summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-05 20:53:28 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-05 20:53:28 -0800
commit3df8db22395361c6367eb632eeb71ee6cf7e8a79 (patch)
treefdb3b354c2f07b44c9beb190cf34e70e36a1e36c
parent7ff4369b0a39aae3cf9b0c875b1bae0f08e27150 (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/51983-0.txt11670
-rw-r--r--old/51983-0.zipbin229254 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51983-8.txt11669
-rw-r--r--old/51983-8.zipbin228332 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51983-h.zipbin581809 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51983-h/51983-h.htm13844
-rw-r--r--old/51983-h/images/0001.jpgbin140538 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51983-h/images/0009.jpgbin57688 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51983-h/images/cover.jpgbin140538 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/51983-h/images/enlarge.jpgbin789 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/51983-h.htm.2021-01-2413843
14 files changed, 17 insertions, 51026 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..153418f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51983 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51983)
diff --git a/old/51983-0.txt b/old/51983-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index de6e3ec..0000000
--- a/old/51983-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,11670 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sin That Was His, by Frank L. Packard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Sin That Was His
-
-Author: Frank L. Packard
-
-Release Date: May 3, 2016 [EBook #51983]
-Last Updated: March 13, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIN THAT WAS HIS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE SIN THAT WAS HIS
-
-By Frank L. Packard
-
-The Copp Clark Co. Toronto, Canada
-
-1917
-
-THE SIN THAT WAS HIS
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I--THREE-ACE ARTIE
-
-|OF Arthur Leroy, commonly known throughout the Yukon as Three-Ace
-Artie, Ton-Nugget Camp knew a good deal--and equally knew very
-little. He had drifted in casually one day, and, evidently finding the
-environment remuneratively to his liking, had stayed. He was a bird of
-passage--tarrying perhaps for the spring clean-up.
-
-He was not exactly elegant in his apparel, for the conditions of an
-out-post mining camp did not lend themselves to elegance; but he was
-immeasurably the best dressed and most scrupulously groomed man that
-side of Dawson. His hands, for instance, were very soft and white; but
-then, he did no work--that is, of a nature to impair their nicety.
-
-His name was somewhat confusing. It might be either French or English,
-according to the twist that was given to its pronunciation--and
-Three-Ace Artie could give it either twist with equal facility. He
-confessed to being a Canadian--which was the only confession of any
-nature whatsoever that Three-Ace Artie had ever been known to make. He
-spoke English in a manner that left no doubt in the world but that it
-was his native language--except in the mind of Canuck John, the only
-French Canadian in the camp, who was equally positive that in the person
-of Three-Ace Artie he had unquestionably found a compatriot born to the
-French tongue.
-
-A few old-timers around Dawson might have remembered, if it had not been
-so commonplace an occurrence when it happened, that Leroy, as a very
-young man, had toiled in over the White Pass; though that being only a
-matter of some four years ago at this time, Leroy was still a very young
-man, even if somewhat of a change had taken place in his appearance--due
-possibly, or possibly not, to the rigours of the climate. Three-Ace
-Artie since then had grown a full beard. But Leroy's arrival, being but
-one of so many, the old-timers had found in it nothing to remember.
-
-Other and more definite particulars concerning Three-Ace Artie, however,
-were in the possession of Ton-Nugget Camp. Three-Ace Artie had no
-temperance proclivities--but he never drank during business hours. No
-one had ever seen a glass at his elbow when there was a pack of cards on
-the table! Frankly a professional gambler, he was admitted to be a
-good one--and square. He was polished, but not too suave; he was
-unquestionably possessed of far more than an ordinary education, but
-he never permitted his erudition to become objectionable; and he had a
-reputation for coolness and nerve that Ton-Nugget Camp had seen enhanced
-on several occasions and belied on none. He was of medium height, broad
-shouldered, and muscular; he had black hair and black eyes; under the
-beard the jaw was square; unruffled, he was genial; ruffled, he was
-known to be dangerous; and, still too young to show the markings of an
-ungracious life, his forehead was unwrinkled, and his skin clear and
-fresh.
-
-Also, during his three months' sojourn in Ton-Nugget Camp, he was
-credited, not without reason, in having won considerably more than
-he had lost. Upon these details rested whatever claim to an intimate
-acquaintanceship with Three-Ace Artie the camp could boast; for the
-rest, Ton-Nugget Camp, in common with the Yukon in general, was quite
-privileged to hazard as many guesses as it pleased!
-
-In a word, such was Three-Ace Artie's status in Ton-Nugget Camp when
-there arrived one afternoon a young man, little more than a boy,
-patently fresh from the East. And here, though Ton-Nugget Camp was quick
-to take the newcomer's measure, and, ignoring the other's claim to the
-self-conferred title of Gerald Rogers, promptly dubbed him the Kid, it
-permitted, through lack of observation, a slight detail to escape its
-notice that might otherwise perhaps have suggested a new and promising
-field for its guesses concerning Three-Ace Artie.
-
-Though at no more distant a date than a few days previous to his
-arrival, the Kid had probably never seen a “poke” in his life before,
-much less one filled with currency in the shape of gold dust, he had, in
-the first flush of his entry to MacDonald's, and with the life-long
-air of one accustomed to doing nothing else, flung a very new and
-pleasantly-filled poke in the general direction of the scales at the end
-of the bar, and, leaning back against the counter, supporting himself on
-his elbows, proceeded to “set them up” for all concerned. MacDonald's,
-collectively and individually, which is to say no small portion of
-the camp, for MacDonald's was at once hotel, store, bar and general
-hang-out, obeyed the invitation without undue delay, and was in the act
-of enjoying the newcomer's hospitality when Three-Ace Artie strolled in.
-
-Some one nearest the bar reached out a glass to the gambler over the
-intervening heads, the cluster of men broke away that the ceremony of
-introduction with the stranger might be duly performed--and Ton-Nugget
-Camp, failing to note the sudden tightening of the gambler's fingers
-around his glass, the startled flash in the dark eyes that was instantly
-veiled by half dropped, sleepy lids, heard only Three-Ace Artie's, “Glad
-to know you, Mr. Rogers,” in the gambler's usual and quietly modulated
-voice.
-
-Following that, however, not being entirely unsophisticated, Ton-Nugget
-Camp stuck its tongue in its cheek and awaited developments--meanwhile
-making the most of its own opportunities, for the Kid, boisterous, loose
-with his money, was obviously too shining a mark for even amateurs
-to overlook. Ton-Nugget Camp, therefore, was, while expectant, quite
-content that Three-Ace Artie should, through motives which it attributed
-to professional delicacy, avoid rather than make any hurried advances
-toward intimacy with the newcomer; since, not feeling the restraint of
-any professional ethics itself, Ton-Nugget Camp was enabled to take up
-a few little collections on its own account via the stud poker route at
-the expense of the Kid.
-
-Two days passed, during which Three-Ace Artie, besides being little
-in evidence, refrained entirely from pressing his attentions upon the
-stranger; but despite this, thanks to the adroitness of certain members
-of the community and his own all too frequent attendance upon the bar,
-matters were not flourishing with the Kid. The Kid drank far more than
-was good for him, played far more than was good for him, and, flushed
-and fuddled with liquor, played none too well. True, there were those
-in the camp who offered earnest, genuine and well-meant advice, amongst
-them a grim old Presbyterian by the name of Murdock Shaw, who was
-credited with being the head of an incipient, and therefore harmless,
-reform movement--but this advice the Kid, quite as warmly as it was
-offered, consigned to other climes in conjunction with its progenitors;
-and, as a result, all that was left of his original poke at the
-expiration of those two days was an empty chamois bag from which,
-possibly by way of compensation, the offensive newness had been
-considerably worn off.
-
-“If he's got any more,” said the amateurs, licking their lips, “here's
-hopin' that Three-Ace Artie 'll keep on overlookin' the bet!”
-
-And then, the next afternoon, the Kid flashed another poke, quite as new
-and quite as pleasantly-nurtured as its predecessor--and Three-Ace Artie
-seemed to awake suddenly to the knock of opportunity at his door.
-
-With just what finesse and aplomb the gambler inveigled the Kid into the
-game no one was prepared co say--it was a detail of no moment, except to
-Three-Ace Artie, who could be confidently trusted to take care of such
-matters, when moved to do so, with the courtly and genial graciousness
-of one conferring a favour on the other! But, be that as it may, the
-first intimation the few loungers who were in MacDonald's at the time
-had that anything was in the wind was the sight of MacDonald, behind the
-bar, obligingly exchanging the pokes of both men For poker chips. The
-loungers present thereupon immediately expressed their interest by
-congregating around the table as Three-Ace Artie and the Kid sat down.
-
-“Stud?” suggested Three-Ace Artie, with an engaging smile.
-
-The Kid, already none too sober, nodded his head.
-
-“And table stakes!” he supplemented, with a somewhat lordly flourish of
-the replenished glass that he had carried with him from the bar.
-
-“Of course!” murmured the gambler.
-
-It was still early afternoon, but an afternoon of the long-night of the
-northern winter, sunless, with only a subdued twilight without, and the
-big metal lamps, hanging from the ceiling, were lighted. In the centre
-of the room a box-stove alternately crackled and purred, its sheet-iron
-sides glowing dull red. The bare, rough-boarded room, save for the
-little group, was empty. Behind the bar, with a sort of curious, cynical
-smile that supplied no additional beauty to his shrewd, hard-lined
-visage, MacDonald himself propped his bullet-head in his hands, elbows
-on the counter, to watch the proceedings.
-
-Three-Ace Artie and the Kid began to play. Occasionally the door opened,
-admitting a miner who took a brisk, fore-intentioned step or two
-toward the bar--and catching sight of the game in progress, as though
-magnet-drawn, immediately changed his direction and joined those already
-around the table. But neither Three-Ace Artie nor the Kid appeared to
-pay any attention to the constantly augmenting number of spectators.
-The game see-sawed, fortune smiling with apparently unbiased fickleness
-first on one, then on the other. The Kid grew a little more noisy, a
-little more intoxicated--as MacDonald, from a mere spectator, became
-an attendant at the Kid's frequent beck and call. Three-Ace Artie was
-entirely professional--there was no glass at Three-Ace Artie's elbow,
-when he lost he smiled good-humouredly, when he won he smoothed over the
-other's discomfiture with self-deprecatory tact; he was unperturbed and
-cordial, he bet sparingly and in moderation--to enjoy the game, as
-it were, for the game's own sake, the stakes being, as it were again,
-simply to supply a little additional zest and tang, and for no other
-reason whatever!
-
-And, then, little by little, the Kid began to force the game; and, as
-the stakes grew higher, began to lose steadily, with the result that
-an hour of play saw most of the chips, instead of a glass, flanking
-Three-Ace Artie's elbow--and saw a large proportion of Ton-Nugget Camp,
-to whom the word in some mysterious manner had gone forth, flanking the
-table five and six deep.
-
-The more the Kid lost, the more he drank. Whatever ease of manner,
-whatever composure he had originally possessed was gone now. His hair
-straggled unkemptly over his forehead, his cheeks were flushed, his lips
-worked constantly on the butt of an unlighted cigarette.
-
-The crowd pressed a little closer, leaned a little further over the
-table. There was something almost fascinating in the deftness with which
-the soft, white hands of Three-Ace Artie caressed the cards, there was
-something almost fascinating, too, in the cool impassiveness of the
-gambler's poise, and in the sort of languid selfpossession that lighted
-the dark eyes; but Ton-Nugget Camp had lived too long in familiarity
-with Three-Ace Artie to be interested in the gambler's personality at
-that moment--its interest was centred in the game. The play now had all
-the earmarks of a grand finale. There were big stakes on the table--and
-the last of the Kid's chips. The crowd raised itself on tiptoes. Both
-men turned their “hole” cards. Three-Ace Artie reached out calmly, drew
-the chips toward him, smiled almost apologetically, and, picking up the
-deck, riffled the cards tentatively--the opposite side of the table was
-bare of stakes.
-
-For a moment the Kid circled his lips with the tip of his tongue, and
-flirted his hair back from his forehead with an uncertain, jerky motion
-of his hand; then he snatched up his glass, spilled a portion of its
-contents, gulped down the remainder, and began to fumble under his vest,
-finally wrenching out a money-belt.
-
-“Go on--what do you think!” he said thickly. “I ain't done yet! I'll
-get mine back, an' yours, too! Table stakes--eh? I'll get you this
-time--b'God! Table stakes--eh--again? What do you say?”
-
-“Of course!” murmured Three-Ace Artie politely.
-
-And then the crowd shuffled its feet uneasily. Murdock Shaw, who had
-edged his way close to the table, leaned over and touched the Kid's
-shoulder.
-
-“I'd cut it out, if I was you, son,” he advised bluntly. “You're
-drunk--and a mark!”
-
-A sort of quick, sibilant intake of breath came from the circle around
-the table. Like a flash, one of Three-Ace Artie's hands, from the deck
-of cards, vanished under the table; and the dark eyes, the slumber gone
-from their depths, narrowed dangerously on Murdock Shaw. Then Three-Ace
-Artie smiled--unpleasantly.
-
-“It isn't as though you were _new_ in the Yukon, Murdock”--there was a
-deadliness in the quiet, level tones. “What's the idea?”
-
-Like magic, to right and left, on each side of the table, the crowd
-cleared a line behind the two men--then silence.
-
-The gambler's hand remained beneath the table; his eyes cold, alert,
-never wavering for the fraction of a second from the miner's face.
-
-Perhaps a minute passed. The miner did not speak or move, save that his
-lips tightened and the tan of his face took on a deeper hue.
-
-Then Three-Ace Artie spoke again:
-
-“Are you _calling_, Murdock?” he inquired softly.
-
-The miner hesitated an instant, then turned abruptly on his heel.
-
-“When I call you,” he said evenly, over his shoulder, “it will break you
-for keeps--and you won't have long to wait, either!”
-
-The Kid, who had been alternating a maudlin gaze from the face of one
-man to the other, stood up now, and, hanging to the back of his chair,
-watched the miner's retreat in a fuddled way.
-
-“Say, go chase yourself!” he called out, in sudden inspiration--and,
-glancing around for approval, laughed boisterously at his own drunken
-humour.
-
-The door closed on Murdock Shaw. The Kid slipped down into his chair,
-dumped a handful of American double-eagles out of the money-belt--and,
-reaching again for his glass, banged it on the table.
-
-“Gimme another!” he shouted in the direction of the bar. “Hey--Mac--d'ye
-hear! Gimme another drink!”
-
-Three-Ace Artie's hands were above the table again--the slim, delicate,
-tapering fingers shuffling, riffling, and reshuffling the cards.
-
-MacDonald approached the table, and picked up the empty glass.
-
-“Wait!” commanded the Kid ponderously, and scowled suddenly in the
-throes of another inspiration. He pointed a finger at Three-Ace Artie.
-“Say--give him one, too!” He wagged his head sapiently. “If he wants
-any more chance at my money, he's got to have one, too! That's what!
-Old guy's right about that! I'm the only one that's drunk--you've got to
-drink, too! What'll you have--eh?”
-
-The group had closed in around the table again, and now all eyes were
-riveted, curiously, expectantly, upon Three-Ace Artie. If the gambler
-had one fixed principle from which, as Ton-Nugget Camp had excellent
-reasons for knowing, neither argument nor cajolery had ever moved him,
-it was that of refusing to drink while he played--but now, while all
-eyes were on Three-Ace Artie, Three-Ace Artie's eyes were on the pile of
-American gold that the Kid had displayed. There was a quick little
-curve to the gambler's lips, that became a slightly tolerant, slightly
-good-natured smile--and then the crowd nodded significantly to itself.
-
-“Why, certainly!” said Three-Ace Artie pleasantly. “Give me the same,
-Mac.”
-
-“That's the talk!” applauded the Kid.
-
-Three-Ace Artie pushed the cards across the table.
-
-“This is a new game!” announced the Kid. “Cut for deal. Table stakes!”
-
-They cut. Three-Ace Artie won, riffled the cards several times, passed
-them over to be cut again, and dealt the first card apiece face down.
-
-The Kid examined his card in approved fashion by pulling it slightly
-over the edge of the table and secretively turning up one corner; then,
-still face down, he pushed it back, and, MacDonald, returning with the
-glasses from the bar at that moment, reached greedily for his own and
-tossed it off. He nodded with heavy satisfaction as Three-Ace Artie
-drained the other glass. Again he examined his card as before.
-
-“That's a pretty good card!” he stated with owlish gravity. “Worth
-pretty good bet!” He laid a stack of his gold eagles upon the card.
-
-Three-Ace Artie placed an equivalent number of chips upon his own card,
-and dealt another apiece--face up now on the table. An eight-spot of
-spades fell to the Kid; a ten-spot of diamonds to Three-Ace Artie.
-
-“Worth jus' much as before!” declared the Kid--and laid another stack of
-eagles upon the card.
-
-“Mine's worth a little more this time,” smiled Three-Ace Artie--and
-doubled the bet.
-
-“Sure!” mumbled the Kid. “Sure thing!”
-
-Again Three-Ace Artie dealt--a king of hearts to the Kid; a deuce of
-hearts to himself.
-
-The Kid's hand seemed to tremble eagerly, as he fumbled with his gold
-eagles. He glanced furtively at the gambler--and then, as though trying
-to read in Three-Ace Artie's face how far he might safely egg the other
-on, he began to drop coin after coin upon his cards.
-
-The crowd stirred a little uncomfortably. The Kid had undoubtedly the
-better hand so far, but he had made a fool play--a blind man could have
-read through the back of the card that was so carefully guarded face
-down on the table. The Kid had a pair of kings against a possible pair
-of tens or deuces on the gambler's side.
-
-Three-Ace Artie imperturbably “saw” the bet--and coolly dealt the fourth
-card. Another king fell to the Kid; another deuce to himself.
-
-The Kid's eyes were burning feverishly now. He bet again, laughing,
-chuckling drunkenly as he swept forward a generous share of his
-remaining gold--and with a quiet, unostentatiously appraising glance at
-what was left of the pile of eagles, Three-Ace Artie raised heavily.
-
-Then, for the first time, the Kid hesitated, and a momentary frightened
-look flashed across his face. He lifted the corner of his “hole” card
-again and again nervously, as though to assure himself that he had made
-no mistake--and finally laughed with raucous confidence again, and,
-pushing the hair out of his eyes, demanded another drink, and returned
-the raise.
-
-The onlookers sucked in their breath--but this time approved the Kid's
-play. The cards showed a pair of deuces and a ten-spot spread out before
-Three-Ace Artie, a pair of kings and an eight-spot in front of the Kid.
-But the Kid had already given his hand away, and with a king in the
-“hole,” making three kings, Three-Ace Artie could not possibly win
-unless his “hole” card was a deuce or a ten, and on top of that that his
-next and final card should be a deuce or ten as well. It looked all the
-Kid's way.
-
-Three-Ace Artie again “saw” the other's raise--and dealt the last card.
-
-There was a sudden shuffling of feet, as the crowd leaned tensely
-forward. A jack fell face up before the Kid--a ten-spot fell before the
-gambler. Three-Ace Artie showed two pairs--it all depended now on what
-he held as his “hole” card.
-
-But the Kid, either because he was too fuddled to take the possibilities
-into account, or because he was drunkenly obsessed with the
-invincibility of his own three kings, laughed hilariously.
-
-“I got you!” he cried--and bet half of his remaining gold.
-
-Three-Ace Artie's smile was cordial.
-
-“Might as well go all the way then,” he suggested--and raised to the
-limit of the Kid's last gold eagle.
-
-The Kid laughed again. He had played cunningly--quite cunningly. The
-gambler had fallen into the trap. All his hand showed was two kings.
-
-“I'll see you! I'll see you!”--he was lurching excitedly in his chair,
-as he pushed the rest of his money forward. “This is the time little old
-two pairs are no good!” He turned his “hole” card triumphantly. “Three
-kings” he gurgled--and reached for the stakes.
-
-“Just a minute,” objected Three-Ace Artie blandly.
-
-He faced his other card. “I've got another ten here. Full house--three
-tens and a pair of deuces.”
-
-A dead silence fell upon the room. The Kid, lurching in his chair,
-stared in a dazed, stunned way at the other's cards--and then his face
-went a deathly white. One hand crept aimlessly to his forehead and
-brushed across his eyes; and after a moment, leaning heavily upon
-the table, he stood up, still swaying. But he was not swaying from
-drunkenness now. The shock seemed to have sobered him, bringing a
-haggard misery into his eyes. The crowd watched, making no comment.
-Three-Ace Artie, without lifting his eyes, was calmly engaged in
-stacking the gold eagles into little piles in front of him. The Kid
-moistened his lips with his tongue, attempted to speak--and succeeded
-only in * swallowing hard once or twice. Then, with a pitiful effort to
-pull himself together, he forced a smile.
-
-“I--I can't play any more,” he said. “I'm cleaned out”--and turned away
-from the table.
-
-The crowd made way for him, following him with its eyes as he crossed
-the room and disappeared through a back door at the side of the bar,
-making evidently for his “hotel” room upstairs. Three-Ace Artie said
-nothing--he was imperturbably pocketing the gold eagles now. The crowd
-drifted away from the table, dispersed around the room, and some went
-out. Three-Ace Artie rose from the table and carried the chips back to
-the bar.
-
-“Guess I'll cash in, Mac,” he drawled.
-
-The proprietor pushed the two pokes across the bar.
-
-“Step up, gentlemen!” invited the gambler amiably, wheeling with his
-back against the bar to face the room.
-
-An air of uneasiness, an awkward tension had settled upon the place.
-Some few more went out; but the others, as though glad of the relief
-afforded the situation by Three-Ace Artie's invitation, stepped promptly
-forward.
-
-Three-Ace Artie's hand encircled a stiff four-fingers of raw spirit.
-
-“Here's how!” he said--and drained his glass.
-
-Somebody “set them up” again; Three-Ace Artie repeated the
-performance--and MacDonald's resumed its normal poise.
-
-For perhaps half an hour Three-Ace Artie leaned against the bar, joining
-in a dice game that some one had inaugurated; and then, interest in this
-lagging, with a yawn and a casual remark about going up to his shack for
-a snooze, he put on his overcoat, pulled his fur cap well down over his
-ears, sauntered to the door--and, with a cheery wave of his hand, went
-out.
-
-But once outside the door, Three-Ace Artie's nonchalance dropped from
-him, and he stood motionless in the dull light of the winter afternoon
-peering sharply up and down the camp's single shack-lined street. There
-was no one in sight. He turned quickly then, and, treading noiselessly
-in the snow, stole along beside the building to a door at the further
-end. He opened this cautiously, stepped inside, and, in semidarkness
-here, halted again to listen. The sounds from the adjoining barroom
-reached him plainly, but that was all. Satisfied that he was unobserved,
-he moved swiftly forward to where, at the end of the sort of passageway
-which he had entered, a steep, ladder-like stairway led upward. He
-mounted this stealthily, gained the landing above, and, groping his way
-now along a narrow hallway, suddenly flung open a door.
-
-“Who's there!” came a quick, startled cry from within.
-
-“Don't talk so loud--damn it!” growled Three-Ace
-
-Artie, in a hoarse whisper. “You can hear yourself think through these
-partitions!” He struck a match, and lighted a candle which he found on
-the combination table and washing-stand near the bed.
-
-The Kid's face, drawn and colourless, loomed up in the yellow light from
-the edge of the bed, as he bent forward, blinking in a kind of miserable
-wonder at Three-Ace Artie.
-
-“You!” he gasped.
-
-Three-Ace Artie closed the door softly.
-
-“Some high-roller, you are, aren't you!” he observed caustically.
-
-The Kid did not answer.
-
-For a full minute Three-Ace Artie eyed the other in silence--then he
-laughed shortly.
-
-“I don't know which of us is the bigger damn fool--you trying to buy
-a through ticket to hell; or yours truly for what I'm going to do now!
-Maybe you have learned your lesson, maybe you haven't; but anyway I am
-going to take the chance. I'm not here to preach, but I'll push a little
-personal advice out of long experience your way. The booze and the
-pasteboards won't get you anywhere--except into the kind of mess you are
-up against now. If you are hankering for more of it, go to it--that's
-all. It's your hunt!”
-
-He flung the Kid's poke suddenly upon the table, and piled the gold
-eagles beside it.
-
-A flush crept into the Kid's cheeks. He leaned further forward, staring
-helplessly, now at Three-Ace Artie, now at the money on the table.
-
-“W-what do you mean?” he stammered.
-
-“It isn't very hard to guess, is it?” said Three-Ace Artie quietly.
-“Here's your money--but there's just one little condition tied to it. I
-can't afford to let the impression get around that I'm establishing
-any precedents--see? And if the boys heard of this they'd think I was
-suffering from softening of the brain! You get away from here without
-saying anything to anybody--and stay away. Bixley, one of the boys, is
-going over to the next camp this afternoon--and you go with him.”
-
-“You--you're giving me back the money?” faltered the Kid.
-
-“Well, it sort of looks that way,” smiled Three-Ace Artie.
-
-A certain dignity came to the Kid--and he held out his hand.
-
-“You're a white man,” he said huskily. “But I can't accept it. I took it
-pretty hard down there perhaps, it seemed to get me all of a sudden when
-the booze went out; but I'm not all yellow. You won it--I can't take it
-back. It's yours.”
-
-“No; it's not mine”--Three-Ace Artie was still smiling. “That's the way
-to talk, Kid. I like that. But you're wrong--it's yours by rights.”
-
-“By rights?” The Kid hesitated, studying Three-Ace Artie's face. “You
-mean,” he ventured slowly, “that the game wasn't on the level--that you
-stacked the cards?”
-
-Three-Ace Artie shook his head.
-
-“I never stacked a card on a man in my life.”
-
-“Then I don't understand what you mean,” said the Kid. “How can it be
-mine by rights?”
-
-“It's simple enough,” replied Three-Ace Artie. “I'm paying back a little
-debt I owe, that's all. I figured the boys had pecked around about deep
-enough on the outskirts of your pile, and that it was about time for me
-to sit in and save the rest. I cleaned you out a little faster than I
-expected, a little faster perhaps than the next man will if you try it
-again--but not any the less thoroughly. It's the 'next man' I'm trying
-to steer you away from, Kid.”
-
-“Yes, I know”--the Kid spoke almost mechanically. “But a debt?”--his
-eyes were searching the gambler's face perplexedly now. Then suddenly:
-“Who are you?” he demanded. “There's something familiar about you. I
-thought there was the first time I saw you the other afternoon. And yet
-I can't place you.”
-
-“Don't try,” said Three-Ace Artie softly. He reached out and laid his
-hand on the other's shoulder. “It wouldn't do you or me any good. There
-are some things best forgotten. I'm telling you the truth, that's all
-you need to know. You're entitled to the money--and another chance. Let
-it go at that. You agree to the bargain, don't you? You leave here with
-Bixley this afternoon--and this is between you and me, Kid, and no one
-else on earth.”
-
-For a moment the Kid's gaze held steadily on Three-Ace Artie; then his
-eyes filled.
-
-“Yes; I'll go,” he said in a low voice. “I guess I'm not going to forget
-this--or you. I don't know what I would have done, and I want to tell
-you----”
-
-“Never mind that!” interrupted Three-Ace Artie with sudden gruffness.
-“It's what you do from now on that counts. You've got to hurry now. Any
-of the boys will show you Bixley's shack, if you don't know where it is.
-Just tell Bixley what you want, and he'll take you along. He'll be glad
-of company on the trail. Shake!” He caught the other's hand, wrung it
-in a hard grip--and turned to the door. “Good luck to you, Kid!” he
-said--and closed the door behind him.
-
-As cautiously as he had entered, Three-Ace Artie made his way downstairs
-again; and, once outside, started briskly in the direction of his shack,
-that he had acquired, bag and baggage, shortly after his arrival in
-the camp, from a miner who was pulling out. It was some three or four
-hundred yards from MacDonald's, and as he went along, feet crunching in
-the snow from his swinging stride, he began quite abruptly to whistle a
-cheery air. It was too bitterly cold, however, to whistle, so instead he
-resorted to humming pleasantly to himself.
-
-He stamped the snow from his feet as he reached the shack, opened the
-door, and went in. A few embers still glowed in the box-stove, and he
-threw on a stick of wood and opened the damper. He lighted a lamp, and
-stood for a moment looking around him. There was a bunk at one side of
-the shack, the table, the stove, a single chair, a few books on a rude
-shelf, a kit bag in one corner, a skin of some sort on the floor, and
-a small cupboard containing supplies and cooking utensils. Three-Ace
-Artie, however, did not appear to be obsessed with the inventory of his
-surroundings. There was a whimsical smile on his lips, as he pulled off
-his fur cap and tossed it on the bunk.
-
-“I guess,” said Three-Ace Artie, “it will give the Recording Angel quite
-a shock to chalk one up on the other side of the page for me!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II--THE TOAST
-
-|THREE-ACE ARTIE, sprawled comfortably cally at the book he held in his
-hand, a copy of Hugo's _Claude Gueux_ in French, tossed it to the foot
-of the bunk, and sat up, dangling his legs over the edge.
-
-A mood that had long been a stranger to him, a mellow mood, as he had
-defined it to himself, had kept him away from MacDonald's that night. It
-was the glow of self-benediction, as it were, ever since he had left the
-boy's room that afternoon, though it had puzzled him to some extent
-to explain its effect upon himself--that, for instance, the corollary
-should take the form of a quiet evening, a pipe, and Hugo.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders. It had been so nevertheless. His shoulders
-lifted again--it was decidedly an incongruous proceeding for one known
-as Three-Ace Artie!
-
-His thoughts reverted to the Kid. No one had come to the shack since he
-had returned from the hotel, but he knew the Kid had left the camp, for
-he had watched from the shack window as Bixley and the boy had passed
-down the street together. The Kid would not play the fool again for a
-while, that was certain--whatever he did eventually.
-
-Three-Ace Artie stared introspectively at the lamp, out at full length
-upon his bunk, yawned, and looked at his watch. It was already after
-midnight. He glanced a little quizzically.
-
-Kid, of course! He had been conscious of an inward flame for a
-moment--then for the third time shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“I guess I'll turn in,” he muttered.
-
-He bent down to untie a shoe lace--and straightened up quickly again. A
-footstep sounded from without, there was a knock upon the door, the door
-opened--and with the inrush of air the lamp flared up. Three-Ace Artie
-reached out swiftly to the top of the chimney, protecting the flame with
-the flat of his hand, and, as the door closed again, stared with cool
-surprise at his visitor. The last time he had seen Sergeant Marden,
-of the Royal North-West Mounted Police, had been the year before at
-Two-Strike-Mountain, where each had followed a gold rush--for quite
-different reasons!
-
-“Hello, sergeant!” he drawled. “I didn't know you were in camp.”
-
-“Just got in around supper-time,” replied the other. “I've been up on
-the Creek for the last few weeks.”
-
-Three-Ace Artie smiled facetiously.
-
-“Any luck?” he inquired.
-
-“I got my man,” said the sergeant quietly.
-
-“Of course!” murmured Three-Ace Artie softly. “You've got a reputation
-for doing that, sergeant.” He laughed pleasantly. “But you haven't
-dropped in on _me_ officially, have you?”
-
-Sergeant Marden, big, thick-set, with a strong, kindly face, with gray
-eyes that lighted now in a gravely humorous way shook his head.
-
-“No,” he answered. “I'm playing the 'old friend' rôle to-night.”
-
-“Good!” exclaimed Three-Ace Artie heartily. “Peel off your duds then,
-and--will you have the bunk, or the chair? Take your choice--only make
-yourself at home.” He stepped over to the cupboard, and, while the
-sergeant pulled off his cap and mitts, and unbuttoned and threw back his
-overcoat, Three-Ace Artie procured a bottle of whisky and two glasses,
-which he set upon the table. “Help yourself, sergeant,” he invited
-cordially.
-
-The sergeant shook his head again, as he drew the chair toward him and
-sat down.
-
-“I don't think I'll take anything to-night,” he said.
-
-“No?”--Three-Ace Artie's voice expressed the polite regret of a perfect
-host. “Well, fill your pipe then,” he suggested hospitably, as he
-seated himself on the edge of the bunk. He began to fill his own pipe
-deliberately, apparently wholly preoccupied for the moment with that
-homely operation--but his mind was leaping in lightning flashes back
-over the range of the four years that he had spent in the Yukon. What
-_exactly_ did Sergeant Marden of the Royal North-West Mounted want with
-him to-night? He had known the other for a good while, it was true--but
-not in a fashion to warrant the sergeant in making a haphazard social
-call at midnight after what must have been a long, hard day on the
-trail.
-
-A match, drawn with a long sweep under the table, crackled; Sergeant
-Marden lighted his pipe, and flipped the match-stub stovewards.
-
-“It looks as though Canuck John wouldn't pull through the night,” he
-said gravely.
-
-“Canuck John!” Three-Ace Artie sat up with a jerk, and glanced sharply
-at the other. “What's that you say?”
-
-Sergeant Marden removed his pipe slowly from his lips.
-
-“Why, you know, don't you?” he asked in surprise.
-
-“No, I don't know!” returned Three-Ace Artie quickly. “I haven't been
-out of this shack since late this afternoon; but I saw him this morning,
-and he was all right then. What's happened?”
-
-“He shot himself just after supper--accident, of course--old story,
-cleaning a gun,” said the sergeant tersely.
-
-“Good God!” cried Three-Ace Artie, in a low, shocked way--and then he
-was on his feet, and reaching for his cap and coat. “I'll go up there
-and see him. You don't mind, sergeant, if I leave you here? I guess I
-knew Canuck John better than any one else in camp did, and--” His coat
-half on, he paused suddenly, his brows gathering in a frown. “After
-supper, you said!” he muttered slowly. “Why, that's hours ago!” Then,
-his voice rasping: “It's damned queer no one came to tell me about this!
-There's something wrong here!” He struggled into his coat.
-
-“He's been unconscious ever since they found him,” said Sergeant Marden,
-his eyes fixed on the bowl of his pipe as he prodded the dottle down
-with his forefinger. “The doctor's just come. You couldn't do any good
-by going up there, and”--his eyes lifted and met Three-Ace Artie's
-meaningly--“take it all around, I guess it would be just as well if you
-didn't go. Murdock Shaw and some of the boys are there, and--well, they
-seem to feel they don't want you.”
-
-For a moment Three-Ace Artie stood motionless, regarding the other in a
-half angry, half puzzled way; then, his weight on both hands, he leaned
-forward over the table toward Sergeant Marden.
-
-“In plain English, and in as few words as you can put it, what in hell
-do you mean by that?” he demanded levelly.
-
-“All right, if you want it that way, I'll tell you,” said Sergeant
-Marden quietly. “I guess perhaps the short cut's best. They've given you
-until to-morrow morning to get out of Ton-Nugget Camp.”
-
-“I beg your pardon?” inquired Three-Ace Artie with ominous politeness.
-
-Sergeant Marden produced a poke partially filled with gold dust and laid
-it on the table.
-
-“What's that?”--Three-Ace Artie's eyes were hard.
-
-“It's the price you paid Sam MacBride for this shack and contents when
-he went away. The boys say they want to play fair.”
-
-And then Three-Ace Artie laughed--not pleasantly. Methodically he
-removed his overcoat, hung it on its peg, and sat down again on the edge
-of the bunk.
-
-“Let's see the rest of your hand, sergeant”--his voice was deadly quiet.
-“I don't quite get the idea.”
-
-“I wasn't here myself this afternoon,” said Sergeant Marden; “but they
-seem to feel that the sort of thing that happened kind of gives the
-community a bad name, and that separating a youngster, when he's drunk,
-from his last dollar is a bit too raw even for Ton-Nugget Camp. That's
-about the size of the way it was put up to me.”
-
-It seemed to Three-Act Artie that in some way he had not quite heard
-aright; or that, if he had, he was being made the object of some,
-unknown to its authors, stupendously ironical joke--and then, as
-he glanced at the officer's grim, though not altogether unfriendly
-countenance, and from Sergeant Marden to the bag of gold upon the table,
-a bitter, furious anger surged upon him. His clenched fist reached out
-and fell smashing upon the table.
-
-“So that's it, is it!” he said between his teeth. “This is some of
-Murdock Shaw's work--the snivelling, psalm-singing hypocrite! Well, he
-can't get away with it! I've a few friends in camp myself.”
-
-“Fairweather friends, I should say,” qualified the sergeant, busy again
-with his pipe bowl. “You said yourself that no one had been near the
-shack here. The camp appears to be pretty well of one mind on the
-subject.”
-
-“Including the half dozen or more who started after the Kid to begin
-with!”--Three-Ace Artie's laugh was savage, full of menace. “Are they
-helping to run me out of camp, too!”
-
-“You seem to have got a little of _everybody's_ money,” suggested
-Sergeant Marden pointedly. “Anyway, I haven't seen any sign of them
-putting up a fight for you.”
-
-“Quite so!” There was a sudden cold self-possession in Three-Ace Artie's
-tones. “Well, I can put up quite a fight for myself, thank you. I'm not
-going! It's too bad Shaw didn't have the nerve to come here and tell me
-this. I----”
-
-“I wouldn't let him,” interposed the sergeant, with a curious smile.
-“That's why I came myself.”
-
-Three-Ace Artie studied the other's face for an instant.
-
-“Well, go on!” he jerked out. “What's the answer to that?”
-
-“That I am going on to Dawson in the morning, and that I thought perhaps
-you might be willing to come along.”
-
-Three-Ace Artie's under jaw crept out the fraction of an inch, and his
-eyes narrowed.
-
-“I thought you said you weren't here officially!”
-
-“I'm not--at least, not yet.”
-
-“Well, it sounds mighty like an arrest to me!” snarled Three-Ace Artie.
-He stood up abruptly, and once more leaned over the table. His dark eyes
-flashed. “But that doesn't go either--not in the Yukon! You can't hold
-me for anything I've done, and you ought to know better than to think
-you can do any bluffing with me and get away with it! Murdock Shaw is.
-evidently running this little game. I gave him a chance to call my hand
-this afternoon--and he lay down like a whipped pup! That chance is still
-open to him--but he can't do it by proxy! That's exactly where you and I
-stand, Marden--don't try the arrest game!”
-
-“I'm not going to--at least, not yet,” said the sergeant again. “It's
-not a question of law. The day may come when the lid goes on out here,
-but so far the local millennium hasn't dawned. There's no dispute there.
-I told you I came in here on the 'old friend' basis, and I meant it.
-I've known you off and on a bit for quite a while; and I always liked
-you for the reputation you had of playing square. There's no talk of
-crookedness now, though I must confess you've pulled something a little
-thinner than I thought it was in you to do. However, let that go. I
-don't want to butt in on this unless I have to--and that's why I'm
-trying to get you to come away with me in the morning. If you don't,
-there'll be trouble, and then I'll have to take a hand whether I want to
-or not.”
-
-“By God!”--the oath came fiercely, involuntarily from Three-Ace Artie's
-lips. The irony of it all was upon him again. The injustice of it galled
-and maddened him. And yet--tell them the truth of the matter? He would
-have seen every last one of them consigned to the bottomless pit first!
-The turbulent soul of the man was aflame. “Run out of camp, eh!”---it
-was a devil's laugh that echoed around the shack. “That means being run
-out of the Yukon! I'd have to get out, wouldn't I--out of the Yukon--ha,
-ha!--my name would smell everywhere to high heaven!”
-
-“I'm not sure but that's exactly what I would do if I were you,” said
-Sergeant Marden simply. “The fact you've got to face is that you're
-black-balled--and the easiest way to swallow a nasty dose is to swallow
-it in a gulp, isn't it?” He got up from his chair and laid his hand
-on Three-Ace Artie's shoulder. “Look here, Leroy,” he said earnestly,
-“you've got a cool enough head on you not to play the fool, and you're
-a big enough sport to stand for the cards whatever way they turn. I want
-you to say that you'll come along with me in the morning--I'll get out
-of here early before any one is about, or I'll go now if you like, if
-that will help any. It's the sensible thing to do. Well?”
-
-“I don't know, Marden--I don't know!” Three-Ace Artie flung out shortly.
-
-“Yes, you do,” insisted the sergeant quietly. “You know a fight wouldn't
-get you anywhere--if you got one or two of them, Murdock Shaw for
-instance, you'd simply be hung for your pains. They mean business, and
-I don't want any trouble--why make any for me when it can't do you any
-good? I'm putting it to you in a friendly way; and, besides that, it's
-common sense, isn't it?” His grip tightened in a kindly pressure on
-Three-Ace Artie's shoulder. “I'm right, ain't I? What do you say?”
-
-“Oh, you're right enough!”--a hard smile twisted Three-Ace Artie's lips.
-“There's no argument about that. I'd have to go anyway, I know that--but
-I'm not keen on going without giving them a run for their money that
-they'd remember for the rest of their lives!”
-
-“And at the same time put a crimp into your own,” said Sergeant Marden
-soberly. He held out his hand. “You'll come, won't you?”
-
-Twice Three-Ace Artie paced the length of the shack. Logically, as he
-had admitted, Marden was right; but battling against logic was a sullen
-fury that prompted him to throw consequences to the winds, and, with
-his back to the wall, invite Ton-Nugget Camp to a showdown. And then,
-abruptly, the gambler's instinct to throw down a beaten hand, when bluff
-would be of no avail and holding it would only increase his loss, turned
-the scales, and he halted before Sergeant Marden.
-
-“I'll go,” he said tersely.
-
-There was genuine relief in the officer's face.
-
-“And I'll stick to my end of the bargain!” the sergeant exclaimed
-heartily. “When do you want to start?”
-
-“It makes damned little odds to me!” Three-Ace Artie answered gruffly.
-“Suit yourself.”
-
-“All right,” said the sergeant. “In that case I'll put in a few hours'
-sleep, and we'll get away before the camp is stirring.” He buttoned up
-his overcoat, put on his cap, and moved toward the door. “I've got a
-team of huskies, and there's room on the sled for anything you want to
-bring along. You can get it ready, and I'll call for you here.”
-
-Three-Ace Artie nodded curtly.
-
-Sergeant Marden reached out to open the door, and, with his hand on the
-latch, hesitated.
-
-“Don't go up there, Leroy,” he said earnestly, jerking his head in the
-direction of the upper end of the camp. “Canuck John is unconscious, as
-I told you--there's nothing you could do.”
-
-But Three-Ace Artie had turned his back. To Canuck John and Sergeant
-Marden he was equally oblivious for the moment. He heard the door close,
-heard the sergeant's footsteps outside recede and die away. He was
-staring now at the bag of gold upon the table. It seemed to mock and
-jeer at him, and suddenly his hands at his sides curled into clenched
-and knotted fists--and after a moment he spoke aloud in French.
-
-“It was the first decent thing I ever did in my life”--he was smiling in
-a sort of horrible mirth. “Do you appreciate that, my very dear friend
-Raymond? It is exquisite! _Sacré nom de Dieu_, it is magnificent! It was
-the first decent thing you ever did in your life--think of that, _mon
-brave!_ And see how well you are paid for it! They are running you out
-of camp!”
-
-He turned and flung himself down on the bunk, his hands still fiercely
-clenched. Black-balled, Sergeant Marden had called it! Well, it was not
-the first time he had been black-balled! Here, in the Yukon, the name
-of Three-Ace Artie was to be a stench to the nostrils; elsewhere, in the
-city of his birth, he, last of his race, had already dragged an honoured
-and patrician name in the mire.
-
-A red flame of anger swept his cheeks. What devil's juggling with the
-cards had brought that young fool across his path, and brought the
-memories of the days gone by, and brought him an indulgence in weak,
-mawkish sentimentality! A debt, he had told the boy!
-
-The red flamed into his face again--and yet again. Curse the memories!
-Once aroused they would not down. Even the old schooldays crowded
-themselves upon him--and at that he jeered out at himself in bitter
-raillery. Brilliant, clever in those days, outstripping many beyond his
-years, as glib with his Latin as with his own French tongue, his father
-had designed him for the Roman Catholic priesthood, and he, Raymond
-Chapelle, the son of the rich seigneur, of one of the oldest families in
-French Canada, instead of becoming a priest of God had become--Three-Ace
-Artie, the pariah of Ton-Nugget Camp!
-
-Would it not make all hell scream with glee! It brought unholy humour
-to himself. He--a priest of God! But he had not journeyed very far along
-that road--even before he had finished school he had had a fling or two!
-It had been easy enough. There was no mother, and he did not know his
-father very well. There had been great style and ceremony in that huge,
-old, lumbering, gray-stone mansion in Montreal--but never a home! His
-father had seemed concerned about him in one respect only--a sort of
-austere pride in his accomplishments at school. Produce proof of that,
-and money was unstinted. It had come very easily, that money--and gone
-riotously even as a boy. Then he had entered college, and half way
-through his course his father had died. He had travelled fast after
-that--so fast that only a blur of wreckage loomed up out of those
-few years. A passion for gambling, excess without restraint, a _roué_
-life--and his patrimony, large as it was, was gone. Family after family
-turned their backs upon him, and his clubs shut their doors in his face!
-And then the Yukon--another identity--and as much excitement as he could
-snatch out of his new life!
-
-There was a snarl now on his lips. It had been a furious pace back
-there in Montreal, but whose business was it save his own! He was not
-whimpering about it. He could swallow his own medicine without asking
-anybody else to make a wry face over it for him! Regrets? What should
-he regret--save that he had lost the money that would enable him to
-maintain the old pace! Regrets! He would not even be thinking of it now
-if that young fool had not crossed his path, and he, the bigger fool of
-the two, had not tried to play the game of the blind leading the blind!
-
-Repay a debt! Fie had not even displayed originality--only a sort of
-absurd mimicry of the boy's father! He was taunting himself now, mocking
-at himself mercilessly. What good had it done! How much different would
-it be with young Rogers than it had been with himself when Rogers'
-father, an old and intimate friend of his own father's, had taken him
-home one night just before the final crash, and had talked till dawn in
-kindly earnestness, pleading with him to change his ways before it was
-too late! True, it had had its effect. The effect had lasted two days!
-But somehow, for all that, he had never been able to forget the old
-gentleman's face, and the gray hairs, and the soft, gentle voice,
-and the dull glow of the fire in the grate that constantly found a
-reflection in the moist eyes fixed so anxiously upon him.
-
-What imp of perversity had inspired him to consider that a debt, and
-prompt him to repay it to the son! Why had he not left well enough
-alone! What infernal trick of memory had caused him to recognise the boy
-at the moment of their first meeting! He had known the other in the old
-days only in the casual way that one of twenty-two would know a boy of
-fifteen still in short trousers!
-
-He started up from the bunk impulsively, walked to the stove, wrenched
-the door open, flung in another stick of wood savagely, and began to
-pace the shack with the sullen fury of a caged beast. The passion within
-the man was rising to white heat. Run out of Ton-Nugget Camp! The
-story would spread. A nasty story! It meant that he was run out of the
-Yukon--his four years here, and not unprofitable years, at an end! It
-was a life he had grown to like because it was untrammelled; a life
-in which, at least in intervals, when the surplus cash was in hand, he
-could live in Dawson for a brief space at a dizzier pace than ever!
-
-He was Three-Ace Artie here--or Arthur Leroy--it did not matter
-which--one took one's choice! And now--what was he to be next--and
-where!
-
-Tell them what he had done, crawl to them, beg them to let him
-stay--never! If he answered them at all, it would be in quite a
-different way, and--his eyes fixed again upon the bag of gold that
-Sergeant Marden had left on the table. A bone flung to a cur as he was
-kicked from the door! The finger nails bit into the palms of Three-Ace
-Artie's hands.
-
-“Damn you!” he gritted, white-lipped. “Damn every one of you!”
-
-And this was his reward for the only decent thing that he could remember
-ever having done in his life--the thought with all its jibing mockery
-was back once more. It added fuel to his fury. It was he, not the Kid,
-who had had his lesson! And it was a lesson he would profit by! If it
-was the only decent thing he had ever done--it would be the last! They
-had intended him for a priest of God in the old days! He threw back his
-head and laughed until the room reverberated with his hollow mirth. He
-had come too damnably near to acting the part that afternoon, it seemed!
-A priest of God! Blasphemy, unbridled, unlicensed, filled his soul. He
-snatched up the bottle of whisky, and poured a glass full to the brim.
-
-“A toast!” he cried. “On your feet, Raymond! Up, Monsieur Leroy! Artie,
-Three-Ace Artie--a toast! Drink deep, _mes braves!_” He lifted the glass
-above his head. “To our liege lord henceforth, praying pardon for our
-lapse from grace! To his Satanic Majesty--and hell!” He drained the
-glass to its dregs, and bowed satirically. “I can not do honour to the
-toast, sire, by snapping the goblet stem.” He held up the glass again.
-“It is only a jelly tumbler, and so--” It struck with a crash against
-the wall of the shack, as he hurled it from him, and smashed to
-splinters.
-
-For a moment, clawing at his throat as the raw spirit burned him,
-staring at the broken glass upon the floor, he stood there; then, with a
-short laugh, he pushed both table and chair closer to the stove and sat
-down--and it was as though it were some strange vigil that he had set
-himself to keep. Occasionally he laughed, occasionally he filled the
-other glass and drank in gulps, occasionally he thought of Canuck
-John, who spoke English very poorly and whose eager snatching at the
-opportunity to speak French had brought about a certain intimacy between
-them, and, thinking of Canuck John, there came a sort of wondering frown
-as at the intrusion of some utterly extraneous thing, occasionally as
-his eyes encountered the bag of gold there came a glitter into their
-depths and his lips parted, hard drawn, over set teeth; but for the most
-part he sat with a fixed, grim smile, his hands opening and shutting on
-his knees, staring straight before him.
-
-Once he got up, and, making the circuit of the shack, collected his
-personal belongings and packed them into his kit bag--and from under a
-loose plank in the corner of the room took out a half dozen large and
-well-filled pokes, tucked them carefully away beneath the clothing in
-the bag, strapped up the bag, replaced the loosened plank, and returned
-to his chair.
-
-Sullen, bitter, desperate, soul reckless with the knowledge that all
-men's hands were against him, as his were against them, he sat there.
-The hours passed unreckoned and unnoticed. There was no dawn to come,
-for there was no sun to rise; but it grew a little lighter. A stillness
-as of the dead hung over Ton-Nugget Camp; and then out of the stillness
-a dog barked--and became a yapping chorus as others joined in.
-
-He reached out mechanically for the bottle--it was empty. He stared at
-it for a moment in bewildered surprise. It had been full, untouched
-when he had placed it on the table. He stood up--steadily, firmly. He
-stretched out his hand in front of him, and studied it critically--there
-was not a tremor. His hand dropped to his side. One could absorb a good
-deal of liquor under mental stress without resultant physical effect! He
-was not drunk. Only his nerves were raw and on edge. That bag of gold
-on the table! His eyes narrowed again upon it for the hundredth time.
-It flaunted itself in his face. It had become symbolic of the unanimous
-contempt with which Ton-Nugget Camp bade him be gone! Damn their cursed
-insolence! It was an entirely inadequate reply to go away and simply
-leave it lying there on the table--and yet what else was there to do?
-The dogs were barking again. That would be Marden harnessing up his
-huskies. The sergeant would be along now in another minute or two.
-
-He turned from the table, picked up his overcoat, put it on, and
-buttoned it to the throat. He put on his cap, jerked his kit bag up from
-the floor, slung one strap over his shoulder, moved toward the door--and
-paused to gaze back around the room. The lamp burned on the table, the
-empty whisky bottle, the glass, the bag of gold beside it; in the
-stove a knot crackled with a report like a pistol shot. Slowly his
-eyes travelled around over the familiar surroundings, his home of four
-months; and slowly the colour mounted in his cheeks--and suddenly, his
-eyes aflame, a low, tigerish cry on his lips, he flung the kit bag from
-his shoulder to the ground.
-
-They would tell the story through the Yukon of how he had fleeced and
-robbed a drunken boy of his last cent on earth--but they would never
-tell the story of how he had slunk away in the darkness like a whipped
-and mangy cur! He feared neither God nor devil, norman, nor beast! That
-had been his lifelong boast, his creed. He feared them now no more than
-he had ever feared them! He listened. There was a footstep without, but
-that was Marden's. Not one of all the camp afoot to risk contamination
-by bidding him goodbye! Well, it was not good-bye yet! Ton-Nugget Camp
-would remember, his adieu! Passion was rocking the man to the soul, the
-sense of bitter injury, smarting like a gaping wound, was maddening him
-beyond all self-control. He tore loose the top button of his coat--and
-turned sharply to face the door. Here was Marden now. He wanted no
-quarrel with Mar-den, but----
-
-The door opened. He felt himself mechanically push his cap back on his
-forehead, felt a sort of unholy joy sweep in a wild, ungovernable surge
-upon him, felt every muscle of his body stiffen and grow rigid in a
-fierce and savage elation, and he heard a sound that he meant for a
-laugh chortle from his lips. It was not Marden standing there--it was
-Murdock Shaw.
-
-And then he spoke.
-
-“Come in, and shut the door, Murdock,” he said in a velvet voice. “I
-thought my luck was out tonight.”
-
-“It's not worth while,” the miner answered. “Mar-den's getting ready to
-go now, and I only came to bring you a message from Canuck John.”
-
-“I've got one for you that you'll remember longer!”--Three-Ace Artie's
-smile was ghastly, as he moved back toward the table in a kind of
-inimical guarantee that the floor space should be equally divided
-between them. “Come in, Murdock, if you are a man--_and shut that
-door_.”
-
-The miner did not move.
-
-“Canuck John is dead,” he said tersely.
-
-“What's that to do with me--or you and me!”--there was a rasp in
-Three-Ace Artie's voice now. “It's you who have started me on the little
-journey that I'm going to take, you know, and it's only decent to use
-the time that's left in bidding me good-bye.”
-
-“I didn't come here to quarrel with you,” Shaw said shortly. “Canuck
-John regained consciousness for a moment before he died. He couldn't
-talk much--just a few words. We don't any of us know his real name, or
-where his home is. From what he said, it seems you do. He said: 'Tell
-Three-Ace Artie--give goodbye message--my mother and--' And then he
-died.”
-
-Three-Ace Artie's fingers were twisting themselves around the bag of
-gold that he had picked up from the table.
-
-“I thought so!” he snarled. “You were yellow this afternoon. I thought
-you hadn't the nerve to come here, unless you figured you were safe some
-way or another. And so you think you are going to hide behind a dead man
-and the sanctimonious pathos of a dying message! Well, I'll see you
-both damned first! Do you hear!” White to the lips with the fury that,
-gathering all through the night, was breaking now, he started toward the
-other, his hand clutching the bag of gold.
-
-Involuntarily the miner stepped back still closer to the door.
-
-“That's not the way out for you!” whispered Three-Ace Artie hoarsely.
-“If you take it, I'll drop you in the snow before you're ten yards up
-the street! Damn you, we'll play this hand out now for keeps! You've
-started something, and we'll finish it. You've rid the camp and rid
-Alaska of a tainted smell, have you? You sneaked around behind my back
-with your cursed righteousness to give me a push further on the road to
-hell! I know your kind--and, by God, I know your breed! Four years ago
-on the White Pass you took a man's last dollar for a hunk of bread. He
-could pay or starve! You sleek skunk--do you remember? Your conscience
-has been troubling you perhaps, and so you went around the camp and
-collected this, did you--_this!_” He held up the bag of gold above his
-head. “No? You didn't recognise me again? Well, no matter--take it back!
-Tell Ton-Nugget Camp I gave it back to you--to keep!” In a flash his arm
-swept forward, and, with all his strength behind it, he hurled the bag
-at the other's head.
-
-It struck full on the miner's forehead--and dropped with a soft thud on
-the floor. The man reeled backward, swayed, and clawed at the wall of
-the shack for support--and while he swayed a red spot dyed his forehead,
-and a crimson stream ran zigzag down over eye and cheek.
-
-And Three-Ace Artie laughed, and stooped, and picked up his kit bag,
-and swung one strap over one shoulder as before--Sergeant Marden,
-stern-faced, was standing on the threshold of the open door.
-
-“I guess my luck is out after all. You win, Murdock!” smiled Three-Ace
-Artie grimly--and brushed past the sergeant out of the shack.
-
-The dog-team was standing before the door. He dropped his kit bag on
-the sled, and strode on down the street. Here and there lights were
-beginning to show from the shack windows. Once a face was pressed
-against a pane to watch him go by, but no voice spoke to him. It was
-silent, and it was dark.
-
-Only the snow was white. And it was cold--cold as death.
-
-Presently Sergeant Marden and the dog-team caught up with him.
-
-“He'll need a stitch or two in his head,” said the sergeant gruffly.
-
-Raymond Chapelle, alias Arthur Leroy, alias Three-Ace Artie, made no
-reply. In his soul was anarchy; in his heart a bitter mockery that
-picked a quarrel with Almighty God.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III--THE CURÉ
-
-|RAYMOND CHAPELLE, once known as Three-Ace Artie, and now, if the
-cardcase in his pocket could be relied upon for veracity, as one Henri
-Mentone--though the cardcase revealed neither when nor where that
-metamorphosis had taken place, nor yet again the nature of Monsieur
-Henri Mentone's pursuits in life--was engaged in the rather futile
-occupation of staring out through the car window into a black and
-objectless night. He was not, however, deeply concerned with the night,
-for at times he shifted his gaze around the smoking compartment, which
-he had to himself, and smiled cynically. The winter of the Yukon had
-changed to the springtime of lower French Canada--it was a far cry from
-Ton-Nugget Camp, from Dawson and the Pacific, to the little village of
-St. Marleau on the banks of the St. Lawrence, where the river in its
-miles of breadth was merging with the Atlantic Ocean!
-
-St. Marleau! That was where Canuck John had lived, where the old folks
-were now--if they were still alive. The cynical smile deepened. The only
-friend he had was--a dead man! The idea rather pleased him, as it had
-pleased him ever since he had started for the East. Perhaps there was a
-certain sentimentality connected with what he was about to do, but
-not the sickly, fool sentimentality that he had been weak enough to be
-guilty of with the Kid in Ton-Nugget Camp! He was through with that!
-Here, if it was sentiment at all, it was a sentiment that appealed to
-his sporting instincts. Canuck John had put it up to him--and died. It
-was a sort of trust; and the only man who trusted him was--a dead man.
-He couldn't throw a dead man down!
-
-He laughed softly, drumming with his carefully manicured fingers on the
-window pane. Besides, there was too much gossip circulating between the
-Pacific Coast and Alaska to make it profitable for a gambler who
-had been kicked out of the Yukon for malpractice to linger in that
-locality--even if he had shaved off his beard! The fingers, from the
-window pane, felt in a sort of grimly ruminative way over the smooth,
-clean-shaven face. So, as well East as anywhere, providing always that
-he gave Montreal a wide berth--which he had!
-
-Canuck John, of course, had not meant to impose any greater trust than
-the mere writing of a letter. But, like Murdock Shaw and the rest of
-Ton-Nugget Camp, he, Raymond, did not know Canuck John's name. If Canuck
-John had ever told him, and he had a hazy recollection that the other
-once had done so, he had completely forgotten it. Of St. Marleau,
-however, Canuck John had spoken scores of times. That made a letter
-still possible, of course--to the postmaster of St. Marleau. But it was
-many years since Canuck John had left there; Canuck John could not write
-himself and therefore his people would have had no knowledge of his
-whereabouts, and to write the postmaster that a man known as Canuck
-John had died in Ton-Nugget Camp was, to say the least of it, open
-to confusing possibilities in view of the fact that in those many and
-intervening years Canuck John was not likely to have been the only one
-who had left his native village to seek a wider field. And since he,
-Raymond, was coming East in any event, he was rather glad than otherwise
-that for the moment he had a definite objective in view.
-
-Anyway, Canuck John had been a good sort--and that was all there was
-to it! And, meanwhile, this filled in, as it were, a hiatus in his own
-career, for he had not quite made up his mind exactly in what direction,
-or against whom specifically, he could pit his wits in future--to the
-best advantage to himself. One thing only was certain, henceforth he
-would be hampered by no maudlin consideration of ethics, such, for
-instance, as had enabled him to state truthfully to the Kid that he had
-never stacked a card in his life. To the winds with all that! He had had
-his lesson! Fish to his net, hereafter, would be all that came his way!
-If every man's hand was against him, his own would not remain palsied!
-For the moment he was in funds, flush, and well provided for; and for
-the moment it was St. Marleau and his dead friend's sorry legacy--to
-those who might be dead themselves! That remained to be seen! After
-that, as far as he was concerned, it was _sauve qui peut_, and--
-
-Monsieur Henri Mentone looked up--and, with no effort to conceal his
-displeasure, Monsieur Henri Mentone scowled. A young priest had entered
-the smoking compartment, and was now in the act of settling himself on
-the opposite seat.
-
-“Good evening,” nodded the other pleasantly. “I think we have been
-travelling companions since Quebec.” He produced a cigar, lighted it,
-and smiled. “It is not a very pleasant night, is it? There appears to be
-a very high wind.”
-
-Raymond Chapelle rattled a newspaper out of his pocket, rattled it open
-brusquely--and retired behind it.
-
-“It appears to be windy!” he growled uninvitingly.
-
-He glanced at the remainder of his cigar. It was a very good cigar, and
-he did not care to sacrifice it by giving the other all the elbow
-room that the entire smoking compartment of the car afforded--as he,
-otherwise, would not have hesitated an instant to do! If his soul
-had nurtured any one especial hatred in its late period of bitter and
-blasphemous fury, it was a hatred of religion and all connected with
-it. He detested the sight of a priest. It always made him think of that
-night in Ton-Nugget Camp when memories had got the better of him. A
-priest of God! He hated them all. And he made no distinction as between
-creeds. They were all alike. They were Murdock Shaws! And he, if his
-father had had his way, would now be wearing a _soutane_, and dangling
-a crucifix from his neck, and sporting one of those damnable round hats
-like the man in front of him!
-
-“Do you know this country at all?” inquired the priest.
-
-“I do not,” Raymond answered curtly from behind his paper.
-
-The other did not appear to notice the rebuff.
-
-“No more do I,” he said engagingly. “I have never been below Quebec
-before, and I am afraid, unfortunately, that I am about to suffer for my
-ignorance. I am going to St. Marleau.”
-
-Raymond lowered his paper, and for the first time gave the other more
-than a casual glance. He found his _vis-à-vis_ to be dark-eyed, of
-rather pleasant features--this he admitted grudgingly--and a young man
-of, he judged, about his own age.
-
-“What is the matter with St. Marleau?” Personal interest prompted him
-to ask the question; nothing could prompt him to infuse even a hint of
-affability into his tones.
-
-The priest shrugged his shoulders, and smiled whimsically.
-
-“The matter with St. Marleau is that it is on the bank of the river,
-and that the station is three miles away. I have been talking to the
-conductor. I did not know that before.”
-
-Raymond had not known it before either. The information did not please
-him. He had taken it as a matter of course that the railroad would set
-him down at the village itself.
-
-“Well?” he prompted sourly.
-
-“It was what caused me to take a particular interest in the
-weather”--the priest waved his cigar philosophically. “I shall have to
-walk, I presume. I am not expected until to-morrow, and the conductor
-tells me there is nothing but a small station where we stop.”
-
-Raymond would have to walk too.
-
-“It is unfortunate!” he observed sarcastically. “I should have thought
-that you would have provided against any such contingencies by making
-inquiries before you started.”
-
-“That is true,” admitted the priest simply. “I am entirely to blame, and
-I must not complain. I was pleasurably over-excited perhaps. It is my
-first charge, you see. The curé of St. Marleau, Father Allard, went away
-yesterday for a vacation--for the summer--his first in many years--he
-is quite an old man”--the young priest was waxing garrulous, and was no
-longer interesting. Raymond peered out of the car window with a new and
-personal concern in the weather. There was no rain, but the howl of the
-wind was distinctly audible over the roar of the train.
-
-“I was to have arrived to-morrow, as I said”--the priest was rattling
-on--“but having my preparations all completed to-day and nothing to
-detain me, I--well, as you see, I am here.”
-
-Raymond was picturing realistically, and none too happily, a three-mile
-walk on a stormy night over a black, rutted country road. The prospect
-was not a soothing one.
-
-“Monsieur is perhaps a commercial traveller?” ventured the young curé
-amiably, by way of continuing the conversation.
-
-Raymond folded his paper deliberately, and replaced it in his pocket.
-There was a quick, twisted smile on his lips, but for the first time his
-voice was cordiality itself.
-
-“Oh, no,” he said. “On the contrary, I make my living precisely as
-does Monsieur le Curé, except perhaps that I have not always the same
-certainty of success.”
-
-“Ah!” The young priest leaned forward interestingly. “Then you----”
-
-“Yes,” said Raymond, and now a snarl crept into his voice. “I let
-some one else toil for the money--while I hold out the hat!” He rose
-abruptly, and flung his cigar viciously in the general direction of the
-cuspidor. “I am a parasite on my fellow men, monsieur--a gambler,” he
-said evenly, and walked to the door.
-
-Over his shoulder he caught the amazement on the young priest's face,
-then the quick, deep flush of indignation--and then the corridor shut
-him off from the other, and he chuckled savagely to himself.
-
-He passed on into the main body of the car, took his bag from the rack
-over the seat that he had occupied, and went on into the next car in the
-rear. The priest, he had noticed, had previously been occupying the
-same car as himself. He wanted no more of the other! And as for making
-a companion of him on the walk from the station to St. Marleau, he would
-sooner have walked with the devil! As a matter of fact, he was prepared
-to admit he would not have been wholly averse to the devil's company.
-But a priest of God! The cynical smile was back on his lips. They were
-all alike--he despised them all. But he nevertheless confessed to a
-certain commiseration; he was sorry for God--the devil was much less
-poorly served!
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV--ON THE ROAD TO ST. MARLEAU
-
-|RAYMOND descended from the train on the opposite side from the station
-platform. He proposed that Monsieur le Curé, _pro tem_., of St. Marleau,
-should have a start sufficient to afford a guarantee against the
-possibility of any further association with the other that night!
-
-A furious gust of wind eddied down the length of the train, caught at
-his travelling bag, and banged it violently against his knees. He swore
-earnestly to himself, as he picked his way further back across the
-siding tracks to guard against the chance of being seen from the
-platform when the train started on again. It was obviously not going to
-be a pleasant experience, that walk! It was bad enough where he stood,
-here on the trackside, somewhat sheltered by the train; in the open the
-wind promised to attain the ferocity of a young tornado!
-
-The train pulled out; and across the tracks a light glimmered from a
-window, and behind the light a building loomed up black and formless.
-The light, filtering out on the platform, disclosed two figures--the
-priest, and, evidently, the station agent.
-
-Raymond sat down on his bag and waited. It was intensely dark, and
-he was far enough away to be secure from observation. He grinned
-maliciously, as he watched a shadowy sort of pantomime in which the
-priest clutched and struggled continually with his _soutane_ as the wind
-kept wrapping it around his legs.
-
-The other might be less infatuated with skirts by the time St. Marleau
-was reached!
-
-The two figures moved down the platform together, and Raymond lost sight
-of them in the darkness. He rose, picked up his bag, walked a few yards
-along the track in the opposite direction to that which they had taken,
-crossed over the mainline, and clambered upon the platform. Here he
-stumbled over a trunk. The curé's, presumably! He continued on along the
-platform slowly--under the circumstances a little information from the
-station agent would not come in amiss. He jammed his slouch hat firmly
-down on his head, and yanked the brim savagely over his eyes against the
-wind. This was likely to prove considerably more than he had bargained
-for! Three miles of it! And for what! He began to call himself a fool.
-And then, the station agent returning alone from the lower end of the
-platform, head down, buffeting the wind, and evidently making for the
-curé's trunk to house it for the night, Raymond stepped forward and
-accosted the other.
-
-The man brought himself up with a jerk. Raymond drew the other into the
-shelter of the station wall. In the meagre light from the window a few
-yards away, he could make out the man's face but very indistinctly; and
-the other, in his turn, appeared equally at a disadvantage, save that,
-possibly, expecting it to be an acquaintance from the village, he found
-a stranger instead.
-
-“_'Cré nom!_” ejaculated the man in surprise. “And where did you come
-from?”
-
-“From the train--naturally,” Raymond answered. “You were busy with some
-one, and I waited.”
-
-“Yes, that is so! I see!” The other nodded his head. “It was Father
-Aubert, the young curé who is come to the village. He has but just
-started, and if you are going to St. Marleau, and hurry, you will have
-company over the road.”
-
-“Never mind about him!” said Raymond shortly. “I am not looking for that
-kind of company!”
-
-“_Tiens!_” exclaimed the man a little blankly. “Not that kind of
-company--but that is strange! It is a bad night and a lonely walk--and,
-I do not know him of course, but he seemed very pleasant, the young
-curé.”
-
-“I daresay,” said Raymond, and shrugged his shoulders. “But I do not
-intend to walk at all if I can help it. Is there no horse to be had
-around here?”
-
-“But, no!”--the other's tones expressed mild reproof at the question.
-“If there had been, I would have procured it for the curé. There is
-nothing. It is as near to the village as anywhere.”
-
-“And that is three miles!” muttered Raymond irritably.
-
-“It is three miles by the road, true, monsieur; but the village itself
-is not nearly so far. There is a short cut. If you take the path that
-leads straight ahead where the road turns off to the left to circle the
-woods, it will bring you to the brow of the hill overlooking the village
-and the river, and you will come out just where the road swings in again
-at the tavern. You save at least a mile.”
-
-Raymond brightened.
-
-“Ah! A tavern!” he cried. “That is better! I was beginning to think the
-cursed----”
-
-“But--wait!” the man laughed suddenly. “It is not what you think! I
-should not advise you to go there.”
-
-“No?” inquired Raymond, “and why not?”
-
-“She is an old hag, an _excommuniée_, old Mother Blondin, who lives
-there--and her son, who is come back for the past week from God knows
-where with a scar all over his ugly face, is no better. It is not a
-tavern at all. That is a name we have for it amongst ourselves. We call
-it the tavern because it is said that she makes her own _whiskey-blanc_
-and sells it on the sly, and that there are some who buy it--though when
-her son is back she could not very well have enough for any customers.
-He has been drunk for a week, and he is a devil.”
-
-“Your Mother Blondin is evidently no fool!” observed Raymond ironically.
-“And so it is said there are some who buy it--eh? And in turn I suppose
-she could buy out every farmer in the village! She should have money,
-your Mother Blondin! Hers is a profitable business.”
-
-“Yes,” said the other. “For me, that is the way I look at it. It is
-gossip that her stocking is well lined; but I believe the gossip. It is
-perhaps well for her if it is so, for she will need it. She is getting
-old and does not see very well, though, _bon Dieu_, she is still sharp
-enough with her wits! But”--his shoulders lifted in a shrug--“the way to
-the village, eh? Well, whether you take the road or the path, you arrive
-at Mother Blondin's. You go down the hill from there, and the village is
-on each side of you along the bank of the river. Ask at the first house,
-and they will show you the way to Madame Dussault's--that is the only
-place to go. She keeps a boarding house whenever there is anybody to
-board, for it is not often that any stranger comes to St. Marleau. Are
-you going to stay long?”
-
-“I don't know,” said Raymond pleasantly--and ignored the implied
-invitation for further confidences.
-
-“Well, if you like,” offered the station agent, “you can leave your bag
-here, and it can go over with the cure's trunk in the morning. He said
-he would send somebody for it then. You won't find it easy carrying that
-bag a night like this.”
-
-“Oh, it's only a small one; I guess I can manage it all right,” said
-Raymond lightly. He extended his hand--the priest was far enough along
-by now so that he would not overtake the other; and, though it was still
-early, not much after eight o'clock, the countryside was not given to
-keeping late hours, and, if he was to reach St. Marleau before this
-Dussault household, for instance, had retired for the night, it was time
-he started. “Much obliged for the information! Goodnight!” he smiled,
-and picked up his bag--and a moment later, the station behind him, was
-battling in the face of furious wind gusts along the road.
-
-It was very dark; and the road was execrable, full of ruts and hollows
-into which he was continually stumbling. He had a flashlight in his bag;
-but, bad as the walking was, it was, after all, he decided, the lesser
-of the two evils--if he used the flashlight, he ran a very large risk of
-inviting the companionship of the priest ahead of him! Also, he had not
-gone very far before he heartily regretted that he had not foregone the
-few little conveniences that the bag contained, and had left the thing
-behind. The wind, as it was, threatened to relieve him of it a score of
-times. Occasionally he halted and turned his back, and stood still for a
-breathing spell. His mood, as he went along, became one that combined
-a sullen stubbornness to walk ten miles, if necessary, once he had
-started, and an acrimonious and savage jeer at himself for having ever
-been fool enough to bring about his present discomfiture.
-
-Finally, however, he reached the turn of the road referred to by the
-station agent, and here he stood for a moment debating with himself the
-advisability of taking the short cut. His eyes grown accustomed to the
-darkness, he could distinguish his surroundings with some distinctness,
-and he made out a beaten track that led off in the same direction which,
-until then, he had been following; but also, a little beyond this
-again, he made out a black stretch of wooded land. He shook his head
-doubtfully. The short cut was a mere path at best, and he might, or
-might not, be able to follow it through the trees. If he lost it, and it
-would be altogether too easy a thing to do, his predicament would not
-be enviable. It was simply a question of whether the mile he might
-save thereby was worth the risk. He shook his head again--this time
-decisively.
-
-“I'm not much on the 'straight and narrow' anyhow!” he muttered
-facetiously--and started on again, following the road.
-
-Gradually the road and the trees began to converge; and presently,
-the road swerving again, this time sharply toward the river, he found
-himself travelling through the woods, and injected into the midst of
-what seemed like the centre of some unearthly and demoniacal chorus
-rehearsing its parts--the wind shrieked through the upper branches of
-the trees, and moaned disconsolately through the lower ones; it cried
-and sobbed; it screamed, and mourned, and sighed; and in the darkness,
-still blacker shapes, like weird, beckoning arms, the limbs swayed to
-and fro. And now and then there came a loud, ominous crackle, and then a
-crash, as a branch, dried and rotten, came hurtling to the ground.
-
-“Damn it,” confessed Raymond earnestly to himself, “I don't like this! I
-wish St. Marleau was where Canuck John is now!”
-
-He quickened his pace--or, rather, tried to do so; but it was much
-blacker here than out in the open, and besides the road now appeared to
-be insanely full of twists and turns, and in spite of his efforts his
-progress was no faster.
-
-It seemed interminable, never-ending. He went on and on. A branch
-crashed down louder than before somewhere ahead of him. He snarled in
-consonance with the wind-shrieks and the wind-moans that now came to
-hold a personal malevolence in their pandemonium for himself. His coat
-caught once on a projecting branch and was torn. He cursed Canuck John,
-and cursed himself with abandon. And then abruptly, as the road twisted
-again, he caught the glimmer of a light through the trees--and his eyes
-upon the light, rather than upon the ground to pick his way, he stumbled
-suddenly and pitched forward over something that was uncannily soft and
-yielding to the touch.
-
-With a startled cry, Raymond picked himself up. It was the body of a man
-sprawled across the road. He wrenched open his bag, and, whipping out
-his flashlight, turned it upon the other.
-
-The man lay upon his back, motionless, inert; the white, ghastly face,
-blood-streaked, was twisted at a sharp angle to the body, disclosing a
-gaping wound in the head that extended from the temple back across
-the skull--and a yard away, mute testimony to its tragic work, lay the
-rotten limb of a tree, devoid of leaves, perhaps ten feet in length and
-of the thickness of one's two fists, its end jagged and splintered where
-it had snapped away from its parent trunk.
-
-It was the priest--Father Aubert, the young curé of St. Marleau.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V--THE “MURDER”
-
-|RAYMOND stooped to the other's side. He called the man's name--there
-was no answer. He lifted the priest's head--it sagged limply back again.
-He felt quickly for the heart beat--there was no sign of life. And then
-Raymond stood up again.
-
-It was the nature of the man that, the sudden shock of his discovery
-once over, he should be cool and unperturbed. His nerves were not easily
-put to rout under any circumstances, and a life in the Great North,
-where the raw edges were turned only too often, left him, if not
-calloused, at least composed and, in a philosophical way, unmoved at the
-sight before him.
-
-“Tough luck--even for a priest!” he muttered, not irreverently. “The
-man's dead, right enough.”
-
-He glanced around him, and his eyes fixed again on the glimmer of
-light through the trees. That was the tavern undoubtedly--old Mother
-Blondin's, the ex_communiée_. He shrugged his shoulders, and a grim
-smile flickered across his lips. She too had her quarrel with the
-church, but even so she would hardly refuse temporary sanctuary to a
-dead man. The priest couldn't be left here lying in the road, and if
-Mother Blondin's son was not too drunk to help carry the body to
-the house, it would solve the problem until word could be got to the
-village.
-
-He took up his bag--he could not be cumbered with that when he returned
-to get the priest--and, the trees sparser here on what was obviously the
-edge of the woods, with the window light to guide him and his flashlight
-to open the way, he left the road and began to run directly toward the
-light.
-
-A hundred yards brought him out into a clearing--and then to his disgust
-he discovered that, apart possibly from another rent or two in his
-clothing, he had gained nothing by leaving the road. It had evidently
-swung straight in toward the house from a point only a few yards further
-on from where he had left the priest, for he was now alongside of it
-again!
-
-He grinned derisively at himself, slipped his flashlight into his
-pocket--and, on the point of starting toward the house, which, with only
-a small yard in front of it, was set practically on the edge of the road
-itself, he halted abruptly. There was only one lighted window that he
-could see, and this was now suddenly darkened by a shadowy form from
-within, and indistinctly he could make out a face pressed close against
-the window pane.
-
-Raymond instinctively remained motionless. The face held there, peering
-long and intently out into the night. It was rather strange! His own
-approach could not have been heard, for the howl of the wind precluded
-any possibility of that; and neither could he be seen out here in the
-darkness. What was it that attracted and seemed to fascinate the watcher
-at the window? Mechanically, he turned his head to look behind and
-around him. There was nothing--only the trees swaying in the woods;
-the scream and screech, and the shrill whistling of the wind; and, in
-addition now, a rumbling bass, low, yet perfectly distinct, the sullen
-roar of beating waves. He looked back at the window--the face was gone.
-
-Raymond moved forward curiously. There was no curtain on the window,
-and a step or two nearer enabled him to see within. It was a typical
-bare-floored room of the _habitant_ class of smaller house that combined
-a living room and kitchen in one, the front door opening directly upon
-it. There was a stove at one end, with a box of cordwood beside it;
-drawn against the wall was a table, upon which stood a lighted lamp;
-and a little distance from the table, also against the wall, was an old,
-gray-painted, and somewhat battered _armoire_, whose top was strewn with
-crockeryware and glass dishes--there was little else in evidence, save a
-few home-made chairs with thong-laced seats.
-
-Raymond's brows gathered in a puzzled frown. Diagonally across the room
-from the window and directly opposite the stove was a closed door, and
-here, back turned, the man who had been peering out of the window--for
-the man was the only occupant of the room--was crouched with his ear
-against the panel. His bewilderment growing, Raymond watched the other.
-The man straightened up after a moment, faced around into the room, and,
-swaying slightly, a vicious smile of satisfaction on his lips, moved
-stealthily in the direction of the table.
-
-And now Raymond had no difficulty in recognising the man from the
-station agent's vivid, if cursory, description. It was Mother Blondin's
-son. A devil, the agent had called the other--and the man looked it! An
-ugly white scar straggled from cheek bone to twisted lip, the eyes were
-narrow and close set, the hair shaggy, and the long arms dangling from a
-powerful frame made Raymond think of a gorilla.
-
-Reaching the table, the man paused, looked furtively all around the
-room, and again appeared to be listening intently; then he stretched out
-his hand and turned the lamp half down.
-
-Raymond's frown deepened. The other was undoubtedly more or less drunk,
-but that did not explain the peculiar and, as it were, ominous way
-in which he was acting. What was the man up to? And where was Mother
-Blondin?
-
-The man moved down the room in the direction of the stove; and, the
-light dim now, Raymond stepped close to the window for a better view.
-The man halted at the end of the room, once more looked quickly all
-about him, gazed fixedly for an instant at the closed door where
-previously he had held his ear to the panel--and reached suddenly up
-above his head, the fingers of both hands working and clawing in a
-sort of mad haste at an interstice in the wall where the rough-squared
-timbers came imperfectly together.
-
-And then Raymond smiled sardonically. He understood now. It was old
-Mother Blondin's “stocking”! She had perhaps not been as generous as the
-son considered she might have been! The man was engaged in the filial
-occupation of robbing his own mother!
-
-“Worthy offspring--if the old dame doesn't belie her reputation!”
- muttered Raymond--and stepped to the front door. “However, it's an ill
-wind that blows nobody good, and, if the priest suffered, Mother Blondin
-can at least thank my interruption incident thereto for the salvage of
-her cash.” He opened the door and walked in coolly. “Good evening!” he
-said pleasantly.
-
-The man whirled from the wall--and with a scream, half of pain and half
-of startled, furious surprise, was jerked back against the wall again.
-His hand was caught as though in a trap. The hiding place had quite
-evidently been intended by Mother Blondin for no larger a hand than her
-own! The man had obviously wormed and wriggled his hand in between the
-timbers--and his hand would not come out with any greater ease than it
-had gone in! He wrenched at it, snarling and cursing now, stamping with
-his feet, and hurling his maledictions at Raymond's head.
-
-“It is not my fault, my friend,” said Raymond calmly. “Shall I help
-you?”
-
-He started forward--and stopped halfway across the room. The man had
-torn his hand loose, sending a rain of coin clinking to the floor, and,
-fluttering after it like falling leaves, a score or two of banknotes
-as well; and now, leaping around, he snatched up a heavy piece of the
-cordwood, and, swinging it about his head, his face working murderously,
-sprang toward Raymond.
-
-The bag dropped from Raymond's hand, and his face hardened. He had not
-bargained for this, but if----
-
-With a snarl and an oath the man was upon him; the cordwood whistled in
-its downward sweep, aimed full at his head. He parried the blow with his
-forearm, and, with a lightning-like movement, side-stepped and sent his
-right fist crashing to the other's jaw.
-
-It staggered the man for an instant--but only for an instant. Bellowing
-with rage, dropping the cordwood, heedless of the blows that Raymond
-battered into his face, by sheer bulk and weight he closed, his arms
-circling Raymond's neck, his fingers feeling for a throat-hold.
-
-Around the room they staggered, swaying, lurching. The man was half
-drunk, and, caught in the act of thievery, his fury was demoniacal.
-Again and again Raymond tried to throw the other off. The man was
-too big, too powerful for close quarters, and his only chance was an
-opportunity to use his fists. They panted heavily, the breath of the one
-hot on the other's cheek; and then, as they swung, Raymond was conscious
-that the door of the rear room was open, and that a woman was standing
-on the threshold. It was only a glance he got--of an old hag-like face,
-of steel-rimmed spectacles, of tumbling and dishevelled gray hair--the
-man's fingers at last were tightening like a vise around his throat.
-
-But the other, too, had seen the woman.
-
-“_Voleur!_ Thief!” he yelled hoarsely. “Smash him on the head with the
-stick, mother, while I hold him!”
-
-“You devil!” gritted Raymond--and with a wrench, a twist, his strength
-massed for the one supreme effort, he tore himself loose, hurling the
-other backward and away from him.
-
-There was a crash of breaking glass as the man smashed into the
-_armoire_; a wild laugh from the woman in the doorway--and, for the
-first time, a cry from Raymond's lips. The man snatched up a revolver
-from the top of the _armoire_.
-
-But quick as the other was, Raymond was quicker as he sprang and
-clutched at the man's hand. His face was sternly white now with the
-consciousness that he was fighting for no less than his life. Here,
-there, now across the room, now back again they reeled and stumbled,
-struggling for possession of the weapon, as Raymond strove to tear it
-from his antagonist's grasp. And now the woman, screaming, ran forward
-and picked up the piece of cordwood, and circling them, screaming still,
-aimed her blows at Raymond.
-
-One struck him on the head, dazing him a little... his brain began to
-whirl... he could not wrench the revolver from the man's hand... it
-seemed as though he had been trying through an eternity... his hands
-seemed to be losing their strength... another desperate jerk from
-the other like that and his hold would be gone, the revolver in the
-unfettered possession of this whisky-maddened brute, whose lips, like
-fangs, were flecked with slaver, in whose eyes, bloodshot, burned the
-light of murder... his fingers were slipping from their grip, and----
-
-There was a blinding flash; the roar of the report; the revolver
-clattered to the floor; a great, ungainly bulk seemed to Raymond to
-waver and sway before him in most curious fashion, then totter and crash
-with an impact that shook the house--or was it that ghastly, howling
-wind!--to the ground.
-
-Raymond reeled back against the _armoire_, and hung there gasping,
-panting for his breath, sweeping his hand again and again across his
-forehead. He was abominably dizzy. The room was swinging around and
-around; there were two figures, now on the ceiling, now on the floor--a
-man who lay flat on his back with his arms and legs grotesquely
-extended, and whose shirt was red-splotched; and a hag with streaming
-gray hair, who rocked and crooned over the other.
-
-“Dead! Dead! Dead!”--the wail rose into a high and piercing falsetto.
-The hag was on her feet and running wildly for the front door. “Murder!
-Thief! Murder! Murder!”
-
-The horrible screeching died away; and a gust of wind, swirling in
-through the door that blew open after the woman, took up the refrain:
-“Murder--murder--_murder!_”
-
-His head ached and swam. He was conscious that he should set his wits at
-work, that he should think--that somehow he was in peril. He groped his
-way unsteadily to where his bag lay on the floor. As he reached it, the
-wind blew the lamp out. He felt around inside the bag, found his flask,
-and drank greedily.
-
-The stimulant cleared his brain. He stood up, and stared around him in
-the darkness. His mind was active enough now--grimly active. If he were
-caught, he would swing for murder! He had only acted in self-defence, he
-had not even fired the shot, the revolver had gone off in the man's
-own hand--but there wasn't a chance for him, if he were caught. The
-old hag's testimony that he had come there as a thief--that was what
-undoubtedly she believed, and undoubtedly what she would swear--would
-damn him. And--cursed irony!--that conversation with the station
-agent, innocent enough then, would corroborate her now! Nor had he any
-reputation to fall back upon to bolster up his story if he faced the
-issue and told the truth. Reputation! He could not even give a plausible
-account of himself without making matters worse. A gambler from the
-Klondike! The _roué_ of Montreal! Would that save him!
-
-His only hope was to run for it--and at once. It could not be very far
-to the village, and it would not be long before that precious old hag
-had alarmed the community and returned with the villagers at her heels.
-But where would he go? There were no trains! It would be a man-hunt
-through the woods, and with so meagre a start that sooner or later they
-would get him. And even if he evaded them at first he would have no
-chance to get very far away from that locality, and ultimately he would
-have to reckon on the arrival of the police. It was probable that old
-Mother Blondin could not recognise him again, for the light had been
-turned down and she was partially blind; and he was certain that the
-station agent would not know his face again either--but both could, and
-would, supply a general description of his dress, appearance and
-build that would serve equally as well to apprehend him in that thinly
-populated country where, under such circumstances, to be even a stranger
-was sufficient to invite suspicion.
-
-Well, if to run for it was his only chance, he would take it! He stooped
-for his bag, and, in the act, stood suddenly motionless in a rigid sort
-of way. No! There was perhaps another plan! It seemed to Raymond that
-he held his breath in suspense until his brain should pass judgment upon
-it. The priest! The dead priest, only a little way off out there on the
-road! No--it was not visionary, nor wild, nor mad. If they _found_ the
-man that they supposed had murdered the old woman's son, they would
-not search any further. That was absurdly obvious! The priest was not
-expected until to-morrow. The only person who knew that the priest had
-arrived, and who knew of his, Raymond's, arrival, was the station agent.
-But the quarry once run to earth, there would be no reason for anybody,
-as might otherwise be the case in a far-flung pursuit, going to the
-station on a night like this. The priest's arrival therefore would not
-become known to the villagers until the next morning at the earliest,
-and quite probably not until much later, when some one from the village
-should drive over to meet the train by which he was expected to arrive.
-As a minimum, therefore, that gave him ten or twelve hours' start--and
-with ten or twelve hours free from pursuit, he could take very good care
-of the “afterwards”! Yes, it was the way! The only way! From what
-the priest had said in the train, it was evident that he was a total
-stranger here, and so, being unknown, the deception would not be
-discovered until the station agent told his story. Furthermore, the
-wound in the priest's head from the falling limb of the tree would be
-attributed to the blow the old hag had struck _him_ on the head with the
-cordwood! The inference, plausible enough, would be that he had run from
-the house wounded, only to drop at last to the ground on the spot
-where the priest, _dressed as the murderer_, was found! And
-besides--yes--there was other evidence he could add! The revolver, for
-instance!
-
-Quick now, his mind made up, Raymond snatched the flashlight from his
-pocket, swept the ray around the floor, located the weapon, and, running
-to it, picked it up and put it in his pocket.
-
-Every second was counting now. It might be five, or ten, or fifteen
-minutes before they got back from the village, he did not know--but
-every moment was priceless. There was still work to be done out there on
-the road, even after he was through here!
-
-He was across the room now by the rear wall, gathering up the coins
-and bills that the dead man had scattered on the floor. These, like the
-revolver, he transferred to his pocket. A thief, had been their cry.
-That was the motive! Well, he would corroborate it! There would be no
-mistake--until to-morrow--about their having found the guilty man!
-
-His hand was a slimmer hand than Blondin's--it slipped easily into the
-chink between the timbers. It was like a hollow bowl inside, and there
-was more money there. He scooped it out. Twice his hand went in again,
-until the hiding place was empty; and then, running back across the
-room, he grabbed up his bag, and rushed from the house.
-
-An instant he paused to listen as he reached the road; but there was
-only the howl of the storm, no sound that he could hear as yet from the
-direction of the village--though, full of ominous possibilities, he did
-not know how far away the village was!
-
-He ran on again at top speed, flashing his way along with his light, the
-wind at his back aiding him now. It would not matter if a stray gleam
-were seen by any one, if he could only complete his work in time--it
-would only be proof, instead of inference, that the murderer had run
-from the house along the road to the spot where he was found.
-
-He reached the priest, set down his bag, and, taking up the broken limb
-of the tree, carried it ten yards away around the turn of the road, and
-flung it in amongst the trees; then he was back once more, and bending
-over the priest. He worked swiftly now, but coolly and with grim
-composure, removing the priest's outer garments. He noted with intense
-relief that there was no blood on the clerical collar--that the blood,
-due to the twisted position of the other's head, had trickled from the
-cheek directly to the ground. It would have been an awkward thing--blood
-on the collar!
-
-It was not easy work. The limp form seemed a ton-weight in his arms, as
-he lifted it now this way, now that, to get off the other's clothes. And
-at times he recoiled from it, though the stake he was playing for was
-his life. It was unnerving business, and the hideous moaning of the wind
-made it worse. And mostly he must work by the sense of touch, for he
-could not hold the flashlight and still use both hands. But it was done
-at last, and now he took off his own clothes, and hastily donned the
-priest's.
-
-He must be careful now--a single slip, something overlooked in his
-pockets perhaps might ruin everything, and the ten or twelve hours'
-start, that was all he asked for, would be lost; but, equally, the
-pockets must not be too bare! He was hurriedly going through his
-discarded garments now. Mother Blondin's money and the revolver, of
-course, must be found there.
-
-The cardcase, yes, that could not do any harm... there were no letters,
-no one ever wrote to him... the trifling odds and ends must be left in
-the pockets too, they lent colour if nothing else... but his own money
-was quite a different matter, and he had the big sum in bills of large
-denominations with him that he had exchanged for the pokes of gold dust
-which he had brought from the Yukon. He tucked this money securely away
-under the _soutane_ he was now wearing, and once more bent over the
-priest.
-
-He had now to dress the priest in his, Raymond's, clothes. It was not
-readily accomplished; it was even more difficult than it had been
-to undress the man; and besides, as he worked now, he found himself
-fighting to maintain his coolness against a sort of reckless haste to
-have done with it that was creeping upon him. It seemed that he had been
-hours at the work, that with every second now the villagers in full cry
-must come upon him. Curse it, could he never button that collar and knot
-that tie! Why did the man's head wobble like that! The vest now! Now the
-coat!
-
-He stood up finally at the end, and flirted his hand across his brow.
-His forehead was clammy wet. He shivered a little; then, lips tight, he
-pulled himself together. He must make certain, absolutely certain that
-he had done nothing, or left nothing undone to rob him of those few
-precious hours that were so necessary to his escape.
-
-He nodded after a moment in a kind of ghastly approval--he had even hung
-the other's crucifix around his neck! There remained only the exchange
-of hats, and--yes, the bag--was there anything in the bag that would
-betray him? He dropped his own hat on the ground a yard away from the
-priest's head where the other's hat had rolled, picked up the priest's
-hat, and put it on--then bent down over the bag.
-
-He lifted his head suddenly, straining his ears to listen. What was
-that! Only the howl and unearthly moaning of the wind? It must have
-been, and his nerves were becoming over-strung, for the wind was blowing
-from the direction of the village, and it seemed as though the sound he
-had thought he heard, that he could not have defined, had come from the
-other direction. But the bag! Was there anything in it that he should
-not leave? He turned the flashlight into its interior, began to rummage
-through its contents--and then, kneeling there, it was as though he were
-suddenly frozen into that posture, bereft of all power of movement.
-
-It was only a lantern--but it seemed as though he were bathed in
-a blistering flood of light that poured full upon him, that burst
-suddenly, without warning, from around the turn of the road in the
-direction away from the village. He felt the colour ebb from his face;
-he knew a sickly consciousness of doom. He was caught--caught in the
-priest's clothes! Shadowy outlined there, was a horse and wagon. A
-woman, carrying the lantern, was running toward him--a man followed
-behind. The wind rose in demoniacal derision--the damnable wind that,
-responsible for everything that night, had brought this crowning
-disaster upon him!
-
-A girl's voice rang out anxiously:
-
-“What is it? Oh, what is it? What has happened?” Raymond felt himself
-grow unnaturally calm. He leaned solicitously over the priest's form.
-
-“I do not know”--he was speaking with sober concern. “I found this man
-lying here as I came along. He has a wound of some sort in his head, and
-I am afraid that he is dead.”
-
-The man, stepping forward, crossed himself hurriedly.
-
-The girl, with a sharp little cry, knelt down on the other side of the
-priest--and in the lantern's glimmer Raymond caught a glimpse of great
-dark eyes, of truant hair, wind-tossed, that blew about a young, sweet
-face that was full now of troubled sympathy.
-
-“And you,” she said quickly; “you are the new curé, monsieur. The
-station agent told us you had come, and we drove fast, my uncle and I,
-to try and catch up with you.”
-
-Raymond's eyes were on the priest's form. There was no need to simulate
-concern now, it was genuine enough, and it was as if something cold and
-icy were closing around his heart. He was not sure--great God, it was
-not possible!--but he thought--he thought the priest had moved. If that
-were so, he was doubly trapped! Cries came suddenly from the direction
-of the village, from the direction of old Mother Blondin's house. He
-heard himself acknowledging her remark with grave deliberation.
-
-“Yes,” he said, “I am Father Aubert.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI--THE JAWS OF THE TRAP
-
-|VOLEUR! Thief! Murder! Murder!”--it rose a high, piercing shriek, and
-the wind seemed to catch up the words and eddy them around, and toss
-them hither and thither until the storm and the night and the woods
-were full of ghouls chanting and screaming and gibbering their hideous
-melody: “_Voleur!_ Thief! Murder! Murder!”
-
-The girl, from the other side of the prostrate priest, rose in quick
-alarm to her feet, and lifted the lantern high above her head to peer
-down the road.
-
-“Listen!” she cried. “What does it mean? See the lights there! Listen!”
-
-The lantern lifted now, Raymond could no longer see the priest's face.
-He slipped his hand in desperately under the man's vest. He had felt
-there once before for the heart beat when he had first stumbled upon the
-other. In God's name, where was his nerve! He needed it now more than he
-had ever needed it in all his dare-devil career before. He had _thought_
-the priest had moved. If the man were alive, he, Raymond, was not only
-in a thousandfold worse case than if he had run for it and taken his
-chances--he had forfeited whatever chance there might have been. The
-mere fact that he had attempted to disguise himself, to assume the
-priest's garments as a means of escape, damned him utterly, irrevocably
-upon the spot. His hand pressed hard against the other's body. Yes,
-there was life there, a faint fluttering of the heart. No--no, it was
-only himself--a tremor in his own fingers. And then a miserable sense of
-disaster fell upon him. The wind howled, those shrieks still rang out,
-there came hoarse shouts and the pound of running feet, but above it
-all, distinct, like a knell of doom, came a low moan from the priest
-upon the ground.
-
-Sharply, as though it were being suddenly seared and burned, Raymond
-snatched away his hand; and his hand struck against something hard,
-and mechanically he gripped at it. The man was _alive!_ The glare of
-lanterns, many of them, flashed from the turn of the road. The village
-was upon the scene. The impulse seized him to run. There was the horse
-and wagon standing there. His lips tightened. Madness! That would be but
-the act of a fool! It was his wits, his brain, his nerve that was his
-only hope now--that cool, callous nerve that had never failed him in a
-crisis before.
-
-A form, unkempt, with gray, streaming, dishevelled hair, rushed upon him
-and the priest, and thrust a lantern into the faces of them both. It was
-the old hag, old Mother Blondin.
-
-“Here he is! Here he is!” she screamed. “It is he!”--her voice kept
-rising until, in a torrent of blasphemous invective, it attained an
-ear-splitting falsetto.
-
-It seemed to Raymond that a hundred voices were all talking at once;
-that the villagers now, as they closed in and clustered around him, were
-as a multitude in their numbers; and there was light now, a blaze of it,
-from a host of accursed lanterns jiggling up and down, each striving to
-thrust itself a little further forward than its fellow. And then upon
-Raymond settled a sort of grim, cold, ironical composure. The stakes
-were very high.
-
-“If you want your life, play for it!” urged a voice within him.
-
-The old hag, in an abandoned paroxysm of grief, rage and fury, was
-cursing, and shaking her lantern and her doubled fist at the priest;
-and, not content with that, she now began to kick viciously at the
-unconscious form.
-
-Raymond rose from his knees, and laid one hand quietly upon her arm.
-
-“Peace, my daughter!” he said softly. “You are in the presence of Holy
-Church, and in the presence perhaps of death.”
-
-She whirled upon him, her wrinkled old face, if possible, contorted more
-furiously than before.
-
-“Holy Church!” she raved. “Holy Church! Ha, ha! What have I to do with
-Holy Church that kicked me from its doors! Will Holy Church give me back
-my son? And what have you to do with this, you smooth-faced hypocrite!
-It is the law I want, not you to stand there and mumble while you smugly
-paw your crucifix!”
-
-It came quick and sharp--an angry sibilant murmur from the crowd, a
-threatening forward movement. Mechanically, Raymond's fingers fell away
-from the crucifix. It was the crucifix, dangling from his neck, that
-he had unconsciously grasped as he had snatched away his hand from the
-priest's body--and it was the crucifix that, equally unconscious of it,
-he had been grasping ever since. Strange that in his agitation he should
-have grasped at a crucifix! Strange that the act and his unconscious
-poise, as he held the crucifix, should have lent verisimilitude to the
-part he played, the rôle in which he sought sanctuary from death!
-
-His hand raised again. The murmuring ceased; the threatening stir was
-instantly checked. And then Raymond took the old woman by the shoulders,
-and with kindly force placed her in the arms of the two nearest men.
-
-“She does not know what she is saying,” he said gently. “The poor woman
-is distraught. Take her home. I do not understand, but she speaks of her
-son being given back to her, and----”
-
-“It is a murder, _mon père_,” broke in one of the men excitedly. “She
-came running to the village a few minutes ago to tell us that her
-son had been killed. It is this man here in the road who did it. She
-recognises him, you see. There is the wound in his head, and she said
-she struck him there with a piece of wood while he was struggling with
-her son.”
-
-The old woman was in hysteria now, alternately sobbing and laughing, but
-no longer struggling.
-
-“Murdered! Her son--murdered!” Raymond gasped in a startled way. “Ah,
-then, be very good to her! It is no wonder that she is beside herself.”
-
-They led her laughing and crying away.
-
-“The law! The law! I demand the law on him!”--her voice, now guttural,
-now shrill, quavering, virulent, out of control, floated back. “_Sacré
-nom de Dieu_, a life for a life, he is the murderer of my son!”
-
-And now, save for the howling of the storm, a silence fell upon the
-scene. Raymond glanced quickly about him. What was it now, what was
-it--ah, he understood! They were waiting for _him_. As though it were
-the most obvious thing in the world to do, as though no one would dream
-of doing anything else, the villagers, collectively and singly, laid
-the burden of initiative upon his clerically garbed shoulders. Raymond
-dropped upon his knees again beside the priest, pretending to make a
-further examination of the other's wound. He could gain a moment or two
-that way, a moment in which to think. The man, though still unconscious,
-was moaning constantly now. At any moment the priest might regain his
-senses. One thing was crucial, vital--in some way he must manouvre so
-that the other should not be removed from his own immediate surveillance
-until he could find some loophole of escape. Once the man began to talk,
-unless he, Raymond, were beside the other to stop the man's mouth, or at
-least to act as interpreter for the other's ramblings--the man was sure
-to ramble at first, or at least people could be made to believe so--he,
-Raymond, would be cornered like a rat in a trap, and, more to be feared
-even than the law, the villagers, in their fury at the sacrilege they
-would consider he had put upon them in the desecration of their priest,
-would show him scant ceremony and little mercy.
-
-He was cool enough now, quite cool--with the grim coolness of a man who
-realises that his life depends upon his keeping his head. Still he bent
-over the priest. He heard a girl's voice speaking rapidly--that would
-be the girl with the great dark eyes who had come upon him with the
-lantern, for there was no other woman here now since he had got rid
-temporarily of that damnable old hag.
-
-“... It is Father Aubert, the new curé. Labbée, at the station, told us
-he had arrived unexpectedly. We have brought his trunk that he was going
-to send for in the morning, and we drove fast hoping to catch up with
-him so that he would not have to walk all the way. We found him here
-kneeling beside that man there, that he had stumbled over as he came
-along. Labbée told us, too, of the other. He said the man seemed anxious
-to avoid Monsieur le Curé, and hung around the station until Father
-Aubert had got well started toward St. Marleau. He must have taken the
-path to the tavern, or he would not have been here ahead of Monsieur le
-Curé, and----”
-
-Raymond reached into the open travelling bag on the ground beside him,
-took out the first article coming to hand that would at all serve the
-purpose, a shirt, and, tearing it, made pretense at binding up the
-priest's head.
-
-“My thanks to you, mademoiselle!” he muttered soberly under his breath.
-“If it were not for the existence of that path----!” He shrugged his
-shoulders, and, his head lowered, a twisted smile flickered upon his
-lips.
-
-The girl had ceased speaking. They were all clustered around him,
-watching him. Short exclamations, bearing little evidence of good will
-toward the unconscious man, came from first one and then another.
-
-“... _Meurtrier!_... He will hang in any case! ... The better for him if
-he dies there!... What does it matter, the blackguard!...”
-
-Raymond rose to his feet.
-
-“No,” he said reprovingly. “It is not for us to think in that way. For
-us, there is only a very badly wounded man here who needs our help and
-care. We will give that first, and leave the rest in the hands of those
-who have the right to judge him if he lives. See now, some of you lift
-him as carefully as possible into the wagon. I will hold his head on my
-lap, and we will get to the village as quickly as we can.”
-
-It was a strange procession then that began to wend its way toward the
-village of St. Marleau. The wagon proved to be a sort of buckboard, and
-Raymond, clambering upon it, sitting with his back propped against the
-seat, held the priest's head upon his knees. Upon the seat itself
-the girl and her uncle resumed their places. With the unconscious man
-stretched out at full length there was no room for the trunk; but, eager
-to be of service to their new curé, so kind and gentle and tender to
-even a criminal for whom the law held nothing in reserve but the gallows
-and a rope, who was tolerant even of Mother Blondin in her blasphemies,
-the villagers quarrelled amongst themselves for the privilege of
-carrying it.
-
-They moved slowly--that the wounded man might not be too severely
-jarred. Constantly the numbers around the wagon were augmented. Women
-began to appear amongst them. The entire village was aroused. St.
-Marleau in all its history had known no such excitement before. A murder
-in St. Marleau--and the murderer caught, and dying they said, was being
-brought back to the village in the arms of the young curé, who had,
-a cause even for added excitement, arrived that evening instead of
-to-morrow as had been expected. Tongues clacked and wagged. It was like
-a furious humming accompaniment to the howling of the wind. But out of
-respect to the curé who held the dying man on his knees, they did not
-press too closely about the wagon.
-
-They passed the “tavern,” which was lighted now in every window, and
-some left the wagon at this point and went to the “tavern,” and others
-who had collected at the “tavern” joined the wagon. They began to
-descend the hill. And now along the road below, to right and left,
-lights twinkled from every house. They met people coming up the hill.
-There were even children now.
-
-Head bent over the priest, that twisted smile was back on Raymond's
-lips. The man moaned at intervals, but showed no further sign of
-returning consciousness. Would the other live--or die? Raymond's hands,
-hidden under the priest's head, were clenched. It was a question of his
-own life or the other's now--wasn't it? What hell-inspired ingenuity had
-flung him into this hideous maze in which at every twist and turn, as
-he sought some avenue of escape, he but found, instead, the way barred
-against him, his retreat cut off, and peril, like some soulless,
-immutable thing, closing irrevocably down upon him! He dared not leave
-the priest; he dared not surrender the other for an instant--lest
-consciousness should return. _But if the man died!_
-
-Raymond's face, as a ghastly temptation came, was as white as the
-upturned face between his knees. If the man died it would be simple
-enough. For a few days, for whatever time was necessary, he could play
-the rôle of priest, and then in some way--his brain was not searching
-out details now, there was only the sure confidence in himself that he
-would be equal to the occasion if only the chance were his--then in some
-way, without attendant hue and cry, without the police of every city in
-America loosed upon him, since the “murderer” of the old hag's son
-would be dead, he could disappear from St. Marleau. But the man was not
-dead--yet. And why should he even think the man would die! Because he
-_hoped_ for it? His lips twitched; and his hands, with a slow, curious
-movement, unclenched, and clenched again--and then with a sort of
-mental wrench, his brain, alert and keen, was coping with the immediate
-situation, the immediate danger.
-
-The girl and her uncle were talking earnestly together on the seat. And
-now, for all that he had not thrust himself forward in what had so far
-transpired, the man appeared to be of some standing and authority in the
-neighbourhood, for, turning from the girl, he called sharply to one of
-the crowd. A villager hurried in response to the side of the wagon, and
-Raymond, listening, caught snatches of the terse, low-toned instructions
-that were given.
-
-The doctor at Tournayville, and at the same time the police...
-yes--to-night... at once....
-
-“_Bien sur!_” said the villager briskly, and disappeared in the crowd.
-
-Then the girl spoke. Raymond could not hear very distinctly, but it was
-something about her mother being unprepared, and from that about a room
-downstairs, and he guessed that they were discussing where they would
-take the wounded man.
-
-He straightened up suddenly. That was a subject which concerned him very
-intimately. There was only one place where the priest could go, and that
-was where he, Raymond, went. They were on the village street now, and,
-twisting his head around to look ahead, he could make out the shadowy
-form of the church steeple close at hand.
-
-“Monsieur,” he called quietly to the man on the seat, “we will take this
-poor fellow to the _presbytère_, of course.”
-
-“Oh, but, Father Aubert”--the girl turned toward him quickly--“we were
-just speaking of that. It would not be at all comfortable for you. You
-see, even your own room there will not be ready for you, since you were
-not expected to-night, and you will have to take Father Allard's, so
-that if this man went there, too, there would be no bed at all for you.”
-
-“I hardly think I shall need any bed to-night, mademoiselle,” Raymond
-said gravely. “The man appears to be in a very critical condition. I
-know a little something of medicine, and I could not think of
-leaving him until--I think I heard your uncle say they were going to
-Tournayville for a doctor--until the doctor arrives.”
-
-“Yes, Monsieur le Curé,” said the man, screwing around in his seat,
-“that is so. I have sent for the doctor, and also for the police--but it
-is eight miles to Tournayville, and on a night like this there will be a
-long while to wait, even if the doctor is to be found at once.”
-
-“You have done well, monsieur,” commended Raymond--but under his breath,
-with a savage, ironical jeer at himself, he added: “And especially about
-the police, curse you!”
-
-“But, Monsieur le Curé,” insisted the girl anxiously, “I am sure
-that----”
-
-“Mademoiselle is very kind, and it is very thoughtful of her,” Raymond
-interposed gratefully; “but under the circumstances I think the
-_presbytère_ will be best. Yes; I think we must decide on the
-_presbytère_.
-
-“But, yes, certainly--if that is Monsieur le Curé's wish,” agreed the
-man. “Monsieur le Curé should know best. Valérie, jump down, and run on
-ahead to tell your mother that we are coming.”
-
-Valérie! So that was the girl's name! It seemed a strangely incongruous
-thought that here, with his back against the wall, literally fighting
-for his life, the name should seem somehow to be so appropriate to that
-dark-eyed face, with its truant, wind-tossed hair, that had come upon
-him so suddenly out of the darkness; that face, sweet, troubled, in
-distress, that he had glimpsed for an instant in the lantern's light.
-Valérie! But what was her other name? What had her mother to do with the
-_presbytère_, that the uncle should have sent her on with that message?
-And who was the uncle, this man here, and what was his name? And how
-much of all this was he, as Father Aubert, supposed already to know? The
-curé of the village, Father Allard--what correspondence, for instance,
-had passed between him and Father Aubert? A hundred questions were on
-his lips. He dared not ask a single one. They had turned in off the road
-now and were passing by the front of the church. He lowered his head
-close down to the priest's. The man still moaned in that same low and,
-as it were, purely mechanical way. Some one in the crowd spoke:
-
-“They are taking him to the _presbytère_.”
-
-At the rear of the wagon, amongst the bobbing lanterns, surrounded by
-awe-struck children and no less awe-struck women, he saw the trunk being
-trundled along by two men, each grasping one end by the handle. The
-crowd took up its spokesman's lead.
-
-... To the _presbytère_.... They are going to the _presbytère_.... The
-curé is taking him to the _presbytère_...
-
-“Yes, damn you!” gritted Raymond between his teeth. “To the
-_presbytère_--for the devil's masquerade!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII--AT THE PRESBYTÈRE
-
-
-|IT was Valerie who held the lamp; and beside her in the doorway stood
-a gentle-faced, silverhaired, slim little old lady--and the latter was
-another Valerie, only a Valerie whom the years in their passing had
-touched in a gentle, kindly way, as though the whitening hair and the
-age creeping upon her were but a crowning. And Raymond, turning to
-mount the stoop of the _presbytère_, as some of the villagers lifted the
-wounded priest from the wagon, drew his breath in sharply, and for an
-instant faltered in his step. It was as though, framed there in the
-doorway, those two forms of the women, those two faces that seemed to
-radiate an innate sanctity, were like guardian angels to bar the way
-against a hideous and sacrilegious invasion of some holy thing within.
-And Valerie's eyes, those great, deep, dark eyes burned into him.
-And her face, that he saw now for the first time plainly, was very
-beautiful, and with a beauty that was not of feature alone--for her
-expression seemed to write a sort of creed upon her face, a creed that
-frankly mirrored faith in all around her, a faith that, never having
-been startled, or dismayed, or disillusioned, and knowing no things for
-evil, accepted all things for good.
-
-And Raymond's step faltered. It seemed as though he had never seen a
-woman's face like that--that it was holding him now in a thrall that
-robbed his surroundings momentarily of their danger and their peril.
-
-And then, the next instant, that voice within him was speaking again.
-
-“You fool!” it whispered fiercely. “What are you doing! If you want your
-life, play for it! Look around you! A false move, a rational word from
-the lips of that limp thing they are carrying there behind you, and
-these people, who believe where you mock, who would kneel if you but
-lifted your hand in sign of benediction, would turn upon you with the
-merciless fury of wild beasts! You fool! You fool! Do you like the feel
-of hemp, as it tightens around your neck!”
-
-And then Raymond lifted his head, and his eyes, and with measured pace
-walked forward up the steps to where the two women stood.
-
-Valérie's introduction was only another warning to him to be upon his
-guard--she seemed to imply that he naturally knew her mother's name.
-
-“Father Aubert, this is my mother,” she said.
-
-With a sort of old-world grace, the elder woman bowed.
-
-“Ah, Monsieur le Curé,” she said quickly, “what a terrible thing to have
-happened! Valérie has just told me. And what a welcome to the parish for
-you! Not even a room, with that _pauvre_ unfortunate, _misérable_
-and murderer though he is, and----”
-
-“But it is a welcome of the heart, I can see that,” Raymond interposed,
-and smiled gravely, and took both of the old lady's hands in his own.
-“And that is worth far more than the room, which, in any case, I
-shall hardly need to-night. It is you, not I, who should have cause
-to grumble, for, to my own unexpected arrival, I bring you the added
-trouble and inconvenience of this very badly wounded and, I fear, dying
-man.”
-
-“But--that!” she exclaimed simply. “But Monsieur le Curé would never
-have thought of doing otherwise! Valérie meant only kindness, but she
-should not have made any other suggestion. It is for nothing else, if
-not this, the _presbytère! Le pauvre misérable_”--she crossed herself
-reverently--“even if he has blood that thought of doing otherwise!
-Valérie meant only kindness, but she should not have made any other
-suggestion. It is for nothing else, if not this, the _presbytère! Le
-pauvre misérable_”--she crossed herself reverently--“even if he has
-blood that is not his own upon him.”
-
-They were coming up the steps, carrying the wounded priest.
-
-“This way!” said the little old lady softly. “Valérie, dear, hold your
-lamp so that they can see. Ah, _le pauvre misérable_; ah, Monsieur le
-Curé!”
-
-The girl leading, they passed down a short hallway, entered a bedroom at
-the rear of the house, and Valérie set the lamp upon the table.
-
-Raymond motioned to the men to lay the priest upon the bed. He glanced
-quietly about him, as he moved to the priest's side. He must get these
-people away--there were reasons why he should be alone. Alone! His brain
-was like some horrible, swirling vortex. Why alone? For what reasons?
-Not that hellish purpose that had flashed so insidiously upon him
-out there on the ride down to the _presbytère!_ Not that! Strange how
-outwardly calm, how deadly calm, how composed and self-possessed he was,
-when such a thought had even for an instant's space found lodgment in
-his soul. It was well that he was calm, he would need to be calm--he
-was doing what that inner monitor had told him to do--he was playing the
-game--he was playing for his life. Well, he had only to dismiss these
-men now, who hung so curiously awe-struck about the bed, and then get
-rid of the women--no, they had gone now; Valérie, with her beautiful
-face, and those great dark eyes; and the mother, whose gray hair did
-not seem to bring age with it at all, and--no, they were back again--no,
-they were not--those were not women's steps entering the room.
-
-He had been making pretence at loosening the priest's collar, and he
-looked up now. The trunk! He had forgotten all about the trunk. The
-newcomers were two men carrying the trunk. They set it down against the
-wall near the door. It was a little more than probable that they had
-seized the opportunity afforded by the trunk to see what was going on
-in the room. They would be favoured amongst their fellows without! They,
-too, hats in hand, stared, curious and awe-struck, toward the bed.
-
-“Thank you, all of you,” Raymond heard himself saying in a low tone.
-“But go now, my friends, go quietly; madame and her daughter will give
-me any further assistance that may be needed.”
-
-They filed obediently from the room--on tiptoe--their coarse, heavy
-boots squeaking the more loudly therefor. Raymond's hands sought the
-priest's collar again, to loosen it this time with a definite object in
-view. He had changed only his outer garments with the other. He dared
-not have the priest undressed until he had made sure that there were no
-tell-tale marks on the underclothing; a laundry number, perhaps, that
-the police would pounce instantly upon. He found himself experiencing
-a sort of facetious soul-grin--detectives always laid great stress upon
-laundry marks!
-
-Again he was interrupted. With the collar in his hand, his own collar,
-that he had removed now from the priest's neck, he turned to see Valérie
-and her mother entering the room. They were very capable, those two--too
-capable! They were carrying basins of water, and cloths that were
-obviously intended for bandages. He had not meant to use any bandages,
-he had meant to--what?
-
-He forced a grave smile of approval to his lips, and nodded his head.
-
-The elder woman glanced about her a little in surprise.
-
-“Oh, are the men gone!” she exclaimed. “_Tiens!_ The stupids! But I will
-call one of them back, and he will help you undress _le pauvre_, Father
-Aubert.”
-
-It was only an instant before Raymond answered; but it seemed, before he
-did so, that he had been listening in a kind of panic for long minutes
-dragged out interminably to that inner voice that kept telling him to
-play the game, play the game, and that only fools lost their heads at
-insignificant little unexpected denouements. She was only suggesting
-that the man should be undressed; whereas the man must under no
-circumstances be undressed until--until----
-
-“I think perhaps we had better not attempt it in his condition until
-the doctor arrives, madame,” he said slowly, thoughtfully, as though his
-words were weighted with deliberation. “It might do far more harm than
-good. For the present, I think it would be better simply to loosen his
-clothing, and make him as comfortable as possible in that way.”
-
-“Yes; I think so, too,” said Valérie--she had moved a little table to
-the bedside, and was arranging the basins of water and the cloths upon
-it.
-
-“Of course!” agreed the little old lady simply. “Monsieur le Curé knows
-best.”
-
-“Yes,” said Valérie, speaking in hushed tones, as she cast an anxious
-look at the white, blood-stained face upon the bed, “and I think it is
-a mercy that Father Aubert knows something about medicine, for
-otherwise the doctor might be too late. I will help you, Monsieur le
-Curé--everything is ready.”
-
-He knew nothing about medicine--there was nothing he knew less about!
-What fiend had prompted him to make such a claim!
-
-“I am afraid, mademoiselle,” he said soberly, “that my knowledge is far
-too inadequate for such a case as this.”
-
-“We will be able to do something at least, father”--there was a brave,
-troubled smile in her eyes as she lifted them for an instant to his; and
-then, bending forward, with deft fingers she removed the torn piece of
-shirt from the wounded man's head.
-
-And then, between them, while the mother watched and wrung out the
-cloths, they dressed the wound, a ghastly, unsightly thing across the
-side of the man's skull--only it was Valerie, not he, who was efficient.
-And strangely, as once before, but a little while before, when out there
-in front of the house, it was Valerie, and not the man, and not the
-wound, and not the peril in which he stood that was dominant, swaying
-him for the moment. There was a wondrous tenderness in her hands as
-she worked with the bandages, and sometimes her hands touched his; and
-sometimes, close together, as they leaned over the bed together, her
-hair, dark, luxuriant, brushed his cheek; and the low-collared blouse
-disclosed a bare and perfect throat that was white like ivory; and the
-half parted lips were tender like the touch of her fingers; and in her
-face at sight of the gruesome wound, bringing an added whiteness,
-was dismay, and struggling with dismay was a wistful earnestness and
-resolution that was born of her woman's sympathy; and she seemed to
-steal upon and pervade his senses as though she were some dream-created
-vision, for she was not reality at all since his subconsciousness told
-him that in actual reality no one existed at all except that
-moaning thing upon the bed--that moaning thing upon the bed and
-himself--himself, who seemed to be swinging by a precarious hold, from
-which even then his fingers were slipping away, over some bottomless
-abyss that yawned below him. “Valérie! Valérie!” He was repeating her
-name to himself, as though calling to her for aid from the edge of that
-black gulf, and----
-
-“Fool!” jeered that inner voice. “Have you never seen a pretty girl
-before? She'd be the first to turn upon you, if she knew!”
-
-“You lie!” retorted another self.
-
-“Where's Three-Ace Artie gone?” inquired the voice with cold contempt.
-
-Raymond straightened up. Valérie, turning from the bed, gathered the
-basins and soiled cloths together, and moved quietly from the room.
-
-“Will he live, father?”--it was the little gray-haired woman, Valérie's
-mother, Valérie's older self, who was looking up into his face so
-anxiously, whose lips quivered a little as she spoke.
-
-Would the man _live!_ A devil's laugh seemed suddenly to possess
-Raymond's soul. They would be alone together, that gasping, white-faced
-thing on the bed, and himself; they would be alone together before
-the doctor came--he would see to that. There had been interruption,
-confusion... his brain itself was confusion... extraneous thoughts had
-intervened... but they would be _alone_ presently. And--great God!--what
-hellish mockery!--she asked _him_ if this man would _live!_
-
-“I am afraid”--he was not looking at her; his hand, clutching at the
-skirt of the _soutane_ he wore, closed and tightened and clenched--“I am
-afraid he will not live.”
-
-“Ah, _le pauvre!_” she whispered, and her eyes filled with tears. “Ah,
-Monsieur le Curé, I do not know these things so well as you. It is true
-that he is a very guilty man, but is not God very good and tender and
-full of compassion, father? Oh, I should not dare to say these things,
-for it is you who know what is right and best”--she had caught his
-sleeve, and was leading him across the room. “And Mother Church,
-Monsieur le Curé, is very merciful and very tender and very
-compassionate too--and, oh--and, oh--can there not be mercy and love
-even for such as he--must he lose his soul too, as well as his life?”
-
-Raymond, in a blind, wondering way, stared at her. The tears
-were streaming down her cheeks now. They had halted before a low,
-old-fashioned cupboard, an _armoire_ much like the _armoire_ in the old
-hag's house, and now she opened the doors in the lower portion, and took
-out a worn and rusty black leather bag, and set it upon the top of the
-_armoire_.
-
-“It is only to show you where it is, father, if--if it might be so--even
-for him--the Sacrament”--and, turning, she crossed the room, and meeting
-Valérie upon the threshold drew the girl away with her, and closed the
-door softly.
-
-It was a bag such as the parish priests carried with them on their
-visits to the sick and dying. Raymond eyed it sullenly. The Sacrament!
-
-“What have I to do with that!” he snarled beneath his breath.
-
-“Are you not a priest of God?”
-
-He whirled like a flash, startled, sweeping his glances around the room.
-And then he laughed in smothered, savage relief. It was only that voice
-within that chose a cursed mockery this time to put him upon his guard.
-
-He was staring now at the sprawled form on the bed, at a red stain that
-was already creeping through the fresh bandages. His face grew hard and
-set; a flush came and died away, leaving it an ashen gray.
-
-And then he stepped to the door--and listened--and locked it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII--THOU SHALT NOT KILL
-
-|IT seemed as though the stillness of death were already in the room;
-a stillness that was horrible and unnerving in contrast with the shrill
-swirling of the wind without, and the loud roar and pound of the waves
-breaking upon the shore close at hand beneath the windows.
-
-His face still set as in a rigid mould, features drawn in hard, sharp
-lines, then ashen gray now even upon the lips, Raymond crossed from the
-door to the nearer of the two windows. It was black outside, inky black,
-unnaturally black, relieved only by a wavering, irregular line of white
-where the waves broke into foam along the rocky beach--and this line,
-as it wavered, and wriggled, and advanced, and receded seemed to lend an
-uncanny ghostlike aspect to the blackness, and, as he strained his eyes
-out of the window, he shuddered suddenly and drew back. But the next
-instant he snarled fiercely to himself. Was he to lose his nerve because
-it was black outside, and because the waves were running high and
-creaming along the shore! He would have something shortly that would
-warrant him in losing his nerve if he faltered now--the hemp around
-his neck, rasping, chafing at his throat, the horrible prickling as the
-rough strands grew taut!
-
-He clutched at his throat mechanically, rubbing it with his fingers
-mechanically--and, as fiercely as before, snarled again. Enough of
-this! He was neither fool nor child. There was a sure way out from that
-dangling noose, cornered, trapped though he was--and he knew the way
-now. He reached up and drew down the window shade, and passed quickly to
-the other window and drew down the shade there as well.
-
-And then he turned, and stepped to the bed, and bent over the priest.
-
-There was the underclothing first. He must make sure of that--that there
-would be no marks of identification--that there would be nothing to rise
-up against him, a mute and mocking witness to his undoing. He loosened
-the man's clothing. It would not be necessary to take off the outer
-garments. It was much easier here with the man on a bed, and a light
-in the room than it had been out there on the road, and--ah! Lips
-compressed, he nodded sharply to himself. The undergarments were new.
-That precluded laundry marks--unless the man had had some marking put
-upon them himself. No, there was nothing--nothing but the maker's tag
-sewn in on the shirt at the back of the neck. He turned the priest over
-on the bed to complete his examination. There was nothing on any
-other part of the garments. The socks, then, perhaps? He pulled up
-the trousers' legs hurriedly. No, there was nothing there, either. He
-reached out to turn the priest over again--and paused. He could snip
-that maker's tag from the neck of the shirt just as easily in the
-position in which the man now lay, and--and the man's face would not
-be staring up at him. There was a cursed, senseless accusation in that
-white face, and the lip muscles twitched as though the man were about
-to shout aloud, to scream out--_murder!_ If only the fool had died out
-there in the woods, and would stop that infernal low moaning noise, and
-those strangling inhalations as he gasped for breath!
-
-Automatically, Raymond's fingers sought his penknife in its accustomed
-place in his vest pocket--and slipped down a smooth, unobstructed
-surface. His eyes followed his fingers in a sort of dazed, perplexed
-way, and then he laughed a little huskily. The _soutane!_ He had
-forgotten for the moment that he was a priest of God! It was the other
-who wore the vest, it was in the other's pocket that the knife was to be
-found. He had forgotten the devil's masquerade in the devil's whispering
-that was in his soul!
-
-He snatched the knife from the vest pocket, opened it, cut away the
-cloth tag, and with infinite pains removed the threads that had held the
-tag in place. He returned the knife to the vest pocket, and tucked the
-little tag away in one of his own pockets; then hastily rearranged
-the other's clothing again, and turned the man back into his original
-position upon the bed.
-
-And now! He glanced furtively all around the room. His hands crept out,
-and advanced toward the priest. It was a very easy thing to do. No one
-would know. No one but would think the man had died naturally. _Died!_
-It was the first time he had allowed his mind to frame a concrete
-expression that would fit the black thing that was in his soul.
-
-A bead of sweat spurted out from his forehead. His hands somehow would
-not travel very fast, but they were all the time creeping nearer to the
-priest's throat. He had only to keep on forcing them on their way...
-and it was not very far to go... and, once there, it would only take an
-instant. God, if that white face would not stare up at him like that...
-the eyes were closed of course... but still it stared.
-
-Raymond touched his lips with the tip of his tongue, and again and again
-circled the room with his eyes. Was that somebody there outside the
-window? Was that a step out there in the passageway? Were those
-_voices_ that chattered and gibbered from everywhere?
-
-He jerked back his hands, and they fell to his sides, and he shivered.
-What was it? What was the matter? What was it that he had to do? It
-wasn't murder. That was a lie! The man wouldn't live anyhow, but he
-might live long enough to talk. It was his life or the other's, wasn't
-it? If he were caught now, there was no power on earth could save him.
-On earth? What did he mean by that? What other power was there? It was
-only a trite phrase he had used.
-
-What was he hesitating about? It was the only chance he had.
-
-“Get it done! Get it done, and over with, you squeamish fool!” prodded
-that inner voice savagely.
-
-His hands crept out again. Of course! Of course! He knew that. He must
-get it done and over with. Only--only, great God, why did his hands
-tremble so! He lifted one of them to his forehead and drew it away
-dripping wet. What did that voice want to keep nagging him for! He knew
-what he had to do. It was the only way. If the priest were dead,
-he, Raymond, would be safe. There would be no question as to who the
-murderer of Blondin was--and the priest would be buried and that would
-be the end of it. And--yes! He had it all now. It was almost too simple!
-He, Raymond, as the curé of the village, after a day or two, would meet
-with an accident. A boating accident--yes, that was it! They would find
-an upturned boat and his hat floating on the water perhaps--but they
-would never find the body! He need only, in the interval of those few
-days, gather together from somewhere some clothes into which he could
-change, hide in the woods after the “accident,” and at night make his
-final escape.
-
-“Of course!” snapped the voice impatiently. “I've been telling you that
-all along! There would be no further investigation as to the murder; and
-only a sorrowful search along the shore, free from all suspicion, for
-the body of Father Aubert. Well, why don't you act? Are you going to
-fling your life away? Are you afraid? Have you forgotten that it is
-growing late, that very soon now the doctor and the police will be
-here?”
-
-Afraid! No; he wasn't afraid of God or devil, or man or beast--that was
-his creed, wasn't it? Only that damnable face still stared up at him,
-and he couldn't get his hands near enough to--to do the work.
-
-Slowly, inch by inch, his face as white and set as chiselled marble, his
-hands crept forward again. How soft the bare, exposed throat looked that
-was almost at his finger tips now. Would it _feel_ soft to the touch,
-or--he swayed unsteadily, and crouched back, that cold shiver passing
-over him. It was strange that he should shiver, that he should find it
-cold. His brain was afire, and it whirled, and whirled, and whirled;
-and devils laughed in his soul--and yet he stood aghast at the abhorrent
-deed.
-
-Wait! He would be able to think clearly in an instant. He must do it--or
-die himself. Yes, yes; it was the _touch_ of his flesh against the
-other's flesh from which he shrank, the _feel_ of his fingers on the
-other's throat that held him back--that was it! Wait! He would remedy
-that. That would have been a crude, mad way in any case. What had he
-been thinking of! It would have left a mark. It would have been sure to
-have left a mark. Perhaps they would not have noticed it, but it would
-have invited the risk. There was a better way, a much better way--and a
-way in which that face wouldn't be able to stare up at him any more, a
-way in which he wouldn't hear that moaning, and that rattling, and
-that struggling for breath. The man was almost dead now. It was only
-necessary to take that other pillow there, and hold it tightly over
-the other's face. _That_ wouldn't leave any mark. Yes, the pillow! Why
-hadn't he thought of that before! It would have been all over by now.
-
-Once more his hands began to creep up and outward. He leaned far over
-the bed, reaching for the pillow--and something came between the
-pillow and his hands. He glanced downward in a startled way. It was the
-crucifix hanging from his neck. With a snarl, he swung it away. It came
-back and struck against his knuckles. He tried to wrench it from his
-neck. It would not come--but, instead, one hand slipped through the
-chain, and pushed the crucifix outward, and for an instant held it there
-between him and that white, staring face. He pulled his hand away. And
-the crucifix swung backward and forward. And he reached again for the
-pillow, and the crucifix was still between. And his hands, trembling,
-grew tangled in the chain.
-
-“Thou shalt not kill!”--it was not that inner voice; it was a voice like
-the girl's, like Valerie's, soft and full of a divine compassion. And
-her fingers in tenderness seemed to be working with that bandaged head;
-and the dark eyes, deep and steadfast, were searching his soul. “Thou
-shalt not kill!”
-
-And with a low, horror-stricken cry, Raymond staggered backward from the
-bed, and dropped into a chair, and buried his face in his hands.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX--UNTIL THE DAWN
-
-|THE man upon the bed moaned continuously now; the wind swirled around
-the corners of the house; the waves pounded in dull, heavy thuds upon
-the shore without--but Raymond heard none of it. It seemed as though he
-were exhausted, spent, physically weak, as from some Titanic struggle.
-He did not move. He sat there, head bowed, his hands clasped over his
-face.
-
-And then, after a long time, a shudder shook his frame--and he rose
-mechanically from his chair. The door was locked, and subconsciously he
-realised that it should not be found locked when that somebody--who
-was it?--yes, he remembered now--the doctor from Tournayville, and the
-police--it should not be found locked when the doctor and the police
-arrived, because they would naturally ask him to account for the reason
-of it. He crossed to the door, unlocked it, and returned to the chair.
-
-And now he stared at the crucifix upon his breast. For the second time
-that night it had played a strange and unaccountable rôle. He lifted
-his hand to his head. His head still ached from the blow the old hag
-had struck him with the piece of wood. That was what was the matter.
-His head ached and he could not therefore think logically, otherwise
-he would not be fool enough to hold the crucifix responsible for--for
-preventing him from what he had been about to do a little while ago.
-
-His face grew cynical in its expression. The crucifix had nothing to
-do with it, nor had the vision of the girl's eyes, nor had the imagined
-sound of Valérie's voice--those things were, all of them, but the form
-his true self had taken to express itself when he had so madly tormented
-himself with that hellish purpose. If it had not been things like that,
-it would have been something else. He could not have struck down a
-wounded and defenceless man, he could not have committed murder in cold
-blood like that. He had recoiled from the act, because it was an act
-that was beyond him to perform, that was all. That man there on the bed
-was as safe, as far as he, Raymond, was concerned, as though they were
-separated by a thousand miles.
-
-“Sophistry!” sneered that inner voice. “You are a weak-kneed fool, and
-very far from a heroic soul that has been tried by fire! Well, you will
-pay for it!” Raymond cast a quick startled glance at the bed, and half
-rose from his seat. What--again? Was that thought back again? He sank
-back in the chair, gripping the chair-arms until his knuckles cracked.
-
-“I won't!” he mumbled hoarsely. “By God--I won't! Maybe--maybe the man
-will die.”
-
-And then impulsively he was on his feet, and pacing the room, a sweep of
-anger upon him.
-
-“What had I to do with all this!” he cried, in low, fierce tones. “And
-look at me!”--he had halted before the dresser, and was glaring into the
-mirror. “_Look at me!_” A face whose pallor was enhanced by the black
-clerical garb gazed contortedly back at him; the crucifix, symbol
-of peace, hung from about his neck. He tucked it hastily inside the
-_soutane_. “Look at me!” he cried, and clenched his fist and shook it at
-the mirror. “Three-Ace Artie! That's you there, Three-Ace Artie! God or
-the devil has stacked the cards on you, and----”
-
-He swung sharply about--listening; and, on the instant, with grave
-demeanour, his face soberly composed, faced the doorway.
-
-The door opened, and two men stepped into the room. One was a big
-man, bearded, with a bluff and hearty cast of countenance that seemed
-peculiarly fitting to his immense breadth of shoulder; the other, a sort
-of foil as it were, was small, sharp featured, with roving black eyes
-that, as he stood on the threshold and on tiptoe impatiently peered over
-the big man's shoulder, darted quick little glances in all directions
-about him. The small man closed the door with a sort of fussily
-momentous air.
-
-“_Tiens_, Monsieur le Curé”--the big man extended his hand to Raymond.
-“I am Doctor Arnaud. And this is Monsieur Dupont, the assistant chief
-of police of Tournayville. Hum!”--he glanced toward the bed. “Hum!”--he
-dropped Raymond's hand, and moved quickly to the bedside.
-
-Raymond shook hands with the little man.
-
-“Bad business! Bad business!”--the assistant chief of police of
-Tournayville continued to send his darting glances about the room, and
-the while he made absurd clucking noises with his tongue. “Yes, very
-bad--very bad! I came myself, you see.”
-
-There was much about the man that afforded Raymond an immense sense of
-relief. He was conscious that he infinitely preferred Monsieur Dupont,
-assistant chief of the Tournayville police, to Sergeant Marden, of the
-Royal North-West Mounted.
-
-“Yes,” said Raymond quietly, “I am afraid it is a very serious matter.”
-
-“Not at all! Not at all!” clucked Monsieur Dupont, promptly
-contradicting himself. “We've got our man--eh--what?” He jerked his hand
-toward the bed. “That's the main thing. Killed Théophile Blondin, did
-he? Well, quite privately, Monsieur le Curé, he might have done worse,
-though the law does not take that into account--no, not at all, not at
-all. Blondin, you understand, Monsieur le Curé, was quite well known to
-the police, and he was”--Monsieur Dupont pinched his nose with his thumb
-and forefinger as though to escape an unsavoury odour--“you understand,
-Monsieur le Curé?”
-
-“I did not know,” replied Raymond. “You see, I only----”
-
-“Yes, yes!” interrupted Monsieur Dupont. “Know all that! Know all that!
-They told me on the drive out. You arrived this evening, and found this
-man lying on the road. Rude initiation to your pastorate, Monsieur le
-Curé. Too bad!” He raised his voice. “Well, Doctor Arnaud, what is the
-verdict--eh?”
-
-“Come here and help me,” said the doctor, over his shoulder. He was
-replacing the bandage, and now he looked around for an instant at
-Raymond. “I can't improve any on that. It was excellent--excellent,
-Monsieur le Curé.”
-
-“The credit is not mine,” Raymond told him. “It was Mademoiselle
-Valérie. But the man, doctor?”
-
-“Not a chance in a thousand”--the doctor shook his head. “Concussion of
-the brain. We'll get his clothes off, and make him comfortable. That's
-about all we can do. He'll probably not last through the night.”
-
-“I will help you,” offered Raymond, stepping forward.
-
-“It's not necessary, Monsieur le Curé,” said the doctor. “Monsieur
-Dupont here can----”
-
-“No,” interposed Monsieur Dupont. “Let Monsieur le Curé help you. We
-will kill two birds with one stone that way. We have still to visit the
-Blondin house. We do not know this man's name. We know nothing about
-him. While you are undressing him, I will search through his clothing.
-Eh? Perhaps we shall find something. I do not swallow whole all the
-story I have heard. We shall see what we shall see.”
-
-Raymond glanced swiftly at Monsieur Dupont. Because the man clucked with
-his tongue and had an opinion of himself, he was perhaps a very long way
-from being either stupid or a fool. Monsieur Dupont might not prove so
-preferable to Sergeant Marden as he had been so quick to imagine.
-
-“Yes,” agreed Raymond. “Monsieur Dupont is right, I am sure. I will
-assist you, doctor, while he makes his search.”
-
-Monsieur Dupont stepped briskly around to the far side of the bed,
-and peered intently into the unconscious man's face, as he waited for
-Raymond and the doctor to hand him the first article of clothing. He
-kept clucking with his tongue, and once his eyes narrowed significantly.
-
-Raymond experienced a sense of disquiet. Was the man simply posing for
-effect, or was he acting naturally--or was there something that had
-really aroused the other's suspicions. He handed the priest's coat, or,
-rather, his own, to Monsieur Dupont.
-
-Monsieur Dupont began to go through the pockets--like one accustomed to
-the task.
-
-“Hah, hah!” he ejaculated suddenly. “Monsieur le Curé, Monsieur le
-Docteur, I call you both to witness! All this loose money in the side
-pocket! The side pocket, mind you, and the money loose! It bears out the
-story that they say Mother Blondin tells about the robbery. I was not
-quite ready to believe it before. See!” He dumped the money on the bed.
-“You are witnesses.” He gathered up the money again and replaced it
-in the pocket. “And here”--from another pocket he produced the
-revolver--“you are witnesses again.” He broke the revolver.
-“Ah--h'm--one shot fired! You see for yourselves? Yes, you see. Very
-well! Continue, messieurs! There may be something more, though it would
-certainly appear that nothing more was necessary.” He nodded crisply at
-both Raymond and the doctor.
-
-The vest yielded up the cardcase. Monsieur Dupont shuffled over the
-dozen or so of neatly printed cards that it contained.
-
-“_Là, là!_” said he sharply. “Our friend is evidently a smooth one. One
-of the clever kind that uses his brains. Very nice cards--very plausible
-sort of thing, eh? Yes, they are. Very! Henri Mentone, eh? Henri
-Mentone, alias something--from nowhere. Well, messieurs, is there still
-by any chance something else?”
-
-There was nothing else. Monsieur Dupont, however, was not satisfied
-until he had examined, even more minutely than Raymond had previously
-done, the priest's undergarments. The doctor turned from the bed.
-Monsieur Dupont rolled all the clothing into a bundle, and tucked it
-under his arm.
-
-“Well, let us go, doctor!” jerked out Monsieur Dupont. “If he dies, he
-dies--eh? In any case he can't run away. If he dies, there is Mother
-Blondin to consider, eh? She struck the blow. They would not do much to
-her perhaps, but she would have to be held. It is the law. If he does
-not die, that is another matter. In any case I shall remain in the
-village to keep an eye on them both--yes? Well then, well then--eh?
---let us go!”
-
-The doctor glanced hesitantly toward the bed.
-
-“I have done all that is possible for the moment,” he said; “but perhaps
-I had better call madame. She and mademoiselle have insisted on sitting
-up out there in the front room.”
-
-Raymond's head was bowed.
-
-“Do not call them,” he said gravely. “If the man is about to die, it is
-my place to stay, doctor.”
-
-“Yes--er--yes, that is so,” acquiesced the doctor. “Very well then, I'll
-pack them off to bed. I shan't be long at Mother Blondin's. Must pay an
-official visit--I'm the coroner, Monsieur le Curé. I'll be back as soon
-as possible, and meanwhile if he shows any change”--he nodded in the
-direction of the bed--“send for me at once. I'll arrange to have some
-one of the men remain out there within call.”
-
-“Very well,” said Raymond simply. “You will be gone--how long, doctor?”
-
-“Oh, say, an hour--certainly not any longer.”
-
-“Very well,” said Raymond again.
-
-He accompanied them to the door, and closed it softly behind them
-as they stepped from the room. And now he experienced a sort of cool
-complacency, an uplift, the removal as of some drear foreboding that had
-weighed him down. The peril in a very large measure had vanished. The
-policeman had swallowed the bait, hook and all; and the doctor had said
-there was not one chance in a thousand that the man would live until
-morning. Therefore the problem resolved itself simply into a matter of
-two or three days in which he should continue in the rôle of curé--after
-that the “accident,” and this accursed St. Marleau could go into
-mourning for him, if it liked, or do anything else it liked! He would be
-through with it!
-
-But those two or three days! It was not altogether a simple affair,
-that. If only he could go now--at once! Only that, of course, would
-arouse suspicion--even if the man did not regain consciousness, and did
-not blurt out something before he died. But why should he keep harping
-on that point? Any fool could see that his safest game was to play the
-hand he held until the “murderer” was dead and buried, and the matter
-legally closed forever. He had already decided that a dozen times,
-hadn't he? Well then, these two or three days! He must plan for these
-two or three days. There were things he should know, that he would be
-expected to know--not mere church matters; his Latin, the training of
-the old school days, a prayer-book, and his wits would carry him through
-anything of such a nature which might intervene in that short time. But,
-for instance, the mother of Valérie--who was she? How did she come to
-be in charge of the _presbytère?_ What was her name--and Valérie's? It
-would be very strange indeed if, coming there for the summer to supply
-for Father Allard, he was not acquainted with all such details.
-
-Raymond's glance fell upon the trunk. The next instant he was hunting
-through his pockets, but making an awkward business of it thanks to the
-unaccustomed skirt of his _soutane_. A bunch of keys, however, rewarded
-his efforts. He stepped over to the trunk, trying first one key and
-then another. Finally, he found the right one, unlocked the trunk--and,
-suddenly, his hand upon the uplifted lid, the blood left his face,
-and he stood as though paralysed, staring at the doorway. He was
-caught--caught in the act. True, she had knocked, but she had opened
-the door at the same time. The little old lady, Valerie's mother, was
-standing there looking at him--and the trunk was open.
-
-“Monsieur le Curé,” she said, “it is only to tell you that we have made
-up a couch for you in the front room that you can use when the doctor
-returns.”
-
-He found his voice. Somehow she did not seem at all surprised that he
-had the trunk open.
-
-“It is very kind and thoughtful of you, madame.”
-
-“_Mais, non!_” she exclaimed, with a smile. “But, no! And if you need
-anything before the doctor gets back, father, you have only to call. We
-shall hear you.”
-
-“I will call if I need you”--Raymond was conscious that he was speaking,
-but that the words came only in a queer, automatic kind of a way.
-
-She poked her head around the door for a sort of anxious, pitying,
-quick-flung glance at the bed; then looked questioningly at Raymond.
-
-Raymond shook his head.
-
-“_Ah, le pauvre! Le pauvre misérable!_” she whispered. “Good-night,
-Monsieur le Curé. Do not fail to call if you want us.”
-
-The door closed. As once before in a night of vigil, in that far-north
-shack, Raymond stretched out his hand before him to study it. It was not
-steady now--it trembled and shook. He looked at the trunk--and then a
-low, hollow laugh was on his lips. A fool and a child he was, and his
-nerves must be near the breaking point. Was there anything strange, was
-there anything surprising in the fact that Monsieur le Curé should be
-discovered in the act of opening Monsieur le Curé's trunk! And it had
-brought a panic upon him--and his hand was shaking like an old man's.
-He was in a pretty state, when coolness was the only thing that stood
-between him and--the gallows! Damn that cursed moaning from the bed!
-Would it never cease!
-
-For a time he stood there without moving; and then, his composure
-regained, the square jaw clamped defiantly against his weakness, he drew
-up a chair, and, sitting down, began to rummage through the trunk.
-
-“François Aubert--eh?” he muttered, as he picked up a prayerbook and
-found the fly-leaf autographed. “So my name is François! Well, that is
-something!” He opened another book, and, on the fly-leaf again, read an
-inscription. “'To my young friend'--eh? and from the Bishop! The Bishop
-of Montigny, is it? Well, that also is something! I am then personally
-acquainted with this Monsignor Montigny! I will remember that! And--ha,
-these!--with any luck, I shall find what I want here.”
-
-He took up a package of letters, ran them over quickly--and frowned in
-disappointment. They were all addressed in a woman's hand. He was not
-interested in that. It was the correspondence from Father Allard that he
-wanted. He was about to return the letters to the trunk and resume his
-search, when he noticed that the topmost envelope bore the St. Marleau
-postmark. He opened it hurriedly--and his frown changed to a nod of
-satisfaction. It was, after all, what he wanted. Father Allard was
-blessed with the services of a secretary, that was the secret--Father
-Allard's signature was affixed at the bottom of the neatly written page.
-
-Raymond leaned back in his chair, and proceeded to read the letters.
-Little by little he pieced together, from references here and there, the
-information that he sought. It was a sort of family arrangement, as it
-were. The old lady was Father Allard's sister, and her name was Lafleur;
-and the husband was dead, since, in one instance, Father Allard referred
-to her as the “Widow Lafleur,” instead of his customary “my sister,
-Madame Lafleur.” And the uncle, who it now appeared was the notary and
-likewise the mayor of the village, was Father Allard's brother.
-
-Raymond returned the letters to the trunk, and commenced a systematic
-examination of the rest of its contents, which, apart from a somewhat
-sparse wardrobe, consisted mainly of books of a theological nature. He
-was still engaged in this occupation, when he heard the front door open
-and close. He snatched the prayer-book out of the trunk, shut down the
-lid, and, with a finger between the closed pages of the book, stood up
-as the doctor came briskly into the room.
-
-“I'm back a little ahead of time, you see,” announced Doctor Arnaud with
-a pleasant nod, and stepped at once across the room to the wounded man.
-
-For perhaps five minutes the doctor remained at the bedside; then,
-closing his little black bag, he laid it upon the table, and turned to
-Raymond.
-
-“Now, father,” he said cheerily, “I understand there's a couch all ready
-for you in the front room. I'll be here for the balance of the night.
-You go and get some sleep.”
-
-Raymond motioned toward the bed.
-
-“Is there any change?” he asked.
-
-The doctor shook his head.
-
-“Then,” said Raymond quietly, “my place is still here.” He smiled
-soberly. “The couch is for you, doctor.”
-
-“But,” protested the doctor, “I----”
-
-“The man is dying. My place is here,” said Raymond again. “If you are
-needed, I have only to call you from the next room. There is no reason
-why both of us should sit up.”
-
-“Hum--_tiens_--well, well!”--the doctor pulled at his beard. “No, of
-course, not--no reason why both should sit up. And if you insist----”
-
-“I do not insist,” interposed Raymond, smiling again. “It is only that
-in any case I shall remain.”
-
-“You are a fine fellow, Monsieur le Curé,” said the bluff doctor
-heartily. He clapped both hands on Raymond's shoulders. “A fine fellow,
-Monsieur le Curé! Well, I will go then--I was, I confess it, up all last
-night.” He moved over to the door--and paused on the threshold. “It is
-quite possible that the man may revive somewhat toward the end, in which
-case--Monsieur Dupont has suggested it--a little stimulation may enable
-us to obtain a statement from him. You understand? So you will call me
-on the instant, father, if you notice anything.”
-
-“On the instant,” said Raymond--and as the door closed behind the
-doctor, he went back to his seat in the chair.
-
-The man would die, the doctor had said so again. That was assured.
-Raymond fingered the prayer-book that he still held abstractedly. That
-was assured. It seemed to relieve his brain from any further necessity
-of thinking, thinking, thinking--his brain was very weary. Also he was
-physically weary and tired. But he was safe. Perhaps a few days of this
-damnable masquerade, but then it would be over.
-
-He began to turn the pages of the prayer-book--and then, with a
-whimsical shrug of his shoulders, he began to read. He must put the
-night in somehow, therefore why not put it in to advantage? To refresh
-his memory a little with the ritual would be a safeguard against those
-few days that he must still remain in St. Marleau--as Father François
-Aubert!
-
-He read for a little while, then got up and went to the bed to look at
-the white face upon it, to listen to the laboured breathing that stood
-between them both--and death. He could see no change. He returned to his
-chair, and resumed his reading.
-
-At intervals he did the same thing over again--only at last, instead
-of reading, he dozed in his chair. Finally, he slept--not heavily,
-but fitfully, lightly, a troubled sleep that came only through bodily
-exhaustion, and that was full of alarm and vague, haunting dreams.
-
-The night passed. The morning light began to find its way in through the
-edges of the drawn window shades. And suddenly Raymond sat upright
-in his chair. He had heard a step along the hall. The prayer-book had
-fallen to the floor. He picked it up. What was that noise--that low
-moaning from the bed? Not dead! The man wasn't dead yet! And--yes--it
-was daylight!
-
-The door opened. It was Valerie. How fresh her face was--fresh as the
-morning dew! What a contrast to the wan and haggard countenance he knew
-he raised to hers!
-
-And she paused in the doorway, and looked at him, and looked toward
-the bed, and back again to him, and the sweet face was beautiful with a
-woman's tenderness.
-
-“Ah, how good you are, Monsieur le Curé, and how tired you must be,” she
-said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X--KYRIE ELEISON
-
-|ST. MARLEAU was agog. St. Marleau was hysterical. St. Marleau was
-on tiptoe. It was in the throes of excitement, and the excitement was
-sustained by expectancy. It wagged its head in sapient prognostication
-of it did not quite know what; it shook its head in a sort of amazed
-wonder that such things should be happening in its own midst; and it
-nodded its head with a profound respect, not unmixed with veneration,
-for its young curé--the good, young Father Aubert, as St. Marleau,
-old and young, had taken to calling him, since it would not have been
-natural to have called him anything else.
-
-The good, young Father Aubert! Ah, yes--was he not to be loved and
-respected! Had he not, for three nights and two days now, sacrificed
-himself, until he had grown pale and wan, to watch like a mother at the
-bedside of the dying murderer, who did not die! It was very splendid of
-the young curé; for, though Madame Lafleur and her daughter beseeched
-him to take rest and to let them watch in his stead, he would not listen
-to them, saying that he was stronger than they and better able to stand
-it, and that, since it was he who had had the stranger brought to the
-_presbytère_, it was he who should see that no one else was put to any
-more inconvenience than could be avoided.
-
-Ah, yes,--it was most certainly the good, young Father Aubert! For, on
-the short walks he took for the fresh air, the very short walks, always
-hurrying back to the murderer's bedside, did he not still find time for
-a friendly and cheery word for every one he met? It was a habit, that,
-of his, which on the instant twined itself around the heart of St.
-Marleau, that where all were strangers to him, and in spite of his own
-anxiety and weariness, he should be so kindly interested in all the
-little details of each one's life, as though they were indeed a part of
-his own. How could one help but love the young curé who stopped one on
-the village street, and, man, woman or child, laid his hand in frank and
-gentle fashion upon one's shoulder, and asked one's name, and where one
-lived, and about one's family, and for the welfare of those who were
-dear to one? And did not both Madame Lafleur and her daughter speak
-constantly of how devout he was, that he was never without a prayer-book
-in his hand? Ah, indeed, it was the good, young Father Aubert!
-
-But this in no whit allayed the hysteria, the excitement and the
-expectancy under which St. Marleau laboured. A murder in St. Marleau!
-That alone was something that the countryside would talk about for years
-to come. And it was not only the murder; it was--what was to happen
-next! It was Mother Blondin's son who had been murdered by the stranger,
-and Mother Blondin, though not under arrest, was being watched by the
-police, who waited for the man in the _presbytère_ to die. It was Mother
-Blondin who had struck the murderer, and if the murderer died then she
-would be responsible for the man's death. What, then, would they do with
-Mother Blondin?
-
-St. Marleau, not being well versed in the law, did not know; it knew
-only that the assistant chief of the Tournayville police had installed
-himself in the Tavern where he could see that Mother Blondin did not
-run away, since the man at the _presbytère_ did not need any police
-watching, and that this assistant chief of the Tournayville police was
-as dumb as an oyster, and looked only very wise, like one who has great
-secrets locked in his bosom, when questions were put to him.
-
-And then, another thing--the funeral of Théophile Blondin. It was only
-this morning--the third morning after the murder--that that had been
-decided. Mother Blondin had raved and cursed and sworn that she would
-not let the body of her son enter the church. But Mother Blondin was
-not, perhaps, as much heretic as she wanted, or pretended, to be. Mother
-Blondin, perhaps, could not escape the faith of the years when she
-was young; and, while she scoffed and blasphemed, in her soul God was
-stronger than she, and she was afraid to stand between her dead son and
-the rites of Holy Church in which, through her own wickedness, she could
-not longer participate. But, however that might be, the people of St.
-Marleau, that is those who were good Christians and had respect for
-themselves, were concerned little with such as Mother Blondin, or,
-for that matter, with her son--but the funeral of a man who had been
-murdered right in their midst, and that was now to take place! Ah, that
-was quite another matter!
-
-And so St. Marleau gathered in a sort of breathless unanimity that
-morning to the tolling of the bell, as the funeral procession of
-Théophile Blondin began to wend its way down the hill--and within the
-sacred precincts of the church the villagers, as best they might, hushed
-their excitement in solemn and decorous silence.
-
-And at the church door, in surplice and stole, the altar boy beside
-him, as the cortège approached, stood Raymond Chapelle--the good, young
-Father Aubert.
-
-He was very pale; the dark eyes were sunk deep in their sockets from
-three sleepless nights, and from the torment of constant suspense, where
-each moment in the countless hours had been pregnant with the threat
-of discovery, where each second had swung like some horrible pendulum
-hesitating between safety--and the gallows. He could not escape this
-sacrilege that he was about to commit. There was no escape from it. They
-had thought it strange, perhaps, that he had not said mass on those two
-mornings that were gone. It was customary; but he knew, too, that it was
-not absolutely obligatory--and so, through one excuse and another, he
-had evaded it. And even if it had been obligatory, he would still have
-had to find some way out, to have taken the law temporarily, as it were,
-into his own hands--for he would not have dared to celebrate the mass.
-Dared? Because of the sacrilege, the meddling with sacred things? Ah,
-no! What was his creed--that he feared neither God nor devil, nor man
-nor beast! What was that toast he had drunk that night in Ton-Nugget
-Camp--he, and Three-Ace Artie, and Arthur Leroy, and Raymond Chapelle!
-No; it was not _that_ he feared--it was this sharp-eyed altar boy, this
-lad of twelve, who at the mass would be always at his elbow. But he was
-no longer afraid of the boy, for now he was ready. He had realised
-that he could not escape performing some of the offices of a priest, no
-matter what happened to that cursed fool lying over yonder there in the
-_presbytère_ upon the bed, who seemed to get better rather than worse,
-and so--he had overheard Madame Lafleur confide it to the doctor--he
-had been of a devoutness rarely seen. Through the nights and through the
-days, spurred on by a sharper, sterner prod than his father's gold in
-the old school days had been, he had poured and studied over the ritual
-and the theological books that he had found in the priest's trunk, until
-now, committing to memory like a parrot, he was thoroughly master of
-anything that might arise--especially this burial of Théophile Blondin
-which he had foreseen was not likely to be avoided, in spite of the
-attitude of that miserable old hag, the mother.
-
-Raymond's head was slightly bowed, his eyes lowered--but his eyes,
-nevertheless, were allowing nothing to escape them. They were extremely
-clumsy, and infernally slow out there in bringing the casket into
-the church! He would see to it that things moved with more despatch
-presently! There was another reason why he had not dared to act as a
-priest in the church before--that man over there in the _presbytère_
-upon the bed. He had, on that first morning, not dared to leave the
-other, and it had been the same yesterday morning. True, to avert
-suspicion, he had gone out sometimes, but never far, never out of call
-of the _presbytère_--which was a very different matter from being caught
-in the midst of a service where his hands would have been tied and he
-could not have instantly returned. It was strange, very strange about
-the wounded priest, who, instead of dying, appeared to be stronger,
-though he lay in a sort of comatose condition--and now the doctor even
-held out hopes of the man's recovery! Suppose--suppose the priest should
-regain consciousness now, at this moment, while he was in the act of
-conducting the funeral, in the other's stead, over the body of the man
-for whose murder, in _his_, Raymond's, stead, the other was held
-guilty! He was juggling with ghastly dice! But he could not have escaped
-this--there was no way to avoid this funeral of the son of that old hag
-who had run screaming, “murder--murder--murder,” into the storm that
-night.
-
-He raised his head. It was the gambler now, steel-nerved, accepting the
-chances against him, to all outward appearances impassive, who stood
-there in the garb of priest. He was cool, possessed, sure of himself,
-cynical of all things holy, disdainful of all things spiritual,
-contemptuous of these villagers around him that he fooled--as he would
-have been contemptuous of himself to have hesitated at the plunge,
-desperate though it was, that was his one and only chance for liberty
-and life.
-
-Ha! At last--eh? They had brought Théophile Blondin to the door!
-
-And then Raymond's voice, rich, full-toned, stilled that queer, subdued,
-composite sound of breathings, of the rustle of garments, of slight,
-involuntary movements--of St. Marleau crowded in the pews in strained,
-tense waiting.
-
-_“'Si iniquitates observaveris, Domine; Domine quis sustinebit?_--If
-Thou, O Lord, wilt mark iniquities; Lord, who shall abide it?”
-
-It was curious that the service should begin like that, curious that he
-had not before found any meaning or significance in the words. He had
-learned them like a parrot. “If Thou, O Lord, wilt mark iniquities....”
- He bowed his head to hide the tightening of his lips. Bah, what was
-this! Some inner consciousness inanely attempting to suggest that there
-was not only significance in the words, but that the significance was
-personal, that the very words from his lips, performing the office of
-priest, desecrating God's holy place, was iniquity, black, blasphemous
-and abhorrent in God's sight--if there were a God!
-
-Ah, that was it--if there were a God! He was reciting now the _De
-Profundis_ in a purely mechanical way. “Out of the depths....”
-
-If there were a God--yes, that was it! He had never believed there was,
-had he? He did not believe it now--but he would make one concession.
-What he was doing was not in intent blasphemous, neither was it to
-mock--it was to save his life. He was a man with a halter strangling
-around his neck. And if there was a God, who then had brought all
-this about? Who then was responsible, and who then should accept the
-consequences? Not he! He had not sought from choice to play the part of
-priest! He had not sought the life of this dead man in the coffin there
-in front of him! He had not sought to--yes, curse it, it was the word to
-use--kill the drunken, besotted, worthless fool!
-
-A cold anger came, steadying his nerves. It was too bad that in some
-way he could not wreck a vengeance on the corpse for all this--the
-miserable, rum-steeped hound who had got him into this hellish fix.
-
-They were bearing the body into the church toward the head of the nave.
-He was at the _Subvenite_ now. “'...Kyrie eleison.”
-
-The boyish treble, hushed yet clear, of young Gauthier Beaulieu, the
-altar boy, rose from beside him in the responses:
-
-“'Christe eleison”
-
-“Lord, have mercy.... From the gate of hell,”
-
-“Deliver his soul, O Lord.”
-
-Again! That sense of solemnity, that personal implication in the words!
-It was coincidence, nothing more. No; it was not even that! He was
-simply twisting the meaning, allowing himself to be played with by a
-warped imagination. He was not a weak fool, was he, to let this get the
-better of him? And, besides, he would hurry through with it, and since
-he would say neither office nor mass it would not take long. It must be
-hot this summer morning, though he had not noticed it particularly when
-he had left the _presbytère_. The church seemed heavy and oppressive.
-Strange how the pews were all lined with eyes staring at him!
-
-The tread of feet up the aisle died away. The bier was set at the head
-of the nave, and lighted candles placed around it. There fell a silence,
-utter and profound.
-
-Why was it now that his lips scarcely moved, that his voice was scarcely
-audible; why that sudden foreboding, intangible yet present everywhere,
-at his temerity, at his unhallowed, hideous perversion of sanctity in
-that he should pray as a priest of God, in the habiliments of one of
-God's ministers, in God's church--ay, it was a devil's masquerade, for
-he, if never before, stood branded now, sealing that blasphemous toast,
-a disciple of hell.
-
-“'_Non intres in judicium cum servo tuo, Domine_....' Enter not into
-judgment with Thy servant, O Lord....”
-
-And so he denied God, did he? And so he was callous and indifferent, and
-scoffed at the possibility of a church, simply because it was a church,
-being the abiding place of a higher, holier, omnipotent presence? Why,
-then, that hoarseness in his throat--why, then, did he not shout his
-parrot words high to the vaulted roof in triumphant defiance? Why that
-struggle with his will to finish the prayer?
-
-From the little organ loft in the gallery over the door, floated now the
-notes of the _Responsory_, and the voices of the choir rolled solemnly
-through the church:
-
-“'_Libera me, Domine, de morte æterna...._' Deliver me, O Lord, from
-eternal death....”
-
-Death! Eternal death! What was death? There was a dead man there in the
-casket--dead because he and the man had fought together, and the other
-had been killed. And he was burying, in a church, as a priest, he, who
-was the one upon whom the law would set its claws if it but knew, the
-man that he had killed! It came suddenly, with terrific force, blotting
-out those wavering candle flames around the coffin, the scene of that
-night. The wind was howling; that white-scarred face was cheek to cheek
-with him; they lunged and staggered around that dimly lighted room, he
-and the man who lay dead there in the coffin. They struggled for the
-revolver; that old hag circled about them like a swirling hawk--that
-blinding flash--the acrid smell of powder--the room revolving around
-and around--and the dead man, who was here in the coffin now, had
-lain sprawled out there on the floor. He shivered--and cursed himself
-fiercely the next instant--it seemed as though the casket suddenly
-opened, and that ugly, venomous, scarred face lifted up and leered at
-him.
-
-“'_Dies ilia, dies iræ...,'_” came the voices of the choir. “That day, a
-day of wrath....”
-
-His jaws clenched. He pulled himself together. That was Valerie up there
-playing the little organ; Valerie with the great, dark eyes, and the
-beautiful face; Valerie, who thought it so unselfish of him because he
-had had a couch made up in the room in order that he might not leave
-the wounded man. The wounded man! Following the order of the service,
-Raymond was putting incense into the censer while the _Responsory_ was
-being sung, and his fingers gripped hard upon the vessel. Again that
-thought to torture and torment him! Had he not enough to do to go
-through with this! Who was with the wounded man now? That
-officious, nosing fool, who preened himself on the strength of being
-assistant-chief of police of some pitiful little town that no one
-outside of its immediate vicinity had ever heard of before? Or was it
-Madame Lafleur? But what, after all, did it matter who was there--if
-the man should happen to regain his senses? Ha, ha! Would it not be a
-delectable sight if that police officer should arrest him, strip these
-priestly trappings from him just as he left the church! It would be
-quite a dramatic scene, would it not--quite too damnably dramatic! He
-was swinging with that infernal pendulum between liberty and death. He
-was, at that moment, if ever a man was, or had been, the sport of fate.
-He had not liked the looks of the wounded priest half an hour ago when
-he had left the _presbytère_ for the sacristy--it had seemed as though
-the man were beginning to look _healthy._
-
-“'_Kyrie eleison....'_” The _Responsory_ was over. In a purely
-mechanical way again he was proceeding with the service. As the ritual
-prescribed, he passed round the bier with sprinkler and censer--and
-presently he found himself reciting the last prayer of that part of the
-service held within the church; and then the bier was being lifted and
-borne down the aisle again.
-
-Out into the sunlight, to the smell of the fields, to the breeze from
-the river wafting upon his cheek! He drew in a deep breath--and almost
-at the same instant passed his hand heavily across his eyes. He had
-thought that stifling heat, that overwhelming oppressiveness all in
-the atmosphere of the church; but here was the sunlight, and here the
-fields, and here the soft breeze blowing from the water--yet that sense
-of foreboding, a prescience, a weight upon him that sank deep to the
-soul, remained with him still.
-
-Slowly the procession passed around the green in front of the church,
-and through the gate of the whitewashed fence into the little burial
-ground beyond on the river's bank. They were chanting _In Paradisum_,
-but Valerie was no longer with the choir, for now, as they passed
-through the gate, he saw her, a slim figure all in white, hurry across
-the green toward the _presbytère._
-
-What was this before him! It was not the smell of fields, but the smell
-of freshly turned earth--a grave. The grave of Théophile Blondin, the
-man whom he had fought with--and killed. And he was a priest of God,
-burying Théophile Blondin. What ghastly, hellish travesty! What were
-those words returning to his memory, coming to him out of the dim past
-when he was still a boy, and still susceptible to the teachings of the
-fathers who had sought to guide him into the church--God is not mocked.
-
-“God is not mocked! God is not mocked!”--the words seemed to echo
-and reverberate around him, they seemed to be thundered in a voice of
-vengeance. “God is not mocked!”--and he was _blessing_ the grave of
-Théophile Blondir!
-
-Did these people, gathered, clustered about him, not hear that voice!
-Why did they not hear it? It was not the _Benedictus_ that was being
-sung that prevented them from hearing it, for he could scarcely hear the
-_Benedictus._
-
-Raymond's lips moved. “I am not mocking God,” he whispered. “I do not
-believe in God, but I am not mocking. I am asking only for my life. I am
-taking only the one chance I have. I did not intend to kill the fool--he
-killed himself. I am no murderer. I----” He shivered suddenly again, as
-once in the church he had shivered before. His hands outstretched seemed
-to be creeping again toward a bare throat that lay exposed upon a bed,
-the feel of soft, pulsing flesh seemed upon his finger tips. And then
-a diabolical chortle seemed to rattle in his ears. So murder was quite
-foreign to him, eh? And he did not believe in God? And he was quite
-above and apart from all such nonsense? And therein, of course, lay the
-reason why the tumbling of this dead thing into a grave left him so
-cool and imperturbable; and why the solemn words of the service had no
-meaning; and why it was a matter of supreme unconcern to him, provided
-he was not caught at it, that he took God's words upon his lips, and
-God's garb upon his shoulders!
-
-White-faced, Raymond lifted his head. The _Benedictus_ was ended,
-and now the words came slowly from his lips in a strange, awed, almost
-wondering way.
-
-“_'Requiem oternam.... Ego sum resurrectio et vita....'_ I am the
-Resurrection and the Life: he that believeth in Me, although he be dead,
-shall live: and every one who liveth, and believeth in Me, shall never
-die.”
-
-His voice faltered a little, steadied by a tremendous effort of will,
-and went on again, low-toned, through the responses and short prayer
-that closed the service. “'_Kyrie eleison'..._ not into temptation....
-'_Requiem oternam_.'... '_Requiescat in pace'..._ through the mercy of
-God.... 'Amen.'”
-
-Forgotten for the moment was that grim pendulum that hovered over the
-bed in the _presbytère_ yonder, and by the side of the grave Raymond
-stood and looked down on the coffin of Théophile Blondin. The people
-began to disperse, but he was scarcely conscious of it. It seemed that
-he had run the gamut of every human emotion since he had met the
-funeral procession at the church door; but here was another now--an
-incomprehensible, quiet, chastened, questioning mood. They were very
-beautiful words, these, that he was repeating to himself. He did not
-believe them, but they were very beautiful, and to one who did believe
-they must offer more than all of life could hold.
-
-“'I am the resurrection and the life... he that be-lieveth in Me...
-shall never die.'”
-
-There was another gateway in the little whitewashed fence, a smaller one
-that gave on the sacristy at the side and toward the rear of the church.
-Slowly, head bowed, absorbed, unconscious of the rôle he played so
-well, Raymond walked toward the gate, and through it, and, raising his
-head, paused. A shrivelled and dishevelled form crouched there against
-the palings. It was old Mother Blondin.
-
-And Raymond stared--and suddenly a wave of immeasurable pity, mingling
-a miserable sense of distress, swept upon him. In there was forbidden
-ground to her; and in there was her son--killed in a fight with him. She
-had come around here to the side, unobserved, unless Dupont were lurking
-somewhere about, to be as near at the last as she could. An old hag,
-wretched, dissolute--but human above all things else, huddling before
-the dying embers of mother-love. She did not look up; her forehead was
-pressed close against the fence as she peered inside; a withered, dirty
-hand clutched fiercely at a paling on each side of her face.
-
-Raymond stepped toward her, and spontaneously laid his hand upon her
-shoulder. And strange words were on his lips, but they were sincere
-words out of a heart torn and troubled and dismayed, out of a soul that
-had recoiled as before some tremendous cataclysm. And his words were the
-words he had been repeating over and over to himself.
-
-“'I am the resurrection and the life...' My poor, poor woman, let me
-help you. See, you must not mourn that way alone. Come, let me take you
-back to your home----”
-
-She rose to her feet, and looked at him, and for an instant the hard,
-set, wrinkled face seemed to soften, and into the blear eyes seemed to
-spring a mist of tears--then her face contorted into livid fury, and she
-struck at his hand, flinging it from her shoulder.
-
-“You go to hell!” she snarled. “You, and all like you, you go to hell!”
-
-She was gone--shuffling around the corner of the church.
-
-And then Raymond laughed a little. It was like a dash of cold water in
-the face. He had been a fool--a fool all morning, a fool to let
-mere words, mere environment have any influence upon him, a fool
-to sentimentality in talking to her like that, mawkish to have used
-the words! He would have said what she had said to any one else, if he
-had been in her place--only more bitterly, more virulently, if that were
-possible.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders, and moved on toward the sacristy to divest
-himself of his surplice and stole--and again he paused, this time in the
-doorway, and turned around, as a voice cried out his name.
-
-“Father Aubert!”
-
-It was Valérie, running swiftly toward him from the _presbytère_.
-
-And Raymond stood still and waited. Intuitively he knew. Something had
-happened in the _presbytère_ at last. He was the gambler again, cool,
-imperturbable, steel-nerved, with the actual crisis upon him. It was the
-turn of the card, the throw of the dice, that was all. Was it life--or
-death? It was Valérie who was to pronounce the sentence. She reached
-him, breathless, flushed. He smiled at her.
-
-“Monsieur le Curé--Father Aubert,” she panted, “come quickly! He can
-speak! He has regained consciousness!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI--“HENRI MENTONE”
-
-|VALERIE'S flushed face was lifted eagerly to his. She had caught
-impetuously at the sleeve of his _soutane_, and was urging him forward.
-And yet he was walking with deliberate measured tread across the green
-toward the _presbytère_. Strange how the blood seemed to be hammering
-feverishly at his temples! Every impulse prompted him to run, as a man
-running for his life, to reach the _presbytère_, to reach that room, to
-shut the door upon himself and that man whose return to consciousness
-meant--what? But it was too late to run now. Too late! Already the news
-seemed to have spread. Those who had been the last to linger at the
-grave of Théophile Blondin were gathering, on their way out from the
-little burying ground, around the door of the _presbytère_. It would
-appear bizarre, perhaps, that the curé should come tearing across
-the green with vestments flying simply because a man had regained
-consciousness! Ha, ha! Yes, very bizarre! Why should their curé run like
-one demented just because a man had regained consciousness! If the
-man were at his last gasp now, were just about to die--that would be
-different! He found a bitter mirth in that. Yes, decidedly, they would
-understand that! But as it was, they would think their curé had gone
-suddenly mad, perhaps, or they would think, perhaps--something else.
-
-The dice were thrown, the card was turned--against him. His luck was
-out. It was like walking tamely to where the noose dangled and awaited
-his neck to walk toward those gaping people clustered around the door,
-to walk into the _presbytère_. But it was his only chance. Yes, there
-was a chance--one chance left. If he could hold out until evening, until
-darkness!
-
-Until evening, until darkness--with the night before him in which to
-attempt his escape! But there were still eight hours or more to
-evening. There were only a few more steps to go before he reached the
-_presbytère_. The distance was pitifully short. In those few steps he
-must plan everything; plan that that accursed noose swaying before his
-eyes should----
-
-“_Dies illa, dies iræ_--that day, a day of wrath.” What brought those
-words flashing through his mind! He had said them once that morning--but
-a little while ago--in church--as a priest--at Théophile Blondin's
-funeral. Damn it, they were not meant for him! They did not mean to-day.
-They were not premonitory. He was not beaten yet!
-
-In the shed behind the _presbytère_ there was a pair of the old
-sacristan's overalls, and an old coat, and an old hat. He had noticed
-them yesterday. They would serve his purpose--a man in a pair of
-overalls and a dirty, torn coat would not look much like a priest. Yes,
-yes; that would do, it was the way--when night came. He would have the
-darkness, and he would hide the next day, and the day after, and travel
-only by night. It invited pursuit of course, the one thing that next
-to capture itself he had struggled and plotted to avoid, but it was the
-only chance now, and, if luck turned again, he might succeed in making
-his way out of the country--when night came.
-
-But until then! What until then? That was where his danger lay now--in
-those hours until darkness.
-
-“Yes!” whispered Raymond fiercely to himself. “Yes--if only you keep
-your head!”
-
-What was the matter with him? Had he forgotten! It was what he had
-been prepared to face that night when he had brought the priest to the
-_presbytère_, should the man then have recovered sufficiently to speak.
-It should be still easier now to make any one believe that the man was
-wandering in his mind, was not yet lucid or coherent after so long a
-lapse from consciousness. And the very story that the man would tell
-must sound like the ravings of a still disordered mind! He, Raymond,
-would insist that the man be kept very quiet during the day; he,
-Raymond, would stay beside the other's bed. Was he not the curé! Would
-they not obey him, show deference to his judgment and his wishes--until
-night came!
-
-They were close to the _presbytère_ now, close to the little gaping
-crowd that surrounded the door; and, as though conscious for the first
-time that she was clinging to his arm, Valérie, in sudden embarrassment
-at her own eagerness, hurriedly dropped her hand to her side. And,
-at the act, Raymond looked at her quickly, in an almost startled way.
-Strange! But then his brain was in turmoil! Strange that extraneous
-things, things that had nothing to do with the one grim purpose of
-saving his neck should even for an instant assert themselves! But then
-they--no, she--had done that before. He remembered now... when they were
-putting on that bandage.
-
-When that crucifix had tangled up his hands, and she had seemed to stand
-before him to save him from himself... those dark eyes, that pure,
-sweet face, the tender, womanly sympathy--the antithesis of himself! And
-to-night, when night came, when the night he longed for came, when
-the night that meant his only chance for life came, he--what was
-this!--this sudden pang of yearning that ignored, with a most curious
-authority, as though it had the right to ignore, the desperate, almost
-hopeless peril that was closing down upon him, that seemed to make the
-coming of the night now a thing he would put off, a thing to regret and
-to dread, that bade him search for some other way, some other plan that
-would not necessitate--
-
-“A fool and a pretty face!”--it was the gibe and sneer and prod of that
-inward monitor. “See all these people who are so reverently making way
-for you, and eying you with affection and simple humility, see the rest
-of them coming back from all directions because the _murderer_ is about
-to tell his story--well, see how they will make way for you, and with
-what affection and humility they will eye you when you come out of that
-house again, if all the wits the devil ever gave you are not about you
-now!”
-
-He spoke to her quietly, controlling his voice:
-
-“You have not told me yet what he said, mademoiselle?”
-
-She shook her head.
-
-“He did not say much--only to ask where he was and for a drink of
-water.”
-
-He had no time to ask more. They had reached the group before the
-_presbytère_ now, and the buzz of conversation, the eager, excited
-exchange of questions and answers was hushed, as, with one accord, men
-and women made way for their curé. And Raymond, lifting his hand in
-a kindly, yet authoritative gesture, cautioning patience and order,
-mounted the steps of the _presbytère_.
-
-And then, inside the doorway, Raymond quickened his step. From the
-closed door at the end of the short hallway came the low murmur of
-voices. It was Madame Lafleur probably who was there with the other now.
-How much, how little had the man said--since Valérie had left the room?
-Raymond's lips tightened grimly. It was fortunate that Madame Lafleur
-had so great a respect for the cloth! He had nothing to fear from
-her. He could make her believe anything. He could twist her around his
-finger, and--he opened the door softly--and stood, as though turned
-suddenly rigid, incapable of movement, upon the threshold--and his hand
-upon the doorknob closed tighter and tighter in a vise-like grip. Across
-the room stood, not Madame Lafleur, but Monsieur Dupont, the assistant
-chief of the Tournayville police, and in Monsieur Dupont's hand was
-a notebook, and upon Monsieur Dupont's lips, as he turned and glanced
-quickly toward the door, there played an enigmatical smile.
-
-“Ah! It is Monsieur le Curé!” observed Monsieur Dupont smoothly. “Well,
-come in, Monsieur le Curé--come in, and shut the door. I promise you,
-you will find it interesting. What? Yes, very interesting!”
-
-“Oh, Monsieur Dupont is here!”--the words seemed to come to Raymond as
-from some great distance behind him.
-
-He turned. It was Valérie. Of course, it was Valérie! He had forgotten.
-She had naturally followed him along the hall to the door. What did this
-Dupont mean by what he had said? What had Dupont already learned--that
-was so _interesting!_ It would not do to have Valérie here, if--if he
-and Dupont----
-
-“Perhaps, Mademoiselle Valérie,” he said gravely, “it would be as
-well if you did not come in. Monsieur Dupont appears to be officially
-engaged.”
-
-“But, of course!” she agreed readily. “I did not know that any one was
-here. I left the man alone when I ran out to find you. I will come back
-when Monsieur Dupont has gone.”
-
-And Raymond smiled, and stepped inside the room, and closed the door,
-and leaned with his back against it.
-
-“Well, Monsieur le Curé”--Monsieur Dupont tapped with his pencil on the
-notebook--“I have it all down here. All! Everything that he has said.”
-
-Raymond had not even glanced toward the bed--his eyes, cool, steady now,
-were on the officer, watching the other like a hawk.
-
-“Yes?” he prompted calmly.
-
-“And”--Monsieur Dupont made that infernal clucking noise with his
-tongue--“I have--nothing! Did I not tell you it was interesting? Yes,
-very interesting! Very!”
-
-Was the man playing with him? How clever was this Dupont? No fool, at
-any rate! He had already shown that, in spite of his absurd mannerisms.
-Raymond's hand began to toy with the crucifix on his breast, while his
-fingers surreptitiously loosened several buttons of his _soutane_.
-
-“Nothing?”--Raymond's eyebrows were raised in mild surprise. “But
-Mademoiselle Valérie told me he had regained consciousness.”
-
-“Yes,” said Monsieur Dupont, “I heard her say so to some one as she
-left the house. I was keeping an eye on that _vieille sauvage_, Mother
-Blondin. But this--ah! Quite a more significant matter! Yes--quite!
-You will understand, Monsieur le Curé, that I lost no time in reaching
-here?”
-
-And now for the first time Raymond looked swiftly toward the bed. It was
-only for the barest fraction of a second that he permitted his eyes to
-leave the police officer; but in that glance he had met coal black eyes,
-all pupils they seemed, fixed in a sort of intense penetration upon him.
-The man was still lying on his back, he had noticed that--but it was the
-eyes, disconcerting, full of something he could not define, boring into
-him, that dominated all else. He stepped nonchalantly toward Monsieur
-Dupont.
-
-“It is astonishing that he has said nothing,” he murmured softly. “Will
-you permit me, Monsieur Dupont”--he held out his hand--“to see your
-book?”
-
-“The book? H'm! Well, why not?” Monsieur Dupont shrugged his shoulders
-as he placed the notebook in Raymond's hand. “It is not customary--but,
-why not!”
-
-And then upon Raymond came relief. It surged upon him until he could
-have laughed out hysterically, laughed like a fool in this Monsieur
-Dupont's face--this Monsieur Dupont who was the assistant chief of the
-police force of Tournayville. It was true! Dupont had at least told the
-truth. So far Dupont had learned nothing. Raymond's face was impassive
-as he scrutinised the page before him. Written with a flourish on the
-upper line, presumably to serve as a caption, were the words:
-
-“The Murderer, Henri Mentone,” and beneath: “Evades direct answers.
-Hardened type--knows his way about. Pretends ignorance. Stubborn. Wily
-rascal--yes, very!”
-
-Raymond handed the notebook back to Monsieur Dupont.
-
-“It is perhaps not so strange after all, Monsieur Dupont,” he remarked
-with a thoughtful air. “We must not forget that the poor fellow has but
-just recovered consciousness. He is hardly likely to be either lucid or
-rational.”
-
-“Bah!” ejaculated Monsieur Dupont grimly. “He is as lucid as I am. But I
-am not through with him yet! He is not the first of his kind I have had
-upon my hook!” He leaned toward the bed. “Now, then, my little Apache,
-you will answer my questions! Do you understand? No more evasions! None
-at all! They will do you no good, and----”
-
-Raymond's hand fell upon Monsieur Dupont's shoulder. Though he had not
-looked again until now, he was conscious that those eyes from the
-bed had never for an instant swerved from his face. Now he met them
-steadily. He addressed Monsieur Dupont, but he spoke to the man on the
-bed.
-
-“Have you warned him, Monsieur Dupont,” he said soberly, “that anything
-he says will be used against him? And have you told him that he is not
-obliged to answer? He is weak yet and at a disadvantage. He would be
-quite justified in waiting until he was stronger, and entirely competent
-to weigh his own words.”
-
-Monsieur Dupont was possessed of an inconsistency all his own.
-
-“_Tonnerre!_” he snapped. “And what is the use of warning him when he
-will not answer at all?”
-
-“You appear not quite to have given up hope!” observed Raymond dryly.
-
-“H'm!” Monsieur Dupont scowled. “Very well, then”--he leaned once more
-over the bed, and addressed the man--“you understand? It is as Monsieur
-le Curé says. I warn you. You are not obliged to answer. Now then--your
-name, your age, your birthplace?”
-
-Raymond shifted his position to the foot of the bed.
-
-Damn those eyes! Move where he would, they never left his face. The man
-had paid no attention to Monsieur Dupont. Why, in God's name, why did
-the man keep on staring and gazing so fixedly at him--and why had the
-man refused to answer Dupont's questions--and why had not the man with
-his first words poured out his story eagerly!
-
-“Well, well!” prodded Monsieur Dupont. “Did you not hear--eh? Your
-name?”
-
-The man's eyes followed Raymond.
-
-“Where am I?” he asked faintly.
-
-It was too querulous, that tone, too genuinely weak and peevish to smack
-of trickery--and suddenly upon Raymond there came again that nervous
-impulse to laugh out aloud. So that was the secret of it, was it? There
-was a sort of sardonic humour then in the situation! The suggestion,
-the belief he had planned to convey to shield himself--that the man
-was still irrational--was, in fact, the truth! But how long would that
-condition last? He must put an end to this--get this cursed Dupont away!
-
-“Where am I?” muttered the man again.
-
-“_Tiens!_” clucked Monsieur Dupont. “You see, Monsieur le Curé! You see?
-Yes, you see. He plays the game well--with finesse, eh?” He turned to
-the man. “Where are you, eh? Well, you are better off where you are
-now than where you will be in a few days! I promise you that! Now,
-again--your name?”
-
-The man shook his head.
-
-“Monsieur Dupont,” said Raymond, a little severely. “You will arrive
-at nothing like this. The man is not himself. To-morrow he will be
-stronger.”
-
-“Bah! Nonsense! Stronger!” jerked out Monsieur Dupont derisively. “Our
-fox is quite strong enough! Monsieur le Curé, you are not a police
-officer--do not let your pity deceive you. And permit me to continue!”
- He slipped his hand into his pocket, and adroitly flashed a visiting
-card suddenly before the man's eyes. “Well, since you cannot recall
-your name, this will perhaps be of assistance! You see, Monsieur Henri
-Mentone, that you get yourself nowhere by refusing to answer!” Once more
-the man shook his head.
-
-“So!” Monsieur Dupont complacently returned the card to his pocket. “Now
-we will continue. You see now where you stand. Your age?”
-
-Again the man shook his head.
-
-“He does not know!” remarked Monsieur Dupont caustically. “Very
-convenient memory! Yes--very! Well, will you tell us where you came
-from?”
-
-For the fourth time the man shook his head--and at that instant Raymond
-edged close to Monsieur Dupont's side. What was that in those eyes
-now--that something that was creeping into them--that _dawning_ light,
-as they searched his face!
-
-“He does not know that, either!” complained Monsieur Dupont
-sarcastically. “Magnificent! Yes--very! He knows nothing at all! He----”
-
-With a low cry, the man struggled to his elbow, propping himself up in
-bed.
-
-“Yes, I know!”--his voice, high-pitched, rang through the room. “I know
-now!” He raised his hand and pointed at Raymond. “_I know you!_”
-
-Raymond's hand was thrust into the breast of his _soutane_, where he had
-unbuttoned it beneath the crucifix--and Raymond's fingers closed upon
-the stock of an automatic in his upper left-hand vest pocket.
-
-“Poor fellow!” murmured Raymond pityingly. “You see, Monsieur
-Dupont”--he moved still a little closer--“you have gone too far. You
-have excited him. He is incoherent. He does not know what he is saying.”
-
-Monsieur Dupont was clucking with his tongue, as he eyed the man
-speculatively.
-
-“Yes, yes; I know you now!” cried the man again. “Oh, monsieur,
-monsieur!”--both hands were suddenly thrust out to Raymond, and there
-was a smile on the trembling lips, an eager flush dyeing the pale
-cheeks. “It is you, monsieur! I have been very sick, have I not? It--it
-was like a dream. I--I was trying to remember--your face. It is your
-face that I have seen so often bending over me. Was that not it,
-monsieur--monsieur, you who have been so good--was that not it? You
-would lift me upon my pillow, and give me something cool to drink. And
-was it not you, monsieur, who sat there in that chair for long, long
-hours? It seems as though I saw you there always--many, many times.”
-
-It was like a shock, a revulsion so strong that for the moment it
-unnerved him. Raymond scarcely heard his own voice.
-
-“Yes,” he said--his forehead was damp, as he brushed his hand across it.
-
-Monsieur Dupont blew out his cheeks.
-
-“_Nom d'un nom!_” he exploded. “Ah, your pardon, Monsieur le Curé!
-But it is mild, a very mild oath, is it not--under the circumstances?
-Yes--very! I admire cleverness--yes, I do! The man has a head! What
-an appeal to the emotions! Poignant! Yes, that's the word--poignant.
-Looking for sympathy! Trying to make an ally of you, Monsieur le Curé!”
-
-“Get rid of the fool! Get rid of the fool!” prompted that inward monitor
-impatiently.
-
-Raymond, with a significant look, plucked at Monsieur Dupont's sleeve,
-and led the other across the room away from the bed.
-
-“Do you think so?” he asked, in a lowered voice.
-
-“Eh?” inquired Monsieur blankly. “Think what?”
-
-“What you just said--that he is trying to make an ally of me.”
-
-“Oh, that--_zut!_” sniffed Monsieur Dupont. “But what else?”
-
-“Then suppose”--Raymond dropped his voice still lower--“then suppose you
-leave him with me until tomorrow. And meanwhile--you understand?”
-
-Monsieur Dupont pondered the suggestion.
-
-“Well, very well--why not?” decided Monsieur Dupont. “Perhaps not a bad
-idea--perhaps not. And if it does not succeed”--Monsieur Dupont shrugged
-his shoulders--“well, we know everything anyhow; and I will make him
-pay through the nose for his tricks! But he is under arrest, Monsieur le
-Curé, you understand that? There is a cell in the jail at Tournayville
-that----”
-
-“Naturally--when he is able to be moved,” agreed Raymond readily. “We
-will speak to the doctor about that. In the meantime he probably could
-not walk across this room. He is quite safe here. I will be responsible
-for him.”
-
-“And I will put a flea in the doctor's ear!” announced Monsieur Dupont,
-moving toward the door. “The assizes are next week, and after the
-assizes, say, another six weeks and”--Monsieur Dupont's tongue clucked
-eloquently several times against the roof of his mouth. “We will not
-keep him waiting long!” Monsieur Dupont opened the door, and, standing
-on the threshold where he was hidden from the bed, laid his forefinger
-along the side of his nose. “You are wrong, Monsieur le Curé”--he had
-raised his voice to carry through the room. “But still you may be right!
-You are too softhearted; yes, that is it--soft-hearted. Well, he has you
-to thank for it. I would not otherwise consider it--it is against my
-best judgment. I bid you good-bye, Monsieur le Curé!”
-
-Raymond closed the door--but it was a moment, standing there with his
-back to the bed, before he moved. His face was set, the square jaws
-clamped, a cynical smile flickering on his lips. It had been close--but
-of the two, as between Monsieur Dupont and himself and the gallows,
-Monsieur Dupont had been the nearer to death! He saw Monsieur Dupont in
-his mind's-eye sprawled on the floor. It would not have been difficult
-to have stopped forever any outcry from that weak thing upon the bed.
-And then the window; and after that--God knew! And it would have been
-God's affair! It was God Who had instituted that primal law that lay
-upon every human soul, the law of self-preservation; and it was God's
-choosing, not his, that he was here! Who was to quarrel with him if he
-stopped at nothing in his fight for life! Well, Dupont was gone now!
-That danger was past. He had only to reckon now with Valérie and her
-mother--until night came. He raised his hand heavily to his forehead and
-pushed back his hair. Valérie! Until night came! Fool! What was Valérie
-to him! And yet--he jeered at himself in a sort of grim derision--and
-yet, if it were not his one chance for life, he would not go to-night.
-He could call himself a fool, if he would; that ubiquitous and caustic
-other self, that was the cool, calculating, unemotional personification
-of Three-Ace Artie, could call him a fool, if it would--those dark eyes
-of Valérie's--no, not that--it was not eyes, nor hair, nor lips, they
-were only part of Valérie--it was Valérie, like some rare fragrance,
-fresh and pure and sweet in her young womanhood, that----
-
-“Monsieur!”--the man was calling from the bed.
-
-And then Raymond turned, and walked back across the room, and drew a
-chair to the bedside, and sat down. And Raymond smiled--but not at the
-bandaged, outstretched form before him. A fool! Well, so be it! The
-fool would sit here for the rest of the morning, and the rest of the
-afternoon, and listen to the babbling wanderings of another fool who
-had not had sense enough to die; and he would play this cursed rôle of
-saint, and fumble with his crucifix, and mumble his * Latin, and
-keep this Mademoiselle Valérie, who meant nothing to him, from the
-room--until to-night. And--what was this other fool saying?
-
-“Monsieur--monsieur, who was that man who just went out?”
-
-Raymond answered mechanically:
-
-“It was Monsieur Dupont, the assistant chief of the Tournayville
-police.”
-
-“What was he doing here?” asked the other slowly, as though trying to
-puzzle out the answer to his own question. “Why was he asking me all
-those questions?”
-
-Raymond, tight-lipped, looked the man in the eyes.
-
-“We've had enough of this, haven't we?” he challenged evenly. “I thought
-at first you were still irrational. You're not--that is now quite
-evident. Well--we are alone--what is your object? You had a chance to
-tell Dupont your story!”
-
-A pitiful, stunned look crept into the man's face. He stretched out his
-hand over the coverlet toward Raymond. “You--you, too, monsieur!” he
-said numbly. “What does it mean? What does it mean?”
-
-It startled Raymond. There was trickery here, it could be nothing
-else--and yet there was sincerity too genuine to be assumed in the
-other's words and acts. Raymond sat back in his chair, and for a long
-minute, brows knitted, studied the man. It was possible, of course, that
-the other might not have recognised him--they had only been together for
-a few moments in the smoking compartment of the train, and, dressed
-now as a priest, that might well be the case--but why not the story
-then?--why not the simple statement that he was the new curé coming to
-the village, that he had been struck down and--bah! What was the man's
-game! Well, he would force the issue, that was all! He leaned over the
-bed; and, his hand upon the other's, his fingers closed around the
-man's wrist until, beneath their tips, they could gauge the throb of the
-other's pulse. And his eyes, steel-hard, were on the other.
-
-“I am the curé,” he said, in a low, level tone, “of St. Marleau--while
-Father Allard is away. My name is--_François Aubert_.”
-
-“And mine,” said the man, “is”--he shook his head--“mine is”--his face
-grew piteously troubled--“it is strange--I do not remember that either.”
-
-There had been no tell-tale nervous flutter of the man's pulse.
-Raymond's hand fell away from the other's wrist. What was this curious,
-almost uncanny presentiment that was creeping upon him! Was it possible
-that the man was telling the _truth!_ Was it possible that--his own
-brain was whirling now--he steadied himself, forcing himself to speak.
-
-“Did you not read the card that Dupont showed you?”
-
-“Yes,” said the other. “Henri Mentone--is that my name?”
-
-“Do you not know!”--Raymond's tone was suddenly sharp, incisive.
-
-“No,” the other answered. “No, I cannot remember.” He reached out his
-arms imploringly to Raymond again. “Oh, monsieur, what does it mean? I
-do not know where I am--I do not know how I came here.”
-
-“You are in the _presbytère_ at St. Marleau,” said Raymond, still
-sharply. Was it true; or was the man simply magnificent in duplicity?
-No--there could be no reason, no valid reason for the man to play a
-part?--no reason why he should have withheld his story from Dupont. It
-was not logical. He, Raymond, who alone knew all the story, knew
-that. It must be true--but he dared not yet drop his guard. He must
-be sure--his life depended on his being sure. He was speaking
-again--uncompromisingly: “You were picked up unconscious on the road by
-the tavern during the storm three nights ago--you remember the storm, of
-course?”
-
-Again that piteously troubled look was on the other's face.
-
-“No, monsieur, I do not remember,” he said tremulously.
-
-“Well, then,” persisted Raymond, “before the storm--you surely remember
-that! Where you came from? Where you lived? Your people?”
-
-“Where I came from, my--my people”--the man repeated the words
-automatically. He swept his hand across his bandaged head. “It is gone,”
- he whispered miserably. “I--it is gone. There--there is nothing. I do
-not remember anything except a girl in this room saying she would run
-for the curé, and then that man came in.” A new trouble came into his
-eyes. “That man--you said he was a police officer--why was he here?
-And--you have not told me yet--why should he ask me questions?”
-
-There was still a card to play. Raymond leaned again over the man.
-
-“All this will not help you,” he said sternly. “Far better that you
-should confide in me! The proof against you is overwhelming. You are
-already condemned. You murdered Théophile Blondin that night, and stole
-Mother Blondin's money. Mother Blondin struck you that blow upon the
-head as you ran from the house. You were found on the road; and in your
-pockets was Mother Blondin's money--and her son's revolver, with which
-you shot him. In a word, you are under arrest for murder.”
-
-“Murder!”--the man, wide-eyed, horror-stricken, was staring at
-Raymond--and then he was clawing himself frantically into an
-upright position in the bed. “No, no! Not that! It cannot be true!
-Not--_murder!_” His voice rose into a piercing cry, and rang, and rang
-again through the room. He reached out his arms. “You are a priest,
-monsieur--by that holy crucifix, by the dear Christ's love, tell me that
-it is not so! Tell me! Murder! It is not true! It cannot be true! No,
-no--no! Monsieur--father--do you not hear me crying to you, do you
-not--” His voice choked and was still. His face was buried in his hands,
-and great sobs shook his shoulders.
-
-And Raymond turned his head away--and Raymond's face was gray and drawn.
-There was no longer room for doubt. That blow upon the skull had blotted
-out the man's memory, left it--a blank.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII--HIS BROTHER'S KEEPER
-
-|FATHER ALLARD'S desk had been moved into the front room. Raymond, on
-a very thin piece of paper, was tracing the signature inscribed on the
-fly-leaf of the prayer-book--François Aubert. Before him lay a number of
-letters written that morning by Valérie--parish letters, a letter to the
-bishop--awaiting his signature. Valérie, who had been private secretary
-to her uncle, was now private secretary to--François Aubert!
-
-The day before yesterday he had signed a letter in this manner,
-and Valérie, who was acquainted with the signature from her uncle's
-correspondence, had had no suspicions. Raymond placed his tracing over
-the bottom of one of the letters, and, bearing down heavily as he wrote,
-obtained an impression on the letter itself. The impression served as a
-guide, and he signed--François Aubert.
-
-It was simple enough, this expedient in lieu of a piece of carbon
-paper that he had no opportunity to buy, and for which, from the notary
-perhaps, Valérie's other uncle, who alone in the village might be
-expected to have such a thing, he had not dared to make the request; but
-it was tedious and laborious--and besides, for the moment, his mind was
-not upon his task.
-
-He signed another, and still another, his face deeply lined as he
-worked, wrinkles nesting in strained little puckers around the corners
-of his eyes--and suddenly, while there were yet two of the letters to
-be signed, he sat back in his chair, staring unseeingly before him. From
-the rear room came that footstep, slow, irregular, uncertain. It was
-Henri Mentone. Dupont's “flea” in the doctor's ear had had its effect.
-Henri Mentone was taking his exercise--from the bed to the window, from
-the window to the door, from the door to the bed, and over again. In the
-three days since the man had recovered consciousness, he had made rapid
-strides toward recovering his strength as well, though he still spent
-part of the day in bed--this afternoon, for instance, he was to be
-allowed out for a little while in the open air.
-
-Raymond's eyes fixed on the open window where the morning sunlight
-streamed into the room. Yes, the man was getting on his feet rapidly
-enough to suit even Monsieur Dupont. The criminal assizes began at
-Tournayville the day after to-morrow. And the day after to-morrow Henri
-Mentone was to stand his trial for the murder of Théophile Blondin!
-
-Raymond's fingers tightened upon the penholder until it cracked
-warningly, recalling him to himself. He had not gone that night. Gone!
-He laughed mockingly. The man had lost his memory! Who would have
-thought of that--and what it meant? If the man had died, or even if the
-man had talked and so _forced_ him to accept pursuit as his one and only
-chance, the issue would have been clear cut. But the man, curse him, had
-not died; nor had he told his story--and to all appearances at least,
-except for still being naturally a little weak, was as well as any one.
-Gone! Gone--that night! Great God, they would _hang_ the fool for this!
-
-The sweat beads crept out on Raymond's forehead. No, no--not that! They
-thought the man was shamming now, but they would surely realise before
-it was too late that he was not. They would convict him of course, the
-evidence was damning, overwhelming, final--but they would not hang a man
-who could not remember. No, they wouldn't hang him. But what they would
-do was horrible enough--they would sentence the man for life, and keep
-him in the infirmary perhaps of some penitentiary. For life--that was
-all.
-
-The square jaw was suddenly out-thrust. Well, what of it! He, Raymond,
-was safe as it was. It was his life, or the other's. In either case
-it would be an innocent man who suffered. As far as actual murder was
-concerned, he was no more guilty than this priest who had had nothing
-to do with it. Besides, they would hang him, Raymond, and they wouldn't
-hang the other. Of course, they didn't believe the man now! Why should
-they? They did not know what he, Raymond, knew; they had only the
-evidence before them that was conclusive enough to convict a saint from
-Heaven! Ha, ha! Why, even the man himself was beginning to believe in
-his own guilt! Sometimes the man was as a caged beast in an impotent
-fury; and--and sometimes he would cling like a frightened child with his
-arms around his, Raymond's, neck.
-
-It was warm here in the room, warm with the bright, glorious sunlight of
-the summer morning. Why did he shiver like that? And this--why _this?_
-The smell of incense; those organ notes rising and swelling through the
-church; the voices of the choir; the bowed heads everywhere! He surged
-up from his chair, and, rocking on his feet, his hands clenched upon the
-edge of the desk. Before what dread tribunal was this that he was being
-called suddenly to account! Yesterday--yesterday had been Sunday--and
-yesterday he had celebrated mass. His own voice seemed to sound again
-in his ears: “_Introibo ad altare Dei_--I will go in unto the Altar of
-God.... _Ab homme iniquo et dolosoerue me_--Deliver me from the unjust
-and deceitful man.... _In quorum manibus iniquitates sunt_--In whose
-hands are iniquities.... _Hic est enim Calix sanguinis mei novi et
-æterni testamenti: mysterium fidei_--For this is the Chalice of My Blood
-of the new and eternal testament: the mystery of faith....” No--no, no!
-He had not profaned those holy things, those holy vessels. He had not
-done it! It was a lie! He had fooled even Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar
-boy.
-
-He sank back into his chair like a man exhausted, and drew his hand
-across his eyes. It was nothing! He was quite calm again. Those words,
-the church, those holy things had nothing to do with Henri Mentone. If
-any one should think otherwise, that one was a fool! Had Three-Ace Artie
-ever been swayed by “mystery of faith”--or been called a coward! Yes,
-that was it--a coward! It was true that he had as much right to life
-as that pitiful thing in the back room, but it was he who had put that
-other's life in jeopardy! That creed--that creed of his, born of the far
-Northland where men were men, fearing neither God nor devil, nor man,
-nor beast--it was better than those trembling words which had just been
-upon his lips. True, he was safe now, if he let them dispose of this
-Henri Mentone--but to desert the other would be a coward's act. Well,
-what then--what then! Confess--and with meek, uplifted eyes, like some
-saintly martyr, stand upon the gibbet and fasten the noose around his
-own neck? _No!_ Well then, what--_what?_ The tormented look was back in
-Raymond's eyes. There was a way, a way by which he could give the man
-a chance, a way by which they both might have their chance, only the
-difficulties so far had seemed insurmountable--a problem that he had not
-yet been able to solve--and the time was short. Yes, the way was there,
-if only----.
-
-With a swift movement, incredibly swift, alert in an instant, his hand
-swept toward the desk. Some one was knocking at the door. His fingers
-closed on the thin piece of paper that had served him in tracing the
-signature of Francois Aubert, and crushed it into a little ball in the
-palm of his hand. The door opened. There were dark eyes there, dark
-hair, a slim figure, a sweet, quiet smile, a calm, an untroubled peace,
-a pervading radiance. It was unreal. It could not exist. There was only
-a ghastly turmoil, agony, dismay and strife everywhere--his soul told
-him so! This was Valérie. God, how tired he was, how weary! Once he had
-seen those arms supporting that wounded man's head so tenderly--like a
-soothing caress. If he might, just for a moment, know that too, it would
-bring him--rest.
-
-She came lightly across the room and stood before the desk.
-
-“It is for the letters, Monsieur le Curé,” she smiled. “I am going down
-to the post-office.” She picked up the little pile of correspondence;
-and, very prettily business-like, began to run through it.
-
-Impulsively Raymond reached out to take the letters from her--and,
-instead, his hand slipped inside his _soutane_, and dropped the crushed
-ball of paper into one of his pockets. It was too late, of course! She
-would already have noticed the omission of the two signatures.
-
-“There are two there that I have not yet signed,” observed Raymond
-casually.
-
-“Yes; so I see!” she answered brightly. “I was just going to tell you
-how terribly careless you were, Monsieur le Curé! Well, you can sign
-them now, while I am putting the others in their envelopes. Here they
-are.”
-
-He took the two letters from her hand--and laid them deliberately aside
-upon the desk.
-
-“It was not carelessness,” he said laughingly; “except that I should
-not have allowed them to get mixed up with the others. There are some
-changes that I think I should like to make before they go. They are not
-important--to-morrow will do.”
-
-“Of course!” she said. Then, in pretended consternation: “I hope the
-mistakes weren't mine!”
-
-“No--not yours”--he spoke abstractedly now. He was watching her as she
-folded the letters and sealed the envelopes. How quickly she worked! In
-a minute now she would go and leave him alone again to listen to those
-footfalls from the other room. He wanted rest for his stumbling brain;
-and, yes--he wanted her. He could have reached out and caught her hands,
-and drawn that dark head bending over the desk closer to him, and held
-her there--a prisoner. He brushed his hands hurriedly over his forehead.
-A prisoner! What did he mean by that? Oh, yes, the thought was born of
-the idea that he was already a jailor. He had been a jailor for three
-days now--of that man there, who was too weak to get away. He had
-appointed himself jailor--and Monsieur Dupont had confirmed the
-appointment. What had that to do with Valérie? He only wanted her to
-stay because--a fool, was he!--because he wanted to torture himself
-a little more. Well, it was exquisite torture then, her presence, her
-voice, her smile! Love? Well, what if he loved! Days and days their
-lives had been spent together now. How long was it? A week--no, it must
-be more than a week--it seemed as though it had been as long as he could
-remember. Yes, he loved her! He knew that now--scoff, sneer and gibe if
-that inner voice would! He loved her! He loved Valérie! Madness? Well,
-what of that, too! Did he dispute it! Yes, it was madness--and in more
-ways than one! He was fighting for his life in this devil's masquerade,
-and he might win; but he could not fight for or win his love. That
-was just dangled before his eyes as the final Satanic touch to this
-hell-born conspiracy that engulfed him! He was in the garb of a priest!
-How those hell demons must shake their very souls out with laughter in
-their damnable glee! He could not even touch her; he could say no word,
-his tongue was tied; nor look at her--he was in the garb of a priest!
-He--what was this! A fire seemed in his veins. Her hand in his! Across
-the desk, her hand had crept softly into his!
-
-“Monsieur--Monsieur le Curé--you are ill!” she cried anxiously.
-
-And then Raymond found himself upon his feet, his other hand laid over
-hers--and he forced a smile.
-
-“I--no”--Raymond shook his head--“no, Mademoiselle Valérie, I am not
-ill.”
-
-“You are worn out, then!” she insisted tremulously. “And it is our
-fault. We should have made you let us help you more. You have been up
-night after night with that man, and in the daytime there was the parish
-work, and you have never had any rest. And yesterday in the church you
-looked so tired--and--and----”
-
-The dark eyes were misty; the sweet face was very close to his. If he
-might bend a little, just a very little, that glad wealth of hair would
-brush his cheek.
-
-“A little tired, perhaps--yes--mademoiselle,” he said, in a low voice.
-“But it is nothing!” He released her hand, and, turning abruptly from
-the desk, walked to the window.
-
-She had followed him with her eyes, turned to look after him--he sensed
-that. There was silence in the room. He did not speak. He did not dare
-to speak until--ah!--this should bring him to his senses quickly enough!
-
-He was staring out through the window. A buck-board had turned in from
-the road, and was coming across the green toward the _presbytère_.
-Dupont and Doctor Arnaud! They were coming for Henri Mentone now--_now!_
-He had let the time slip by until it was too late--because he had not
-been able to fight his way through the odds against him! And then there
-came a wan smile to Raymond's lips. No! His fears were groundless.
-Three-Ace Artie would have seen that at once! The buckboard was
-single-seated, there was room only for two--and Monsieur Dupont could be
-well trusted to look after his own comfort when he took the man away.
-
-He drew back from the window, and faced around--and the thrill that had
-come from the touch of her hand was back again, as he caught her gaze
-upon him. What was it that was in those eyes, that was in her face?
-She had been looking at him like that, he knew, all the time that he
-had been standing at the window. They were still misty, those eyes--she
-could not hide that, though she lowered them hurriedly now. And that
-faint flush tinging her cheeks! Did it mean that she--Fool! He knew what
-it meant! It meant that if he cared to seek for any added self-torture
-with his madman's imaginings, he could find it readily to hand. She--to
-have any thought but that prompted by her woman's sympathy, her tender
-anxiety for another's trouble! She--who thought him a priest, and, pure
-in her faith as in her soul, would have recoiled in horror from----
-
-He steadied his voice.
-
-“Monsieur Dupont and the doctor have just arrived,” he said.
-
-She looked up, her face serious now.
-
-“They have come for Henri Mentone?”
-
-“No, not yet, I imagine,” he answered; “since they have only a
-one-seated buckboard.”
-
-“I will be glad when he has gone!” she exclaimed impulsively.
-
-“Glad?”
-
-“Yes--for your sake,” she said. “He has brought you to the verge of
-illness yourself.” She was looking down again, shuffling the sealed
-envelopes abstractedly. “And it is not only I who say so--it is all St.
-Marleau. St. Marleau loves you for it, for your care of him, Monsieur le
-Curé--but also St. Marlbau thinks more of its curé than it does of one
-who has taken another's life.”
-
-Raymond did not reply--he was listening now to the footsteps of Monsieur
-Dupont and the doctor, as they passed by along the hallway outside. Came
-then a sharp, angry voice raised querulously from the rear room--that
-was Henri Mentone. Monsieur Dupont's voice snapped in reply; and then
-the voices merged into a confused buzz and murmur. He glanced quickly at
-Valérie. She, too, was listening. Her head was turned toward the door,
-he could not see her face.
-
-He walked slowly across the room to her side by the desk.
-
-“You do not think, mademoiselle,” he asked gravely, “that it is possible
-the man is telling the truth, that he really cannot remember anything
-that happened that night--and before?”
-
-She shook her head.
-
-“Every one knows he is guilty,” she said thoughtfully. “The evidence
-proves it absolutely. Why, then, should one believe him? If there was
-even a little doubt of his guilt, no matter how little, it might be
-different, and one might wonder then; but as it is--no.”
-
-“And it is not only you who say so”--he smiled, using her own words--“it
-is all St. Marleau?”
-
-“Yes, all St. Marleau--and every one else, including Monsieur le Curé,
-even if he has sacrificed himself for the man,” she smiled in return.
-Her brows puckered suddenly. “Sometimes I am afraid of him,” she said
-nervously. “Yesterday I ran from the room. He was in a fury.”
-
-Raymond's face grew grave.
-
-“Ah! You did not tell me that, mademoiselle,” he said soberly.
-
-“And I am sorry I have told you now, if it is going to worry you,” she
-said quickly. “You must not say anything to him. The next time I went in
-he was so sorry that it was pitiful.”
-
-In a fury--at times! Was it strange! Was it strange if one did not sit
-unmoved to watch, fettered, bound, impotent, a horrible doom creeping
-inexorably upon one! Was it strange if at times, all recollection
-blotted out, conscious only that one was powerless to avert that
-creeping terror, one should experience a paroxysm of fury that rocked
-one to the very soul--and at times in anguish left one like a helpless
-child! He had seen the man like that--many times in the last few days.
-And he, too, had seen that same terror creep like a dread thing out
-of the night upon himself to hover over him; and he could see it now
-lurking there, ever present--but he, Raymond, could fight!
-
-The door of the rear room opened and closed; and Monsieur Dupont's voice
-resounded from the hall.
-
-“Where is Monsieur le Curé? Ho, Monsieur le Curé!”
-
-Valérie looked toward him inquiringly.
-
-“Shall I tell them you are here?” she asked.
-
-Raymond nodded mechanically.
-
-“Yes--if you will, please.”
-
-He leaned against the desk, his hands gripping its edge behind his back.
-What was it now that this Monsieur Dupont wanted? He was never sure of
-Dupont. And this morning his brain was fagged, and he did not want to
-cope with this infernal Monsieur Dupont! He watched Valérie walk across
-the room, and disappear outside in the hall.
-
-“Monsieur le Curé is here,” he heard her say. “Will you walk in?” And
-then, at some remark in the doctor's voice which he did not catch: “No;
-he is not busy. I was just going to take his letters to the postoffice.
-He heard Monsieur Dupont call.”
-
-And then, as the two men stepped in through the doorway, Raymond spoke
-quietly:
-
-“Good morning, Monsieur Dupont! Good morning, Doctor Arnaud!”
-
-“Hah! Monsieur le Curé!” Monsieur Dupont wagged his head vigorously. “He
-is in a very pretty temper this morning, our friend in there--eh? Yes,
-very pretty! You have noticed it? Yes, you have noticed it. It would
-seem that he is beginning to realise at last that his little tricks are
-going to do him no good!”
-
-Raymond waved his hand toward chairs.
-
-“You will sit down?” he invited courteously.
-
-“No”--Doctor Arnaud smiled, as he answered for them both. “No, not this
-morning, Monsieur le Curé. We are returning at once to Tournayville. I
-have an important case there, and Monsieur Dupont has promised to have
-me back before noon.”
-
-“Yes,” said Monsieur Dupont, “we stopped only to tell you”--Monsieur
-Dupont jerked his hand in the direction of the rear room--“that we will
-take him away to-morrow morning. Doctor Arnaud says he will be quite
-able to go. We will see what the taste of a day in jail will do for him
-before he goes into the dock--what? He is very fortunate! Yes, very!
-There are not many who have only one day in jail before they are tried!
-Yes! To-morrow morning! You look surprised, Monsieur le Curé, that it
-should be so soon. Yes, you look surprised!”
-
-“On the contrary,” observed Raymond impassively, “when I saw you drive
-up a few minutes ago, I thought you had come to take him away at once.”
-
-“But, not at all!” Monsieur Dupont indulged in a significant smile.
-“No--not at all! I take not even that chance of cheating the court out
-of his appearance--I do not wish to house him for months until the next
-assizes. I take no chances on a relapse. He has been quite safe here.
-Yes--quite! He will be quite safe for another twenty-four hours in your
-excellent keeping, Monsieur le Curé--since he is still too weak to run
-far enough to have it do him any good!”
-
-“You pay a high compliment to my vigilance, Monsieur Dupont,” said
-Raymond, with a faint smile.
-
-“Hah!” cried Monsieur Dupont. “Hah!”--he began to chuckle. “Do you hear
-that, Monsieur le Docteur Arnaud? I thought it had escaped him! He has a
-sense of humour, our estimable curé! You see, do you not? Yes, you see.
-Well, we will go now!” He pushed the doctor from the room. “_Au
-revoir_ Monsieur le Curé! It is understood then? To-morrow morning! _Au
-revoir_--till to-morrow!”
-
-Monsieur Dupont bowed, and whisked himself out of sight. Raymond went
-to the door, closed it, and mechanically began to pace up and down
-the room. He heard Monsieur Dupont and the doctor clamber into the
-buckboard, and heard the buckboard drive off. There was moisture upon
-his forehead again. He swept it away. To-morrow morning! He had until
-to-morrow morning in which to act--if he was to act at all. But the way!
-He could not see the way. It was full of peril. The risk was too great
-to be overcome! He dared not even approach that man in there with any
-plan. There was something horribly sardonic in that! If he was to act,
-he must act now, at once--there was only the afternoon and the night
-left.
-
-“You are safe as it is,” whispered that inner voice insidiously. “The
-man's condemnation by the law will dispose of the killing of Théophile
-Blondin forever. It will be as a closed book. And then--have you
-forgotten?--there is your own plan for getting away after a little
-while. It cannot fail, that plan. Besides, they will not sentence the
-man to hang, they will be sure to see that his memory is really gone;
-whereas they will surely hang you if you are caught--as you will be, if
-you are fool enough to attempt the impossible now. What did you ever get
-out of being quixotic? Do you remember that little affair in Ton-Nugget
-Camp?”
-
-“My God, what shall I do?” Raymond cried out aloud. “If--if only I could
-see the way!”
-
-“But you can't!” sneered the voice viciously. “Haven't you tried hard
-enough to satisfy even that remarkably tender conscience that you seem
-to have picked up somewhere so suddenly! You--who were going to kill the
-man with your own hands! Let well enough alone!”
-
-It was silent now in the rear room. Raymond halted in the centre of the
-floor and listened. There were no footsteps; no sound of voice--only
-silence. He laughed a little harshly. What was the man doing? Planning
-his _own_ escape! Again Raymond laughed in bitter mirth. God speed to
-the man in any such plans--only the man, as Monsieur Dupont had most
-sagaciously suggested, would not get very far alone. But still it would
-be humorous, would it not, if the man should succeed alone, where he,
-Raymond, had utterly failed so far to work out any plan that would
-accomplish the same end! There was the open window to begin with, the
-man had been told now probably that he was to be taken away to-morrow
-morning, and--why was there such absolute stillness from that other
-room? The partitions were very thin, and--Raymond, as mechanically as he
-had set to pacing up and down the room, turned to the door, passed out
-into the hall, and walked softly along to the door of the rear room.
-He listened there again. There was still silence. He opened the door,
-stepped across the threshold--and a strange white look crept into his
-face, and he stood still.
-
-Upon the floor at the bedside knelt Henri Mentone, and at the opening
-of the door the man did not look up. There was no fury now; it was the
-child, helpless in despair and grief. His hands were outflung across the
-coverlet, his head was buried in his arms--and there was no movement,
-save only a convulsive tremor that shook the thin shoulders. And there
-was no sound.
-
-And the whiteness deepened in Raymond's face--and, as he looked,
-suddenly the scene was blurred before his eyes.
-
-And then Raymond stepped back into the hall, and closed the door again,
-and on Raymond's lips was a queer, twisted smile.
-
-“To-morrow morning, I think you said, Monsieur Dupont,” he whispered.
-“Well, to-morrow morning, Monsieur Dupont--he will be gone.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII--THE CONFEDERATE
-
-|THERE had been a caller, there had been parish matters, there had
-been endless things through endless hours which he had been unable to
-avoid--except in mind. He had attended to them subconsciously, as it
-were; his mind had never for an instant left Henri Mentone. And it was
-beginning to take form now, a plan whereby he might effect the other's
-escape.
-
-Sitting at his desk, he looked at his watch as he heard Valérie and
-her mother go upstairs. It was a quarter past three. Later on in the
-afternoon, in another hour or thereabouts Madame Lafleur would take
-Henri Mentone for a few steps here and there about the green, or sit
-with him for a little fresh air on the porch of the _presbytère_.
-Raymond smiled ironically. As jailor he had delegated the task to
-Madame Lafleur--since, as he had told both Valérie and her mother at the
-noonday meal, he was going out to make pastoral visits that afternoon.
-Meanwhile--he had just looked into Henri Mentone's room--the man was
-lying on his bed asleep. If he worked quickly now--while Valérie and her
-mother were upstairs, and the man was lying on his bed!
-
-He picked up a pen, and drew a piece of paper toward him. Everything
-hinged on his being able to procure a confederate. He, the curé of St.
-Marleau, must procure a confederate by some means, and naturally without
-the confederate knowing that Monsieur le Curé was doing so--and, almost
-as essential, a confederate who had no love for Monsieur le Curé! It was
-not a very simple matter! That was the problem with which he had racked
-his brains for the last three days. Not that the minor details were
-lacking in difficulties either; he, as the curé, must not appear even
-remotely in the plan; he, as the curé, dared not even suggest escape to
-Henri Mentone--but he could overcome all that if only he could secure a
-confederate. That was the point upon which everything depended.
-
-His pen poised in his hand, he stared across the room. Yes, he saw it
-now--a gambler's chance. But the time was short now, short enough to
-make him welcome any chance. He would go to Mother Blondin's. He
-might find a man there such as he sought, one of those who already had
-offended the law by frequenting the dissolute old hag's illicit still.
-He could ask, of course, who these men were without exciting any
-suspicion, and if luck failed him that afternoon he would do so, and it
-would be like a shot still left in his locker; but if, in his rôle of
-curé, he could actually trap one of them drinking there, and incense
-the man, even fight with him, it would make success almost certain. Yes,
-yes--he could see it all now--clearly--afterwards, when it grew dark, he
-would go to the man in a far different rôle from that of a curé, and
-the man would be at his disposal. Yes, if he could trap one of them
-there--but before anything else Henri Mentone must be prepared for the
-attempt.
-
-Raymond began to write slowly, in a tentative sort of way, upon the
-paper before him. Henri Mentone, remembering nothing of the events of
-that night, must be left in no doubt as to the genuineness and good
-faith of the note, or of the vital necessity of acting upon its
-instructions. At the expiration of a few minutes, Raymond read over
-what he had written. He scored out a word here and there; and then, on
-another sheet of paper, in a scrawling, illiterate hand, he wrote out
-a slangy, ungrammatical version of the original draft. He read it again
-now:
-
-“The memory game won't go, Henri. They've got you cold, but they don't
-know there was two of us in it at the old woman's that night, so keep up
-your nerve, for I ain't for laying down on a pal. I got it fixed for a
-getaway for you to-night. Keep the back window open, and be ready at any
-time after dark--see? Leave-the rest to me. If that mealy-mouthed priest
-gets in the road, so much the worse for him. I'll take care of him so he
-won't be any trouble to any one except a doctor, and mabbe not much to a
-doctor--get me? I'd have been back sooner, only I had to beat it for you
-know where to get the necessary coin. Here's some to keep you going in
-case we have to separate in a hurry to-night.----Pierre.”
-
-Raymond nodded to himself. Henri Mentone might not relish the suggestion
-of any violence offered to the “mealy-mouthed priest,” for he had come
-to look upon Father François Aubert as his only friend, and, except in
-his fits of fury, to cling dependently upon him; but then there would
-be no violence offered to Father François Aubert, and the suggestion
-supplied a final touch of authenticity to the note, since Henri Mentone
-would realise that escape was impossible unless in some way the curé
-could be got out of the road.
-
-Raymond destroyed the original draft, and took out his pocketbook. He
-smiled curiously, as he examined its contents. It was the gold of the
-Yukon, the gold of Ton-Nugget Camp, that he had changed into banknotes
-of large denominations. He selected two fifty-dollar bills. It was not
-enough to carry the man far, or to take care of the man until he was on
-his feet, nor were fifty-dollar bills the most convenient denomination
-for a man under the present circumstances; but that was not their
-purpose--they would act as a guarantee of one “Pierre” and “Pierre's”
- plan, and to-night he would give the man more without stint, and
-supplement it with some small bills from his roll of “petty cash.” He
-folded the money in the note, found a small piece of string in one of
-the drawers of the desk, stood up, took his hat, tiptoed softly across
-the room, out into the hall, and from the hall to the front porch.
-
-Here, he stood quietly for a moment, looking about him; and then,
-satisfied that he was unobserved, that neither Valérie nor her mother
-had noticed his exit, he walked quickly around to the back of the
-house--and paused again, this time beneath the open window of Henri
-Mentone's room. Here, too, but even more sharply now, he looked about
-him--then stooped ana picked up a small stone. He tied the note around
-this, and, crouched low by the window, called softly: “Henri! Henri!”
-
-He heard a rustle, the creak of the bed, as though the man, startled and
-suddenly roused, were jerking himself up into an upright position.
-
-“It is Pierre!” Raymond called again. “_Courage, mon vieux!_ Have no
-fear! All is arranged for tonight. But do not come to the window--we
-must be careful. Here--_voici!_”--he tossed the note in over the sill.
-“Until dark--tu comprends, Henri? I will be back then. Be ready!”
-
-He heard the man cry out in a low voice, and the creak of the bed again,
-and the man's step on the floor--and, stooping low, Raymond darted
-around the corner of the house.
-
-A moment later he was standing again in the hallway of the _presbytère_.
-
-“Oh, Madame Lafleur!” he called up the stairs. “It is only to tell you
-that I am going out now.”
-
-“Yes, Monsieur le Curé--yes. Very well, Monsieur le Curé,” she answered.
-
-Raymond closed the front door behind him, and, walking sedately across
-the green and past the church, gained the road. It was Mother Blondin's
-now, but he would not go by the station road--further along the village
-street, where the houses thinned out and were scattered more apart,
-he could climb up the little hill without being seen, and by walking
-through the woods would come out on the path whose existence had once
-already done him such excellent service. And the path, as an approach
-to Mother Blondin's this afternoon, offered certain very important
-strategical advantages.
-
-But now for the moment he was in the heart of the village, and from
-the doorways and garden patches of the little squat, curved-roof,
-whitewashed houses of rough-squared logs that flanked the road on either
-side, voices called out to him cheerily as he walked along. He answered
-them--all of them. He was even conscious, in spite of the worry of his
-mind, of a curious and not altogether unwelcome wonder. They were simple
-folk, these people, big-hearted and kindly, free and open-handed with
-the little they had, and they appeared to have grown fond of him in the
-few days he had been in St. Marleau, to look up to him, to trust him,
-to have faith in him, and to accept him as a friend, offering a frank
-friendship in return.
-
-His hands were clasped behind his back as he walked along, and suddenly
-his fingers laced tightly over one another. The pleasurable wonder of
-it was gone. He was playing well this rôle of saint! He was a
-gambler--Three-Ace Artie of Ton-Nugget Camp; a gambler--too unclean even
-for the Yukon. But he was no hypocrite! He would have liked to have torn
-these saintly trappings from his body, wrenched off his _soutane_
-and hurled it in the faces of these people, and bade them keep their
-friendship and their trust--tell them that he asked for nothing that
-they gave because they believed him other than he was. He was no
-hypocrite--he was a man fighting desperately for that for which every
-one had a right to fight, for which instinct bade even an insect
-fight--his life! He did not despise this proffered friendship, the smile
-of eye and lip, the ring of genuine sincerity in the voices that called
-to him--but they were not his, they were not meant for Three-Ace Artie,
-they were not meant for Raymond Chapelle. Somehow--it was a grotesque
-thought--he envied himself in the rôle of curé for these things. But
-they were not his. It was strange even that he, in whose life there had
-been naught but riot and ruin, should still be able to simulate so well
-the better things, to carry through, not the rôle of priest, that was
-a matter of ritual, a matter of keeping his head and his nerve, but the
-far kindlier and intimate rôle of _father_ to the parish! Yes, it was
-very strange, and----
-
-“_Bon jour_, Monsieur le Curé!”
-
-Raymond halted. It was Madame Bouchard, the carpenter's wife. With a
-sort of long-handled wooden paddle, she was removing huge loaves of
-bread from the queer-looking outdoor oven which, though built of a
-mixture of stone and brick, resembled very much, through being rounded
-over at the top, an exaggerated beehive. A few yards further in from the
-edge of the road Bouchard himself was at work upon a boat in front of
-his shop. Above the shop was the living quarters of the family, and
-here, on a narrow veranda, peering over, a half dozen scantily clad and
-very small children clung to the railings.
-
-Raymond sniffed the air luxuriously.
-
-“_Tiens_, Madame Bouchard!” he cried. “Your husband is to be envied! The
-smell of the bread is enough to make one hungry!”
-
-The carpenter laid down his tools, and looked up, laughing.
-
-“_Salut_, Monsieur le Curé!” he called.
-
-“If Monsieur le Curé would like one”--Madame Bouchard's cheeks had grown
-a little rosy--“I--I will send one to the _presbytère_ for him.”
-
-Raymond had eaten of St. Marleau bread before. The taste was sour, and
-it required little short of a deftly wielded axe to make any impression
-upon the crust.
-
-“You are too good, too generous, Madame Bouchard,” he said, shaking his
-forefinger at her chidingly. “And yet”--he smiled broadly--“if there is
-enough to spare, there is nothing I know of that would delight me more.”
-
-“Of course, she can spare it!” declared the carpenter heartily, coming
-forward. “Stanislaus will carry you two presently. And, _tiens_,
-Monsieur le Curé, you like to row a boat--eh?”
-
-Raymond, on the point of shaking his head, checked himself. A boat!
-One of these days--soon, if this devil's trap would only open a
-little--there was his own escape to be managed. He had planned that
-carefully... a boating accident... the boat recovered... the curé's body
-swept out somewhere in those twenty-five miles of river breadth that
-stretched away before him now, and from there--who could doubt it!--to
-the sea.
-
-“Yes,” he said; “I am very fond of it, but as yet I have not found
-time.”
-
-“Good!” exclaimed the carpenter. “Well, in two or three days it will
-be finished, the best boat in St. Marleau--and Monsieur le Curé will be
-welcome to it as much as he likes. It is a nice row to the islands
-out there--three miles--to gather the sea-gull eggs--and the islands
-themselves are very pretty. It is a great place for a picnic, Monsieur
-le Curé.”
-
-“Excellent!” said Raymond enthusiastically. “That is exactly what
-I shall do.” He clapped the carpenter playfully upon the shoulder.
-“So--eh, Monsieur Bouchard,--you will lose no time in finishing the
-boat!” He turned to Madame Bouchard. “_Au revoir_, madame--and very many
-thanks to you. I shall think of you at supper to-night, I promise you!”
- He waved his hand to the children on the veranda, and once more started
-along the road.
-
-Madame Bouchard's voice, speaking to her husband, reached him. The words
-were not intended for his ears, and he did not catch them all. It was
-something about--“the good, young Father Aubert.”
-
-A wan smile crept to Raymond's lips. For the moment at least, he was in
-a softened, chastened mood. “The good, young Father Aubert”--well, let
-it be so! They would never know, these people of St. Marleau. Somehow,
-he was relieved at that. He did not want them to know. Somehow, he, too,
-wanted for himself just what they would have--a memory--the memory of a
-good, young Father Aubert.
-
-At a bend in the road, where the road edged in against the slope of the
-hill, hiding him from view, Raymond clambered up the short ascent. In a
-clump of small cedars at the top, he paused and looked back. The great
-sweep of river, widening into the Gulf of St. Lawrence, with no breath
-of air to stir its surface, shimmered like a mirror under the afternoon
-sun. A big liner, outward bound, and perhaps ten miles from shore,
-seemed as though it were painted there. To the right, close in, was the
-little group of islands, with bare, rounded, rocky peaks, to which
-the carpenter had referred. About him, from distant fields, came the
-occasional voice of a man calling to his horses, the faint whir of a
-reaper, and a sort of pervading, drowsy murmur of insect life. Below
-him, nestled along the winding road, were the little whitewashed houses,
-quiet, secure, tranquil, they seemed to lie there; and high above them
-all, as though to typify the scene, to set its seal upon it, from the
-steeple of the church there gleamed in the sunlight a golden cross, the
-symbol of peace--such as he wore upon his breast!
-
-With a quick intake of his breath, a snarl smothered in a low, confused
-cry, as he glanced involuntarily downward at his crucifix, he gathered
-up the skirts of his _soutane_, and, as though to vent his emotion in
-physical exertion, began to force his way savagely through the bushes
-and undergrowth.
-
-He had other things to do than waste time in toying with visionary
-sentiment! There was one detail in that scene of _peace_ he had not
-seen--that man in the rear room of the _presbytère_ who was going to
-trial for the murder of Théophile Blondin, because he was decked out in
-the clothes of one Raymond Chapelle, alias Henri Mentone. It would be
-well perhaps for Raymond Chapelle to remember that, and to remember
-nothing else for the remainder of the afternoon!
-
-He went on through the woods, heading as nearly as he could judge in a
-direction that would bring him out at the rear of the tavern. And now
-he laughed shortly to himself. Peace! There would be a peace that would
-linger long in somebody's memory at Mother Blondin's this afternoon, if
-only luck were with him! He was on a priestly mission--to console, bring
-comfort to the old hag for the loss of her son--and, quite incidentally,
-to precipitate a fight with any of the loungers who might be burying
-their noses in Mother Blondin's home-made _whiskey-blanc!_ He laughed
-out again. St. Marleau would talk of that, too, and applaud the
-righteousness of the good, young Father Au^ bert--but he would attain
-the object he sought. He, the good, young Father Aubert, the man with a
-rope around his neck, whose hands were against everyman's, had too many
-friends in St. Marleau--he needed an _enemy_ now! It was the one thing
-that would make the night's work sure.
-
-He reached the edge of the wood to find himself even nearer the tavern
-than he had expected--and to find, too, that he would not have to lie
-long in wait for a visitor to Mother Blondin's. There was one there
-already. So far then, he could have asked for no better luck. He caught
-the sound of voices--the old hag's, high-pitched and querulous; a man's,
-rough and domineering. Looking cautiously through the fringe of trees
-that still sheltered him, Raymond discovered that he was separated from
-Mother Blondin's back door by a matter of but a few yards of clearing.
-The door was open, and a man, heavy-built, in a red-checkered shirt,
-a wide-brimmed hat of coarse straw, was forcing his way past the
-shrivelled old woman. As the man turned his head sideways, Raymond
-caught a glimpse of the other's face. It was not a pleasant face. The
-eyes were black, narrow and shifty under a low brow; and a three days'
-growth of black stubble on his jaws added to his exceedingly dirty and
-unkempt appearance.
-
-Mother Blondin's voice rose furiously.
-
-“You will pay first!” she screamed. “I know you too well, Jacques
-Bourget! Do you understand? The money! You will pay me first!”
-
-“Or otherwise you will tell the police, eh?” the man guffawed
-contemptuously. He pushed his way inside the house, and pushed a table
-that stood in the centre of the room roughly back against the wall. “You
-shut your mouth!” he jeered at her--and, stooping down, lifted up a trap
-door in the floor. “Now trot along quick for some glasses, so you can
-keep count of all we both drink!”
-
-“You are a thief, a robber, a _crapule_, a--” she burst into a stream
-of blasphemous invective. Her wrinkled face grew livid with ungovernable
-rage. She shook a bony fist at him. “I will show you what you will get
-for this! You think I am alone--eh? You think I am an old woman that you
-can rob as you like--eh? You think my whisky is for your guzzling throat
-without pay--eh? Well, I will show you, you----”
-
-The man made a threatening movement toward her, and she retreated back
-out of Raymond's sight--evidently into an inner room, for her voice,
-as virago-like as ever, was muffled now.
-
-“Bring me a glass, and waste no time about it!” the man called after
-her. “And if you do not hold your tongue, something worse will happen to
-you than the loss of a drop out of your bottle!”
-
-The man turned, and descended to the cellar through the trapdoor.
-
-“Yes,” said Raymond softly to himself. “Yes, I think Monsieur Jacques
-Bourget is the man I came to find.”
-
-He stepped out from the trees, walked noiselessly across to the house,
-and, reaching the doorway, remained standing quietly upon the threshold.
-He could hear the man moving about in the cellar below; from the inner
-room came Mother Blondin's incessant mutterings, mingled with a savage
-rattling of crockery. Raymond smiled ominously--and then Raymond's face
-grew stern with well-simulated clerical disapproval.
-
-The man's head, back turned, showed above the level of the floor. Into
-the doorway from the inner room came Mother Blondin--and halted there,
-her withered old jaw sagging downward in dumfounded surprise until it
-displayed her almost toothless gums. The man gained his feet, turned
-around--and, with a startled oath, dropped the bottle he was carrying.
-It crashed to the floor, broke, and the contents began to trickle back
-over the edge of the trapdoor.
-
-“_Sacristi!_” shouted the man, his face flaring up into an angry red.
-He thrust his head forward truculently from his shoulders, and glared at
-Raymond. “_Sacré nom de Dieu_, it is the saintly priest!” he sneered.
-
-“My son,” said Raymond gravely, “do not blaspheme! And have respect for
-the Church!”
-
-“Bah!” snarled the man. “Do you think I care for you--or your church!”
- He looked suddenly at Mother Blondin. “Hah!”--he jumped across the room
-toward her. “So that is what you meant by not being alone--eh? I did not
-understand! You would trick me, would you! You would sell me out for the
-price of a drink--and--ha, ha--to a priest! Well”--he had her now by the
-shoulders--“I will take a turn at showing you what I will do! Eh--why
-did you not warn me he was here?” He caught her head, and banged it
-brutally against the wall. “Eh--why did----”
-
-Raymond, too, was across the room. It was strange! Most strange! He had
-intended to seek an occasion to quarrel. The occasion was made for
-him. He had no longer any desire to quarrel--he was possessed of an
-overwhelming desire to get his fingers around the throat of this cur who
-banged that straggling, dishevelled gray hair against the wall. He was
-not quite sure that it was himself who spoke. No, of course, it was not!
-It was Monsieur le Curé--the good, young Father Aubert. He was between
-them now, only Mother Blondin had fallen to the floor.
-
-“My son,” he said placidly, “since you will not respect the Church for
-one reason, I will teach you to respect it for another.” He pointed to
-old Mother Blcndin, who, more terrified than hurt perhaps, was getting
-to her knees, moaning and wringing her hands. “You have heard, though I
-fear you may have forgotten it, of the Mosaic law. An eye for an eye, my
-son. I intend to do to you exactly what you have done to this woman.”
-
-The man, drawn back, eyed him first in angry bewilderment, and then with
-profound contempt.
-
-“You'd better get out of here!” he said roughly.
-
-“Presently--when I have thrown you out”--Raymond was calmly tucking up
-the skirts of his _soutane_. “And”--the flat of his hand landed with a
-stinging blow across the other's cheek--“you see that I do not take even
-you off your guard.”
-
-The man reeled back--and then, with a bull-like roar of rage, head down,
-rushed at Raymond.
-
-It was not Monsieur le Curé now--it was Raymond Chapelle, alias Arthur
-Leroy, alias Three-Ace Artie, cold, contained, quick and lithe as a
-panther, and with a panther's strength. A crash--a lightning right
-whipped to the point of Bourget's jaw--and Bourget's head jolted back
-quivering on his shoulders like a tuning fork. And like a flash, before
-the other could recover, a left and right smashed full again into
-Bourget's face.
-
-With a scream, Mother Blondin crawled and scuttled into the doorway
-of the inner room. The man, bellowing with mad dismay, his hands
-outstretched, his fingers crooked to tear at Raymond's flesh if they
-could but reach it, rushed again.
-
-And now Raymond, wary of the other's strength and bulk, gave ground; and
-now he side-stepped and swung, battering his blows into Bourget's face;
-and now he ran craftily from the other. Chairs and table crashed to the
-floor; their heels crunched in the splinters of the broken bottle. The
-man's face began to bleed profusely from both nose and a cut lip. They
-were not tactics that Bourget understood. He clawed, he kept his head
-down, he rushed in blind clumsiness--and always Raymond was just beyond
-his reach.
-
-Again and again they circled the room, Bourget, big, lumbering, awkward,
-futilely expending his strength, screaming oaths with gasping breath.
-And again and again, springing aside as the man charged blindly by,
-Raymond with a grim fury rained in his blows. It was something like that
-other night--here in Mother Blon-din's. She was shrieking again now from
-the doorway:
-
-“Kill him! The _misérable!_ Hah, Jacques Bourget, are you a
-jack-in-the-box only to bob your head backward every time you are hit!
-I did not bring the priest here! _Sacré nom_, you cannot blame me! I had
-nothing to do with it! _Sacré nom--sacré nom--sacré nom--kill him!_”
-
-Kill who? Who did she mean--the man or himself? Raymond did not know.
-She was just a blurred object of rage and tumbled hair dancing in a
-frenzy up and down there in the doorway. He ran again. Bourget, like a
-stunned fool, was covering his face with his arms as he dashed forward.
-Ah, yes, Bourget was trying to crush him back into the corner there,
-and--no!--the maniacal rush had faltered, the man was swaying on his
-feet. And then Raymond, crouched to elude the man, sprang instead at the
-other's throat, his hands closed like a vise, and with the impact of his
-body both lurched back against the wall by the rear doorway.
-
-“My son,” panted Raymond, “you remember--an eye for an eye”--he smashed
-the man's head back against the wall--and then, gathering all his
-strength, flung the other from him out through the open door.
-
-The fight was out of the man. For a moment he lay sprawled on the grass.
-Then he raised himself up, and got upon his knees. His face was bruised
-and blood-stained almost beyond recognition. He shook both fists at
-Raymond.
-
-“By God, I'll get you for this!”--the man's voice was guttural with
-unbridled passion. “I'll get you, you censer-swinging devil! I'll twist
-your neck with the chain of your own crucifix! Damn you to the pit!
-You're not through with me!”
-
-“Go!” said Raymond sternly. “Go--and be glad that I have treated you no
-worse!”
-
-He shut the door in the man's face; and, turning abruptly, walked across
-the floor to where Mother Blondin, quiet for the moment, gaped at him
-from the threshold of the other room.
-
-“He will not trouble you any more, Madame Blondin, I imagine,” he said
-quietly. “See, it is over!” He smiled at her reassuringly--he needed to
-know now only where the man lived. “I should be sorry to think he was
-one of my parishioners. Where does he come from?”
-
-“He is a farmer, and he lives in the house on the point a mile and
-a quarter up the road”--the answer had come automatically; she was
-listening, without looking at Raymond, to the threats and oaths that
-Jacques Bourget, as he evidently moved away for his voice kept growing
-fainter, still bawled from without. And then hate and sullen viciousness
-was in her face again. Her hair had tumbled to her shoulders and
-straggled over her forehead. She jabbed at it with both hands, sweeping
-it from her eyes, and leered at him fiercely. “You dirty spy!” she
-croaked hoarsely. “I know you--I know all of you priests! You are all
-alike! Sneaks! Sneaks! Meddlers and sneaks! But you'll get to hell some
-day--like the rest of us! Ha, ha--to hell! You can't fool the devil!
-I know you. That's what you sneaked up here for--to spy on me, to find
-something against me that the police weren't sharp enough to find, so
-that you could get rid of me, get me out of St. Marleau! I know! They've
-been trying that for a long time!”
-
-“To turn you over to the police,” said Raymond gently, “would never save
-you from yourself. I came to talk to you a little about your son--to see
-if in any way I could help you, or be of comfort to you.”
-
-She stared at him for an instant, wondering and perplexed; and then the
-snarl was on her lips again.
-
-“You lie! No priest comes here for that! I am an _excommuniée_.”
-
-“You are a woman in sorrow,” Raymond said simply.
-
-She did not answer him--only drew back into the other room.
-
-Raymond followed her. It was the room where he had fought that
-night--with Théophile Blondin. His eyes swept it with a hurried glance.
-There was the _armoire_ from which Théophile Blondin had snatched the
-revolver--and there was the spot on the floor where the dead man had
-fallen. And here was the old hag with the streaming hair, as it had
-streamed that night, who had run shrieking into the storm that he had
-murdered her son. And the whole scene began to live itself over again in
-his mind in minute detail. It seemed to possess an unhealthy fascination
-that bade him linger, and at the same time to fill him with an impulse
-to rush away from it. And the impulse was the stronger; and, besides, it
-would be evening soon, and there was that man in the _presbytère_,
-and there was much to do, and he had his confederate now--one Jacques
-Bourget.
-
-“I shall not stay now”--he smiled, as he turned to Mother Blondin, and
-held out his hand. “You are upset over what has happened. Another time.
-But you will remember, will you not, that I would like to help you in
-any way I can?”
-
-She reached out her hand mechanically to take his that was extended to
-her, and suddenly, muttering, jerked it back--and Raymond, appearing not
-to notice, smiled again, and, crossing the room, went out through the
-front door.
-
-He went slowly across the little patch of yard, and on along the road in
-the direction of the village, and now his lips thinned in a grim smile.
-Yes, St. Marleau would hear of this, his chivalrous protection of Mother
-Blondin--and place another halo on his head! The devil's sense of humour
-was of a brand all its own!
-
-The more he twisted and squirmed and wriggled to get out of the trap,
-desperate to the extent that he would hesitate at nothing, the more
-he became--the good, young Father Aubert! Even that dissolute old
-hag, whose hatred for the church and all pertaining to it was the most
-dominant passion in her life, was not far from the point where she would
-tolerate a priest--if the priest were the good, young Father Aubert!
-
-He reached the point where the road began to descend the hill, and,
-pausing, looked back. Yes--even Mother Blondin, the _excommuniée!_ She
-was standing in the doorway, dirty, unkempt, disreputable, and, shading
-her eyes with her hand, was gazing after him. Yes, even she--whose son
-had been killed in a fight with him.
-
-And Raymond, fumbling suddenly with his hat, lifted it to Mother
-Blondin, and went on down the hill.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV--THE HOUSE ON THE POINT
-
-|IT was late, a good half hour after the usual supper time, when Raymond
-returned to the _presbytère_. He had done a very strange thing. He had
-gone into the church, and sat there in the silence and the quiet of
-the sacristy--and twilight had come unnoticed. It was the quiet he had
-sought, respite for a mind that had suddenly seemed nerve-racked to the
-breaking point as he had come down the hill from Mother Blondin's. It
-had been dim, and still, and cool, and restful in there--in the church.
-There was still Valerie, still the priest who had not died, still his
-own peril and danger, and still the hazard of the night before him; all
-that had not been altered; all that still remained--but in a measure,
-strangely, somehow, he was calmed. He was full of apologies now to
-Madame Lafleur, as he sat down to supper.
-
-“But it is nothing!” she said, placing a lamp upon the table. She sat
-down herself; and added simply, as though, indeed, no reason could be
-more valid: “I saw you go into the church, Monsieur le Curé.”
-
-“Yes,” said Raymond, his eyes now on Valerie's empty seat. “And where is
-Mademoiselle Valerie? Taking our _pauvre_ Mentone his supper?”
-
-“Oh, no!” she answered quickly. “I took him his supper myself a little
-while ago--though I do not know whether he will eat it or not. Valerie
-went over to her uncle's about halfpast five. She said something about
-going for a drive.”
-
-Raymond cut his slice of cold pork without comment. He was conscious of
-a dismal sense of disappointment, a depression, a falling of his spirits
-again. The room seemed cold and dead without Valérie there, without
-her voice, without her smile. And then there came a sense of pique, of
-irritation, unreasonable no doubt, but there for all that. Why had she
-not included him in the drive? Fool! Had he forgotten? He could not have
-gone if she had--he had other things to do than drive that evening!
-
-“Yes,” said Madame Lafleur, significantly reverting to her former
-remark, as she handed him his tea, “yes, I do not know if the poor
-fellow will eat anything or not.”
-
-Raymond glanced at her quickly. What was the matter? Had anything been
-discovered! And then his eyes were on his plate again. Madame Lafleur's
-face, whatever her words might be intended to convey, was genuinely
-sympathetic, nothing more.
-
-“Not eat?” he repeated mildly. “And why not, Madame Lafleur?”
-
-“I am sure I do not know,” she replied, a little anxiously. “I have
-never seen him so excited. I thought it was because he was to be taken
-away to-morrow morning. And so, when we went out this afternoon,
-I tried to say something to him about his going away that would cheer
-him up. And would you believe it, Monsieur le Curé, he just stared at
-me, and then, as though I had said something droll, he--fancy, Monsieur
-le Curé, from a man who was going to be tried for his life--he laughed
-until I thought he would never stop. And after that he would say nothing
-at all; and since he has come in he has not been for an instant still.
-Do you not hear him, Monsieur le Curé?”
-
-Raymond heard very distinctly. His ears had caught the sounds from the
-moment he had entered the _presbytère_. Up and down, up and down, from
-that back room came the stumbling footfalls; then silence for a moment,
-as though from exhaustion the man had sunk down into a chair; and then
-the pacing to and fro again. Raymond's lips tightened in understanding,
-as he bent his head over his plate. Like himself, the man in there was
-waiting--for darkness!
-
-“He is over-excited,” he said gravely. “And being still so weak, the
-news that he is to go to-morrow, I am afraid, has been too much for him.
-I have no doubt he was verging on hysteria when he laughed at you like
-that, Madame Lafleur.”
-
-“I--I hope we shall not have any trouble with him,” said Madame Lafleur
-nervously. “I mean that I hope he won't be taken sick again. He did not
-look at the tray at all when I took it in; he kept his eyes on me all
-the time, as though he were trying to read something in my face.”
-
-“Poor fellow!” murmured Raymond.
-
-Madame Lafleur nodded her gray head in sympathetic assent.
-
-“Ah, yes, Monsieur le Curé--the poor fellow!” she sighed. “It is a
-terrible thing that he has done; but it is also terrible to think of
-what he will have to face. Do you think it wrong, Monsieur le Curé, to
-wish almost that he might escape?”
-
-Escape! Curse it--what was the matter with Madame Lafleur to-night? Or
-was it something the matter with himself?
-
-“Not wrong, perhaps,” he said, smiling at her, “if you do not connive at
-it.”
-
-“Oh, but, Monsieur le Curé!” she exclaimed reprovingly. “What a thing
-to say! But I would never do that! Still, it is all very sad, and I am
-heartily glad that I am not to be a witness at the trial like you and
-Valérie. And they say that Madame Blondin, and Monsieur Labbée, the
-station agent, and a lot of the villagers are to go too.”
-
-“Yes, I believe so,” Raymond nodded.
-
-Madame Lafleur, in quaint consternation, suddenly changed the subject.
-
-“Oh, but I forgot to tell you!” she cried. “The bread! Madame Bouchard
-sent you two loaves all fresh and hot. Do you like it?”
-
-The bread! He had been conscious neither that the bread was sour, nor
-that the crust was unmanageable. He became suddenly aware that the
-morsel in his mouth was not at all like the baking of Madame Lafleur.
-
-“You are all too good to me here in St. Marleau,” he protested.
-
-He checked her reply with a chiding forefinger, and a shake of his
-head--and presently, the meal at an end, pushed back his chair, and
-strolled to the window. He stood there for a moment looking out. It was
-dark now--dark enough for his purpose.
-
-“It is a beautiful night, Madame Lafleur,” he said enthusiastically. “I
-am almost tempted to go out again for a little walk.”
-
-“But, yes, Monsieur le Curé--why not!” Madame Lafleur was quite anxious
-that he should go. Madame Lafleur was possessed of that enviable
-disposition that was instantly responsive to the interests and pleasures
-of others.
-
-“Yes--why not!” smiled Raymond, patting her arm as he passed by her on
-his way to the door. “Well, I believe I will.”
-
-But outside in the hall he hesitated. Should he go first to the man in
-the rear room? He had intended to do so before he went out--to probe the
-other, as it were, to satisfy himself, perhaps more by the man's acts
-and looks than by words, that Henri Mentone had entered into the plans
-for the night. But he was satisfied of that now. Madame Lafleur's
-conversation had left no doubt but that the man's unusual restlessness
-and excitement were due to his being on the _qui vive_ of expectancy.
-No, there was no use, therefore, in going to the man now, it would only
-be a waste of valuable time.
-
-This decision taken, Raymond walked to the front door and down the steps
-of the porch. Here he turned, and, choosing the opposite side of
-the house from the kitchen and dining room, where he might have been
-observed by Madame Lafleur, yet still moving deliberately as though he
-were but sauntering idly toward the beach, made his way around to the
-rear of the _presbytère_. It was quite dark. There were stars, but no
-moon. Behind here, between the back of the house and the shed, there
-was no possibility of his being seen. The only light came from Henri
-Mentone's room, and the shades there were drawn.
-
-He opened the shed door silently, stepped inside, and closed the door
-behind him. He struck a match, held it above his head--and almost
-instantly extinguished it, as he located the sacristan's overalls, and
-the old coat and hat.
-
-And now Raymond worked quickly. He stripped off his _soutane_, drew on
-the overalls, turning the bottoms well up over his own trousers, slipped
-on the coat, tucked the hat into one of the coat pockets, and put on his
-_soutane_ again. It was very simple--the _soutane_ hid everything. He
-smiled grimly, as he, stepped outside again--the Monsieur le Curé who
-came out, was the Monsieur le Curé who had gone in.
-
-Raymond chose the beach. The village street meant that he would be
-delayed by being forced to stop and talk with any one he might meet, to
-say nothing of the possibility of having the ruinous, if well meaning,
-companionship of some one foisted upon him--while, even if seen, there
-would be nothing strange in the fact that the curé should be taking an
-evening walk along the shore.
-
-He started off at a brisk pace along the stretch of sand just behind
-the _presbytère_. It was a mile and a quarter to the point--to Jacques
-Bourget's. At the end of the sandy stretch Raymond went more slowly--the
-shore line as a promenade left much to be desired--there was a seemingly
-interminable ledge of slate rock over which he had need to pick his way
-carefully. He negotiated this, and was rewarded with another short sandy
-strip--but only to encounter the slate rocks again with their ubiquitous
-little pools of water in the hollows, which he must avoid warily.
-
-Sometimes he slipped; once he fell. The grim smile was back on his lips.
-There seemed to be something ironical even in these minor difficulties
-that stood between him and the effecting of the other's escape! There
-seemed to be a world of irony in the fact that he who sought escape
-himself should plan another's rather than his own! It was the devil's
-toils, that was all, the devil's damnable ingenuity, and hell's
-incomparable sense of humour! He had either to desert the man; or stand
-in the man's place himself, and dangle from the gallows for his
-pains; or get the man away. Well, he had no desire to dangle from the
-gallows--or to desert the man! He had chosen the third and only course
-left open to him. If he got the man away, if the man succeeded in making
-his escape, it would not only save the man, but he, Raymond, would have
-nothing thereafter to fear--the Curé of St. Marleau in due course would
-meet with his deplorable and fatal accident! True, the man would always
-live in the shadow of pursuit, a thing that he, Raymond, had been
-willing to accept for himself only as a last resort, but there was no
-help for that in the other's case now. He would give the man more money,
-plenty of it. The man should be across the border and in the States
-early to-morrow, then New York, and a steamer for South America. Yes, it
-should unquestionably succeed. He had worked out all those details while
-he was still racking his brain for a “Jacques Bourget,” and he would
-give the man minute instructions at the last moment when he gave him
-more money--that hundred dollars was only an evidence of good faith and
-of the loyalty of one “Pierre.” The only disturbing factor in the
-plan was the man's physical condition. The man was still virtually an
-invalid--otherwise the police would have been neither justified in
-so doing, nor for a moment have been willing to leave him in the
-_presbytère_, as they had. Monsieur Dupont was no fool, and it was
-perfectly true that the man had not the slightest chance in the world
-of getting away--alone. But, aided as he, Raymond, proposed to aid the
-other, the man surely would be able to stand the strain of travelling,
-for a man could do much where his life was at stake. Yes, after all,
-why worry on that score! It was only the night and part of the next day.
-Then the man could rest quietly at a certain address in New York, while
-waiting for his steamer. Yes, unquestionably, the man, with his life in
-the balance, would be able to manage that.
-
-Raymond was still picking his way over the ledges, still slipping and
-stumbling, and now, recovering from a fall that had brought him to his
-knees, he gave his undivided attention to his immediate task. It seemed
-a very long mile and a quarter, but at the expiration of perhaps another
-twenty minutes he was at the end of it, and halted to take note of his
-surroundings. He could just distinguish the village road edging away
-on his left; while ahead of him, but a little to his right, out on the
-wooded point, he caught the glimmer of a light through the trees. That
-would be Jacques Bourget's house.
-
-He now looked cautiously about him. There was no other house in sight.
-His eyes swept the road up and down as far as he could see--there was no
-one, no sign of life. He listened--there was nothing, save the distant
-lapping of the water far out, for the tide was low on the mud flats.
-
-A large rock close at hand suggested a landmark that could not be
-mistaken. He stepped toward it, took off his _soutane_, and laid the
-garment down beside the rock; he removed his clerical collar and his
-clerical hat, and placed them on top of the _soutane_, taking care,
-however, to cover the white collar with the hat--then, turning down
-the trouser legs of the overalls, and turning up the collar of the
-threadbare coat, he took the battered slouch hat from his pocket and
-pulled it far down over his eyes.
-
-“Behold,” said Raymond cynically, “behold Pierre--what is his other
-name? Well, what does it matter? Pierre--Desforges. Desforges will do as
-well as any--behold Pierre Desforges!”
-
-He left the beach, went up the little rise of ground that brought
-him amongst the trees, and made his way through the latter toward the
-lighted window of the house. Arrived here, he once more looked about
-him.
-
-The house was isolated, far back from the road; and, in the darkness
-and the shadows cast by the trees, would have been scarcely discernible,
-save that it was whitewashed, and but for the yellow glow diffused
-from the window. He approached the door softly, and listened. A woman's
-voice, and then a man's, snarling viciously, reached him. “... _le sacré
-maudit curé!_”
-
-Raymond laughed low. Jacques Bourget and his wife appeared to have
-an engrossing topic of conversation, if they had been at it since
-afternoon! Also Jacques Bourget appeared to be of an unforgiving nature!
-
-There was no veranda, not even a step, the door was on a level with the
-ground; and, from the little Raymond could see of the house now that
-he was close beside it, it appeared to be as down-at-the-heels and as
-shiftless as its proprietor. He leaned forward to avail himself of
-the light from the window, and, taking out a roll of bills, of smaller
-denominations than those which he carried in his pocketbook, he counted
-out five ten-dollar notes.
-
-Jacques Bourget from within was still in the midst of a blasphemous
-tirade. Raymond rapped sharply on the door with his knuckles. Bourget's
-voice ceased instantly, and there was silence for a moment. Raymond
-rapped again--and then, as a chair leg squeaked upon the floor, and
-there came the sound of a heavy tread approaching the door, he drew
-quickly back into the shadows at one side.
-
-The door was flung open, and Bourget's face, battered and cut, an eye
-black and swollen, his lip puffed out to twice its normal size, peered
-out into the darkness.
-
-“Who's there?” he called out gruffly.
-
-“S-sh! Don't talk so loud!” Raymond cautioned in a guarded voice. “Are
-you Jacques Bourget?”
-
-The man, with a start, turned his face in the direction of Raymond's
-voice. Mechanically he dropped his own voice.
-
-“Mabbe I am, and mabbe I'm not,” he growled suspiciously. “What do you
-want?”
-
-“I want to talk to you if you are Jacques Bourget,” Raymond answered.
-“And if you are Jacques Bourget I can put you in the way of turning a
-few dollars tonight, to say nothing of another little matter that will
-be to your liking.”
-
-The man hesitated, then drew back a little in the doorway.
-
-“Well, come in,” he invited. “There's no one but the old woman here.”
-
-“The old woman is one old woman too many,” Raymond said roughly. “I'm
-not on exhibition. You come out here, and shut the door. You've nothing
-to be afraid of--the only thing I have to do with the police is to keep
-away from them, and that takes me all my time.”
-
-“I ain't worrying about the police,” said Bourget shrewdly.
-
-“Maybe not,” returned Raymond. “I didn't say you were. I said I was.
-I've got a hundred dollars here that----”
-
-A woman appeared suddenly in the doorway behind Bourget.
-
-“What is it? Who is it, Jacques?” she shrilled out inquisitively.
-
-Bourget, for answer, swore at her, pushed her back, and, slamming the
-door behind him, stepped outside.
-
-“Well, what is it? And who are you?” he demanded.
-
-“My name is Desforges--Pierre Desforges,” said Raymond, his voice still
-significantly low. “That doesn't mean anything to you--and it doesn't
-matter. What I want you to do is to drive a man to the second station
-from here to-night--St. Eustace is the name, isn't it?--and you get a
-hundred dollars for the trip.”
-
-“What do you mean?” Bourget's voice mingled incredulity and avarice. “A
-hundred dollars for that, eh? Are you trying to make a fool of me?”
-
-Raymond held the bills up before the man's face. “Feel the money, if you
-can't see it!” he suggested, with a short laugh. “That's what talks.”
-
-“_Bon Dieu!_” ejaculated Bourget. “Yes, it is so! Well, who am I to
-drive? You? You are running away! Yes, Î understand! They are after
-you--eh? I am to drive you, eh?”
-
-“No,” said Raymond. He drew the man close to him in the darkness, and
-placed his lips to Bourget's ear. “_Henri Mentone_.”
-
-Bourget, startled, sprang back.
-
-“_What! Who!_” he cried out loudly.
-
-“I told you not to talk so loud!” snapped Raymond. “You heard what I
-said.”
-
-Bourget twisted his head furtively about.
-
-“No, '_cré nom--no!_” he said huskily. “It is too much risk! If one were
-caught at that--eh? _Bien non, merci!_”
-
-“There's no chance of your being caught”--Raymond's voice was smooth
-again. “It is only nine miles to St. Eustace--you will be back and in
-bed long before daylight. Who is to know anything about it?”
-
-“Yes, and you!”--Bourget was still twisting his head about furtively.
-“What do I know about you? What have you to do with this?”
-
-“I will tell you,” said Raymond, and into the velvet softness of his
-voice there crept an ominous undertone; “and at the same time I will
-tell you that you will be very wise to keep your mouth shut. You
-understand? If I trust you, it is to make you trust me. Henri Mentone is
-my pal. I was there the night Théophile Blondin was killed. But I made
-my escape. I do not desert a pal, only I had no money. Well, I have the
-money now, and I am back. And I am just in time--eh? They say he is well
-enough to be taken away in the morning.”
-
-“_Mon Dieu_, you were there at the killing!” muttered Bourget hoarsely.
-“No--I do not like it! No--it is too much risk!” His voice grew suddenly
-sharp with undisguised suspicion. “And why did you come to me, eh? Why
-did you come to me? Who sent you here?”
-
-“I came because Mentone must be driven to St. Eustace--because he is not
-strong enough to walk,” said Raymond coolly. “And no one sent me here.
-I heard of your fight this afternoon. The curé is telling around the
-village that if he could not change the aspect of your heart, there was
-no doubt as to the change in the aspect of your face.”
-
-“_Sacré nom!_” gritted Bourget furiously. “He said that! I will show
-him! I am not through with him yet! But what has he to do with this that
-you come here? Eh? I do not understand.”
-
-“Simply,” said Raymond meaningly, “that Monsieur le Curé is the one with
-whom we shall have to deal in getting Mentone away.”
-
-“Hah!” exclaimed Bourget fiercely. “Yes--I am listening now! Well?”
-
-“He sits a great deal of the time in the room with Mentone,” explained
-Raymond, with a callous laugh. “Very well. Mentone has been warned. If
-this fool of a curé knows no better than to sit there all night tonight,
-I will find some reason for calling him outside, and in the darkness
-where he will recognise no one we shall know what to do with him, and
-when we are through we will tie him and gag him and throw him into the
-shed where he will not be found until morning. On the other hand, if we
-are able to get Mentone away without the curé knowing it, you will
-still not be without your revenge. He is responsible for Mentone, and if
-Mentone gets away through the curé's negligence, the curé will get into
-trouble with the police.”
-
-“I like the first plan better,” decided Bourget, with an ugly sneer. “He
-talks of my face, does he! _Nom de Dieu,_ he will not be able to talk of
-his own! And a hundred dollars--eh? You said a hundred dollars? Well,
-if there is no more risk than that in the rest of the plan, _sacré nom_,
-you can count on Jacques Bourget”. . .
-
-“There is no risk at all,” said Raymond. “And as to which plan--we shall
-see. We shall have to be guided by the circumstances, eh? And for the
-rest--listen! I will return by the beach, and watch the _presbytère_.
-You give me time to get back, then harness your horse and drive down
-there--drive past the _presbytère_. I will be listening, and will hear
-you. Then after you have gone a little way beyond, turn around and come
-back, and I will know that it is you. If you drive in behind the church
-to where the people tie their horses at mass on Sundays, you can wait
-there without being seen by any one passing by on the road. I will come
-and let you know how things are going. We may have to wait a while after
-that until everything is quiet, but in that way we will be ready to act
-the minute it is safe to do so.”
-
-“All that is simple enough,” Bourget grunted in agreement. “And then?”
-
-“And then,” said Raymond, “we will get Mentone out through the window of
-his room. There is a train that passes St. Eustace at ten minutes after
-midnight--and that is all. The St. Eustace station, I understand, is
-like the one here--far from the village, and with no houses about. He
-can hide near the station until traintime; and, without having shown
-yourself, you can drive back home and go to bed. It is your wife only
-that you have to think of--she will say nothing, eh?”
-
-“_Baptême!_” snorted Bourget contemptuously. “She has learned before now
-when to keep her tongue where it belongs! And you? You are coming, too?”
-
-“Do you think I am a fool, Bourget?” inquired Raymond shortly.
-“When they find Mentone is gone, they will know he must have had an
-accomplice, for he could not get far alone. They will be looking for two
-of us travelling together. I will go the other way. That makes it safe
-for Mentone--and safe for me. I can walk to Tournayville easily before
-daylight; and in that way we shall both give the police the slip.”
-
-“_Diable!_” grunted Bourget admiringly. “You have a head!”
-
-“It is good enough to take care of us all in a little job like
-to-night's,” returned Raymond, with a shrug of his shoulders. “Well,
-do you understand everything? For if you do, there's no use wasting any
-time.”
-
-“Yes--I have it all!” Bourget's voice grew vicious again. “That _sacré
-maudit curé!_ Yes, I understand.”
-
-Raymond thrust the banknotes he had been holding into Bourget's hand.
-
-“Here are fifty dollars to bind the bargain,” he said crisply. “You get
-the other fifty at the church. If you don't get them, all you've got to
-do is drive off and leave Mentone in the lurch. That's fair, isn't it?”
-
-Bourget shuffled back to the edge of the lighted window, counted the
-money, and shoved it into his pocket.
-
-“_Bon Dieu!_” Bourget's puffed lip twisted into a satisfied grin. “I do
-not mind telling you, my Pierre Desforges, that it is long since I have
-seen so much.”
-
-“Well, the other fifty is just as good,” said Raymond in grim
-pleasantry. He stepped back and away from the house. “At the church
-then, Bourget--in, say, three-quarters of an hour.”
-
-“I will be there,” Bourget answered. “Have no fear--I will be there!”
-
-“All right!” Raymond called back--and a moment later gained the beach
-again.
-
-At the rock, he once more put on his _soutane_; and, running now where
-the sandy stretches gave him opportunity, scrambling as rapidly as
-he could over the ledges of slate rock, he headed back for the
-_presbytère_.
-
-It was as good as done! There was a freeness to his spirits now--a
-weight and an oppression lifted from him. Henri Mentone would stand in
-no prisoner's dock the day after to-morrow to answer for the murder of
-Théophile Blondin! And it was very simple--now that Bourget's aid had
-been enlisted. He smiled ironically as he went along. It would not even
-be necessary to pommel Monsieur le Curé into a state of insensibility!
-Madame Lafleur retired very early--by nine o'clock at the latest--as did
-Valérie. As soon as he heard Bourget drive up to the church, he would
-go to the man to allay any impatience, and as evidence that the plan was
-working well. He would return then to the _presbytère_--it was a matter
-only of slipping on and off his _soutane_ to appear as Father Aubert to
-Madame Lafleur and Valérie, and as Pierre Desforges to Jacques Bourget.
-And the moment Madame Lafleur and Valérie were in bed, he would
-extinguish the light in the front room as proof that Monsieur le Curé,
-too, had retired, run around to the back of the house, get Henri
-Mentone out of the window, and hand him over to Bourget, explaining that
-everything had worked even more smoothly than he had hoped for, that all
-were in bed, and that there was no chance of the escape being discovered
-until morning. Bourget, it was true, was very likely to be disappointed
-in the measure of the revenge wrecked upon the curé, but Bourget's
-feelings in the matter, since Bourget then would have no choice but to
-drive Henri Mentone to St. Eustace, were of little account.
-
-And as far as Henri Mentone was concerned, it was very simple too. The
-man would have ample time and opportunity to get well out of reach. He,
-Raymond, would take care that the man's disappearance was not discovered
-any earlier than need be in the morning! It would then be a perfectly
-natural supposition--a supposition which he, Raymond, would father--that
-the man, in his condition, could not be far away, but had probably only
-gone restlessly and aimlessly from the house; and at first no one would
-even think of such a thing as escape. They would look for him around
-the _presbytère_, and close at hand on the beach. It would be impossible
-that, weak as he was, the man had gone far! The search would perhaps
-be extended to the village by the time Monsieur Dupont arrived for his
-vanished prisoner. Then they would extend the search still further, to
-the adjacent fields and woods, and it would certainly be noontime before
-the alternative that the man, aided by an accomplice, had got away
-became the only tenable conclusion. But even then Monsieur Dupont would
-either have to drive three miles to the station to reach the telegraph,
-or return to Tournayville--and by that time Henri Mentone would long
-since have been in the United States.
-
-And after that--Raymond smiled ironically again---well after that, it
-would be Monsieur Dupont's move!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV--HOW HENRI MENTONE RODE WITH JACQUES BOURGET
-
-|IT was eight o'clock--the clock was striking in the kitchen--as Raymond
-entered the _presbytère_ again. He stepped briskly to the door of the
-front room, opened it, and paused--no, before going in there to wait,
-it would be well first to let Madame Lafleur know that he was back,
-to establish the fact that it was _after_ his return that the man had
-escaped, that his evening walk could in no way be connected with what
-would set all St. Marleau by the ears in the morning. And so he passed
-on to the dining room, which Madame Lafleur used as a sitting room as
-well. She was sewing beside the table lamp.
-
-“Always busy, Madame Lafleur!” he called out cheerily, from the
-threshold. “Well, and has Mademoiselle Valérie returned?”
-
-“Ah, it is you, Monsieur le Curé!” she exclaimed, dropping her work on
-her knees. “And did you enjoy your walk? No, Valérie has not come back
-here yet, though I am sure she must have got back to her uncle's by now.
-Did you want her for anything, Monsieur le Curé--to write letters? I can
-go over and tell her.”
-
-“But, no--not at all!” said Raymond hastily. He indicated the rear room
-with an inclination of his head. “And our _pauvre_ there?”
-
-Madame Lafleur's sweet, motherly face grew instantly troubled.
-
-“You can hear him tossing on the bed yourself, Monsieur le Curé. I have
-just been in to see him. He has one of his bad moods. He said he wanted
-nothing except to be left alone. But I think he will soon be quiet. Poor
-man, he is so weak he will be altogether exhausted--it is only his mind
-that keeps him restless.”
-
-Raymond nodded.
-
-“It is a very sad affair,” he said slowly, “a very sad affair!” He
-lifted a finger and shook it playfully at Madame Lafleur. “But we must
-think of you too--eh? Do not work too late, Madame Lafleur!”
-
-She answered him seriously.
-
-“Only to finish this, Monsieur le Curé. See, it is an altar cloth--for
-next Sunday.” She held it up. “It is you who work too hard and too
-late.”
-
-It was a cross on a satin background. He stared at it. It had been
-hidden on her lap before. He had not been thinking of--a cross. For the
-moment, assured of Henri Mentone's escape, he had been more light of
-heart than at any time since he had come to St. Mar-leau; and, for the
-moment, he had forgotten that he was a meddler with holy things, that
-he was--a priest of God! It seemed as though this were being flaunted
-suddenly now as a jeering reminder before his eyes; and with it he
-seemed as suddenly to see the chancel, the altar of the church where the
-cloth was to play its part--and himself kneeling there--and, curse
-the vividness of it! he heard his own lips at their sacrilegious work:
-“_Lavabo inter innocentes manus meas: et circumdabo altare tuum,
-Domine_.... I will wash my hands among the innocent: and I will compass
-Thine altar, O Lord.” And so he stared at this cross she held before
-him, fighting to bring a pleased and approving smile to the lips that
-fought in turn for their right to snarl a defiant mockery.
-
-“Ah, you like it, Monsieur le Curé!” cried Madame Lafleur happily. “I am
-so glad.”
-
-And Raymond smiled for answer, and went from the room.
-
-And in the front room he lighted the lamp upon his desk, and stood
-there looking down at the two letters that still awaited the signature
-of--Francois Aubert. “I will wash my hands among the innocent”--he
-raised his hands, and they were clenched into hard and knotted fists.
-Words! Words! They were only words. And what did their damnable
-insinuations matter to him! Others might listen devoutly and believe, as
-he mouthed them in his surplice and stole--but for himself they were
-no more than the mimicry of sounds issuing from a parrot's beak! It was
-absurd then that they should affect him at all. He would better laugh
-and jeer at them, and all this holy entourage with which he cloaked
-himself, for these things were being made to serve his own ends, were
-being turned to his own account, and--it was Three-Ace Artie now, and
-he laughed hoarsely under his breath--for once they were proving of some
-real and tangible value! Madame Lafleur, and her cross, and her altar
-cloth! He laughed again. Well, while she was busy with her churchly
-task, that she no doubt fondly believed would hurry her exit through the
-purgatory to come, he would busy himself a little in getting as speedily
-as possible out of the purgatory of the present. These letters now.
-While he was waiting, and there was an opportunity, he would sign them.
-It would be easier to say that he had decided not to make any changes
-in them after all, than to have new ones written and then have to
-find another opportunity for signing the latter. He reached for
-the prayer-book to make a tracing of the signature that was on the
-fly-leaf--and suddenly drew back his hand, and stood motionless,
-listening.
-
-From the road came the rumble of wheels. The sound grew louder.
-The vehicle passed by the _presbytère_, going in the direction of
-Tournayville. The sound died away. Still Raymond listened--even more
-intently than before. Jacques Bourget did not own the only horse and
-wagon in St. Marleau, but Bourget was to turn around a little way down
-the road, and return to the church. A minute, two passed, another;
-and then Raymond caught the sound of a wheel-tire rasping and grinding
-against the body of a wagon, as though the latter were being turned in a
-narrow space--then presently the rattle of wheels again, coming back now
-toward the church. And now by the church he heard the wagon turn in from
-the road.
-
-Raymond relaxed from his strained attitude of attention. Jacques
-Bourget, it was quite evident, intended to earn the balance of his
-money! Well, for a word then between Pierre Desforges and Jacques
-Bourget--pending the time that Madame Lafleur and her altar cloth should
-go to bed. The letters could wait.
-
-He moved stealthily and very slowly across the room. Madame Lafleur must
-not hear him leaving the house. He would be gone only a minute--just to
-warn Bourget to keep very quiet, and to satisfy the man that everything
-was going well. He could strip off his _soutane_ and leave it under the
-porch.
-
-Cautiously he opened the door, an inch at a time that it might not
-creak, and stepped out into the hall on tiptoe--and listened. Madame
-Lafleur's rocking chair squeaked back and forth reassuringly. She had
-perhaps had enough of her altar cloth for a while! How could one do fine
-needle work--and rock! And why that fanciful detail to flash across
-his mind! And--his face was suddenly set, his lips tight-drawn
-together--_what was this!_ These footsteps that had made no sound in
-crossing the green, but were quick and heavy upon the porch outside! He
-drew back upon the threshold of his room. And then the front door
-was thrust open. And in the doorway was Dupont, Monsieur Dupont, the
-assistant chief of the Tournayville police, and behind Dupont was
-another man, and behind the man was--yes--it was Valerie.
-
-“_Tiens! 'Cré nom d'un chien!_” clucked Monsieur Dupont. “Ha, Monsieur
-le Curé, you heard us--eh? But you did not hear us until we were at the
-door--and a man posted at the back of the house by that window there,
-eh? No, you did not hear us. Well, we have nipped the little scheme in
-the bud, eh?”
-
-Dupont _knew!_ Raymond's hand tightened on the door jamb--and, as once
-before, his other hand crept in under his crucifix, and under the breast
-of his _soutane_ to his revolver.
-
-“I do not understand”--he spoke deliberately, gravely. “You speak of a
-scheme, Monsieur Dupont? I do not understand.”
-
-“Ah, you do not understand!”--Monsieur Duponts face screwed up into a
-cryptic smile. “No, of course, you do not understand! Well, you will in
-a moment! But first we will attend to Monsieur Henri Mentone! Now
-then, Marchand”--he addressed his companion, and pointed to the rear
-room--“that room in there, and handcuff him to you. You had better stay
-where you are, Monsieur le Curé. Come along, Marchand!”
-
-Dupont and his companion ran into Henri Mentone's room. Raymond heard
-Madame Lafleur cry out in sudden consternation. It was echoed by a cry
-in Henri Mentone's voice. But he was looking at Valérie, who had stepped
-into the hall. She was very pale. What had she to do with this? What did
-it mean? Had she discovered that he--no, Dupont would not have rushed
-away in that case, but then--His lips moved: “You--Valérie!” How very
-pale she was--and how those dark eyes, deep with something he could not
-fathom, sought his face, only to be quickly veiled by their long lashes.
-
-“Do not look like that, Monsieur le Curé--as though I had done wrong.”
- she said in a low, hurried tone. “I am sorry for the man too; but the
-police were to have taken him away to-morrow morning in any case. And if
-I went for Monsieur Dupont to-night, it was----”
-
-“You went for Monsieur Dupont?”--he repeated her words dazedly, as
-though he had not heard aright. “It was you who brought Monsieur Dupont
-here just now--from Tournayville! But--but, I do not understand at all!”
-
-“Valérie! Valérie!”--it was Madame Lafleur, pale and excited, who had
-rushed to her daughter's side. “Valérie, speak quickly! What are they
-doing? What does all this mean?”
-
-Valérie's arm stole around her mother's shoulder.
-
-“I--I was just telling Father Aubert, mother,” she said, a little
-tremulously. “You--you must not be nervous. See, it was like this.
-You had just taken the man for a little walk about the green this
-afternoon--you remember? When I came out of the house a few minutes
-later to join you, I saw what I thought looked like some money sticking
-out from one end of a folded-up piece of paper that was lying on the
-grass just at the bottom of the porch steps. I was sure, of course, that
-it was only a trick my imagination was playing on me, but I stooped down
-and picked it up. It was money, a great deal of money, and there was
-writing on the paper. I read it, and then I was afraid. It was from some
-friend of that man's in there, and was a plan for him to make his escape
-to-night.”
-
-“Escape!”--Madame Lafleur drew closer to her daughter, as she glanced
-apprehensively toward the rear room.
-
-Dupont's voice floated menacingly out into the hall--came a gruff
-oath from his companion--the sound of a chair over-turned--and Henri
-Mentone's cry, pitched high.
-
-In a curiously futile way Raymond's hand dropped from the breast of
-his _soutane_ to his side. Valérie and her mother seemed to be swirling
-around in circles in the hall before him. He forced himself to speak
-naturally:
-
-“And then?”
-
-Valérie's eyes were on her mother.
-
-“I did not want to alarm you, mother,” she went on rapidly; “and so I
-told you I was going for a drive. I ran to uncle's house. He was out
-somewhere. I could go as well as any one, and if Henri Mentone had a
-friend lurking somewhere in the village there would be nothing to arouse
-suspicion in a girl driving alone; and, besides, I did not know who this
-friend might be, and I did not know who to trust. I told old Adèle that
-I wanted to go for a drive, and she helped me to harness the horse.”
-
-And now, as Raymond listened, those devils, that had chuckled and
-screeched as the lumpy earth had thudded down on the lid of Théophile
-Blondin's coffin, were at their hell-carols again. It was not just luck,
-just the unfortunate turn of a card that the man had dropped the
-money and the note. It was more than that. It seemed to hold a grim,
-significant premonition--for the future. Those devils did well to
-chuckle! Struggle as he would, they had woven their net too cunningly
-for his escape. It was those devils who had torn his coat that night in
-the storm, as he had tried to force his way through the woods. It was
-_his_ coat that Henri Mentone was wearing. He remembered now that the
-lining of the pocket on the inside had been ripped across. It was those
-devils who had seen to that--for this--knowing what was to come. A
-finger seemed to wag with hideous jocularity before his eyes--the finger
-of fate. He looked at Valerie. It was nothing for her to have driven to
-Tournayville, she had probably done it a hundred times before, but it
-seemed a little strange that Henri Mentone's possible escape should have
-been, apparently, so intimate and personal a matter to her.
-
-“You were afraid, you said, Mademoiselle Valerie,” he said slowly.
-“Afraid--that he would escape?”
-
-She shook her head--and the colour mounted suddenly in her face.
-
-“Of what then?” he asked.
-
-“Of what was in the note,” she said, in a low voice. “I knew I had time,
-for nothing was to be done until the _presbytère_ was quiet for the
-night; but the plan then was to--to put you out of the way, and----”
-
-His voice was suddenly hoarse.
-
-“And you were afraid--for me? It was for me that you have done this?”
-
-She did not answer. The colour was still in her cheeks--her eyes were
-lowered.
-
-“The blessed saints!” cried Madame Lafleur, crossing herself. “The
-devils! They would do harm to Father Aubert! Well, I am sorry for that
-man no longer! He----”
-
-They were coming along the hall--Henri Mentone handcuffed to Monsieur
-Dupont's companion, and Monsieur Dupont himself in the rear.
-
-“Monsieur le Curé!” Henri Mentone called out wildly. “Monsieur le Curé,
-do not----”
-
-“Enough! Hold your tongue!” snapped Monsieur Dupont, giving the man a
-push past Raymond toward the front door. “Do you appeal to Monsieur le
-Curé because he has been good to you--or because you intended to knock
-Monsieur le Curé on the head to-night! Bah! Hurry him along, Marchand!”
- Monsieur Dupont paused before Valérie and her mother. “You will do me a
-favour, mesdames? A very great favour--yes? You will retire instantly to
-bed--instantly. I have my reasons. Yes, that is right--go at once.”
- He turned to Raymond. “And you, Monsieur le Curé, you will wait for me
-here, eh? Yes, you will wait. I will be back on the instant.”
-
-The hall was empty. In a subconscious sort of way Raymond stepped back
-into his room, and, reaching the desk, stood leaning heavily against it.
-His brain would tolerate no single coherent thought. Valérie had done
-this for fear of harm to him, Valérie had... there was Jacques Bourget
-who if he attempted now to... it was no wonder that Henri Mentone had
-been restless all evening, knowing that he had lost the note, and not
-daring to question... the day after to-morrow there was to be a trial at
-the criminal assizes... Valérie had not met his eyes, but there had been
-the crimson colour in her face, and she had done this to save _him_...
-were they still laughing, those hell-devils... were they now engaged in
-making Valérie love him, and making her torture her soul because she
-was so pure that no thought could strike her more cruelly than that
-love should come to her for a priest? Ah, his brain was logical now! His
-hands clenched, and unclenched, and clenched again. Impotent fury was
-upon him. If it were true! Damn them to the everlasting place from
-whence they came! But it was not true! It was but another trick of
-theirs to make him writhe the more--to make _him_ believe she cared!
-
-A footstep! He looked up. Monsieur Dupont was back.
-
-“_Tiens!_” cried Monsieur Dupont. “Well, you have had an escape,
-Monsieur le Curé! An escape! Yes, you have! But I do not take all the
-credit. No, I do not. She is a fine girl, that Valérie Lafleur. If she
-were a man she would have a career--with the police. I would see to it!
-But you do not know yet what it is all about, Monsieur le Curé, eh?”
-
-“There was a note and money that Mademoiselle Valérie said she
-found”--Raymond's voice was steady, composed.
-
-“_Zut!_” Monsieur Dupont laid his forefinger along the side of his nose
-impressively. “That is the least of it! There is an accomplice--two of
-them in it! You would not have thought that, eh, Monsieur le Curé? No,
-you would not. Very well, then--listen! I have this Mentone safe, and
-now I, Dupont, will give this accomplice a little surprise. There will
-be the two of them at the trial for the murder of Théophile Blondin! The
-grand jury is still sitting. You understand, Monsieur le Curé? Yes, you
-understand. You are listening?”...
-
-“I am listening,” said Raymond gravely--and instinctively glanced toward
-the window. It might still have been Jacques Bourget who had turned
-down there on the road; or, if not, then the man would be along at any
-minute. In either case, he must find some way to warn Bourget. “I am
-listening, Monsieur Dupont,” he said again. “You propose to lay a trap
-for this accomplice?”
-
-“It is already laid,” announced Monsieur Dupont complacently. “They
-will discover with whom they are dealing! I returned at once with
-Mademoiselle Valérie. I brought two men with me; but you will observe,
-Monsieur le Curé, that I did not bring two teams--nothing to arouse
-suspicion--nothing to indicate that I was about to remove our friend
-Mentone to-night. It would be a very simple matter to secure a team here
-when I was ready for it. You see, Monsieur le Curé? Yes, you see. Very
-well! My plans worked without a hitch. Just as we approached the church,
-we met a man named Jacques Bourget driving alone in a buckboard. Nothing
-could be better. It was excellent. I stopped him. I requisitioned him
-and his horse and his wagon in the name of the law. I made him turn
-around, and told him to follow us back here after a few minutes. You
-see, Monsieur le Curé? Yes, you see. Monsieur Jacques Bourget is now on
-his way to Tournayville with one of my officers and the prisoner.”
-
-Raymond's fingers were playing nonchalantly with the chain of his
-crucifix. Raymond's face was unmoved. It was really funny, was it not!
-No wonder those denizens of hell were shrieking with abandoned glee in
-his ears. This time they had a right to be amused. It was really very
-funny--that Jacques Bourget should be driving Henri Mentone away from
-St. Marleau! Well, and now--what?
-
-“You are to be congratulated, Monsieur Dupont,” he murmured. “But the
-accomplice--the other one, who is still at large?”
-
-“Ah, the other one!” said Monsieur Dupont, and laid his hand
-confidentially on Raymond's arm. “The other--heh, _mon Dieu_, Monsieur
-le Curé, but you wear heavy clothes for the summertime!”
-
-It was the bulk of the sacristan's old coat! There was a smile in
-Raymond's eyes, a curious smile, as he searched the other's face. One
-could never be sure of Monsieur Dupont.
-
-“A coat always under my _soutane_ in the evenings”--Raymond's voice was
-tranquil, and he did not withdraw his arm.
-
-“A coat--yes--of course!” Monsieur Dupont nodded his head. “Why not!
-Well then, the other--listen. All has been done very quietly. No alarm
-raised. None at all! I have sent Madame Lafleur and her daughter to
-bed. The plan was that the accomplice should come to the back window for
-Mentone. But they would not make the attempt until late--until all in
-the village was quiet. That is evident, is it not? Yes, it is evident.
-Very good! You sleep here in this room, Monsieur le Curé? Yes? Well, you
-too will put out your light and retire at once. I will go into Mentone's
-room, and wait there in the dark for our other friend to come to the
-window. I will be Henri Mentone. You see? Yes, you see. It is simple, is
-it not? Yes, it is simple. Before morning I will have the man in a
-cell alongside of Henri Mentone. Do you see any objections to the plan,
-Monsieur le Curé?”
-
-“Only that it might prove very dangerous--for you,” said Raymond
-soberly. “If the man, who is certain to be a desperate character,
-attacked you before you----”
-
-“Dangerous! Bah!” exclaimed Monsieur Dupont. “That is part of my
-business. I do not consider that! I have my other officer outside there
-now by the shed. As soon as the man we are after approaches the window,
-the officer will leap upon him and overpower him. And now, Monsieur le
-Curé, to bed--eh? And the light out!”
-
-“At once!” agreed Raymond. “And I wish you every success, Monsieur
-Dupont! If you need help you have only to call; or, if you like, I will
-go in there and stay with you.”
-
-“No, no--not at all!” Monsieur Dupont moved toward the door. “It is not
-necessary. Nothing can go wrong. We may have to wait well through the
-night, and there is no reason why you should remain up too. _Tiens!_
-Fancy! Imagine! Did I not tell you that Mentone was a hardened rascal?
-Two of them! Well, we will see if the second one can remember any better
-than the first? The light, Monsieur le Curé--do not forget! He will not
-come while there is a sound or a light about the house!” Monsieur Dupont
-waved his hand, and the door closed on Monsieur Dupont.
-
-Raymond, still leaning against the desk, heard the other walk along the
-hall, and enter the rear room--and then all was quiet. He leaned over
-and blew out the lamp. Nothing must be allowed to frustrate Monsieur
-Dupont's plans!
-
-And then, in the darkness, for a long time Raymond stood there. And
-thinking of Monsieur Dupont's dangerous vigil in the other room, he
-laughed; and thinking of Valérie, he knew a bitter joy; and thinking
-of Henri Mentone, his hands knotted at his sides, and his face grew
-strained and drawn. And after that long time was past, he fumbled with
-his hands outstretched before him like a blind man feeling his way, and
-flung himself down upon the couch.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI--FOR THE MURDER OF THÉOPHILE BLONDIN
-
-|THEY sat on two benches by themselves, the witnesses in the trial
-of Henri Mentone for the murder of Théophile Blondin. On one side of
-Raymond was Valérie, on the other was Mother Blondin; and there was
-Labbée, the station agent, and Monsieur Dupont, and Doctor Arnaud. And
-on the other bench were several of the villagers, and two men Raymond
-did not know, and another man, a crown surveyor, who had just testified
-to the difference in time and distance from the station to Madame
-Blondin's as between the road and the path--thus establishing for the
-prosecution the fact that by following the path there had been ample
-opportunity for the crime to have been committed by one who had left the
-station after the curé had already started toward the village and yet
-still be discovered by the curé on the road near the tavern. The counsel
-appointed by the court for the defence had allowed the testimony to go
-unchallenged. It was obvious. It did not require a crown surveyor to
-announce the fact--even an urchin from St. Marleau was already aware
-of it. The villagers too had testified. They had testified that Madame
-Blondin had come running into the village screaming out that her son had
-been murdered; and that they had gone back with her to her house and had
-found the dead body of her son lying on the floor.
-
-It was stiflingly hot in the courtroom; and the courtroom was crowded to
-its last available inch of space.
-
-There were many there from Tournayville--but there was all of St.
-Marleau. It was St. Marleau's own and particular affair. Since early
-morning, since very early morning, Raymond had seen and heard the
-vehicles of all descriptions rattling past the _presbytère_, the
-occupants dressed in their Sunday clothes. It was a _jour de fête_.
-St. Marleau did not every day have a murder of its own! The fields were
-deserted; only the very old and the children had not come. They were not
-all in the room, for there was not place for them all--those who had
-not been on hand at the opening of the doors had been obliged to content
-themselves with gathering outside to derive what satisfaction they could
-from their proximity to the fateful events that were transpiring within;
-and they had at least seen the prisoner led handcuffed from the jail
-that adjoined the courthouse, and had been rewarded to the extent of
-being able to view with intense and bated interest people they had
-known all their lives, such as Valérie, and Mother Blondin, and the more
-privileged of their fellows who had been chosen as witnesses, as these
-latter disappeared inside the building!
-
-Raymond's eyes roved around the courtroom, and rested upon the judge
-upon the bench. His first glance at the judge, taken at the moment the
-other had entered the room, had brought a certain, quick relief. Far
-from severity, the white-haired man sitting there in his black gown had
-a kindly, genial face. He found his first impressions even strengthened
-now. His eyes passed on to the crown prosecutor; and here, too, he
-found cause for reassurance. The man was middle-aged, shrewd-faced,
-and somewhat domineering. He was crisp, incisive, and had been even
-unnecessarily blunt and curt in his speech and manner so far--he was
-not one who would enlist the sympathy of a jury. On the other
-hand--Raymond's eyes shifted again, to hold on the clean-cut, smiling
-face of the prisoner's counsel--Lemoyne, that was the lawyer's name he
-had been told, was young, pleasant-voiced, magnetic. Raymond experienced
-a sort of grim admiration, as he looked at this man. No man in the
-courtroom knew better than Lemoyne the hopelessness of his case, and yet
-he sat there confident, smiling, undisturbed.
-
-Raymond's eyes sought the floor. It was a foregone conclusion that the
-verdict would be guilty. There was not a loophole for defence. But they
-would not hang the man. He clung to that. Lemoyne could at least fight
-for the man's life. They would not hang a man who could not remember.
-They had beaten him, Raymond, the night before last; and at first he had
-been like a man stunned with the knowledge that his all was on the table
-and that the cards in his hand were worthless--and then had come a sort
-of philosophical calm, the gambler's optimism--the hand was still to be
-played. They would sentence the man for life, and--well, there was time
-enough in a lifetime for another chance. Somehow--in some way--he
-did not know now--but in some way he would see that there was another
-chance. He would not desert the man.
-
-Again he raised his eyes, but this time as though against his will, as
-though they were impelled and drawn in spite of himself across the room.
-That was Raymond Chapelle, alias Arthur Leroy, alias Three-Ace Artie,
-alias Henri Mentone, sitting there in the prisoner's box; at least, that
-gaunt, thin-faced, haggard man there was dressed in Raymond Chapelle's
-clothes--and _he_, François Aubert, the priest, the curé, in his
-_soutane_, with his crucifix around his neck, sat here amongst the
-witnesses at the trial of Raymond Chapelle, who had killed Théophile
-Blondin in the fight that night. One would almost think the man _knew!_
-How the man's eyes burned into him, how they tormented and plagued him!
-They were sad, those eyes, pitiful--they were helpless--they seemed to
-seek him out as the only _friend_ amongst all these bobbing heads, and
-these staring, gaping faces.
-
-“Marcien Labbée!”--the clerk's voice snapped through the courtroom.
-“Marcien Labbée!” The clerk was a very fussy and important short
-little man, who puffed his cheeks in and out, and clawed at his white
-side-whiskers. “Marcien Labbée!”
-
-The station agent rose from the bench, entered the witness box, and was
-sworn.
-
-With a few crisp questions, the crown prosecutor established the time of
-the train's arrival, and the fact that the curé and another man had got
-off at the station. The witness explained that the curé had started to
-walk toward the village before the other man appeared on the platform.
-
-“And this other man”--the crown prosecutor whirled sharply around, and
-pointed toward Henri Mentone--“do you recognise him as the prisoner at
-the bar?”
-
-Labbée shook his head.
-
-“It was very dark,” he said. “I could not swear to it.”
-
-“His general appearance then? His clothes? They correspond with what you
-remember of the man?”
-
-“Yes,” Labbée answered. “There is no doubt of that.”
-
-“And as I understand it, you told the man that Monsieur le Curé had
-just started a moment before, and that if he went at once he would have
-company on the walk to the village?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What did he say?”
-
-“He said that he was not looking for that kind of company.”
-
-There was a sudden, curious, restrained movement through the courtroom;
-and, here and there, a villager, with pursed lips, nodded his head. It
-was quite evident to those from St. Marleau at least that such as Henri
-Mentone would not care for the company of their curé.
-
-“You gave the man directions as to the short cut to the village?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“You may tell the court and the gentlemen of the jury what was said
-then.”
-
-Labbée, who had at first appeared a little nervous, now pulled down his
-vest, and looked around him with an air of importance.
-
-“I told him that the path came out at the tavern. When I said 'tavern,'
-he was at once very interested. I thought then it was because he was
-glad to know there was a place to stay--it was such a terrible night,
-you understand? So I told him it was only a name we gave it, and that it
-was no place for one to go. I told him it was kept by an old woman, who
-was an _excommuniée_, and who made whisky on the sly, and that her son
-was----”
-
-“_Misérable!_”--it was Mother Blondin, in a furious scream. Her eyes,
-under her matted gray hair, glared fiercely at Labbée.
-
-“Silence!” roared the clerk of the court, leaping to his feet.
-
-Raymond's hand closed over the clenched, bony fist that Mother Blondin
-had raised, and gently lowered it to her lap.
-
-“He will do you no harm, Madame Blondin,” he whispered reassuringly.
-“And see, you must be careful, or you will get into serious trouble.”
-
-Her hand trembled with passion in his, but she did not draw it away. It
-was strange that she did not! It was strange that he felt pity for her
-when so much was at stake, when pity was such a trivial and inconsequent
-thing! This was a murder trial, a trial for the killing of this woman's
-son. It was strange that he should be holding the _mother's_ hand,
-and--it was Raymond who drew his hand away. He clasped it over his other
-one until the knuckles grew white.
-
-“And then?” prompted the crown prosecutor.
-
-“And then, I do not remember how it came about,” Labbée continued, “he
-spoke of Madame Blondin having money--enough to buy out any one around
-there. I said it was true that it was the gossip that she had made a
-lot, and that she had a well-filled stocking hidden away somewhere.”
-
-“_Crapule!_”--Mother Blondin's voice, if scarcely audible this time, had
-lost none of its fury.
-
-The clerk contented himself with a menacing gesture toward his
-own side-whiskers. The crown prosecutor paid no attention to the
-interruption.
-
-“Did the man give any reason for coming to St. Marleau?”
-
-“None.”
-
-“Did you ask him how long he intended to remain?”
-
-“Yes; he said he didn't know.”
-
-“He had a travelling bag with him?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“This one?”--the crown prosecutor held up Raymond's travelling bag from
-the table beside him.
-
-“I cannot say,” Labbée replied. “It was too dark on the platform.”
-
-“Quite so! But it was of a size sufficient, in your opinion, to cause
-the man inconvenience in carrying it in such a storm, so you offered to
-have it sent over with Monsieur le Curé's trunk in the morning?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What did he say?”
-
-“He said he could carry it all right.”
-
-“He started off then with the bag along the road toward St. Marleau?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-The crown prosecutor glanced inquiringly toward the prisoner's counsel.
-The latter shook his head.
-
-“You may step down, Monsieur Labbée,” directed the crown prosecutor.
-“Call Madame Blondin!” There was a stir in the courtroom now. Heads
-craned forward as the old woman shuffled across the floor to the witness
-box--Mother Blondin was quite capable of anything--even of throwing to
-the ground the Holy Book upon which the clerk would swear her! Mother
-Blondin, however, did nothing of the sort. She gripped at the edge of
-the witness box, mumbling at the clerk, and all the while straining her
-eyes through her steel-bowed spectacles at the prisoner across the
-room. And then her lips began to work curiously, her face to grow
-contorted--and suddenly the courtroom was in an uproar. She was shaking
-both scranny fists at Henri Mentone, and screaming at the top of her
-voice.
-
-“That is the man! That is the man!”--her voice became ungovernable,
-insensate, it rose shrilly, it broke, it rose piercingly again. “That is
-the man! The law! The law! I demand the law on him! He killed my son! He
-did it! I tell you, he did it! He----”
-
-Chairs and benches were scraping on the floor. Little cries of nervous
-terror came from the women; involuntarily men stood up the better to
-look at both Mother Blondin and the accused. It was a sensation! It was
-something to talk about in St. Marleau over the stoves in the coming
-winter. It was something of which nothing was to be missed.
-
-“Order! Silence! Order!” bawled the clerk.
-
-Valérie had caught Raymond's sleeve. He did not look at her. He was
-looking at Henri Mentone--at the look of dumb horror on the man's
-face--and then at a quite different figure in the prisoner's dock, whose
-head was bent down until it could scarcely be seen, and whose face was
-covered by his hands. He tried to force a grim complacence into his
-soul. It was absolutely certain that _he_ had nothing to fear from the
-trial. Nothing! The other Henri Mentone, the other priest, was answering
-for the killing of that night, and--who was this speaking? The crown
-prosecutor? He had not thought the man could be so suave and gentle.
-
-“Try and calm yourself, Madame Blondin. You have a perfect right to
-demand the punishment of the law upon the murderer of your son, and that
-is what we are here for now, and that is why I want you to tell us just
-as quietly as possible what happened that night.”
-
-She stared truculently.
-
-“Everybody knows what happened!” she snarled at him. “He killed my son!”
-
-“How did he kill your son?” inquired the crown prosecutor, with a
-sudden, crafty note of scepticism in his voice. “How do you know he
-did?”
-
-“I saw him! I tell you, I saw him! I heard my son shout '_voleur_' and
-cry for help”--Mother Blon-din's words would not come fast enough now.
-“I was in the back room. When I opened the door he was fighting my son.
-He tried to steal my money. Some of it was on the floor. My son cried
-for help again. I ran and got a stick of wood. My son tried to get his
-revolver from the _armoire_. This man got it away from him. I struck the
-man on the head with the wood, then he shot my son, and I ran out for
-help.”
-
-“And you positively identify the prisoner as the man who shot your son?”
-
-“Yes, yes! Have I not told you so often enough!”
-
-“And this”--the crown prosecutor handed her a revolver--“do you identify
-this?”
-
-“Yes; it was my son's.”
-
-“You kept your money in a hiding place, Madame Blondin, I understand--in
-a hollow between two of the logs in the wall of the room? Is that so?”
-
-“Yes; it is so!”--Mother Blondin's voice grew shrill again. “But I will
-find a better place for it, if I ever get it back again! The police are
-as great thieves as that man! They took it from him, and now they keep
-it from me!”
-
-“It is here, Madame Blondin,” said the lawyer soothingly, opening a
-large envelope. “It will be returned to you after the trial. How much
-was there?”
-
-“I know very well how much!” she shrilled out suspiciously. “You cannot
-cheat me! I know! There were all my savings, years of savings--there was
-more than five hundred dollars.”
-
-A little gasp went around the courtroom. Five hundred dollars! It was a
-fortune! Gossip then had not lied--it had been outdone!
-
-“Now this hiding place, Madame Blondin--you had never told any one about
-it? Not even your son?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“It would seem then that this man must have known about it in some way.
-Had you been near it a short time previous to the fight?”
-
-“I told you I had, didn't I? I told Monsieur Dupont all that once.”
- Mother Blondin was growing unmanageable again. “I went there to put some
-money in not five minutes before I heard my son call for help.”
-
-“Your son then was not in the room when you went to put this money
-away?”
-
-“No; of course, he wasn't! I have told that to Monsieur Dupont, too. I
-heard him coming downstairs just as I left the room.”
-
-“That is all, Madame Blondin, thank you, unless----” The crown
-prosecutor turned again toward the counsel for the defence.
-
-Lemoyne rose, and, standing by his chair without approaching the witness
-box, took a small penknife from his pocket, and held it up.
-
-“Madame Blondin,” he said gently, “will you tell me what I am holding in
-my hand?”
-
-Mother Blondin squinted, set her glasses further on her nose, and shook
-her head.
-
-“I do not know,” she said.
-
-“You do not see very well, Madame Blondin?”--sympathetically.
-
-“What is it you have got there--eh? What is it?” she demanded sharply.
-
-Lemoyne glanced at the jury--and smiled. He restored the penknife to his
-pocket.
-
-“It is a penknife, Madame Blondin--one of my own. An object that any one
-would recognise--unless one did not see very well. Are you quite sure,
-Madame Blondin--quite sure on second thoughts--that you see well enough
-to identify the prisoner so positively as the man who was fighting with
-your son?”
-
-The jury, with quick meaning glances at one another, with a new
-interest, leaned forward in their seats. There was a tense moment--a
-sort of bated silence in the courtroom. And then, as Mother Blondin
-answered, some one tittered audibly, the spell was broken, the point
-made by the defence swept away, turned even into a weapon against
-itself.
-
-“If you will give me a stick of wood and come closer, close enough so
-that I can hit you over the head with it,” said Mother Blondin, and
-cackled viciously, “you will see how well I can see!”
-
-Madame Blondin stepped down.
-
-And then there came upon Raymond a thrill, a weakness, a quick
-tightening of his muscles. The clerk had called his name. He walked
-mechanically to the witness stand. It was coming now. He must be on his
-guard. But he had thought out everything very carefully, and--no, almost
-before he knew it, he was back in his seat again. He had been asked only
-if he had followed the road all the way from the station, to describe
-how he had found the man, and to identify the prisoner as that man. He
-was to be recalled. Le-moyne had not asked him a single question.
-
-“Mademoiselle Valérie Lafleur!” called the clerk.
-
-“Oh, Monsieur le Curé!” she whispered tremulously. “I--I do not want to
-go. It--it is such a terrible thing to _have_ to say anything that would
-help to send a man to death--I---”
-
-“Mademoiselle Valérie Lafleur!” snapped the clerk. “Will the witness
-have the goodness to----”
-
-Raymond did not hear her testimony; he knew only that she, too,
-identified the man as the one she had seen lying unconscious in
-the road, and that the note she had found was read and placed in
-evidence--in his ears, like a dull, constant dirge, were those words of
-hers with which she had left him--“it is such a terrible thing to have
-to say anything that would help to send a man to death.” Who was it that
-was sending the man to death? Not he! He had tried to save the man.
-It wasn't death, anyway. The man's guilt would appear obvious, of
-course--Lemoyne, the lawyer, could not alter that; but he had still
-faith in Lemoyne. Lemoyne would make his defence on the man's condition.
-Lemoyne would come to that.
-
-“My son!” croaked old Mother Blondin fiercely, at his side. “My son!
-What I know, I know! But the law--the law on the man who killed my
-son!”
-
-“Pull yourself together, you fool!” rasped that inner voice. “Do
-you want everybody in the courtroom staring at you. Listen to the
-incomparable Dupont telling how clever he was!”
-
-Yes, Dupont was on the stand now. Dupont was testifying to finding the
-revolver and money in the prisoner's pockets. He verified the amount.
-Dupont had his case at his fingers' tips, and he sketched it, with an
-amazing conciseness for Monsieur Dupont, from the moment he had been
-notified of the crime up to the time of the attempted escape. He was
-convinced that, in spite of all precautions, the prisoner's accomplice
-had taken alarm--since he, Dupont, had sat the night in the room waiting
-for the unknown's appearance, and neither he nor his deputy, who had
-remained until daylight hiding in the shed where he could watch the
-prisoner's window, had seen or heard anything. On cross-examination he
-admitted that pressure had been brought to bear upon the prisoner in
-an effort to trip the man up in his story, but that the prisoner had
-unswervingly held to the statement that he could remember nothing.
-
-The voices droned through the courtroom. It was Doctor Arnaud now
-identifying the man. They were always identifying the man! Why did not
-he, the saintly curé of St. Marleau--no, it was Three-Ace Artie--why did
-not he, Three-Ace Artie, laugh outright in all their faces! It was not
-hard to identify the man. He had seen to that very thoroughly, more
-thoroughly than even he had imagined that night in the storm when all
-the devils of hell were loosed to shriek around him, and he had changed
-clothes with a _dead_ man. A dead man--yes, that was the way it should
-have been! Did he not remember how limply the man's neck and head wagged
-on the shoulders, and how the body kept falling all over in grotesque
-attitudes instead of helping him to get its clothes off! Only the dead
-man had come to life! That was the man over there inside that box
-with the little wood-turned decorations all around the railing--no, he
-wouldn't look--but that man there who was the colour of soiled chalk,
-and whose eyes, with the hurt of a dumb beast in them, kept turning
-constantly in this direction, over here, here where the witnesses sat.
-
-“Doctor Arnaud”--it was the counsel for the defence speaking, and
-suddenly Raymond was listening with strained attention--“you have
-attended the prisoner from the night he was found unconscious in the
-road until the present time?”
-
-“Yes, monsieur.”
-
-“You have heard me in cross-examination ask Mademoiselle Lafleur and
-Monsieur Dupont if at any time during this period the prisoner, by
-act, manner or word, swerved from his statement that he could remember
-nothing, either of the events of that night, or of prior events in his
-life. You have heard both of these witness testify that he had not done
-so. I will ask you now if you are in a position to corroborate their
-testimony?”
-
-“I am,” replied Doctor Arnaud. “He has said nothing else to my
-knowledge.”
-
-“Then, doctor, in your professional capacity, will you kindly tell the
-court and the gentlemen of the jury whether or not loss of memory could
-result from a blow upon the head.”
-
-“It could--certainly,” stated Doctor Arnaud. “There is no doubt of that,
-but it depends on the----”
-
-“Just a moment, doctor, if you please; we will come to that”--Lemoyne,
-as Raymond knew well that Le-moyne himself was fully aware, was treading
-on thin and perilous ice, but on Lemoyne's lips, as he interrupted, was
-an engaging smile. “This loss of memory now. Will you please help us to
-understand just what it means? Take a hypothetical case. Could a man,
-for example, read and write, do arithmetic, say, appear normal in all
-other ways, and still have lost the memory of his name, his parents, his
-friends, his home, his previous state?”
-
-“Yes,” said Doctor Arnaud. “That is quite true. He might lose the memory
-of all those things, and still retain everything he has acquired by
-education.”
-
-“That is a medical fact?”
-
-“Yes, certainly, it is a medical fact.”
-
-“And is it not also a medical fact, doctor, that this condition has been
-known to have been caused by a blow--I will not say so slight, for that
-would be misleading--but by a blow that did not even cause a wound, and
-I mean by wound a gash, a cut, or the tearing of the flesh?”
-
-“Yes; that, too, is so.”
-
-Lemoyne paused. He looked at Henri Mentone, and suddenly it seemed as
-though a world of sympathy and pity were in his face. He turned and
-looked at the jury--at each one of the twelve men, but almost as though
-he did not see them. There was a mist in his eyes. It was silent again
-in the courtroom. His voice was low and grave as he spoke again.
-
-“Doctor Arnaud, are you prepared to state professionally under oath
-that it is impossible that the blow received by the prisoner at the bar
-should have caused him to lose his memory?”
-
-“No.” Doctor Arnaud shook his head. “No; I would not say that.”
-
-Lemoyne's voice was still grave.
-
-“You admit then, Doctor Arnaud, that it is possible?”
-
-Doctor Arnaud hesitated. “Yes,” he said. “It is possible, of course.”
-
-“That is all, doctor”--Lemoyne sat down.
-
-“One moment!”--the crown prosecutor, crisp, curt, incisive, was on his
-feet. “Loss of memory is not insanity, doctor?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Is the prisoner in your professional judgment insane?”
-
-“No,” declared Doctor Arnaud emphatically. “Most certainly not!”
-
-With a nod, the crown prosecutor dismissed the witness.
-
-A buzz, whisperings, ran around the room. Raymond's eyes were fixed
-sombrely on the floor. Relief had come with Lemoyne's climax, but now in
-Doctor Arnaud's reply to the crown prosecutor he sensed catastrophe.
-A sentence for life was the best that could be hoped for, but
-suppose--suppose Lemoyne should fail to secure even that! No, no--they
-would not hang the man! Even Doctor Arnaud had been forced to admit that
-he might have lost his memory. That would be strong enough for any jury,
-and--they were calling his name again, and he was rising, and walking
-a second time to the witness stand. Surely all these people _knew_. Was
-not his face set, and white, and drawn! See that ray of sunlight
-coming in through that far window, and how it did not deviate, but came
-straight toward him, and lay upon the crucifix on his breast, to draw
-all eyes upon it, upon that Figure on the Cross, the Man Betrayed.
-God, he had not meant this! He had thought the priest already dead that
-night. It was a dead man he had meant should answer for the killing of
-that ugly, scarred-faced, drunken blackguard, Théophile Blondin. That
-couldn't do a dead man any harm! It was a dead man, a dead man, a dead
-man--not this living, breathing one who----
-
-“Monsieur le Curé,” said the crown prosecutor, “you were present in the
-prisoner's room with Monsieur Dupont and Doctor Arnaud, when Monsieur
-Dupont made a search of the accused's clothing?”
-
-“Yes,” Raymond answered.
-
-“Do you identify this revolver as the one taken from the prisoner's
-pocket?”
-
-What was it Valérie had said--that it was such a terrible thing to have
-to say anything that would help to send a man to death? But the man was
-not going to death. It was to be a life sentence--and afterwards, after
-the trial, there would be time to think, and plot, and plan.
-
-“It is the same one,” said Raymond in a low voice.
-
-“You also saw Monsieur Dupont take a large number of loose bills from
-the prisoner's pocket?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Do you know their amount?”
-
-“No. Monsieur Dupont did not count them at the time.”
-
-“There were a great many, however, crumpled in the pocket, as though
-they had been hastily thrust there?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Why did that man in the prisoner's dock look at him like that--not
-in accusation--it was worse than that--it was in a sorrowful sort of
-wonder, and a numbed despair. Those devils were laughing in his ears--he
-was telling the _truth!_
-
-“That is all, I think, Monsieur le Curé,” said the crown prosecutor
-abruptly.
-
-All! There came a bitter and abysmal irony. Puppets! All were puppets
-upon a set stage--from the judge on the bench to that dismayed thing
-yonder who wrung his hands before the imposing majesty of the law! All!
-That was all, was it--the few words he had said? Who then was the author
-of every word that had been uttered in the room, who then had pulled the
-strings that jerked these automatons about in their every movement! Ah,
-here was Lemoyne this time, the prisoner's counsel. This time there was
-to be a cross-examination. Yes, certainly, he would like to help Lemoyne,
-but Lemoyne must not try to trap him. Lemoyne, too, was a puppet, and
-therefore Lemoyne could not be expected to know how very true it was
-that “Henri Mentone” was on trial for his life, and that “Henri Mentone”
- would fight for that life with any weapon he could grasp, and that
-Lemoyne would do the prisoner an ill turn to put “Henri Mentone” on the
-defensive! Well--he brushed his hand across his forehead, and fixed his
-eyes steadily on Lemoyne--he was ready for the man.
-
-“Monsieur le Curé”--Lemoyne had come very close to the witness stand,
-and Lemoyne's voice was soberly modulated--“Monsieur le Curé, I have
-only one question to ask you. You have been with this unfortunate man
-since the night you found him on the road, you have nursed him night and
-day as a mother would a child, you have not been long in St. Marleau,
-but in that time, so I am told, and I can very readily see why, you
-have come to be called the good, young Father Aubert by all your parish.
-Monsieur le Curé, you have been constantly with this man, for days and
-nights you have scarcely left his side, and so I come to the question
-that, it seems to me, you, of all others, are best qualified to answer.”
- Lemoyne paused. He had placed his two hands on the edge of the witness
-box, and was looking earnestly into Raymond's face. “Monsieur le Curé,
-do you believe that when the prisoner says that he remembers nothing of
-the events of that night, that he has no recollection of the crime
-of which he is accused--do you believe, Monsieur le Curé, that he is
-telling the truth?”
-
-There had been silence in the courtroom before--it was a silence now
-that seemed to palpitate and throb, a _living_ silence. Instinctively
-the crown prosecutor had made as though to rise from his chair; and
-then, as if indifferent, had changed his mind. No one else in the
-room had moved. Raymond glanced around him. They were waiting--for
-his answer. The word of the good, young Father Aubert would go far.
-Lemoyne's eyes were pleading mutely--for the one ground of defence, the
-one chance for his client's life. But Lemoyne did not need to plead--for
-that! They must not hang the man! They were waiting--for his answer.
-Still the silence held. And then Raymond raised his right hand solemnly.
-
-“As God is my judge,” he said, “I firmly believe that the man is telling
-the truth.”
-
-Benches creaked, there was the rustle of garments, a sort of unanimous
-and involuntary long-drawn sigh; and it seemed to Raymond that, as all
-eyes turned on the prisoner, they held a kindlier and more tolerant
-light. And then, as he walked back to the other witnesses and took his
-seat, he heard the crown prosecutor speak--as though disposing of the
-matter in blunt disdain:
-
-“The prosecution rests.”
-
-Valérie laid her hand over his.
-
-“I am so glad--so glad you said that,” she whispered.
-
-Monsieur Dupont leaned forward, and clucked his tongue very softly.
-
-“Hah, Monsieur le Curé!” He wagged his head indulgently. “Well, I
-suppose you could not help it--eh? No, you could not. I have told you
-before that you are too soft-hearted.”
-
-There were two witnesses for the defence--Doctor Arnaud's two
-fellow-practitioners in Tournayville. Their testimony was virtually
-that of Doctor Arnaud in cross-examination. To each of them the crown
-prosecutor put the same question--and only one. Was the prisoner insane?
-Each answered in the negative.
-
-And then, a moment later, Lemoyne, rising to sum up for the defence,
-walked soberly forward to the jury-box, and halted before the twelve
-men.
-
-“Gentlemen of the jury,” he began quietly, “you have heard the
-professional testimony of three doctors, one of them a witness for the
-prosecution, who all agree that the wound received by the prisoner might
-result in loss of memory. You have heard the testimony of that good man,
-the curé of St. Marleau, who gave his days and nights to the care and
-nursing of the one whose life, gentlemen, now lies in your hands; you
-have heard him declare in the most solemn and impressive manner that he
-believed the prisoner had no remembrance, no recollection of the night
-on which the crime was committed. Who should be better able to form
-an opinion as to whether, as the prosecution pretends, the prisoner is
-playing a part, or as to whether he is telling the truth, than the one
-who has been with him from that day to this, and been with him in the
-most intimate way, more than any one else? And I ask you, too, to weigh
-well and remember the character of the man, whom his people call the
-good, young Father Aubert, who has so emphatically testified to this
-effect. His words were not lightly spoken, and they were pure in
-motive. You have heard other witnesses--all witnesses for the defence,
-gentlemen--assert that they have seen nothing, heard nothing, that would
-indicate that the prisoner was playing a part. Gentlemen, every scrap
-of evidence that has been introduced but goes to substantiate the
-prisoner's story. Is it possible, do you believe for an instant, that a
-man could with his first conscious breath assume such a part, and, sick
-and wounded and physically weak, play it through without a slip, or
-sign, or word, or act that would so much as hint at duplicity? But that
-is not all. Gentlemen, I will ask you to come with me in thought to a
-scene that occurred this morning an hour before this trial began, and I
-would that the gift of words were mine to make you see that scene as I
-saw it.” He turned and swept out his hand toward the prisoner. “That man
-was in his cell, on his knees beside his cot. He did not look up as I
-entered, and I did not disturb him. We were alone together there. After
-a few minutes he raised his head. There was agony in his face such as
-I have never seen before on a human countenance. I spoke to him then.
-I told him that professional confidence was sacred, I warned him of the
-peril in which he stood, I pleaded with him to help me save his life, to
-tell me all, everything, not to tie my hands. Gentlemen of the jury, do
-you know his answer? It was a simple one--and spoken as simply. 'When
-you came in I was asking God to give me back my memory before it was too
-late.' That is what he said, gentlemen.”
-
-There were tears in Lemoyne's eyes--there were tears in other eyes
-throughout the courtroom. There was a cry in Raymond's heart that went
-out to Le-moyne. He had not failed! He had not failed! Le-moyne had not
-failed!
-
-“Gentlemen, he did not know.” Lemoyne's voice rose now in impassioned
-pleading--and he spoke on with that eloquence that is born only of
-conviction and in the soul. It was the picture of the man's helplessness
-he drew; the horror of an innocent man entangled in seemingly
-incontrovertible evidence, and doomed to a frightful death. He played
-upon the emotions with a master touch--and as the minutes passed sobs
-echoed back from every quarter of the room--and in the jury box men
-brushed their hands across their eyes. And at the end he was very quiet
-again, and his words were very low.
-
-“Gentlemen of the jury, I believe in my soul that this man is innocent.
-I ask you to believe that he is innocent. I ask you to believe that if
-he could tell of the events of that night he would stand before you a
-martyr to a cruel chain of circumstance. And I ask you to remember the
-terrible responsibility that rests upon you of passing judgment upon a
-man, helpless, impotent, and alone, and who, deprived of all means of
-self-defence, has only you to look to--for his life.”
-
-There was buoyancy in Raymond's heart. Lemoyne had not failed! He had
-been magnificent--triumphant! Even the judge was fumbling awkwardly with
-the papers on his desk. What did it matter now what the crown prosecutor
-might say? No one doubted perhaps that the man was guilty, but the spell
-that Lemoyne had cast would remain, and there would be mercy. A chill
-came, a chill like death--if it were not so, what would he have to face!
-
-“Gentlemen of the jury”--the crown prosecutor was speaking now--“I
-should do less than justice to my learned friend if I did not admit that
-I was affected by his words; but I should also do less than justice to
-the laws of this land, to you, and to myself if I did not tell you that
-emotion has no place in the consideration of this case, and that fact
-alone must be the basis of your verdict. I shall not keep you long. I
-have only a few words to say. The court will instruct you that if the
-prisoner is sane he is accountable to the law for his crime. We are
-concerned, not with his loss of memory, though my learned friend has
-made much of that, but with his sanity. The court will also instruct
-you on that point. I shall not, therefore, discuss the question of the
-prisoner's mental condition, except to recall to your minds that the
-medical testimony has been unanimous in declaring that the accused
-is not insane; and except to say that, in so far as loss of memory is
-concerned, it is plainly evident that he was in full possession of
-all his faculties at the time the murder was committed, and that I am
-personally inclined to share the opinion of his accomplice in crime--a
-man, gentlemen, whom we may safely presume is even a better judge of the
-prisoner's character than is the curé of St. Marleau--who, from the note
-you have heard read, has certainly no doubt that the prisoner is not
-only quite capable of attempting such a deception, but is actually
-engaged in practising it at the present moment.
-
-“I pass on to the facts' brought out by the evidence. On the night
-of the crime, a man answering the general description of the prisoner
-arrived at the St. Marleau station. It was a night when one, and
-especially a stranger, would naturally be glad of company on the
-three-mile walk to the village. The man refused the company of the curé.
-Why? He, as it later appears, had very good reasons of his own! It was
-such a night that it would be all one would care to do to battle against
-the wind without being hampered by a travelling bag. He refused the
-station agent's offer to keep the bag until morning and send it over
-with the curé's trunk. Why? It is quite evident, in view of what
-followed, that he did not expect to be there the next morning! He
-drew from the station agent, corroborating presumably the information
-previously obtained either by himself or this unknown accomplice, the
-statement that Madame Blondin was believed to have a large sum of money
-hidden away somewhere in her house. That was the man, gentlemen, who
-answers the general description of the prisoner. Within approximately
-half an hour later Madame Blondin's house is robbed, and, in an effort
-to protect his mother's property, Théophile Blondin is shot and killed.
-The question perhaps arises as to how the author of this crime knew the
-exact hiding place where the money was kept. But it is not material, in
-as much as we know that he was in a position to be in possession of that
-knowledge. He might have been peering in through the window when Madame
-Blondin, as she testified, was at the hiding place a few minutes before
-he broke into her house--or his accomplice, still unapprehended, may, as
-I have previously intimated, already have discovered it.
-
-“And now we pass entirely out of the realm of conjecture. You have
-heard the testimony of the murdered man's mother, who both saw and
-participated in the struggle. The man who murdered Théophile Blondin,
-who was actually seen to commit the act, is identified as the prisoner
-at the bar. He was struck over the head by Madame Blondin with a stick
-of wood, which inflicted a serious wound. We can picture him running
-from the house, after Madame Blondin rushed out toward the village to
-give the alarm. He did not, however, get very far--he was himself too
-badly hurt. He was found lying unconscious on the road a short distance
-away. Again the identification is complete--and in his pocket is found
-the motive for the crime, Madame Blondin's savings--and in his pocket
-is found the weapon, Théophile Blondin's revolver, with which the murder
-was committed. Gentlemen, I shall not take up your time, or the time of
-this court needlessly. No logical human being could doubt the prisoner's
-guilt for an instant. I ask you, gentlemen of the jury, to return a
-verdict in accordance with the evidence.”
-
-Raymond did not look up, as the crown prosecutor sat down. “No logical
-human being could doubt the prisoner's guilt for an instant.” That was
-true, wasn't it? No human being--save only _one_. Well, he had expected
-that--it was even a tribute to his own quick wit. Puppets! Yes,
-puppets--they were all puppets--all but himself. But if there was guilt,
-there was also mercy. They would show mercy to a man who could not
-remember. How many times had he said that to himself! Well, he had been
-right, hadn't he? He had more reason to believe it now than he had
-had to believe it before. Lemoyne had, beyond the shadow of a doubt,
-convinced every one in the courtroom that the man could not remember.
-
-“Order! Attention! Silence!” rapped out the clerk pompously.
-
-The judge had turned in his seat to face the jury.
-
-“Gentlemen of the jury,” he said impassively, “it is my province to
-instruct you in the law as it applies to this case, and as it applies
-to the interpretation of the evidence before you. There must be no
-confusion in your minds as to the question of the prisoner's mental
-condition. The law does not hold accountable, nor does it bring to trial
-any person who is insane. The law, however, does not recognise loss of
-memory as insanity. There has been no testimony to indicate that the
-prisoner is insane, or even that he was not in an entirely normal
-condition of mind at the time the crime was committed; there has been
-the testimony of three physicians that he is not insane. You have
-therefore but one thing to consider. If, from the evidence, you believe
-that the prisoner killed Théophile Blondin, it is your duty to bring in
-a verdict of guilty; on the other hand, the prisoner is entitled to the
-benefit of any reasonable doubt as to his guilt that may exist in your
-minds. You may retire, gentlemen, for your deliberations.”
-
-There was a hurried, whispered consultation amongst the twelve men in
-the jury box. It brought Raymond no surprise that the jury did not leave
-the room. It brought him no surprise that the figure with the thin, pale
-face, who was dressed in Raymond Chapelle's clothes, should be ordered
-to stand and face those twelve men, and hear the word “guilty” fall from
-the foreman's lips. He had known it, every one had known it--it was the
-judge now, that white-haired, kindly-faced man, upon whom he riveted his
-attention. A sentence for life... yes, that was terrible enough... but
-there was a way... there would be some way in the days to come... he had
-fastened this crime upon a dead man to save his own life... not on this
-living one whose eyes now he could not meet across the room, though
-he could feel them upon him, feel them staring, staring at his naked
-soul... he would find some way... there would be time, there was all
-of time in a sentence for life... he would not desert the man, he
-would-----
-
-“Henri Mentone”--the judge was speaking again--“you have been found
-guilty by a jury of your peers of the murder of one Théophile Blondin.
-Have you anything to say why the sentence of this court should not be
-passed upon you?”
-
-There was no answer. What was the man doing? Was he crying? Trembling?
-Was there that old nameless horror in the face? Were his lips quivering
-as a child's lips quiver when it is broken-hearted? Raymond dared
-not look; dared not look anywhere now save at the white-haired,
-kindly-faced--yes, he was kindly-faced--judge. And then suddenly he
-found himself swaying weakly, and his shoulder bumped into old Mother
-Blondin. Not that--great God--not that! That kindly-faced man was
-putting a _black hat_ on his head, and standing up. Everybody was
-standing up. He, too, was standing up, only he was not steady on his
-feet. Was Valérie's hand on his arm in nervous terror, or to support
-him! Some one was speaking. The words were throbbing through his brain.
-Yes, throbbing--throbbing and clanging like hammer blows--that was why
-he could not hear them all.
-
-“... the sentence of this court... place of confinement... thence to the
-place of execution... hanged by the neck until you are dead, and may God
-have mercy on your soul.”
-
-And then Raymond looked; and through the solemn silence, and through the
-doom that hung upon the room, there came a cry. It was Henri Mentone.
-The man's hands were stretched out, the tears were streaming down
-his cheeks. And was this mockery--or a joke of hell! Then why did not
-everybody howl and scream with mirth! The man was calling upon himself
-to save himself! No, no--he, Raymond, was going mad to call it mockery
-or mirth. It was ghastly, horrible, pitiful beyond human understanding,
-it tore at the heart and the soul--the man was doing what that Figure
-upon the Cross had once been bade to do--his own name was upon his own
-lips, he was calling upon himself to save himself. And the voice in
-agony rang through the crowded room, and people sobbed.
-
-“Father--Father Francois Aubert, help me, do not leave me! I do not
-know--I do not understand. Father--_Father François Aubert_, help me--I
-do not understand!”
-
-And Raymond, groping out behind him, flung his arm across the back of
-the bench, and, sinking down, his head fell forward, and his face was
-hidden.
-
-“_Tiens_,” said Mother Blondin sullenly, as though forced to admit it
-against her will, “he has a good heart, even if he is a priest.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII--THE COMMON CUP
-
-|IT seemed as though it were an immeasurable span of time since that
-voice had rung through the courtroom. He could hear it yet--he was
-hearing it always. “Father--Father François Aubert--help me--I do not
-know--I do not understand.” And sometimes it was pitiful beyond that
-of any human cry before; and sometimes it was dominant in its ghastly
-irony. And yet that was only yesterday, and it was only the afternoon of
-the next day now.
-
-There were wild roses, and wild raspberries growing here along the side
-of the road, and the smoke wreathed upward from the chimneys of the
-whitewashed cottages, and the water lapped upon the shore--these things
-were unchanged, undisturbed, unaffected, untouched. It seemed curiously
-improper that it should be so--that the sense of values was somehow
-lost.
-
-He had come from the courtroom with his brain in a state of numbed
-shock, as it were, like a wound that has taken the nerve centres by
-surprise and had not yet begun to throb. It was instinct, the instinct
-to fight on, the instinct of self-preservation that had bade him grope
-his way to Lemoyne, the counsel for the defence. “I have friends who
-have money,” he had said. “Appeal the case--spare no effort--I will see
-that the expenses are met.” And after that he had driven back to St.
-Marleau, and after that again he had lived through a succession of
-blurred hours, obeying mechanically a sense of routine--he had talked to
-the villagers, he had eaten supper with Valérie and her mother, he
-had gone to bed and lain awake, he had said mass in the church that
-morning--mass!
-
-Was it the heat of the day! His brow was feverish. He took off his hat,
-and turned to let the breeze from the river fan his face and head. It
-was only this afternoon, a little while ago, that he had emerged from
-that numbed stupor, and now the hurt and the smarting of the wound had
-come. His brain was clear now--_terribly_ clear. Better that the stupor,
-which was a kindly thing, had remained! He had said mass that morning.
-“_Lavabo inter innocentes manus meas_--I will wash my hands among the
-innocent.” In the sight of holy God, he had said that; at God's holy
-altar as he had spoken, symbolising his words, he had washed his fingers
-in water. It had not seemed to matter so much then, he had even mocked
-cynically at those same words the night that Madame Lafleur had shown
-him the altar cloth--but that other voice, those other words had
-not been pounding at his ears then, as now. And now they were joined
-together, his voice and that other voice, his words and those other
-words: “I will wash my hands among the innocent--hanged by the neck
-until you are dead, and may God have mercy on your soul.”
-
-He stood by the roadside hatless. Through the open doorway of a
-cottage a few yards away he could see old grandmother Frenier, who was
-exceedingly poor, and deaf, and far up in the eighties, contentedly at
-work with her spinning-wheel; on the shore, where the tide was half
-out and the sand of the beach had merged into oozy mud, two bare-footed
-children overturned the rocks of such size as were not beyond their
-strength, laughing gleefully as they captured the sea-worms, whose
-nippers could pinch with no little degree of ferocity, and with which,
-later, no doubt, they intended to fish for tommy-cods; also there was
-sunlight, and sparkling water, and some one driving along the road
-toward him in a buckboard; and he could hear Bouchard in the carpenter
-shop alternately hammering and whistling--the whistling was out of tune,
-it was true, but what it lacked in melody it made up in spirit. This was
-reality, this was actuality, happiness and peace, and contentment, and
-serenity; and he, standing here on the road, was an integral part of the
-scene--no painter would leave out the village curé standing hatless
-on the road--the village curé would, indeed, stand out as the central
-figure, like a benediction upon all the rest. Why then should he not in
-truth, as in semblance, enter into this scene of tranquillity? Where did
-they come from, those words that were so foreign to all about him, where
-had they found birth, and why were they seared into his brain so that
-he could not banish them? Surely they were but an hallucination--he had
-only to look around him to find evidence of that. Surely they had no
-basis in fact, those words--“hanged by the neck until you are dead, and
-may God have mercy on your soul.”
-
-They seemed to fade slowly away, old grandmother Frenier and her
-spinning-wheel, and the children puddling in the mud, and the buckboard
-coming along the road; and he no longer heard the whistling from the
-carpenter shop--it seemed to fade out like a picture on a cinema
-screen, while another crept there, at first intangible and undefined,
-to supplant the first. It was sombre and dark, and a narrow space, and
-a shadowy human form. Then there came a ray of light--sunlight, only
-the gladness and the brightness were not in the sunlight because it had
-first to pass through an opening where there were iron bars. But the ray
-of light, nevertheless, grew stronger, and the picture took form. There
-were bare walls, and bare floors, and a narrow cot--and it was a cell.
-And the shadowy form became more distinct--it was a man, whose back
-was turned, who stood at the end of the cell, and whose hands were each
-clutched around one of the iron bars, and who seemed to be striving to
-thrust his head out into the sunlight, for his head, too, was pressed
-close against the iron bars. And there was something horribly familiar
-in the figure. And then the head turned slowly, and the sunlight, that
-was robbed of its warmth and its freedom, slanted upon a pale cheek, and
-ashen lips, and eyes that were torture-burned; and the face was the face
-of the man who was--to be hanged by the neck until he was dead, and upon
-whose soul that voice had implored the mercy of God.
-
-Raymond stared at his hat which was lying in the road. How had it got
-there? He did not remember that he had dropped it. He had been holding
-it in his hand. This buckboard that was approaching would run over it.
-He stooped and picked it up, and mechanically began to brush away the
-dust. That figure in the buckboard seemed to be familiar, too. Yes, of
-course, it was Monsieur Dupont, the assistant chief of the Tournayville
-police--the man who always answered his own questions, and clucked with
-his tongue as though he were some animal learning to talk. But Monsieur
-Dupont mattered little now. It was not old grandmother Frenier and her
-spinning-wheel that was reality--it was Father François Aubert in the
-condemned cell of the Tournayville jail, waiting to be hanged by the
-neck until he was dead for the murder of Théophile Blondin.
-
-Raymond put on his hat with forced calmness. He must settle this with
-himself; he could not afford to lose his poise--either mentally or
-physically. He laid no claim to the heroic or to the quixotic--he did
-not want to die in the stead of that man, or in the stead of any other
-man. Neither was he a coward--no man had ever called Raymond Chapelle,
-or Arthur Leroy, or Three-Ace Artie a coward. He was a gambler--and
-there was still a chance. There was the appeal. He was gambling now for
-both their lives. He would lay down no hand, he would fight as he had
-always fought--to the end--while a chance remained. There was still
-a chance--the appeal. It was long odds, he knew that--but it was a
-chance--and he was a gambler. He could only wait now for the turn of the
-final card. He would not tolerate consideration beyond that point--not
-if with all his might he could force his brain to leave that
-“afterwards” alone. It was weeks yet to the date set for the execution
-of Henri Mentone for the murder of Théophile Blondin, and it would
-be weeks yet before the appeal was acted upon. He could only wait
-now--here--here in St. Marleau, as the good young Father Aubert. He
-could not run away, or disappear, like a pitiful coward, until
-that appeal had had its answer. Afterwards--no, there was no
-“afterwards”--not _now!_ Now, it was the ubiquitous Monsieur Dupont, the
-short little man with the sharp features, and the roving black eyes that
-glanced everywhere at once, who was calling to him, and clambering out
-of the buckboard.
-
-“You are surprised to see me, eh, Monsieur le Curé?” clucked Monsieur
-Dupont. “Yes, you are surprised. Very well! But what would you say, eh,
-if I told you that I had come to arrest Monsieur le Curé of St. Marleau?
-Eh--what would you say to that?”
-
-Arrest! Curious, the cold, calculating alertness that swept upon him at
-that word! What had happened?
-
-Was the game up--now? Curious, how he measured appraisingly--and almost
-contemptuously--the physique of this man before him. And then, under his
-breath, he snarled an oath at the other. Curse Monsieur Dupont and his
-perverted sense of humour! It was not the first time Monsieur Dupont had
-startled him. Monsieur Dupont was grinning broadly--like an ape!
-
-“I imagine,” said Raymond placidly, “that what I would say, Monsieur
-Dupont, would be to inquire as to the nature of the charge against
-Monsieur le Curé of St. Marleau.”
-
-“And I,” said Monsieur Dupont, “would at once reply--assault.
-Assault--bodily harm and injury--assault upon the person of one Jacques
-Bourget.”
-
-“Oh!” said Raymond--and smiled. “Yes, I believe there have been rumours
-of it in the village, Monsieur Dupont. Several have spoken to me about
-it, and I even understand that the Curé of St. Marleau pleads guilty.”
-
-And then Monsieur Dupont puckered up his face, and burst into a guffaw.
-
-“_'Cré nom_--ah, pardon--but it is excusable, one bad little word,
-eh? Yes, it is excusable. But imagine--fancy! The good, young Father
-Aubert--and Jacques Bourget! I would have liked to have seen it. Yes,
-I would! Monsieur le Curé, you do not look it, but you are magnificent.
-Monsieur le Curé, I lift my hat to you. _Bon Dieu_--ah, pardon
-again--but you were not gentle with Jacques Bourget, whom one would
-think could eat you alive! And you told me nothing about it--you are
-modest, eh? Yes, you are modest.”
-
-“I have had no opportunity to be modest.” Raymond laughed, “since, so
-I understand, Bourget encountered some of the villagers on his way home
-that afternoon, and gave me a reputation that, to say the least of it,
-left me with little to be modest about.”
-
-“I believe you,” chuckled Monsieur Dupont. “I believe you, Monsieur
-le Curé, since I, too, got the story from Jacques Bourget himself.
-He desired to swear out a warrant for your arrest. You have not seen
-Bourget for several days, eh, Monsieur le Curé? No, you have not seen
-him. But I know very well how to handle such as he! He will swear out
-no warrant. On the contrary, he would very gladly feed out of anybody's
-hand just now--even yours, Monsieur le Curé. I have the brave Jacques
-Bourget in jail at the present moment.”
-
-“In jail?” Raymond's puzzled frown was genuine. “But----”
-
-“Wait a minute, Monsieur le Curé”--Monsieur Dupont's smile was suddenly
-gone. He tapped Raymond impressively on the shoulder. “There is more in
-this than appears on the surface, Monsieur le Curé. You see? Yes,
-you see. Well then, listen! He talked no longer of a warrant when I
-threatened him with arrest for getting whisky at Mother Blondin's. I had
-him frightened. And that brings us to Mother Blondin, which is one
-of the reasons I am here this afternoon--but we will return to Mother
-Blondin's case in a moment. You remember, eh, that I caught Bourget
-driving on the road the night Mentone tried to escape, and that I made
-him drive the prisoner to Tournayville? Yes, you remember. Very good!
-This morning his wife comes to Tournayville to say that he has not been
-seen since that night. We make a search. He is not hard to find. He has
-been drunk ever since--we find him in a room over one of the saloons
-just beginning to get sober again. Also, we find that since that night
-Bourget, who never has any money, has spent a great deal of money. Where
-did Bourget get that money? You begin to see, eh, Monsieur le Curé? Yes,
-you begin to see.” Monsieur Dupont laid his forefinger sagaciously along
-the side of his nose. “Very good! I begin to question. I am instantly
-suspicious. Bourget is very sullen and morose. He talks only of a
-warrant against you. I seize upon that story again to threaten him with,
-if he does not tell where he got the money. I put him in jail, where
-I shall keep him for two or three days to teach him a lesson before
-letting him go. It is another Bourget, a very lamblike Bourget, Monsieur
-le Curé, before I am through; though I have to promise him immunity for
-turning king's evidence. Do you see what is coming, Monsieur le Curé?
-No, you do not. Most certainly you do not! Very well then, listen! I am
-on the track of Mentone's accomplice. Bourget was in the plot. It was
-Bourget who was to drive Mentone away that night--to the St. Eustace
-station--after they had throttled you. Now, Monsieur le Curé”--Monsieur
-Dupont's eyes were afire; Monsieur Dupont assumed an attitude; Monsieur
-Dupont's arms wrapped themselves in a fold upon his breast--“now,
-Monsieur le Curé, what do you say to that?”
-
-“It is amazing!”--Raymond's hands, palms outward, were lifted in a
-gesture eminently clerical. “Amazing! I can hardly credit it. Bourget
-then knows who this accomplice is?”
-
-“No--_tonnerre_--that is the bad luck of it!” scowled Monsieur Dupont.
-“But there is also good luck in it. I am on the scent. I am on the
-trail. I shall succeed, shall I not? Yes, certainly, I shall succeed.
-Very well then, listen! It was dark that night. The man went to
-Bourget's house and called Bourget outside. Bourget could not see what
-the fellow looked like. He gave Bourget fifty dollars, and promised
-still another fifty as soon as Bourget had Mentone in the wagon. And it
-was on your account, Monsieur le Curé, that he went to Bourget.”
-
-Raymond was incredulous.
-
-“On mine?” he gasped.
-
-“Yes, certainly--on yours. It was to offer Bourget a chance to revenge
-himself on you. You see, eh? Yes, you see. He said he had heard of
-what you had done to Bourget. Very well! We have only to analyse that a
-little, and instantly we have a clue. You see where that brings us, eh,
-Monsieur le Curé?” Raymond shook his head.
-
-“No, I must confess, I don't,” he said.
-
-“Hah! No? _Tiens!_” ejaculated Monsieur Dupont almost pityingly. “It
-is easy to be seen, Monsieur le Curé, that you would make a very poor
-police officer, and an equally poor criminal--the law would have its
-fingers on you while you were wondering what to do. It is so, is it not?
-Yes, it is so. You are much better as a priest. As a priest--I pay
-you the compliment, Monsieur le Curé--you are incomparable. Very good!
-Listen, then! I will explain. The fellow said he had heard of your fight
-with Bourget. Splendid! Excellent! He must then have heard of it from
-_some one_. Therefore he has been seen in the neighbourhood by some one
-besides Bourget. Who is that 'some one' who has talked with a stranger,
-and who can very likely tell us what that stranger looks like, where
-Bourget cannot? I do not say that it is certain, but that it is likely.
-It may not have been so dark when he talked to this 'some one'--eh? In
-any case it is enough to go on. Now, you see, Monsieur le Curé, why I am
-here--I shall begin to question everybody; and for your part, Monsieur
-le Curé, you can do a great deal in letting the parish know what we are
-after.”
-
-Raymond looked at Monsieur Dupont with admiration. Monsieur Dupont had
-set himself another “vigil”!
-
-“Without doubt, Monsieur Dupont!” he assured the other heartily.
-“Certainly, I will do my utmost to help you. I will have a notice posted
-on the church door.”
-
-“Good!” cried Monsieur Dupont, with a gratified smile. “And now another
-matter--and one that will afford you satisfaction, Monsieur le Curé.
-In a day or so, I will see that Mother Blondin is the source of no more
-trouble in St. Marleau--or anywhere else.”
-
-“Mother Blondin?” repeated Raymond--and now he was suddenly conscious
-that he was in some way genuinely disturbed.
-
-“Yes,” said Monsieur Dupont. “Twice in the past we have searched her
-place. We knew she sold whisky. But she was too sharp for us--and those
-who bought knew how to keep their mouths shut. But with Bourget as a
-witness, it is different, eh? You see? Yes, you see. She is a fester,
-a sore. We will clean up the place; we will put her in jail. The air
-around here will be the sweeter for it, and----”
-
-“No,” said Raymond soberly. “No, Monsieur Dupont”--his hands reached
-out and clasped on Monsieur Dupont's shoulders. He knew now what was
-disturbing him. It was that surge of pity for the proscribed old woman,
-that sense of miserable distress that he had experienced more than once
-before. The scene of that morning, when she had clung to the palings of
-the fence outside the graveyard while they shovelled the earth upon the
-coffin of her son, rose vividly before him. And it was he again who was
-bringing more trouble upon her now through his dealings with Jacques
-Bourget. Yes, it was pity--and more. It was a swiftly matured, but none
-the less determined, resolve to protect her. “No, Monsieur Dupont, I beg
-of you”--he shook his head gravely--“no, Monsieur Dupont, you will not
-do that.”
-
-“Heh! No? And why not?” demanded Monsieur Dupont in jerky astonishment.
-“I thought you would ask for nothing better. She is already an
-_excommuniée_, and-----”
-
-“And she has suffered enough,” said Raymond earnestly. “It would seem
-that sorrow and misery had been the only life she had ever known. She is
-too old a woman now to have her home taken from her, and herself sent
-to jail. She is none too well, as it is. It would kill her. A little
-sympathy, a little kindness, Monsieur Dupont--it will succeed far
-better.”
-
-“Bah!” sniffed Monsieur Dupont. “A little sympathy, a little kindness!
-And will that stop the whisky selling that the law demands shall be
-stopped, Monsieur le Curé?”
-
-“I will guarantee that,” said Raymond calmly.
-
-“You!” Monsieur Dupont clucked vigorously with his tongue. “You will
-stop that! And besides other things, do you perform miracles, Monsieur
-le Curé? How will you do that?”
-
-“You must leave it to me”--Raymond's hands tightened in friendly fashion
-on Monsieur Dupont's shoulders--“I will guarantee it. If that is a
-miracle, I will attempt it. If I do not succeed I will tell you so, and
-then you will do as you see fit. You will agree, will you not, Monsieur
-Dupont?--and I shall be deeply grateful to you.”
-
-Monsieur Dupont shrugged his shoulders helplessly.
-
-“I have to tell you again that you are too soft-hearted, Monsieur le
-Curé. Yes, there is no other name for it--soft-hearted. And you will be
-made a fool of. I warn you! Well--very well! Try it, if you like. I
-give you a week. If at the end of a week--well, you understand? Yes, you
-understand.”
-
-“I understand,” said Raymond; and, with a final dap on Monsieur Dupont's
-shoulders, he dropped his hands. “And I am of the impression that
-Monsieur le Curé is not the only one who is--soft-hearted.”
-
-“Bah! Nothing of the sort! Nothing of the sort!” snorted Monsieur Dupont
-in a sort of pleased repudiation, as he climbed back into the buckboard.
-“It is only to open your eyes.” He picked up the reins. “I shall spend
-the rest of the day around here on that other business. Do not forget
-about the notice, Monsieur le Curé.”
-
-“It shall be posted on the church door this afternoon,” Raymond
-promised.
-
-He stood for a moment looking after Monsieur Dupont, as the other drove
-off; and then, turning abruptly, he walked rapidly along in the opposite
-direction, and, reaching the station road that led past old Mother
-Blondin's door, began to climb the hill. Yes, decidedly he would post
-a notice on the church door for Monsieur Dupont! If in any way he could
-aid Monsieur Dupont to lay hands on this accomplice of Henri Mentone,
-he--the derision that had crept to his lips faded away, and into the
-dark eyes came a sudden weariness. There was humour doubtless in the
-picture of Monsieur Dupont buttonholing every one he met, as he flitted
-indefatigably all over the country in pursuit for his mare's nest; but,
-somehow, he, Raymond, was not in the mood for laughter--for even a grim
-laughter.
-
-There was a man waiting to be hanged; and, besides the man waiting to be
-hanged, there was--Valérie.
-
-There was Valérie who, come what would, some day, near or distant,
-whether he escaped or not, must inevitably know him finally for the man
-he was. Not that it would change her life, it was only those devils of
-hell who tried to insinuate that she cared; but to him it was a thought
-pregnant with an agony so great that he could _pray_--he who had thought
-never to bow the knee in sincerity to God--yes, that he could pray,
-without mimicry, without that hideous profanation upon his lips, that
-he might not stand despised, a contemptuous thing, a sacrilegious
-profligate, in the eyes of the woman whom he loved.
-
-He clenched his hands. He was not logical. If he cared so much as that
-why--no, here was specious argument! He _was_ logical. His love for
-Valerie, great as it might be, great as it was, in the final analysis
-was hopeless. If he escaped, he could never return to the village, he
-could never return to her--to be recognised as the good, young Father
-Aubert; if he did not escape, if he--no, that was the “afterwards,”
- he would not consent to think of that--only if he did not escape there
-would be more than the hopelessness of this love to concern him, there
-would be death. Yes, he was logical. The love he knew for Valérie was
-but to mock him, to tantalise him with a vista of what, under other
-circumstances, he might have claimed by right of his manhood's
-franchise--if he had not, years ago, from a boy almost, bartered away
-that franchise to the devil. Well, was he to whimper now, and turn, like
-a craven thing, from the bitter dregs that, while the cup was still full
-and the dregs yet afar off, he had held in bald contempt and incredulous
-raillery! The dregs were here now. They were not bitter on his
-lips, they were bitter in his soul; they were bitter almost beyond
-endurance--but was he to whimper! Yes, he was logical.
-
-All else might be hopeless; but it was not hopeless that he might save
-his life. He had a right to fight for that, and he would fight for it as
-any man would fight--to the last.
-
-He had climbed the hill now, and was approaching old Mother Blondin's
-door. Logical! Yes, he was logical--but life was not all logic. In the
-abstract logic was doubtless a panacea that was all-embracing; in the
-presence of the actual it shrank back a futile thing from the dull
-gnawing of the heart and the misery of the soul. Perhaps that was why
-he was standing here at Mother Blondin's door now. God knew, she was
-miserable enough; God knew, that the dregs too were now at her lips!
-They were not unlike--old Mother Blon-din and himself. Theirs was a
-common cup.
-
-He knocked upon the door--and, as he knocked, he caught sight of the
-old woman's shrivelled face peering at him none too pleasantly from the
-window. And then her step, sullen and reluctant, crossed the floor,
-and she held the door open grudgingly a little way; and the space thus
-opened she blocked completely with her body.
-
-“What do you want?” she demanded sourly.
-
-“I would like to come in, Madame Blondin,” Raymond answered pleasantly.
-“I would like to have a little talk with you.”
-
-“Well, you can't come in!” she snarled defiantly. “I don't want to talk
-to you, and I don't want you coming here! It is true I may have been
-fool enough to say you had a good heart, but I want nothing to do with
-you. You are perhaps not as bad as some of them; but you are all full of
-tricks with your smirking mouths! No priest would come here if he were
-not up to something. I am an _excommuniée_--eh? Well, I am satisfied!”
- Her voice was beginning to rise shrilly. “I don't know what you want,
-and I don't want to know; but you can't wheedle around me just because
-Jacques Bourget knocked me down, and you----”
-
-“It is on account of Jacques Bourget that I want to speak to you,”
- Raymond interposed soothingly. “Bourget has been locked up in jail.”
-
-She stared at him, blinking viciously behind her glasses.
-
-“Ah! I thought so! That is like the whole tribe of you! You had him
-arrested!”
-
-“No,” said Raymond. “I did not have him arrested. You remember the note
-that was read out at the trial, Madame Blcndin--about the attempted
-escape of Henri Mentone?”
-
-“Well?”--Madame Blondin's animosity at the sight of a _soutane_ was
-forgotten for the moment in a newly aroused interest. “Well--what of it?
-I remember! What of it?”
-
-“It seems,” said Raymond, “that Monsieur Dupont has discovered that
-Bourget was to help in the escape.”
-
-Madame Blondin cackled suddenly in unholy mirth. “And so they arrested
-him, eh? Well, I am glad! Do you hear? I am glad! I hope they wring his
-neck for him! He would help the murderer of my son to escape, would he?
-I hope they hang him with the other!”
-
-“They will not hang him,” Raymond replied. “He has given all the
-information in his possession to the police, and he is to go free. But
-it was because of that afternoon here that he was persuaded to help in
-the escape. He expected to revenge himself on me: and that story, too,
-Madame Blondin, is now known to the police. Bourget has confessed to
-buying whisky here, and is ready to testify as a witness against you.”
-
-“_Le maudit!_” Mother Blondin's voice rose in a virulent scream. “I will
-tear his eyes out! Do you hear? I will show Jacques Bourget what he will
-get for telling on me! He has robbed me! He never pays! Well, he will
-pay for this! He will pay for this! I will find some one who will cut
-his tongue out! They are not all like Jacques Bourget, they are----”
-
-“You do not quite understand, Madame Blondin,” Raymond interrupted
-gravely. “It is not with Jacques Bourget that you are concerned now,
-it is with the police. Monsieur Dupont came to the village this
-afternoon--indeed, he is here now. He said he had evidence enough at
-last to close up this place and put you in jail, and that he was going
-to do so. You are in a very serious situation, Madame Blondin”--he made
-as though to step forward--“will you not let me come in, as a friend,
-and talk it over with you, and see what we can do?”
-
-Mother Blondin's hand was like a claw in its bony thinness, as it
-gripped hard over the edge of the door.
-
-“No, you will not come in!” she shouted. “You, or your Monsieur Dupont,
-or the police--you will not come in! Eh--they will take my home from
-me--all I've got--they will put me in jail”--she was twisting her head
-about in a sort of pitiful inventory of her surroundings. “They have
-been trying to run me out of St. Marleau for a long time--all the _good_
-people, the saintly people--you, and your hypocrites. They cross to the
-other side of the road to get out of old Mother Blondin's way! And so
-at last, between you, you have beaten an old woman, who has no one to
-protect her since you have killed her son! It is a victory--eh! Go
-tell them to ring the church bells--go tell them--go tell them! And on
-Sunday, eh, you will have something to preach about! It will make a fine
-sermon!”
-
-And somehow there came a lump into Raymond's throat. There was something
-fine in this wretched, tattered, unkempt figure before him--something of
-the indomitable, of the unconquerable in her spirit, misapplied though
-it was. Her voice fought bravely to hold its defiant, infuriated ring,
-to show no sign of the misery that had stolen into the dim old eyes,
-and was quivering on the wrinkled lips, but the voice had broken--once
-almost in a sob.
-
-“No, no, Madame Blondin”--he reached out his hand impulsively to lay it
-over the one that was clutched upon the door--“you must not----”
-
-She snatched her hand away--and suddenly thrust her head through the
-partially open doorway into his face.
-
-“It is not Bourget, it is not Jacques Bourget!” she cried fiercely. “It
-is you! If you had not come that afternoon when you had no business to
-come, this would not have happened. It is you, who----”
-
-“That is true,” said Raymond quietly. “And that is why I am here now.
-I have had a talk with Monsieur Dupont, and he will give you another
-chance.”
-
-She still held her face close to his.
-
-“I do not believe you!” she flung out furiously. “I do not believe you!
-It is some trick you are trying to play! I know Monsieur Dupont! I know
-him! He would give no one a chance if he could help it! I have been too
-much for him for a long time, and if he had evidence against me now he
-would give me not a minute to sell any more of--of what he thinks I sell
-here!”
-
-“That also is true,” said Raymond, as quietly as before. “He could not
-very well permit you to go on breaking the law if he could prevent it.
-But in exchange for his promise, I have given him a pledge that you will
-not sell any more whisky.”
-
-She straightened up--and stared at him, half in amazement, half in
-crafty suspicion.
-
-“Ah, then, so it is you, and not Monsieur Dupont, who is going to stop
-it--eh?” she exclaimed, with a shrill laugh. “And how do you intend to
-do it--eh? How do you intend to do it? Tell me that!”
-
-“I think it will be very simple,” said Raymond--and his dark eyes, full
-of a kindly sympathy, looked into hers. “To save your home, and you,
-I have pledged myself to Monsieur Dupont that this will stop, and
-so--well, Madame Blondin, and so I have come to put you upon your honour
-to make good my pledge.” She craned her head forward again to peer into
-his face. She looked at him for a long minute without a word. Her
-lips alternately tightened and were tremulous. The fingers of her
-hand plucked at the door's edge. And then she threw back her head in a
-quavering, jeering laugh.
-
-“Ha, ha! Old Mother Blondin upon her honour--think of that! You, a
-smooth-tongued priest--and me, an _excommuniée!_ Ha, ha! Think of that!
-And what did Monsieur Dupont say, eh--what did Monsieur Dupont say?”
-
-“He said what I know is not true,” said Raymond simply. “He said you
-would make a fool of me.”
-
-“Ah, he said that!”--she jerked her head forward again sharply. “Well,
-Monsieur Dupont is wrong, and you are right. I would not do that,
-because I could not--since you have already made one of yourself! Ha,
-ha! Old Mother Blondin upon her _honour!_ Ha, ha! It is a long while
-since I have heard that--and from a priest--ha, ha! How could any one
-make a fool of a fool!” Her voice was high-pitched again, fighting for
-its defiance; but, somehow, where she strove to infuse venom, there
-seemed only a pathetic wistfulness instead. “And so you would trust old
-Mother Blondin--eh? Well”--she slammed the door suddenly in his face,
-and her voice came muffled through the panels--“well, you are a fool!”
-
-The bolt within rasped into place--and Raymond, turned away, and began
-to descend the hill.
-
-Mother Blondin for the moment was in the grip of a sullen pride that
-bade her rise in arms against this fresh outlook on life; but Mother
-Blondin would close and bolt yet another door, unless he was very
-much mistaken--the rear door, and in the faces of her erstwhile and
-unhallowed clientele!
-
-Yes, he had pity for the old woman who had no kin now, and who had no
-friends. Pity! He owed her more than that! So then--there came a sudden
-thought--so then, why not? He would not long be curé of St. Marleau, but
-while he was--well, he was the curé of St. Marleau! He could not remove
-the ban of excommunication, that was beyond the authority of a mere
-curé, it would require at least Monsignor the Bishop to do that; but
-he could remove the ban--of ostracism! Yes, decidedly, the good, young
-Father Aubert could do that! He was vaguely conscious that there were
-degrees of excommunication, and he seemed to remember that Valérie had
-said it was but a minor one that had been laid upon Mother Blondin, and
-that the villagers of their own accord had drawn more and more aloof. It
-would, therefore, not be very difficult.
-
-He quickened his step, and, reaching the bottom of the hill, made his
-way at once toward the carpenter shop. He could see Madame Bouchard
-hoeing in the little garden patch between the road and the front of the
-shop. It was Madame Bouchard that he now desired to see.
-
-“_Tiens! Bon jour_, Madame Bouchard!” he called out to her, as he
-approached. “I am come a penitent! I did not deserve your bread! I am
-sure that you are vexed with me! But I have not seen you since to thank
-you.”
-
-She came forward to where Raymond now leaned upon the fence.
-
-“Oh, Monsieur le Curé!” she exclaimed laughingly. “How can you say such
-things! Fancy! The idea! Vexed with you! It is only if you really liked
-it?”
-
-“H'm!” drawled Raymond teasingly, pretending to deliberate. “When do you
-bake again, Madame Bouchard?”
-
-She laughed outright now.
-
-“To-morrow, Monsieur le Curé--and I shall see that you are not
-forgotten.”
-
-“It is a long way off--to-morrow,” said Raymond mournfully; and then,
-with a quick smile: “But only one loaf this time, Madame Bouchard,
-instead of two.”
-
-“Nonsense!” she returned. “It is a great pleasure. And what are two
-little loaves!”
-
-“A great deal,” said Raymond, suddenly serious. “A very great deal,
-Madame Bouchard; and especially so if you send one of the two loaves to
-some one else that I know of.”
-
-“Some one else?”
-
-“Yes,” said Raymond. “To Mother Blondin.”
-
-“To--Mother Blondin!”--Madame Bouchard stared in utter amazement.
-“But--but, Monsieur le Curé, you are not in earnest! She--she is an
-_excommuniée_, and we--we do not----”
-
-“I think it would make her very glad,” said Raymond softly. “And Mother
-Blondin I think has----”
-
-It was on the tip of his tongue to say that Mother Blondin was not
-likely now to sell any more whisky at the tavern, but he checked
-himself. It was Mother Blondin who must be left to tell of that herself.
-If he spread such a tale, she would be more likely than not to rebel at
-a situation which she would probably conceive was being thrust forcibly
-down her throat; and, in pure spite at what she might also conceive to
-be a self-preening and boastful spirit on his part for his superiority
-over her, sell all the more, no matter what the consequences to herself.
-And so he changed what he was about to say. “And Mother Blondin I think
-has known but little gladness in her life.”
-
-“But--but, Monsieur le Curé,” she gasped, “what would the neighbours
-say?”
-
-“I hope,” said Raymond, “that they would say they too would send her
-loaves--of kindness.”
-
-Madame Bouchard leaned heavily upon her hoe.
-
-“It is many years, Monsieur le Curé, since almost I was a little girl,
-that any one has willingly had anything to do with the old woman on the
-hill.”
-
-“Yes,” said Raymond gently. “And will you think of that, Madame
-Bouchard, when you bake to-morrow--the many years--and the few that are
-left--for the old woman on the hill.”
-
-The tears had sprung to Madame Bouchard's eyes. He left her standing
-there, leaning on the hoe.
-
-He went on along the road toward the _presbytère_. It had been a strange
-afternoon--an illogical one, an imaginary one almost. It seemed to have
-been a jumble of complexities, and incongruities, and unrealities--there
-was the man who was to be hanged by the neck until he was dead; and
-Monsieur Dupont who, through a very natural deduction and not because he
-was a fool, for Monsieur Dupont was very far from a fool, was now vainly
-engaged like a dog circling around in a wild effort to catch his own
-tail; and there was Mother Blondin who had another window to gaze from;
-and Madame Bouchard who had still another. Yes, it had been a strange
-afternoon--only now that voice in the courtroom was beginning to ring
-in his ears again. “Father--Father François Aubert--help me--I do not
-understand.” And the gnawing was at his soul again, and again his hat
-was lifted from his head to cool his fevered brow.
-
-And as he reached the church there came to him the sound of organ notes,
-and instead of crossing to the _presbytère_ he stepped softly inside to
-listen--it would be Valérie--Valérie, and Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar
-boy, probably, who often pumped the organ for her when she was at
-practice. But as he stepped inside the music ceased, and instead he
-heard them talking in the gallery, and in the stillness of the church
-their voices came to him distinctly.
-
-“Valérie”--yes, that was the boy's voice--“Valérie, why do they call him
-the good, young Father Aubert?”
-
-“Such a question!” Valérie laughed. “Why do you call him that yourself?”
-
-“I don't--any more,” asserted the boy. “Not after what I saw at mass
-this morning.”
-
-Raymond drew his breath in sharply. What was this! What was this that
-Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar boy, had seen at mass! He had fooled the
-boy--the boy could not have seen anything! He drew back, opening the
-door cautiously. They were coming down the stairs now--but he must
-hear--hear what it was that Gauthier Beaulieu had seen.
-
-“Why, what do you mean, Gauthier?” Valérie asked.
-
-“I mean what I say,” insisted the boy doggedly. “It is not right to call
-him that! When he was kneeling there this morning, and I guess it was
-the bright light because the stained window was open, for I never saw it
-before, I saw his hair all specked with white around his temples. And
-a man with white in his hair isn't young, is he! And I saw it,
-Valérie--honest, I did!”
-
-“Your eyes should have been closed,” said Valérie. “And----”
-
-Raymond was crossing the green to the _presbytère_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII--THE CALL IN THE NIGHT
-
-|IT was very dark here in the front room, and somehow the darkness
-seemed tangible to the touch, like something oppressive, like the folds
-of a pall that was spread over him, and which he could not thrust aside.
-And it was still, and very quiet--save for the voices, and save that it
-seemed he could hear that faltering, irregular step from the rear room,
-where there was no longer any step to hear.
-
-Surely it would be daylight soon--the merciful daylight. The darkness
-and the night were meant only for sleep, and it was an eternity since he
-had slept--no, not an eternity, only a week--it was only a week since he
-had slept. No, that was not true either--there had been hours, not many
-of them, but there had been hours when his eyes had been closed and he
-had not been conscious of his surroundings, but those hours had been
-even more horrible than when he had tossed on his bed awake. They had
-brought neither rest nor oblivion--they were full of dreams that were
-hideous--and the dreams would not leave him when he was awake--and the
-sleep when it came was a curse because the dreams remained to cast
-an added blight upon his wakefulness--and he had come even to fight
-against sleep and to resist it because the dreams remained.
-
-Dreams! There was always the dream of the Walled Place which--no! Not
-that--_now!_ Not that! Yes! The dream of the Walled Place. See--it went
-like this: He was in a sort of cavernous gloom in which he could not see
-very distinctly, but he was obsessed with the knowledge that there were
-hidden things from which he must escape. So he would run frantically
-around and around, following four square walls which were so high that
-the tops merged into the gloom; and the walls, as he touched them with
-his hands, seeking an opening, were wet with a slime that grew upon
-them. Then, looming out of the centre of this place, he would suddenly
-see what it was that he was running away from. There was a form, a human
-form, with something black over its head, that swayed to and fro, and
-was suspended from a bar that reached across from one wall to another;
-and on the top of this bar there roosted a myriad winged creatures like
-gigantic bats, only their eyes blazed, and they had enormous claws--and
-suddenly these vampires would rise with a terrifying crackling of their
-wings, and shrill, abominable screams, and swirl and circle over him,
-drawing nearer and nearer until his blood ran cold--and then, shrieking
-like a maniac, he would run again around and around the walls, beating
-at the slime until his hands bled. And the screaming things with
-outstretched talons followed him, and he stumbled and fell, and fell
-again, and shrieked out in his terror of these inhuman vultures that had
-roosted above the swaying thing with the black-covered head--and just as
-they were settling upon him there was an opening in the wall where there
-had been no opening before, and with his last strength he struggled
-toward it--and the way was blocked. The opening had become a gate that
-was all studded with iron spikes which if he rushed upon it would impale
-him, and which Valerie was closing--and as she closed it her head was
-averted, and one hand was thrown across her eyes, its palm toward him,
-as though she would not look upon his face.
-
-Raymond's hands were wet with perspiration. They slipped from the arms
-of his chair, and hung downward at his sides. What time was it? It had
-been midnight when he had risen fully dressed from his bed in the rear
-room--that he occupied now that they had taken the man away to jail--and
-had come in here to sit at the desk. Since then the clock had struck
-many times, the half hours, and the hours. Ah--listen! It was striking
-again. One--two--three! Three o'clock! It was still a long way off,
-the daylight--the merciful daylight. The voices did not plague him so
-constantly in the warmth of the sunshine. Three o'clock! It would be
-five o'clock before the dawn came.
-
-They had changed, those voices, in the last week--at least there was
-a new voice that had come, and an old one that did not recur so
-insistently. “Father--Father François Aubert--help me--I do not
-understand”--yes, that was still dinning forever in his ears; but,
-instead of that voice which said some one was to be hanged by the neck
-until dead, the new voice had quite a different thing to say. It was the
-voice of the “afterwards.” Hark! There it was now: “What fine and subtle
-shade of distinction is there between being hanged and imprisoned for
-life; what difference does it make, what difference could it make, what
-difference will it make--why do you temporise?”
-
-He had fought with all his strength against that “afterwards”--and it
-was stronger than he. He could not evade the issue that was flung at
-him, and flung again and again until his brain writhed in agony with it.
-He was a gambler, but he was not a blind gambler. He did not want the
-man to lose his life, or his freedom for all of life--he did not want
-to lose his own life. While the appeal was pending _something_ might
-happen, a thousand things might happen, there was always, always a
-chance. He would not throw away that chance--only a fool who had lost
-his nerve would do that. But he was not blind. The chance was one where
-the odds against him staggered him--there was so little chance that,
-fight as he would to escape it, logic and plain common sense had forced
-upon him the “afterwards.” And these days while the appeal was pending
-were like remorseless steps that led on and on to end only upon the
-brink of a yawning chasm, whose depth and whose blackness were as the
-depth and blackness of hell, and over which he sprang suddenly erect,
-his head flung back, the strong jaws clamped like a vise. Who had
-brought this torture upon him? He could not sleep! He knew no repose!
-God, or devil, or power infernal--who was it? Neither sleep nor repose
-might be his, but he was unbroken yet, and he could still fight! He
-asked only that--that the author of this torment stand before him--and
-fight! Why should he, unless the one meagre hope that something might
-happen in the meantime be fulfilled, why should he stand faced with the
-choice of swinging like a felon from the gallows, or of allowing that
-other innocent man to go to his doom? Yes, why should he submit to this
-torture, when that scarred-faced blackguard had brought his death upon
-himself--why should he submit to it, when it was so easy to escape it
-all! Once, that night in Ton-Nugget Camp, he had flung down the gauntlet
-in the face of God, and in the face of hell, and in the face of man, and
-in the face of beast. Was he a weakling and a fool now who had not sense
-enough to seize his opportunity to be quit of this, and to go his way,
-and live again the full, red-blooded, reckless life that he had lived
-since he was a boy, and that now, a young man still, beckoned to
-him with allurements as yet untasted! To-morrow--no, to-day when the
-daylight came--he had only to borrow Bouchard's boat, and the boat
-upturned would be found, and St. Mar-leau would mourn the loss of the
-good, young Father Aubert whose body had been swept out to sea, and
-the law would take its course on the man in the condemned cell, and
-Three-Ace Artie would be as free and untrammelled as the air--yes, and
-a coward, and a crawling thing, and--the paroxysm of fury passed. He
-sagged against the desk. This was the “afterwards”--but why should it
-come now! Between now and then there was a chance that something might
-intervene. He had only been trying to delude himself when he had said
-that in a life sentence there was all of time to plan and plot--he knew
-that. And he knew, too, that he was no more content that the man should
-be imprisoned for life than that the man should hang--that one was the
-equal of the other. He knew that this “all of time” was ended when
-the appeal was decided. He knew all that--that voice would not let him
-juggle with myths any more. But that moment had not come yet--there were
-still weeks before it would come--and in those weeks there lay a hope,
-a chance, a gambling chance that something might happen. And even in the
-appeal there lay a hope too, not that the sentence might be commuted to
-life imprisonment, that changed nothing now, but that they might perhaps
-after all consider the man's condition sufficient reason for not holding
-him to account for murder, and might therefore, instead, place him under
-medical treatment somewhere until, if ever, he recovered. He, Raymond,
-had not struck the man, he had not in even a remote particular been
-responsible for the man's wound, or the ensuing condition, and if the
-man were turned over to medical supervision the man automatically ceased
-to have any claim upon him.
-
-But that was not likely to happen--it was only one of those thousand
-things that _might_ happen--nothing was likely to happen except that the
-man would be hanged. And when that time came, if the appeal were lost
-and every one of those thousand chances swept away, and the only thing
-that could save the man's life would be to--God, would he never stop
-this! Would his mind never, even through utter exhaustion, cease
-its groping in this horrible turmoil! On, on, on! His brain was
-remorselessly driven on! It was like--like a slave that, already
-lacerated and bleeding, was lashed on again to renewed effort by some
-monstrous, brutal and inhuman master!
-
-Yes, when that time came, and if that chance were gone, and supposing he
-gave himself up to stand in the other's place, could he in any way evade
-the rope, wriggle away from that dangling noose? Was there a loophole in
-the evidence anywhere? If only in some way he could prove that the act
-had been committed in self-defence! He had feared to risk such a plea
-that night, because he had feared that his own past would condemn him
-out of hand; and, moreover, however that might have been, the man lying
-in the road, whom he had thought dead, had seemed to offer the means of
-washing his hands for good and all of the whole matter. Self-defence!
-Ha, ha! Listen to those devils laugh! It was his own hand that had tied
-the knot in the noose so that it would never slip--it was he who had so
-cunningly supplied all the attendant details that irrevocably placed the
-stamp of robbery and murder upon the doings of that night. Here there
-was no delusion; here, where delusion was sought again, there was no
-delusion--if he gave himself up he would hang--hang by the neck until he
-was dead--and, since he had desecrated God's holy places, he would
-hang without the mercy of God upon his soul. Well, what odds did that
-make--whether there was mercy of God upon his soul-or not! Was there
-anything in common between--no, that was not what he had to think about
-now--it was quite another matter.
-
-Suppose, when he was forced to fling down his hand finally, that instead
-of giving himself up, or instead of making it appear that the good,
-young Father Aubert was dead--suppose that he simply made an escape
-from St. Marleau such as he had planned for Henri Mentone that night?
-He could at least secure a few hours' start, and then, from somewhere,
-before it was too late, send back, say, a written confession. He could
-always do that. Surely that would save the man. They would hunt for him,
-Raymond, as they would hunt for a wild beast that had run amuck, and
-they would hunt for him for the rest of his life, and in the end they
-might even catch him--but that was the chance he would have to accept.
-Yes, here was another way--only why did not this way bring rest, and
-repose, and satisfaction, and sleep? And why ask the question? He
-knew--he knew why! It was--Valérie. It was not a big way, it was not
-a man's way--and in Valerie's eyes at the last, not absolving him,
-not even that she might endure the better, for it could not intimately
-affect her, there was left to him only the one redeeming act, the one
-thing that would lift him above contempt and loathing, and that was that
-she should know him--for a _man_.
-
-Life, the mere act of breathing, of knowing a concrete existence, was
-not everything; it did not embrace everything, it was not even a state
-that was not voluntarily to be surrendered to greater things, to----
-
-“A fool and a woman's face, and blatant sophistry, and mock
-heroics!”--that inner monitor, with its gibe and sneer, was back again.
-Its voice, too, must make itself heard!
-
-He raised his hands and pressed them tight against his throbbing
-temples. This was hell's debating society, and he must listen to the
-arguments and decide upon their merits and pronounce upon them, for he
-was the presiding officer and the decision remained with him! How they
-gabbled, and shrieked, and whispered, and jeered, and interrupted each
-other, and would not keep order--those voices! Though now for the moment
-that inner voice kept drowning all the others out.
-
-“You had your chance! If you hadn't turned squeamish that night when
-all you needed to do was to hold a pillow over the man's face for a few
-minutes, you wouldn't have had any of this now! How much good will it do
-you what _she_ thinks--when they get through burying you in lime under
-the jail walls!”
-
-It was dark, very dark here in the room. That was the window over there
-in that direction, but there was not even any grayness showing, no sign
-yet of daylight--no sign yet of daylight. Why would they not let him
-alone, these voices, until the time came when he _must_ act? That was
-all he asked. In the interval something might--his hands dropped to his
-sides, and he half slipped, half fell into his chair, and his head went
-forward over the desk. Was all that to begin over again--and commence
-with the dream of the Walled Place! No, no; he would not let it--_he
-would not let it!_
-
-He would think about something else; force himself to
-think--rationally--about something else. Well then, the man in the
-condemned cell, whom he had not dared refuse to visit, and whom he had
-gone twice that week to see? No---not that, either! The man was always
-sitting on that cursed cot with his hands clasped dejectedly between his
-knees, and the iron bars robbed the sunlight of warmth, and it was cold,
-and the man's eyes haunted him. No--not that, either! He had to go and
-see the man again to-morrow--and that was enough--and that was enough!
-
-Well then, Mother Blondin? Yes, that was better! He could even laugh
-ironically at that--at old Mother Blondin. Old Mother Blondin was
-falling under the spell of the example set by the good, young Father
-Aubert! Some of the old habitués, he had heard, were beginning to
-grumble because it was becoming difficult to obtain whisky at the
-tavern. The Madame Bouchards were crowding the habitues out; and the old
-woman on the hill, even if with occasional sullen and stubborn
-relapses, was slowly yielding to the advances of St. Marleau that he had
-inaugurated through the carpenter's v/ife. Ah--he had thought to laugh
-at this, had he! Laugh! He might well keep his head buried miserably in
-his arms here upon the desk! Laugh! It brought instead only a profound
-and bitter loneliness. He was alone, utterly alone, isolated and cut off
-in a world where there was the sound of no human voice, the touch of no
-human hand, alone--amidst people whose smiles greeted him on every hand,
-amidst people who admired and loved him, and listened reverently to the
-words of God that fell from his lips. But they loved, and admired,
-and gave their friendship, not to the man he was, but to the man they
-thought he was--to the good, young Father Aubert. That was what was
-actuating even Mother Blondin! And the life that he had led as the good,
-young Father Aubert was being held up to him now as in a mental mirror
-that lay bare to his gaze his naked soul. They loved him, these people;
-they had faith in him--and a pure, unswerving faith in the religion, and
-in the God as whose holy priest he masqueraded!
-
-Raymond's lips twisted in pain. The love of these people struck to the
-heart, and the pang hurt. It would have been a glad thing to have won
-this love--for himself. And he was requiting what they gave in their
-ignorance by defiling what meant most in life to them--the holy things
-they worshipped. It was strange--strange how of late he had sought, in
-a sort of pitiful atonement for the wrong he had done them, to put
-sincerity into the words that, before, he had only mumbled at the church
-altar! Yes, he had earned their love and their respect, and he was the
-good, young Father Aubert, and the life he had led amongst them was a
-blasphemous lie--but it had not been the motives of a hypocrite that had
-actuated him. It had not been that the devil desired to pose as a saint.
-He stood acquitted before even God of that. He had sought only, fought
-only, asked only--for his life.
-
-A sham, a pretence, a lie--it was abhorrent, damnable--it was not
-even Three-Ace Artie's way--and he was chained to it in every word and
-thought and act. There--that thing that loomed up through the darkness
-there a few inches from him--that was one of the lies. That was a
-typewriter he had rented in Tour-nayville and had brought back when
-returning from his last visit to the jail. Personal letters had begun to
-arrive for Father François Aubert. He might duplicate a signature,
-but he could not imitate pages of the man's writings. And he could not
-dictate a letter to-the man's _mother_--and meet Valérie's eyes.
-
-Valérie! Out in that world where he was set apart, out in that world
-of inhuman isolation, this was the loneliness that was greatest of all.
-Valérie! Valérie! It seemed as though he were held in some machiavellian
-bondage, free to move and act, free in all things save one--he could not
-pass the border of his prison-land. But he, Raymond Chapelle, could look
-out over the border of his prison-land, and watch this woman, whose
-face was pure and beautiful, as she walked about, and talked, and was
-constantly in the company of a young priest, who was the good, young
-Father Aubert, the Curé of St. Marleau. And because he had watched her
-hungrily for many days, and knew the smile that came so gladly to the
-sweet lips, and because he had looked into the clear, steadfast eyes,
-and listened to her voice, and because she was just Valérie, he had
-come to the knowledge of a great love--and a great, torturing, envious
-jealousy of this man, cloaked in priestly garb, who was forever at her
-side.
-
-His lips moved, but no sound came from them. Valérie! Valérie! Why had
-she not come into his life before! Before--when? Before that night at
-Mother Blondin's? Was he not man enough to look the truth in the face!
-That night was only a culminating incident of a life that went back many
-years to the days when--when there had been no Valérie either! But it
-was too late to think of that now--now that Valérie had come, come as
-a final, terrible punishment, holding up before him, through bitter
-contrast, the hollow worthlessness of the stakes that, when the choice
-had been freely his, he had chosen to play for!
-
-Valérie! Valérie! His soul was calling out to her. A life with Valérie!
-What would it not have meant? The dear love that she might have given
-him--the priceless love that he might have won! Gone! Gone forever! No,
-it was not gone, for it had never been. He thanked God for that. Yes,
-there must be a God who had brought this about, for while he flouted
-this God in the dress of this God's priest, this God utilised that very
-act to save Valérie, who trusted this God, from the misery and sorrow
-and hopelessness that must have come to her with love. She could not
-love a priest; there could be no thought of such a thing for Valérie.
-This God had set that barrier there--to protect her. Yes, he thanked
-God for that; he thanked God he had not brought this hurt upon her--and
-those minions of hell, who tried to tantalise, and with their insidious
-deviltry tried to make him think otherwise, were powerless here. But
-that did not appease the yearning; that did not answer the cry of his
-heart and soul.
-
-Valérie! Valérie! Valérie! He was calling to her with all his strength
-from the border of that prison-land. Valérie! Valérie! Would his voice
-not reach her! Would she not turn her head and smile! Valérie! Valérie!
-He wanted her now in his hour of agony, in this hour of terrible
-loneliness, in this hour when his brain rocked and reeled on the verge
-of madness.
-
-How still it was--and how dark! There were no voices now--only the voice
-of his soul calling, calling, calling for Valérie--calling for what
-he could never have--calling for the touch of her hand to guide
-him--calling for her smile to help him on his way. Yes, Valérie--he was
-calling Valérie--he was calling to her from the depths of his being. Out
-into the night, out into the everywhere, he was flinging his piteous,
-soundless cry, and God, if God would, might listen, and know that His
-revenge was taken; and hell might listen, and shriek its mirth--they
-would not silence him.
-
-Valérie! Valérie! No, there was no answer. There would never be an
-answer--but he would always call. Through the years to come, if there
-were those years to reckon with, he would call as he was calling now.
-Valérie! Valérie! Valérie! She would not hear--she would not answer--she
-would not know. But he would call--because he loved her.
-
-A sob shook his bowed shoulders. A hand in agony gathered and crushed a
-fold of flesh from the forehead that lay upon it. Valérie! Valérie! He
-did not cry out. He made no sound. It was still, still as the living
-death in that prison-land--and then--and then he was swaying to his
-feet, and clutching with both hands at the desk, for support. Valérie!
-The door was open, and a soft light filled the room. Valérie! Valérie
-was standing there on the threshold, holding a lamp in her hand. It was
-phantasm! A vision! It was not real! It was not Valérie! His mind was
-a broken thing at last! It was not Valérie--but that was Valérie's
-voice--that was Valérie's voice.
-
-The lamp shook a little unsteadily in her hand.
-
-“Did you call?” she asked.
-
-He did not answer--only looked at her, as though in truth she were a
-vision that had come to him. She was in dressing-gown; and her hair,
-loosely knotted, framed her face in dark, waving tresses; and her eyes
-were wide, startled and perplexed, as they fixed upon him.
-
-“I--I thought I heard you call,” she faltered.
-
-All the gladness, all the joy in life, all that the world could hold
-seemed for an instant his. All else was forgotten--all else but that
-singing in his heart--all else but that fierce, elemental, triumphant,
-mighty joy lifting him high to a pinnacle that reared itself supreme,
-commanding and immortal, far beyond the reach of that sea of torment
-which had engulfed him. Valérie had heard him call--and she had
-answered--and she was here. Valérie was here--she had come to him.
-Valérie had heard him call--and she was here. And then beneath his feet
-that pinnacle, so supreme, commanding and immortal, seemed to dissolve
-away, and that sea of torment closed over him again, and all those
-voices that plagued him, mocking, jeering, screaming, shrieking, were
-like a horrible requiem ringing in his ears. She had heard him call--and
-he had made no sound--only his soul had spoken.. And she had answered.
-And she was here--here now--standing there on the threshold. _Why?_
-He dared not answer. It was a blessed thing, a wonderful, glorious
-thing---and it was a terrible thing, a thing of misery and despair. What
-was he doing now--_answering_ that “why”! No, no--it was not true--it
-could not be true. He had thanked God that it could not be so. It was
-not that--_that_ was not the reason she had heard him call--that was
-not the reason she was here. It was not! It was not! It was only those
-insidious----
-
-He heard himself speaking; he was conscious that his voice by some
-miracle was low, grave, contained. “No, Mademoiselle Valérie, I did not
-call.”
-
-The colour was slowly leaving her cheeks, and into her eyes came
-creeping confusion and dismay.
-
-“It--it is strange,” she said nervously. “I was asleep, and I thought
-I heard you call for--for help, and I got up and lighted the lamp,
-and----”
-
-Was that his laugh--quiet, gentle, reassuring? Was he so much in
-command of himself as that? Was it the gambler, or the priest, or--great
-God!--the lover now? She was here--she had come to him.
-
-“It was a dream, Mademoiselle Valérie,” he was saying. “A very terrible
-dream, I am afraid, if I was the subject of it; but, see, it is nothing
-to cause you distress, and to-morrow you will laugh over it.”
-
-She did not reply at once. She was very pale now; and her lips, though
-tightly closed, were quivering. Nor did she look at him. Her eyes were
-on the floor. Her hand mechanically drew and held the dressing-gown
-closer about her throat.
-
-He had not moved from the side of the desk, nor she from the threshold
-of the door--and now she looked up suddenly, and held the lamp in her
-hand a little higher, and her eyes searched his face.
-
-“It must be very late--very, very late,” she said steadily. “And you
-have not gone to bed. There is something the matter. What is it? Will
-you tell me?”
-
-“But, yes!” he said--and smiled. “But, yes--I will tell you. It is very
-simple. I think perhaps I was overtired. In any case, I was restless
-and could not sleep, and so I came in here, and--well, since I must
-confess--I imagine I finally fell asleep in my chair.”
-
-“Is that all?” she asked--and there was a curious insistence in her
-voice. “You look as though you were ill. Are you telling me all?”
-
-“Everything!” he said. “And I am not ill, Mademoiselle Valérie”--he
-laughed again--“you would hear me complain fast enough if I were! I am
-not a model patient.”
-
-She shook her head, as though she would not enter into the lightness of
-his reply; and again her eyes sought the floor. And, as he watched her,
-the colour now came and went from her cheeks, and there was trouble in
-her face, and hesitancy, and irresolution.
-
-“What is it, Mademoiselle Valérie?”--his forced lightness was gone now.
-She was frightened, and nervous, and ill at ease--that she should be
-standing here like this at this hour of night, of course. Yes, that was
-it. Naturally that would be so. He lifted his hand and drew it heavily
-across his forehead. She was frightened. If he might only take her in
-his arms, and draw her head to his shoulder, and hold her there, and
-soothe her! It seemed that all his being cried to him to do that. “Well,
-why don't you?”--that inner voice was flashing the suggestion quick upon
-him--“well, why don't you? You could do it as a priest, in the rôle of
-priest, you know--like a father to one of his flock. Go ahead, here's
-your chance--be the priest, be the priest! Don't you want to hold her in
-your arms--be the priest, be the priest!”
-
-She had not answered his question. He found himself answering it for
-her.
-
-“What is it, Mademoiselle Valérie? You must not let a dream affect you,
-you know. It is gone now. And you can see that----”
-
-“It is strange”--she spoke almost to herself. “I--I was so sure that I
-heard you call.”
-
-Why was he not moving toward her? Why was he clinging in a sort of
-tenacious frenzy to the desk? Why was he not obeying the promptings
-of that inner voice? It would be quite a natural thing to do what that
-voice prompted--and Valérie, Valérie who would never be his, would for a
-moment, snatched out of all eternity, be in his arms.
-
-“But you must not let such a thing as a dream affect you”--he seemed to
-be speaking without volition of his own, and he seemed stupidly able to
-say but the same thing over again. “And, see, it is over, and you are
-awake now to find that no one is really in trouble after all.”
-
-And then she raised her head--and suddenly, but as though she were
-afraid even of her own act, as though she still fought against some
-decision she had forced upon herself, she walked slowly forward into the
-room, and set the lamp down upon the desk.
-
-“Yes, there is some one in trouble”--the words came steadily, but
-scarcely above a whisper; and her hand was tense about the white throat
-now, where before it had mechanically clutched at the dressing-gown. “I
-am in trouble--Father Aubert.”
-
-“You--Valérie!” He was conscious, even in his startled exclamation, of a
-strange and disturbing prescience. Father Aubert--he could not remember
-when she had called him that before--_Father_ Aubert. It was very rarely
-that she called him that, it was almost always Monsieur le Curé. And
-he--her name--he had called her Valérie--not Mademoiselle Valérie--but
-Valérie, as once before, when she had stood out there in the hall the
-night they had taken that man away, her name had sprung spontaneously to
-his lips.
-
-“Yes,” she said, and bowed her head. “I am in trouble, father; for I
-have sinned.”
-
-“Sinned--Valérie”--the words were stumbling on his lips. How fast that
-white throat throbbed! Valérie, pure and innocent, meant perhaps to
-confess to--_Father_ Aubert. Well, she should not, and she would not!
-Not that! She should not have to remember in the “afterwards” that she
-had bared her soul at the shrine of profanity. Back again into his voice
-he forced a cheery, playful reassurance. “It cannot be a very grievous
-sin that Mademoiselle Valérie has been guilty of! Of that, I am sure!
-And to-morrow----”
-
-“No, no!” she cried out. “You do not know! See, be indulgent with me
-now, father--I am in trouble--in very deep and terrible trouble. I--I
-cannot even confess and ask you for absolution--but you can help me--do
-not try to put me off--I--I may not have the courage again. See, I--I am
-not very brave, and I am not very strong, and the tears are not far off.
-Help me to do what I want to do.”
-
-“Valérie!” he scarcely breathed her name. Help her to do what she wanted
-to do! There was another prescience upon him now; but one that he could
-not understand, save that it seemed to be pointing toward the threshold
-of a moment that he was to remember all his life.
-
-“Sit down there in your chair, father, please”--her voice was very low
-again. “Sit there, and let me kneel before you.”
-
-He stepped back as from a blow.
-
-“No, Valérie, you shall not kneel to me”--he did not know what he was
-saying now. Kneel! Valérie kneel to him! “You shall not kneel to me,
-I----”
-
-“_Yes!_” The word came feverishly. The composure that she had been
-fighting to retain was slipping from her. “Yes--I must! I must!” She
-was close upon him, forcing him back toward the chair. Her eyes, dry
-and wide before, were swimming with sudden tears. “Oh, don't you
-understand! Oh, don't you understand! I am not kneeling to you as a man,
-I am kneeling to you as--as a--a _priest_--a priest of God--for--for I
-have sinned.”
-
-She was on her knees--and, with a mental cry of anguish, Raymond slipped
-down into the chair. Yes, he understood--now--at last! He
-understood what, pray God, she should never realise he understood!
-She--Valérie--cared. And she was trying now--God, the cruelty of
-it!--and she was trying now to save herself, to protect herself, by
-forcing upon herself an actual physical acceptance of him as a priest.
-No! It was not so! It could not be so! He did _not_ understand!
-
-He would not have it so! He would not! It was only hell's trickery
-again--only that--and----
-
-“Lay your hands on my head, father.” She caught his hands and lifted
-them, and laid them upon her bowed head--and as his hands touched her
-she seemed to tremble for an instant, and her hands tightened upon his.
-“Hold them there for a little while, father,” she murmured--and took her
-own hands away, and clasped them before her hidden face.
-
-Raymond's countenance was ashen as he bent forward. What had that
-voice prompted him to do? Be the priest? Well, he was being the priest
-now--and he knew torment in the depths of a sacrilege at last before
-which his soul shrank back appalled. The soft hair was silken to the
-touch of his hands, and yet it burned and seared him as with brands of
-fire. It was Valérie's hair. It was Valérie's head that was bowed
-before him. It was Valérie, the one to whom his soul had called, who was
-kneeling to him--as a priest of God--to save herself!
-
-“Say the _Pater Noster_ with me, father,” she whispered.
-
-He bent his head still lower--lower now that she might not by any chance
-glimpse his face. Like death it must look. He pressed his hands in
-assent upon her head--but it was Valérie's voice alone that faltered
-through the room.
-
-“.... _Sanctificetur nomen tuum_--hallowed be Thy name... _fiat voluntas
-tua_--Thy will be done.... _et dimitte nobis débita nostra_--and forgive
-us our trespasses... _et ne nos inducas in tentationem_--and lead us not
-into temptation... _sed libera nos a malo_--but deliver us from evil...
-Amen.”
-
-The lamp burned upon the desk; it lighted up the room--but before
-Raymond's eyes was only a blur, and nothing was distinct. And there was
-silence--silence for a long time.
-
-And then Valérie spoke again.
-
-“I am stronger now,” she said. “I--I think God showed me the way. You
-have been very good to me to-night--not to question me--just to let me
-have my way. And now bless me, father, and I will go.”
-
-Bless Valérie--ask God's blessing on Valérie--would that be profanation?
-God's blessing on Valérie! Ay, he could ask that! Profligate, sinner,
-sham and mocker, he could ask that in reverence and sincerity--God's
-blessing upon Valérie--because he loved her.
-
-“God keep you, Valérie,” he said, and fought the tremor from his voice.
-“God keep you, Valérie--and bless you--and guard you through all your
-life.”
-
-She rose from her knees, and turning quickly because her cheeks were
-wet, picked up the lamp, and walked to the door. At the threshold she
-paused, but did not look back.
-
-“Good-night, father,” she said simply.
-
-“Good-night, Valérie,” he answered.
-
-It was dark again in the room. He had risen from his chair as Valérie
-had risen from her knees--and now his hand felt out for the chair again,
-and he sank down, and, as when she had come to him, his head was buried
-again in his arms upon the desk.
-
-Valérie cared! Valérie loved him! Valérie, too, had been through her
-hour of torment. “Not as a man--as a priest, a priest of God.” No, he
-would not believe that, he would not let himself believe that. It could
-not be so! She was troubled, in distress--about something else. What
-time was it now? Not daylight yet--the merciful daylight--no sign of
-daylight yet? If it were true--what then? If she cared--what then?
-
-If Valérie loved him--what then? What was he to do in the “afterwards”?
-It would not be himself alone who was to bear the burden then. It was
-not true, of course; he would not believe it, he would not let himself
-believe it. But if it were true how would Valérie endure the hanging
-by the neck until he was dead of the man she loved, or the knowledge of
-what he was, or the death by accident--of the man she loved!
-
-He did not stir now. He made no sound, no movement--and his head lay
-in his outflung arms. And time passed, and through the window crept the
-gray of dawn--and presently it was daylight--the merciful daylight--and
-the night was gone. But he was scarcely conscious of it now. It grew
-lighter still, and filled the room--that merciful daylight. And his
-brain, sick and stumbling and weary, reeled on and on, and there was the
-dream of the Walled Place again, and Valérie was closing the gate that
-was studded with iron spikes--and there was no way out.
-
-And then very slowly, like a man rousing from a stupor, his head came up
-from the desk, and he listened. From across the green came the sound of
-the church bells ringing for early mass. And as he listened the bells
-seemed to catch up the tempo of some refrain. What was it? Yes, he knew
-now. It was the opening of the mass--the words he would have to go in
-there presently and say. Were they mocking him, those bells! Was this
-what the daylight, the merciful daylight had brought--only a crowning,
-pitiless, merciless jeer! His face, strained and haggard, lifted
-suddenly a little higher. Was it only mockery, or could it be--see,
-they seemed to peal more softly now--could it be that they held another
-meaning--like voices calling in compassion to him because he was lost?
-No--his mind was dazed--it could not mean that--for him. But listen!
-They were repeating it over and over again. It was the call to mass, for
-it was daylight, and the beginning of a new day. Listen!
-
-“_Introibo ad altare Dei_--I will go in unto the Altar of God.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX--THE TWO SINNERS
-
-|INTROIBO ad altare Dei--I will go in unto the Altar of God.” It had
-been days, another week of them, since the morning when he had raised
-his head to that call for early mass,' and his brain, stumbling and
-confused, had set those words in a refrain to the tempo of the pealing
-bells.
-
-It was midnight now--another night--the dreaded night. They were not all
-like that other night, not all so pitiless--that would have been beyond
-physical endurance. But they were bad, all the nights were bad. They
-seemed cunningly just to skirt the border edge of strain that could be
-endured, and cunningly just to evade the breaking point.
-
-It was midnight. On the table beside the bed stood the lighted lamp; and
-beside the lamp, topped by a prayer-book, was a little pile of
-François Aubert's books; and the bed was turned neatly down, disclosing
-invitingly the cool, fresh sheets. These were Madame Lafleur's kindly
-and well-meant offices. Madame La-fleur knew that he did not sleep very
-well. Each evening she came in here and set the lamp on the table, and
-arranged the books, and turned down the bed.
-
-This was the same rocking-chair he sat in now that he had sat in night
-after night, and watched a man with bandaged head lying on that same
-bed--watched and waited for the man to die. The man was not there
-any more--there were just the cool, fresh sheets. The man was in
-Tournayville. He had seen the man again that afternoon--and now it was
-the man who was waiting to die.
-
-“I will go in unto the Altar of God.” With a curious hesitancy he
-reached out and took the prayer-book from the table, and abstractedly
-began to finger its pages. What did those words mean? They had been with
-him incessantly, insistently, since that morning when he had groped
-for their meaning as between the bitterest of mockeries and a sublime
-sincerity. They did not mock him now, they held no sting of irony. It
-was very strange. They had not mocked him all that week. He had been
-glad, eager, somehow, to repeat them to himself. Did they mean--peace?
-
-Peace! If he could have peace--even for to-night. If he could lie down
-between those cool, fresh sheets--and sleep! He was physically weary. He
-had made himself weary each night in the hope that weariness might bring
-a dreamless rest. He had thrown himself feverishly into the rôle of the
-Curé of St. Marleau; he had walked miles and driven miles; there was
-not a cottage in the parish upon whose door he had not knocked, and with
-whose occupants he had not shared-the personal joys and sorrows of
-the moment; and he had sat with the sick--with old Mother Blondin that
-morning, for instance, who seemed quite ill and feeble, and who in the
-last few days had taken to her bed. Yes, it was strange! He had done
-all this, too, with a certain sincerity that was not alone due to an
-effort to find forgetfulness during the day and weariness that would
-bring repose at night. He had found neither the forgetfulness nor the
-repose; but he had found a sort of wistful joy in the kindly acts of the
-good, young Father Aubert!
-
-He had found neither the forgetfulness nor the repose. He could not
-forget the “afterwards”--the day that must irrevocably come--unless
-something, some turn of fate, some unforeseen thing intervened.
-_Something!_ It was a pitiful thing to cling to--a pitiful thing even
-for a gambler's chance! But he clung to it now more desperately, more
-tenaciously than ever before. It was not only his life now, it was not
-only the life of the condemned man in that cell--it was Valérie. He
-might blindfold his mental vision; he might crush back, and trample
-down, and smother the thought, and refuse to admit it--but in his soul
-he believed she cared. And if she cared, and if that “something” did not
-happen, and he was forced, in whatever way he finally must choose, to
-play the last card--there was Valérie. If she cared--there was Valérie
-to suffer too! If he hanged instead of that man--there was Valérie! If
-he confessed from a safe distance after flight--there was Valérie
-to endure the shame! If the good, young Father Aubert died by
-“accident”--there was the condemned man in the death cell to pay the
-penalty--and Valérie to know the grief! Choice! What choice was there?
-Who called this ghastly impasse a choice! He could only wait--wait and
-cling to that hope, which in itself, because it was so paltry a thing to
-lean on, but added to the horror and suspense of the hours and days that
-stretched between now and the “afterwards.”
-
-“Something” might happen--yes, something might happen--but nothing had
-happened yet--nothing yet--and his brain, day and night, would not stop
-mangling and tearing itself to pieces--and would not let him rest--and
-there was no peace--none--not even for a few short hours.
-
-His fingers were still mechanically turning the pages of the
-prayer-book. “I will go in unto the Altar of God.” Why did those words
-keep on running insistently through his mind? Did they suggest--peace?
-
-Well, if they did, why wasn't there something practical about them,
-something tangible, something he could lay material hands upon, and
-sense, and feel? The Altar, of God! Was there in very reality a God?
-He had chosen once to deny it contemptuously; and he had chosen once
-to despise religion as cant and chicanery cleverly practised upon the
-gullible and the weak-minded to the profit of those who pretended to
-interpret it! But there were beautiful words here in this book; and
-religion, if this were religion, must therefore be beautiful too--if
-one could believe. He remembered those words at the burial of Théophile
-Blondin--years, an eternity ago that was--“I am the resurrection and
-the life... he that believeth in Me... shall never die.” He had repeated
-them over and over to himself that morning--he had spoken them aloud, in
-what had seemed then an unaccountable sincerity, to old Mother Blondin
-as she had clung to the palings of the cemetery fence that morning. Yes,
-they were beautiful words--if one could believe.
-
-And here were others! What were these words here? He was staring at an
-open page before him, staring and staring at it. What were these other
-words here? It was not that he had never seen them before--but why
-was the book open at this place now--at these last few words of the
-_Benedictus? “Per viscera misericordiæ Dei nostri... illuminare his qui
-in tenebris et in umbra mortis sedent: ad dirigendos pedes nostros in
-viam pacis_--Through the tender mercy of our God... to enlighten those
-who sit in darkness and in the shade of death: to direct our feet into
-the way of peace.”
-
-Were they but words--mere words--these? They were addressed to
-him--definitely to him, were they not? He sat in darkness, in an agony
-of darkness, lost, unable to find his way, and he sat--in the shade of
-death! Was there a God, a God who had tender mercy, a God--to direct his
-feet into the way of peace?
-
-The book slipped from his fingers, and dropped to the floor--and, his
-lips compressed, he stood up from the chair. If there was a God who
-had mercy, mercy of any kind--it was mercy he asked now. Where was this
-mercy? Where was this way of peace? Where was--a strange, bewildered,
-incredulous wonder was creeping into his face. Was that it--the Altar
-of God? Was that where there was peace--in unto the Altar of God? He
-had asked for a practical application of the words. Is that what they
-meant--that he should actually go--in unto the Altar of God--in there in
-the church--now?
-
-It seemed to stagger him for a moment. Numbly he stooped and picked up
-the prayer-book, and closed it, and laid it back on the table--and stood
-irresolute. Something, he was conscious, was impelling him to go there.
-Well, why not? If there was a God, if there was a God who had tender
-mercy, if it was that God whose words were suggesting a way of
-peace--why not put that God to the test! Once, on the afternoon just
-before he had attempted that man's escape, he had yielded to a previous
-impulse, and had gone into the church. It had been quiet, still
-and restful, he remembered; and he remembered that he had come away
-strangely calmed. But since then a cataclysm had swept over him; then
-he had been in a state of mind that, compared with now, was one even
-of peace--but even so, it was quiet, still and restful there, he
-remembered.
-
-He was crossing the room slowly, hesitantly, toward the door. Well, why
-not? If there was a God, and this impulse emanated from God--why not put
-it to the test? If it was all a hollow fraud, a myth, a superstition
-to which he was weak enough to yield, he would at least be no worse
-off than to sit here in that chair, or to lie upon the bed and toss the
-hours away until morning came!
-
-Well, he would go! He stepped softly out into the hall, closed his door
-behind him, groped his way in the darkness to the front door of the
-_presbytère_, opened it--and stood still for an instant, listening.
-Neither Valérie nor her mother, asleep upstairs, had been disturbed he
-was sure. If they had--well, they would assign no ulterior motive to his
-going out--it was only that Monsieur le Curé, poor man, did not sleep
-well!
-
-He closed the door quietly, and went down the steps--and at the bottom
-paused again. He became suddenly conscious that there was a great quiet
-and a great serenity in the night--and a great beauty. There were stars,
-a myriad stars in a perfect sky; and the moonlight bathed the church
-green in a radiance that made of it a velvet carpet, marvellously
-wrought in shadows of many hues. There, along the road, a whitewashed
-cottage stood out distinctly, and still further along another, and yet
-another--like little fortresses whose tranquillity was impregnable. And
-the moonlight, and the lullaby of the lapping water on the shore, and
-the night sounds that were the chirping of the little grass-things,
-were like some benediction breathed softly upon the earth.
-
-“To direct our feet into the way of peace”--Raymond murmured the words
-with a sudden overpowering sense of yearning and wistfulness sweeping
-upon him. And then, as suddenly, he was tense, alert, straining his eyes
-toward the front of the church. Was that a shadow there that moved, cast
-perhaps by the swaying branch of some tree? It was a very curious branch
-if that were so! The shadow seemed to have appeared suddenly from around
-the corner of the church and to be creeping toward the door. It was
-too far across the green to see distinctly, even with the moonlight as
-bright as it was, but it seemed as though he could see the church door
-open and close again--and now the shadow had disappeared.
-
-Mechanically Raymond rubbed his eyes. It was strange, so very strange
-that it must surely be only a trick of the imagination. The moonlight
-was always deceptive and lent itself easily to hallucinations, and at
-that distance he certainly could not be sure. And besides, at this hour,
-after midnight, why should any one go stealing into the church? And yet
-he could have sworn he had seen the door open! And stare as he would
-now, the shadow that had crept along the low platform above the church
-steps was no longer visible.
-
-He hesitated a moment. It was even an added incentive for him to go into
-the church, but suppose some one was there, and he should be seen? He
-smiled a little wanly--and stepped forward across the green. Well, what
-of it! Was he not the Curé of St. Mar-leau? It would be only another
-halo for the head of the good, young Father Aubert! It would require but
-a word of explanation from him, he could even tell the truth--and they
-would call him the _devout_, good, young Father Aubert! Only, instead of
-entering by one of the main doors, he would go in through the sacristy.
-He was not even likely to be seen himself in that way; and, if there was
-any one there, he should be able to discover who it was, and what he or
-she was doing there.
-
-He passed on along the side of the church, his footsteps soundless on
-the sward, reached the door of the sacristy, opened it silently, and
-stepped inside. It was intensely dark here. Treading on tiptoe, he
-traversed the little room, and finally, after a moment's groping, his
-fingers closed on the knob of the door that opened on the interior of
-the church.
-
-A sound broke the stillness. Yes, there was some one out there! Raymond
-cautiously pulled the door ajar. Came that sound again. It was very
-loud--and yet it was only the creak of a footstep that seemed to come
-from somewhere amongst the aisles. It echoed back from the high vaulted
-roof with a great noise. It seemed to give pause, to terrify with
-its own alarm whoever was out there, for now as he listened there was
-silence again.
-
-Still cautiously and still a little wider, Raymond opened the door, and
-now he could see out into the body of the church--and for a moment, as
-though gazing upon some mystic scene, he stood there wrapt, immovable.
-Above the tops of the high, stained windows, it was as though a vast
-canopy of impenetrable blackness were spread from end to end of the
-edifice; and slanting from the edge of this canopy in a series of
-parallel rays the moonlight, coloured into curious solemn tints,
-filtered across from one wall to the other. And the aisles were like
-little dark alleyways leading away as into some immensity beyond. And
-here, looming up, a statue, the figure of some white-robed saint,
-drew, as it were, a holy light about it, and seemed to take on life
-and breathe into the stillness a sense of calm and pure and unchanging
-presence. And the black canopy and the little dark alleyways seemed
-to whisper of hidden things that kept ward over this abode of God. And
-there was no sound--and there was awe and solemnity in this silence. And
-on the altar, very near him, the Altar of God that he had come to seek,
-the single altar light burned like a tiny scintillating jewel in its
-setting of moon rays. And there, shadowy against the wall, just outside
-the chancel rail, was the great cross. There seemed something that spoke
-of the immutable in that. The first little wooden church above whose
-doors it had been reared was gone, and there was a church of stone now
-with a golden, metal cross upon its spire, but this great cross of wood
-was still here. It was a very precious relic to St. Marleau, and so it
-hung there on the wall of the new church between the two windows nearest
-the altar.
-
-And then his eyes, travelling down the length of the cross, fixed upon
-its base--and the spell that had held him was gone. It was blacker
-there, very much blacker! There was a patch of blackness there that
-seemed to move and waver slightly--and it was neither shadow, nor
-yet the support built out to hold the base of the cross. Some one was
-crouching there. Well, what should he do? Remain in hiding here, or go
-out there as the Curé of St. Marleau and see who it was? Something
-urged him to go; caution bade him remain where he was. He knew a sudden
-resentment. He had put God to the test--and, instead of peace, he had
-found a prowler in the church!
-
-Ah--what was that! That low, broken sound--like a sob! Yes, it came
-again--and the echoes whispered it back from everywhere. It was a woman.
-A woman was sobbing there at the foot of the cross. Who was it? Came
-a thought that stabbed with pain. Not Valérie! It could not be
-Valérie--kneeling there under a load that was beyond her strength! It
-could not be Valérie in anguish and grief greater than she could bear
-because--because she loved a man whom she believed to be a priest of
-God! No--not Valérie! But if it were!
-
-He drew back a little. If it were Valérie she should not know that he
-had seen. At least he could save her that. He would wait until whoever
-it was had left the church, and if it were Valérie she would go back to
-the _presbytère_, and in that way he would know.
-
-And now--what were those words now? She was praying out there as
-she sobbed. And slowly an amazed and incredulous wonder spread over
-Raymond's face. No, it was not Valérie! That was not Valérie's voice!
-Those mumbling, hesitant, uncertain words, as though the memory
-were pitifully at fault, were not Valérie's. It was not Valérie! He
-recognised the voice now. It was the old woman on the hill--old Mother
-Blondin!
-
-And Raymond stared for a moment helplessly out through the crack of the
-sacristy door which he held ajar, out into those curiously tinted moon
-rays, and past the altar with its tiny light, to where that dark shadow
-lay against the wall. Old Mother Blondin! Old Mother Blondin, the
-heretic, was out there--_praying in the church!_ Why? What had brought
-her there? Old Mother Blondin who was supposed to be ill in her bed--he
-had seen her there that morning! She had been sick for the last
-few days, and worse if anything that morning--and now--now she was
-here--praying in the church.
-
-What had brought her here? What motive had brought this about, that,
-with its strength of purpose, must have supplied physical strength as
-well, for she must almost literally have had to crawl down the hill
-in her feeble state? Had she too come seeking for--peace! Was it
-coincidence that they two, who had reached the lees and dregs of that
-common cup, should be here together, at this strange hour, at the Altar
-of God! Was it only coincidence--nothing more? Was he ready to believe,
-would he admit so much, that it was _more_ than--coincidence?
-
-A sense of solemnity and of awe that mingled with a sense of profound
-compassion for old Mother Blon-din sobbing there in her misery took
-possession of him, and he seemed moved now as by an impulse beyond and
-outside himself--to go to her--to comfort and soothe her, if he could.
-And slowly he opened the sacristy door, and stepped out into the
-chancel, and into the moonlight that fell softly across the altar's
-edge--and he called her name.
-
-There was a cry, wild, unrestrained--a cry of terror that seemed to
-swirl about the church, and from the black canopy above that hid the
-vaulted roof was hurled back in a thousand echoes. But with the cry,
-as the dark form from against the wall sprang erect, Raymond caught a
-sharp, ominous cracking sound--and, as he looked, high up on the wall,
-the arms of the huge cross seemed to waver and begin to tilt forward.
-
-With a bound, as he saw her danger, Raymond cleared the chancel rail,
-and the next instant had caught at the base of the cross and steadied
-it. In her terror as she had jumped to her feet, she had knocked against
-it and forced it almost off the sort of shelf, or ledge, that had been
-built out from the wall to support it; and at the same time, he could
-see now, one or more of the wall fastenings at the top had given away.
-It was very heavy and unmanageable, but he finally succeeded in getting
-it far enough back into position to make it temporarily secure.
-
-He turned then to face Mother Blondin. She seemed oblivious, unconscious
-of her escape, though her face in the moonlight held a ghastly colour.
-She was staring at him with eyes that burned feverishly in their deep
-sockets. She was not crying now, but there were still tears, undried,
-that clung to her withered cheeks. One bony hand reached out and
-clutched at the back of a pew, for she was swaying on her feet; but the
-other was clenched and knotted--and suddenly she raised it and shook it
-in his face.
-
-“Yes, it is I! I--Mother Blondin!” she choked. “Mother Blondin--the old
-hag--the _excommuniée!_ You saw me come in--eh? And you have come to put
-me out--to put old Mother Blondin, the _excommuniée_, out--eh? I have no
-right here--here--eh? Well, who said I had any right! Put me out--put me
-out--put me-----” The clenched hand opened, clawed queerly at her face,
-as though to clear away something that had gathered before her eyes and
-would not let her see--and she reeled heavily backward.
-
-Raymond's arm went around her shoulders.
-
-“You are ill, Madame Blondin--ill and weak,” he said soothingly.
-“See”--he half lifted, half supported her into the pew--“sit down here
-for a moment and rest. I am afraid I frightened you. I am very sorry.
-Perhaps it would have been better if I had left you by yourself; but
-I heard you sobbing out here, and I thought that I might perhaps help
-you--and so I came--and so--you are better now, are you not?---and so,
-you see, it was not to drive you out of the church.”
-
-She looked at him in a sort of angry unbelief.
-
-“Ah!” she exclaimed fiercely. “Why do you tell me that, eh? Why do you
-tell me that? I have no right here--and you are a priest. That is your
-business--to drive me out.”
-
-“No,” said Raymond gravely; “it is not my business. And I think you
-would go very far, Madame Blondin, before you would find a priest who
-would drive you from his church under the circumstances in which I have
-found you here to-night.”
-
-“Well then, I will go myself!” she said defiantly--and made as though to
-rise.
-
-“No, not yet”--Raymond pressed her quietly back into the seat. “You must
-rest for a little while. Why, this morning, you know, you were seriously
-ill in bed. Surely you were not alone in the house to-night, that there
-was no one to prevent you getting up--I asked Madame Bouchard to----”
-
-“Madame Bouchard came to spend the night, but I did not want her, and I
-sent her home,” she interrupted brusquely.
-
-“You should not have done that, Madame Blondin,” Raymond remonstrated
-kindly. “But even then, you are very weak, and I do not see how you
-managed to get here.”
-
-Her face set hard with the old stubborn indomitableness that he knew so
-well.
-
-“I walked!” she said shortly.
-
-Her hands were twisting together in her lap. There was dust covering her
-skirt thickly.
-
-“And fell,” he said.
-
-She did not answer.
-
-“Will you tell me why you came?” he asked.
-
-“Because I was a fool”--her lips were working, her hands kept twisting
-over each other in her lap.
-
-“I heard you praying,” said Raymond gently. “What brought you here
-to-night, Madame Blondin?”
-
-She shook her head now, and turned her face away.
-
-The moonlight fell on the sparse, gray hair, and the thin, drooping
-shoulders, and the unkempt, shabby clothing. It seemed to enfold her in
-an infinite sympathy all its own. And suddenly Raymond found that his
-eyes were wet. It did not seem so startling and incongruous a thing that
-she should be here at midnight in the church--at the Altar of God. And
-yet--and yet why had she come? Something within himself demanded in a
-strange wistfulness the answer to that question, as though in the answer
-she would answer for them both, for the two who had no _right_ here in
-this sacred place unless--unless, if there were a God, that God in His
-own way had meant to--direct their feet into the way of peace.
-
-“Madame Blondin”--his voice was very low, trembling with
-earnestness--“Madame Blondin, do you believe in God?”
-
-Her hands stopped their nervous movements, and clasped hard one upon the
-other.
-
-“No!” she cried out sharply. “No--I----” And then her voice faltered,
-and she burst suddenly into tears. “I--I don't know.”
-
-His arm was still about her shoulders, and now his hand tightened a
-little upon her. She was crying softly. He was silent now--staring
-before him at that tiny flame burning in the moon rays on the altar.
-Well, suppose she did! Suppose even Mother Blondin believed, though
-she would fight on until she was beaten to her knees before she would
-unconditionally admit it, did that mean anything to him? Mother Blondin
-had not stood before that altar there with a crucifix upon her breast,
-and----
-
-She was speaking again--brushing the tears away with the back of her
-hand.
-
-“Once I did--once I believed,” she said. “That was when I was a girl,
-and--and for a little while afterward. I used to come to the church
-then, and I used to believe. And then after Pierre died I married
-Blondin, and after that very soon I came no more. It is forty
-years--forty years--it was the old church then. The ban came before
-this one was built--I was never in here before--it is only the old cross
-there, the cross that was on the old church, that I know. Forty years is
-a long time--a long time--I am seventy-two now--seventy-two.”
-
-She was crying again softly.
-
-“Yes,” said Raymond, and his own voice choked, “and to-night--after
-forty years?”
-
-“I wanted to come”--she seemed almost to be whispering to herself--“I
-wanted to come. Blondin said there was no God, but I remembered that
-when I was a girl--forty years ago--there was a God here. I--I wanted
-to come and see--and--and I--I don't know--I--I couldn't remember
-the prayers very well, and so maybe if God is still here He did not
-understand. Pierre always said there was a God, and he used to come
-here with me to mass; but Blondin said the priests were all liars, and
-I began to drink with Blondin, and he said they were all liars when he
-died, and no one except the ones that came to buy the _whiskey-blanc_
-would have anything to do with us, and--and I believed him.”
-
-“And Pierre?” Raymond asked softly. “Who was Pierre?”
-
-“Pierre?” She turned her head and looked at him--and somehow, perhaps
-it was the tint of the moon rays, somehow the old, hard face was
-transfigured, and seemed to glow with untold sweetness, and a smile
-of tenderness mingled with the tears. “Pierre? Ah, he was a good boy,
-Pierre. Yes, I have been happy! Who shall say I have not been happy?
-There were three years of it--three years of it--and then Pierre died. I
-was eighteen, eighteen on the day that Pierre and I were married. And it
-was a great day in the village--all the village was _en fête_. You would
-not believe that! But it is true. It is a long time between eighteen and
-seventy-two, and I was not like I am now, and Pierre was loved by every
-one. It is hard to believe, eh? And there are not many now who remember.
-But there is old Grandmother Frenier. She will tell you that I am
-telling you the truth about Pierre Letellier.”
-
-“_Letellier!_”--it came in a low, involuntary cry from Raymond.
-Letellier! Where had he heard that name before? What strange stirring of
-the memory was this that the name had brought? Letellier! Was it--could
-it be----?
-
-“What is it, monsieur?”--she had caught at his sleeve. “Ah, you had
-perhaps heard that the Letelliers all moved away from here--and you did
-not know that I was once a Letellier? They sold everything and went away
-because of me a few years after I married Blondin.”
-
-“Yes,” said Raymond mechanically. “But tell me more about yourself
-and Pierre--and--and those happy years. You had children--a--a son,
-perhaps?”
-
-“Yes--yes, monsieur!” There was a glad eagerness in her voice--and
-then a broken sob--and the old eyes brimmed anew with tears. “There was
-little Jean. He was born just a few months after his father died. He--he
-was just like Pierre. He was four years old when I married Blondin,
-and--and when he was ten he ran away.”
-
-The altar light, that tiny light there seemed curiously transparent.
-He could see through it, not to the body of the altar behind it, but
-through it to a vast distance that did not measure miles, and he could
-see the interior of a shack whose window pane was thickly frosted and in
-whose doorway stood a man, and the man was Murdock Shaw who had come
-to bring Canuck John's dying message--and he could hear Murdock Shaw's
-words: “'Tell Three-Ace Artie--give good-bye message--my mother and----'
-And then he died.”
-
-“I do not know where he went”--old Mother Blon-din's faltering voice,
-too, seemed a vast distance away--“I--I have never heard of him since
-then. He is dead, perhaps; but, if he is alive, I hope--I hope that he
-will never know. Yes--there were three years of happiness, monsieur--and
-then it was finished. Monsieur, I--I will go now.”
-
-Raymond's head on his crossed arms was bowed on the back of the pew
-before him. Letellier! It was the forgotten name come back to him. This
-was Canuck John's mother--and this was Théophile Blondin's mother--and
-he had come to St. Marleau to deliver to her a message of death--and
-he had delivered it in the killing of her other son! Was this the peace
-that he had come here to seek to-night? Was this the hand of God that
-had led him here? What did it mean? Was it God who had brought Mother
-Blondin here to-night? Would it bring her comfort--to believe in God
-again? Was he here for _that?_ Here, that a word from him, whom she
-thought a priest, might turn the scales and bring her to her God of the
-many years ago? Was this God's way--to use him, who masqueraded as God's
-priest, and through whom this woman's son had been killed--was this
-God's way to save old Mother Blondin?
-
-She touched his arm timidly.
-
-“Are you praying for me, monsieur?” she whispered tremulously. “It--it
-is too late for that--that was forty years ago. And--and I will go now.”
-
-He raised his head and looked at the old, withered, tear-stained face.
-The question of his own belief did not enter here. If she went now
-without a word from him, without a priestly word, she went forever. They
-were beautiful words--and, if one believed, they brought comfort. And
-she was near, very near to that old belief again. And they were near,
-very near to his own lips too, those words.
-
-“It is not too late,” he said brokenly. “Listen! Do you remember
-the _Benedictus?_ Give me your hand, and we will kneel, and say it
-together.”
-
-She drew back, and shook her head, and tried to speak--but no words
-came, only her lips quivered.
-
-He held out his hand to her--held it silently there for a long time--and
-then, hesitantly, she laid her hand in his.
-
-And kneeling there in the pew, old Mother Blondin and Raymond Chapelle,
-Raymond began the solemn words of the _Benedictus_. Low his voice was,
-and the tears crept to his eyes as the thin hand clutched and clasped
-spasmodically at his own. And as he came to the end, the tears held back
-no longer and rolled hot upon his cheeks.
-
-“... Through the tender mercy of our God... to enlighten those who sit
-in darkness, and in the shade of death: to direct our feet into the way
-of peace”--his voice died away.
-
-She was sobbing bitterly. He helped her to her feet as she sought to
-rise, and, holding tightly to her arm for she swayed unsteadily, he led
-her down the aisle. And they came to the church door, and out upon the
-green. And here she paused, as though she expected him to leave her.
-
-“I will walk up the hill with you, Mother Blondin,” he said. “I do not
-think you are strong enough to go alone.”
-
-She did not answer.
-
-They started on along the road. She walked very slowly, very feebly, and
-leaned heavily upon him. And neither spoke. And they turned up the hill.
-And halfway up the hill he lifted her in his arms and carried her, for
-her strength was gone. And somehow he knew that when she had left her
-bed that night to stumble down this hill to the moonlit church she had
-left it for the last time--save one.
-
-She was speaking again--almost inaudibly. He bent his head to catch the
-words.
-
-“It is forty years,” said old Mother Blondin. “Forty years--it is a long
-time--forty years.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX--AN UNCOVERED SOUL
-
-|IT hung there precariously. All through the mass that morning Raymond's
-eyes had kept straying to the great cross on the wall that old Mother
-Blondin had disturbed the night before. No one else, it was true, had
-appeared to notice it; but, having no reason to do so, no one else, very
-probably, had given it any particular attention--nevertheless, a single
-strand of cord on one end of the horizontal beam was all that now
-prevented the cross from pitching outward from the wall and crashing
-down into the body of the church.
-
-The door of the sacristy leading into the chancel was open, and, in the
-sacristy now, Raymond's eyes fixed uneasily again on the huge, squared
-timbers of the cross. The support at the base held the weight of course,
-but the balance and adjustment was gone, and the slightest jar would be
-all that was necessary to snap that remaining cord above. Massive and
-unwieldy, the cross itself must be at least seven feet in height; and,
-though this was of course imagination, it seemed to waver there now
-ominously, as if to impress upon him the fact that in the cause of its
-insecurity he was not without a personal responsibility.
-
-He had removed his surplice and stole; Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar boy,
-had gone; and there was only old Narcisse Pélude, the aged sacristan,
-who was still puttering about the room. And the church was empty now,
-save that he could still hear Valérie moving around up there in the
-little organ loft.
-
-Raymond passed his hand wearily across his eyes. He was very tired.
-Valérie was lingering intentionally--and he knew why. He had not
-returned to the _presbytère_, his bed had not been slept in. Valérie and
-her mother could not have helped but discover that, and they would be
-anxious, and worried, and perhaps a little frightened--and that was why
-Valérie was lingering now, waiting for him. He had not dared to leave
-old Mother Blondin alone through the night. She had been very ill.
-And he had not gone to any one near at hand, to Madame Bouchard, for
-instance, to get her to take his place, for that would have entailed
-explanations which, not on his own account, but for old Mother Blondin's
-sake, he had not cared to make; and so, when the bell for mass had rung
-that morning, he had still been at the bedside of the old woman on the
-hill. And he had left her only then because she was sleeping quietly,
-and the immediate crisis seemed safely past.
-
-Raymond's eyes, from the cross, rested speculatively for a moment on the
-bent figure of the aged sacristan. He could make those explanations to
-Valérie, he could go out there now and in a sort of timely corroboration
-of the story repair the damage done to the cross, and she would
-understand; but he could not publicly make those explanations. If it was
-to be known in the village that old Mother Blondin had come here to the
-church, it was for old Mother Blondin herself, and for no one else, to
-tell it. It was the same attitude he had adopted toward her once before.
-True, Mother Blondin had changed very greatly since then; but a tactless
-word from any one, a sneer, the suggestion of triumph over her, and
-the old sullen defiance might well rise supreme again--and old Mother
-Blondin, he knew now, had not very long to live. Valérie and her mother
-would very readily, and very sympathetically understand. He could tell
-Valérie, indeed he was forced to do so in order to explain his own
-absence from the _presbytère_; but to others, to the village, to old
-Narcisse Pélude here, since the broken fastenings of the cross must be
-replaced, old Mother Blondin's name need not be mentioned.
-
-“Narcisse, how long has that great cross hung there on the wall?” he
-inquired abruptly.
-
-“Ah--the great cross! Yes--Monsieur le Curé!” The old man laid down a
-vestment that he had been carefully folding, and wagged his head. “It is
-very old--very old, that cross. You will see how old it is when I tell
-you it was made by the grandfather of the present Bouchard, whose pew
-is right underneath it. Grandfather Bouchard was one of the first in St.
-Mar-leau, and you must know, Monsieur le Curé, that St. Marleau was then
-a very small place. It was the Grandfather Bouchard who built most of
-the old wooden church, and there was a little cupola for the bell, and
-above the cupola was that cross. Yes, Monsieur le Curé, there have been
-changes in St. Marleau, and----”
-
-“But how long has it hung there on the wall, Narcisse?” Raymond
-interrupted with a tolerant smile--Narcisse had been known at times to
-verge on garrulity!
-
-“But I am telling you, Monsieur le Curé,” said the old sacristan
-earnestly. “We began to build this fine stone church, and when it was
-finished the little old wooden church was torn down, and we brought the
-cross here, and it has been here ever since, and that is thirty-two--no,
-thirty-three years ago, Monsieur le Curé--it will be thirty-three years
-this coming November.”
-
-“And in those thirty-three years,” observed Raymond, “I imagine that the
-cross has remained untouched?”
-
-“But, yes, Monsieur le Curé! Untouched--yes, of course! It was
-consecrated by Monsignor the Bishop himself--not the present bishop,
-Monsieur le Curé will understand, but the old bishop who is since dead,
-and----”
-
-“Quite so,” said Raymond. “Well, come here, nearer to the door,
-Narcisse. Now, look at the cross very carefully, and see if you can
-discover why I asked you if it had remained untouched all those years?”
-
-The old man strained his eyes across the chancel to the opposite
-wall--and shook his head.
-
-“No, Monsieur le Curé, I see nothing--only the cross there as usual.”
-
-“Look higher up,” prompted Raymond. “Do you not see that all but one of
-the fastenings are broken, and that it is about to fall?”
-
-“Fall? About to fall?” The old man rubbed his eyes, and stared, and
-rubbed his eyes again. “Yes--yes--it is true! I see now! The cords have
-rotted away. It is no wonder--in all that time. I--I should have thought
-of that long, long ago.” He turned a white face to Raymond. “It--it is
-the mercy of God that it did not happen, Monsieur le Curé, with anybody
-there! It would have killed Bouchard, and madame, and the children! It
-would have crushed them to death! Monsieur le Curé, I am a _misérable!_
-I am an old man, and I forget, but that is not an excuse. Yes, Monsieur
-le Curé, I am a _misérable!_”
-
-Raymond laid his hand on the old sacristan's shoulder.
-
-“We will see that it does not fall on the excellent Bouchard, or on
-madame, or on the children,” he smiled. “Therefore, bring a ladder and
-some stout cord, Narcisse, and we will fix it at once.”
-
-The old man stared again at the cross for a moment, then started
-hurriedly toward the sacristy door that gave on the side of the church.
-
-“Yes, Monsieur le Curé--yes--at once,” he agreed anxiously. “There is a
-ladder beside the shed that is long enough. I will get it immediately.
-I am an old man, and I forget, but I am none the less a _misérable_.
-If Monsieur le Curé had not happened to notice it, and it had fallen on
-Bouchard! Monsieur le Curé is very good not to blame me, but I am none
-the less----”
-
-The old man, shaking his head, and still talking, had disappeared
-through the doorway.
-
-Old Narcisse Pélude--the self-styled _misérable!_ The old man had taken
-it quite to heart! Raymond shrugged his shoulders whimsically. Well, so
-much the better! It was for old Mother Blondin to tell her own story--if
-she chose! He wondered, with a curious and seemingly unaccountable
-wistfulness, if she ever would! It had been a night that had left him
-strangely moved, strangely bewildered, unable even yet to focus his
-mind clearly and logically upon it. He could tell Valérie of old Mother
-Blondin, of how the old woman on the hill had come here seeking peace;
-he could not tell her that he, too, had come in the hope that he might
-find what old Mother Blondin had sought--at the Altar of God!
-
-Valérie! Yes, he was strangely moved this morning. And now a yearning
-and an agony surged upon him. Valérie! Between Valérie's coming to him
-that night in the stillness of the hours just before the dawn, and his
-coming here to the church last night, there lay an analogy of souls
-near-spent, clutching at what they might to save themselves. Peace, and
-the seeking of a way, he had come for; and peace, and the seeking of a
-way, she had come for then. It seemed as though he could see that scene
-again--that room in the _presbytère_, and the lamp upon the desk, and
-that slim, girlish form upon her knees before him; and it seemed as
-though he could feel the touch again of that soft, dark, silken hair, as
-she laid his hands upon her bowed head; and it seemed as though he could
-hear her voice again, as it faltered through the _Pater Noster_:
-“Hallowed be Thy name... and lead us not into temptation... but deliver
-us from evil.” Had he, in any measure, found what he had sought last
-night? He did not know. He had knelt and prayed with old Mother Blondin.
-The _Benedictus_, as he had repeated it, had seemed real. He had known a
-profound solemnity, and the sense of that solemnity had remained with
-him, was with him now--and yet he blasphemed that solemnity, and the
-Altar of God, and this holy place in standing here at this very moment
-decked out in his stolen _soutane_ and the crucifix that hung from his
-neck! Illogical? Why did he do it then? His eyes were on the floor.
-Illogical? It was to save his life--it was because he was fighting to
-save his life. It was not to repudiate the sincerity with which he had
-repeated the words of the _Benedictus_ to old Mother Blondin--it was to
-save his life. Whatever he had found here, whether a deeper meaning in
-these holy symbolisms, he had not found the way--no other way but to
-blaspheme on with his _soutane_ cloaked around him. And she--Valérie?
-Had she found what she had sought that night? He did not know. Refuse to
-acknowledge it, attempt to argue himself into disbelief, if he would, he
-knew that when she had knelt there that night in the front room of the
-_presbytère_ she cared. And since then? Had she, in any measure, found
-what she had sought? Had she crushed back the love, triumphed over it
-until it remained only a memory in her life? He did not know. She had
-given no sign. They had never spoken of that night again. Only--only it
-seemed as though of late there had come a shadow into the fresh, young
-face, and a shadow into the dark, steadfast eyes, a shadow that had not
-been there on the night when he had first come to St. Marleau, and she
-and he had bent together over the wounded man upon the bed.
-
-Subconsciously he had been listening for her step; and now, as he heard
-her descending the stairs from the organ loft, he stepped out from the
-sacristy into the chancel, and down into the nave of the church. He
-could see her now, and she had seen him. She had halted at the foot of
-the stairs under the gallery at the back of the church. Valérie! How
-sweet and beautiful she looked this morning! There was just a tinge of
-rising colour in her cheeks, a little smile, half tremulous, half gay
-on the parted lips, a dainty gesture of severity and playfulness in the
-shake of her head, as he approached.
-
-“Oh, Father Aubert,” she exclaimed, “you do not know how relieved we
-were, mother and I, when we saw you enter the church this morning for
-mass! We--we were really very anxious about you; and we did not know
-what to think when mother called you as usual half an hour before the
-mass, and found that you were not there, and that you had not slept in
-your bed.”
-
-“Yes, I know,” said Raymond gravely; “and that is what I have come to
-speak to you about now. I was afraid you would be anxious, but I knew
-you would understand--though you would perhaps wonder a little--when I
-told you what kept me away last night. Let us walk down the side aisle
-there to the chancel, Mademoiselle Valérie, and I will explain.”
-
-A bewildered little pucker gathered on her forehead.
-
-“The side aisle, Father Aubert?” she repeated in a puzzled way.
-
-“Yes; come,” he said. “You will see.”
-
-He led her down the aisle, and, halting before the cross, pointed
-upward.
-
-“Why, the fastenings, all but one, are broken!” she cried out instantly.
-“It is a miracle that it has not fallen! What does it mean?”
-
-“It is the story of last night, Mademoiselle Valerie,” he answered with
-a sober smile. “Sit down in the pew there, and I will tell you. I have
-sent Narcisse for a ladder, and we will repair the damage presently, but
-there will be time before he gets back. He believes that the fastenings
-have grown old and rotten, which is true; and that they parted simply
-from age, which is not quite so much the fact. I have allowed him to
-form his own conclusions; I have even encouraged him to believe in
-them.”
-
-She was sitting in the pew now. The bewildered little pucker had grown
-deeper. She kept glancing back and forth from Raymond, standing before
-her in the aisle, to the broken fastenings of the cross high up on the
-wall.
-
-“But that is what any one would naturally think,” she said slowly. “I
-thought so myself. I--I do not quite understand, Father Aubert.”
-
-“I think you know,” said Raymond quietly, “that some nights I do not
-sleep very well, Mademoiselle Valerie. Last night was one of those. When
-midnight came I was still wakeful, and I had not gone to bed. I was very
-restless; I knew I could not sleep, and so I decided to go out for a
-little while.”
-
-“Yes,” she said impulsively; “I know. I heard you.”
-
-“You heard me?” He looked at her in quick surprise. “But I thought I had
-been very careful indeed to make no noise. I--I did not think that I had
-wakened------”
-
-A flush came suddenly to her cheeks, and she turned her head aside.
-
-“I--I was not asleep,” she said hurriedly. “Go on, Father Aubert, I did
-not mean to interrupt you.”
-
-Raymond did not speak for a moment. He was not looking at her now--he
-dared not trust his eyes to drink deeper of that flush that had come
-with the simple statement that she too had been awake. Valérie! Valérie!
-It was the silent voice of his soul calling her. And suddenly he seemed
-to be looking out from his prison land upon the present scene--upon
-Valérie and the good, young Father Aubert together, looking upon them
-both, as he had looked upon them together many times. And suddenly he
-hated that figure in priestly dress with a deadly hate--because Valérie
-had tossed upon her bed awake, and had not slept; and because, as though
-gifted with prophetic vision, he could see the shadow in Valérie's
-fresh, pure face change and deepen into misery immeasurable, and the
-young life, barely on its threshold, be robbed of youth with its joy and
-gladness, and with sorrow grow prematurely old.
-
-“You went out, Father Aubert,” she prompted. “And then?”
-
-The old sacristan would be back with the ladder very shortly, at almost
-any minute now--and he had to tell Valérie about old Mother Blondin
-and the cross before Narcisse returned. He looked up. He found himself
-speaking at first mechanically, and then low and earnestly, swayed
-strangely by his own words. And so, standing there in the aisle of the
-church, he told Valerie the story of the night, of the broken cross, of
-the broken life so near its end. And there was amazement, and wonder,
-and surprise in Valerie's face as she listened, and then a tender
-sympathy--and at the end, the dark eyes, as they lifted to his, were
-filled with tears.
-
-“It is very wonderful,” she said almost to herself. “Old Mother
-Blondin--it could be only God who brought her here.”
-
-Raymond did not answer. The old sacristan had entered the church, and
-was bringing the ladder down the aisle. It was the sacristan who spoke,
-catching sight of Valérie, as Raymond, taking one end of the ladder,
-raised it against the wall beside the cross.
-
-“_Tiens!_” The old man lifted the coil of thin rope which he held, and
-with the back of his hand mopped away a bead of perspiration from his
-forehead. “You have seen then what has happened, mademoiselle! Father
-Aubert has made light of it; but what will Monsieur le Curé, your uncle,
-say when he hears of it! Yes, it is true--I am a _misérable_--I do not
-deserve to be sacristan any longer! It was consecrated by Monsignor the
-Bishop, that cross, when the church was consecrated, and----”
-
-Raymond took the cord quietly from the old man's hand, and began to
-mount the ladder. He went up slowly--not that the ladder was insecure,
-but that his mind and thoughts were far removed from the mere mechanical
-task which he had set himself to perform. Valérie's words had set that
-turmoil at work in his soul again. She had not hesitated to say that
-it was God who had brought old Mother Blondin here. And he too believed
-that now. Peace he had not found, nor the way, but he believed that now.
-Therefore he must believe now that there was a God--yes, the night had
-brought him that. And if there was a God, was it God who had led him,
-as old Mother Blondin had been led, to fall upon his knees in that pew
-below there where Valérie now sat, and _pray?_ Had he prayed for old
-Mother Blondin's sake _alone?_ Was God partial then? Old Mother Blondin,
-he knew, even if her surrender were not yet complete, had found the way.
-He had not. He had found no way--to save that man who was to be hanged
-by the neck until he was dead--to save Valérie from shame and misery if
-she cared, if she still cared--to save himself! Old Mother Blondin
-alone had found the way. Was it because she was the lesser sinner of the
-two--because he had blasphemed God beyond all recall--because he still
-dared to blaspheme God--because he had stood again that morning at the
-altar and had officiated as God's holy priest--because he stood here now
-in God's house, an impostor, an intruder and a defiler! No way! And
-yet _through him_ old Mother Blondin had found her God again! Was it
-irony--God's irony--God's answer, irrefutable, to his former denial of
-God's existence!
-
-No way! Ten feet below him Valérie and the old sacristan talked and
-watched; the weather-beaten timbers of the great cross were within reach
-of his hands; there, inside the chancel rail, was the altar--all these
-things were real, were physically real. It did not seem as though it
-could be so. It seemed as though, instead, he were taking part in
-some horrible, and horribly vivid dream-life. Only there would be no
-awakening! There was no way--he would twist this cord about the iron
-hooks on the cross and the iron hook on the wall, and descend, and go
-through another day, and be the good, young Father Aubert, and toss
-through another night, and wait, clinging to the miserable hope, spurned
-even by his gambler's instinct, that “something” might happen--wait for
-the deciding of that appeal, and picture the doomed man in the death
-cell, and dream his dreams, and watch Valérie from his prison land, and
-know through the hours and minutes torment and merciless unrest. Yes,
-he believed there was a God. He believed that God had brought them both
-here, old Mother Blondin to cling to the foot of the cross, and himself
-to find her there--but to him there had come no peace--no way. His
-blasphemy, his desecration of God's altar and God's church had been
-made to serve God's ends--old Mother Blondin had found the way. But that
-purpose was accomplished now. How much longer, then, would God suffer
-this to continue? Not long! To-morrow, the next day, the day after,
-would come the answer to the appeal--and then he must choose. Choose!
-Choose what? What was there to choose where--his hands gripped hard on
-the rung of the ladder. Enough! Enough of this! It was terrible enough
-in the nights! There was no end to it! It would go on and on--the same
-ghoulish cycle over and over again. He would not let it master him now,
-for there would be no end to it! He was here to fix the cross. To fix
-God's cross, the consecrated cross--it was a fitting task for one who
-walked always with that symbol suspended from his neck! It was curious
-how that symbol had tangled up his hands the night his fingers had crept
-toward that white throat on the bed! Even the garb of priest that he
-wore God turned to account, and--no! He lifted his hand and swept it
-fiercely across his eyes. Enough! That was enough! It was only beginning
-somewhere else in the cycle that inevitably led around into all the rest
-again.
-
-He fought his mind back to his immediate surroundings. He was above the
-horizontal arm of the cross now, and he could see and appreciate how
-narrowly a catastrophe had been averted the night before. It was, as
-Valérie had said, a miracle that the cross had not fallen, for the
-single strand of cord that still held it was frayed to a threadlike
-thinness.
-
-He glanced above him, decided to make the vertical beam, or centre, of
-the cross secure first by passing the cord around the upper hook in the
-wall that was still just a little beyond his reach, stepped quickly up
-to the next rung of the ladder--and lurched suddenly, pitching heavily
-to one side. It was his _soutane_, the garb of priest, the garb of God's
-holy priest--his foot had caught in the skirt of his _soutane_. He flung
-out his hands against the wall to save himself. It was too late! The
-ladder swayed against the cross--the threadlike fastening snapped--and
-the massive arms of the cross lunged outward toward him, pushing the
-ladder back. A cry, hoarse, involuntary, burst from his lips--it was
-echoed by another, a cry from Valérie, a cry that rang in terror through
-the church. Two faces, white with horror, looking up at him from below,
-flashed before his eyes--and he was plunging backward, downward with the
-ladder--and hurtling through the air behind it, the mighty cross, with
-arms outspread as though in vengeance and to defy escape, pursued and
-rushed upon him, and---- There was a terrific crash, the rip and rend
-and tear of splintering wood--and blackness.
-
-There came at first a dull sense of pain; then the pain began to
-increase in intensity. There were insistent murmurings; there were
-voices. He was coming back to consciousness; but he seemed to be coming
-very slowly, for he could not move or make any sign. His side commenced
-to cause him agony. His head ached and throbbed as though it were being
-pounded under quick and never-ending hammer blows; and yet it seemed to
-be strangely and softly cushioned. The murmurings continued. He began to
-distinguish words--and then suddenly his brain was cleared, cleared as
-by some terrific mental shock that struck to the soul, uplifting it in a
-flood of glory, engulfing it in a fathomless and abysmal misery. It was
-Valerie--it was Valerie's voice--Valerie whispering in a frightened,
-terrified, almost demented way--whispering that she _loved_ him,
-imploring him to speak.
-
-“... Oh, will no one come! Can Narcisse find no one! I--I cannot bring
-him back to consciousness! Speak to me! Speak to me! You must--you
-shall! It is I who have sinned in loving you. It is I who have sinned
-and made God angry, and brought this upon you. But God will not let you
-die--because--because--it was my sin--and--and you would never know.
-I--I promised God that you would never know. And you--you shall not die!
-You shall not! You shall not! Speak to me--oh, speak to me!”
-
-Speak to her! Speak to Valerie! Not even to whisper her name--when the
-blood in a fiery tide whipped through his veins; when impulse born of
-every fibre of his being prompted him to lift his arms to her face, so
-close to his that he could feel her breath upon his cheek, and draw it
-closer, closer, until it lay against his own, and to hold it there, and
-find her lips, and feel them cling to his! There was a physical agony
-from his hurts upon him that racked him from head to foot--but there was
-an agony deeper still that was in his soul. His head was pillowed on her
-knee, but even to open his eyes and look up into that pure face he loved
-was denied him, even to whisper a word that would allay her fears
-and comfort her was denied him. From Valérie's own lips had come the
-bitterest and dearest words that he would ever hear. He could temporise
-no longer now. He could juggle no more with his false and inconsistent
-arguments. Valérie cared, Valérie loved him--as he had known she cared,
-as he had known she loved him. A moan was on his lips, forced there by
-a sudden twinge of pain that seemed unendurable. He choked it back. She
-must not know that he had heard--he must simulate unconsciousness. He
-could not save her from much now, from the “afterwards” that was so
-close upon him--but he could save her from this. She should not know!
-God's cross in God's church... his blasphemy, his sacrilege had been
-answered... the very garb of priest had repaid him for its profanation
-and struck him down... and Valérie... Valérie was here... holding him...
-and Valérie loved him... but Valérie must not know... it was between
-Valérie and her God... she must not know that he had heard.
-
-Her hands were caressing his face, smoothing back his hair, bathing his
-forehead with the water which had been her first thought perhaps before
-she had sent Narcisse for help. Valérie's hands! Like fire, they were,
-upon him, torturing him with a torture beyond the bodily torment he was
-suffering; and like the tenderest, gladdest joy he had ever known, they
-were. A priest of God--and Valérie! No, it went deeper far than that;
-it was a life of which this was but the inevitable and bitter
-culmination--and Valérie. But for that, in a surge of triumphant
-ecstasy, victor of a prize beyond all price, his arms might have swept
-out in the full tide of his manhood's strength around her, claiming her
-surrender--a surrender that would have been his right--a surrender that
-would have been written deep in love and trust and faith and glory in
-those dark, tear-dimmed eyes.
-
-And now her hands closed softly, and remained still, and held his face
-between them--and she was gazing down at him. He could see her, he had
-no need to open his eyes for that--he could see the sweet, quivering
-lips; the love, the terror, the yearning, the fear mingling in the
-white, beautiful face. And then suddenly, with a choked sob, she bent
-forward and kissed him, and laid her face against his cheek.
-
-“He will not speak to me!”--her voice was breaking. “Then listen, my
-lover--my lover, who cannot hear--my lover, who will never know. Is it
-wrong to kiss you, is it making my sin the greater to tell you--you who
-will not hear. There is only God to know. And out of all my life it is
-for just this once--for just this once. Afterwards, if you live, I will
-ask God to forgive--for it is only for this once--this once out of all
-my life. And--and--if you die--then--then I will ask God to be merciful
-and--and take me too. You did not know I loved you so, and I had never
-thought to tell you. And if you live you will never know, because you
-are God's priest, and my sin is very terrible, but--but I--I shall know
-that you are somewhere, a big and brave and loyal man, and glad in your
-life, and--and loved, as all love you here in St. Marleau. All through
-my life I will love you--all through my life--and--and I will remember
-that for just this once, for this moment out of all the years, I gave
-myself to you.”
-
-She drew him closer. An agony that was maddening shot through his side
-as she moved him. If he might only clench his teeth deep in his lips
-that he might not scream out! But he could not do that for Valeric would
-see--and Valérie must not know. Tighter and tighter she held him in
-her strong, young arms--and now, like the bursting wide of flood-gates,
-there was passion in her voice.
-
-“I love you! I love you! I love you! And I am afraid--and I am afraid!
-For I am only a woman, and it is a woman's love. Would you turn from me
-if you knew? No, no--I--I do not know what I am saying--only that
-you are here with my arms around you--and that--that your face is so
-pale--and that--and that you will not speak to me.”
-
-She was crying. She bent lower until, as a mother clasps a child, his
-head lay upon her breast and shoulder, and her own head was buried on
-his breast. And again with the movement came excruciating pain, and now
-a weakness, a giddy swirling of his senses. It passed. He opened his
-eyes for an instant, for she could not see him now. He was lying just
-inside the chancel rail, and almost at the altar's foot. The sunlight
-streamed through the windows of the church, but they were in shadow,
-Valérie and he, in a curious shadow--it seemed to fall in a straight
-line across them both, and yet be spread out in two wide arms that
-completely covered them. And at first he could not understand, and then
-he saw that the great cross lay forward with its foot against the wall
-and the arms upon the shattered chancel rail--and the shadow was the
-shadow of the cross. What did it mean? Was it there premonitory of a
-wrath still unappeased, that was still to know fulfilment; or was it
-there in pity--on Valérie--into whose life he had brought a sorrow that
-would never know its healing? He closed his eyes again--the giddiness
-had come once more.
-
-“I--I promised God that he would never know”--she was speaking scarcely
-above her breath, and the passion was gone out from her voice now, and
-there was only pleading and entreaty. “Mary, dear and holy Mother, have
-pity, and listen, and forgive--and bring him back to life. It came, and
-it was stronger than I--the love. But I will keep my promise to
-God--always--always. Forgive my sin, if it is not too great for
-forgiveness, and help me to endure--and--and----” her voice broke in a
-sob, and was still.
-
-Her lips touched his brow gently; her hands smoothed back his hair.
-Dizziness and torturing pain were sweeping over him in swiftly
-alternating flashes. There were beads of agony standing out, he knew,
-upon his forehead--but they were mingled and were lost in the tears that
-suddenly fell hot upon him. Valerie! Valerie! God give him strength
-that he might not writhe, that he might not moan. No, he need not fear
-that--the pain was not so great now--it seemed to be passing gradually,
-very gradually, even soothingly, away--there were other voices--they
-seemed a long way off--there seemed to be footsteps and the closing of a
-door--and the footsteps came nearer and nearer--but as they came nearer
-they grew fainter and fainter--and blackness fell again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI--THE CONDEMNED CELL
-
-|THE reins lay idly in Raymond's hand. The horse, left to its own
-initiative, ambled lazily to the crest of a little rise that commanded
-a view of the town of Tournayville beyond. Raymond's eyes, lifting from
-the dash-board, ignoring the general perspective, fixed and held on
-a single detail, to the right, and perhaps a mile away--a high,
-rectangular, gray stone wall, that inclosed a gray, rectangular stone
-building.
-
-His eyes reverted to the dash-board. It was nearly two weeks now since
-he had seen that cold and narrow space with its iron bars, and the
-figure that huddled on the cot clasping its hands dejectedly between its
-knees--nearly two weeks. It was ten days since he had been struck down
-in the church--and in another ten days, over yonder, inside that gray
-stone wall, a man was to be hung by the neck until he was dead. Ten days
-forward--ten days backward--ten days.
-
-Ten days! In the ten days just past he had sought, in a deeper, more
-terrible anguish of mind than even in those days when he had thought the
-bitterest dregs were already at his lips, for the answer to these ten
-days to come--for now there was Valerie, Valérie's love, no longer a
-probability against which he might argue fiercely, desperately with
-himself, but an actual, real, existent, living thing, glorious and
-wonderful--and terrible as a hand of death stretching out a pointing
-finger to the “afterwards.” And there was God.
-
-Yes--God! He was still the curé of St. Marleau, still the good, young
-Father Aubert; but since that morning when he had been struck down at
-the foot of God's altar he had not entered the church--and he had been
-no more a priest, profaning that holy place. It was not fear, a craven,
-superstitious fear that the hand which had struck him once would deal
-him physical injury again; it was not that--it was--what? He did not
-know. His mind was chaos there--chaos where it groped for a definite,
-tangible expression of his attitude toward God. There was a God. It was
-God who had drawn old Mother Blondin to the church that night, and had
-made him the instrument of her recovered faith--and the instrument of
-his own punishment when, in her fright which he had caused, she had
-loosened the great cross upon the wall. It was not coincidence, it was
-not superstition--deep in his consciousness lay the memory of that night
-when, with the old woman's hand in his, he had knelt and prayed; and
-deep in his consciousness was the sure knowledge that when he had prayed
-he had prayed in the presence of God. But he could get no further--it
-was as though he looked on God from afar off. Here turmoil took command.
-There was Valérie; the man who was to die; himself; the inflexible,
-immutable approach, the closing in upon him of that day of final
-reckoning. And God had shown him no way. He seemed to recognise an
-avenging God, not one to love. He could not say that he had the impulse
-to revere as the simple people of St. Marleau had, as Valérie had--and
-yet since that morning when they had carried him unconscious to the
-_presbytère_ he had not again entered the church, he had not again stood
-before God's altar in his blasphemous, stolen garb of priest!
-
-Raymond's thumb nail made abstracted little markings on the leather rein
-in his hand. Yes, that was true; profanation seemed to have acquired
-a new, and personal, and intimate meaning--and he had not gone.
-Circumstances had aided him. The solicitude of Madame Lafleur had made
-it easy for him to linger in bed, and subsequently to remain confined
-to his room long after his broken ribs, and the severe contusions he
-had received in his fall, had healed sufficiently to let him get about
-again. And he had allowed Madame Lafleur to “persuade” him! It had not
-been difficult as far as the early morning mass was concerned, for,
-with the curé sick in bed, the mass, it would be expected, would be
-temporarily dispensed with; but a Sunday had intervened. But even that
-he had solved. If some one from somewhere must say mass that day, it
-must be some one who would not by any chance have ever known or met the
-real Father François Aubert. There was Father Décan, the prison chaplain
-of Tour-nayville. He had never met Father Décan, even when visiting the
-jail, but since Father Décan had not recognised the prisoner, Father
-Décan obviously would have no suspicions of one Raymond Chapelle--and so
-he had sent a request to Father Décan to celebrate mass on the preceding
-Sunday, and Father Décan had complied.
-
-The thumb nail bit a little deeper into the leather. Yesterday was
-the first day he had been out. This morning he had again deliberately
-dispensed with the mass, but to-day was Saturday--and to-morrow would be
-Sunday--and to-morrow St. Marleau would gather to hear the good, young
-Father Aubert preach again! Was God playing with him! Did God not see
-that he had twisted, and turned, and struggled, and planned that he
-might not blaspheme and profane God's altar again! Did God not see that
-he revolted at the thought! And yet God had shown him no other way. What
-else could he do? What else was there to do? He was still with his
-life at stake, with the life of another at stake--and there was
-Valérie--Valérie--Valérie!
-
-A sharp cry of pain came involuntarily to his lips, and found
-utterance--and startled the horse into a reluctant jogging for a few
-paces. Valérie! He had scarcely seen her in all those ten days. It was
-Madame Lafleur who had taken care of him. Valérie had not purposely
-avoided him--it was not that--only she had gone to live practically all
-the time at old Mother Blondin's. The old woman was dying. For three
-days now she had not roused from unconsciousness. This morning she had
-been very low. By the time he returned she might be dead.
-
-Dead! These were the closing hours of his own life in St. Marleau, the
-end here, too, was very near--and the closing hours, with sinister,
-ominous significance, seemed to be all encompassed about and permeated
-with death. It was not only old Mother Blon-din. There was the man in
-the death cell, whom he was on his way to see now, this afternoon, who
-was waiting for death--for death on a dangling rope--for death that was
-not many days off. Yesterday Father Décan had driven out to say that the
-prisoner was in a pitiful state of mental collapse, imploring, begging,
-entreating that Father Aubert should come to him--and so this afternoon
-Father Aubert, the good, young Father Aubert, was on his way--to the
-cell of death.
-
-Raymond's lips moved silently. This was the very threshold of the
-“afterwards”--the threshold of that day--the day of wrath.
-
-“_Dies ilia, dies ira, calamitatis et miserio, dies magna et am ara
-valde_--That day, a day of wrath, of wasting, and of misery, a great
-day, and exceeding bitter.”
-
-Unbidden had come the words. Set his face was, and white. If all else
-were false, if God were but the transition from the fairy tales of
-childhood to the fairy tale of maturity, if religion were but a shell, a
-beautiful shell that was empty, a storehouse of wonderful architectural
-beauty that held no treasure within--at least those words were true--a
-day of wrath, and exceeding bitter. And that day was upon him; and there
-was no way to go, no turn to take, only the dark, mocking pathways of
-the maze that possessed no opening, only the dank, slimy walls of that
-Walled Place against which he beat and bruised his fists in impotent
-despair. There was the man who was to be hanged--and himself--and
-Valerie--and he knew now that Valérie loved him.
-
-The horse ambled on through the outskirts of the town. Occasionally
-Raymond mechanically turned out for a passing team, and acknowledged
-mechanically the respectful salutation. In his mind a new thought was
-germinating and taking form. He had said that God-had shown him no way.
-Was he so sure of that? If God had led him to the church that night,
-and had brought through him an eleventh hour reversion of faith to old
-Mother Blondin, and had forced the acceptance of divine existence upon
-himself, was he so sure that in the breaking of the fastenings of the
-cross, that it might fall and strike him down, there lay only a crowning
-punishment, only a thousandfold greater anguish, only bitter, helpless
-despair, in that it had been the means whereby, from Valérie's own lips,
-he had come to the knowledge of Valérie's love? Was he so sure of that?
-Was he so sure that in the very coming to him of the knowledge of her
-love he was not being shown the way he was to take!
-
-The buckboard turned from the road it had been following, and took the
-one leading to the jail. Subconsciously Raymond guided the horse
-now, and subconsciously he was alive to his surroundings and to the
-passers-by--but his mind worked on and on with the thought that now
-obsessed him.
-
-Suppose that his choice of saving one of the two lay between this man
-in the condemned cell and Valerie--which would he choose? He laughed
-sharply aloud in ironical derision. Which would he choose! It was
-pitiful, it was absurd--the question! Pitiful? Absurd? Well, but was it
-not precisely the choice he was called upon to make--to choose between
-Valérie and the man in the condemned cell? Was that not what the
-knowledge of her love meant? She loved him; from her own lips, as she
-had poured out her soul, thinking there was none but God to hear, he had
-learned the full measure of her love--a love that would never die, deep,
-and pure, and sinless--a love that was but the stronger for the sorrow
-it had to bear--a cherished, hallowed love around which her very life
-had entwined itself until life and love were one for always.
-
-The gray stone walls of the jail, cold, dreary, forbidding, loomed up a
-little way ahead. The reins were loose upon the dashboard, but clenched
-in a mighty grip in Raymond's hand. He could save the man in there from
-death--but he could save Valérie from what would be worse than death to
-her. He could save her from the shame, the agony, the degradation that
-would kill that pure soul of hers, that would imbitter, wreck and ruin
-that young life, if he, the object of her love, should dangle as a felon
-from the gallows almost before her eyes, or flee, leaving to that love,
-a felon's heritage. Yes, he could save Valérie from that; and if he
-could save Valérie from that, what did the man in the condemned
-cell count for in the balance? The man meant nothing to
-him--nothing--nothing! It was Valérie! There was the “accident”--so
-easy, so sure--the “death” of the good, young Father Aubert--the
-upturned boat--the body supposedly washed out to sea. Long ago, in the
-first days of his life in St. Marleau, he had worked out the details,
-and the plan could not fail. There would be her grief, of course; he
-could not stand between her and her grief for the loss of the one she
-loved--but it would be a grief without bitterness, a memory without
-shame.
-
-Did the man in the condemned cell count for anything against that! It
-would save Valerie, and--his face set suddenly in rigid lines, and his
-lips drew tight together--and it would save _himself!_ It was the one
-alternative to either giving himself up to stand in the other's place,
-or of becoming a fugitive, branding himself as such, and saving
-the condemned man by a confession sent, say, to the Bishop, who,
-he remembered, knew the real François Aubert personally, and could
-therefore at once identify the man. Yes, it was the one alternative--and
-that alternative would save--himself! Wait! Was he sure that it was only
-Valérie of whom he was thinking? Was he sure that he was sincere? Was he
-sure there were no coward promptings--to save himself?
-
-For a moment the tense and drawn expression in his face held as he
-groped in mind and soul for the answer; and then his lips parted in a
-bitter smile. It was not much to boast of! Three-Ace Artie a coward?
-Ask of the men of that far Northland whose lives ran hand in hand with
-death, ask of the men of the Yukon, ask of the men who knew! Gambler,
-roué, whatever else they might have called him, no man had ever called
-him coward! If his actual death, rather than his supposititious death,
-could save Valérie the better, in his soul he knew that he would not
-have hesitated. Why then should he hesitate about this man! If it lay
-between Valérie and this man, why should he hesitate! If he would give
-his own life to save Valérie from suffering and shame, why should he
-consider this man's life--this man who meant nothing to him--nothing!
-
-Well, had he decided? He was at the jail now. Was he satisfied that this
-was the way? Yes! Yes--_yes!_ He told himself with fierce insistence
-that it was--an insistence that by brute force beat down an opposition
-that somehow seemed miserably seeking to intrude itself. Yes--it was the
-way! There was only the appeal, that one chance to wait for, and
-once that was refused he would borrow Bouchard's boat--Bouchard's new
-boat--and to-morrow, or the next day, or the next, whenever it might
-be, instead of looking for him at mass in church, St. Marleau would look
-along the shore in search of the body of the good, young Father Aubert.
-
-He tied his horse, and knocked upon the jail gate, and presently the
-gate was opened.
-
-The attendant touched his cap.
-
-“_Salut_, Monsieur le Curé!” he said respectfully, as he stepped aside
-for Raymond to enter. “Monsieur le Curé had a very narrow escape. The
-blessed saints be praised! It is good to see him. He is quite well
-again?”
-
-“Quite,” said Raymond pleasantly.
-
-The man closed the gate, and led the way across a narrow courtyard
-to the jail building. The jail was pretentious neither in size nor in
-staff--the man who had opened the gate acted as one of the turnkeys as
-well.
-
-“It is to see the prisoner Mentone that Monsieur le Curé has come, of
-course?” suggested the attendant.
-
-“Yes,” Raymond answered.
-
-The turnkey nodded.
-
-“_Pauvre diable!_ He will be glad! He has been calling for you all the
-time. It did no good to tell him you were sick, and Father Décan could
-do nothing with him. He has been very bad--not hard to manage, you
-understand, Monsieur le Curé--but he does not sleep except when he is
-exhausted, because he says there is only a little while left and he will
-live that much longer if he keeps awake. _Tiens!_ I have never had a
-murderer here to be hanged before, and I do not like it. I dream of the
-man myself!”
-
-Raymond made no reply. They had entered the jail now, and the turnkey
-was leading the way along a cell-flanked corridor.
-
-“Yes, I dream of him every night, and the job ahead of us--and so does
-Jacques, the other turnkey.” The man nodded his head again; then, over
-his shoulder: “He has a visitor with him now, Monsieur le Curé, but that
-will not matter--it is Monsieur l'Avocat, Monsieur Lemoyne, you know.”
-
-Lemoyne! Lemoyne--here! Why? Raymond reached out impulsively, and,
-catching the turnkey's arm, brought the man to a sudden halt.
-
-“Monsieur Lemoyne, you say!” he exclaimed sharply. “What is Monsieur
-Lemoyne doing here?”
-
-“But--but, I do not know, Monsieur le Curé,” the turnkey, taken by
-surprise, stammered. “He comes often, he is often here, it is the
-privilege of the prisoner's lawyer. I--I thought that perhaps Monsieur
-le Curé would care to see him too. But perhaps Monsieur le Curé would
-prefer to wait until he has gone?”
-
-“No”--Raymond's hand fell away from the other's arm. “No--I will see
-him. I was afraid for the moment that he might have brought--bad news.
-That was all.”
-
-“Ah, yes, I understand, Monsieur le Curé”--the turnkey nodded once more.
-“But I do not know. Monsieur Lemoyne said nothing when he came in.”
-
-Afraid! Afraid that Lemoyne had brought the answer to that appeal! Well,
-what if Lemoyne had! Had he, Raymond, not known always what the answer
-would be, and had he not just decided what he would do when that answer
-was received--had he not decided that between the man and Valérie there
-could be no hesitation, no more faltering, or tormenting----
-
-The cell door swung open.
-
-“Enter, Monsieur le Curé!”
-
-The turnkey's voice seemed far away. Mechanically Raymond stepped
-forward. The door clanged raucously behind him. There came a cry, a
-choked cry, a strangling cry, that mingled a pitiful joy with terror
-and despair--and a figure with outstretched arms, a figure with gaunt,
-white, haggard face was stumbling toward him; and now the figure had
-flung itself upon its knees, and was clutching at him convulsively with
-its arms.
-
-“Father--Father François Aubert--father, have pity upon me--father, tell
-them to have pity upon me!”
-
-And yet he scarcely saw this figure, scarcely heard the voice, though
-his hands were laid upon the bowed head that was buried in the skirt
-of his _soutane_. He was looking at that other figure, at Lemoyne, the
-young lawyer, who stood at the far end of the cell near the iron-barred
-window. There were tears in Lemoyne's eyes; and Lemoyne held a document
-in his hand.
-
-“Thank God that you have come, Monsieur le Curé!” Lemoyne said huskily.
-
-“You have”--Raymond steadied his voice--“bad news?”
-
-Lemoyne silently extended the document.
-
-There were a great many words, a great many sentences written on the
-paper. If he read them all, Raymond was not conscious of it; he was
-conscious only that, in summary, he had grasped their meaning--_the man
-must die_.
-
-The man's head was still buried in Raymond's _soutane_, his hands still
-clasped tightly at Raymond's knees. Raymond did not speak--the question
-was in his eyes as they met Lemoyne's.
-
-Lemoyne shook his head hopelessly, and, taking the document back from
-Raymond, returned it slowly to his pocket.
-
-“I will leave you alone with him, Monsieur le Curé--it will be better,”
- he said in a low voice. He stepped across the cell, and for a moment
-laid his hand on the shoulder of the kneeling man. “Courage, Henri--I
-will come back to-morrow,” he whispered, and passed on to the door.
-
-“Wait!”--Raymond stepped to Lemoyne's side, as the lawyer rattled upon
-the door for the turnkey. “There--there is nothing more that can be
-done?” His throat was dry, even his undertone rasped and grated in his
-own ears. “Nothing?”
-
-“Nothing!” Lemoyne's wet eyes lifted to meet Raymond's, and again he
-shook his head. “I shall ask, as a matter of course, that the sentence
-be commuted to life imprisonment--but it will not be granted. It--it
-would be cruelty even to suggest it to him, Monsieur le Curé.” And then,
-as the door opened, he wrung Raymond's hand, and went hurriedly from the
-cell.
-
-Slowly Raymond turned away from the door. There was hollow laughter in
-his soul. A mocking voice was in his ears--that inner voice.
-
-“Well, _that_ is decided! Now put your own decision into effect, and
-have done with this! Have done with it--do you hear! Have done with
-it--have done with it--once for all!”
-
-His eyes swept the narrow cell, its white walls, the bare, cold floor,
-the cot with its rumpled blanket, the iron bars on the window that
-sullenly permitted an oblong shaft of sunlight to fall obliquely on the
-floor--and upon the figure that, still upon its knees, held out its arms
-imploringly to him, that cried again to him piteously.
-
-“Father--Father Aubert--help me--tell them to have pity upon me--save
-me, father--Father François Aubert--save me!”
-
-And Raymond, though he fought to shift his eyes again to those iron
-bars, to the sunlight's shaft, to anywhere, could not take them from
-that figure. The man was distraught, stricken, beside himself; weakness,
-illness, the weeks of confinement, the mental anguish, crowned in this
-moment as he saw his last hope swept away, had done their work. The
-tears raced down the pallid cheeks; the eyes were like--like they had
-been in the courtroom that day--like dumb beast's in agony.
-
-“Soothe him, quiet him,” snarled that voice savagely, “and do it as
-quickly as you can--and get out of here! Tell him about that God that
-you think you've come to believe is not a myth, if you like--tell him
-anything that will let you get away--and remember Valérie. Do you think
-this scene here in this cell, and that thing grovelling on the floor is
-the sum of human misery? Then picture Valérie nursing shame and horror
-and degradation in her soul! What is this man to you! Remember Valérie!”
-
-Yes--Valérie! That was true! Only--if only he could avoid the man's
-eyes! Well, why did not he, Raymond, speak, why did he not act, why did
-he not do something--instead of standing here impotently over the other,
-and simply hold the man's hands--yes, that was what he was doing--that
-was what felt so hot, so feverishly hot--those hands that laced their
-fingers so frantically around his.
-
-“My son,”--the words were coming by sheer force of will--“do not give
-way like this. Try and calm yourself. See”--he stooped, and, raising the
-other by the shoulders, drew him to the cot--“sit here, and----”
-
-“You will not go, father--you will not go?”--the man was passing his
-hands up and down Raymond's arms, patting them, caressing them, as
-though to assure and reassure himself that Raymond was there. “They told
-me that you were hurt, and--and I was afraid, for there is no one else,
-father--no one else--only--only you--and you are here now--you are here
-now--and--and you will stay with me, father?”
-
-“Yes,” said Raymond numbly.
-
-“Yes, you are here”--it was as though the man were whispering to
-himself, and a smile had lighted up the wan face. “See, I am not afraid
-any more, for you have come. Monsieur Lemoyne said that I must die, that
-there was no hope any more, that--that I would have to be hanged, but
-you will not let them, father, you will not let them--for you have come
-now--you have come--Father François Aubert, my friend, you have come.”
-
-Raymond's hand, resting on the cot behind the other's back, picked
-up and clenched a fold of blanket. There was something horrible,
-abominable, hellish in the man's trustful smile, in the man's faith,
-that was the faith of a child in the parent's omnipotence, in this man
-crying upon his own name as a magic talisman that would open to him
-the gates of life! What answer was there to make? He could not sit here
-dumb--and yet he could not speak. There were things a _priest_ should
-say--a priest who was here to comfort a man condemned to death, a man
-who was to be hanged by the neck until he was dead. He should talk to
-the other of God, of the tender mercy of God, of the life that was to
-come where there was no more death. But talk to the man like that--when
-he, Raymond, was sending the other to his doom; when the other, not he,
-should be sitting here in this _soutane_; when he had already robbed the
-man of his identity, and even at this moment purposed robbing him of his
-life! Act Father François Aubert to Father François Aubert here in this
-prison cell under the shadow of that dangling rope, tell him of God, of
-God's tender mercy, supplicate to God for that mercy, _pray_ with his
-lips for that mercy while he stabbed the man to death! He shivered, and
-it seemed as though his fingers would tear and rend through the blanket
-in the fierceness of their clutch--it was the one logical, natural thing
-that a priest should say, that he, in his priestly dress, should say!
-_No!_ He neither would nor could! It was hideous! No human soul could
-touch depths as black as that--and the man was clinging to him--clinging
-to him--and---
-
-“_Remember Valérie!_”--it came like a curling lash, that inner voice,
-curt, brutal, contemptuous. “Are you going to weaken again? Remember
-what it cost you once--and remember that it is for Valérie's sake this
-time!”
-
-The strong jaws set together. Yes--Valérie! Yes--he would remember. He
-would not falter now--he would go through with it, and have done with
-it. Between this man's life and a lifelong misery for Valerie there
-could be no hesitation.
-
-“Henri Mentone, my son,” he said gravely, “I adjure you to be brave. I
-have come, it is true, and I will come often, but----”
-
-The words that Raymond's brain was stumbling, groping for, the
-“something,” the “anything” to say, found no expression. The man
-suddenly appeared to be paying no attention; his head was turned in a
-tense, listening attitude; there was horror in the white face; and now
-the other's hands closed like steel bands around Raymond's wrists.
-
-“Listen!” whispered the man wildly. “Listen! Oh, my God--listen!”
-
-Startled, Raymond turned his head about, looking quickly around the
-cell. There was nothing--there was no sound.
-
-“Don't you hear it!”--the other's voice was guttural and choked now, and
-he shook fiercely at Raymond's wrists. “I thought it had gone away when
-you came, but there it is again. I--I thought you had told them to stop!
-Don't you hear it--don't you hear it! Don't you hear them _hammering!_
-Listen! Listen! There it is!”
-
-Raymond felt the blood ebb swiftly from his face.
-
-“No--try and compose yourself. There is nothing--nothing, my son--it is
-only---------”
-
-“I tell you, yes!” cried the man frantically. “I hear it! I hear it! You
-say, no; and I tell you, yes! I have heard it night and day. It comes
-from there--see!”--he swept one hand toward the barred window, and
-suddenly, leaping to his feet, dragged at Raymond with almost superhuman
-strength, forcing Raymond up from the cot and across the cell. “Come,
-and I will show you! It is out there! They are hammering out there now!”
-
-The man's face was ghastly, the frenzy with which he pulled was
-ghastly--and now at the window he thrust out his arm through the bars,
-far out up to the armpit, far out with horrible eagerness, and pointed.
-
-“There! There! You cannot see, but it is just around the corner of the
-building--between the building and the wall. You cannot see, but it is
-just around the corner there that they are building it! Listen to them!
-Listen to them--hammering--hammering--hammering!”
-
-Sweat was on Raymond's forehead.
-
-“Come away!” he said hoarsely. “In the name of God, come away!”
-
-“Ah, you hear it now!”--the condemned man drew in his arm, until his
-fingers clawed and picked at the bars. “They will not stop,
-and it is because I cannot remember--because I cannot
-remember--here--here--here”--he swung clear of the window--and suddenly
-raising his clenched fists began to beat with almost maniacal fury at
-his temples. “If I could remember, they would stop--they would----”
-
-“Henri! My son!” Raymond cried out sharply--and caught at the other's
-hands. A crimson drop had oozed from the man's bruised skin, and now was
-trickling down the colourless, working face. “You do not know what you
-are doing! Listen to me! Listen! Let me go!”--the man wrenched and
-fought furiously to break Raymond's hold. “They will not stop out
-there--they are hammering--don't you hear them hammering--and it is
-because I--I----” The snarl, the fury in the voice was suddenly a sob.
-The man was like a child again, helpless, stricken, chidden; and as
-Raymond's hands unlocked, the man reached out his arms and put them
-around Raymond's neck, and hid his face upon Raymond's shoulder.
-“Forgive me, father--forgive me!” he pleaded brokenly. “Forgive me--it
-is sometimes more than I can bear.”
-
-Raymond's arms mechanically tightened around the shaking shoulders; and
-mechanically he drew the other slowly back to the cot. Something was
-gnawing at his soul until his soul grew sick and faint. Hell shrieked
-its abominable approval in his ears, as he sat down upon the cot still
-holding the other--and shrieked the louder, until the cell seemed to
-ring and ring again with its unholy mirth, as the man pressed his lips
-to the crucifix on Raymond's breast.
-
-“Father, I do not want to die”--the man spoke brokenly again. “They
-say I killed a man. How could I have killed a man, father? See”--he
-straightened back, and held out both his hands before Raymond's
-eyes--“see, father, surely these hands have never harmed any one. I
-cannot remember--I do not remember anything they say I did. Surely if I
-could remember, I could make them know that I am innocent. But I
-cannot remember. Father, must I die because I cannot remember? Must I,
-father”--the man's face was gray with anguish. “I have prayed to God
-to make me remember, father, and--and He does not answer--He does not
-answer--and I hear only that hammering--and sometimes in the night there
-is something that tightens and tightens around my throat, and--and it
-is horrible. Father--Father François Aubert--tell them to have pity upon
-me--you believe that I am innocent, don't you--you believe, father--yes,
-yes!”--he clutched at Raymond's shoulders--“yes, yes, y°u believe--look
-into my eyes, look into my face--look, father--look----”
-
-Look! Look into that face, look into those eyes! He could not look.
-
-“My son, be still!”--the words were wrung in sudden agony from Raymond's
-lips.
-
-He drew the other's head to his shoulder again, and held the other
-there--that he might not look--that the eyes and the face might be
-hidden from him. And the form in his arms shook with convulsive sobs,
-and clung to him, and called him by its own name, and called him
-friend--this stricken man who was to die--for whom he, Raymond,
-was building “it” out there under the shadow of the jail
-wall--and--and--God, he too could hear that _hammering_
-and--“Fool, remember Valérie!”
-
-The sweat beads multiplied upon Raymond's forehead. His face was
-bloodless; his grip so tight upon the other that the man cried out, yet
-in turn but clung the closer. Yes, that voice was right--right--right!
-It was only that for the moment he was unnerved. It was this man's life
-for Valérie--this man's life for Valérie. It would only be a few days
-more, and then it would be over in a second, before even the man knew
-it--but with Valérie it would be for all of life, and there would be
-years and years--yes, yes, it was only that he had been unnerved for the
-instant--it was this man's life for Valérie--if he would give his own
-life, why shouldn't he give this man's--why shouldn't----
-
-His brain, his mind, his thoughts seemed suddenly to be inert, to be
-held in some strangely numbed, yet fascinated suspension. He was staring
-at the shaft of sunlight that fought for its right against those
-iron bars to enter this place of death. He stared and stared at
-it--something--a face--seemed to be emerging slowly out of the sunlight,
-to be taking form just beyond, just outside those iron bars, to become
-framed in the gray, pitiless stone of the window slit, to be pressed
-against those iron bars, to be looking in.
-
-And suddenly he pushed the man violently and without heed from him,
-until the man fell forward on the cot, and Raymond, lurching upward
-himself, stood rocking upon his feet. It was clear, distinct now,
-that face looking in through those iron bars. It was Valerie's
-face--Valerie's--Valerie's face. It was beautiful as he had never seen
-it beautiful before. The sweet lips were parted in a smile of infinite
-tenderness and pity, and the dark eyes looked out through a mist of
-compassion, not upon him, but upon the figure behind him on the prison
-cot. He reached out his arms. His lips moved silently--Valérie! And then
-she seemed to turn her head and look at him, and her eyes swam deeper
-in their tears, and there was a wondrous light of love in her face, and
-with the love a condemnation that was one of sorrow and of bitter pain.
-She seemed to speak; he seemed to hear her voice: “That life is not
-yours to give. I have sinned, my lover, in loving you. Is my sin to be
-beyond all forgiveness because out of my love has been born the guilt of
-murder?”
-
-The voice was gone. The face had faded out of that shaft of
-sunlight--only the iron bars were there now. Raymond's outstretched arms
-fell to his side--and then he turned, and dropped upon his knees beside
-the cot, and hid his face in his hands.
-
-Murder! Yes, it was murder--murder that desecrated, that vilified, that
-made a wanton thing of that pure love, that brave and sinless love,
-that Valerie had given him. And he would have linked the vilest and the
-blackest crime, hideous the more in the Judas betrayal with which he
-would have accomplished it, with Valerie--with Valerie's love! His
-hands, locked about his face, trembled. He was weak and nerveless in a
-Titanic revulsion of soul and mind and body. And horror was upon him, a
-horror of himself--and yet, too, a strange and numbed relief. It was not
-he, it was not he as he knew himself, who had meant to do this thing--it
-was not Raymond Chapelle who had thought and argued that this was the
-way. See! His soul recoiled, blasted, shrivelled now from before it! It
-was because his brain had been tormented, not to the verge of madness,
-but had been flung across that border-line for a space into the
-gibbering realms beyond where reason tottered and was lost.
-
-He was conscious that the man was sitting upright on the edge of the
-cot, conscious that the man's hands were plucking pitifully at the
-sleeve of his _soutane_, conscious that the man was pleading again
-hysterically: “Father, you will tell them that you know I am innocent.
-They will believe you, father--they will believe you. They say I did
-it, father, but I cannot remember, or--or, perhaps, I could make them
-believe me, too. You will not let me die, father--because--because I
-cannot remember. You will save me, father”--the man's voice was rising,
-passing beyond control--“Father François Aubert, for the pity of
-Christ's love, tell me that you will not let me die--tell me----”
-
-And then Raymond raised his head. His face was strangely composed.
-
-“Hush, my son”--he scarcely recognised his own voice--it was quiet, low,
-gentle, like one soothing a child. “Hush, my son, you will not die.”
-
-“Father! Father Aubert!”--the man was lurching forward toward him; the
-white, hollow face was close to his; the burning deep-sunk eyes with
-a terrible hunger in them looked into his. “I will not die! I will not
-die! You said that, father? You said that?”
-
-“Hush!” Raymond's lips were dry, he moistened them with his tongue.
-“Calm yourself now, my son--you need no longer have any fear.”
-
-A sob broke from the man's lips. His hands covered his face; he began to
-rock slowly back and forth upon the cot. He crooned to himself:
-
-“I will not die--I am to live--I will not die--I am to live....”
-
-And then suddenly, in a paroxysm of returning fear, he was on his feet,
-dragging Raymond up from his knees, and, catching at Raymond's crucifix,
-lifted it wildly to Raymond's lips.
-
-“Swear it, father!” he cried. “Swear it on the cross! Swear by God's
-holy Son that I will not die! Swear it on the blessed cross!”
-
-“I swear it,” Raymond answered in a steady voice.
-
-There was no sound, no cry now--only a transfigured face, glad with a
-mighty joy. And then the man's hands went upward queerly, seeking his
-temples--and the swaying form lay in Raymond's arms.
-
-The man stirred after a moment, and opened his eyes.
-
-“Are you there, father--my friend?” he whispered.
-
-“Yes,” Raymond said.
-
-The man's hold tightened, and he sighed like one over-weary who had
-found repose.
-
-And sitting there upon the edge of the cot, Raymond held the other
-in his arms--and the sunlight's shaft through the barred window grew
-shorter--and shadows crept into the narrow cell. At times there came
-low sobs; at times the man's hand was raised to feel and touch Raymond's
-face, at times to touch the crucifix on Raymond's breast. And then at
-last the other moved no more, and the breathing became deep and regular,
-and a peaceful smile came and lingered on the lips.
-
-And Raymond laid the other gently back upon the cot, and, crossing to
-the cell door, knocked softly upon it for the turnkey. And as the door
-was opened, he laid his finger across his lips.
-
-“He is asleep,” he said. “Do not disturb him.”
-
-“Asleep!”--the turnkey in amazement thrust his head inside the cell; and
-then he looked in wonder at Raymond. “Asleep--but Monsieur Lemoyne told
-me of the news when he went out. Asleep--after that! The man who never
-sleeps!”
-
-But Raymond only shook his head, and did not answer, and walked on down
-the corridor, and out into the courtyard. It was dusk now. He seemed to
-be moving purely by intuition. It was not the way--the man was to live.
-His mind was obsessed with that. It was not the way. There were two ways
-left--two out of the three.
-
-The turnkey, who had followed in respectful silence, spoke again as he
-opened the jail gates.
-
-“_Au revoir_, Monsieur le Cure”--he lifted his cap. “Monsieur le Curé
-will return to-morrow?”
-
-To-morrow! Raymond's hands fumbled with the halter, as he untied the
-horse. To-morrow! There were two ways left, and the time was short.
-To-morrow--what would to-morrow bring!
-
-“Perhaps,” he said, unconscious that his reply had been long
-delayed--and found that he was speaking to closed gates, and that the
-turnkey was gone.
-
-And then Raymond smiled as he seated himself in the buckboard and drove
-away--the smile a curious twitching of the lips. The turnkey was a
-tactful man who would not intrude upon Monsieur le Curé's so easily
-understood sorrow for the condemned man!
-
-He drove on through the town, and turned into the St. Marleau road that
-wound its way for miles along the river's shore. And as he had driven
-slowly on his way to the jail, so he drove slowly on his return to the
-village, the horse left almost to guide itself and to set its own pace.
-
-The dusk deepened, and the road grew dark--it seemed fitting that the
-road should grow dark. There were two ways left. The jaws of the trap
-were narrowing--one of the three ways was gone. There were two left.
-Either he must stand in that other's place, and hang in that other's
-place; or run for it with what start he could, throw them off his trail
-if he could, and write from somewhere a letter that would exonerate
-the other and disclose the priest's identity---a letter to the Bishop
-unquestionably, if the letter was to be written at all, for the Bishop,
-not only because he knew the man personally and could at once establish
-his identity, but because, in the very nature of the case, with the life
-of one of his own curés at stake, the Bishop, above all other men,
-would have both the incentive and the power to act. Two ways! One was a
-ghastly, ignominious death, to hang by the neck until he was dead--the
-other was to be a fugitive from the law, to become a hunted, baited
-beast, fighting every moment with his wits for the right to breathe.
-There were two ways! One was death--one held a chance for life. And the
-time was short.
-
-It was the horse that turned of its own accord in past the church, and
-across the green to the _presbytère_.
-
-He left the horse standing there--Narcisse would come and get it
-presently--and went up the steps, and entered the house. The door of the
-front room was open, a light burned upon his desk. Along the hall, from
-the dining room, Madame Lafleur came hurrying forward smilingly.
-
-“Supper is ready, Monsieur le Curé,” she called out cheerily. “Poor
-man, you must be tired--it was a long drive to take so soon after your
-illness, and before you were really strong again.”
-
-“I am late,” said Raymond; “that is the main thing, Madame Lafleur. I
-put you always, it seems, to a great deal of trouble.”
-
-“Tut!” she expostulated, shaking her head at him as she smiled. “It
-is scarcely seven o'clock. Trouble! The idea! We did not wait for you,
-Monsieur le Curé, because Valérie had to hurry back to Madame Blondin.
-Madame Blondin is very, very low, Monsieur le Curé. Doctor Arnaud, when
-he left this afternoon, said that--but I will tell you while you are
-eating your supper. Only first--yes--wait--it is there on your desk.
-Monsieur Labbée sent it over from the station this afternoon--a
-telegram, Monsieur le Curé.”
-
-A telegram! He glanced swiftly at her face. It told him nothing. Why
-should it!
-
-“Thank you,” he said, and stepping into the front room, walked over to
-the desk, picked up the yellow-envelope, tore it open calmly, and read
-the message.
-
-His back was toward the door. He laid the slip of paper down upon the
-desk, and with that curious trick of his stretched out his hand in front
-of him, and held it there, and stared at it. It was steady--without
-tremor. It was well that it was so. He would need his nerve now. He had
-been quite right--the time was short. There remained--_one hour_. In
-an hour from now, on the evening train, Monsignor the Bishop, who was
-personally acquainted with Father François Aubert, would arrive in St.
-Marleau.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII--HOW RAYMOND BADE FAREWELL TO ST. MARLEAU
-
-|AN hour! There lay an hour between himself--and death. Primal,
-elemental, savage in its intensity, tigerish in its coming, there surged
-upon him the demand for life--to live--to fight for self-preservation.
-And yet how clear his brain was, and how swiftly it worked! Life! There
-lay an hour between himself--and death. The horse was still outside.
-The overalls, the old coat, the old hat belonging to the sacristan were
-still at his disposal in the shed. He would ostentatiously set out to
-drive to the station to meet the Bishop, hide the horse and buckboard in
-the woods just before he got there, change his clothes, run on the rest
-of the way, remain concealed on the far side of the tracks until the
-train arrived--and, as Monsignor the Bishop descended from one side of
-the train to the platform, he, Raymond, would board it from the other.
-There would then, of course, be no one to meet the Bishop. The Bishop
-would wait patiently no doubt for a while; then Labbée perhaps would
-manage to procure a vehicle of some sort, or the Bishop might even walk.
-Eventually, of course, it would appear that Father Aubert had set out
-for the station and had not since been seen--but it would be a good many
-hours before the truth began to dawn on any one. There would be alarm
-only at first for the _safety_ of the good, young Father Aubert--and
-meanwhile he would have reached Halifax, say One could not ask for a
-better start than that!
-
-Life! With the crisis upon him, his mind held on no other thing.
-Life--the human impulse to live and not to die! No other thing--but
-life! It was an hour before the train was due--he could drive to the
-station easily in half an hour. There was no hurry--but there was Madame
-Lafleur who, he was conscious, was watching him from the doorway--Madame
-Lafleur, and Madame Lafleur's supper. He would have need of food, there
-was no telling when he would have another chance to eat; and there was
-Madame Lafleur, too, to enlist as an unwitting accomplice.
-
-“Monsieur le Curé”--it was Madame Lafleur speaking a little timidly
-from the doorway--“it--it is not bad news that Monsieur le Curé has
-received?”
-
-“Bad news!” Raymond picked up the telegram, and, turning from the desk,
-walked toward her. “Bad news!” he smiled. “But on the contrary, my dear
-Madame Lafleur! I was thinking only of just what was the best thing to
-do, since it is now quite late, and I did not receive the telegram this
-afternoon, as I otherwise should had I not been away. Listen! Monsignor
-the Bishop, who is on his way”--Raymond glanced deliberately at the
-message--“yes, he says to Halifax--who then is on his way to Halifax,
-will stop off here this evening.”
-
-Madame Lafleur was instantly in a flutter of excitement.
-
-“Oh, Monsieur le Curé!”--her comely cheeks grew rosy, and her eyes shone
-with pleasure. “Oh, Monsieur le Curé--Monsignor the Bishop! He will
-spend the night here?” she demanded eagerly.
-
-Raymond patted her shoulder playfully, as he led her toward the dining
-room.
-
-“Yes, he will spend the night here, Madame Lafleur”--it was strange that
-he could laugh teasingly, naturally. “But first, a little supper for
-a mere curé, eh, Madame Lafleur--since Monsignor the Bishop will
-undoubtedly have dined on the train.”
-
-“Oh, Monsieur le Curé!” She shook her head at him.
-
-“And then,” laughed Raymond, as he seated himself at the table, “since
-the horse is already outside, I will drive over to the station and meet
-him.”
-
-He ate rapidly, and, strangely enough, with an appetite. Madame Lafleur
-bustled about him, quite unable to keep still in her excitement. She
-talked, and he answered her. He did not know what she said; his replies
-were perfunctory. There was an excuse to be made for going to the shed
-instead of getting directly into the buckboard and driving off. Madame
-Lafleur would undoubtedly and most naturally watch him off from the
-front door. But--yes, of course--that was simple--absurdly simple! Well
-then, another thing--it would mean at least a good hour to him if the
-village was not on tiptoe with expectancy awaiting the Bishop's arrival,
-and thus be ready to start out to discover what had happened to the
-good, young Father Aubert on the instant that the alarm was given; or,
-worse still, that any one, learning of the Bishop's expected arrival,
-should enthusiastically drive over to the station as a sort of
-self-appointed delegation of welcome, just a few minutes behind himself.
-In that case anything might happen. No, it would not do at all! Every
-minute of delay and confusion on the part of St. Marleau, and Labbée,
-and Madame Lafleur no less than the others, was priceless to him now. He
-remembered his own experience. It would take Labbée a long time to find
-a horse and wagon; and Madame Lafleur, on her part, would think nothing
-of a prolonged delay in his return--if he left her with the suggestion,
-that the train might be late! Well, there was no reason why he should
-not accomplish all this. So far, it was quite evident, since Madame
-Lafleur had had no inkling of what the telegram contained, that no one
-knew anything about it; and that Labbée, whom he was quite prepared
-to credit with being loose-tongued enough to have otherwise spread the
-news, had not associated the Bishop's official signature--with
-Monsignor the Bishop! It was natural enough. The telegram was signed
-simply--“Montigny”--not the Bishop of Montigny.
-
-He had eaten enough--he pushed back his chair and stood up.
-
-“I think perhaps, Madame Lafleur,” he said reflectively, “that it would
-be as well not to say anything to any one until Monsignor arrives.”
- He handed her the telegram. “It would appear that his visit is not an
-official one, and he may prefer to rest and spend a quiet evening. We
-can allow him to decide that for himself.”
-
-Madame Lafleur adjusted her spectacles, and read the message.
-
-“But, yes, Monsieur le Curé,” she agreed heartily. “Monsignor will tell
-us what he desires; and if he wishes to see any one in the village
-this evening, it will not be too late when you return. But, Monsieur le
-Curé”--she glanced at the clock--“hadn't you better hurry?”
-
-“Yes,” said Raymond quickly; “that's so! I had!”
-
-Madame Lafleur accompanied him to the front door, carrying a lamp. At
-the foot of the steps Raymond paused, and looked back at her. It had
-grown black now, and there was no moon.
-
-“I'll run around to the shed and get a lantern,” he called up to
-her--and, without waiting for a reply, hurried around the corner of the
-house.
-
-He laughed a little harshly, his lips were tightly set, as he reached
-the shed door, opened it, and closed it behind him. He struck a match,
-found and lighted a lantern, procured a small piece of string, tucked
-the sacristan's overalls, and the old coat and hat swiftly under his
-_soutane_--and a moment later was back beside the buckboard again.
-
-He tied the lantern in front of the dash-board, and climbed into the
-seat. Madame Lafleur was still standing in the doorway. He hesitated an
-instant, as he picked up the reins. The sweet, motherly old face smiled
-at him. A pang came and found lodgment in his heart. It was like that,
-standing there in the lamp-lit doorway of the _presbytère_, that he
-had seen her for the first time--as he saw her now for the last. He
-had grown to love the silver-haired little old lady with her heart of
-gold--and so he looked--and a mist came before his eyes, for this was
-his good-bye.
-
-“You will be back in an hour?” she called out. “You forget, Madame
-Lafleur”--he forced himself to laugh in the old playful, teasing
-way--“that the train is sometimes more than an hour late itself!”
-
-“Yes, that is true!” she said. “_Au revoir_, then, Monsieur le Curé!”
-
-He answered quietly.
-
-“Good-night, Madame Lafleur!”
-
-He drove out across the green, and past the church, and, a short
-distance down the road, where he could no longer be seen from the
-windows of the _presbytère_, he leaned forward and extinguished the
-lantern. He smiled curiously to himself. It was the only act that
-appeared at all in consonance with escape! He was a fugitive now, a
-fugitive for life--and a fugitive running for his life. It seemed as
-though he should be standing up in the buckboard, and lashing at the
-horse until the animal was flecked with foam, and the buckboard rocked
-and swayed with a mad speed along the road. Instead--he had turned off
-and was on the station road now--the horse was labouring slowly up the
-steep hill. It seemed as though there should be haste, furious haste,
-a wild abandon in his flight--that there should be no time to mark, or
-see, or note, as he was noting now, the twinkling lights of the quiet
-village nestling below him there along the river's shore. It seemed that
-his blood should be whipping madly through his veins--instead he was
-contained, composed, playing his last hand with the old-time gambler's
-nerve that precluded a false lead, that calculated deliberately,
-methodically, and with deadly coolness, the value of every card. And
-yet, beneath this nerve-imposed veneer, he was conscious of a thousand
-emotions that battered and seethed and raged at their barriers, and
-sought to fling themselves upon him and have him for their prey.
-
-He laughed coldly out into the night. It was not the fool who tore like
-a madman, boisterously, blindly, into the open that would escape! He
-had ample time. He had seen to that, even if he had appeared to accept
-Madame Lafleur's injunction to hurry. He need reach the station but
-a minute or so ahead of the train. Meanwhile, the minor details--were
-there any that he had overlooked? What about the _soutane_ and the
-clerical hat, for instance, after he had exchanged them for the
-sacristan's things? Should he hide them where he left the horse and
-buckboard in the woods? He shook his head after a moment. No; they
-would probably find the horse before morning, and they might find the
-_soutane_. There must be no trace of Father Aubert--the longer they
-searched the better. And then, more important still, when finally the
-alarm was spread, the description that would be sent out would be that
-of a man dressed as a priest. No; he would take them with him, wrap them
-up in a bundle around a stone, and somewhere miles away, say, throw them
-from the car into the water as the train crossed a bridge. So much for
-that! Was there anything else, anything that he----
-
-A lighted window glowed yellow in the darkness from a little distance
-away. He had come to the top of the rise. It was old Mother Blondin's
-cottage. He had meant to urge the horse into a trot once the level was
-gained--but instead the horse was forgotten, and the animal plodded
-slowly forward at the same pace at which it had ascended the hill.
-
-Raymond's eyes were fixed upon the light. Old Mother Blondin's
-cottage--and in that room, beyond that light, old Mother Blondin, the
-old woman on the hill, the _excommuniée_, lay dying. And there was a
-shadow on the window shade--the shadow of one sitting in a chair--a
-woman's shadow--Valerie!
-
-He stopped the horse, and, sitting there in the buck-board opposite the
-cottage, he raised his hand slowly and took his hat from his head.
-
-“Go on--fool!”--with a snarl, vicious as the cut of a whip-lash, came
-that inner voice. “You may have time--but you have none to throw away!”
-
-“Be still!” answered Raymond's soul. “This is my hour. Be still!”
-
-Valerie! That shadow on the window he knew was Valerie--and within was
-that other shadow, the shadow of death. This was his good-bye to old
-Mother Blondin, who had drunk of the common cup with him, and knelt with
-him in the moonlit church, her hand in his, outcasts, sealing a most
-strange bond--and this was his good-bye to Valérie. Valérie--a shadow
-there on the window shade. That was all--a shadow--all that she could
-ever be, nothing more tangible in his life through the years to come, if
-there were years, than a shadow that did not smile, that did not speak
-to him, that did not touch his hand, or lift brave eyes to look
-into his. A shadow--that was all--a shadow. It was brutal, cruel,
-remorseless, yet immeasurably true in its significance, this
-good-bye--this good-bye to Valérie--a shadow.
-
-The shadow moved, and was gone; from miles away, borne for a great
-distance on the clear night air, came faintly the whistle of a
-train--and Raymond, springing suddenly erect, his teeth clenched
-together, snatched at the whip and laid it across the horse's back.
-
-The wagon lurched forward, and he staggered with the plunge and
-jerk--and his whip fell again. And he laughed now--no longer calm--and
-lashed the horse. It was not time that he was racing, there was ample
-time, the train was still far away; it was his thoughts--to outrun them,
-to distance them, to leave them behind him, to know no other thing than
-that impulse for life that alone until now so far this night had swayed
-him.
-
-And he laughed--and horse and wagon tore frantically along the road, and
-the woods were about him now, and it was black, black as the mouth of
-Satan's pit and the roadway to it were black. He was flung back into his
-seat--and he laughed at that. Life--and he had doddled along the road,
-preening himself on his magnificent apathy! Life--and the battle and
-the fight for it was the blood afire, reckless of fear and of odds, the
-laugh of defiance, the joy of combat, the clenched fist shaken in the
-face of hell itself! Life--in the mad rush for it was appeal! On! The
-wagon reeled like a drunken thing, and the wheels twisted in the ruts; a
-patch of starlight seeping through the branches overhead made a patch
-of gloom in the inky blackness underneath, and in this patch of gloom
-wavering tree trunks, like uncouth monsters as they flitted by, snatched
-at the wheel-hubs to wreck and overturn the wagon, but he was too quick
-for them, too quick--they always missed. On! Away from memory, away from
-those good-byes, away from every thought save that of life--life, and
-the right to live--life, and the fight to hurl that gibbet with its
-dangling rope a smashed and battered and splintered thing against the
-jail wall where they would strangle him to death and bury him in their
-cursed lime!
-
-On! Why did not the beast go faster! Were those white spots that danced
-before his eyes a lather of foam on the animal's flanks? On--along the
-road to life! Faster! Faster! It was not fast enough--for thoughts were
-swift, and they were racing behind him now in their pursuit, and coming
-closer, and they would overtake him unless he could go faster--faster!
-Faster, or they would be upon him, and--_a big and brave and loyal man_.
-
-A low cry, a cry of sudden, overmastering hurt, was drowned in the
-furious pound of the horse's hoofs, in the rattle and the creaking
-of the wagon, and in the screech and grinding of the wagon's jolt and
-swing. And, unconscious that he held the reins, unconscious that he
-tightened them, his hands, clenched, went upward to his face. There was
-no black road, no plunging horse, no mad, insensate rush, ungoverned and
-unguided, no wagon rocking demoniacally through the night--there was
-a woman who knelt in the aisle of a church, and in her arms she held a
-man, and across the shattered chancel rail there lay a mighty cross, and
-the shadow of the cross fell upon them both, and the woman's eyes were
-filled with tears, and she spoke: “A big and brave and loyal man.”
-
-Tighter against his face he pressed his clenched hands, unconscious that
-the horse responded to the check and gradually slowed its pace. Valérie!
-The woman was Valerie--and he was the man! God, the hurt of it--the hurt
-of those words ringing now in his ears! She had given him her all--her
-love, her faith, her trust. And in return, he----
-
-The reins dropped from his hands, and his head bowed forward. Life!
-Yes, there was life this way for him--and for Valerie the bitterest of
-legacies. He would bequeath to her the belief that she had given her
-love not only to a felon but to a _coward._ A coward! And no man, he
-had boasted, had ever called him a coward. Pitiful boast! Life for
-himself--for Valerie the fuller measure of misery! Yes, he loved
-Valérie--he loved her with a traitor's and a coward's love!
-
-His lips were drawn together until they were bloodless. In retrospect
-his life passed swiftly, unbidden before him--and strewn on every hand
-was wreckage. And here was the final, crowning act of all--the coward's
-act--the coward afraid at the end to face the ruin he had, disdainful,
-callous, contemptuous then of consequence, so consistently wrought since
-boyhood! If he got away and wrote a letter it would save the man's life,
-it was true; but it was also true that he ran because he was cornered
-and at the end of his resources, and because what he might write would,
-in any case, be instantly discovered if he did not run--and to plead
-his own innocence in that letter, in the face of glaring proof to the
-contrary, in the face of the evidence he had so carefully budded against
-another, smacked only of the grovelling whine of the condemned wretch
-afraid. None would believe him. None! It was paltry, the police were
-inured to that; all criminals were eager to protest their innocence,
-and pule out their tale of extenuating circumstances. None would believe
-him. Valérie would not believe.
-
-Folds of his cheeks were gripped and crushed in his hands until
-the finger nails bit into the flesh. He _was_ innocent. He had not
-_murdered_ that scarred-faced drunken hound--only Valérie would neither
-believe nor know; and in Valérie's eyes he would stand a loathsome
-thing, and in her soul would be a horror, and a misery, and a shame that
-was measured only by the greatness and the depth of the love she had
-given him, for in that greatness and that depth lay, too, the greatness
-and the depth of that love's dishonour and that love's abasement. But
-if--but if----
-
-For a moment he did not stir or move, his eyes seeing nothing, fixed
-before him--and then steadily his head came up and poised far back on
-the broad, square shoulders, and the tight lips parted in a strange and
-sudden smile. If he drove to the station and met Monsignor the Bishop,
-and drove Monsignor the Bishop back to St. Marleau--then she would
-believe. No one else could or would believe him, the proof was
-irrefutable against him, they would convict him, and the sentence would
-be death; but she in her splendid love would believe him, and know that
-she had loved--a man. There had been three ways, but one had gone that
-afternoon; and then there had been two ways, but there was only one now,
-the man's way, for the other was the coward's way. And, taking this, he
-could lift his head and stand before them all, for in Valérie's face
-and in Valérie's eyes there would not be---what was worse than death. To
-save Valérie from what he could--not from sorrow, not from grief, that
-he could not do--but that she might know that her love had been given
-where it was held a sacred, a priceless and a hallowed thing, and was
-not outraged and was not degraded because it had been given to him! To
-save Valerie from what he could--to save himself in his own eyes from
-the self-abasing knowledge that through a craven fear he had bartered
-away his manhood and his self-respect, that through fear he ran, and
-that through fear he hid, and that through fear, though he was innocent,
-he dared not stand--a man!
-
-He stopped the horse, and stepped down to the ground; and, searching
-for a match, found one, and lighted the lantern where it hung upon the
-dash-board. He was calm now, not with that calmness desperately imposed
-by will and nerve, but with a calmness that was like to--peace. And,
-standing there, the lantern light fell upon him, and gleamed upon the
-crucifix upon his breast. And he lifted the crucifix, and, wondering,
-held it in his hand, and looked at it. It was here in these woods and on
-this road that he had first hung it about his neck in insolent and bald
-denial of the Figure that it bore. It was very strange! He had meant it
-then to save his life; and now--he let it slip gently from his fingers,
-and climbed back into the buckboard--and now it seemed, as though
-strengthening him in the way he saw at last, in the way he was to take,
-as though indeed it were the way itself, came radiating from it, like a
-benediction, a calm and holy--peace.
-
-And there was no more any turmoil.
-
-And he picked up the reins and drove on along the road.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII--MONSIGNOR THE BISHOP
-
-|THE train had come and gone, as Raymond reached the station platform.
-He had meant it so. He had meant to avoid the lights from the car
-windows that would have illuminated the otherwise dark platform; to
-avoid, if possible, a disclosure in Labbée's, the station agent's,
-presence. Afterwards, Labbée would know, as all would know--but not now.
-It was not easy to tell; the words perhaps would not come readily even
-when alone with Monsignor the Bishop, as they drove back together to the
-village.
-
-There were but two figures on the platform--Labbée, who held a satchel
-in his hand; and a tall, slight form in clerical attire.
-
-“Ah, Father Aubert--_salut!_” Labbée called out. “You are late; but we
-saw your light coming just as the train pulled out, and so----”
-
-“Well, well, François, my son!”--it was a rich, mellow voice that broke
-in on the station agent.
-
-Raymond stood up and lifted his hat--lifted it so that it but shaded his
-face the more.
-
-“Monsignor!” he said, in a low voice. “This is a great honour.”
-
-“Honour!” the Bishop responded heartily. “Why should I not come, I--but
-do I sit on this side?”--he had stepped down into the buckboard, as he
-grasped Raymond's hand.
-
-“Yes, Monsignor”--Raymond's wide-brimmed clerical hat was far over his
-eyes. The lantern on the front of the dash-board left them in shadow;
-Labbée's lantern for the moment was behind them, as the station agent
-stowed the Bishop's valise under the seat. He took up the reins, and
-with an almost abrupt “goodnight” to the station agent, started the
-horse forward along the road.
-
-“Good-night!” Labbée shouted after them. “Goodnight, Monsignor!”
-
-“Good-night!” the Bishop called back--and turned to Raymond. “Yes, as I
-was saying,” he resumed, “why should I not come? I was passing through
-St. Marleau in any case. I have heard splendid things of my young
-friend, the curé, here. I wanted to see for myself, and to tell him how
-pleased and gratified I was.”
-
-“You are very good, Monsignor,” Raymond answered, his voice still low
-and hurried.
-
-“Excellent!” pursued the Bishop. “Most excellent! I do not know when
-I have been so pleased over anything. The parish perhaps”--he laughed
-pleasantly--“would not object if Father Allard prolonged his holiday a
-little--eh--François, my son?”
-
-Raymond shook his head.
-
-“Hardly that, Monsignor”--he dared indulge in little more than
-monosyllables--it was even strange the Bishop had not already noticed
-that his voice was not the voice of Father François Aubert. And yet what
-did it matter? In a moment, in five minutes, in half an hour, the Bishop
-would know all--he would have told the Bishop all. Why should he strive
-now to keep up a deception that he was voluntarily to acknowledge almost
-the next instant? It was not argument in his mind, not argument again
-that brought indecision and chaotic hesitancy, it was not that--the way
-was clear, there was only one way, the way that he would take--? and
-yet, perhaps because it was so very human, because perhaps he sought
-for still more strength, because perhaps it was so almost literally the
-final, closing act of his life, he waited and clung to that moment more,
-and to that five minutes more.
-
-“Well, well,” said the Bishop happily, “we will perhaps have to look
-around and see if we cannot find for you a parish of your own, my son.
-And who knows--eh--perhaps we have already found it?”
-
-How queerly the lantern jerked its rays up and down the horse's legs,
-and cast its shadows along the road! He heard himself speaking again.
-
-“You are very good, Monsignor”--they were the same words with which he
-had replied before--he uttered them mechanically.
-
-He felt the Bishop's hand close gently, yet firmly, upon his shoulder.
-
-“François, my son”--the voice had suddenly become grave--“what is the
-matter? You act strangely. Your voice does not somehow seem natural--it
-is very hoarse. You have a cold perhaps, or perhaps you are ill?”
-
-“No, Monsignor--I am not ill.”
-
-“Then--but, you alarm me, my son!” exclaimed the Bishop anxiously.
-“Something has happened?”
-
-“Yes, Monsignor--something has happened.”
-
-How curiously his mind seemed to be working! He was conscious that the
-Bishop's hand remained in kindly pressure on his shoulder as though
-inviting his confidence, conscious that the man beside him maintained a
-sympathetic, tactful silence, waiting for him to speak; but his thoughts
-for the moment now were not upon the immediate present, but upon the
-immediate afterwards when his story had been told.
-
-The buckboard rattled on along the road; it entered the wooded
-stretch--and still went on. When he had told this man beside him all,
-they would drive into the village. Then presently they would set out for
-Tournayville, and Monsieur Dupont, and the jail. But before that--there
-was Valérie. He turned his head still further away--even in
-the blackness his face must show its ashen whiteness. There was
-Valérie--Valérie who would believe--but Valérie who was to suffer, and
-to know agony and sorrow--and he, who loved her, must look into her face
-and see the smile die out of it, and the quiver come to her lips, and
-see her eyes fill, while with his own hands he dealt her the blow,
-which, soften it as he would, must still strike her down. It was the
-only way--the way of peace. It seemed most strange that peace should lie
-in that black hour ahead for Valérie and for himself--that peace should
-lie in death--and yet within him, quiet, undismayed, calm and untroubled
-in its own immortal truth, was the knowledge that it was so.
-
-Raymond lifted his head suddenly--through the-trees there showed the
-glimmer of a light--as it had showed that other night when he had walked
-here in the storm. Had they come thus far--in silence! Involuntarily he
-stopped the horse. It was the light from old Mother Blondin's cottage,
-and here was the spot where he had stumbled that night over the priest
-whom he had thought dead, as the other lay sprawled across the road.
-It was strange again--most strange! He had not deliberately chosen this
-spot to tell----
-
-“François, my son--what is it?”--the Bishop's voice was full of deep
-concern.
-
-For a moment Raymond did not move, and he did not speak. Then he laid
-down the reins, and, leaning forward, untied the lantern from the
-dash-board--and, taking off his hat, held up the lantern between them
-until the light fell full upon his face.
-
-There was a quick and startled cry from the Bishop, and then for an
-instant--silence. And Raymond looked into the other's face, even as the
-other looked into his. It was a face full of dignity and strength and
-quiet, an aged, kindly face, crowned with hair that was silver-white;
-but the blue eyes that spoke of tranquillity were widened now in
-amazement, surprise and consternation.
-
-And then the Bishop spoke.
-
-“Something has happened to François,” he said, in a hesitant, troubled
-way, “and you have come from Tournayville to take his place perhaps, or
-perhaps to--to be with him. Is it as serious as that--and you were loath
-to break the news, my son? And yet--and yet I do not understand. The
-station agent said nothing to indicate that anything was wrong, though
-perhaps he might not have heard; and he called you Father Aubert,
-though, too, that possibly well might be, for it was dark, and I myself
-did not see your face. My son, I fear that I am right. Tell me, then!
-You are a priest from Tournayville, or from a neighbouring parish?”
-
-“I am not a priest,” said Raymond steadily.
-
-The Bishop drew back sharply, as though he had been struck a blow.
-
-“Not a priest--and in those clothes!”
-
-“No, Monsignor.”
-
-The fine old face grew set and stern.
-
-“And Francois Aubert, then--_where is Father Francois Aubert?_”
-
-“Monsignor”--Raymond's lips were white--“he is in the condemned cell at
-Tournayville--under sentence of death--he is----”
-
-“Condemned--to death! François Aubert--condemned to death!”--the Bishop
-was grasping with one hand at the back of the seat. And then slowly,
-still grasping at the seat, he pulled himself up and stood erect, and
-raised his other hand over Raymond in solemnity and adjuration. “In the
-name of God, what does this mean? Who are you?”
-
-“I am Raymond Chapelle,” Raymond answered--and abruptly lowered the
-lantern, and a twisted smile of pain gathered on his lips. “You have
-heard the name, Monsignor--all French Canada has heard it.” The Bishop's
-hand dropped heavily to his side.
-
-“Yes, I have heard it,” he said sternly. “I have heard that it was a
-proud name dishonoured, a princely fortune dissolutely wasted. And you
-are Raymond Chapelle, you say! I have heard this much, that you had
-disappeared, but after that----”
-
-Raymond put his head down into his hands, and drew his hands tightly
-across his face.
-
-“This is the end of the story,” he said. “Listen, Monsignor”--he raised
-his head again. “You have heard, too, of the murder of Théophile Blondin
-that was committed here a little while ago. It is for that murder that
-François Aubert was tried, found guilty, and sentenced to be hanged.”
- He paused an instant, his lips tight. “Monsignor, it is I who killed
-Théophile Blondin. It is I who, since that night, have lived here as the
-curé--as Father François Aubert.”
-
-How ghastly white the aged face was! As ghastly as his own must be! The
-other's hands were gripping viselike at his shoulders.
-
-“Are you mad!” the Bishop whispered hoarsely. “Do you know what you are
-saying!”
-
-“I know”--there was a sort of unnatural calm and finality in Raymond's
-tones now. “I was on the train the night that Father Aubert came to St.
-Marleau. I had a message for the mother of a man who was killed in the
-Yukon, Monsignor. The mother lived here. There was a wild storm that
-night. There was no wagon to be had, and we both walked from the
-station. But I did not walk with the priest. You, who have heard
-of Raymond Chapelle, know why--I despised a priest--I knew no God.
-Monsignor”--he turned and pointed suddenly--“you see that light through
-the trees? It is the light I saw that night, as I stumbled over the body
-of a man lying here in the road. The man was Father Aubert. The limb of
-a tree had fallen and struck him on the head. I thought him dead. I went
-over to that house for help.”
-
-He paused again. The Bishop's hands, withdrawn,* were clasped now upon a
-golden crucifix--it was like his own crucifix, only it was larger, much
-larger than his own. But the Bishop's white face was still close to his;
-and the blue eyes seemed to have grown darker, and were upon him in a
-fixed, tense way, as though to read his soul.
-
-“And then?”--he saw the Bishop's lips move, he did not hear the Bishop
-speak.
-
-At times the horse moved restively; at times there came the chirping of
-insects from the woods; at times a breeze stirred and whispered through
-the leaves. Raymond, staring at the yellow flicker of the lantern, set
-now upon the floor of the buckboard at their feet, spoke on, in his
-voice that same unnatural calm. It seemed almost as though he himself
-were listening to some stranger speak. It was the story of that night he
-told, the story of the days and nights that followed, the story of old
-Mother Blondin, the story of the cross, the story of the afternoon in
-the condemned cell, the story of his ride for liberty of an hour ago,
-the story of his sacrilege and his redemption--the story of all, without
-reservation, save the story of Valérie's love, for that was between
-Valérie and her God.
-
-And when he had done, a silence fell between them and endured for a
-great while.
-
-And then Raymond looked up at last to face the condemnation he thought
-to see in the other's eyes--and found instead that the silver hair was
-bare of covering, and that the tears were flowing unchecked down the
-other's cheeks.
-
-“God's ways are beyond all understanding”--the Bishop seemed to be
-speaking to himself. He brushed the tears now from his cheeks, as he
-looked at Raymond. “It is true there is not any proof, and without proof
-that it was in self-defence, then----”
-
-“It is the end,” said Raymond simply--and, standing up, took the
-sacristan's old coat from under his _soutane_. “We will drive to the
-village, Monsignor; and then, if you will, to the jail in Tournayville.”
- Slowly he unbuttoned his _soutane_ from top to bottom, and took it off,
-and laid it over the back of the seat; and, standing there erect,
-his face white, his eyes half closed, like a soldier in unconditional
-surrender, he unclasped the crucifix from around his neck, and held it
-out to the Bishop--and bowed his head.
-
-He felt the Bishop's hands close over his, and over the crucifix, and
-gently press it back.
-
-“Cling to it, my son”--the Bishop's voice was broken. “It is yours,
-for you have found it--and, with it, pardon, and the faith that is more
-precious than life, than the life you are offering to surrender now. It
-seems as though it were God's mysterious way, the hand of God--the hand
-of God that would not let you lose your soul. And now, my son, kneel
-down, for I would pray for a brave man.”
-
-A quiet pressure upon his shoulders brought Raymond to his knees. His
-eyes, were wet; he covered his face with his hands.
-
-“Father, have mercy upon us”--the Bishop's voice was tremulous and low.
-“Lord, have mercy upon us. Look down in pity upon this man whom Thou
-hast brought unto Thyself, and who now in expiation of his past offences
-offers his life that another may not die. Father, grant us Thy divine
-mercy. Father, show us the way, if there be a way, and if it be Thy
-will, that he may not drink of this final cup; and if that may not be,
-then in Thy love continue unto him the strength Thou gavest him to bring
-him thus far upon his road.”
-
-And silence fell again between them. And there was a strange gladness in
-Raymond's heart that this man, where he had thought no man would, should
-have believed. It altered no fact, the cold and brutal evidence, clear
-cut before a jury would not be a scene such as this, for the evidence in
-the light of logic and before the law would say he _lied_; it held out
-no hope, he knew that well--but it brought peace again. And so he rose
-from his knees, and feeling out blindly for the old sacristan's coat,
-put it on, and spoke to the horse, and the buckboard moved forward.
-
-And a little way along, just around the turn of the road, they came out
-of the woods in front of old Mother Blondin's cottage. And standing by
-the roadside in the darkness was a figure. And a voice called out:
-
-“Is that you, Father Aubert? I went to the _presbytère_ for you, and
-mother said you had gone to meet Monsignor. I have been waiting here to
-catch you on the way back.”
-
-It was Valérie.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV--THE OLD WOMAN ON THE HILL
-
-|SHE came forward toward the buckboard, and into the lantern light--and
-stopped suddenly, looking from Raymond to the Bishop in a bewildered and
-startled way.
-
-“Why--why, Father Aubert,” she stammered, “I--I hardly knew you in that
-coat. I--Monsignor”--she bent her knee reverently--“I”--her eyes were
-searching their faces--“I---”
-
-Raymond's eyes fixed ahead of him, and he was silent. Valérie! Ay, it
-was the end! He had thought to see her before they should take him to
-Tournayville--but he had thought to see her alone. And even then he had
-not known what he should say to her--what words to speak--or whether
-she should know from him his love. He was conscious that the Bishop was
-fumbling with his crucifix, as though loath to take the initiative upon
-himself.
-
-It was Valérie who spoke--hurriedly, as though in a nervous effort to
-bridge the awkward silence.
-
-“Mother Blondin became conscious a little while ago. She asked for
-Father Aubert, and--and begged for the Sacrament. I ran down to the
-_presbytère_, and when mother told me that Monsignor was coming I---I
-brought back the bag that my uncle, Father Allard, takes with him to--to
-the dying. Oh, Monsignor, I thought that perhaps--perhaps--she is an
-_excommuniée_, Monsignor--but she is a penitent. And when I got back she
-was unconscious again, and then I came down here to wait by the side of
-the road so that I would not miss you, for Madame Bouchard is there, and
-she was to call me if--if there was any change. And so--and so--you will
-go to her, Monsignor, will you not--and Father Aubert--and--and----” Her
-lips quivered suddenly, for Raymond's white face was lifted now, and his
-eyes met hers. “Oh, what is the matter?” she cried out in fear. “Why
-do you look like that, Father Aubert--and why do you wear that coat,
-and----”
-
-“My daughter”--the Bishop's grave voice interrupted her. He rose from
-his seat, and, moving past Raymond, stepped to the ground. “My daughter,
-Father Aubert is---”
-
-“No!”--Raymond, too, had stepped to the ground. “No, Monsignor”--his
-voice caught, then was steadied as he fought fiercely for
-self-control--“I will tell her, Monsignor.”
-
-How clearly her face was defined in the lantern light, how pure it was,
-and, in its purity, how far removed from the story that he had to tell!
-And how beautiful it was, even in its startled fear and wonder--the
-sweet lips parted; the dark eyes wide, disturbed and troubled, as they
-held upon his face.
-
-“Father Aubert!”--it was a quick cry, but low, and one of apprehension.
-
-“Mademoiselle Valérie”--the words came slowly; it seemed as though his
-soul faltered now, and had not strength to say this thing--“I am not
-Father Aubert.”
-
-She did not move. She repeated the words with long pauses between,
-as though she groped dazedly in her mind for their meaning and
-significance.
-
-“You--are--not--Father--Aubert?”
-
-The Bishop, hands clasped behind his back, his head bowed, had withdrawn
-a few paces out of the lantern light toward the rear of the buckboard.
-Raymond's hands closed and gripped upon the wheel-tire against which
-he stood--closed tighter and tighter until it seemed the tendons in his
-hand must snap.
-
-“Father Aubert is the man you know as Henri Mentone”--his eyes were upon
-her hungrily, pleading, searching for some sign, a smile, a gesture
-of sympathy that would help him to go on--and her hands were clasped
-suddenly, wildly to her bosom. “When you came upon me in the road that
-night I had just changed clothes with him. I--I was trying to escape.”
-
-She closed her eyes. Her face became a deathly white, and she swayed a
-little on her feet.
-
-“You--you are not a--a priest?”
-
-He shook his head.
-
-“It was the only way I saw to save my life. He had been struck by the
-falling limb of a tree. I thought that he was dead.”
-
-“To save your life?”--she spoke with a curious, listless apathy, her
-eyes still closed.
-
-“It was I,” he said, “not Father Aubert, who fought with Théophile
-Blondin that night.”
-
-Her eyes were open wide now--wide upon him with terror.
-
-“It was you--_you_ who killed Théophile Blondin?”--her voice was dead,
-scarce above a whisper.
-
-“I caught him in the act of robbing his mother--I had gone to the house
-for help after finding Father Aubert”--Raymond's voice grew passionate
-now in its pleading. He must make her believe! He must make her believe!
-It was the one thing left to him--and to her. “It was in self-defence.
-He sprang at me, and we fought. And afterwards, when he snatched up the
-revolver from the _armoire_, it went off in his own hand as I struggled
-to take it from him. But I could not prove it. Every circumstance
-pointed to premeditated theft on my part--and murder. And--and my life
-before that was--was a ruined life that would but--but make conviction
-certain if I were found there. My only chance lay in getting away. But
-there was no time--nowhere to go. And so--and so I ran back to where
-Father Aubert lay, and put on his clothes, meaning to gain a few hours'
-time that way, and in the noise of the storm I did not hear you coming
-until it was too late to run.”
-
-How mercilessly hard her hands seemed to press at her bosom!
-
-“I--I do not understand”--it was as though she spoke to herself. “There
-was another--a man who, with Jacques Bourget, tried to have Henri--Henri
-Mentone escape.”
-
-“It was I,” said Raymond. “I took Narcisse Pélude's old clothes from the
-shed.”
-
-She cried out a little--like a sharp and sudden moan, it was, as from
-unendurable pain.
-
-“And then--and then you lived here as--as a priest.”
-
-“Yes,” he answered.
-
-“And--and to-night?”--her eyes were closed again.
-
-“To-night,” said Raymond, and turned away his head, “to-night I am going
-to--to Tournayville.”
-
-“To your death”--it was again as though she were speaking to herself.
-
-“There is no other way,” he said. “I thought there was another way.
-I meant at first to escape to-night when I learned that Monsignor was
-coming. I took this coat, Narcisse Pélude's old clothes from the shed
-again, the clothes I wore the night I went to Jacques Bourget, and
-I meant to escape on the train. But”--he hesitated now, groping
-desperately for words--he could not tell her of that ride along the
-road; he had no right to tell her of his love, he saw that now, he had
-no right to tell her that, to make it the harder, the more cruel for
-her; he had no right to trespass on his knowledge of her love for him,
-to let her glean from any words of his a hint of that; he had the right
-only, for her sake and for his own, that, in her eyes and in her soul,
-the stain of murder and of theft should not rest upon him--“but”--the
-words seemed weak, inadequate--“but I could not go. Instead, I gave
-myself up to Monsignor. Mademoiselle”--how bitterly full of irony was
-that word--mademoiselle--mademoiselle to Valérie--like a gulf
-between them--mademoiselle to Valérie, who was dearest in life to
-him--“Mademoiselle Valérie”--he was pleading again, his soul in
-his voice--“it was in self-defence that night. It was that way that
-Théophile Blondin was killed. I could not prove it then, and--and the
-evidence is even blacker against me now through the things that I have
-done in an effort to escape. But--but it was in that way that Théophile
-Blondin was killed. The law will not believe. I know that. But
-you--you--” his voice broke. The love, the yearning for her was rushing
-him onward beyond self-control, and near, very near to his lips,
-struggling and battling for expression, were the words he was praying
-God now for the strength not to speak.
-
-She did not answer him. She only moved away. Her white face was set
-rigidly, and the dark eyes that had been full upon him were but a blur
-now, for she was moving slowly backward, away from him, toward where
-the Bishop stood. And she passed out of the lantern light and into the
-shadows. And in the shadows her hand was raised from her bosom and was
-held before her face--and it seemed as though she held it, as she had
-held it in the dream of that Walled Place; that she held it, as she had
-held it to shut out the sight of his face from her, as she had closed
-upon him that door with its studded spikes. And like a stricken man he
-stood there, gripping at the buckboard's wheel. She did not believe him.
-Valérie did not believe him! There was agony to come, black depths of
-torment yawning just before him when the numbness from the blow had
-passed--but now he was stunned. She did not believe him! That man there,
-whom he had thought would turn with bitter words upon him, had believed
-him--but Valérie--Valérie--Valérie did not believe him! Ay, it was the
-end! The agony and the torment were coming now. It was the dream come
-true. The studded gate clanged shut, and the horror, without hope,
-without smile, without human word, of that Walled Place with its slimy
-walls was his, and, over the shrieking of those winged and hideous
-things, that swaying carrion seemed to scream the louder: “_Dies ilia,
-dies iro_--that day, a day of wrath, of wasting, and of misery, a great
-day, and exceeding bitter.”
-
-He did not move. Through that blur and through the shadows he watched
-her, watched her as she reached the Bishop, and sank down upon the
-ground, and clasped her hands around the Bishop's knees. And then he
-heard her speak--and it seemed to Raymond that, as though stilled by a
-mighty uplift that swept upon him, the beating of his heart had ceased.
-
-“Monsignor!” she cried out piteously. “Monsignor! Monsignor! It is true
-that they will not believe him! I was at the trial, Monsignor, I know
-the evidence, and I know that they will not believe him. He is going
-to--to his--death--to save that man. Oh, Monsignor--Monsignor, is there
-no other way?”
-
-Slowly, mechanically, as slowly as she had retreated from him, Raymond
-moved toward the kneeling figure. The Bishop was speaking now--he had
-laid his hands upon her head.
-
-“My daughter,” he said gently, “what other way would you have him take?
-It is a brave man's way, and for that I honour him; but it is more, it
-is the way of one who has come out of the darkness into the light,
-and for that my heart is full of thankfulness to God. It is the way of
-atonement, not for any wrong he has done the church, for he could do the
-church no wrong, for the church is pure and holy and beyond the reach of
-any human hand or act to soil, for it is God's church--but atonement to
-God for those sins of sacrilege and unbelief that lay between himself
-and God alone. And so, my daughter, if in those sins he has been brought
-to see and understand, and in his heart has sought and found God's
-pardon and forgiveness, he could do no other thing than that which he
-has done to-night.” The Bishop's voice had faltered; he brushed his hand
-across his cheek as though to wipe away a tear. “It is God's way, my
-daughter. There could be no other way.”
-
-She rose to her feet, her face covered by her hands.
-
-“No other way”--the words were lifeless on her lips, save that they were
-broken with a sob. And then, suddenly, she drew herself erect, and there
-was a pride and a glory in the poise of her head, and her voice rang
-clear and there was no tremor in it, and in it was only the pride and
-only the glory that was in the head held high, and in the fair, white,
-uplifted face. “Listen, Monsignor! I thought he was a priest, and
-I promised God that he should never know--but to-night all that is
-changed. Monsignor, does it matter that he has no thought of me! He is
-going to his death, Monsignor, and he shall not face this alone because
-I was ashamed and dared not speak. I love him, Monsignor--I love him,
-and I believe him, and---”
-
-“_Valérie!_” Raymond's hands reached out to her. Weak he was. It seemed
-as though in his knees there was no strength. “Valérie!” he cried, and
-stumbled toward her.
-
-And she put out her hand and held him back for an instant as her eyes
-searched his face--and then into hers there came a wondrous light.
-
-“I did not know,” she whispered. “I did not know you cared.”
-
-His arms were still outstretched, and now she came into them, and for
-a moment she lifted her face to his, and, for a moment that was glad
-beyond all gladness, he drank with his lips from her lips and from the
-trembling eyelids. And then the tears came, and she was sobbing on his
-breast, and with her arms tight about his neck she clung to him--and
-closer still his own arms enwrapped her--and he forgot--and he
-forgot--_that it was only for a moment_.
-
-And so he held her there, his face buried in the dark, soft masses
-of her hair--and he forgot. And then out of this forgetfulness, this
-transport of blinding joy, there came a voice, low and shaken with
-emotion--the Bishop's voice.
-
-“There is some one calling from the house.”
-
-Raymond lifted up his head. A woman's figure was framed in the now open
-and lighted doorway of the cottage. It was Madame Bouchard; and now he
-heard Madame Bouchard as she called again.
-
-“Valerie! Father Aubert! Come! Come quickly! Madame Blondin is conscious
-again, but she is very weak.”
-
-He drew his breath in sharply as one in bitter pain, and then gently he
-took Valerie's arms from about him, and his shoulders squared. He had
-had his moment. This was reality now. He heard Valérie cry out, and saw
-her run toward the cottage.
-
-“Monsignor,” he said hoarsely, and, moving back, lifted the _soutane_
-from the buckboard's seat, “Monsignor, she must not know--and she
-has asked for me. It is for her sake, Monsignor--that she be not
-disillusioned in her death, and lose the faith that she has found
-again. Monsignor, it is for the last time, not to perform any office,
-Monsignor, for you will do that, but that she may not die in the belief
-that God, through me, has only mocked her at the end.”
-
-“I understand, my son,” the Bishop answered simply. “Put it on--and
-come.”
-
-And so Raymond put on the _soutane_ again, and they hurried toward the
-cottage. And at the doorway Madame Bouchard courtesied in reverence to
-the Bishop, and Raymond heard her say something about the horse, and
-that she would remain within call; and then they passed on into Mother
-Blondin's room.
-
-It was a bare room, poor and meagre in its furnishings--a single rag mat
-upon the floor; a single chair, and upon the chair the black bag that
-Valerie had brought from the _presbytère_; and beside the rough wooden
-bed, made perhaps by the Grandfather Bouchard in the old carpenter shop
-by the river bank, was a small table, and upon the table a lamp, and
-some cups with pewter spoons laid across their tops.
-
-Extraneous things, these details seemed to Raymond to have intruded
-themselves upon him as by some strange and vivid assertiveness of their
-own, for he was not conscious that he had looked about him--that he had
-looked anywhere but at that white and pitifully sunken face that was
-straining upward from the pillows, and at Valérie who knelt at the
-bedside and supported old Mother Blondin in her arms.
-
-“Quick!” Valerie cried anxiously. “Give her a teaspoonful from that
-first cup on the table. She has been trying to say something, and--and
-I do not understand. Oh, be quick! It is something about that man in the
-prison.”
-
-The old woman's head bobbed jerkily, as though she fought for strength
-to hold it up; the eyes, half closed, were dulled; and she struggled,
-gasping, for her breath.
-
-“Yes--the prison--the man”--the words were almost inarticulate. Raymond,
-beside her now, was holding the spoonful of stimulant to her lips.
-She swallowed it eagerly. “I--I lied--I lied--at the trial. Hold
-me--tighter. Do not let me--go. Not yet--not--not until----” Her body
-seemed to straighten, then wrench backward, and her eyes closed, and her
-voice died away.
-
-Raymond felt the Bishop's hand close tensely on his shoulder.
-
-“What is this she says, my son?”
-
-Raymond shook his head.
-
-“I do not know,” he said huskily.
-
-The eyes opened again, clearer now--and recognition came into them as
-they met Raymond's. And there came a smile, and she reached out her hand
-to him.
-
-“You, father--I--I was afraid you would not come in time. I--I am
-stronger now. Give Valerie the cup, and kneel, father--don't you
-remember--like that night in the church--and hold my hand--and--and do
-not let it go because--because then I--I should be afraid that God--that
-God would not forgive.”
-
-He took her hand between both his own, and knelt beside the bed.
-
-“I will not let it go,” he said--and tried to keep the choking from his
-throat. “What is it that you want to say--Mother Blondin?”
-
-Her fingers twined over his, and clung tighter and tighter.
-
-“That man, father--he--he must not hang. I--I cannot go to God with that
-on my soul. I lied at the trial--I lied. I hated God then. I wanted only
-revenge because my son was dead. I said I recognised him again,
-but--but that is not true, for the light was low, and--and I do not see
-well--but--but that--that does not matter, father--it is not that--for
-it must have been that man. But it was not that man who--who tried to
-rob me--it--it was my own son. That man is innocent--innocent--I tell
-you--I----” She raised herself wildly up in bed. “Why do you look at
-me like that, Father Aubert--with that white face--is it too late--too
-late--and--and--will God not forgive?”
-
-“It is not too late. Go on, Mother Blondin”--it was his lips that formed
-the words; it was not his voice, it could not be--that quiet voice
-speaking so softly.
-
-Her face grew calmer. The fear was gone.
-
-“It is not too late--it is not too late--and--and God will forgive,” she
-whispered. “Listen then, father--listen, and pray for me. I--I was sure
-Théophile had been robbing me. I watched behind the door that night.
-I saw him go to take the money. And--and then that man came in, and
-Théophile rushed at him with a stick of wood. The man had--had done
-nothing. It was in self-defence he fought. And then I--I helped
-Théophile. It was Théophile who took the revolver to kill him,
-and--and--it went off in Théophile's hand, and----” she sighed heavily,
-and sank back on the pillow.
-
-The room seemed to sway before Raymond--and
-
-Valérie's face, across the bed, seemed to move slowly before him with
-a pendulum-like movement, and her face was very white, and in it was
-wonder, and a great dawning hope, and awe. And he put his head down upon
-the coverlet, but his hands still held old Mother Blondin's hand between
-them.
-
-And then she spoke again, with greater difficulty now; and somehow her
-other hand had found Raymond's head, and her fingers played tremblingly
-through his hair.
-
-“You will tell them, father--and--and this other father here will tell
-them--and--and Valérie will bear witness--and--and the man will live.
-And you will tell him, father, how God came again and made me tell the
-truth because you were good, and--and because you made be believe again
-in--in you--and God--and-----”
-
-A broken cry came from Raymond. The scalding tears were in his eyes.
-
-“Hush, my son!”--it was the Bishop's grave and gentle voice. “God has
-done a wondrous thing tonight.”
-
-There was silence in the little room.
-
-And then suddenly Raymond lifted his head--and the room was no more,
-and in its place was the moonlit church of that other night, and he saw
-again the old withered face transfigured into one of tender sweetness
-and ineffable love.
-
-“Pierre, monsieur?”--her mind was wandering now--they were the words she
-had spoken as she had sat beside him in the pew. “Ah, he was a good boy,
-Pierre--have you not heard of Pierre Letellier? And there was little
-Jean--little Jean--he went away, monsieur, and I--I do not know
-where--where he is--I do not know-----”
-
-Raymond's voice was breaking, as he leaned forward toward her.
-
-“He is with God, Mother Blondin. Jean--Jean has sent you a message. His
-last thoughts were of you--his mother.”
-
-The old eyes flamed with a dying fire.
-
-“Jean--my son! My little Jean--his--his mother.” A smile lighted up
-her face, and hovered on her lips; and her hand, clinging to Raymond's,
-tightened.
-
-“Father--I----” And then her fingers slipped from their hold, and fell
-away.
-
-The Bishop's arm was around Raymond's shoulders.
-
-“Go now, my son--and you, my daughter,” he said gently. “It is very near
-the end, and the time is short.”
-
-Raymond rose blindly from his knees. Mother Blondin was very still, and
-a pallor, gray and premonitory, had crept into her face. Her eyes were
-closed. He raised the thin hand, and touched it with his lips--and
-turned away.
-
-And Valérie passed out of the room with him.
-
-And by the open window of the room beyond, Valérie knelt down, and he
-knelt down beside her.
-
-It was quiet without--and there was no sound, save now the murmur of the
-Bishop's voice from the inner room. He was to live--and not to die. To
-go free! To give himself up--but to be set free--and there were to
-be the years with Valérie. He could not understand it yet in all its
-fulness.
-
-Valérie was crying softly. With a great tenderness he put his arm about
-her.
-
-“It was the _Benedictus_--'into the way of peace'--that you said for her
-that night,” she whispered. “Say it now again, my lover--for her--and
-for us.”
-
-He drew her closer to him, and, with her wet cheek against his own, they
-repeated the words together.
-
-And after a little time she raised her hands, and held his face between
-them, and looked into his face for a long while, and there was a great
-gladness, and a great love, and a great trust in the tear-wet eyes.
-
-“I do not know your name,” she said.
-
-“It is Raymond,” he answered.
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Sin That Was His, by Frank L. Packard
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIN THAT WAS HIS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 51983-0.txt or 51983-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/1/9/8/51983/
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase “Project
-Gutenberg”), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. “Project Gutenberg” is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (“the
-Foundation” or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase “Project Gutenberg” appears, or with which the
-phrase “Project Gutenberg” is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase “Project
-Gutenberg” associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than “Plain Vanilla ASCII” or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original “Plain
-Vanilla ASCII” or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, “Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation.”
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain “Defects,” such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the “Right
-of Replacement or Refund” described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/51983-0.zip b/old/51983-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 1438c44..0000000
--- a/old/51983-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51983-8.txt b/old/51983-8.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index a0279f5..0000000
--- a/old/51983-8.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,11669 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sin That Was His, by Frank L. Packard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Sin That Was His
-
-Author: Frank L. Packard
-
-Release Date: May 3, 2016 [EBook #51983]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIN THAT WAS HIS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE SIN THAT WAS HIS
-
-By Frank L. Packard
-
-The Copp Clark Co. Toronto, Canada
-
-1917
-
-THE SIN THAT WAS HIS
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I--THREE-ACE ARTIE
-
-|OF Arthur Leroy, commonly known throughout the Yukon as Three-Ace
-Artie, Ton-Nugget Camp knew a good deal--and equally knew very
-little. He had drifted in casually one day, and, evidently finding the
-environment remuneratively to his liking, had stayed. He was a bird of
-passage--tarrying perhaps for the spring clean-up.
-
-He was not exactly elegant in his apparel, for the conditions of an
-out-post mining camp did not lend themselves to elegance; but he was
-immeasurably the best dressed and most scrupulously groomed man that
-side of Dawson. His hands, for instance, were very soft and white; but
-then, he did no work--that is, of a nature to impair their nicety.
-
-His name was somewhat confusing. It might be either French or English,
-according to the twist that was given to its pronunciation--and
-Three-Ace Artie could give it either twist with equal facility. He
-confessed to being a Canadian--which was the only confession of any
-nature whatsoever that Three-Ace Artie had ever been known to make. He
-spoke English in a manner that left no doubt in the world but that it
-was his native language--except in the mind of Canuck John, the only
-French Canadian in the camp, who was equally positive that in the person
-of Three-Ace Artie he had unquestionably found a compatriot born to the
-French tongue.
-
-A few old-timers around Dawson might have remembered, if it had not been
-so commonplace an occurrence when it happened, that Leroy, as a very
-young man, had toiled in over the White Pass; though that being only a
-matter of some four years ago at this time, Leroy was still a very young
-man, even if somewhat of a change had taken place in his appearance--due
-possibly, or possibly not, to the rigours of the climate. Three-Ace
-Artie since then had grown a full beard. But Leroy's arrival, being but
-one of so many, the old-timers had found in it nothing to remember.
-
-Other and more definite particulars concerning Three-Ace Artie, however,
-were in the possession of Ton-Nugget Camp. Three-Ace Artie had no
-temperance proclivities--but he never drank during business hours. No
-one had ever seen a glass at his elbow when there was a pack of cards on
-the table! Frankly a professional gambler, he was admitted to be a
-good one--and square. He was polished, but not too suave; he was
-unquestionably possessed of far more than an ordinary education, but
-he never permitted his erudition to become objectionable; and he had a
-reputation for coolness and nerve that Ton-Nugget Camp had seen enhanced
-on several occasions and belied on none. He was of medium height, broad
-shouldered, and muscular; he had black hair and black eyes; under the
-beard the jaw was square; unruffled, he was genial; ruffled, he was
-known to be dangerous; and, still too young to show the markings of an
-ungracious life, his forehead was unwrinkled, and his skin clear and
-fresh.
-
-Also, during his three months' sojourn in Ton-Nugget Camp, he was
-credited, not without reason, in having won considerably more than
-he had lost. Upon these details rested whatever claim to an intimate
-acquaintanceship with Three-Ace Artie the camp could boast; for the
-rest, Ton-Nugget Camp, in common with the Yukon in general, was quite
-privileged to hazard as many guesses as it pleased!
-
-In a word, such was Three-Ace Artie's status in Ton-Nugget Camp when
-there arrived one afternoon a young man, little more than a boy,
-patently fresh from the East. And here, though Ton-Nugget Camp was quick
-to take the newcomer's measure, and, ignoring the other's claim to the
-self-conferred title of Gerald Rogers, promptly dubbed him the Kid, it
-permitted, through lack of observation, a slight detail to escape its
-notice that might otherwise perhaps have suggested a new and promising
-field for its guesses concerning Three-Ace Artie.
-
-Though at no more distant a date than a few days previous to his
-arrival, the Kid had probably never seen a "poke" in his life before,
-much less one filled with currency in the shape of gold dust, he had, in
-the first flush of his entry to MacDonald's, and with the life-long
-air of one accustomed to doing nothing else, flung a very new and
-pleasantly-filled poke in the general direction of the scales at the end
-of the bar, and, leaning back against the counter, supporting himself on
-his elbows, proceeded to "set them up" for all concerned. MacDonald's,
-collectively and individually, which is to say no small portion of
-the camp, for MacDonald's was at once hotel, store, bar and general
-hang-out, obeyed the invitation without undue delay, and was in the act
-of enjoying the newcomer's hospitality when Three-Ace Artie strolled in.
-
-Some one nearest the bar reached out a glass to the gambler over the
-intervening heads, the cluster of men broke away that the ceremony of
-introduction with the stranger might be duly performed--and Ton-Nugget
-Camp, failing to note the sudden tightening of the gambler's fingers
-around his glass, the startled flash in the dark eyes that was instantly
-veiled by half dropped, sleepy lids, heard only Three-Ace Artie's, "Glad
-to know you, Mr. Rogers," in the gambler's usual and quietly modulated
-voice.
-
-Following that, however, not being entirely unsophisticated, Ton-Nugget
-Camp stuck its tongue in its cheek and awaited developments--meanwhile
-making the most of its own opportunities, for the Kid, boisterous, loose
-with his money, was obviously too shining a mark for even amateurs
-to overlook. Ton-Nugget Camp, therefore, was, while expectant, quite
-content that Three-Ace Artie should, through motives which it attributed
-to professional delicacy, avoid rather than make any hurried advances
-toward intimacy with the newcomer; since, not feeling the restraint of
-any professional ethics itself, Ton-Nugget Camp was enabled to take up
-a few little collections on its own account via the stud poker route at
-the expense of the Kid.
-
-Two days passed, during which Three-Ace Artie, besides being little
-in evidence, refrained entirely from pressing his attentions upon the
-stranger; but despite this, thanks to the adroitness of certain members
-of the community and his own all too frequent attendance upon the bar,
-matters were not flourishing with the Kid. The Kid drank far more than
-was good for him, played far more than was good for him, and, flushed
-and fuddled with liquor, played none too well. True, there were those
-in the camp who offered earnest, genuine and well-meant advice, amongst
-them a grim old Presbyterian by the name of Murdock Shaw, who was
-credited with being the head of an incipient, and therefore harmless,
-reform movement--but this advice the Kid, quite as warmly as it was
-offered, consigned to other climes in conjunction with its progenitors;
-and, as a result, all that was left of his original poke at the
-expiration of those two days was an empty chamois bag from which,
-possibly by way of compensation, the offensive newness had been
-considerably worn off.
-
-"If he's got any more," said the amateurs, licking their lips, "here's
-hopin' that Three-Ace Artie 'll keep on overlookin' the bet!"
-
-And then, the next afternoon, the Kid flashed another poke, quite as new
-and quite as pleasantly-nurtured as its predecessor--and Three-Ace Artie
-seemed to awake suddenly to the knock of opportunity at his door.
-
-With just what finesse and aplomb the gambler inveigled the Kid into the
-game no one was prepared co say--it was a detail of no moment, except to
-Three-Ace Artie, who could be confidently trusted to take care of such
-matters, when moved to do so, with the courtly and genial graciousness
-of one conferring a favour on the other! But, be that as it may, the
-first intimation the few loungers who were in MacDonald's at the time
-had that anything was in the wind was the sight of MacDonald, behind the
-bar, obligingly exchanging the pokes of both men For poker chips. The
-loungers present thereupon immediately expressed their interest by
-congregating around the table as Three-Ace Artie and the Kid sat down.
-
-"Stud?" suggested Three-Ace Artie, with an engaging smile.
-
-The Kid, already none too sober, nodded his head.
-
-"And table stakes!" he supplemented, with a somewhat lordly flourish of
-the replenished glass that he had carried with him from the bar.
-
-"Of course!" murmured the gambler.
-
-It was still early afternoon, but an afternoon of the long-night of the
-northern winter, sunless, with only a subdued twilight without, and the
-big metal lamps, hanging from the ceiling, were lighted. In the centre
-of the room a box-stove alternately crackled and purred, its sheet-iron
-sides glowing dull red. The bare, rough-boarded room, save for the
-little group, was empty. Behind the bar, with a sort of curious, cynical
-smile that supplied no additional beauty to his shrewd, hard-lined
-visage, MacDonald himself propped his bullet-head in his hands, elbows
-on the counter, to watch the proceedings.
-
-Three-Ace Artie and the Kid began to play. Occasionally the door opened,
-admitting a miner who took a brisk, fore-intentioned step or two
-toward the bar--and catching sight of the game in progress, as though
-magnet-drawn, immediately changed his direction and joined those already
-around the table. But neither Three-Ace Artie nor the Kid appeared to
-pay any attention to the constantly augmenting number of spectators.
-The game see-sawed, fortune smiling with apparently unbiased fickleness
-first on one, then on the other. The Kid grew a little more noisy, a
-little more intoxicated--as MacDonald, from a mere spectator, became
-an attendant at the Kid's frequent beck and call. Three-Ace Artie was
-entirely professional--there was no glass at Three-Ace Artie's elbow,
-when he lost he smiled good-humouredly, when he won he smoothed over the
-other's discomfiture with self-deprecatory tact; he was unperturbed and
-cordial, he bet sparingly and in moderation--to enjoy the game, as
-it were, for the game's own sake, the stakes being, as it were again,
-simply to supply a little additional zest and tang, and for no other
-reason whatever!
-
-And, then, little by little, the Kid began to force the game; and, as
-the stakes grew higher, began to lose steadily, with the result that
-an hour of play saw most of the chips, instead of a glass, flanking
-Three-Ace Artie's elbow--and saw a large proportion of Ton-Nugget Camp,
-to whom the word in some mysterious manner had gone forth, flanking the
-table five and six deep.
-
-The more the Kid lost, the more he drank. Whatever ease of manner,
-whatever composure he had originally possessed was gone now. His hair
-straggled unkemptly over his forehead, his cheeks were flushed, his lips
-worked constantly on the butt of an unlighted cigarette.
-
-The crowd pressed a little closer, leaned a little further over the
-table. There was something almost fascinating in the deftness with which
-the soft, white hands of Three-Ace Artie caressed the cards, there was
-something almost fascinating, too, in the cool impassiveness of the
-gambler's poise, and in the sort of languid selfpossession that lighted
-the dark eyes; but Ton-Nugget Camp had lived too long in familiarity
-with Three-Ace Artie to be interested in the gambler's personality at
-that moment--its interest was centred in the game. The play now had all
-the earmarks of a grand finale. There were big stakes on the table--and
-the last of the Kid's chips. The crowd raised itself on tiptoes. Both
-men turned their "hole" cards. Three-Ace Artie reached out calmly, drew
-the chips toward him, smiled almost apologetically, and, picking up the
-deck, riffled the cards tentatively--the opposite side of the table was
-bare of stakes.
-
-For a moment the Kid circled his lips with the tip of his tongue, and
-flirted his hair back from his forehead with an uncertain, jerky motion
-of his hand; then he snatched up his glass, spilled a portion of its
-contents, gulped down the remainder, and began to fumble under his vest,
-finally wrenching out a money-belt.
-
-"Go on--what do you think!" he said thickly. "I ain't done yet! I'll
-get mine back, an' yours, too! Table stakes--eh? I'll get you this
-time--b'God! Table stakes--eh--again? What do you say?"
-
-"Of course!" murmured Three-Ace Artie politely.
-
-And then the crowd shuffled its feet uneasily. Murdock Shaw, who had
-edged his way close to the table, leaned over and touched the Kid's
-shoulder.
-
-"I'd cut it out, if I was you, son," he advised bluntly. "You're
-drunk--and a mark!"
-
-A sort of quick, sibilant intake of breath came from the circle around
-the table. Like a flash, one of Three-Ace Artie's hands, from the deck
-of cards, vanished under the table; and the dark eyes, the slumber gone
-from their depths, narrowed dangerously on Murdock Shaw. Then Three-Ace
-Artie smiled--unpleasantly.
-
-"It isn't as though you were _new_ in the Yukon, Murdock"--there was a
-deadliness in the quiet, level tones. "What's the idea?"
-
-Like magic, to right and left, on each side of the table, the crowd
-cleared a line behind the two men--then silence.
-
-The gambler's hand remained beneath the table; his eyes cold, alert,
-never wavering for the fraction of a second from the miner's face.
-
-Perhaps a minute passed. The miner did not speak or move, save that his
-lips tightened and the tan of his face took on a deeper hue.
-
-Then Three-Ace Artie spoke again:
-
-"Are you _calling_, Murdock?" he inquired softly.
-
-The miner hesitated an instant, then turned abruptly on his heel.
-
-"When I call you," he said evenly, over his shoulder, "it will break you
-for keeps--and you won't have long to wait, either!"
-
-The Kid, who had been alternating a maudlin gaze from the face of one
-man to the other, stood up now, and, hanging to the back of his chair,
-watched the miner's retreat in a fuddled way.
-
-"Say, go chase yourself!" he called out, in sudden inspiration--and,
-glancing around for approval, laughed boisterously at his own drunken
-humour.
-
-The door closed on Murdock Shaw. The Kid slipped down into his chair,
-dumped a handful of American double-eagles out of the money-belt--and,
-reaching again for his glass, banged it on the table.
-
-"Gimme another!" he shouted in the direction of the bar. "Hey--Mac--d'ye
-hear! Gimme another drink!"
-
-Three-Ace Artie's hands were above the table again--the slim, delicate,
-tapering fingers shuffling, riffling, and reshuffling the cards.
-
-MacDonald approached the table, and picked up the empty glass.
-
-"Wait!" commanded the Kid ponderously, and scowled suddenly in the
-throes of another inspiration. He pointed a finger at Three-Ace Artie.
-"Say--give him one, too!" He wagged his head sapiently. "If he wants
-any more chance at my money, he's got to have one, too! That's what!
-Old guy's right about that! I'm the only one that's drunk--you've got to
-drink, too! What'll you have--eh?"
-
-The group had closed in around the table again, and now all eyes were
-riveted, curiously, expectantly, upon Three-Ace Artie. If the gambler
-had one fixed principle from which, as Ton-Nugget Camp had excellent
-reasons for knowing, neither argument nor cajolery had ever moved him,
-it was that of refusing to drink while he played--but now, while all
-eyes were on Three-Ace Artie, Three-Ace Artie's eyes were on the pile of
-American gold that the Kid had displayed. There was a quick little
-curve to the gambler's lips, that became a slightly tolerant, slightly
-good-natured smile--and then the crowd nodded significantly to itself.
-
-"Why, certainly!" said Three-Ace Artie pleasantly. "Give me the same,
-Mac."
-
-"That's the talk!" applauded the Kid.
-
-Three-Ace Artie pushed the cards across the table.
-
-"This is a new game!" announced the Kid. "Cut for deal. Table stakes!"
-
-They cut. Three-Ace Artie won, riffled the cards several times, passed
-them over to be cut again, and dealt the first card apiece face down.
-
-The Kid examined his card in approved fashion by pulling it slightly
-over the edge of the table and secretively turning up one corner; then,
-still face down, he pushed it back, and, MacDonald, returning with the
-glasses from the bar at that moment, reached greedily for his own and
-tossed it off. He nodded with heavy satisfaction as Three-Ace Artie
-drained the other glass. Again he examined his card as before.
-
-"That's a pretty good card!" he stated with owlish gravity. "Worth
-pretty good bet!" He laid a stack of his gold eagles upon the card.
-
-Three-Ace Artie placed an equivalent number of chips upon his own card,
-and dealt another apiece--face up now on the table. An eight-spot of
-spades fell to the Kid; a ten-spot of diamonds to Three-Ace Artie.
-
-"Worth jus' much as before!" declared the Kid--and laid another stack of
-eagles upon the card.
-
-"Mine's worth a little more this time," smiled Three-Ace Artie--and
-doubled the bet.
-
-"Sure!" mumbled the Kid. "Sure thing!"
-
-Again Three-Ace Artie dealt--a king of hearts to the Kid; a deuce of
-hearts to himself.
-
-The Kid's hand seemed to tremble eagerly, as he fumbled with his gold
-eagles. He glanced furtively at the gambler--and then, as though trying
-to read in Three-Ace Artie's face how far he might safely egg the other
-on, he began to drop coin after coin upon his cards.
-
-The crowd stirred a little uncomfortably. The Kid had undoubtedly the
-better hand so far, but he had made a fool play--a blind man could have
-read through the back of the card that was so carefully guarded face
-down on the table. The Kid had a pair of kings against a possible pair
-of tens or deuces on the gambler's side.
-
-Three-Ace Artie imperturbably "saw" the bet--and coolly dealt the fourth
-card. Another king fell to the Kid; another deuce to himself.
-
-The Kid's eyes were burning feverishly now. He bet again, laughing,
-chuckling drunkenly as he swept forward a generous share of his
-remaining gold--and with a quiet, unostentatiously appraising glance at
-what was left of the pile of eagles, Three-Ace Artie raised heavily.
-
-Then, for the first time, the Kid hesitated, and a momentary frightened
-look flashed across his face. He lifted the corner of his "hole" card
-again and again nervously, as though to assure himself that he had made
-no mistake--and finally laughed with raucous confidence again, and,
-pushing the hair out of his eyes, demanded another drink, and returned
-the raise.
-
-The onlookers sucked in their breath--but this time approved the Kid's
-play. The cards showed a pair of deuces and a ten-spot spread out before
-Three-Ace Artie, a pair of kings and an eight-spot in front of the Kid.
-But the Kid had already given his hand away, and with a king in the
-"hole," making three kings, Three-Ace Artie could not possibly win
-unless his "hole" card was a deuce or a ten, and on top of that that his
-next and final card should be a deuce or ten as well. It looked all the
-Kid's way.
-
-Three-Ace Artie again "saw" the other's raise--and dealt the last card.
-
-There was a sudden shuffling of feet, as the crowd leaned tensely
-forward. A jack fell face up before the Kid--a ten-spot fell before the
-gambler. Three-Ace Artie showed two pairs--it all depended now on what
-he held as his "hole" card.
-
-But the Kid, either because he was too fuddled to take the possibilities
-into account, or because he was drunkenly obsessed with the
-invincibility of his own three kings, laughed hilariously.
-
-"I got you!" he cried--and bet half of his remaining gold.
-
-Three-Ace Artie's smile was cordial.
-
-"Might as well go all the way then," he suggested--and raised to the
-limit of the Kid's last gold eagle.
-
-The Kid laughed again. He had played cunningly--quite cunningly. The
-gambler had fallen into the trap. All his hand showed was two kings.
-
-"I'll see you! I'll see you!"--he was lurching excitedly in his chair,
-as he pushed the rest of his money forward. "This is the time little old
-two pairs are no good!" He turned his "hole" card triumphantly. "Three
-kings" he gurgled--and reached for the stakes.
-
-"Just a minute," objected Three-Ace Artie blandly.
-
-He faced his other card. "I've got another ten here. Full house--three
-tens and a pair of deuces."
-
-A dead silence fell upon the room. The Kid, lurching in his chair,
-stared in a dazed, stunned way at the other's cards--and then his face
-went a deathly white. One hand crept aimlessly to his forehead and
-brushed across his eyes; and after a moment, leaning heavily upon
-the table, he stood up, still swaying. But he was not swaying from
-drunkenness now. The shock seemed to have sobered him, bringing a
-haggard misery into his eyes. The crowd watched, making no comment.
-Three-Ace Artie, without lifting his eyes, was calmly engaged in
-stacking the gold eagles into little piles in front of him. The Kid
-moistened his lips with his tongue, attempted to speak--and succeeded
-only in * swallowing hard once or twice. Then, with a pitiful effort to
-pull himself together, he forced a smile.
-
-"I--I can't play any more," he said. "I'm cleaned out"--and turned away
-from the table.
-
-The crowd made way for him, following him with its eyes as he crossed
-the room and disappeared through a back door at the side of the bar,
-making evidently for his "hotel" room upstairs. Three-Ace Artie said
-nothing--he was imperturbably pocketing the gold eagles now. The crowd
-drifted away from the table, dispersed around the room, and some went
-out. Three-Ace Artie rose from the table and carried the chips back to
-the bar.
-
-"Guess I'll cash in, Mac," he drawled.
-
-The proprietor pushed the two pokes across the bar.
-
-"Step up, gentlemen!" invited the gambler amiably, wheeling with his
-back against the bar to face the room.
-
-An air of uneasiness, an awkward tension had settled upon the place.
-Some few more went out; but the others, as though glad of the relief
-afforded the situation by Three-Ace Artie's invitation, stepped promptly
-forward.
-
-Three-Ace Artie's hand encircled a stiff four-fingers of raw spirit.
-
-"Here's how!" he said--and drained his glass.
-
-Somebody "set them up" again; Three-Ace Artie repeated the
-performance--and MacDonald's resumed its normal poise.
-
-For perhaps half an hour Three-Ace Artie leaned against the bar, joining
-in a dice game that some one had inaugurated; and then, interest in this
-lagging, with a yawn and a casual remark about going up to his shack for
-a snooze, he put on his overcoat, pulled his fur cap well down over his
-ears, sauntered to the door--and, with a cheery wave of his hand, went
-out.
-
-But once outside the door, Three-Ace Artie's nonchalance dropped from
-him, and he stood motionless in the dull light of the winter afternoon
-peering sharply up and down the camp's single shack-lined street. There
-was no one in sight. He turned quickly then, and, treading noiselessly
-in the snow, stole along beside the building to a door at the further
-end. He opened this cautiously, stepped inside, and, in semidarkness
-here, halted again to listen. The sounds from the adjoining barroom
-reached him plainly, but that was all. Satisfied that he was unobserved,
-he moved swiftly forward to where, at the end of the sort of passageway
-which he had entered, a steep, ladder-like stairway led upward. He
-mounted this stealthily, gained the landing above, and, groping his way
-now along a narrow hallway, suddenly flung open a door.
-
-"Who's there!" came a quick, startled cry from within.
-
-"Don't talk so loud--damn it!" growled Three-Ace
-
-Artie, in a hoarse whisper. "You can hear yourself think through these
-partitions!" He struck a match, and lighted a candle which he found on
-the combination table and washing-stand near the bed.
-
-The Kid's face, drawn and colourless, loomed up in the yellow light from
-the edge of the bed, as he bent forward, blinking in a kind of miserable
-wonder at Three-Ace Artie.
-
-"You!" he gasped.
-
-Three-Ace Artie closed the door softly.
-
-"Some high-roller, you are, aren't you!" he observed caustically.
-
-The Kid did not answer.
-
-For a full minute Three-Ace Artie eyed the other in silence--then he
-laughed shortly.
-
-"I don't know which of us is the bigger damn fool--you trying to buy
-a through ticket to hell; or yours truly for what I'm going to do now!
-Maybe you have learned your lesson, maybe you haven't; but anyway I am
-going to take the chance. I'm not here to preach, but I'll push a little
-personal advice out of long experience your way. The booze and the
-pasteboards won't get you anywhere--except into the kind of mess you are
-up against now. If you are hankering for more of it, go to it--that's
-all. It's your hunt!"
-
-He flung the Kid's poke suddenly upon the table, and piled the gold
-eagles beside it.
-
-A flush crept into the Kid's cheeks. He leaned further forward, staring
-helplessly, now at Three-Ace Artie, now at the money on the table.
-
-"W-what do you mean?" he stammered.
-
-"It isn't very hard to guess, is it?" said Three-Ace Artie quietly.
-"Here's your money--but there's just one little condition tied to it. I
-can't afford to let the impression get around that I'm establishing
-any precedents--see? And if the boys heard of this they'd think I was
-suffering from softening of the brain! You get away from here without
-saying anything to anybody--and stay away. Bixley, one of the boys, is
-going over to the next camp this afternoon--and you go with him."
-
-"You--you're giving me back the money?" faltered the Kid.
-
-"Well, it sort of looks that way," smiled Three-Ace Artie.
-
-A certain dignity came to the Kid--and he held out his hand.
-
-"You're a white man," he said huskily. "But I can't accept it. I took it
-pretty hard down there perhaps, it seemed to get me all of a sudden when
-the booze went out; but I'm not all yellow. You won it--I can't take it
-back. It's yours."
-
-"No; it's not mine"--Three-Ace Artie was still smiling. "That's the way
-to talk, Kid. I like that. But you're wrong--it's yours by rights."
-
-"By rights?" The Kid hesitated, studying Three-Ace Artie's face. "You
-mean," he ventured slowly, "that the game wasn't on the level--that you
-stacked the cards?"
-
-Three-Ace Artie shook his head.
-
-"I never stacked a card on a man in my life."
-
-"Then I don't understand what you mean," said the Kid. "How can it be
-mine by rights?"
-
-"It's simple enough," replied Three-Ace Artie. "I'm paying back a little
-debt I owe, that's all. I figured the boys had pecked around about deep
-enough on the outskirts of your pile, and that it was about time for me
-to sit in and save the rest. I cleaned you out a little faster than I
-expected, a little faster perhaps than the next man will if you try it
-again--but not any the less thoroughly. It's the 'next man' I'm trying
-to steer you away from, Kid."
-
-"Yes, I know"--the Kid spoke almost mechanically. "But a debt?"--his
-eyes were searching the gambler's face perplexedly now. Then suddenly:
-"Who are you?" he demanded. "There's something familiar about you. I
-thought there was the first time I saw you the other afternoon. And yet
-I can't place you."
-
-"Don't try," said Three-Ace Artie softly. He reached out and laid his
-hand on the other's shoulder. "It wouldn't do you or me any good. There
-are some things best forgotten. I'm telling you the truth, that's all
-you need to know. You're entitled to the money--and another chance. Let
-it go at that. You agree to the bargain, don't you? You leave here with
-Bixley this afternoon--and this is between you and me, Kid, and no one
-else on earth."
-
-For a moment the Kid's gaze held steadily on Three-Ace Artie; then his
-eyes filled.
-
-"Yes; I'll go," he said in a low voice. "I guess I'm not going to forget
-this--or you. I don't know what I would have done, and I want to tell
-you----"
-
-"Never mind that!" interrupted Three-Ace Artie with sudden gruffness.
-"It's what you do from now on that counts. You've got to hurry now. Any
-of the boys will show you Bixley's shack, if you don't know where it is.
-Just tell Bixley what you want, and he'll take you along. He'll be glad
-of company on the trail. Shake!" He caught the other's hand, wrung it
-in a hard grip--and turned to the door. "Good luck to you, Kid!" he
-said--and closed the door behind him.
-
-As cautiously as he had entered, Three-Ace Artie made his way downstairs
-again; and, once outside, started briskly in the direction of his shack,
-that he had acquired, bag and baggage, shortly after his arrival in
-the camp, from a miner who was pulling out. It was some three or four
-hundred yards from MacDonald's, and as he went along, feet crunching in
-the snow from his swinging stride, he began quite abruptly to whistle a
-cheery air. It was too bitterly cold, however, to whistle, so instead he
-resorted to humming pleasantly to himself.
-
-He stamped the snow from his feet as he reached the shack, opened the
-door, and went in. A few embers still glowed in the box-stove, and he
-threw on a stick of wood and opened the damper. He lighted a lamp, and
-stood for a moment looking around him. There was a bunk at one side of
-the shack, the table, the stove, a single chair, a few books on a rude
-shelf, a kit bag in one corner, a skin of some sort on the floor, and
-a small cupboard containing supplies and cooking utensils. Three-Ace
-Artie, however, did not appear to be obsessed with the inventory of his
-surroundings. There was a whimsical smile on his lips, as he pulled off
-his fur cap and tossed it on the bunk.
-
-"I guess," said Three-Ace Artie, "it will give the Recording Angel quite
-a shock to chalk one up on the other side of the page for me!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II--THE TOAST
-
-|THREE-ACE ARTIE, sprawled comfortably cally at the book he held in his
-hand, a copy of Hugo's _Claude Gueux_ in French, tossed it to the foot
-of the bunk, and sat up, dangling his legs over the edge.
-
-A mood that had long been a stranger to him, a mellow mood, as he had
-defined it to himself, had kept him away from MacDonald's that night. It
-was the glow of self-benediction, as it were, ever since he had left the
-boy's room that afternoon, though it had puzzled him to some extent
-to explain its effect upon himself--that, for instance, the corollary
-should take the form of a quiet evening, a pipe, and Hugo.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders. It had been so nevertheless. His shoulders
-lifted again--it was decidedly an incongruous proceeding for one known
-as Three-Ace Artie!
-
-His thoughts reverted to the Kid. No one had come to the shack since he
-had returned from the hotel, but he knew the Kid had left the camp, for
-he had watched from the shack window as Bixley and the boy had passed
-down the street together. The Kid would not play the fool again for a
-while, that was certain--whatever he did eventually.
-
-Three-Ace Artie stared introspectively at the lamp, out at full length
-upon his bunk, yawned, and looked at his watch. It was already after
-midnight. He glanced a little quizzically.
-
-Kid, of course! He had been conscious of an inward flame for a
-moment--then for the third time shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"I guess I'll turn in," he muttered.
-
-He bent down to untie a shoe lace--and straightened up quickly again. A
-footstep sounded from without, there was a knock upon the door, the door
-opened--and with the inrush of air the lamp flared up. Three-Ace Artie
-reached out swiftly to the top of the chimney, protecting the flame with
-the flat of his hand, and, as the door closed again, stared with cool
-surprise at his visitor. The last time he had seen Sergeant Marden,
-of the Royal North-West Mounted Police, had been the year before at
-Two-Strike-Mountain, where each had followed a gold rush--for quite
-different reasons!
-
-"Hello, sergeant!" he drawled. "I didn't know you were in camp."
-
-"Just got in around supper-time," replied the other. "I've been up on
-the Creek for the last few weeks."
-
-Three-Ace Artie smiled facetiously.
-
-"Any luck?" he inquired.
-
-"I got my man," said the sergeant quietly.
-
-"Of course!" murmured Three-Ace Artie softly. "You've got a reputation
-for doing that, sergeant." He laughed pleasantly. "But you haven't
-dropped in on _me_ officially, have you?"
-
-Sergeant Marden, big, thick-set, with a strong, kindly face, with gray
-eyes that lighted now in a gravely humorous way shook his head.
-
-"No," he answered. "I'm playing the 'old friend' rle to-night."
-
-"Good!" exclaimed Three-Ace Artie heartily. "Peel off your duds then,
-and--will you have the bunk, or the chair? Take your choice--only make
-yourself at home." He stepped over to the cupboard, and, while the
-sergeant pulled off his cap and mitts, and unbuttoned and threw back his
-overcoat, Three-Ace Artie procured a bottle of whisky and two glasses,
-which he set upon the table. "Help yourself, sergeant," he invited
-cordially.
-
-The sergeant shook his head again, as he drew the chair toward him and
-sat down.
-
-"I don't think I'll take anything to-night," he said.
-
-"No?"--Three-Ace Artie's voice expressed the polite regret of a perfect
-host. "Well, fill your pipe then," he suggested hospitably, as he
-seated himself on the edge of the bunk. He began to fill his own pipe
-deliberately, apparently wholly preoccupied for the moment with that
-homely operation--but his mind was leaping in lightning flashes back
-over the range of the four years that he had spent in the Yukon. What
-_exactly_ did Sergeant Marden of the Royal North-West Mounted want with
-him to-night? He had known the other for a good while, it was true--but
-not in a fashion to warrant the sergeant in making a haphazard social
-call at midnight after what must have been a long, hard day on the
-trail.
-
-A match, drawn with a long sweep under the table, crackled; Sergeant
-Marden lighted his pipe, and flipped the match-stub stovewards.
-
-"It looks as though Canuck John wouldn't pull through the night," he
-said gravely.
-
-"Canuck John!" Three-Ace Artie sat up with a jerk, and glanced sharply
-at the other. "What's that you say?"
-
-Sergeant Marden removed his pipe slowly from his lips.
-
-"Why, you know, don't you?" he asked in surprise.
-
-"No, I don't know!" returned Three-Ace Artie quickly. "I haven't been
-out of this shack since late this afternoon; but I saw him this morning,
-and he was all right then. What's happened?"
-
-"He shot himself just after supper--accident, of course--old story,
-cleaning a gun," said the sergeant tersely.
-
-"Good God!" cried Three-Ace Artie, in a low, shocked way--and then he
-was on his feet, and reaching for his cap and coat. "I'll go up there
-and see him. You don't mind, sergeant, if I leave you here? I guess I
-knew Canuck John better than any one else in camp did, and--" His coat
-half on, he paused suddenly, his brows gathering in a frown. "After
-supper, you said!" he muttered slowly. "Why, that's hours ago!" Then,
-his voice rasping: "It's damned queer no one came to tell me about this!
-There's something wrong here!" He struggled into his coat.
-
-"He's been unconscious ever since they found him," said Sergeant Marden,
-his eyes fixed on the bowl of his pipe as he prodded the dottle down
-with his forefinger. "The doctor's just come. You couldn't do any good
-by going up there, and"--his eyes lifted and met Three-Ace Artie's
-meaningly--"take it all around, I guess it would be just as well if you
-didn't go. Murdock Shaw and some of the boys are there, and--well, they
-seem to feel they don't want you."
-
-For a moment Three-Ace Artie stood motionless, regarding the other in a
-half angry, half puzzled way; then, his weight on both hands, he leaned
-forward over the table toward Sergeant Marden.
-
-"In plain English, and in as few words as you can put it, what in hell
-do you mean by that?" he demanded levelly.
-
-"All right, if you want it that way, I'll tell you," said Sergeant
-Marden quietly. "I guess perhaps the short cut's best. They've given you
-until to-morrow morning to get out of Ton-Nugget Camp."
-
-"I beg your pardon?" inquired Three-Ace Artie with ominous politeness.
-
-Sergeant Marden produced a poke partially filled with gold dust and laid
-it on the table.
-
-"What's that?"--Three-Ace Artie's eyes were hard.
-
-"It's the price you paid Sam MacBride for this shack and contents when
-he went away. The boys say they want to play fair."
-
-And then Three-Ace Artie laughed--not pleasantly. Methodically he
-removed his overcoat, hung it on its peg, and sat down again on the edge
-of the bunk.
-
-"Let's see the rest of your hand, sergeant"--his voice was deadly quiet.
-"I don't quite get the idea."
-
-"I wasn't here myself this afternoon," said Sergeant Marden; "but they
-seem to feel that the sort of thing that happened kind of gives the
-community a bad name, and that separating a youngster, when he's drunk,
-from his last dollar is a bit too raw even for Ton-Nugget Camp. That's
-about the size of the way it was put up to me."
-
-It seemed to Three-Act Artie that in some way he had not quite heard
-aright; or that, if he had, he was being made the object of some,
-unknown to its authors, stupendously ironical joke--and then, as
-he glanced at the officer's grim, though not altogether unfriendly
-countenance, and from Sergeant Marden to the bag of gold upon the table,
-a bitter, furious anger surged upon him. His clenched fist reached out
-and fell smashing upon the table.
-
-"So that's it, is it!" he said between his teeth. "This is some of
-Murdock Shaw's work--the snivelling, psalm-singing hypocrite! Well, he
-can't get away with it! I've a few friends in camp myself."
-
-"Fairweather friends, I should say," qualified the sergeant, busy again
-with his pipe bowl. "You said yourself that no one had been near the
-shack here. The camp appears to be pretty well of one mind on the
-subject."
-
-"Including the half dozen or more who started after the Kid to begin
-with!"--Three-Ace Artie's laugh was savage, full of menace. "Are they
-helping to run me out of camp, too!"
-
-"You seem to have got a little of _everybody's_ money," suggested
-Sergeant Marden pointedly. "Anyway, I haven't seen any sign of them
-putting up a fight for you."
-
-"Quite so!" There was a sudden cold self-possession in Three-Ace Artie's
-tones. "Well, I can put up quite a fight for myself, thank you. I'm not
-going! It's too bad Shaw didn't have the nerve to come here and tell me
-this. I----"
-
-"I wouldn't let him," interposed the sergeant, with a curious smile.
-"That's why I came myself."
-
-Three-Ace Artie studied the other's face for an instant.
-
-"Well, go on!" he jerked out. "What's the answer to that?"
-
-"That I am going on to Dawson in the morning, and that I thought perhaps
-you might be willing to come along."
-
-Three-Ace Artie's under jaw crept out the fraction of an inch, and his
-eyes narrowed.
-
-"I thought you said you weren't here officially!"
-
-"I'm not--at least, not yet."
-
-"Well, it sounds mighty like an arrest to me!" snarled Three-Ace Artie.
-He stood up abruptly, and once more leaned over the table. His dark eyes
-flashed. "But that doesn't go either--not in the Yukon! You can't hold
-me for anything I've done, and you ought to know better than to think
-you can do any bluffing with me and get away with it! Murdock Shaw is.
-evidently running this little game. I gave him a chance to call my hand
-this afternoon--and he lay down like a whipped pup! That chance is still
-open to him--but he can't do it by proxy! That's exactly where you and I
-stand, Marden--don't try the arrest game!"
-
-"I'm not going to--at least, not yet," said the sergeant again. "It's
-not a question of law. The day may come when the lid goes on out here,
-but so far the local millennium hasn't dawned. There's no dispute there.
-I told you I came in here on the 'old friend' basis, and I meant it.
-I've known you off and on a bit for quite a while; and I always liked
-you for the reputation you had of playing square. There's no talk of
-crookedness now, though I must confess you've pulled something a little
-thinner than I thought it was in you to do. However, let that go. I
-don't want to butt in on this unless I have to--and that's why I'm
-trying to get you to come away with me in the morning. If you don't,
-there'll be trouble, and then I'll have to take a hand whether I want to
-or not."
-
-"By God!"--the oath came fiercely, involuntarily from Three-Ace Artie's
-lips. The irony of it all was upon him again. The injustice of it galled
-and maddened him. And yet--tell them the truth of the matter? He would
-have seen every last one of them consigned to the bottomless pit first!
-The turbulent soul of the man was aflame. "Run out of camp, eh!"---it
-was a devil's laugh that echoed around the shack. "That means being run
-out of the Yukon! I'd have to get out, wouldn't I--out of the Yukon--ha,
-ha!--my name would smell everywhere to high heaven!"
-
-"I'm not sure but that's exactly what I would do if I were you," said
-Sergeant Marden simply. "The fact you've got to face is that you're
-black-balled--and the easiest way to swallow a nasty dose is to swallow
-it in a gulp, isn't it?" He got up from his chair and laid his hand
-on Three-Ace Artie's shoulder. "Look here, Leroy," he said earnestly,
-"you've got a cool enough head on you not to play the fool, and you're
-a big enough sport to stand for the cards whatever way they turn. I want
-you to say that you'll come along with me in the morning--I'll get out
-of here early before any one is about, or I'll go now if you like, if
-that will help any. It's the sensible thing to do. Well?"
-
-"I don't know, Marden--I don't know!" Three-Ace Artie flung out shortly.
-
-"Yes, you do," insisted the sergeant quietly. "You know a fight wouldn't
-get you anywhere--if you got one or two of them, Murdock Shaw for
-instance, you'd simply be hung for your pains. They mean business, and
-I don't want any trouble--why make any for me when it can't do you any
-good? I'm putting it to you in a friendly way; and, besides that, it's
-common sense, isn't it?" His grip tightened in a kindly pressure on
-Three-Ace Artie's shoulder. "I'm right, ain't I? What do you say?"
-
-"Oh, you're right enough!"--a hard smile twisted Three-Ace Artie's lips.
-"There's no argument about that. I'd have to go anyway, I know that--but
-I'm not keen on going without giving them a run for their money that
-they'd remember for the rest of their lives!"
-
-"And at the same time put a crimp into your own," said Sergeant Marden
-soberly. He held out his hand. "You'll come, won't you?"
-
-Twice Three-Ace Artie paced the length of the shack. Logically, as he
-had admitted, Marden was right; but battling against logic was a sullen
-fury that prompted him to throw consequences to the winds, and, with
-his back to the wall, invite Ton-Nugget Camp to a showdown. And then,
-abruptly, the gambler's instinct to throw down a beaten hand, when bluff
-would be of no avail and holding it would only increase his loss, turned
-the scales, and he halted before Sergeant Marden.
-
-"I'll go," he said tersely.
-
-There was genuine relief in the officer's face.
-
-"And I'll stick to my end of the bargain!" the sergeant exclaimed
-heartily. "When do you want to start?"
-
-"It makes damned little odds to me!" Three-Ace Artie answered gruffly.
-"Suit yourself."
-
-"All right," said the sergeant. "In that case I'll put in a few hours'
-sleep, and we'll get away before the camp is stirring." He buttoned up
-his overcoat, put on his cap, and moved toward the door. "I've got a
-team of huskies, and there's room on the sled for anything you want to
-bring along. You can get it ready, and I'll call for you here."
-
-Three-Ace Artie nodded curtly.
-
-Sergeant Marden reached out to open the door, and, with his hand on the
-latch, hesitated.
-
-"Don't go up there, Leroy," he said earnestly, jerking his head in the
-direction of the upper end of the camp. "Canuck John is unconscious, as
-I told you--there's nothing you could do."
-
-But Three-Ace Artie had turned his back. To Canuck John and Sergeant
-Marden he was equally oblivious for the moment. He heard the door close,
-heard the sergeant's footsteps outside recede and die away. He was
-staring now at the bag of gold upon the table. It seemed to mock and
-jeer at him, and suddenly his hands at his sides curled into clenched
-and knotted fists--and after a moment he spoke aloud in French.
-
-"It was the first decent thing I ever did in my life"--he was smiling in
-a sort of horrible mirth. "Do you appreciate that, my very dear friend
-Raymond? It is exquisite! _Sacr nom de Dieu_, it is magnificent! It was
-the first decent thing you ever did in your life--think of that, _mon
-brave!_ And see how well you are paid for it! They are running you out
-of camp!"
-
-He turned and flung himself down on the bunk, his hands still fiercely
-clenched. Black-balled, Sergeant Marden had called it! Well, it was not
-the first time he had been black-balled! Here, in the Yukon, the name
-of Three-Ace Artie was to be a stench to the nostrils; elsewhere, in the
-city of his birth, he, last of his race, had already dragged an honoured
-and patrician name in the mire.
-
-A red flame of anger swept his cheeks. What devil's juggling with the
-cards had brought that young fool across his path, and brought the
-memories of the days gone by, and brought him an indulgence in weak,
-mawkish sentimentality! A debt, he had told the boy!
-
-The red flamed into his face again--and yet again. Curse the memories!
-Once aroused they would not down. Even the old schooldays crowded
-themselves upon him--and at that he jeered out at himself in bitter
-raillery. Brilliant, clever in those days, outstripping many beyond his
-years, as glib with his Latin as with his own French tongue, his father
-had designed him for the Roman Catholic priesthood, and he, Raymond
-Chapelle, the son of the rich seigneur, of one of the oldest families in
-French Canada, instead of becoming a priest of God had become--Three-Ace
-Artie, the pariah of Ton-Nugget Camp!
-
-Would it not make all hell scream with glee! It brought unholy humour
-to himself. He--a priest of God! But he had not journeyed very far along
-that road--even before he had finished school he had had a fling or two!
-It had been easy enough. There was no mother, and he did not know his
-father very well. There had been great style and ceremony in that huge,
-old, lumbering, gray-stone mansion in Montreal--but never a home! His
-father had seemed concerned about him in one respect only--a sort of
-austere pride in his accomplishments at school. Produce proof of that,
-and money was unstinted. It had come very easily, that money--and gone
-riotously even as a boy. Then he had entered college, and half way
-through his course his father had died. He had travelled fast after
-that--so fast that only a blur of wreckage loomed up out of those
-few years. A passion for gambling, excess without restraint, a _rou_
-life--and his patrimony, large as it was, was gone. Family after family
-turned their backs upon him, and his clubs shut their doors in his face!
-And then the Yukon--another identity--and as much excitement as he could
-snatch out of his new life!
-
-There was a snarl now on his lips. It had been a furious pace back
-there in Montreal, but whose business was it save his own! He was not
-whimpering about it. He could swallow his own medicine without asking
-anybody else to make a wry face over it for him! Regrets? What should
-he regret--save that he had lost the money that would enable him to
-maintain the old pace! Regrets! He would not even be thinking of it now
-if that young fool had not crossed his path, and he, the bigger fool of
-the two, had not tried to play the game of the blind leading the blind!
-
-Repay a debt! Fie had not even displayed originality--only a sort of
-absurd mimicry of the boy's father! He was taunting himself now, mocking
-at himself mercilessly. What good had it done! How much different would
-it be with young Rogers than it had been with himself when Rogers'
-father, an old and intimate friend of his own father's, had taken him
-home one night just before the final crash, and had talked till dawn in
-kindly earnestness, pleading with him to change his ways before it was
-too late! True, it had had its effect. The effect had lasted two days!
-But somehow, for all that, he had never been able to forget the old
-gentleman's face, and the gray hairs, and the soft, gentle voice,
-and the dull glow of the fire in the grate that constantly found a
-reflection in the moist eyes fixed so anxiously upon him.
-
-What imp of perversity had inspired him to consider that a debt, and
-prompt him to repay it to the son! Why had he not left well enough
-alone! What infernal trick of memory had caused him to recognise the boy
-at the moment of their first meeting! He had known the other in the old
-days only in the casual way that one of twenty-two would know a boy of
-fifteen still in short trousers!
-
-He started up from the bunk impulsively, walked to the stove, wrenched
-the door open, flung in another stick of wood savagely, and began to
-pace the shack with the sullen fury of a caged beast. The passion within
-the man was rising to white heat. Run out of Ton-Nugget Camp! The
-story would spread. A nasty story! It meant that he was run out of the
-Yukon--his four years here, and not unprofitable years, at an end! It
-was a life he had grown to like because it was untrammelled; a life
-in which, at least in intervals, when the surplus cash was in hand, he
-could live in Dawson for a brief space at a dizzier pace than ever!
-
-He was Three-Ace Artie here--or Arthur Leroy--it did not matter
-which--one took one's choice! And now--what was he to be next--and
-where!
-
-Tell them what he had done, crawl to them, beg them to let him
-stay--never! If he answered them at all, it would be in quite a
-different way, and--his eyes fixed again upon the bag of gold that
-Sergeant Marden had left on the table. A bone flung to a cur as he was
-kicked from the door! The finger nails bit into the palms of Three-Ace
-Artie's hands.
-
-"Damn you!" he gritted, white-lipped. "Damn every one of you!"
-
-And this was his reward for the only decent thing that he could remember
-ever having done in his life--the thought with all its jibing mockery
-was back once more. It added fuel to his fury. It was he, not the Kid,
-who had had his lesson! And it was a lesson he would profit by! If it
-was the only decent thing he had ever done--it would be the last! They
-had intended him for a priest of God in the old days! He threw back his
-head and laughed until the room reverberated with his hollow mirth. He
-had come too damnably near to acting the part that afternoon, it seemed!
-A priest of God! Blasphemy, unbridled, unlicensed, filled his soul. He
-snatched up the bottle of whisky, and poured a glass full to the brim.
-
-"A toast!" he cried. "On your feet, Raymond! Up, Monsieur Leroy! Artie,
-Three-Ace Artie--a toast! Drink deep, _mes braves!_" He lifted the glass
-above his head. "To our liege lord henceforth, praying pardon for our
-lapse from grace! To his Satanic Majesty--and hell!" He drained the
-glass to its dregs, and bowed satirically. "I can not do honour to the
-toast, sire, by snapping the goblet stem." He held up the glass again.
-"It is only a jelly tumbler, and so--" It struck with a crash against
-the wall of the shack, as he hurled it from him, and smashed to
-splinters.
-
-For a moment, clawing at his throat as the raw spirit burned him,
-staring at the broken glass upon the floor, he stood there; then, with a
-short laugh, he pushed both table and chair closer to the stove and sat
-down--and it was as though it were some strange vigil that he had set
-himself to keep. Occasionally he laughed, occasionally he filled the
-other glass and drank in gulps, occasionally he thought of Canuck
-John, who spoke English very poorly and whose eager snatching at the
-opportunity to speak French had brought about a certain intimacy between
-them, and, thinking of Canuck John, there came a sort of wondering frown
-as at the intrusion of some utterly extraneous thing, occasionally as
-his eyes encountered the bag of gold there came a glitter into their
-depths and his lips parted, hard drawn, over set teeth; but for the most
-part he sat with a fixed, grim smile, his hands opening and shutting on
-his knees, staring straight before him.
-
-Once he got up, and, making the circuit of the shack, collected his
-personal belongings and packed them into his kit bag--and from under a
-loose plank in the corner of the room took out a half dozen large and
-well-filled pokes, tucked them carefully away beneath the clothing in
-the bag, strapped up the bag, replaced the loosened plank, and returned
-to his chair.
-
-Sullen, bitter, desperate, soul reckless with the knowledge that all
-men's hands were against him, as his were against them, he sat there.
-The hours passed unreckoned and unnoticed. There was no dawn to come,
-for there was no sun to rise; but it grew a little lighter. A stillness
-as of the dead hung over Ton-Nugget Camp; and then out of the stillness
-a dog barked--and became a yapping chorus as others joined in.
-
-He reached out mechanically for the bottle--it was empty. He stared at
-it for a moment in bewildered surprise. It had been full, untouched
-when he had placed it on the table. He stood up--steadily, firmly. He
-stretched out his hand in front of him, and studied it critically--there
-was not a tremor. His hand dropped to his side. One could absorb a good
-deal of liquor under mental stress without resultant physical effect! He
-was not drunk. Only his nerves were raw and on edge. That bag of gold
-on the table! His eyes narrowed again upon it for the hundredth time.
-It flaunted itself in his face. It had become symbolic of the unanimous
-contempt with which Ton-Nugget Camp bade him be gone! Damn their cursed
-insolence! It was an entirely inadequate reply to go away and simply
-leave it lying there on the table--and yet what else was there to do?
-The dogs were barking again. That would be Marden harnessing up his
-huskies. The sergeant would be along now in another minute or two.
-
-He turned from the table, picked up his overcoat, put it on, and
-buttoned it to the throat. He put on his cap, jerked his kit bag up from
-the floor, slung one strap over his shoulder, moved toward the door--and
-paused to gaze back around the room. The lamp burned on the table, the
-empty whisky bottle, the glass, the bag of gold beside it; in the
-stove a knot crackled with a report like a pistol shot. Slowly his
-eyes travelled around over the familiar surroundings, his home of four
-months; and slowly the colour mounted in his cheeks--and suddenly, his
-eyes aflame, a low, tigerish cry on his lips, he flung the kit bag from
-his shoulder to the ground.
-
-They would tell the story through the Yukon of how he had fleeced and
-robbed a drunken boy of his last cent on earth--but they would never
-tell the story of how he had slunk away in the darkness like a whipped
-and mangy cur! He feared neither God nor devil, norman, nor beast! That
-had been his lifelong boast, his creed. He feared them now no more than
-he had ever feared them! He listened. There was a footstep without, but
-that was Marden's. Not one of all the camp afoot to risk contamination
-by bidding him goodbye! Well, it was not good-bye yet! Ton-Nugget Camp
-would remember, his adieu! Passion was rocking the man to the soul, the
-sense of bitter injury, smarting like a gaping wound, was maddening him
-beyond all self-control. He tore loose the top button of his coat--and
-turned sharply to face the door. Here was Marden now. He wanted no
-quarrel with Mar-den, but----
-
-The door opened. He felt himself mechanically push his cap back on his
-forehead, felt a sort of unholy joy sweep in a wild, ungovernable surge
-upon him, felt every muscle of his body stiffen and grow rigid in a
-fierce and savage elation, and he heard a sound that he meant for a
-laugh chortle from his lips. It was not Marden standing there--it was
-Murdock Shaw.
-
-And then he spoke.
-
-"Come in, and shut the door, Murdock," he said in a velvet voice. "I
-thought my luck was out tonight."
-
-"It's not worth while," the miner answered. "Mar-den's getting ready to
-go now, and I only came to bring you a message from Canuck John."
-
-"I've got one for you that you'll remember longer!"--Three-Ace Artie's
-smile was ghastly, as he moved back toward the table in a kind of
-inimical guarantee that the floor space should be equally divided
-between them. "Come in, Murdock, if you are a man--_and shut that
-door_."
-
-The miner did not move.
-
-"Canuck John is dead," he said tersely.
-
-"What's that to do with me--or you and me!"--there was a rasp in
-Three-Ace Artie's voice now. "It's you who have started me on the little
-journey that I'm going to take, you know, and it's only decent to use
-the time that's left in bidding me good-bye."
-
-"I didn't come here to quarrel with you," Shaw said shortly. "Canuck
-John regained consciousness for a moment before he died. He couldn't
-talk much--just a few words. We don't any of us know his real name, or
-where his home is. From what he said, it seems you do. He said: 'Tell
-Three-Ace Artie--give goodbye message--my mother and--' And then he
-died."
-
-Three-Ace Artie's fingers were twisting themselves around the bag of
-gold that he had picked up from the table.
-
-"I thought so!" he snarled. "You were yellow this afternoon. I thought
-you hadn't the nerve to come here, unless you figured you were safe some
-way or another. And so you think you are going to hide behind a dead man
-and the sanctimonious pathos of a dying message! Well, I'll see you
-both damned first! Do you hear!" White to the lips with the fury that,
-gathering all through the night, was breaking now, he started toward the
-other, his hand clutching the bag of gold.
-
-Involuntarily the miner stepped back still closer to the door.
-
-"That's not the way out for you!" whispered Three-Ace Artie hoarsely.
-"If you take it, I'll drop you in the snow before you're ten yards up
-the street! Damn you, we'll play this hand out now for keeps! You've
-started something, and we'll finish it. You've rid the camp and rid
-Alaska of a tainted smell, have you? You sneaked around behind my back
-with your cursed righteousness to give me a push further on the road to
-hell! I know your kind--and, by God, I know your breed! Four years ago
-on the White Pass you took a man's last dollar for a hunk of bread. He
-could pay or starve! You sleek skunk--do you remember? Your conscience
-has been troubling you perhaps, and so you went around the camp and
-collected this, did you--_this!_" He held up the bag of gold above his
-head. "No? You didn't recognise me again? Well, no matter--take it back!
-Tell Ton-Nugget Camp I gave it back to you--to keep!" In a flash his arm
-swept forward, and, with all his strength behind it, he hurled the bag
-at the other's head.
-
-It struck full on the miner's forehead--and dropped with a soft thud on
-the floor. The man reeled backward, swayed, and clawed at the wall of
-the shack for support--and while he swayed a red spot dyed his forehead,
-and a crimson stream ran zigzag down over eye and cheek.
-
-And Three-Ace Artie laughed, and stooped, and picked up his kit bag,
-and swung one strap over one shoulder as before--Sergeant Marden,
-stern-faced, was standing on the threshold of the open door.
-
-"I guess my luck is out after all. You win, Murdock!" smiled Three-Ace
-Artie grimly--and brushed past the sergeant out of the shack.
-
-The dog-team was standing before the door. He dropped his kit bag on
-the sled, and strode on down the street. Here and there lights were
-beginning to show from the shack windows. Once a face was pressed
-against a pane to watch him go by, but no voice spoke to him. It was
-silent, and it was dark.
-
-Only the snow was white. And it was cold--cold as death.
-
-Presently Sergeant Marden and the dog-team caught up with him.
-
-"He'll need a stitch or two in his head," said the sergeant gruffly.
-
-Raymond Chapelle, alias Arthur Leroy, alias Three-Ace Artie, made no
-reply. In his soul was anarchy; in his heart a bitter mockery that
-picked a quarrel with Almighty God.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III--THE CUR
-
-|RAYMOND CHAPELLE, once known as Three-Ace Artie, and now, if the
-cardcase in his pocket could be relied upon for veracity, as one Henri
-Mentone--though the cardcase revealed neither when nor where that
-metamorphosis had taken place, nor yet again the nature of Monsieur
-Henri Mentone's pursuits in life--was engaged in the rather futile
-occupation of staring out through the car window into a black and
-objectless night. He was not, however, deeply concerned with the night,
-for at times he shifted his gaze around the smoking compartment, which
-he had to himself, and smiled cynically. The winter of the Yukon had
-changed to the springtime of lower French Canada--it was a far cry from
-Ton-Nugget Camp, from Dawson and the Pacific, to the little village of
-St. Marleau on the banks of the St. Lawrence, where the river in its
-miles of breadth was merging with the Atlantic Ocean!
-
-St. Marleau! That was where Canuck John had lived, where the old folks
-were now--if they were still alive. The cynical smile deepened. The only
-friend he had was--a dead man! The idea rather pleased him, as it had
-pleased him ever since he had started for the East. Perhaps there was a
-certain sentimentality connected with what he was about to do, but
-not the sickly, fool sentimentality that he had been weak enough to be
-guilty of with the Kid in Ton-Nugget Camp! He was through with that!
-Here, if it was sentiment at all, it was a sentiment that appealed to
-his sporting instincts. Canuck John had put it up to him--and died. It
-was a sort of trust; and the only man who trusted him was--a dead man.
-He couldn't throw a dead man down!
-
-He laughed softly, drumming with his carefully manicured fingers on the
-window pane. Besides, there was too much gossip circulating between the
-Pacific Coast and Alaska to make it profitable for a gambler who
-had been kicked out of the Yukon for malpractice to linger in that
-locality--even if he had shaved off his beard! The fingers, from the
-window pane, felt in a sort of grimly ruminative way over the smooth,
-clean-shaven face. So, as well East as anywhere, providing always that
-he gave Montreal a wide berth--which he had!
-
-Canuck John, of course, had not meant to impose any greater trust than
-the mere writing of a letter. But, like Murdock Shaw and the rest of
-Ton-Nugget Camp, he, Raymond, did not know Canuck John's name. If Canuck
-John had ever told him, and he had a hazy recollection that the other
-once had done so, he had completely forgotten it. Of St. Marleau,
-however, Canuck John had spoken scores of times. That made a letter
-still possible, of course--to the postmaster of St. Marleau. But it was
-many years since Canuck John had left there; Canuck John could not write
-himself and therefore his people would have had no knowledge of his
-whereabouts, and to write the postmaster that a man known as Canuck
-John had died in Ton-Nugget Camp was, to say the least of it, open
-to confusing possibilities in view of the fact that in those many and
-intervening years Canuck John was not likely to have been the only one
-who had left his native village to seek a wider field. And since he,
-Raymond, was coming East in any event, he was rather glad than otherwise
-that for the moment he had a definite objective in view.
-
-Anyway, Canuck John had been a good sort--and that was all there was
-to it! And, meanwhile, this filled in, as it were, a hiatus in his own
-career, for he had not quite made up his mind exactly in what direction,
-or against whom specifically, he could pit his wits in future--to the
-best advantage to himself. One thing only was certain, henceforth he
-would be hampered by no maudlin consideration of ethics, such, for
-instance, as had enabled him to state truthfully to the Kid that he had
-never stacked a card in his life. To the winds with all that! He had had
-his lesson! Fish to his net, hereafter, would be all that came his way!
-If every man's hand was against him, his own would not remain palsied!
-For the moment he was in funds, flush, and well provided for; and for
-the moment it was St. Marleau and his dead friend's sorry legacy--to
-those who might be dead themselves! That remained to be seen! After
-that, as far as he was concerned, it was _sauve qui peut_, and--
-
-Monsieur Henri Mentone looked up--and, with no effort to conceal his
-displeasure, Monsieur Henri Mentone scowled. A young priest had entered
-the smoking compartment, and was now in the act of settling himself on
-the opposite seat.
-
-"Good evening," nodded the other pleasantly. "I think we have been
-travelling companions since Quebec." He produced a cigar, lighted it,
-and smiled. "It is not a very pleasant night, is it? There appears to be
-a very high wind."
-
-Raymond Chapelle rattled a newspaper out of his pocket, rattled it open
-brusquely--and retired behind it.
-
-"It appears to be windy!" he growled uninvitingly.
-
-He glanced at the remainder of his cigar. It was a very good cigar, and
-he did not care to sacrifice it by giving the other all the elbow
-room that the entire smoking compartment of the car afforded--as he,
-otherwise, would not have hesitated an instant to do! If his soul
-had nurtured any one especial hatred in its late period of bitter and
-blasphemous fury, it was a hatred of religion and all connected with
-it. He detested the sight of a priest. It always made him think of that
-night in Ton-Nugget Camp when memories had got the better of him. A
-priest of God! He hated them all. And he made no distinction as between
-creeds. They were all alike. They were Murdock Shaws! And he, if his
-father had had his way, would now be wearing a _soutane_, and dangling
-a crucifix from his neck, and sporting one of those damnable round hats
-like the man in front of him!
-
-"Do you know this country at all?" inquired the priest.
-
-"I do not," Raymond answered curtly from behind his paper.
-
-The other did not appear to notice the rebuff.
-
-"No more do I," he said engagingly. "I have never been below Quebec
-before, and I am afraid, unfortunately, that I am about to suffer for my
-ignorance. I am going to St. Marleau."
-
-Raymond lowered his paper, and for the first time gave the other more
-than a casual glance. He found his _vis--vis_ to be dark-eyed, of
-rather pleasant features--this he admitted grudgingly--and a young man
-of, he judged, about his own age.
-
-"What is the matter with St. Marleau?" Personal interest prompted him
-to ask the question; nothing could prompt him to infuse even a hint of
-affability into his tones.
-
-The priest shrugged his shoulders, and smiled whimsically.
-
-"The matter with St. Marleau is that it is on the bank of the river,
-and that the station is three miles away. I have been talking to the
-conductor. I did not know that before."
-
-Raymond had not known it before either. The information did not please
-him. He had taken it as a matter of course that the railroad would set
-him down at the village itself.
-
-"Well?" he prompted sourly.
-
-"It was what caused me to take a particular interest in the
-weather"--the priest waved his cigar philosophically. "I shall have to
-walk, I presume. I am not expected until to-morrow, and the conductor
-tells me there is nothing but a small station where we stop."
-
-Raymond would have to walk too.
-
-"It is unfortunate!" he observed sarcastically. "I should have thought
-that you would have provided against any such contingencies by making
-inquiries before you started."
-
-"That is true," admitted the priest simply. "I am entirely to blame, and
-I must not complain. I was pleasurably over-excited perhaps. It is my
-first charge, you see. The cur of St. Marleau, Father Allard, went away
-yesterday for a vacation--for the summer--his first in many years--he
-is quite an old man"--the young priest was waxing garrulous, and was no
-longer interesting. Raymond peered out of the car window with a new and
-personal concern in the weather. There was no rain, but the howl of the
-wind was distinctly audible over the roar of the train.
-
-"I was to have arrived to-morrow, as I said"--the priest was rattling
-on--"but having my preparations all completed to-day and nothing to
-detain me, I--well, as you see, I am here."
-
-Raymond was picturing realistically, and none too happily, a three-mile
-walk on a stormy night over a black, rutted country road. The prospect
-was not a soothing one.
-
-"Monsieur is perhaps a commercial traveller?" ventured the young cur
-amiably, by way of continuing the conversation.
-
-Raymond folded his paper deliberately, and replaced it in his pocket.
-There was a quick, twisted smile on his lips, but for the first time his
-voice was cordiality itself.
-
-"Oh, no," he said. "On the contrary, I make my living precisely as
-does Monsieur le Cur, except perhaps that I have not always the same
-certainty of success."
-
-"Ah!" The young priest leaned forward interestingly. "Then you----"
-
-"Yes," said Raymond, and now a snarl crept into his voice. "I let
-some one else toil for the money--while I hold out the hat!" He rose
-abruptly, and flung his cigar viciously in the general direction of the
-cuspidor. "I am a parasite on my fellow men, monsieur--a gambler," he
-said evenly, and walked to the door.
-
-Over his shoulder he caught the amazement on the young priest's face,
-then the quick, deep flush of indignation--and then the corridor shut
-him off from the other, and he chuckled savagely to himself.
-
-He passed on into the main body of the car, took his bag from the rack
-over the seat that he had occupied, and went on into the next car in the
-rear. The priest, he had noticed, had previously been occupying the
-same car as himself. He wanted no more of the other! And as for making
-a companion of him on the walk from the station to St. Marleau, he would
-sooner have walked with the devil! As a matter of fact, he was prepared
-to admit he would not have been wholly averse to the devil's company.
-But a priest of God! The cynical smile was back on his lips. They were
-all alike--he despised them all. But he nevertheless confessed to a
-certain commiseration; he was sorry for God--the devil was much less
-poorly served!
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV--ON THE ROAD TO ST. MARLEAU
-
-|RAYMOND descended from the train on the opposite side from the station
-platform. He proposed that Monsieur le Cur, _pro tem_., of St. Marleau,
-should have a start sufficient to afford a guarantee against the
-possibility of any further association with the other that night!
-
-A furious gust of wind eddied down the length of the train, caught at
-his travelling bag, and banged it violently against his knees. He swore
-earnestly to himself, as he picked his way further back across the
-siding tracks to guard against the chance of being seen from the
-platform when the train started on again. It was obviously not going to
-be a pleasant experience, that walk! It was bad enough where he stood,
-here on the trackside, somewhat sheltered by the train; in the open the
-wind promised to attain the ferocity of a young tornado!
-
-The train pulled out; and across the tracks a light glimmered from a
-window, and behind the light a building loomed up black and formless.
-The light, filtering out on the platform, disclosed two figures--the
-priest, and, evidently, the station agent.
-
-Raymond sat down on his bag and waited. It was intensely dark, and
-he was far enough away to be secure from observation. He grinned
-maliciously, as he watched a shadowy sort of pantomime in which the
-priest clutched and struggled continually with his _soutane_ as the wind
-kept wrapping it around his legs.
-
-The other might be less infatuated with skirts by the time St. Marleau
-was reached!
-
-The two figures moved down the platform together, and Raymond lost sight
-of them in the darkness. He rose, picked up his bag, walked a few yards
-along the track in the opposite direction to that which they had taken,
-crossed over the mainline, and clambered upon the platform. Here he
-stumbled over a trunk. The cur's, presumably! He continued on along the
-platform slowly--under the circumstances a little information from the
-station agent would not come in amiss. He jammed his slouch hat firmly
-down on his head, and yanked the brim savagely over his eyes against the
-wind. This was likely to prove considerably more than he had bargained
-for! Three miles of it! And for what! He began to call himself a fool.
-And then, the station agent returning alone from the lower end of the
-platform, head down, buffeting the wind, and evidently making for the
-cur's trunk to house it for the night, Raymond stepped forward and
-accosted the other.
-
-The man brought himself up with a jerk. Raymond drew the other into the
-shelter of the station wall. In the meagre light from the window a few
-yards away, he could make out the man's face but very indistinctly; and
-the other, in his turn, appeared equally at a disadvantage, save that,
-possibly, expecting it to be an acquaintance from the village, he found
-a stranger instead.
-
-"_'Cr nom!_" ejaculated the man in surprise. "And where did you come
-from?"
-
-"From the train--naturally," Raymond answered. "You were busy with some
-one, and I waited."
-
-"Yes, that is so! I see!" The other nodded his head. "It was Father
-Aubert, the young cur who is come to the village. He has but just
-started, and if you are going to St. Marleau, and hurry, you will have
-company over the road."
-
-"Never mind about him!" said Raymond shortly. "I am not looking for that
-kind of company!"
-
-"_Tiens!_" exclaimed the man a little blankly. "Not that kind of
-company--but that is strange! It is a bad night and a lonely walk--and,
-I do not know him of course, but he seemed very pleasant, the young
-cur."
-
-"I daresay," said Raymond, and shrugged his shoulders. "But I do not
-intend to walk at all if I can help it. Is there no horse to be had
-around here?"
-
-"But, no!"--the other's tones expressed mild reproof at the question.
-"If there had been, I would have procured it for the cur. There is
-nothing. It is as near to the village as anywhere."
-
-"And that is three miles!" muttered Raymond irritably.
-
-"It is three miles by the road, true, monsieur; but the village itself
-is not nearly so far. There is a short cut. If you take the path that
-leads straight ahead where the road turns off to the left to circle the
-woods, it will bring you to the brow of the hill overlooking the village
-and the river, and you will come out just where the road swings in again
-at the tavern. You save at least a mile."
-
-Raymond brightened.
-
-"Ah! A tavern!" he cried. "That is better! I was beginning to think the
-cursed----"
-
-"But--wait!" the man laughed suddenly. "It is not what you think! I
-should not advise you to go there."
-
-"No?" inquired Raymond, "and why not?"
-
-"She is an old hag, an _excommunie_, old Mother Blondin, who lives
-there--and her son, who is come back for the past week from God knows
-where with a scar all over his ugly face, is no better. It is not a
-tavern at all. That is a name we have for it amongst ourselves. We call
-it the tavern because it is said that she makes her own _whiskey-blanc_
-and sells it on the sly, and that there are some who buy it--though when
-her son is back she could not very well have enough for any customers.
-He has been drunk for a week, and he is a devil."
-
-"Your Mother Blondin is evidently no fool!" observed Raymond ironically.
-"And so it is said there are some who buy it--eh? And in turn I suppose
-she could buy out every farmer in the village! She should have money,
-your Mother Blondin! Hers is a profitable business."
-
-"Yes," said the other. "For me, that is the way I look at it. It is
-gossip that her stocking is well lined; but I believe the gossip. It is
-perhaps well for her if it is so, for she will need it. She is getting
-old and does not see very well, though, _bon Dieu_, she is still sharp
-enough with her wits! But"--his shoulders lifted in a shrug--"the way to
-the village, eh? Well, whether you take the road or the path, you arrive
-at Mother Blondin's. You go down the hill from there, and the village is
-on each side of you along the bank of the river. Ask at the first house,
-and they will show you the way to Madame Dussault's--that is the only
-place to go. She keeps a boarding house whenever there is anybody to
-board, for it is not often that any stranger comes to St. Marleau. Are
-you going to stay long?"
-
-"I don't know," said Raymond pleasantly--and ignored the implied
-invitation for further confidences.
-
-"Well, if you like," offered the station agent, "you can leave your bag
-here, and it can go over with the cure's trunk in the morning. He said
-he would send somebody for it then. You won't find it easy carrying that
-bag a night like this."
-
-"Oh, it's only a small one; I guess I can manage it all right," said
-Raymond lightly. He extended his hand--the priest was far enough along
-by now so that he would not overtake the other; and, though it was still
-early, not much after eight o'clock, the countryside was not given to
-keeping late hours, and, if he was to reach St. Marleau before this
-Dussault household, for instance, had retired for the night, it was time
-he started. "Much obliged for the information! Goodnight!" he smiled,
-and picked up his bag--and a moment later, the station behind him, was
-battling in the face of furious wind gusts along the road.
-
-It was very dark; and the road was execrable, full of ruts and hollows
-into which he was continually stumbling. He had a flashlight in his bag;
-but, bad as the walking was, it was, after all, he decided, the lesser
-of the two evils--if he used the flashlight, he ran a very large risk of
-inviting the companionship of the priest ahead of him! Also, he had not
-gone very far before he heartily regretted that he had not foregone the
-few little conveniences that the bag contained, and had left the thing
-behind. The wind, as it was, threatened to relieve him of it a score of
-times. Occasionally he halted and turned his back, and stood still for a
-breathing spell. His mood, as he went along, became one that combined
-a sullen stubbornness to walk ten miles, if necessary, once he had
-started, and an acrimonious and savage jeer at himself for having ever
-been fool enough to bring about his present discomfiture.
-
-Finally, however, he reached the turn of the road referred to by the
-station agent, and here he stood for a moment debating with himself the
-advisability of taking the short cut. His eyes grown accustomed to the
-darkness, he could distinguish his surroundings with some distinctness,
-and he made out a beaten track that led off in the same direction which,
-until then, he had been following; but also, a little beyond this
-again, he made out a black stretch of wooded land. He shook his head
-doubtfully. The short cut was a mere path at best, and he might, or
-might not, be able to follow it through the trees. If he lost it, and it
-would be altogether too easy a thing to do, his predicament would not
-be enviable. It was simply a question of whether the mile he might
-save thereby was worth the risk. He shook his head again--this time
-decisively.
-
-"I'm not much on the 'straight and narrow' anyhow!" he muttered
-facetiously--and started on again, following the road.
-
-Gradually the road and the trees began to converge; and presently,
-the road swerving again, this time sharply toward the river, he found
-himself travelling through the woods, and injected into the midst of
-what seemed like the centre of some unearthly and demoniacal chorus
-rehearsing its parts--the wind shrieked through the upper branches of
-the trees, and moaned disconsolately through the lower ones; it cried
-and sobbed; it screamed, and mourned, and sighed; and in the darkness,
-still blacker shapes, like weird, beckoning arms, the limbs swayed to
-and fro. And now and then there came a loud, ominous crackle, and then a
-crash, as a branch, dried and rotten, came hurtling to the ground.
-
-"Damn it," confessed Raymond earnestly to himself, "I don't like this! I
-wish St. Marleau was where Canuck John is now!"
-
-He quickened his pace--or, rather, tried to do so; but it was much
-blacker here than out in the open, and besides the road now appeared to
-be insanely full of twists and turns, and in spite of his efforts his
-progress was no faster.
-
-It seemed interminable, never-ending. He went on and on. A branch
-crashed down louder than before somewhere ahead of him. He snarled in
-consonance with the wind-shrieks and the wind-moans that now came to
-hold a personal malevolence in their pandemonium for himself. His coat
-caught once on a projecting branch and was torn. He cursed Canuck John,
-and cursed himself with abandon. And then abruptly, as the road twisted
-again, he caught the glimmer of a light through the trees--and his eyes
-upon the light, rather than upon the ground to pick his way, he stumbled
-suddenly and pitched forward over something that was uncannily soft and
-yielding to the touch.
-
-With a startled cry, Raymond picked himself up. It was the body of a man
-sprawled across the road. He wrenched open his bag, and, whipping out
-his flashlight, turned it upon the other.
-
-The man lay upon his back, motionless, inert; the white, ghastly face,
-blood-streaked, was twisted at a sharp angle to the body, disclosing a
-gaping wound in the head that extended from the temple back across
-the skull--and a yard away, mute testimony to its tragic work, lay the
-rotten limb of a tree, devoid of leaves, perhaps ten feet in length and
-of the thickness of one's two fists, its end jagged and splintered where
-it had snapped away from its parent trunk.
-
-It was the priest--Father Aubert, the young cur of St. Marleau.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V--THE "MURDER"
-
-|RAYMOND stooped to the other's side. He called the man's name--there
-was no answer. He lifted the priest's head--it sagged limply back again.
-He felt quickly for the heart beat--there was no sign of life. And then
-Raymond stood up again.
-
-It was the nature of the man that, the sudden shock of his discovery
-once over, he should be cool and unperturbed. His nerves were not easily
-put to rout under any circumstances, and a life in the Great North,
-where the raw edges were turned only too often, left him, if not
-calloused, at least composed and, in a philosophical way, unmoved at the
-sight before him.
-
-"Tough luck--even for a priest!" he muttered, not irreverently. "The
-man's dead, right enough."
-
-He glanced around him, and his eyes fixed again on the glimmer of
-light through the trees. That was the tavern undoubtedly--old Mother
-Blondin's, the ex_communie_. He shrugged his shoulders, and a grim
-smile flickered across his lips. She too had her quarrel with the
-church, but even so she would hardly refuse temporary sanctuary to a
-dead man. The priest couldn't be left here lying in the road, and if
-Mother Blondin's son was not too drunk to help carry the body to
-the house, it would solve the problem until word could be got to the
-village.
-
-He took up his bag--he could not be cumbered with that when he returned
-to get the priest--and, the trees sparser here on what was obviously the
-edge of the woods, with the window light to guide him and his flashlight
-to open the way, he left the road and began to run directly toward the
-light.
-
-A hundred yards brought him out into a clearing--and then to his disgust
-he discovered that, apart possibly from another rent or two in his
-clothing, he had gained nothing by leaving the road. It had evidently
-swung straight in toward the house from a point only a few yards further
-on from where he had left the priest, for he was now alongside of it
-again!
-
-He grinned derisively at himself, slipped his flashlight into his
-pocket--and, on the point of starting toward the house, which, with only
-a small yard in front of it, was set practically on the edge of the road
-itself, he halted abruptly. There was only one lighted window that he
-could see, and this was now suddenly darkened by a shadowy form from
-within, and indistinctly he could make out a face pressed close against
-the window pane.
-
-Raymond instinctively remained motionless. The face held there, peering
-long and intently out into the night. It was rather strange! His own
-approach could not have been heard, for the howl of the wind precluded
-any possibility of that; and neither could he be seen out here in the
-darkness. What was it that attracted and seemed to fascinate the watcher
-at the window? Mechanically, he turned his head to look behind and
-around him. There was nothing--only the trees swaying in the woods;
-the scream and screech, and the shrill whistling of the wind; and, in
-addition now, a rumbling bass, low, yet perfectly distinct, the sullen
-roar of beating waves. He looked back at the window--the face was gone.
-
-Raymond moved forward curiously. There was no curtain on the window,
-and a step or two nearer enabled him to see within. It was a typical
-bare-floored room of the _habitant_ class of smaller house that combined
-a living room and kitchen in one, the front door opening directly upon
-it. There was a stove at one end, with a box of cordwood beside it;
-drawn against the wall was a table, upon which stood a lighted lamp;
-and a little distance from the table, also against the wall, was an old,
-gray-painted, and somewhat battered _armoire_, whose top was strewn with
-crockeryware and glass dishes--there was little else in evidence, save a
-few home-made chairs with thong-laced seats.
-
-Raymond's brows gathered in a puzzled frown. Diagonally across the room
-from the window and directly opposite the stove was a closed door, and
-here, back turned, the man who had been peering out of the window--for
-the man was the only occupant of the room--was crouched with his ear
-against the panel. His bewilderment growing, Raymond watched the other.
-The man straightened up after a moment, faced around into the room, and,
-swaying slightly, a vicious smile of satisfaction on his lips, moved
-stealthily in the direction of the table.
-
-And now Raymond had no difficulty in recognising the man from the
-station agent's vivid, if cursory, description. It was Mother Blondin's
-son. A devil, the agent had called the other--and the man looked it! An
-ugly white scar straggled from cheek bone to twisted lip, the eyes were
-narrow and close set, the hair shaggy, and the long arms dangling from a
-powerful frame made Raymond think of a gorilla.
-
-Reaching the table, the man paused, looked furtively all around the
-room, and again appeared to be listening intently; then he stretched out
-his hand and turned the lamp half down.
-
-Raymond's frown deepened. The other was undoubtedly more or less drunk,
-but that did not explain the peculiar and, as it were, ominous way
-in which he was acting. What was the man up to? And where was Mother
-Blondin?
-
-The man moved down the room in the direction of the stove; and, the
-light dim now, Raymond stepped close to the window for a better view.
-The man halted at the end of the room, once more looked quickly all
-about him, gazed fixedly for an instant at the closed door where
-previously he had held his ear to the panel--and reached suddenly up
-above his head, the fingers of both hands working and clawing in a
-sort of mad haste at an interstice in the wall where the rough-squared
-timbers came imperfectly together.
-
-And then Raymond smiled sardonically. He understood now. It was old
-Mother Blondin's "stocking"! She had perhaps not been as generous as the
-son considered she might have been! The man was engaged in the filial
-occupation of robbing his own mother!
-
-"Worthy offspring--if the old dame doesn't belie her reputation!"
-muttered Raymond--and stepped to the front door. "However, it's an ill
-wind that blows nobody good, and, if the priest suffered, Mother Blondin
-can at least thank my interruption incident thereto for the salvage of
-her cash." He opened the door and walked in coolly. "Good evening!" he
-said pleasantly.
-
-The man whirled from the wall--and with a scream, half of pain and half
-of startled, furious surprise, was jerked back against the wall again.
-His hand was caught as though in a trap. The hiding place had quite
-evidently been intended by Mother Blondin for no larger a hand than her
-own! The man had obviously wormed and wriggled his hand in between the
-timbers--and his hand would not come out with any greater ease than it
-had gone in! He wrenched at it, snarling and cursing now, stamping with
-his feet, and hurling his maledictions at Raymond's head.
-
-"It is not my fault, my friend," said Raymond calmly. "Shall I help
-you?"
-
-He started forward--and stopped halfway across the room. The man had
-torn his hand loose, sending a rain of coin clinking to the floor, and,
-fluttering after it like falling leaves, a score or two of banknotes
-as well; and now, leaping around, he snatched up a heavy piece of the
-cordwood, and, swinging it about his head, his face working murderously,
-sprang toward Raymond.
-
-The bag dropped from Raymond's hand, and his face hardened. He had not
-bargained for this, but if----
-
-With a snarl and an oath the man was upon him; the cordwood whistled in
-its downward sweep, aimed full at his head. He parried the blow with his
-forearm, and, with a lightning-like movement, side-stepped and sent his
-right fist crashing to the other's jaw.
-
-It staggered the man for an instant--but only for an instant. Bellowing
-with rage, dropping the cordwood, heedless of the blows that Raymond
-battered into his face, by sheer bulk and weight he closed, his arms
-circling Raymond's neck, his fingers feeling for a throat-hold.
-
-Around the room they staggered, swaying, lurching. The man was half
-drunk, and, caught in the act of thievery, his fury was demoniacal.
-Again and again Raymond tried to throw the other off. The man was
-too big, too powerful for close quarters, and his only chance was an
-opportunity to use his fists. They panted heavily, the breath of the one
-hot on the other's cheek; and then, as they swung, Raymond was conscious
-that the door of the rear room was open, and that a woman was standing
-on the threshold. It was only a glance he got--of an old hag-like face,
-of steel-rimmed spectacles, of tumbling and dishevelled gray hair--the
-man's fingers at last were tightening like a vise around his throat.
-
-But the other, too, had seen the woman.
-
-"_Voleur!_ Thief!" he yelled hoarsely. "Smash him on the head with the
-stick, mother, while I hold him!"
-
-"You devil!" gritted Raymond--and with a wrench, a twist, his strength
-massed for the one supreme effort, he tore himself loose, hurling the
-other backward and away from him.
-
-There was a crash of breaking glass as the man smashed into the
-_armoire_; a wild laugh from the woman in the doorway--and, for the
-first time, a cry from Raymond's lips. The man snatched up a revolver
-from the top of the _armoire_.
-
-But quick as the other was, Raymond was quicker as he sprang and
-clutched at the man's hand. His face was sternly white now with the
-consciousness that he was fighting for no less than his life. Here,
-there, now across the room, now back again they reeled and stumbled,
-struggling for possession of the weapon, as Raymond strove to tear it
-from his antagonist's grasp. And now the woman, screaming, ran forward
-and picked up the piece of cordwood, and circling them, screaming still,
-aimed her blows at Raymond.
-
-One struck him on the head, dazing him a little... his brain began to
-whirl... he could not wrench the revolver from the man's hand... it
-seemed as though he had been trying through an eternity... his hands
-seemed to be losing their strength... another desperate jerk from
-the other like that and his hold would be gone, the revolver in the
-unfettered possession of this whisky-maddened brute, whose lips, like
-fangs, were flecked with slaver, in whose eyes, bloodshot, burned the
-light of murder... his fingers were slipping from their grip, and----
-
-There was a blinding flash; the roar of the report; the revolver
-clattered to the floor; a great, ungainly bulk seemed to Raymond to
-waver and sway before him in most curious fashion, then totter and crash
-with an impact that shook the house--or was it that ghastly, howling
-wind!--to the ground.
-
-Raymond reeled back against the _armoire_, and hung there gasping,
-panting for his breath, sweeping his hand again and again across his
-forehead. He was abominably dizzy. The room was swinging around and
-around; there were two figures, now on the ceiling, now on the floor--a
-man who lay flat on his back with his arms and legs grotesquely
-extended, and whose shirt was red-splotched; and a hag with streaming
-gray hair, who rocked and crooned over the other.
-
-"Dead! Dead! Dead!"--the wail rose into a high and piercing falsetto.
-The hag was on her feet and running wildly for the front door. "Murder!
-Thief! Murder! Murder!"
-
-The horrible screeching died away; and a gust of wind, swirling in
-through the door that blew open after the woman, took up the refrain:
-"Murder--murder--_murder!_"
-
-His head ached and swam. He was conscious that he should set his wits at
-work, that he should think--that somehow he was in peril. He groped his
-way unsteadily to where his bag lay on the floor. As he reached it, the
-wind blew the lamp out. He felt around inside the bag, found his flask,
-and drank greedily.
-
-The stimulant cleared his brain. He stood up, and stared around him in
-the darkness. His mind was active enough now--grimly active. If he were
-caught, he would swing for murder! He had only acted in self-defence, he
-had not even fired the shot, the revolver had gone off in the man's
-own hand--but there wasn't a chance for him, if he were caught. The
-old hag's testimony that he had come there as a thief--that was what
-undoubtedly she believed, and undoubtedly what she would swear--would
-damn him. And--cursed irony!--that conversation with the station
-agent, innocent enough then, would corroborate her now! Nor had he any
-reputation to fall back upon to bolster up his story if he faced the
-issue and told the truth. Reputation! He could not even give a plausible
-account of himself without making matters worse. A gambler from the
-Klondike! The _rou_ of Montreal! Would that save him!
-
-His only hope was to run for it--and at once. It could not be very far
-to the village, and it would not be long before that precious old hag
-had alarmed the community and returned with the villagers at her heels.
-But where would he go? There were no trains! It would be a man-hunt
-through the woods, and with so meagre a start that sooner or later they
-would get him. And even if he evaded them at first he would have no
-chance to get very far away from that locality, and ultimately he would
-have to reckon on the arrival of the police. It was probable that old
-Mother Blondin could not recognise him again, for the light had been
-turned down and she was partially blind; and he was certain that the
-station agent would not know his face again either--but both could, and
-would, supply a general description of his dress, appearance and
-build that would serve equally as well to apprehend him in that thinly
-populated country where, under such circumstances, to be even a stranger
-was sufficient to invite suspicion.
-
-Well, if to run for it was his only chance, he would take it! He stooped
-for his bag, and, in the act, stood suddenly motionless in a rigid sort
-of way. No! There was perhaps another plan! It seemed to Raymond that
-he held his breath in suspense until his brain should pass judgment upon
-it. The priest! The dead priest, only a little way off out there on the
-road! No--it was not visionary, nor wild, nor mad. If they _found_ the
-man that they supposed had murdered the old woman's son, they would
-not search any further. That was absurdly obvious! The priest was not
-expected until to-morrow. The only person who knew that the priest had
-arrived, and who knew of his, Raymond's, arrival, was the station agent.
-But the quarry once run to earth, there would be no reason for anybody,
-as might otherwise be the case in a far-flung pursuit, going to the
-station on a night like this. The priest's arrival therefore would not
-become known to the villagers until the next morning at the earliest,
-and quite probably not until much later, when some one from the village
-should drive over to meet the train by which he was expected to arrive.
-As a minimum, therefore, that gave him ten or twelve hours' start--and
-with ten or twelve hours free from pursuit, he could take very good care
-of the "afterwards"! Yes, it was the way! The only way! From what
-the priest had said in the train, it was evident that he was a total
-stranger here, and so, being unknown, the deception would not be
-discovered until the station agent told his story. Furthermore, the
-wound in the priest's head from the falling limb of the tree would be
-attributed to the blow the old hag had struck _him_ on the head with the
-cordwood! The inference, plausible enough, would be that he had run from
-the house wounded, only to drop at last to the ground on the spot
-where the priest, _dressed as the murderer_, was found! And
-besides--yes--there was other evidence he could add! The revolver, for
-instance!
-
-Quick now, his mind made up, Raymond snatched the flashlight from his
-pocket, swept the ray around the floor, located the weapon, and, running
-to it, picked it up and put it in his pocket.
-
-Every second was counting now. It might be five, or ten, or fifteen
-minutes before they got back from the village, he did not know--but
-every moment was priceless. There was still work to be done out there on
-the road, even after he was through here!
-
-He was across the room now by the rear wall, gathering up the coins
-and bills that the dead man had scattered on the floor. These, like the
-revolver, he transferred to his pocket. A thief, had been their cry.
-That was the motive! Well, he would corroborate it! There would be no
-mistake--until to-morrow--about their having found the guilty man!
-
-His hand was a slimmer hand than Blondin's--it slipped easily into the
-chink between the timbers. It was like a hollow bowl inside, and there
-was more money there. He scooped it out. Twice his hand went in again,
-until the hiding place was empty; and then, running back across the
-room, he grabbed up his bag, and rushed from the house.
-
-An instant he paused to listen as he reached the road; but there was
-only the howl of the storm, no sound that he could hear as yet from the
-direction of the village--though, full of ominous possibilities, he did
-not know how far away the village was!
-
-He ran on again at top speed, flashing his way along with his light, the
-wind at his back aiding him now. It would not matter if a stray gleam
-were seen by any one, if he could only complete his work in time--it
-would only be proof, instead of inference, that the murderer had run
-from the house along the road to the spot where he was found.
-
-He reached the priest, set down his bag, and, taking up the broken limb
-of the tree, carried it ten yards away around the turn of the road, and
-flung it in amongst the trees; then he was back once more, and bending
-over the priest. He worked swiftly now, but coolly and with grim
-composure, removing the priest's outer garments. He noted with intense
-relief that there was no blood on the clerical collar--that the blood,
-due to the twisted position of the other's head, had trickled from the
-cheek directly to the ground. It would have been an awkward thing--blood
-on the collar!
-
-It was not easy work. The limp form seemed a ton-weight in his arms, as
-he lifted it now this way, now that, to get off the other's clothes. And
-at times he recoiled from it, though the stake he was playing for was
-his life. It was unnerving business, and the hideous moaning of the wind
-made it worse. And mostly he must work by the sense of touch, for he
-could not hold the flashlight and still use both hands. But it was done
-at last, and now he took off his own clothes, and hastily donned the
-priest's.
-
-He must be careful now--a single slip, something overlooked in his
-pockets perhaps might ruin everything, and the ten or twelve hours'
-start, that was all he asked for, would be lost; but, equally, the
-pockets must not be too bare! He was hurriedly going through his
-discarded garments now. Mother Blondin's money and the revolver, of
-course, must be found there.
-
-The cardcase, yes, that could not do any harm... there were no letters,
-no one ever wrote to him... the trifling odds and ends must be left in
-the pockets too, they lent colour if nothing else... but his own money
-was quite a different matter, and he had the big sum in bills of large
-denominations with him that he had exchanged for the pokes of gold dust
-which he had brought from the Yukon. He tucked this money securely away
-under the _soutane_ he was now wearing, and once more bent over the
-priest.
-
-He had now to dress the priest in his, Raymond's, clothes. It was not
-readily accomplished; it was even more difficult than it had been
-to undress the man; and besides, as he worked now, he found himself
-fighting to maintain his coolness against a sort of reckless haste to
-have done with it that was creeping upon him. It seemed that he had been
-hours at the work, that with every second now the villagers in full cry
-must come upon him. Curse it, could he never button that collar and knot
-that tie! Why did the man's head wobble like that! The vest now! Now the
-coat!
-
-He stood up finally at the end, and flirted his hand across his brow.
-His forehead was clammy wet. He shivered a little; then, lips tight, he
-pulled himself together. He must make certain, absolutely certain that
-he had done nothing, or left nothing undone to rob him of those few
-precious hours that were so necessary to his escape.
-
-He nodded after a moment in a kind of ghastly approval--he had even hung
-the other's crucifix around his neck! There remained only the exchange
-of hats, and--yes, the bag--was there anything in the bag that would
-betray him? He dropped his own hat on the ground a yard away from the
-priest's head where the other's hat had rolled, picked up the priest's
-hat, and put it on--then bent down over the bag.
-
-He lifted his head suddenly, straining his ears to listen. What was
-that! Only the howl and unearthly moaning of the wind? It must have
-been, and his nerves were becoming over-strung, for the wind was blowing
-from the direction of the village, and it seemed as though the sound he
-had thought he heard, that he could not have defined, had come from the
-other direction. But the bag! Was there anything in it that he should
-not leave? He turned the flashlight into its interior, began to rummage
-through its contents--and then, kneeling there, it was as though he were
-suddenly frozen into that posture, bereft of all power of movement.
-
-It was only a lantern--but it seemed as though he were bathed in
-a blistering flood of light that poured full upon him, that burst
-suddenly, without warning, from around the turn of the road in the
-direction away from the village. He felt the colour ebb from his face;
-he knew a sickly consciousness of doom. He was caught--caught in the
-priest's clothes! Shadowy outlined there, was a horse and wagon. A
-woman, carrying the lantern, was running toward him--a man followed
-behind. The wind rose in demoniacal derision--the damnable wind that,
-responsible for everything that night, had brought this crowning
-disaster upon him!
-
-A girl's voice rang out anxiously:
-
-"What is it? Oh, what is it? What has happened?" Raymond felt himself
-grow unnaturally calm. He leaned solicitously over the priest's form.
-
-"I do not know"--he was speaking with sober concern. "I found this man
-lying here as I came along. He has a wound of some sort in his head, and
-I am afraid that he is dead."
-
-The man, stepping forward, crossed himself hurriedly.
-
-The girl, with a sharp little cry, knelt down on the other side of the
-priest--and in the lantern's glimmer Raymond caught a glimpse of great
-dark eyes, of truant hair, wind-tossed, that blew about a young, sweet
-face that was full now of troubled sympathy.
-
-"And you," she said quickly; "you are the new cur, monsieur. The
-station agent told us you had come, and we drove fast, my uncle and I,
-to try and catch up with you."
-
-Raymond's eyes were on the priest's form. There was no need to simulate
-concern now, it was genuine enough, and it was as if something cold and
-icy were closing around his heart. He was not sure--great God, it was
-not possible!--but he thought--he thought the priest had moved. If that
-were so, he was doubly trapped! Cries came suddenly from the direction
-of the village, from the direction of old Mother Blondin's house. He
-heard himself acknowledging her remark with grave deliberation.
-
-"Yes," he said, "I am Father Aubert."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI--THE JAWS OF THE TRAP
-
-|VOLEUR! Thief! Murder! Murder!"--it rose a high, piercing shriek, and
-the wind seemed to catch up the words and eddy them around, and toss
-them hither and thither until the storm and the night and the woods
-were full of ghouls chanting and screaming and gibbering their hideous
-melody: "_Voleur!_ Thief! Murder! Murder!"
-
-The girl, from the other side of the prostrate priest, rose in quick
-alarm to her feet, and lifted the lantern high above her head to peer
-down the road.
-
-"Listen!" she cried. "What does it mean? See the lights there! Listen!"
-
-The lantern lifted now, Raymond could no longer see the priest's face.
-He slipped his hand in desperately under the man's vest. He had felt
-there once before for the heart beat when he had first stumbled upon the
-other. In God's name, where was his nerve! He needed it now more than he
-had ever needed it in all his dare-devil career before. He had _thought_
-the priest had moved. If the man were alive, he, Raymond, was not only
-in a thousandfold worse case than if he had run for it and taken his
-chances--he had forfeited whatever chance there might have been. The
-mere fact that he had attempted to disguise himself, to assume the
-priest's garments as a means of escape, damned him utterly, irrevocably
-upon the spot. His hand pressed hard against the other's body. Yes,
-there was life there, a faint fluttering of the heart. No--no, it was
-only himself--a tremor in his own fingers. And then a miserable sense of
-disaster fell upon him. The wind howled, those shrieks still rang out,
-there came hoarse shouts and the pound of running feet, but above it
-all, distinct, like a knell of doom, came a low moan from the priest
-upon the ground.
-
-Sharply, as though it were being suddenly seared and burned, Raymond
-snatched away his hand; and his hand struck against something hard,
-and mechanically he gripped at it. The man was _alive!_ The glare of
-lanterns, many of them, flashed from the turn of the road. The village
-was upon the scene. The impulse seized him to run. There was the horse
-and wagon standing there. His lips tightened. Madness! That would be but
-the act of a fool! It was his wits, his brain, his nerve that was his
-only hope now--that cool, callous nerve that had never failed him in a
-crisis before.
-
-A form, unkempt, with gray, streaming, dishevelled hair, rushed upon him
-and the priest, and thrust a lantern into the faces of them both. It was
-the old hag, old Mother Blondin.
-
-"Here he is! Here he is!" she screamed. "It is he!"--her voice kept
-rising until, in a torrent of blasphemous invective, it attained an
-ear-splitting falsetto.
-
-It seemed to Raymond that a hundred voices were all talking at once;
-that the villagers now, as they closed in and clustered around him, were
-as a multitude in their numbers; and there was light now, a blaze of it,
-from a host of accursed lanterns jiggling up and down, each striving to
-thrust itself a little further forward than its fellow. And then upon
-Raymond settled a sort of grim, cold, ironical composure. The stakes
-were very high.
-
-"If you want your life, play for it!" urged a voice within him.
-
-The old hag, in an abandoned paroxysm of grief, rage and fury, was
-cursing, and shaking her lantern and her doubled fist at the priest;
-and, not content with that, she now began to kick viciously at the
-unconscious form.
-
-Raymond rose from his knees, and laid one hand quietly upon her arm.
-
-"Peace, my daughter!" he said softly. "You are in the presence of Holy
-Church, and in the presence perhaps of death."
-
-She whirled upon him, her wrinkled old face, if possible, contorted more
-furiously than before.
-
-"Holy Church!" she raved. "Holy Church! Ha, ha! What have I to do with
-Holy Church that kicked me from its doors! Will Holy Church give me back
-my son? And what have you to do with this, you smooth-faced hypocrite!
-It is the law I want, not you to stand there and mumble while you smugly
-paw your crucifix!"
-
-It came quick and sharp--an angry sibilant murmur from the crowd, a
-threatening forward movement. Mechanically, Raymond's fingers fell away
-from the crucifix. It was the crucifix, dangling from his neck, that
-he had unconsciously grasped as he had snatched away his hand from the
-priest's body--and it was the crucifix that, equally unconscious of it,
-he had been grasping ever since. Strange that in his agitation he should
-have grasped at a crucifix! Strange that the act and his unconscious
-poise, as he held the crucifix, should have lent verisimilitude to the
-part he played, the rle in which he sought sanctuary from death!
-
-His hand raised again. The murmuring ceased; the threatening stir was
-instantly checked. And then Raymond took the old woman by the shoulders,
-and with kindly force placed her in the arms of the two nearest men.
-
-"She does not know what she is saying," he said gently. "The poor woman
-is distraught. Take her home. I do not understand, but she speaks of her
-son being given back to her, and----"
-
-"It is a murder, _mon pre_," broke in one of the men excitedly. "She
-came running to the village a few minutes ago to tell us that her
-son had been killed. It is this man here in the road who did it. She
-recognises him, you see. There is the wound in his head, and she said
-she struck him there with a piece of wood while he was struggling with
-her son."
-
-The old woman was in hysteria now, alternately sobbing and laughing, but
-no longer struggling.
-
-"Murdered! Her son--murdered!" Raymond gasped in a startled way. "Ah,
-then, be very good to her! It is no wonder that she is beside herself."
-
-They led her laughing and crying away.
-
-"The law! The law! I demand the law on him!"--her voice, now guttural,
-now shrill, quavering, virulent, out of control, floated back. "_Sacr
-nom de Dieu_, a life for a life, he is the murderer of my son!"
-
-And now, save for the howling of the storm, a silence fell upon the
-scene. Raymond glanced quickly about him. What was it now, what was
-it--ah, he understood! They were waiting for _him_. As though it were
-the most obvious thing in the world to do, as though no one would dream
-of doing anything else, the villagers, collectively and singly, laid
-the burden of initiative upon his clerically garbed shoulders. Raymond
-dropped upon his knees again beside the priest, pretending to make a
-further examination of the other's wound. He could gain a moment or two
-that way, a moment in which to think. The man, though still unconscious,
-was moaning constantly now. At any moment the priest might regain his
-senses. One thing was crucial, vital--in some way he must manouvre so
-that the other should not be removed from his own immediate surveillance
-until he could find some loophole of escape. Once the man began to talk,
-unless he, Raymond, were beside the other to stop the man's mouth, or at
-least to act as interpreter for the other's ramblings--the man was sure
-to ramble at first, or at least people could be made to believe so--he,
-Raymond, would be cornered like a rat in a trap, and, more to be feared
-even than the law, the villagers, in their fury at the sacrilege they
-would consider he had put upon them in the desecration of their priest,
-would show him scant ceremony and little mercy.
-
-He was cool enough now, quite cool--with the grim coolness of a man who
-realises that his life depends upon his keeping his head. Still he bent
-over the priest. He heard a girl's voice speaking rapidly--that would
-be the girl with the great dark eyes who had come upon him with the
-lantern, for there was no other woman here now since he had got rid
-temporarily of that damnable old hag.
-
-"... It is Father Aubert, the new cur. Labbe, at the station, told us
-he had arrived unexpectedly. We have brought his trunk that he was going
-to send for in the morning, and we drove fast hoping to catch up with
-him so that he would not have to walk all the way. We found him here
-kneeling beside that man there, that he had stumbled over as he came
-along. Labbe told us, too, of the other. He said the man seemed anxious
-to avoid Monsieur le Cur, and hung around the station until Father
-Aubert had got well started toward St. Marleau. He must have taken the
-path to the tavern, or he would not have been here ahead of Monsieur le
-Cur, and----"
-
-Raymond reached into the open travelling bag on the ground beside him,
-took out the first article coming to hand that would at all serve the
-purpose, a shirt, and, tearing it, made pretense at binding up the
-priest's head.
-
-"My thanks to you, mademoiselle!" he muttered soberly under his breath.
-"If it were not for the existence of that path----!" He shrugged his
-shoulders, and, his head lowered, a twisted smile flickered upon his
-lips.
-
-The girl had ceased speaking. They were all clustered around him,
-watching him. Short exclamations, bearing little evidence of good will
-toward the unconscious man, came from first one and then another.
-
-"... _Meurtrier!_... He will hang in any case! ... The better for him if
-he dies there!... What does it matter, the blackguard!..."
-
-Raymond rose to his feet.
-
-"No," he said reprovingly. "It is not for us to think in that way. For
-us, there is only a very badly wounded man here who needs our help and
-care. We will give that first, and leave the rest in the hands of those
-who have the right to judge him if he lives. See now, some of you lift
-him as carefully as possible into the wagon. I will hold his head on my
-lap, and we will get to the village as quickly as we can."
-
-It was a strange procession then that began to wend its way toward the
-village of St. Marleau. The wagon proved to be a sort of buckboard, and
-Raymond, clambering upon it, sitting with his back propped against the
-seat, held the priest's head upon his knees. Upon the seat itself
-the girl and her uncle resumed their places. With the unconscious man
-stretched out at full length there was no room for the trunk; but, eager
-to be of service to their new cur, so kind and gentle and tender to
-even a criminal for whom the law held nothing in reserve but the gallows
-and a rope, who was tolerant even of Mother Blondin in her blasphemies,
-the villagers quarrelled amongst themselves for the privilege of
-carrying it.
-
-They moved slowly--that the wounded man might not be too severely
-jarred. Constantly the numbers around the wagon were augmented. Women
-began to appear amongst them. The entire village was aroused. St.
-Marleau in all its history had known no such excitement before. A murder
-in St. Marleau--and the murderer caught, and dying they said, was being
-brought back to the village in the arms of the young cur, who had,
-a cause even for added excitement, arrived that evening instead of
-to-morrow as had been expected. Tongues clacked and wagged. It was like
-a furious humming accompaniment to the howling of the wind. But out of
-respect to the cur who held the dying man on his knees, they did not
-press too closely about the wagon.
-
-They passed the "tavern," which was lighted now in every window, and
-some left the wagon at this point and went to the "tavern," and others
-who had collected at the "tavern" joined the wagon. They began to
-descend the hill. And now along the road below, to right and left,
-lights twinkled from every house. They met people coming up the hill.
-There were even children now.
-
-Head bent over the priest, that twisted smile was back on Raymond's
-lips. The man moaned at intervals, but showed no further sign of
-returning consciousness. Would the other live--or die? Raymond's hands,
-hidden under the priest's head, were clenched. It was a question of his
-own life or the other's now--wasn't it? What hell-inspired ingenuity had
-flung him into this hideous maze in which at every twist and turn, as
-he sought some avenue of escape, he but found, instead, the way barred
-against him, his retreat cut off, and peril, like some soulless,
-immutable thing, closing irrevocably down upon him! He dared not leave
-the priest; he dared not surrender the other for an instant--lest
-consciousness should return. _But if the man died!_
-
-Raymond's face, as a ghastly temptation came, was as white as the
-upturned face between his knees. If the man died it would be simple
-enough. For a few days, for whatever time was necessary, he could play
-the rle of priest, and then in some way--his brain was not searching
-out details now, there was only the sure confidence in himself that he
-would be equal to the occasion if only the chance were his--then in some
-way, without attendant hue and cry, without the police of every city in
-America loosed upon him, since the "murderer" of the old hag's son
-would be dead, he could disappear from St. Marleau. But the man was not
-dead--yet. And why should he even think the man would die! Because he
-_hoped_ for it? His lips twitched; and his hands, with a slow, curious
-movement, unclenched, and clenched again--and then with a sort of
-mental wrench, his brain, alert and keen, was coping with the immediate
-situation, the immediate danger.
-
-The girl and her uncle were talking earnestly together on the seat. And
-now, for all that he had not thrust himself forward in what had so far
-transpired, the man appeared to be of some standing and authority in the
-neighbourhood, for, turning from the girl, he called sharply to one of
-the crowd. A villager hurried in response to the side of the wagon, and
-Raymond, listening, caught snatches of the terse, low-toned instructions
-that were given.
-
-The doctor at Tournayville, and at the same time the police...
-yes--to-night... at once....
-
-"_Bien sur!_" said the villager briskly, and disappeared in the crowd.
-
-Then the girl spoke. Raymond could not hear very distinctly, but it was
-something about her mother being unprepared, and from that about a room
-downstairs, and he guessed that they were discussing where they would
-take the wounded man.
-
-He straightened up suddenly. That was a subject which concerned him very
-intimately. There was only one place where the priest could go, and that
-was where he, Raymond, went. They were on the village street now, and,
-twisting his head around to look ahead, he could make out the shadowy
-form of the church steeple close at hand.
-
-"Monsieur," he called quietly to the man on the seat, "we will take this
-poor fellow to the _presbytre_, of course."
-
-"Oh, but, Father Aubert"--the girl turned toward him quickly--"we were
-just speaking of that. It would not be at all comfortable for you. You
-see, even your own room there will not be ready for you, since you were
-not expected to-night, and you will have to take Father Allard's, so
-that if this man went there, too, there would be no bed at all for you."
-
-"I hardly think I shall need any bed to-night, mademoiselle," Raymond
-said gravely. "The man appears to be in a very critical condition. I
-know a little something of medicine, and I could not think of
-leaving him until--I think I heard your uncle say they were going to
-Tournayville for a doctor--until the doctor arrives."
-
-"Yes, Monsieur le Cur," said the man, screwing around in his seat,
-"that is so. I have sent for the doctor, and also for the police--but it
-is eight miles to Tournayville, and on a night like this there will be a
-long while to wait, even if the doctor is to be found at once."
-
-"You have done well, monsieur," commended Raymond--but under his breath,
-with a savage, ironical jeer at himself, he added: "And especially about
-the police, curse you!"
-
-"But, Monsieur le Cur," insisted the girl anxiously, "I am sure
-that----"
-
-"Mademoiselle is very kind, and it is very thoughtful of her," Raymond
-interposed gratefully; "but under the circumstances I think the
-_presbytre_ will be best. Yes; I think we must decide on the
-_presbytre_.
-
-"But, yes, certainly--if that is Monsieur le Cur's wish," agreed the
-man. "Monsieur le Cur should know best. Valrie, jump down, and run on
-ahead to tell your mother that we are coming."
-
-Valrie! So that was the girl's name! It seemed a strangely incongruous
-thought that here, with his back against the wall, literally fighting
-for his life, the name should seem somehow to be so appropriate to that
-dark-eyed face, with its truant, wind-tossed hair, that had come upon
-him so suddenly out of the darkness; that face, sweet, troubled, in
-distress, that he had glimpsed for an instant in the lantern's light.
-Valrie! But what was her other name? What had her mother to do with the
-_presbytre_, that the uncle should have sent her on with that message?
-And who was the uncle, this man here, and what was his name? And how
-much of all this was he, as Father Aubert, supposed already to know? The
-cur of the village, Father Allard--what correspondence, for instance,
-had passed between him and Father Aubert? A hundred questions were on
-his lips. He dared not ask a single one. They had turned in off the road
-now and were passing by the front of the church. He lowered his head
-close down to the priest's. The man still moaned in that same low and,
-as it were, purely mechanical way. Some one in the crowd spoke:
-
-"They are taking him to the _presbytre_."
-
-At the rear of the wagon, amongst the bobbing lanterns, surrounded by
-awe-struck children and no less awe-struck women, he saw the trunk being
-trundled along by two men, each grasping one end by the handle. The
-crowd took up its spokesman's lead.
-
-... To the _presbytre_.... They are going to the _presbytre_.... The
-cur is taking him to the _presbytre_...
-
-"Yes, damn you!" gritted Raymond between his teeth. "To the
-_presbytre_--for the devil's masquerade!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII--AT THE PRESBYTRE
-
-
-|IT was Valerie who held the lamp; and beside her in the doorway stood
-a gentle-faced, silverhaired, slim little old lady--and the latter was
-another Valerie, only a Valerie whom the years in their passing had
-touched in a gentle, kindly way, as though the whitening hair and the
-age creeping upon her were but a crowning. And Raymond, turning to
-mount the stoop of the _presbytre_, as some of the villagers lifted the
-wounded priest from the wagon, drew his breath in sharply, and for an
-instant faltered in his step. It was as though, framed there in the
-doorway, those two forms of the women, those two faces that seemed to
-radiate an innate sanctity, were like guardian angels to bar the way
-against a hideous and sacrilegious invasion of some holy thing within.
-And Valerie's eyes, those great, deep, dark eyes burned into him.
-And her face, that he saw now for the first time plainly, was very
-beautiful, and with a beauty that was not of feature alone--for her
-expression seemed to write a sort of creed upon her face, a creed that
-frankly mirrored faith in all around her, a faith that, never having
-been startled, or dismayed, or disillusioned, and knowing no things for
-evil, accepted all things for good.
-
-And Raymond's step faltered. It seemed as though he had never seen a
-woman's face like that--that it was holding him now in a thrall that
-robbed his surroundings momentarily of their danger and their peril.
-
-And then, the next instant, that voice within him was speaking again.
-
-"You fool!" it whispered fiercely. "What are you doing! If you want your
-life, play for it! Look around you! A false move, a rational word from
-the lips of that limp thing they are carrying there behind you, and
-these people, who believe where you mock, who would kneel if you but
-lifted your hand in sign of benediction, would turn upon you with the
-merciless fury of wild beasts! You fool! You fool! Do you like the feel
-of hemp, as it tightens around your neck!"
-
-And then Raymond lifted his head, and his eyes, and with measured pace
-walked forward up the steps to where the two women stood.
-
-Valrie's introduction was only another warning to him to be upon his
-guard--she seemed to imply that he naturally knew her mother's name.
-
-"Father Aubert, this is my mother," she said.
-
-With a sort of old-world grace, the elder woman bowed.
-
-"Ah, Monsieur le Cur," she said quickly, "what a terrible thing to have
-happened! Valrie has just told me. And what a welcome to the parish for
-you! Not even a room, with that _pauvre_ unfortunate, _misrable_
-and murderer though he is, and----"
-
-"But it is a welcome of the heart, I can see that," Raymond interposed,
-and smiled gravely, and took both of the old lady's hands in his own.
-"And that is worth far more than the room, which, in any case, I
-shall hardly need to-night. It is you, not I, who should have cause
-to grumble, for, to my own unexpected arrival, I bring you the added
-trouble and inconvenience of this very badly wounded and, I fear, dying
-man."
-
-"But--that!" she exclaimed simply. "But Monsieur le Cur would never
-have thought of doing otherwise! Valrie meant only kindness, but she
-should not have made any other suggestion. It is for nothing else, if
-not this, the _presbytre! Le pauvre misrable_"--she crossed herself
-reverently--"even if he has blood that thought of doing otherwise!
-Valrie meant only kindness, but she should not have made any other
-suggestion. It is for nothing else, if not this, the _presbytre! Le
-pauvre misrable_"--she crossed herself reverently--"even if he has
-blood that is not his own upon him."
-
-They were coming up the steps, carrying the wounded priest.
-
-"This way!" said the little old lady softly. "Valrie, dear, hold your
-lamp so that they can see. Ah, _le pauvre misrable_; ah, Monsieur le
-Cur!"
-
-The girl leading, they passed down a short hallway, entered a bedroom at
-the rear of the house, and Valrie set the lamp upon the table.
-
-Raymond motioned to the men to lay the priest upon the bed. He glanced
-quietly about him, as he moved to the priest's side. He must get these
-people away--there were reasons why he should be alone. Alone! His brain
-was like some horrible, swirling vortex. Why alone? For what reasons?
-Not that hellish purpose that had flashed so insidiously upon him
-out there on the ride down to the _presbytre!_ Not that! Strange how
-outwardly calm, how deadly calm, how composed and self-possessed he was,
-when such a thought had even for an instant's space found lodgment in
-his soul. It was well that he was calm, he would need to be calm--he
-was doing what that inner monitor had told him to do--he was playing the
-game--he was playing for his life. Well, he had only to dismiss these
-men now, who hung so curiously awe-struck about the bed, and then get
-rid of the women--no, they had gone now; Valrie, with her beautiful
-face, and those great dark eyes; and the mother, whose gray hair did
-not seem to bring age with it at all, and--no, they were back again--no,
-they were not--those were not women's steps entering the room.
-
-He had been making pretence at loosening the priest's collar, and he
-looked up now. The trunk! He had forgotten all about the trunk. The
-newcomers were two men carrying the trunk. They set it down against the
-wall near the door. It was a little more than probable that they had
-seized the opportunity afforded by the trunk to see what was going on
-in the room. They would be favoured amongst their fellows without! They,
-too, hats in hand, stared, curious and awe-struck, toward the bed.
-
-"Thank you, all of you," Raymond heard himself saying in a low tone.
-"But go now, my friends, go quietly; madame and her daughter will give
-me any further assistance that may be needed."
-
-They filed obediently from the room--on tiptoe--their coarse, heavy
-boots squeaking the more loudly therefor. Raymond's hands sought the
-priest's collar again, to loosen it this time with a definite object in
-view. He had changed only his outer garments with the other. He dared
-not have the priest undressed until he had made sure that there were no
-tell-tale marks on the underclothing; a laundry number, perhaps, that
-the police would pounce instantly upon. He found himself experiencing
-a sort of facetious soul-grin--detectives always laid great stress upon
-laundry marks!
-
-Again he was interrupted. With the collar in his hand, his own collar,
-that he had removed now from the priest's neck, he turned to see Valrie
-and her mother entering the room. They were very capable, those two--too
-capable! They were carrying basins of water, and cloths that were
-obviously intended for bandages. He had not meant to use any bandages,
-he had meant to--what?
-
-He forced a grave smile of approval to his lips, and nodded his head.
-
-The elder woman glanced about her a little in surprise.
-
-"Oh, are the men gone!" she exclaimed. "_Tiens!_ The stupids! But I will
-call one of them back, and he will help you undress _le pauvre_, Father
-Aubert."
-
-It was only an instant before Raymond answered; but it seemed, before he
-did so, that he had been listening in a kind of panic for long minutes
-dragged out interminably to that inner voice that kept telling him to
-play the game, play the game, and that only fools lost their heads at
-insignificant little unexpected denouements. She was only suggesting
-that the man should be undressed; whereas the man must under no
-circumstances be undressed until--until----
-
-"I think perhaps we had better not attempt it in his condition until
-the doctor arrives, madame," he said slowly, thoughtfully, as though his
-words were weighted with deliberation. "It might do far more harm than
-good. For the present, I think it would be better simply to loosen his
-clothing, and make him as comfortable as possible in that way."
-
-"Yes; I think so, too," said Valrie--she had moved a little table to
-the bedside, and was arranging the basins of water and the cloths upon
-it.
-
-"Of course!" agreed the little old lady simply. "Monsieur le Cur knows
-best."
-
-"Yes," said Valrie, speaking in hushed tones, as she cast an anxious
-look at the white, blood-stained face upon the bed, "and I think it is
-a mercy that Father Aubert knows something about medicine, for
-otherwise the doctor might be too late. I will help you, Monsieur le
-Cur--everything is ready."
-
-He knew nothing about medicine--there was nothing he knew less about!
-What fiend had prompted him to make such a claim!
-
-"I am afraid, mademoiselle," he said soberly, "that my knowledge is far
-too inadequate for such a case as this."
-
-"We will be able to do something at least, father"--there was a brave,
-troubled smile in her eyes as she lifted them for an instant to his; and
-then, bending forward, with deft fingers she removed the torn piece of
-shirt from the wounded man's head.
-
-And then, between them, while the mother watched and wrung out the
-cloths, they dressed the wound, a ghastly, unsightly thing across the
-side of the man's skull--only it was Valerie, not he, who was efficient.
-And strangely, as once before, but a little while before, when out there
-in front of the house, it was Valerie, and not the man, and not the
-wound, and not the peril in which he stood that was dominant, swaying
-him for the moment. There was a wondrous tenderness in her hands as
-she worked with the bandages, and sometimes her hands touched his; and
-sometimes, close together, as they leaned over the bed together, her
-hair, dark, luxuriant, brushed his cheek; and the low-collared blouse
-disclosed a bare and perfect throat that was white like ivory; and the
-half parted lips were tender like the touch of her fingers; and in her
-face at sight of the gruesome wound, bringing an added whiteness,
-was dismay, and struggling with dismay was a wistful earnestness and
-resolution that was born of her woman's sympathy; and she seemed to
-steal upon and pervade his senses as though she were some dream-created
-vision, for she was not reality at all since his subconsciousness told
-him that in actual reality no one existed at all except that
-moaning thing upon the bed--that moaning thing upon the bed and
-himself--himself, who seemed to be swinging by a precarious hold, from
-which even then his fingers were slipping away, over some bottomless
-abyss that yawned below him. "Valrie! Valrie!" He was repeating her
-name to himself, as though calling to her for aid from the edge of that
-black gulf, and----
-
-"Fool!" jeered that inner voice. "Have you never seen a pretty girl
-before? She'd be the first to turn upon you, if she knew!"
-
-"You lie!" retorted another self.
-
-"Where's Three-Ace Artie gone?" inquired the voice with cold contempt.
-
-Raymond straightened up. Valrie, turning from the bed, gathered the
-basins and soiled cloths together, and moved quietly from the room.
-
-"Will he live, father?"--it was the little gray-haired woman, Valrie's
-mother, Valrie's older self, who was looking up into his face so
-anxiously, whose lips quivered a little as she spoke.
-
-Would the man _live!_ A devil's laugh seemed suddenly to possess
-Raymond's soul. They would be alone together, that gasping, white-faced
-thing on the bed, and himself; they would be alone together before
-the doctor came--he would see to that. There had been interruption,
-confusion... his brain itself was confusion... extraneous thoughts had
-intervened... but they would be _alone_ presently. And--great God!--what
-hellish mockery!--she asked _him_ if this man would _live!_
-
-"I am afraid"--he was not looking at her; his hand, clutching at the
-skirt of the _soutane_ he wore, closed and tightened and clenched--"I am
-afraid he will not live."
-
-"Ah, _le pauvre!_" she whispered, and her eyes filled with tears. "Ah,
-Monsieur le Cur, I do not know these things so well as you. It is true
-that he is a very guilty man, but is not God very good and tender and
-full of compassion, father? Oh, I should not dare to say these things,
-for it is you who know what is right and best"--she had caught his
-sleeve, and was leading him across the room. "And Mother Church,
-Monsieur le Cur, is very merciful and very tender and very
-compassionate too--and, oh--and, oh--can there not be mercy and love
-even for such as he--must he lose his soul too, as well as his life?"
-
-Raymond, in a blind, wondering way, stared at her. The tears
-were streaming down her cheeks now. They had halted before a low,
-old-fashioned cupboard, an _armoire_ much like the _armoire_ in the old
-hag's house, and now she opened the doors in the lower portion, and took
-out a worn and rusty black leather bag, and set it upon the top of the
-_armoire_.
-
-"It is only to show you where it is, father, if--if it might be so--even
-for him--the Sacrament"--and, turning, she crossed the room, and meeting
-Valrie upon the threshold drew the girl away with her, and closed the
-door softly.
-
-It was a bag such as the parish priests carried with them on their
-visits to the sick and dying. Raymond eyed it sullenly. The Sacrament!
-
-"What have I to do with that!" he snarled beneath his breath.
-
-"Are you not a priest of God?"
-
-He whirled like a flash, startled, sweeping his glances around the room.
-And then he laughed in smothered, savage relief. It was only that voice
-within that chose a cursed mockery this time to put him upon his guard.
-
-He was staring now at the sprawled form on the bed, at a red stain that
-was already creeping through the fresh bandages. His face grew hard and
-set; a flush came and died away, leaving it an ashen gray.
-
-And then he stepped to the door--and listened--and locked it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII--THOU SHALT NOT KILL
-
-|IT seemed as though the stillness of death were already in the room;
-a stillness that was horrible and unnerving in contrast with the shrill
-swirling of the wind without, and the loud roar and pound of the waves
-breaking upon the shore close at hand beneath the windows.
-
-His face still set as in a rigid mould, features drawn in hard, sharp
-lines, then ashen gray now even upon the lips, Raymond crossed from the
-door to the nearer of the two windows. It was black outside, inky black,
-unnaturally black, relieved only by a wavering, irregular line of white
-where the waves broke into foam along the rocky beach--and this line,
-as it wavered, and wriggled, and advanced, and receded seemed to lend an
-uncanny ghostlike aspect to the blackness, and, as he strained his eyes
-out of the window, he shuddered suddenly and drew back. But the next
-instant he snarled fiercely to himself. Was he to lose his nerve because
-it was black outside, and because the waves were running high and
-creaming along the shore! He would have something shortly that would
-warrant him in losing his nerve if he faltered now--the hemp around
-his neck, rasping, chafing at his throat, the horrible prickling as the
-rough strands grew taut!
-
-He clutched at his throat mechanically, rubbing it with his fingers
-mechanically--and, as fiercely as before, snarled again. Enough of
-this! He was neither fool nor child. There was a sure way out from that
-dangling noose, cornered, trapped though he was--and he knew the way
-now. He reached up and drew down the window shade, and passed quickly to
-the other window and drew down the shade there as well.
-
-And then he turned, and stepped to the bed, and bent over the priest.
-
-There was the underclothing first. He must make sure of that--that there
-would be no marks of identification--that there would be nothing to rise
-up against him, a mute and mocking witness to his undoing. He loosened
-the man's clothing. It would not be necessary to take off the outer
-garments. It was much easier here with the man on a bed, and a light
-in the room than it had been out there on the road, and--ah! Lips
-compressed, he nodded sharply to himself. The undergarments were new.
-That precluded laundry marks--unless the man had had some marking put
-upon them himself. No, there was nothing--nothing but the maker's tag
-sewn in on the shirt at the back of the neck. He turned the priest over
-on the bed to complete his examination. There was nothing on any
-other part of the garments. The socks, then, perhaps? He pulled up
-the trousers' legs hurriedly. No, there was nothing there, either. He
-reached out to turn the priest over again--and paused. He could snip
-that maker's tag from the neck of the shirt just as easily in the
-position in which the man now lay, and--and the man's face would not
-be staring up at him. There was a cursed, senseless accusation in that
-white face, and the lip muscles twitched as though the man were about
-to shout aloud, to scream out--_murder!_ If only the fool had died out
-there in the woods, and would stop that infernal low moaning noise, and
-those strangling inhalations as he gasped for breath!
-
-Automatically, Raymond's fingers sought his penknife in its accustomed
-place in his vest pocket--and slipped down a smooth, unobstructed
-surface. His eyes followed his fingers in a sort of dazed, perplexed
-way, and then he laughed a little huskily. The _soutane!_ He had
-forgotten for the moment that he was a priest of God! It was the other
-who wore the vest, it was in the other's pocket that the knife was to be
-found. He had forgotten the devil's masquerade in the devil's whispering
-that was in his soul!
-
-He snatched the knife from the vest pocket, opened it, cut away the
-cloth tag, and with infinite pains removed the threads that had held the
-tag in place. He returned the knife to the vest pocket, and tucked the
-little tag away in one of his own pockets; then hastily rearranged
-the other's clothing again, and turned the man back into his original
-position upon the bed.
-
-And now! He glanced furtively all around the room. His hands crept out,
-and advanced toward the priest. It was a very easy thing to do. No one
-would know. No one but would think the man had died naturally. _Died!_
-It was the first time he had allowed his mind to frame a concrete
-expression that would fit the black thing that was in his soul.
-
-A bead of sweat spurted out from his forehead. His hands somehow would
-not travel very fast, but they were all the time creeping nearer to the
-priest's throat. He had only to keep on forcing them on their way...
-and it was not very far to go... and, once there, it would only take an
-instant. God, if that white face would not stare up at him like that...
-the eyes were closed of course... but still it stared.
-
-Raymond touched his lips with the tip of his tongue, and again and again
-circled the room with his eyes. Was that somebody there outside the
-window? Was that a step out there in the passageway? Were those
-_voices_ that chattered and gibbered from everywhere?
-
-He jerked back his hands, and they fell to his sides, and he shivered.
-What was it? What was the matter? What was it that he had to do? It
-wasn't murder. That was a lie! The man wouldn't live anyhow, but he
-might live long enough to talk. It was his life or the other's, wasn't
-it? If he were caught now, there was no power on earth could save him.
-On earth? What did he mean by that? What other power was there? It was
-only a trite phrase he had used.
-
-What was he hesitating about? It was the only chance he had.
-
-"Get it done! Get it done, and over with, you squeamish fool!" prodded
-that inner voice savagely.
-
-His hands crept out again. Of course! Of course! He knew that. He must
-get it done and over with. Only--only, great God, why did his hands
-tremble so! He lifted one of them to his forehead and drew it away
-dripping wet. What did that voice want to keep nagging him for! He knew
-what he had to do. It was the only way. If the priest were dead,
-he, Raymond, would be safe. There would be no question as to who the
-murderer of Blondin was--and the priest would be buried and that would
-be the end of it. And--yes! He had it all now. It was almost too simple!
-He, Raymond, as the cur of the village, after a day or two, would meet
-with an accident. A boating accident--yes, that was it! They would find
-an upturned boat and his hat floating on the water perhaps--but they
-would never find the body! He need only, in the interval of those few
-days, gather together from somewhere some clothes into which he could
-change, hide in the woods after the "accident," and at night make his
-final escape.
-
-"Of course!" snapped the voice impatiently. "I've been telling you that
-all along! There would be no further investigation as to the murder; and
-only a sorrowful search along the shore, free from all suspicion, for
-the body of Father Aubert. Well, why don't you act? Are you going to
-fling your life away? Are you afraid? Have you forgotten that it is
-growing late, that very soon now the doctor and the police will be
-here?"
-
-Afraid! No; he wasn't afraid of God or devil, or man or beast--that was
-his creed, wasn't it? Only that damnable face still stared up at him,
-and he couldn't get his hands near enough to--to do the work.
-
-Slowly, inch by inch, his face as white and set as chiselled marble, his
-hands crept forward again. How soft the bare, exposed throat looked that
-was almost at his finger tips now. Would it _feel_ soft to the touch,
-or--he swayed unsteadily, and crouched back, that cold shiver passing
-over him. It was strange that he should shiver, that he should find it
-cold. His brain was afire, and it whirled, and whirled, and whirled;
-and devils laughed in his soul--and yet he stood aghast at the abhorrent
-deed.
-
-Wait! He would be able to think clearly in an instant. He must do it--or
-die himself. Yes, yes; it was the _touch_ of his flesh against the
-other's flesh from which he shrank, the _feel_ of his fingers on the
-other's throat that held him back--that was it! Wait! He would remedy
-that. That would have been a crude, mad way in any case. What had he
-been thinking of! It would have left a mark. It would have been sure to
-have left a mark. Perhaps they would not have noticed it, but it would
-have invited the risk. There was a better way, a much better way--and a
-way in which that face wouldn't be able to stare up at him any more, a
-way in which he wouldn't hear that moaning, and that rattling, and
-that struggling for breath. The man was almost dead now. It was only
-necessary to take that other pillow there, and hold it tightly over
-the other's face. _That_ wouldn't leave any mark. Yes, the pillow! Why
-hadn't he thought of that before! It would have been all over by now.
-
-Once more his hands began to creep up and outward. He leaned far over
-the bed, reaching for the pillow--and something came between the
-pillow and his hands. He glanced downward in a startled way. It was the
-crucifix hanging from his neck. With a snarl, he swung it away. It came
-back and struck against his knuckles. He tried to wrench it from his
-neck. It would not come--but, instead, one hand slipped through the
-chain, and pushed the crucifix outward, and for an instant held it there
-between him and that white, staring face. He pulled his hand away. And
-the crucifix swung backward and forward. And he reached again for the
-pillow, and the crucifix was still between. And his hands, trembling,
-grew tangled in the chain.
-
-"Thou shalt not kill!"--it was not that inner voice; it was a voice like
-the girl's, like Valerie's, soft and full of a divine compassion. And
-her fingers in tenderness seemed to be working with that bandaged head;
-and the dark eyes, deep and steadfast, were searching his soul. "Thou
-shalt not kill!"
-
-And with a low, horror-stricken cry, Raymond staggered backward from the
-bed, and dropped into a chair, and buried his face in his hands.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX--UNTIL THE DAWN
-
-|THE man upon the bed moaned continuously now; the wind swirled around
-the corners of the house; the waves pounded in dull, heavy thuds upon
-the shore without--but Raymond heard none of it. It seemed as though he
-were exhausted, spent, physically weak, as from some Titanic struggle.
-He did not move. He sat there, head bowed, his hands clasped over his
-face.
-
-And then, after a long time, a shudder shook his frame--and he rose
-mechanically from his chair. The door was locked, and subconsciously he
-realised that it should not be found locked when that somebody--who
-was it?--yes, he remembered now--the doctor from Tournayville, and the
-police--it should not be found locked when the doctor and the police
-arrived, because they would naturally ask him to account for the reason
-of it. He crossed to the door, unlocked it, and returned to the chair.
-
-And now he stared at the crucifix upon his breast. For the second time
-that night it had played a strange and unaccountable rle. He lifted
-his hand to his head. His head still ached from the blow the old hag
-had struck him with the piece of wood. That was what was the matter.
-His head ached and he could not therefore think logically, otherwise
-he would not be fool enough to hold the crucifix responsible for--for
-preventing him from what he had been about to do a little while ago.
-
-His face grew cynical in its expression. The crucifix had nothing to
-do with it, nor had the vision of the girl's eyes, nor had the imagined
-sound of Valrie's voice--those things were, all of them, but the form
-his true self had taken to express itself when he had so madly tormented
-himself with that hellish purpose. If it had not been things like that,
-it would have been something else. He could not have struck down a
-wounded and defenceless man, he could not have committed murder in cold
-blood like that. He had recoiled from the act, because it was an act
-that was beyond him to perform, that was all. That man there on the bed
-was as safe, as far as he, Raymond, was concerned, as though they were
-separated by a thousand miles.
-
-"Sophistry!" sneered that inner voice. "You are a weak-kneed fool, and
-very far from a heroic soul that has been tried by fire! Well, you will
-pay for it!" Raymond cast a quick startled glance at the bed, and half
-rose from his seat. What--again? Was that thought back again? He sank
-back in the chair, gripping the chair-arms until his knuckles cracked.
-
-"I won't!" he mumbled hoarsely. "By God--I won't! Maybe--maybe the man
-will die."
-
-And then impulsively he was on his feet, and pacing the room, a sweep of
-anger upon him.
-
-"What had I to do with all this!" he cried, in low, fierce tones. "And
-look at me!"--he had halted before the dresser, and was glaring into the
-mirror. "_Look at me!_" A face whose pallor was enhanced by the black
-clerical garb gazed contortedly back at him; the crucifix, symbol
-of peace, hung from about his neck. He tucked it hastily inside the
-_soutane_. "Look at me!" he cried, and clenched his fist and shook it at
-the mirror. "Three-Ace Artie! That's you there, Three-Ace Artie! God or
-the devil has stacked the cards on you, and----"
-
-He swung sharply about--listening; and, on the instant, with grave
-demeanour, his face soberly composed, faced the doorway.
-
-The door opened, and two men stepped into the room. One was a big
-man, bearded, with a bluff and hearty cast of countenance that seemed
-peculiarly fitting to his immense breadth of shoulder; the other, a sort
-of foil as it were, was small, sharp featured, with roving black eyes
-that, as he stood on the threshold and on tiptoe impatiently peered over
-the big man's shoulder, darted quick little glances in all directions
-about him. The small man closed the door with a sort of fussily
-momentous air.
-
-"_Tiens_, Monsieur le Cur"--the big man extended his hand to Raymond.
-"I am Doctor Arnaud. And this is Monsieur Dupont, the assistant chief
-of police of Tournayville. Hum!"--he glanced toward the bed. "Hum!"--he
-dropped Raymond's hand, and moved quickly to the bedside.
-
-Raymond shook hands with the little man.
-
-"Bad business! Bad business!"--the assistant chief of police of
-Tournayville continued to send his darting glances about the room, and
-the while he made absurd clucking noises with his tongue. "Yes, very
-bad--very bad! I came myself, you see."
-
-There was much about the man that afforded Raymond an immense sense of
-relief. He was conscious that he infinitely preferred Monsieur Dupont,
-assistant chief of the Tournayville police, to Sergeant Marden, of the
-Royal North-West Mounted.
-
-"Yes," said Raymond quietly, "I am afraid it is a very serious matter."
-
-"Not at all! Not at all!" clucked Monsieur Dupont, promptly
-contradicting himself. "We've got our man--eh--what?" He jerked his hand
-toward the bed. "That's the main thing. Killed Thophile Blondin, did
-he? Well, quite privately, Monsieur le Cur, he might have done worse,
-though the law does not take that into account--no, not at all, not at
-all. Blondin, you understand, Monsieur le Cur, was quite well known to
-the police, and he was"--Monsieur Dupont pinched his nose with his thumb
-and forefinger as though to escape an unsavoury odour--"you understand,
-Monsieur le Cur?"
-
-"I did not know," replied Raymond. "You see, I only----"
-
-"Yes, yes!" interrupted Monsieur Dupont. "Know all that! Know all that!
-They told me on the drive out. You arrived this evening, and found this
-man lying on the road. Rude initiation to your pastorate, Monsieur le
-Cur. Too bad!" He raised his voice. "Well, Doctor Arnaud, what is the
-verdict--eh?"
-
-"Come here and help me," said the doctor, over his shoulder. He was
-replacing the bandage, and now he looked around for an instant at
-Raymond. "I can't improve any on that. It was excellent--excellent,
-Monsieur le Cur."
-
-"The credit is not mine," Raymond told him. "It was Mademoiselle
-Valrie. But the man, doctor?"
-
-"Not a chance in a thousand"--the doctor shook his head. "Concussion of
-the brain. We'll get his clothes off, and make him comfortable. That's
-about all we can do. He'll probably not last through the night."
-
-"I will help you," offered Raymond, stepping forward.
-
-"It's not necessary, Monsieur le Cur," said the doctor. "Monsieur
-Dupont here can----"
-
-"No," interposed Monsieur Dupont. "Let Monsieur le Cur help you. We
-will kill two birds with one stone that way. We have still to visit the
-Blondin house. We do not know this man's name. We know nothing about
-him. While you are undressing him, I will search through his clothing.
-Eh? Perhaps we shall find something. I do not swallow whole all the
-story I have heard. We shall see what we shall see."
-
-Raymond glanced swiftly at Monsieur Dupont. Because the man clucked with
-his tongue and had an opinion of himself, he was perhaps a very long way
-from being either stupid or a fool. Monsieur Dupont might not prove so
-preferable to Sergeant Marden as he had been so quick to imagine.
-
-"Yes," agreed Raymond. "Monsieur Dupont is right, I am sure. I will
-assist you, doctor, while he makes his search."
-
-Monsieur Dupont stepped briskly around to the far side of the bed,
-and peered intently into the unconscious man's face, as he waited for
-Raymond and the doctor to hand him the first article of clothing. He
-kept clucking with his tongue, and once his eyes narrowed significantly.
-
-Raymond experienced a sense of disquiet. Was the man simply posing for
-effect, or was he acting naturally--or was there something that had
-really aroused the other's suspicions. He handed the priest's coat, or,
-rather, his own, to Monsieur Dupont.
-
-Monsieur Dupont began to go through the pockets--like one accustomed to
-the task.
-
-"Hah, hah!" he ejaculated suddenly. "Monsieur le Cur, Monsieur le
-Docteur, I call you both to witness! All this loose money in the side
-pocket! The side pocket, mind you, and the money loose! It bears out the
-story that they say Mother Blondin tells about the robbery. I was not
-quite ready to believe it before. See!" He dumped the money on the bed.
-"You are witnesses." He gathered up the money again and replaced it
-in the pocket. "And here"--from another pocket he produced the
-revolver--"you are witnesses again." He broke the revolver.
-"Ah--h'm--one shot fired! You see for yourselves? Yes, you see. Very
-well! Continue, messieurs! There may be something more, though it would
-certainly appear that nothing more was necessary." He nodded crisply at
-both Raymond and the doctor.
-
-The vest yielded up the cardcase. Monsieur Dupont shuffled over the
-dozen or so of neatly printed cards that it contained.
-
-"_L, l!_" said he sharply. "Our friend is evidently a smooth one. One
-of the clever kind that uses his brains. Very nice cards--very plausible
-sort of thing, eh? Yes, they are. Very! Henri Mentone, eh? Henri
-Mentone, alias something--from nowhere. Well, messieurs, is there still
-by any chance something else?"
-
-There was nothing else. Monsieur Dupont, however, was not satisfied
-until he had examined, even more minutely than Raymond had previously
-done, the priest's undergarments. The doctor turned from the bed.
-Monsieur Dupont rolled all the clothing into a bundle, and tucked it
-under his arm.
-
-"Well, let us go, doctor!" jerked out Monsieur Dupont. "If he dies, he
-dies--eh? In any case he can't run away. If he dies, there is Mother
-Blondin to consider, eh? She struck the blow. They would not do much to
-her perhaps, but she would have to be held. It is the law. If he does
-not die, that is another matter. In any case I shall remain in the
-village to keep an eye on them both--yes? Well then, well then--eh?
---let us go!"
-
-The doctor glanced hesitantly toward the bed.
-
-"I have done all that is possible for the moment," he said; "but perhaps
-I had better call madame. She and mademoiselle have insisted on sitting
-up out there in the front room."
-
-Raymond's head was bowed.
-
-"Do not call them," he said gravely. "If the man is about to die, it is
-my place to stay, doctor."
-
-"Yes--er--yes, that is so," acquiesced the doctor. "Very well then, I'll
-pack them off to bed. I shan't be long at Mother Blondin's. Must pay an
-official visit--I'm the coroner, Monsieur le Cur. I'll be back as soon
-as possible, and meanwhile if he shows any change"--he nodded in the
-direction of the bed--"send for me at once. I'll arrange to have some
-one of the men remain out there within call."
-
-"Very well," said Raymond simply. "You will be gone--how long, doctor?"
-
-"Oh, say, an hour--certainly not any longer."
-
-"Very well," said Raymond again.
-
-He accompanied them to the door, and closed it softly behind them
-as they stepped from the room. And now he experienced a sort of cool
-complacency, an uplift, the removal as of some drear foreboding that had
-weighed him down. The peril in a very large measure had vanished. The
-policeman had swallowed the bait, hook and all; and the doctor had said
-there was not one chance in a thousand that the man would live until
-morning. Therefore the problem resolved itself simply into a matter of
-two or three days in which he should continue in the rle of cur--after
-that the "accident," and this accursed St. Marleau could go into
-mourning for him, if it liked, or do anything else it liked! He would be
-through with it!
-
-But those two or three days! It was not altogether a simple affair,
-that. If only he could go now--at once! Only that, of course, would
-arouse suspicion--even if the man did not regain consciousness, and did
-not blurt out something before he died. But why should he keep harping
-on that point? Any fool could see that his safest game was to play the
-hand he held until the "murderer" was dead and buried, and the matter
-legally closed forever. He had already decided that a dozen times,
-hadn't he? Well then, these two or three days! He must plan for these
-two or three days. There were things he should know, that he would be
-expected to know--not mere church matters; his Latin, the training of
-the old school days, a prayer-book, and his wits would carry him through
-anything of such a nature which might intervene in that short time. But,
-for instance, the mother of Valrie--who was she? How did she come to
-be in charge of the _presbytre?_ What was her name--and Valrie's? It
-would be very strange indeed if, coming there for the summer to supply
-for Father Allard, he was not acquainted with all such details.
-
-Raymond's glance fell upon the trunk. The next instant he was hunting
-through his pockets, but making an awkward business of it thanks to the
-unaccustomed skirt of his _soutane_. A bunch of keys, however, rewarded
-his efforts. He stepped over to the trunk, trying first one key and
-then another. Finally, he found the right one, unlocked the trunk--and,
-suddenly, his hand upon the uplifted lid, the blood left his face,
-and he stood as though paralysed, staring at the doorway. He was
-caught--caught in the act. True, she had knocked, but she had opened
-the door at the same time. The little old lady, Valerie's mother, was
-standing there looking at him--and the trunk was open.
-
-"Monsieur le Cur," she said, "it is only to tell you that we have made
-up a couch for you in the front room that you can use when the doctor
-returns."
-
-He found his voice. Somehow she did not seem at all surprised that he
-had the trunk open.
-
-"It is very kind and thoughtful of you, madame."
-
-"_Mais, non!_" she exclaimed, with a smile. "But, no! And if you need
-anything before the doctor gets back, father, you have only to call. We
-shall hear you."
-
-"I will call if I need you"--Raymond was conscious that he was speaking,
-but that the words came only in a queer, automatic kind of a way.
-
-She poked her head around the door for a sort of anxious, pitying,
-quick-flung glance at the bed; then looked questioningly at Raymond.
-
-Raymond shook his head.
-
-"_Ah, le pauvre! Le pauvre misrable!_" she whispered. "Good-night,
-Monsieur le Cur. Do not fail to call if you want us."
-
-The door closed. As once before in a night of vigil, in that far-north
-shack, Raymond stretched out his hand before him to study it. It was not
-steady now--it trembled and shook. He looked at the trunk--and then a
-low, hollow laugh was on his lips. A fool and a child he was, and his
-nerves must be near the breaking point. Was there anything strange, was
-there anything surprising in the fact that Monsieur le Cur should be
-discovered in the act of opening Monsieur le Cur's trunk! And it had
-brought a panic upon him--and his hand was shaking like an old man's.
-He was in a pretty state, when coolness was the only thing that stood
-between him and--the gallows! Damn that cursed moaning from the bed!
-Would it never cease!
-
-For a time he stood there without moving; and then, his composure
-regained, the square jaw clamped defiantly against his weakness, he drew
-up a chair, and, sitting down, began to rummage through the trunk.
-
-"Franois Aubert--eh?" he muttered, as he picked up a prayerbook and
-found the fly-leaf autographed. "So my name is Franois! Well, that is
-something!" He opened another book, and, on the fly-leaf again, read an
-inscription. "'To my young friend'--eh? and from the Bishop! The Bishop
-of Montigny, is it? Well, that also is something! I am then personally
-acquainted with this Monsignor Montigny! I will remember that! And--ha,
-these!--with any luck, I shall find what I want here."
-
-He took up a package of letters, ran them over quickly--and frowned in
-disappointment. They were all addressed in a woman's hand. He was not
-interested in that. It was the correspondence from Father Allard that he
-wanted. He was about to return the letters to the trunk and resume his
-search, when he noticed that the topmost envelope bore the St. Marleau
-postmark. He opened it hurriedly--and his frown changed to a nod of
-satisfaction. It was, after all, what he wanted. Father Allard was
-blessed with the services of a secretary, that was the secret--Father
-Allard's signature was affixed at the bottom of the neatly written page.
-
-Raymond leaned back in his chair, and proceeded to read the letters.
-Little by little he pieced together, from references here and there, the
-information that he sought. It was a sort of family arrangement, as it
-were. The old lady was Father Allard's sister, and her name was Lafleur;
-and the husband was dead, since, in one instance, Father Allard referred
-to her as the "Widow Lafleur," instead of his customary "my sister,
-Madame Lafleur." And the uncle, who it now appeared was the notary and
-likewise the mayor of the village, was Father Allard's brother.
-
-Raymond returned the letters to the trunk, and commenced a systematic
-examination of the rest of its contents, which, apart from a somewhat
-sparse wardrobe, consisted mainly of books of a theological nature. He
-was still engaged in this occupation, when he heard the front door open
-and close. He snatched the prayer-book out of the trunk, shut down the
-lid, and, with a finger between the closed pages of the book, stood up
-as the doctor came briskly into the room.
-
-"I'm back a little ahead of time, you see," announced Doctor Arnaud with
-a pleasant nod, and stepped at once across the room to the wounded man.
-
-For perhaps five minutes the doctor remained at the bedside; then,
-closing his little black bag, he laid it upon the table, and turned to
-Raymond.
-
-"Now, father," he said cheerily, "I understand there's a couch all ready
-for you in the front room. I'll be here for the balance of the night.
-You go and get some sleep."
-
-Raymond motioned toward the bed.
-
-"Is there any change?" he asked.
-
-The doctor shook his head.
-
-"Then," said Raymond quietly, "my place is still here." He smiled
-soberly. "The couch is for you, doctor."
-
-"But," protested the doctor, "I----"
-
-"The man is dying. My place is here," said Raymond again. "If you are
-needed, I have only to call you from the next room. There is no reason
-why both of us should sit up."
-
-"Hum--_tiens_--well, well!"--the doctor pulled at his beard. "No, of
-course, not--no reason why both should sit up. And if you insist----"
-
-"I do not insist," interposed Raymond, smiling again. "It is only that
-in any case I shall remain."
-
-"You are a fine fellow, Monsieur le Cur," said the bluff doctor
-heartily. He clapped both hands on Raymond's shoulders. "A fine fellow,
-Monsieur le Cur! Well, I will go then--I was, I confess it, up all last
-night." He moved over to the door--and paused on the threshold. "It is
-quite possible that the man may revive somewhat toward the end, in which
-case--Monsieur Dupont has suggested it--a little stimulation may enable
-us to obtain a statement from him. You understand? So you will call me
-on the instant, father, if you notice anything."
-
-"On the instant," said Raymond--and as the door closed behind the
-doctor, he went back to his seat in the chair.
-
-The man would die, the doctor had said so again. That was assured.
-Raymond fingered the prayer-book that he still held abstractedly. That
-was assured. It seemed to relieve his brain from any further necessity
-of thinking, thinking, thinking--his brain was very weary. Also he was
-physically weary and tired. But he was safe. Perhaps a few days of this
-damnable masquerade, but then it would be over.
-
-He began to turn the pages of the prayer-book--and then, with a
-whimsical shrug of his shoulders, he began to read. He must put the
-night in somehow, therefore why not put it in to advantage? To refresh
-his memory a little with the ritual would be a safeguard against those
-few days that he must still remain in St. Marleau--as Father Franois
-Aubert!
-
-He read for a little while, then got up and went to the bed to look at
-the white face upon it, to listen to the laboured breathing that stood
-between them both--and death. He could see no change. He returned to his
-chair, and resumed his reading.
-
-At intervals he did the same thing over again--only at last, instead
-of reading, he dozed in his chair. Finally, he slept--not heavily,
-but fitfully, lightly, a troubled sleep that came only through bodily
-exhaustion, and that was full of alarm and vague, haunting dreams.
-
-The night passed. The morning light began to find its way in through the
-edges of the drawn window shades. And suddenly Raymond sat upright
-in his chair. He had heard a step along the hall. The prayer-book had
-fallen to the floor. He picked it up. What was that noise--that low
-moaning from the bed? Not dead! The man wasn't dead yet! And--yes--it
-was daylight!
-
-The door opened. It was Valerie. How fresh her face was--fresh as the
-morning dew! What a contrast to the wan and haggard countenance he knew
-he raised to hers!
-
-And she paused in the doorway, and looked at him, and looked toward
-the bed, and back again to him, and the sweet face was beautiful with a
-woman's tenderness.
-
-"Ah, how good you are, Monsieur le Cur, and how tired you must be," she
-said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X--KYRIE ELEISON
-
-|ST. MARLEAU was agog. St. Marleau was hysterical. St. Marleau was
-on tiptoe. It was in the throes of excitement, and the excitement was
-sustained by expectancy. It wagged its head in sapient prognostication
-of it did not quite know what; it shook its head in a sort of amazed
-wonder that such things should be happening in its own midst; and it
-nodded its head with a profound respect, not unmixed with veneration,
-for its young cur--the good, young Father Aubert, as St. Marleau,
-old and young, had taken to calling him, since it would not have been
-natural to have called him anything else.
-
-The good, young Father Aubert! Ah, yes--was he not to be loved and
-respected! Had he not, for three nights and two days now, sacrificed
-himself, until he had grown pale and wan, to watch like a mother at the
-bedside of the dying murderer, who did not die! It was very splendid of
-the young cur; for, though Madame Lafleur and her daughter beseeched
-him to take rest and to let them watch in his stead, he would not listen
-to them, saying that he was stronger than they and better able to stand
-it, and that, since it was he who had had the stranger brought to the
-_presbytre_, it was he who should see that no one else was put to any
-more inconvenience than could be avoided.
-
-Ah, yes,--it was most certainly the good, young Father Aubert! For, on
-the short walks he took for the fresh air, the very short walks, always
-hurrying back to the murderer's bedside, did he not still find time for
-a friendly and cheery word for every one he met? It was a habit, that,
-of his, which on the instant twined itself around the heart of St.
-Marleau, that where all were strangers to him, and in spite of his own
-anxiety and weariness, he should be so kindly interested in all the
-little details of each one's life, as though they were indeed a part of
-his own. How could one help but love the young cur who stopped one on
-the village street, and, man, woman or child, laid his hand in frank and
-gentle fashion upon one's shoulder, and asked one's name, and where one
-lived, and about one's family, and for the welfare of those who were
-dear to one? And did not both Madame Lafleur and her daughter speak
-constantly of how devout he was, that he was never without a prayer-book
-in his hand? Ah, indeed, it was the good, young Father Aubert!
-
-But this in no whit allayed the hysteria, the excitement and the
-expectancy under which St. Marleau laboured. A murder in St. Marleau!
-That alone was something that the countryside would talk about for years
-to come. And it was not only the murder; it was--what was to happen
-next! It was Mother Blondin's son who had been murdered by the stranger,
-and Mother Blondin, though not under arrest, was being watched by the
-police, who waited for the man in the _presbytre_ to die. It was Mother
-Blondin who had struck the murderer, and if the murderer died then she
-would be responsible for the man's death. What, then, would they do with
-Mother Blondin?
-
-St. Marleau, not being well versed in the law, did not know; it knew
-only that the assistant chief of the Tournayville police had installed
-himself in the Tavern where he could see that Mother Blondin did not
-run away, since the man at the _presbytre_ did not need any police
-watching, and that this assistant chief of the Tournayville police was
-as dumb as an oyster, and looked only very wise, like one who has great
-secrets locked in his bosom, when questions were put to him.
-
-And then, another thing--the funeral of Thophile Blondin. It was only
-this morning--the third morning after the murder--that that had been
-decided. Mother Blondin had raved and cursed and sworn that she would
-not let the body of her son enter the church. But Mother Blondin was
-not, perhaps, as much heretic as she wanted, or pretended, to be. Mother
-Blondin, perhaps, could not escape the faith of the years when she
-was young; and, while she scoffed and blasphemed, in her soul God was
-stronger than she, and she was afraid to stand between her dead son and
-the rites of Holy Church in which, through her own wickedness, she could
-not longer participate. But, however that might be, the people of St.
-Marleau, that is those who were good Christians and had respect for
-themselves, were concerned little with such as Mother Blondin, or,
-for that matter, with her son--but the funeral of a man who had been
-murdered right in their midst, and that was now to take place! Ah, that
-was quite another matter!
-
-And so St. Marleau gathered in a sort of breathless unanimity that
-morning to the tolling of the bell, as the funeral procession of
-Thophile Blondin began to wend its way down the hill--and within the
-sacred precincts of the church the villagers, as best they might, hushed
-their excitement in solemn and decorous silence.
-
-And at the church door, in surplice and stole, the altar boy beside
-him, as the cortge approached, stood Raymond Chapelle--the good, young
-Father Aubert.
-
-He was very pale; the dark eyes were sunk deep in their sockets from
-three sleepless nights, and from the torment of constant suspense, where
-each moment in the countless hours had been pregnant with the threat
-of discovery, where each second had swung like some horrible pendulum
-hesitating between safety--and the gallows. He could not escape this
-sacrilege that he was about to commit. There was no escape from it. They
-had thought it strange, perhaps, that he had not said mass on those two
-mornings that were gone. It was customary; but he knew, too, that it was
-not absolutely obligatory--and so, through one excuse and another, he
-had evaded it. And even if it had been obligatory, he would still have
-had to find some way out, to have taken the law temporarily, as it were,
-into his own hands--for he would not have dared to celebrate the mass.
-Dared? Because of the sacrilege, the meddling with sacred things? Ah,
-no! What was his creed--that he feared neither God nor devil, nor man
-nor beast! What was that toast he had drunk that night in Ton-Nugget
-Camp--he, and Three-Ace Artie, and Arthur Leroy, and Raymond Chapelle!
-No; it was not _that_ he feared--it was this sharp-eyed altar boy, this
-lad of twelve, who at the mass would be always at his elbow. But he was
-no longer afraid of the boy, for now he was ready. He had realised
-that he could not escape performing some of the offices of a priest, no
-matter what happened to that cursed fool lying over yonder there in the
-_presbytre_ upon the bed, who seemed to get better rather than worse,
-and so--he had overheard Madame Lafleur confide it to the doctor--he
-had been of a devoutness rarely seen. Through the nights and through the
-days, spurred on by a sharper, sterner prod than his father's gold in
-the old school days had been, he had poured and studied over the ritual
-and the theological books that he had found in the priest's trunk, until
-now, committing to memory like a parrot, he was thoroughly master of
-anything that might arise--especially this burial of Thophile Blondin
-which he had foreseen was not likely to be avoided, in spite of the
-attitude of that miserable old hag, the mother.
-
-Raymond's head was slightly bowed, his eyes lowered--but his eyes,
-nevertheless, were allowing nothing to escape them. They were extremely
-clumsy, and infernally slow out there in bringing the casket into
-the church! He would see to it that things moved with more despatch
-presently! There was another reason why he had not dared to act as a
-priest in the church before--that man over there in the _presbytre_
-upon the bed. He had, on that first morning, not dared to leave the
-other, and it had been the same yesterday morning. True, to avert
-suspicion, he had gone out sometimes, but never far, never out of call
-of the _presbytre_--which was a very different matter from being caught
-in the midst of a service where his hands would have been tied and he
-could not have instantly returned. It was strange, very strange about
-the wounded priest, who, instead of dying, appeared to be stronger,
-though he lay in a sort of comatose condition--and now the doctor even
-held out hopes of the man's recovery! Suppose--suppose the priest should
-regain consciousness now, at this moment, while he was in the act of
-conducting the funeral, in the other's stead, over the body of the man
-for whose murder, in _his_, Raymond's, stead, the other was held
-guilty! He was juggling with ghastly dice! But he could not have escaped
-this--there was no way to avoid this funeral of the son of that old hag
-who had run screaming, "murder--murder--murder," into the storm that
-night.
-
-He raised his head. It was the gambler now, steel-nerved, accepting the
-chances against him, to all outward appearances impassive, who stood
-there in the garb of priest. He was cool, possessed, sure of himself,
-cynical of all things holy, disdainful of all things spiritual,
-contemptuous of these villagers around him that he fooled--as he would
-have been contemptuous of himself to have hesitated at the plunge,
-desperate though it was, that was his one and only chance for liberty
-and life.
-
-Ha! At last--eh? They had brought Thophile Blondin to the door!
-
-And then Raymond's voice, rich, full-toned, stilled that queer, subdued,
-composite sound of breathings, of the rustle of garments, of slight,
-involuntary movements--of St. Marleau crowded in the pews in strained,
-tense waiting.
-
-_"'Si iniquitates observaveris, Domine; Domine quis sustinebit?_--If
-Thou, O Lord, wilt mark iniquities; Lord, who shall abide it?"
-
-It was curious that the service should begin like that, curious that he
-had not before found any meaning or significance in the words. He had
-learned them like a parrot. "If Thou, O Lord, wilt mark iniquities...."
-He bowed his head to hide the tightening of his lips. Bah, what was
-this! Some inner consciousness inanely attempting to suggest that there
-was not only significance in the words, but that the significance was
-personal, that the very words from his lips, performing the office of
-priest, desecrating God's holy place, was iniquity, black, blasphemous
-and abhorrent in God's sight--if there were a God!
-
-Ah, that was it--if there were a God! He was reciting now the _De
-Profundis_ in a purely mechanical way. "Out of the depths...."
-
-If there were a God--yes, that was it! He had never believed there was,
-had he? He did not believe it now--but he would make one concession.
-What he was doing was not in intent blasphemous, neither was it to
-mock--it was to save his life. He was a man with a halter strangling
-around his neck. And if there was a God, who then had brought all
-this about? Who then was responsible, and who then should accept the
-consequences? Not he! He had not sought from choice to play the part of
-priest! He had not sought the life of this dead man in the coffin there
-in front of him! He had not sought to--yes, curse it, it was the word to
-use--kill the drunken, besotted, worthless fool!
-
-A cold anger came, steadying his nerves. It was too bad that in some
-way he could not wreck a vengeance on the corpse for all this--the
-miserable, rum-steeped hound who had got him into this hellish fix.
-
-They were bearing the body into the church toward the head of the nave.
-He was at the _Subvenite_ now. "'...Kyrie eleison."
-
-The boyish treble, hushed yet clear, of young Gauthier Beaulieu, the
-altar boy, rose from beside him in the responses:
-
-"'Christe eleison"
-
-"Lord, have mercy.... From the gate of hell,"
-
-"Deliver his soul, O Lord."
-
-Again! That sense of solemnity, that personal implication in the words!
-It was coincidence, nothing more. No; it was not even that! He was
-simply twisting the meaning, allowing himself to be played with by a
-warped imagination. He was not a weak fool, was he, to let this get the
-better of him? And, besides, he would hurry through with it, and since
-he would say neither office nor mass it would not take long. It must be
-hot this summer morning, though he had not noticed it particularly when
-he had left the _presbytre_. The church seemed heavy and oppressive.
-Strange how the pews were all lined with eyes staring at him!
-
-The tread of feet up the aisle died away. The bier was set at the head
-of the nave, and lighted candles placed around it. There fell a silence,
-utter and profound.
-
-Why was it now that his lips scarcely moved, that his voice was scarcely
-audible; why that sudden foreboding, intangible yet present everywhere,
-at his temerity, at his unhallowed, hideous perversion of sanctity in
-that he should pray as a priest of God, in the habiliments of one of
-God's ministers, in God's church--ay, it was a devil's masquerade, for
-he, if never before, stood branded now, sealing that blasphemous toast,
-a disciple of hell.
-
-"'_Non intres in judicium cum servo tuo, Domine_....' Enter not into
-judgment with Thy servant, O Lord...."
-
-And so he denied God, did he? And so he was callous and indifferent, and
-scoffed at the possibility of a church, simply because it was a church,
-being the abiding place of a higher, holier, omnipotent presence? Why,
-then, that hoarseness in his throat--why, then, did he not shout his
-parrot words high to the vaulted roof in triumphant defiance? Why that
-struggle with his will to finish the prayer?
-
-From the little organ loft in the gallery over the door, floated now the
-notes of the _Responsory_, and the voices of the choir rolled solemnly
-through the church:
-
-"'_Libera me, Domine, de morte terna...._' Deliver me, O Lord, from
-eternal death...."
-
-Death! Eternal death! What was death? There was a dead man there in the
-casket--dead because he and the man had fought together, and the other
-had been killed. And he was burying, in a church, as a priest, he, who
-was the one upon whom the law would set its claws if it but knew, the
-man that he had killed! It came suddenly, with terrific force, blotting
-out those wavering candle flames around the coffin, the scene of that
-night. The wind was howling; that white-scarred face was cheek to cheek
-with him; they lunged and staggered around that dimly lighted room, he
-and the man who lay dead there in the coffin. They struggled for the
-revolver; that old hag circled about them like a swirling hawk--that
-blinding flash--the acrid smell of powder--the room revolving around
-and around--and the dead man, who was here in the coffin now, had
-lain sprawled out there on the floor. He shivered--and cursed himself
-fiercely the next instant--it seemed as though the casket suddenly
-opened, and that ugly, venomous, scarred face lifted up and leered at
-him.
-
-"'_Dies ilia, dies ir...,'_" came the voices of the choir. "That day, a
-day of wrath...."
-
-His jaws clenched. He pulled himself together. That was Valerie up there
-playing the little organ; Valerie with the great, dark eyes, and the
-beautiful face; Valerie, who thought it so unselfish of him because he
-had had a couch made up in the room in order that he might not leave
-the wounded man. The wounded man! Following the order of the service,
-Raymond was putting incense into the censer while the _Responsory_ was
-being sung, and his fingers gripped hard upon the vessel. Again that
-thought to torture and torment him! Had he not enough to do to go
-through with this! Who was with the wounded man now? That
-officious, nosing fool, who preened himself on the strength of being
-assistant-chief of police of some pitiful little town that no one
-outside of its immediate vicinity had ever heard of before? Or was it
-Madame Lafleur? But what, after all, did it matter who was there--if
-the man should happen to regain his senses? Ha, ha! Would it not be a
-delectable sight if that police officer should arrest him, strip these
-priestly trappings from him just as he left the church! It would be
-quite a dramatic scene, would it not--quite too damnably dramatic! He
-was swinging with that infernal pendulum between liberty and death. He
-was, at that moment, if ever a man was, or had been, the sport of fate.
-He had not liked the looks of the wounded priest half an hour ago when
-he had left the _presbytre_ for the sacristy--it had seemed as though
-the man were beginning to look _healthy._
-
-"'_Kyrie eleison....'_" The _Responsory_ was over. In a purely
-mechanical way again he was proceeding with the service. As the ritual
-prescribed, he passed round the bier with sprinkler and censer--and
-presently he found himself reciting the last prayer of that part of the
-service held within the church; and then the bier was being lifted and
-borne down the aisle again.
-
-Out into the sunlight, to the smell of the fields, to the breeze from
-the river wafting upon his cheek! He drew in a deep breath--and almost
-at the same instant passed his hand heavily across his eyes. He had
-thought that stifling heat, that overwhelming oppressiveness all in
-the atmosphere of the church; but here was the sunlight, and here the
-fields, and here the soft breeze blowing from the water--yet that sense
-of foreboding, a prescience, a weight upon him that sank deep to the
-soul, remained with him still.
-
-Slowly the procession passed around the green in front of the church,
-and through the gate of the whitewashed fence into the little burial
-ground beyond on the river's bank. They were chanting _In Paradisum_,
-but Valerie was no longer with the choir, for now, as they passed
-through the gate, he saw her, a slim figure all in white, hurry across
-the green toward the _presbytre._
-
-What was this before him! It was not the smell of fields, but the smell
-of freshly turned earth--a grave. The grave of Thophile Blondin, the
-man whom he had fought with--and killed. And he was a priest of God,
-burying Thophile Blondin. What ghastly, hellish travesty! What were
-those words returning to his memory, coming to him out of the dim past
-when he was still a boy, and still susceptible to the teachings of the
-fathers who had sought to guide him into the church--God is not mocked.
-
-"God is not mocked! God is not mocked!"--the words seemed to echo
-and reverberate around him, they seemed to be thundered in a voice of
-vengeance. "God is not mocked!"--and he was _blessing_ the grave of
-Thophile Blondir!
-
-Did these people, gathered, clustered about him, not hear that voice!
-Why did they not hear it? It was not the _Benedictus_ that was being
-sung that prevented them from hearing it, for he could scarcely hear the
-_Benedictus._
-
-Raymond's lips moved. "I am not mocking God," he whispered. "I do not
-believe in God, but I am not mocking. I am asking only for my life. I am
-taking only the one chance I have. I did not intend to kill the fool--he
-killed himself. I am no murderer. I----" He shivered suddenly again, as
-once in the church he had shivered before. His hands outstretched seemed
-to be creeping again toward a bare throat that lay exposed upon a bed,
-the feel of soft, pulsing flesh seemed upon his finger tips. And then
-a diabolical chortle seemed to rattle in his ears. So murder was quite
-foreign to him, eh? And he did not believe in God? And he was quite
-above and apart from all such nonsense? And therein, of course, lay the
-reason why the tumbling of this dead thing into a grave left him so
-cool and imperturbable; and why the solemn words of the service had no
-meaning; and why it was a matter of supreme unconcern to him, provided
-he was not caught at it, that he took God's words upon his lips, and
-God's garb upon his shoulders!
-
-White-faced, Raymond lifted his head. The _Benedictus_ was ended,
-and now the words came slowly from his lips in a strange, awed, almost
-wondering way.
-
-"_'Requiem oternam.... Ego sum resurrectio et vita....'_ I am the
-Resurrection and the Life: he that believeth in Me, although he be dead,
-shall live: and every one who liveth, and believeth in Me, shall never
-die."
-
-His voice faltered a little, steadied by a tremendous effort of will,
-and went on again, low-toned, through the responses and short prayer
-that closed the service."'_Kyrie eleison'..._ not into temptation....
-'_Requiem oternam_.'... '_Requiescat in pace'..._ through the mercy of
-God.... 'Amen.'"
-
-Forgotten for the moment was that grim pendulum that hovered over the
-bed in the _presbytre_ yonder, and by the side of the grave Raymond
-stood and looked down on the coffin of Thophile Blondin. The people
-began to disperse, but he was scarcely conscious of it. It seemed that
-he had run the gamut of every human emotion since he had met the
-funeral procession at the church door; but here was another now--an
-incomprehensible, quiet, chastened, questioning mood. They were very
-beautiful words, these, that he was repeating to himself. He did not
-believe them, but they were very beautiful, and to one who did believe
-they must offer more than all of life could hold.
-
-"'I am the resurrection and the life... he that be-lieveth in Me...
-shall never die.'"
-
-There was another gateway in the little whitewashed fence, a smaller one
-that gave on the sacristy at the side and toward the rear of the church.
-Slowly, head bowed, absorbed, unconscious of the rle he played so
-well, Raymond walked toward the gate, and through it, and, raising his
-head, paused. A shrivelled and dishevelled form crouched there against
-the palings. It was old Mother Blondin.
-
-And Raymond stared--and suddenly a wave of immeasurable pity, mingling
-a miserable sense of distress, swept upon him. In there was forbidden
-ground to her; and in there was her son--killed in a fight with him. She
-had come around here to the side, unobserved, unless Dupont were lurking
-somewhere about, to be as near at the last as she could. An old hag,
-wretched, dissolute--but human above all things else, huddling before
-the dying embers of mother-love. She did not look up; her forehead was
-pressed close against the fence as she peered inside; a withered, dirty
-hand clutched fiercely at a paling on each side of her face.
-
-Raymond stepped toward her, and spontaneously laid his hand upon her
-shoulder. And strange words were on his lips, but they were sincere
-words out of a heart torn and troubled and dismayed, out of a soul that
-had recoiled as before some tremendous cataclysm. And his words were the
-words he had been repeating over and over to himself.
-
-"'I am the resurrection and the life...' My poor, poor woman, let me
-help you. See, you must not mourn that way alone. Come, let me take you
-back to your home----"
-
-She rose to her feet, and looked at him, and for an instant the hard,
-set, wrinkled face seemed to soften, and into the blear eyes seemed to
-spring a mist of tears--then her face contorted into livid fury, and she
-struck at his hand, flinging it from her shoulder.
-
-"You go to hell!" she snarled. "You, and all like you, you go to hell!"
-
-She was gone--shuffling around the corner of the church.
-
-And then Raymond laughed a little. It was like a dash of cold water in
-the face. He had been a fool--a fool all morning, a fool to let
-mere words, mere environment have any influence upon him, a fool
-to sentimentality in talking to her like that, mawkish to have used
-the words! He would have said what she had said to any one else, if he
-had been in her place--only more bitterly, more virulently, if that were
-possible.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders, and moved on toward the sacristy to divest
-himself of his surplice and stole--and again he paused, this time in the
-doorway, and turned around, as a voice cried out his name.
-
-"Father Aubert!"
-
-It was Valrie, running swiftly toward him from the _presbytre_.
-
-And Raymond stood still and waited. Intuitively he knew. Something had
-happened in the _presbytre_ at last. He was the gambler again, cool,
-imperturbable, steel-nerved, with the actual crisis upon him. It was the
-turn of the card, the throw of the dice, that was all. Was it life--or
-death? It was Valrie who was to pronounce the sentence. She reached
-him, breathless, flushed. He smiled at her.
-
-"Monsieur le Cur--Father Aubert," she panted, "come quickly! He can
-speak! He has regained consciousness!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI--"HENRI MENTONE"
-
-|VALERIE'S flushed face was lifted eagerly to his. She had caught
-impetuously at the sleeve of his _soutane_, and was urging him forward.
-And yet he was walking with deliberate measured tread across the green
-toward the _presbytre_. Strange how the blood seemed to be hammering
-feverishly at his temples! Every impulse prompted him to run, as a man
-running for his life, to reach the _presbytre_, to reach that room, to
-shut the door upon himself and that man whose return to consciousness
-meant--what? But it was too late to run now. Too late! Already the news
-seemed to have spread. Those who had been the last to linger at the
-grave of Thophile Blondin were gathering, on their way out from the
-little burying ground, around the door of the _presbytre_. It would
-appear bizarre, perhaps, that the cur should come tearing across
-the green with vestments flying simply because a man had regained
-consciousness! Ha, ha! Yes, very bizarre! Why should their cur run like
-one demented just because a man had regained consciousness! If the
-man were at his last gasp now, were just about to die--that would be
-different! He found a bitter mirth in that. Yes, decidedly, they would
-understand that! But as it was, they would think their cur had gone
-suddenly mad, perhaps, or they would think, perhaps--something else.
-
-The dice were thrown, the card was turned--against him. His luck was
-out. It was like walking tamely to where the noose dangled and awaited
-his neck to walk toward those gaping people clustered around the door,
-to walk into the _presbytre_. But it was his only chance. Yes, there
-was a chance--one chance left. If he could hold out until evening, until
-darkness!
-
-Until evening, until darkness--with the night before him in which to
-attempt his escape! But there were still eight hours or more to
-evening. There were only a few more steps to go before he reached the
-_presbytre_. The distance was pitifully short. In those few steps he
-must plan everything; plan that that accursed noose swaying before his
-eyes should----
-
-"_Dies illa, dies ir_--that day, a day of wrath." What brought those
-words flashing through his mind! He had said them once that morning--but
-a little while ago--in church--as a priest--at Thophile Blondin's
-funeral. Damn it, they were not meant for him! They did not mean to-day.
-They were not premonitory. He was not beaten yet!
-
-In the shed behind the _presbytre_ there was a pair of the old
-sacristan's overalls, and an old coat, and an old hat. He had noticed
-them yesterday. They would serve his purpose--a man in a pair of
-overalls and a dirty, torn coat would not look much like a priest. Yes,
-yes; that would do, it was the way--when night came. He would have the
-darkness, and he would hide the next day, and the day after, and travel
-only by night. It invited pursuit of course, the one thing that next
-to capture itself he had struggled and plotted to avoid, but it was the
-only chance now, and, if luck turned again, he might succeed in making
-his way out of the country--when night came.
-
-But until then! What until then? That was where his danger lay now--in
-those hours until darkness.
-
-"Yes!" whispered Raymond fiercely to himself. "Yes--if only you keep
-your head!"
-
-What was the matter with him? Had he forgotten! It was what he had
-been prepared to face that night when he had brought the priest to the
-_presbytre_, should the man then have recovered sufficiently to speak.
-It should be still easier now to make any one believe that the man was
-wandering in his mind, was not yet lucid or coherent after so long a
-lapse from consciousness. And the very story that the man would tell
-must sound like the ravings of a still disordered mind! He, Raymond,
-would insist that the man be kept very quiet during the day; he,
-Raymond, would stay beside the other's bed. Was he not the cur! Would
-they not obey him, show deference to his judgment and his wishes--until
-night came!
-
-They were close to the _presbytre_ now, close to the little gaping
-crowd that surrounded the door; and, as though conscious for the first
-time that she was clinging to his arm, Valrie, in sudden embarrassment
-at her own eagerness, hurriedly dropped her hand to her side. And,
-at the act, Raymond looked at her quickly, in an almost startled way.
-Strange! But then his brain was in turmoil! Strange that extraneous
-things, things that had nothing to do with the one grim purpose of
-saving his neck should even for an instant assert themselves! But then
-they--no, she--had done that before. He remembered now... when they were
-putting on that bandage.
-
-When that crucifix had tangled up his hands, and she had seemed to stand
-before him to save him from himself... those dark eyes, that pure,
-sweet face, the tender, womanly sympathy--the antithesis of himself! And
-to-night, when night came, when the night he longed for came, when
-the night that meant his only chance for life came, he--what was
-this!--this sudden pang of yearning that ignored, with a most curious
-authority, as though it had the right to ignore, the desperate, almost
-hopeless peril that was closing down upon him, that seemed to make the
-coming of the night now a thing he would put off, a thing to regret and
-to dread, that bade him search for some other way, some other plan that
-would not necessitate--
-
-"A fool and a pretty face!"--it was the gibe and sneer and prod of that
-inward monitor. "See all these people who are so reverently making way
-for you, and eying you with affection and simple humility, see the rest
-of them coming back from all directions because the _murderer_ is about
-to tell his story--well, see how they will make way for you, and with
-what affection and humility they will eye you when you come out of that
-house again, if all the wits the devil ever gave you are not about you
-now!"
-
-He spoke to her quietly, controlling his voice:
-
-"You have not told me yet what he said, mademoiselle?"
-
-She shook her head.
-
-"He did not say much--only to ask where he was and for a drink of
-water."
-
-He had no time to ask more. They had reached the group before the
-_presbytre_ now, and the buzz of conversation, the eager, excited
-exchange of questions and answers was hushed, as, with one accord, men
-and women made way for their cur. And Raymond, lifting his hand in
-a kindly, yet authoritative gesture, cautioning patience and order,
-mounted the steps of the _presbytre_.
-
-And then, inside the doorway, Raymond quickened his step. From the
-closed door at the end of the short hallway came the low murmur of
-voices. It was Madame Lafleur probably who was there with the other now.
-How much, how little had the man said--since Valrie had left the room?
-Raymond's lips tightened grimly. It was fortunate that Madame Lafleur
-had so great a respect for the cloth! He had nothing to fear from
-her. He could make her believe anything. He could twist her around his
-finger, and--he opened the door softly--and stood, as though turned
-suddenly rigid, incapable of movement, upon the threshold--and his hand
-upon the doorknob closed tighter and tighter in a vise-like grip. Across
-the room stood, not Madame Lafleur, but Monsieur Dupont, the assistant
-chief of the Tournayville police, and in Monsieur Dupont's hand was
-a notebook, and upon Monsieur Dupont's lips, as he turned and glanced
-quickly toward the door, there played an enigmatical smile.
-
-"Ah! It is Monsieur le Cur!" observed Monsieur Dupont smoothly. "Well,
-come in, Monsieur le Cur--come in, and shut the door. I promise you,
-you will find it interesting. What? Yes, very interesting!"
-
-"Oh, Monsieur Dupont is here!"--the words seemed to come to Raymond as
-from some great distance behind him.
-
-He turned. It was Valrie. Of course, it was Valrie! He had forgotten.
-She had naturally followed him along the hall to the door. What did this
-Dupont mean by what he had said? What had Dupont already learned--that
-was so _interesting!_ It would not do to have Valrie here, if--if he
-and Dupont----
-
-"Perhaps, Mademoiselle Valrie," he said gravely, "it would be as
-well if you did not come in. Monsieur Dupont appears to be officially
-engaged."
-
-"But, of course!" she agreed readily. "I did not know that any one was
-here. I left the man alone when I ran out to find you. I will come back
-when Monsieur Dupont has gone."
-
-And Raymond smiled, and stepped inside the room, and closed the door,
-and leaned with his back against it.
-
-"Well, Monsieur le Cur"--Monsieur Dupont tapped with his pencil on the
-notebook--"I have it all down here. All! Everything that he has said."
-
-Raymond had not even glanced toward the bed--his eyes, cool, steady now,
-were on the officer, watching the other like a hawk.
-
-"Yes?" he prompted calmly.
-
-"And"--Monsieur Dupont made that infernal clucking noise with his
-tongue--"I have--nothing! Did I not tell you it was interesting? Yes,
-very interesting! Very!"
-
-Was the man playing with him? How clever was this Dupont? No fool, at
-any rate! He had already shown that, in spite of his absurd mannerisms.
-Raymond's hand began to toy with the crucifix on his breast, while his
-fingers surreptitiously loosened several buttons of his _soutane_.
-
-"Nothing?"--Raymond's eyebrows were raised in mild surprise. "But
-Mademoiselle Valrie told me he had regained consciousness."
-
-"Yes," said Monsieur Dupont, "I heard her say so to some one as she
-left the house. I was keeping an eye on that _vieille sauvage_, Mother
-Blondin. But this--ah! Quite a more significant matter! Yes--quite!
-You will understand, Monsieur le Cur, that I lost no time in reaching
-here?"
-
-And now for the first time Raymond looked swiftly toward the bed. It was
-only for the barest fraction of a second that he permitted his eyes to
-leave the police officer; but in that glance he had met coal black eyes,
-all pupils they seemed, fixed in a sort of intense penetration upon him.
-The man was still lying on his back, he had noticed that--but it was the
-eyes, disconcerting, full of something he could not define, boring into
-him, that dominated all else. He stepped nonchalantly toward Monsieur
-Dupont.
-
-"It is astonishing that he has said nothing," he murmured softly. "Will
-you permit me, Monsieur Dupont"--he held out his hand--"to see your
-book?"
-
-"The book? H'm! Well, why not?" Monsieur Dupont shrugged his shoulders
-as he placed the notebook in Raymond's hand. "It is not customary--but,
-why not!"
-
-And then upon Raymond came relief. It surged upon him until he could
-have laughed out hysterically, laughed like a fool in this Monsieur
-Dupont's face--this Monsieur Dupont who was the assistant chief of the
-police force of Tournayville. It was true! Dupont had at least told the
-truth. So far Dupont had learned nothing. Raymond's face was impassive
-as he scrutinised the page before him. Written with a flourish on the
-upper line, presumably to serve as a caption, were the words:
-
-"The Murderer, Henri Mentone," and beneath: "Evades direct answers.
-Hardened type--knows his way about. Pretends ignorance. Stubborn. Wily
-rascal--yes, very!"
-
-Raymond handed the notebook back to Monsieur Dupont.
-
-"It is perhaps not so strange after all, Monsieur Dupont," he remarked
-with a thoughtful air. "We must not forget that the poor fellow has but
-just recovered consciousness. He is hardly likely to be either lucid or
-rational."
-
-"Bah!" ejaculated Monsieur Dupont grimly. "He is as lucid as I am. But I
-am not through with him yet! He is not the first of his kind I have had
-upon my hook!" He leaned toward the bed. "Now, then, my little Apache,
-you will answer my questions! Do you understand? No more evasions! None
-at all! They will do you no good, and----"
-
-Raymond's hand fell upon Monsieur Dupont's shoulder. Though he had not
-looked again until now, he was conscious that those eyes from the
-bed had never for an instant swerved from his face. Now he met them
-steadily. He addressed Monsieur Dupont, but he spoke to the man on the
-bed.
-
-"Have you warned him, Monsieur Dupont," he said soberly, "that anything
-he says will be used against him? And have you told him that he is not
-obliged to answer? He is weak yet and at a disadvantage. He would be
-quite justified in waiting until he was stronger, and entirely competent
-to weigh his own words."
-
-Monsieur Dupont was possessed of an inconsistency all his own.
-
-"_Tonnerre!_" he snapped. "And what is the use of warning him when he
-will not answer at all?"
-
-"You appear not quite to have given up hope!" observed Raymond dryly.
-
-"H'm!" Monsieur Dupont scowled. "Very well, then"--he leaned once more
-over the bed, and addressed the man--"you understand? It is as Monsieur
-le Cur says. I warn you. You are not obliged to answer. Now then--your
-name, your age, your birthplace?"
-
-Raymond shifted his position to the foot of the bed.
-
-Damn those eyes! Move where he would, they never left his face. The man
-had paid no attention to Monsieur Dupont. Why, in God's name, why did
-the man keep on staring and gazing so fixedly at him--and why had the
-man refused to answer Dupont's questions--and why had not the man with
-his first words poured out his story eagerly!
-
-"Well, well!" prodded Monsieur Dupont. "Did you not hear--eh? Your
-name?"
-
-The man's eyes followed Raymond.
-
-"Where am I?" he asked faintly.
-
-It was too querulous, that tone, too genuinely weak and peevish to smack
-of trickery--and suddenly upon Raymond there came again that nervous
-impulse to laugh out aloud. So that was the secret of it, was it? There
-was a sort of sardonic humour then in the situation! The suggestion,
-the belief he had planned to convey to shield himself--that the man
-was still irrational--was, in fact, the truth! But how long would that
-condition last? He must put an end to this--get this cursed Dupont away!
-
-"Where am I?" muttered the man again.
-
-"_Tiens!_" clucked Monsieur Dupont. "You see, Monsieur le Cur! You see?
-Yes, you see. He plays the game well--with finesse, eh?" He turned to
-the man. "Where are you, eh? Well, you are better off where you are
-now than where you will be in a few days! I promise you that! Now,
-again--your name?"
-
-The man shook his head.
-
-"Monsieur Dupont," said Raymond, a little severely. "You will arrive
-at nothing like this. The man is not himself. To-morrow he will be
-stronger."
-
-"Bah! Nonsense! Stronger!" jerked out Monsieur Dupont derisively. "Our
-fox is quite strong enough! Monsieur le Cur, you are not a police
-officer--do not let your pity deceive you. And permit me to continue!"
-He slipped his hand into his pocket, and adroitly flashed a visiting
-card suddenly before the man's eyes. "Well, since you cannot recall
-your name, this will perhaps be of assistance! You see, Monsieur Henri
-Mentone, that you get yourself nowhere by refusing to answer!" Once more
-the man shook his head.
-
-"So!" Monsieur Dupont complacently returned the card to his pocket. "Now
-we will continue. You see now where you stand. Your age?"
-
-Again the man shook his head.
-
-"He does not know!" remarked Monsieur Dupont caustically. "Very
-convenient memory! Yes--very! Well, will you tell us where you came
-from?"
-
-For the fourth time the man shook his head--and at that instant Raymond
-edged close to Monsieur Dupont's side. What was that in those eyes
-now--that something that was creeping into them--that _dawning_ light,
-as they searched his face!
-
-"He does not know that, either!" complained Monsieur Dupont
-sarcastically. "Magnificent! Yes--very! He knows nothing at all! He----"
-
-With a low cry, the man struggled to his elbow, propping himself up in
-bed.
-
-"Yes, I know!"--his voice, high-pitched, rang through the room. "I know
-now!" He raised his hand and pointed at Raymond. "_I know you!_"
-
-Raymond's hand was thrust into the breast of his _soutane_, where he had
-unbuttoned it beneath the crucifix--and Raymond's fingers closed upon
-the stock of an automatic in his upper left-hand vest pocket.
-
-"Poor fellow!" murmured Raymond pityingly. "You see, Monsieur
-Dupont"--he moved still a little closer--"you have gone too far. You
-have excited him. He is incoherent. He does not know what he is saying."
-
-Monsieur Dupont was clucking with his tongue, as he eyed the man
-speculatively.
-
-"Yes, yes; I know you now!" cried the man again. "Oh, monsieur,
-monsieur!"--both hands were suddenly thrust out to Raymond, and there
-was a smile on the trembling lips, an eager flush dyeing the pale
-cheeks. "It is you, monsieur! I have been very sick, have I not? It--it
-was like a dream. I--I was trying to remember--your face. It is your
-face that I have seen so often bending over me. Was that not it,
-monsieur--monsieur, you who have been so good--was that not it? You
-would lift me upon my pillow, and give me something cool to drink. And
-was it not you, monsieur, who sat there in that chair for long, long
-hours? It seems as though I saw you there always--many, many times."
-
-It was like a shock, a revulsion so strong that for the moment it
-unnerved him. Raymond scarcely heard his own voice.
-
-"Yes," he said--his forehead was damp, as he brushed his hand across it.
-
-Monsieur Dupont blew out his cheeks.
-
-"_Nom d'un nom!_" he exploded. "Ah, your pardon, Monsieur le Cur!
-But it is mild, a very mild oath, is it not--under the circumstances?
-Yes--very! I admire cleverness--yes, I do! The man has a head! What
-an appeal to the emotions! Poignant! Yes, that's the word--poignant.
-Looking for sympathy! Trying to make an ally of you, Monsieur le Cur!"
-
-"Get rid of the fool! Get rid of the fool!" prompted that inward monitor
-impatiently.
-
-Raymond, with a significant look, plucked at Monsieur Dupont's sleeve,
-and led the other across the room away from the bed.
-
-"Do you think so?" he asked, in a lowered voice.
-
-"Eh?" inquired Monsieur blankly. "Think what?"
-
-"What you just said--that he is trying to make an ally of me."
-
-"Oh, that--_zut!_" sniffed Monsieur Dupont. "But what else?"
-
-"Then suppose"--Raymond dropped his voice still lower--"then suppose you
-leave him with me until tomorrow. And meanwhile--you understand?"
-
-Monsieur Dupont pondered the suggestion.
-
-"Well, very well--why not?" decided Monsieur Dupont. "Perhaps not a bad
-idea--perhaps not. And if it does not succeed"--Monsieur Dupont shrugged
-his shoulders--"well, we know everything anyhow; and I will make him
-pay through the nose for his tricks! But he is under arrest, Monsieur le
-Cur, you understand that? There is a cell in the jail at Tournayville
-that----"
-
-"Naturally--when he is able to be moved," agreed Raymond readily. "We
-will speak to the doctor about that. In the meantime he probably could
-not walk across this room. He is quite safe here. I will be responsible
-for him."
-
-"And I will put a flea in the doctor's ear!" announced Monsieur Dupont,
-moving toward the door. "The assizes are next week, and after the
-assizes, say, another six weeks and"--Monsieur Dupont's tongue clucked
-eloquently several times against the roof of his mouth. "We will not
-keep him waiting long!" Monsieur Dupont opened the door, and, standing
-on the threshold where he was hidden from the bed, laid his forefinger
-along the side of his nose. "You are wrong, Monsieur le Cur"--he had
-raised his voice to carry through the room. "But still you may be right!
-You are too softhearted; yes, that is it--soft-hearted. Well, he has you
-to thank for it. I would not otherwise consider it--it is against my
-best judgment. I bid you good-bye, Monsieur le Cur!"
-
-Raymond closed the door--but it was a moment, standing there with his
-back to the bed, before he moved. His face was set, the square jaws
-clamped, a cynical smile flickering on his lips. It had been close--but
-of the two, as between Monsieur Dupont and himself and the gallows,
-Monsieur Dupont had been the nearer to death! He saw Monsieur Dupont in
-his mind's-eye sprawled on the floor. It would not have been difficult
-to have stopped forever any outcry from that weak thing upon the bed.
-And then the window; and after that--God knew! And it would have been
-God's affair! It was God Who had instituted that primal law that lay
-upon every human soul, the law of self-preservation; and it was God's
-choosing, not his, that he was here! Who was to quarrel with him if he
-stopped at nothing in his fight for life! Well, Dupont was gone now!
-That danger was past. He had only to reckon now with Valrie and her
-mother--until night came. He raised his hand heavily to his forehead and
-pushed back his hair. Valrie! Until night came! Fool! What was Valrie
-to him! And yet--he jeered at himself in a sort of grim derision--and
-yet, if it were not his one chance for life, he would not go to-night.
-He could call himself a fool, if he would; that ubiquitous and caustic
-other self, that was the cool, calculating, unemotional personification
-of Three-Ace Artie, could call him a fool, if it would--those dark eyes
-of Valrie's--no, not that--it was not eyes, nor hair, nor lips, they
-were only part of Valrie--it was Valrie, like some rare fragrance,
-fresh and pure and sweet in her young womanhood, that----
-
-"Monsieur!"--the man was calling from the bed.
-
-And then Raymond turned, and walked back across the room, and drew a
-chair to the bedside, and sat down. And Raymond smiled--but not at the
-bandaged, outstretched form before him. A fool! Well, so be it! The
-fool would sit here for the rest of the morning, and the rest of the
-afternoon, and listen to the babbling wanderings of another fool who
-had not had sense enough to die; and he would play this cursed rle of
-saint, and fumble with his crucifix, and mumble his * Latin, and
-keep this Mademoiselle Valrie, who meant nothing to him, from the
-room--until to-night. And--what was this other fool saying?
-
-"Monsieur--monsieur, who was that man who just went out?"
-
-Raymond answered mechanically:
-
-"It was Monsieur Dupont, the assistant chief of the Tournayville
-police."
-
-"What was he doing here?" asked the other slowly, as though trying to
-puzzle out the answer to his own question. "Why was he asking me all
-those questions?"
-
-Raymond, tight-lipped, looked the man in the eyes.
-
-"We've had enough of this, haven't we?" he challenged evenly. "I thought
-at first you were still irrational. You're not--that is now quite
-evident. Well--we are alone--what is your object? You had a chance to
-tell Dupont your story!"
-
-A pitiful, stunned look crept into the man's face. He stretched out his
-hand over the coverlet toward Raymond. "You--you, too, monsieur!" he
-said numbly. "What does it mean? What does it mean?"
-
-It startled Raymond. There was trickery here, it could be nothing
-else--and yet there was sincerity too genuine to be assumed in the
-other's words and acts. Raymond sat back in his chair, and for a long
-minute, brows knitted, studied the man. It was possible, of course, that
-the other might not have recognised him--they had only been together for
-a few moments in the smoking compartment of the train, and, dressed
-now as a priest, that might well be the case--but why not the story
-then?--why not the simple statement that he was the new cur coming to
-the village, that he had been struck down and--bah! What was the man's
-game! Well, he would force the issue, that was all! He leaned over the
-bed; and, his hand upon the other's, his fingers closed around the
-man's wrist until, beneath their tips, they could gauge the throb of the
-other's pulse. And his eyes, steel-hard, were on the other.
-
-"I am the cur," he said, in a low, level tone, "of St. Marleau--while
-Father Allard is away. My name is--_Franois Aubert_."
-
-"And mine," said the man, "is"--he shook his head--"mine is"--his face
-grew piteously troubled--"it is strange--I do not remember that either."
-
-There had been no tell-tale nervous flutter of the man's pulse.
-Raymond's hand fell away from the other's wrist. What was this curious,
-almost uncanny presentiment that was creeping upon him! Was it possible
-that the man was telling the _truth!_ Was it possible that--his own
-brain was whirling now--he steadied himself, forcing himself to speak.
-
-"Did you not read the card that Dupont showed you?"
-
-"Yes," said the other. "Henri Mentone--is that my name?"
-
-"Do you not know!"--Raymond's tone was suddenly sharp, incisive.
-
-"No," the other answered. "No, I cannot remember." He reached out his
-arms imploringly to Raymond again. "Oh, monsieur, what does it mean? I
-do not know where I am--I do not know how I came here."
-
-"You are in the _presbytre_ at St. Marleau," said Raymond, still
-sharply. Was it true; or was the man simply magnificent in duplicity?
-No--there could be no reason, no valid reason for the man to play a
-part?--no reason why he should have withheld his story from Dupont. It
-was not logical. He, Raymond, who alone knew all the story, knew
-that. It must be true--but he dared not yet drop his guard. He must
-be sure--his life depended on his being sure. He was speaking
-again--uncompromisingly: "You were picked up unconscious on the road by
-the tavern during the storm three nights ago--you remember the storm, of
-course?"
-
-Again that piteously troubled look was on the other's face.
-
-"No, monsieur, I do not remember," he said tremulously.
-
-"Well, then," persisted Raymond, "before the storm--you surely remember
-that! Where you came from? Where you lived? Your people?"
-
-"Where I came from, my--my people"--the man repeated the words
-automatically. He swept his hand across his bandaged head. "It is gone,"
-he whispered miserably. "I--it is gone. There--there is nothing. I do
-not remember anything except a girl in this room saying she would run
-for the cur, and then that man came in." A new trouble came into his
-eyes. "That man--you said he was a police officer--why was he here?
-And--you have not told me yet--why should he ask me questions?"
-
-There was still a card to play. Raymond leaned again over the man.
-
-"All this will not help you," he said sternly. "Far better that you
-should confide in me! The proof against you is overwhelming. You are
-already condemned. You murdered Thophile Blondin that night, and stole
-Mother Blondin's money. Mother Blondin struck you that blow upon the
-head as you ran from the house. You were found on the road; and in your
-pockets was Mother Blondin's money--and her son's revolver, with which
-you shot him. In a word, you are under arrest for murder."
-
-"Murder!"--the man, wide-eyed, horror-stricken, was staring at
-Raymond--and then he was clawing himself frantically into an
-upright position in the bed. "No, no! Not that! It cannot be true!
-Not--_murder!_" His voice rose into a piercing cry, and rang, and rang
-again through the room. He reached out his arms. "You are a priest,
-monsieur--by that holy crucifix, by the dear Christ's love, tell me that
-it is not so! Tell me! Murder! It is not true! It cannot be true! No,
-no--no! Monsieur--father--do you not hear me crying to you, do you
-not--" His voice choked and was still. His face was buried in his hands,
-and great sobs shook his shoulders.
-
-And Raymond turned his head away--and Raymond's face was gray and drawn.
-There was no longer room for doubt. That blow upon the skull had blotted
-out the man's memory, left it--a blank.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII--HIS BROTHER'S KEEPER
-
-|FATHER ALLARD'S desk had been moved into the front room. Raymond, on
-a very thin piece of paper, was tracing the signature inscribed on the
-fly-leaf of the prayer-book--Franois Aubert. Before him lay a number of
-letters written that morning by Valrie--parish letters, a letter to the
-bishop--awaiting his signature. Valrie, who had been private secretary
-to her uncle, was now private secretary to--Franois Aubert!
-
-The day before yesterday he had signed a letter in this manner,
-and Valrie, who was acquainted with the signature from her uncle's
-correspondence, had had no suspicions. Raymond placed his tracing over
-the bottom of one of the letters, and, bearing down heavily as he wrote,
-obtained an impression on the letter itself. The impression served as a
-guide, and he signed--Franois Aubert.
-
-It was simple enough, this expedient in lieu of a piece of carbon
-paper that he had no opportunity to buy, and for which, from the notary
-perhaps, Valrie's other uncle, who alone in the village might be
-expected to have such a thing, he had not dared to make the request; but
-it was tedious and laborious--and besides, for the moment, his mind was
-not upon his task.
-
-He signed another, and still another, his face deeply lined as he
-worked, wrinkles nesting in strained little puckers around the corners
-of his eyes--and suddenly, while there were yet two of the letters to
-be signed, he sat back in his chair, staring unseeingly before him. From
-the rear room came that footstep, slow, irregular, uncertain. It was
-Henri Mentone. Dupont's "flea" in the doctor's ear had had its effect.
-Henri Mentone was taking his exercise--from the bed to the window, from
-the window to the door, from the door to the bed, and over again. In the
-three days since the man had recovered consciousness, he had made rapid
-strides toward recovering his strength as well, though he still spent
-part of the day in bed--this afternoon, for instance, he was to be
-allowed out for a little while in the open air.
-
-Raymond's eyes fixed on the open window where the morning sunlight
-streamed into the room. Yes, the man was getting on his feet rapidly
-enough to suit even Monsieur Dupont. The criminal assizes began at
-Tournayville the day after to-morrow. And the day after to-morrow Henri
-Mentone was to stand his trial for the murder of Thophile Blondin!
-
-Raymond's fingers tightened upon the penholder until it cracked
-warningly, recalling him to himself. He had not gone that night. Gone!
-He laughed mockingly. The man had lost his memory! Who would have
-thought of that--and what it meant? If the man had died, or even if the
-man had talked and so _forced_ him to accept pursuit as his one and only
-chance, the issue would have been clear cut. But the man, curse him, had
-not died; nor had he told his story--and to all appearances at least,
-except for still being naturally a little weak, was as well as any one.
-Gone! Gone--that night! Great God, they would _hang_ the fool for this!
-
-The sweat beads crept out on Raymond's forehead. No, no--not that! They
-thought the man was shamming now, but they would surely realise before
-it was too late that he was not. They would convict him of course, the
-evidence was damning, overwhelming, final--but they would not hang a man
-who could not remember. No, they wouldn't hang him. But what they would
-do was horrible enough--they would sentence the man for life, and keep
-him in the infirmary perhaps of some penitentiary. For life--that was
-all.
-
-The square jaw was suddenly out-thrust. Well, what of it! He, Raymond,
-was safe as it was. It was his life, or the other's. In either case
-it would be an innocent man who suffered. As far as actual murder was
-concerned, he was no more guilty than this priest who had had nothing
-to do with it. Besides, they would hang him, Raymond, and they wouldn't
-hang the other. Of course, they didn't believe the man now! Why should
-they? They did not know what he, Raymond, knew; they had only the
-evidence before them that was conclusive enough to convict a saint from
-Heaven! Ha, ha! Why, even the man himself was beginning to believe in
-his own guilt! Sometimes the man was as a caged beast in an impotent
-fury; and--and sometimes he would cling like a frightened child with his
-arms around his, Raymond's, neck.
-
-It was warm here in the room, warm with the bright, glorious sunlight of
-the summer morning. Why did he shiver like that? And this--why _this?_
-The smell of incense; those organ notes rising and swelling through the
-church; the voices of the choir; the bowed heads everywhere! He surged
-up from his chair, and, rocking on his feet, his hands clenched upon the
-edge of the desk. Before what dread tribunal was this that he was being
-called suddenly to account! Yesterday--yesterday had been Sunday--and
-yesterday he had celebrated mass. His own voice seemed to sound again
-in his ears: "_Introibo ad altare Dei_--I will go in unto the Altar of
-God.... _Ab homme iniquo et dolosoerue me_--Deliver me from the unjust
-and deceitful man.... _In quorum manibus iniquitates sunt_--In whose
-hands are iniquities.... _Hic est enim Calix sanguinis mei novi et
-terni testamenti: mysterium fidei_--For this is the Chalice of My Blood
-of the new and eternal testament: the mystery of faith...." No--no, no!
-He had not profaned those holy things, those holy vessels. He had not
-done it! It was a lie! He had fooled even Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar
-boy.
-
-He sank back into his chair like a man exhausted, and drew his hand
-across his eyes. It was nothing! He was quite calm again. Those words,
-the church, those holy things had nothing to do with Henri Mentone. If
-any one should think otherwise, that one was a fool! Had Three-Ace Artie
-ever been swayed by "mystery of faith"--or been called a coward! Yes,
-that was it--a coward! It was true that he had as much right to life
-as that pitiful thing in the back room, but it was he who had put that
-other's life in jeopardy! That creed--that creed of his, born of the far
-Northland where men were men, fearing neither God nor devil, nor man,
-nor beast--it was better than those trembling words which had just been
-upon his lips. True, he was safe now, if he let them dispose of this
-Henri Mentone--but to desert the other would be a coward's act. Well,
-what then--what then! Confess--and with meek, uplifted eyes, like some
-saintly martyr, stand upon the gibbet and fasten the noose around his
-own neck? _No!_ Well then, what--_what?_ The tormented look was back in
-Raymond's eyes. There was a way, a way by which he could give the man
-a chance, a way by which they both might have their chance, only the
-difficulties so far had seemed insurmountable--a problem that he had not
-yet been able to solve--and the time was short. Yes, the way was there,
-if only----.
-
-With a swift movement, incredibly swift, alert in an instant, his hand
-swept toward the desk. Some one was knocking at the door. His fingers
-closed on the thin piece of paper that had served him in tracing the
-signature of Francois Aubert, and crushed it into a little ball in the
-palm of his hand. The door opened. There were dark eyes there, dark
-hair, a slim figure, a sweet, quiet smile, a calm, an untroubled peace,
-a pervading radiance. It was unreal. It could not exist. There was only
-a ghastly turmoil, agony, dismay and strife everywhere--his soul told
-him so! This was Valrie. God, how tired he was, how weary! Once he had
-seen those arms supporting that wounded man's head so tenderly--like a
-soothing caress. If he might, just for a moment, know that too, it would
-bring him--rest.
-
-She came lightly across the room and stood before the desk.
-
-"It is for the letters, Monsieur le Cur," she smiled. "I am going down
-to the post-office." She picked up the little pile of correspondence;
-and, very prettily business-like, began to run through it.
-
-Impulsively Raymond reached out to take the letters from her--and,
-instead, his hand slipped inside his _soutane_, and dropped the crushed
-ball of paper into one of his pockets. It was too late, of course! She
-would already have noticed the omission of the two signatures.
-
-"There are two there that I have not yet signed," observed Raymond
-casually.
-
-"Yes; so I see!" she answered brightly. "I was just going to tell you
-how terribly careless you were, Monsieur le Cur! Well, you can sign
-them now, while I am putting the others in their envelopes. Here they
-are."
-
-He took the two letters from her hand--and laid them deliberately aside
-upon the desk.
-
-"It was not carelessness," he said laughingly; "except that I should
-not have allowed them to get mixed up with the others. There are some
-changes that I think I should like to make before they go. They are not
-important--to-morrow will do."
-
-"Of course!" she said. Then, in pretended consternation: "I hope the
-mistakes weren't mine!"
-
-"No--not yours"--he spoke abstractedly now. He was watching her as she
-folded the letters and sealed the envelopes. How quickly she worked! In
-a minute now she would go and leave him alone again to listen to those
-footfalls from the other room. He wanted rest for his stumbling brain;
-and, yes--he wanted her. He could have reached out and caught her hands,
-and drawn that dark head bending over the desk closer to him, and held
-her there--a prisoner. He brushed his hands hurriedly over his forehead.
-A prisoner! What did he mean by that? Oh, yes, the thought was born of
-the idea that he was already a jailor. He had been a jailor for three
-days now--of that man there, who was too weak to get away. He had
-appointed himself jailor--and Monsieur Dupont had confirmed the
-appointment. What had that to do with Valrie? He only wanted her to
-stay because--a fool, was he!--because he wanted to torture himself
-a little more. Well, it was exquisite torture then, her presence, her
-voice, her smile! Love? Well, what if he loved! Days and days their
-lives had been spent together now. How long was it? A week--no, it must
-be more than a week--it seemed as though it had been as long as he could
-remember. Yes, he loved her! He knew that now--scoff, sneer and gibe if
-that inner voice would! He loved her! He loved Valrie! Madness? Well,
-what of that, too! Did he dispute it! Yes, it was madness--and in more
-ways than one! He was fighting for his life in this devil's masquerade,
-and he might win; but he could not fight for or win his love. That
-was just dangled before his eyes as the final Satanic touch to this
-hell-born conspiracy that engulfed him! He was in the garb of a priest!
-How those hell demons must shake their very souls out with laughter in
-their damnable glee! He could not even touch her; he could say no word,
-his tongue was tied; nor look at her--he was in the garb of a priest!
-He--what was this! A fire seemed in his veins. Her hand in his! Across
-the desk, her hand had crept softly into his!
-
-"Monsieur--Monsieur le Cur--you are ill!" she cried anxiously.
-
-And then Raymond found himself upon his feet, his other hand laid over
-hers--and he forced a smile.
-
-"I--no"--Raymond shook his head--"no, Mademoiselle Valrie, I am not
-ill."
-
-"You are worn out, then!" she insisted tremulously. "And it is our
-fault. We should have made you let us help you more. You have been up
-night after night with that man, and in the daytime there was the parish
-work, and you have never had any rest. And yesterday in the church you
-looked so tired--and--and----"
-
-The dark eyes were misty; the sweet face was very close to his. If he
-might bend a little, just a very little, that glad wealth of hair would
-brush his cheek.
-
-"A little tired, perhaps--yes--mademoiselle," he said, in a low voice.
-"But it is nothing!" He released her hand, and, turning abruptly from
-the desk, walked to the window.
-
-She had followed him with her eyes, turned to look after him--he sensed
-that. There was silence in the room. He did not speak. He did not dare
-to speak until--ah!--this should bring him to his senses quickly enough!
-
-He was staring out through the window. A buck-board had turned in from
-the road, and was coming across the green toward the _presbytre_.
-Dupont and Doctor Arnaud! They were coming for Henri Mentone now--_now!_
-He had let the time slip by until it was too late--because he had not
-been able to fight his way through the odds against him! And then there
-came a wan smile to Raymond's lips. No! His fears were groundless.
-Three-Ace Artie would have seen that at once! The buckboard was
-single-seated, there was room only for two--and Monsieur Dupont could be
-well trusted to look after his own comfort when he took the man away.
-
-He drew back from the window, and faced around--and the thrill that had
-come from the touch of her hand was back again, as he caught her gaze
-upon him. What was it that was in those eyes, that was in her face?
-She had been looking at him like that, he knew, all the time that he
-had been standing at the window. They were still misty, those eyes--she
-could not hide that, though she lowered them hurriedly now. And that
-faint flush tinging her cheeks! Did it mean that she--Fool! He knew what
-it meant! It meant that if he cared to seek for any added self-torture
-with his madman's imaginings, he could find it readily to hand. She--to
-have any thought but that prompted by her woman's sympathy, her tender
-anxiety for another's trouble! She--who thought him a priest, and, pure
-in her faith as in her soul, would have recoiled in horror from----
-
-He steadied his voice.
-
-"Monsieur Dupont and the doctor have just arrived," he said.
-
-She looked up, her face serious now.
-
-"They have come for Henri Mentone?"
-
-"No, not yet, I imagine," he answered; "since they have only a
-one-seated buckboard."
-
-"I will be glad when he has gone!" she exclaimed impulsively.
-
-"Glad?"
-
-"Yes--for your sake," she said. "He has brought you to the verge of
-illness yourself." She was looking down again, shuffling the sealed
-envelopes abstractedly. "And it is not only I who say so--it is all St.
-Marleau. St. Marleau loves you for it, for your care of him, Monsieur le
-Cur--but also St. Marlbau thinks more of its cur than it does of one
-who has taken another's life."
-
-Raymond did not reply--he was listening now to the footsteps of Monsieur
-Dupont and the doctor, as they passed by along the hallway outside. Came
-then a sharp, angry voice raised querulously from the rear room--that
-was Henri Mentone. Monsieur Dupont's voice snapped in reply; and then
-the voices merged into a confused buzz and murmur. He glanced quickly at
-Valrie. She, too, was listening. Her head was turned toward the door,
-he could not see her face.
-
-He walked slowly across the room to her side by the desk.
-
-"You do not think, mademoiselle," he asked gravely, "that it is possible
-the man is telling the truth, that he really cannot remember anything
-that happened that night--and before?"
-
-She shook her head.
-
-"Every one knows he is guilty," she said thoughtfully. "The evidence
-proves it absolutely. Why, then, should one believe him? If there was
-even a little doubt of his guilt, no matter how little, it might be
-different, and one might wonder then; but as it is--no."
-
-"And it is not only you who say so"--he smiled, using her own words--"it
-is all St. Marleau?"
-
-"Yes, all St. Marleau--and every one else, including Monsieur le Cur,
-even if he has sacrificed himself for the man," she smiled in return.
-Her brows puckered suddenly. "Sometimes I am afraid of him," she said
-nervously. "Yesterday I ran from the room. He was in a fury."
-
-Raymond's face grew grave.
-
-"Ah! You did not tell me that, mademoiselle," he said soberly.
-
-"And I am sorry I have told you now, if it is going to worry you," she
-said quickly. "You must not say anything to him. The next time I went in
-he was so sorry that it was pitiful."
-
-In a fury--at times! Was it strange! Was it strange if one did not sit
-unmoved to watch, fettered, bound, impotent, a horrible doom creeping
-inexorably upon one! Was it strange if at times, all recollection
-blotted out, conscious only that one was powerless to avert that
-creeping terror, one should experience a paroxysm of fury that rocked
-one to the very soul--and at times in anguish left one like a helpless
-child! He had seen the man like that--many times in the last few days.
-And he, too, had seen that same terror creep like a dread thing out
-of the night upon himself to hover over him; and he could see it now
-lurking there, ever present--but he, Raymond, could fight!
-
-The door of the rear room opened and closed; and Monsieur Dupont's voice
-resounded from the hall.
-
-"Where is Monsieur le Cur? Ho, Monsieur le Cur!"
-
-Valrie looked toward him inquiringly.
-
-"Shall I tell them you are here?" she asked.
-
-Raymond nodded mechanically.
-
-"Yes--if you will, please."
-
-He leaned against the desk, his hands gripping its edge behind his back.
-What was it now that this Monsieur Dupont wanted? He was never sure of
-Dupont. And this morning his brain was fagged, and he did not want to
-cope with this infernal Monsieur Dupont! He watched Valrie walk across
-the room, and disappear outside in the hall.
-
-"Monsieur le Cur is here," he heard her say. "Will you walk in?" And
-then, at some remark in the doctor's voice which he did not catch: "No;
-he is not busy. I was just going to take his letters to the postoffice.
-He heard Monsieur Dupont call."
-
-And then, as the two men stepped in through the doorway, Raymond spoke
-quietly:
-
-"Good morning, Monsieur Dupont! Good morning, Doctor Arnaud!"
-
-"Hah! Monsieur le Cur!" Monsieur Dupont wagged his head vigorously. "He
-is in a very pretty temper this morning, our friend in there--eh? Yes,
-very pretty! You have noticed it? Yes, you have noticed it. It would
-seem that he is beginning to realise at last that his little tricks are
-going to do him no good!"
-
-Raymond waved his hand toward chairs.
-
-"You will sit down?" he invited courteously.
-
-"No"--Doctor Arnaud smiled, as he answered for them both. "No, not this
-morning, Monsieur le Cur. We are returning at once to Tournayville. I
-have an important case there, and Monsieur Dupont has promised to have
-me back before noon."
-
-"Yes," said Monsieur Dupont, "we stopped only to tell you"--Monsieur
-Dupont jerked his hand in the direction of the rear room--"that we will
-take him away to-morrow morning. Doctor Arnaud says he will be quite
-able to go. We will see what the taste of a day in jail will do for him
-before he goes into the dock--what? He is very fortunate! Yes, very!
-There are not many who have only one day in jail before they are tried!
-Yes! To-morrow morning! You look surprised, Monsieur le Cur, that it
-should be so soon. Yes, you look surprised!"
-
-"On the contrary," observed Raymond impassively, "when I saw you drive
-up a few minutes ago, I thought you had come to take him away at once."
-
-"But, not at all!" Monsieur Dupont indulged in a significant smile.
-"No--not at all! I take not even that chance of cheating the court out
-of his appearance--I do not wish to house him for months until the next
-assizes. I take no chances on a relapse. He has been quite safe here.
-Yes--quite! He will be quite safe for another twenty-four hours in your
-excellent keeping, Monsieur le Cur--since he is still too weak to run
-far enough to have it do him any good!"
-
-"You pay a high compliment to my vigilance, Monsieur Dupont," said
-Raymond, with a faint smile.
-
-"Hah!" cried Monsieur Dupont. "Hah!"--he began to chuckle. "Do you hear
-that, Monsieur le Docteur Arnaud? I thought it had escaped him! He has a
-sense of humour, our estimable cur! You see, do you not? Yes, you see.
-Well, we will go now!" He pushed the doctor from the room. "_Au
-revoir_ Monsieur le Cur! It is understood then? To-morrow morning! _Au
-revoir_--till to-morrow!"
-
-Monsieur Dupont bowed, and whisked himself out of sight. Raymond went
-to the door, closed it, and mechanically began to pace up and down
-the room. He heard Monsieur Dupont and the doctor clamber into the
-buckboard, and heard the buckboard drive off. There was moisture upon
-his forehead again. He swept it away. To-morrow morning! He had until
-to-morrow morning in which to act--if he was to act at all. But the way!
-He could not see the way. It was full of peril. The risk was too great
-to be overcome! He dared not even approach that man in there with any
-plan. There was something horribly sardonic in that! If he was to act,
-he must act now, at once--there was only the afternoon and the night
-left.
-
-"You are safe as it is," whispered that inner voice insidiously. "The
-man's condemnation by the law will dispose of the killing of Thophile
-Blondin forever. It will be as a closed book. And then--have you
-forgotten?--there is your own plan for getting away after a little
-while. It cannot fail, that plan. Besides, they will not sentence the
-man to hang, they will be sure to see that his memory is really gone;
-whereas they will surely hang you if you are caught--as you will be, if
-you are fool enough to attempt the impossible now. What did you ever get
-out of being quixotic? Do you remember that little affair in Ton-Nugget
-Camp?"
-
-"My God, what shall I do?" Raymond cried out aloud. "If--if only I could
-see the way!"
-
-"But you can't!" sneered the voice viciously. "Haven't you tried hard
-enough to satisfy even that remarkably tender conscience that you seem
-to have picked up somewhere so suddenly! You--who were going to kill the
-man with your own hands! Let well enough alone!"
-
-It was silent now in the rear room. Raymond halted in the centre of the
-floor and listened. There were no footsteps; no sound of voice--only
-silence. He laughed a little harshly. What was the man doing? Planning
-his _own_ escape! Again Raymond laughed in bitter mirth. God speed to
-the man in any such plans--only the man, as Monsieur Dupont had most
-sagaciously suggested, would not get very far alone. But still it would
-be humorous, would it not, if the man should succeed alone, where he,
-Raymond, had utterly failed so far to work out any plan that would
-accomplish the same end! There was the open window to begin with, the
-man had been told now probably that he was to be taken away to-morrow
-morning, and--why was there such absolute stillness from that other
-room? The partitions were very thin, and--Raymond, as mechanically as he
-had set to pacing up and down the room, turned to the door, passed out
-into the hall, and walked softly along to the door of the rear room.
-He listened there again. There was still silence. He opened the door,
-stepped across the threshold--and a strange white look crept into his
-face, and he stood still.
-
-Upon the floor at the bedside knelt Henri Mentone, and at the opening
-of the door the man did not look up. There was no fury now; it was the
-child, helpless in despair and grief. His hands were outflung across the
-coverlet, his head was buried in his arms--and there was no movement,
-save only a convulsive tremor that shook the thin shoulders. And there
-was no sound.
-
-And the whiteness deepened in Raymond's face--and, as he looked,
-suddenly the scene was blurred before his eyes.
-
-And then Raymond stepped back into the hall, and closed the door again,
-and on Raymond's lips was a queer, twisted smile.
-
-"To-morrow morning, I think you said, Monsieur Dupont," he whispered.
-"Well, to-morrow morning, Monsieur Dupont--he will be gone."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII--THE CONFEDERATE
-
-|THERE had been a caller, there had been parish matters, there had
-been endless things through endless hours which he had been unable to
-avoid--except in mind. He had attended to them subconsciously, as it
-were; his mind had never for an instant left Henri Mentone. And it was
-beginning to take form now, a plan whereby he might effect the other's
-escape.
-
-Sitting at his desk, he looked at his watch as he heard Valrie and
-her mother go upstairs. It was a quarter past three. Later on in the
-afternoon, in another hour or thereabouts Madame Lafleur would take
-Henri Mentone for a few steps here and there about the green, or sit
-with him for a little fresh air on the porch of the _presbytre_.
-Raymond smiled ironically. As jailor he had delegated the task to
-Madame Lafleur--since, as he had told both Valrie and her mother at the
-noonday meal, he was going out to make pastoral visits that afternoon.
-Meanwhile--he had just looked into Henri Mentone's room--the man was
-lying on his bed asleep. If he worked quickly now--while Valrie and her
-mother were upstairs, and the man was lying on his bed!
-
-He picked up a pen, and drew a piece of paper toward him. Everything
-hinged on his being able to procure a confederate. He, the cur of St.
-Marleau, must procure a confederate by some means, and naturally without
-the confederate knowing that Monsieur le Cur was doing so--and, almost
-as essential, a confederate who had no love for Monsieur le Cur! It was
-not a very simple matter! That was the problem with which he had racked
-his brains for the last three days. Not that the minor details were
-lacking in difficulties either; he, as the cur, must not appear even
-remotely in the plan; he, as the cur, dared not even suggest escape to
-Henri Mentone--but he could overcome all that if only he could secure a
-confederate. That was the point upon which everything depended.
-
-His pen poised in his hand, he stared across the room. Yes, he saw it
-now--a gambler's chance. But the time was short now, short enough to
-make him welcome any chance. He would go to Mother Blondin's. He
-might find a man there such as he sought, one of those who already had
-offended the law by frequenting the dissolute old hag's illicit still.
-He could ask, of course, who these men were without exciting any
-suspicion, and if luck failed him that afternoon he would do so, and it
-would be like a shot still left in his locker; but if, in his rle of
-cur, he could actually trap one of them drinking there, and incense
-the man, even fight with him, it would make success almost certain. Yes,
-yes--he could see it all now--clearly--afterwards, when it grew dark, he
-would go to the man in a far different rle from that of a cur, and
-the man would be at his disposal. Yes, if he could trap one of them
-there--but before anything else Henri Mentone must be prepared for the
-attempt.
-
-Raymond began to write slowly, in a tentative sort of way, upon the
-paper before him. Henri Mentone, remembering nothing of the events of
-that night, must be left in no doubt as to the genuineness and good
-faith of the note, or of the vital necessity of acting upon its
-instructions. At the expiration of a few minutes, Raymond read over
-what he had written. He scored out a word here and there; and then, on
-another sheet of paper, in a scrawling, illiterate hand, he wrote out
-a slangy, ungrammatical version of the original draft. He read it again
-now:
-
-"The memory game won't go, Henri. They've got you cold, but they don't
-know there was two of us in it at the old woman's that night, so keep up
-your nerve, for I ain't for laying down on a pal. I got it fixed for a
-getaway for you to-night. Keep the back window open, and be ready at any
-time after dark--see? Leave-the rest to me. If that mealy-mouthed priest
-gets in the road, so much the worse for him. I'll take care of him so he
-won't be any trouble to any one except a doctor, and mabbe not much to a
-doctor--get me? I'd have been back sooner, only I had to beat it for you
-know where to get the necessary coin. Here's some to keep you going in
-case we have to separate in a hurry to-night.----Pierre."
-
-Raymond nodded to himself. Henri Mentone might not relish the suggestion
-of any violence offered to the "mealy-mouthed priest," for he had come
-to look upon Father Franois Aubert as his only friend, and, except in
-his fits of fury, to cling dependently upon him; but then there would
-be no violence offered to Father Franois Aubert, and the suggestion
-supplied a final touch of authenticity to the note, since Henri Mentone
-would realise that escape was impossible unless in some way the cur
-could be got out of the road.
-
-Raymond destroyed the original draft, and took out his pocketbook. He
-smiled curiously, as he examined its contents. It was the gold of the
-Yukon, the gold of Ton-Nugget Camp, that he had changed into banknotes
-of large denominations. He selected two fifty-dollar bills. It was not
-enough to carry the man far, or to take care of the man until he was on
-his feet, nor were fifty-dollar bills the most convenient denomination
-for a man under the present circumstances; but that was not their
-purpose--they would act as a guarantee of one "Pierre" and "Pierre's"
-plan, and to-night he would give the man more without stint, and
-supplement it with some small bills from his roll of "petty cash." He
-folded the money in the note, found a small piece of string in one of
-the drawers of the desk, stood up, took his hat, tiptoed softly across
-the room, out into the hall, and from the hall to the front porch.
-
-Here, he stood quietly for a moment, looking about him; and then,
-satisfied that he was unobserved, that neither Valrie nor her mother
-had noticed his exit, he walked quickly around to the back of the
-house--and paused again, this time beneath the open window of Henri
-Mentone's room. Here, too, but even more sharply now, he looked about
-him--then stooped ana picked up a small stone. He tied the note around
-this, and, crouched low by the window, called softly: "Henri! Henri!"
-
-He heard a rustle, the creak of the bed, as though the man, startled and
-suddenly roused, were jerking himself up into an upright position.
-
-"It is Pierre!" Raymond called again. "_Courage, mon vieux!_ Have no
-fear! All is arranged for tonight. But do not come to the window--we
-must be careful. Here--_voici!_"--he tossed the note in over the sill.
-"Until dark--tu comprends, Henri? I will be back then. Be ready!"
-
-He heard the man cry out in a low voice, and the creak of the bed again,
-and the man's step on the floor--and, stooping low, Raymond darted
-around the corner of the house.
-
-A moment later he was standing again in the hallway of the _presbytre_.
-
-"Oh, Madame Lafleur!" he called up the stairs. "It is only to tell you
-that I am going out now."
-
-"Yes, Monsieur le Cur--yes. Very well, Monsieur le Cur," she answered.
-
-Raymond closed the front door behind him, and, walking sedately across
-the green and past the church, gained the road. It was Mother Blondin's
-now, but he would not go by the station road--further along the village
-street, where the houses thinned out and were scattered more apart,
-he could climb up the little hill without being seen, and by walking
-through the woods would come out on the path whose existence had once
-already done him such excellent service. And the path, as an approach
-to Mother Blondin's this afternoon, offered certain very important
-strategical advantages.
-
-But now for the moment he was in the heart of the village, and from
-the doorways and garden patches of the little squat, curved-roof,
-whitewashed houses of rough-squared logs that flanked the road on either
-side, voices called out to him cheerily as he walked along. He answered
-them--all of them. He was even conscious, in spite of the worry of his
-mind, of a curious and not altogether unwelcome wonder. They were simple
-folk, these people, big-hearted and kindly, free and open-handed with
-the little they had, and they appeared to have grown fond of him in the
-few days he had been in St. Marleau, to look up to him, to trust him,
-to have faith in him, and to accept him as a friend, offering a frank
-friendship in return.
-
-His hands were clasped behind his back as he walked along, and suddenly
-his fingers laced tightly over one another. The pleasurable wonder of
-it was gone. He was playing well this rle of saint! He was a
-gambler--Three-Ace Artie of Ton-Nugget Camp; a gambler--too unclean even
-for the Yukon. But he was no hypocrite! He would have liked to have torn
-these saintly trappings from his body, wrenched off his _soutane_
-and hurled it in the faces of these people, and bade them keep their
-friendship and their trust--tell them that he asked for nothing that
-they gave because they believed him other than he was. He was no
-hypocrite--he was a man fighting desperately for that for which every
-one had a right to fight, for which instinct bade even an insect
-fight--his life! He did not despise this proffered friendship, the smile
-of eye and lip, the ring of genuine sincerity in the voices that called
-to him--but they were not his, they were not meant for Three-Ace Artie,
-they were not meant for Raymond Chapelle. Somehow--it was a grotesque
-thought--he envied himself in the rle of cur for these things. But
-they were not his. It was strange even that he, in whose life there had
-been naught but riot and ruin, should still be able to simulate so well
-the better things, to carry through, not the rle of priest, that was
-a matter of ritual, a matter of keeping his head and his nerve, but the
-far kindlier and intimate rle of _father_ to the parish! Yes, it was
-very strange, and----
-
-"_Bon jour_, Monsieur le Cur!"
-
-Raymond halted. It was Madame Bouchard, the carpenter's wife. With a
-sort of long-handled wooden paddle, she was removing huge loaves of
-bread from the queer-looking outdoor oven which, though built of a
-mixture of stone and brick, resembled very much, through being rounded
-over at the top, an exaggerated beehive. A few yards further in from the
-edge of the road Bouchard himself was at work upon a boat in front of
-his shop. Above the shop was the living quarters of the family, and
-here, on a narrow veranda, peering over, a half dozen scantily clad and
-very small children clung to the railings.
-
-Raymond sniffed the air luxuriously.
-
-"_Tiens_, Madame Bouchard!" he cried. "Your husband is to be envied! The
-smell of the bread is enough to make one hungry!"
-
-The carpenter laid down his tools, and looked up, laughing.
-
-"_Salut_, Monsieur le Cur!" he called.
-
-"If Monsieur le Cur would like one"--Madame Bouchard's cheeks had grown
-a little rosy--"I--I will send one to the _presbytre_ for him."
-
-Raymond had eaten of St. Marleau bread before. The taste was sour, and
-it required little short of a deftly wielded axe to make any impression
-upon the crust.
-
-"You are too good, too generous, Madame Bouchard," he said, shaking his
-forefinger at her chidingly. "And yet"--he smiled broadly--"if there is
-enough to spare, there is nothing I know of that would delight me more."
-
-"Of course, she can spare it!" declared the carpenter heartily, coming
-forward. "Stanislaus will carry you two presently. And, _tiens_,
-Monsieur le Cur, you like to row a boat--eh?"
-
-Raymond, on the point of shaking his head, checked himself. A boat!
-One of these days--soon, if this devil's trap would only open a
-little--there was his own escape to be managed. He had planned that
-carefully... a boating accident... the boat recovered... the cur's body
-swept out somewhere in those twenty-five miles of river breadth that
-stretched away before him now, and from there--who could doubt it!--to
-the sea.
-
-"Yes," he said; "I am very fond of it, but as yet I have not found
-time."
-
-"Good!" exclaimed the carpenter. "Well, in two or three days it will
-be finished, the best boat in St. Marleau--and Monsieur le Cur will be
-welcome to it as much as he likes. It is a nice row to the islands
-out there--three miles--to gather the sea-gull eggs--and the islands
-themselves are very pretty. It is a great place for a picnic, Monsieur
-le Cur."
-
-"Excellent!" said Raymond enthusiastically. "That is exactly what
-I shall do." He clapped the carpenter playfully upon the shoulder.
-"So--eh, Monsieur Bouchard,--you will lose no time in finishing the
-boat!" He turned to Madame Bouchard. "_Au revoir_, madame--and very many
-thanks to you. I shall think of you at supper to-night, I promise you!"
-He waved his hand to the children on the veranda, and once more started
-along the road.
-
-Madame Bouchard's voice, speaking to her husband, reached him. The words
-were not intended for his ears, and he did not catch them all. It was
-something about--"the good, young Father Aubert."
-
-A wan smile crept to Raymond's lips. For the moment at least, he was in
-a softened, chastened mood. "The good, young Father Aubert"--well, let
-it be so! They would never know, these people of St. Marleau. Somehow,
-he was relieved at that. He did not want them to know. Somehow, he, too,
-wanted for himself just what they would have--a memory--the memory of a
-good, young Father Aubert.
-
-At a bend in the road, where the road edged in against the slope of the
-hill, hiding him from view, Raymond clambered up the short ascent. In a
-clump of small cedars at the top, he paused and looked back. The great
-sweep of river, widening into the Gulf of St. Lawrence, with no breath
-of air to stir its surface, shimmered like a mirror under the afternoon
-sun. A big liner, outward bound, and perhaps ten miles from shore,
-seemed as though it were painted there. To the right, close in, was the
-little group of islands, with bare, rounded, rocky peaks, to which
-the carpenter had referred. About him, from distant fields, came the
-occasional voice of a man calling to his horses, the faint whir of a
-reaper, and a sort of pervading, drowsy murmur of insect life. Below
-him, nestled along the winding road, were the little whitewashed houses,
-quiet, secure, tranquil, they seemed to lie there; and high above them
-all, as though to typify the scene, to set its seal upon it, from the
-steeple of the church there gleamed in the sunlight a golden cross, the
-symbol of peace--such as he wore upon his breast!
-
-With a quick intake of his breath, a snarl smothered in a low, confused
-cry, as he glanced involuntarily downward at his crucifix, he gathered
-up the skirts of his _soutane_, and, as though to vent his emotion in
-physical exertion, began to force his way savagely through the bushes
-and undergrowth.
-
-He had other things to do than waste time in toying with visionary
-sentiment! There was one detail in that scene of _peace_ he had not
-seen--that man in the rear room of the _presbytre_ who was going to
-trial for the murder of Thophile Blondin, because he was decked out in
-the clothes of one Raymond Chapelle, alias Henri Mentone. It would be
-well perhaps for Raymond Chapelle to remember that, and to remember
-nothing else for the remainder of the afternoon!
-
-He went on through the woods, heading as nearly as he could judge in a
-direction that would bring him out at the rear of the tavern. And now
-he laughed shortly to himself. Peace! There would be a peace that would
-linger long in somebody's memory at Mother Blondin's this afternoon, if
-only luck were with him! He was on a priestly mission--to console, bring
-comfort to the old hag for the loss of her son--and, quite incidentally,
-to precipitate a fight with any of the loungers who might be burying
-their noses in Mother Blondin's home-made _whiskey-blanc!_ He laughed
-out again. St. Marleau would talk of that, too, and applaud the
-righteousness of the good, young Father Au^ bert--but he would attain
-the object he sought. He, the good, young Father Aubert, the man with a
-rope around his neck, whose hands were against everyman's, had too many
-friends in St. Marleau--he needed an _enemy_ now! It was the one thing
-that would make the night's work sure.
-
-He reached the edge of the wood to find himself even nearer the tavern
-than he had expected--and to find, too, that he would not have to lie
-long in wait for a visitor to Mother Blondin's. There was one there
-already. So far then, he could have asked for no better luck. He caught
-the sound of voices--the old hag's, high-pitched and querulous; a man's,
-rough and domineering. Looking cautiously through the fringe of trees
-that still sheltered him, Raymond discovered that he was separated from
-Mother Blondin's back door by a matter of but a few yards of clearing.
-The door was open, and a man, heavy-built, in a red-checkered shirt,
-a wide-brimmed hat of coarse straw, was forcing his way past the
-shrivelled old woman. As the man turned his head sideways, Raymond
-caught a glimpse of the other's face. It was not a pleasant face. The
-eyes were black, narrow and shifty under a low brow; and a three days'
-growth of black stubble on his jaws added to his exceedingly dirty and
-unkempt appearance.
-
-Mother Blondin's voice rose furiously.
-
-"You will pay first!" she screamed. "I know you too well, Jacques
-Bourget! Do you understand? The money! You will pay me first!"
-
-"Or otherwise you will tell the police, eh?" the man guffawed
-contemptuously. He pushed his way inside the house, and pushed a table
-that stood in the centre of the room roughly back against the wall. "You
-shut your mouth!" he jeered at her--and, stooping down, lifted up a trap
-door in the floor. "Now trot along quick for some glasses, so you can
-keep count of all we both drink!"
-
-"You are a thief, a robber, a _crapule_, a--" she burst into a stream
-of blasphemous invective. Her wrinkled face grew livid with ungovernable
-rage. She shook a bony fist at him. "I will show you what you will get
-for this! You think I am alone--eh? You think I am an old woman that you
-can rob as you like--eh? You think my whisky is for your guzzling throat
-without pay--eh? Well, I will show you, you----"
-
-The man made a threatening movement toward her, and she retreated back
-out of Raymond's sight--evidently into an inner room, for her voice,
-as virago-like as ever, was muffled now.
-
-"Bring me a glass, and waste no time about it!" the man called after
-her. "And if you do not hold your tongue, something worse will happen to
-you than the loss of a drop out of your bottle!"
-
-The man turned, and descended to the cellar through the trapdoor.
-
-"Yes," said Raymond softly to himself. "Yes, I think Monsieur Jacques
-Bourget is the man I came to find."
-
-He stepped out from the trees, walked noiselessly across to the house,
-and, reaching the doorway, remained standing quietly upon the threshold.
-He could hear the man moving about in the cellar below; from the inner
-room came Mother Blondin's incessant mutterings, mingled with a savage
-rattling of crockery. Raymond smiled ominously--and then Raymond's face
-grew stern with well-simulated clerical disapproval.
-
-The man's head, back turned, showed above the level of the floor. Into
-the doorway from the inner room came Mother Blondin--and halted there,
-her withered old jaw sagging downward in dumfounded surprise until it
-displayed her almost toothless gums. The man gained his feet, turned
-around--and, with a startled oath, dropped the bottle he was carrying.
-It crashed to the floor, broke, and the contents began to trickle back
-over the edge of the trapdoor.
-
-"_Sacristi!_" shouted the man, his face flaring up into an angry red.
-He thrust his head forward truculently from his shoulders, and glared at
-Raymond. "_Sacr nom de Dieu_, it is the saintly priest!" he sneered.
-
-"My son," said Raymond gravely, "do not blaspheme! And have respect for
-the Church!"
-
-"Bah!" snarled the man. "Do you think I care for you--or your church!"
-He looked suddenly at Mother Blondin. "Hah!"--he jumped across the room
-toward her. "So that is what you meant by not being alone--eh? I did not
-understand! You would trick me, would you! You would sell me out for the
-price of a drink--and--ha, ha--to a priest! Well"--he had her now by the
-shoulders--"I will take a turn at showing you what I will do! Eh--why
-did you not warn me he was here?" He caught her head, and banged it
-brutally against the wall. "Eh--why did----"
-
-Raymond, too, was across the room. It was strange! Most strange! He had
-intended to seek an occasion to quarrel. The occasion was made for
-him. He had no longer any desire to quarrel--he was possessed of an
-overwhelming desire to get his fingers around the throat of this cur who
-banged that straggling, dishevelled gray hair against the wall. He was
-not quite sure that it was himself who spoke. No, of course, it was not!
-It was Monsieur le Cur--the good, young Father Aubert. He was between
-them now, only Mother Blondin had fallen to the floor.
-
-"My son," he said placidly, "since you will not respect the Church for
-one reason, I will teach you to respect it for another." He pointed to
-old Mother Blcndin, who, more terrified than hurt perhaps, was getting
-to her knees, moaning and wringing her hands. "You have heard, though I
-fear you may have forgotten it, of the Mosaic law. An eye for an eye, my
-son. I intend to do to you exactly what you have done to this woman."
-
-The man, drawn back, eyed him first in angry bewilderment, and then with
-profound contempt.
-
-"You'd better get out of here!" he said roughly.
-
-"Presently--when I have thrown you out"--Raymond was calmly tucking up
-the skirts of his _soutane_. "And"--the flat of his hand landed with a
-stinging blow across the other's cheek--"you see that I do not take even
-you off your guard."
-
-The man reeled back--and then, with a bull-like roar of rage, head down,
-rushed at Raymond.
-
-It was not Monsieur le Cur now--it was Raymond Chapelle, alias Arthur
-Leroy, alias Three-Ace Artie, cold, contained, quick and lithe as a
-panther, and with a panther's strength. A crash--a lightning right
-whipped to the point of Bourget's jaw--and Bourget's head jolted back
-quivering on his shoulders like a tuning fork. And like a flash, before
-the other could recover, a left and right smashed full again into
-Bourget's face.
-
-With a scream, Mother Blondin crawled and scuttled into the doorway
-of the inner room. The man, bellowing with mad dismay, his hands
-outstretched, his fingers crooked to tear at Raymond's flesh if they
-could but reach it, rushed again.
-
-And now Raymond, wary of the other's strength and bulk, gave ground; and
-now he side-stepped and swung, battering his blows into Bourget's face;
-and now he ran craftily from the other. Chairs and table crashed to the
-floor; their heels crunched in the splinters of the broken bottle. The
-man's face began to bleed profusely from both nose and a cut lip. They
-were not tactics that Bourget understood. He clawed, he kept his head
-down, he rushed in blind clumsiness--and always Raymond was just beyond
-his reach.
-
-Again and again they circled the room, Bourget, big, lumbering, awkward,
-futilely expending his strength, screaming oaths with gasping breath.
-And again and again, springing aside as the man charged blindly by,
-Raymond with a grim fury rained in his blows. It was something like that
-other night--here in Mother Blon-din's. She was shrieking again now from
-the doorway:
-
-"Kill him! The _misrable!_ Hah, Jacques Bourget, are you a
-jack-in-the-box only to bob your head backward every time you are hit!
-I did not bring the priest here! _Sacr nom_, you cannot blame me! I had
-nothing to do with it! _Sacr nom--sacr nom--sacr nom--kill him!_"
-
-Kill who? Who did she mean--the man or himself? Raymond did not know.
-She was just a blurred object of rage and tumbled hair dancing in a
-frenzy up and down there in the doorway. He ran again. Bourget, like a
-stunned fool, was covering his face with his arms as he dashed forward.
-Ah, yes, Bourget was trying to crush him back into the corner there,
-and--no!--the maniacal rush had faltered, the man was swaying on his
-feet. And then Raymond, crouched to elude the man, sprang instead at the
-other's throat, his hands closed like a vise, and with the impact of his
-body both lurched back against the wall by the rear doorway.
-
-"My son," panted Raymond, "you remember--an eye for an eye"--he smashed
-the man's head back against the wall--and then, gathering all his
-strength, flung the other from him out through the open door.
-
-The fight was out of the man. For a moment he lay sprawled on the grass.
-Then he raised himself up, and got upon his knees. His face was bruised
-and blood-stained almost beyond recognition. He shook both fists at
-Raymond.
-
-"By God, I'll get you for this!"--the man's voice was guttural with
-unbridled passion. "I'll get you, you censer-swinging devil! I'll twist
-your neck with the chain of your own crucifix! Damn you to the pit!
-You're not through with me!"
-
-"Go!" said Raymond sternly. "Go--and be glad that I have treated you no
-worse!"
-
-He shut the door in the man's face; and, turning abruptly, walked across
-the floor to where Mother Blondin, quiet for the moment, gaped at him
-from the threshold of the other room.
-
-"He will not trouble you any more, Madame Blondin, I imagine," he said
-quietly. "See, it is over!" He smiled at her reassuringly--he needed to
-know now only where the man lived. "I should be sorry to think he was
-one of my parishioners. Where does he come from?"
-
-"He is a farmer, and he lives in the house on the point a mile and
-a quarter up the road"--the answer had come automatically; she was
-listening, without looking at Raymond, to the threats and oaths that
-Jacques Bourget, as he evidently moved away for his voice kept growing
-fainter, still bawled from without. And then hate and sullen viciousness
-was in her face again. Her hair had tumbled to her shoulders and
-straggled over her forehead. She jabbed at it with both hands, sweeping
-it from her eyes, and leered at him fiercely. "You dirty spy!" she
-croaked hoarsely. "I know you--I know all of you priests! You are all
-alike! Sneaks! Sneaks! Meddlers and sneaks! But you'll get to hell some
-day--like the rest of us! Ha, ha--to hell! You can't fool the devil!
-I know you. That's what you sneaked up here for--to spy on me, to find
-something against me that the police weren't sharp enough to find, so
-that you could get rid of me, get me out of St. Marleau! I know! They've
-been trying that for a long time!"
-
-"To turn you over to the police," said Raymond gently, "would never save
-you from yourself. I came to talk to you a little about your son--to see
-if in any way I could help you, or be of comfort to you."
-
-She stared at him for an instant, wondering and perplexed; and then the
-snarl was on her lips again.
-
-"You lie! No priest comes here for that! I am an _excommunie_."
-
-"You are a woman in sorrow," Raymond said simply.
-
-She did not answer him--only drew back into the other room.
-
-Raymond followed her. It was the room where he had fought that
-night--with Thophile Blondin. His eyes swept it with a hurried glance.
-There was the _armoire_ from which Thophile Blondin had snatched the
-revolver--and there was the spot on the floor where the dead man had
-fallen. And here was the old hag with the streaming hair, as it had
-streamed that night, who had run shrieking into the storm that he had
-murdered her son. And the whole scene began to live itself over again in
-his mind in minute detail. It seemed to possess an unhealthy fascination
-that bade him linger, and at the same time to fill him with an impulse
-to rush away from it. And the impulse was the stronger; and, besides, it
-would be evening soon, and there was that man in the _presbytre_,
-and there was much to do, and he had his confederate now--one Jacques
-Bourget.
-
-"I shall not stay now"--he smiled, as he turned to Mother Blondin, and
-held out his hand. "You are upset over what has happened. Another time.
-But you will remember, will you not, that I would like to help you in
-any way I can?"
-
-She reached out her hand mechanically to take his that was extended to
-her, and suddenly, muttering, jerked it back--and Raymond, appearing not
-to notice, smiled again, and, crossing the room, went out through the
-front door.
-
-He went slowly across the little patch of yard, and on along the road in
-the direction of the village, and now his lips thinned in a grim smile.
-Yes, St. Marleau would hear of this, his chivalrous protection of Mother
-Blondin--and place another halo on his head! The devil's sense of humour
-was of a brand all its own!
-
-The more he twisted and squirmed and wriggled to get out of the trap,
-desperate to the extent that he would hesitate at nothing, the more
-he became--the good, young Father Aubert! Even that dissolute old
-hag, whose hatred for the church and all pertaining to it was the most
-dominant passion in her life, was not far from the point where she would
-tolerate a priest--if the priest were the good, young Father Aubert!
-
-He reached the point where the road began to descend the hill, and,
-pausing, looked back. Yes--even Mother Blondin, the _excommunie!_ She
-was standing in the doorway, dirty, unkempt, disreputable, and, shading
-her eyes with her hand, was gazing after him. Yes, even she--whose son
-had been killed in a fight with him.
-
-And Raymond, fumbling suddenly with his hat, lifted it to Mother
-Blondin, and went on down the hill.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV--THE HOUSE ON THE POINT
-
-|IT was late, a good half hour after the usual supper time, when Raymond
-returned to the _presbytre_. He had done a very strange thing. He had
-gone into the church, and sat there in the silence and the quiet of
-the sacristy--and twilight had come unnoticed. It was the quiet he had
-sought, respite for a mind that had suddenly seemed nerve-racked to the
-breaking point as he had come down the hill from Mother Blondin's. It
-had been dim, and still, and cool, and restful in there--in the church.
-There was still Valerie, still the priest who had not died, still his
-own peril and danger, and still the hazard of the night before him; all
-that had not been altered; all that still remained--but in a measure,
-strangely, somehow, he was calmed. He was full of apologies now to
-Madame Lafleur, as he sat down to supper.
-
-"But it is nothing!" she said, placing a lamp upon the table. She sat
-down herself; and added simply, as though, indeed, no reason could be
-more valid: "I saw you go into the church, Monsieur le Cur."
-
-"Yes," said Raymond, his eyes now on Valerie's empty seat. "And where is
-Mademoiselle Valerie? Taking our _pauvre_ Mentone his supper?"
-
-"Oh, no!" she answered quickly. "I took him his supper myself a little
-while ago--though I do not know whether he will eat it or not. Valerie
-went over to her uncle's about halfpast five. She said something about
-going for a drive."
-
-Raymond cut his slice of cold pork without comment. He was conscious of
-a dismal sense of disappointment, a depression, a falling of his spirits
-again. The room seemed cold and dead without Valrie there, without
-her voice, without her smile. And then there came a sense of pique, of
-irritation, unreasonable no doubt, but there for all that. Why had she
-not included him in the drive? Fool! Had he forgotten? He could not have
-gone if she had--he had other things to do than drive that evening!
-
-"Yes," said Madame Lafleur, significantly reverting to her former
-remark, as she handed him his tea, "yes, I do not know if the poor
-fellow will eat anything or not."
-
-Raymond glanced at her quickly. What was the matter? Had anything been
-discovered! And then his eyes were on his plate again. Madame Lafleur's
-face, whatever her words might be intended to convey, was genuinely
-sympathetic, nothing more.
-
-"Not eat?" he repeated mildly. "And why not, Madame Lafleur?"
-
-"I am sure I do not know," she replied, a little anxiously. "I have
-never seen him so excited. I thought it was because he was to be taken
-away to-morrow morning. And so, when we went out this afternoon,
-I tried to say something to him about his going away that would cheer
-him up. And would you believe it, Monsieur le Cur, he just stared at
-me, and then, as though I had said something droll, he--fancy, Monsieur
-le Cur, from a man who was going to be tried for his life--he laughed
-until I thought he would never stop. And after that he would say nothing
-at all; and since he has come in he has not been for an instant still.
-Do you not hear him, Monsieur le Cur?"
-
-Raymond heard very distinctly. His ears had caught the sounds from the
-moment he had entered the _presbytre_. Up and down, up and down, from
-that back room came the stumbling footfalls; then silence for a moment,
-as though from exhaustion the man had sunk down into a chair; and then
-the pacing to and fro again. Raymond's lips tightened in understanding,
-as he bent his head over his plate. Like himself, the man in there was
-waiting--for darkness!
-
-"He is over-excited," he said gravely. "And being still so weak, the
-news that he is to go to-morrow, I am afraid, has been too much for him.
-I have no doubt he was verging on hysteria when he laughed at you like
-that, Madame Lafleur."
-
-"I--I hope we shall not have any trouble with him," said Madame Lafleur
-nervously. "I mean that I hope he won't be taken sick again. He did not
-look at the tray at all when I took it in; he kept his eyes on me all
-the time, as though he were trying to read something in my face."
-
-"Poor fellow!" murmured Raymond.
-
-Madame Lafleur nodded her gray head in sympathetic assent.
-
-"Ah, yes, Monsieur le Cur--the poor fellow!" she sighed. "It is a
-terrible thing that he has done; but it is also terrible to think of
-what he will have to face. Do you think it wrong, Monsieur le Cur, to
-wish almost that he might escape?"
-
-Escape! Curse it--what was the matter with Madame Lafleur to-night? Or
-was it something the matter with himself?
-
-"Not wrong, perhaps," he said, smiling at her, "if you do not connive at
-it."
-
-"Oh, but, Monsieur le Cur!" she exclaimed reprovingly. "What a thing
-to say! But I would never do that! Still, it is all very sad, and I am
-heartily glad that I am not to be a witness at the trial like you and
-Valrie. And they say that Madame Blondin, and Monsieur Labbe, the
-station agent, and a lot of the villagers are to go too."
-
-"Yes, I believe so," Raymond nodded.
-
-Madame Lafleur, in quaint consternation, suddenly changed the subject.
-
-"Oh, but I forgot to tell you!" she cried. "The bread! Madame Bouchard
-sent you two loaves all fresh and hot. Do you like it?"
-
-The bread! He had been conscious neither that the bread was sour, nor
-that the crust was unmanageable. He became suddenly aware that the
-morsel in his mouth was not at all like the baking of Madame Lafleur.
-
-"You are all too good to me here in St. Marleau," he protested.
-
-He checked her reply with a chiding forefinger, and a shake of his
-head--and presently, the meal at an end, pushed back his chair, and
-strolled to the window. He stood there for a moment looking out. It was
-dark now--dark enough for his purpose.
-
-"It is a beautiful night, Madame Lafleur," he said enthusiastically. "I
-am almost tempted to go out again for a little walk."
-
-"But, yes, Monsieur le Cur--why not!" Madame Lafleur was quite anxious
-that he should go. Madame Lafleur was possessed of that enviable
-disposition that was instantly responsive to the interests and pleasures
-of others.
-
-"Yes--why not!" smiled Raymond, patting her arm as he passed by her on
-his way to the door. "Well, I believe I will."
-
-But outside in the hall he hesitated. Should he go first to the man in
-the rear room? He had intended to do so before he went out--to probe the
-other, as it were, to satisfy himself, perhaps more by the man's acts
-and looks than by words, that Henri Mentone had entered into the plans
-for the night. But he was satisfied of that now. Madame Lafleur's
-conversation had left no doubt but that the man's unusual restlessness
-and excitement were due to his being on the _qui vive_ of expectancy.
-No, there was no use, therefore, in going to the man now, it would only
-be a waste of valuable time.
-
-This decision taken, Raymond walked to the front door and down the steps
-of the porch. Here he turned, and, choosing the opposite side of
-the house from the kitchen and dining room, where he might have been
-observed by Madame Lafleur, yet still moving deliberately as though he
-were but sauntering idly toward the beach, made his way around to the
-rear of the _presbytre_. It was quite dark. There were stars, but no
-moon. Behind here, between the back of the house and the shed, there
-was no possibility of his being seen. The only light came from Henri
-Mentone's room, and the shades there were drawn.
-
-He opened the shed door silently, stepped inside, and closed the door
-behind him. He struck a match, held it above his head--and almost
-instantly extinguished it, as he located the sacristan's overalls, and
-the old coat and hat.
-
-And now Raymond worked quickly. He stripped off his _soutane_, drew on
-the overalls, turning the bottoms well up over his own trousers, slipped
-on the coat, tucked the hat into one of the coat pockets, and put on his
-_soutane_ again. It was very simple--the _soutane_ hid everything. He
-smiled grimly, as he, stepped outside again--the Monsieur le Cur who
-came out, was the Monsieur le Cur who had gone in.
-
-Raymond chose the beach. The village street meant that he would be
-delayed by being forced to stop and talk with any one he might meet, to
-say nothing of the possibility of having the ruinous, if well meaning,
-companionship of some one foisted upon him--while, even if seen, there
-would be nothing strange in the fact that the cur should be taking an
-evening walk along the shore.
-
-He started off at a brisk pace along the stretch of sand just behind
-the _presbytre_. It was a mile and a quarter to the point--to Jacques
-Bourget's. At the end of the sandy stretch Raymond went more slowly--the
-shore line as a promenade left much to be desired--there was a seemingly
-interminable ledge of slate rock over which he had need to pick his way
-carefully. He negotiated this, and was rewarded with another short sandy
-strip--but only to encounter the slate rocks again with their ubiquitous
-little pools of water in the hollows, which he must avoid warily.
-
-Sometimes he slipped; once he fell. The grim smile was back on his lips.
-There seemed to be something ironical even in these minor difficulties
-that stood between him and the effecting of the other's escape! There
-seemed to be a world of irony in the fact that he who sought escape
-himself should plan another's rather than his own! It was the devil's
-toils, that was all, the devil's damnable ingenuity, and hell's
-incomparable sense of humour! He had either to desert the man; or stand
-in the man's place himself, and dangle from the gallows for his
-pains; or get the man away. Well, he had no desire to dangle from the
-gallows--or to desert the man! He had chosen the third and only course
-left open to him. If he got the man away, if the man succeeded in making
-his escape, it would not only save the man, but he, Raymond, would have
-nothing thereafter to fear--the Cur of St. Marleau in due course would
-meet with his deplorable and fatal accident! True, the man would always
-live in the shadow of pursuit, a thing that he, Raymond, had been
-willing to accept for himself only as a last resort, but there was no
-help for that in the other's case now. He would give the man more money,
-plenty of it. The man should be across the border and in the States
-early to-morrow, then New York, and a steamer for South America. Yes, it
-should unquestionably succeed. He had worked out all those details while
-he was still racking his brain for a "Jacques Bourget," and he would
-give the man minute instructions at the last moment when he gave him
-more money--that hundred dollars was only an evidence of good faith and
-of the loyalty of one "Pierre." The only disturbing factor in the
-plan was the man's physical condition. The man was still virtually an
-invalid--otherwise the police would have been neither justified in
-so doing, nor for a moment have been willing to leave him in the
-_presbytre_, as they had. Monsieur Dupont was no fool, and it was
-perfectly true that the man had not the slightest chance in the world
-of getting away--alone. But, aided as he, Raymond, proposed to aid the
-other, the man surely would be able to stand the strain of travelling,
-for a man could do much where his life was at stake. Yes, after all,
-why worry on that score! It was only the night and part of the next day.
-Then the man could rest quietly at a certain address in New York, while
-waiting for his steamer. Yes, unquestionably, the man, with his life in
-the balance, would be able to manage that.
-
-Raymond was still picking his way over the ledges, still slipping and
-stumbling, and now, recovering from a fall that had brought him to his
-knees, he gave his undivided attention to his immediate task. It seemed
-a very long mile and a quarter, but at the expiration of perhaps another
-twenty minutes he was at the end of it, and halted to take note of his
-surroundings. He could just distinguish the village road edging away
-on his left; while ahead of him, but a little to his right, out on the
-wooded point, he caught the glimmer of a light through the trees. That
-would be Jacques Bourget's house.
-
-He now looked cautiously about him. There was no other house in sight.
-His eyes swept the road up and down as far as he could see--there was no
-one, no sign of life. He listened--there was nothing, save the distant
-lapping of the water far out, for the tide was low on the mud flats.
-
-A large rock close at hand suggested a landmark that could not be
-mistaken. He stepped toward it, took off his _soutane_, and laid the
-garment down beside the rock; he removed his clerical collar and his
-clerical hat, and placed them on top of the _soutane_, taking care,
-however, to cover the white collar with the hat--then, turning down
-the trouser legs of the overalls, and turning up the collar of the
-threadbare coat, he took the battered slouch hat from his pocket and
-pulled it far down over his eyes.
-
-"Behold," said Raymond cynically, "behold Pierre--what is his other
-name? Well, what does it matter? Pierre--Desforges. Desforges will do as
-well as any--behold Pierre Desforges!"
-
-He left the beach, went up the little rise of ground that brought
-him amongst the trees, and made his way through the latter toward the
-lighted window of the house. Arrived here, he once more looked about
-him.
-
-The house was isolated, far back from the road; and, in the darkness
-and the shadows cast by the trees, would have been scarcely discernible,
-save that it was whitewashed, and but for the yellow glow diffused
-from the window. He approached the door softly, and listened. A woman's
-voice, and then a man's, snarling viciously, reached him. "... _le sacr
-maudit cur!_"
-
-Raymond laughed low. Jacques Bourget and his wife appeared to have
-an engrossing topic of conversation, if they had been at it since
-afternoon! Also Jacques Bourget appeared to be of an unforgiving nature!
-
-There was no veranda, not even a step, the door was on a level with the
-ground; and, from the little Raymond could see of the house now that
-he was close beside it, it appeared to be as down-at-the-heels and as
-shiftless as its proprietor. He leaned forward to avail himself of
-the light from the window, and, taking out a roll of bills, of smaller
-denominations than those which he carried in his pocketbook, he counted
-out five ten-dollar notes.
-
-Jacques Bourget from within was still in the midst of a blasphemous
-tirade. Raymond rapped sharply on the door with his knuckles. Bourget's
-voice ceased instantly, and there was silence for a moment. Raymond
-rapped again--and then, as a chair leg squeaked upon the floor, and
-there came the sound of a heavy tread approaching the door, he drew
-quickly back into the shadows at one side.
-
-The door was flung open, and Bourget's face, battered and cut, an eye
-black and swollen, his lip puffed out to twice its normal size, peered
-out into the darkness.
-
-"Who's there?" he called out gruffly.
-
-"S-sh! Don't talk so loud!" Raymond cautioned in a guarded voice. "Are
-you Jacques Bourget?"
-
-The man, with a start, turned his face in the direction of Raymond's
-voice. Mechanically he dropped his own voice.
-
-"Mabbe I am, and mabbe I'm not," he growled suspiciously. "What do you
-want?"
-
-"I want to talk to you if you are Jacques Bourget," Raymond answered.
-"And if you are Jacques Bourget I can put you in the way of turning a
-few dollars tonight, to say nothing of another little matter that will
-be to your liking."
-
-The man hesitated, then drew back a little in the doorway.
-
-"Well, come in," he invited. "There's no one but the old woman here."
-
-"The old woman is one old woman too many," Raymond said roughly. "I'm
-not on exhibition. You come out here, and shut the door. You've nothing
-to be afraid of--the only thing I have to do with the police is to keep
-away from them, and that takes me all my time."
-
-"I ain't worrying about the police," said Bourget shrewdly.
-
-"Maybe not," returned Raymond. "I didn't say you were. I said I was.
-I've got a hundred dollars here that----"
-
-A woman appeared suddenly in the doorway behind Bourget.
-
-"What is it? Who is it, Jacques?" she shrilled out inquisitively.
-
-Bourget, for answer, swore at her, pushed her back, and, slamming the
-door behind him, stepped outside.
-
-"Well, what is it? And who are you?" he demanded.
-
-"My name is Desforges--Pierre Desforges," said Raymond, his voice still
-significantly low. "That doesn't mean anything to you--and it doesn't
-matter. What I want you to do is to drive a man to the second station
-from here to-night--St. Eustace is the name, isn't it?--and you get a
-hundred dollars for the trip."
-
-"What do you mean?" Bourget's voice mingled incredulity and avarice. "A
-hundred dollars for that, eh? Are you trying to make a fool of me?"
-
-Raymond held the bills up before the man's face. "Feel the money, if you
-can't see it!" he suggested, with a short laugh. "That's what talks."
-
-"_Bon Dieu!_" ejaculated Bourget. "Yes, it is so! Well, who am I to
-drive? You? You are running away! Yes, understand! They are after
-you--eh? I am to drive you, eh?"
-
-"No," said Raymond. He drew the man close to him in the darkness, and
-placed his lips to Bourget's ear. "_Henri Mentone_."
-
-Bourget, startled, sprang back.
-
-"_What! Who!_" he cried out loudly.
-
-"I told you not to talk so loud!" snapped Raymond. "You heard what I
-said."
-
-Bourget twisted his head furtively about.
-
-"No, '_cr nom--no!_" he said huskily. "It is too much risk! If one were
-caught at that--eh? _Bien non, merci!_"
-
-"There's no chance of your being caught"--Raymond's voice was smooth
-again. "It is only nine miles to St. Eustace--you will be back and in
-bed long before daylight. Who is to know anything about it?"
-
-"Yes, and you!"--Bourget was still twisting his head about furtively.
-"What do I know about you? What have you to do with this?"
-
-"I will tell you," said Raymond, and into the velvet softness of his
-voice there crept an ominous undertone; "and at the same time I will
-tell you that you will be very wise to keep your mouth shut. You
-understand? If I trust you, it is to make you trust me. Henri Mentone is
-my pal. I was there the night Thophile Blondin was killed. But I made
-my escape. I do not desert a pal, only I had no money. Well, I have the
-money now, and I am back. And I am just in time--eh? They say he is well
-enough to be taken away in the morning."
-
-"_Mon Dieu_, you were there at the killing!" muttered Bourget hoarsely.
-"No--I do not like it! No--it is too much risk!" His voice grew suddenly
-sharp with undisguised suspicion. "And why did you come to me, eh? Why
-did you come to me? Who sent you here?"
-
-"I came because Mentone must be driven to St. Eustace--because he is not
-strong enough to walk," said Raymond coolly. "And no one sent me here.
-I heard of your fight this afternoon. The cur is telling around the
-village that if he could not change the aspect of your heart, there was
-no doubt as to the change in the aspect of your face."
-
-"_Sacr nom!_" gritted Bourget furiously. "He said that! I will show
-him! I am not through with him yet! But what has he to do with this that
-you come here? Eh? I do not understand."
-
-"Simply," said Raymond meaningly, "that Monsieur le Cur is the one with
-whom we shall have to deal in getting Mentone away."
-
-"Hah!" exclaimed Bourget fiercely. "Yes--I am listening now! Well?"
-
-"He sits a great deal of the time in the room with Mentone," explained
-Raymond, with a callous laugh. "Very well. Mentone has been warned. If
-this fool of a cur knows no better than to sit there all night tonight,
-I will find some reason for calling him outside, and in the darkness
-where he will recognise no one we shall know what to do with him, and
-when we are through we will tie him and gag him and throw him into the
-shed where he will not be found until morning. On the other hand, if we
-are able to get Mentone away without the cur knowing it, you will
-still not be without your revenge. He is responsible for Mentone, and if
-Mentone gets away through the cur's negligence, the cur will get into
-trouble with the police."
-
-"I like the first plan better," decided Bourget, with an ugly sneer. "He
-talks of my face, does he! _Nom de Dieu,_ he will not be able to talk of
-his own! And a hundred dollars--eh? You said a hundred dollars? Well,
-if there is no more risk than that in the rest of the plan, _sacr nom_,
-you can count on Jacques Bourget". . .
-
-"There is no risk at all," said Raymond. "And as to which plan--we shall
-see. We shall have to be guided by the circumstances, eh? And for the
-rest--listen! I will return by the beach, and watch the _presbytre_.
-You give me time to get back, then harness your horse and drive down
-there--drive past the _presbytre_. I will be listening, and will hear
-you. Then after you have gone a little way beyond, turn around and come
-back, and I will know that it is you. If you drive in behind the church
-to where the people tie their horses at mass on Sundays, you can wait
-there without being seen by any one passing by on the road. I will come
-and let you know how things are going. We may have to wait a while after
-that until everything is quiet, but in that way we will be ready to act
-the minute it is safe to do so."
-
-"All that is simple enough," Bourget grunted in agreement. "And then?"
-
-"And then," said Raymond, "we will get Mentone out through the window of
-his room. There is a train that passes St. Eustace at ten minutes after
-midnight--and that is all. The St. Eustace station, I understand, is
-like the one here--far from the village, and with no houses about. He
-can hide near the station until traintime; and, without having shown
-yourself, you can drive back home and go to bed. It is your wife only
-that you have to think of--she will say nothing, eh?"
-
-"_Baptme!_" snorted Bourget contemptuously. "She has learned before now
-when to keep her tongue where it belongs! And you? You are coming, too?"
-
-"Do you think I am a fool, Bourget?" inquired Raymond shortly.
-"When they find Mentone is gone, they will know he must have had an
-accomplice, for he could not get far alone. They will be looking for two
-of us travelling together. I will go the other way. That makes it safe
-for Mentone--and safe for me. I can walk to Tournayville easily before
-daylight; and in that way we shall both give the police the slip."
-
-"_Diable!_" grunted Bourget admiringly. "You have a head!"
-
-"It is good enough to take care of us all in a little job like
-to-night's," returned Raymond, with a shrug of his shoulders. "Well,
-do you understand everything? For if you do, there's no use wasting any
-time."
-
-"Yes--I have it all!" Bourget's voice grew vicious again. "That _sacr
-maudit cur!_ Yes, I understand."
-
-Raymond thrust the banknotes he had been holding into Bourget's hand.
-
-"Here are fifty dollars to bind the bargain," he said crisply. "You get
-the other fifty at the church. If you don't get them, all you've got to
-do is drive off and leave Mentone in the lurch. That's fair, isn't it?"
-
-Bourget shuffled back to the edge of the lighted window, counted the
-money, and shoved it into his pocket.
-
-"_Bon Dieu!_" Bourget's puffed lip twisted into a satisfied grin. "I do
-not mind telling you, my Pierre Desforges, that it is long since I have
-seen so much."
-
-"Well, the other fifty is just as good," said Raymond in grim
-pleasantry. He stepped back and away from the house. "At the church
-then, Bourget--in, say, three-quarters of an hour."
-
-"I will be there," Bourget answered. "Have no fear--I will be there!"
-
-"All right!" Raymond called back--and a moment later gained the beach
-again.
-
-At the rock, he once more put on his _soutane_; and, running now where
-the sandy stretches gave him opportunity, scrambling as rapidly as
-he could over the ledges of slate rock, he headed back for the
-_presbytre_.
-
-It was as good as done! There was a freeness to his spirits now--a
-weight and an oppression lifted from him. Henri Mentone would stand in
-no prisoner's dock the day after to-morrow to answer for the murder of
-Thophile Blondin! And it was very simple--now that Bourget's aid had
-been enlisted. He smiled ironically as he went along. It would not even
-be necessary to pommel Monsieur le Cur into a state of insensibility!
-Madame Lafleur retired very early--by nine o'clock at the latest--as did
-Valrie. As soon as he heard Bourget drive up to the church, he would
-go to the man to allay any impatience, and as evidence that the plan was
-working well. He would return then to the _presbytre_--it was a matter
-only of slipping on and off his _soutane_ to appear as Father Aubert to
-Madame Lafleur and Valrie, and as Pierre Desforges to Jacques Bourget.
-And the moment Madame Lafleur and Valrie were in bed, he would
-extinguish the light in the front room as proof that Monsieur le Cur,
-too, had retired, run around to the back of the house, get Henri
-Mentone out of the window, and hand him over to Bourget, explaining that
-everything had worked even more smoothly than he had hoped for, that all
-were in bed, and that there was no chance of the escape being discovered
-until morning. Bourget, it was true, was very likely to be disappointed
-in the measure of the revenge wrecked upon the cur, but Bourget's
-feelings in the matter, since Bourget then would have no choice but to
-drive Henri Mentone to St. Eustace, were of little account.
-
-And as far as Henri Mentone was concerned, it was very simple too. The
-man would have ample time and opportunity to get well out of reach. He,
-Raymond, would take care that the man's disappearance was not discovered
-any earlier than need be in the morning! It would then be a perfectly
-natural supposition--a supposition which he, Raymond, would father--that
-the man, in his condition, could not be far away, but had probably only
-gone restlessly and aimlessly from the house; and at first no one would
-even think of such a thing as escape. They would look for him around
-the _presbytre_, and close at hand on the beach. It would be impossible
-that, weak as he was, the man had gone far! The search would perhaps
-be extended to the village by the time Monsieur Dupont arrived for his
-vanished prisoner. Then they would extend the search still further, to
-the adjacent fields and woods, and it would certainly be noontime before
-the alternative that the man, aided by an accomplice, had got away
-became the only tenable conclusion. But even then Monsieur Dupont would
-either have to drive three miles to the station to reach the telegraph,
-or return to Tournayville--and by that time Henri Mentone would long
-since have been in the United States.
-
-And after that--Raymond smiled ironically again---well after that, it
-would be Monsieur Dupont's move!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV--HOW HENRI MENTONE RODE WITH JACQUES BOURGET
-
-|IT was eight o'clock--the clock was striking in the kitchen--as Raymond
-entered the _presbytre_ again. He stepped briskly to the door of the
-front room, opened it, and paused--no, before going in there to wait,
-it would be well first to let Madame Lafleur know that he was back,
-to establish the fact that it was _after_ his return that the man had
-escaped, that his evening walk could in no way be connected with what
-would set all St. Marleau by the ears in the morning. And so he passed
-on to the dining room, which Madame Lafleur used as a sitting room as
-well. She was sewing beside the table lamp.
-
-"Always busy, Madame Lafleur!" he called out cheerily, from the
-threshold. "Well, and has Mademoiselle Valrie returned?"
-
-"Ah, it is you, Monsieur le Cur!" she exclaimed, dropping her work on
-her knees. "And did you enjoy your walk? No, Valrie has not come back
-here yet, though I am sure she must have got back to her uncle's by now.
-Did you want her for anything, Monsieur le Cur--to write letters? I can
-go over and tell her."
-
-"But, no--not at all!" said Raymond hastily. He indicated the rear room
-with an inclination of his head. "And our _pauvre_ there?"
-
-Madame Lafleur's sweet, motherly face grew instantly troubled.
-
-"You can hear him tossing on the bed yourself, Monsieur le Cur. I have
-just been in to see him. He has one of his bad moods. He said he wanted
-nothing except to be left alone. But I think he will soon be quiet. Poor
-man, he is so weak he will be altogether exhausted--it is only his mind
-that keeps him restless."
-
-Raymond nodded.
-
-"It is a very sad affair," he said slowly, "a very sad affair!" He
-lifted a finger and shook it playfully at Madame Lafleur. "But we must
-think of you too--eh? Do not work too late, Madame Lafleur!"
-
-She answered him seriously.
-
-"Only to finish this, Monsieur le Cur. See, it is an altar cloth--for
-next Sunday." She held it up. "It is you who work too hard and too
-late."
-
-It was a cross on a satin background. He stared at it. It had been
-hidden on her lap before. He had not been thinking of--a cross. For the
-moment, assured of Henri Mentone's escape, he had been more light of
-heart than at any time since he had come to St. Mar-leau; and, for the
-moment, he had forgotten that he was a meddler with holy things, that
-he was--a priest of God! It seemed as though this were being flaunted
-suddenly now as a jeering reminder before his eyes; and with it he
-seemed as suddenly to see the chancel, the altar of the church where the
-cloth was to play its part--and himself kneeling there--and, curse
-the vividness of it! he heard his own lips at their sacrilegious work:
-"_Lavabo inter innocentes manus meas: et circumdabo altare tuum,
-Domine_.... I will wash my hands among the innocent: and I will compass
-Thine altar, O Lord." And so he stared at this cross she held before
-him, fighting to bring a pleased and approving smile to the lips that
-fought in turn for their right to snarl a defiant mockery.
-
-"Ah, you like it, Monsieur le Cur!" cried Madame Lafleur happily. "I am
-so glad."
-
-And Raymond smiled for answer, and went from the room.
-
-And in the front room he lighted the lamp upon his desk, and stood
-there looking down at the two letters that still awaited the signature
-of--Francois Aubert. "I will wash my hands among the innocent"--he
-raised his hands, and they were clenched into hard and knotted fists.
-Words! Words! They were only words. And what did their damnable
-insinuations matter to him! Others might listen devoutly and believe, as
-he mouthed them in his surplice and stole--but for himself they were
-no more than the mimicry of sounds issuing from a parrot's beak! It was
-absurd then that they should affect him at all. He would better laugh
-and jeer at them, and all this holy entourage with which he cloaked
-himself, for these things were being made to serve his own ends, were
-being turned to his own account, and--it was Three-Ace Artie now, and
-he laughed hoarsely under his breath--for once they were proving of some
-real and tangible value! Madame Lafleur, and her cross, and her altar
-cloth! He laughed again. Well, while she was busy with her churchly
-task, that she no doubt fondly believed would hurry her exit through the
-purgatory to come, he would busy himself a little in getting as speedily
-as possible out of the purgatory of the present. These letters now.
-While he was waiting, and there was an opportunity, he would sign them.
-It would be easier to say that he had decided not to make any changes
-in them after all, than to have new ones written and then have to
-find another opportunity for signing the latter. He reached for
-the prayer-book to make a tracing of the signature that was on the
-fly-leaf--and suddenly drew back his hand, and stood motionless,
-listening.
-
-From the road came the rumble of wheels. The sound grew louder.
-The vehicle passed by the _presbytre_, going in the direction of
-Tournayville. The sound died away. Still Raymond listened--even more
-intently than before. Jacques Bourget did not own the only horse and
-wagon in St. Marleau, but Bourget was to turn around a little way down
-the road, and return to the church. A minute, two passed, another;
-and then Raymond caught the sound of a wheel-tire rasping and grinding
-against the body of a wagon, as though the latter were being turned in a
-narrow space--then presently the rattle of wheels again, coming back now
-toward the church. And now by the church he heard the wagon turn in from
-the road.
-
-Raymond relaxed from his strained attitude of attention. Jacques
-Bourget, it was quite evident, intended to earn the balance of his
-money! Well, for a word then between Pierre Desforges and Jacques
-Bourget--pending the time that Madame Lafleur and her altar cloth should
-go to bed. The letters could wait.
-
-He moved stealthily and very slowly across the room. Madame Lafleur must
-not hear him leaving the house. He would be gone only a minute--just to
-warn Bourget to keep very quiet, and to satisfy the man that everything
-was going well. He could strip off his _soutane_ and leave it under the
-porch.
-
-Cautiously he opened the door, an inch at a time that it might not
-creak, and stepped out into the hall on tiptoe--and listened. Madame
-Lafleur's rocking chair squeaked back and forth reassuringly. She had
-perhaps had enough of her altar cloth for a while! How could one do fine
-needle work--and rock! And why that fanciful detail to flash across
-his mind! And--his face was suddenly set, his lips tight-drawn
-together--_what was this!_ These footsteps that had made no sound in
-crossing the green, but were quick and heavy upon the porch outside! He
-drew back upon the threshold of his room. And then the front door
-was thrust open. And in the doorway was Dupont, Monsieur Dupont, the
-assistant chief of the Tournayville police, and behind Dupont was
-another man, and behind the man was--yes--it was Valerie.
-
-"_Tiens! 'Cr nom d'un chien!_" clucked Monsieur Dupont. "Ha, Monsieur
-le Cur, you heard us--eh? But you did not hear us until we were at the
-door--and a man posted at the back of the house by that window there,
-eh? No, you did not hear us. Well, we have nipped the little scheme in
-the bud, eh?"
-
-Dupont _knew!_ Raymond's hand tightened on the door jamb--and, as once
-before, his other hand crept in under his crucifix, and under the breast
-of his _soutane_ to his revolver.
-
-"I do not understand"--he spoke deliberately, gravely. "You speak of a
-scheme, Monsieur Dupont? I do not understand."
-
-"Ah, you do not understand!"--Monsieur Duponts face screwed up into a
-cryptic smile. "No, of course, you do not understand! Well, you will in
-a moment! But first we will attend to Monsieur Henri Mentone! Now
-then, Marchand"--he addressed his companion, and pointed to the rear
-room--"that room in there, and handcuff him to you. You had better stay
-where you are, Monsieur le Cur. Come along, Marchand!"
-
-Dupont and his companion ran into Henri Mentone's room. Raymond heard
-Madame Lafleur cry out in sudden consternation. It was echoed by a cry
-in Henri Mentone's voice. But he was looking at Valrie, who had stepped
-into the hall. She was very pale. What had she to do with this? What did
-it mean? Had she discovered that he--no, Dupont would not have rushed
-away in that case, but then--His lips moved: "You--Valrie!" How very
-pale she was--and how those dark eyes, deep with something he could not
-fathom, sought his face, only to be quickly veiled by their long lashes.
-
-"Do not look like that, Monsieur le Cur--as though I had done wrong."
-she said in a low, hurried tone. "I am sorry for the man too; but the
-police were to have taken him away to-morrow morning in any case. And if
-I went for Monsieur Dupont to-night, it was----"
-
-"You went for Monsieur Dupont?"--he repeated her words dazedly, as
-though he had not heard aright. "It was you who brought Monsieur Dupont
-here just now--from Tournayville! But--but, I do not understand at all!"
-
-"Valrie! Valrie!"--it was Madame Lafleur, pale and excited, who had
-rushed to her daughter's side. "Valrie, speak quickly! What are they
-doing? What does all this mean?"
-
-Valrie's arm stole around her mother's shoulder.
-
-"I--I was just telling Father Aubert, mother," she said, a little
-tremulously. "You--you must not be nervous. See, it was like this.
-You had just taken the man for a little walk about the green this
-afternoon--you remember? When I came out of the house a few minutes
-later to join you, I saw what I thought looked like some money sticking
-out from one end of a folded-up piece of paper that was lying on the
-grass just at the bottom of the porch steps. I was sure, of course, that
-it was only a trick my imagination was playing on me, but I stooped down
-and picked it up. It was money, a great deal of money, and there was
-writing on the paper. I read it, and then I was afraid. It was from some
-friend of that man's in there, and was a plan for him to make his escape
-to-night."
-
-"Escape!"--Madame Lafleur drew closer to her daughter, as she glanced
-apprehensively toward the rear room.
-
-Dupont's voice floated menacingly out into the hall--came a gruff
-oath from his companion--the sound of a chair over-turned--and Henri
-Mentone's cry, pitched high.
-
-In a curiously futile way Raymond's hand dropped from the breast of
-his _soutane_ to his side. Valrie and her mother seemed to be swirling
-around in circles in the hall before him. He forced himself to speak
-naturally:
-
-"And then?"
-
-Valrie's eyes were on her mother.
-
-"I did not want to alarm you, mother," she went on rapidly; "and so I
-told you I was going for a drive. I ran to uncle's house. He was out
-somewhere. I could go as well as any one, and if Henri Mentone had a
-friend lurking somewhere in the village there would be nothing to arouse
-suspicion in a girl driving alone; and, besides, I did not know who this
-friend might be, and I did not know who to trust. I told old Adle that
-I wanted to go for a drive, and she helped me to harness the horse."
-
-And now, as Raymond listened, those devils, that had chuckled and
-screeched as the lumpy earth had thudded down on the lid of Thophile
-Blondin's coffin, were at their hell-carols again. It was not just luck,
-just the unfortunate turn of a card that the man had dropped the
-money and the note. It was more than that. It seemed to hold a grim,
-significant premonition--for the future. Those devils did well to
-chuckle! Struggle as he would, they had woven their net too cunningly
-for his escape. It was those devils who had torn his coat that night in
-the storm, as he had tried to force his way through the woods. It was
-_his_ coat that Henri Mentone was wearing. He remembered now that the
-lining of the pocket on the inside had been ripped across. It was those
-devils who had seen to that--for this--knowing what was to come. A
-finger seemed to wag with hideous jocularity before his eyes--the finger
-of fate. He looked at Valerie. It was nothing for her to have driven to
-Tournayville, she had probably done it a hundred times before, but it
-seemed a little strange that Henri Mentone's possible escape should have
-been, apparently, so intimate and personal a matter to her.
-
-"You were afraid, you said, Mademoiselle Valerie," he said slowly.
-"Afraid--that he would escape?"
-
-She shook her head--and the colour mounted suddenly in her face.
-
-"Of what then?" he asked.
-
-"Of what was in the note," she said, in a low voice. "I knew I had time,
-for nothing was to be done until the _presbytre_ was quiet for the
-night; but the plan then was to--to put you out of the way, and----"
-
-His voice was suddenly hoarse.
-
-"And you were afraid--for me? It was for me that you have done this?"
-
-She did not answer. The colour was still in her cheeks--her eyes were
-lowered.
-
-"The blessed saints!" cried Madame Lafleur, crossing herself. "The
-devils! They would do harm to Father Aubert! Well, I am sorry for that
-man no longer! He----"
-
-They were coming along the hall--Henri Mentone handcuffed to Monsieur
-Dupont's companion, and Monsieur Dupont himself in the rear.
-
-"Monsieur le Cur!" Henri Mentone called out wildly. "Monsieur le Cur,
-do not----"
-
-"Enough! Hold your tongue!" snapped Monsieur Dupont, giving the man a
-push past Raymond toward the front door. "Do you appeal to Monsieur le
-Cur because he has been good to you--or because you intended to knock
-Monsieur le Cur on the head to-night! Bah! Hurry him along, Marchand!"
-Monsieur Dupont paused before Valrie and her mother. "You will do me a
-favour, mesdames? A very great favour--yes? You will retire instantly to
-bed--instantly. I have my reasons. Yes, that is right--go at once."
-He turned to Raymond. "And you, Monsieur le Cur, you will wait for me
-here, eh? Yes, you will wait. I will be back on the instant."
-
-The hall was empty. In a subconscious sort of way Raymond stepped back
-into his room, and, reaching the desk, stood leaning heavily against it.
-His brain would tolerate no single coherent thought. Valrie had done
-this for fear of harm to him, Valrie had... there was Jacques Bourget
-who if he attempted now to... it was no wonder that Henri Mentone had
-been restless all evening, knowing that he had lost the note, and not
-daring to question... the day after to-morrow there was to be a trial at
-the criminal assizes... Valrie had not met his eyes, but there had been
-the crimson colour in her face, and she had done this to save _him_...
-were they still laughing, those hell-devils... were they now engaged in
-making Valrie love him, and making her torture her soul because she
-was so pure that no thought could strike her more cruelly than that
-love should come to her for a priest? Ah, his brain was logical now! His
-hands clenched, and unclenched, and clenched again. Impotent fury was
-upon him. If it were true! Damn them to the everlasting place from
-whence they came! But it was not true! It was but another trick of
-theirs to make him writhe the more--to make _him_ believe she cared!
-
-A footstep! He looked up. Monsieur Dupont was back.
-
-"_Tiens!_" cried Monsieur Dupont. "Well, you have had an escape,
-Monsieur le Cur! An escape! Yes, you have! But I do not take all the
-credit. No, I do not. She is a fine girl, that Valrie Lafleur. If she
-were a man she would have a career--with the police. I would see to it!
-But you do not know yet what it is all about, Monsieur le Cur, eh?"
-
-"There was a note and money that Mademoiselle Valrie said she
-found"--Raymond's voice was steady, composed.
-
-"_Zut!_" Monsieur Dupont laid his forefinger along the side of his nose
-impressively. "That is the least of it! There is an accomplice--two of
-them in it! You would not have thought that, eh, Monsieur le Cur? No,
-you would not. Very well, then--listen! I have this Mentone safe, and
-now I, Dupont, will give this accomplice a little surprise. There will
-be the two of them at the trial for the murder of Thophile Blondin! The
-grand jury is still sitting. You understand, Monsieur le Cur? Yes, you
-understand. You are listening?"...
-
-"I am listening," said Raymond gravely--and instinctively glanced toward
-the window. It might still have been Jacques Bourget who had turned
-down there on the road; or, if not, then the man would be along at any
-minute. In either case, he must find some way to warn Bourget. "I am
-listening, Monsieur Dupont," he said again. "You propose to lay a trap
-for this accomplice?"
-
-"It is already laid," announced Monsieur Dupont complacently. "They
-will discover with whom they are dealing! I returned at once with
-Mademoiselle Valrie. I brought two men with me; but you will observe,
-Monsieur le Cur, that I did not bring two teams--nothing to arouse
-suspicion--nothing to indicate that I was about to remove our friend
-Mentone to-night. It would be a very simple matter to secure a team here
-when I was ready for it. You see, Monsieur le Cur? Yes, you see. Very
-well! My plans worked without a hitch. Just as we approached the church,
-we met a man named Jacques Bourget driving alone in a buckboard. Nothing
-could be better. It was excellent. I stopped him. I requisitioned him
-and his horse and his wagon in the name of the law. I made him turn
-around, and told him to follow us back here after a few minutes. You
-see, Monsieur le Cur? Yes, you see. Monsieur Jacques Bourget is now on
-his way to Tournayville with one of my officers and the prisoner."
-
-Raymond's fingers were playing nonchalantly with the chain of his
-crucifix. Raymond's face was unmoved. It was really funny, was it not!
-No wonder those denizens of hell were shrieking with abandoned glee in
-his ears. This time they had a right to be amused. It was really very
-funny--that Jacques Bourget should be driving Henri Mentone away from
-St. Marleau! Well, and now--what?
-
-"You are to be congratulated, Monsieur Dupont," he murmured. "But the
-accomplice--the other one, who is still at large?"
-
-"Ah, the other one!" said Monsieur Dupont, and laid his hand
-confidentially on Raymond's arm. "The other--heh, _mon Dieu_, Monsieur
-le Cur, but you wear heavy clothes for the summertime!"
-
-It was the bulk of the sacristan's old coat! There was a smile in
-Raymond's eyes, a curious smile, as he searched the other's face. One
-could never be sure of Monsieur Dupont.
-
-"A coat always under my _soutane_ in the evenings"--Raymond's voice was
-tranquil, and he did not withdraw his arm.
-
-"A coat--yes--of course!" Monsieur Dupont nodded his head. "Why not!
-Well then, the other--listen. All has been done very quietly. No alarm
-raised. None at all! I have sent Madame Lafleur and her daughter to
-bed. The plan was that the accomplice should come to the back window for
-Mentone. But they would not make the attempt until late--until all in
-the village was quiet. That is evident, is it not? Yes, it is evident.
-Very good! You sleep here in this room, Monsieur le Cur? Yes? Well, you
-too will put out your light and retire at once. I will go into Mentone's
-room, and wait there in the dark for our other friend to come to the
-window. I will be Henri Mentone. You see? Yes, you see. It is simple, is
-it not? Yes, it is simple. Before morning I will have the man in a
-cell alongside of Henri Mentone. Do you see any objections to the plan,
-Monsieur le Cur?"
-
-"Only that it might prove very dangerous--for you," said Raymond
-soberly. "If the man, who is certain to be a desperate character,
-attacked you before you----"
-
-"Dangerous! Bah!" exclaimed Monsieur Dupont. "That is part of my
-business. I do not consider that! I have my other officer outside there
-now by the shed. As soon as the man we are after approaches the window,
-the officer will leap upon him and overpower him. And now, Monsieur le
-Cur, to bed--eh? And the light out!"
-
-"At once!" agreed Raymond. "And I wish you every success, Monsieur
-Dupont! If you need help you have only to call; or, if you like, I will
-go in there and stay with you."
-
-"No, no--not at all!" Monsieur Dupont moved toward the door. "It is not
-necessary. Nothing can go wrong. We may have to wait well through the
-night, and there is no reason why you should remain up too. _Tiens!_
-Fancy! Imagine! Did I not tell you that Mentone was a hardened rascal?
-Two of them! Well, we will see if the second one can remember any better
-than the first? The light, Monsieur le Cur--do not forget! He will not
-come while there is a sound or a light about the house!" Monsieur Dupont
-waved his hand, and the door closed on Monsieur Dupont.
-
-Raymond, still leaning against the desk, heard the other walk along the
-hall, and enter the rear room--and then all was quiet. He leaned over
-and blew out the lamp. Nothing must be allowed to frustrate Monsieur
-Dupont's plans!
-
-And then, in the darkness, for a long time Raymond stood there. And
-thinking of Monsieur Dupont's dangerous vigil in the other room, he
-laughed; and thinking of Valrie, he knew a bitter joy; and thinking
-of Henri Mentone, his hands knotted at his sides, and his face grew
-strained and drawn. And after that long time was past, he fumbled with
-his hands outstretched before him like a blind man feeling his way, and
-flung himself down upon the couch.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI--FOR THE MURDER OF THOPHILE BLONDIN
-
-|THEY sat on two benches by themselves, the witnesses in the trial
-of Henri Mentone for the murder of Thophile Blondin. On one side of
-Raymond was Valrie, on the other was Mother Blondin; and there was
-Labbe, the station agent, and Monsieur Dupont, and Doctor Arnaud. And
-on the other bench were several of the villagers, and two men Raymond
-did not know, and another man, a crown surveyor, who had just testified
-to the difference in time and distance from the station to Madame
-Blondin's as between the road and the path--thus establishing for the
-prosecution the fact that by following the path there had been ample
-opportunity for the crime to have been committed by one who had left the
-station after the cur had already started toward the village and yet
-still be discovered by the cur on the road near the tavern. The counsel
-appointed by the court for the defence had allowed the testimony to go
-unchallenged. It was obvious. It did not require a crown surveyor to
-announce the fact--even an urchin from St. Marleau was already aware
-of it. The villagers too had testified. They had testified that Madame
-Blondin had come running into the village screaming out that her son had
-been murdered; and that they had gone back with her to her house and had
-found the dead body of her son lying on the floor.
-
-It was stiflingly hot in the courtroom; and the courtroom was crowded to
-its last available inch of space.
-
-There were many there from Tournayville--but there was all of St.
-Marleau. It was St. Marleau's own and particular affair. Since early
-morning, since very early morning, Raymond had seen and heard the
-vehicles of all descriptions rattling past the _presbytre_, the
-occupants dressed in their Sunday clothes. It was a _jour de fte_.
-St. Marleau did not every day have a murder of its own! The fields were
-deserted; only the very old and the children had not come. They were not
-all in the room, for there was not place for them all--those who had
-not been on hand at the opening of the doors had been obliged to content
-themselves with gathering outside to derive what satisfaction they could
-from their proximity to the fateful events that were transpiring within;
-and they had at least seen the prisoner led handcuffed from the jail
-that adjoined the courthouse, and had been rewarded to the extent of
-being able to view with intense and bated interest people they had
-known all their lives, such as Valrie, and Mother Blondin, and the more
-privileged of their fellows who had been chosen as witnesses, as these
-latter disappeared inside the building!
-
-Raymond's eyes roved around the courtroom, and rested upon the judge
-upon the bench. His first glance at the judge, taken at the moment the
-other had entered the room, had brought a certain, quick relief. Far
-from severity, the white-haired man sitting there in his black gown had
-a kindly, genial face. He found his first impressions even strengthened
-now. His eyes passed on to the crown prosecutor; and here, too, he
-found cause for reassurance. The man was middle-aged, shrewd-faced,
-and somewhat domineering. He was crisp, incisive, and had been even
-unnecessarily blunt and curt in his speech and manner so far--he was
-not one who would enlist the sympathy of a jury. On the other
-hand--Raymond's eyes shifted again, to hold on the clean-cut, smiling
-face of the prisoner's counsel--Lemoyne, that was the lawyer's name he
-had been told, was young, pleasant-voiced, magnetic. Raymond experienced
-a sort of grim admiration, as he looked at this man. No man in the
-courtroom knew better than Lemoyne the hopelessness of his case, and yet
-he sat there confident, smiling, undisturbed.
-
-Raymond's eyes sought the floor. It was a foregone conclusion that the
-verdict would be guilty. There was not a loophole for defence. But they
-would not hang the man. He clung to that. Lemoyne could at least fight
-for the man's life. They would not hang a man who could not remember.
-They had beaten him, Raymond, the night before last; and at first he had
-been like a man stunned with the knowledge that his all was on the table
-and that the cards in his hand were worthless--and then had come a sort
-of philosophical calm, the gambler's optimism--the hand was still to be
-played. They would sentence the man for life, and--well, there was time
-enough in a lifetime for another chance. Somehow--in some way--he
-did not know now--but in some way he would see that there was another
-chance. He would not desert the man.
-
-Again he raised his eyes, but this time as though against his will, as
-though they were impelled and drawn in spite of himself across the room.
-That was Raymond Chapelle, alias Arthur Leroy, alias Three-Ace Artie,
-alias Henri Mentone, sitting there in the prisoner's box; at least, that
-gaunt, thin-faced, haggard man there was dressed in Raymond Chapelle's
-clothes--and _he_, Franois Aubert, the priest, the cur, in his
-_soutane_, with his crucifix around his neck, sat here amongst the
-witnesses at the trial of Raymond Chapelle, who had killed Thophile
-Blondin in the fight that night. One would almost think the man _knew!_
-How the man's eyes burned into him, how they tormented and plagued him!
-They were sad, those eyes, pitiful--they were helpless--they seemed to
-seek him out as the only _friend_ amongst all these bobbing heads, and
-these staring, gaping faces.
-
-"Marcien Labbe!"--the clerk's voice snapped through the courtroom.
-"Marcien Labbe!" The clerk was a very fussy and important short
-little man, who puffed his cheeks in and out, and clawed at his white
-side-whiskers. "Marcien Labbe!"
-
-The station agent rose from the bench, entered the witness box, and was
-sworn.
-
-With a few crisp questions, the crown prosecutor established the time of
-the train's arrival, and the fact that the cur and another man had got
-off at the station. The witness explained that the cur had started to
-walk toward the village before the other man appeared on the platform.
-
-"And this other man"--the crown prosecutor whirled sharply around, and
-pointed toward Henri Mentone--"do you recognise him as the prisoner at
-the bar?"
-
-Labbe shook his head.
-
-"It was very dark," he said. "I could not swear to it."
-
-"His general appearance then? His clothes? They correspond with what you
-remember of the man?"
-
-"Yes," Labbe answered. "There is no doubt of that."
-
-"And as I understand it, you told the man that Monsieur le Cur had
-just started a moment before, and that if he went at once he would have
-company on the walk to the village?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"What did he say?"
-
-"He said that he was not looking for that kind of company."
-
-There was a sudden, curious, restrained movement through the courtroom;
-and, here and there, a villager, with pursed lips, nodded his head. It
-was quite evident to those from St. Marleau at least that such as Henri
-Mentone would not care for the company of their cur.
-
-"You gave the man directions as to the short cut to the village?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You may tell the court and the gentlemen of the jury what was said
-then."
-
-Labbe, who had at first appeared a little nervous, now pulled down his
-vest, and looked around him with an air of importance.
-
-"I told him that the path came out at the tavern. When I said 'tavern,'
-he was at once very interested. I thought then it was because he was
-glad to know there was a place to stay--it was such a terrible night,
-you understand? So I told him it was only a name we gave it, and that it
-was no place for one to go. I told him it was kept by an old woman, who
-was an _excommunie_, and who made whisky on the sly, and that her son
-was----"
-
-"_Misrable!_"--it was Mother Blondin, in a furious scream. Her eyes,
-under her matted gray hair, glared fiercely at Labbe.
-
-"Silence!" roared the clerk of the court, leaping to his feet.
-
-Raymond's hand closed over the clenched, bony fist that Mother Blondin
-had raised, and gently lowered it to her lap.
-
-"He will do you no harm, Madame Blondin," he whispered reassuringly.
-"And see, you must be careful, or you will get into serious trouble."
-
-Her hand trembled with passion in his, but she did not draw it away. It
-was strange that she did not! It was strange that he felt pity for her
-when so much was at stake, when pity was such a trivial and inconsequent
-thing! This was a murder trial, a trial for the killing of this woman's
-son. It was strange that he should be holding the _mother's_ hand,
-and--it was Raymond who drew his hand away. He clasped it over his other
-one until the knuckles grew white.
-
-"And then?" prompted the crown prosecutor.
-
-"And then, I do not remember how it came about," Labbe continued, "he
-spoke of Madame Blondin having money--enough to buy out any one around
-there. I said it was true that it was the gossip that she had made a
-lot, and that she had a well-filled stocking hidden away somewhere."
-
-"_Crapule!_"--Mother Blondin's voice, if scarcely audible this time, had
-lost none of its fury.
-
-The clerk contented himself with a menacing gesture toward his
-own side-whiskers. The crown prosecutor paid no attention to the
-interruption.
-
-"Did the man give any reason for coming to St. Marleau?"
-
-"None."
-
-"Did you ask him how long he intended to remain?"
-
-"Yes; he said he didn't know."
-
-"He had a travelling bag with him?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"This one?"--the crown prosecutor held up Raymond's travelling bag from
-the table beside him.
-
-"I cannot say," Labbe replied. "It was too dark on the platform."
-
-"Quite so! But it was of a size sufficient, in your opinion, to cause
-the man inconvenience in carrying it in such a storm, so you offered to
-have it sent over with Monsieur le Cur's trunk in the morning?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"What did he say?"
-
-"He said he could carry it all right."
-
-"He started off then with the bag along the road toward St. Marleau?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-The crown prosecutor glanced inquiringly toward the prisoner's counsel.
-The latter shook his head.
-
-"You may step down, Monsieur Labbe," directed the crown prosecutor.
-"Call Madame Blondin!" There was a stir in the courtroom now. Heads
-craned forward as the old woman shuffled across the floor to the witness
-box--Mother Blondin was quite capable of anything--even of throwing to
-the ground the Holy Book upon which the clerk would swear her! Mother
-Blondin, however, did nothing of the sort. She gripped at the edge of
-the witness box, mumbling at the clerk, and all the while straining her
-eyes through her steel-bowed spectacles at the prisoner across the
-room. And then her lips began to work curiously, her face to grow
-contorted--and suddenly the courtroom was in an uproar. She was shaking
-both scranny fists at Henri Mentone, and screaming at the top of her
-voice.
-
-"That is the man! That is the man!"--her voice became ungovernable,
-insensate, it rose shrilly, it broke, it rose piercingly again. "That is
-the man! The law! The law! I demand the law on him! He killed my son! He
-did it! I tell you, he did it! He----"
-
-Chairs and benches were scraping on the floor. Little cries of nervous
-terror came from the women; involuntarily men stood up the better to
-look at both Mother Blondin and the accused. It was a sensation! It was
-something to talk about in St. Marleau over the stoves in the coming
-winter. It was something of which nothing was to be missed.
-
-"Order! Silence! Order!" bawled the clerk.
-
-Valrie had caught Raymond's sleeve. He did not look at her. He was
-looking at Henri Mentone--at the look of dumb horror on the man's
-face--and then at a quite different figure in the prisoner's dock, whose
-head was bent down until it could scarcely be seen, and whose face was
-covered by his hands. He tried to force a grim complacence into his
-soul. It was absolutely certain that _he_ had nothing to fear from the
-trial. Nothing! The other Henri Mentone, the other priest, was answering
-for the killing of that night, and--who was this speaking? The crown
-prosecutor? He had not thought the man could be so suave and gentle.
-
-"Try and calm yourself, Madame Blondin. You have a perfect right to
-demand the punishment of the law upon the murderer of your son, and that
-is what we are here for now, and that is why I want you to tell us just
-as quietly as possible what happened that night."
-
-She stared truculently.
-
-"Everybody knows what happened!" she snarled at him. "He killed my son!"
-
-"How did he kill your son?" inquired the crown prosecutor, with a
-sudden, crafty note of scepticism in his voice. "How do you know he
-did?"
-
-"I saw him! I tell you, I saw him! I heard my son shout '_voleur_' and
-cry for help"--Mother Blon-din's words would not come fast enough now.
-"I was in the back room. When I opened the door he was fighting my son.
-He tried to steal my money. Some of it was on the floor. My son cried
-for help again. I ran and got a stick of wood. My son tried to get his
-revolver from the _armoire_. This man got it away from him. I struck the
-man on the head with the wood, then he shot my son, and I ran out for
-help."
-
-"And you positively identify the prisoner as the man who shot your son?"
-
-"Yes, yes! Have I not told you so often enough!"
-
-"And this"--the crown prosecutor handed her a revolver--"do you identify
-this?"
-
-"Yes; it was my son's."
-
-"You kept your money in a hiding place, Madame Blondin, I understand--in
-a hollow between two of the logs in the wall of the room? Is that so?"
-
-"Yes; it is so!"--Mother Blondin's voice grew shrill again. "But I will
-find a better place for it, if I ever get it back again! The police are
-as great thieves as that man! They took it from him, and now they keep
-it from me!"
-
-"It is here, Madame Blondin," said the lawyer soothingly, opening a
-large envelope. "It will be returned to you after the trial. How much
-was there?"
-
-"I know very well how much!" she shrilled out suspiciously. "You cannot
-cheat me! I know! There were all my savings, years of savings--there was
-more than five hundred dollars."
-
-A little gasp went around the courtroom. Five hundred dollars! It was a
-fortune! Gossip then had not lied--it had been outdone!
-
-"Now this hiding place, Madame Blondin--you had never told any one about
-it? Not even your son?"
-
-"No."
-
-"It would seem then that this man must have known about it in some way.
-Had you been near it a short time previous to the fight?"
-
-"I told you I had, didn't I? I told Monsieur Dupont all that once."
-Mother Blondin was growing unmanageable again. "I went there to put some
-money in not five minutes before I heard my son call for help."
-
-"Your son then was not in the room when you went to put this money
-away?"
-
-"No; of course, he wasn't! I have told that to Monsieur Dupont, too. I
-heard him coming downstairs just as I left the room."
-
-"That is all, Madame Blondin, thank you, unless----" The crown
-prosecutor turned again toward the counsel for the defence.
-
-Lemoyne rose, and, standing by his chair without approaching the witness
-box, took a small penknife from his pocket, and held it up.
-
-"Madame Blondin," he said gently, "will you tell me what I am holding in
-my hand?"
-
-Mother Blondin squinted, set her glasses further on her nose, and shook
-her head.
-
-"I do not know," she said.
-
-"You do not see very well, Madame Blondin?"--sympathetically.
-
-"What is it you have got there--eh? What is it?" she demanded sharply.
-
-Lemoyne glanced at the jury--and smiled. He restored the penknife to his
-pocket.
-
-"It is a penknife, Madame Blondin--one of my own. An object that any one
-would recognise--unless one did not see very well. Are you quite sure,
-Madame Blondin--quite sure on second thoughts--that you see well enough
-to identify the prisoner so positively as the man who was fighting with
-your son?"
-
-The jury, with quick meaning glances at one another, with a new
-interest, leaned forward in their seats. There was a tense moment--a
-sort of bated silence in the courtroom. And then, as Mother Blondin
-answered, some one tittered audibly, the spell was broken, the point
-made by the defence swept away, turned even into a weapon against
-itself.
-
-"If you will give me a stick of wood and come closer, close enough so
-that I can hit you over the head with it," said Mother Blondin, and
-cackled viciously, "you will see how well I can see!"
-
-Madame Blondin stepped down.
-
-And then there came upon Raymond a thrill, a weakness, a quick
-tightening of his muscles. The clerk had called his name. He walked
-mechanically to the witness stand. It was coming now. He must be on his
-guard. But he had thought out everything very carefully, and--no, almost
-before he knew it, he was back in his seat again. He had been asked only
-if he had followed the road all the way from the station, to describe
-how he had found the man, and to identify the prisoner as that man. He
-was to be recalled. Le-moyne had not asked him a single question.
-
-"Mademoiselle Valrie Lafleur!" called the clerk.
-
-"Oh, Monsieur le Cur!" she whispered tremulously. "I--I do not want to
-go. It--it is such a terrible thing to _have_ to say anything that would
-help to send a man to death--I---"
-
-"Mademoiselle Valrie Lafleur!" snapped the clerk. "Will the witness
-have the goodness to----"
-
-Raymond did not hear her testimony; he knew only that she, too,
-identified the man as the one she had seen lying unconscious in
-the road, and that the note she had found was read and placed in
-evidence--in his ears, like a dull, constant dirge, were those words of
-hers with which she had left him--"it is such a terrible thing to have
-to say anything that would help to send a man to death." Who was it that
-was sending the man to death? Not he! He had tried to save the man.
-It wasn't death, anyway. The man's guilt would appear obvious, of
-course--Lemoyne, the lawyer, could not alter that; but he had still
-faith in Lemoyne. Lemoyne would make his defence on the man's condition.
-Lemoyne would come to that.
-
-"My son!" croaked old Mother Blondin fiercely, at his side. "My son!
-What I know, I know! But the law--the law on the man who killed my
-son!"
-
-"Pull yourself together, you fool!" rasped that inner voice. "Do
-you want everybody in the courtroom staring at you. Listen to the
-incomparable Dupont telling how clever he was!"
-
-Yes, Dupont was on the stand now. Dupont was testifying to finding the
-revolver and money in the prisoner's pockets. He verified the amount.
-Dupont had his case at his fingers' tips, and he sketched it, with an
-amazing conciseness for Monsieur Dupont, from the moment he had been
-notified of the crime up to the time of the attempted escape. He was
-convinced that, in spite of all precautions, the prisoner's accomplice
-had taken alarm--since he, Dupont, had sat the night in the room waiting
-for the unknown's appearance, and neither he nor his deputy, who had
-remained until daylight hiding in the shed where he could watch the
-prisoner's window, had seen or heard anything. On cross-examination he
-admitted that pressure had been brought to bear upon the prisoner in
-an effort to trip the man up in his story, but that the prisoner had
-unswervingly held to the statement that he could remember nothing.
-
-The voices droned through the courtroom. It was Doctor Arnaud now
-identifying the man. They were always identifying the man! Why did not
-he, the saintly cur of St. Marleau--no, it was Three-Ace Artie--why did
-not he, Three-Ace Artie, laugh outright in all their faces! It was not
-hard to identify the man. He had seen to that very thoroughly, more
-thoroughly than even he had imagined that night in the storm when all
-the devils of hell were loosed to shriek around him, and he had changed
-clothes with a _dead_ man. A dead man--yes, that was the way it should
-have been! Did he not remember how limply the man's neck and head wagged
-on the shoulders, and how the body kept falling all over in grotesque
-attitudes instead of helping him to get its clothes off! Only the dead
-man had come to life! That was the man over there inside that box
-with the little wood-turned decorations all around the railing--no, he
-wouldn't look--but that man there who was the colour of soiled chalk,
-and whose eyes, with the hurt of a dumb beast in them, kept turning
-constantly in this direction, over here, here where the witnesses sat.
-
-"Doctor Arnaud"--it was the counsel for the defence speaking, and
-suddenly Raymond was listening with strained attention--"you have
-attended the prisoner from the night he was found unconscious in the
-road until the present time?"
-
-"Yes, monsieur."
-
-"You have heard me in cross-examination ask Mademoiselle Lafleur and
-Monsieur Dupont if at any time during this period the prisoner, by
-act, manner or word, swerved from his statement that he could remember
-nothing, either of the events of that night, or of prior events in his
-life. You have heard both of these witness testify that he had not done
-so. I will ask you now if you are in a position to corroborate their
-testimony?"
-
-"I am," replied Doctor Arnaud. "He has said nothing else to my
-knowledge."
-
-"Then, doctor, in your professional capacity, will you kindly tell the
-court and the gentlemen of the jury whether or not loss of memory could
-result from a blow upon the head."
-
-"It could--certainly," stated Doctor Arnaud. "There is no doubt of that,
-but it depends on the----"
-
-"Just a moment, doctor, if you please; we will come to that"--Lemoyne,
-as Raymond knew well that Le-moyne himself was fully aware, was treading
-on thin and perilous ice, but on Lemoyne's lips, as he interrupted, was
-an engaging smile. "This loss of memory now. Will you please help us to
-understand just what it means? Take a hypothetical case. Could a man,
-for example, read and write, do arithmetic, say, appear normal in all
-other ways, and still have lost the memory of his name, his parents, his
-friends, his home, his previous state?"
-
-"Yes," said Doctor Arnaud. "That is quite true. He might lose the memory
-of all those things, and still retain everything he has acquired by
-education."
-
-"That is a medical fact?"
-
-"Yes, certainly, it is a medical fact."
-
-"And is it not also a medical fact, doctor, that this condition has been
-known to have been caused by a blow--I will not say so slight, for that
-would be misleading--but by a blow that did not even cause a wound, and
-I mean by wound a gash, a cut, or the tearing of the flesh?"
-
-"Yes; that, too, is so."
-
-Lemoyne paused. He looked at Henri Mentone, and suddenly it seemed as
-though a world of sympathy and pity were in his face. He turned and
-looked at the jury--at each one of the twelve men, but almost as though
-he did not see them. There was a mist in his eyes. It was silent again
-in the courtroom. His voice was low and grave as he spoke again.
-
-"Doctor Arnaud, are you prepared to state professionally under oath
-that it is impossible that the blow received by the prisoner at the bar
-should have caused him to lose his memory?"
-
-"No." Doctor Arnaud shook his head. "No; I would not say that."
-
-Lemoyne's voice was still grave.
-
-"You admit then, Doctor Arnaud, that it is possible?"
-
-Doctor Arnaud hesitated. "Yes," he said. "It is possible, of course."
-
-"That is all, doctor"--Lemoyne sat down.
-
-"One moment!"--the crown prosecutor, crisp, curt, incisive, was on his
-feet. "Loss of memory is not insanity, doctor?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Is the prisoner in your professional judgment insane?"
-
-"No," declared Doctor Arnaud emphatically. "Most certainly not!"
-
-With a nod, the crown prosecutor dismissed the witness.
-
-A buzz, whisperings, ran around the room. Raymond's eyes were fixed
-sombrely on the floor. Relief had come with Lemoyne's climax, but now in
-Doctor Arnaud's reply to the crown prosecutor he sensed catastrophe.
-A sentence for life was the best that could be hoped for, but
-suppose--suppose Lemoyne should fail to secure even that! No, no--they
-would not hang the man! Even Doctor Arnaud had been forced to admit that
-he might have lost his memory. That would be strong enough for any jury,
-and--they were calling his name again, and he was rising, and walking
-a second time to the witness stand. Surely all these people _knew_. Was
-not his face set, and white, and drawn! See that ray of sunlight
-coming in through that far window, and how it did not deviate, but came
-straight toward him, and lay upon the crucifix on his breast, to draw
-all eyes upon it, upon that Figure on the Cross, the Man Betrayed.
-God, he had not meant this! He had thought the priest already dead that
-night. It was a dead man he had meant should answer for the killing of
-that ugly, scarred-faced, drunken blackguard, Thophile Blondin. That
-couldn't do a dead man any harm! It was a dead man, a dead man, a dead
-man--not this living, breathing one who----
-
-"Monsieur le Cur," said the crown prosecutor, "you were present in the
-prisoner's room with Monsieur Dupont and Doctor Arnaud, when Monsieur
-Dupont made a search of the accused's clothing?"
-
-"Yes," Raymond answered.
-
-"Do you identify this revolver as the one taken from the prisoner's
-pocket?"
-
-What was it Valrie had said--that it was such a terrible thing to have
-to say anything that would help to send a man to death? But the man was
-not going to death. It was to be a life sentence--and afterwards, after
-the trial, there would be time to think, and plot, and plan.
-
-"It is the same one," said Raymond in a low voice.
-
-"You also saw Monsieur Dupont take a large number of loose bills from
-the prisoner's pocket?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Do you know their amount?"
-
-"No. Monsieur Dupont did not count them at the time."
-
-"There were a great many, however, crumpled in the pocket, as though
-they had been hastily thrust there?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-Why did that man in the prisoner's dock look at him like that--not
-in accusation--it was worse than that--it was in a sorrowful sort of
-wonder, and a numbed despair. Those devils were laughing in his ears--he
-was telling the _truth!_
-
-"That is all, I think, Monsieur le Cur," said the crown prosecutor
-abruptly.
-
-All! There came a bitter and abysmal irony. Puppets! All were puppets
-upon a set stage--from the judge on the bench to that dismayed thing
-yonder who wrung his hands before the imposing majesty of the law! All!
-That was all, was it--the few words he had said? Who then was the author
-of every word that had been uttered in the room, who then had pulled the
-strings that jerked these automatons about in their every movement! Ah,
-here was Lemoyne this time, the prisoner's counsel. This time there was
-to be a cross-examination. Yes, certainly, he would like to help Lemoyne,
-but Lemoyne must not try to trap him. Lemoyne, too, was a puppet, and
-therefore Lemoyne could not be expected to know how very true it was
-that "Henri Mentone" was on trial for his life, and that "Henri Mentone"
-would fight for that life with any weapon he could grasp, and that
-Lemoyne would do the prisoner an ill turn to put "Henri Mentone" on the
-defensive! Well--he brushed his hand across his forehead, and fixed his
-eyes steadily on Lemoyne--he was ready for the man.
-
-"Monsieur le Cur"--Lemoyne had come very close to the witness stand,
-and Lemoyne's voice was soberly modulated--"Monsieur le Cur, I have
-only one question to ask you. You have been with this unfortunate man
-since the night you found him on the road, you have nursed him night and
-day as a mother would a child, you have not been long in St. Marleau,
-but in that time, so I am told, and I can very readily see why, you
-have come to be called the good, young Father Aubert by all your parish.
-Monsieur le Cur, you have been constantly with this man, for days and
-nights you have scarcely left his side, and so I come to the question
-that, it seems to me, you, of all others, are best qualified to answer."
-Lemoyne paused. He had placed his two hands on the edge of the witness
-box, and was looking earnestly into Raymond's face. "Monsieur le Cur,
-do you believe that when the prisoner says that he remembers nothing of
-the events of that night, that he has no recollection of the crime
-of which he is accused--do you believe, Monsieur le Cur, that he is
-telling the truth?"
-
-There had been silence in the courtroom before--it was a silence now
-that seemed to palpitate and throb, a _living_ silence. Instinctively
-the crown prosecutor had made as though to rise from his chair; and
-then, as if indifferent, had changed his mind. No one else in the
-room had moved. Raymond glanced around him. They were waiting--for
-his answer. The word of the good, young Father Aubert would go far.
-Lemoyne's eyes were pleading mutely--for the one ground of defence, the
-one chance for his client's life. But Lemoyne did not need to plead--for
-that! They must not hang the man! They were waiting--for his answer.
-Still the silence held. And then Raymond raised his right hand solemnly.
-
-"As God is my judge," he said, "I firmly believe that the man is telling
-the truth."
-
-Benches creaked, there was the rustle of garments, a sort of unanimous
-and involuntary long-drawn sigh; and it seemed to Raymond that, as all
-eyes turned on the prisoner, they held a kindlier and more tolerant
-light. And then, as he walked back to the other witnesses and took his
-seat, he heard the crown prosecutor speak--as though disposing of the
-matter in blunt disdain:
-
-"The prosecution rests."
-
-Valrie laid her hand over his.
-
-"I am so glad--so glad you said that," she whispered.
-
-Monsieur Dupont leaned forward, and clucked his tongue very softly.
-
-"Hah, Monsieur le Cur!" He wagged his head indulgently. "Well, I
-suppose you could not help it--eh? No, you could not. I have told you
-before that you are too soft-hearted."
-
-There were two witnesses for the defence--Doctor Arnaud's two
-fellow-practitioners in Tournayville. Their testimony was virtually
-that of Doctor Arnaud in cross-examination. To each of them the crown
-prosecutor put the same question--and only one. Was the prisoner insane?
-Each answered in the negative.
-
-And then, a moment later, Lemoyne, rising to sum up for the defence,
-walked soberly forward to the jury-box, and halted before the twelve
-men.
-
-"Gentlemen of the jury," he began quietly, "you have heard the
-professional testimony of three doctors, one of them a witness for the
-prosecution, who all agree that the wound received by the prisoner might
-result in loss of memory. You have heard the testimony of that good man,
-the cur of St. Marleau, who gave his days and nights to the care and
-nursing of the one whose life, gentlemen, now lies in your hands; you
-have heard him declare in the most solemn and impressive manner that he
-believed the prisoner had no remembrance, no recollection of the night
-on which the crime was committed. Who should be better able to form
-an opinion as to whether, as the prosecution pretends, the prisoner is
-playing a part, or as to whether he is telling the truth, than the one
-who has been with him from that day to this, and been with him in the
-most intimate way, more than any one else? And I ask you, too, to weigh
-well and remember the character of the man, whom his people call the
-good, young Father Aubert, who has so emphatically testified to this
-effect. His words were not lightly spoken, and they were pure in
-motive. You have heard other witnesses--all witnesses for the defence,
-gentlemen--assert that they have seen nothing, heard nothing, that would
-indicate that the prisoner was playing a part. Gentlemen, every scrap
-of evidence that has been introduced but goes to substantiate the
-prisoner's story. Is it possible, do you believe for an instant, that a
-man could with his first conscious breath assume such a part, and, sick
-and wounded and physically weak, play it through without a slip, or
-sign, or word, or act that would so much as hint at duplicity? But that
-is not all. Gentlemen, I will ask you to come with me in thought to a
-scene that occurred this morning an hour before this trial began, and I
-would that the gift of words were mine to make you see that scene as I
-saw it." He turned and swept out his hand toward the prisoner. "That man
-was in his cell, on his knees beside his cot. He did not look up as I
-entered, and I did not disturb him. We were alone together there. After
-a few minutes he raised his head. There was agony in his face such as
-I have never seen before on a human countenance. I spoke to him then.
-I told him that professional confidence was sacred, I warned him of the
-peril in which he stood, I pleaded with him to help me save his life, to
-tell me all, everything, not to tie my hands. Gentlemen of the jury, do
-you know his answer? It was a simple one--and spoken as simply. 'When
-you came in I was asking God to give me back my memory before it was too
-late.' That is what he said, gentlemen."
-
-There were tears in Lemoyne's eyes--there were tears in other eyes
-throughout the courtroom. There was a cry in Raymond's heart that went
-out to Le-moyne. He had not failed! He had not failed! Le-moyne had not
-failed!
-
-"Gentlemen, he did not know." Lemoyne's voice rose now in impassioned
-pleading--and he spoke on with that eloquence that is born only of
-conviction and in the soul. It was the picture of the man's helplessness
-he drew; the horror of an innocent man entangled in seemingly
-incontrovertible evidence, and doomed to a frightful death. He played
-upon the emotions with a master touch--and as the minutes passed sobs
-echoed back from every quarter of the room--and in the jury box men
-brushed their hands across their eyes. And at the end he was very quiet
-again, and his words were very low.
-
-"Gentlemen of the jury, I believe in my soul that this man is innocent.
-I ask you to believe that he is innocent. I ask you to believe that if
-he could tell of the events of that night he would stand before you a
-martyr to a cruel chain of circumstance. And I ask you to remember the
-terrible responsibility that rests upon you of passing judgment upon a
-man, helpless, impotent, and alone, and who, deprived of all means of
-self-defence, has only you to look to--for his life."
-
-There was buoyancy in Raymond's heart. Lemoyne had not failed! He had
-been magnificent--triumphant! Even the judge was fumbling awkwardly with
-the papers on his desk. What did it matter now what the crown prosecutor
-might say? No one doubted perhaps that the man was guilty, but the spell
-that Lemoyne had cast would remain, and there would be mercy. A chill
-came, a chill like death--if it were not so, what would he have to face!
-
-"Gentlemen of the jury"--the crown prosecutor was speaking now--"I
-should do less than justice to my learned friend if I did not admit that
-I was affected by his words; but I should also do less than justice to
-the laws of this land, to you, and to myself if I did not tell you that
-emotion has no place in the consideration of this case, and that fact
-alone must be the basis of your verdict. I shall not keep you long. I
-have only a few words to say. The court will instruct you that if the
-prisoner is sane he is accountable to the law for his crime. We are
-concerned, not with his loss of memory, though my learned friend has
-made much of that, but with his sanity. The court will also instruct
-you on that point. I shall not, therefore, discuss the question of the
-prisoner's mental condition, except to recall to your minds that the
-medical testimony has been unanimous in declaring that the accused
-is not insane; and except to say that, in so far as loss of memory is
-concerned, it is plainly evident that he was in full possession of
-all his faculties at the time the murder was committed, and that I am
-personally inclined to share the opinion of his accomplice in crime--a
-man, gentlemen, whom we may safely presume is even a better judge of the
-prisoner's character than is the cur of St. Marleau--who, from the note
-you have heard read, has certainly no doubt that the prisoner is not
-only quite capable of attempting such a deception, but is actually
-engaged in practising it at the present moment.
-
-"I pass on to the facts' brought out by the evidence. On the night
-of the crime, a man answering the general description of the prisoner
-arrived at the St. Marleau station. It was a night when one, and
-especially a stranger, would naturally be glad of company on the
-three-mile walk to the village. The man refused the company of the cur.
-Why? He, as it later appears, had very good reasons of his own! It was
-such a night that it would be all one would care to do to battle against
-the wind without being hampered by a travelling bag. He refused the
-station agent's offer to keep the bag until morning and send it over
-with the cur's trunk. Why? It is quite evident, in view of what
-followed, that he did not expect to be there the next morning! He
-drew from the station agent, corroborating presumably the information
-previously obtained either by himself or this unknown accomplice, the
-statement that Madame Blondin was believed to have a large sum of money
-hidden away somewhere in her house. That was the man, gentlemen, who
-answers the general description of the prisoner. Within approximately
-half an hour later Madame Blondin's house is robbed, and, in an effort
-to protect his mother's property, Thophile Blondin is shot and killed.
-The question perhaps arises as to how the author of this crime knew the
-exact hiding place where the money was kept. But it is not material, in
-as much as we know that he was in a position to be in possession of that
-knowledge. He might have been peering in through the window when Madame
-Blondin, as she testified, was at the hiding place a few minutes before
-he broke into her house--or his accomplice, still unapprehended, may, as
-I have previously intimated, already have discovered it.
-
-"And now we pass entirely out of the realm of conjecture. You have
-heard the testimony of the murdered man's mother, who both saw and
-participated in the struggle. The man who murdered Thophile Blondin,
-who was actually seen to commit the act, is identified as the prisoner
-at the bar. He was struck over the head by Madame Blondin with a stick
-of wood, which inflicted a serious wound. We can picture him running
-from the house, after Madame Blondin rushed out toward the village to
-give the alarm. He did not, however, get very far--he was himself too
-badly hurt. He was found lying unconscious on the road a short distance
-away. Again the identification is complete--and in his pocket is found
-the motive for the crime, Madame Blondin's savings--and in his pocket
-is found the weapon, Thophile Blondin's revolver, with which the murder
-was committed. Gentlemen, I shall not take up your time, or the time of
-this court needlessly. No logical human being could doubt the prisoner's
-guilt for an instant. I ask you, gentlemen of the jury, to return a
-verdict in accordance with the evidence."
-
-Raymond did not look up, as the crown prosecutor sat down. "No logical
-human being could doubt the prisoner's guilt for an instant." That was
-true, wasn't it? No human being--save only _one_. Well, he had expected
-that--it was even a tribute to his own quick wit. Puppets! Yes,
-puppets--they were all puppets--all but himself. But if there was guilt,
-there was also mercy. They would show mercy to a man who could not
-remember. How many times had he said that to himself! Well, he had been
-right, hadn't he? He had more reason to believe it now than he had
-had to believe it before. Lemoyne had, beyond the shadow of a doubt,
-convinced every one in the courtroom that the man could not remember.
-
-"Order! Attention! Silence!" rapped out the clerk pompously.
-
-The judge had turned in his seat to face the jury.
-
-"Gentlemen of the jury," he said impassively, "it is my province to
-instruct you in the law as it applies to this case, and as it applies
-to the interpretation of the evidence before you. There must be no
-confusion in your minds as to the question of the prisoner's mental
-condition. The law does not hold accountable, nor does it bring to trial
-any person who is insane. The law, however, does not recognise loss of
-memory as insanity. There has been no testimony to indicate that the
-prisoner is insane, or even that he was not in an entirely normal
-condition of mind at the time the crime was committed; there has been
-the testimony of three physicians that he is not insane. You have
-therefore but one thing to consider. If, from the evidence, you believe
-that the prisoner killed Thophile Blondin, it is your duty to bring in
-a verdict of guilty; on the other hand, the prisoner is entitled to the
-benefit of any reasonable doubt as to his guilt that may exist in your
-minds. You may retire, gentlemen, for your deliberations."
-
-There was a hurried, whispered consultation amongst the twelve men in
-the jury box. It brought Raymond no surprise that the jury did not leave
-the room. It brought him no surprise that the figure with the thin, pale
-face, who was dressed in Raymond Chapelle's clothes, should be ordered
-to stand and face those twelve men, and hear the word "guilty" fall from
-the foreman's lips. He had known it, every one had known it--it was the
-judge now, that white-haired, kindly-faced man, upon whom he riveted his
-attention. A sentence for life... yes, that was terrible enough... but
-there was a way... there would be some way in the days to come... he had
-fastened this crime upon a dead man to save his own life... not on this
-living one whose eyes now he could not meet across the room, though
-he could feel them upon him, feel them staring, staring at his naked
-soul... he would find some way... there would be time, there was all
-of time in a sentence for life... he would not desert the man, he
-would-----
-
-"Henri Mentone"--the judge was speaking again--"you have been found
-guilty by a jury of your peers of the murder of one Thophile Blondin.
-Have you anything to say why the sentence of this court should not be
-passed upon you?"
-
-There was no answer. What was the man doing? Was he crying? Trembling?
-Was there that old nameless horror in the face? Were his lips quivering
-as a child's lips quiver when it is broken-hearted? Raymond dared
-not look; dared not look anywhere now save at the white-haired,
-kindly-faced--yes, he was kindly-faced--judge. And then suddenly he
-found himself swaying weakly, and his shoulder bumped into old Mother
-Blondin. Not that--great God--not that! That kindly-faced man was
-putting a _black hat_ on his head, and standing up. Everybody was
-standing up. He, too, was standing up, only he was not steady on his
-feet. Was Valrie's hand on his arm in nervous terror, or to support
-him! Some one was speaking. The words were throbbing through his brain.
-Yes, throbbing--throbbing and clanging like hammer blows--that was why
-he could not hear them all.
-
-"... the sentence of this court... place of confinement... thence to the
-place of execution... hanged by the neck until you are dead, and may God
-have mercy on your soul."
-
-And then Raymond looked; and through the solemn silence, and through the
-doom that hung upon the room, there came a cry. It was Henri Mentone.
-The man's hands were stretched out, the tears were streaming down
-his cheeks. And was this mockery--or a joke of hell! Then why did not
-everybody howl and scream with mirth! The man was calling upon himself
-to save himself! No, no--he, Raymond, was going mad to call it mockery
-or mirth. It was ghastly, horrible, pitiful beyond human understanding,
-it tore at the heart and the soul--the man was doing what that Figure
-upon the Cross had once been bade to do--his own name was upon his own
-lips, he was calling upon himself to save himself. And the voice in
-agony rang through the crowded room, and people sobbed.
-
-"Father--Father Francois Aubert, help me, do not leave me! I do not
-know--I do not understand. Father--_Father Franois Aubert_, help me--I
-do not understand!"
-
-And Raymond, groping out behind him, flung his arm across the back of
-the bench, and, sinking down, his head fell forward, and his face was
-hidden.
-
-"_Tiens_," said Mother Blondin sullenly, as though forced to admit it
-against her will, "he has a good heart, even if he is a priest."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII--THE COMMON CUP
-
-|IT seemed as though it were an immeasurable span of time since that
-voice had rung through the courtroom. He could hear it yet--he was
-hearing it always. "Father--Father Franois Aubert--help me--I do not
-know--I do not understand." And sometimes it was pitiful beyond that
-of any human cry before; and sometimes it was dominant in its ghastly
-irony. And yet that was only yesterday, and it was only the afternoon of
-the next day now.
-
-There were wild roses, and wild raspberries growing here along the side
-of the road, and the smoke wreathed upward from the chimneys of the
-whitewashed cottages, and the water lapped upon the shore--these things
-were unchanged, undisturbed, unaffected, untouched. It seemed curiously
-improper that it should be so--that the sense of values was somehow
-lost.
-
-He had come from the courtroom with his brain in a state of numbed
-shock, as it were, like a wound that has taken the nerve centres by
-surprise and had not yet begun to throb. It was instinct, the instinct
-to fight on, the instinct of self-preservation that had bade him grope
-his way to Lemoyne, the counsel for the defence. "I have friends who
-have money," he had said. "Appeal the case--spare no effort--I will see
-that the expenses are met." And after that he had driven back to St.
-Marleau, and after that again he had lived through a succession of
-blurred hours, obeying mechanically a sense of routine--he had talked to
-the villagers, he had eaten supper with Valrie and her mother, he
-had gone to bed and lain awake, he had said mass in the church that
-morning--mass!
-
-Was it the heat of the day! His brow was feverish. He took off his hat,
-and turned to let the breeze from the river fan his face and head. It
-was only this afternoon, a little while ago, that he had emerged from
-that numbed stupor, and now the hurt and the smarting of the wound had
-come. His brain was clear now--_terribly_ clear. Better that the stupor,
-which was a kindly thing, had remained! He had said mass that morning.
-"_Lavabo inter innocentes manus meas_--I will wash my hands among the
-innocent." In the sight of holy God, he had said that; at God's holy
-altar as he had spoken, symbolising his words, he had washed his fingers
-in water. It had not seemed to matter so much then, he had even mocked
-cynically at those same words the night that Madame Lafleur had shown
-him the altar cloth--but that other voice, those other words had
-not been pounding at his ears then, as now. And now they were joined
-together, his voice and that other voice, his words and those other
-words: "I will wash my hands among the innocent--hanged by the neck
-until you are dead, and may God have mercy on your soul."
-
-He stood by the roadside hatless. Through the open doorway of a
-cottage a few yards away he could see old grandmother Frenier, who was
-exceedingly poor, and deaf, and far up in the eighties, contentedly at
-work with her spinning-wheel; on the shore, where the tide was half
-out and the sand of the beach had merged into oozy mud, two bare-footed
-children overturned the rocks of such size as were not beyond their
-strength, laughing gleefully as they captured the sea-worms, whose
-nippers could pinch with no little degree of ferocity, and with which,
-later, no doubt, they intended to fish for tommy-cods; also there was
-sunlight, and sparkling water, and some one driving along the road
-toward him in a buckboard; and he could hear Bouchard in the carpenter
-shop alternately hammering and whistling--the whistling was out of tune,
-it was true, but what it lacked in melody it made up in spirit. This was
-reality, this was actuality, happiness and peace, and contentment, and
-serenity; and he, standing here on the road, was an integral part of the
-scene--no painter would leave out the village cur standing hatless
-on the road--the village cur would, indeed, stand out as the central
-figure, like a benediction upon all the rest. Why then should he not in
-truth, as in semblance, enter into this scene of tranquillity? Where did
-they come from, those words that were so foreign to all about him, where
-had they found birth, and why were they seared into his brain so that
-he could not banish them? Surely they were but an hallucination--he had
-only to look around him to find evidence of that. Surely they had no
-basis in fact, those words--"hanged by the neck until you are dead, and
-may God have mercy on your soul."
-
-They seemed to fade slowly away, old grandmother Frenier and her
-spinning-wheel, and the children puddling in the mud, and the buckboard
-coming along the road; and he no longer heard the whistling from the
-carpenter shop--it seemed to fade out like a picture on a cinema
-screen, while another crept there, at first intangible and undefined,
-to supplant the first. It was sombre and dark, and a narrow space, and
-a shadowy human form. Then there came a ray of light--sunlight, only
-the gladness and the brightness were not in the sunlight because it had
-first to pass through an opening where there were iron bars. But the ray
-of light, nevertheless, grew stronger, and the picture took form. There
-were bare walls, and bare floors, and a narrow cot--and it was a cell.
-And the shadowy form became more distinct--it was a man, whose back
-was turned, who stood at the end of the cell, and whose hands were each
-clutched around one of the iron bars, and who seemed to be striving to
-thrust his head out into the sunlight, for his head, too, was pressed
-close against the iron bars. And there was something horribly familiar
-in the figure. And then the head turned slowly, and the sunlight, that
-was robbed of its warmth and its freedom, slanted upon a pale cheek, and
-ashen lips, and eyes that were torture-burned; and the face was the face
-of the man who was--to be hanged by the neck until he was dead, and upon
-whose soul that voice had implored the mercy of God.
-
-Raymond stared at his hat which was lying in the road. How had it got
-there? He did not remember that he had dropped it. He had been holding
-it in his hand. This buckboard that was approaching would run over it.
-He stooped and picked it up, and mechanically began to brush away the
-dust. That figure in the buckboard seemed to be familiar, too. Yes, of
-course, it was Monsieur Dupont, the assistant chief of the Tournayville
-police--the man who always answered his own questions, and clucked with
-his tongue as though he were some animal learning to talk. But Monsieur
-Dupont mattered little now. It was not old grandmother Frenier and her
-spinning-wheel that was reality--it was Father Franois Aubert in the
-condemned cell of the Tournayville jail, waiting to be hanged by the
-neck until he was dead for the murder of Thophile Blondin.
-
-Raymond put on his hat with forced calmness. He must settle this with
-himself; he could not afford to lose his poise--either mentally or
-physically. He laid no claim to the heroic or to the quixotic--he did
-not want to die in the stead of that man, or in the stead of any other
-man. Neither was he a coward--no man had ever called Raymond Chapelle,
-or Arthur Leroy, or Three-Ace Artie a coward. He was a gambler--and
-there was still a chance. There was the appeal. He was gambling now for
-both their lives. He would lay down no hand, he would fight as he had
-always fought--to the end--while a chance remained. There was still
-a chance--the appeal. It was long odds, he knew that--but it was a
-chance--and he was a gambler. He could only wait now for the turn of the
-final card. He would not tolerate consideration beyond that point--not
-if with all his might he could force his brain to leave that
-"afterwards" alone. It was weeks yet to the date set for the execution
-of Henri Mentone for the murder of Thophile Blondin, and it would
-be weeks yet before the appeal was acted upon. He could only wait
-now--here--here in St. Marleau, as the good young Father Aubert. He
-could not run away, or disappear, like a pitiful coward, until
-that appeal had had its answer. Afterwards--no, there was no
-"afterwards"--not _now!_ Now, it was the ubiquitous Monsieur Dupont, the
-short little man with the sharp features, and the roving black eyes that
-glanced everywhere at once, who was calling to him, and clambering out
-of the buckboard.
-
-"You are surprised to see me, eh, Monsieur le Cur?" clucked Monsieur
-Dupont. "Yes, you are surprised. Very well! But what would you say, eh,
-if I told you that I had come to arrest Monsieur le Cur of St. Marleau?
-Eh--what would you say to that?"
-
-Arrest! Curious, the cold, calculating alertness that swept upon him at
-that word! What had happened?
-
-Was the game up--now? Curious, how he measured appraisingly--and almost
-contemptuously--the physique of this man before him. And then, under his
-breath, he snarled an oath at the other. Curse Monsieur Dupont and his
-perverted sense of humour! It was not the first time Monsieur Dupont had
-startled him. Monsieur Dupont was grinning broadly--like an ape!
-
-"I imagine," said Raymond placidly, "that what I would say, Monsieur
-Dupont, would be to inquire as to the nature of the charge against
-Monsieur le Cur of St. Marleau."
-
-"And I," said Monsieur Dupont, "would at once reply--assault.
-Assault--bodily harm and injury--assault upon the person of one Jacques
-Bourget."
-
-"Oh!" said Raymond--and smiled. "Yes, I believe there have been rumours
-of it in the village, Monsieur Dupont. Several have spoken to me about
-it, and I even understand that the Cur of St. Marleau pleads guilty."
-
-And then Monsieur Dupont puckered up his face, and burst into a guffaw.
-
-"_'Cr nom_--ah, pardon--but it is excusable, one bad little word,
-eh? Yes, it is excusable. But imagine--fancy! The good, young Father
-Aubert--and Jacques Bourget! I would have liked to have seen it. Yes,
-I would! Monsieur le Cur, you do not look it, but you are magnificent.
-Monsieur le Cur, I lift my hat to you. _Bon Dieu_--ah, pardon
-again--but you were not gentle with Jacques Bourget, whom one would
-think could eat you alive! And you told me nothing about it--you are
-modest, eh? Yes, you are modest."
-
-"I have had no opportunity to be modest." Raymond laughed, "since, so
-I understand, Bourget encountered some of the villagers on his way home
-that afternoon, and gave me a reputation that, to say the least of it,
-left me with little to be modest about."
-
-"I believe you," chuckled Monsieur Dupont. "I believe you, Monsieur
-le Cur, since I, too, got the story from Jacques Bourget himself.
-He desired to swear out a warrant for your arrest. You have not seen
-Bourget for several days, eh, Monsieur le Cur? No, you have not seen
-him. But I know very well how to handle such as he! He will swear out
-no warrant. On the contrary, he would very gladly feed out of anybody's
-hand just now--even yours, Monsieur le Cur. I have the brave Jacques
-Bourget in jail at the present moment."
-
-"In jail?" Raymond's puzzled frown was genuine. "But----"
-
-"Wait a minute, Monsieur le Cur"--Monsieur Dupont's smile was suddenly
-gone. He tapped Raymond impressively on the shoulder. "There is more in
-this than appears on the surface, Monsieur le Cur. You see? Yes,
-you see. Well then, listen! He talked no longer of a warrant when I
-threatened him with arrest for getting whisky at Mother Blondin's. I had
-him frightened. And that brings us to Mother Blondin, which is one
-of the reasons I am here this afternoon--but we will return to Mother
-Blondin's case in a moment. You remember, eh, that I caught Bourget
-driving on the road the night Mentone tried to escape, and that I made
-him drive the prisoner to Tournayville? Yes, you remember. Very good!
-This morning his wife comes to Tournayville to say that he has not been
-seen since that night. We make a search. He is not hard to find. He has
-been drunk ever since--we find him in a room over one of the saloons
-just beginning to get sober again. Also, we find that since that night
-Bourget, who never has any money, has spent a great deal of money. Where
-did Bourget get that money? You begin to see, eh, Monsieur le Cur? Yes,
-you begin to see." Monsieur Dupont laid his forefinger sagaciously along
-the side of his nose. "Very good! I begin to question. I am instantly
-suspicious. Bourget is very sullen and morose. He talks only of a
-warrant against you. I seize upon that story again to threaten him with,
-if he does not tell where he got the money. I put him in jail, where
-I shall keep him for two or three days to teach him a lesson before
-letting him go. It is another Bourget, a very lamblike Bourget, Monsieur
-le Cur, before I am through; though I have to promise him immunity for
-turning king's evidence. Do you see what is coming, Monsieur le Cur?
-No, you do not. Most certainly you do not! Very well then, listen! I am
-on the track of Mentone's accomplice. Bourget was in the plot. It was
-Bourget who was to drive Mentone away that night--to the St. Eustace
-station--after they had throttled you. Now, Monsieur le Cur"--Monsieur
-Dupont's eyes were afire; Monsieur Dupont assumed an attitude; Monsieur
-Dupont's arms wrapped themselves in a fold upon his breast--"now,
-Monsieur le Cur, what do you say to that?"
-
-"It is amazing!"--Raymond's hands, palms outward, were lifted in a
-gesture eminently clerical. "Amazing! I can hardly credit it. Bourget
-then knows who this accomplice is?"
-
-"No--_tonnerre_--that is the bad luck of it!" scowled Monsieur Dupont.
-"But there is also good luck in it. I am on the scent. I am on the
-trail. I shall succeed, shall I not? Yes, certainly, I shall succeed.
-Very well then, listen! It was dark that night. The man went to
-Bourget's house and called Bourget outside. Bourget could not see what
-the fellow looked like. He gave Bourget fifty dollars, and promised
-still another fifty as soon as Bourget had Mentone in the wagon. And it
-was on your account, Monsieur le Cur, that he went to Bourget."
-
-Raymond was incredulous.
-
-"On mine?" he gasped.
-
-"Yes, certainly--on yours. It was to offer Bourget a chance to revenge
-himself on you. You see, eh? Yes, you see. He said he had heard of
-what you had done to Bourget. Very well! We have only to analyse that a
-little, and instantly we have a clue. You see where that brings us, eh,
-Monsieur le Cur?" Raymond shook his head.
-
-"No, I must confess, I don't," he said.
-
-"Hah! No? _Tiens!_" ejaculated Monsieur Dupont almost pityingly. "It
-is easy to be seen, Monsieur le Cur, that you would make a very poor
-police officer, and an equally poor criminal--the law would have its
-fingers on you while you were wondering what to do. It is so, is it not?
-Yes, it is so. You are much better as a priest. As a priest--I pay
-you the compliment, Monsieur le Cur--you are incomparable. Very good!
-Listen, then! I will explain. The fellow said he had heard of your fight
-with Bourget. Splendid! Excellent! He must then have heard of it from
-_some one_. Therefore he has been seen in the neighbourhood by some one
-besides Bourget. Who is that 'some one' who has talked with a stranger,
-and who can very likely tell us what that stranger looks like, where
-Bourget cannot? I do not say that it is certain, but that it is likely.
-It may not have been so dark when he talked to this 'some one'--eh? In
-any case it is enough to go on. Now, you see, Monsieur le Cur, why I am
-here--I shall begin to question everybody; and for your part, Monsieur
-le Cur, you can do a great deal in letting the parish know what we are
-after."
-
-Raymond looked at Monsieur Dupont with admiration. Monsieur Dupont had
-set himself another "vigil"!
-
-"Without doubt, Monsieur Dupont!" he assured the other heartily.
-"Certainly, I will do my utmost to help you. I will have a notice posted
-on the church door."
-
-"Good!" cried Monsieur Dupont, with a gratified smile. "And now another
-matter--and one that will afford you satisfaction, Monsieur le Cur.
-In a day or so, I will see that Mother Blondin is the source of no more
-trouble in St. Marleau--or anywhere else."
-
-"Mother Blondin?" repeated Raymond--and now he was suddenly conscious
-that he was in some way genuinely disturbed.
-
-"Yes," said Monsieur Dupont. "Twice in the past we have searched her
-place. We knew she sold whisky. But she was too sharp for us--and those
-who bought knew how to keep their mouths shut. But with Bourget as a
-witness, it is different, eh? You see? Yes, you see. She is a fester,
-a sore. We will clean up the place; we will put her in jail. The air
-around here will be the sweeter for it, and----"
-
-"No," said Raymond soberly. "No, Monsieur Dupont"--his hands reached
-out and clasped on Monsieur Dupont's shoulders. He knew now what was
-disturbing him. It was that surge of pity for the proscribed old woman,
-that sense of miserable distress that he had experienced more than once
-before. The scene of that morning, when she had clung to the palings of
-the fence outside the graveyard while they shovelled the earth upon the
-coffin of her son, rose vividly before him. And it was he again who was
-bringing more trouble upon her now through his dealings with Jacques
-Bourget. Yes, it was pity--and more. It was a swiftly matured, but none
-the less determined, resolve to protect her. "No, Monsieur Dupont, I beg
-of you"--he shook his head gravely--"no, Monsieur Dupont, you will not
-do that."
-
-"Heh! No? And why not?" demanded Monsieur Dupont in jerky astonishment.
-"I thought you would ask for nothing better. She is already an
-_excommunie_, and-----"
-
-"And she has suffered enough," said Raymond earnestly. "It would seem
-that sorrow and misery had been the only life she had ever known. She is
-too old a woman now to have her home taken from her, and herself sent
-to jail. She is none too well, as it is. It would kill her. A little
-sympathy, a little kindness, Monsieur Dupont--it will succeed far
-better."
-
-"Bah!" sniffed Monsieur Dupont. "A little sympathy, a little kindness!
-And will that stop the whisky selling that the law demands shall be
-stopped, Monsieur le Cur?"
-
-"I will guarantee that," said Raymond calmly.
-
-"You!" Monsieur Dupont clucked vigorously with his tongue. "You will
-stop that! And besides other things, do you perform miracles, Monsieur
-le Cur? How will you do that?"
-
-"You must leave it to me"--Raymond's hands tightened in friendly fashion
-on Monsieur Dupont's shoulders--"I will guarantee it. If that is a
-miracle, I will attempt it. If I do not succeed I will tell you so, and
-then you will do as you see fit. You will agree, will you not, Monsieur
-Dupont?--and I shall be deeply grateful to you."
-
-Monsieur Dupont shrugged his shoulders helplessly.
-
-"I have to tell you again that you are too soft-hearted, Monsieur le
-Cur. Yes, there is no other name for it--soft-hearted. And you will be
-made a fool of. I warn you! Well--very well! Try it, if you like. I
-give you a week. If at the end of a week--well, you understand? Yes, you
-understand."
-
-"I understand," said Raymond; and, with a final dap on Monsieur Dupont's
-shoulders, he dropped his hands. "And I am of the impression that
-Monsieur le Cur is not the only one who is--soft-hearted."
-
-"Bah! Nothing of the sort! Nothing of the sort!" snorted Monsieur Dupont
-in a sort of pleased repudiation, as he climbed back into the buckboard.
-"It is only to open your eyes." He picked up the reins. "I shall spend
-the rest of the day around here on that other business. Do not forget
-about the notice, Monsieur le Cur."
-
-"It shall be posted on the church door this afternoon," Raymond
-promised.
-
-He stood for a moment looking after Monsieur Dupont, as the other drove
-off; and then, turning abruptly, he walked rapidly along in the opposite
-direction, and, reaching the station road that led past old Mother
-Blondin's door, began to climb the hill. Yes, decidedly he would post
-a notice on the church door for Monsieur Dupont! If in any way he could
-aid Monsieur Dupont to lay hands on this accomplice of Henri Mentone,
-he--the derision that had crept to his lips faded away, and into the
-dark eyes came a sudden weariness. There was humour doubtless in the
-picture of Monsieur Dupont buttonholing every one he met, as he flitted
-indefatigably all over the country in pursuit for his mare's nest; but,
-somehow, he, Raymond, was not in the mood for laughter--for even a grim
-laughter.
-
-There was a man waiting to be hanged; and, besides the man waiting to be
-hanged, there was--Valrie.
-
-There was Valrie who, come what would, some day, near or distant,
-whether he escaped or not, must inevitably know him finally for the man
-he was. Not that it would change her life, it was only those devils of
-hell who tried to insinuate that she cared; but to him it was a thought
-pregnant with an agony so great that he could _pray_--he who had thought
-never to bow the knee in sincerity to God--yes, that he could pray,
-without mimicry, without that hideous profanation upon his lips, that
-he might not stand despised, a contemptuous thing, a sacrilegious
-profligate, in the eyes of the woman whom he loved.
-
-He clenched his hands. He was not logical. If he cared so much as that
-why--no, here was specious argument! He _was_ logical. His love for
-Valerie, great as it might be, great as it was, in the final analysis
-was hopeless. If he escaped, he could never return to the village, he
-could never return to her--to be recognised as the good, young Father
-Aubert; if he did not escape, if he--no, that was the "afterwards,"
-he would not consent to think of that--only if he did not escape there
-would be more than the hopelessness of this love to concern him, there
-would be death. Yes, he was logical. The love he knew for Valrie was
-but to mock him, to tantalise him with a vista of what, under other
-circumstances, he might have claimed by right of his manhood's
-franchise--if he had not, years ago, from a boy almost, bartered away
-that franchise to the devil. Well, was he to whimper now, and turn, like
-a craven thing, from the bitter dregs that, while the cup was still full
-and the dregs yet afar off, he had held in bald contempt and incredulous
-raillery! The dregs were here now. They were not bitter on his
-lips, they were bitter in his soul; they were bitter almost beyond
-endurance--but was he to whimper! Yes, he was logical.
-
-All else might be hopeless; but it was not hopeless that he might save
-his life. He had a right to fight for that, and he would fight for it as
-any man would fight--to the last.
-
-He had climbed the hill now, and was approaching old Mother Blondin's
-door. Logical! Yes, he was logical--but life was not all logic. In the
-abstract logic was doubtless a panacea that was all-embracing; in the
-presence of the actual it shrank back a futile thing from the dull
-gnawing of the heart and the misery of the soul. Perhaps that was why
-he was standing here at Mother Blondin's door now. God knew, she was
-miserable enough; God knew, that the dregs too were now at her lips!
-They were not unlike--old Mother Blon-din and himself. Theirs was a
-common cup.
-
-He knocked upon the door--and, as he knocked, he caught sight of the
-old woman's shrivelled face peering at him none too pleasantly from the
-window. And then her step, sullen and reluctant, crossed the floor,
-and she held the door open grudgingly a little way; and the space thus
-opened she blocked completely with her body.
-
-"What do you want?" she demanded sourly.
-
-"I would like to come in, Madame Blondin," Raymond answered pleasantly.
-"I would like to have a little talk with you."
-
-"Well, you can't come in!" she snarled defiantly. "I don't want to talk
-to you, and I don't want you coming here! It is true I may have been
-fool enough to say you had a good heart, but I want nothing to do with
-you. You are perhaps not as bad as some of them; but you are all full of
-tricks with your smirking mouths! No priest would come here if he were
-not up to something. I am an _excommunie_--eh? Well, I am satisfied!"
-Her voice was beginning to rise shrilly. "I don't know what you want,
-and I don't want to know; but you can't wheedle around me just because
-Jacques Bourget knocked me down, and you----"
-
-"It is on account of Jacques Bourget that I want to speak to you,"
-Raymond interposed soothingly. "Bourget has been locked up in jail."
-
-She stared at him, blinking viciously behind her glasses.
-
-"Ah! I thought so! That is like the whole tribe of you! You had him
-arrested!"
-
-"No," said Raymond. "I did not have him arrested. You remember the note
-that was read out at the trial, Madame Blcndin--about the attempted
-escape of Henri Mentone?"
-
-"Well?"--Madame Blondin's animosity at the sight of a _soutane_ was
-forgotten for the moment in a newly aroused interest. "Well--what of it?
-I remember! What of it?"
-
-"It seems," said Raymond, "that Monsieur Dupont has discovered that
-Bourget was to help in the escape."
-
-Madame Blondin cackled suddenly in unholy mirth. "And so they arrested
-him, eh? Well, I am glad! Do you hear? I am glad! I hope they wring his
-neck for him! He would help the murderer of my son to escape, would he?
-I hope they hang him with the other!"
-
-"They will not hang him," Raymond replied. "He has given all the
-information in his possession to the police, and he is to go free. But
-it was because of that afternoon here that he was persuaded to help in
-the escape. He expected to revenge himself on me: and that story, too,
-Madame Blondin, is now known to the police. Bourget has confessed to
-buying whisky here, and is ready to testify as a witness against you."
-
-"_Le maudit!_" Mother Blondin's voice rose in a virulent scream. "I will
-tear his eyes out! Do you hear? I will show Jacques Bourget what he will
-get for telling on me! He has robbed me! He never pays! Well, he will
-pay for this! He will pay for this! I will find some one who will cut
-his tongue out! They are not all like Jacques Bourget, they are----"
-
-"You do not quite understand, Madame Blondin," Raymond interrupted
-gravely. "It is not with Jacques Bourget that you are concerned now,
-it is with the police. Monsieur Dupont came to the village this
-afternoon--indeed, he is here now. He said he had evidence enough at
-last to close up this place and put you in jail, and that he was going
-to do so. You are in a very serious situation, Madame Blondin"--he made
-as though to step forward--"will you not let me come in, as a friend,
-and talk it over with you, and see what we can do?"
-
-Mother Blondin's hand was like a claw in its bony thinness, as it
-gripped hard over the edge of the door.
-
-"No, you will not come in!" she shouted. "You, or your Monsieur Dupont,
-or the police--you will not come in! Eh--they will take my home from
-me--all I've got--they will put me in jail"--she was twisting her head
-about in a sort of pitiful inventory of her surroundings. "They have
-been trying to run me out of St. Marleau for a long time--all the _good_
-people, the saintly people--you, and your hypocrites. They cross to the
-other side of the road to get out of old Mother Blondin's way! And so
-at last, between you, you have beaten an old woman, who has no one to
-protect her since you have killed her son! It is a victory--eh! Go
-tell them to ring the church bells--go tell them--go tell them! And on
-Sunday, eh, you will have something to preach about! It will make a fine
-sermon!"
-
-And somehow there came a lump into Raymond's throat. There was something
-fine in this wretched, tattered, unkempt figure before him--something of
-the indomitable, of the unconquerable in her spirit, misapplied though
-it was. Her voice fought bravely to hold its defiant, infuriated ring,
-to show no sign of the misery that had stolen into the dim old eyes,
-and was quivering on the wrinkled lips, but the voice had broken--once
-almost in a sob.
-
-"No, no, Madame Blondin"--he reached out his hand impulsively to lay it
-over the one that was clutched upon the door--"you must not----"
-
-She snatched her hand away--and suddenly thrust her head through the
-partially open doorway into his face.
-
-"It is not Bourget, it is not Jacques Bourget!" she cried fiercely. "It
-is you! If you had not come that afternoon when you had no business to
-come, this would not have happened. It is you, who----"
-
-"That is true," said Raymond quietly. "And that is why I am here now.
-I have had a talk with Monsieur Dupont, and he will give you another
-chance."
-
-She still held her face close to his.
-
-"I do not believe you!" she flung out furiously. "I do not believe you!
-It is some trick you are trying to play! I know Monsieur Dupont! I know
-him! He would give no one a chance if he could help it! I have been too
-much for him for a long time, and if he had evidence against me now he
-would give me not a minute to sell any more of--of what he thinks I sell
-here!"
-
-"That also is true," said Raymond, as quietly as before. "He could not
-very well permit you to go on breaking the law if he could prevent it.
-But in exchange for his promise, I have given him a pledge that you will
-not sell any more whisky."
-
-She straightened up--and stared at him, half in amazement, half in
-crafty suspicion.
-
-"Ah, then, so it is you, and not Monsieur Dupont, who is going to stop
-it--eh?" she exclaimed, with a shrill laugh. "And how do you intend to
-do it--eh? How do you intend to do it? Tell me that!"
-
-"I think it will be very simple," said Raymond--and his dark eyes, full
-of a kindly sympathy, looked into hers. "To save your home, and you,
-I have pledged myself to Monsieur Dupont that this will stop, and
-so--well, Madame Blondin, and so I have come to put you upon your honour
-to make good my pledge." She craned her head forward again to peer into
-his face. She looked at him for a long minute without a word. Her
-lips alternately tightened and were tremulous. The fingers of her
-hand plucked at the door's edge. And then she threw back her head in a
-quavering, jeering laugh.
-
-"Ha, ha! Old Mother Blondin upon her honour--think of that! You, a
-smooth-tongued priest--and me, an _excommunie!_ Ha, ha! Think of that!
-And what did Monsieur Dupont say, eh--what did Monsieur Dupont say?"
-
-"He said what I know is not true," said Raymond simply. "He said you
-would make a fool of me."
-
-"Ah, he said that!"--she jerked her head forward again sharply. "Well,
-Monsieur Dupont is wrong, and you are right. I would not do that,
-because I could not--since you have already made one of yourself! Ha,
-ha! Old Mother Blondin upon her _honour!_ Ha, ha! It is a long while
-since I have heard that--and from a priest--ha, ha! How could any one
-make a fool of a fool!" Her voice was high-pitched again, fighting for
-its defiance; but, somehow, where she strove to infuse venom, there
-seemed only a pathetic wistfulness instead. "And so you would trust old
-Mother Blondin--eh? Well"--she slammed the door suddenly in his face,
-and her voice came muffled through the panels--"well, you are a fool!"
-
-The bolt within rasped into place--and Raymond, turned away, and began
-to descend the hill.
-
-Mother Blondin for the moment was in the grip of a sullen pride that
-bade her rise in arms against this fresh outlook on life; but Mother
-Blondin would close and bolt yet another door, unless he was very
-much mistaken--the rear door, and in the faces of her erstwhile and
-unhallowed clientele!
-
-Yes, he had pity for the old woman who had no kin now, and who had no
-friends. Pity! He owed her more than that! So then--there came a sudden
-thought--so then, why not? He would not long be cur of St. Marleau, but
-while he was--well, he was the cur of St. Marleau! He could not remove
-the ban of excommunication, that was beyond the authority of a mere
-cur, it would require at least Monsignor the Bishop to do that; but
-he could remove the ban--of ostracism! Yes, decidedly, the good, young
-Father Aubert could do that! He was vaguely conscious that there were
-degrees of excommunication, and he seemed to remember that Valrie had
-said it was but a minor one that had been laid upon Mother Blondin, and
-that the villagers of their own accord had drawn more and more aloof. It
-would, therefore, not be very difficult.
-
-He quickened his step, and, reaching the bottom of the hill, made his
-way at once toward the carpenter shop. He could see Madame Bouchard
-hoeing in the little garden patch between the road and the front of the
-shop. It was Madame Bouchard that he now desired to see.
-
-"_Tiens! Bon jour_, Madame Bouchard!" he called out to her, as he
-approached. "I am come a penitent! I did not deserve your bread! I am
-sure that you are vexed with me! But I have not seen you since to thank
-you."
-
-She came forward to where Raymond now leaned upon the fence.
-
-"Oh, Monsieur le Cur!" she exclaimed laughingly. "How can you say such
-things! Fancy! The idea! Vexed with you! It is only if you really liked
-it?"
-
-"H'm!" drawled Raymond teasingly, pretending to deliberate. "When do you
-bake again, Madame Bouchard?"
-
-She laughed outright now.
-
-"To-morrow, Monsieur le Cur--and I shall see that you are not
-forgotten."
-
-"It is a long way off--to-morrow," said Raymond mournfully; and then,
-with a quick smile: "But only one loaf this time, Madame Bouchard,
-instead of two."
-
-"Nonsense!" she returned. "It is a great pleasure. And what are two
-little loaves!"
-
-"A great deal," said Raymond, suddenly serious. "A very great deal,
-Madame Bouchard; and especially so if you send one of the two loaves to
-some one else that I know of."
-
-"Some one else?"
-
-"Yes," said Raymond. "To Mother Blondin."
-
-"To--Mother Blondin!"--Madame Bouchard stared in utter amazement.
-"But--but, Monsieur le Cur, you are not in earnest! She--she is an
-_excommunie_, and we--we do not----"
-
-"I think it would make her very glad," said Raymond softly. "And Mother
-Blondin I think has----"
-
-It was on the tip of his tongue to say that Mother Blondin was not
-likely now to sell any more whisky at the tavern, but he checked
-himself. It was Mother Blondin who must be left to tell of that herself.
-If he spread such a tale, she would be more likely than not to rebel at
-a situation which she would probably conceive was being thrust forcibly
-down her throat; and, in pure spite at what she might also conceive to
-be a self-preening and boastful spirit on his part for his superiority
-over her, sell all the more, no matter what the consequences to herself.
-And so he changed what he was about to say. "And Mother Blondin I think
-has known but little gladness in her life."
-
-"But--but, Monsieur le Cur," she gasped, "what would the neighbours
-say?"
-
-"I hope," said Raymond, "that they would say they too would send her
-loaves--of kindness."
-
-Madame Bouchard leaned heavily upon her hoe.
-
-"It is many years, Monsieur le Cur, since almost I was a little girl,
-that any one has willingly had anything to do with the old woman on the
-hill."
-
-"Yes," said Raymond gently. "And will you think of that, Madame
-Bouchard, when you bake to-morrow--the many years--and the few that are
-left--for the old woman on the hill."
-
-The tears had sprung to Madame Bouchard's eyes. He left her standing
-there, leaning on the hoe.
-
-He went on along the road toward the _presbytre_. It had been a strange
-afternoon--an illogical one, an imaginary one almost. It seemed to have
-been a jumble of complexities, and incongruities, and unrealities--there
-was the man who was to be hanged by the neck until he was dead; and
-Monsieur Dupont who, through a very natural deduction and not because he
-was a fool, for Monsieur Dupont was very far from a fool, was now vainly
-engaged like a dog circling around in a wild effort to catch his own
-tail; and there was Mother Blondin who had another window to gaze from;
-and Madame Bouchard who had still another. Yes, it had been a strange
-afternoon--only now that voice in the courtroom was beginning to ring
-in his ears again. "Father--Father Franois Aubert--help me--I do not
-understand." And the gnawing was at his soul again, and again his hat
-was lifted from his head to cool his fevered brow.
-
-And as he reached the church there came to him the sound of organ notes,
-and instead of crossing to the _presbytre_ he stepped softly inside to
-listen--it would be Valrie--Valrie, and Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar
-boy, probably, who often pumped the organ for her when she was at
-practice. But as he stepped inside the music ceased, and instead he
-heard them talking in the gallery, and in the stillness of the church
-their voices came to him distinctly.
-
-"Valrie"--yes, that was the boy's voice--"Valrie, why do they call him
-the good, young Father Aubert?"
-
-"Such a question!" Valrie laughed. "Why do you call him that yourself?"
-
-"I don't--any more," asserted the boy. "Not after what I saw at mass
-this morning."
-
-Raymond drew his breath in sharply. What was this! What was this that
-Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar boy, had seen at mass! He had fooled the
-boy--the boy could not have seen anything! He drew back, opening the
-door cautiously. They were coming down the stairs now--but he must
-hear--hear what it was that Gauthier Beaulieu had seen.
-
-"Why, what do you mean, Gauthier?" Valrie asked.
-
-"I mean what I say," insisted the boy doggedly. "It is not right to call
-him that! When he was kneeling there this morning, and I guess it was
-the bright light because the stained window was open, for I never saw it
-before, I saw his hair all specked with white around his temples. And
-a man with white in his hair isn't young, is he! And I saw it,
-Valrie--honest, I did!"
-
-"Your eyes should have been closed," said Valrie. "And----"
-
-Raymond was crossing the green to the _presbytre_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII--THE CALL IN THE NIGHT
-
-|IT was very dark here in the front room, and somehow the darkness
-seemed tangible to the touch, like something oppressive, like the folds
-of a pall that was spread over him, and which he could not thrust aside.
-And it was still, and very quiet--save for the voices, and save that it
-seemed he could hear that faltering, irregular step from the rear room,
-where there was no longer any step to hear.
-
-Surely it would be daylight soon--the merciful daylight. The darkness
-and the night were meant only for sleep, and it was an eternity since he
-had slept--no, not an eternity, only a week--it was only a week since he
-had slept. No, that was not true either--there had been hours, not many
-of them, but there had been hours when his eyes had been closed and he
-had not been conscious of his surroundings, but those hours had been
-even more horrible than when he had tossed on his bed awake. They had
-brought neither rest nor oblivion--they were full of dreams that were
-hideous--and the dreams would not leave him when he was awake--and the
-sleep when it came was a curse because the dreams remained to cast
-an added blight upon his wakefulness--and he had come even to fight
-against sleep and to resist it because the dreams remained.
-
-Dreams! There was always the dream of the Walled Place which--no! Not
-that--_now!_ Not that! Yes! The dream of the Walled Place. See--it went
-like this: He was in a sort of cavernous gloom in which he could not see
-very distinctly, but he was obsessed with the knowledge that there were
-hidden things from which he must escape. So he would run frantically
-around and around, following four square walls which were so high that
-the tops merged into the gloom; and the walls, as he touched them with
-his hands, seeking an opening, were wet with a slime that grew upon
-them. Then, looming out of the centre of this place, he would suddenly
-see what it was that he was running away from. There was a form, a human
-form, with something black over its head, that swayed to and fro, and
-was suspended from a bar that reached across from one wall to another;
-and on the top of this bar there roosted a myriad winged creatures like
-gigantic bats, only their eyes blazed, and they had enormous claws--and
-suddenly these vampires would rise with a terrifying crackling of their
-wings, and shrill, abominable screams, and swirl and circle over him,
-drawing nearer and nearer until his blood ran cold--and then, shrieking
-like a maniac, he would run again around and around the walls, beating
-at the slime until his hands bled. And the screaming things with
-outstretched talons followed him, and he stumbled and fell, and fell
-again, and shrieked out in his terror of these inhuman vultures that had
-roosted above the swaying thing with the black-covered head--and just as
-they were settling upon him there was an opening in the wall where there
-had been no opening before, and with his last strength he struggled
-toward it--and the way was blocked. The opening had become a gate that
-was all studded with iron spikes which if he rushed upon it would impale
-him, and which Valerie was closing--and as she closed it her head was
-averted, and one hand was thrown across her eyes, its palm toward him,
-as though she would not look upon his face.
-
-Raymond's hands were wet with perspiration. They slipped from the arms
-of his chair, and hung downward at his sides. What time was it? It had
-been midnight when he had risen fully dressed from his bed in the rear
-room--that he occupied now that they had taken the man away to jail--and
-had come in here to sit at the desk. Since then the clock had struck
-many times, the half hours, and the hours. Ah--listen! It was striking
-again. One--two--three! Three o'clock! It was still a long way off,
-the daylight--the merciful daylight. The voices did not plague him so
-constantly in the warmth of the sunshine. Three o'clock! It would be
-five o'clock before the dawn came.
-
-They had changed, those voices, in the last week--at least there was
-a new voice that had come, and an old one that did not recur so
-insistently. "Father--Father Franois Aubert--help me--I do not
-understand"--yes, that was still dinning forever in his ears; but,
-instead of that voice which said some one was to be hanged by the neck
-until dead, the new voice had quite a different thing to say. It was the
-voice of the "afterwards." Hark! There it was now: "What fine and subtle
-shade of distinction is there between being hanged and imprisoned for
-life; what difference does it make, what difference could it make, what
-difference will it make--why do you temporise?"
-
-He had fought with all his strength against that "afterwards"--and it
-was stronger than he. He could not evade the issue that was flung at
-him, and flung again and again until his brain writhed in agony with it.
-He was a gambler, but he was not a blind gambler. He did not want the
-man to lose his life, or his freedom for all of life--he did not want
-to lose his own life. While the appeal was pending _something_ might
-happen, a thousand things might happen, there was always, always a
-chance. He would not throw away that chance--only a fool who had lost
-his nerve would do that. But he was not blind. The chance was one where
-the odds against him staggered him--there was so little chance that,
-fight as he would to escape it, logic and plain common sense had forced
-upon him the "afterwards." And these days while the appeal was pending
-were like remorseless steps that led on and on to end only upon the
-brink of a yawning chasm, whose depth and whose blackness were as the
-depth and blackness of hell, and over which he sprang suddenly erect,
-his head flung back, the strong jaws clamped like a vise. Who had
-brought this torture upon him? He could not sleep! He knew no repose!
-God, or devil, or power infernal--who was it? Neither sleep nor repose
-might be his, but he was unbroken yet, and he could still fight! He
-asked only that--that the author of this torment stand before him--and
-fight! Why should he, unless the one meagre hope that something might
-happen in the meantime be fulfilled, why should he stand faced with the
-choice of swinging like a felon from the gallows, or of allowing that
-other innocent man to go to his doom? Yes, why should he submit to this
-torture, when that scarred-faced blackguard had brought his death upon
-himself--why should he submit to it, when it was so easy to escape it
-all! Once, that night in Ton-Nugget Camp, he had flung down the gauntlet
-in the face of God, and in the face of hell, and in the face of man, and
-in the face of beast. Was he a weakling and a fool now who had not sense
-enough to seize his opportunity to be quit of this, and to go his way,
-and live again the full, red-blooded, reckless life that he had lived
-since he was a boy, and that now, a young man still, beckoned to
-him with allurements as yet untasted! To-morrow--no, to-day when the
-daylight came--he had only to borrow Bouchard's boat, and the boat
-upturned would be found, and St. Mar-leau would mourn the loss of the
-good, young Father Aubert whose body had been swept out to sea, and
-the law would take its course on the man in the condemned cell, and
-Three-Ace Artie would be as free and untrammelled as the air--yes, and
-a coward, and a crawling thing, and--the paroxysm of fury passed. He
-sagged against the desk. This was the "afterwards"--but why should it
-come now! Between now and then there was a chance that something might
-intervene. He had only been trying to delude himself when he had said
-that in a life sentence there was all of time to plan and plot--he knew
-that. And he knew, too, that he was no more content that the man should
-be imprisoned for life than that the man should hang--that one was the
-equal of the other. He knew that this "all of time" was ended when
-the appeal was decided. He knew all that--that voice would not let him
-juggle with myths any more. But that moment had not come yet--there were
-still weeks before it would come--and in those weeks there lay a hope,
-a chance, a gambling chance that something might happen. And even in the
-appeal there lay a hope too, not that the sentence might be commuted to
-life imprisonment, that changed nothing now, but that they might perhaps
-after all consider the man's condition sufficient reason for not holding
-him to account for murder, and might therefore, instead, place him under
-medical treatment somewhere until, if ever, he recovered. He, Raymond,
-had not struck the man, he had not in even a remote particular been
-responsible for the man's wound, or the ensuing condition, and if the
-man were turned over to medical supervision the man automatically ceased
-to have any claim upon him.
-
-But that was not likely to happen--it was only one of those thousand
-things that _might_ happen--nothing was likely to happen except that the
-man would be hanged. And when that time came, if the appeal were lost
-and every one of those thousand chances swept away, and the only thing
-that could save the man's life would be to--God, would he never stop
-this! Would his mind never, even through utter exhaustion, cease
-its groping in this horrible turmoil! On, on, on! His brain was
-remorselessly driven on! It was like--like a slave that, already
-lacerated and bleeding, was lashed on again to renewed effort by some
-monstrous, brutal and inhuman master!
-
-Yes, when that time came, and if that chance were gone, and supposing he
-gave himself up to stand in the other's place, could he in any way evade
-the rope, wriggle away from that dangling noose? Was there a loophole in
-the evidence anywhere? If only in some way he could prove that the act
-had been committed in self-defence! He had feared to risk such a plea
-that night, because he had feared that his own past would condemn him
-out of hand; and, moreover, however that might have been, the man lying
-in the road, whom he had thought dead, had seemed to offer the means of
-washing his hands for good and all of the whole matter. Self-defence!
-Ha, ha! Listen to those devils laugh! It was his own hand that had tied
-the knot in the noose so that it would never slip--it was he who had so
-cunningly supplied all the attendant details that irrevocably placed the
-stamp of robbery and murder upon the doings of that night. Here there
-was no delusion; here, where delusion was sought again, there was no
-delusion--if he gave himself up he would hang--hang by the neck until he
-was dead--and, since he had desecrated God's holy places, he would
-hang without the mercy of God upon his soul. Well, what odds did that
-make--whether there was mercy of God upon his soul-or not! Was there
-anything in common between--no, that was not what he had to think about
-now--it was quite another matter.
-
-Suppose, when he was forced to fling down his hand finally, that instead
-of giving himself up, or instead of making it appear that the good,
-young Father Aubert was dead--suppose that he simply made an escape
-from St. Marleau such as he had planned for Henri Mentone that night?
-He could at least secure a few hours' start, and then, from somewhere,
-before it was too late, send back, say, a written confession. He could
-always do that. Surely that would save the man. They would hunt for him,
-Raymond, as they would hunt for a wild beast that had run amuck, and
-they would hunt for him for the rest of his life, and in the end they
-might even catch him--but that was the chance he would have to accept.
-Yes, here was another way--only why did not this way bring rest, and
-repose, and satisfaction, and sleep? And why ask the question? He
-knew--he knew why! It was--Valrie. It was not a big way, it was not
-a man's way--and in Valerie's eyes at the last, not absolving him,
-not even that she might endure the better, for it could not intimately
-affect her, there was left to him only the one redeeming act, the one
-thing that would lift him above contempt and loathing, and that was that
-she should know him--for a _man_.
-
-Life, the mere act of breathing, of knowing a concrete existence, was
-not everything; it did not embrace everything, it was not even a state
-that was not voluntarily to be surrendered to greater things, to----
-
-"A fool and a woman's face, and blatant sophistry, and mock
-heroics!"--that inner monitor, with its gibe and sneer, was back again.
-Its voice, too, must make itself heard!
-
-He raised his hands and pressed them tight against his throbbing
-temples. This was hell's debating society, and he must listen to the
-arguments and decide upon their merits and pronounce upon them, for he
-was the presiding officer and the decision remained with him! How they
-gabbled, and shrieked, and whispered, and jeered, and interrupted each
-other, and would not keep order--those voices! Though now for the moment
-that inner voice kept drowning all the others out.
-
-"You had your chance! If you hadn't turned squeamish that night when
-all you needed to do was to hold a pillow over the man's face for a few
-minutes, you wouldn't have had any of this now! How much good will it do
-you what _she_ thinks--when they get through burying you in lime under
-the jail walls!"
-
-It was dark, very dark here in the room. That was the window over there
-in that direction, but there was not even any grayness showing, no sign
-yet of daylight--no sign yet of daylight. Why would they not let him
-alone, these voices, until the time came when he _must_ act? That was
-all he asked. In the interval something might--his hands dropped to his
-sides, and he half slipped, half fell into his chair, and his head went
-forward over the desk. Was all that to begin over again--and commence
-with the dream of the Walled Place! No, no; he would not let it--_he
-would not let it!_
-
-He would think about something else; force himself to
-think--rationally--about something else. Well then, the man in the
-condemned cell, whom he had not dared refuse to visit, and whom he had
-gone twice that week to see? No---not that, either! The man was always
-sitting on that cursed cot with his hands clasped dejectedly between his
-knees, and the iron bars robbed the sunlight of warmth, and it was cold,
-and the man's eyes haunted him. No--not that, either! He had to go and
-see the man again to-morrow--and that was enough--and that was enough!
-
-Well then, Mother Blondin? Yes, that was better! He could even laugh
-ironically at that--at old Mother Blondin. Old Mother Blondin was
-falling under the spell of the example set by the good, young Father
-Aubert! Some of the old habitus, he had heard, were beginning to
-grumble because it was becoming difficult to obtain whisky at the
-tavern. The Madame Bouchards were crowding the habitues out; and the old
-woman on the hill, even if with occasional sullen and stubborn
-relapses, was slowly yielding to the advances of St. Marleau that he had
-inaugurated through the carpenter's v/ife. Ah--he had thought to laugh
-at this, had he! Laugh! He might well keep his head buried miserably in
-his arms here upon the desk! Laugh! It brought instead only a profound
-and bitter loneliness. He was alone, utterly alone, isolated and cut off
-in a world where there was the sound of no human voice, the touch of no
-human hand, alone--amidst people whose smiles greeted him on every hand,
-amidst people who admired and loved him, and listened reverently to the
-words of God that fell from his lips. But they loved, and admired,
-and gave their friendship, not to the man he was, but to the man they
-thought he was--to the good, young Father Aubert. That was what was
-actuating even Mother Blondin! And the life that he had led as the good,
-young Father Aubert was being held up to him now as in a mental mirror
-that lay bare to his gaze his naked soul. They loved him, these people;
-they had faith in him--and a pure, unswerving faith in the religion, and
-in the God as whose holy priest he masqueraded!
-
-Raymond's lips twisted in pain. The love of these people struck to the
-heart, and the pang hurt. It would have been a glad thing to have won
-this love--for himself. And he was requiting what they gave in their
-ignorance by defiling what meant most in life to them--the holy things
-they worshipped. It was strange--strange how of late he had sought, in
-a sort of pitiful atonement for the wrong he had done them, to put
-sincerity into the words that, before, he had only mumbled at the church
-altar! Yes, he had earned their love and their respect, and he was the
-good, young Father Aubert, and the life he had led amongst them was a
-blasphemous lie--but it had not been the motives of a hypocrite that had
-actuated him. It had not been that the devil desired to pose as a saint.
-He stood acquitted before even God of that. He had sought only, fought
-only, asked only--for his life.
-
-A sham, a pretence, a lie--it was abhorrent, damnable--it was not
-even Three-Ace Artie's way--and he was chained to it in every word and
-thought and act. There--that thing that loomed up through the darkness
-there a few inches from him--that was one of the lies. That was a
-typewriter he had rented in Tour-nayville and had brought back when
-returning from his last visit to the jail. Personal letters had begun to
-arrive for Father Franois Aubert. He might duplicate a signature,
-but he could not imitate pages of the man's writings. And he could not
-dictate a letter to-the man's _mother_--and meet Valrie's eyes.
-
-Valrie! Out in that world where he was set apart, out in that world
-of inhuman isolation, this was the loneliness that was greatest of all.
-Valrie! Valrie! It seemed as though he were held in some machiavellian
-bondage, free to move and act, free in all things save one--he could not
-pass the border of his prison-land. But he, Raymond Chapelle, could look
-out over the border of his prison-land, and watch this woman, whose
-face was pure and beautiful, as she walked about, and talked, and was
-constantly in the company of a young priest, who was the good, young
-Father Aubert, the Cur of St. Marleau. And because he had watched her
-hungrily for many days, and knew the smile that came so gladly to the
-sweet lips, and because he had looked into the clear, steadfast eyes,
-and listened to her voice, and because she was just Valrie, he had
-come to the knowledge of a great love--and a great, torturing, envious
-jealousy of this man, cloaked in priestly garb, who was forever at her
-side.
-
-His lips moved, but no sound came from them. Valrie! Valrie! Why had
-she not come into his life before! Before--when? Before that night at
-Mother Blondin's? Was he not man enough to look the truth in the face!
-That night was only a culminating incident of a life that went back many
-years to the days when--when there had been no Valrie either! But it
-was too late to think of that now--now that Valrie had come, come as
-a final, terrible punishment, holding up before him, through bitter
-contrast, the hollow worthlessness of the stakes that, when the choice
-had been freely his, he had chosen to play for!
-
-Valrie! Valrie! His soul was calling out to her. A life with Valrie!
-What would it not have meant? The dear love that she might have given
-him--the priceless love that he might have won! Gone! Gone forever! No,
-it was not gone, for it had never been. He thanked God for that. Yes,
-there must be a God who had brought this about, for while he flouted
-this God in the dress of this God's priest, this God utilised that very
-act to save Valrie, who trusted this God, from the misery and sorrow
-and hopelessness that must have come to her with love. She could not
-love a priest; there could be no thought of such a thing for Valrie.
-This God had set that barrier there--to protect her. Yes, he thanked
-God for that; he thanked God he had not brought this hurt upon her--and
-those minions of hell, who tried to tantalise, and with their insidious
-deviltry tried to make him think otherwise, were powerless here. But
-that did not appease the yearning; that did not answer the cry of his
-heart and soul.
-
-Valrie! Valrie! Valrie! He was calling to her with all his strength
-from the border of that prison-land. Valrie! Valrie! Would his voice
-not reach her! Would she not turn her head and smile! Valrie! Valrie!
-He wanted her now in his hour of agony, in this hour of terrible
-loneliness, in this hour when his brain rocked and reeled on the verge
-of madness.
-
-How still it was--and how dark! There were no voices now--only the voice
-of his soul calling, calling, calling for Valrie--calling for what
-he could never have--calling for the touch of her hand to guide
-him--calling for her smile to help him on his way. Yes, Valrie--he was
-calling Valrie--he was calling to her from the depths of his being. Out
-into the night, out into the everywhere, he was flinging his piteous,
-soundless cry, and God, if God would, might listen, and know that His
-revenge was taken; and hell might listen, and shriek its mirth--they
-would not silence him.
-
-Valrie! Valrie! No, there was no answer. There would never be an
-answer--but he would always call. Through the years to come, if there
-were those years to reckon with, he would call as he was calling now.
-Valrie! Valrie! Valrie! She would not hear--she would not answer--she
-would not know. But he would call--because he loved her.
-
-A sob shook his bowed shoulders. A hand in agony gathered and crushed a
-fold of flesh from the forehead that lay upon it. Valrie! Valrie! He
-did not cry out. He made no sound. It was still, still as the living
-death in that prison-land--and then--and then he was swaying to his
-feet, and clutching with both hands at the desk, for support. Valrie!
-The door was open, and a soft light filled the room. Valrie! Valrie
-was standing there on the threshold, holding a lamp in her hand. It was
-phantasm! A vision! It was not real! It was not Valrie! His mind was
-a broken thing at last! It was not Valrie--but that was Valrie's
-voice--that was Valrie's voice.
-
-The lamp shook a little unsteadily in her hand.
-
-"Did you call?" she asked.
-
-He did not answer--only looked at her, as though in truth she were a
-vision that had come to him. She was in dressing-gown; and her hair,
-loosely knotted, framed her face in dark, waving tresses; and her eyes
-were wide, startled and perplexed, as they fixed upon him.
-
-"I--I thought I heard you call," she faltered.
-
-All the gladness, all the joy in life, all that the world could hold
-seemed for an instant his. All else was forgotten--all else but that
-singing in his heart--all else but that fierce, elemental, triumphant,
-mighty joy lifting him high to a pinnacle that reared itself supreme,
-commanding and immortal, far beyond the reach of that sea of torment
-which had engulfed him. Valrie had heard him call--and she had
-answered--and she was here. Valrie was here--she had come to him.
-Valrie had heard him call--and she was here. And then beneath his feet
-that pinnacle, so supreme, commanding and immortal, seemed to dissolve
-away, and that sea of torment closed over him again, and all those
-voices that plagued him, mocking, jeering, screaming, shrieking, were
-like a horrible requiem ringing in his ears. She had heard him call--and
-he had made no sound--only his soul had spoken.. And she had answered.
-And she was here--here now--standing there on the threshold. _Why?_
-He dared not answer. It was a blessed thing, a wonderful, glorious
-thing---and it was a terrible thing, a thing of misery and despair. What
-was he doing now--_answering_ that "why"! No, no--it was not true--it
-could not be true. He had thanked God that it could not be so. It was
-not that--_that_ was not the reason she had heard him call--that was
-not the reason she was here. It was not! It was not! It was only those
-insidious----
-
-He heard himself speaking; he was conscious that his voice by some
-miracle was low, grave, contained. "No, Mademoiselle Valrie, I did not
-call."
-
-The colour was slowly leaving her cheeks, and into her eyes came
-creeping confusion and dismay.
-
-"It--it is strange," she said nervously. "I was asleep, and I thought
-I heard you call for--for help, and I got up and lighted the lamp,
-and----"
-
-Was that his laugh--quiet, gentle, reassuring? Was he so much in
-command of himself as that? Was it the gambler, or the priest, or--great
-God!--the lover now? She was here--she had come to him.
-
-"It was a dream, Mademoiselle Valrie," he was saying. "A very terrible
-dream, I am afraid, if I was the subject of it; but, see, it is nothing
-to cause you distress, and to-morrow you will laugh over it."
-
-She did not reply at once. She was very pale now; and her lips, though
-tightly closed, were quivering. Nor did she look at him. Her eyes were
-on the floor. Her hand mechanically drew and held the dressing-gown
-closer about her throat.
-
-He had not moved from the side of the desk, nor she from the threshold
-of the door--and now she looked up suddenly, and held the lamp in her
-hand a little higher, and her eyes searched his face.
-
-"It must be very late--very, very late," she said steadily. "And you
-have not gone to bed. There is something the matter. What is it? Will
-you tell me?"
-
-"But, yes!" he said--and smiled. "But, yes--I will tell you. It is very
-simple. I think perhaps I was overtired. In any case, I was restless
-and could not sleep, and so I came in here, and--well, since I must
-confess--I imagine I finally fell asleep in my chair."
-
-"Is that all?" she asked--and there was a curious insistence in her
-voice. "You look as though you were ill. Are you telling me all?"
-
-"Everything!" he said. "And I am not ill, Mademoiselle Valrie"--he
-laughed again--"you would hear me complain fast enough if I were! I am
-not a model patient."
-
-She shook her head, as though she would not enter into the lightness of
-his reply; and again her eyes sought the floor. And, as he watched her,
-the colour now came and went from her cheeks, and there was trouble in
-her face, and hesitancy, and irresolution.
-
-"What is it, Mademoiselle Valrie?"--his forced lightness was gone now.
-She was frightened, and nervous, and ill at ease--that she should be
-standing here like this at this hour of night, of course. Yes, that was
-it. Naturally that would be so. He lifted his hand and drew it heavily
-across his forehead. She was frightened. If he might only take her in
-his arms, and draw her head to his shoulder, and hold her there, and
-soothe her! It seemed that all his being cried to him to do that. "Well,
-why don't you?"--that inner voice was flashing the suggestion quick upon
-him--"well, why don't you? You could do it as a priest, in the rle of
-priest, you know--like a father to one of his flock. Go ahead, here's
-your chance--be the priest, be the priest! Don't you want to hold her in
-your arms--be the priest, be the priest!"
-
-She had not answered his question. He found himself answering it for
-her.
-
-"What is it, Mademoiselle Valrie? You must not let a dream affect you,
-you know. It is gone now. And you can see that----"
-
-"It is strange"--she spoke almost to herself. "I--I was so sure that I
-heard you call."
-
-Why was he not moving toward her? Why was he clinging in a sort of
-tenacious frenzy to the desk? Why was he not obeying the promptings
-of that inner voice? It would be quite a natural thing to do what that
-voice prompted--and Valrie, Valrie who would never be his, would for a
-moment, snatched out of all eternity, be in his arms.
-
-"But you must not let such a thing as a dream affect you"--he seemed to
-be speaking without volition of his own, and he seemed stupidly able to
-say but the same thing over again. "And, see, it is over, and you are
-awake now to find that no one is really in trouble after all."
-
-And then she raised her head--and suddenly, but as though she were
-afraid even of her own act, as though she still fought against some
-decision she had forced upon herself, she walked slowly forward into the
-room, and set the lamp down upon the desk.
-
-"Yes, there is some one in trouble"--the words came steadily, but
-scarcely above a whisper; and her hand was tense about the white throat
-now, where before it had mechanically clutched at the dressing-gown. "I
-am in trouble--Father Aubert."
-
-"You--Valrie!" He was conscious, even in his startled exclamation, of a
-strange and disturbing prescience. Father Aubert--he could not remember
-when she had called him that before--_Father_ Aubert. It was very rarely
-that she called him that, it was almost always Monsieur le Cur. And
-he--her name--he had called her Valrie--not Mademoiselle Valrie--but
-Valrie, as once before, when she had stood out there in the hall the
-night they had taken that man away, her name had sprung spontaneously to
-his lips.
-
-"Yes," she said, and bowed her head. "I am in trouble, father; for I
-have sinned."
-
-"Sinned--Valrie"--the words were stumbling on his lips. How fast that
-white throat throbbed! Valrie, pure and innocent, meant perhaps to
-confess to--_Father_ Aubert. Well, she should not, and she would not!
-Not that! She should not have to remember in the "afterwards" that she
-had bared her soul at the shrine of profanity. Back again into his voice
-he forced a cheery, playful reassurance. "It cannot be a very grievous
-sin that Mademoiselle Valrie has been guilty of! Of that, I am sure!
-And to-morrow----"
-
-"No, no!" she cried out. "You do not know! See, be indulgent with me
-now, father--I am in trouble--in very deep and terrible trouble. I--I
-cannot even confess and ask you for absolution--but you can help me--do
-not try to put me off--I--I may not have the courage again. See, I--I am
-not very brave, and I am not very strong, and the tears are not far off.
-Help me to do what I want to do."
-
-"Valrie!" he scarcely breathed her name. Help her to do what she wanted
-to do! There was another prescience upon him now; but one that he could
-not understand, save that it seemed to be pointing toward the threshold
-of a moment that he was to remember all his life.
-
-"Sit down there in your chair, father, please"--her voice was very low
-again. "Sit there, and let me kneel before you."
-
-He stepped back as from a blow.
-
-"No, Valrie, you shall not kneel to me"--he did not know what he was
-saying now. Kneel! Valrie kneel to him! "You shall not kneel to me,
-I----"
-
-"_Yes!_" The word came feverishly. The composure that she had been
-fighting to retain was slipping from her. "Yes--I must! I must!" She
-was close upon him, forcing him back toward the chair. Her eyes, dry
-and wide before, were swimming with sudden tears. "Oh, don't you
-understand! Oh, don't you understand! I am not kneeling to you as a man,
-I am kneeling to you as--as a--a _priest_--a priest of God--for--for I
-have sinned."
-
-She was on her knees--and, with a mental cry of anguish, Raymond slipped
-down into the chair. Yes, he understood--now--at last! He
-understood what, pray God, she should never realise he understood!
-She--Valrie--cared. And she was trying now--God, the cruelty of
-it!--and she was trying now to save herself, to protect herself, by
-forcing upon herself an actual physical acceptance of him as a priest.
-No! It was not so! It could not be so! He did _not_ understand!
-
-He would not have it so! He would not! It was only hell's trickery
-again--only that--and----
-
-"Lay your hands on my head, father." She caught his hands and lifted
-them, and laid them upon her bowed head--and as his hands touched her
-she seemed to tremble for an instant, and her hands tightened upon his.
-"Hold them there for a little while, father," she murmured--and took her
-own hands away, and clasped them before her hidden face.
-
-Raymond's countenance was ashen as he bent forward. What had that
-voice prompted him to do? Be the priest? Well, he was being the priest
-now--and he knew torment in the depths of a sacrilege at last before
-which his soul shrank back appalled. The soft hair was silken to the
-touch of his hands, and yet it burned and seared him as with brands of
-fire. It was Valrie's hair. It was Valrie's head that was bowed
-before him. It was Valrie, the one to whom his soul had called, who was
-kneeling to him--as a priest of God--to save herself!
-
-"Say the _Pater Noster_ with me, father," she whispered.
-
-He bent his head still lower--lower now that she might not by any chance
-glimpse his face. Like death it must look. He pressed his hands in
-assent upon her head--but it was Valrie's voice alone that faltered
-through the room.
-
-".... _Sanctificetur nomen tuum_--hallowed be Thy name... _fiat voluntas
-tua_--Thy will be done.... _et dimitte nobis dbita nostra_--and forgive
-us our trespasses... _et ne nos inducas in tentationem_--and lead us not
-into temptation... _sed libera nos a malo_--but deliver us from evil...
-Amen."
-
-The lamp burned upon the desk; it lighted up the room--but before
-Raymond's eyes was only a blur, and nothing was distinct. And there was
-silence--silence for a long time.
-
-And then Valrie spoke again.
-
-"I am stronger now," she said. "I--I think God showed me the way. You
-have been very good to me to-night--not to question me--just to let me
-have my way. And now bless me, father, and I will go."
-
-Bless Valrie--ask God's blessing on Valrie--would that be profanation?
-God's blessing on Valrie! Ay, he could ask that! Profligate, sinner,
-sham and mocker, he could ask that in reverence and sincerity--God's
-blessing upon Valrie--because he loved her.
-
-"God keep you, Valrie," he said, and fought the tremor from his voice.
-"God keep you, Valrie--and bless you--and guard you through all your
-life."
-
-She rose from her knees, and turning quickly because her cheeks were
-wet, picked up the lamp, and walked to the door. At the threshold she
-paused, but did not look back.
-
-"Good-night, father," she said simply.
-
-"Good-night, Valrie," he answered.
-
-It was dark again in the room. He had risen from his chair as Valrie
-had risen from her knees--and now his hand felt out for the chair again,
-and he sank down, and, as when she had come to him, his head was buried
-again in his arms upon the desk.
-
-Valrie cared! Valrie loved him! Valrie, too, had been through her
-hour of torment. "Not as a man--as a priest, a priest of God." No, he
-would not believe that, he would not let himself believe that. It could
-not be so! She was troubled, in distress--about something else. What
-time was it now? Not daylight yet--the merciful daylight--no sign of
-daylight yet? If it were true--what then? If she cared--what then?
-
-If Valrie loved him--what then? What was he to do in the "afterwards"?
-It would not be himself alone who was to bear the burden then. It was
-not true, of course; he would not believe it, he would not let himself
-believe it. But if it were true how would Valrie endure the hanging
-by the neck until he was dead of the man she loved, or the knowledge of
-what he was, or the death by accident--of the man she loved!
-
-He did not stir now. He made no sound, no movement--and his head lay
-in his outflung arms. And time passed, and through the window crept the
-gray of dawn--and presently it was daylight--the merciful daylight--and
-the night was gone. But he was scarcely conscious of it now. It grew
-lighter still, and filled the room--that merciful daylight. And his
-brain, sick and stumbling and weary, reeled on and on, and there was the
-dream of the Walled Place again, and Valrie was closing the gate that
-was studded with iron spikes--and there was no way out.
-
-And then very slowly, like a man rousing from a stupor, his head came up
-from the desk, and he listened. From across the green came the sound of
-the church bells ringing for early mass. And as he listened the bells
-seemed to catch up the tempo of some refrain. What was it? Yes, he knew
-now. It was the opening of the mass--the words he would have to go in
-there presently and say. Were they mocking him, those bells! Was this
-what the daylight, the merciful daylight had brought--only a crowning,
-pitiless, merciless jeer! His face, strained and haggard, lifted
-suddenly a little higher. Was it only mockery, or could it be--see,
-they seemed to peal more softly now--could it be that they held another
-meaning--like voices calling in compassion to him because he was lost?
-No--his mind was dazed--it could not mean that--for him. But listen!
-They were repeating it over and over again. It was the call to mass, for
-it was daylight, and the beginning of a new day. Listen!
-
-"_Introibo ad altare Dei_--I will go in unto the Altar of God."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX--THE TWO SINNERS
-
-|INTROIBO ad altare Dei--I will go in unto the Altar of God." It had
-been days, another week of them, since the morning when he had raised
-his head to that call for early mass,' and his brain, stumbling and
-confused, had set those words in a refrain to the tempo of the pealing
-bells.
-
-It was midnight now--another night--the dreaded night. They were not all
-like that other night, not all so pitiless--that would have been beyond
-physical endurance. But they were bad, all the nights were bad. They
-seemed cunningly just to skirt the border edge of strain that could be
-endured, and cunningly just to evade the breaking point.
-
-It was midnight. On the table beside the bed stood the lighted lamp; and
-beside the lamp, topped by a prayer-book, was a little pile of
-Franois Aubert's books; and the bed was turned neatly down, disclosing
-invitingly the cool, fresh sheets. These were Madame Lafleur's kindly
-and well-meant offices. Madame La-fleur knew that he did not sleep very
-well. Each evening she came in here and set the lamp on the table, and
-arranged the books, and turned down the bed.
-
-This was the same rocking-chair he sat in now that he had sat in night
-after night, and watched a man with bandaged head lying on that same
-bed--watched and waited for the man to die. The man was not there
-any more--there were just the cool, fresh sheets. The man was in
-Tournayville. He had seen the man again that afternoon--and now it was
-the man who was waiting to die.
-
-"I will go in unto the Altar of God." With a curious hesitancy he
-reached out and took the prayer-book from the table, and abstractedly
-began to finger its pages. What did those words mean? They had been with
-him incessantly, insistently, since that morning when he had groped
-for their meaning as between the bitterest of mockeries and a sublime
-sincerity. They did not mock him now, they held no sting of irony. It
-was very strange. They had not mocked him all that week. He had been
-glad, eager, somehow, to repeat them to himself. Did they mean--peace?
-
-Peace! If he could have peace--even for to-night. If he could lie down
-between those cool, fresh sheets--and sleep! He was physically weary. He
-had made himself weary each night in the hope that weariness might bring
-a dreamless rest. He had thrown himself feverishly into the rle of the
-Cur of St. Marleau; he had walked miles and driven miles; there was
-not a cottage in the parish upon whose door he had not knocked, and with
-whose occupants he had not shared-the personal joys and sorrows of
-the moment; and he had sat with the sick--with old Mother Blondin that
-morning, for instance, who seemed quite ill and feeble, and who in the
-last few days had taken to her bed. Yes, it was strange! He had done
-all this, too, with a certain sincerity that was not alone due to an
-effort to find forgetfulness during the day and weariness that would
-bring repose at night. He had found neither the forgetfulness nor the
-repose; but he had found a sort of wistful joy in the kindly acts of the
-good, young Father Aubert!
-
-He had found neither the forgetfulness nor the repose. He could not
-forget the "afterwards"--the day that must irrevocably come--unless
-something, some turn of fate, some unforeseen thing intervened.
-_Something!_ It was a pitiful thing to cling to--a pitiful thing even
-for a gambler's chance! But he clung to it now more desperately, more
-tenaciously than ever before. It was not only his life now, it was not
-only the life of the condemned man in that cell--it was Valrie. He
-might blindfold his mental vision; he might crush back, and trample
-down, and smother the thought, and refuse to admit it--but in his soul
-he believed she cared. And if she cared, and if that "something" did not
-happen, and he was forced, in whatever way he finally must choose, to
-play the last card--there was Valrie. If she cared--there was Valrie
-to suffer too! If he hanged instead of that man--there was Valrie! If
-he confessed from a safe distance after flight--there was Valrie
-to endure the shame! If the good, young Father Aubert died by
-"accident"--there was the condemned man in the death cell to pay the
-penalty--and Valrie to know the grief! Choice! What choice was there?
-Who called this ghastly impasse a choice! He could only wait--wait and
-cling to that hope, which in itself, because it was so paltry a thing to
-lean on, but added to the horror and suspense of the hours and days that
-stretched between now and the "afterwards."
-
-"Something" might happen--yes, something might happen--but nothing had
-happened yet--nothing yet--and his brain, day and night, would not stop
-mangling and tearing itself to pieces--and would not let him rest--and
-there was no peace--none--not even for a few short hours.
-
-His fingers were still mechanically turning the pages of the
-prayer-book. "I will go in unto the Altar of God." Why did those words
-keep on running insistently through his mind? Did they suggest--peace?
-
-Well, if they did, why wasn't there something practical about them,
-something tangible, something he could lay material hands upon, and
-sense, and feel? The Altar, of God! Was there in very reality a God?
-He had chosen once to deny it contemptuously; and he had chosen once
-to despise religion as cant and chicanery cleverly practised upon the
-gullible and the weak-minded to the profit of those who pretended to
-interpret it! But there were beautiful words here in this book; and
-religion, if this were religion, must therefore be beautiful too--if
-one could believe. He remembered those words at the burial of Thophile
-Blondin--years, an eternity ago that was--"I am the resurrection and
-the life... he that believeth in Me... shall never die." He had repeated
-them over and over to himself that morning--he had spoken them aloud, in
-what had seemed then an unaccountable sincerity, to old Mother Blondin
-as she had clung to the palings of the cemetery fence that morning. Yes,
-they were beautiful words--if one could believe.
-
-And here were others! What were these words here? He was staring at an
-open page before him, staring and staring at it. What were these other
-words here? It was not that he had never seen them before--but why
-was the book open at this place now--at these last few words of the
-_Benedictus? "Per viscera misericordi Dei nostri... illuminare his qui
-in tenebris et in umbra mortis sedent: ad dirigendos pedes nostros in
-viam pacis_--Through the tender mercy of our God... to enlighten those
-who sit in darkness and in the shade of death: to direct our feet into
-the way of peace."
-
-Were they but words--mere words--these? They were addressed to
-him--definitely to him, were they not? He sat in darkness, in an agony
-of darkness, lost, unable to find his way, and he sat--in the shade of
-death! Was there a God, a God who had tender mercy, a God--to direct his
-feet into the way of peace?
-
-The book slipped from his fingers, and dropped to the floor--and, his
-lips compressed, he stood up from the chair. If there was a God who
-had mercy, mercy of any kind--it was mercy he asked now. Where was this
-mercy? Where was this way of peace? Where was--a strange, bewildered,
-incredulous wonder was creeping into his face. Was that it--the Altar
-of God? Was that where there was peace--in unto the Altar of God? He
-had asked for a practical application of the words. Is that what they
-meant--that he should actually go--in unto the Altar of God--in there in
-the church--now?
-
-It seemed to stagger him for a moment. Numbly he stooped and picked up
-the prayer-book, and closed it, and laid it back on the table--and stood
-irresolute. Something, he was conscious, was impelling him to go there.
-Well, why not? If there was a God, if there was a God who had tender
-mercy, if it was that God whose words were suggesting a way of
-peace--why not put that God to the test! Once, on the afternoon just
-before he had attempted that man's escape, he had yielded to a previous
-impulse, and had gone into the church. It had been quiet, still
-and restful, he remembered; and he remembered that he had come away
-strangely calmed. But since then a cataclysm had swept over him; then
-he had been in a state of mind that, compared with now, was one even
-of peace--but even so, it was quiet, still and restful there, he
-remembered.
-
-He was crossing the room slowly, hesitantly, toward the door. Well, why
-not? If there was a God, and this impulse emanated from God--why not put
-it to the test? If it was all a hollow fraud, a myth, a superstition
-to which he was weak enough to yield, he would at least be no worse
-off than to sit here in that chair, or to lie upon the bed and toss the
-hours away until morning came!
-
-Well, he would go! He stepped softly out into the hall, closed his door
-behind him, groped his way in the darkness to the front door of the
-_presbytre_, opened it--and stood still for an instant, listening.
-Neither Valrie nor her mother, asleep upstairs, had been disturbed he
-was sure. If they had--well, they would assign no ulterior motive to his
-going out--it was only that Monsieur le Cur, poor man, did not sleep
-well!
-
-He closed the door quietly, and went down the steps--and at the bottom
-paused again. He became suddenly conscious that there was a great quiet
-and a great serenity in the night--and a great beauty. There were stars,
-a myriad stars in a perfect sky; and the moonlight bathed the church
-green in a radiance that made of it a velvet carpet, marvellously
-wrought in shadows of many hues. There, along the road, a whitewashed
-cottage stood out distinctly, and still further along another, and yet
-another--like little fortresses whose tranquillity was impregnable. And
-the moonlight, and the lullaby of the lapping water on the shore, and
-the night sounds that were the chirping of the little grass-things,
-were like some benediction breathed softly upon the earth.
-
-"To direct our feet into the way of peace"--Raymond murmured the words
-with a sudden overpowering sense of yearning and wistfulness sweeping
-upon him. And then, as suddenly, he was tense, alert, straining his eyes
-toward the front of the church. Was that a shadow there that moved, cast
-perhaps by the swaying branch of some tree? It was a very curious branch
-if that were so! The shadow seemed to have appeared suddenly from around
-the corner of the church and to be creeping toward the door. It was
-too far across the green to see distinctly, even with the moonlight as
-bright as it was, but it seemed as though he could see the church door
-open and close again--and now the shadow had disappeared.
-
-Mechanically Raymond rubbed his eyes. It was strange, so very strange
-that it must surely be only a trick of the imagination. The moonlight
-was always deceptive and lent itself easily to hallucinations, and at
-that distance he certainly could not be sure. And besides, at this hour,
-after midnight, why should any one go stealing into the church? And yet
-he could have sworn he had seen the door open! And stare as he would
-now, the shadow that had crept along the low platform above the church
-steps was no longer visible.
-
-He hesitated a moment. It was even an added incentive for him to go into
-the church, but suppose some one was there, and he should be seen? He
-smiled a little wanly--and stepped forward across the green. Well, what
-of it! Was he not the Cur of St. Mar-leau? It would be only another
-halo for the head of the good, young Father Aubert! It would require but
-a word of explanation from him, he could even tell the truth--and they
-would call him the _devout_, good, young Father Aubert! Only, instead of
-entering by one of the main doors, he would go in through the sacristy.
-He was not even likely to be seen himself in that way; and, if there was
-any one there, he should be able to discover who it was, and what he or
-she was doing there.
-
-He passed on along the side of the church, his footsteps soundless on
-the sward, reached the door of the sacristy, opened it silently, and
-stepped inside. It was intensely dark here. Treading on tiptoe, he
-traversed the little room, and finally, after a moment's groping, his
-fingers closed on the knob of the door that opened on the interior of
-the church.
-
-A sound broke the stillness. Yes, there was some one out there! Raymond
-cautiously pulled the door ajar. Came that sound again. It was very
-loud--and yet it was only the creak of a footstep that seemed to come
-from somewhere amongst the aisles. It echoed back from the high vaulted
-roof with a great noise. It seemed to give pause, to terrify with
-its own alarm whoever was out there, for now as he listened there was
-silence again.
-
-Still cautiously and still a little wider, Raymond opened the door, and
-now he could see out into the body of the church--and for a moment, as
-though gazing upon some mystic scene, he stood there wrapt, immovable.
-Above the tops of the high, stained windows, it was as though a vast
-canopy of impenetrable blackness were spread from end to end of the
-edifice; and slanting from the edge of this canopy in a series of
-parallel rays the moonlight, coloured into curious solemn tints,
-filtered across from one wall to the other. And the aisles were like
-little dark alleyways leading away as into some immensity beyond. And
-here, looming up, a statue, the figure of some white-robed saint,
-drew, as it were, a holy light about it, and seemed to take on life
-and breathe into the stillness a sense of calm and pure and unchanging
-presence. And the black canopy and the little dark alleyways seemed
-to whisper of hidden things that kept ward over this abode of God. And
-there was no sound--and there was awe and solemnity in this silence. And
-on the altar, very near him, the Altar of God that he had come to seek,
-the single altar light burned like a tiny scintillating jewel in its
-setting of moon rays. And there, shadowy against the wall, just outside
-the chancel rail, was the great cross. There seemed something that spoke
-of the immutable in that. The first little wooden church above whose
-doors it had been reared was gone, and there was a church of stone now
-with a golden, metal cross upon its spire, but this great cross of wood
-was still here. It was a very precious relic to St. Marleau, and so it
-hung there on the wall of the new church between the two windows nearest
-the altar.
-
-And then his eyes, travelling down the length of the cross, fixed upon
-its base--and the spell that had held him was gone. It was blacker
-there, very much blacker! There was a patch of blackness there that
-seemed to move and waver slightly--and it was neither shadow, nor
-yet the support built out to hold the base of the cross. Some one was
-crouching there. Well, what should he do? Remain in hiding here, or go
-out there as the Cur of St. Marleau and see who it was? Something
-urged him to go; caution bade him remain where he was. He knew a sudden
-resentment. He had put God to the test--and, instead of peace, he had
-found a prowler in the church!
-
-Ah--what was that! That low, broken sound--like a sob! Yes, it came
-again--and the echoes whispered it back from everywhere. It was a woman.
-A woman was sobbing there at the foot of the cross. Who was it? Came
-a thought that stabbed with pain. Not Valrie! It could not be
-Valrie--kneeling there under a load that was beyond her strength! It
-could not be Valrie in anguish and grief greater than she could bear
-because--because she loved a man whom she believed to be a priest of
-God! No--not Valrie! But if it were!
-
-He drew back a little. If it were Valrie she should not know that he
-had seen. At least he could save her that. He would wait until whoever
-it was had left the church, and if it were Valrie she would go back to
-the _presbytre_, and in that way he would know.
-
-And now--what were those words now? She was praying out there as
-she sobbed. And slowly an amazed and incredulous wonder spread over
-Raymond's face. No, it was not Valrie! That was not Valrie's voice!
-Those mumbling, hesitant, uncertain words, as though the memory
-were pitifully at fault, were not Valrie's. It was not Valrie! He
-recognised the voice now. It was the old woman on the hill--old Mother
-Blondin!
-
-And Raymond stared for a moment helplessly out through the crack of the
-sacristy door which he held ajar, out into those curiously tinted moon
-rays, and past the altar with its tiny light, to where that dark shadow
-lay against the wall. Old Mother Blondin! Old Mother Blondin, the
-heretic, was out there--_praying in the church!_ Why? What had brought
-her there? Old Mother Blondin who was supposed to be ill in her bed--he
-had seen her there that morning! She had been sick for the last
-few days, and worse if anything that morning--and now--now she was
-here--praying in the church.
-
-What had brought her here? What motive had brought this about, that,
-with its strength of purpose, must have supplied physical strength as
-well, for she must almost literally have had to crawl down the hill
-in her feeble state? Had she too come seeking for--peace! Was it
-coincidence that they two, who had reached the lees and dregs of that
-common cup, should be here together, at this strange hour, at the Altar
-of God! Was it only coincidence--nothing more? Was he ready to believe,
-would he admit so much, that it was _more_ than--coincidence?
-
-A sense of solemnity and of awe that mingled with a sense of profound
-compassion for old Mother Blon-din sobbing there in her misery took
-possession of him, and he seemed moved now as by an impulse beyond and
-outside himself--to go to her--to comfort and soothe her, if he could.
-And slowly he opened the sacristy door, and stepped out into the
-chancel, and into the moonlight that fell softly across the altar's
-edge--and he called her name.
-
-There was a cry, wild, unrestrained--a cry of terror that seemed to
-swirl about the church, and from the black canopy above that hid the
-vaulted roof was hurled back in a thousand echoes. But with the cry,
-as the dark form from against the wall sprang erect, Raymond caught a
-sharp, ominous cracking sound--and, as he looked, high up on the wall,
-the arms of the huge cross seemed to waver and begin to tilt forward.
-
-With a bound, as he saw her danger, Raymond cleared the chancel rail,
-and the next instant had caught at the base of the cross and steadied
-it. In her terror as she had jumped to her feet, she had knocked against
-it and forced it almost off the sort of shelf, or ledge, that had been
-built out from the wall to support it; and at the same time, he could
-see now, one or more of the wall fastenings at the top had given away.
-It was very heavy and unmanageable, but he finally succeeded in getting
-it far enough back into position to make it temporarily secure.
-
-He turned then to face Mother Blondin. She seemed oblivious, unconscious
-of her escape, though her face in the moonlight held a ghastly colour.
-She was staring at him with eyes that burned feverishly in their deep
-sockets. She was not crying now, but there were still tears, undried,
-that clung to her withered cheeks. One bony hand reached out and
-clutched at the back of a pew, for she was swaying on her feet; but the
-other was clenched and knotted--and suddenly she raised it and shook it
-in his face.
-
-"Yes, it is I! I--Mother Blondin!" she choked. "Mother Blondin--the old
-hag--the _excommunie!_ You saw me come in--eh? And you have come to put
-me out--to put old Mother Blondin, the _excommunie_, out--eh? I have no
-right here--here--eh? Well, who said I had any right! Put me out--put me
-out--put me-----" The clenched hand opened, clawed queerly at her face,
-as though to clear away something that had gathered before her eyes and
-would not let her see--and she reeled heavily backward.
-
-Raymond's arm went around her shoulders.
-
-"You are ill, Madame Blondin--ill and weak," he said soothingly.
-"See"--he half lifted, half supported her into the pew--"sit down here
-for a moment and rest. I am afraid I frightened you. I am very sorry.
-Perhaps it would have been better if I had left you by yourself; but
-I heard you sobbing out here, and I thought that I might perhaps help
-you--and so I came--and so--you are better now, are you not?---and so,
-you see, it was not to drive you out of the church."
-
-She looked at him in a sort of angry unbelief.
-
-"Ah!" she exclaimed fiercely. "Why do you tell me that, eh? Why do you
-tell me that? I have no right here--and you are a priest. That is your
-business--to drive me out."
-
-"No," said Raymond gravely; "it is not my business. And I think you
-would go very far, Madame Blondin, before you would find a priest who
-would drive you from his church under the circumstances in which I have
-found you here to-night."
-
-"Well then, I will go myself!" she said defiantly--and made as though to
-rise.
-
-"No, not yet"--Raymond pressed her quietly back into the seat. "You must
-rest for a little while. Why, this morning, you know, you were seriously
-ill in bed. Surely you were not alone in the house to-night, that there
-was no one to prevent you getting up--I asked Madame Bouchard to----"
-
-"Madame Bouchard came to spend the night, but I did not want her, and I
-sent her home," she interrupted brusquely.
-
-"You should not have done that, Madame Blondin," Raymond remonstrated
-kindly. "But even then, you are very weak, and I do not see how you
-managed to get here."
-
-Her face set hard with the old stubborn indomitableness that he knew so
-well.
-
-"I walked!" she said shortly.
-
-Her hands were twisting together in her lap. There was dust covering her
-skirt thickly.
-
-"And fell," he said.
-
-She did not answer.
-
-"Will you tell me why you came?" he asked.
-
-"Because I was a fool"--her lips were working, her hands kept twisting
-over each other in her lap.
-
-"I heard you praying," said Raymond gently. "What brought you here
-to-night, Madame Blondin?"
-
-She shook her head now, and turned her face away.
-
-The moonlight fell on the sparse, gray hair, and the thin, drooping
-shoulders, and the unkempt, shabby clothing. It seemed to enfold her in
-an infinite sympathy all its own. And suddenly Raymond found that his
-eyes were wet. It did not seem so startling and incongruous a thing that
-she should be here at midnight in the church--at the Altar of God. And
-yet--and yet why had she come? Something within himself demanded in a
-strange wistfulness the answer to that question, as though in the answer
-she would answer for them both, for the two who had no _right_ here in
-this sacred place unless--unless, if there were a God, that God in His
-own way had meant to--direct their feet into the way of peace.
-
-"Madame Blondin"--his voice was very low, trembling with
-earnestness--"Madame Blondin, do you believe in God?"
-
-Her hands stopped their nervous movements, and clasped hard one upon the
-other.
-
-"No!" she cried out sharply. "No--I----" And then her voice faltered,
-and she burst suddenly into tears. "I--I don't know."
-
-His arm was still about her shoulders, and now his hand tightened a
-little upon her. She was crying softly. He was silent now--staring
-before him at that tiny flame burning in the moon rays on the altar.
-Well, suppose she did! Suppose even Mother Blondin believed, though
-she would fight on until she was beaten to her knees before she would
-unconditionally admit it, did that mean anything to him? Mother Blondin
-had not stood before that altar there with a crucifix upon her breast,
-and----
-
-She was speaking again--brushing the tears away with the back of her
-hand.
-
-"Once I did--once I believed," she said. "That was when I was a girl,
-and--and for a little while afterward. I used to come to the church
-then, and I used to believe. And then after Pierre died I married
-Blondin, and after that very soon I came no more. It is forty
-years--forty years--it was the old church then. The ban came before
-this one was built--I was never in here before--it is only the old cross
-there, the cross that was on the old church, that I know. Forty years is
-a long time--a long time--I am seventy-two now--seventy-two."
-
-She was crying again softly.
-
-"Yes," said Raymond, and his own voice choked, "and to-night--after
-forty years?"
-
-"I wanted to come"--she seemed almost to be whispering to herself--"I
-wanted to come. Blondin said there was no God, but I remembered that
-when I was a girl--forty years ago--there was a God here. I--I wanted
-to come and see--and--and I--I don't know--I--I couldn't remember
-the prayers very well, and so maybe if God is still here He did not
-understand. Pierre always said there was a God, and he used to come
-here with me to mass; but Blondin said the priests were all liars, and
-I began to drink with Blondin, and he said they were all liars when he
-died, and no one except the ones that came to buy the _whiskey-blanc_
-would have anything to do with us, and--and I believed him."
-
-"And Pierre?" Raymond asked softly. "Who was Pierre?"
-
-"Pierre?" She turned her head and looked at him--and somehow, perhaps
-it was the tint of the moon rays, somehow the old, hard face was
-transfigured, and seemed to glow with untold sweetness, and a smile
-of tenderness mingled with the tears. "Pierre? Ah, he was a good boy,
-Pierre. Yes, I have been happy! Who shall say I have not been happy?
-There were three years of it--three years of it--and then Pierre died. I
-was eighteen, eighteen on the day that Pierre and I were married. And it
-was a great day in the village--all the village was _en fte_. You would
-not believe that! But it is true. It is a long time between eighteen and
-seventy-two, and I was not like I am now, and Pierre was loved by every
-one. It is hard to believe, eh? And there are not many now who remember.
-But there is old Grandmother Frenier. She will tell you that I am
-telling you the truth about Pierre Letellier."
-
-"_Letellier!_"--it came in a low, involuntary cry from Raymond.
-Letellier! Where had he heard that name before? What strange stirring of
-the memory was this that the name had brought? Letellier! Was it--could
-it be----?
-
-"What is it, monsieur?"--she had caught at his sleeve. "Ah, you had
-perhaps heard that the Letelliers all moved away from here--and you did
-not know that I was once a Letellier? They sold everything and went away
-because of me a few years after I married Blondin."
-
-"Yes," said Raymond mechanically. "But tell me more about yourself
-and Pierre--and--and those happy years. You had children--a--a son,
-perhaps?"
-
-"Yes--yes, monsieur!" There was a glad eagerness in her voice--and
-then a broken sob--and the old eyes brimmed anew with tears. "There was
-little Jean. He was born just a few months after his father died. He--he
-was just like Pierre. He was four years old when I married Blondin,
-and--and when he was ten he ran away."
-
-The altar light, that tiny light there seemed curiously transparent.
-He could see through it, not to the body of the altar behind it, but
-through it to a vast distance that did not measure miles, and he could
-see the interior of a shack whose window pane was thickly frosted and in
-whose doorway stood a man, and the man was Murdock Shaw who had come
-to bring Canuck John's dying message--and he could hear Murdock Shaw's
-words: "'Tell Three-Ace Artie--give good-bye message--my mother and----'
-And then he died."
-
-"I do not know where he went"--old Mother Blon-din's faltering voice,
-too, seemed a vast distance away--"I--I have never heard of him since
-then. He is dead, perhaps; but, if he is alive, I hope--I hope that he
-will never know. Yes--there were three years of happiness, monsieur--and
-then it was finished. Monsieur, I--I will go now."
-
-Raymond's head on his crossed arms was bowed on the back of the pew
-before him. Letellier! It was the forgotten name come back to him. This
-was Canuck John's mother--and this was Thophile Blondin's mother--and
-he had come to St. Marleau to deliver to her a message of death--and
-he had delivered it in the killing of her other son! Was this the peace
-that he had come here to seek to-night? Was this the hand of God that
-had led him here? What did it mean? Was it God who had brought Mother
-Blondin here to-night? Would it bring her comfort--to believe in God
-again? Was he here for _that?_ Here, that a word from him, whom she
-thought a priest, might turn the scales and bring her to her God of the
-many years ago? Was this God's way--to use him, who masqueraded as God's
-priest, and through whom this woman's son had been killed--was this
-God's way to save old Mother Blondin?
-
-She touched his arm timidly.
-
-"Are you praying for me, monsieur?" she whispered tremulously. "It--it
-is too late for that--that was forty years ago. And--and I will go now."
-
-He raised his head and looked at the old, withered, tear-stained face.
-The question of his own belief did not enter here. If she went now
-without a word from him, without a priestly word, she went forever. They
-were beautiful words--and, if one believed, they brought comfort. And
-she was near, very near to that old belief again. And they were near,
-very near to his own lips too, those words.
-
-"It is not too late," he said brokenly. "Listen! Do you remember
-the _Benedictus?_ Give me your hand, and we will kneel, and say it
-together."
-
-She drew back, and shook her head, and tried to speak--but no words
-came, only her lips quivered.
-
-He held out his hand to her--held it silently there for a long time--and
-then, hesitantly, she laid her hand in his.
-
-And kneeling there in the pew, old Mother Blondin and Raymond Chapelle,
-Raymond began the solemn words of the _Benedictus_. Low his voice was,
-and the tears crept to his eyes as the thin hand clutched and clasped
-spasmodically at his own. And as he came to the end, the tears held back
-no longer and rolled hot upon his cheeks.
-
-"... Through the tender mercy of our God... to enlighten those who sit
-in darkness, and in the shade of death: to direct our feet into the way
-of peace"--his voice died away.
-
-She was sobbing bitterly. He helped her to her feet as she sought to
-rise, and, holding tightly to her arm for she swayed unsteadily, he led
-her down the aisle. And they came to the church door, and out upon the
-green. And here she paused, as though she expected him to leave her.
-
-"I will walk up the hill with you, Mother Blondin," he said. "I do not
-think you are strong enough to go alone."
-
-She did not answer.
-
-They started on along the road. She walked very slowly, very feebly, and
-leaned heavily upon him. And neither spoke. And they turned up the hill.
-And halfway up the hill he lifted her in his arms and carried her, for
-her strength was gone. And somehow he knew that when she had left her
-bed that night to stumble down this hill to the moonlit church she had
-left it for the last time--save one.
-
-She was speaking again--almost inaudibly. He bent his head to catch the
-words.
-
-"It is forty years," said old Mother Blondin. "Forty years--it is a long
-time--forty years."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX--AN UNCOVERED SOUL
-
-|IT hung there precariously. All through the mass that morning Raymond's
-eyes had kept straying to the great cross on the wall that old Mother
-Blondin had disturbed the night before. No one else, it was true, had
-appeared to notice it; but, having no reason to do so, no one else, very
-probably, had given it any particular attention--nevertheless, a single
-strand of cord on one end of the horizontal beam was all that now
-prevented the cross from pitching outward from the wall and crashing
-down into the body of the church.
-
-The door of the sacristy leading into the chancel was open, and, in the
-sacristy now, Raymond's eyes fixed uneasily again on the huge, squared
-timbers of the cross. The support at the base held the weight of course,
-but the balance and adjustment was gone, and the slightest jar would be
-all that was necessary to snap that remaining cord above. Massive and
-unwieldy, the cross itself must be at least seven feet in height; and,
-though this was of course imagination, it seemed to waver there now
-ominously, as if to impress upon him the fact that in the cause of its
-insecurity he was not without a personal responsibility.
-
-He had removed his surplice and stole; Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar boy,
-had gone; and there was only old Narcisse Plude, the aged sacristan,
-who was still puttering about the room. And the church was empty now,
-save that he could still hear Valrie moving around up there in the
-little organ loft.
-
-Raymond passed his hand wearily across his eyes. He was very tired.
-Valrie was lingering intentionally--and he knew why. He had not
-returned to the _presbytre_, his bed had not been slept in. Valrie and
-her mother could not have helped but discover that, and they would be
-anxious, and worried, and perhaps a little frightened--and that was why
-Valrie was lingering now, waiting for him. He had not dared to leave
-old Mother Blondin alone through the night. She had been very ill.
-And he had not gone to any one near at hand, to Madame Bouchard, for
-instance, to get her to take his place, for that would have entailed
-explanations which, not on his own account, but for old Mother Blondin's
-sake, he had not cared to make; and so, when the bell for mass had rung
-that morning, he had still been at the bedside of the old woman on the
-hill. And he had left her only then because she was sleeping quietly,
-and the immediate crisis seemed safely past.
-
-Raymond's eyes, from the cross, rested speculatively for a moment on the
-bent figure of the aged sacristan. He could make those explanations to
-Valrie, he could go out there now and in a sort of timely corroboration
-of the story repair the damage done to the cross, and she would
-understand; but he could not publicly make those explanations. If it was
-to be known in the village that old Mother Blondin had come here to the
-church, it was for old Mother Blondin herself, and for no one else, to
-tell it. It was the same attitude he had adopted toward her once before.
-True, Mother Blondin had changed very greatly since then; but a tactless
-word from any one, a sneer, the suggestion of triumph over her, and
-the old sullen defiance might well rise supreme again--and old Mother
-Blondin, he knew now, had not very long to live. Valrie and her mother
-would very readily, and very sympathetically understand. He could tell
-Valrie, indeed he was forced to do so in order to explain his own
-absence from the _presbytre_; but to others, to the village, to old
-Narcisse Plude here, since the broken fastenings of the cross must be
-replaced, old Mother Blondin's name need not be mentioned.
-
-"Narcisse, how long has that great cross hung there on the wall?" he
-inquired abruptly.
-
-"Ah--the great cross! Yes--Monsieur le Cur!" The old man laid down a
-vestment that he had been carefully folding, and wagged his head. "It is
-very old--very old, that cross. You will see how old it is when I tell
-you it was made by the grandfather of the present Bouchard, whose pew
-is right underneath it. Grandfather Bouchard was one of the first in St.
-Mar-leau, and you must know, Monsieur le Cur, that St. Marleau was then
-a very small place. It was the Grandfather Bouchard who built most of
-the old wooden church, and there was a little cupola for the bell, and
-above the cupola was that cross. Yes, Monsieur le Cur, there have been
-changes in St. Marleau, and----"
-
-"But how long has it hung there on the wall, Narcisse?" Raymond
-interrupted with a tolerant smile--Narcisse had been known at times to
-verge on garrulity!
-
-"But I am telling you, Monsieur le Cur," said the old sacristan
-earnestly. "We began to build this fine stone church, and when it was
-finished the little old wooden church was torn down, and we brought the
-cross here, and it has been here ever since, and that is thirty-two--no,
-thirty-three years ago, Monsieur le Cur--it will be thirty-three years
-this coming November."
-
-"And in those thirty-three years," observed Raymond, "I imagine that the
-cross has remained untouched?"
-
-"But, yes, Monsieur le Cur! Untouched--yes, of course! It was
-consecrated by Monsignor the Bishop himself--not the present bishop,
-Monsieur le Cur will understand, but the old bishop who is since dead,
-and----"
-
-"Quite so," said Raymond. "Well, come here, nearer to the door,
-Narcisse. Now, look at the cross very carefully, and see if you can
-discover why I asked you if it had remained untouched all those years?"
-
-The old man strained his eyes across the chancel to the opposite
-wall--and shook his head.
-
-"No, Monsieur le Cur, I see nothing--only the cross there as usual."
-
-"Look higher up," prompted Raymond. "Do you not see that all but one of
-the fastenings are broken, and that it is about to fall?"
-
-"Fall? About to fall?" The old man rubbed his eyes, and stared, and
-rubbed his eyes again. "Yes--yes--it is true! I see now! The cords have
-rotted away. It is no wonder--in all that time. I--I should have thought
-of that long, long ago." He turned a white face to Raymond. "It--it is
-the mercy of God that it did not happen, Monsieur le Cur, with anybody
-there! It would have killed Bouchard, and madame, and the children! It
-would have crushed them to death! Monsieur le Cur, I am a _misrable!_
-I am an old man, and I forget, but that is not an excuse. Yes, Monsieur
-le Cur, I am a _misrable!_"
-
-Raymond laid his hand on the old sacristan's shoulder.
-
-"We will see that it does not fall on the excellent Bouchard, or on
-madame, or on the children," he smiled. "Therefore, bring a ladder and
-some stout cord, Narcisse, and we will fix it at once."
-
-The old man stared again at the cross for a moment, then started
-hurriedly toward the sacristy door that gave on the side of the church.
-
-"Yes, Monsieur le Cur--yes--at once," he agreed anxiously. "There is a
-ladder beside the shed that is long enough. I will get it immediately.
-I am an old man, and I forget, but I am none the less a _misrable_.
-If Monsieur le Cur had not happened to notice it, and it had fallen on
-Bouchard! Monsieur le Cur is very good not to blame me, but I am none
-the less----"
-
-The old man, shaking his head, and still talking, had disappeared
-through the doorway.
-
-Old Narcisse Plude--the self-styled _misrable!_ The old man had taken
-it quite to heart! Raymond shrugged his shoulders whimsically. Well, so
-much the better! It was for old Mother Blondin to tell her own story--if
-she chose! He wondered, with a curious and seemingly unaccountable
-wistfulness, if she ever would! It had been a night that had left him
-strangely moved, strangely bewildered, unable even yet to focus his
-mind clearly and logically upon it. He could tell Valrie of old Mother
-Blondin, of how the old woman on the hill had come here seeking peace;
-he could not tell her that he, too, had come in the hope that he might
-find what old Mother Blondin had sought--at the Altar of God!
-
-Valrie! Yes, he was strangely moved this morning. And now a yearning
-and an agony surged upon him. Valrie! Between Valrie's coming to him
-that night in the stillness of the hours just before the dawn, and his
-coming here to the church last night, there lay an analogy of souls
-near-spent, clutching at what they might to save themselves. Peace, and
-the seeking of a way, he had come for; and peace, and the seeking of a
-way, she had come for then. It seemed as though he could see that scene
-again--that room in the _presbytre_, and the lamp upon the desk, and
-that slim, girlish form upon her knees before him; and it seemed as
-though he could feel the touch again of that soft, dark, silken hair, as
-she laid his hands upon her bowed head; and it seemed as though he could
-hear her voice again, as it faltered through the _Pater Noster_:
-"Hallowed be Thy name... and lead us not into temptation... but deliver
-us from evil." Had he, in any measure, found what he had sought last
-night? He did not know. He had knelt and prayed with old Mother Blondin.
-The _Benedictus_, as he had repeated it, had seemed real. He had known a
-profound solemnity, and the sense of that solemnity had remained with
-him, was with him now--and yet he blasphemed that solemnity, and the
-Altar of God, and this holy place in standing here at this very moment
-decked out in his stolen _soutane_ and the crucifix that hung from his
-neck! Illogical? Why did he do it then? His eyes were on the floor.
-Illogical? It was to save his life--it was because he was fighting to
-save his life. It was not to repudiate the sincerity with which he had
-repeated the words of the _Benedictus_ to old Mother Blondin--it was to
-save his life. Whatever he had found here, whether a deeper meaning in
-these holy symbolisms, he had not found the way--no other way but to
-blaspheme on with his _soutane_ cloaked around him. And she--Valrie?
-Had she found what she had sought that night? He did not know. Refuse to
-acknowledge it, attempt to argue himself into disbelief, if he would, he
-knew that when she had knelt there that night in the front room of the
-_presbytre_ she cared. And since then? Had she, in any measure, found
-what she had sought? Had she crushed back the love, triumphed over it
-until it remained only a memory in her life? He did not know. She had
-given no sign. They had never spoken of that night again. Only--only it
-seemed as though of late there had come a shadow into the fresh, young
-face, and a shadow into the dark, steadfast eyes, a shadow that had not
-been there on the night when he had first come to St. Marleau, and she
-and he had bent together over the wounded man upon the bed.
-
-Subconsciously he had been listening for her step; and now, as he heard
-her descending the stairs from the organ loft, he stepped out from the
-sacristy into the chancel, and down into the nave of the church. He
-could see her now, and she had seen him. She had halted at the foot of
-the stairs under the gallery at the back of the church. Valrie! How
-sweet and beautiful she looked this morning! There was just a tinge of
-rising colour in her cheeks, a little smile, half tremulous, half gay
-on the parted lips, a dainty gesture of severity and playfulness in the
-shake of her head, as he approached.
-
-"Oh, Father Aubert," she exclaimed, "you do not know how relieved we
-were, mother and I, when we saw you enter the church this morning for
-mass! We--we were really very anxious about you; and we did not know
-what to think when mother called you as usual half an hour before the
-mass, and found that you were not there, and that you had not slept in
-your bed."
-
-"Yes, I know," said Raymond gravely; "and that is what I have come to
-speak to you about now. I was afraid you would be anxious, but I knew
-you would understand--though you would perhaps wonder a little--when I
-told you what kept me away last night. Let us walk down the side aisle
-there to the chancel, Mademoiselle Valrie, and I will explain."
-
-A bewildered little pucker gathered on her forehead.
-
-"The side aisle, Father Aubert?" she repeated in a puzzled way.
-
-"Yes; come," he said. "You will see."
-
-He led her down the aisle, and, halting before the cross, pointed
-upward.
-
-"Why, the fastenings, all but one, are broken!" she cried out instantly.
-"It is a miracle that it has not fallen! What does it mean?"
-
-"It is the story of last night, Mademoiselle Valerie," he answered with
-a sober smile. "Sit down in the pew there, and I will tell you. I have
-sent Narcisse for a ladder, and we will repair the damage presently, but
-there will be time before he gets back. He believes that the fastenings
-have grown old and rotten, which is true; and that they parted simply
-from age, which is not quite so much the fact. I have allowed him to
-form his own conclusions; I have even encouraged him to believe in
-them."
-
-She was sitting in the pew now. The bewildered little pucker had grown
-deeper. She kept glancing back and forth from Raymond, standing before
-her in the aisle, to the broken fastenings of the cross high up on the
-wall.
-
-"But that is what any one would naturally think," she said slowly. "I
-thought so myself. I--I do not quite understand, Father Aubert."
-
-"I think you know," said Raymond quietly, "that some nights I do not
-sleep very well, Mademoiselle Valerie. Last night was one of those. When
-midnight came I was still wakeful, and I had not gone to bed. I was very
-restless; I knew I could not sleep, and so I decided to go out for a
-little while."
-
-"Yes," she said impulsively; "I know. I heard you."
-
-"You heard me?" He looked at her in quick surprise. "But I thought I had
-been very careful indeed to make no noise. I--I did not think that I had
-wakened------"
-
-A flush came suddenly to her cheeks, and she turned her head aside.
-
-"I--I was not asleep," she said hurriedly. "Go on, Father Aubert, I did
-not mean to interrupt you."
-
-Raymond did not speak for a moment. He was not looking at her now--he
-dared not trust his eyes to drink deeper of that flush that had come
-with the simple statement that she too had been awake. Valrie! Valrie!
-It was the silent voice of his soul calling her. And suddenly he seemed
-to be looking out from his prison land upon the present scene--upon
-Valrie and the good, young Father Aubert together, looking upon them
-both, as he had looked upon them together many times. And suddenly he
-hated that figure in priestly dress with a deadly hate--because Valrie
-had tossed upon her bed awake, and had not slept; and because, as though
-gifted with prophetic vision, he could see the shadow in Valrie's
-fresh, pure face change and deepen into misery immeasurable, and the
-young life, barely on its threshold, be robbed of youth with its joy and
-gladness, and with sorrow grow prematurely old.
-
-"You went out, Father Aubert," she prompted. "And then?"
-
-The old sacristan would be back with the ladder very shortly, at almost
-any minute now--and he had to tell Valrie about old Mother Blondin
-and the cross before Narcisse returned. He looked up. He found himself
-speaking at first mechanically, and then low and earnestly, swayed
-strangely by his own words. And so, standing there in the aisle of the
-church, he told Valerie the story of the night, of the broken cross, of
-the broken life so near its end. And there was amazement, and wonder,
-and surprise in Valerie's face as she listened, and then a tender
-sympathy--and at the end, the dark eyes, as they lifted to his, were
-filled with tears.
-
-"It is very wonderful," she said almost to herself. "Old Mother
-Blondin--it could be only God who brought her here."
-
-Raymond did not answer. The old sacristan had entered the church, and
-was bringing the ladder down the aisle. It was the sacristan who spoke,
-catching sight of Valrie, as Raymond, taking one end of the ladder,
-raised it against the wall beside the cross.
-
-"_Tiens!_" The old man lifted the coil of thin rope which he held, and
-with the back of his hand mopped away a bead of perspiration from his
-forehead. "You have seen then what has happened, mademoiselle! Father
-Aubert has made light of it; but what will Monsieur le Cur, your uncle,
-say when he hears of it! Yes, it is true--I am a _misrable_--I do not
-deserve to be sacristan any longer! It was consecrated by Monsignor the
-Bishop, that cross, when the church was consecrated, and----"
-
-Raymond took the cord quietly from the old man's hand, and began to
-mount the ladder. He went up slowly--not that the ladder was insecure,
-but that his mind and thoughts were far removed from the mere mechanical
-task which he had set himself to perform. Valrie's words had set that
-turmoil at work in his soul again. She had not hesitated to say that
-it was God who had brought old Mother Blondin here. And he too believed
-that now. Peace he had not found, nor the way, but he believed that now.
-Therefore he must believe now that there was a God--yes, the night had
-brought him that. And if there was a God, was it God who had led him,
-as old Mother Blondin had been led, to fall upon his knees in that pew
-below there where Valrie now sat, and _pray?_ Had he prayed for old
-Mother Blondin's sake _alone?_ Was God partial then? Old Mother Blondin,
-he knew, even if her surrender were not yet complete, had found the way.
-He had not. He had found no way--to save that man who was to be hanged
-by the neck until he was dead--to save Valrie from shame and misery if
-she cared, if she still cared--to save himself! Old Mother Blondin
-alone had found the way. Was it because she was the lesser sinner of the
-two--because he had blasphemed God beyond all recall--because he still
-dared to blaspheme God--because he had stood again that morning at the
-altar and had officiated as God's holy priest--because he stood here now
-in God's house, an impostor, an intruder and a defiler! No way! And
-yet _through him_ old Mother Blondin had found her God again! Was it
-irony--God's irony--God's answer, irrefutable, to his former denial of
-God's existence!
-
-No way! Ten feet below him Valrie and the old sacristan talked and
-watched; the weather-beaten timbers of the great cross were within reach
-of his hands; there, inside the chancel rail, was the altar--all these
-things were real, were physically real. It did not seem as though it
-could be so. It seemed as though, instead, he were taking part in
-some horrible, and horribly vivid dream-life. Only there would be no
-awakening! There was no way--he would twist this cord about the iron
-hooks on the cross and the iron hook on the wall, and descend, and go
-through another day, and be the good, young Father Aubert, and toss
-through another night, and wait, clinging to the miserable hope, spurned
-even by his gambler's instinct, that "something" might happen--wait for
-the deciding of that appeal, and picture the doomed man in the death
-cell, and dream his dreams, and watch Valrie from his prison land, and
-know through the hours and minutes torment and merciless unrest. Yes,
-he believed there was a God. He believed that God had brought them both
-here, old Mother Blondin to cling to the foot of the cross, and himself
-to find her there--but to him there had come no peace--no way. His
-blasphemy, his desecration of God's altar and God's church had been
-made to serve God's ends--old Mother Blondin had found the way. But that
-purpose was accomplished now. How much longer, then, would God suffer
-this to continue? Not long! To-morrow, the next day, the day after,
-would come the answer to the appeal--and then he must choose. Choose!
-Choose what? What was there to choose where--his hands gripped hard on
-the rung of the ladder. Enough! Enough of this! It was terrible enough
-in the nights! There was no end to it! It would go on and on--the same
-ghoulish cycle over and over again. He would not let it master him now,
-for there would be no end to it! He was here to fix the cross. To fix
-God's cross, the consecrated cross--it was a fitting task for one who
-walked always with that symbol suspended from his neck! It was curious
-how that symbol had tangled up his hands the night his fingers had crept
-toward that white throat on the bed! Even the garb of priest that he
-wore God turned to account, and--no! He lifted his hand and swept it
-fiercely across his eyes. Enough! That was enough! It was only beginning
-somewhere else in the cycle that inevitably led around into all the rest
-again.
-
-He fought his mind back to his immediate surroundings. He was above the
-horizontal arm of the cross now, and he could see and appreciate how
-narrowly a catastrophe had been averted the night before. It was, as
-Valrie had said, a miracle that the cross had not fallen, for the
-single strand of cord that still held it was frayed to a threadlike
-thinness.
-
-He glanced above him, decided to make the vertical beam, or centre, of
-the cross secure first by passing the cord around the upper hook in the
-wall that was still just a little beyond his reach, stepped quickly up
-to the next rung of the ladder--and lurched suddenly, pitching heavily
-to one side. It was his _soutane_, the garb of priest, the garb of God's
-holy priest--his foot had caught in the skirt of his _soutane_. He flung
-out his hands against the wall to save himself. It was too late! The
-ladder swayed against the cross--the threadlike fastening snapped--and
-the massive arms of the cross lunged outward toward him, pushing the
-ladder back. A cry, hoarse, involuntary, burst from his lips--it was
-echoed by another, a cry from Valrie, a cry that rang in terror through
-the church. Two faces, white with horror, looking up at him from below,
-flashed before his eyes--and he was plunging backward, downward with the
-ladder--and hurtling through the air behind it, the mighty cross, with
-arms outspread as though in vengeance and to defy escape, pursued and
-rushed upon him, and---- There was a terrific crash, the rip and rend
-and tear of splintering wood--and blackness.
-
-There came at first a dull sense of pain; then the pain began to
-increase in intensity. There were insistent murmurings; there were
-voices. He was coming back to consciousness; but he seemed to be coming
-very slowly, for he could not move or make any sign. His side commenced
-to cause him agony. His head ached and throbbed as though it were being
-pounded under quick and never-ending hammer blows; and yet it seemed to
-be strangely and softly cushioned. The murmurings continued. He began to
-distinguish words--and then suddenly his brain was cleared, cleared as
-by some terrific mental shock that struck to the soul, uplifting it in a
-flood of glory, engulfing it in a fathomless and abysmal misery. It was
-Valerie--it was Valerie's voice--Valerie whispering in a frightened,
-terrified, almost demented way--whispering that she _loved_ him,
-imploring him to speak.
-
-"... Oh, will no one come! Can Narcisse find no one! I--I cannot bring
-him back to consciousness! Speak to me! Speak to me! You must--you
-shall! It is I who have sinned in loving you. It is I who have sinned
-and made God angry, and brought this upon you. But God will not let you
-die--because--because--it was my sin--and--and you would never know.
-I--I promised God that you would never know. And you--you shall not die!
-You shall not! You shall not! Speak to me--oh, speak to me!"
-
-Speak to her! Speak to Valerie! Not even to whisper her name--when the
-blood in a fiery tide whipped through his veins; when impulse born of
-every fibre of his being prompted him to lift his arms to her face, so
-close to his that he could feel her breath upon his cheek, and draw it
-closer, closer, until it lay against his own, and to hold it there, and
-find her lips, and feel them cling to his! There was a physical agony
-from his hurts upon him that racked him from head to foot--but there was
-an agony deeper still that was in his soul. His head was pillowed on her
-knee, but even to open his eyes and look up into that pure face he loved
-was denied him, even to whisper a word that would allay her fears
-and comfort her was denied him. From Valrie's own lips had come the
-bitterest and dearest words that he would ever hear. He could temporise
-no longer now. He could juggle no more with his false and inconsistent
-arguments. Valrie cared, Valrie loved him--as he had known she cared,
-as he had known she loved him. A moan was on his lips, forced there by
-a sudden twinge of pain that seemed unendurable. He choked it back. She
-must not know that he had heard--he must simulate unconsciousness. He
-could not save her from much now, from the "afterwards" that was so
-close upon him--but he could save her from this. She should not know!
-God's cross in God's church... his blasphemy, his sacrilege had been
-answered... the very garb of priest had repaid him for its profanation
-and struck him down... and Valrie... Valrie was here... holding him...
-and Valrie loved him... but Valrie must not know... it was between
-Valrie and her God... she must not know that he had heard.
-
-Her hands were caressing his face, smoothing back his hair, bathing his
-forehead with the water which had been her first thought perhaps before
-she had sent Narcisse for help. Valrie's hands! Like fire, they were,
-upon him, torturing him with a torture beyond the bodily torment he was
-suffering; and like the tenderest, gladdest joy he had ever known, they
-were. A priest of God--and Valrie! No, it went deeper far than that;
-it was a life of which this was but the inevitable and bitter
-culmination--and Valrie. But for that, in a surge of triumphant
-ecstasy, victor of a prize beyond all price, his arms might have swept
-out in the full tide of his manhood's strength around her, claiming her
-surrender--a surrender that would have been his right--a surrender that
-would have been written deep in love and trust and faith and glory in
-those dark, tear-dimmed eyes.
-
-And now her hands closed softly, and remained still, and held his face
-between them--and she was gazing down at him. He could see her, he had
-no need to open his eyes for that--he could see the sweet, quivering
-lips; the love, the terror, the yearning, the fear mingling in the
-white, beautiful face. And then suddenly, with a choked sob, she bent
-forward and kissed him, and laid her face against his cheek.
-
-"He will not speak to me!"--her voice was breaking. "Then listen, my
-lover--my lover, who cannot hear--my lover, who will never know. Is it
-wrong to kiss you, is it making my sin the greater to tell you--you who
-will not hear. There is only God to know. And out of all my life it is
-for just this once--for just this once. Afterwards, if you live, I will
-ask God to forgive--for it is only for this once--this once out of all
-my life. And--and--if you die--then--then I will ask God to be merciful
-and--and take me too. You did not know I loved you so, and I had never
-thought to tell you. And if you live you will never know, because you
-are God's priest, and my sin is very terrible, but--but I--I shall know
-that you are somewhere, a big and brave and loyal man, and glad in your
-life, and--and loved, as all love you here in St. Marleau. All through
-my life I will love you--all through my life--and--and I will remember
-that for just this once, for this moment out of all the years, I gave
-myself to you."
-
-She drew him closer. An agony that was maddening shot through his side
-as she moved him. If he might only clench his teeth deep in his lips
-that he might not scream out! But he could not do that for Valeric would
-see--and Valrie must not know. Tighter and tighter she held him in
-her strong, young arms--and now, like the bursting wide of flood-gates,
-there was passion in her voice.
-
-"I love you! I love you! I love you! And I am afraid--and I am afraid!
-For I am only a woman, and it is a woman's love. Would you turn from me
-if you knew? No, no--I--I do not know what I am saying--only that
-you are here with my arms around you--and that--that your face is so
-pale--and that--and that you will not speak to me."
-
-She was crying. She bent lower until, as a mother clasps a child, his
-head lay upon her breast and shoulder, and her own head was buried on
-his breast. And again with the movement came excruciating pain, and now
-a weakness, a giddy swirling of his senses. It passed. He opened his
-eyes for an instant, for she could not see him now. He was lying just
-inside the chancel rail, and almost at the altar's foot. The sunlight
-streamed through the windows of the church, but they were in shadow,
-Valrie and he, in a curious shadow--it seemed to fall in a straight
-line across them both, and yet be spread out in two wide arms that
-completely covered them. And at first he could not understand, and then
-he saw that the great cross lay forward with its foot against the wall
-and the arms upon the shattered chancel rail--and the shadow was the
-shadow of the cross. What did it mean? Was it there premonitory of a
-wrath still unappeased, that was still to know fulfilment; or was it
-there in pity--on Valrie--into whose life he had brought a sorrow that
-would never know its healing? He closed his eyes again--the giddiness
-had come once more.
-
-"I--I promised God that he would never know"--she was speaking scarcely
-above her breath, and the passion was gone out from her voice now, and
-there was only pleading and entreaty. "Mary, dear and holy Mother, have
-pity, and listen, and forgive--and bring him back to life. It came, and
-it was stronger than I--the love. But I will keep my promise to
-God--always--always. Forgive my sin, if it is not too great for
-forgiveness, and help me to endure--and--and----" her voice broke in a
-sob, and was still.
-
-Her lips touched his brow gently; her hands smoothed back his hair.
-Dizziness and torturing pain were sweeping over him in swiftly
-alternating flashes. There were beads of agony standing out, he knew,
-upon his forehead--but they were mingled and were lost in the tears that
-suddenly fell hot upon him. Valerie! Valerie! God give him strength
-that he might not writhe, that he might not moan. No, he need not fear
-that--the pain was not so great now--it seemed to be passing gradually,
-very gradually, even soothingly, away--there were other voices--they
-seemed a long way off--there seemed to be footsteps and the closing of a
-door--and the footsteps came nearer and nearer--but as they came nearer
-they grew fainter and fainter--and blackness fell again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI--THE CONDEMNED CELL
-
-|THE reins lay idly in Raymond's hand. The horse, left to its own
-initiative, ambled lazily to the crest of a little rise that commanded
-a view of the town of Tournayville beyond. Raymond's eyes, lifting from
-the dash-board, ignoring the general perspective, fixed and held on
-a single detail, to the right, and perhaps a mile away--a high,
-rectangular, gray stone wall, that inclosed a gray, rectangular stone
-building.
-
-His eyes reverted to the dash-board. It was nearly two weeks now since
-he had seen that cold and narrow space with its iron bars, and the
-figure that huddled on the cot clasping its hands dejectedly between its
-knees--nearly two weeks. It was ten days since he had been struck down
-in the church--and in another ten days, over yonder, inside that gray
-stone wall, a man was to be hung by the neck until he was dead. Ten days
-forward--ten days backward--ten days.
-
-Ten days! In the ten days just past he had sought, in a deeper, more
-terrible anguish of mind than even in those days when he had thought the
-bitterest dregs were already at his lips, for the answer to these ten
-days to come--for now there was Valerie, Valrie's love, no longer a
-probability against which he might argue fiercely, desperately with
-himself, but an actual, real, existent, living thing, glorious and
-wonderful--and terrible as a hand of death stretching out a pointing
-finger to the "afterwards." And there was God.
-
-Yes--God! He was still the cur of St. Marleau, still the good, young
-Father Aubert; but since that morning when he had been struck down at
-the foot of God's altar he had not entered the church--and he had been
-no more a priest, profaning that holy place. It was not fear, a craven,
-superstitious fear that the hand which had struck him once would deal
-him physical injury again; it was not that--it was--what? He did not
-know. His mind was chaos there--chaos where it groped for a definite,
-tangible expression of his attitude toward God. There was a God. It was
-God who had drawn old Mother Blondin to the church that night, and had
-made him the instrument of her recovered faith--and the instrument of
-his own punishment when, in her fright which he had caused, she had
-loosened the great cross upon the wall. It was not coincidence, it was
-not superstition--deep in his consciousness lay the memory of that night
-when, with the old woman's hand in his, he had knelt and prayed; and
-deep in his consciousness was the sure knowledge that when he had prayed
-he had prayed in the presence of God. But he could get no further--it
-was as though he looked on God from afar off. Here turmoil took command.
-There was Valrie; the man who was to die; himself; the inflexible,
-immutable approach, the closing in upon him of that day of final
-reckoning. And God had shown him no way. He seemed to recognise an
-avenging God, not one to love. He could not say that he had the impulse
-to revere as the simple people of St. Marleau had, as Valrie had--and
-yet since that morning when they had carried him unconscious to the
-_presbytre_ he had not again entered the church, he had not again stood
-before God's altar in his blasphemous, stolen garb of priest!
-
-Raymond's thumb nail made abstracted little markings on the leather rein
-in his hand. Yes, that was true; profanation seemed to have acquired
-a new, and personal, and intimate meaning--and he had not gone.
-Circumstances had aided him. The solicitude of Madame Lafleur had made
-it easy for him to linger in bed, and subsequently to remain confined
-to his room long after his broken ribs, and the severe contusions he
-had received in his fall, had healed sufficiently to let him get about
-again. And he had allowed Madame Lafleur to "persuade" him! It had not
-been difficult as far as the early morning mass was concerned, for,
-with the cur sick in bed, the mass, it would be expected, would be
-temporarily dispensed with; but a Sunday had intervened. But even that
-he had solved. If some one from somewhere must say mass that day, it
-must be some one who would not by any chance have ever known or met the
-real Father Franois Aubert. There was Father Dcan, the prison chaplain
-of Tour-nayville. He had never met Father Dcan, even when visiting the
-jail, but since Father Dcan had not recognised the prisoner, Father
-Dcan obviously would have no suspicions of one Raymond Chapelle--and so
-he had sent a request to Father Dcan to celebrate mass on the preceding
-Sunday, and Father Dcan had complied.
-
-The thumb nail bit a little deeper into the leather. Yesterday was
-the first day he had been out. This morning he had again deliberately
-dispensed with the mass, but to-day was Saturday--and to-morrow would be
-Sunday--and to-morrow St. Marleau would gather to hear the good, young
-Father Aubert preach again! Was God playing with him! Did God not see
-that he had twisted, and turned, and struggled, and planned that he
-might not blaspheme and profane God's altar again! Did God not see that
-he revolted at the thought! And yet God had shown him no other way. What
-else could he do? What else was there to do? He was still with his
-life at stake, with the life of another at stake--and there was
-Valrie--Valrie--Valrie!
-
-A sharp cry of pain came involuntarily to his lips, and found
-utterance--and startled the horse into a reluctant jogging for a few
-paces. Valrie! He had scarcely seen her in all those ten days. It was
-Madame Lafleur who had taken care of him. Valrie had not purposely
-avoided him--it was not that--only she had gone to live practically all
-the time at old Mother Blondin's. The old woman was dying. For three
-days now she had not roused from unconsciousness. This morning she had
-been very low. By the time he returned she might be dead.
-
-Dead! These were the closing hours of his own life in St. Marleau, the
-end here, too, was very near--and the closing hours, with sinister,
-ominous significance, seemed to be all encompassed about and permeated
-with death. It was not only old Mother Blon-din. There was the man in
-the death cell, whom he was on his way to see now, this afternoon, who
-was waiting for death--for death on a dangling rope--for death that was
-not many days off. Yesterday Father Dcan had driven out to say that the
-prisoner was in a pitiful state of mental collapse, imploring, begging,
-entreating that Father Aubert should come to him--and so this afternoon
-Father Aubert, the good, young Father Aubert, was on his way--to the
-cell of death.
-
-Raymond's lips moved silently. This was the very threshold of the
-"afterwards"--the threshold of that day--the day of wrath.
-
-"_Dies ilia, dies ira, calamitatis et miserio, dies magna et am ara
-valde_--That day, a day of wrath, of wasting, and of misery, a great
-day, and exceeding bitter."
-
-Unbidden had come the words. Set his face was, and white. If all else
-were false, if God were but the transition from the fairy tales of
-childhood to the fairy tale of maturity, if religion were but a shell, a
-beautiful shell that was empty, a storehouse of wonderful architectural
-beauty that held no treasure within--at least those words were true--a
-day of wrath, and exceeding bitter. And that day was upon him; and there
-was no way to go, no turn to take, only the dark, mocking pathways of
-the maze that possessed no opening, only the dank, slimy walls of that
-Walled Place against which he beat and bruised his fists in impotent
-despair. There was the man who was to be hanged--and himself--and
-Valerie--and he knew now that Valrie loved him.
-
-The horse ambled on through the outskirts of the town. Occasionally
-Raymond mechanically turned out for a passing team, and acknowledged
-mechanically the respectful salutation. In his mind a new thought was
-germinating and taking form. He had said that God-had shown him no way.
-Was he so sure of that? If God had led him to the church that night,
-and had brought through him an eleventh hour reversion of faith to old
-Mother Blondin, and had forced the acceptance of divine existence upon
-himself, was he so sure that in the breaking of the fastenings of the
-cross, that it might fall and strike him down, there lay only a crowning
-punishment, only a thousandfold greater anguish, only bitter, helpless
-despair, in that it had been the means whereby, from Valrie's own lips,
-he had come to the knowledge of Valrie's love? Was he so sure of that?
-Was he so sure that in the very coming to him of the knowledge of her
-love he was not being shown the way he was to take!
-
-The buckboard turned from the road it had been following, and took the
-one leading to the jail. Subconsciously Raymond guided the horse
-now, and subconsciously he was alive to his surroundings and to the
-passers-by--but his mind worked on and on with the thought that now
-obsessed him.
-
-Suppose that his choice of saving one of the two lay between this man
-in the condemned cell and Valerie--which would he choose? He laughed
-sharply aloud in ironical derision. Which would he choose! It was
-pitiful, it was absurd--the question! Pitiful? Absurd? Well, but was it
-not precisely the choice he was called upon to make--to choose between
-Valrie and the man in the condemned cell? Was that not what the
-knowledge of her love meant? She loved him; from her own lips, as she
-had poured out her soul, thinking there was none but God to hear, he had
-learned the full measure of her love--a love that would never die, deep,
-and pure, and sinless--a love that was but the stronger for the sorrow
-it had to bear--a cherished, hallowed love around which her very life
-had entwined itself until life and love were one for always.
-
-The gray stone walls of the jail, cold, dreary, forbidding, loomed up a
-little way ahead. The reins were loose upon the dashboard, but clenched
-in a mighty grip in Raymond's hand. He could save the man in there from
-death--but he could save Valrie from what would be worse than death to
-her. He could save her from the shame, the agony, the degradation that
-would kill that pure soul of hers, that would imbitter, wreck and ruin
-that young life, if he, the object of her love, should dangle as a felon
-from the gallows almost before her eyes, or flee, leaving to that love,
-a felon's heritage. Yes, he could save Valrie from that; and if he
-could save Valrie from that, what did the man in the condemned
-cell count for in the balance? The man meant nothing to
-him--nothing--nothing! It was Valrie! There was the "accident"--so
-easy, so sure--the "death" of the good, young Father Aubert--the
-upturned boat--the body supposedly washed out to sea. Long ago, in the
-first days of his life in St. Marleau, he had worked out the details,
-and the plan could not fail. There would be her grief, of course; he
-could not stand between her and her grief for the loss of the one she
-loved--but it would be a grief without bitterness, a memory without
-shame.
-
-Did the man in the condemned cell count for anything against that! It
-would save Valerie, and--his face set suddenly in rigid lines, and his
-lips drew tight together--and it would save _himself!_ It was the one
-alternative to either giving himself up to stand in the other's place,
-or of becoming a fugitive, branding himself as such, and saving
-the condemned man by a confession sent, say, to the Bishop, who,
-he remembered, knew the real Franois Aubert personally, and could
-therefore at once identify the man. Yes, it was the one alternative--and
-that alternative would save--himself! Wait! Was he sure that it was only
-Valrie of whom he was thinking? Was he sure that he was sincere? Was he
-sure there were no coward promptings--to save himself?
-
-For a moment the tense and drawn expression in his face held as he
-groped in mind and soul for the answer; and then his lips parted in a
-bitter smile. It was not much to boast of! Three-Ace Artie a coward?
-Ask of the men of that far Northland whose lives ran hand in hand with
-death, ask of the men of the Yukon, ask of the men who knew! Gambler,
-rou, whatever else they might have called him, no man had ever called
-him coward! If his actual death, rather than his supposititious death,
-could save Valrie the better, in his soul he knew that he would not
-have hesitated. Why then should he hesitate about this man! If it lay
-between Valrie and this man, why should he hesitate! If he would give
-his own life to save Valrie from suffering and shame, why should he
-consider this man's life--this man who meant nothing to him--nothing!
-
-Well, had he decided? He was at the jail now. Was he satisfied that this
-was the way? Yes! Yes--_yes!_ He told himself with fierce insistence
-that it was--an insistence that by brute force beat down an opposition
-that somehow seemed miserably seeking to intrude itself. Yes--it was the
-way! There was only the appeal, that one chance to wait for, and
-once that was refused he would borrow Bouchard's boat--Bouchard's new
-boat--and to-morrow, or the next day, or the next, whenever it might
-be, instead of looking for him at mass in church, St. Marleau would look
-along the shore in search of the body of the good, young Father Aubert.
-
-He tied his horse, and knocked upon the jail gate, and presently the
-gate was opened.
-
-The attendant touched his cap.
-
-"_Salut_, Monsieur le Cur!" he said respectfully, as he stepped aside
-for Raymond to enter. "Monsieur le Cur had a very narrow escape. The
-blessed saints be praised! It is good to see him. He is quite well
-again?"
-
-"Quite," said Raymond pleasantly.
-
-The man closed the gate, and led the way across a narrow courtyard
-to the jail building. The jail was pretentious neither in size nor in
-staff--the man who had opened the gate acted as one of the turnkeys as
-well.
-
-"It is to see the prisoner Mentone that Monsieur le Cur has come, of
-course?" suggested the attendant.
-
-"Yes," Raymond answered.
-
-The turnkey nodded.
-
-"_Pauvre diable!_ He will be glad! He has been calling for you all the
-time. It did no good to tell him you were sick, and Father Dcan could
-do nothing with him. He has been very bad--not hard to manage, you
-understand, Monsieur le Cur--but he does not sleep except when he is
-exhausted, because he says there is only a little while left and he will
-live that much longer if he keeps awake. _Tiens!_ I have never had a
-murderer here to be hanged before, and I do not like it. I dream of the
-man myself!"
-
-Raymond made no reply. They had entered the jail now, and the turnkey
-was leading the way along a cell-flanked corridor.
-
-"Yes, I dream of him every night, and the job ahead of us--and so does
-Jacques, the other turnkey." The man nodded his head again; then, over
-his shoulder: "He has a visitor with him now, Monsieur le Cur, but that
-will not matter--it is Monsieur l'Avocat, Monsieur Lemoyne, you know."
-
-Lemoyne! Lemoyne--here! Why? Raymond reached out impulsively, and,
-catching the turnkey's arm, brought the man to a sudden halt.
-
-"Monsieur Lemoyne, you say!" he exclaimed sharply. "What is Monsieur
-Lemoyne doing here?"
-
-"But--but, I do not know, Monsieur le Cur," the turnkey, taken by
-surprise, stammered. "He comes often, he is often here, it is the
-privilege of the prisoner's lawyer. I--I thought that perhaps Monsieur
-le Cur would care to see him too. But perhaps Monsieur le Cur would
-prefer to wait until he has gone?"
-
-"No"--Raymond's hand fell away from the other's arm. "No--I will see
-him. I was afraid for the moment that he might have brought--bad news.
-That was all."
-
-"Ah, yes, I understand, Monsieur le Cur"--the turnkey nodded once more.
-"But I do not know. Monsieur Lemoyne said nothing when he came in."
-
-Afraid! Afraid that Lemoyne had brought the answer to that appeal! Well,
-what if Lemoyne had! Had he, Raymond, not known always what the answer
-would be, and had he not just decided what he would do when that answer
-was received--had he not decided that between the man and Valrie there
-could be no hesitation, no more faltering, or tormenting----
-
-The cell door swung open.
-
-"Enter, Monsieur le Cur!"
-
-The turnkey's voice seemed far away. Mechanically Raymond stepped
-forward. The door clanged raucously behind him. There came a cry, a
-choked cry, a strangling cry, that mingled a pitiful joy with terror
-and despair--and a figure with outstretched arms, a figure with gaunt,
-white, haggard face was stumbling toward him; and now the figure had
-flung itself upon its knees, and was clutching at him convulsively with
-its arms.
-
-"Father--Father Franois Aubert--father, have pity upon me--father, tell
-them to have pity upon me!"
-
-And yet he scarcely saw this figure, scarcely heard the voice, though
-his hands were laid upon the bowed head that was buried in the skirt
-of his _soutane_. He was looking at that other figure, at Lemoyne, the
-young lawyer, who stood at the far end of the cell near the iron-barred
-window. There were tears in Lemoyne's eyes; and Lemoyne held a document
-in his hand.
-
-"Thank God that you have come, Monsieur le Cur!" Lemoyne said huskily.
-
-"You have"--Raymond steadied his voice--"bad news?"
-
-Lemoyne silently extended the document.
-
-There were a great many words, a great many sentences written on the
-paper. If he read them all, Raymond was not conscious of it; he was
-conscious only that, in summary, he had grasped their meaning--_the man
-must die_.
-
-The man's head was still buried in Raymond's _soutane_, his hands still
-clasped tightly at Raymond's knees. Raymond did not speak--the question
-was in his eyes as they met Lemoyne's.
-
-Lemoyne shook his head hopelessly, and, taking the document back from
-Raymond, returned it slowly to his pocket.
-
-"I will leave you alone with him, Monsieur le Cur--it will be better,"
-he said in a low voice. He stepped across the cell, and for a moment
-laid his hand on the shoulder of the kneeling man. "Courage, Henri--I
-will come back to-morrow," he whispered, and passed on to the door.
-
-"Wait!"--Raymond stepped to Lemoyne's side, as the lawyer rattled upon
-the door for the turnkey. "There--there is nothing more that can be
-done?" His throat was dry, even his undertone rasped and grated in his
-own ears. "Nothing?"
-
-"Nothing!" Lemoyne's wet eyes lifted to meet Raymond's, and again he
-shook his head. "I shall ask, as a matter of course, that the sentence
-be commuted to life imprisonment--but it will not be granted. It--it
-would be cruelty even to suggest it to him, Monsieur le Cur." And then,
-as the door opened, he wrung Raymond's hand, and went hurriedly from the
-cell.
-
-Slowly Raymond turned away from the door. There was hollow laughter in
-his soul. A mocking voice was in his ears--that inner voice.
-
-"Well, _that_ is decided! Now put your own decision into effect, and
-have done with this! Have done with it--do you hear! Have done with
-it--have done with it--once for all!"
-
-His eyes swept the narrow cell, its white walls, the bare, cold floor,
-the cot with its rumpled blanket, the iron bars on the window that
-sullenly permitted an oblong shaft of sunlight to fall obliquely on the
-floor--and upon the figure that, still upon its knees, held out its arms
-imploringly to him, that cried again to him piteously.
-
-"Father--Father Aubert--help me--tell them to have pity upon me--save
-me, father--Father Franois Aubert--save me!"
-
-And Raymond, though he fought to shift his eyes again to those iron
-bars, to the sunlight's shaft, to anywhere, could not take them from
-that figure. The man was distraught, stricken, beside himself; weakness,
-illness, the weeks of confinement, the mental anguish, crowned in this
-moment as he saw his last hope swept away, had done their work. The
-tears raced down the pallid cheeks; the eyes were like--like they had
-been in the courtroom that day--like dumb beast's in agony.
-
-"Soothe him, quiet him," snarled that voice savagely, "and do it as
-quickly as you can--and get out of here! Tell him about that God that
-you think you've come to believe is not a myth, if you like--tell him
-anything that will let you get away--and remember Valrie. Do you think
-this scene here in this cell, and that thing grovelling on the floor is
-the sum of human misery? Then picture Valrie nursing shame and horror
-and degradation in her soul! What is this man to you! Remember Valrie!"
-
-Yes--Valrie! That was true! Only--if only he could avoid the man's
-eyes! Well, why did not he, Raymond, speak, why did he not act, why did
-he not do something--instead of standing here impotently over the other,
-and simply hold the man's hands--yes, that was what he was doing--that
-was what felt so hot, so feverishly hot--those hands that laced their
-fingers so frantically around his.
-
-"My son,"--the words were coming by sheer force of will--"do not give
-way like this. Try and calm yourself. See"--he stooped, and, raising the
-other by the shoulders, drew him to the cot--"sit here, and----"
-
-"You will not go, father--you will not go?"--the man was passing his
-hands up and down Raymond's arms, patting them, caressing them, as
-though to assure and reassure himself that Raymond was there. "They told
-me that you were hurt, and--and I was afraid, for there is no one else,
-father--no one else--only--only you--and you are here now--you are here
-now--and--and you will stay with me, father?"
-
-"Yes," said Raymond numbly.
-
-"Yes, you are here"--it was as though the man were whispering to
-himself, and a smile had lighted up the wan face. "See, I am not afraid
-any more, for you have come. Monsieur Lemoyne said that I must die, that
-there was no hope any more, that--that I would have to be hanged, but
-you will not let them, father, you will not let them--for you have come
-now--you have come--Father Franois Aubert, my friend, you have come."
-
-Raymond's hand, resting on the cot behind the other's back, picked
-up and clenched a fold of blanket. There was something horrible,
-abominable, hellish in the man's trustful smile, in the man's faith,
-that was the faith of a child in the parent's omnipotence, in this man
-crying upon his own name as a magic talisman that would open to him
-the gates of life! What answer was there to make? He could not sit here
-dumb--and yet he could not speak. There were things a _priest_ should
-say--a priest who was here to comfort a man condemned to death, a man
-who was to be hanged by the neck until he was dead. He should talk to
-the other of God, of the tender mercy of God, of the life that was to
-come where there was no more death. But talk to the man like that--when
-he, Raymond, was sending the other to his doom; when the other, not he,
-should be sitting here in this _soutane_; when he had already robbed the
-man of his identity, and even at this moment purposed robbing him of his
-life! Act Father Franois Aubert to Father Franois Aubert here in this
-prison cell under the shadow of that dangling rope, tell him of God, of
-God's tender mercy, supplicate to God for that mercy, _pray_ with his
-lips for that mercy while he stabbed the man to death! He shivered, and
-it seemed as though his fingers would tear and rend through the blanket
-in the fierceness of their clutch--it was the one logical, natural thing
-that a priest should say, that he, in his priestly dress, should say!
-_No!_ He neither would nor could! It was hideous! No human soul could
-touch depths as black as that--and the man was clinging to him--clinging
-to him--and---
-
-"_Remember Valrie!_"--it came like a curling lash, that inner voice,
-curt, brutal, contemptuous. "Are you going to weaken again? Remember
-what it cost you once--and remember that it is for Valrie's sake this
-time!"
-
-The strong jaws set together. Yes--Valrie! Yes--he would remember. He
-would not falter now--he would go through with it, and have done with
-it. Between this man's life and a lifelong misery for Valerie there
-could be no hesitation.
-
-"Henri Mentone, my son," he said gravely, "I adjure you to be brave. I
-have come, it is true, and I will come often, but----"
-
-The words that Raymond's brain was stumbling, groping for, the
-"something," the "anything" to say, found no expression. The man
-suddenly appeared to be paying no attention; his head was turned in a
-tense, listening attitude; there was horror in the white face; and now
-the other's hands closed like steel bands around Raymond's wrists.
-
-"Listen!" whispered the man wildly. "Listen! Oh, my God--listen!"
-
-Startled, Raymond turned his head about, looking quickly around the
-cell. There was nothing--there was no sound.
-
-"Don't you hear it!"--the other's voice was guttural and choked now, and
-he shook fiercely at Raymond's wrists. "I thought it had gone away when
-you came, but there it is again. I--I thought you had told them to stop!
-Don't you hear it--don't you hear it! Don't you hear them _hammering!_
-Listen! Listen! There it is!"
-
-Raymond felt the blood ebb swiftly from his face.
-
-"No--try and compose yourself. There is nothing--nothing, my son--it is
-only---------"
-
-"I tell you, yes!" cried the man frantically. "I hear it! I hear it! You
-say, no; and I tell you, yes! I have heard it night and day. It comes
-from there--see!"--he swept one hand toward the barred window, and
-suddenly, leaping to his feet, dragged at Raymond with almost superhuman
-strength, forcing Raymond up from the cot and across the cell. "Come,
-and I will show you! It is out there! They are hammering out there now!"
-
-The man's face was ghastly, the frenzy with which he pulled was
-ghastly--and now at the window he thrust out his arm through the bars,
-far out up to the armpit, far out with horrible eagerness, and pointed.
-
-"There! There! You cannot see, but it is just around the corner of the
-building--between the building and the wall. You cannot see, but it is
-just around the corner there that they are building it! Listen to them!
-Listen to them--hammering--hammering--hammering!"
-
-Sweat was on Raymond's forehead.
-
-"Come away!" he said hoarsely. "In the name of God, come away!"
-
-"Ah, you hear it now!"--the condemned man drew in his arm, until his
-fingers clawed and picked at the bars. "They will not stop,
-and it is because I cannot remember--because I cannot
-remember--here--here--here"--he swung clear of the window--and suddenly
-raising his clenched fists began to beat with almost maniacal fury at
-his temples. "If I could remember, they would stop--they would----"
-
-"Henri! My son!" Raymond cried out sharply--and caught at the other's
-hands. A crimson drop had oozed from the man's bruised skin, and now was
-trickling down the colourless, working face. "You do not know what you
-are doing! Listen to me! Listen! Let me go!"--the man wrenched and
-fought furiously to break Raymond's hold. "They will not stop out
-there--they are hammering--don't you hear them hammering--and it is
-because I--I----" The snarl, the fury in the voice was suddenly a sob.
-The man was like a child again, helpless, stricken, chidden; and as
-Raymond's hands unlocked, the man reached out his arms and put them
-around Raymond's neck, and hid his face upon Raymond's shoulder.
-"Forgive me, father--forgive me!" he pleaded brokenly. "Forgive me--it
-is sometimes more than I can bear."
-
-Raymond's arms mechanically tightened around the shaking shoulders; and
-mechanically he drew the other slowly back to the cot. Something was
-gnawing at his soul until his soul grew sick and faint. Hell shrieked
-its abominable approval in his ears, as he sat down upon the cot still
-holding the other--and shrieked the louder, until the cell seemed to
-ring and ring again with its unholy mirth, as the man pressed his lips
-to the crucifix on Raymond's breast.
-
-"Father, I do not want to die"--the man spoke brokenly again. "They
-say I killed a man. How could I have killed a man, father? See"--he
-straightened back, and held out both his hands before Raymond's
-eyes--"see, father, surely these hands have never harmed any one. I
-cannot remember--I do not remember anything they say I did. Surely if I
-could remember, I could make them know that I am innocent. But I
-cannot remember. Father, must I die because I cannot remember? Must I,
-father"--the man's face was gray with anguish. "I have prayed to God
-to make me remember, father, and--and He does not answer--He does not
-answer--and I hear only that hammering--and sometimes in the night there
-is something that tightens and tightens around my throat, and--and it
-is horrible. Father--Father Franois Aubert--tell them to have pity upon
-me--you believe that I am innocent, don't you--you believe, father--yes,
-yes!"--he clutched at Raymond's shoulders--"yes, yes, yu believe--look
-into my eyes, look into my face--look, father--look----"
-
-Look! Look into that face, look into those eyes! He could not look.
-
-"My son, be still!"--the words were wrung in sudden agony from Raymond's
-lips.
-
-He drew the other's head to his shoulder again, and held the other
-there--that he might not look--that the eyes and the face might be
-hidden from him. And the form in his arms shook with convulsive sobs,
-and clung to him, and called him by its own name, and called him
-friend--this stricken man who was to die--for whom he, Raymond,
-was building "it" out there under the shadow of the jail
-wall--and--and--God, he too could hear that _hammering_
-and--"Fool, remember Valrie!"
-
-The sweat beads multiplied upon Raymond's forehead. His face was
-bloodless; his grip so tight upon the other that the man cried out, yet
-in turn but clung the closer. Yes, that voice was right--right--right!
-It was only that for the moment he was unnerved. It was this man's life
-for Valrie--this man's life for Valrie. It would only be a few days
-more, and then it would be over in a second, before even the man knew
-it--but with Valrie it would be for all of life, and there would be
-years and years--yes, yes, it was only that he had been unnerved for the
-instant--it was this man's life for Valrie--if he would give his own
-life, why shouldn't he give this man's--why shouldn't----
-
-His brain, his mind, his thoughts seemed suddenly to be inert, to be
-held in some strangely numbed, yet fascinated suspension. He was staring
-at the shaft of sunlight that fought for its right against those
-iron bars to enter this place of death. He stared and stared at
-it--something--a face--seemed to be emerging slowly out of the sunlight,
-to be taking form just beyond, just outside those iron bars, to become
-framed in the gray, pitiless stone of the window slit, to be pressed
-against those iron bars, to be looking in.
-
-And suddenly he pushed the man violently and without heed from him,
-until the man fell forward on the cot, and Raymond, lurching upward
-himself, stood rocking upon his feet. It was clear, distinct now,
-that face looking in through those iron bars. It was Valerie's
-face--Valerie's--Valerie's face. It was beautiful as he had never seen
-it beautiful before. The sweet lips were parted in a smile of infinite
-tenderness and pity, and the dark eyes looked out through a mist of
-compassion, not upon him, but upon the figure behind him on the prison
-cot. He reached out his arms. His lips moved silently--Valrie! And then
-she seemed to turn her head and look at him, and her eyes swam deeper
-in their tears, and there was a wondrous light of love in her face, and
-with the love a condemnation that was one of sorrow and of bitter pain.
-She seemed to speak; he seemed to hear her voice: "That life is not
-yours to give. I have sinned, my lover, in loving you. Is my sin to be
-beyond all forgiveness because out of my love has been born the guilt of
-murder?"
-
-The voice was gone. The face had faded out of that shaft of
-sunlight--only the iron bars were there now. Raymond's outstretched arms
-fell to his side--and then he turned, and dropped upon his knees beside
-the cot, and hid his face in his hands.
-
-Murder! Yes, it was murder--murder that desecrated, that vilified, that
-made a wanton thing of that pure love, that brave and sinless love,
-that Valerie had given him. And he would have linked the vilest and the
-blackest crime, hideous the more in the Judas betrayal with which he
-would have accomplished it, with Valerie--with Valerie's love! His
-hands, locked about his face, trembled. He was weak and nerveless in a
-Titanic revulsion of soul and mind and body. And horror was upon him, a
-horror of himself--and yet, too, a strange and numbed relief. It was not
-he, it was not he as he knew himself, who had meant to do this thing--it
-was not Raymond Chapelle who had thought and argued that this was the
-way. See! His soul recoiled, blasted, shrivelled now from before it! It
-was because his brain had been tormented, not to the verge of madness,
-but had been flung across that border-line for a space into the
-gibbering realms beyond where reason tottered and was lost.
-
-He was conscious that the man was sitting upright on the edge of the
-cot, conscious that the man's hands were plucking pitifully at the
-sleeve of his _soutane_, conscious that the man was pleading again
-hysterically: "Father, you will tell them that you know I am innocent.
-They will believe you, father--they will believe you. They say I did
-it, father, but I cannot remember, or--or, perhaps, I could make them
-believe me, too. You will not let me die, father--because--because I
-cannot remember. You will save me, father"--the man's voice was rising,
-passing beyond control--"Father Franois Aubert, for the pity of
-Christ's love, tell me that you will not let me die--tell me----"
-
-And then Raymond raised his head. His face was strangely composed.
-
-"Hush, my son"--he scarcely recognised his own voice--it was quiet, low,
-gentle, like one soothing a child. "Hush, my son, you will not die."
-
-"Father! Father Aubert!"--the man was lurching forward toward him; the
-white, hollow face was close to his; the burning deep-sunk eyes with
-a terrible hunger in them looked into his. "I will not die! I will not
-die! You said that, father? You said that?"
-
-"Hush!" Raymond's lips were dry, he moistened them with his tongue.
-"Calm yourself now, my son--you need no longer have any fear."
-
-A sob broke from the man's lips. His hands covered his face; he began to
-rock slowly back and forth upon the cot. He crooned to himself:
-
-"I will not die--I am to live--I will not die--I am to live...."
-
-And then suddenly, in a paroxysm of returning fear, he was on his feet,
-dragging Raymond up from his knees, and, catching at Raymond's crucifix,
-lifted it wildly to Raymond's lips.
-
-"Swear it, father!" he cried. "Swear it on the cross! Swear by God's
-holy Son that I will not die! Swear it on the blessed cross!"
-
-"I swear it," Raymond answered in a steady voice.
-
-There was no sound, no cry now--only a transfigured face, glad with a
-mighty joy. And then the man's hands went upward queerly, seeking his
-temples--and the swaying form lay in Raymond's arms.
-
-The man stirred after a moment, and opened his eyes.
-
-"Are you there, father--my friend?" he whispered.
-
-"Yes," Raymond said.
-
-The man's hold tightened, and he sighed like one over-weary who had
-found repose.
-
-And sitting there upon the edge of the cot, Raymond held the other
-in his arms--and the sunlight's shaft through the barred window grew
-shorter--and shadows crept into the narrow cell. At times there came
-low sobs; at times the man's hand was raised to feel and touch Raymond's
-face, at times to touch the crucifix on Raymond's breast. And then at
-last the other moved no more, and the breathing became deep and regular,
-and a peaceful smile came and lingered on the lips.
-
-And Raymond laid the other gently back upon the cot, and, crossing to
-the cell door, knocked softly upon it for the turnkey. And as the door
-was opened, he laid his finger across his lips.
-
-"He is asleep," he said. "Do not disturb him."
-
-"Asleep!"--the turnkey in amazement thrust his head inside the cell; and
-then he looked in wonder at Raymond. "Asleep--but Monsieur Lemoyne told
-me of the news when he went out. Asleep--after that! The man who never
-sleeps!"
-
-But Raymond only shook his head, and did not answer, and walked on down
-the corridor, and out into the courtyard. It was dusk now. He seemed to
-be moving purely by intuition. It was not the way--the man was to live.
-His mind was obsessed with that. It was not the way. There were two ways
-left--two out of the three.
-
-The turnkey, who had followed in respectful silence, spoke again as he
-opened the jail gates.
-
-"_Au revoir_, Monsieur le Cure"--he lifted his cap. "Monsieur le Cur
-will return to-morrow?"
-
-To-morrow! Raymond's hands fumbled with the halter, as he untied the
-horse. To-morrow! There were two ways left, and the time was short.
-To-morrow--what would to-morrow bring!
-
-"Perhaps," he said, unconscious that his reply had been long
-delayed--and found that he was speaking to closed gates, and that the
-turnkey was gone.
-
-And then Raymond smiled as he seated himself in the buckboard and drove
-away--the smile a curious twitching of the lips. The turnkey was a
-tactful man who would not intrude upon Monsieur le Cur's so easily
-understood sorrow for the condemned man!
-
-He drove on through the town, and turned into the St. Marleau road that
-wound its way for miles along the river's shore. And as he had driven
-slowly on his way to the jail, so he drove slowly on his return to the
-village, the horse left almost to guide itself and to set its own pace.
-
-The dusk deepened, and the road grew dark--it seemed fitting that the
-road should grow dark. There were two ways left. The jaws of the trap
-were narrowing--one of the three ways was gone. There were two left.
-Either he must stand in that other's place, and hang in that other's
-place; or run for it with what start he could, throw them off his trail
-if he could, and write from somewhere a letter that would exonerate
-the other and disclose the priest's identity---a letter to the Bishop
-unquestionably, if the letter was to be written at all, for the Bishop,
-not only because he knew the man personally and could at once establish
-his identity, but because, in the very nature of the case, with the life
-of one of his own curs at stake, the Bishop, above all other men,
-would have both the incentive and the power to act. Two ways! One was a
-ghastly, ignominious death, to hang by the neck until he was dead--the
-other was to be a fugitive from the law, to become a hunted, baited
-beast, fighting every moment with his wits for the right to breathe.
-There were two ways! One was death--one held a chance for life. And the
-time was short.
-
-It was the horse that turned of its own accord in past the church, and
-across the green to the _presbytre_.
-
-He left the horse standing there--Narcisse would come and get it
-presently--and went up the steps, and entered the house. The door of the
-front room was open, a light burned upon his desk. Along the hall, from
-the dining room, Madame Lafleur came hurrying forward smilingly.
-
-"Supper is ready, Monsieur le Cur," she called out cheerily. "Poor
-man, you must be tired--it was a long drive to take so soon after your
-illness, and before you were really strong again."
-
-"I am late," said Raymond; "that is the main thing, Madame Lafleur. I
-put you always, it seems, to a great deal of trouble."
-
-"Tut!" she expostulated, shaking her head at him as she smiled. "It
-is scarcely seven o'clock. Trouble! The idea! We did not wait for you,
-Monsieur le Cur, because Valrie had to hurry back to Madame Blondin.
-Madame Blondin is very, very low, Monsieur le Cur. Doctor Arnaud, when
-he left this afternoon, said that--but I will tell you while you are
-eating your supper. Only first--yes--wait--it is there on your desk.
-Monsieur Labbe sent it over from the station this afternoon--a
-telegram, Monsieur le Cur."
-
-A telegram! He glanced swiftly at her face. It told him nothing. Why
-should it!
-
-"Thank you," he said, and stepping into the front room, walked over to
-the desk, picked up the yellow-envelope, tore it open calmly, and read
-the message.
-
-His back was toward the door. He laid the slip of paper down upon the
-desk, and with that curious trick of his stretched out his hand in front
-of him, and held it there, and stared at it. It was steady--without
-tremor. It was well that it was so. He would need his nerve now. He had
-been quite right--the time was short. There remained--_one hour_. In
-an hour from now, on the evening train, Monsignor the Bishop, who was
-personally acquainted with Father Franois Aubert, would arrive in St.
-Marleau.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII--HOW RAYMOND BADE FAREWELL TO ST. MARLEAU
-
-|AN hour! There lay an hour between himself--and death. Primal,
-elemental, savage in its intensity, tigerish in its coming, there surged
-upon him the demand for life--to live--to fight for self-preservation.
-And yet how clear his brain was, and how swiftly it worked! Life! There
-lay an hour between himself--and death. The horse was still outside.
-The overalls, the old coat, the old hat belonging to the sacristan were
-still at his disposal in the shed. He would ostentatiously set out to
-drive to the station to meet the Bishop, hide the horse and buckboard in
-the woods just before he got there, change his clothes, run on the rest
-of the way, remain concealed on the far side of the tracks until the
-train arrived--and, as Monsignor the Bishop descended from one side of
-the train to the platform, he, Raymond, would board it from the other.
-There would then, of course, be no one to meet the Bishop. The Bishop
-would wait patiently no doubt for a while; then Labbe perhaps would
-manage to procure a vehicle of some sort, or the Bishop might even walk.
-Eventually, of course, it would appear that Father Aubert had set out
-for the station and had not since been seen--but it would be a good many
-hours before the truth began to dawn on any one. There would be alarm
-only at first for the _safety_ of the good, young Father Aubert--and
-meanwhile he would have reached Halifax, say One could not ask for a
-better start than that!
-
-Life! With the crisis upon him, his mind held on no other thing.
-Life--the human impulse to live and not to die! No other thing--but
-life! It was an hour before the train was due--he could drive to the
-station easily in half an hour. There was no hurry--but there was Madame
-Lafleur who, he was conscious, was watching him from the doorway--Madame
-Lafleur, and Madame Lafleur's supper. He would have need of food, there
-was no telling when he would have another chance to eat; and there was
-Madame Lafleur, too, to enlist as an unwitting accomplice.
-
-"Monsieur le Cur"--it was Madame Lafleur speaking a little timidly
-from the doorway--"it--it is not bad news that Monsieur le Cur has
-received?"
-
-"Bad news!" Raymond picked up the telegram, and, turning from the desk,
-walked toward her. "Bad news!" he smiled. "But on the contrary, my dear
-Madame Lafleur! I was thinking only of just what was the best thing to
-do, since it is now quite late, and I did not receive the telegram this
-afternoon, as I otherwise should had I not been away. Listen! Monsignor
-the Bishop, who is on his way"--Raymond glanced deliberately at the
-message--"yes, he says to Halifax--who then is on his way to Halifax,
-will stop off here this evening."
-
-Madame Lafleur was instantly in a flutter of excitement.
-
-"Oh, Monsieur le Cur!"--her comely cheeks grew rosy, and her eyes shone
-with pleasure. "Oh, Monsieur le Cur--Monsignor the Bishop! He will
-spend the night here?" she demanded eagerly.
-
-Raymond patted her shoulder playfully, as he led her toward the dining
-room.
-
-"Yes, he will spend the night here, Madame Lafleur"--it was strange that
-he could laugh teasingly, naturally. "But first, a little supper for
-a mere cur, eh, Madame Lafleur--since Monsignor the Bishop will
-undoubtedly have dined on the train."
-
-"Oh, Monsieur le Cur!" She shook her head at him.
-
-"And then," laughed Raymond, as he seated himself at the table, "since
-the horse is already outside, I will drive over to the station and meet
-him."
-
-He ate rapidly, and, strangely enough, with an appetite. Madame Lafleur
-bustled about him, quite unable to keep still in her excitement. She
-talked, and he answered her. He did not know what she said; his replies
-were perfunctory. There was an excuse to be made for going to the shed
-instead of getting directly into the buckboard and driving off. Madame
-Lafleur would undoubtedly and most naturally watch him off from the
-front door. But--yes, of course--that was simple--absurdly simple! Well
-then, another thing--it would mean at least a good hour to him if the
-village was not on tiptoe with expectancy awaiting the Bishop's arrival,
-and thus be ready to start out to discover what had happened to the
-good, young Father Aubert on the instant that the alarm was given; or,
-worse still, that any one, learning of the Bishop's expected arrival,
-should enthusiastically drive over to the station as a sort of
-self-appointed delegation of welcome, just a few minutes behind himself.
-In that case anything might happen. No, it would not do at all! Every
-minute of delay and confusion on the part of St. Marleau, and Labbe,
-and Madame Lafleur no less than the others, was priceless to him now. He
-remembered his own experience. It would take Labbe a long time to find
-a horse and wagon; and Madame Lafleur, on her part, would think nothing
-of a prolonged delay in his return--if he left her with the suggestion,
-that the train might be late! Well, there was no reason why he should
-not accomplish all this. So far, it was quite evident, since Madame
-Lafleur had had no inkling of what the telegram contained, that no one
-knew anything about it; and that Labbe, whom he was quite prepared
-to credit with being loose-tongued enough to have otherwise spread the
-news, had not associated the Bishop's official signature--with
-Monsignor the Bishop! It was natural enough. The telegram was signed
-simply--"Montigny"--not the Bishop of Montigny.
-
-He had eaten enough--he pushed back his chair and stood up.
-
-"I think perhaps, Madame Lafleur," he said reflectively, "that it would
-be as well not to say anything to any one until Monsignor arrives."
-He handed her the telegram. "It would appear that his visit is not an
-official one, and he may prefer to rest and spend a quiet evening. We
-can allow him to decide that for himself."
-
-Madame Lafleur adjusted her spectacles, and read the message.
-
-"But, yes, Monsieur le Cur," she agreed heartily. "Monsignor will tell
-us what he desires; and if he wishes to see any one in the village
-this evening, it will not be too late when you return. But, Monsieur le
-Cur"--she glanced at the clock--"hadn't you better hurry?"
-
-"Yes," said Raymond quickly; "that's so! I had!"
-
-Madame Lafleur accompanied him to the front door, carrying a lamp. At
-the foot of the steps Raymond paused, and looked back at her. It had
-grown black now, and there was no moon.
-
-"I'll run around to the shed and get a lantern," he called up to
-her--and, without waiting for a reply, hurried around the corner of the
-house.
-
-He laughed a little harshly, his lips were tightly set, as he reached
-the shed door, opened it, and closed it behind him. He struck a match,
-found and lighted a lantern, procured a small piece of string, tucked
-the sacristan's overalls, and the old coat and hat swiftly under his
-_soutane_--and a moment later was back beside the buckboard again.
-
-He tied the lantern in front of the dash-board, and climbed into the
-seat. Madame Lafleur was still standing in the doorway. He hesitated an
-instant, as he picked up the reins. The sweet, motherly old face smiled
-at him. A pang came and found lodgment in his heart. It was like that,
-standing there in the lamp-lit doorway of the _presbytre_, that he
-had seen her for the first time--as he saw her now for the last. He
-had grown to love the silver-haired little old lady with her heart of
-gold--and so he looked--and a mist came before his eyes, for this was
-his good-bye.
-
-"You will be back in an hour?" she called out. "You forget, Madame
-Lafleur"--he forced himself to laugh in the old playful, teasing
-way--"that the train is sometimes more than an hour late itself!"
-
-"Yes, that is true!" she said. "_Au revoir_, then, Monsieur le Cur!"
-
-He answered quietly.
-
-"Good-night, Madame Lafleur!"
-
-He drove out across the green, and past the church, and, a short
-distance down the road, where he could no longer be seen from the
-windows of the _presbytre_, he leaned forward and extinguished the
-lantern. He smiled curiously to himself. It was the only act that
-appeared at all in consonance with escape! He was a fugitive now, a
-fugitive for life--and a fugitive running for his life. It seemed as
-though he should be standing up in the buckboard, and lashing at the
-horse until the animal was flecked with foam, and the buckboard rocked
-and swayed with a mad speed along the road. Instead--he had turned off
-and was on the station road now--the horse was labouring slowly up the
-steep hill. It seemed as though there should be haste, furious haste,
-a wild abandon in his flight--that there should be no time to mark, or
-see, or note, as he was noting now, the twinkling lights of the quiet
-village nestling below him there along the river's shore. It seemed that
-his blood should be whipping madly through his veins--instead he was
-contained, composed, playing his last hand with the old-time gambler's
-nerve that precluded a false lead, that calculated deliberately,
-methodically, and with deadly coolness, the value of every card. And
-yet, beneath this nerve-imposed veneer, he was conscious of a thousand
-emotions that battered and seethed and raged at their barriers, and
-sought to fling themselves upon him and have him for their prey.
-
-He laughed coldly out into the night. It was not the fool who tore like
-a madman, boisterously, blindly, into the open that would escape! He
-had ample time. He had seen to that, even if he had appeared to accept
-Madame Lafleur's injunction to hurry. He need reach the station but
-a minute or so ahead of the train. Meanwhile, the minor details--were
-there any that he had overlooked? What about the _soutane_ and the
-clerical hat, for instance, after he had exchanged them for the
-sacristan's things? Should he hide them where he left the horse and
-buckboard in the woods? He shook his head after a moment. No; they
-would probably find the horse before morning, and they might find the
-_soutane_. There must be no trace of Father Aubert--the longer they
-searched the better. And then, more important still, when finally the
-alarm was spread, the description that would be sent out would be that
-of a man dressed as a priest. No; he would take them with him, wrap them
-up in a bundle around a stone, and somewhere miles away, say, throw them
-from the car into the water as the train crossed a bridge. So much for
-that! Was there anything else, anything that he----
-
-A lighted window glowed yellow in the darkness from a little distance
-away. He had come to the top of the rise. It was old Mother Blondin's
-cottage. He had meant to urge the horse into a trot once the level was
-gained--but instead the horse was forgotten, and the animal plodded
-slowly forward at the same pace at which it had ascended the hill.
-
-Raymond's eyes were fixed upon the light. Old Mother Blondin's
-cottage--and in that room, beyond that light, old Mother Blondin, the
-old woman on the hill, the _excommunie_, lay dying. And there was a
-shadow on the window shade--the shadow of one sitting in a chair--a
-woman's shadow--Valerie!
-
-He stopped the horse, and, sitting there in the buck-board opposite the
-cottage, he raised his hand slowly and took his hat from his head.
-
-"Go on--fool!"--with a snarl, vicious as the cut of a whip-lash, came
-that inner voice. "You may have time--but you have none to throw away!"
-
-"Be still!" answered Raymond's soul. "This is my hour. Be still!"
-
-Valerie! That shadow on the window he knew was Valerie--and within was
-that other shadow, the shadow of death. This was his good-bye to old
-Mother Blondin, who had drunk of the common cup with him, and knelt with
-him in the moonlit church, her hand in his, outcasts, sealing a most
-strange bond--and this was his good-bye to Valrie. Valrie--a shadow
-there on the window shade. That was all--a shadow--all that she could
-ever be, nothing more tangible in his life through the years to come, if
-there were years, than a shadow that did not smile, that did not speak
-to him, that did not touch his hand, or lift brave eyes to look
-into his. A shadow--that was all--a shadow. It was brutal, cruel,
-remorseless, yet immeasurably true in its significance, this
-good-bye--this good-bye to Valrie--a shadow.
-
-The shadow moved, and was gone; from miles away, borne for a great
-distance on the clear night air, came faintly the whistle of a
-train--and Raymond, springing suddenly erect, his teeth clenched
-together, snatched at the whip and laid it across the horse's back.
-
-The wagon lurched forward, and he staggered with the plunge and
-jerk--and his whip fell again. And he laughed now--no longer calm--and
-lashed the horse. It was not time that he was racing, there was ample
-time, the train was still far away; it was his thoughts--to outrun them,
-to distance them, to leave them behind him, to know no other thing than
-that impulse for life that alone until now so far this night had swayed
-him.
-
-And he laughed--and horse and wagon tore frantically along the road, and
-the woods were about him now, and it was black, black as the mouth of
-Satan's pit and the roadway to it were black. He was flung back into his
-seat--and he laughed at that. Life--and he had doddled along the road,
-preening himself on his magnificent apathy! Life--and the battle and
-the fight for it was the blood afire, reckless of fear and of odds, the
-laugh of defiance, the joy of combat, the clenched fist shaken in the
-face of hell itself! Life--in the mad rush for it was appeal! On! The
-wagon reeled like a drunken thing, and the wheels twisted in the ruts; a
-patch of starlight seeping through the branches overhead made a patch
-of gloom in the inky blackness underneath, and in this patch of gloom
-wavering tree trunks, like uncouth monsters as they flitted by, snatched
-at the wheel-hubs to wreck and overturn the wagon, but he was too quick
-for them, too quick--they always missed. On! Away from memory, away from
-those good-byes, away from every thought save that of life--life, and
-the right to live--life, and the fight to hurl that gibbet with its
-dangling rope a smashed and battered and splintered thing against the
-jail wall where they would strangle him to death and bury him in their
-cursed lime!
-
-On! Why did not the beast go faster! Were those white spots that danced
-before his eyes a lather of foam on the animal's flanks? On--along the
-road to life! Faster! Faster! It was not fast enough--for thoughts were
-swift, and they were racing behind him now in their pursuit, and coming
-closer, and they would overtake him unless he could go faster--faster!
-Faster, or they would be upon him, and--_a big and brave and loyal man_.
-
-A low cry, a cry of sudden, overmastering hurt, was drowned in the
-furious pound of the horse's hoofs, in the rattle and the creaking
-of the wagon, and in the screech and grinding of the wagon's jolt and
-swing. And, unconscious that he held the reins, unconscious that he
-tightened them, his hands, clenched, went upward to his face. There was
-no black road, no plunging horse, no mad, insensate rush, ungoverned and
-unguided, no wagon rocking demoniacally through the night--there was
-a woman who knelt in the aisle of a church, and in her arms she held a
-man, and across the shattered chancel rail there lay a mighty cross, and
-the shadow of the cross fell upon them both, and the woman's eyes were
-filled with tears, and she spoke: "A big and brave and loyal man."
-
-Tighter against his face he pressed his clenched hands, unconscious that
-the horse responded to the check and gradually slowed its pace. Valrie!
-The woman was Valerie--and he was the man! God, the hurt of it--the hurt
-of those words ringing now in his ears! She had given him her all--her
-love, her faith, her trust. And in return, he----
-
-The reins dropped from his hands, and his head bowed forward. Life!
-Yes, there was life this way for him--and for Valerie the bitterest of
-legacies. He would bequeath to her the belief that she had given her
-love not only to a felon but to a _coward._ A coward! And no man, he
-had boasted, had ever called him a coward. Pitiful boast! Life for
-himself--for Valerie the fuller measure of misery! Yes, he loved
-Valrie--he loved her with a traitor's and a coward's love!
-
-His lips were drawn together until they were bloodless. In retrospect
-his life passed swiftly, unbidden before him--and strewn on every hand
-was wreckage. And here was the final, crowning act of all--the coward's
-act--the coward afraid at the end to face the ruin he had, disdainful,
-callous, contemptuous then of consequence, so consistently wrought since
-boyhood! If he got away and wrote a letter it would save the man's life,
-it was true; but it was also true that he ran because he was cornered
-and at the end of his resources, and because what he might write would,
-in any case, be instantly discovered if he did not run--and to plead
-his own innocence in that letter, in the face of glaring proof to the
-contrary, in the face of the evidence he had so carefully budded against
-another, smacked only of the grovelling whine of the condemned wretch
-afraid. None would believe him. None! It was paltry, the police were
-inured to that; all criminals were eager to protest their innocence,
-and pule out their tale of extenuating circumstances. None would believe
-him. Valrie would not believe.
-
-Folds of his cheeks were gripped and crushed in his hands until
-the finger nails bit into the flesh. He _was_ innocent. He had not
-_murdered_ that scarred-faced drunken hound--only Valrie would neither
-believe nor know; and in Valrie's eyes he would stand a loathsome
-thing, and in her soul would be a horror, and a misery, and a shame that
-was measured only by the greatness and the depth of the love she had
-given him, for in that greatness and that depth lay, too, the greatness
-and the depth of that love's dishonour and that love's abasement. But
-if--but if----
-
-For a moment he did not stir or move, his eyes seeing nothing, fixed
-before him--and then steadily his head came up and poised far back on
-the broad, square shoulders, and the tight lips parted in a strange and
-sudden smile. If he drove to the station and met Monsignor the Bishop,
-and drove Monsignor the Bishop back to St. Marleau--then she would
-believe. No one else could or would believe him, the proof was
-irrefutable against him, they would convict him, and the sentence would
-be death; but she in her splendid love would believe him, and know that
-she had loved--a man. There had been three ways, but one had gone that
-afternoon; and then there had been two ways, but there was only one now,
-the man's way, for the other was the coward's way. And, taking this, he
-could lift his head and stand before them all, for in Valrie's face
-and in Valrie's eyes there would not be---what was worse than death. To
-save Valrie from what he could--not from sorrow, not from grief, that
-he could not do--but that she might know that her love had been given
-where it was held a sacred, a priceless and a hallowed thing, and was
-not outraged and was not degraded because it had been given to him! To
-save Valerie from what he could--to save himself in his own eyes from
-the self-abasing knowledge that through a craven fear he had bartered
-away his manhood and his self-respect, that through fear he ran, and
-that through fear he hid, and that through fear, though he was innocent,
-he dared not stand--a man!
-
-He stopped the horse, and stepped down to the ground; and, searching
-for a match, found one, and lighted the lantern where it hung upon the
-dash-board. He was calm now, not with that calmness desperately imposed
-by will and nerve, but with a calmness that was like to--peace. And,
-standing there, the lantern light fell upon him, and gleamed upon the
-crucifix upon his breast. And he lifted the crucifix, and, wondering,
-held it in his hand, and looked at it. It was here in these woods and on
-this road that he had first hung it about his neck in insolent and bald
-denial of the Figure that it bore. It was very strange! He had meant it
-then to save his life; and now--he let it slip gently from his fingers,
-and climbed back into the buckboard--and now it seemed, as though
-strengthening him in the way he saw at last, in the way he was to take,
-as though indeed it were the way itself, came radiating from it, like a
-benediction, a calm and holy--peace.
-
-And there was no more any turmoil.
-
-And he picked up the reins and drove on along the road.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII--MONSIGNOR THE BISHOP
-
-|THE train had come and gone, as Raymond reached the station platform.
-He had meant it so. He had meant to avoid the lights from the car
-windows that would have illuminated the otherwise dark platform; to
-avoid, if possible, a disclosure in Labbe's, the station agent's,
-presence. Afterwards, Labbe would know, as all would know--but not now.
-It was not easy to tell; the words perhaps would not come readily even
-when alone with Monsignor the Bishop, as they drove back together to the
-village.
-
-There were but two figures on the platform--Labbe, who held a satchel
-in his hand; and a tall, slight form in clerical attire.
-
-"Ah, Father Aubert--_salut!_" Labbe called out. "You are late; but we
-saw your light coming just as the train pulled out, and so----"
-
-"Well, well, Franois, my son!"--it was a rich, mellow voice that broke
-in on the station agent.
-
-Raymond stood up and lifted his hat--lifted it so that it but shaded his
-face the more.
-
-"Monsignor!" he said, in a low voice. "This is a great honour."
-
-"Honour!" the Bishop responded heartily. "Why should I not come, I--but
-do I sit on this side?"--he had stepped down into the buckboard, as he
-grasped Raymond's hand.
-
-"Yes, Monsignor"--Raymond's wide-brimmed clerical hat was far over his
-eyes. The lantern on the front of the dash-board left them in shadow;
-Labbe's lantern for the moment was behind them, as the station agent
-stowed the Bishop's valise under the seat. He took up the reins, and
-with an almost abrupt "goodnight" to the station agent, started the
-horse forward along the road.
-
-"Good-night!" Labbe shouted after them. "Goodnight, Monsignor!"
-
-"Good-night!" the Bishop called back--and turned to Raymond. "Yes, as I
-was saying," he resumed, "why should I not come? I was passing through
-St. Marleau in any case. I have heard splendid things of my young
-friend, the cur, here. I wanted to see for myself, and to tell him how
-pleased and gratified I was."
-
-"You are very good, Monsignor," Raymond answered, his voice still low
-and hurried.
-
-"Excellent!" pursued the Bishop. "Most excellent! I do not know when
-I have been so pleased over anything. The parish perhaps"--he laughed
-pleasantly--"would not object if Father Allard prolonged his holiday a
-little--eh--Franois, my son?"
-
-Raymond shook his head.
-
-"Hardly that, Monsignor"--he dared indulge in little more than
-monosyllables--it was even strange the Bishop had not already noticed
-that his voice was not the voice of Father Franois Aubert. And yet what
-did it matter? In a moment, in five minutes, in half an hour, the Bishop
-would know all--he would have told the Bishop all. Why should he strive
-now to keep up a deception that he was voluntarily to acknowledge almost
-the next instant? It was not argument in his mind, not argument again
-that brought indecision and chaotic hesitancy, it was not that--the way
-was clear, there was only one way, the way that he would take--? and
-yet, perhaps because it was so very human, because perhaps he sought
-for still more strength, because perhaps it was so almost literally the
-final, closing act of his life, he waited and clung to that moment more,
-and to that five minutes more.
-
-"Well, well," said the Bishop happily, "we will perhaps have to look
-around and see if we cannot find for you a parish of your own, my son.
-And who knows--eh--perhaps we have already found it?"
-
-How queerly the lantern jerked its rays up and down the horse's legs,
-and cast its shadows along the road! He heard himself speaking again.
-
-"You are very good, Monsignor"--they were the same words with which he
-had replied before--he uttered them mechanically.
-
-He felt the Bishop's hand close gently, yet firmly, upon his shoulder.
-
-"Franois, my son"--the voice had suddenly become grave--"what is the
-matter? You act strangely. Your voice does not somehow seem natural--it
-is very hoarse. You have a cold perhaps, or perhaps you are ill?"
-
-"No, Monsignor--I am not ill."
-
-"Then--but, you alarm me, my son!" exclaimed the Bishop anxiously.
-"Something has happened?"
-
-"Yes, Monsignor--something has happened."
-
-How curiously his mind seemed to be working! He was conscious that the
-Bishop's hand remained in kindly pressure on his shoulder as though
-inviting his confidence, conscious that the man beside him maintained a
-sympathetic, tactful silence, waiting for him to speak; but his thoughts
-for the moment now were not upon the immediate present, but upon the
-immediate afterwards when his story had been told.
-
-The buckboard rattled on along the road; it entered the wooded
-stretch--and still went on. When he had told this man beside him all,
-they would drive into the village. Then presently they would set out for
-Tournayville, and Monsieur Dupont, and the jail. But before that--there
-was Valrie. He turned his head still further away--even in
-the blackness his face must show its ashen whiteness. There was
-Valrie--Valrie who would believe--but Valrie who was to suffer, and
-to know agony and sorrow--and he, who loved her, must look into her face
-and see the smile die out of it, and the quiver come to her lips, and
-see her eyes fill, while with his own hands he dealt her the blow,
-which, soften it as he would, must still strike her down. It was the
-only way--the way of peace. It seemed most strange that peace should lie
-in that black hour ahead for Valrie and for himself--that peace should
-lie in death--and yet within him, quiet, undismayed, calm and untroubled
-in its own immortal truth, was the knowledge that it was so.
-
-Raymond lifted his head suddenly--through the-trees there showed the
-glimmer of a light--as it had showed that other night when he had walked
-here in the storm. Had they come thus far--in silence! Involuntarily he
-stopped the horse. It was the light from old Mother Blondin's cottage,
-and here was the spot where he had stumbled that night over the priest
-whom he had thought dead, as the other lay sprawled across the road.
-It was strange again--most strange! He had not deliberately chosen this
-spot to tell----
-
-"Franois, my son--what is it?"--the Bishop's voice was full of deep
-concern.
-
-For a moment Raymond did not move, and he did not speak. Then he laid
-down the reins, and, leaning forward, untied the lantern from the
-dash-board--and, taking off his hat, held up the lantern between them
-until the light fell full upon his face.
-
-There was a quick and startled cry from the Bishop, and then for an
-instant--silence. And Raymond looked into the other's face, even as the
-other looked into his. It was a face full of dignity and strength and
-quiet, an aged, kindly face, crowned with hair that was silver-white;
-but the blue eyes that spoke of tranquillity were widened now in
-amazement, surprise and consternation.
-
-And then the Bishop spoke.
-
-"Something has happened to Franois," he said, in a hesitant, troubled
-way, "and you have come from Tournayville to take his place perhaps, or
-perhaps to--to be with him. Is it as serious as that--and you were loath
-to break the news, my son? And yet--and yet I do not understand. The
-station agent said nothing to indicate that anything was wrong, though
-perhaps he might not have heard; and he called you Father Aubert,
-though, too, that possibly well might be, for it was dark, and I myself
-did not see your face. My son, I fear that I am right. Tell me, then!
-You are a priest from Tournayville, or from a neighbouring parish?"
-
-"I am not a priest," said Raymond steadily.
-
-The Bishop drew back sharply, as though he had been struck a blow.
-
-"Not a priest--and in those clothes!"
-
-"No, Monsignor."
-
-The fine old face grew set and stern.
-
-"And Francois Aubert, then--_where is Father Francois Aubert?_"
-
-"Monsignor"--Raymond's lips were white--"he is in the condemned cell at
-Tournayville--under sentence of death--he is----"
-
-"Condemned--to death! Franois Aubert--condemned to death!"--the Bishop
-was grasping with one hand at the back of the seat. And then slowly,
-still grasping at the seat, he pulled himself up and stood erect, and
-raised his other hand over Raymond in solemnity and adjuration. "In the
-name of God, what does this mean? Who are you?"
-
-"I am Raymond Chapelle," Raymond answered--and abruptly lowered the
-lantern, and a twisted smile of pain gathered on his lips. "You have
-heard the name, Monsignor--all French Canada has heard it." The Bishop's
-hand dropped heavily to his side.
-
-"Yes, I have heard it," he said sternly. "I have heard that it was a
-proud name dishonoured, a princely fortune dissolutely wasted. And you
-are Raymond Chapelle, you say! I have heard this much, that you had
-disappeared, but after that----"
-
-Raymond put his head down into his hands, and drew his hands tightly
-across his face.
-
-"This is the end of the story," he said. "Listen, Monsignor"--he raised
-his head again. "You have heard, too, of the murder of Thophile Blondin
-that was committed here a little while ago. It is for that murder that
-Franois Aubert was tried, found guilty, and sentenced to be hanged."
-He paused an instant, his lips tight. "Monsignor, it is I who killed
-Thophile Blondin. It is I who, since that night, have lived here as the
-cur--as Father Franois Aubert."
-
-How ghastly white the aged face was! As ghastly as his own must be! The
-other's hands were gripping viselike at his shoulders.
-
-"Are you mad!" the Bishop whispered hoarsely. "Do you know what you are
-saying!"
-
-"I know"--there was a sort of unnatural calm and finality in Raymond's
-tones now. "I was on the train the night that Father Aubert came to St.
-Marleau. I had a message for the mother of a man who was killed in the
-Yukon, Monsignor. The mother lived here. There was a wild storm that
-night. There was no wagon to be had, and we both walked from the
-station. But I did not walk with the priest. You, who have heard
-of Raymond Chapelle, know why--I despised a priest--I knew no God.
-Monsignor"--he turned and pointed suddenly--"you see that light through
-the trees? It is the light I saw that night, as I stumbled over the body
-of a man lying here in the road. The man was Father Aubert. The limb of
-a tree had fallen and struck him on the head. I thought him dead. I went
-over to that house for help."
-
-He paused again. The Bishop's hands, withdrawn,* were clasped now upon a
-golden crucifix--it was like his own crucifix, only it was larger, much
-larger than his own. But the Bishop's white face was still close to his;
-and the blue eyes seemed to have grown darker, and were upon him in a
-fixed, tense way, as though to read his soul.
-
-"And then?"--he saw the Bishop's lips move, he did not hear the Bishop
-speak.
-
-At times the horse moved restively; at times there came the chirping of
-insects from the woods; at times a breeze stirred and whispered through
-the leaves. Raymond, staring at the yellow flicker of the lantern, set
-now upon the floor of the buckboard at their feet, spoke on, in his
-voice that same unnatural calm. It seemed almost as though he himself
-were listening to some stranger speak. It was the story of that night he
-told, the story of the days and nights that followed, the story of old
-Mother Blondin, the story of the cross, the story of the afternoon in
-the condemned cell, the story of his ride for liberty of an hour ago,
-the story of his sacrilege and his redemption--the story of all, without
-reservation, save the story of Valrie's love, for that was between
-Valrie and her God.
-
-And when he had done, a silence fell between them and endured for a
-great while.
-
-And then Raymond looked up at last to face the condemnation he thought
-to see in the other's eyes--and found instead that the silver hair was
-bare of covering, and that the tears were flowing unchecked down the
-other's cheeks.
-
-"God's ways are beyond all understanding"--the Bishop seemed to be
-speaking to himself. He brushed the tears now from his cheeks, as he
-looked at Raymond. "It is true there is not any proof, and without proof
-that it was in self-defence, then----"
-
-"It is the end," said Raymond simply--and, standing up, took the
-sacristan's old coat from under his _soutane_. "We will drive to the
-village, Monsignor; and then, if you will, to the jail in Tournayville."
-Slowly he unbuttoned his _soutane_ from top to bottom, and took it off,
-and laid it over the back of the seat; and, standing there erect,
-his face white, his eyes half closed, like a soldier in unconditional
-surrender, he unclasped the crucifix from around his neck, and held it
-out to the Bishop--and bowed his head.
-
-He felt the Bishop's hands close over his, and over the crucifix, and
-gently press it back.
-
-"Cling to it, my son"--the Bishop's voice was broken. "It is yours,
-for you have found it--and, with it, pardon, and the faith that is more
-precious than life, than the life you are offering to surrender now. It
-seems as though it were God's mysterious way, the hand of God--the hand
-of God that would not let you lose your soul. And now, my son, kneel
-down, for I would pray for a brave man."
-
-A quiet pressure upon his shoulders brought Raymond to his knees. His
-eyes, were wet; he covered his face with his hands.
-
-"Father, have mercy upon us"--the Bishop's voice was tremulous and low.
-"Lord, have mercy upon us. Look down in pity upon this man whom Thou
-hast brought unto Thyself, and who now in expiation of his past offences
-offers his life that another may not die. Father, grant us Thy divine
-mercy. Father, show us the way, if there be a way, and if it be Thy
-will, that he may not drink of this final cup; and if that may not be,
-then in Thy love continue unto him the strength Thou gavest him to bring
-him thus far upon his road."
-
-And silence fell again between them. And there was a strange gladness in
-Raymond's heart that this man, where he had thought no man would, should
-have believed. It altered no fact, the cold and brutal evidence, clear
-cut before a jury would not be a scene such as this, for the evidence in
-the light of logic and before the law would say he _lied_; it held out
-no hope, he knew that well--but it brought peace again. And so he rose
-from his knees, and feeling out blindly for the old sacristan's coat,
-put it on, and spoke to the horse, and the buckboard moved forward.
-
-And a little way along, just around the turn of the road, they came out
-of the woods in front of old Mother Blondin's cottage. And standing by
-the roadside in the darkness was a figure. And a voice called out:
-
-"Is that you, Father Aubert? I went to the _presbytre_ for you, and
-mother said you had gone to meet Monsignor. I have been waiting here to
-catch you on the way back."
-
-It was Valrie.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV--THE OLD WOMAN ON THE HILL
-
-|SHE came forward toward the buckboard, and into the lantern light--and
-stopped suddenly, looking from Raymond to the Bishop in a bewildered and
-startled way.
-
-"Why--why, Father Aubert," she stammered, "I--I hardly knew you in that
-coat. I--Monsignor"--she bent her knee reverently--"I"--her eyes were
-searching their faces--"I---"
-
-Raymond's eyes fixed ahead of him, and he was silent. Valrie! Ay, it
-was the end! He had thought to see her before they should take him to
-Tournayville--but he had thought to see her alone. And even then he had
-not known what he should say to her--what words to speak--or whether
-she should know from him his love. He was conscious that the Bishop was
-fumbling with his crucifix, as though loath to take the initiative upon
-himself.
-
-It was Valrie who spoke--hurriedly, as though in a nervous effort to
-bridge the awkward silence.
-
-"Mother Blondin became conscious a little while ago. She asked for
-Father Aubert, and--and begged for the Sacrament. I ran down to the
-_presbytre_, and when mother told me that Monsignor was coming I---I
-brought back the bag that my uncle, Father Allard, takes with him to--to
-the dying. Oh, Monsignor, I thought that perhaps--perhaps--she is an
-_excommunie_, Monsignor--but she is a penitent. And when I got back she
-was unconscious again, and then I came down here to wait by the side of
-the road so that I would not miss you, for Madame Bouchard is there, and
-she was to call me if--if there was any change. And so--and so--you will
-go to her, Monsignor, will you not--and Father Aubert--and--and----" Her
-lips quivered suddenly, for Raymond's white face was lifted now, and his
-eyes met hers. "Oh, what is the matter?" she cried out in fear. "Why
-do you look like that, Father Aubert--and why do you wear that coat,
-and----"
-
-"My daughter"--the Bishop's grave voice interrupted her. He rose from
-his seat, and, moving past Raymond, stepped to the ground. "My daughter,
-Father Aubert is---"
-
-"No!"--Raymond, too, had stepped to the ground. "No, Monsignor"--his
-voice caught, then was steadied as he fought fiercely for
-self-control--"I will tell her, Monsignor."
-
-How clearly her face was defined in the lantern light, how pure it was,
-and, in its purity, how far removed from the story that he had to tell!
-And how beautiful it was, even in its startled fear and wonder--the
-sweet lips parted; the dark eyes wide, disturbed and troubled, as they
-held upon his face.
-
-"Father Aubert!"--it was a quick cry, but low, and one of apprehension.
-
-"Mademoiselle Valrie"--the words came slowly; it seemed as though his
-soul faltered now, and had not strength to say this thing--"I am not
-Father Aubert."
-
-She did not move. She repeated the words with long pauses between,
-as though she groped dazedly in her mind for their meaning and
-significance.
-
-"You--are--not--Father--Aubert?"
-
-The Bishop, hands clasped behind his back, his head bowed, had withdrawn
-a few paces out of the lantern light toward the rear of the buckboard.
-Raymond's hands closed and gripped upon the wheel-tire against which
-he stood--closed tighter and tighter until it seemed the tendons in his
-hand must snap.
-
-"Father Aubert is the man you know as Henri Mentone"--his eyes were upon
-her hungrily, pleading, searching for some sign, a smile, a gesture
-of sympathy that would help him to go on--and her hands were clasped
-suddenly, wildly to her bosom. "When you came upon me in the road that
-night I had just changed clothes with him. I--I was trying to escape."
-
-She closed her eyes. Her face became a deathly white, and she swayed a
-little on her feet.
-
-"You--you are not a--a priest?"
-
-He shook his head.
-
-"It was the only way I saw to save my life. He had been struck by the
-falling limb of a tree. I thought that he was dead."
-
-"To save your life?"--she spoke with a curious, listless apathy, her
-eyes still closed.
-
-"It was I," he said, "not Father Aubert, who fought with Thophile
-Blondin that night."
-
-Her eyes were open wide now--wide upon him with terror.
-
-"It was you--_you_ who killed Thophile Blondin?"--her voice was dead,
-scarce above a whisper.
-
-"I caught him in the act of robbing his mother--I had gone to the house
-for help after finding Father Aubert"--Raymond's voice grew passionate
-now in its pleading. He must make her believe! He must make her believe!
-It was the one thing left to him--and to her. "It was in self-defence.
-He sprang at me, and we fought. And afterwards, when he snatched up the
-revolver from the _armoire_, it went off in his own hand as I struggled
-to take it from him. But I could not prove it. Every circumstance
-pointed to premeditated theft on my part--and murder. And--and my life
-before that was--was a ruined life that would but--but make conviction
-certain if I were found there. My only chance lay in getting away. But
-there was no time--nowhere to go. And so--and so I ran back to where
-Father Aubert lay, and put on his clothes, meaning to gain a few hours'
-time that way, and in the noise of the storm I did not hear you coming
-until it was too late to run."
-
-How mercilessly hard her hands seemed to press at her bosom!
-
-"I--I do not understand"--it was as though she spoke to herself. "There
-was another--a man who, with Jacques Bourget, tried to have Henri--Henri
-Mentone escape."
-
-"It was I," said Raymond. "I took Narcisse Plude's old clothes from the
-shed."
-
-She cried out a little--like a sharp and sudden moan, it was, as from
-unendurable pain.
-
-"And then--and then you lived here as--as a priest."
-
-"Yes," he answered.
-
-"And--and to-night?"--her eyes were closed again.
-
-"To-night," said Raymond, and turned away his head, "to-night I am going
-to--to Tournayville."
-
-"To your death"--it was again as though she were speaking to herself.
-
-"There is no other way," he said. "I thought there was another way.
-I meant at first to escape to-night when I learned that Monsignor was
-coming. I took this coat, Narcisse Plude's old clothes from the shed
-again, the clothes I wore the night I went to Jacques Bourget, and
-I meant to escape on the train. But"--he hesitated now, groping
-desperately for words--he could not tell her of that ride along the
-road; he had no right to tell her of his love, he saw that now, he had
-no right to tell her that, to make it the harder, the more cruel for
-her; he had no right to trespass on his knowledge of her love for him,
-to let her glean from any words of his a hint of that; he had the right
-only, for her sake and for his own, that, in her eyes and in her soul,
-the stain of murder and of theft should not rest upon him--"but"--the
-words seemed weak, inadequate--"but I could not go. Instead, I gave
-myself up to Monsignor. Mademoiselle"--how bitterly full of irony was
-that word--mademoiselle--mademoiselle to Valrie--like a gulf
-between them--mademoiselle to Valrie, who was dearest in life to
-him--"Mademoiselle Valrie"--he was pleading again, his soul in
-his voice--"it was in self-defence that night. It was that way that
-Thophile Blondin was killed. I could not prove it then, and--and the
-evidence is even blacker against me now through the things that I have
-done in an effort to escape. But--but it was in that way that Thophile
-Blondin was killed. The law will not believe. I know that. But
-you--you--" his voice broke. The love, the yearning for her was rushing
-him onward beyond self-control, and near, very near to his lips,
-struggling and battling for expression, were the words he was praying
-God now for the strength not to speak.
-
-She did not answer him. She only moved away. Her white face was set
-rigidly, and the dark eyes that had been full upon him were but a blur
-now, for she was moving slowly backward, away from him, toward where
-the Bishop stood. And she passed out of the lantern light and into the
-shadows. And in the shadows her hand was raised from her bosom and was
-held before her face--and it seemed as though she held it, as she had
-held it in the dream of that Walled Place; that she held it, as she had
-held it to shut out the sight of his face from her, as she had closed
-upon him that door with its studded spikes. And like a stricken man he
-stood there, gripping at the buckboard's wheel. She did not believe him.
-Valrie did not believe him! There was agony to come, black depths of
-torment yawning just before him when the numbness from the blow had
-passed--but now he was stunned. She did not believe him! That man there,
-whom he had thought would turn with bitter words upon him, had believed
-him--but Valrie--Valrie--Valrie did not believe him! Ay, it was the
-end! The agony and the torment were coming now. It was the dream come
-true. The studded gate clanged shut, and the horror, without hope,
-without smile, without human word, of that Walled Place with its slimy
-walls was his, and, over the shrieking of those winged and hideous
-things, that swaying carrion seemed to scream the louder: "_Dies ilia,
-dies iro_--that day, a day of wrath, of wasting, and of misery, a great
-day, and exceeding bitter."
-
-He did not move. Through that blur and through the shadows he watched
-her, watched her as she reached the Bishop, and sank down upon the
-ground, and clasped her hands around the Bishop's knees. And then he
-heard her speak--and it seemed to Raymond that, as though stilled by a
-mighty uplift that swept upon him, the beating of his heart had ceased.
-
-"Monsignor!" she cried out piteously. "Monsignor! Monsignor! It is true
-that they will not believe him! I was at the trial, Monsignor, I know
-the evidence, and I know that they will not believe him. He is going
-to--to his--death--to save that man. Oh, Monsignor--Monsignor, is there
-no other way?"
-
-Slowly, mechanically, as slowly as she had retreated from him, Raymond
-moved toward the kneeling figure. The Bishop was speaking now--he had
-laid his hands upon her head.
-
-"My daughter," he said gently, "what other way would you have him take?
-It is a brave man's way, and for that I honour him; but it is more, it
-is the way of one who has come out of the darkness into the light,
-and for that my heart is full of thankfulness to God. It is the way of
-atonement, not for any wrong he has done the church, for he could do the
-church no wrong, for the church is pure and holy and beyond the reach of
-any human hand or act to soil, for it is God's church--but atonement to
-God for those sins of sacrilege and unbelief that lay between himself
-and God alone. And so, my daughter, if in those sins he has been brought
-to see and understand, and in his heart has sought and found God's
-pardon and forgiveness, he could do no other thing than that which he
-has done to-night." The Bishop's voice had faltered; he brushed his hand
-across his cheek as though to wipe away a tear. "It is God's way, my
-daughter. There could be no other way."
-
-She rose to her feet, her face covered by her hands.
-
-"No other way"--the words were lifeless on her lips, save that they were
-broken with a sob. And then, suddenly, she drew herself erect, and there
-was a pride and a glory in the poise of her head, and her voice rang
-clear and there was no tremor in it, and in it was only the pride and
-only the glory that was in the head held high, and in the fair, white,
-uplifted face. "Listen, Monsignor! I thought he was a priest, and
-I promised God that he should never know--but to-night all that is
-changed. Monsignor, does it matter that he has no thought of me! He is
-going to his death, Monsignor, and he shall not face this alone because
-I was ashamed and dared not speak. I love him, Monsignor--I love him,
-and I believe him, and---"
-
-"_Valrie!_" Raymond's hands reached out to her. Weak he was. It seemed
-as though in his knees there was no strength. "Valrie!" he cried, and
-stumbled toward her.
-
-And she put out her hand and held him back for an instant as her eyes
-searched his face--and then into hers there came a wondrous light.
-
-"I did not know," she whispered. "I did not know you cared."
-
-His arms were still outstretched, and now she came into them, and for
-a moment she lifted her face to his, and, for a moment that was glad
-beyond all gladness, he drank with his lips from her lips and from the
-trembling eyelids. And then the tears came, and she was sobbing on his
-breast, and with her arms tight about his neck she clung to him--and
-closer still his own arms enwrapped her--and he forgot--and he
-forgot--_that it was only for a moment_.
-
-And so he held her there, his face buried in the dark, soft masses
-of her hair--and he forgot. And then out of this forgetfulness, this
-transport of blinding joy, there came a voice, low and shaken with
-emotion--the Bishop's voice.
-
-"There is some one calling from the house."
-
-Raymond lifted up his head. A woman's figure was framed in the now open
-and lighted doorway of the cottage. It was Madame Bouchard; and now he
-heard Madame Bouchard as she called again.
-
-"Valerie! Father Aubert! Come! Come quickly! Madame Blondin is conscious
-again, but she is very weak."
-
-He drew his breath in sharply as one in bitter pain, and then gently he
-took Valerie's arms from about him, and his shoulders squared. He had
-had his moment. This was reality now. He heard Valrie cry out, and saw
-her run toward the cottage.
-
-"Monsignor," he said hoarsely, and, moving back, lifted the _soutane_
-from the buckboard's seat, "Monsignor, she must not know--and she
-has asked for me. It is for her sake, Monsignor--that she be not
-disillusioned in her death, and lose the faith that she has found
-again. Monsignor, it is for the last time, not to perform any office,
-Monsignor, for you will do that, but that she may not die in the belief
-that God, through me, has only mocked her at the end."
-
-"I understand, my son," the Bishop answered simply. "Put it on--and
-come."
-
-And so Raymond put on the _soutane_ again, and they hurried toward the
-cottage. And at the doorway Madame Bouchard courtesied in reverence to
-the Bishop, and Raymond heard her say something about the horse, and
-that she would remain within call; and then they passed on into Mother
-Blondin's room.
-
-It was a bare room, poor and meagre in its furnishings--a single rag mat
-upon the floor; a single chair, and upon the chair the black bag that
-Valerie had brought from the _presbytre_; and beside the rough wooden
-bed, made perhaps by the Grandfather Bouchard in the old carpenter shop
-by the river bank, was a small table, and upon the table a lamp, and
-some cups with pewter spoons laid across their tops.
-
-Extraneous things, these details seemed to Raymond to have intruded
-themselves upon him as by some strange and vivid assertiveness of their
-own, for he was not conscious that he had looked about him--that he had
-looked anywhere but at that white and pitifully sunken face that was
-straining upward from the pillows, and at Valrie who knelt at the
-bedside and supported old Mother Blondin in her arms.
-
-"Quick!" Valerie cried anxiously. "Give her a teaspoonful from that
-first cup on the table. She has been trying to say something, and--and
-I do not understand. Oh, be quick! It is something about that man in the
-prison."
-
-The old woman's head bobbed jerkily, as though she fought for strength
-to hold it up; the eyes, half closed, were dulled; and she struggled,
-gasping, for her breath.
-
-"Yes--the prison--the man"--the words were almost inarticulate. Raymond,
-beside her now, was holding the spoonful of stimulant to her lips.
-She swallowed it eagerly. "I--I lied--I lied--at the trial. Hold
-me--tighter. Do not let me--go. Not yet--not--not until----" Her body
-seemed to straighten, then wrench backward, and her eyes closed, and her
-voice died away.
-
-Raymond felt the Bishop's hand close tensely on his shoulder.
-
-"What is this she says, my son?"
-
-Raymond shook his head.
-
-"I do not know," he said huskily.
-
-The eyes opened again, clearer now--and recognition came into them as
-they met Raymond's. And there came a smile, and she reached out her hand
-to him.
-
-"You, father--I--I was afraid you would not come in time. I--I am
-stronger now. Give Valerie the cup, and kneel, father--don't you
-remember--like that night in the church--and hold my hand--and--and do
-not let it go because--because then I--I should be afraid that God--that
-God would not forgive."
-
-He took her hand between both his own, and knelt beside the bed.
-
-"I will not let it go," he said--and tried to keep the choking from his
-throat. "What is it that you want to say--Mother Blondin?"
-
-Her fingers twined over his, and clung tighter and tighter.
-
-"That man, father--he--he must not hang. I--I cannot go to God with that
-on my soul. I lied at the trial--I lied. I hated God then. I wanted only
-revenge because my son was dead. I said I recognised him again,
-but--but that is not true, for the light was low, and--and I do not see
-well--but--but that--that does not matter, father--it is not that--for
-it must have been that man. But it was not that man who--who tried to
-rob me--it--it was my own son. That man is innocent--innocent--I tell
-you--I----" She raised herself wildly up in bed. "Why do you look at
-me like that, Father Aubert--with that white face--is it too late--too
-late--and--and--will God not forgive?"
-
-"It is not too late. Go on, Mother Blondin"--it was his lips that formed
-the words; it was not his voice, it could not be--that quiet voice
-speaking so softly.
-
-Her face grew calmer. The fear was gone.
-
-"It is not too late--it is not too late--and--and God will forgive," she
-whispered. "Listen then, father--listen, and pray for me. I--I was sure
-Thophile had been robbing me. I watched behind the door that night.
-I saw him go to take the money. And--and then that man came in, and
-Thophile rushed at him with a stick of wood. The man had--had done
-nothing. It was in self-defence he fought. And then I--I helped
-Thophile. It was Thophile who took the revolver to kill him,
-and--and--it went off in Thophile's hand, and----" she sighed heavily,
-and sank back on the pillow.
-
-The room seemed to sway before Raymond--and
-
-Valrie's face, across the bed, seemed to move slowly before him with
-a pendulum-like movement, and her face was very white, and in it was
-wonder, and a great dawning hope, and awe. And he put his head down upon
-the coverlet, but his hands still held old Mother Blondin's hand between
-them.
-
-And then she spoke again, with greater difficulty now; and somehow her
-other hand had found Raymond's head, and her fingers played tremblingly
-through his hair.
-
-"You will tell them, father--and--and this other father here will tell
-them--and--and Valrie will bear witness--and--and the man will live.
-And you will tell him, father, how God came again and made me tell the
-truth because you were good, and--and because you made be believe again
-in--in you--and God--and-----"
-
-A broken cry came from Raymond. The scalding tears were in his eyes.
-
-"Hush, my son!"--it was the Bishop's grave and gentle voice. "God has
-done a wondrous thing tonight."
-
-There was silence in the little room.
-
-And then suddenly Raymond lifted his head--and the room was no more,
-and in its place was the moonlit church of that other night, and he saw
-again the old withered face transfigured into one of tender sweetness
-and ineffable love.
-
-"Pierre, monsieur?"--her mind was wandering now--they were the words she
-had spoken as she had sat beside him in the pew. "Ah, he was a good boy,
-Pierre--have you not heard of Pierre Letellier? And there was little
-Jean--little Jean--he went away, monsieur, and I--I do not know
-where--where he is--I do not know-----"
-
-Raymond's voice was breaking, as he leaned forward toward her.
-
-"He is with God, Mother Blondin. Jean--Jean has sent you a message. His
-last thoughts were of you--his mother."
-
-The old eyes flamed with a dying fire.
-
-"Jean--my son! My little Jean--his--his mother." A smile lighted up
-her face, and hovered on her lips; and her hand, clinging to Raymond's,
-tightened.
-
-"Father--I----" And then her fingers slipped from their hold, and fell
-away.
-
-The Bishop's arm was around Raymond's shoulders.
-
-"Go now, my son--and you, my daughter," he said gently. "It is very near
-the end, and the time is short."
-
-Raymond rose blindly from his knees. Mother Blondin was very still, and
-a pallor, gray and premonitory, had crept into her face. Her eyes were
-closed. He raised the thin hand, and touched it with his lips--and
-turned away.
-
-And Valrie passed out of the room with him.
-
-And by the open window of the room beyond, Valrie knelt down, and he
-knelt down beside her.
-
-It was quiet without--and there was no sound, save now the murmur of the
-Bishop's voice from the inner room. He was to live--and not to die. To
-go free! To give himself up--but to be set free--and there were to
-be the years with Valrie. He could not understand it yet in all its
-fulness.
-
-Valrie was crying softly. With a great tenderness he put his arm about
-her.
-
-"It was the _Benedictus_--'into the way of peace'--that you said for her
-that night," she whispered. "Say it now again, my lover--for her--and
-for us."
-
-He drew her closer to him, and, with her wet cheek against his own, they
-repeated the words together.
-
-And after a little time she raised her hands, and held his face between
-them, and looked into his face for a long while, and there was a great
-gladness, and a great love, and a great trust in the tear-wet eyes.
-
-"I do not know your name," she said.
-
-"It is Raymond," he answered.
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Sin That Was His, by Frank L. Packard
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIN THAT WAS HIS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 51983-8.txt or 51983-8.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/1/9/8/51983/
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/51983-8.zip b/old/51983-8.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index aa45644..0000000
--- a/old/51983-8.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51983-h.zip b/old/51983-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 126531d..0000000
--- a/old/51983-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51983-h/51983-h.htm b/old/51983-h/51983-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index bd11dcb..0000000
--- a/old/51983-h/51983-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,13844 +0,0 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
-
-<!DOCTYPE html
- PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
-
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
- <title>
- The Sin That Was His, by Frank L. Packard
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
-
- body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
- P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
- H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
- hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
- .foot { margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%; text-align: justify; font-size: 80%; font-style: italic;}
- blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
- .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
- .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
- .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
- .xx-small {font-size: 60%;}
- .x-small {font-size: 75%;}
- .small {font-size: 85%;}
- .large {font-size: 115%;}
- .x-large {font-size: 130%;}
- .indent5 { margin-left: 5%;}
- .indent10 { margin-left: 10%;}
- .indent15 { margin-left: 15%;}
- .indent20 { margin-left: 20%;}
- .indent30 { margin-left: 30%;}
- .indent40 { margin-left: 40%;}
- div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
- div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
- .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
- .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
- .pagenum {position: absolute; right: 1%; font-size: 0.6em;
- font-variant: normal; font-style: normal;
- text-align: right; background-color: #FFFACD;
- border: 1px solid; padding: 0.3em;text-indent: 0em;}
- .side { float: left; font-size: 75%; width: 15%; padding-left: 0.8em;
- border-left: dashed thin; text-align: left;
- text-indent: 0; font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;
- font-weight: bold; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: solid 1px;}
- .head { float: left; font-size: 90%; width: 98%; padding-left: 0.8em;
- border-left: dashed thin; text-align: center;
- text-indent: 0; font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;
- font-weight: bold; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: solid 1px;}
- p.pfirst, p.noindent {text-indent: 0}
- span.dropcap { float: left; margin: 0 0.1em 0 0; line-height: 0.8 }
- pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
-
-</style>
- </head>
- <body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sin That Was His, by Frank L. Packard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Sin That Was His
-
-Author: Frank L. Packard
-
-Release Date: May 3, 2016 [EBook #51983]
-Last Updated: March 13, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIN THAT WAS HIS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- THE SIN THAT WAS HIS
- </h1>
- <h2>
- By Frank L. Packard
- </h2>
- <h4>
- The Copp Clark Co. Toronto, Canada
- </h4>
- <h3>
- 1917
- </h3>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0001.jpg" alt="0001 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0001.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0009.jpg" alt="0009 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0009.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>CONTENTS</b>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I&mdash;THREE-ACE ARTIE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II&mdash;THE TOAST </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III&mdash;THE CURÉ </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV&mdash;ON THE ROAD TO ST. MARLEAU </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V&mdash;THE &ldquo;MURDER&rdquo; </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI&mdash;THE JAWS OF THE TRAP </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII&mdash;AT THE PRESBYTÈRE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII&mdash;THOU SHALT NOT KILL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX&mdash;UNTIL THE DAWN </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X&mdash;KYRIE ELEISON </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI&mdash;&ldquo;HENRI MENTONE&rdquo; </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII&mdash;HIS BROTHER'S KEEPER </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII&mdash;THE CONFEDERATE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV&mdash;THE HOUSE ON THE POINT </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV&mdash;HOW HENRI MENTONE RODE WITH
- JACQUES BOURGET </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI&mdash;FOR THE MURDER OF THÉOPHILE
- BLONDIN </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII&mdash;THE COMMON CUP </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII&mdash;THE CALL IN THE NIGHT </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX&mdash;THE TWO SINNERS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX&mdash;AN UNCOVERED SOUL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI&mdash;THE CONDEMNED CELL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII&mdash;HOW RAYMOND BADE FAREWELL TO
- ST. MARLEAU </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII&mdash;MONSIGNOR THE BISHOP </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV&mdash;THE OLD WOMAN ON THE HILL </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I&mdash;THREE-ACE ARTIE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>F Arthur Leroy,
- commonly known throughout the Yukon as Three-Ace Artie, Ton-Nugget Camp
- knew a good deal&mdash;and equally knew very little. He had drifted in
- casually one day, and, evidently finding the environment remuneratively to
- his liking, had stayed. He was a bird of passage&mdash;tarrying perhaps
- for the spring clean-up.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was not exactly elegant in his apparel, for the conditions of an
- out-post mining camp did not lend themselves to elegance; but he was
- immeasurably the best dressed and most scrupulously groomed man that side
- of Dawson. His hands, for instance, were very soft and white; but then, he
- did no work&mdash;that is, of a nature to impair their nicety.
- </p>
- <p>
- His name was somewhat confusing. It might be either French or English,
- according to the twist that was given to its pronunciation&mdash;and
- Three-Ace Artie could give it either twist with equal facility. He
- confessed to being a Canadian&mdash;which was the only confession of any
- nature whatsoever that Three-Ace Artie had ever been known to make. He
- spoke English in a manner that left no doubt in the world but that it was
- his native language&mdash;except in the mind of Canuck John, the only
- French Canadian in the camp, who was equally positive that in the person
- of Three-Ace Artie he had unquestionably found a compatriot born to the
- French tongue.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few old-timers around Dawson might have remembered, if it had not been
- so commonplace an occurrence when it happened, that Leroy, as a very young
- man, had toiled in over the White Pass; though that being only a matter of
- some four years ago at this time, Leroy was still a very young man, even
- if somewhat of a change had taken place in his appearance&mdash;due
- possibly, or possibly not, to the rigours of the climate. Three-Ace Artie
- since then had grown a full beard. But Leroy's arrival, being but one of
- so many, the old-timers had found in it nothing to remember.
- </p>
- <p>
- Other and more definite particulars concerning Three-Ace Artie, however,
- were in the possession of Ton-Nugget Camp. Three-Ace Artie had no
- temperance proclivities&mdash;but he never drank during business hours. No
- one had ever seen a glass at his elbow when there was a pack of cards on
- the table! Frankly a professional gambler, he was admitted to be a good
- one&mdash;and square. He was polished, but not too suave; he was
- unquestionably possessed of far more than an ordinary education, but he
- never permitted his erudition to become objectionable; and he had a
- reputation for coolness and nerve that Ton-Nugget Camp had seen enhanced
- on several occasions and belied on none. He was of medium height, broad
- shouldered, and muscular; he had black hair and black eyes; under the
- beard the jaw was square; unruffled, he was genial; ruffled, he was known
- to be dangerous; and, still too young to show the markings of an
- ungracious life, his forehead was unwrinkled, and his skin clear and
- fresh.
- </p>
- <p>
- Also, during his three months' sojourn in Ton-Nugget Camp, he was
- credited, not without reason, in having won considerably more than he had
- lost. Upon these details rested whatever claim to an intimate
- acquaintanceship with Three-Ace Artie the camp could boast; for the rest,
- Ton-Nugget Camp, in common with the Yukon in general, was quite privileged
- to hazard as many guesses as it pleased!
- </p>
- <p>
- In a word, such was Three-Ace Artie's status in Ton-Nugget Camp when there
- arrived one afternoon a young man, little more than a boy, patently fresh
- from the East. And here, though Ton-Nugget Camp was quick to take the
- newcomer's measure, and, ignoring the other's claim to the self-conferred
- title of Gerald Rogers, promptly dubbed him the Kid, it permitted, through
- lack of observation, a slight detail to escape its notice that might
- otherwise perhaps have suggested a new and promising field for its guesses
- concerning Three-Ace Artie.
- </p>
- <p>
- Though at no more distant a date than a few days previous to his arrival,
- the Kid had probably never seen a &ldquo;poke&rdquo; in his life before, much less one
- filled with currency in the shape of gold dust, he had, in the first flush
- of his entry to MacDonald's, and with the life-long air of one accustomed
- to doing nothing else, flung a very new and pleasantly-filled poke in the
- general direction of the scales at the end of the bar, and, leaning back
- against the counter, supporting himself on his elbows, proceeded to &ldquo;set
- them up&rdquo; for all concerned. MacDonald's, collectively and individually,
- which is to say no small portion of the camp, for MacDonald's was at once
- hotel, store, bar and general hang-out, obeyed the invitation without
- undue delay, and was in the act of enjoying the newcomer's hospitality
- when Three-Ace Artie strolled in.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some one nearest the bar reached out a glass to the gambler over the
- intervening heads, the cluster of men broke away that the ceremony of
- introduction with the stranger might be duly performed&mdash;and
- Ton-Nugget Camp, failing to note the sudden tightening of the gambler's
- fingers around his glass, the startled flash in the dark eyes that was
- instantly veiled by half dropped, sleepy lids, heard only Three-Ace
- Artie's, &ldquo;Glad to know you, Mr. Rogers,&rdquo; in the gambler's usual and
- quietly modulated voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- Following that, however, not being entirely unsophisticated, Ton-Nugget
- Camp stuck its tongue in its cheek and awaited developments&mdash;meanwhile
- making the most of its own opportunities, for the Kid, boisterous, loose
- with his money, was obviously too shining a mark for even amateurs to
- overlook. Ton-Nugget Camp, therefore, was, while expectant, quite content
- that Three-Ace Artie should, through motives which it attributed to
- professional delicacy, avoid rather than make any hurried advances toward
- intimacy with the newcomer; since, not feeling the restraint of any
- professional ethics itself, Ton-Nugget Camp was enabled to take up a few
- little collections on its own account via the stud poker route at the
- expense of the Kid.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two days passed, during which Three-Ace Artie, besides being little in
- evidence, refrained entirely from pressing his attentions upon the
- stranger; but despite this, thanks to the adroitness of certain members of
- the community and his own all too frequent attendance upon the bar,
- matters were not flourishing with the Kid. The Kid drank far more than was
- good for him, played far more than was good for him, and, flushed and
- fuddled with liquor, played none too well. True, there were those in the
- camp who offered earnest, genuine and well-meant advice, amongst them a
- grim old Presbyterian by the name of Murdock Shaw, who was credited with
- being the head of an incipient, and therefore harmless, reform movement&mdash;but
- this advice the Kid, quite as warmly as it was offered, consigned to other
- climes in conjunction with its progenitors; and, as a result, all that was
- left of his original poke at the expiration of those two days was an empty
- chamois bag from which, possibly by way of compensation, the offensive
- newness had been considerably worn off.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he's got any more,&rdquo; said the amateurs, licking their lips, &ldquo;here's
- hopin' that Three-Ace Artie 'll keep on overlookin' the bet!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, the next afternoon, the Kid flashed another poke, quite as new
- and quite as pleasantly-nurtured as its predecessor&mdash;and Three-Ace
- Artie seemed to awake suddenly to the knock of opportunity at his door.
- </p>
- <p>
- With just what finesse and aplomb the gambler inveigled the Kid into the
- game no one was prepared co say&mdash;it was a detail of no moment, except
- to Three-Ace Artie, who could be confidently trusted to take care of such
- matters, when moved to do so, with the courtly and genial graciousness of
- one conferring a favour on the other! But, be that as it may, the first
- intimation the few loungers who were in MacDonald's at the time had that
- anything was in the wind was the sight of MacDonald, behind the bar,
- obligingly exchanging the pokes of both men For poker chips. The loungers
- present thereupon immediately expressed their interest by congregating
- around the table as Three-Ace Artie and the Kid sat down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stud?&rdquo; suggested Three-Ace Artie, with an engaging smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid, already none too sober, nodded his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And table stakes!&rdquo; he supplemented, with a somewhat lordly flourish of
- the replenished glass that he had carried with him from the bar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; murmured the gambler.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was still early afternoon, but an afternoon of the long-night of the
- northern winter, sunless, with only a subdued twilight without, and the
- big metal lamps, hanging from the ceiling, were lighted. In the centre of
- the room a box-stove alternately crackled and purred, its sheet-iron sides
- glowing dull red. The bare, rough-boarded room, save for the little group,
- was empty. Behind the bar, with a sort of curious, cynical smile that
- supplied no additional beauty to his shrewd, hard-lined visage, MacDonald
- himself propped his bullet-head in his hands, elbows on the counter, to
- watch the proceedings.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie and the Kid began to play. Occasionally the door opened,
- admitting a miner who took a brisk, fore-intentioned step or two toward
- the bar&mdash;and catching sight of the game in progress, as though
- magnet-drawn, immediately changed his direction and joined those already
- around the table. But neither Three-Ace Artie nor the Kid appeared to pay
- any attention to the constantly augmenting number of spectators. The game
- see-sawed, fortune smiling with apparently unbiased fickleness first on
- one, then on the other. The Kid grew a little more noisy, a little more
- intoxicated&mdash;as MacDonald, from a mere spectator, became an attendant
- at the Kid's frequent beck and call. Three-Ace Artie was entirely
- professional&mdash;there was no glass at Three-Ace Artie's elbow, when he
- lost he smiled good-humouredly, when he won he smoothed over the other's
- discomfiture with self-deprecatory tact; he was unperturbed and cordial,
- he bet sparingly and in moderation&mdash;to enjoy the game, as it were,
- for the game's own sake, the stakes being, as it were again, simply to
- supply a little additional zest and tang, and for no other reason
- whatever!
- </p>
- <p>
- And, then, little by little, the Kid began to force the game; and, as the
- stakes grew higher, began to lose steadily, with the result that an hour
- of play saw most of the chips, instead of a glass, flanking Three-Ace
- Artie's elbow&mdash;and saw a large proportion of Ton-Nugget Camp, to whom
- the word in some mysterious manner had gone forth, flanking the table five
- and six deep.
- </p>
- <p>
- The more the Kid lost, the more he drank. Whatever ease of manner,
- whatever composure he had originally possessed was gone now. His hair
- straggled unkemptly over his forehead, his cheeks were flushed, his lips
- worked constantly on the butt of an unlighted cigarette.
- </p>
- <p>
- The crowd pressed a little closer, leaned a little further over the table.
- There was something almost fascinating in the deftness with which the
- soft, white hands of Three-Ace Artie caressed the cards, there was
- something almost fascinating, too, in the cool impassiveness of the
- gambler's poise, and in the sort of languid selfpossession that lighted
- the dark eyes; but Ton-Nugget Camp had lived too long in familiarity with
- Three-Ace Artie to be interested in the gambler's personality at that
- moment&mdash;its interest was centred in the game. The play now had all
- the earmarks of a grand finale. There were big stakes on the table&mdash;and
- the last of the Kid's chips. The crowd raised itself on tiptoes. Both men
- turned their &ldquo;hole&rdquo; cards. Three-Ace Artie reached out calmly, drew the
- chips toward him, smiled almost apologetically, and, picking up the deck,
- riffled the cards tentatively&mdash;the opposite side of the table was
- bare of stakes.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment the Kid circled his lips with the tip of his tongue, and
- flirted his hair back from his forehead with an uncertain, jerky motion of
- his hand; then he snatched up his glass, spilled a portion of its
- contents, gulped down the remainder, and began to fumble under his vest,
- finally wrenching out a money-belt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go on&mdash;what do you think!&rdquo; he said thickly. &ldquo;I ain't done yet! I'll
- get mine back, an' yours, too! Table stakes&mdash;eh? I'll get you this
- time&mdash;b'God! Table stakes&mdash;eh&mdash;again? What do you say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; murmured Three-Ace Artie politely.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then the crowd shuffled its feet uneasily. Murdock Shaw, who had edged
- his way close to the table, leaned over and touched the Kid's shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'd cut it out, if I was you, son,&rdquo; he advised bluntly. &ldquo;You're drunk&mdash;and
- a mark!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A sort of quick, sibilant intake of breath came from the circle around the
- table. Like a flash, one of Three-Ace Artie's hands, from the deck of
- cards, vanished under the table; and the dark eyes, the slumber gone from
- their depths, narrowed dangerously on Murdock Shaw. Then Three-Ace Artie
- smiled&mdash;unpleasantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It isn't as though you were <i>new</i> in the Yukon, Murdock&rdquo;&mdash;there
- was a deadliness in the quiet, level tones. &ldquo;What's the idea?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Like magic, to right and left, on each side of the table, the crowd
- cleared a line behind the two men&mdash;then silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- The gambler's hand remained beneath the table; his eyes cold, alert, never
- wavering for the fraction of a second from the miner's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- Perhaps a minute passed. The miner did not speak or move, save that his
- lips tightened and the tan of his face took on a deeper hue.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then Three-Ace Artie spoke again:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you <i>calling</i>, Murdock?&rdquo; he inquired softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The miner hesitated an instant, then turned abruptly on his heel.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I call you,&rdquo; he said evenly, over his shoulder, &ldquo;it will break you
- for keeps&mdash;and you won't have long to wait, either!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid, who had been alternating a maudlin gaze from the face of one man
- to the other, stood up now, and, hanging to the back of his chair, watched
- the miner's retreat in a fuddled way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, go chase yourself!&rdquo; he called out, in sudden inspiration&mdash;and,
- glancing around for approval, laughed boisterously at his own drunken
- humour.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door closed on Murdock Shaw. The Kid slipped down into his chair,
- dumped a handful of American double-eagles out of the money-belt&mdash;and,
- reaching again for his glass, banged it on the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gimme another!&rdquo; he shouted in the direction of the bar. &ldquo;Hey&mdash;Mac&mdash;d'ye
- hear! Gimme another drink!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie's hands were above the table again&mdash;the slim,
- delicate, tapering fingers shuffling, riffling, and reshuffling the cards.
- </p>
- <p>
- MacDonald approached the table, and picked up the empty glass.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; commanded the Kid ponderously, and scowled suddenly in the throes
- of another inspiration. He pointed a finger at Three-Ace Artie. &ldquo;Say&mdash;give
- him one, too!&rdquo; He wagged his head sapiently. &ldquo;If he wants any more chance
- at my money, he's got to have one, too! That's what! Old guy's right about
- that! I'm the only one that's drunk&mdash;you've got to drink, too!
- What'll you have&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The group had closed in around the table again, and now all eyes were
- riveted, curiously, expectantly, upon Three-Ace Artie. If the gambler had
- one fixed principle from which, as Ton-Nugget Camp had excellent reasons
- for knowing, neither argument nor cajolery had ever moved him, it was that
- of refusing to drink while he played&mdash;but now, while all eyes were on
- Three-Ace Artie, Three-Ace Artie's eyes were on the pile of American gold
- that the Kid had displayed. There was a quick little curve to the
- gambler's lips, that became a slightly tolerant, slightly good-natured
- smile&mdash;and then the crowd nodded significantly to itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, certainly!&rdquo; said Three-Ace Artie pleasantly. &ldquo;Give me the same,
- Mac.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's the talk!&rdquo; applauded the Kid.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie pushed the cards across the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is a new game!&rdquo; announced the Kid. &ldquo;Cut for deal. Table stakes!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They cut. Three-Ace Artie won, riffled the cards several times, passed
- them over to be cut again, and dealt the first card apiece face down.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid examined his card in approved fashion by pulling it slightly over
- the edge of the table and secretively turning up one corner; then, still
- face down, he pushed it back, and, MacDonald, returning with the glasses
- from the bar at that moment, reached greedily for his own and tossed it
- off. He nodded with heavy satisfaction as Three-Ace Artie drained the
- other glass. Again he examined his card as before.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's a pretty good card!&rdquo; he stated with owlish gravity. &ldquo;Worth pretty
- good bet!&rdquo; He laid a stack of his gold eagles upon the card.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie placed an equivalent number of chips upon his own card,
- and dealt another apiece&mdash;face up now on the table. An eight-spot of
- spades fell to the Kid; a ten-spot of diamonds to Three-Ace Artie.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Worth jus' much as before!&rdquo; declared the Kid&mdash;and laid another stack
- of eagles upon the card.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mine's worth a little more this time,&rdquo; smiled Three-Ace Artie&mdash;and
- doubled the bet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure!&rdquo; mumbled the Kid. &ldquo;Sure thing!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again Three-Ace Artie dealt&mdash;a king of hearts to the Kid; a deuce of
- hearts to himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid's hand seemed to tremble eagerly, as he fumbled with his gold
- eagles. He glanced furtively at the gambler&mdash;and then, as though
- trying to read in Three-Ace Artie's face how far he might safely egg the
- other on, he began to drop coin after coin upon his cards.
- </p>
- <p>
- The crowd stirred a little uncomfortably. The Kid had undoubtedly the
- better hand so far, but he had made a fool play&mdash;a blind man could
- have read through the back of the card that was so carefully guarded face
- down on the table. The Kid had a pair of kings against a possible pair of
- tens or deuces on the gambler's side.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie imperturbably &ldquo;saw&rdquo; the bet&mdash;and coolly dealt the
- fourth card. Another king fell to the Kid; another deuce to himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid's eyes were burning feverishly now. He bet again, laughing,
- chuckling drunkenly as he swept forward a generous share of his remaining
- gold&mdash;and with a quiet, unostentatiously appraising glance at what
- was left of the pile of eagles, Three-Ace Artie raised heavily.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then, for the first time, the Kid hesitated, and a momentary frightened
- look flashed across his face. He lifted the corner of his &ldquo;hole&rdquo; card
- again and again nervously, as though to assure himself that he had made no
- mistake&mdash;and finally laughed with raucous confidence again, and,
- pushing the hair out of his eyes, demanded another drink, and returned the
- raise.
- </p>
- <p>
- The onlookers sucked in their breath&mdash;but this time approved the
- Kid's play. The cards showed a pair of deuces and a ten-spot spread out
- before Three-Ace Artie, a pair of kings and an eight-spot in front of the
- Kid. But the Kid had already given his hand away, and with a king in the
- &ldquo;hole,&rdquo; making three kings, Three-Ace Artie could not possibly win unless
- his &ldquo;hole&rdquo; card was a deuce or a ten, and on top of that that his next and
- final card should be a deuce or ten as well. It looked all the Kid's way.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie again &ldquo;saw&rdquo; the other's raise&mdash;and dealt the last
- card.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a sudden shuffling of feet, as the crowd leaned tensely forward.
- A jack fell face up before the Kid&mdash;a ten-spot fell before the
- gambler. Three-Ace Artie showed two pairs&mdash;it all depended now on
- what he held as his &ldquo;hole&rdquo; card.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the Kid, either because he was too fuddled to take the possibilities
- into account, or because he was drunkenly obsessed with the invincibility
- of his own three kings, laughed hilariously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I got you!&rdquo; he cried&mdash;and bet half of his remaining gold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie's smile was cordial.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Might as well go all the way then,&rdquo; he suggested&mdash;and raised to the
- limit of the Kid's last gold eagle.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid laughed again. He had played cunningly&mdash;quite cunningly. The
- gambler had fallen into the trap. All his hand showed was two kings.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll see you! I'll see you!&rdquo;&mdash;he was lurching excitedly in his
- chair, as he pushed the rest of his money forward. &ldquo;This is the time
- little old two pairs are no good!&rdquo; He turned his &ldquo;hole&rdquo; card triumphantly.
- &ldquo;Three kings&rdquo; he gurgled&mdash;and reached for the stakes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just a minute,&rdquo; objected Three-Ace Artie blandly.
- </p>
- <p>
- He faced his other card. &ldquo;I've got another ten here. Full house&mdash;three
- tens and a pair of deuces.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A dead silence fell upon the room. The Kid, lurching in his chair, stared
- in a dazed, stunned way at the other's cards&mdash;and then his face went
- a deathly white. One hand crept aimlessly to his forehead and brushed
- across his eyes; and after a moment, leaning heavily upon the table, he
- stood up, still swaying. But he was not swaying from drunkenness now. The
- shock seemed to have sobered him, bringing a haggard misery into his eyes.
- The crowd watched, making no comment. Three-Ace Artie, without lifting his
- eyes, was calmly engaged in stacking the gold eagles into little piles in
- front of him. The Kid moistened his lips with his tongue, attempted to
- speak&mdash;and succeeded only in * swallowing hard once or twice. Then,
- with a pitiful effort to pull himself together, he forced a smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I can't play any more,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'm cleaned out&rdquo;&mdash;and
- turned away from the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- The crowd made way for him, following him with its eyes as he crossed the
- room and disappeared through a back door at the side of the bar, making
- evidently for his &ldquo;hotel&rdquo; room upstairs. Three-Ace Artie said nothing&mdash;he
- was imperturbably pocketing the gold eagles now. The crowd drifted away
- from the table, dispersed around the room, and some went out. Three-Ace
- Artie rose from the table and carried the chips back to the bar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Guess I'll cash in, Mac,&rdquo; he drawled.
- </p>
- <p>
- The proprietor pushed the two pokes across the bar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Step up, gentlemen!&rdquo; invited the gambler amiably, wheeling with his back
- against the bar to face the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- An air of uneasiness, an awkward tension had settled upon the place. Some
- few more went out; but the others, as though glad of the relief afforded
- the situation by Three-Ace Artie's invitation, stepped promptly forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie's hand encircled a stiff four-fingers of raw spirit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here's how!&rdquo; he said&mdash;and drained his glass.
- </p>
- <p>
- Somebody &ldquo;set them up&rdquo; again; Three-Ace Artie repeated the performance&mdash;and
- MacDonald's resumed its normal poise.
- </p>
- <p>
- For perhaps half an hour Three-Ace Artie leaned against the bar, joining
- in a dice game that some one had inaugurated; and then, interest in this
- lagging, with a yawn and a casual remark about going up to his shack for a
- snooze, he put on his overcoat, pulled his fur cap well down over his
- ears, sauntered to the door&mdash;and, with a cheery wave of his hand,
- went out.
- </p>
- <p>
- But once outside the door, Three-Ace Artie's nonchalance dropped from him,
- and he stood motionless in the dull light of the winter afternoon peering
- sharply up and down the camp's single shack-lined street. There was no one
- in sight. He turned quickly then, and, treading noiselessly in the snow,
- stole along beside the building to a door at the further end. He opened
- this cautiously, stepped inside, and, in semidarkness here, halted again
- to listen. The sounds from the adjoining barroom reached him plainly, but
- that was all. Satisfied that he was unobserved, he moved swiftly forward
- to where, at the end of the sort of passageway which he had entered, a
- steep, ladder-like stairway led upward. He mounted this stealthily, gained
- the landing above, and, groping his way now along a narrow hallway,
- suddenly flung open a door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who's there!&rdquo; came a quick, startled cry from within.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't talk so loud&mdash;damn it!&rdquo; growled Three-Ace
- </p>
- <p>
- Artie, in a hoarse whisper. &ldquo;You can hear yourself think through these
- partitions!&rdquo; He struck a match, and lighted a candle which he found on the
- combination table and washing-stand near the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid's face, drawn and colourless, loomed up in the yellow light from
- the edge of the bed, as he bent forward, blinking in a kind of miserable
- wonder at Three-Ace Artie.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You!&rdquo; he gasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie closed the door softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some high-roller, you are, aren't you!&rdquo; he observed caustically.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid did not answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a full minute Three-Ace Artie eyed the other in silence&mdash;then he
- laughed shortly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know which of us is the bigger damn fool&mdash;you trying to buy
- a through ticket to hell; or yours truly for what I'm going to do now!
- Maybe you have learned your lesson, maybe you haven't; but anyway I am
- going to take the chance. I'm not here to preach, but I'll push a little
- personal advice out of long experience your way. The booze and the
- pasteboards won't get you anywhere&mdash;except into the kind of mess you
- are up against now. If you are hankering for more of it, go to it&mdash;that's
- all. It's your hunt!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He flung the Kid's poke suddenly upon the table, and piled the gold eagles
- beside it.
- </p>
- <p>
- A flush crept into the Kid's cheeks. He leaned further forward, staring
- helplessly, now at Three-Ace Artie, now at the money on the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W-what do you mean?&rdquo; he stammered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It isn't very hard to guess, is it?&rdquo; said Three-Ace Artie quietly.
- &ldquo;Here's your money&mdash;but there's just one little condition tied to it.
- I can't afford to let the impression get around that I'm establishing any
- precedents&mdash;see? And if the boys heard of this they'd think I was
- suffering from softening of the brain! You get away from here without
- saying anything to anybody&mdash;and stay away. Bixley, one of the boys,
- is going over to the next camp this afternoon&mdash;and you go with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You&mdash;you're giving me back the money?&rdquo; faltered the Kid.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it sort of looks that way,&rdquo; smiled Three-Ace Artie.
- </p>
- <p>
- A certain dignity came to the Kid&mdash;and he held out his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a white man,&rdquo; he said huskily. &ldquo;But I can't accept it. I took it
- pretty hard down there perhaps, it seemed to get me all of a sudden when
- the booze went out; but I'm not all yellow. You won it&mdash;I can't take
- it back. It's yours.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; it's not mine&rdquo;&mdash;Three-Ace Artie was still smiling. &ldquo;That's the
- way to talk, Kid. I like that. But you're wrong&mdash;it's yours by
- rights.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By rights?&rdquo; The Kid hesitated, studying Three-Ace Artie's face. &ldquo;You
- mean,&rdquo; he ventured slowly, &ldquo;that the game wasn't on the level&mdash;that
- you stacked the cards?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never stacked a card on a man in my life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I don't understand what you mean,&rdquo; said the Kid. &ldquo;How can it be mine
- by rights?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's simple enough,&rdquo; replied Three-Ace Artie. &ldquo;I'm paying back a little
- debt I owe, that's all. I figured the boys had pecked around about deep
- enough on the outskirts of your pile, and that it was about time for me to
- sit in and save the rest. I cleaned you out a little faster than I
- expected, a little faster perhaps than the next man will if you try it
- again&mdash;but not any the less thoroughly. It's the 'next man' I'm
- trying to steer you away from, Kid.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I know&rdquo;&mdash;the Kid spoke almost mechanically. &ldquo;But a debt?&rdquo;&mdash;his
- eyes were searching the gambler's face perplexedly now. Then suddenly:
- &ldquo;Who are you?&rdquo; he demanded. &ldquo;There's something familiar about you. I
- thought there was the first time I saw you the other afternoon. And yet I
- can't place you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't try,&rdquo; said Three-Ace Artie softly. He reached out and laid his hand
- on the other's shoulder. &ldquo;It wouldn't do you or me any good. There are
- some things best forgotten. I'm telling you the truth, that's all you need
- to know. You're entitled to the money&mdash;and another chance. Let it go
- at that. You agree to the bargain, don't you? You leave here with Bixley
- this afternoon&mdash;and this is between you and me, Kid, and no one else
- on earth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment the Kid's gaze held steadily on Three-Ace Artie; then his
- eyes filled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; I'll go,&rdquo; he said in a low voice. &ldquo;I guess I'm not going to forget
- this&mdash;or you. I don't know what I would have done, and I want to tell
- you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never mind that!&rdquo; interrupted Three-Ace Artie with sudden gruffness.
- &ldquo;It's what you do from now on that counts. You've got to hurry now. Any of
- the boys will show you Bixley's shack, if you don't know where it is. Just
- tell Bixley what you want, and he'll take you along. He'll be glad of
- company on the trail. Shake!&rdquo; He caught the other's hand, wrung it in a
- hard grip&mdash;and turned to the door. &ldquo;Good luck to you, Kid!&rdquo; he said&mdash;and
- closed the door behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- As cautiously as he had entered, Three-Ace Artie made his way downstairs
- again; and, once outside, started briskly in the direction of his shack,
- that he had acquired, bag and baggage, shortly after his arrival in the
- camp, from a miner who was pulling out. It was some three or four hundred
- yards from MacDonald's, and as he went along, feet crunching in the snow
- from his swinging stride, he began quite abruptly to whistle a cheery air.
- It was too bitterly cold, however, to whistle, so instead he resorted to
- humming pleasantly to himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- He stamped the snow from his feet as he reached the shack, opened the
- door, and went in. A few embers still glowed in the box-stove, and he
- threw on a stick of wood and opened the damper. He lighted a lamp, and
- stood for a moment looking around him. There was a bunk at one side of the
- shack, the table, the stove, a single chair, a few books on a rude shelf,
- a kit bag in one corner, a skin of some sort on the floor, and a small
- cupboard containing supplies and cooking utensils. Three-Ace Artie,
- however, did not appear to be obsessed with the inventory of his
- surroundings. There was a whimsical smile on his lips, as he pulled off
- his fur cap and tossed it on the bunk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I guess,&rdquo; said Three-Ace Artie, &ldquo;it will give the Recording Angel quite a
- shock to chalk one up on the other side of the page for me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II&mdash;THE TOAST
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HREE-ACE ARTIE,
- sprawled comfortably cally at the book he held in his hand, a copy of
- Hugo's <i>Claude Gueux</i> in French, tossed it to the foot of the bunk,
- and sat up, dangling his legs over the edge.
- </p>
- <p>
- A mood that had long been a stranger to him, a mellow mood, as he had
- defined it to himself, had kept him away from MacDonald's that night. It
- was the glow of self-benediction, as it were, ever since he had left the
- boy's room that afternoon, though it had puzzled him to some extent to
- explain its effect upon himself&mdash;that, for instance, the corollary
- should take the form of a quiet evening, a pipe, and Hugo.
- </p>
- <p>
- He shrugged his shoulders. It had been so nevertheless. His shoulders
- lifted again&mdash;it was decidedly an incongruous proceeding for one
- known as Three-Ace Artie!
- </p>
- <p>
- His thoughts reverted to the Kid. No one had come to the shack since he
- had returned from the hotel, but he knew the Kid had left the camp, for he
- had watched from the shack window as Bixley and the boy had passed down
- the street together. The Kid would not play the fool again for a while,
- that was certain&mdash;whatever he did eventually.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie stared introspectively at the lamp, out at full length
- upon his bunk, yawned, and looked at his watch. It was already after
- midnight. He glanced a little quizzically.
- </p>
- <p>
- Kid, of course! He had been conscious of an inward flame for a moment&mdash;then
- for the third time shrugged his shoulders.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I guess I'll turn in,&rdquo; he muttered.
- </p>
- <p>
- He bent down to untie a shoe lace&mdash;and straightened up quickly again.
- A footstep sounded from without, there was a knock upon the door, the door
- opened&mdash;and with the inrush of air the lamp flared up. Three-Ace
- Artie reached out swiftly to the top of the chimney, protecting the flame
- with the flat of his hand, and, as the door closed again, stared with cool
- surprise at his visitor. The last time he had seen Sergeant Marden, of the
- Royal North-West Mounted Police, had been the year before at
- Two-Strike-Mountain, where each had followed a gold rush&mdash;for quite
- different reasons!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello, sergeant!&rdquo; he drawled. &ldquo;I didn't know you were in camp.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just got in around supper-time,&rdquo; replied the other. &ldquo;I've been up on the
- Creek for the last few weeks.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie smiled facetiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any luck?&rdquo; he inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I got my man,&rdquo; said the sergeant quietly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; murmured Three-Ace Artie softly. &ldquo;You've got a reputation for
- doing that, sergeant.&rdquo; He laughed pleasantly. &ldquo;But you haven't dropped in
- on <i>me</i> officially, have you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sergeant Marden, big, thick-set, with a strong, kindly face, with gray
- eyes that lighted now in a gravely humorous way shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I'm playing the 'old friend' rôle to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; exclaimed Three-Ace Artie heartily. &ldquo;Peel off your duds then, and&mdash;will
- you have the bunk, or the chair? Take your choice&mdash;only make yourself
- at home.&rdquo; He stepped over to the cupboard, and, while the sergeant pulled
- off his cap and mitts, and unbuttoned and threw back his overcoat,
- Three-Ace Artie procured a bottle of whisky and two glasses, which he set
- upon the table. &ldquo;Help yourself, sergeant,&rdquo; he invited cordially.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sergeant shook his head again, as he drew the chair toward him and sat
- down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't think I'll take anything to-night,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No?&rdquo;&mdash;Three-Ace Artie's voice expressed the polite regret of a
- perfect host. &ldquo;Well, fill your pipe then,&rdquo; he suggested hospitably, as he
- seated himself on the edge of the bunk. He began to fill his own pipe
- deliberately, apparently wholly preoccupied for the moment with that
- homely operation&mdash;but his mind was leaping in lightning flashes back
- over the range of the four years that he had spent in the Yukon. What <i>exactly</i>
- did Sergeant Marden of the Royal North-West Mounted want with him
- to-night? He had known the other for a good while, it was true&mdash;but
- not in a fashion to warrant the sergeant in making a haphazard social call
- at midnight after what must have been a long, hard day on the trail.
- </p>
- <p>
- A match, drawn with a long sweep under the table, crackled; Sergeant
- Marden lighted his pipe, and flipped the match-stub stovewards.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It looks as though Canuck John wouldn't pull through the night,&rdquo; he said
- gravely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Canuck John!&rdquo; Three-Ace Artie sat up with a jerk, and glanced sharply at
- the other. &ldquo;What's that you say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sergeant Marden removed his pipe slowly from his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, you know, don't you?&rdquo; he asked in surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I don't know!&rdquo; returned Three-Ace Artie quickly. &ldquo;I haven't been out
- of this shack since late this afternoon; but I saw him this morning, and
- he was all right then. What's happened?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He shot himself just after supper&mdash;accident, of course&mdash;old
- story, cleaning a gun,&rdquo; said the sergeant tersely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good God!&rdquo; cried Three-Ace Artie, in a low, shocked way&mdash;and then he
- was on his feet, and reaching for his cap and coat. &ldquo;I'll go up there and
- see him. You don't mind, sergeant, if I leave you here? I guess I knew
- Canuck John better than any one else in camp did, and&mdash;&rdquo; His coat
- half on, he paused suddenly, his brows gathering in a frown. &ldquo;After
- supper, you said!&rdquo; he muttered slowly. &ldquo;Why, that's hours ago!&rdquo; Then, his
- voice rasping: &ldquo;It's damned queer no one came to tell me about this!
- There's something wrong here!&rdquo; He struggled into his coat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's been unconscious ever since they found him,&rdquo; said Sergeant Marden,
- his eyes fixed on the bowl of his pipe as he prodded the dottle down with
- his forefinger. &ldquo;The doctor's just come. You couldn't do any good by going
- up there, and&rdquo;&mdash;his eyes lifted and met Three-Ace Artie's meaningly&mdash;&ldquo;take
- it all around, I guess it would be just as well if you didn't go. Murdock
- Shaw and some of the boys are there, and&mdash;well, they seem to feel
- they don't want you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment Three-Ace Artie stood motionless, regarding the other in a
- half angry, half puzzled way; then, his weight on both hands, he leaned
- forward over the table toward Sergeant Marden.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In plain English, and in as few words as you can put it, what in hell do
- you mean by that?&rdquo; he demanded levelly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, if you want it that way, I'll tell you,&rdquo; said Sergeant Marden
- quietly. &ldquo;I guess perhaps the short cut's best. They've given you until
- to-morrow morning to get out of Ton-Nugget Camp.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I beg your pardon?&rdquo; inquired Three-Ace Artie with ominous politeness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sergeant Marden produced a poke partially filled with gold dust and laid
- it on the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's that?&rdquo;&mdash;Three-Ace Artie's eyes were hard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's the price you paid Sam MacBride for this shack and contents when he
- went away. The boys say they want to play fair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Three-Ace Artie laughed&mdash;not pleasantly. Methodically he
- removed his overcoat, hung it on its peg, and sat down again on the edge
- of the bunk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let's see the rest of your hand, sergeant&rdquo;&mdash;his voice was deadly
- quiet. &ldquo;I don't quite get the idea.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wasn't here myself this afternoon,&rdquo; said Sergeant Marden; &ldquo;but they
- seem to feel that the sort of thing that happened kind of gives the
- community a bad name, and that separating a youngster, when he's drunk,
- from his last dollar is a bit too raw even for Ton-Nugget Camp. That's
- about the size of the way it was put up to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It seemed to Three-Act Artie that in some way he had not quite heard
- aright; or that, if he had, he was being made the object of some, unknown
- to its authors, stupendously ironical joke&mdash;and then, as he glanced
- at the officer's grim, though not altogether unfriendly countenance, and
- from Sergeant Marden to the bag of gold upon the table, a bitter, furious
- anger surged upon him. His clenched fist reached out and fell smashing
- upon the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So that's it, is it!&rdquo; he said between his teeth. &ldquo;This is some of Murdock
- Shaw's work&mdash;the snivelling, psalm-singing hypocrite! Well, he can't
- get away with it! I've a few friends in camp myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fairweather friends, I should say,&rdquo; qualified the sergeant, busy again
- with his pipe bowl. &ldquo;You said yourself that no one had been near the shack
- here. The camp appears to be pretty well of one mind on the subject.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Including the half dozen or more who started after the Kid to begin
- with!&rdquo;&mdash;Three-Ace Artie's laugh was savage, full of menace. &ldquo;Are they
- helping to run me out of camp, too!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You seem to have got a little of <i>everybody's</i> money,&rdquo; suggested
- Sergeant Marden pointedly. &ldquo;Anyway, I haven't seen any sign of them
- putting up a fight for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quite so!&rdquo; There was a sudden cold self-possession in Three-Ace Artie's
- tones. &ldquo;Well, I can put up quite a fight for myself, thank you. I'm not
- going! It's too bad Shaw didn't have the nerve to come here and tell me
- this. I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wouldn't let him,&rdquo; interposed the sergeant, with a curious smile.
- &ldquo;That's why I came myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie studied the other's face for an instant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, go on!&rdquo; he jerked out. &ldquo;What's the answer to that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That I am going on to Dawson in the morning, and that I thought perhaps
- you might be willing to come along.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie's under jaw crept out the fraction of an inch, and his
- eyes narrowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought you said you weren't here officially!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not&mdash;at least, not yet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it sounds mighty like an arrest to me!&rdquo; snarled Three-Ace Artie. He
- stood up abruptly, and once more leaned over the table. His dark eyes
- flashed. &ldquo;But that doesn't go either&mdash;not in the Yukon! You can't
- hold me for anything I've done, and you ought to know better than to think
- you can do any bluffing with me and get away with it! Murdock Shaw is.
- evidently running this little game. I gave him a chance to call my hand
- this afternoon&mdash;and he lay down like a whipped pup! That chance is
- still open to him&mdash;but he can't do it by proxy! That's exactly where
- you and I stand, Marden&mdash;don't try the arrest game!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not going to&mdash;at least, not yet,&rdquo; said the sergeant again. &ldquo;It's
- not a question of law. The day may come when the lid goes on out here, but
- so far the local millennium hasn't dawned. There's no dispute there. I
- told you I came in here on the 'old friend' basis, and I meant it. I've
- known you off and on a bit for quite a while; and I always liked you for
- the reputation you had of playing square. There's no talk of crookedness
- now, though I must confess you've pulled something a little thinner than I
- thought it was in you to do. However, let that go. I don't want to butt in
- on this unless I have to&mdash;and that's why I'm trying to get you to
- come away with me in the morning. If you don't, there'll be trouble, and
- then I'll have to take a hand whether I want to or not.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By God!&rdquo;&mdash;the oath came fiercely, involuntarily from Three-Ace
- Artie's lips. The irony of it all was upon him again. The injustice of it
- galled and maddened him. And yet&mdash;tell them the truth of the matter?
- He would have seen every last one of them consigned to the bottomless pit
- first! The turbulent soul of the man was aflame. &ldquo;Run out of camp, eh!&rdquo;&mdash;-it
- was a devil's laugh that echoed around the shack. &ldquo;That means being run
- out of the Yukon! I'd have to get out, wouldn't I&mdash;out of the Yukon&mdash;ha,
- ha!&mdash;my name would smell everywhere to high heaven!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not sure but that's exactly what I would do if I were you,&rdquo; said
- Sergeant Marden simply. &ldquo;The fact you've got to face is that you're
- black-balled&mdash;and the easiest way to swallow a nasty dose is to
- swallow it in a gulp, isn't it?&rdquo; He got up from his chair and laid his
- hand on Three-Ace Artie's shoulder. &ldquo;Look here, Leroy,&rdquo; he said earnestly,
- &ldquo;you've got a cool enough head on you not to play the fool, and you're a
- big enough sport to stand for the cards whatever way they turn. I want you
- to say that you'll come along with me in the morning&mdash;I'll get out of
- here early before any one is about, or I'll go now if you like, if that
- will help any. It's the sensible thing to do. Well?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know, Marden&mdash;I don't know!&rdquo; Three-Ace Artie flung out
- shortly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you do,&rdquo; insisted the sergeant quietly. &ldquo;You know a fight wouldn't
- get you anywhere&mdash;if you got one or two of them, Murdock Shaw for
- instance, you'd simply be hung for your pains. They mean business, and I
- don't want any trouble&mdash;why make any for me when it can't do you any
- good? I'm putting it to you in a friendly way; and, besides that, it's
- common sense, isn't it?&rdquo; His grip tightened in a kindly pressure on
- Three-Ace Artie's shoulder. &ldquo;I'm right, ain't I? What do you say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you're right enough!&rdquo;&mdash;a hard smile twisted Three-Ace Artie's
- lips. &ldquo;There's no argument about that. I'd have to go anyway, I know that&mdash;but
- I'm not keen on going without giving them a run for their money that
- they'd remember for the rest of their lives!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And at the same time put a crimp into your own,&rdquo; said Sergeant Marden
- soberly. He held out his hand. &ldquo;You'll come, won't you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Twice Three-Ace Artie paced the length of the shack. Logically, as he had
- admitted, Marden was right; but battling against logic was a sullen fury
- that prompted him to throw consequences to the winds, and, with his back
- to the wall, invite Ton-Nugget Camp to a showdown. And then, abruptly, the
- gambler's instinct to throw down a beaten hand, when bluff would be of no
- avail and holding it would only increase his loss, turned the scales, and
- he halted before Sergeant Marden.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll go,&rdquo; he said tersely.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was genuine relief in the officer's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I'll stick to my end of the bargain!&rdquo; the sergeant exclaimed
- heartily. &ldquo;When do you want to start?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It makes damned little odds to me!&rdquo; Three-Ace Artie answered gruffly.
- &ldquo;Suit yourself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said the sergeant. &ldquo;In that case I'll put in a few hours'
- sleep, and we'll get away before the camp is stirring.&rdquo; He buttoned up his
- overcoat, put on his cap, and moved toward the door. &ldquo;I've got a team of
- huskies, and there's room on the sled for anything you want to bring
- along. You can get it ready, and I'll call for you here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie nodded curtly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sergeant Marden reached out to open the door, and, with his hand on the
- latch, hesitated.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't go up there, Leroy,&rdquo; he said earnestly, jerking his head in the
- direction of the upper end of the camp. &ldquo;Canuck John is unconscious, as I
- told you&mdash;there's nothing you could do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But Three-Ace Artie had turned his back. To Canuck John and Sergeant
- Marden he was equally oblivious for the moment. He heard the door close,
- heard the sergeant's footsteps outside recede and die away. He was staring
- now at the bag of gold upon the table. It seemed to mock and jeer at him,
- and suddenly his hands at his sides curled into clenched and knotted fists&mdash;and
- after a moment he spoke aloud in French.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was the first decent thing I ever did in my life&rdquo;&mdash;he was smiling
- in a sort of horrible mirth. &ldquo;Do you appreciate that, my very dear friend
- Raymond? It is exquisite! <i>Sacré nom de Dieu</i>, it is magnificent! It
- was the first decent thing you ever did in your life&mdash;think of that,
- <i>mon brave!</i> And see how well you are paid for it! They are running
- you out of camp!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned and flung himself down on the bunk, his hands still fiercely
- clenched. Black-balled, Sergeant Marden had called it! Well, it was not
- the first time he had been black-balled! Here, in the Yukon, the name of
- Three-Ace Artie was to be a stench to the nostrils; elsewhere, in the city
- of his birth, he, last of his race, had already dragged an honoured and
- patrician name in the mire.
- </p>
- <p>
- A red flame of anger swept his cheeks. What devil's juggling with the
- cards had brought that young fool across his path, and brought the
- memories of the days gone by, and brought him an indulgence in weak,
- mawkish sentimentality! A debt, he had told the boy!
- </p>
- <p>
- The red flamed into his face again&mdash;and yet again. Curse the
- memories! Once aroused they would not down. Even the old schooldays
- crowded themselves upon him&mdash;and at that he jeered out at himself in
- bitter raillery. Brilliant, clever in those days, outstripping many beyond
- his years, as glib with his Latin as with his own French tongue, his
- father had designed him for the Roman Catholic priesthood, and he, Raymond
- Chapelle, the son of the rich seigneur, of one of the oldest families in
- French Canada, instead of becoming a priest of God had become&mdash;Three-Ace
- Artie, the pariah of Ton-Nugget Camp!
- </p>
- <p>
- Would it not make all hell scream with glee! It brought unholy humour to
- himself. He&mdash;a priest of God! But he had not journeyed very far along
- that road&mdash;even before he had finished school he had had a fling or
- two! It had been easy enough. There was no mother, and he did not know his
- father very well. There had been great style and ceremony in that huge,
- old, lumbering, gray-stone mansion in Montreal&mdash;but never a home! His
- father had seemed concerned about him in one respect only&mdash;a sort of
- austere pride in his accomplishments at school. Produce proof of that, and
- money was unstinted. It had come very easily, that money&mdash;and gone
- riotously even as a boy. Then he had entered college, and half way through
- his course his father had died. He had travelled fast after that&mdash;so
- fast that only a blur of wreckage loomed up out of those few years. A
- passion for gambling, excess without restraint, a <i>roué</i> life&mdash;and
- his patrimony, large as it was, was gone. Family after family turned their
- backs upon him, and his clubs shut their doors in his face! And then the
- Yukon&mdash;another identity&mdash;and as much excitement as he could
- snatch out of his new life!
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a snarl now on his lips. It had been a furious pace back there
- in Montreal, but whose business was it save his own! He was not whimpering
- about it. He could swallow his own medicine without asking anybody else to
- make a wry face over it for him! Regrets? What should he regret&mdash;save
- that he had lost the money that would enable him to maintain the old pace!
- Regrets! He would not even be thinking of it now if that young fool had
- not crossed his path, and he, the bigger fool of the two, had not tried to
- play the game of the blind leading the blind!
- </p>
- <p>
- Repay a debt! Fie had not even displayed originality&mdash;only a sort of
- absurd mimicry of the boy's father! He was taunting himself now, mocking
- at himself mercilessly. What good had it done! How much different would it
- be with young Rogers than it had been with himself when Rogers' father, an
- old and intimate friend of his own father's, had taken him home one night
- just before the final crash, and had talked till dawn in kindly
- earnestness, pleading with him to change his ways before it was too late!
- True, it had had its effect. The effect had lasted two days! But somehow,
- for all that, he had never been able to forget the old gentleman's face,
- and the gray hairs, and the soft, gentle voice, and the dull glow of the
- fire in the grate that constantly found a reflection in the moist eyes
- fixed so anxiously upon him.
- </p>
- <p>
- What imp of perversity had inspired him to consider that a debt, and
- prompt him to repay it to the son! Why had he not left well enough alone!
- What infernal trick of memory had caused him to recognise the boy at the
- moment of their first meeting! He had known the other in the old days only
- in the casual way that one of twenty-two would know a boy of fifteen still
- in short trousers!
- </p>
- <p>
- He started up from the bunk impulsively, walked to the stove, wrenched the
- door open, flung in another stick of wood savagely, and began to pace the
- shack with the sullen fury of a caged beast. The passion within the man
- was rising to white heat. Run out of Ton-Nugget Camp! The story would
- spread. A nasty story! It meant that he was run out of the Yukon&mdash;his
- four years here, and not unprofitable years, at an end! It was a life he
- had grown to like because it was untrammelled; a life in which, at least
- in intervals, when the surplus cash was in hand, he could live in Dawson
- for a brief space at a dizzier pace than ever!
- </p>
- <p>
- He was Three-Ace Artie here&mdash;or Arthur Leroy&mdash;it did not matter
- which&mdash;one took one's choice! And now&mdash;what was he to be next&mdash;and
- where!
- </p>
- <p>
- Tell them what he had done, crawl to them, beg them to let him stay&mdash;never!
- If he answered them at all, it would be in quite a different way, and&mdash;his
- eyes fixed again upon the bag of gold that Sergeant Marden had left on the
- table. A bone flung to a cur as he was kicked from the door! The finger
- nails bit into the palms of Three-Ace Artie's hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Damn you!&rdquo; he gritted, white-lipped. &ldquo;Damn every one of you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And this was his reward for the only decent thing that he could remember
- ever having done in his life&mdash;the thought with all its jibing mockery
- was back once more. It added fuel to his fury. It was he, not the Kid, who
- had had his lesson! And it was a lesson he would profit by! If it was the
- only decent thing he had ever done&mdash;it would be the last! They had
- intended him for a priest of God in the old days! He threw back his head
- and laughed until the room reverberated with his hollow mirth. He had come
- too damnably near to acting the part that afternoon, it seemed! A priest
- of God! Blasphemy, unbridled, unlicensed, filled his soul. He snatched up
- the bottle of whisky, and poured a glass full to the brim.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A toast!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;On your feet, Raymond! Up, Monsieur Leroy! Artie,
- Three-Ace Artie&mdash;a toast! Drink deep, <i>mes braves!</i>&rdquo; He lifted
- the glass above his head. &ldquo;To our liege lord henceforth, praying pardon
- for our lapse from grace! To his Satanic Majesty&mdash;and hell!&rdquo; He
- drained the glass to its dregs, and bowed satirically. &ldquo;I can not do
- honour to the toast, sire, by snapping the goblet stem.&rdquo; He held up the
- glass again. &ldquo;It is only a jelly tumbler, and so&mdash;&rdquo; It struck with a
- crash against the wall of the shack, as he hurled it from him, and smashed
- to splinters.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment, clawing at his throat as the raw spirit burned him, staring
- at the broken glass upon the floor, he stood there; then, with a short
- laugh, he pushed both table and chair closer to the stove and sat down&mdash;and
- it was as though it were some strange vigil that he had set himself to
- keep. Occasionally he laughed, occasionally he filled the other glass and
- drank in gulps, occasionally he thought of Canuck John, who spoke English
- very poorly and whose eager snatching at the opportunity to speak French
- had brought about a certain intimacy between them, and, thinking of Canuck
- John, there came a sort of wondering frown as at the intrusion of some
- utterly extraneous thing, occasionally as his eyes encountered the bag of
- gold there came a glitter into their depths and his lips parted, hard
- drawn, over set teeth; but for the most part he sat with a fixed, grim
- smile, his hands opening and shutting on his knees, staring straight
- before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once he got up, and, making the circuit of the shack, collected his
- personal belongings and packed them into his kit bag&mdash;and from under
- a loose plank in the corner of the room took out a half dozen large and
- well-filled pokes, tucked them carefully away beneath the clothing in the
- bag, strapped up the bag, replaced the loosened plank, and returned to his
- chair.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sullen, bitter, desperate, soul reckless with the knowledge that all men's
- hands were against him, as his were against them, he sat there. The hours
- passed unreckoned and unnoticed. There was no dawn to come, for there was
- no sun to rise; but it grew a little lighter. A stillness as of the dead
- hung over Ton-Nugget Camp; and then out of the stillness a dog barked&mdash;and
- became a yapping chorus as others joined in.
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached out mechanically for the bottle&mdash;it was empty. He stared
- at it for a moment in bewildered surprise. It had been full, untouched
- when he had placed it on the table. He stood up&mdash;steadily, firmly. He
- stretched out his hand in front of him, and studied it critically&mdash;there
- was not a tremor. His hand dropped to his side. One could absorb a good
- deal of liquor under mental stress without resultant physical effect! He
- was not drunk. Only his nerves were raw and on edge. That bag of gold on
- the table! His eyes narrowed again upon it for the hundredth time. It
- flaunted itself in his face. It had become symbolic of the unanimous
- contempt with which Ton-Nugget Camp bade him be gone! Damn their cursed
- insolence! It was an entirely inadequate reply to go away and simply leave
- it lying there on the table&mdash;and yet what else was there to do? The
- dogs were barking again. That would be Marden harnessing up his huskies.
- The sergeant would be along now in another minute or two.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned from the table, picked up his overcoat, put it on, and buttoned
- it to the throat. He put on his cap, jerked his kit bag up from the floor,
- slung one strap over his shoulder, moved toward the door&mdash;and paused
- to gaze back around the room. The lamp burned on the table, the empty
- whisky bottle, the glass, the bag of gold beside it; in the stove a knot
- crackled with a report like a pistol shot. Slowly his eyes travelled
- around over the familiar surroundings, his home of four months; and slowly
- the colour mounted in his cheeks&mdash;and suddenly, his eyes aflame, a
- low, tigerish cry on his lips, he flung the kit bag from his shoulder to
- the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- They would tell the story through the Yukon of how he had fleeced and
- robbed a drunken boy of his last cent on earth&mdash;but they would never
- tell the story of how he had slunk away in the darkness like a whipped and
- mangy cur! He feared neither God nor devil, norman, nor beast! That had
- been his lifelong boast, his creed. He feared them now no more than he had
- ever feared them! He listened. There was a footstep without, but that was
- Marden's. Not one of all the camp afoot to risk contamination by bidding
- him goodbye! Well, it was not good-bye yet! Ton-Nugget Camp would
- remember, his adieu! Passion was rocking the man to the soul, the sense of
- bitter injury, smarting like a gaping wound, was maddening him beyond all
- self-control. He tore loose the top button of his coat&mdash;and turned
- sharply to face the door. Here was Marden now. He wanted no quarrel with
- Mar-den, but&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- The door opened. He felt himself mechanically push his cap back on his
- forehead, felt a sort of unholy joy sweep in a wild, ungovernable surge
- upon him, felt every muscle of his body stiffen and grow rigid in a fierce
- and savage elation, and he heard a sound that he meant for a laugh chortle
- from his lips. It was not Marden standing there&mdash;it was Murdock Shaw.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then he spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come in, and shut the door, Murdock,&rdquo; he said in a velvet voice. &ldquo;I
- thought my luck was out tonight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's not worth while,&rdquo; the miner answered. &ldquo;Mar-den's getting ready to go
- now, and I only came to bring you a message from Canuck John.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've got one for you that you'll remember longer!&rdquo;&mdash;Three-Ace
- Artie's smile was ghastly, as he moved back toward the table in a kind of
- inimical guarantee that the floor space should be equally divided between
- them. &ldquo;Come in, Murdock, if you are a man&mdash;<i>and shut that door</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The miner did not move.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Canuck John is dead,&rdquo; he said tersely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's that to do with me&mdash;or you and me!&rdquo;&mdash;there was a rasp in
- Three-Ace Artie's voice now. &ldquo;It's you who have started me on the little
- journey that I'm going to take, you know, and it's only decent to use the
- time that's left in bidding me good-bye.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't come here to quarrel with you,&rdquo; Shaw said shortly. &ldquo;Canuck John
- regained consciousness for a moment before he died. He couldn't talk much&mdash;just
- a few words. We don't any of us know his real name, or where his home is.
- From what he said, it seems you do. He said: 'Tell Three-Ace Artie&mdash;give
- goodbye message&mdash;my mother and&mdash;' And then he died.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie's fingers were twisting themselves around the bag of gold
- that he had picked up from the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought so!&rdquo; he snarled. &ldquo;You were yellow this afternoon. I thought you
- hadn't the nerve to come here, unless you figured you were safe some way
- or another. And so you think you are going to hide behind a dead man and
- the sanctimonious pathos of a dying message! Well, I'll see you both
- damned first! Do you hear!&rdquo; White to the lips with the fury that,
- gathering all through the night, was breaking now, he started toward the
- other, his hand clutching the bag of gold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Involuntarily the miner stepped back still closer to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's not the way out for you!&rdquo; whispered Three-Ace Artie hoarsely. &ldquo;If
- you take it, I'll drop you in the snow before you're ten yards up the
- street! Damn you, we'll play this hand out now for keeps! You've started
- something, and we'll finish it. You've rid the camp and rid Alaska of a
- tainted smell, have you? You sneaked around behind my back with your
- cursed righteousness to give me a push further on the road to hell! I know
- your kind&mdash;and, by God, I know your breed! Four years ago on the
- White Pass you took a man's last dollar for a hunk of bread. He could pay
- or starve! You sleek skunk&mdash;do you remember? Your conscience has been
- troubling you perhaps, and so you went around the camp and collected this,
- did you&mdash;<i>this!</i>&rdquo; He held up the bag of gold above his head.
- &ldquo;No? You didn't recognise me again? Well, no matter&mdash;take it back!
- Tell Ton-Nugget Camp I gave it back to you&mdash;to keep!&rdquo; In a flash his
- arm swept forward, and, with all his strength behind it, he hurled the bag
- at the other's head.
- </p>
- <p>
- It struck full on the miner's forehead&mdash;and dropped with a soft thud
- on the floor. The man reeled backward, swayed, and clawed at the wall of
- the shack for support&mdash;and while he swayed a red spot dyed his
- forehead, and a crimson stream ran zigzag down over eye and cheek.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Three-Ace Artie laughed, and stooped, and picked up his kit bag, and
- swung one strap over one shoulder as before&mdash;Sergeant Marden,
- stern-faced, was standing on the threshold of the open door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I guess my luck is out after all. You win, Murdock!&rdquo; smiled Three-Ace
- Artie grimly&mdash;and brushed past the sergeant out of the shack.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dog-team was standing before the door. He dropped his kit bag on the
- sled, and strode on down the street. Here and there lights were beginning
- to show from the shack windows. Once a face was pressed against a pane to
- watch him go by, but no voice spoke to him. It was silent, and it was
- dark.
- </p>
- <p>
- Only the snow was white. And it was cold&mdash;cold as death.
- </p>
- <p>
- Presently Sergeant Marden and the dog-team caught up with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He'll need a stitch or two in his head,&rdquo; said the sergeant gruffly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond Chapelle, alias Arthur Leroy, alias Three-Ace Artie, made no
- reply. In his soul was anarchy; in his heart a bitter mockery that picked
- a quarrel with Almighty God.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III&mdash;THE CURÉ
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">R</span>AYMOND CHAPELLE,
- once known as Three-Ace Artie, and now, if the cardcase in his pocket
- could be relied upon for veracity, as one Henri Mentone&mdash;though the
- cardcase revealed neither when nor where that metamorphosis had taken
- place, nor yet again the nature of Monsieur Henri Mentone's pursuits in
- life&mdash;was engaged in the rather futile occupation of staring out
- through the car window into a black and objectless night. He was not,
- however, deeply concerned with the night, for at times he shifted his gaze
- around the smoking compartment, which he had to himself, and smiled
- cynically. The winter of the Yukon had changed to the springtime of lower
- French Canada&mdash;it was a far cry from Ton-Nugget Camp, from Dawson and
- the Pacific, to the little village of St. Marleau on the banks of the St.
- Lawrence, where the river in its miles of breadth was merging with the
- Atlantic Ocean!
- </p>
- <p>
- St. Marleau! That was where Canuck John had lived, where the old folks
- were now&mdash;if they were still alive. The cynical smile deepened. The
- only friend he had was&mdash;a dead man! The idea rather pleased him, as
- it had pleased him ever since he had started for the East. Perhaps there
- was a certain sentimentality connected with what he was about to do, but
- not the sickly, fool sentimentality that he had been weak enough to be
- guilty of with the Kid in Ton-Nugget Camp! He was through with that! Here,
- if it was sentiment at all, it was a sentiment that appealed to his
- sporting instincts. Canuck John had put it up to him&mdash;and died. It
- was a sort of trust; and the only man who trusted him was&mdash;a dead
- man. He couldn't throw a dead man down!
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed softly, drumming with his carefully manicured fingers on the
- window pane. Besides, there was too much gossip circulating between the
- Pacific Coast and Alaska to make it profitable for a gambler who had been
- kicked out of the Yukon for malpractice to linger in that locality&mdash;even
- if he had shaved off his beard! The fingers, from the window pane, felt in
- a sort of grimly ruminative way over the smooth, clean-shaven face. So, as
- well East as anywhere, providing always that he gave Montreal a wide berth&mdash;which
- he had!
- </p>
- <p>
- Canuck John, of course, had not meant to impose any greater trust than the
- mere writing of a letter. But, like Murdock Shaw and the rest of
- Ton-Nugget Camp, he, Raymond, did not know Canuck John's name. If Canuck
- John had ever told him, and he had a hazy recollection that the other once
- had done so, he had completely forgotten it. Of St. Marleau, however,
- Canuck John had spoken scores of times. That made a letter still possible,
- of course&mdash;to the postmaster of St. Marleau. But it was many years
- since Canuck John had left there; Canuck John could not write himself and
- therefore his people would have had no knowledge of his whereabouts, and
- to write the postmaster that a man known as Canuck John had died in
- Ton-Nugget Camp was, to say the least of it, open to confusing
- possibilities in view of the fact that in those many and intervening years
- Canuck John was not likely to have been the only one who had left his
- native village to seek a wider field. And since he, Raymond, was coming
- East in any event, he was rather glad than otherwise that for the moment
- he had a definite objective in view.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anyway, Canuck John had been a good sort&mdash;and that was all there was
- to it! And, meanwhile, this filled in, as it were, a hiatus in his own
- career, for he had not quite made up his mind exactly in what direction,
- or against whom specifically, he could pit his wits in future&mdash;to the
- best advantage to himself. One thing only was certain, henceforth he would
- be hampered by no maudlin consideration of ethics, such, for instance, as
- had enabled him to state truthfully to the Kid that he had never stacked a
- card in his life. To the winds with all that! He had had his lesson! Fish
- to his net, hereafter, would be all that came his way! If every man's hand
- was against him, his own would not remain palsied! For the moment he was
- in funds, flush, and well provided for; and for the moment it was St.
- Marleau and his dead friend's sorry legacy&mdash;to those who might be
- dead themselves! That remained to be seen! After that, as far as he was
- concerned, it was <i>sauve qui peut</i>, and&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Henri Mentone looked up&mdash;and, with no effort to conceal his
- displeasure, Monsieur Henri Mentone scowled. A young priest had entered
- the smoking compartment, and was now in the act of settling himself on the
- opposite seat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good evening,&rdquo; nodded the other pleasantly. &ldquo;I think we have been
- travelling companions since Quebec.&rdquo; He produced a cigar, lighted it, and
- smiled. &ldquo;It is not a very pleasant night, is it? There appears to be a
- very high wind.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond Chapelle rattled a newspaper out of his pocket, rattled it open
- brusquely&mdash;and retired behind it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It appears to be windy!&rdquo; he growled uninvitingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced at the remainder of his cigar. It was a very good cigar, and he
- did not care to sacrifice it by giving the other all the elbow room that
- the entire smoking compartment of the car afforded&mdash;as he, otherwise,
- would not have hesitated an instant to do! If his soul had nurtured any
- one especial hatred in its late period of bitter and blasphemous fury, it
- was a hatred of religion and all connected with it. He detested the sight
- of a priest. It always made him think of that night in Ton-Nugget Camp
- when memories had got the better of him. A priest of God! He hated them
- all. And he made no distinction as between creeds. They were all alike.
- They were Murdock Shaws! And he, if his father had had his way, would now
- be wearing a <i>soutane</i>, and dangling a crucifix from his neck, and
- sporting one of those damnable round hats like the man in front of him!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know this country at all?&rdquo; inquired the priest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not,&rdquo; Raymond answered curtly from behind his paper.
- </p>
- <p>
- The other did not appear to notice the rebuff.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No more do I,&rdquo; he said engagingly. &ldquo;I have never been below Quebec
- before, and I am afraid, unfortunately, that I am about to suffer for my
- ignorance. I am going to St. Marleau.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond lowered his paper, and for the first time gave the other more than
- a casual glance. He found his <i>vis-à-vis</i> to be dark-eyed, of rather
- pleasant features&mdash;this he admitted grudgingly&mdash;and a young man
- of, he judged, about his own age.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is the matter with St. Marleau?&rdquo; Personal interest prompted him to
- ask the question; nothing could prompt him to infuse even a hint of
- affability into his tones.
- </p>
- <p>
- The priest shrugged his shoulders, and smiled whimsically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The matter with St. Marleau is that it is on the bank of the river, and
- that the station is three miles away. I have been talking to the
- conductor. I did not know that before.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond had not known it before either. The information did not please
- him. He had taken it as a matter of course that the railroad would set him
- down at the village itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; he prompted sourly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was what caused me to take a particular interest in the weather&rdquo;&mdash;the
- priest waved his cigar philosophically. &ldquo;I shall have to walk, I presume.
- I am not expected until to-morrow, and the conductor tells me there is
- nothing but a small station where we stop.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond would have to walk too.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is unfortunate!&rdquo; he observed sarcastically. &ldquo;I should have thought
- that you would have provided against any such contingencies by making
- inquiries before you started.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is true,&rdquo; admitted the priest simply. &ldquo;I am entirely to blame, and I
- must not complain. I was pleasurably over-excited perhaps. It is my first
- charge, you see. The curé of St. Marleau, Father Allard, went away
- yesterday for a vacation&mdash;for the summer&mdash;his first in many
- years&mdash;he is quite an old man&rdquo;&mdash;the young priest was waxing
- garrulous, and was no longer interesting. Raymond peered out of the car
- window with a new and personal concern in the weather. There was no rain,
- but the howl of the wind was distinctly audible over the roar of the
- train.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was to have arrived to-morrow, as I said&rdquo;&mdash;the priest was rattling
- on&mdash;&ldquo;but having my preparations all completed to-day and nothing to
- detain me, I&mdash;well, as you see, I am here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond was picturing realistically, and none too happily, a three-mile
- walk on a stormy night over a black, rutted country road. The prospect was
- not a soothing one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur is perhaps a commercial traveller?&rdquo; ventured the young curé
- amiably, by way of continuing the conversation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond folded his paper deliberately, and replaced it in his pocket.
- There was a quick, twisted smile on his lips, but for the first time his
- voice was cordiality itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;On the contrary, I make my living precisely as does
- Monsieur le Curé, except perhaps that I have not always the same certainty
- of success.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; The young priest leaned forward interestingly. &ldquo;Then you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond, and now a snarl crept into his voice. &ldquo;I let some one
- else toil for the money&mdash;while I hold out the hat!&rdquo; He rose abruptly,
- and flung his cigar viciously in the general direction of the cuspidor. &ldquo;I
- am a parasite on my fellow men, monsieur&mdash;a gambler,&rdquo; he said evenly,
- and walked to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- Over his shoulder he caught the amazement on the young priest's face, then
- the quick, deep flush of indignation&mdash;and then the corridor shut him
- off from the other, and he chuckled savagely to himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- He passed on into the main body of the car, took his bag from the rack
- over the seat that he had occupied, and went on into the next car in the
- rear. The priest, he had noticed, had previously been occupying the same
- car as himself. He wanted no more of the other! And as for making a
- companion of him on the walk from the station to St. Marleau, he would
- sooner have walked with the devil! As a matter of fact, he was prepared to
- admit he would not have been wholly averse to the devil's company. But a
- priest of God! The cynical smile was back on his lips. They were all alike&mdash;he
- despised them all. But he nevertheless confessed to a certain
- commiseration; he was sorry for God&mdash;the devil was much less poorly
- served!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV&mdash;ON THE ROAD TO ST. MARLEAU
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">R</span>AYMOND descended
- from the train on the opposite side from the station platform. He proposed
- that Monsieur le Curé, <i>pro tem</i>., of St. Marleau, should have a
- start sufficient to afford a guarantee against the possibility of any
- further association with the other that night!
- </p>
- <p>
- A furious gust of wind eddied down the length of the train, caught at his
- travelling bag, and banged it violently against his knees. He swore
- earnestly to himself, as he picked his way further back across the siding
- tracks to guard against the chance of being seen from the platform when
- the train started on again. It was obviously not going to be a pleasant
- experience, that walk! It was bad enough where he stood, here on the
- trackside, somewhat sheltered by the train; in the open the wind promised
- to attain the ferocity of a young tornado!
- </p>
- <p>
- The train pulled out; and across the tracks a light glimmered from a
- window, and behind the light a building loomed up black and formless. The
- light, filtering out on the platform, disclosed two figures&mdash;the
- priest, and, evidently, the station agent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond sat down on his bag and waited. It was intensely dark, and he was
- far enough away to be secure from observation. He grinned maliciously, as
- he watched a shadowy sort of pantomime in which the priest clutched and
- struggled continually with his <i>soutane</i> as the wind kept wrapping it
- around his legs.
- </p>
- <p>
- The other might be less infatuated with skirts by the time St. Marleau was
- reached!
- </p>
- <p>
- The two figures moved down the platform together, and Raymond lost sight
- of them in the darkness. He rose, picked up his bag, walked a few yards
- along the track in the opposite direction to that which they had taken,
- crossed over the mainline, and clambered upon the platform. Here he
- stumbled over a trunk. The curé's, presumably! He continued on along the
- platform slowly&mdash;under the circumstances a little information from
- the station agent would not come in amiss. He jammed his slouch hat firmly
- down on his head, and yanked the brim savagely over his eyes against the
- wind. This was likely to prove considerably more than he had bargained
- for! Three miles of it! And for what! He began to call himself a fool. And
- then, the station agent returning alone from the lower end of the
- platform, head down, buffeting the wind, and evidently making for the
- curé's trunk to house it for the night, Raymond stepped forward and
- accosted the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man brought himself up with a jerk. Raymond drew the other into the
- shelter of the station wall. In the meagre light from the window a few
- yards away, he could make out the man's face but very indistinctly; and
- the other, in his turn, appeared equally at a disadvantage, save that,
- possibly, expecting it to be an acquaintance from the village, he found a
- stranger instead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>'Cré nom!</i>&rdquo; ejaculated the man in surprise. &ldquo;And where did you come
- from?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From the train&mdash;naturally,&rdquo; Raymond answered. &ldquo;You were busy with
- some one, and I waited.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that is so! I see!&rdquo; The other nodded his head. &ldquo;It was Father
- Aubert, the young curé who is come to the village. He has but just
- started, and if you are going to St. Marleau, and hurry, you will have
- company over the road.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never mind about him!&rdquo; said Raymond shortly. &ldquo;I am not looking for that
- kind of company!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens!</i>&rdquo; exclaimed the man a little blankly. &ldquo;Not that kind of
- company&mdash;but that is strange! It is a bad night and a lonely walk&mdash;and,
- I do not know him of course, but he seemed very pleasant, the young curé.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I daresay,&rdquo; said Raymond, and shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;But I do not
- intend to walk at all if I can help it. Is there no horse to be had around
- here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, no!&rdquo;&mdash;the other's tones expressed mild reproof at the question.
- &ldquo;If there had been, I would have procured it for the curé. There is
- nothing. It is as near to the village as anywhere.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And that is three miles!&rdquo; muttered Raymond irritably.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is three miles by the road, true, monsieur; but the village itself is
- not nearly so far. There is a short cut. If you take the path that leads
- straight ahead where the road turns off to the left to circle the woods,
- it will bring you to the brow of the hill overlooking the village and the
- river, and you will come out just where the road swings in again at the
- tavern. You save at least a mile.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond brightened.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah! A tavern!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;That is better! I was beginning to think the
- cursed&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&mdash;wait!&rdquo; the man laughed suddenly. &ldquo;It is not what you think! I
- should not advise you to go there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No?&rdquo; inquired Raymond, &ldquo;and why not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She is an old hag, an <i>excommuniée</i>, old Mother Blondin, who lives
- there&mdash;and her son, who is come back for the past week from God knows
- where with a scar all over his ugly face, is no better. It is not a tavern
- at all. That is a name we have for it amongst ourselves. We call it the
- tavern because it is said that she makes her own <i>whiskey-blanc</i> and
- sells it on the sly, and that there are some who buy it&mdash;though when
- her son is back she could not very well have enough for any customers. He
- has been drunk for a week, and he is a devil.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your Mother Blondin is evidently no fool!&rdquo; observed Raymond ironically.
- &ldquo;And so it is said there are some who buy it&mdash;eh? And in turn I
- suppose she could buy out every farmer in the village! She should have
- money, your Mother Blondin! Hers is a profitable business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the other. &ldquo;For me, that is the way I look at it. It is gossip
- that her stocking is well lined; but I believe the gossip. It is perhaps
- well for her if it is so, for she will need it. She is getting old and
- does not see very well, though, <i>bon Dieu</i>, she is still sharp enough
- with her wits! But&rdquo;&mdash;his shoulders lifted in a shrug&mdash;&ldquo;the way
- to the village, eh? Well, whether you take the road or the path, you
- arrive at Mother Blondin's. You go down the hill from there, and the
- village is on each side of you along the bank of the river. Ask at the
- first house, and they will show you the way to Madame Dussault's&mdash;that
- is the only place to go. She keeps a boarding house whenever there is
- anybody to board, for it is not often that any stranger comes to St.
- Marleau. Are you going to stay long?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know,&rdquo; said Raymond pleasantly&mdash;and ignored the implied
- invitation for further confidences.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, if you like,&rdquo; offered the station agent, &ldquo;you can leave your bag
- here, and it can go over with the cure's trunk in the morning. He said he
- would send somebody for it then. You won't find it easy carrying that bag
- a night like this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it's only a small one; I guess I can manage it all right,&rdquo; said
- Raymond lightly. He extended his hand&mdash;the priest was far enough
- along by now so that he would not overtake the other; and, though it was
- still early, not much after eight o'clock, the countryside was not given
- to keeping late hours, and, if he was to reach St. Marleau before this
- Dussault household, for instance, had retired for the night, it was time
- he started. &ldquo;Much obliged for the information! Goodnight!&rdquo; he smiled, and
- picked up his bag&mdash;and a moment later, the station behind him, was
- battling in the face of furious wind gusts along the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was very dark; and the road was execrable, full of ruts and hollows
- into which he was continually stumbling. He had a flashlight in his bag;
- but, bad as the walking was, it was, after all, he decided, the lesser of
- the two evils&mdash;if he used the flashlight, he ran a very large risk of
- inviting the companionship of the priest ahead of him! Also, he had not
- gone very far before he heartily regretted that he had not foregone the
- few little conveniences that the bag contained, and had left the thing
- behind. The wind, as it was, threatened to relieve him of it a score of
- times. Occasionally he halted and turned his back, and stood still for a
- breathing spell. His mood, as he went along, became one that combined a
- sullen stubbornness to walk ten miles, if necessary, once he had started,
- and an acrimonious and savage jeer at himself for having ever been fool
- enough to bring about his present discomfiture.
- </p>
- <p>
- Finally, however, he reached the turn of the road referred to by the
- station agent, and here he stood for a moment debating with himself the
- advisability of taking the short cut. His eyes grown accustomed to the
- darkness, he could distinguish his surroundings with some distinctness,
- and he made out a beaten track that led off in the same direction which,
- until then, he had been following; but also, a little beyond this again,
- he made out a black stretch of wooded land. He shook his head doubtfully.
- The short cut was a mere path at best, and he might, or might not, be able
- to follow it through the trees. If he lost it, and it would be altogether
- too easy a thing to do, his predicament would not be enviable. It was
- simply a question of whether the mile he might save thereby was worth the
- risk. He shook his head again&mdash;this time decisively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not much on the 'straight and narrow' anyhow!&rdquo; he muttered
- facetiously&mdash;and started on again, following the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gradually the road and the trees began to converge; and presently, the
- road swerving again, this time sharply toward the river, he found himself
- travelling through the woods, and injected into the midst of what seemed
- like the centre of some unearthly and demoniacal chorus rehearsing its
- parts&mdash;the wind shrieked through the upper branches of the trees, and
- moaned disconsolately through the lower ones; it cried and sobbed; it
- screamed, and mourned, and sighed; and in the darkness, still blacker
- shapes, like weird, beckoning arms, the limbs swayed to and fro. And now
- and then there came a loud, ominous crackle, and then a crash, as a
- branch, dried and rotten, came hurtling to the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Damn it,&rdquo; confessed Raymond earnestly to himself, &ldquo;I don't like this! I
- wish St. Marleau was where Canuck John is now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He quickened his pace&mdash;or, rather, tried to do so; but it was much
- blacker here than out in the open, and besides the road now appeared to be
- insanely full of twists and turns, and in spite of his efforts his
- progress was no faster.
- </p>
- <p>
- It seemed interminable, never-ending. He went on and on. A branch crashed
- down louder than before somewhere ahead of him. He snarled in consonance
- with the wind-shrieks and the wind-moans that now came to hold a personal
- malevolence in their pandemonium for himself. His coat caught once on a
- projecting branch and was torn. He cursed Canuck John, and cursed himself
- with abandon. And then abruptly, as the road twisted again, he caught the
- glimmer of a light through the trees&mdash;and his eyes upon the light,
- rather than upon the ground to pick his way, he stumbled suddenly and
- pitched forward over something that was uncannily soft and yielding to the
- touch.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a startled cry, Raymond picked himself up. It was the body of a man
- sprawled across the road. He wrenched open his bag, and, whipping out his
- flashlight, turned it upon the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man lay upon his back, motionless, inert; the white, ghastly face,
- blood-streaked, was twisted at a sharp angle to the body, disclosing a
- gaping wound in the head that extended from the temple back across the
- skull&mdash;and a yard away, mute testimony to its tragic work, lay the
- rotten limb of a tree, devoid of leaves, perhaps ten feet in length and of
- the thickness of one's two fists, its end jagged and splintered where it
- had snapped away from its parent trunk.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the priest&mdash;Father Aubert, the young curé of St. Marleau.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V&mdash;THE &ldquo;MURDER&rdquo;
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">R</span>AYMOND stooped to
- the other's side. He called the man's name&mdash;there was no answer. He
- lifted the priest's head&mdash;it sagged limply back again. He felt
- quickly for the heart beat&mdash;there was no sign of life. And then
- Raymond stood up again.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the nature of the man that, the sudden shock of his discovery once
- over, he should be cool and unperturbed. His nerves were not easily put to
- rout under any circumstances, and a life in the Great North, where the raw
- edges were turned only too often, left him, if not calloused, at least
- composed and, in a philosophical way, unmoved at the sight before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tough luck&mdash;even for a priest!&rdquo; he muttered, not irreverently. &ldquo;The
- man's dead, right enough.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced around him, and his eyes fixed again on the glimmer of light
- through the trees. That was the tavern undoubtedly&mdash;old Mother
- Blondin's, the ex<i>communiée</i>. He shrugged his shoulders, and a grim
- smile flickered across his lips. She too had her quarrel with the church,
- but even so she would hardly refuse temporary sanctuary to a dead man. The
- priest couldn't be left here lying in the road, and if Mother Blondin's
- son was not too drunk to help carry the body to the house, it would solve
- the problem until word could be got to the village.
- </p>
- <p>
- He took up his bag&mdash;he could not be cumbered with that when he
- returned to get the priest&mdash;and, the trees sparser here on what was
- obviously the edge of the woods, with the window light to guide him and
- his flashlight to open the way, he left the road and began to run directly
- toward the light.
- </p>
- <p>
- A hundred yards brought him out into a clearing&mdash;and then to his
- disgust he discovered that, apart possibly from another rent or two in his
- clothing, he had gained nothing by leaving the road. It had evidently
- swung straight in toward the house from a point only a few yards further
- on from where he had left the priest, for he was now alongside of it
- again!
- </p>
- <p>
- He grinned derisively at himself, slipped his flashlight into his pocket&mdash;and,
- on the point of starting toward the house, which, with only a small yard
- in front of it, was set practically on the edge of the road itself, he
- halted abruptly. There was only one lighted window that he could see, and
- this was now suddenly darkened by a shadowy form from within, and
- indistinctly he could make out a face pressed close against the window
- pane.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond instinctively remained motionless. The face held there, peering
- long and intently out into the night. It was rather strange! His own
- approach could not have been heard, for the howl of the wind precluded any
- possibility of that; and neither could he be seen out here in the
- darkness. What was it that attracted and seemed to fascinate the watcher
- at the window? Mechanically, he turned his head to look behind and around
- him. There was nothing&mdash;only the trees swaying in the woods; the
- scream and screech, and the shrill whistling of the wind; and, in addition
- now, a rumbling bass, low, yet perfectly distinct, the sullen roar of
- beating waves. He looked back at the window&mdash;the face was gone.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond moved forward curiously. There was no curtain on the window, and a
- step or two nearer enabled him to see within. It was a typical
- bare-floored room of the <i>habitant</i> class of smaller house that
- combined a living room and kitchen in one, the front door opening directly
- upon it. There was a stove at one end, with a box of cordwood beside it;
- drawn against the wall was a table, upon which stood a lighted lamp; and a
- little distance from the table, also against the wall, was an old,
- gray-painted, and somewhat battered <i>armoire</i>, whose top was strewn
- with crockeryware and glass dishes&mdash;there was little else in
- evidence, save a few home-made chairs with thong-laced seats.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's brows gathered in a puzzled frown. Diagonally across the room
- from the window and directly opposite the stove was a closed door, and
- here, back turned, the man who had been peering out of the window&mdash;for
- the man was the only occupant of the room&mdash;was crouched with his ear
- against the panel. His bewilderment growing, Raymond watched the other.
- The man straightened up after a moment, faced around into the room, and,
- swaying slightly, a vicious smile of satisfaction on his lips, moved
- stealthily in the direction of the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now Raymond had no difficulty in recognising the man from the station
- agent's vivid, if cursory, description. It was Mother Blondin's son. A
- devil, the agent had called the other&mdash;and the man looked it! An ugly
- white scar straggled from cheek bone to twisted lip, the eyes were narrow
- and close set, the hair shaggy, and the long arms dangling from a powerful
- frame made Raymond think of a gorilla.
- </p>
- <p>
- Reaching the table, the man paused, looked furtively all around the room,
- and again appeared to be listening intently; then he stretched out his
- hand and turned the lamp half down.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's frown deepened. The other was undoubtedly more or less drunk,
- but that did not explain the peculiar and, as it were, ominous way in
- which he was acting. What was the man up to? And where was Mother Blondin?
- </p>
- <p>
- The man moved down the room in the direction of the stove; and, the light
- dim now, Raymond stepped close to the window for a better view. The man
- halted at the end of the room, once more looked quickly all about him,
- gazed fixedly for an instant at the closed door where previously he had
- held his ear to the panel&mdash;and reached suddenly up above his head,
- the fingers of both hands working and clawing in a sort of mad haste at an
- interstice in the wall where the rough-squared timbers came imperfectly
- together.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond smiled sardonically. He understood now. It was old Mother
- Blondin's &ldquo;stocking&rdquo;! She had perhaps not been as generous as the son
- considered she might have been! The man was engaged in the filial
- occupation of robbing his own mother!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Worthy offspring&mdash;if the old dame doesn't belie her reputation!&rdquo;
- muttered Raymond&mdash;and stepped to the front door. &ldquo;However, it's an
- ill wind that blows nobody good, and, if the priest suffered, Mother
- Blondin can at least thank my interruption incident thereto for the
- salvage of her cash.&rdquo; He opened the door and walked in coolly. &ldquo;Good
- evening!&rdquo; he said pleasantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man whirled from the wall&mdash;and with a scream, half of pain and
- half of startled, furious surprise, was jerked back against the wall
- again. His hand was caught as though in a trap. The hiding place had quite
- evidently been intended by Mother Blondin for no larger a hand than her
- own! The man had obviously wormed and wriggled his hand in between the
- timbers&mdash;and his hand would not come out with any greater ease than
- it had gone in! He wrenched at it, snarling and cursing now, stamping with
- his feet, and hurling his maledictions at Raymond's head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is not my fault, my friend,&rdquo; said Raymond calmly. &ldquo;Shall I help you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He started forward&mdash;and stopped halfway across the room. The man had
- torn his hand loose, sending a rain of coin clinking to the floor, and,
- fluttering after it like falling leaves, a score or two of banknotes as
- well; and now, leaping around, he snatched up a heavy piece of the
- cordwood, and, swinging it about his head, his face working murderously,
- sprang toward Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- The bag dropped from Raymond's hand, and his face hardened. He had not
- bargained for this, but if&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a snarl and an oath the man was upon him; the cordwood whistled in
- its downward sweep, aimed full at his head. He parried the blow with his
- forearm, and, with a lightning-like movement, side-stepped and sent his
- right fist crashing to the other's jaw.
- </p>
- <p>
- It staggered the man for an instant&mdash;but only for an instant.
- Bellowing with rage, dropping the cordwood, heedless of the blows that
- Raymond battered into his face, by sheer bulk and weight he closed, his
- arms circling Raymond's neck, his fingers feeling for a throat-hold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Around the room they staggered, swaying, lurching. The man was half drunk,
- and, caught in the act of thievery, his fury was demoniacal. Again and
- again Raymond tried to throw the other off. The man was too big, too
- powerful for close quarters, and his only chance was an opportunity to use
- his fists. They panted heavily, the breath of the one hot on the other's
- cheek; and then, as they swung, Raymond was conscious that the door of the
- rear room was open, and that a woman was standing on the threshold. It was
- only a glance he got&mdash;of an old hag-like face, of steel-rimmed
- spectacles, of tumbling and dishevelled gray hair&mdash;the man's fingers
- at last were tightening like a vise around his throat.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the other, too, had seen the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Voleur!</i> Thief!&rdquo; he yelled hoarsely. &ldquo;Smash him on the head with
- the stick, mother, while I hold him!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You devil!&rdquo; gritted Raymond&mdash;and with a wrench, a twist, his
- strength massed for the one supreme effort, he tore himself loose, hurling
- the other backward and away from him.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a crash of breaking glass as the man smashed into the <i>armoire</i>;
- a wild laugh from the woman in the doorway&mdash;and, for the first time,
- a cry from Raymond's lips. The man snatched up a revolver from the top of
- the <i>armoire</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- But quick as the other was, Raymond was quicker as he sprang and clutched
- at the man's hand. His face was sternly white now with the consciousness
- that he was fighting for no less than his life. Here, there, now across
- the room, now back again they reeled and stumbled, struggling for
- possession of the weapon, as Raymond strove to tear it from his
- antagonist's grasp. And now the woman, screaming, ran forward and picked
- up the piece of cordwood, and circling them, screaming still, aimed her
- blows at Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- One struck him on the head, dazing him a little... his brain began to
- whirl... he could not wrench the revolver from the man's hand... it seemed
- as though he had been trying through an eternity... his hands seemed to be
- losing their strength... another desperate jerk from the other like that
- and his hold would be gone, the revolver in the unfettered possession of
- this whisky-maddened brute, whose lips, like fangs, were flecked with
- slaver, in whose eyes, bloodshot, burned the light of murder... his
- fingers were slipping from their grip, and&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a blinding flash; the roar of the report; the revolver clattered
- to the floor; a great, ungainly bulk seemed to Raymond to waver and sway
- before him in most curious fashion, then totter and crash with an impact
- that shook the house&mdash;or was it that ghastly, howling wind!&mdash;to
- the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond reeled back against the <i>armoire</i>, and hung there gasping,
- panting for his breath, sweeping his hand again and again across his
- forehead. He was abominably dizzy. The room was swinging around and
- around; there were two figures, now on the ceiling, now on the floor&mdash;a
- man who lay flat on his back with his arms and legs grotesquely extended,
- and whose shirt was red-splotched; and a hag with streaming gray hair, who
- rocked and crooned over the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dead! Dead! Dead!&rdquo;&mdash;the wail rose into a high and piercing falsetto.
- The hag was on her feet and running wildly for the front door. &ldquo;Murder!
- Thief! Murder! Murder!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The horrible screeching died away; and a gust of wind, swirling in through
- the door that blew open after the woman, took up the refrain: &ldquo;Murder&mdash;murder&mdash;<i>murder!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His head ached and swam. He was conscious that he should set his wits at
- work, that he should think&mdash;that somehow he was in peril. He groped
- his way unsteadily to where his bag lay on the floor. As he reached it,
- the wind blew the lamp out. He felt around inside the bag, found his
- flask, and drank greedily.
- </p>
- <p>
- The stimulant cleared his brain. He stood up, and stared around him in the
- darkness. His mind was active enough now&mdash;grimly active. If he were
- caught, he would swing for murder! He had only acted in self-defence, he
- had not even fired the shot, the revolver had gone off in the man's own
- hand&mdash;but there wasn't a chance for him, if he were caught. The old
- hag's testimony that he had come there as a thief&mdash;that was what
- undoubtedly she believed, and undoubtedly what she would swear&mdash;would
- damn him. And&mdash;cursed irony!&mdash;that conversation with the station
- agent, innocent enough then, would corroborate her now! Nor had he any
- reputation to fall back upon to bolster up his story if he faced the issue
- and told the truth. Reputation! He could not even give a plausible account
- of himself without making matters worse. A gambler from the Klondike! The
- <i>roué</i> of Montreal! Would that save him!
- </p>
- <p>
- His only hope was to run for it&mdash;and at once. It could not be very
- far to the village, and it would not be long before that precious old hag
- had alarmed the community and returned with the villagers at her heels.
- But where would he go? There were no trains! It would be a man-hunt
- through the woods, and with so meagre a start that sooner or later they
- would get him. And even if he evaded them at first he would have no chance
- to get very far away from that locality, and ultimately he would have to
- reckon on the arrival of the police. It was probable that old Mother
- Blondin could not recognise him again, for the light had been turned down
- and she was partially blind; and he was certain that the station agent
- would not know his face again either&mdash;but both could, and would,
- supply a general description of his dress, appearance and build that would
- serve equally as well to apprehend him in that thinly populated country
- where, under such circumstances, to be even a stranger was sufficient to
- invite suspicion.
- </p>
- <p>
- Well, if to run for it was his only chance, he would take it! He stooped
- for his bag, and, in the act, stood suddenly motionless in a rigid sort of
- way. No! There was perhaps another plan! It seemed to Raymond that he held
- his breath in suspense until his brain should pass judgment upon it. The
- priest! The dead priest, only a little way off out there on the road! No&mdash;it
- was not visionary, nor wild, nor mad. If they <i>found</i> the man that
- they supposed had murdered the old woman's son, they would not search any
- further. That was absurdly obvious! The priest was not expected until
- to-morrow. The only person who knew that the priest had arrived, and who
- knew of his, Raymond's, arrival, was the station agent. But the quarry
- once run to earth, there would be no reason for anybody, as might
- otherwise be the case in a far-flung pursuit, going to the station on a
- night like this. The priest's arrival therefore would not become known to
- the villagers until the next morning at the earliest, and quite probably
- not until much later, when some one from the village should drive over to
- meet the train by which he was expected to arrive. As a minimum,
- therefore, that gave him ten or twelve hours' start&mdash;and with ten or
- twelve hours free from pursuit, he could take very good care of the
- &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;! Yes, it was the way! The only way! From what the priest had
- said in the train, it was evident that he was a total stranger here, and
- so, being unknown, the deception would not be discovered until the station
- agent told his story. Furthermore, the wound in the priest's head from the
- falling limb of the tree would be attributed to the blow the old hag had
- struck <i>him</i> on the head with the cordwood! The inference, plausible
- enough, would be that he had run from the house wounded, only to drop at
- last to the ground on the spot where the priest, <i>dressed as the
- murderer</i>, was found! And besides&mdash;yes&mdash;there was other
- evidence he could add! The revolver, for instance!
- </p>
- <p>
- Quick now, his mind made up, Raymond snatched the flashlight from his
- pocket, swept the ray around the floor, located the weapon, and, running
- to it, picked it up and put it in his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- Every second was counting now. It might be five, or ten, or fifteen
- minutes before they got back from the village, he did not know&mdash;but
- every moment was priceless. There was still work to be done out there on
- the road, even after he was through here!
- </p>
- <p>
- He was across the room now by the rear wall, gathering up the coins and
- bills that the dead man had scattered on the floor. These, like the
- revolver, he transferred to his pocket. A thief, had been their cry. That
- was the motive! Well, he would corroborate it! There would be no mistake&mdash;until
- to-morrow&mdash;about their having found the guilty man!
- </p>
- <p>
- His hand was a slimmer hand than Blondin's&mdash;it slipped easily into
- the chink between the timbers. It was like a hollow bowl inside, and there
- was more money there. He scooped it out. Twice his hand went in again,
- until the hiding place was empty; and then, running back across the room,
- he grabbed up his bag, and rushed from the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- An instant he paused to listen as he reached the road; but there was only
- the howl of the storm, no sound that he could hear as yet from the
- direction of the village&mdash;though, full of ominous possibilities, he
- did not know how far away the village was!
- </p>
- <p>
- He ran on again at top speed, flashing his way along with his light, the
- wind at his back aiding him now. It would not matter if a stray gleam were
- seen by any one, if he could only complete his work in time&mdash;it would
- only be proof, instead of inference, that the murderer had run from the
- house along the road to the spot where he was found.
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached the priest, set down his bag, and, taking up the broken limb of
- the tree, carried it ten yards away around the turn of the road, and flung
- it in amongst the trees; then he was back once more, and bending over the
- priest. He worked swiftly now, but coolly and with grim composure,
- removing the priest's outer garments. He noted with intense relief that
- there was no blood on the clerical collar&mdash;that the blood, due to the
- twisted position of the other's head, had trickled from the cheek directly
- to the ground. It would have been an awkward thing&mdash;blood on the
- collar!
- </p>
- <p>
- It was not easy work. The limp form seemed a ton-weight in his arms, as he
- lifted it now this way, now that, to get off the other's clothes. And at
- times he recoiled from it, though the stake he was playing for was his
- life. It was unnerving business, and the hideous moaning of the wind made
- it worse. And mostly he must work by the sense of touch, for he could not
- hold the flashlight and still use both hands. But it was done at last, and
- now he took off his own clothes, and hastily donned the priest's.
- </p>
- <p>
- He must be careful now&mdash;a single slip, something overlooked in his
- pockets perhaps might ruin everything, and the ten or twelve hours' start,
- that was all he asked for, would be lost; but, equally, the pockets must
- not be too bare! He was hurriedly going through his discarded garments
- now. Mother Blondin's money and the revolver, of course, must be found
- there.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cardcase, yes, that could not do any harm... there were no letters, no
- one ever wrote to him... the trifling odds and ends must be left in the
- pockets too, they lent colour if nothing else... but his own money was
- quite a different matter, and he had the big sum in bills of large
- denominations with him that he had exchanged for the pokes of gold dust
- which he had brought from the Yukon. He tucked this money securely away
- under the <i>soutane</i> he was now wearing, and once more bent over the
- priest.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had now to dress the priest in his, Raymond's, clothes. It was not
- readily accomplished; it was even more difficult than it had been to
- undress the man; and besides, as he worked now, he found himself fighting
- to maintain his coolness against a sort of reckless haste to have done
- with it that was creeping upon him. It seemed that he had been hours at
- the work, that with every second now the villagers in full cry must come
- upon him. Curse it, could he never button that collar and knot that tie!
- Why did the man's head wobble like that! The vest now! Now the coat!
- </p>
- <p>
- He stood up finally at the end, and flirted his hand across his brow. His
- forehead was clammy wet. He shivered a little; then, lips tight, he pulled
- himself together. He must make certain, absolutely certain that he had
- done nothing, or left nothing undone to rob him of those few precious
- hours that were so necessary to his escape.
- </p>
- <p>
- He nodded after a moment in a kind of ghastly approval&mdash;he had even
- hung the other's crucifix around his neck! There remained only the
- exchange of hats, and&mdash;yes, the bag&mdash;was there anything in the
- bag that would betray him? He dropped his own hat on the ground a yard
- away from the priest's head where the other's hat had rolled, picked up
- the priest's hat, and put it on&mdash;then bent down over the bag.
- </p>
- <p>
- He lifted his head suddenly, straining his ears to listen. What was that!
- Only the howl and unearthly moaning of the wind? It must have been, and
- his nerves were becoming over-strung, for the wind was blowing from the
- direction of the village, and it seemed as though the sound he had thought
- he heard, that he could not have defined, had come from the other
- direction. But the bag! Was there anything in it that he should not leave?
- He turned the flashlight into its interior, began to rummage through its
- contents&mdash;and then, kneeling there, it was as though he were suddenly
- frozen into that posture, bereft of all power of movement.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was only a lantern&mdash;but it seemed as though he were bathed in a
- blistering flood of light that poured full upon him, that burst suddenly,
- without warning, from around the turn of the road in the direction away
- from the village. He felt the colour ebb from his face; he knew a sickly
- consciousness of doom. He was caught&mdash;caught in the priest's clothes!
- Shadowy outlined there, was a horse and wagon. A woman, carrying the
- lantern, was running toward him&mdash;a man followed behind. The wind rose
- in demoniacal derision&mdash;the damnable wind that, responsible for
- everything that night, had brought this crowning disaster upon him!
- </p>
- <p>
- A girl's voice rang out anxiously:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it? Oh, what is it? What has happened?&rdquo; Raymond felt himself grow
- unnaturally calm. He leaned solicitously over the priest's form.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not know&rdquo;&mdash;he was speaking with sober concern. &ldquo;I found this
- man lying here as I came along. He has a wound of some sort in his head,
- and I am afraid that he is dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man, stepping forward, crossed himself hurriedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl, with a sharp little cry, knelt down on the other side of the
- priest&mdash;and in the lantern's glimmer Raymond caught a glimpse of
- great dark eyes, of truant hair, wind-tossed, that blew about a young,
- sweet face that was full now of troubled sympathy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you,&rdquo; she said quickly; &ldquo;you are the new curé, monsieur. The station
- agent told us you had come, and we drove fast, my uncle and I, to try and
- catch up with you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes were on the priest's form. There was no need to simulate
- concern now, it was genuine enough, and it was as if something cold and
- icy were closing around his heart. He was not sure&mdash;great God, it was
- not possible!&mdash;but he thought&mdash;he thought the priest had moved.
- If that were so, he was doubly trapped! Cries came suddenly from the
- direction of the village, from the direction of old Mother Blondin's
- house. He heard himself acknowledging her remark with grave deliberation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I am Father Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI&mdash;THE JAWS OF THE TRAP
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">V</span>OLEUR! Thief!
- Murder! Murder!&rdquo;&mdash;it rose a high, piercing shriek, and the wind
- seemed to catch up the words and eddy them around, and toss them hither
- and thither until the storm and the night and the woods were full of
- ghouls chanting and screaming and gibbering their hideous melody: &ldquo;<i>Voleur!</i>
- Thief! Murder! Murder!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl, from the other side of the prostrate priest, rose in quick alarm
- to her feet, and lifted the lantern high above her head to peer down the
- road.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;What does it mean? See the lights there! Listen!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The lantern lifted now, Raymond could no longer see the priest's face. He
- slipped his hand in desperately under the man's vest. He had felt there
- once before for the heart beat when he had first stumbled upon the other.
- In God's name, where was his nerve! He needed it now more than he had ever
- needed it in all his dare-devil career before. He had <i>thought</i> the
- priest had moved. If the man were alive, he, Raymond, was not only in a
- thousandfold worse case than if he had run for it and taken his chances&mdash;he
- had forfeited whatever chance there might have been. The mere fact that he
- had attempted to disguise himself, to assume the priest's garments as a
- means of escape, damned him utterly, irrevocably upon the spot. His hand
- pressed hard against the other's body. Yes, there was life there, a faint
- fluttering of the heart. No&mdash;no, it was only himself&mdash;a tremor
- in his own fingers. And then a miserable sense of disaster fell upon him.
- The wind howled, those shrieks still rang out, there came hoarse shouts
- and the pound of running feet, but above it all, distinct, like a knell of
- doom, came a low moan from the priest upon the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sharply, as though it were being suddenly seared and burned, Raymond
- snatched away his hand; and his hand struck against something hard, and
- mechanically he gripped at it. The man was <i>alive!</i> The glare of
- lanterns, many of them, flashed from the turn of the road. The village was
- upon the scene. The impulse seized him to run. There was the horse and
- wagon standing there. His lips tightened. Madness! That would be but the
- act of a fool! It was his wits, his brain, his nerve that was his only
- hope now&mdash;that cool, callous nerve that had never failed him in a
- crisis before.
- </p>
- <p>
- A form, unkempt, with gray, streaming, dishevelled hair, rushed upon him
- and the priest, and thrust a lantern into the faces of them both. It was
- the old hag, old Mother Blondin.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here he is! Here he is!&rdquo; she screamed. &ldquo;It is he!&rdquo;&mdash;her voice kept
- rising until, in a torrent of blasphemous invective, it attained an
- ear-splitting falsetto.
- </p>
- <p>
- It seemed to Raymond that a hundred voices were all talking at once; that
- the villagers now, as they closed in and clustered around him, were as a
- multitude in their numbers; and there was light now, a blaze of it, from a
- host of accursed lanterns jiggling up and down, each striving to thrust
- itself a little further forward than its fellow. And then upon Raymond
- settled a sort of grim, cold, ironical composure. The stakes were very
- high.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you want your life, play for it!&rdquo; urged a voice within him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old hag, in an abandoned paroxysm of grief, rage and fury, was
- cursing, and shaking her lantern and her doubled fist at the priest; and,
- not content with that, she now began to kick viciously at the unconscious
- form.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond rose from his knees, and laid one hand quietly upon her arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Peace, my daughter!&rdquo; he said softly. &ldquo;You are in the presence of Holy
- Church, and in the presence perhaps of death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She whirled upon him, her wrinkled old face, if possible, contorted more
- furiously than before.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Holy Church!&rdquo; she raved. &ldquo;Holy Church! Ha, ha! What have I to do with
- Holy Church that kicked me from its doors! Will Holy Church give me back
- my son? And what have you to do with this, you smooth-faced hypocrite! It
- is the law I want, not you to stand there and mumble while you smugly paw
- your crucifix!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It came quick and sharp&mdash;an angry sibilant murmur from the crowd, a
- threatening forward movement. Mechanically, Raymond's fingers fell away
- from the crucifix. It was the crucifix, dangling from his neck, that he
- had unconsciously grasped as he had snatched away his hand from the
- priest's body&mdash;and it was the crucifix that, equally unconscious of
- it, he had been grasping ever since. Strange that in his agitation he
- should have grasped at a crucifix! Strange that the act and his
- unconscious poise, as he held the crucifix, should have lent
- verisimilitude to the part he played, the rôle in which he sought
- sanctuary from death!
- </p>
- <p>
- His hand raised again. The murmuring ceased; the threatening stir was
- instantly checked. And then Raymond took the old woman by the shoulders,
- and with kindly force placed her in the arms of the two nearest men.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She does not know what she is saying,&rdquo; he said gently. &ldquo;The poor woman is
- distraught. Take her home. I do not understand, but she speaks of her son
- being given back to her, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a murder, <i>mon père</i>,&rdquo; broke in one of the men excitedly. &ldquo;She
- came running to the village a few minutes ago to tell us that her son had
- been killed. It is this man here in the road who did it. She recognises
- him, you see. There is the wound in his head, and she said she struck him
- there with a piece of wood while he was struggling with her son.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old woman was in hysteria now, alternately sobbing and laughing, but
- no longer struggling.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Murdered! Her son&mdash;murdered!&rdquo; Raymond gasped in a startled way. &ldquo;Ah,
- then, be very good to her! It is no wonder that she is beside herself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They led her laughing and crying away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The law! The law! I demand the law on him!&rdquo;&mdash;her voice, now
- guttural, now shrill, quavering, virulent, out of control, floated back. &ldquo;<i>Sacré
- nom de Dieu</i>, a life for a life, he is the murderer of my son!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And now, save for the howling of the storm, a silence fell upon the scene.
- Raymond glanced quickly about him. What was it now, what was it&mdash;ah,
- he understood! They were waiting for <i>him</i>. As though it were the
- most obvious thing in the world to do, as though no one would dream of
- doing anything else, the villagers, collectively and singly, laid the
- burden of initiative upon his clerically garbed shoulders. Raymond dropped
- upon his knees again beside the priest, pretending to make a further
- examination of the other's wound. He could gain a moment or two that way,
- a moment in which to think. The man, though still unconscious, was moaning
- constantly now. At any moment the priest might regain his senses. One
- thing was crucial, vital&mdash;in some way he must manouvre so that the
- other should not be removed from his own immediate surveillance until he
- could find some loophole of escape. Once the man began to talk, unless he,
- Raymond, were beside the other to stop the man's mouth, or at least to act
- as interpreter for the other's ramblings&mdash;the man was sure to ramble
- at first, or at least people could be made to believe so&mdash;he,
- Raymond, would be cornered like a rat in a trap, and, more to be feared
- even than the law, the villagers, in their fury at the sacrilege they
- would consider he had put upon them in the desecration of their priest,
- would show him scant ceremony and little mercy.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was cool enough now, quite cool&mdash;with the grim coolness of a man
- who realises that his life depends upon his keeping his head. Still he
- bent over the priest. He heard a girl's voice speaking rapidly&mdash;that
- would be the girl with the great dark eyes who had come upon him with the
- lantern, for there was no other woman here now since he had got rid
- temporarily of that damnable old hag.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;... It is Father Aubert, the new curé. Labbée, at the station, told us he
- had arrived unexpectedly. We have brought his trunk that he was going to
- send for in the morning, and we drove fast hoping to catch up with him so
- that he would not have to walk all the way. We found him here kneeling
- beside that man there, that he had stumbled over as he came along. Labbée
- told us, too, of the other. He said the man seemed anxious to avoid
- Monsieur le Curé, and hung around the station until Father Aubert had got
- well started toward St. Marleau. He must have taken the path to the
- tavern, or he would not have been here ahead of Monsieur le Curé, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond reached into the open travelling bag on the ground beside him,
- took out the first article coming to hand that would at all serve the
- purpose, a shirt, and, tearing it, made pretense at binding up the
- priest's head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My thanks to you, mademoiselle!&rdquo; he muttered soberly under his breath.
- &ldquo;If it were not for the existence of that path&mdash;&mdash;!&rdquo; He shrugged
- his shoulders, and, his head lowered, a twisted smile flickered upon his
- lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl had ceased speaking. They were all clustered around him, watching
- him. Short exclamations, bearing little evidence of good will toward the
- unconscious man, came from first one and then another.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;... <i>Meurtrier!</i>... He will hang in any case! ... The better for him
- if he dies there!... What does it matter, the blackguard!...&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond rose to his feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said reprovingly. &ldquo;It is not for us to think in that way. For us,
- there is only a very badly wounded man here who needs our help and care.
- We will give that first, and leave the rest in the hands of those who have
- the right to judge him if he lives. See now, some of you lift him as
- carefully as possible into the wagon. I will hold his head on my lap, and
- we will get to the village as quickly as we can.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a strange procession then that began to wend its way toward the
- village of St. Marleau. The wagon proved to be a sort of buckboard, and
- Raymond, clambering upon it, sitting with his back propped against the
- seat, held the priest's head upon his knees. Upon the seat itself the girl
- and her uncle resumed their places. With the unconscious man stretched out
- at full length there was no room for the trunk; but, eager to be of
- service to their new curé, so kind and gentle and tender to even a
- criminal for whom the law held nothing in reserve but the gallows and a
- rope, who was tolerant even of Mother Blondin in her blasphemies, the
- villagers quarrelled amongst themselves for the privilege of carrying it.
- </p>
- <p>
- They moved slowly&mdash;that the wounded man might not be too severely
- jarred. Constantly the numbers around the wagon were augmented. Women
- began to appear amongst them. The entire village was aroused. St. Marleau
- in all its history had known no such excitement before. A murder in St.
- Marleau&mdash;and the murderer caught, and dying they said, was being
- brought back to the village in the arms of the young curé, who had, a
- cause even for added excitement, arrived that evening instead of to-morrow
- as had been expected. Tongues clacked and wagged. It was like a furious
- humming accompaniment to the howling of the wind. But out of respect to
- the curé who held the dying man on his knees, they did not press too
- closely about the wagon.
- </p>
- <p>
- They passed the &ldquo;tavern,&rdquo; which was lighted now in every window, and some
- left the wagon at this point and went to the &ldquo;tavern,&rdquo; and others who had
- collected at the &ldquo;tavern&rdquo; joined the wagon. They began to descend the
- hill. And now along the road below, to right and left, lights twinkled
- from every house. They met people coming up the hill. There were even
- children now.
- </p>
- <p>
- Head bent over the priest, that twisted smile was back on Raymond's lips.
- The man moaned at intervals, but showed no further sign of returning
- consciousness. Would the other live&mdash;or die? Raymond's hands, hidden
- under the priest's head, were clenched. It was a question of his own life
- or the other's now&mdash;wasn't it? What hell-inspired ingenuity had flung
- him into this hideous maze in which at every twist and turn, as he sought
- some avenue of escape, he but found, instead, the way barred against him,
- his retreat cut off, and peril, like some soulless, immutable thing,
- closing irrevocably down upon him! He dared not leave the priest; he dared
- not surrender the other for an instant&mdash;lest consciousness should
- return. <i>But if the man died!</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's face, as a ghastly temptation came, was as white as the upturned
- face between his knees. If the man died it would be simple enough. For a
- few days, for whatever time was necessary, he could play the rôle of
- priest, and then in some way&mdash;his brain was not searching out details
- now, there was only the sure confidence in himself that he would be equal
- to the occasion if only the chance were his&mdash;then in some way,
- without attendant hue and cry, without the police of every city in America
- loosed upon him, since the &ldquo;murderer&rdquo; of the old hag's son would be dead,
- he could disappear from St. Marleau. But the man was not dead&mdash;yet.
- And why should he even think the man would die! Because he <i>hoped</i>
- for it? His lips twitched; and his hands, with a slow, curious movement,
- unclenched, and clenched again&mdash;and then with a sort of mental
- wrench, his brain, alert and keen, was coping with the immediate
- situation, the immediate danger.
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl and her uncle were talking earnestly together on the seat. And
- now, for all that he had not thrust himself forward in what had so far
- transpired, the man appeared to be of some standing and authority in the
- neighbourhood, for, turning from the girl, he called sharply to one of the
- crowd. A villager hurried in response to the side of the wagon, and
- Raymond, listening, caught snatches of the terse, low-toned instructions
- that were given.
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor at Tournayville, and at the same time the police... yes&mdash;to-night...
- at once....
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Bien sur!</i>&rdquo; said the villager briskly, and disappeared in the
- crowd.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the girl spoke. Raymond could not hear very distinctly, but it was
- something about her mother being unprepared, and from that about a room
- downstairs, and he guessed that they were discussing where they would take
- the wounded man.
- </p>
- <p>
- He straightened up suddenly. That was a subject which concerned him very
- intimately. There was only one place where the priest could go, and that
- was where he, Raymond, went. They were on the village street now, and,
- twisting his head around to look ahead, he could make out the shadowy form
- of the church steeple close at hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur,&rdquo; he called quietly to the man on the seat, &ldquo;we will take this
- poor fellow to the <i>presbytère</i>, of course.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, but, Father Aubert&rdquo;&mdash;the girl turned toward him quickly&mdash;&ldquo;we
- were just speaking of that. It would not be at all comfortable for you.
- You see, even your own room there will not be ready for you, since you
- were not expected to-night, and you will have to take Father Allard's, so
- that if this man went there, too, there would be no bed at all for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hardly think I shall need any bed to-night, mademoiselle,&rdquo; Raymond said
- gravely. &ldquo;The man appears to be in a very critical condition. I know a
- little something of medicine, and I could not think of leaving him until&mdash;I
- think I heard your uncle say they were going to Tournayville for a doctor&mdash;until
- the doctor arrives.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; said the man, screwing around in his seat, &ldquo;that
- is so. I have sent for the doctor, and also for the police&mdash;but it is
- eight miles to Tournayville, and on a night like this there will be a long
- while to wait, even if the doctor is to be found at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have done well, monsieur,&rdquo; commended Raymond&mdash;but under his
- breath, with a savage, ironical jeer at himself, he added: &ldquo;And especially
- about the police, curse you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; insisted the girl anxiously, &ldquo;I am sure that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mademoiselle is very kind, and it is very thoughtful of her,&rdquo; Raymond
- interposed gratefully; &ldquo;but under the circumstances I think the <i>presbytère</i>
- will be best. Yes; I think we must decide on the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, yes, certainly&mdash;if that is Monsieur le Curé's wish,&rdquo; agreed the
- man. &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé should know best. Valérie, jump down, and run on
- ahead to tell your mother that we are coming.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie! So that was the girl's name! It seemed a strangely incongruous
- thought that here, with his back against the wall, literally fighting for
- his life, the name should seem somehow to be so appropriate to that
- dark-eyed face, with its truant, wind-tossed hair, that had come upon him
- so suddenly out of the darkness; that face, sweet, troubled, in distress,
- that he had glimpsed for an instant in the lantern's light. Valérie! But
- what was her other name? What had her mother to do with the <i>presbytère</i>,
- that the uncle should have sent her on with that message? And who was the
- uncle, this man here, and what was his name? And how much of all this was
- he, as Father Aubert, supposed already to know? The curé of the village,
- Father Allard&mdash;what correspondence, for instance, had passed between
- him and Father Aubert? A hundred questions were on his lips. He dared not
- ask a single one. They had turned in off the road now and were passing by
- the front of the church. He lowered his head close down to the priest's.
- The man still moaned in that same low and, as it were, purely mechanical
- way. Some one in the crowd spoke:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They are taking him to the <i>presbytère</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the rear of the wagon, amongst the bobbing lanterns, surrounded by
- awe-struck children and no less awe-struck women, he saw the trunk being
- trundled along by two men, each grasping one end by the handle. The crowd
- took up its spokesman's lead.
- </p>
- <p>
- ... To the <i>presbytère</i>.... They are going to the <i>presbytère</i>....
- The curé is taking him to the <i>presbytère</i>...
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, damn you!&rdquo; gritted Raymond between his teeth. &ldquo;To the <i>presbytère</i>&mdash;for
- the devil's masquerade!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VII&mdash;AT THE PRESBYTÈRE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T was Valerie who
- held the lamp; and beside her in the doorway stood a gentle-faced,
- silverhaired, slim little old lady&mdash;and the latter was another
- Valerie, only a Valerie whom the years in their passing had touched in a
- gentle, kindly way, as though the whitening hair and the age creeping upon
- her were but a crowning. And Raymond, turning to mount the stoop of the <i>presbytère</i>,
- as some of the villagers lifted the wounded priest from the wagon, drew
- his breath in sharply, and for an instant faltered in his step. It was as
- though, framed there in the doorway, those two forms of the women, those
- two faces that seemed to radiate an innate sanctity, were like guardian
- angels to bar the way against a hideous and sacrilegious invasion of some
- holy thing within. And Valerie's eyes, those great, deep, dark eyes burned
- into him. And her face, that he saw now for the first time plainly, was
- very beautiful, and with a beauty that was not of feature alone&mdash;for
- her expression seemed to write a sort of creed upon her face, a creed that
- frankly mirrored faith in all around her, a faith that, never having been
- startled, or dismayed, or disillusioned, and knowing no things for evil,
- accepted all things for good.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond's step faltered. It seemed as though he had never seen a
- woman's face like that&mdash;that it was holding him now in a thrall that
- robbed his surroundings momentarily of their danger and their peril.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, the next instant, that voice within him was speaking again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You fool!&rdquo; it whispered fiercely. &ldquo;What are you doing! If you want your
- life, play for it! Look around you! A false move, a rational word from the
- lips of that limp thing they are carrying there behind you, and these
- people, who believe where you mock, who would kneel if you but lifted your
- hand in sign of benediction, would turn upon you with the merciless fury
- of wild beasts! You fool! You fool! Do you like the feel of hemp, as it
- tightens around your neck!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond lifted his head, and his eyes, and with measured pace
- walked forward up the steps to where the two women stood.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie's introduction was only another warning to him to be upon his
- guard&mdash;she seemed to imply that he naturally knew her mother's name.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father Aubert, this is my mother,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a sort of old-world grace, the elder woman bowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she said quickly, &ldquo;what a terrible thing to have
- happened! Valérie has just told me. And what a welcome to the parish for
- you! Not even a room, with that <i>pauvre</i> unfortunate, <i>misérable</i>
- and murderer though he is, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it is a welcome of the heart, I can see that,&rdquo; Raymond interposed,
- and smiled gravely, and took both of the old lady's hands in his own. &ldquo;And
- that is worth far more than the room, which, in any case, I shall hardly
- need to-night. It is you, not I, who should have cause to grumble, for, to
- my own unexpected arrival, I bring you the added trouble and inconvenience
- of this very badly wounded and, I fear, dying man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&mdash;that!&rdquo; she exclaimed simply. &ldquo;But Monsieur le Curé would never
- have thought of doing otherwise! Valérie meant only kindness, but she
- should not have made any other suggestion. It is for nothing else, if not
- this, the <i>presbytère! Le pauvre misérable</i>&rdquo;&mdash;she crossed
- herself reverently&mdash;&ldquo;even if he has blood that thought of doing
- otherwise! Valérie meant only kindness, but she should not have made any
- other suggestion. It is for nothing else, if not this, the <i>presbytère!
- Le pauvre misérable</i>&rdquo;&mdash;she crossed herself reverently&mdash;&ldquo;even
- if he has blood that is not his own upon him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They were coming up the steps, carrying the wounded priest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This way!&rdquo; said the little old lady softly. &ldquo;Valérie, dear, hold your
- lamp so that they can see. Ah, <i>le pauvre misérable</i>; ah, Monsieur le
- Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl leading, they passed down a short hallway, entered a bedroom at
- the rear of the house, and Valérie set the lamp upon the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond motioned to the men to lay the priest upon the bed. He glanced
- quietly about him, as he moved to the priest's side. He must get these
- people away&mdash;there were reasons why he should be alone. Alone! His
- brain was like some horrible, swirling vortex. Why alone? For what
- reasons? Not that hellish purpose that had flashed so insidiously upon him
- out there on the ride down to the <i>presbytère!</i> Not that! Strange how
- outwardly calm, how deadly calm, how composed and self-possessed he was,
- when such a thought had even for an instant's space found lodgment in his
- soul. It was well that he was calm, he would need to be calm&mdash;he was
- doing what that inner monitor had told him to do&mdash;he was playing the
- game&mdash;he was playing for his life. Well, he had only to dismiss these
- men now, who hung so curiously awe-struck about the bed, and then get rid
- of the women&mdash;no, they had gone now; Valérie, with her beautiful
- face, and those great dark eyes; and the mother, whose gray hair did not
- seem to bring age with it at all, and&mdash;no, they were back again&mdash;no,
- they were not&mdash;those were not women's steps entering the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had been making pretence at loosening the priest's collar, and he
- looked up now. The trunk! He had forgotten all about the trunk. The
- newcomers were two men carrying the trunk. They set it down against the
- wall near the door. It was a little more than probable that they had
- seized the opportunity afforded by the trunk to see what was going on in
- the room. They would be favoured amongst their fellows without! They, too,
- hats in hand, stared, curious and awe-struck, toward the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank you, all of you,&rdquo; Raymond heard himself saying in a low tone. &ldquo;But
- go now, my friends, go quietly; madame and her daughter will give me any
- further assistance that may be needed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They filed obediently from the room&mdash;on tiptoe&mdash;their coarse,
- heavy boots squeaking the more loudly therefor. Raymond's hands sought the
- priest's collar again, to loosen it this time with a definite object in
- view. He had changed only his outer garments with the other. He dared not
- have the priest undressed until he had made sure that there were no
- tell-tale marks on the underclothing; a laundry number, perhaps, that the
- police would pounce instantly upon. He found himself experiencing a sort
- of facetious soul-grin&mdash;detectives always laid great stress upon
- laundry marks!
- </p>
- <p>
- Again he was interrupted. With the collar in his hand, his own collar,
- that he had removed now from the priest's neck, he turned to see Valérie
- and her mother entering the room. They were very capable, those two&mdash;too
- capable! They were carrying basins of water, and cloths that were
- obviously intended for bandages. He had not meant to use any bandages, he
- had meant to&mdash;what?
- </p>
- <p>
- He forced a grave smile of approval to his lips, and nodded his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- The elder woman glanced about her a little in surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, are the men gone!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;<i>Tiens!</i> The stupids! But I
- will call one of them back, and he will help you undress <i>le pauvre</i>,
- Father Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was only an instant before Raymond answered; but it seemed, before he
- did so, that he had been listening in a kind of panic for long minutes
- dragged out interminably to that inner voice that kept telling him to play
- the game, play the game, and that only fools lost their heads at
- insignificant little unexpected denouements. She was only suggesting that
- the man should be undressed; whereas the man must under no circumstances
- be undressed until&mdash;until&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think perhaps we had better not attempt it in his condition until the
- doctor arrives, madame,&rdquo; he said slowly, thoughtfully, as though his words
- were weighted with deliberation. &ldquo;It might do far more harm than good. For
- the present, I think it would be better simply to loosen his clothing, and
- make him as comfortable as possible in that way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; I think so, too,&rdquo; said Valérie&mdash;she had moved a little table to
- the bedside, and was arranging the basins of water and the cloths upon it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; agreed the little old lady simply. &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé knows
- best.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Valérie, speaking in hushed tones, as she cast an anxious look
- at the white, blood-stained face upon the bed, &ldquo;and I think it is a mercy
- that Father Aubert knows something about medicine, for otherwise the
- doctor might be too late. I will help you, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;everything
- is ready.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He knew nothing about medicine&mdash;there was nothing he knew less about!
- What fiend had prompted him to make such a claim!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am afraid, mademoiselle,&rdquo; he said soberly, &ldquo;that my knowledge is far
- too inadequate for such a case as this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We will be able to do something at least, father&rdquo;&mdash;there was a
- brave, troubled smile in her eyes as she lifted them for an instant to
- his; and then, bending forward, with deft fingers she removed the torn
- piece of shirt from the wounded man's head.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, between them, while the mother watched and wrung out the cloths,
- they dressed the wound, a ghastly, unsightly thing across the side of the
- man's skull&mdash;only it was Valerie, not he, who was efficient. And
- strangely, as once before, but a little while before, when out there in
- front of the house, it was Valerie, and not the man, and not the wound,
- and not the peril in which he stood that was dominant, swaying him for the
- moment. There was a wondrous tenderness in her hands as she worked with
- the bandages, and sometimes her hands touched his; and sometimes, close
- together, as they leaned over the bed together, her hair, dark, luxuriant,
- brushed his cheek; and the low-collared blouse disclosed a bare and
- perfect throat that was white like ivory; and the half parted lips were
- tender like the touch of her fingers; and in her face at sight of the
- gruesome wound, bringing an added whiteness, was dismay, and struggling
- with dismay was a wistful earnestness and resolution that was born of her
- woman's sympathy; and she seemed to steal upon and pervade his senses as
- though she were some dream-created vision, for she was not reality at all
- since his subconsciousness told him that in actual reality no one existed
- at all except that moaning thing upon the bed&mdash;that moaning thing
- upon the bed and himself&mdash;himself, who seemed to be swinging by a
- precarious hold, from which even then his fingers were slipping away, over
- some bottomless abyss that yawned below him. &ldquo;Valérie! Valérie!&rdquo; He was
- repeating her name to himself, as though calling to her for aid from the
- edge of that black gulf, and&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fool!&rdquo; jeered that inner voice. &ldquo;Have you never seen a pretty girl
- before? She'd be the first to turn upon you, if she knew!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You lie!&rdquo; retorted another self.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where's Three-Ace Artie gone?&rdquo; inquired the voice with cold contempt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond straightened up. Valérie, turning from the bed, gathered the
- basins and soiled cloths together, and moved quietly from the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Will he live, father?&rdquo;&mdash;it was the little gray-haired woman,
- Valérie's mother, Valérie's older self, who was looking up into his face
- so anxiously, whose lips quivered a little as she spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- Would the man <i>live!</i> A devil's laugh seemed suddenly to possess
- Raymond's soul. They would be alone together, that gasping, white-faced
- thing on the bed, and himself; they would be alone together before the
- doctor came&mdash;he would see to that. There had been interruption,
- confusion... his brain itself was confusion... extraneous thoughts had
- intervened... but they would be <i>alone</i> presently. And&mdash;great
- God!&mdash;what hellish mockery!&mdash;she asked <i>him</i> if this man
- would <i>live!</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am afraid&rdquo;&mdash;he was not looking at her; his hand, clutching at the
- skirt of the <i>soutane</i> he wore, closed and tightened and clenched&mdash;&ldquo;I
- am afraid he will not live.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, <i>le pauvre!</i>&rdquo; she whispered, and her eyes filled with tears.
- &ldquo;Ah, Monsieur le Curé, I do not know these things so well as you. It is
- true that he is a very guilty man, but is not God very good and tender and
- full of compassion, father? Oh, I should not dare to say these things, for
- it is you who know what is right and best&rdquo;&mdash;she had caught his
- sleeve, and was leading him across the room. &ldquo;And Mother Church, Monsieur
- le Curé, is very merciful and very tender and very compassionate too&mdash;and,
- oh&mdash;and, oh&mdash;can there not be mercy and love even for such as he&mdash;must
- he lose his soul too, as well as his life?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond, in a blind, wondering way, stared at her. The tears were
- streaming down her cheeks now. They had halted before a low, old-fashioned
- cupboard, an <i>armoire</i> much like the <i>armoire</i> in the old hag's
- house, and now she opened the doors in the lower portion, and took out a
- worn and rusty black leather bag, and set it upon the top of the <i>armoire</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is only to show you where it is, father, if&mdash;if it might be so&mdash;even
- for him&mdash;the Sacrament&rdquo;&mdash;and, turning, she crossed the room, and
- meeting Valérie upon the threshold drew the girl away with her, and closed
- the door softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a bag such as the parish priests carried with them on their visits
- to the sick and dying. Raymond eyed it sullenly. The Sacrament!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What have I to do with that!&rdquo; he snarled beneath his breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you not a priest of God?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He whirled like a flash, startled, sweeping his glances around the room.
- And then he laughed in smothered, savage relief. It was only that voice
- within that chose a cursed mockery this time to put him upon his guard.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was staring now at the sprawled form on the bed, at a red stain that
- was already creeping through the fresh bandages. His face grew hard and
- set; a flush came and died away, leaving it an ashen gray.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then he stepped to the door&mdash;and listened&mdash;and locked it.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VIII&mdash;THOU SHALT NOT KILL
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T seemed as though
- the stillness of death were already in the room; a stillness that was
- horrible and unnerving in contrast with the shrill swirling of the wind
- without, and the loud roar and pound of the waves breaking upon the shore
- close at hand beneath the windows.
- </p>
- <p>
- His face still set as in a rigid mould, features drawn in hard, sharp
- lines, then ashen gray now even upon the lips, Raymond crossed from the
- door to the nearer of the two windows. It was black outside, inky black,
- unnaturally black, relieved only by a wavering, irregular line of white
- where the waves broke into foam along the rocky beach&mdash;and this line,
- as it wavered, and wriggled, and advanced, and receded seemed to lend an
- uncanny ghostlike aspect to the blackness, and, as he strained his eyes
- out of the window, he shuddered suddenly and drew back. But the next
- instant he snarled fiercely to himself. Was he to lose his nerve because
- it was black outside, and because the waves were running high and creaming
- along the shore! He would have something shortly that would warrant him in
- losing his nerve if he faltered now&mdash;the hemp around his neck,
- rasping, chafing at his throat, the horrible prickling as the rough
- strands grew taut!
- </p>
- <p>
- He clutched at his throat mechanically, rubbing it with his fingers
- mechanically&mdash;and, as fiercely as before, snarled again. Enough of
- this! He was neither fool nor child. There was a sure way out from that
- dangling noose, cornered, trapped though he was&mdash;and he knew the way
- now. He reached up and drew down the window shade, and passed quickly to
- the other window and drew down the shade there as well.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then he turned, and stepped to the bed, and bent over the priest.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was the underclothing first. He must make sure of that&mdash;that
- there would be no marks of identification&mdash;that there would be
- nothing to rise up against him, a mute and mocking witness to his undoing.
- He loosened the man's clothing. It would not be necessary to take off the
- outer garments. It was much easier here with the man on a bed, and a light
- in the room than it had been out there on the road, and&mdash;ah! Lips
- compressed, he nodded sharply to himself. The undergarments were new. That
- precluded laundry marks&mdash;unless the man had had some marking put upon
- them himself. No, there was nothing&mdash;nothing but the maker's tag sewn
- in on the shirt at the back of the neck. He turned the priest over on the
- bed to complete his examination. There was nothing on any other part of
- the garments. The socks, then, perhaps? He pulled up the trousers' legs
- hurriedly. No, there was nothing there, either. He reached out to turn the
- priest over again&mdash;and paused. He could snip that maker's tag from
- the neck of the shirt just as easily in the position in which the man now
- lay, and&mdash;and the man's face would not be staring up at him. There
- was a cursed, senseless accusation in that white face, and the lip muscles
- twitched as though the man were about to shout aloud, to scream out&mdash;<i>murder!</i>
- If only the fool had died out there in the woods, and would stop that
- infernal low moaning noise, and those strangling inhalations as he gasped
- for breath!
- </p>
- <p>
- Automatically, Raymond's fingers sought his penknife in its accustomed
- place in his vest pocket&mdash;and slipped down a smooth, unobstructed
- surface. His eyes followed his fingers in a sort of dazed, perplexed way,
- and then he laughed a little huskily. The <i>soutane!</i> He had forgotten
- for the moment that he was a priest of God! It was the other who wore the
- vest, it was in the other's pocket that the knife was to be found. He had
- forgotten the devil's masquerade in the devil's whispering that was in his
- soul!
- </p>
- <p>
- He snatched the knife from the vest pocket, opened it, cut away the cloth
- tag, and with infinite pains removed the threads that had held the tag in
- place. He returned the knife to the vest pocket, and tucked the little tag
- away in one of his own pockets; then hastily rearranged the other's
- clothing again, and turned the man back into his original position upon
- the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now! He glanced furtively all around the room. His hands crept out,
- and advanced toward the priest. It was a very easy thing to do. No one
- would know. No one but would think the man had died naturally. <i>Died!</i>
- It was the first time he had allowed his mind to frame a concrete
- expression that would fit the black thing that was in his soul.
- </p>
- <p>
- A bead of sweat spurted out from his forehead. His hands somehow would not
- travel very fast, but they were all the time creeping nearer to the
- priest's throat. He had only to keep on forcing them on their way... and
- it was not very far to go... and, once there, it would only take an
- instant. God, if that white face would not stare up at him like that...
- the eyes were closed of course... but still it stared.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond touched his lips with the tip of his tongue, and again and again
- circled the room with his eyes. Was that somebody there outside the
- window? Was that a step out there in the passageway? Were those <i>voices</i>
- that chattered and gibbered from everywhere?
- </p>
- <p>
- He jerked back his hands, and they fell to his sides, and he shivered.
- What was it? What was the matter? What was it that he had to do? It wasn't
- murder. That was a lie! The man wouldn't live anyhow, but he might live
- long enough to talk. It was his life or the other's, wasn't it? If he were
- caught now, there was no power on earth could save him. On earth? What did
- he mean by that? What other power was there? It was only a trite phrase he
- had used.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was he hesitating about? It was the only chance he had.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get it done! Get it done, and over with, you squeamish fool!&rdquo; prodded
- that inner voice savagely.
- </p>
- <p>
- His hands crept out again. Of course! Of course! He knew that. He must get
- it done and over with. Only&mdash;only, great God, why did his hands
- tremble so! He lifted one of them to his forehead and drew it away
- dripping wet. What did that voice want to keep nagging him for! He knew
- what he had to do. It was the only way. If the priest were dead, he,
- Raymond, would be safe. There would be no question as to who the murderer
- of Blondin was&mdash;and the priest would be buried and that would be the
- end of it. And&mdash;yes! He had it all now. It was almost too simple! He,
- Raymond, as the curé of the village, after a day or two, would meet with
- an accident. A boating accident&mdash;yes, that was it! They would find an
- upturned boat and his hat floating on the water perhaps&mdash;but they
- would never find the body! He need only, in the interval of those few
- days, gather together from somewhere some clothes into which he could
- change, hide in the woods after the &ldquo;accident,&rdquo; and at night make his
- final escape.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; snapped the voice impatiently. &ldquo;I've been telling you that
- all along! There would be no further investigation as to the murder; and
- only a sorrowful search along the shore, free from all suspicion, for the
- body of Father Aubert. Well, why don't you act? Are you going to fling
- your life away? Are you afraid? Have you forgotten that it is growing
- late, that very soon now the doctor and the police will be here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Afraid! No; he wasn't afraid of God or devil, or man or beast&mdash;that
- was his creed, wasn't it? Only that damnable face still stared up at him,
- and he couldn't get his hands near enough to&mdash;to do the work.
- </p>
- <p>
- Slowly, inch by inch, his face as white and set as chiselled marble, his
- hands crept forward again. How soft the bare, exposed throat looked that
- was almost at his finger tips now. Would it <i>feel</i> soft to the touch,
- or&mdash;he swayed unsteadily, and crouched back, that cold shiver passing
- over him. It was strange that he should shiver, that he should find it
- cold. His brain was afire, and it whirled, and whirled, and whirled; and
- devils laughed in his soul&mdash;and yet he stood aghast at the abhorrent
- deed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wait! He would be able to think clearly in an instant. He must do it&mdash;or
- die himself. Yes, yes; it was the <i>touch</i> of his flesh against the
- other's flesh from which he shrank, the <i>feel</i> of his fingers on the
- other's throat that held him back&mdash;that was it! Wait! He would remedy
- that. That would have been a crude, mad way in any case. What had he been
- thinking of! It would have left a mark. It would have been sure to have
- left a mark. Perhaps they would not have noticed it, but it would have
- invited the risk. There was a better way, a much better way&mdash;and a
- way in which that face wouldn't be able to stare up at him any more, a way
- in which he wouldn't hear that moaning, and that rattling, and that
- struggling for breath. The man was almost dead now. It was only necessary
- to take that other pillow there, and hold it tightly over the other's
- face. <i>That</i> wouldn't leave any mark. Yes, the pillow! Why hadn't he
- thought of that before! It would have been all over by now.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once more his hands began to creep up and outward. He leaned far over the
- bed, reaching for the pillow&mdash;and something came between the pillow
- and his hands. He glanced downward in a startled way. It was the crucifix
- hanging from his neck. With a snarl, he swung it away. It came back and
- struck against his knuckles. He tried to wrench it from his neck. It would
- not come&mdash;but, instead, one hand slipped through the chain, and
- pushed the crucifix outward, and for an instant held it there between him
- and that white, staring face. He pulled his hand away. And the crucifix
- swung backward and forward. And he reached again for the pillow, and the
- crucifix was still between. And his hands, trembling, grew tangled in the
- chain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thou shalt not kill!&rdquo;&mdash;it was not that inner voice; it was a voice
- like the girl's, like Valerie's, soft and full of a divine compassion. And
- her fingers in tenderness seemed to be working with that bandaged head;
- and the dark eyes, deep and steadfast, were searching his soul. &ldquo;Thou
- shalt not kill!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And with a low, horror-stricken cry, Raymond staggered backward from the
- bed, and dropped into a chair, and buried his face in his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IX&mdash;UNTIL THE DAWN
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE man upon the
- bed moaned continuously now; the wind swirled around the corners of the
- house; the waves pounded in dull, heavy thuds upon the shore without&mdash;but
- Raymond heard none of it. It seemed as though he were exhausted, spent,
- physically weak, as from some Titanic struggle. He did not move. He sat
- there, head bowed, his hands clasped over his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, after a long time, a shudder shook his frame&mdash;and he rose
- mechanically from his chair. The door was locked, and subconsciously he
- realised that it should not be found locked when that somebody&mdash;who
- was it?&mdash;yes, he remembered now&mdash;the doctor from Tournayville,
- and the police&mdash;it should not be found locked when the doctor and the
- police arrived, because they would naturally ask him to account for the
- reason of it. He crossed to the door, unlocked it, and returned to the
- chair.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now he stared at the crucifix upon his breast. For the second time
- that night it had played a strange and unaccountable rôle. He lifted his
- hand to his head. His head still ached from the blow the old hag had
- struck him with the piece of wood. That was what was the matter. His head
- ached and he could not therefore think logically, otherwise he would not
- be fool enough to hold the crucifix responsible for&mdash;for preventing
- him from what he had been about to do a little while ago.
- </p>
- <p>
- His face grew cynical in its expression. The crucifix had nothing to do
- with it, nor had the vision of the girl's eyes, nor had the imagined sound
- of Valérie's voice&mdash;those things were, all of them, but the form his
- true self had taken to express itself when he had so madly tormented
- himself with that hellish purpose. If it had not been things like that, it
- would have been something else. He could not have struck down a wounded
- and defenceless man, he could not have committed murder in cold blood like
- that. He had recoiled from the act, because it was an act that was beyond
- him to perform, that was all. That man there on the bed was as safe, as
- far as he, Raymond, was concerned, as though they were separated by a
- thousand miles.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sophistry!&rdquo; sneered that inner voice. &ldquo;You are a weak-kneed fool, and
- very far from a heroic soul that has been tried by fire! Well, you will
- pay for it!&rdquo; Raymond cast a quick startled glance at the bed, and half
- rose from his seat. What&mdash;again? Was that thought back again? He sank
- back in the chair, gripping the chair-arms until his knuckles cracked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I won't!&rdquo; he mumbled hoarsely. &ldquo;By God&mdash;I won't! Maybe&mdash;maybe
- the man will die.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then impulsively he was on his feet, and pacing the room, a sweep of
- anger upon him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What had I to do with all this!&rdquo; he cried, in low, fierce tones. &ldquo;And
- look at me!&rdquo;&mdash;he had halted before the dresser, and was glaring into
- the mirror. &ldquo;<i>Look at me!</i>&rdquo; A face whose pallor was enhanced by the
- black clerical garb gazed contortedly back at him; the crucifix, symbol of
- peace, hung from about his neck. He tucked it hastily inside the <i>soutane</i>.
- &ldquo;Look at me!&rdquo; he cried, and clenched his fist and shook it at the mirror.
- &ldquo;Three-Ace Artie! That's you there, Three-Ace Artie! God or the devil has
- stacked the cards on you, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He swung sharply about&mdash;listening; and, on the instant, with grave
- demeanour, his face soberly composed, faced the doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door opened, and two men stepped into the room. One was a big man,
- bearded, with a bluff and hearty cast of countenance that seemed
- peculiarly fitting to his immense breadth of shoulder; the other, a sort
- of foil as it were, was small, sharp featured, with roving black eyes
- that, as he stood on the threshold and on tiptoe impatiently peered over
- the big man's shoulder, darted quick little glances in all directions
- about him. The small man closed the door with a sort of fussily momentous
- air.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens</i>, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;the big man extended his hand to
- Raymond. &ldquo;I am Doctor Arnaud. And this is Monsieur Dupont, the assistant
- chief of police of Tournayville. Hum!&rdquo;&mdash;he glanced toward the bed.
- &ldquo;Hum!&rdquo;&mdash;he dropped Raymond's hand, and moved quickly to the bedside.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond shook hands with the little man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bad business! Bad business!&rdquo;&mdash;the assistant chief of police of
- Tournayville continued to send his darting glances about the room, and the
- while he made absurd clucking noises with his tongue. &ldquo;Yes, very bad&mdash;very
- bad! I came myself, you see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was much about the man that afforded Raymond an immense sense of
- relief. He was conscious that he infinitely preferred Monsieur Dupont,
- assistant chief of the Tournayville police, to Sergeant Marden, of the
- Royal North-West Mounted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond quietly, &ldquo;I am afraid it is a very serious matter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not at all! Not at all!&rdquo; clucked Monsieur Dupont, promptly contradicting
- himself. &ldquo;We've got our man&mdash;eh&mdash;what?&rdquo; He jerked his hand
- toward the bed. &ldquo;That's the main thing. Killed Théophile Blondin, did he?
- Well, quite privately, Monsieur le Curé, he might have done worse, though
- the law does not take that into account&mdash;no, not at all, not at all.
- Blondin, you understand, Monsieur le Curé, was quite well known to the
- police, and he was&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Dupont pinched his nose with his thumb
- and forefinger as though to escape an unsavoury odour&mdash;&ldquo;you
- understand, Monsieur le Curé?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I did not know,&rdquo; replied Raymond. &ldquo;You see, I only&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, yes!&rdquo; interrupted Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Know all that! Know all that!
- They told me on the drive out. You arrived this evening, and found this
- man lying on the road. Rude initiation to your pastorate, Monsieur le
- Curé. Too bad!&rdquo; He raised his voice. &ldquo;Well, Doctor Arnaud, what is the
- verdict&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come here and help me,&rdquo; said the doctor, over his shoulder. He was
- replacing the bandage, and now he looked around for an instant at Raymond.
- &ldquo;I can't improve any on that. It was excellent&mdash;excellent, Monsieur
- le Curé.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The credit is not mine,&rdquo; Raymond told him. &ldquo;It was Mademoiselle Valérie.
- But the man, doctor?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not a chance in a thousand&rdquo;&mdash;the doctor shook his head. &ldquo;Concussion
- of the brain. We'll get his clothes off, and make him comfortable. That's
- about all we can do. He'll probably not last through the night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will help you,&rdquo; offered Raymond, stepping forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's not necessary, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;Monsieur Dupont
- here can&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; interposed Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Let Monsieur le Curé help you. We will
- kill two birds with one stone that way. We have still to visit the Blondin
- house. We do not know this man's name. We know nothing about him. While
- you are undressing him, I will search through his clothing. Eh? Perhaps we
- shall find something. I do not swallow whole all the story I have heard.
- We shall see what we shall see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond glanced swiftly at Monsieur Dupont. Because the man clucked with
- his tongue and had an opinion of himself, he was perhaps a very long way
- from being either stupid or a fool. Monsieur Dupont might not prove so
- preferable to Sergeant Marden as he had been so quick to imagine.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; agreed Raymond. &ldquo;Monsieur Dupont is right, I am sure. I will assist
- you, doctor, while he makes his search.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont stepped briskly around to the far side of the bed, and
- peered intently into the unconscious man's face, as he waited for Raymond
- and the doctor to hand him the first article of clothing. He kept clucking
- with his tongue, and once his eyes narrowed significantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond experienced a sense of disquiet. Was the man simply posing for
- effect, or was he acting naturally&mdash;or was there something that had
- really aroused the other's suspicions. He handed the priest's coat, or,
- rather, his own, to Monsieur Dupont.
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont began to go through the pockets&mdash;like one accustomed
- to the task.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hah, hah!&rdquo; he ejaculated suddenly. &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé, Monsieur le
- Docteur, I call you both to witness! All this loose money in the side
- pocket! The side pocket, mind you, and the money loose! It bears out the
- story that they say Mother Blondin tells about the robbery. I was not
- quite ready to believe it before. See!&rdquo; He dumped the money on the bed.
- &ldquo;You are witnesses.&rdquo; He gathered up the money again and replaced it in the
- pocket. &ldquo;And here&rdquo;&mdash;from another pocket he produced the revolver&mdash;&ldquo;you
- are witnesses again.&rdquo; He broke the revolver. &ldquo;Ah&mdash;h'm&mdash;one shot
- fired! You see for yourselves? Yes, you see. Very well! Continue,
- messieurs! There may be something more, though it would certainly appear
- that nothing more was necessary.&rdquo; He nodded crisply at both Raymond and
- the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- The vest yielded up the cardcase. Monsieur Dupont shuffled over the dozen
- or so of neatly printed cards that it contained.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Là, là!</i>&rdquo; said he sharply. &ldquo;Our friend is evidently a smooth one.
- One of the clever kind that uses his brains. Very nice cards&mdash;very
- plausible sort of thing, eh? Yes, they are. Very! Henri Mentone, eh? Henri
- Mentone, alias something&mdash;from nowhere. Well, messieurs, is there
- still by any chance something else?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was nothing else. Monsieur Dupont, however, was not satisfied until
- he had examined, even more minutely than Raymond had previously done, the
- priest's undergarments. The doctor turned from the bed. Monsieur Dupont
- rolled all the clothing into a bundle, and tucked it under his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, let us go, doctor!&rdquo; jerked out Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;If he dies, he
- dies&mdash;eh? In any case he can't run away. If he dies, there is Mother
- Blondin to consider, eh? She struck the blow. They would not do much to
- her perhaps, but she would have to be held. It is the law. If he does not
- die, that is another matter. In any case I shall remain in the village to
- keep an eye on them both&mdash;yes? Well then, well then&mdash;eh? &mdash;let
- us go!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor glanced hesitantly toward the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have done all that is possible for the moment,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but perhaps I
- had better call madame. She and mademoiselle have insisted on sitting up
- out there in the front room.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's head was bowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do not call them,&rdquo; he said gravely. &ldquo;If the man is about to die, it is my
- place to stay, doctor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;er&mdash;yes, that is so,&rdquo; acquiesced the doctor. &ldquo;Very well
- then, I'll pack them off to bed. I shan't be long at Mother Blondin's.
- Must pay an official visit&mdash;I'm the coroner, Monsieur le Curé. I'll
- be back as soon as possible, and meanwhile if he shows any change&rdquo;&mdash;he
- nodded in the direction of the bed&mdash;&ldquo;send for me at once. I'll
- arrange to have some one of the men remain out there within call.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said Raymond simply. &ldquo;You will be gone&mdash;how long,
- doctor?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, say, an hour&mdash;certainly not any longer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said Raymond again.
- </p>
- <p>
- He accompanied them to the door, and closed it softly behind them as they
- stepped from the room. And now he experienced a sort of cool complacency,
- an uplift, the removal as of some drear foreboding that had weighed him
- down. The peril in a very large measure had vanished. The policeman had
- swallowed the bait, hook and all; and the doctor had said there was not
- one chance in a thousand that the man would live until morning. Therefore
- the problem resolved itself simply into a matter of two or three days in
- which he should continue in the rôle of curé&mdash;after that the
- &ldquo;accident,&rdquo; and this accursed St. Marleau could go into mourning for him,
- if it liked, or do anything else it liked! He would be through with it!
- </p>
- <p>
- But those two or three days! It was not altogether a simple affair, that.
- If only he could go now&mdash;at once! Only that, of course, would arouse
- suspicion&mdash;even if the man did not regain consciousness, and did not
- blurt out something before he died. But why should he keep harping on that
- point? Any fool could see that his safest game was to play the hand he
- held until the &ldquo;murderer&rdquo; was dead and buried, and the matter legally
- closed forever. He had already decided that a dozen times, hadn't he? Well
- then, these two or three days! He must plan for these two or three days.
- There were things he should know, that he would be expected to know&mdash;not
- mere church matters; his Latin, the training of the old school days, a
- prayer-book, and his wits would carry him through anything of such a
- nature which might intervene in that short time. But, for instance, the
- mother of Valérie&mdash;who was she? How did she come to be in charge of
- the <i>presbytère?</i> What was her name&mdash;and Valérie's? It would be
- very strange indeed if, coming there for the summer to supply for Father
- Allard, he was not acquainted with all such details.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's glance fell upon the trunk. The next instant he was hunting
- through his pockets, but making an awkward business of it thanks to the
- unaccustomed skirt of his <i>soutane</i>. A bunch of keys, however,
- rewarded his efforts. He stepped over to the trunk, trying first one key
- and then another. Finally, he found the right one, unlocked the trunk&mdash;and,
- suddenly, his hand upon the uplifted lid, the blood left his face, and he
- stood as though paralysed, staring at the doorway. He was caught&mdash;caught
- in the act. True, she had knocked, but she had opened the door at the same
- time. The little old lady, Valerie's mother, was standing there looking at
- him&mdash;and the trunk was open.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;it is only to tell you that we have made up
- a couch for you in the front room that you can use when the doctor
- returns.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He found his voice. Somehow she did not seem at all surprised that he had
- the trunk open.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is very kind and thoughtful of you, madame.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Mais, non!</i>&rdquo; she exclaimed, with a smile. &ldquo;But, no! And if you need
- anything before the doctor gets back, father, you have only to call. We
- shall hear you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will call if I need you&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond was conscious that he was
- speaking, but that the words came only in a queer, automatic kind of a
- way.
- </p>
- <p>
- She poked her head around the door for a sort of anxious, pitying,
- quick-flung glance at the bed; then looked questioningly at Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Ah, le pauvre! Le pauvre misérable!</i>&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Good-night,
- Monsieur le Curé. Do not fail to call if you want us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The door closed. As once before in a night of vigil, in that far-north
- shack, Raymond stretched out his hand before him to study it. It was not
- steady now&mdash;it trembled and shook. He looked at the trunk&mdash;and
- then a low, hollow laugh was on his lips. A fool and a child he was, and
- his nerves must be near the breaking point. Was there anything strange,
- was there anything surprising in the fact that Monsieur le Curé should be
- discovered in the act of opening Monsieur le Curé's trunk! And it had
- brought a panic upon him&mdash;and his hand was shaking like an old man's.
- He was in a pretty state, when coolness was the only thing that stood
- between him and&mdash;the gallows! Damn that cursed moaning from the bed!
- Would it never cease!
- </p>
- <p>
- For a time he stood there without moving; and then, his composure
- regained, the square jaw clamped defiantly against his weakness, he drew
- up a chair, and, sitting down, began to rummage through the trunk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;François Aubert&mdash;eh?&rdquo; he muttered, as he picked up a prayerbook and
- found the fly-leaf autographed. &ldquo;So my name is François! Well, that is
- something!&rdquo; He opened another book, and, on the fly-leaf again, read an
- inscription. &ldquo;'To my young friend'&mdash;eh? and from the Bishop! The
- Bishop of Montigny, is it? Well, that also is something! I am then
- personally acquainted with this Monsignor Montigny! I will remember that!
- And&mdash;ha, these!&mdash;with any luck, I shall find what I want here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He took up a package of letters, ran them over quickly&mdash;and frowned
- in disappointment. They were all addressed in a woman's hand. He was not
- interested in that. It was the correspondence from Father Allard that he
- wanted. He was about to return the letters to the trunk and resume his
- search, when he noticed that the topmost envelope bore the St. Marleau
- postmark. He opened it hurriedly&mdash;and his frown changed to a nod of
- satisfaction. It was, after all, what he wanted. Father Allard was blessed
- with the services of a secretary, that was the secret&mdash;Father
- Allard's signature was affixed at the bottom of the neatly written page.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond leaned back in his chair, and proceeded to read the letters.
- Little by little he pieced together, from references here and there, the
- information that he sought. It was a sort of family arrangement, as it
- were. The old lady was Father Allard's sister, and her name was Lafleur;
- and the husband was dead, since, in one instance, Father Allard referred
- to her as the &ldquo;Widow Lafleur,&rdquo; instead of his customary &ldquo;my sister, Madame
- Lafleur.&rdquo; And the uncle, who it now appeared was the notary and likewise
- the mayor of the village, was Father Allard's brother.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond returned the letters to the trunk, and commenced a systematic
- examination of the rest of its contents, which, apart from a somewhat
- sparse wardrobe, consisted mainly of books of a theological nature. He was
- still engaged in this occupation, when he heard the front door open and
- close. He snatched the prayer-book out of the trunk, shut down the lid,
- and, with a finger between the closed pages of the book, stood up as the
- doctor came briskly into the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm back a little ahead of time, you see,&rdquo; announced Doctor Arnaud with a
- pleasant nod, and stepped at once across the room to the wounded man.
- </p>
- <p>
- For perhaps five minutes the doctor remained at the bedside; then, closing
- his little black bag, he laid it upon the table, and turned to Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, father,&rdquo; he said cheerily, &ldquo;I understand there's a couch all ready
- for you in the front room. I'll be here for the balance of the night. You
- go and get some sleep.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond motioned toward the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is there any change?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Raymond quietly, &ldquo;my place is still here.&rdquo; He smiled soberly.
- &ldquo;The couch is for you, doctor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But,&rdquo; protested the doctor, &ldquo;I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The man is dying. My place is here,&rdquo; said Raymond again. &ldquo;If you are
- needed, I have only to call you from the next room. There is no reason why
- both of us should sit up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hum&mdash;<i>tiens</i>&mdash;well, well!&rdquo;&mdash;the doctor pulled at his
- beard. &ldquo;No, of course, not&mdash;no reason why both should sit up. And if
- you insist&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not insist,&rdquo; interposed Raymond, smiling again. &ldquo;It is only that in
- any case I shall remain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are a fine fellow, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; said the bluff doctor heartily.
- He clapped both hands on Raymond's shoulders. &ldquo;A fine fellow, Monsieur le
- Curé! Well, I will go then&mdash;I was, I confess it, up all last night.&rdquo;
- He moved over to the door&mdash;and paused on the threshold. &ldquo;It is quite
- possible that the man may revive somewhat toward the end, in which case&mdash;Monsieur
- Dupont has suggested it&mdash;a little stimulation may enable us to obtain
- a statement from him. You understand? So you will call me on the instant,
- father, if you notice anything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On the instant,&rdquo; said Raymond&mdash;and as the door closed behind the
- doctor, he went back to his seat in the chair.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man would die, the doctor had said so again. That was assured. Raymond
- fingered the prayer-book that he still held abstractedly. That was
- assured. It seemed to relieve his brain from any further necessity of
- thinking, thinking, thinking&mdash;his brain was very weary. Also he was
- physically weary and tired. But he was safe. Perhaps a few days of this
- damnable masquerade, but then it would be over.
- </p>
- <p>
- He began to turn the pages of the prayer-book&mdash;and then, with a
- whimsical shrug of his shoulders, he began to read. He must put the night
- in somehow, therefore why not put it in to advantage? To refresh his
- memory a little with the ritual would be a safeguard against those few
- days that he must still remain in St. Marleau&mdash;as Father François
- Aubert!
- </p>
- <p>
- He read for a little while, then got up and went to the bed to look at the
- white face upon it, to listen to the laboured breathing that stood between
- them both&mdash;and death. He could see no change. He returned to his
- chair, and resumed his reading.
- </p>
- <p>
- At intervals he did the same thing over again&mdash;only at last, instead
- of reading, he dozed in his chair. Finally, he slept&mdash;not heavily,
- but fitfully, lightly, a troubled sleep that came only through bodily
- exhaustion, and that was full of alarm and vague, haunting dreams.
- </p>
- <p>
- The night passed. The morning light began to find its way in through the
- edges of the drawn window shades. And suddenly Raymond sat upright in his
- chair. He had heard a step along the hall. The prayer-book had fallen to
- the floor. He picked it up. What was that noise&mdash;that low moaning
- from the bed? Not dead! The man wasn't dead yet! And&mdash;yes&mdash;it
- was daylight!
- </p>
- <p>
- The door opened. It was Valerie. How fresh her face was&mdash;fresh as the
- morning dew! What a contrast to the wan and haggard countenance he knew he
- raised to hers!
- </p>
- <p>
- And she paused in the doorway, and looked at him, and looked toward the
- bed, and back again to him, and the sweet face was beautiful with a
- woman's tenderness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, how good you are, Monsieur le Curé, and how tired you must be,&rdquo; she
- said.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER X&mdash;KYRIE ELEISON
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>T. MARLEAU was
- agog. St. Marleau was hysterical. St. Marleau was on tiptoe. It was in the
- throes of excitement, and the excitement was sustained by expectancy. It
- wagged its head in sapient prognostication of it did not quite know what;
- it shook its head in a sort of amazed wonder that such things should be
- happening in its own midst; and it nodded its head with a profound
- respect, not unmixed with veneration, for its young curé&mdash;the good,
- young Father Aubert, as St. Marleau, old and young, had taken to calling
- him, since it would not have been natural to have called him anything
- else.
- </p>
- <p>
- The good, young Father Aubert! Ah, yes&mdash;was he not to be loved and
- respected! Had he not, for three nights and two days now, sacrificed
- himself, until he had grown pale and wan, to watch like a mother at the
- bedside of the dying murderer, who did not die! It was very splendid of
- the young curé; for, though Madame Lafleur and her daughter beseeched him
- to take rest and to let them watch in his stead, he would not listen to
- them, saying that he was stronger than they and better able to stand it,
- and that, since it was he who had had the stranger brought to the <i>presbytère</i>,
- it was he who should see that no one else was put to any more
- inconvenience than could be avoided.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ah, yes,&mdash;it was most certainly the good, young Father Aubert! For,
- on the short walks he took for the fresh air, the very short walks, always
- hurrying back to the murderer's bedside, did he not still find time for a
- friendly and cheery word for every one he met? It was a habit, that, of
- his, which on the instant twined itself around the heart of St. Marleau,
- that where all were strangers to him, and in spite of his own anxiety and
- weariness, he should be so kindly interested in all the little details of
- each one's life, as though they were indeed a part of his own. How could
- one help but love the young curé who stopped one on the village street,
- and, man, woman or child, laid his hand in frank and gentle fashion upon
- one's shoulder, and asked one's name, and where one lived, and about one's
- family, and for the welfare of those who were dear to one? And did not
- both Madame Lafleur and her daughter speak constantly of how devout he
- was, that he was never without a prayer-book in his hand? Ah, indeed, it
- was the good, young Father Aubert!
- </p>
- <p>
- But this in no whit allayed the hysteria, the excitement and the
- expectancy under which St. Marleau laboured. A murder in St. Marleau! That
- alone was something that the countryside would talk about for years to
- come. And it was not only the murder; it was&mdash;what was to happen
- next! It was Mother Blondin's son who had been murdered by the stranger,
- and Mother Blondin, though not under arrest, was being watched by the
- police, who waited for the man in the <i>presbytère</i> to die. It was
- Mother Blondin who had struck the murderer, and if the murderer died then
- she would be responsible for the man's death. What, then, would they do
- with Mother Blondin?
- </p>
- <p>
- St. Marleau, not being well versed in the law, did not know; it knew only
- that the assistant chief of the Tournayville police had installed himself
- in the Tavern where he could see that Mother Blondin did not run away,
- since the man at the <i>presbytère</i> did not need any police watching,
- and that this assistant chief of the Tournayville police was as dumb as an
- oyster, and looked only very wise, like one who has great secrets locked
- in his bosom, when questions were put to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, another thing&mdash;the funeral of Théophile Blondin. It was
- only this morning&mdash;the third morning after the murder&mdash;that that
- had been decided. Mother Blondin had raved and cursed and sworn that she
- would not let the body of her son enter the church. But Mother Blondin was
- not, perhaps, as much heretic as she wanted, or pretended, to be. Mother
- Blondin, perhaps, could not escape the faith of the years when she was
- young; and, while she scoffed and blasphemed, in her soul God was stronger
- than she, and she was afraid to stand between her dead son and the rites
- of Holy Church in which, through her own wickedness, she could not longer
- participate. But, however that might be, the people of St. Marleau, that
- is those who were good Christians and had respect for themselves, were
- concerned little with such as Mother Blondin, or, for that matter, with
- her son&mdash;but the funeral of a man who had been murdered right in
- their midst, and that was now to take place! Ah, that was quite another
- matter!
- </p>
- <p>
- And so St. Marleau gathered in a sort of breathless unanimity that morning
- to the tolling of the bell, as the funeral procession of Théophile Blondin
- began to wend its way down the hill&mdash;and within the sacred precincts
- of the church the villagers, as best they might, hushed their excitement
- in solemn and decorous silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- And at the church door, in surplice and stole, the altar boy beside him,
- as the cortège approached, stood Raymond Chapelle&mdash;the good, young
- Father Aubert.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was very pale; the dark eyes were sunk deep in their sockets from three
- sleepless nights, and from the torment of constant suspense, where each
- moment in the countless hours had been pregnant with the threat of
- discovery, where each second had swung like some horrible pendulum
- hesitating between safety&mdash;and the gallows. He could not escape this
- sacrilege that he was about to commit. There was no escape from it. They
- had thought it strange, perhaps, that he had not said mass on those two
- mornings that were gone. It was customary; but he knew, too, that it was
- not absolutely obligatory&mdash;and so, through one excuse and another, he
- had evaded it. And even if it had been obligatory, he would still have had
- to find some way out, to have taken the law temporarily, as it were, into
- his own hands&mdash;for he would not have dared to celebrate the mass.
- Dared? Because of the sacrilege, the meddling with sacred things? Ah, no!
- What was his creed&mdash;that he feared neither God nor devil, nor man nor
- beast! What was that toast he had drunk that night in Ton-Nugget Camp&mdash;he,
- and Three-Ace Artie, and Arthur Leroy, and Raymond Chapelle! No; it was
- not <i>that</i> he feared&mdash;it was this sharp-eyed altar boy, this lad
- of twelve, who at the mass would be always at his elbow. But he was no
- longer afraid of the boy, for now he was ready. He had realised that he
- could not escape performing some of the offices of a priest, no matter
- what happened to that cursed fool lying over yonder there in the <i>presbytère</i>
- upon the bed, who seemed to get better rather than worse, and so&mdash;he
- had overheard Madame Lafleur confide it to the doctor&mdash;he had been of
- a devoutness rarely seen. Through the nights and through the days, spurred
- on by a sharper, sterner prod than his father's gold in the old school
- days had been, he had poured and studied over the ritual and the
- theological books that he had found in the priest's trunk, until now,
- committing to memory like a parrot, he was thoroughly master of anything
- that might arise&mdash;especially this burial of Théophile Blondin which
- he had foreseen was not likely to be avoided, in spite of the attitude of
- that miserable old hag, the mother.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's head was slightly bowed, his eyes lowered&mdash;but his eyes,
- nevertheless, were allowing nothing to escape them. They were extremely
- clumsy, and infernally slow out there in bringing the casket into the
- church! He would see to it that things moved with more despatch presently!
- There was another reason why he had not dared to act as a priest in the
- church before&mdash;that man over there in the <i>presbytère</i> upon the
- bed. He had, on that first morning, not dared to leave the other, and it
- had been the same yesterday morning. True, to avert suspicion, he had gone
- out sometimes, but never far, never out of call of the <i>presbytère</i>&mdash;which
- was a very different matter from being caught in the midst of a service
- where his hands would have been tied and he could not have instantly
- returned. It was strange, very strange about the wounded priest, who,
- instead of dying, appeared to be stronger, though he lay in a sort of
- comatose condition&mdash;and now the doctor even held out hopes of the
- man's recovery! Suppose&mdash;suppose the priest should regain
- consciousness now, at this moment, while he was in the act of conducting
- the funeral, in the other's stead, over the body of the man for whose
- murder, in <i>his</i>, Raymond's, stead, the other was held guilty! He was
- juggling with ghastly dice! But he could not have escaped this&mdash;there
- was no way to avoid this funeral of the son of that old hag who had run
- screaming, &ldquo;murder&mdash;murder&mdash;murder,&rdquo; into the storm that night.
- </p>
- <p>
- He raised his head. It was the gambler now, steel-nerved, accepting the
- chances against him, to all outward appearances impassive, who stood there
- in the garb of priest. He was cool, possessed, sure of himself, cynical of
- all things holy, disdainful of all things spiritual, contemptuous of these
- villagers around him that he fooled&mdash;as he would have been
- contemptuous of himself to have hesitated at the plunge, desperate though
- it was, that was his one and only chance for liberty and life.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ha! At last&mdash;eh? They had brought Théophile Blondin to the door!
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond's voice, rich, full-toned, stilled that queer, subdued,
- composite sound of breathings, of the rustle of garments, of slight,
- involuntary movements&mdash;of St. Marleau crowded in the pews in
- strained, tense waiting.
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>&ldquo;'Si iniquitates observaveris, Domine; Domine quis sustinebit?</i>&mdash;If
- Thou, O Lord, wilt mark iniquities; Lord, who shall abide it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was curious that the service should begin like that, curious that he
- had not before found any meaning or significance in the words. He had
- learned them like a parrot. &ldquo;If Thou, O Lord, wilt mark iniquities....&rdquo; He
- bowed his head to hide the tightening of his lips. Bah, what was this!
- Some inner consciousness inanely attempting to suggest that there was not
- only significance in the words, but that the significance was personal,
- that the very words from his lips, performing the office of priest,
- desecrating God's holy place, was iniquity, black, blasphemous and
- abhorrent in God's sight&mdash;if there were a God!
- </p>
- <p>
- Ah, that was it&mdash;if there were a God! He was reciting now the <i>De
- Profundis</i> in a purely mechanical way. &ldquo;Out of the depths....&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- If there were a God&mdash;yes, that was it! He had never believed there
- was, had he? He did not believe it now&mdash;but he would make one
- concession. What he was doing was not in intent blasphemous, neither was
- it to mock&mdash;it was to save his life. He was a man with a halter
- strangling around his neck. And if there was a God, who then had brought
- all this about? Who then was responsible, and who then should accept the
- consequences? Not he! He had not sought from choice to play the part of
- priest! He had not sought the life of this dead man in the coffin there in
- front of him! He had not sought to&mdash;yes, curse it, it was the word to
- use&mdash;kill the drunken, besotted, worthless fool!
- </p>
- <p>
- A cold anger came, steadying his nerves. It was too bad that in some way
- he could not wreck a vengeance on the corpse for all this&mdash;the
- miserable, rum-steeped hound who had got him into this hellish fix.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were bearing the body into the church toward the head of the nave. He
- was at the <i>Subvenite</i> now. &ldquo;'...Kyrie eleison.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The boyish treble, hushed yet clear, of young Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar
- boy, rose from beside him in the responses:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Christe eleison&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lord, have mercy.... From the gate of hell,&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Deliver his soul, O Lord.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again! That sense of solemnity, that personal implication in the words! It
- was coincidence, nothing more. No; it was not even that! He was simply
- twisting the meaning, allowing himself to be played with by a warped
- imagination. He was not a weak fool, was he, to let this get the better of
- him? And, besides, he would hurry through with it, and since he would say
- neither office nor mass it would not take long. It must be hot this summer
- morning, though he had not noticed it particularly when he had left the <i>presbytère</i>.
- The church seemed heavy and oppressive. Strange how the pews were all
- lined with eyes staring at him!
- </p>
- <p>
- The tread of feet up the aisle died away. The bier was set at the head of
- the nave, and lighted candles placed around it. There fell a silence,
- utter and profound.
- </p>
- <p>
- Why was it now that his lips scarcely moved, that his voice was scarcely
- audible; why that sudden foreboding, intangible yet present everywhere, at
- his temerity, at his unhallowed, hideous perversion of sanctity in that he
- should pray as a priest of God, in the habiliments of one of God's
- ministers, in God's church&mdash;ay, it was a devil's masquerade, for he,
- if never before, stood branded now, sealing that blasphemous toast, a
- disciple of hell.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'<i>Non intres in judicium cum servo tuo, Domine</i>....' Enter not into
- judgment with Thy servant, O Lord....&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And so he denied God, did he? And so he was callous and indifferent, and
- scoffed at the possibility of a church, simply because it was a church,
- being the abiding place of a higher, holier, omnipotent presence? Why,
- then, that hoarseness in his throat&mdash;why, then, did he not shout his
- parrot words high to the vaulted roof in triumphant defiance? Why that
- struggle with his will to finish the prayer?
- </p>
- <p>
- From the little organ loft in the gallery over the door, floated now the
- notes of the <i>Responsory</i>, and the voices of the choir rolled
- solemnly through the church:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'<i>Libera me, Domine, de morte æterna....</i>' Deliver me, O Lord, from
- eternal death....&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Death! Eternal death! What was death? There was a dead man there in the
- casket&mdash;dead because he and the man had fought together, and the
- other had been killed. And he was burying, in a church, as a priest, he,
- who was the one upon whom the law would set its claws if it but knew, the
- man that he had killed! It came suddenly, with terrific force, blotting
- out those wavering candle flames around the coffin, the scene of that
- night. The wind was howling; that white-scarred face was cheek to cheek
- with him; they lunged and staggered around that dimly lighted room, he and
- the man who lay dead there in the coffin. They struggled for the revolver;
- that old hag circled about them like a swirling hawk&mdash;that blinding
- flash&mdash;the acrid smell of powder&mdash;the room revolving around and
- around&mdash;and the dead man, who was here in the coffin now, had lain
- sprawled out there on the floor. He shivered&mdash;and cursed himself
- fiercely the next instant&mdash;it seemed as though the casket suddenly
- opened, and that ugly, venomous, scarred face lifted up and leered at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'<i>Dies ilia, dies iræ...,''</i>&rdquo; came the voices of the choir. &ldquo;That
- day, a day of wrath....&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His jaws clenched. He pulled himself together. That was Valerie up there
- playing the little organ; Valerie with the great, dark eyes, and the
- beautiful face; Valerie, who thought it so unselfish of him because he had
- had a couch made up in the room in order that he might not leave the
- wounded man. The wounded man! Following the order of the service, Raymond
- was putting incense into the censer while the <i>Responsory</i> was being
- sung, and his fingers gripped hard upon the vessel. Again that thought to
- torture and torment him! Had he not enough to do to go through with this!
- Who was with the wounded man now? That officious, nosing fool, who preened
- himself on the strength of being assistant-chief of police of some pitiful
- little town that no one outside of its immediate vicinity had ever heard
- of before? Or was it Madame Lafleur? But what, after all, did it matter
- who was there&mdash;if the man should happen to regain his senses? Ha, ha!
- Would it not be a delectable sight if that police officer should arrest
- him, strip these priestly trappings from him just as he left the church!
- It would be quite a dramatic scene, would it not&mdash;quite too damnably
- dramatic! He was swinging with that infernal pendulum between liberty and
- death. He was, at that moment, if ever a man was, or had been, the sport
- of fate. He had not liked the looks of the wounded priest half an hour ago
- when he had left the <i>presbytère</i> for the sacristy&mdash;it had
- seemed as though the man were beginning to look <i>healthy.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'<i>Kyrie eleison....'</i>&rdquo; The <i>Responsory</i> was over. In a purely
- mechanical way again he was proceeding with the service. As the ritual
- prescribed, he passed round the bier with sprinkler and censer&mdash;and
- presently he found himself reciting the last prayer of that part of the
- service held within the church; and then the bier was being lifted and
- borne down the aisle again.
- </p>
- <p>
- Out into the sunlight, to the smell of the fields, to the breeze from the
- river wafting upon his cheek! He drew in a deep breath&mdash;and almost at
- the same instant passed his hand heavily across his eyes. He had thought
- that stifling heat, that overwhelming oppressiveness all in the atmosphere
- of the church; but here was the sunlight, and here the fields, and here
- the soft breeze blowing from the water&mdash;yet that sense of foreboding,
- a prescience, a weight upon him that sank deep to the soul, remained with
- him still.
- </p>
- <p>
- Slowly the procession passed around the green in front of the church, and
- through the gate of the whitewashed fence into the little burial ground
- beyond on the river's bank. They were chanting <i>In Paradisum</i>, but
- Valerie was no longer with the choir, for now, as they passed through the
- gate, he saw her, a slim figure all in white, hurry across the green
- toward the <i>presbytère.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- What was this before him! It was not the smell of fields, but the smell of
- freshly turned earth&mdash;a grave. The grave of Théophile Blondin, the
- man whom he had fought with&mdash;and killed. And he was a priest of God,
- burying Théophile Blondin. What ghastly, hellish travesty! What were those
- words returning to his memory, coming to him out of the dim past when he
- was still a boy, and still susceptible to the teachings of the fathers who
- had sought to guide him into the church&mdash;God is not mocked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;God is not mocked! God is not mocked!&rdquo;&mdash;the words seemed to echo and
- reverberate around him, they seemed to be thundered in a voice of
- vengeance. &ldquo;God is not mocked!&rdquo;&mdash;and he was <i>blessing</i> the grave
- of Théophile Blondir!
- </p>
- <p>
- Did these people, gathered, clustered about him, not hear that voice! Why
- did they not hear it? It was not the <i>Benedictus</i> that was being sung
- that prevented them from hearing it, for he could scarcely hear the <i>Benedictus.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's lips moved. &ldquo;I am not mocking God,&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;I do not
- believe in God, but I am not mocking. I am asking only for my life. I am
- taking only the one chance I have. I did not intend to kill the fool&mdash;he
- killed himself. I am no murderer. I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He shivered suddenly
- again, as once in the church he had shivered before. His hands
- outstretched seemed to be creeping again toward a bare throat that lay
- exposed upon a bed, the feel of soft, pulsing flesh seemed upon his finger
- tips. And then a diabolical chortle seemed to rattle in his ears. So
- murder was quite foreign to him, eh? And he did not believe in God? And he
- was quite above and apart from all such nonsense? And therein, of course,
- lay the reason why the tumbling of this dead thing into a grave left him
- so cool and imperturbable; and why the solemn words of the service had no
- meaning; and why it was a matter of supreme unconcern to him, provided he
- was not caught at it, that he took God's words upon his lips, and God's
- garb upon his shoulders!
- </p>
- <p>
- White-faced, Raymond lifted his head. The <i>Benedictus</i> was ended, and
- now the words came slowly from his lips in a strange, awed, almost
- wondering way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>'Requiem oternam.... Ego sum resurrectio et vita....'</i> I am the
- Resurrection and the Life: he that believeth in Me, although he be dead,
- shall live: and every one who liveth, and believeth in Me, shall never
- die.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His voice faltered a little, steadied by a tremendous effort of will, and
- went on again, low-toned, through the responses and short prayer that
- closed the service. &ldquo;'<i>Kyrie eleison'...</i> not into temptation.... '<i>Requiem
- oternam</i>.'... '<i>Requiescat in pace'...</i> through the mercy of
- God.... 'Amen.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Forgotten for the moment was that grim pendulum that hovered over the bed
- in the <i>presbytère</i> yonder, and by the side of the grave Raymond
- stood and looked down on the coffin of Théophile Blondin. The people began
- to disperse, but he was scarcely conscious of it. It seemed that he had
- run the gamut of every human emotion since he had met the funeral
- procession at the church door; but here was another now&mdash;an
- incomprehensible, quiet, chastened, questioning mood. They were very
- beautiful words, these, that he was repeating to himself. He did not
- believe them, but they were very beautiful, and to one who did believe
- they must offer more than all of life could hold.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I am the resurrection and the life... he that be-lieveth in Me... shall
- never die.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was another gateway in the little whitewashed fence, a smaller one
- that gave on the sacristy at the side and toward the rear of the church.
- Slowly, head bowed, absorbed, unconscious of the rôle he played so well,
- Raymond walked toward the gate, and through it, and, raising his head,
- paused. A shrivelled and dishevelled form crouched there against the
- palings. It was old Mother Blondin.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond stared&mdash;and suddenly a wave of immeasurable pity,
- mingling a miserable sense of distress, swept upon him. In there was
- forbidden ground to her; and in there was her son&mdash;killed in a fight
- with him. She had come around here to the side, unobserved, unless Dupont
- were lurking somewhere about, to be as near at the last as she could. An
- old hag, wretched, dissolute&mdash;but human above all things else,
- huddling before the dying embers of mother-love. She did not look up; her
- forehead was pressed close against the fence as she peered inside; a
- withered, dirty hand clutched fiercely at a paling on each side of her
- face.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond stepped toward her, and spontaneously laid his hand upon her
- shoulder. And strange words were on his lips, but they were sincere words
- out of a heart torn and troubled and dismayed, out of a soul that had
- recoiled as before some tremendous cataclysm. And his words were the words
- he had been repeating over and over to himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I am the resurrection and the life...' My poor, poor woman, let me help
- you. See, you must not mourn that way alone. Come, let me take you back to
- your home&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She rose to her feet, and looked at him, and for an instant the hard, set,
- wrinkled face seemed to soften, and into the blear eyes seemed to spring a
- mist of tears&mdash;then her face contorted into livid fury, and she
- struck at his hand, flinging it from her shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You go to hell!&rdquo; she snarled. &ldquo;You, and all like you, you go to hell!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was gone&mdash;shuffling around the corner of the church.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond laughed a little. It was like a dash of cold water in the
- face. He had been a fool&mdash;a fool all morning, a fool to let mere
- words, mere environment have any influence upon him, a fool to
- sentimentality in talking to her like that, mawkish to have used the
- words! He would have said what she had said to any one else, if he had
- been in her place&mdash;only more bitterly, more virulently, if that were
- possible.
- </p>
- <p>
- He shrugged his shoulders, and moved on toward the sacristy to divest
- himself of his surplice and stole&mdash;and again he paused, this time in
- the doorway, and turned around, as a voice cried out his name.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father Aubert!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Valérie, running swiftly toward him from the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond stood still and waited. Intuitively he knew. Something had
- happened in the <i>presbytère</i> at last. He was the gambler again, cool,
- imperturbable, steel-nerved, with the actual crisis upon him. It was the
- turn of the card, the throw of the dice, that was all. Was it life&mdash;or
- death? It was Valérie who was to pronounce the sentence. She reached him,
- breathless, flushed. He smiled at her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé&mdash;Father Aubert,&rdquo; she panted, &ldquo;come quickly! He can
- speak! He has regained consciousness!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XI&mdash;&ldquo;HENRI MENTONE&rdquo;
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">V</span>ALERIE'S flushed
- face was lifted eagerly to his. She had caught impetuously at the sleeve
- of his <i>soutane</i>, and was urging him forward. And yet he was walking
- with deliberate measured tread across the green toward the <i>presbytère</i>.
- Strange how the blood seemed to be hammering feverishly at his temples!
- Every impulse prompted him to run, as a man running for his life, to reach
- the <i>presbytère</i>, to reach that room, to shut the door upon himself
- and that man whose return to consciousness meant&mdash;what? But it was
- too late to run now. Too late! Already the news seemed to have spread.
- Those who had been the last to linger at the grave of Théophile Blondin
- were gathering, on their way out from the little burying ground, around
- the door of the <i>presbytère</i>. It would appear bizarre, perhaps, that
- the curé should come tearing across the green with vestments flying simply
- because a man had regained consciousness! Ha, ha! Yes, very bizarre! Why
- should their curé run like one demented just because a man had regained
- consciousness! If the man were at his last gasp now, were just about to
- die&mdash;that would be different! He found a bitter mirth in that. Yes,
- decidedly, they would understand that! But as it was, they would think
- their curé had gone suddenly mad, perhaps, or they would think, perhaps&mdash;something
- else.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dice were thrown, the card was turned&mdash;against him. His luck was
- out. It was like walking tamely to where the noose dangled and awaited his
- neck to walk toward those gaping people clustered around the door, to walk
- into the <i>presbytère</i>. But it was his only chance. Yes, there was a
- chance&mdash;one chance left. If he could hold out until evening, until
- darkness!
- </p>
- <p>
- Until evening, until darkness&mdash;with the night before him in which to
- attempt his escape! But there were still eight hours or more to evening.
- There were only a few more steps to go before he reached the <i>presbytère</i>.
- The distance was pitifully short. In those few steps he must plan
- everything; plan that that accursed noose swaying before his eyes should&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Dies illa, dies iræ</i>&mdash;that day, a day of wrath.&rdquo; What brought
- those words flashing through his mind! He had said them once that morning&mdash;but
- a little while ago&mdash;in church&mdash;as a priest&mdash;at Théophile
- Blondin's funeral. Damn it, they were not meant for him! They did not mean
- to-day. They were not premonitory. He was not beaten yet!
- </p>
- <p>
- In the shed behind the <i>presbytère</i> there was a pair of the old
- sacristan's overalls, and an old coat, and an old hat. He had noticed them
- yesterday. They would serve his purpose&mdash;a man in a pair of overalls
- and a dirty, torn coat would not look much like a priest. Yes, yes; that
- would do, it was the way&mdash;when night came. He would have the
- darkness, and he would hide the next day, and the day after, and travel
- only by night. It invited pursuit of course, the one thing that next to
- capture itself he had struggled and plotted to avoid, but it was the only
- chance now, and, if luck turned again, he might succeed in making his way
- out of the country&mdash;when night came.
- </p>
- <p>
- But until then! What until then? That was where his danger lay now&mdash;in
- those hours until darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; whispered Raymond fiercely to himself. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;if only you keep
- your head!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What was the matter with him? Had he forgotten! It was what he had been
- prepared to face that night when he had brought the priest to the <i>presbytère</i>,
- should the man then have recovered sufficiently to speak. It should be
- still easier now to make any one believe that the man was wandering in his
- mind, was not yet lucid or coherent after so long a lapse from
- consciousness. And the very story that the man would tell must sound like
- the ravings of a still disordered mind! He, Raymond, would insist that the
- man be kept very quiet during the day; he, Raymond, would stay beside the
- other's bed. Was he not the curé! Would they not obey him, show deference
- to his judgment and his wishes&mdash;until night came!
- </p>
- <p>
- They were close to the <i>presbytère</i> now, close to the little gaping
- crowd that surrounded the door; and, as though conscious for the first
- time that she was clinging to his arm, Valérie, in sudden embarrassment at
- her own eagerness, hurriedly dropped her hand to her side. And, at the
- act, Raymond looked at her quickly, in an almost startled way. Strange!
- But then his brain was in turmoil! Strange that extraneous things, things
- that had nothing to do with the one grim purpose of saving his neck should
- even for an instant assert themselves! But then they&mdash;no, she&mdash;had
- done that before. He remembered now... when they were putting on that
- bandage.
- </p>
- <p>
- When that crucifix had tangled up his hands, and she had seemed to stand
- before him to save him from himself... those dark eyes, that pure, sweet
- face, the tender, womanly sympathy&mdash;the antithesis of himself! And
- to-night, when night came, when the night he longed for came, when the
- night that meant his only chance for life came, he&mdash;what was this!&mdash;this
- sudden pang of yearning that ignored, with a most curious authority, as
- though it had the right to ignore, the desperate, almost hopeless peril
- that was closing down upon him, that seemed to make the coming of the
- night now a thing he would put off, a thing to regret and to dread, that
- bade him search for some other way, some other plan that would not
- necessitate&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A fool and a pretty face!&rdquo;&mdash;it was the gibe and sneer and prod of
- that inward monitor. &ldquo;See all these people who are so reverently making
- way for you, and eying you with affection and simple humility, see the
- rest of them coming back from all directions because the <i>murderer</i>
- is about to tell his story&mdash;well, see how they will make way for you,
- and with what affection and humility they will eye you when you come out
- of that house again, if all the wits the devil ever gave you are not about
- you now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He spoke to her quietly, controlling his voice:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have not told me yet what he said, mademoiselle?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He did not say much&mdash;only to ask where he was and for a drink of
- water.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had no time to ask more. They had reached the group before the <i>presbytère</i>
- now, and the buzz of conversation, the eager, excited exchange of
- questions and answers was hushed, as, with one accord, men and women made
- way for their curé. And Raymond, lifting his hand in a kindly, yet
- authoritative gesture, cautioning patience and order, mounted the steps of
- the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, inside the doorway, Raymond quickened his step. From the closed
- door at the end of the short hallway came the low murmur of voices. It was
- Madame Lafleur probably who was there with the other now. How much, how
- little had the man said&mdash;since Valérie had left the room? Raymond's
- lips tightened grimly. It was fortunate that Madame Lafleur had so great a
- respect for the cloth! He had nothing to fear from her. He could make her
- believe anything. He could twist her around his finger, and&mdash;he
- opened the door softly&mdash;and stood, as though turned suddenly rigid,
- incapable of movement, upon the threshold&mdash;and his hand upon the
- doorknob closed tighter and tighter in a vise-like grip. Across the room
- stood, not Madame Lafleur, but Monsieur Dupont, the assistant chief of the
- Tournayville police, and in Monsieur Dupont's hand was a notebook, and
- upon Monsieur Dupont's lips, as he turned and glanced quickly toward the
- door, there played an enigmatical smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah! It is Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; observed Monsieur Dupont smoothly. &ldquo;Well,
- come in, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;come in, and shut the door. I promise you,
- you will find it interesting. What? Yes, very interesting!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur Dupont is here!&rdquo;&mdash;the words seemed to come to Raymond
- as from some great distance behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned. It was Valérie. Of course, it was Valérie! He had forgotten.
- She had naturally followed him along the hall to the door. What did this
- Dupont mean by what he had said? What had Dupont already learned&mdash;that
- was so <i>interesting!</i> It would not do to have Valérie here, if&mdash;if
- he and Dupont&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps, Mademoiselle Valérie,&rdquo; he said gravely, &ldquo;it would be as well if
- you did not come in. Monsieur Dupont appears to be officially engaged.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, of course!&rdquo; she agreed readily. &ldquo;I did not know that any one was
- here. I left the man alone when I ran out to find you. I will come back
- when Monsieur Dupont has gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond smiled, and stepped inside the room, and closed the door, and
- leaned with his back against it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Dupont tapped with his pencil on
- the notebook&mdash;&ldquo;I have it all down here. All! Everything that he has
- said.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond had not even glanced toward the bed&mdash;his eyes, cool, steady
- now, were on the officer, watching the other like a hawk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; he prompted calmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Dupont made that infernal clucking noise with his
- tongue&mdash;&ldquo;I have&mdash;nothing! Did I not tell you it was interesting?
- Yes, very interesting! Very!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Was the man playing with him? How clever was this Dupont? No fool, at any
- rate! He had already shown that, in spite of his absurd mannerisms.
- Raymond's hand began to toy with the crucifix on his breast, while his
- fingers surreptitiously loosened several buttons of his <i>soutane</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing?&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's eyebrows were raised in mild surprise. &ldquo;But
- Mademoiselle Valérie told me he had regained consciousness.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Monsieur Dupont, &ldquo;I heard her say so to some one as she left
- the house. I was keeping an eye on that <i>vieille sauvage</i>, Mother
- Blondin. But this&mdash;ah! Quite a more significant matter! Yes&mdash;quite!
- You will understand, Monsieur le Curé, that I lost no time in reaching
- here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And now for the first time Raymond looked swiftly toward the bed. It was
- only for the barest fraction of a second that he permitted his eyes to
- leave the police officer; but in that glance he had met coal black eyes,
- all pupils they seemed, fixed in a sort of intense penetration upon him.
- The man was still lying on his back, he had noticed that&mdash;but it was
- the eyes, disconcerting, full of something he could not define, boring
- into him, that dominated all else. He stepped nonchalantly toward Monsieur
- Dupont.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is astonishing that he has said nothing,&rdquo; he murmured softly. &ldquo;Will
- you permit me, Monsieur Dupont&rdquo;&mdash;he held out his hand&mdash;&ldquo;to see
- your book?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The book? H'm! Well, why not?&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont shrugged his shoulders as
- he placed the notebook in Raymond's hand. &ldquo;It is not customary&mdash;but,
- why not!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then upon Raymond came relief. It surged upon him until he could have
- laughed out hysterically, laughed like a fool in this Monsieur Dupont's
- face&mdash;this Monsieur Dupont who was the assistant chief of the police
- force of Tournayville. It was true! Dupont had at least told the truth. So
- far Dupont had learned nothing. Raymond's face was impassive as he
- scrutinised the page before him. Written with a flourish on the upper
- line, presumably to serve as a caption, were the words:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The Murderer, Henri Mentone,&rdquo; and beneath: &ldquo;Evades direct answers.
- Hardened type&mdash;knows his way about. Pretends ignorance. Stubborn.
- Wily rascal&mdash;yes, very!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond handed the notebook back to Monsieur Dupont.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is perhaps not so strange after all, Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; he remarked
- with a thoughtful air. &ldquo;We must not forget that the poor fellow has but
- just recovered consciousness. He is hardly likely to be either lucid or
- rational.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bah!&rdquo; ejaculated Monsieur Dupont grimly. &ldquo;He is as lucid as I am. But I
- am not through with him yet! He is not the first of his kind I have had
- upon my hook!&rdquo; He leaned toward the bed. &ldquo;Now, then, my little Apache, you
- will answer my questions! Do you understand? No more evasions! None at
- all! They will do you no good, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's hand fell upon Monsieur Dupont's shoulder. Though he had not
- looked again until now, he was conscious that those eyes from the bed had
- never for an instant swerved from his face. Now he met them steadily. He
- addressed Monsieur Dupont, but he spoke to the man on the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you warned him, Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; he said soberly, &ldquo;that anything he
- says will be used against him? And have you told him that he is not
- obliged to answer? He is weak yet and at a disadvantage. He would be quite
- justified in waiting until he was stronger, and entirely competent to
- weigh his own words.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont was possessed of an inconsistency all his own.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tonnerre!</i>&rdquo; he snapped. &ldquo;And what is the use of warning him when he
- will not answer at all?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You appear not quite to have given up hope!&rdquo; observed Raymond dryly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;H'm!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont scowled. &ldquo;Very well, then&rdquo;&mdash;he leaned once
- more over the bed, and addressed the man&mdash;&ldquo;you understand? It is as
- Monsieur le Curé says. I warn you. You are not obliged to answer. Now then&mdash;your
- name, your age, your birthplace?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond shifted his position to the foot of the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Damn those eyes! Move where he would, they never left his face. The man
- had paid no attention to Monsieur Dupont. Why, in God's name, why did the
- man keep on staring and gazing so fixedly at him&mdash;and why had the man
- refused to answer Dupont's questions&mdash;and why had not the man with
- his first words poured out his story eagerly!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well!&rdquo; prodded Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Did you not hear&mdash;eh? Your
- name?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man's eyes followed Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where am I?&rdquo; he asked faintly.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was too querulous, that tone, too genuinely weak and peevish to smack
- of trickery&mdash;and suddenly upon Raymond there came again that nervous
- impulse to laugh out aloud. So that was the secret of it, was it? There
- was a sort of sardonic humour then in the situation! The suggestion, the
- belief he had planned to convey to shield himself&mdash;that the man was
- still irrational&mdash;was, in fact, the truth! But how long would that
- condition last? He must put an end to this&mdash;get this cursed Dupont
- away!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where am I?&rdquo; muttered the man again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens!</i>&rdquo; clucked Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;You see, Monsieur le Curé! You
- see? Yes, you see. He plays the game well&mdash;with finesse, eh?&rdquo; He
- turned to the man. &ldquo;Where are you, eh? Well, you are better off where you
- are now than where you will be in a few days! I promise you that! Now,
- again&mdash;your name?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; said Raymond, a little severely. &ldquo;You will arrive at
- nothing like this. The man is not himself. To-morrow he will be stronger.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bah! Nonsense! Stronger!&rdquo; jerked out Monsieur Dupont derisively. &ldquo;Our fox
- is quite strong enough! Monsieur le Curé, you are not a police officer&mdash;do
- not let your pity deceive you. And permit me to continue!&rdquo; He slipped his
- hand into his pocket, and adroitly flashed a visiting card suddenly before
- the man's eyes. &ldquo;Well, since you cannot recall your name, this will
- perhaps be of assistance! You see, Monsieur Henri Mentone, that you get
- yourself nowhere by refusing to answer!&rdquo; Once more the man shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont complacently returned the card to his pocket. &ldquo;Now
- we will continue. You see now where you stand. Your age?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the man shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He does not know!&rdquo; remarked Monsieur Dupont caustically. &ldquo;Very convenient
- memory! Yes&mdash;very! Well, will you tell us where you came from?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For the fourth time the man shook his head&mdash;and at that instant
- Raymond edged close to Monsieur Dupont's side. What was that in those eyes
- now&mdash;that something that was creeping into them&mdash;that <i>dawning</i>
- light, as they searched his face!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He does not know that, either!&rdquo; complained Monsieur Dupont sarcastically.
- &ldquo;Magnificent! Yes&mdash;very! He knows nothing at all! He&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a low cry, the man struggled to his elbow, propping himself up in
- bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I know!&rdquo;&mdash;his voice, high-pitched, rang through the room. &ldquo;I
- know now!&rdquo; He raised his hand and pointed at Raymond. &ldquo;<i>I know you!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's hand was thrust into the breast of his <i>soutane</i>, where he
- had unbuttoned it beneath the crucifix&mdash;and Raymond's fingers closed
- upon the stock of an automatic in his upper left-hand vest pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor fellow!&rdquo; murmured Raymond pityingly. &ldquo;You see, Monsieur Dupont&rdquo;&mdash;he
- moved still a little closer&mdash;&ldquo;you have gone too far. You have excited
- him. He is incoherent. He does not know what he is saying.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont was clucking with his tongue, as he eyed the man
- speculatively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, yes; I know you now!&rdquo; cried the man again. &ldquo;Oh, monsieur, monsieur!&rdquo;&mdash;both
- hands were suddenly thrust out to Raymond, and there was a smile on the
- trembling lips, an eager flush dyeing the pale cheeks. &ldquo;It is you,
- monsieur! I have been very sick, have I not? It&mdash;it was like a dream.
- I&mdash;I was trying to remember&mdash;your face. It is your face that I
- have seen so often bending over me. Was that not it, monsieur&mdash;monsieur,
- you who have been so good&mdash;was that not it? You would lift me upon my
- pillow, and give me something cool to drink. And was it not you, monsieur,
- who sat there in that chair for long, long hours? It seems as though I saw
- you there always&mdash;many, many times.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was like a shock, a revulsion so strong that for the moment it unnerved
- him. Raymond scarcely heard his own voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said&mdash;his forehead was damp, as he brushed his hand across
- it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont blew out his cheeks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Nom d'un nom!</i>&rdquo; he exploded. &ldquo;Ah, your pardon, Monsieur le Curé!
- But it is mild, a very mild oath, is it not&mdash;under the circumstances?
- Yes&mdash;very! I admire cleverness&mdash;yes, I do! The man has a head!
- What an appeal to the emotions! Poignant! Yes, that's the word&mdash;poignant.
- Looking for sympathy! Trying to make an ally of you, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get rid of the fool! Get rid of the fool!&rdquo; prompted that inward monitor
- impatiently.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond, with a significant look, plucked at Monsieur Dupont's sleeve, and
- led the other across the room away from the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think so?&rdquo; he asked, in a lowered voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Eh?&rdquo; inquired Monsieur blankly. &ldquo;Think what?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What you just said&mdash;that he is trying to make an ally of me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that&mdash;<i>zut!</i>&rdquo; sniffed Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;But what else?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then suppose&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond dropped his voice still lower&mdash;&ldquo;then
- suppose you leave him with me until tomorrow. And meanwhile&mdash;you
- understand?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont pondered the suggestion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, very well&mdash;why not?&rdquo; decided Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Perhaps not a
- bad idea&mdash;perhaps not. And if it does not succeed&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur
- Dupont shrugged his shoulders&mdash;&ldquo;well, we know everything anyhow; and
- I will make him pay through the nose for his tricks! But he is under
- arrest, Monsieur le Curé, you understand that? There is a cell in the jail
- at Tournayville that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Naturally&mdash;when he is able to be moved,&rdquo; agreed Raymond readily. &ldquo;We
- will speak to the doctor about that. In the meantime he probably could not
- walk across this room. He is quite safe here. I will be responsible for
- him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I will put a flea in the doctor's ear!&rdquo; announced Monsieur Dupont,
- moving toward the door. &ldquo;The assizes are next week, and after the assizes,
- say, another six weeks and&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Dupont's tongue clucked
- eloquently several times against the roof of his mouth. &ldquo;We will not keep
- him waiting long!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont opened the door, and, standing on the
- threshold where he was hidden from the bed, laid his forefinger along the
- side of his nose. &ldquo;You are wrong, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;he had raised
- his voice to carry through the room. &ldquo;But still you may be right! You are
- too softhearted; yes, that is it&mdash;soft-hearted. Well, he has you to
- thank for it. I would not otherwise consider it&mdash;it is against my
- best judgment. I bid you good-bye, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond closed the door&mdash;but it was a moment, standing there with his
- back to the bed, before he moved. His face was set, the square jaws
- clamped, a cynical smile flickering on his lips. It had been close&mdash;but
- of the two, as between Monsieur Dupont and himself and the gallows,
- Monsieur Dupont had been the nearer to death! He saw Monsieur Dupont in
- his mind's-eye sprawled on the floor. It would not have been difficult to
- have stopped forever any outcry from that weak thing upon the bed. And
- then the window; and after that&mdash;God knew! And it would have been
- God's affair! It was God Who had instituted that primal law that lay upon
- every human soul, the law of self-preservation; and it was God's choosing,
- not his, that he was here! Who was to quarrel with him if he stopped at
- nothing in his fight for life! Well, Dupont was gone now! That danger was
- past. He had only to reckon now with Valérie and her mother&mdash;until
- night came. He raised his hand heavily to his forehead and pushed back his
- hair. Valérie! Until night came! Fool! What was Valérie to him! And yet&mdash;he
- jeered at himself in a sort of grim derision&mdash;and yet, if it were not
- his one chance for life, he would not go to-night. He could call himself a
- fool, if he would; that ubiquitous and caustic other self, that was the
- cool, calculating, unemotional personification of Three-Ace Artie, could
- call him a fool, if it would&mdash;those dark eyes of Valérie's&mdash;no,
- not that&mdash;it was not eyes, nor hair, nor lips, they were only part of
- Valérie&mdash;it was Valérie, like some rare fragrance, fresh and pure and
- sweet in her young womanhood, that&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur!&rdquo;&mdash;the man was calling from the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond turned, and walked back across the room, and drew a chair
- to the bedside, and sat down. And Raymond smiled&mdash;but not at the
- bandaged, outstretched form before him. A fool! Well, so be it! The fool
- would sit here for the rest of the morning, and the rest of the afternoon,
- and listen to the babbling wanderings of another fool who had not had
- sense enough to die; and he would play this cursed rôle of saint, and
- fumble with his crucifix, and mumble his * Latin, and keep this
- Mademoiselle Valérie, who meant nothing to him, from the room&mdash;until
- to-night. And&mdash;what was this other fool saying?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur&mdash;monsieur, who was that man who just went out?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond answered mechanically:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was Monsieur Dupont, the assistant chief of the Tournayville police.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was he doing here?&rdquo; asked the other slowly, as though trying to
- puzzle out the answer to his own question. &ldquo;Why was he asking me all those
- questions?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond, tight-lipped, looked the man in the eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've had enough of this, haven't we?&rdquo; he challenged evenly. &ldquo;I thought
- at first you were still irrational. You're not&mdash;that is now quite
- evident. Well&mdash;we are alone&mdash;what is your object? You had a
- chance to tell Dupont your story!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A pitiful, stunned look crept into the man's face. He stretched out his
- hand over the coverlet toward Raymond. &ldquo;You&mdash;you, too, monsieur!&rdquo; he
- said numbly. &ldquo;What does it mean? What does it mean?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It startled Raymond. There was trickery here, it could be nothing else&mdash;and
- yet there was sincerity too genuine to be assumed in the other's words and
- acts. Raymond sat back in his chair, and for a long minute, brows knitted,
- studied the man. It was possible, of course, that the other might not have
- recognised him&mdash;they had only been together for a few moments in the
- smoking compartment of the train, and, dressed now as a priest, that might
- well be the case&mdash;but why not the story then?&mdash;why not the
- simple statement that he was the new curé coming to the village, that he
- had been struck down and&mdash;bah! What was the man's game! Well, he
- would force the issue, that was all! He leaned over the bed; and, his hand
- upon the other's, his fingers closed around the man's wrist until, beneath
- their tips, they could gauge the throb of the other's pulse. And his eyes,
- steel-hard, were on the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am the curé,&rdquo; he said, in a low, level tone, &ldquo;of St. Marleau&mdash;while
- Father Allard is away. My name is&mdash;<i>François Aubert</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And mine,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;is&rdquo;&mdash;he shook his head&mdash;&ldquo;mine is&rdquo;&mdash;his
- face grew piteously troubled&mdash;&ldquo;it is strange&mdash;I do not remember
- that either.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There had been no tell-tale nervous flutter of the man's pulse. Raymond's
- hand fell away from the other's wrist. What was this curious, almost
- uncanny presentiment that was creeping upon him! Was it possible that the
- man was telling the <i>truth!</i> Was it possible that&mdash;his own brain
- was whirling now&mdash;he steadied himself, forcing himself to speak.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you not read the card that Dupont showed you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the other. &ldquo;Henri Mentone&mdash;is that my name?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you not know!&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's tone was suddenly sharp, incisive.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; the other answered. &ldquo;No, I cannot remember.&rdquo; He reached out his arms
- imploringly to Raymond again. &ldquo;Oh, monsieur, what does it mean? I do not
- know where I am&mdash;I do not know how I came here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are in the <i>presbytère</i> at St. Marleau,&rdquo; said Raymond, still
- sharply. Was it true; or was the man simply magnificent in duplicity? No&mdash;there
- could be no reason, no valid reason for the man to play a part?&mdash;no
- reason why he should have withheld his story from Dupont. It was not
- logical. He, Raymond, who alone knew all the story, knew that. It must be
- true&mdash;but he dared not yet drop his guard. He must be sure&mdash;his
- life depended on his being sure. He was speaking again&mdash;uncompromisingly:
- &ldquo;You were picked up unconscious on the road by the tavern during the storm
- three nights ago&mdash;you remember the storm, of course?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again that piteously troubled look was on the other's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, monsieur, I do not remember,&rdquo; he said tremulously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; persisted Raymond, &ldquo;before the storm&mdash;you surely
- remember that! Where you came from? Where you lived? Your people?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where I came from, my&mdash;my people&rdquo;&mdash;the man repeated the words
- automatically. He swept his hand across his bandaged head. &ldquo;It is gone,&rdquo;
- he whispered miserably. &ldquo;I&mdash;it is gone. There&mdash;there is nothing.
- I do not remember anything except a girl in this room saying she would run
- for the curé, and then that man came in.&rdquo; A new trouble came into his
- eyes. &ldquo;That man&mdash;you said he was a police officer&mdash;why was he
- here? And&mdash;you have not told me yet&mdash;why should he ask me
- questions?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was still a card to play. Raymond leaned again over the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All this will not help you,&rdquo; he said sternly. &ldquo;Far better that you should
- confide in me! The proof against you is overwhelming. You are already
- condemned. You murdered Théophile Blondin that night, and stole Mother
- Blondin's money. Mother Blondin struck you that blow upon the head as you
- ran from the house. You were found on the road; and in your pockets was
- Mother Blondin's money&mdash;and her son's revolver, with which you shot
- him. In a word, you are under arrest for murder.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Murder!&rdquo;&mdash;the man, wide-eyed, horror-stricken, was staring at
- Raymond&mdash;and then he was clawing himself frantically into an upright
- position in the bed. &ldquo;No, no! Not that! It cannot be true! Not&mdash;<i>murder!</i>&rdquo;
- His voice rose into a piercing cry, and rang, and rang again through the
- room. He reached out his arms. &ldquo;You are a priest, monsieur&mdash;by that
- holy crucifix, by the dear Christ's love, tell me that it is not so! Tell
- me! Murder! It is not true! It cannot be true! No, no&mdash;no! Monsieur&mdash;father&mdash;do
- you not hear me crying to you, do you not&mdash;&rdquo; His voice choked and was
- still. His face was buried in his hands, and great sobs shook his
- shoulders.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond turned his head away&mdash;and Raymond's face was gray and
- drawn. There was no longer room for doubt. That blow upon the skull had
- blotted out the man's memory, left it&mdash;a blank.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XII&mdash;HIS BROTHER'S KEEPER
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>ATHER ALLARD'S
- desk had been moved into the front room. Raymond, on a very thin piece of
- paper, was tracing the signature inscribed on the fly-leaf of the
- prayer-book&mdash;François Aubert. Before him lay a number of letters
- written that morning by Valérie&mdash;parish letters, a letter to the
- bishop&mdash;awaiting his signature. Valérie, who had been private
- secretary to her uncle, was now private secretary to&mdash;François
- Aubert!
- </p>
- <p>
- The day before yesterday he had signed a letter in this manner, and
- Valérie, who was acquainted with the signature from her uncle's
- correspondence, had had no suspicions. Raymond placed his tracing over the
- bottom of one of the letters, and, bearing down heavily as he wrote,
- obtained an impression on the letter itself. The impression served as a
- guide, and he signed&mdash;François Aubert.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was simple enough, this expedient in lieu of a piece of carbon paper
- that he had no opportunity to buy, and for which, from the notary perhaps,
- Valérie's other uncle, who alone in the village might be expected to have
- such a thing, he had not dared to make the request; but it was tedious and
- laborious&mdash;and besides, for the moment, his mind was not upon his
- task.
- </p>
- <p>
- He signed another, and still another, his face deeply lined as he worked,
- wrinkles nesting in strained little puckers around the corners of his eyes&mdash;and
- suddenly, while there were yet two of the letters to be signed, he sat
- back in his chair, staring unseeingly before him. From the rear room came
- that footstep, slow, irregular, uncertain. It was Henri Mentone. Dupont's
- &ldquo;flea&rdquo; in the doctor's ear had had its effect. Henri Mentone was taking
- his exercise&mdash;from the bed to the window, from the window to the
- door, from the door to the bed, and over again. In the three days since
- the man had recovered consciousness, he had made rapid strides toward
- recovering his strength as well, though he still spent part of the day in
- bed&mdash;this afternoon, for instance, he was to be allowed out for a
- little while in the open air.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes fixed on the open window where the morning sunlight
- streamed into the room. Yes, the man was getting on his feet rapidly
- enough to suit even Monsieur Dupont. The criminal assizes began at
- Tournayville the day after to-morrow. And the day after to-morrow Henri
- Mentone was to stand his trial for the murder of Théophile Blondin!
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's fingers tightened upon the penholder until it cracked warningly,
- recalling him to himself. He had not gone that night. Gone! He laughed
- mockingly. The man had lost his memory! Who would have thought of that&mdash;and
- what it meant? If the man had died, or even if the man had talked and so
- <i>forced</i> him to accept pursuit as his one and only chance, the issue
- would have been clear cut. But the man, curse him, had not died; nor had
- he told his story&mdash;and to all appearances at least, except for still
- being naturally a little weak, was as well as any one. Gone! Gone&mdash;that
- night! Great God, they would <i>hang</i> the fool for this!
- </p>
- <p>
- The sweat beads crept out on Raymond's forehead. No, no&mdash;not that!
- They thought the man was shamming now, but they would surely realise
- before it was too late that he was not. They would convict him of course,
- the evidence was damning, overwhelming, final&mdash;but they would not
- hang a man who could not remember. No, they wouldn't hang him. But what
- they would do was horrible enough&mdash;they would sentence the man for
- life, and keep him in the infirmary perhaps of some penitentiary. For life&mdash;that
- was all.
- </p>
- <p>
- The square jaw was suddenly out-thrust. Well, what of it! He, Raymond, was
- safe as it was. It was his life, or the other's. In either case it would
- be an innocent man who suffered. As far as actual murder was concerned, he
- was no more guilty than this priest who had had nothing to do with it.
- Besides, they would hang him, Raymond, and they wouldn't hang the other.
- Of course, they didn't believe the man now! Why should they? They did not
- know what he, Raymond, knew; they had only the evidence before them that
- was conclusive enough to convict a saint from Heaven! Ha, ha! Why, even
- the man himself was beginning to believe in his own guilt! Sometimes the
- man was as a caged beast in an impotent fury; and&mdash;and sometimes he
- would cling like a frightened child with his arms around his, Raymond's,
- neck.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was warm here in the room, warm with the bright, glorious sunlight of
- the summer morning. Why did he shiver like that? And this&mdash;why <i>this?</i>
- The smell of incense; those organ notes rising and swelling through the
- church; the voices of the choir; the bowed heads everywhere! He surged up
- from his chair, and, rocking on his feet, his hands clenched upon the edge
- of the desk. Before what dread tribunal was this that he was being called
- suddenly to account! Yesterday&mdash;yesterday had been Sunday&mdash;and
- yesterday he had celebrated mass. His own voice seemed to sound again in
- his ears: &ldquo;<i>Introibo ad altare Dei</i>&mdash;I will go in unto the Altar
- of God.... <i>Ab homme iniquo et dolosoerue me</i>&mdash;Deliver me from
- the unjust and deceitful man.... <i>In quorum manibus iniquitates sunt</i>&mdash;In
- whose hands are iniquities.... <i>Hic est enim Calix sanguinis mei novi et
- æterni testamenti: mysterium fidei</i>&mdash;For this is the Chalice of My
- Blood of the new and eternal testament: the mystery of faith....&rdquo; No&mdash;no,
- no! He had not profaned those holy things, those holy vessels. He had not
- done it! It was a lie! He had fooled even Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar
- boy.
- </p>
- <p>
- He sank back into his chair like a man exhausted, and drew his hand across
- his eyes. It was nothing! He was quite calm again. Those words, the
- church, those holy things had nothing to do with Henri Mentone. If any one
- should think otherwise, that one was a fool! Had Three-Ace Artie ever been
- swayed by &ldquo;mystery of faith&rdquo;&mdash;or been called a coward! Yes, that was
- it&mdash;a coward! It was true that he had as much right to life as that
- pitiful thing in the back room, but it was he who had put that other's
- life in jeopardy! That creed&mdash;that creed of his, born of the far
- Northland where men were men, fearing neither God nor devil, nor man, nor
- beast&mdash;it was better than those trembling words which had just been
- upon his lips. True, he was safe now, if he let them dispose of this Henri
- Mentone&mdash;but to desert the other would be a coward's act. Well, what
- then&mdash;what then! Confess&mdash;and with meek, uplifted eyes, like
- some saintly martyr, stand upon the gibbet and fasten the noose around his
- own neck? <i>No!</i> Well then, what&mdash;<i>what?</i> The tormented look
- was back in Raymond's eyes. There was a way, a way by which he could give
- the man a chance, a way by which they both might have their chance, only
- the difficulties so far had seemed insurmountable&mdash;a problem that he
- had not yet been able to solve&mdash;and the time was short. Yes, the way
- was there, if only&mdash;&mdash;.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a swift movement, incredibly swift, alert in an instant, his hand
- swept toward the desk. Some one was knocking at the door. His fingers
- closed on the thin piece of paper that had served him in tracing the
- signature of Francois Aubert, and crushed it into a little ball in the
- palm of his hand. The door opened. There were dark eyes there, dark hair,
- a slim figure, a sweet, quiet smile, a calm, an untroubled peace, a
- pervading radiance. It was unreal. It could not exist. There was only a
- ghastly turmoil, agony, dismay and strife everywhere&mdash;his soul told
- him so! This was Valérie. God, how tired he was, how weary! Once he had
- seen those arms supporting that wounded man's head so tenderly&mdash;like
- a soothing caress. If he might, just for a moment, know that too, it would
- bring him&mdash;rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- She came lightly across the room and stood before the desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is for the letters, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she smiled. &ldquo;I am going down to
- the post-office.&rdquo; She picked up the little pile of correspondence; and,
- very prettily business-like, began to run through it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Impulsively Raymond reached out to take the letters from her&mdash;and,
- instead, his hand slipped inside his <i>soutane</i>, and dropped the
- crushed ball of paper into one of his pockets. It was too late, of course!
- She would already have noticed the omission of the two signatures.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are two there that I have not yet signed,&rdquo; observed Raymond
- casually.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; so I see!&rdquo; she answered brightly. &ldquo;I was just going to tell you how
- terribly careless you were, Monsieur le Curé! Well, you can sign them now,
- while I am putting the others in their envelopes. Here they are.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He took the two letters from her hand&mdash;and laid them deliberately
- aside upon the desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was not carelessness,&rdquo; he said laughingly; &ldquo;except that I should not
- have allowed them to get mixed up with the others. There are some changes
- that I think I should like to make before they go. They are not important&mdash;to-morrow
- will do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; she said. Then, in pretended consternation: &ldquo;I hope the
- mistakes weren't mine!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No&mdash;not yours&rdquo;&mdash;he spoke abstractedly now. He was watching her
- as she folded the letters and sealed the envelopes. How quickly she
- worked! In a minute now she would go and leave him alone again to listen
- to those footfalls from the other room. He wanted rest for his stumbling
- brain; and, yes&mdash;he wanted her. He could have reached out and caught
- her hands, and drawn that dark head bending over the desk closer to him,
- and held her there&mdash;a prisoner. He brushed his hands hurriedly over
- his forehead. A prisoner! What did he mean by that? Oh, yes, the thought
- was born of the idea that he was already a jailor. He had been a jailor
- for three days now&mdash;of that man there, who was too weak to get away.
- He had appointed himself jailor&mdash;and Monsieur Dupont had confirmed
- the appointment. What had that to do with Valérie? He only wanted her to
- stay because&mdash;a fool, was he!&mdash;because he wanted to torture
- himself a little more. Well, it was exquisite torture then, her presence,
- her voice, her smile! Love? Well, what if he loved! Days and days their
- lives had been spent together now. How long was it? A week&mdash;no, it
- must be more than a week&mdash;it seemed as though it had been as long as
- he could remember. Yes, he loved her! He knew that now&mdash;scoff, sneer
- and gibe if that inner voice would! He loved her! He loved Valérie!
- Madness? Well, what of that, too! Did he dispute it! Yes, it was madness&mdash;and
- in more ways than one! He was fighting for his life in this devil's
- masquerade, and he might win; but he could not fight for or win his love.
- That was just dangled before his eyes as the final Satanic touch to this
- hell-born conspiracy that engulfed him! He was in the garb of a priest!
- How those hell demons must shake their very souls out with laughter in
- their damnable glee! He could not even touch her; he could say no word,
- his tongue was tied; nor look at her&mdash;he was in the garb of a priest!
- He&mdash;what was this! A fire seemed in his veins. Her hand in his!
- Across the desk, her hand had crept softly into his!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur&mdash;Monsieur le Curé&mdash;you are ill!&rdquo; she cried anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond found himself upon his feet, his other hand laid over
- hers&mdash;and he forced a smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;no&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond shook his head&mdash;&ldquo;no, Mademoiselle Valérie,
- I am not ill.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are worn out, then!&rdquo; she insisted tremulously. &ldquo;And it is our fault.
- We should have made you let us help you more. You have been up night after
- night with that man, and in the daytime there was the parish work, and you
- have never had any rest. And yesterday in the church you looked so tired&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The dark eyes were misty; the sweet face was very close to his. If he
- might bend a little, just a very little, that glad wealth of hair would
- brush his cheek.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A little tired, perhaps&mdash;yes&mdash;mademoiselle,&rdquo; he said, in a low
- voice. &ldquo;But it is nothing!&rdquo; He released her hand, and, turning abruptly
- from the desk, walked to the window.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had followed him with her eyes, turned to look after him&mdash;he
- sensed that. There was silence in the room. He did not speak. He did not
- dare to speak until&mdash;ah!&mdash;this should bring him to his senses
- quickly enough!
- </p>
- <p>
- He was staring out through the window. A buck-board had turned in from the
- road, and was coming across the green toward the <i>presbytère</i>. Dupont
- and Doctor Arnaud! They were coming for Henri Mentone now&mdash;<i>now!</i>
- He had let the time slip by until it was too late&mdash;because he had not
- been able to fight his way through the odds against him! And then there
- came a wan smile to Raymond's lips. No! His fears were groundless.
- Three-Ace Artie would have seen that at once! The buckboard was
- single-seated, there was room only for two&mdash;and Monsieur Dupont could
- be well trusted to look after his own comfort when he took the man away.
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew back from the window, and faced around&mdash;and the thrill that
- had come from the touch of her hand was back again, as he caught her gaze
- upon him. What was it that was in those eyes, that was in her face? She
- had been looking at him like that, he knew, all the time that he had been
- standing at the window. They were still misty, those eyes&mdash;she could
- not hide that, though she lowered them hurriedly now. And that faint flush
- tinging her cheeks! Did it mean that she&mdash;Fool! He knew what it
- meant! It meant that if he cared to seek for any added self-torture with
- his madman's imaginings, he could find it readily to hand. She&mdash;to
- have any thought but that prompted by her woman's sympathy, her tender
- anxiety for another's trouble! She&mdash;who thought him a priest, and,
- pure in her faith as in her soul, would have recoiled in horror from&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- He steadied his voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur Dupont and the doctor have just arrived,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- She looked up, her face serious now.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They have come for Henri Mentone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, not yet, I imagine,&rdquo; he answered; &ldquo;since they have only a one-seated
- buckboard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will be glad when he has gone!&rdquo; she exclaimed impulsively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Glad?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;for your sake,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He has brought you to the verge of
- illness yourself.&rdquo; She was looking down again, shuffling the sealed
- envelopes abstractedly. &ldquo;And it is not only I who say so&mdash;it is all
- St. Marleau. St. Marleau loves you for it, for your care of him, Monsieur
- le Curé&mdash;but also St. Marlbau thinks more of its curé than it does of
- one who has taken another's life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond did not reply&mdash;he was listening now to the footsteps of
- Monsieur Dupont and the doctor, as they passed by along the hallway
- outside. Came then a sharp, angry voice raised querulously from the rear
- room&mdash;that was Henri Mentone. Monsieur Dupont's voice snapped in
- reply; and then the voices merged into a confused buzz and murmur. He
- glanced quickly at Valérie. She, too, was listening. Her head was turned
- toward the door, he could not see her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- He walked slowly across the room to her side by the desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do not think, mademoiselle,&rdquo; he asked gravely, &ldquo;that it is possible
- the man is telling the truth, that he really cannot remember anything that
- happened that night&mdash;and before?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Every one knows he is guilty,&rdquo; she said thoughtfully. &ldquo;The evidence
- proves it absolutely. Why, then, should one believe him? If there was even
- a little doubt of his guilt, no matter how little, it might be different,
- and one might wonder then; but as it is&mdash;no.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And it is not only you who say so&rdquo;&mdash;he smiled, using her own words&mdash;&ldquo;it
- is all St. Marleau?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, all St. Marleau&mdash;and every one else, including Monsieur le
- Curé, even if he has sacrificed himself for the man,&rdquo; she smiled in
- return. Her brows puckered suddenly. &ldquo;Sometimes I am afraid of him,&rdquo; she
- said nervously. &ldquo;Yesterday I ran from the room. He was in a fury.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's face grew grave.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah! You did not tell me that, mademoiselle,&rdquo; he said soberly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I am sorry I have told you now, if it is going to worry you,&rdquo; she
- said quickly. &ldquo;You must not say anything to him. The next time I went in
- he was so sorry that it was pitiful.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In a fury&mdash;at times! Was it strange! Was it strange if one did not
- sit unmoved to watch, fettered, bound, impotent, a horrible doom creeping
- inexorably upon one! Was it strange if at times, all recollection blotted
- out, conscious only that one was powerless to avert that creeping terror,
- one should experience a paroxysm of fury that rocked one to the very soul&mdash;and
- at times in anguish left one like a helpless child! He had seen the man
- like that&mdash;many times in the last few days. And he, too, had seen
- that same terror creep like a dread thing out of the night upon himself to
- hover over him; and he could see it now lurking there, ever present&mdash;but
- he, Raymond, could fight!
- </p>
- <p>
- The door of the rear room opened and closed; and Monsieur Dupont's voice
- resounded from the hall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where is Monsieur le Curé? Ho, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie looked toward him inquiringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shall I tell them you are here?&rdquo; she asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond nodded mechanically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;if you will, please.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He leaned against the desk, his hands gripping its edge behind his back.
- What was it now that this Monsieur Dupont wanted? He was never sure of
- Dupont. And this morning his brain was fagged, and he did not want to cope
- with this infernal Monsieur Dupont! He watched Valérie walk across the
- room, and disappear outside in the hall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé is here,&rdquo; he heard her say. &ldquo;Will you walk in?&rdquo; And
- then, at some remark in the doctor's voice which he did not catch: &ldquo;No; he
- is not busy. I was just going to take his letters to the postoffice. He
- heard Monsieur Dupont call.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, as the two men stepped in through the doorway, Raymond spoke
- quietly:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good morning, Monsieur Dupont! Good morning, Doctor Arnaud!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hah! Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont wagged his head vigorously. &ldquo;He
- is in a very pretty temper this morning, our friend in there&mdash;eh?
- Yes, very pretty! You have noticed it? Yes, you have noticed it. It would
- seem that he is beginning to realise at last that his little tricks are
- going to do him no good!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond waved his hand toward chairs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You will sit down?&rdquo; he invited courteously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No&rdquo;&mdash;Doctor Arnaud smiled, as he answered for them both. &ldquo;No, not
- this morning, Monsieur le Curé. We are returning at once to Tournayville.
- I have an important case there, and Monsieur Dupont has promised to have
- me back before noon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Monsieur Dupont, &ldquo;we stopped only to tell you&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur
- Dupont jerked his hand in the direction of the rear room&mdash;&ldquo;that we
- will take him away to-morrow morning. Doctor Arnaud says he will be quite
- able to go. We will see what the taste of a day in jail will do for him
- before he goes into the dock&mdash;what? He is very fortunate! Yes, very!
- There are not many who have only one day in jail before they are tried!
- Yes! To-morrow morning! You look surprised, Monsieur le Curé, that it
- should be so soon. Yes, you look surprised!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On the contrary,&rdquo; observed Raymond impassively, &ldquo;when I saw you drive up
- a few minutes ago, I thought you had come to take him away at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, not at all!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont indulged in a significant smile. &ldquo;No&mdash;not
- at all! I take not even that chance of cheating the court out of his
- appearance&mdash;I do not wish to house him for months until the next
- assizes. I take no chances on a relapse. He has been quite safe here. Yes&mdash;quite!
- He will be quite safe for another twenty-four hours in your excellent
- keeping, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;since he is still too weak to run far
- enough to have it do him any good!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You pay a high compliment to my vigilance, Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; said
- Raymond, with a faint smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hah!&rdquo; cried Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Hah!&rdquo;&mdash;he began to chuckle. &ldquo;Do you
- hear that, Monsieur le Docteur Arnaud? I thought it had escaped him! He
- has a sense of humour, our estimable curé! You see, do you not? Yes, you
- see. Well, we will go now!&rdquo; He pushed the doctor from the room. &ldquo;<i>Au
- revoir</i> Monsieur le Curé! It is understood then? To-morrow morning! <i>Au
- revoir</i>&mdash;till to-morrow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont bowed, and whisked himself out of sight. Raymond went to
- the door, closed it, and mechanically began to pace up and down the room.
- He heard Monsieur Dupont and the doctor clamber into the buckboard, and
- heard the buckboard drive off. There was moisture upon his forehead again.
- He swept it away. To-morrow morning! He had until to-morrow morning in
- which to act&mdash;if he was to act at all. But the way! He could not see
- the way. It was full of peril. The risk was too great to be overcome! He
- dared not even approach that man in there with any plan. There was
- something horribly sardonic in that! If he was to act, he must act now, at
- once&mdash;there was only the afternoon and the night left.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are safe as it is,&rdquo; whispered that inner voice insidiously. &ldquo;The
- man's condemnation by the law will dispose of the killing of Théophile
- Blondin forever. It will be as a closed book. And then&mdash;have you
- forgotten?&mdash;there is your own plan for getting away after a little
- while. It cannot fail, that plan. Besides, they will not sentence the man
- to hang, they will be sure to see that his memory is really gone; whereas
- they will surely hang you if you are caught&mdash;as you will be, if you
- are fool enough to attempt the impossible now. What did you ever get out
- of being quixotic? Do you remember that little affair in Ton-Nugget Camp?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My God, what shall I do?&rdquo; Raymond cried out aloud. &ldquo;If&mdash;if only I
- could see the way!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you can't!&rdquo; sneered the voice viciously. &ldquo;Haven't you tried hard
- enough to satisfy even that remarkably tender conscience that you seem to
- have picked up somewhere so suddenly! You&mdash;who were going to kill the
- man with your own hands! Let well enough alone!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was silent now in the rear room. Raymond halted in the centre of the
- floor and listened. There were no footsteps; no sound of voice&mdash;only
- silence. He laughed a little harshly. What was the man doing? Planning his
- <i>own</i> escape! Again Raymond laughed in bitter mirth. God speed to the
- man in any such plans&mdash;only the man, as Monsieur Dupont had most
- sagaciously suggested, would not get very far alone. But still it would be
- humorous, would it not, if the man should succeed alone, where he,
- Raymond, had utterly failed so far to work out any plan that would
- accomplish the same end! There was the open window to begin with, the man
- had been told now probably that he was to be taken away to-morrow morning,
- and&mdash;why was there such absolute stillness from that other room? The
- partitions were very thin, and&mdash;Raymond, as mechanically as he had
- set to pacing up and down the room, turned to the door, passed out into
- the hall, and walked softly along to the door of the rear room. He
- listened there again. There was still silence. He opened the door, stepped
- across the threshold&mdash;and a strange white look crept into his face,
- and he stood still.
- </p>
- <p>
- Upon the floor at the bedside knelt Henri Mentone, and at the opening of
- the door the man did not look up. There was no fury now; it was the child,
- helpless in despair and grief. His hands were outflung across the
- coverlet, his head was buried in his arms&mdash;and there was no movement,
- save only a convulsive tremor that shook the thin shoulders. And there was
- no sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- And the whiteness deepened in Raymond's face&mdash;and, as he looked,
- suddenly the scene was blurred before his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond stepped back into the hall, and closed the door again,
- and on Raymond's lips was a queer, twisted smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To-morrow morning, I think you said, Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; he whispered.
- &ldquo;Well, to-morrow morning, Monsieur Dupont&mdash;he will be gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIII&mdash;THE CONFEDERATE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HERE had been a
- caller, there had been parish matters, there had been endless things
- through endless hours which he had been unable to avoid&mdash;except in
- mind. He had attended to them subconsciously, as it were; his mind had
- never for an instant left Henri Mentone. And it was beginning to take form
- now, a plan whereby he might effect the other's escape.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sitting at his desk, he looked at his watch as he heard Valérie and her
- mother go upstairs. It was a quarter past three. Later on in the
- afternoon, in another hour or thereabouts Madame Lafleur would take Henri
- Mentone for a few steps here and there about the green, or sit with him
- for a little fresh air on the porch of the <i>presbytère</i>. Raymond
- smiled ironically. As jailor he had delegated the task to Madame Lafleur&mdash;since,
- as he had told both Valérie and her mother at the noonday meal, he was
- going out to make pastoral visits that afternoon. Meanwhile&mdash;he had
- just looked into Henri Mentone's room&mdash;the man was lying on his bed
- asleep. If he worked quickly now&mdash;while Valérie and her mother were
- upstairs, and the man was lying on his bed!
- </p>
- <p>
- He picked up a pen, and drew a piece of paper toward him. Everything
- hinged on his being able to procure a confederate. He, the curé of St.
- Marleau, must procure a confederate by some means, and naturally without
- the confederate knowing that Monsieur le Curé was doing so&mdash;and,
- almost as essential, a confederate who had no love for Monsieur le Curé!
- It was not a very simple matter! That was the problem with which he had
- racked his brains for the last three days. Not that the minor details were
- lacking in difficulties either; he, as the curé, must not appear even
- remotely in the plan; he, as the curé, dared not even suggest escape to
- Henri Mentone&mdash;but he could overcome all that if only he could secure
- a confederate. That was the point upon which everything depended.
- </p>
- <p>
- His pen poised in his hand, he stared across the room. Yes, he saw it now&mdash;a
- gambler's chance. But the time was short now, short enough to make him
- welcome any chance. He would go to Mother Blondin's. He might find a man
- there such as he sought, one of those who already had offended the law by
- frequenting the dissolute old hag's illicit still. He could ask, of
- course, who these men were without exciting any suspicion, and if luck
- failed him that afternoon he would do so, and it would be like a shot
- still left in his locker; but if, in his rôle of curé, he could actually
- trap one of them drinking there, and incense the man, even fight with him,
- it would make success almost certain. Yes, yes&mdash;he could see it all
- now&mdash;clearly&mdash;afterwards, when it grew dark, he would go to the
- man in a far different rôle from that of a curé, and the man would be at
- his disposal. Yes, if he could trap one of them there&mdash;but before
- anything else Henri Mentone must be prepared for the attempt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond began to write slowly, in a tentative sort of way, upon the paper
- before him. Henri Mentone, remembering nothing of the events of that
- night, must be left in no doubt as to the genuineness and good faith of
- the note, or of the vital necessity of acting upon its instructions. At
- the expiration of a few minutes, Raymond read over what he had written. He
- scored out a word here and there; and then, on another sheet of paper, in
- a scrawling, illiterate hand, he wrote out a slangy, ungrammatical version
- of the original draft. He read it again now:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The memory game won't go, Henri. They've got you cold, but they don't
- know there was two of us in it at the old woman's that night, so keep up
- your nerve, for I ain't for laying down on a pal. I got it fixed for a
- getaway for you to-night. Keep the back window open, and be ready at any
- time after dark&mdash;see? Leave-the rest to me. If that mealy-mouthed
- priest gets in the road, so much the worse for him. I'll take care of him
- so he won't be any trouble to any one except a doctor, and mabbe not much
- to a doctor&mdash;get me? I'd have been back sooner, only I had to beat it
- for you know where to get the necessary coin. Here's some to keep you
- going in case we have to separate in a hurry to-night.&mdash;&mdash;Pierre.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond nodded to himself. Henri Mentone might not relish the suggestion
- of any violence offered to the &ldquo;mealy-mouthed priest,&rdquo; for he had come to
- look upon Father François Aubert as his only friend, and, except in his
- fits of fury, to cling dependently upon him; but then there would be no
- violence offered to Father François Aubert, and the suggestion supplied a
- final touch of authenticity to the note, since Henri Mentone would realise
- that escape was impossible unless in some way the curé could be got out of
- the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond destroyed the original draft, and took out his pocketbook. He
- smiled curiously, as he examined its contents. It was the gold of the
- Yukon, the gold of Ton-Nugget Camp, that he had changed into banknotes of
- large denominations. He selected two fifty-dollar bills. It was not enough
- to carry the man far, or to take care of the man until he was on his feet,
- nor were fifty-dollar bills the most convenient denomination for a man
- under the present circumstances; but that was not their purpose&mdash;they
- would act as a guarantee of one &ldquo;Pierre&rdquo; and &ldquo;Pierre's&rdquo; plan, and to-night
- he would give the man more without stint, and supplement it with some
- small bills from his roll of &ldquo;petty cash.&rdquo; He folded the money in the
- note, found a small piece of string in one of the drawers of the desk,
- stood up, took his hat, tiptoed softly across the room, out into the hall,
- and from the hall to the front porch.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here, he stood quietly for a moment, looking about him; and then,
- satisfied that he was unobserved, that neither Valérie nor her mother had
- noticed his exit, he walked quickly around to the back of the house&mdash;and
- paused again, this time beneath the open window of Henri Mentone's room.
- Here, too, but even more sharply now, he looked about him&mdash;then
- stooped ana picked up a small stone. He tied the note around this, and,
- crouched low by the window, called softly: &ldquo;Henri! Henri!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He heard a rustle, the creak of the bed, as though the man, startled and
- suddenly roused, were jerking himself up into an upright position.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is Pierre!&rdquo; Raymond called again. &ldquo;<i>Courage, mon vieux!</i> Have no
- fear! All is arranged for tonight. But do not come to the window&mdash;we
- must be careful. Here&mdash;<i>voici!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;he tossed the note in
- over the sill. &ldquo;Until dark&mdash;tu comprends, Henri? I will be back then.
- Be ready!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He heard the man cry out in a low voice, and the creak of the bed again,
- and the man's step on the floor&mdash;and, stooping low, Raymond darted
- around the corner of the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- A moment later he was standing again in the hallway of the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Madame Lafleur!&rdquo; he called up the stairs. &ldquo;It is only to tell you
- that I am going out now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;yes. Very well, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she
- answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond closed the front door behind him, and, walking sedately across the
- green and past the church, gained the road. It was Mother Blondin's now,
- but he would not go by the station road&mdash;further along the village
- street, where the houses thinned out and were scattered more apart, he
- could climb up the little hill without being seen, and by walking through
- the woods would come out on the path whose existence had once already done
- him such excellent service. And the path, as an approach to Mother
- Blondin's this afternoon, offered certain very important strategical
- advantages.
- </p>
- <p>
- But now for the moment he was in the heart of the village, and from the
- doorways and garden patches of the little squat, curved-roof, whitewashed
- houses of rough-squared logs that flanked the road on either side, voices
- called out to him cheerily as he walked along. He answered them&mdash;all
- of them. He was even conscious, in spite of the worry of his mind, of a
- curious and not altogether unwelcome wonder. They were simple folk, these
- people, big-hearted and kindly, free and open-handed with the little they
- had, and they appeared to have grown fond of him in the few days he had
- been in St. Marleau, to look up to him, to trust him, to have faith in
- him, and to accept him as a friend, offering a frank friendship in return.
- </p>
- <p>
- His hands were clasped behind his back as he walked along, and suddenly
- his fingers laced tightly over one another. The pleasurable wonder of it
- was gone. He was playing well this rôle of saint! He was a gambler&mdash;Three-Ace
- Artie of Ton-Nugget Camp; a gambler&mdash;too unclean even for the Yukon.
- But he was no hypocrite! He would have liked to have torn these saintly
- trappings from his body, wrenched off his <i>soutane</i> and hurled it in
- the faces of these people, and bade them keep their friendship and their
- trust&mdash;tell them that he asked for nothing that they gave because
- they believed him other than he was. He was no hypocrite&mdash;he was a
- man fighting desperately for that for which every one had a right to
- fight, for which instinct bade even an insect fight&mdash;his life! He did
- not despise this proffered friendship, the smile of eye and lip, the ring
- of genuine sincerity in the voices that called to him&mdash;but they were
- not his, they were not meant for Three-Ace Artie, they were not meant for
- Raymond Chapelle. Somehow&mdash;it was a grotesque thought&mdash;he envied
- himself in the rôle of curé for these things. But they were not his. It
- was strange even that he, in whose life there had been naught but riot and
- ruin, should still be able to simulate so well the better things, to carry
- through, not the rôle of priest, that was a matter of ritual, a matter of
- keeping his head and his nerve, but the far kindlier and intimate rôle of
- <i>father</i> to the parish! Yes, it was very strange, and&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Bon jour</i>, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond halted. It was Madame Bouchard, the carpenter's wife. With a sort
- of long-handled wooden paddle, she was removing huge loaves of bread from
- the queer-looking outdoor oven which, though built of a mixture of stone
- and brick, resembled very much, through being rounded over at the top, an
- exaggerated beehive. A few yards further in from the edge of the road
- Bouchard himself was at work upon a boat in front of his shop. Above the
- shop was the living quarters of the family, and here, on a narrow veranda,
- peering over, a half dozen scantily clad and very small children clung to
- the railings.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond sniffed the air luxuriously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens</i>, Madame Bouchard!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Your husband is to be envied!
- The smell of the bread is enough to make one hungry!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The carpenter laid down his tools, and looked up, laughing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Salut</i>, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; he called.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If Monsieur le Curé would like one&rdquo;&mdash;Madame Bouchard's cheeks had
- grown a little rosy&mdash;&ldquo;I&mdash;I will send one to the <i>presbytère</i>
- for him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond had eaten of St. Marleau bread before. The taste was sour, and it
- required little short of a deftly wielded axe to make any impression upon
- the crust.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are too good, too generous, Madame Bouchard,&rdquo; he said, shaking his
- forefinger at her chidingly. &ldquo;And yet&rdquo;&mdash;he smiled broadly&mdash;&ldquo;if
- there is enough to spare, there is nothing I know of that would delight me
- more.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, she can spare it!&rdquo; declared the carpenter heartily, coming
- forward. &ldquo;Stanislaus will carry you two presently. And, <i>tiens</i>,
- Monsieur le Curé, you like to row a boat&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond, on the point of shaking his head, checked himself. A boat! One of
- these days&mdash;soon, if this devil's trap would only open a little&mdash;there
- was his own escape to be managed. He had planned that carefully... a
- boating accident... the boat recovered... the curé's body swept out
- somewhere in those twenty-five miles of river breadth that stretched away
- before him now, and from there&mdash;who could doubt it!&mdash;to the sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I am very fond of it, but as yet I have not found time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; exclaimed the carpenter. &ldquo;Well, in two or three days it will be
- finished, the best boat in St. Marleau&mdash;and Monsieur le Curé will be
- welcome to it as much as he likes. It is a nice row to the islands out
- there&mdash;three miles&mdash;to gather the sea-gull eggs&mdash;and the
- islands themselves are very pretty. It is a great place for a picnic,
- Monsieur le Curé.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excellent!&rdquo; said Raymond enthusiastically. &ldquo;That is exactly what I shall
- do.&rdquo; He clapped the carpenter playfully upon the shoulder. &ldquo;So&mdash;eh,
- Monsieur Bouchard,&mdash;you will lose no time in finishing the boat!&rdquo; He
- turned to Madame Bouchard. &ldquo;<i>Au revoir</i>, madame&mdash;and very many
- thanks to you. I shall think of you at supper to-night, I promise you!&rdquo; He
- waved his hand to the children on the veranda, and once more started along
- the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Bouchard's voice, speaking to her husband, reached him. The words
- were not intended for his ears, and he did not catch them all. It was
- something about&mdash;&ldquo;the good, young Father Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A wan smile crept to Raymond's lips. For the moment at least, he was in a
- softened, chastened mood. &ldquo;The good, young Father Aubert&rdquo;&mdash;well, let
- it be so! They would never know, these people of St. Marleau. Somehow, he
- was relieved at that. He did not want them to know. Somehow, he, too,
- wanted for himself just what they would have&mdash;a memory&mdash;the
- memory of a good, young Father Aubert.
- </p>
- <p>
- At a bend in the road, where the road edged in against the slope of the
- hill, hiding him from view, Raymond clambered up the short ascent. In a
- clump of small cedars at the top, he paused and looked back. The great
- sweep of river, widening into the Gulf of St. Lawrence, with no breath of
- air to stir its surface, shimmered like a mirror under the afternoon sun.
- A big liner, outward bound, and perhaps ten miles from shore, seemed as
- though it were painted there. To the right, close in, was the little group
- of islands, with bare, rounded, rocky peaks, to which the carpenter had
- referred. About him, from distant fields, came the occasional voice of a
- man calling to his horses, the faint whir of a reaper, and a sort of
- pervading, drowsy murmur of insect life. Below him, nestled along the
- winding road, were the little whitewashed houses, quiet, secure, tranquil,
- they seemed to lie there; and high above them all, as though to typify the
- scene, to set its seal upon it, from the steeple of the church there
- gleamed in the sunlight a golden cross, the symbol of peace&mdash;such as
- he wore upon his breast!
- </p>
- <p>
- With a quick intake of his breath, a snarl smothered in a low, confused
- cry, as he glanced involuntarily downward at his crucifix, he gathered up
- the skirts of his <i>soutane</i>, and, as though to vent his emotion in
- physical exertion, began to force his way savagely through the bushes and
- undergrowth.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had other things to do than waste time in toying with visionary
- sentiment! There was one detail in that scene of <i>peace</i> he had not
- seen&mdash;that man in the rear room of the <i>presbytère</i> who was
- going to trial for the murder of Théophile Blondin, because he was decked
- out in the clothes of one Raymond Chapelle, alias Henri Mentone. It would
- be well perhaps for Raymond Chapelle to remember that, and to remember
- nothing else for the remainder of the afternoon!
- </p>
- <p>
- He went on through the woods, heading as nearly as he could judge in a
- direction that would bring him out at the rear of the tavern. And now he
- laughed shortly to himself. Peace! There would be a peace that would
- linger long in somebody's memory at Mother Blondin's this afternoon, if
- only luck were with him! He was on a priestly mission&mdash;to console,
- bring comfort to the old hag for the loss of her son&mdash;and, quite
- incidentally, to precipitate a fight with any of the loungers who might be
- burying their noses in Mother Blondin's home-made <i>whiskey-blanc!</i> He
- laughed out again. St. Marleau would talk of that, too, and applaud the
- righteousness of the good, young Father Au^ bert&mdash;but he would attain
- the object he sought. He, the good, young Father Aubert, the man with a
- rope around his neck, whose hands were against everyman's, had too many
- friends in St. Marleau&mdash;he needed an <i>enemy</i> now! It was the one
- thing that would make the night's work sure.
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached the edge of the wood to find himself even nearer the tavern
- than he had expected&mdash;and to find, too, that he would not have to lie
- long in wait for a visitor to Mother Blondin's. There was one there
- already. So far then, he could have asked for no better luck. He caught
- the sound of voices&mdash;the old hag's, high-pitched and querulous; a
- man's, rough and domineering. Looking cautiously through the fringe of
- trees that still sheltered him, Raymond discovered that he was separated
- from Mother Blondin's back door by a matter of but a few yards of
- clearing. The door was open, and a man, heavy-built, in a red-checkered
- shirt, a wide-brimmed hat of coarse straw, was forcing his way past the
- shrivelled old woman. As the man turned his head sideways, Raymond caught
- a glimpse of the other's face. It was not a pleasant face. The eyes were
- black, narrow and shifty under a low brow; and a three days' growth of
- black stubble on his jaws added to his exceedingly dirty and unkempt
- appearance.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mother Blondin's voice rose furiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You will pay first!&rdquo; she screamed. &ldquo;I know you too well, Jacques Bourget!
- Do you understand? The money! You will pay me first!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Or otherwise you will tell the police, eh?&rdquo; the man guffawed
- contemptuously. He pushed his way inside the house, and pushed a table
- that stood in the centre of the room roughly back against the wall. &ldquo;You
- shut your mouth!&rdquo; he jeered at her&mdash;and, stooping down, lifted up a
- trap door in the floor. &ldquo;Now trot along quick for some glasses, so you can
- keep count of all we both drink!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are a thief, a robber, a <i>crapule</i>, a&mdash;&rdquo; she burst into a
- stream of blasphemous invective. Her wrinkled face grew livid with
- ungovernable rage. She shook a bony fist at him. &ldquo;I will show you what you
- will get for this! You think I am alone&mdash;eh? You think I am an old
- woman that you can rob as you like&mdash;eh? You think my whisky is for
- your guzzling throat without pay&mdash;eh? Well, I will show you, you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man made a threatening movement toward her, and she retreated back out
- of Raymond's sight&mdash;evidently into an inner room, for her voice, as
- virago-like as ever, was muffled now.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bring me a glass, and waste no time about it!&rdquo; the man called after her.
- &ldquo;And if you do not hold your tongue, something worse will happen to you
- than the loss of a drop out of your bottle!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man turned, and descended to the cellar through the trapdoor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond softly to himself. &ldquo;Yes, I think Monsieur Jacques
- Bourget is the man I came to find.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stepped out from the trees, walked noiselessly across to the house,
- and, reaching the doorway, remained standing quietly upon the threshold.
- He could hear the man moving about in the cellar below; from the inner
- room came Mother Blondin's incessant mutterings, mingled with a savage
- rattling of crockery. Raymond smiled ominously&mdash;and then Raymond's
- face grew stern with well-simulated clerical disapproval.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man's head, back turned, showed above the level of the floor. Into the
- doorway from the inner room came Mother Blondin&mdash;and halted there,
- her withered old jaw sagging downward in dumfounded surprise until it
- displayed her almost toothless gums. The man gained his feet, turned
- around&mdash;and, with a startled oath, dropped the bottle he was
- carrying. It crashed to the floor, broke, and the contents began to
- trickle back over the edge of the trapdoor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Sacristi!</i>&rdquo; shouted the man, his face flaring up into an angry red.
- He thrust his head forward truculently from his shoulders, and glared at
- Raymond. &ldquo;<i>Sacré nom de Dieu</i>, it is the saintly priest!&rdquo; he sneered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My son,&rdquo; said Raymond gravely, &ldquo;do not blaspheme! And have respect for
- the Church!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bah!&rdquo; snarled the man. &ldquo;Do you think I care for you&mdash;or your
- church!&rdquo; He looked suddenly at Mother Blondin. &ldquo;Hah!&rdquo;&mdash;he jumped
- across the room toward her. &ldquo;So that is what you meant by not being alone&mdash;eh?
- I did not understand! You would trick me, would you! You would sell me out
- for the price of a drink&mdash;and&mdash;ha, ha&mdash;to a priest! Well&rdquo;&mdash;he
- had her now by the shoulders&mdash;&ldquo;I will take a turn at showing you what
- I will do! Eh&mdash;why did you not warn me he was here?&rdquo; He caught her
- head, and banged it brutally against the wall. &ldquo;Eh&mdash;why did&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond, too, was across the room. It was strange! Most strange! He had
- intended to seek an occasion to quarrel. The occasion was made for him. He
- had no longer any desire to quarrel&mdash;he was possessed of an
- overwhelming desire to get his fingers around the throat of this cur who
- banged that straggling, dishevelled gray hair against the wall. He was not
- quite sure that it was himself who spoke. No, of course, it was not! It
- was Monsieur le Curé&mdash;the good, young Father Aubert. He was between
- them now, only Mother Blondin had fallen to the floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My son,&rdquo; he said placidly, &ldquo;since you will not respect the Church for one
- reason, I will teach you to respect it for another.&rdquo; He pointed to old
- Mother Blcndin, who, more terrified than hurt perhaps, was getting to her
- knees, moaning and wringing her hands. &ldquo;You have heard, though I fear you
- may have forgotten it, of the Mosaic law. An eye for an eye, my son. I
- intend to do to you exactly what you have done to this woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man, drawn back, eyed him first in angry bewilderment, and then with
- profound contempt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'd better get out of here!&rdquo; he said roughly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Presently&mdash;when I have thrown you out&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond was calmly
- tucking up the skirts of his <i>soutane</i>. &ldquo;And&rdquo;&mdash;the flat of his
- hand landed with a stinging blow across the other's cheek&mdash;&ldquo;you see
- that I do not take even you off your guard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man reeled back&mdash;and then, with a bull-like roar of rage, head
- down, rushed at Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was not Monsieur le Curé now&mdash;it was Raymond Chapelle, alias
- Arthur Leroy, alias Three-Ace Artie, cold, contained, quick and lithe as a
- panther, and with a panther's strength. A crash&mdash;a lightning right
- whipped to the point of Bourget's jaw&mdash;and Bourget's head jolted back
- quivering on his shoulders like a tuning fork. And like a flash, before
- the other could recover, a left and right smashed full again into
- Bourget's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a scream, Mother Blondin crawled and scuttled into the doorway of the
- inner room. The man, bellowing with mad dismay, his hands outstretched,
- his fingers crooked to tear at Raymond's flesh if they could but reach it,
- rushed again.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now Raymond, wary of the other's strength and bulk, gave ground; and
- now he side-stepped and swung, battering his blows into Bourget's face;
- and now he ran craftily from the other. Chairs and table crashed to the
- floor; their heels crunched in the splinters of the broken bottle. The
- man's face began to bleed profusely from both nose and a cut lip. They
- were not tactics that Bourget understood. He clawed, he kept his head
- down, he rushed in blind clumsiness&mdash;and always Raymond was just
- beyond his reach.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again and again they circled the room, Bourget, big, lumbering, awkward,
- futilely expending his strength, screaming oaths with gasping breath. And
- again and again, springing aside as the man charged blindly by, Raymond
- with a grim fury rained in his blows. It was something like that other
- night&mdash;here in Mother Blon-din's. She was shrieking again now from
- the doorway:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Kill him! The <i>misérable!</i> Hah, Jacques Bourget, are you a
- jack-in-the-box only to bob your head backward every time you are hit! I
- did not bring the priest here! <i>Sacré nom</i>, you cannot blame me! I
- had nothing to do with it! <i>Sacré nom&mdash;sacré nom&mdash;sacré nom&mdash;kill
- him!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Kill who? Who did she mean&mdash;the man or himself? Raymond did not know.
- She was just a blurred object of rage and tumbled hair dancing in a frenzy
- up and down there in the doorway. He ran again. Bourget, like a stunned
- fool, was covering his face with his arms as he dashed forward. Ah, yes,
- Bourget was trying to crush him back into the corner there, and&mdash;no!&mdash;the
- maniacal rush had faltered, the man was swaying on his feet. And then
- Raymond, crouched to elude the man, sprang instead at the other's throat,
- his hands closed like a vise, and with the impact of his body both lurched
- back against the wall by the rear doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My son,&rdquo; panted Raymond, &ldquo;you remember&mdash;an eye for an eye&rdquo;&mdash;he
- smashed the man's head back against the wall&mdash;and then, gathering all
- his strength, flung the other from him out through the open door.
- </p>
- <p>
- The fight was out of the man. For a moment he lay sprawled on the grass.
- Then he raised himself up, and got upon his knees. His face was bruised
- and blood-stained almost beyond recognition. He shook both fists at
- Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By God, I'll get you for this!&rdquo;&mdash;the man's voice was guttural with
- unbridled passion. &ldquo;I'll get you, you censer-swinging devil! I'll twist
- your neck with the chain of your own crucifix! Damn you to the pit! You're
- not through with me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go!&rdquo; said Raymond sternly. &ldquo;Go&mdash;and be glad that I have treated you
- no worse!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He shut the door in the man's face; and, turning abruptly, walked across
- the floor to where Mother Blondin, quiet for the moment, gaped at him from
- the threshold of the other room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He will not trouble you any more, Madame Blondin, I imagine,&rdquo; he said
- quietly. &ldquo;See, it is over!&rdquo; He smiled at her reassuringly&mdash;he needed
- to know now only where the man lived. &ldquo;I should be sorry to think he was
- one of my parishioners. Where does he come from?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He is a farmer, and he lives in the house on the point a mile and a
- quarter up the road&rdquo;&mdash;the answer had come automatically; she was
- listening, without looking at Raymond, to the threats and oaths that
- Jacques Bourget, as he evidently moved away for his voice kept growing
- fainter, still bawled from without. And then hate and sullen viciousness
- was in her face again. Her hair had tumbled to her shoulders and straggled
- over her forehead. She jabbed at it with both hands, sweeping it from her
- eyes, and leered at him fiercely. &ldquo;You dirty spy!&rdquo; she croaked hoarsely.
- &ldquo;I know you&mdash;I know all of you priests! You are all alike! Sneaks!
- Sneaks! Meddlers and sneaks! But you'll get to hell some day&mdash;like
- the rest of us! Ha, ha&mdash;to hell! You can't fool the devil! I know
- you. That's what you sneaked up here for&mdash;to spy on me, to find
- something against me that the police weren't sharp enough to find, so that
- you could get rid of me, get me out of St. Marleau! I know! They've been
- trying that for a long time!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To turn you over to the police,&rdquo; said Raymond gently, &ldquo;would never save
- you from yourself. I came to talk to you a little about your son&mdash;to
- see if in any way I could help you, or be of comfort to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She stared at him for an instant, wondering and perplexed; and then the
- snarl was on her lips again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You lie! No priest comes here for that! I am an <i>excommuniée</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are a woman in sorrow,&rdquo; Raymond said simply.
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not answer him&mdash;only drew back into the other room.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond followed her. It was the room where he had fought that night&mdash;with
- Théophile Blondin. His eyes swept it with a hurried glance. There was the
- <i>armoire</i> from which Théophile Blondin had snatched the revolver&mdash;and
- there was the spot on the floor where the dead man had fallen. And here
- was the old hag with the streaming hair, as it had streamed that night,
- who had run shrieking into the storm that he had murdered her son. And the
- whole scene began to live itself over again in his mind in minute detail.
- It seemed to possess an unhealthy fascination that bade him linger, and at
- the same time to fill him with an impulse to rush away from it. And the
- impulse was the stronger; and, besides, it would be evening soon, and
- there was that man in the <i>presbytère</i>, and there was much to do, and
- he had his confederate now&mdash;one Jacques Bourget.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shall not stay now&rdquo;&mdash;he smiled, as he turned to Mother Blondin,
- and held out his hand. &ldquo;You are upset over what has happened. Another
- time. But you will remember, will you not, that I would like to help you
- in any way I can?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She reached out her hand mechanically to take his that was extended to
- her, and suddenly, muttering, jerked it back&mdash;and Raymond, appearing
- not to notice, smiled again, and, crossing the room, went out through the
- front door.
- </p>
- <p>
- He went slowly across the little patch of yard, and on along the road in
- the direction of the village, and now his lips thinned in a grim smile.
- Yes, St. Marleau would hear of this, his chivalrous protection of Mother
- Blondin&mdash;and place another halo on his head! The devil's sense of
- humour was of a brand all its own!
- </p>
- <p>
- The more he twisted and squirmed and wriggled to get out of the trap,
- desperate to the extent that he would hesitate at nothing, the more he
- became&mdash;the good, young Father Aubert! Even that dissolute old hag,
- whose hatred for the church and all pertaining to it was the most dominant
- passion in her life, was not far from the point where she would tolerate a
- priest&mdash;if the priest were the good, young Father Aubert!
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached the point where the road began to descend the hill, and,
- pausing, looked back. Yes&mdash;even Mother Blondin, the <i>excommuniée!</i>
- She was standing in the doorway, dirty, unkempt, disreputable, and,
- shading her eyes with her hand, was gazing after him. Yes, even she&mdash;whose
- son had been killed in a fight with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond, fumbling suddenly with his hat, lifted it to Mother Blondin,
- and went on down the hill.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIV&mdash;THE HOUSE ON THE POINT
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T was late, a good
- half hour after the usual supper time, when Raymond returned to the <i>presbytère</i>.
- He had done a very strange thing. He had gone into the church, and sat
- there in the silence and the quiet of the sacristy&mdash;and twilight had
- come unnoticed. It was the quiet he had sought, respite for a mind that
- had suddenly seemed nerve-racked to the breaking point as he had come down
- the hill from Mother Blondin's. It had been dim, and still, and cool, and
- restful in there&mdash;in the church. There was still Valerie, still the
- priest who had not died, still his own peril and danger, and still the
- hazard of the night before him; all that had not been altered; all that
- still remained&mdash;but in a measure, strangely, somehow, he was calmed.
- He was full of apologies now to Madame Lafleur, as he sat down to supper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it is nothing!&rdquo; she said, placing a lamp upon the table. She sat down
- herself; and added simply, as though, indeed, no reason could be more
- valid: &ldquo;I saw you go into the church, Monsieur le Curé.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond, his eyes now on Valerie's empty seat. &ldquo;And where is
- Mademoiselle Valerie? Taking our <i>pauvre</i> Mentone his supper?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; she answered quickly. &ldquo;I took him his supper myself a little
- while ago&mdash;though I do not know whether he will eat it or not.
- Valerie went over to her uncle's about halfpast five. She said something
- about going for a drive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond cut his slice of cold pork without comment. He was conscious of a
- dismal sense of disappointment, a depression, a falling of his spirits
- again. The room seemed cold and dead without Valérie there, without her
- voice, without her smile. And then there came a sense of pique, of
- irritation, unreasonable no doubt, but there for all that. Why had she not
- included him in the drive? Fool! Had he forgotten? He could not have gone
- if she had&mdash;he had other things to do than drive that evening!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Madame Lafleur, significantly reverting to her former remark,
- as she handed him his tea, &ldquo;yes, I do not know if the poor fellow will eat
- anything or not.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond glanced at her quickly. What was the matter? Had anything been
- discovered! And then his eyes were on his plate again. Madame Lafleur's
- face, whatever her words might be intended to convey, was genuinely
- sympathetic, nothing more.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not eat?&rdquo; he repeated mildly. &ldquo;And why not, Madame Lafleur?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am sure I do not know,&rdquo; she replied, a little anxiously. &ldquo;I have never
- seen him so excited. I thought it was because he was to be taken away
- to-morrow morning. And so, when we went out this afternoon, I tried to say
- something to him about his going away that would cheer him up. And would
- you believe it, Monsieur le Curé, he just stared at me, and then, as
- though I had said something droll, he&mdash;fancy, Monsieur le Curé, from
- a man who was going to be tried for his life&mdash;he laughed until I
- thought he would never stop. And after that he would say nothing at all;
- and since he has come in he has not been for an instant still. Do you not
- hear him, Monsieur le Curé?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond heard very distinctly. His ears had caught the sounds from the
- moment he had entered the <i>presbytère</i>. Up and down, up and down,
- from that back room came the stumbling footfalls; then silence for a
- moment, as though from exhaustion the man had sunk down into a chair; and
- then the pacing to and fro again. Raymond's lips tightened in
- understanding, as he bent his head over his plate. Like himself, the man
- in there was waiting&mdash;for darkness!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He is over-excited,&rdquo; he said gravely. &ldquo;And being still so weak, the news
- that he is to go to-morrow, I am afraid, has been too much for him. I have
- no doubt he was verging on hysteria when he laughed at you like that,
- Madame Lafleur.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I hope we shall not have any trouble with him,&rdquo; said Madame
- Lafleur nervously. &ldquo;I mean that I hope he won't be taken sick again. He
- did not look at the tray at all when I took it in; he kept his eyes on me
- all the time, as though he were trying to read something in my face.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor fellow!&rdquo; murmured Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Lafleur nodded her gray head in sympathetic assent.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, yes, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;the poor fellow!&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;It is a
- terrible thing that he has done; but it is also terrible to think of what
- he will have to face. Do you think it wrong, Monsieur le Curé, to wish
- almost that he might escape?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Escape! Curse it&mdash;what was the matter with Madame Lafleur to-night?
- Or was it something the matter with himself?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not wrong, perhaps,&rdquo; he said, smiling at her, &ldquo;if you do not connive at
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, but, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; she exclaimed reprovingly. &ldquo;What a thing to
- say! But I would never do that! Still, it is all very sad, and I am
- heartily glad that I am not to be a witness at the trial like you and
- Valérie. And they say that Madame Blondin, and Monsieur Labbée, the
- station agent, and a lot of the villagers are to go too.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I believe so,&rdquo; Raymond nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Lafleur, in quaint consternation, suddenly changed the subject.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, but I forgot to tell you!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;The bread! Madame Bouchard
- sent you two loaves all fresh and hot. Do you like it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The bread! He had been conscious neither that the bread was sour, nor that
- the crust was unmanageable. He became suddenly aware that the morsel in
- his mouth was not at all like the baking of Madame Lafleur.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are all too good to me here in St. Marleau,&rdquo; he protested.
- </p>
- <p>
- He checked her reply with a chiding forefinger, and a shake of his head&mdash;and
- presently, the meal at an end, pushed back his chair, and strolled to the
- window. He stood there for a moment looking out. It was dark now&mdash;dark
- enough for his purpose.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a beautiful night, Madame Lafleur,&rdquo; he said enthusiastically. &ldquo;I am
- almost tempted to go out again for a little walk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, yes, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;why not!&rdquo; Madame Lafleur was quite
- anxious that he should go. Madame Lafleur was possessed of that enviable
- disposition that was instantly responsive to the interests and pleasures
- of others.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;why not!&rdquo; smiled Raymond, patting her arm as he passed by her
- on his way to the door. &ldquo;Well, I believe I will.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But outside in the hall he hesitated. Should he go first to the man in the
- rear room? He had intended to do so before he went out&mdash;to probe the
- other, as it were, to satisfy himself, perhaps more by the man's acts and
- looks than by words, that Henri Mentone had entered into the plans for the
- night. But he was satisfied of that now. Madame Lafleur's conversation had
- left no doubt but that the man's unusual restlessness and excitement were
- due to his being on the <i>qui vive</i> of expectancy. No, there was no
- use, therefore, in going to the man now, it would only be a waste of
- valuable time.
- </p>
- <p>
- This decision taken, Raymond walked to the front door and down the steps
- of the porch. Here he turned, and, choosing the opposite side of the house
- from the kitchen and dining room, where he might have been observed by
- Madame Lafleur, yet still moving deliberately as though he were but
- sauntering idly toward the beach, made his way around to the rear of the
- <i>presbytère</i>. It was quite dark. There were stars, but no moon.
- Behind here, between the back of the house and the shed, there was no
- possibility of his being seen. The only light came from Henri Mentone's
- room, and the shades there were drawn.
- </p>
- <p>
- He opened the shed door silently, stepped inside, and closed the door
- behind him. He struck a match, held it above his head&mdash;and almost
- instantly extinguished it, as he located the sacristan's overalls, and the
- old coat and hat.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now Raymond worked quickly. He stripped off his <i>soutane</i>, drew
- on the overalls, turning the bottoms well up over his own trousers,
- slipped on the coat, tucked the hat into one of the coat pockets, and put
- on his <i>soutane</i> again. It was very simple&mdash;the <i>soutane</i>
- hid everything. He smiled grimly, as he, stepped outside again&mdash;the
- Monsieur le Curé who came out, was the Monsieur le Curé who had gone in.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond chose the beach. The village street meant that he would be delayed
- by being forced to stop and talk with any one he might meet, to say
- nothing of the possibility of having the ruinous, if well meaning,
- companionship of some one foisted upon him&mdash;while, even if seen,
- there would be nothing strange in the fact that the curé should be taking
- an evening walk along the shore.
- </p>
- <p>
- He started off at a brisk pace along the stretch of sand just behind the
- <i>presbytère</i>. It was a mile and a quarter to the point&mdash;to
- Jacques Bourget's. At the end of the sandy stretch Raymond went more
- slowly&mdash;the shore line as a promenade left much to be desired&mdash;there
- was a seemingly interminable ledge of slate rock over which he had need to
- pick his way carefully. He negotiated this, and was rewarded with another
- short sandy strip&mdash;but only to encounter the slate rocks again with
- their ubiquitous little pools of water in the hollows, which he must avoid
- warily.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sometimes he slipped; once he fell. The grim smile was back on his lips.
- There seemed to be something ironical even in these minor difficulties
- that stood between him and the effecting of the other's escape! There
- seemed to be a world of irony in the fact that he who sought escape
- himself should plan another's rather than his own! It was the devil's
- toils, that was all, the devil's damnable ingenuity, and hell's
- incomparable sense of humour! He had either to desert the man; or stand in
- the man's place himself, and dangle from the gallows for his pains; or get
- the man away. Well, he had no desire to dangle from the gallows&mdash;or
- to desert the man! He had chosen the third and only course left open to
- him. If he got the man away, if the man succeeded in making his escape, it
- would not only save the man, but he, Raymond, would have nothing
- thereafter to fear&mdash;the Curé of St. Marleau in due course would meet
- with his deplorable and fatal accident! True, the man would always live in
- the shadow of pursuit, a thing that he, Raymond, had been willing to
- accept for himself only as a last resort, but there was no help for that
- in the other's case now. He would give the man more money, plenty of it.
- The man should be across the border and in the States early to-morrow,
- then New York, and a steamer for South America. Yes, it should
- unquestionably succeed. He had worked out all those details while he was
- still racking his brain for a &ldquo;Jacques Bourget,&rdquo; and he would give the man
- minute instructions at the last moment when he gave him more money&mdash;that
- hundred dollars was only an evidence of good faith and of the loyalty of
- one &ldquo;Pierre.&rdquo; The only disturbing factor in the plan was the man's
- physical condition. The man was still virtually an invalid&mdash;otherwise
- the police would have been neither justified in so doing, nor for a moment
- have been willing to leave him in the <i>presbytère</i>, as they had.
- Monsieur Dupont was no fool, and it was perfectly true that the man had
- not the slightest chance in the world of getting away&mdash;alone. But,
- aided as he, Raymond, proposed to aid the other, the man surely would be
- able to stand the strain of travelling, for a man could do much where his
- life was at stake. Yes, after all, why worry on that score! It was only
- the night and part of the next day. Then the man could rest quietly at a
- certain address in New York, while waiting for his steamer. Yes,
- unquestionably, the man, with his life in the balance, would be able to
- manage that.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond was still picking his way over the ledges, still slipping and
- stumbling, and now, recovering from a fall that had brought him to his
- knees, he gave his undivided attention to his immediate task. It seemed a
- very long mile and a quarter, but at the expiration of perhaps another
- twenty minutes he was at the end of it, and halted to take note of his
- surroundings. He could just distinguish the village road edging away on
- his left; while ahead of him, but a little to his right, out on the wooded
- point, he caught the glimmer of a light through the trees. That would be
- Jacques Bourget's house.
- </p>
- <p>
- He now looked cautiously about him. There was no other house in sight. His
- eyes swept the road up and down as far as he could see&mdash;there was no
- one, no sign of life. He listened&mdash;there was nothing, save the
- distant lapping of the water far out, for the tide was low on the mud
- flats.
- </p>
- <p>
- A large rock close at hand suggested a landmark that could not be
- mistaken. He stepped toward it, took off his <i>soutane</i>, and laid the
- garment down beside the rock; he removed his clerical collar and his
- clerical hat, and placed them on top of the <i>soutane</i>, taking care,
- however, to cover the white collar with the hat&mdash;then, turning down
- the trouser legs of the overalls, and turning up the collar of the
- threadbare coat, he took the battered slouch hat from his pocket and
- pulled it far down over his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Behold,&rdquo; said Raymond cynically, &ldquo;behold Pierre&mdash;what is his other
- name? Well, what does it matter? Pierre&mdash;Desforges. Desforges will do
- as well as any&mdash;behold Pierre Desforges!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He left the beach, went up the little rise of ground that brought him
- amongst the trees, and made his way through the latter toward the lighted
- window of the house. Arrived here, he once more looked about him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The house was isolated, far back from the road; and, in the darkness and
- the shadows cast by the trees, would have been scarcely discernible, save
- that it was whitewashed, and but for the yellow glow diffused from the
- window. He approached the door softly, and listened. A woman's voice, and
- then a man's, snarling viciously, reached him. &ldquo;... <i>le sacré maudit
- curé!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond laughed low. Jacques Bourget and his wife appeared to have an
- engrossing topic of conversation, if they had been at it since afternoon!
- Also Jacques Bourget appeared to be of an unforgiving nature!
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no veranda, not even a step, the door was on a level with the
- ground; and, from the little Raymond could see of the house now that he
- was close beside it, it appeared to be as down-at-the-heels and as
- shiftless as its proprietor. He leaned forward to avail himself of the
- light from the window, and, taking out a roll of bills, of smaller
- denominations than those which he carried in his pocketbook, he counted
- out five ten-dollar notes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jacques Bourget from within was still in the midst of a blasphemous
- tirade. Raymond rapped sharply on the door with his knuckles. Bourget's
- voice ceased instantly, and there was silence for a moment. Raymond rapped
- again&mdash;and then, as a chair leg squeaked upon the floor, and there
- came the sound of a heavy tread approaching the door, he drew quickly back
- into the shadows at one side.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door was flung open, and Bourget's face, battered and cut, an eye
- black and swollen, his lip puffed out to twice its normal size, peered out
- into the darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who's there?&rdquo; he called out gruffly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;S-sh! Don't talk so loud!&rdquo; Raymond cautioned in a guarded voice. &ldquo;Are you
- Jacques Bourget?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man, with a start, turned his face in the direction of Raymond's
- voice. Mechanically he dropped his own voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mabbe I am, and mabbe I'm not,&rdquo; he growled suspiciously. &ldquo;What do you
- want?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to talk to you if you are Jacques Bourget,&rdquo; Raymond answered. &ldquo;And
- if you are Jacques Bourget I can put you in the way of turning a few
- dollars tonight, to say nothing of another little matter that will be to
- your liking.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man hesitated, then drew back a little in the doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, come in,&rdquo; he invited. &ldquo;There's no one but the old woman here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The old woman is one old woman too many,&rdquo; Raymond said roughly. &ldquo;I'm not
- on exhibition. You come out here, and shut the door. You've nothing to be
- afraid of&mdash;the only thing I have to do with the police is to keep
- away from them, and that takes me all my time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ain't worrying about the police,&rdquo; said Bourget shrewdly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Maybe not,&rdquo; returned Raymond. &ldquo;I didn't say you were. I said I was. I've
- got a hundred dollars here that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A woman appeared suddenly in the doorway behind Bourget.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it? Who is it, Jacques?&rdquo; she shrilled out inquisitively.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bourget, for answer, swore at her, pushed her back, and, slamming the door
- behind him, stepped outside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what is it? And who are you?&rdquo; he demanded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My name is Desforges&mdash;Pierre Desforges,&rdquo; said Raymond, his voice
- still significantly low. &ldquo;That doesn't mean anything to you&mdash;and it
- doesn't matter. What I want you to do is to drive a man to the second
- station from here to-night&mdash;St. Eustace is the name, isn't it?&mdash;and
- you get a hundred dollars for the trip.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; Bourget's voice mingled incredulity and avarice. &ldquo;A
- hundred dollars for that, eh? Are you trying to make a fool of me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond held the bills up before the man's face. &ldquo;Feel the money, if you
- can't see it!&rdquo; he suggested, with a short laugh. &ldquo;That's what talks.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Bon Dieu!</i>&rdquo; ejaculated Bourget. &ldquo;Yes, it is so! Well, who am I to
- drive? You? You are running away! Yes, Î understand! They are after you&mdash;eh?
- I am to drive you, eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Raymond. He drew the man close to him in the darkness, and
- placed his lips to Bourget's ear. &ldquo;<i>Henri Mentone</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bourget, startled, sprang back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>What! Who!</i>&rdquo; he cried out loudly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I told you not to talk so loud!&rdquo; snapped Raymond. &ldquo;You heard what I
- said.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bourget twisted his head furtively about.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, '<i>cré nom&mdash;no!</i>&rdquo; he said huskily. &ldquo;It is too much risk! If
- one were caught at that&mdash;eh? <i>Bien non, merci!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's no chance of your being caught&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's voice was smooth
- again. &ldquo;It is only nine miles to St. Eustace&mdash;you will be back and in
- bed long before daylight. Who is to know anything about it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and you!&rdquo;&mdash;Bourget was still twisting his head about furtively.
- &ldquo;What do I know about you? What have you to do with this?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will tell you,&rdquo; said Raymond, and into the velvet softness of his voice
- there crept an ominous undertone; &ldquo;and at the same time I will tell you
- that you will be very wise to keep your mouth shut. You understand? If I
- trust you, it is to make you trust me. Henri Mentone is my pal. I was
- there the night Théophile Blondin was killed. But I made my escape. I do
- not desert a pal, only I had no money. Well, I have the money now, and I
- am back. And I am just in time&mdash;eh? They say he is well enough to be
- taken away in the morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Mon Dieu</i>, you were there at the killing!&rdquo; muttered Bourget
- hoarsely. &ldquo;No&mdash;I do not like it! No&mdash;it is too much risk!&rdquo; His
- voice grew suddenly sharp with undisguised suspicion. &ldquo;And why did you
- come to me, eh? Why did you come to me? Who sent you here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I came because Mentone must be driven to St. Eustace&mdash;because he is
- not strong enough to walk,&rdquo; said Raymond coolly. &ldquo;And no one sent me here.
- I heard of your fight this afternoon. The curé is telling around the
- village that if he could not change the aspect of your heart, there was no
- doubt as to the change in the aspect of your face.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Sacré nom!</i>&rdquo; gritted Bourget furiously. &ldquo;He said that! I will show
- him! I am not through with him yet! But what has he to do with this that
- you come here? Eh? I do not understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Simply,&rdquo; said Raymond meaningly, &ldquo;that Monsieur le Curé is the one with
- whom we shall have to deal in getting Mentone away.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hah!&rdquo; exclaimed Bourget fiercely. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;I am listening now! Well?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He sits a great deal of the time in the room with Mentone,&rdquo; explained
- Raymond, with a callous laugh. &ldquo;Very well. Mentone has been warned. If
- this fool of a curé knows no better than to sit there all night tonight, I
- will find some reason for calling him outside, and in the darkness where
- he will recognise no one we shall know what to do with him, and when we
- are through we will tie him and gag him and throw him into the shed where
- he will not be found until morning. On the other hand, if we are able to
- get Mentone away without the curé knowing it, you will still not be
- without your revenge. He is responsible for Mentone, and if Mentone gets
- away through the curé's negligence, the curé will get into trouble with
- the police.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I like the first plan better,&rdquo; decided Bourget, with an ugly sneer. &ldquo;He
- talks of my face, does he! <i>Nom de Dieu,</i> he will not be able to talk
- of his own! And a hundred dollars&mdash;eh? You said a hundred dollars?
- Well, if there is no more risk than that in the rest of the plan, <i>sacré
- nom</i>, you can count on Jacques Bourget&rdquo;. . .
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is no risk at all,&rdquo; said Raymond. &ldquo;And as to which plan&mdash;we
- shall see. We shall have to be guided by the circumstances, eh? And for
- the rest&mdash;listen! I will return by the beach, and watch the <i>presbytère</i>.
- You give me time to get back, then harness your horse and drive down there&mdash;drive
- past the <i>presbytère</i>. I will be listening, and will hear you. Then
- after you have gone a little way beyond, turn around and come back, and I
- will know that it is you. If you drive in behind the church to where the
- people tie their horses at mass on Sundays, you can wait there without
- being seen by any one passing by on the road. I will come and let you know
- how things are going. We may have to wait a while after that until
- everything is quiet, but in that way we will be ready to act the minute it
- is safe to do so.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All that is simple enough,&rdquo; Bourget grunted in agreement. &ldquo;And then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then,&rdquo; said Raymond, &ldquo;we will get Mentone out through the window of
- his room. There is a train that passes St. Eustace at ten minutes after
- midnight&mdash;and that is all. The St. Eustace station, I understand, is
- like the one here&mdash;far from the village, and with no houses about. He
- can hide near the station until traintime; and, without having shown
- yourself, you can drive back home and go to bed. It is your wife only that
- you have to think of&mdash;she will say nothing, eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Baptême!</i>&rdquo; snorted Bourget contemptuously. &ldquo;She has learned before
- now when to keep her tongue where it belongs! And you? You are coming,
- too?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think I am a fool, Bourget?&rdquo; inquired Raymond shortly. &ldquo;When they
- find Mentone is gone, they will know he must have had an accomplice, for
- he could not get far alone. They will be looking for two of us travelling
- together. I will go the other way. That makes it safe for Mentone&mdash;and
- safe for me. I can walk to Tournayville easily before daylight; and in
- that way we shall both give the police the slip.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Diable!</i>&rdquo; grunted Bourget admiringly. &ldquo;You have a head!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is good enough to take care of us all in a little job like
- to-night's,&rdquo; returned Raymond, with a shrug of his shoulders. &ldquo;Well, do
- you understand everything? For if you do, there's no use wasting any
- time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;I have it all!&rdquo; Bourget's voice grew vicious again. &ldquo;That <i>sacré
- maudit curé!</i> Yes, I understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond thrust the banknotes he had been holding into Bourget's hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here are fifty dollars to bind the bargain,&rdquo; he said crisply. &ldquo;You get
- the other fifty at the church. If you don't get them, all you've got to do
- is drive off and leave Mentone in the lurch. That's fair, isn't it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bourget shuffled back to the edge of the lighted window, counted the
- money, and shoved it into his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Bon Dieu!</i>&rdquo; Bourget's puffed lip twisted into a satisfied grin. &ldquo;I
- do not mind telling you, my Pierre Desforges, that it is long since I have
- seen so much.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, the other fifty is just as good,&rdquo; said Raymond in grim pleasantry.
- He stepped back and away from the house. &ldquo;At the church then, Bourget&mdash;in,
- say, three-quarters of an hour.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will be there,&rdquo; Bourget answered. &ldquo;Have no fear&mdash;I will be there!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right!&rdquo; Raymond called back&mdash;and a moment later gained the beach
- again.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the rock, he once more put on his <i>soutane</i>; and, running now
- where the sandy stretches gave him opportunity, scrambling as rapidly as
- he could over the ledges of slate rock, he headed back for the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was as good as done! There was a freeness to his spirits now&mdash;a
- weight and an oppression lifted from him. Henri Mentone would stand in no
- prisoner's dock the day after to-morrow to answer for the murder of
- Théophile Blondin! And it was very simple&mdash;now that Bourget's aid had
- been enlisted. He smiled ironically as he went along. It would not even be
- necessary to pommel Monsieur le Curé into a state of insensibility! Madame
- Lafleur retired very early&mdash;by nine o'clock at the latest&mdash;as
- did Valérie. As soon as he heard Bourget drive up to the church, he would
- go to the man to allay any impatience, and as evidence that the plan was
- working well. He would return then to the <i>presbytère</i>&mdash;it was a
- matter only of slipping on and off his <i>soutane</i> to appear as Father
- Aubert to Madame Lafleur and Valérie, and as Pierre Desforges to Jacques
- Bourget. And the moment Madame Lafleur and Valérie were in bed, he would
- extinguish the light in the front room as proof that Monsieur le Curé,
- too, had retired, run around to the back of the house, get Henri Mentone
- out of the window, and hand him over to Bourget, explaining that
- everything had worked even more smoothly than he had hoped for, that all
- were in bed, and that there was no chance of the escape being discovered
- until morning. Bourget, it was true, was very likely to be disappointed in
- the measure of the revenge wrecked upon the curé, but Bourget's feelings
- in the matter, since Bourget then would have no choice but to drive Henri
- Mentone to St. Eustace, were of little account.
- </p>
- <p>
- And as far as Henri Mentone was concerned, it was very simple too. The man
- would have ample time and opportunity to get well out of reach. He,
- Raymond, would take care that the man's disappearance was not discovered
- any earlier than need be in the morning! It would then be a perfectly
- natural supposition&mdash;a supposition which he, Raymond, would father&mdash;that
- the man, in his condition, could not be far away, but had probably only
- gone restlessly and aimlessly from the house; and at first no one would
- even think of such a thing as escape. They would look for him around the
- <i>presbytère</i>, and close at hand on the beach. It would be impossible
- that, weak as he was, the man had gone far! The search would perhaps be
- extended to the village by the time Monsieur Dupont arrived for his
- vanished prisoner. Then they would extend the search still further, to the
- adjacent fields and woods, and it would certainly be noontime before the
- alternative that the man, aided by an accomplice, had got away became the
- only tenable conclusion. But even then Monsieur Dupont would either have
- to drive three miles to the station to reach the telegraph, or return to
- Tournayville&mdash;and by that time Henri Mentone would long since have
- been in the United States.
- </p>
- <p>
- And after that&mdash;Raymond smiled ironically again&mdash;-well after
- that, it would be Monsieur Dupont's move!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XV&mdash;HOW HENRI MENTONE RODE WITH JACQUES BOURGET
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T was eight
- o'clock&mdash;the clock was striking in the kitchen&mdash;as Raymond
- entered the <i>presbytère</i> again. He stepped briskly to the door of the
- front room, opened it, and paused&mdash;no, before going in there to wait,
- it would be well first to let Madame Lafleur know that he was back, to
- establish the fact that it was <i>after</i> his return that the man had
- escaped, that his evening walk could in no way be connected with what
- would set all St. Marleau by the ears in the morning. And so he passed on
- to the dining room, which Madame Lafleur used as a sitting room as well.
- She was sewing beside the table lamp.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Always busy, Madame Lafleur!&rdquo; he called out cheerily, from the threshold.
- &ldquo;Well, and has Mademoiselle Valérie returned?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, it is you, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; she exclaimed, dropping her work on her
- knees. &ldquo;And did you enjoy your walk? No, Valérie has not come back here
- yet, though I am sure she must have got back to her uncle's by now. Did
- you want her for anything, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;to write letters? I can
- go over and tell her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, no&mdash;not at all!&rdquo; said Raymond hastily. He indicated the rear
- room with an inclination of his head. &ldquo;And our <i>pauvre</i> there?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Lafleur's sweet, motherly face grew instantly troubled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can hear him tossing on the bed yourself, Monsieur le Curé. I have
- just been in to see him. He has one of his bad moods. He said he wanted
- nothing except to be left alone. But I think he will soon be quiet. Poor
- man, he is so weak he will be altogether exhausted&mdash;it is only his
- mind that keeps him restless.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a very sad affair,&rdquo; he said slowly, &ldquo;a very sad affair!&rdquo; He lifted
- a finger and shook it playfully at Madame Lafleur. &ldquo;But we must think of
- you too&mdash;eh? Do not work too late, Madame Lafleur!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She answered him seriously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Only to finish this, Monsieur le Curé. See, it is an altar cloth&mdash;for
- next Sunday.&rdquo; She held it up. &ldquo;It is you who work too hard and too late.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a cross on a satin background. He stared at it. It had been hidden
- on her lap before. He had not been thinking of&mdash;a cross. For the
- moment, assured of Henri Mentone's escape, he had been more light of heart
- than at any time since he had come to St. Mar-leau; and, for the moment,
- he had forgotten that he was a meddler with holy things, that he was&mdash;a
- priest of God! It seemed as though this were being flaunted suddenly now
- as a jeering reminder before his eyes; and with it he seemed as suddenly
- to see the chancel, the altar of the church where the cloth was to play
- its part&mdash;and himself kneeling there&mdash;and, curse the vividness
- of it! he heard his own lips at their sacrilegious work: &ldquo;<i>Lavabo inter
- innocentes manus meas: et circumdabo altare tuum, Domine</i>.... I will
- wash my hands among the innocent: and I will compass Thine altar, O Lord.&rdquo;
- And so he stared at this cross she held before him, fighting to bring a
- pleased and approving smile to the lips that fought in turn for their
- right to snarl a defiant mockery.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, you like it, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; cried Madame Lafleur happily. &ldquo;I am
- so glad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond smiled for answer, and went from the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- And in the front room he lighted the lamp upon his desk, and stood there
- looking down at the two letters that still awaited the signature of&mdash;Francois
- Aubert. &ldquo;I will wash my hands among the innocent&rdquo;&mdash;he raised his
- hands, and they were clenched into hard and knotted fists. Words! Words!
- They were only words. And what did their damnable insinuations matter to
- him! Others might listen devoutly and believe, as he mouthed them in his
- surplice and stole&mdash;but for himself they were no more than the
- mimicry of sounds issuing from a parrot's beak! It was absurd then that
- they should affect him at all. He would better laugh and jeer at them, and
- all this holy entourage with which he cloaked himself, for these things
- were being made to serve his own ends, were being turned to his own
- account, and&mdash;it was Three-Ace Artie now, and he laughed hoarsely
- under his breath&mdash;for once they were proving of some real and
- tangible value! Madame Lafleur, and her cross, and her altar cloth! He
- laughed again. Well, while she was busy with her churchly task, that she
- no doubt fondly believed would hurry her exit through the purgatory to
- come, he would busy himself a little in getting as speedily as possible
- out of the purgatory of the present. These letters now. While he was
- waiting, and there was an opportunity, he would sign them. It would be
- easier to say that he had decided not to make any changes in them after
- all, than to have new ones written and then have to find another
- opportunity for signing the latter. He reached for the prayer-book to make
- a tracing of the signature that was on the fly-leaf&mdash;and suddenly
- drew back his hand, and stood motionless, listening.
- </p>
- <p>
- From the road came the rumble of wheels. The sound grew louder. The
- vehicle passed by the <i>presbytère</i>, going in the direction of
- Tournayville. The sound died away. Still Raymond listened&mdash;even more
- intently than before. Jacques Bourget did not own the only horse and wagon
- in St. Marleau, but Bourget was to turn around a little way down the road,
- and return to the church. A minute, two passed, another; and then Raymond
- caught the sound of a wheel-tire rasping and grinding against the body of
- a wagon, as though the latter were being turned in a narrow space&mdash;then
- presently the rattle of wheels again, coming back now toward the church.
- And now by the church he heard the wagon turn in from the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond relaxed from his strained attitude of attention. Jacques Bourget,
- it was quite evident, intended to earn the balance of his money! Well, for
- a word then between Pierre Desforges and Jacques Bourget&mdash;pending the
- time that Madame Lafleur and her altar cloth should go to bed. The letters
- could wait.
- </p>
- <p>
- He moved stealthily and very slowly across the room. Madame Lafleur must
- not hear him leaving the house. He would be gone only a minute&mdash;just
- to warn Bourget to keep very quiet, and to satisfy the man that everything
- was going well. He could strip off his <i>soutane</i> and leave it under
- the porch.
- </p>
- <p>
- Cautiously he opened the door, an inch at a time that it might not creak,
- and stepped out into the hall on tiptoe&mdash;and listened. Madame
- Lafleur's rocking chair squeaked back and forth reassuringly. She had
- perhaps had enough of her altar cloth for a while! How could one do fine
- needle work&mdash;and rock! And why that fanciful detail to flash across
- his mind! And&mdash;his face was suddenly set, his lips tight-drawn
- together&mdash;<i>what was this!</i> These footsteps that had made no
- sound in crossing the green, but were quick and heavy upon the porch
- outside! He drew back upon the threshold of his room. And then the front
- door was thrust open. And in the doorway was Dupont, Monsieur Dupont, the
- assistant chief of the Tournayville police, and behind Dupont was another
- man, and behind the man was&mdash;yes&mdash;it was Valerie.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens! 'Cré nom d'un chien!</i>&rdquo; clucked Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Ha,
- Monsieur le Curé, you heard us&mdash;eh? But you did not hear us until we
- were at the door&mdash;and a man posted at the back of the house by that
- window there, eh? No, you did not hear us. Well, we have nipped the little
- scheme in the bud, eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dupont <i>knew!</i> Raymond's hand tightened on the door jamb&mdash;and,
- as once before, his other hand crept in under his crucifix, and under the
- breast of his <i>soutane</i> to his revolver.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not understand&rdquo;&mdash;he spoke deliberately, gravely. &ldquo;You speak of
- a scheme, Monsieur Dupont? I do not understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, you do not understand!&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Duponts face screwed up into a
- cryptic smile. &ldquo;No, of course, you do not understand! Well, you will in a
- moment! But first we will attend to Monsieur Henri Mentone! Now then,
- Marchand&rdquo;&mdash;he addressed his companion, and pointed to the rear room&mdash;&ldquo;that
- room in there, and handcuff him to you. You had better stay where you are,
- Monsieur le Curé. Come along, Marchand!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dupont and his companion ran into Henri Mentone's room. Raymond heard
- Madame Lafleur cry out in sudden consternation. It was echoed by a cry in
- Henri Mentone's voice. But he was looking at Valérie, who had stepped into
- the hall. She was very pale. What had she to do with this? What did it
- mean? Had she discovered that he&mdash;no, Dupont would not have rushed
- away in that case, but then&mdash;His lips moved: &ldquo;You&mdash;Valérie!&rdquo; How
- very pale she was&mdash;and how those dark eyes, deep with something he
- could not fathom, sought his face, only to be quickly veiled by their long
- lashes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do not look like that, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;as though I had done
- wrong.&rdquo; she said in a low, hurried tone. &ldquo;I am sorry for the man too; but
- the police were to have taken him away to-morrow morning in any case. And
- if I went for Monsieur Dupont to-night, it was&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You went for Monsieur Dupont?&rdquo;&mdash;he repeated her words dazedly, as
- though he had not heard aright. &ldquo;It was you who brought Monsieur Dupont
- here just now&mdash;from Tournayville! But&mdash;but, I do not understand
- at all!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Valérie! Valérie!&rdquo;&mdash;it was Madame Lafleur, pale and excited, who had
- rushed to her daughter's side. &ldquo;Valérie, speak quickly! What are they
- doing? What does all this mean?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie's arm stole around her mother's shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I was just telling Father Aubert, mother,&rdquo; she said, a little
- tremulously. &ldquo;You&mdash;you must not be nervous. See, it was like this.
- You had just taken the man for a little walk about the green this
- afternoon&mdash;you remember? When I came out of the house a few minutes
- later to join you, I saw what I thought looked like some money sticking
- out from one end of a folded-up piece of paper that was lying on the grass
- just at the bottom of the porch steps. I was sure, of course, that it was
- only a trick my imagination was playing on me, but I stooped down and
- picked it up. It was money, a great deal of money, and there was writing
- on the paper. I read it, and then I was afraid. It was from some friend of
- that man's in there, and was a plan for him to make his escape to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Escape!&rdquo;&mdash;Madame Lafleur drew closer to her daughter, as she glanced
- apprehensively toward the rear room.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dupont's voice floated menacingly out into the hall&mdash;came a gruff
- oath from his companion&mdash;the sound of a chair over-turned&mdash;and
- Henri Mentone's cry, pitched high.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a curiously futile way Raymond's hand dropped from the breast of his <i>soutane</i>
- to his side. Valérie and her mother seemed to be swirling around in
- circles in the hall before him. He forced himself to speak naturally:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie's eyes were on her mother.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I did not want to alarm you, mother,&rdquo; she went on rapidly; &ldquo;and so I told
- you I was going for a drive. I ran to uncle's house. He was out somewhere.
- I could go as well as any one, and if Henri Mentone had a friend lurking
- somewhere in the village there would be nothing to arouse suspicion in a
- girl driving alone; and, besides, I did not know who this friend might be,
- and I did not know who to trust. I told old Adèle that I wanted to go for
- a drive, and she helped me to harness the horse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And now, as Raymond listened, those devils, that had chuckled and
- screeched as the lumpy earth had thudded down on the lid of Théophile
- Blondin's coffin, were at their hell-carols again. It was not just luck,
- just the unfortunate turn of a card that the man had dropped the money and
- the note. It was more than that. It seemed to hold a grim, significant
- premonition&mdash;for the future. Those devils did well to chuckle!
- Struggle as he would, they had woven their net too cunningly for his
- escape. It was those devils who had torn his coat that night in the storm,
- as he had tried to force his way through the woods. It was <i>his</i> coat
- that Henri Mentone was wearing. He remembered now that the lining of the
- pocket on the inside had been ripped across. It was those devils who had
- seen to that&mdash;for this&mdash;knowing what was to come. A finger
- seemed to wag with hideous jocularity before his eyes&mdash;the finger of
- fate. He looked at Valerie. It was nothing for her to have driven to
- Tournayville, she had probably done it a hundred times before, but it
- seemed a little strange that Henri Mentone's possible escape should have
- been, apparently, so intimate and personal a matter to her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You were afraid, you said, Mademoiselle Valerie,&rdquo; he said slowly. &ldquo;Afraid&mdash;that
- he would escape?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head&mdash;and the colour mounted suddenly in her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of what then?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of what was in the note,&rdquo; she said, in a low voice. &ldquo;I knew I had time,
- for nothing was to be done until the <i>presbytère</i> was quiet for the
- night; but the plan then was to&mdash;to put you out of the way, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His voice was suddenly hoarse.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you were afraid&mdash;for me? It was for me that you have done this?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not answer. The colour was still in her cheeks&mdash;her eyes were
- lowered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The blessed saints!&rdquo; cried Madame Lafleur, crossing herself. &ldquo;The devils!
- They would do harm to Father Aubert! Well, I am sorry for that man no
- longer! He&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They were coming along the hall&mdash;Henri Mentone handcuffed to Monsieur
- Dupont's companion, and Monsieur Dupont himself in the rear.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; Henri Mentone called out wildly. &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé, do
- not&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Enough! Hold your tongue!&rdquo; snapped Monsieur Dupont, giving the man a push
- past Raymond toward the front door. &ldquo;Do you appeal to Monsieur le Curé
- because he has been good to you&mdash;or because you intended to knock
- Monsieur le Curé on the head to-night! Bah! Hurry him along, Marchand!&rdquo;
- Monsieur Dupont paused before Valérie and her mother. &ldquo;You will do me a
- favour, mesdames? A very great favour&mdash;yes? You will retire instantly
- to bed&mdash;instantly. I have my reasons. Yes, that is right&mdash;go at
- once.&rdquo; He turned to Raymond. &ldquo;And you, Monsieur le Curé, you will wait for
- me here, eh? Yes, you will wait. I will be back on the instant.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The hall was empty. In a subconscious sort of way Raymond stepped back
- into his room, and, reaching the desk, stood leaning heavily against it.
- His brain would tolerate no single coherent thought. Valérie had done this
- for fear of harm to him, Valérie had... there was Jacques Bourget who if
- he attempted now to... it was no wonder that Henri Mentone had been
- restless all evening, knowing that he had lost the note, and not daring to
- question... the day after to-morrow there was to be a trial at the
- criminal assizes... Valérie had not met his eyes, but there had been the
- crimson colour in her face, and she had done this to save <i>him</i>...
- were they still laughing, those hell-devils... were they now engaged in
- making Valérie love him, and making her torture her soul because she was
- so pure that no thought could strike her more cruelly than that love
- should come to her for a priest? Ah, his brain was logical now! His hands
- clenched, and unclenched, and clenched again. Impotent fury was upon him.
- If it were true! Damn them to the everlasting place from whence they came!
- But it was not true! It was but another trick of theirs to make him writhe
- the more&mdash;to make <i>him</i> believe she cared!
- </p>
- <p>
- A footstep! He looked up. Monsieur Dupont was back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens!</i>&rdquo; cried Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Well, you have had an escape,
- Monsieur le Curé! An escape! Yes, you have! But I do not take all the
- credit. No, I do not. She is a fine girl, that Valérie Lafleur. If she
- were a man she would have a career&mdash;with the police. I would see to
- it! But you do not know yet what it is all about, Monsieur le Curé, eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There was a note and money that Mademoiselle Valérie said she found&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's
- voice was steady, composed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Zut!</i>&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont laid his forefinger along the side of his
- nose impressively. &ldquo;That is the least of it! There is an accomplice&mdash;two
- of them in it! You would not have thought that, eh, Monsieur le Curé? No,
- you would not. Very well, then&mdash;listen! I have this Mentone safe, and
- now I, Dupont, will give this accomplice a little surprise. There will be
- the two of them at the trial for the murder of Théophile Blondin! The
- grand jury is still sitting. You understand, Monsieur le Curé? Yes, you
- understand. You are listening?&rdquo;...
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am listening,&rdquo; said Raymond gravely&mdash;and instinctively glanced
- toward the window. It might still have been Jacques Bourget who had turned
- down there on the road; or, if not, then the man would be along at any
- minute. In either case, he must find some way to warn Bourget. &ldquo;I am
- listening, Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; he said again. &ldquo;You propose to lay a trap for
- this accomplice?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is already laid,&rdquo; announced Monsieur Dupont complacently. &ldquo;They will
- discover with whom they are dealing! I returned at once with Mademoiselle
- Valérie. I brought two men with me; but you will observe, Monsieur le
- Curé, that I did not bring two teams&mdash;nothing to arouse suspicion&mdash;nothing
- to indicate that I was about to remove our friend Mentone to-night. It
- would be a very simple matter to secure a team here when I was ready for
- it. You see, Monsieur le Curé? Yes, you see. Very well! My plans worked
- without a hitch. Just as we approached the church, we met a man named
- Jacques Bourget driving alone in a buckboard. Nothing could be better. It
- was excellent. I stopped him. I requisitioned him and his horse and his
- wagon in the name of the law. I made him turn around, and told him to
- follow us back here after a few minutes. You see, Monsieur le Curé? Yes,
- you see. Monsieur Jacques Bourget is now on his way to Tournayville with
- one of my officers and the prisoner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's fingers were playing nonchalantly with the chain of his
- crucifix. Raymond's face was unmoved. It was really funny, was it not! No
- wonder those denizens of hell were shrieking with abandoned glee in his
- ears. This time they had a right to be amused. It was really very funny&mdash;that
- Jacques Bourget should be driving Henri Mentone away from St. Marleau!
- Well, and now&mdash;what?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are to be congratulated, Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; he murmured. &ldquo;But the
- accomplice&mdash;the other one, who is still at large?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, the other one!&rdquo; said Monsieur Dupont, and laid his hand
- confidentially on Raymond's arm. &ldquo;The other&mdash;heh, <i>mon Dieu</i>,
- Monsieur le Curé, but you wear heavy clothes for the summertime!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the bulk of the sacristan's old coat! There was a smile in
- Raymond's eyes, a curious smile, as he searched the other's face. One
- could never be sure of Monsieur Dupont.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A coat always under my <i>soutane</i> in the evenings&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's
- voice was tranquil, and he did not withdraw his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A coat&mdash;yes&mdash;of course!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont nodded his head. &ldquo;Why
- not! Well then, the other&mdash;listen. All has been done very quietly. No
- alarm raised. None at all! I have sent Madame Lafleur and her daughter to
- bed. The plan was that the accomplice should come to the back window for
- Mentone. But they would not make the attempt until late&mdash;until all in
- the village was quiet. That is evident, is it not? Yes, it is evident.
- Very good! You sleep here in this room, Monsieur le Curé? Yes? Well, you
- too will put out your light and retire at once. I will go into Mentone's
- room, and wait there in the dark for our other friend to come to the
- window. I will be Henri Mentone. You see? Yes, you see. It is simple, is
- it not? Yes, it is simple. Before morning I will have the man in a cell
- alongside of Henri Mentone. Do you see any objections to the plan,
- Monsieur le Curé?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Only that it might prove very dangerous&mdash;for you,&rdquo; said Raymond
- soberly. &ldquo;If the man, who is certain to be a desperate character, attacked
- you before you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dangerous! Bah!&rdquo; exclaimed Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;That is part of my business.
- I do not consider that! I have my other officer outside there now by the
- shed. As soon as the man we are after approaches the window, the officer
- will leap upon him and overpower him. And now, Monsieur le Curé, to bed&mdash;eh?
- And the light out!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At once!&rdquo; agreed Raymond. &ldquo;And I wish you every success, Monsieur Dupont!
- If you need help you have only to call; or, if you like, I will go in
- there and stay with you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, no&mdash;not at all!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont moved toward the door. &ldquo;It is
- not necessary. Nothing can go wrong. We may have to wait well through the
- night, and there is no reason why you should remain up too. <i>Tiens!</i>
- Fancy! Imagine! Did I not tell you that Mentone was a hardened rascal? Two
- of them! Well, we will see if the second one can remember any better than
- the first? The light, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;do not forget! He will not
- come while there is a sound or a light about the house!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont
- waved his hand, and the door closed on Monsieur Dupont.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond, still leaning against the desk, heard the other walk along the
- hall, and enter the rear room&mdash;and then all was quiet. He leaned over
- and blew out the lamp. Nothing must be allowed to frustrate Monsieur
- Dupont's plans!
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, in the darkness, for a long time Raymond stood there. And
- thinking of Monsieur Dupont's dangerous vigil in the other room, he
- laughed; and thinking of Valérie, he knew a bitter joy; and thinking of
- Henri Mentone, his hands knotted at his sides, and his face grew strained
- and drawn. And after that long time was past, he fumbled with his hands
- outstretched before him like a blind man feeling his way, and flung
- himself down upon the couch.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVI&mdash;FOR THE MURDER OF THÉOPHILE BLONDIN
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HEY sat on two
- benches by themselves, the witnesses in the trial of Henri Mentone for the
- murder of Théophile Blondin. On one side of Raymond was Valérie, on the
- other was Mother Blondin; and there was Labbée, the station agent, and
- Monsieur Dupont, and Doctor Arnaud. And on the other bench were several of
- the villagers, and two men Raymond did not know, and another man, a crown
- surveyor, who had just testified to the difference in time and distance
- from the station to Madame Blondin's as between the road and the path&mdash;thus
- establishing for the prosecution the fact that by following the path there
- had been ample opportunity for the crime to have been committed by one who
- had left the station after the curé had already started toward the village
- and yet still be discovered by the curé on the road near the tavern. The
- counsel appointed by the court for the defence had allowed the testimony
- to go unchallenged. It was obvious. It did not require a crown surveyor to
- announce the fact&mdash;even an urchin from St. Marleau was already aware
- of it. The villagers too had testified. They had testified that Madame
- Blondin had come running into the village screaming out that her son had
- been murdered; and that they had gone back with her to her house and had
- found the dead body of her son lying on the floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was stiflingly hot in the courtroom; and the courtroom was crowded to
- its last available inch of space.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were many there from Tournayville&mdash;but there was all of St.
- Marleau. It was St. Marleau's own and particular affair. Since early
- morning, since very early morning, Raymond had seen and heard the vehicles
- of all descriptions rattling past the <i>presbytère</i>, the occupants
- dressed in their Sunday clothes. It was a <i>jour de fête</i>. St. Marleau
- did not every day have a murder of its own! The fields were deserted; only
- the very old and the children had not come. They were not all in the room,
- for there was not place for them all&mdash;those who had not been on hand
- at the opening of the doors had been obliged to content themselves with
- gathering outside to derive what satisfaction they could from their
- proximity to the fateful events that were transpiring within; and they had
- at least seen the prisoner led handcuffed from the jail that adjoined the
- courthouse, and had been rewarded to the extent of being able to view with
- intense and bated interest people they had known all their lives, such as
- Valérie, and Mother Blondin, and the more privileged of their fellows who
- had been chosen as witnesses, as these latter disappeared inside the
- building!
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes roved around the courtroom, and rested upon the judge upon
- the bench. His first glance at the judge, taken at the moment the other
- had entered the room, had brought a certain, quick relief. Far from
- severity, the white-haired man sitting there in his black gown had a
- kindly, genial face. He found his first impressions even strengthened now.
- His eyes passed on to the crown prosecutor; and here, too, he found cause
- for reassurance. The man was middle-aged, shrewd-faced, and somewhat
- domineering. He was crisp, incisive, and had been even unnecessarily blunt
- and curt in his speech and manner so far&mdash;he was not one who would
- enlist the sympathy of a jury. On the other hand&mdash;Raymond's eyes
- shifted again, to hold on the clean-cut, smiling face of the prisoner's
- counsel&mdash;Lemoyne, that was the lawyer's name he had been told, was
- young, pleasant-voiced, magnetic. Raymond experienced a sort of grim
- admiration, as he looked at this man. No man in the courtroom knew better
- than Lemoyne the hopelessness of his case, and yet he sat there confident,
- smiling, undisturbed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes sought the floor. It was a foregone conclusion that the
- verdict would be guilty. There was not a loophole for defence. But they
- would not hang the man. He clung to that. Lemoyne could at least fight for
- the man's life. They would not hang a man who could not remember. They had
- beaten him, Raymond, the night before last; and at first he had been like
- a man stunned with the knowledge that his all was on the table and that
- the cards in his hand were worthless&mdash;and then had come a sort of
- philosophical calm, the gambler's optimism&mdash;the hand was still to be
- played. They would sentence the man for life, and&mdash;well, there was
- time enough in a lifetime for another chance. Somehow&mdash;in some way&mdash;he
- did not know now&mdash;but in some way he would see that there was another
- chance. He would not desert the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again he raised his eyes, but this time as though against his will, as
- though they were impelled and drawn in spite of himself across the room.
- That was Raymond Chapelle, alias Arthur Leroy, alias Three-Ace Artie,
- alias Henri Mentone, sitting there in the prisoner's box; at least, that
- gaunt, thin-faced, haggard man there was dressed in Raymond Chapelle's
- clothes&mdash;and <i>he</i>, François Aubert, the priest, the curé, in his
- <i>soutane</i>, with his crucifix around his neck, sat here amongst the
- witnesses at the trial of Raymond Chapelle, who had killed Théophile
- Blondin in the fight that night. One would almost think the man <i>knew!</i>
- How the man's eyes burned into him, how they tormented and plagued him!
- They were sad, those eyes, pitiful&mdash;they were helpless&mdash;they
- seemed to seek him out as the only <i>friend</i> amongst all these bobbing
- heads, and these staring, gaping faces.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Marcien Labbée!&rdquo;&mdash;the clerk's voice snapped through the courtroom.
- &ldquo;Marcien Labbée!&rdquo; The clerk was a very fussy and important short little
- man, who puffed his cheeks in and out, and clawed at his white
- side-whiskers. &ldquo;Marcien Labbée!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The station agent rose from the bench, entered the witness box, and was
- sworn.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a few crisp questions, the crown prosecutor established the time of
- the train's arrival, and the fact that the curé and another man had got
- off at the station. The witness explained that the curé had started to
- walk toward the village before the other man appeared on the platform.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And this other man&rdquo;&mdash;the crown prosecutor whirled sharply around,
- and pointed toward Henri Mentone&mdash;&ldquo;do you recognise him as the
- prisoner at the bar?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Labbée shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was very dark,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I could not swear to it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;His general appearance then? His clothes? They correspond with what you
- remember of the man?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Labbée answered. &ldquo;There is no doubt of that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And as I understand it, you told the man that Monsieur le Curé had just
- started a moment before, and that if he went at once he would have company
- on the walk to the village?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He said that he was not looking for that kind of company.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a sudden, curious, restrained movement through the courtroom;
- and, here and there, a villager, with pursed lips, nodded his head. It was
- quite evident to those from St. Marleau at least that such as Henri
- Mentone would not care for the company of their curé.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You gave the man directions as to the short cut to the village?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You may tell the court and the gentlemen of the jury what was said then.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Labbée, who had at first appeared a little nervous, now pulled down his
- vest, and looked around him with an air of importance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I told him that the path came out at the tavern. When I said 'tavern,' he
- was at once very interested. I thought then it was because he was glad to
- know there was a place to stay&mdash;it was such a terrible night, you
- understand? So I told him it was only a name we gave it, and that it was
- no place for one to go. I told him it was kept by an old woman, who was an
- <i>excommuniée</i>, and who made whisky on the sly, and that her son was&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Misérable!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;it was Mother Blondin, in a furious scream. Her
- eyes, under her matted gray hair, glared fiercely at Labbée.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Silence!&rdquo; roared the clerk of the court, leaping to his feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's hand closed over the clenched, bony fist that Mother Blondin had
- raised, and gently lowered it to her lap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He will do you no harm, Madame Blondin,&rdquo; he whispered reassuringly. &ldquo;And
- see, you must be careful, or you will get into serious trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hand trembled with passion in his, but she did not draw it away. It
- was strange that she did not! It was strange that he felt pity for her
- when so much was at stake, when pity was such a trivial and inconsequent
- thing! This was a murder trial, a trial for the killing of this woman's
- son. It was strange that he should be holding the <i>mother's</i> hand,
- and&mdash;it was Raymond who drew his hand away. He clasped it over his
- other one until the knuckles grew white.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then?&rdquo; prompted the crown prosecutor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then, I do not remember how it came about,&rdquo; Labbée continued, &ldquo;he
- spoke of Madame Blondin having money&mdash;enough to buy out any one
- around there. I said it was true that it was the gossip that she had made
- a lot, and that she had a well-filled stocking hidden away somewhere.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Crapule!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;Mother Blondin's voice, if scarcely audible this
- time, had lost none of its fury.
- </p>
- <p>
- The clerk contented himself with a menacing gesture toward his own
- side-whiskers. The crown prosecutor paid no attention to the interruption.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did the man give any reason for coming to St. Marleau?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you ask him how long he intended to remain?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; he said he didn't know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He had a travelling bag with him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This one?&rdquo;&mdash;the crown prosecutor held up Raymond's travelling bag
- from the table beside him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I cannot say,&rdquo; Labbée replied. &ldquo;It was too dark on the platform.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quite so! But it was of a size sufficient, in your opinion, to cause the
- man inconvenience in carrying it in such a storm, so you offered to have
- it sent over with Monsieur le Curé's trunk in the morning?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He said he could carry it all right.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He started off then with the bag along the road toward St. Marleau?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The crown prosecutor glanced inquiringly toward the prisoner's counsel.
- The latter shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You may step down, Monsieur Labbée,&rdquo; directed the crown prosecutor. &ldquo;Call
- Madame Blondin!&rdquo; There was a stir in the courtroom now. Heads craned
- forward as the old woman shuffled across the floor to the witness box&mdash;Mother
- Blondin was quite capable of anything&mdash;even of throwing to the ground
- the Holy Book upon which the clerk would swear her! Mother Blondin,
- however, did nothing of the sort. She gripped at the edge of the witness
- box, mumbling at the clerk, and all the while straining her eyes through
- her steel-bowed spectacles at the prisoner across the room. And then her
- lips began to work curiously, her face to grow contorted&mdash;and
- suddenly the courtroom was in an uproar. She was shaking both scranny
- fists at Henri Mentone, and screaming at the top of her voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is the man! That is the man!&rdquo;&mdash;her voice became ungovernable,
- insensate, it rose shrilly, it broke, it rose piercingly again. &ldquo;That is
- the man! The law! The law! I demand the law on him! He killed my son! He
- did it! I tell you, he did it! He&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Chairs and benches were scraping on the floor. Little cries of nervous
- terror came from the women; involuntarily men stood up the better to look
- at both Mother Blondin and the accused. It was a sensation! It was
- something to talk about in St. Marleau over the stoves in the coming
- winter. It was something of which nothing was to be missed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Order! Silence! Order!&rdquo; bawled the clerk.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie had caught Raymond's sleeve. He did not look at her. He was
- looking at Henri Mentone&mdash;at the look of dumb horror on the man's
- face&mdash;and then at a quite different figure in the prisoner's dock,
- whose head was bent down until it could scarcely be seen, and whose face
- was covered by his hands. He tried to force a grim complacence into his
- soul. It was absolutely certain that <i>he</i> had nothing to fear from
- the trial. Nothing! The other Henri Mentone, the other priest, was
- answering for the killing of that night, and&mdash;who was this speaking?
- The crown prosecutor? He had not thought the man could be so suave and
- gentle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Try and calm yourself, Madame Blondin. You have a perfect right to demand
- the punishment of the law upon the murderer of your son, and that is what
- we are here for now, and that is why I want you to tell us just as quietly
- as possible what happened that night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She stared truculently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Everybody knows what happened!&rdquo; she snarled at him. &ldquo;He killed my son!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How did he kill your son?&rdquo; inquired the crown prosecutor, with a sudden,
- crafty note of scepticism in his voice. &ldquo;How do you know he did?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I saw him! I tell you, I saw him! I heard my son shout '<i>voleur</i>'
- and cry for help&rdquo;&mdash;Mother Blon-din's words would not come fast enough
- now. &ldquo;I was in the back room. When I opened the door he was fighting my
- son. He tried to steal my money. Some of it was on the floor. My son cried
- for help again. I ran and got a stick of wood. My son tried to get his
- revolver from the <i>armoire</i>. This man got it away from him. I struck
- the man on the head with the wood, then he shot my son, and I ran out for
- help.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you positively identify the prisoner as the man who shot your son?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, yes! Have I not told you so often enough!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And this&rdquo;&mdash;the crown prosecutor handed her a revolver&mdash;&ldquo;do you
- identify this?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; it was my son's.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You kept your money in a hiding place, Madame Blondin, I understand&mdash;in
- a hollow between two of the logs in the wall of the room? Is that so?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; it is so!&rdquo;&mdash;Mother Blondin's voice grew shrill again. &ldquo;But I
- will find a better place for it, if I ever get it back again! The police
- are as great thieves as that man! They took it from him, and now they keep
- it from me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is here, Madame Blondin,&rdquo; said the lawyer soothingly, opening a large
- envelope. &ldquo;It will be returned to you after the trial. How much was
- there?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know very well how much!&rdquo; she shrilled out suspiciously. &ldquo;You cannot
- cheat me! I know! There were all my savings, years of savings&mdash;there
- was more than five hundred dollars.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A little gasp went around the courtroom. Five hundred dollars! It was a
- fortune! Gossip then had not lied&mdash;it had been outdone!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now this hiding place, Madame Blondin&mdash;you had never told any one
- about it? Not even your son?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It would seem then that this man must have known about it in some way.
- Had you been near it a short time previous to the fight?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I told you I had, didn't I? I told Monsieur Dupont all that once.&rdquo; Mother
- Blondin was growing unmanageable again. &ldquo;I went there to put some money in
- not five minutes before I heard my son call for help.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your son then was not in the room when you went to put this money away?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; of course, he wasn't! I have told that to Monsieur Dupont, too. I
- heard him coming downstairs just as I left the room.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is all, Madame Blondin, thank you, unless&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; The crown
- prosecutor turned again toward the counsel for the defence.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne rose, and, standing by his chair without approaching the witness
- box, took a small penknife from his pocket, and held it up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Madame Blondin,&rdquo; he said gently, &ldquo;will you tell me what I am holding in
- my hand?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mother Blondin squinted, set her glasses further on her nose, and shook
- her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not know,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do not see very well, Madame Blondin?&rdquo;&mdash;sympathetically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it you have got there&mdash;eh? What is it?&rdquo; she demanded
- sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne glanced at the jury&mdash;and smiled. He restored the penknife to
- his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a penknife, Madame Blondin&mdash;one of my own. An object that any
- one would recognise&mdash;unless one did not see very well. Are you quite
- sure, Madame Blondin&mdash;quite sure on second thoughts&mdash;that you
- see well enough to identify the prisoner so positively as the man who was
- fighting with your son?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The jury, with quick meaning glances at one another, with a new interest,
- leaned forward in their seats. There was a tense moment&mdash;a sort of
- bated silence in the courtroom. And then, as Mother Blondin answered, some
- one tittered audibly, the spell was broken, the point made by the defence
- swept away, turned even into a weapon against itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you will give me a stick of wood and come closer, close enough so that
- I can hit you over the head with it,&rdquo; said Mother Blondin, and cackled
- viciously, &ldquo;you will see how well I can see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Blondin stepped down.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then there came upon Raymond a thrill, a weakness, a quick tightening
- of his muscles. The clerk had called his name. He walked mechanically to
- the witness stand. It was coming now. He must be on his guard. But he had
- thought out everything very carefully, and&mdash;no, almost before he knew
- it, he was back in his seat again. He had been asked only if he had
- followed the road all the way from the station, to describe how he had
- found the man, and to identify the prisoner as that man. He was to be
- recalled. Le-moyne had not asked him a single question.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mademoiselle Valérie Lafleur!&rdquo; called the clerk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; she whispered tremulously. &ldquo;I&mdash;I do not want
- to go. It&mdash;it is such a terrible thing to <i>have</i> to say anything
- that would help to send a man to death&mdash;I&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mademoiselle Valérie Lafleur!&rdquo; snapped the clerk. &ldquo;Will the witness have
- the goodness to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond did not hear her testimony; he knew only that she, too, identified
- the man as the one she had seen lying unconscious in the road, and that
- the note she had found was read and placed in evidence&mdash;in his ears,
- like a dull, constant dirge, were those words of hers with which she had
- left him&mdash;&ldquo;it is such a terrible thing to have to say anything that
- would help to send a man to death.&rdquo; Who was it that was sending the man to
- death? Not he! He had tried to save the man. It wasn't death, anyway. The
- man's guilt would appear obvious, of course&mdash;Lemoyne, the lawyer,
- could not alter that; but he had still faith in Lemoyne. Lemoyne would
- make his defence on the man's condition. Lemoyne would come to that.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My son!&rdquo; croaked old Mother Blondin fiercely, at his side. &ldquo;My son! What
- I know, I know! But the law&mdash;the law on the man who killed my son!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pull yourself together, you fool!&rdquo; rasped that inner voice. &ldquo;Do you want
- everybody in the courtroom staring at you. Listen to the incomparable
- Dupont telling how clever he was!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, Dupont was on the stand now. Dupont was testifying to finding the
- revolver and money in the prisoner's pockets. He verified the amount.
- Dupont had his case at his fingers' tips, and he sketched it, with an
- amazing conciseness for Monsieur Dupont, from the moment he had been
- notified of the crime up to the time of the attempted escape. He was
- convinced that, in spite of all precautions, the prisoner's accomplice had
- taken alarm&mdash;since he, Dupont, had sat the night in the room waiting
- for the unknown's appearance, and neither he nor his deputy, who had
- remained until daylight hiding in the shed where he could watch the
- prisoner's window, had seen or heard anything. On cross-examination he
- admitted that pressure had been brought to bear upon the prisoner in an
- effort to trip the man up in his story, but that the prisoner had
- unswervingly held to the statement that he could remember nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- The voices droned through the courtroom. It was Doctor Arnaud now
- identifying the man. They were always identifying the man! Why did not he,
- the saintly curé of St. Marleau&mdash;no, it was Three-Ace Artie&mdash;why
- did not he, Three-Ace Artie, laugh outright in all their faces! It was not
- hard to identify the man. He had seen to that very thoroughly, more
- thoroughly than even he had imagined that night in the storm when all the
- devils of hell were loosed to shriek around him, and he had changed
- clothes with a <i>dead</i> man. A dead man&mdash;yes, that was the way it
- should have been! Did he not remember how limply the man's neck and head
- wagged on the shoulders, and how the body kept falling all over in
- grotesque attitudes instead of helping him to get its clothes off! Only
- the dead man had come to life! That was the man over there inside that box
- with the little wood-turned decorations all around the railing&mdash;no,
- he wouldn't look&mdash;but that man there who was the colour of soiled
- chalk, and whose eyes, with the hurt of a dumb beast in them, kept turning
- constantly in this direction, over here, here where the witnesses sat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Doctor Arnaud&rdquo;&mdash;it was the counsel for the defence speaking, and
- suddenly Raymond was listening with strained attention&mdash;&ldquo;you have
- attended the prisoner from the night he was found unconscious in the road
- until the present time?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, monsieur.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have heard me in cross-examination ask Mademoiselle Lafleur and
- Monsieur Dupont if at any time during this period the prisoner, by act,
- manner or word, swerved from his statement that he could remember nothing,
- either of the events of that night, or of prior events in his life. You
- have heard both of these witness testify that he had not done so. I will
- ask you now if you are in a position to corroborate their testimony?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am,&rdquo; replied Doctor Arnaud. &ldquo;He has said nothing else to my knowledge.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, doctor, in your professional capacity, will you kindly tell the
- court and the gentlemen of the jury whether or not loss of memory could
- result from a blow upon the head.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It could&mdash;certainly,&rdquo; stated Doctor Arnaud. &ldquo;There is no doubt of
- that, but it depends on the&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just a moment, doctor, if you please; we will come to that&rdquo;&mdash;Lemoyne,
- as Raymond knew well that Le-moyne himself was fully aware, was treading
- on thin and perilous ice, but on Lemoyne's lips, as he interrupted, was an
- engaging smile. &ldquo;This loss of memory now. Will you please help us to
- understand just what it means? Take a hypothetical case. Could a man, for
- example, read and write, do arithmetic, say, appear normal in all other
- ways, and still have lost the memory of his name, his parents, his
- friends, his home, his previous state?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Doctor Arnaud. &ldquo;That is quite true. He might lose the memory
- of all those things, and still retain everything he has acquired by
- education.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is a medical fact?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, certainly, it is a medical fact.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And is it not also a medical fact, doctor, that this condition has been
- known to have been caused by a blow&mdash;I will not say so slight, for
- that would be misleading&mdash;but by a blow that did not even cause a
- wound, and I mean by wound a gash, a cut, or the tearing of the flesh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; that, too, is so.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne paused. He looked at Henri Mentone, and suddenly it seemed as
- though a world of sympathy and pity were in his face. He turned and looked
- at the jury&mdash;at each one of the twelve men, but almost as though he
- did not see them. There was a mist in his eyes. It was silent again in the
- courtroom. His voice was low and grave as he spoke again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Doctor Arnaud, are you prepared to state professionally under oath that
- it is impossible that the blow received by the prisoner at the bar should
- have caused him to lose his memory?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo; Doctor Arnaud shook his head. &ldquo;No; I would not say that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne's voice was still grave.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You admit then, Doctor Arnaud, that it is possible?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Doctor Arnaud hesitated. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It is possible, of course.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is all, doctor&rdquo;&mdash;Lemoyne sat down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One moment!&rdquo;&mdash;the crown prosecutor, crisp, curt, incisive, was on
- his feet. &ldquo;Loss of memory is not insanity, doctor?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is the prisoner in your professional judgment insane?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; declared Doctor Arnaud emphatically. &ldquo;Most certainly not!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a nod, the crown prosecutor dismissed the witness.
- </p>
- <p>
- A buzz, whisperings, ran around the room. Raymond's eyes were fixed
- sombrely on the floor. Relief had come with Lemoyne's climax, but now in
- Doctor Arnaud's reply to the crown prosecutor he sensed catastrophe. A
- sentence for life was the best that could be hoped for, but suppose&mdash;suppose
- Lemoyne should fail to secure even that! No, no&mdash;they would not hang
- the man! Even Doctor Arnaud had been forced to admit that he might have
- lost his memory. That would be strong enough for any jury, and&mdash;they
- were calling his name again, and he was rising, and walking a second time
- to the witness stand. Surely all these people <i>knew</i>. Was not his
- face set, and white, and drawn! See that ray of sunlight coming in through
- that far window, and how it did not deviate, but came straight toward him,
- and lay upon the crucifix on his breast, to draw all eyes upon it, upon
- that Figure on the Cross, the Man Betrayed. God, he had not meant this! He
- had thought the priest already dead that night. It was a dead man he had
- meant should answer for the killing of that ugly, scarred-faced, drunken
- blackguard, Théophile Blondin. That couldn't do a dead man any harm! It
- was a dead man, a dead man, a dead man&mdash;not this living, breathing
- one who&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; said the crown prosecutor, &ldquo;you were present in the
- prisoner's room with Monsieur Dupont and Doctor Arnaud, when Monsieur
- Dupont made a search of the accused's clothing?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Raymond answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you identify this revolver as the one taken from the prisoner's
- pocket?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What was it Valérie had said&mdash;that it was such a terrible thing to
- have to say anything that would help to send a man to death? But the man
- was not going to death. It was to be a life sentence&mdash;and afterwards,
- after the trial, there would be time to think, and plot, and plan.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is the same one,&rdquo; said Raymond in a low voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You also saw Monsieur Dupont take a large number of loose bills from the
- prisoner's pocket?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know their amount?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. Monsieur Dupont did not count them at the time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There were a great many, however, crumpled in the pocket, as though they
- had been hastily thrust there?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Why did that man in the prisoner's dock look at him like that&mdash;not in
- accusation&mdash;it was worse than that&mdash;it was in a sorrowful sort
- of wonder, and a numbed despair. Those devils were laughing in his ears&mdash;he
- was telling the <i>truth!</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is all, I think, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; said the crown prosecutor
- abruptly.
- </p>
- <p>
- All! There came a bitter and abysmal irony. Puppets! All were puppets upon
- a set stage&mdash;from the judge on the bench to that dismayed thing
- yonder who wrung his hands before the imposing majesty of the law! All!
- That was all, was it&mdash;the few words he had said? Who then was the
- author of every word that had been uttered in the room, who then had
- pulled the strings that jerked these automatons about in their every
- movement! Ah, here was Lemoyne this time, the prisoner's counsel. This
- time there was to be a cross-examination. Yes, certainly, he would like to
- help Lemoyne, but Lemoyne must not try to trap him. Lemoyne, too, was a
- puppet, and therefore Lemoyne could not be expected to know how very true
- it was that &ldquo;Henri Mentone&rdquo; was on trial for his life, and that &ldquo;Henri
- Mentone&rdquo; would fight for that life with any weapon he could grasp, and
- that Lemoyne would do the prisoner an ill turn to put &ldquo;Henri Mentone&rdquo; on
- the defensive! Well&mdash;he brushed his hand across his forehead, and
- fixed his eyes steadily on Lemoyne&mdash;he was ready for the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;Lemoyne had come very close to the witness stand,
- and Lemoyne's voice was soberly modulated&mdash;&ldquo;Monsieur le Curé, I have
- only one question to ask you. You have been with this unfortunate man
- since the night you found him on the road, you have nursed him night and
- day as a mother would a child, you have not been long in St. Marleau, but
- in that time, so I am told, and I can very readily see why, you have come
- to be called the good, young Father Aubert by all your parish. Monsieur le
- Curé, you have been constantly with this man, for days and nights you have
- scarcely left his side, and so I come to the question that, it seems to
- me, you, of all others, are best qualified to answer.&rdquo; Lemoyne paused. He
- had placed his two hands on the edge of the witness box, and was looking
- earnestly into Raymond's face. &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé, do you believe that when
- the prisoner says that he remembers nothing of the events of that night,
- that he has no recollection of the crime of which he is accused&mdash;do
- you believe, Monsieur le Curé, that he is telling the truth?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There had been silence in the courtroom before&mdash;it was a silence now
- that seemed to palpitate and throb, a <i>living</i> silence. Instinctively
- the crown prosecutor had made as though to rise from his chair; and then,
- as if indifferent, had changed his mind. No one else in the room had
- moved. Raymond glanced around him. They were waiting&mdash;for his answer.
- The word of the good, young Father Aubert would go far. Lemoyne's eyes
- were pleading mutely&mdash;for the one ground of defence, the one chance
- for his client's life. But Lemoyne did not need to plead&mdash;for that!
- They must not hang the man! They were waiting&mdash;for his answer. Still
- the silence held. And then Raymond raised his right hand solemnly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As God is my judge,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I firmly believe that the man is telling
- the truth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Benches creaked, there was the rustle of garments, a sort of unanimous and
- involuntary long-drawn sigh; and it seemed to Raymond that, as all eyes
- turned on the prisoner, they held a kindlier and more tolerant light. And
- then, as he walked back to the other witnesses and took his seat, he heard
- the crown prosecutor speak&mdash;as though disposing of the matter in
- blunt disdain:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The prosecution rests.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie laid her hand over his.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am so glad&mdash;so glad you said that,&rdquo; she whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont leaned forward, and clucked his tongue very softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hah, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; He wagged his head indulgently. &ldquo;Well, I suppose
- you could not help it&mdash;eh? No, you could not. I have told you before
- that you are too soft-hearted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There were two witnesses for the defence&mdash;Doctor Arnaud's two
- fellow-practitioners in Tournayville. Their testimony was virtually that
- of Doctor Arnaud in cross-examination. To each of them the crown
- prosecutor put the same question&mdash;and only one. Was the prisoner
- insane? Each answered in the negative.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, a moment later, Lemoyne, rising to sum up for the defence,
- walked soberly forward to the jury-box, and halted before the twelve men.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen of the jury,&rdquo; he began quietly, &ldquo;you have heard the
- professional testimony of three doctors, one of them a witness for the
- prosecution, who all agree that the wound received by the prisoner might
- result in loss of memory. You have heard the testimony of that good man,
- the curé of St. Marleau, who gave his days and nights to the care and
- nursing of the one whose life, gentlemen, now lies in your hands; you have
- heard him declare in the most solemn and impressive manner that he
- believed the prisoner had no remembrance, no recollection of the night on
- which the crime was committed. Who should be better able to form an
- opinion as to whether, as the prosecution pretends, the prisoner is
- playing a part, or as to whether he is telling the truth, than the one who
- has been with him from that day to this, and been with him in the most
- intimate way, more than any one else? And I ask you, too, to weigh well
- and remember the character of the man, whom his people call the good,
- young Father Aubert, who has so emphatically testified to this effect. His
- words were not lightly spoken, and they were pure in motive. You have
- heard other witnesses&mdash;all witnesses for the defence, gentlemen&mdash;assert
- that they have seen nothing, heard nothing, that would indicate that the
- prisoner was playing a part. Gentlemen, every scrap of evidence that has
- been introduced but goes to substantiate the prisoner's story. Is it
- possible, do you believe for an instant, that a man could with his first
- conscious breath assume such a part, and, sick and wounded and physically
- weak, play it through without a slip, or sign, or word, or act that would
- so much as hint at duplicity? But that is not all. Gentlemen, I will ask
- you to come with me in thought to a scene that occurred this morning an
- hour before this trial began, and I would that the gift of words were mine
- to make you see that scene as I saw it.&rdquo; He turned and swept out his hand
- toward the prisoner. &ldquo;That man was in his cell, on his knees beside his
- cot. He did not look up as I entered, and I did not disturb him. We were
- alone together there. After a few minutes he raised his head. There was
- agony in his face such as I have never seen before on a human countenance.
- I spoke to him then. I told him that professional confidence was sacred, I
- warned him of the peril in which he stood, I pleaded with him to help me
- save his life, to tell me all, everything, not to tie my hands. Gentlemen
- of the jury, do you know his answer? It was a simple one&mdash;and spoken
- as simply. 'When you came in I was asking God to give me back my memory
- before it was too late.' That is what he said, gentlemen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There were tears in Lemoyne's eyes&mdash;there were tears in other eyes
- throughout the courtroom. There was a cry in Raymond's heart that went out
- to Le-moyne. He had not failed! He had not failed! Le-moyne had not
- failed!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen, he did not know.&rdquo; Lemoyne's voice rose now in impassioned
- pleading&mdash;and he spoke on with that eloquence that is born only of
- conviction and in the soul. It was the picture of the man's helplessness
- he drew; the horror of an innocent man entangled in seemingly
- incontrovertible evidence, and doomed to a frightful death. He played upon
- the emotions with a master touch&mdash;and as the minutes passed sobs
- echoed back from every quarter of the room&mdash;and in the jury box men
- brushed their hands across their eyes. And at the end he was very quiet
- again, and his words were very low.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen of the jury, I believe in my soul that this man is innocent. I
- ask you to believe that he is innocent. I ask you to believe that if he
- could tell of the events of that night he would stand before you a martyr
- to a cruel chain of circumstance. And I ask you to remember the terrible
- responsibility that rests upon you of passing judgment upon a man,
- helpless, impotent, and alone, and who, deprived of all means of
- self-defence, has only you to look to&mdash;for his life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was buoyancy in Raymond's heart. Lemoyne had not failed! He had been
- magnificent&mdash;triumphant! Even the judge was fumbling awkwardly with
- the papers on his desk. What did it matter now what the crown prosecutor
- might say? No one doubted perhaps that the man was guilty, but the spell
- that Lemoyne had cast would remain, and there would be mercy. A chill
- came, a chill like death&mdash;if it were not so, what would he have to
- face!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen of the jury&rdquo;&mdash;the crown prosecutor was speaking now&mdash;&ldquo;I
- should do less than justice to my learned friend if I did not admit that I
- was affected by his words; but I should also do less than justice to the
- laws of this land, to you, and to myself if I did not tell you that
- emotion has no place in the consideration of this case, and that fact
- alone must be the basis of your verdict. I shall not keep you long. I have
- only a few words to say. The court will instruct you that if the prisoner
- is sane he is accountable to the law for his crime. We are concerned, not
- with his loss of memory, though my learned friend has made much of that,
- but with his sanity. The court will also instruct you on that point. I
- shall not, therefore, discuss the question of the prisoner's mental
- condition, except to recall to your minds that the medical testimony has
- been unanimous in declaring that the accused is not insane; and except to
- say that, in so far as loss of memory is concerned, it is plainly evident
- that he was in full possession of all his faculties at the time the murder
- was committed, and that I am personally inclined to share the opinion of
- his accomplice in crime&mdash;a man, gentlemen, whom we may safely presume
- is even a better judge of the prisoner's character than is the curé of St.
- Marleau&mdash;who, from the note you have heard read, has certainly no
- doubt that the prisoner is not only quite capable of attempting such a
- deception, but is actually engaged in practising it at the present moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I pass on to the facts' brought out by the evidence. On the night of the
- crime, a man answering the general description of the prisoner arrived at
- the St. Marleau station. It was a night when one, and especially a
- stranger, would naturally be glad of company on the three-mile walk to the
- village. The man refused the company of the curé. Why? He, as it later
- appears, had very good reasons of his own! It was such a night that it
- would be all one would care to do to battle against the wind without being
- hampered by a travelling bag. He refused the station agent's offer to keep
- the bag until morning and send it over with the curé's trunk. Why? It is
- quite evident, in view of what followed, that he did not expect to be
- there the next morning! He drew from the station agent, corroborating
- presumably the information previously obtained either by himself or this
- unknown accomplice, the statement that Madame Blondin was believed to have
- a large sum of money hidden away somewhere in her house. That was the man,
- gentlemen, who answers the general description of the prisoner. Within
- approximately half an hour later Madame Blondin's house is robbed, and, in
- an effort to protect his mother's property, Théophile Blondin is shot and
- killed. The question perhaps arises as to how the author of this crime
- knew the exact hiding place where the money was kept. But it is not
- material, in as much as we know that he was in a position to be in
- possession of that knowledge. He might have been peering in through the
- window when Madame Blondin, as she testified, was at the hiding place a
- few minutes before he broke into her house&mdash;or his accomplice, still
- unapprehended, may, as I have previously intimated, already have
- discovered it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And now we pass entirely out of the realm of conjecture. You have heard
- the testimony of the murdered man's mother, who both saw and participated
- in the struggle. The man who murdered Théophile Blondin, who was actually
- seen to commit the act, is identified as the prisoner at the bar. He was
- struck over the head by Madame Blondin with a stick of wood, which
- inflicted a serious wound. We can picture him running from the house,
- after Madame Blondin rushed out toward the village to give the alarm. He
- did not, however, get very far&mdash;he was himself too badly hurt. He was
- found lying unconscious on the road a short distance away. Again the
- identification is complete&mdash;and in his pocket is found the motive for
- the crime, Madame Blondin's savings&mdash;and in his pocket is found the
- weapon, Théophile Blondin's revolver, with which the murder was committed.
- Gentlemen, I shall not take up your time, or the time of this court
- needlessly. No logical human being could doubt the prisoner's guilt for an
- instant. I ask you, gentlemen of the jury, to return a verdict in
- accordance with the evidence.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond did not look up, as the crown prosecutor sat down. &ldquo;No logical
- human being could doubt the prisoner's guilt for an instant.&rdquo; That was
- true, wasn't it? No human being&mdash;save only <i>one</i>. Well, he had
- expected that&mdash;it was even a tribute to his own quick wit. Puppets!
- Yes, puppets&mdash;they were all puppets&mdash;all but himself. But if
- there was guilt, there was also mercy. They would show mercy to a man who
- could not remember. How many times had he said that to himself! Well, he
- had been right, hadn't he? He had more reason to believe it now than he
- had had to believe it before. Lemoyne had, beyond the shadow of a doubt,
- convinced every one in the courtroom that the man could not remember.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Order! Attention! Silence!&rdquo; rapped out the clerk pompously.
- </p>
- <p>
- The judge had turned in his seat to face the jury.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen of the jury,&rdquo; he said impassively, &ldquo;it is my province to
- instruct you in the law as it applies to this case, and as it applies to
- the interpretation of the evidence before you. There must be no confusion
- in your minds as to the question of the prisoner's mental condition. The
- law does not hold accountable, nor does it bring to trial any person who
- is insane. The law, however, does not recognise loss of memory as
- insanity. There has been no testimony to indicate that the prisoner is
- insane, or even that he was not in an entirely normal condition of mind at
- the time the crime was committed; there has been the testimony of three
- physicians that he is not insane. You have therefore but one thing to
- consider. If, from the evidence, you believe that the prisoner killed
- Théophile Blondin, it is your duty to bring in a verdict of guilty; on the
- other hand, the prisoner is entitled to the benefit of any reasonable
- doubt as to his guilt that may exist in your minds. You may retire,
- gentlemen, for your deliberations.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a hurried, whispered consultation amongst the twelve men in the
- jury box. It brought Raymond no surprise that the jury did not leave the
- room. It brought him no surprise that the figure with the thin, pale face,
- who was dressed in Raymond Chapelle's clothes, should be ordered to stand
- and face those twelve men, and hear the word &ldquo;guilty&rdquo; fall from the
- foreman's lips. He had known it, every one had known it&mdash;it was the
- judge now, that white-haired, kindly-faced man, upon whom he riveted his
- attention. A sentence for life... yes, that was terrible enough... but
- there was a way... there would be some way in the days to come... he had
- fastened this crime upon a dead man to save his own life... not on this
- living one whose eyes now he could not meet across the room, though he
- could feel them upon him, feel them staring, staring at his naked soul...
- he would find some way... there would be time, there was all of time in a
- sentence for life... he would not desert the man, he would&mdash;&mdash;-
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Henri Mentone&rdquo;&mdash;the judge was speaking again&mdash;&ldquo;you have been
- found guilty by a jury of your peers of the murder of one Théophile
- Blondin. Have you anything to say why the sentence of this court should
- not be passed upon you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no answer. What was the man doing? Was he crying? Trembling? Was
- there that old nameless horror in the face? Were his lips quivering as a
- child's lips quiver when it is broken-hearted? Raymond dared not look;
- dared not look anywhere now save at the white-haired, kindly-faced&mdash;yes,
- he was kindly-faced&mdash;judge. And then suddenly he found himself
- swaying weakly, and his shoulder bumped into old Mother Blondin. Not that&mdash;great
- God&mdash;not that! That kindly-faced man was putting a <i>black hat</i>
- on his head, and standing up. Everybody was standing up. He, too, was
- standing up, only he was not steady on his feet. Was Valérie's hand on his
- arm in nervous terror, or to support him! Some one was speaking. The words
- were throbbing through his brain. Yes, throbbing&mdash;throbbing and
- clanging like hammer blows&mdash;that was why he could not hear them all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;... the sentence of this court... place of confinement... thence to the
- place of execution... hanged by the neck until you are dead, and may God
- have mercy on your soul.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond looked; and through the solemn silence, and through the
- doom that hung upon the room, there came a cry. It was Henri Mentone. The
- man's hands were stretched out, the tears were streaming down his cheeks.
- And was this mockery&mdash;or a joke of hell! Then why did not everybody
- howl and scream with mirth! The man was calling upon himself to save
- himself! No, no&mdash;he, Raymond, was going mad to call it mockery or
- mirth. It was ghastly, horrible, pitiful beyond human understanding, it
- tore at the heart and the soul&mdash;the man was doing what that Figure
- upon the Cross had once been bade to do&mdash;his own name was upon his
- own lips, he was calling upon himself to save himself. And the voice in
- agony rang through the crowded room, and people sobbed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father&mdash;Father Francois Aubert, help me, do not leave me! I do not
- know&mdash;I do not understand. Father&mdash;<i>Father François Aubert</i>,
- help me&mdash;I do not understand!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond, groping out behind him, flung his arm across the back of the
- bench, and, sinking down, his head fell forward, and his face was hidden.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens</i>,&rdquo; said Mother Blondin sullenly, as though forced to admit it
- against her will, &ldquo;he has a good heart, even if he is a priest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVII&mdash;THE COMMON CUP
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T seemed as though
- it were an immeasurable span of time since that voice had rung through the
- courtroom. He could hear it yet&mdash;he was hearing it always. &ldquo;Father&mdash;Father
- François Aubert&mdash;help me&mdash;I do not know&mdash;I do not
- understand.&rdquo; And sometimes it was pitiful beyond that of any human cry
- before; and sometimes it was dominant in its ghastly irony. And yet that
- was only yesterday, and it was only the afternoon of the next day now.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were wild roses, and wild raspberries growing here along the side of
- the road, and the smoke wreathed upward from the chimneys of the
- whitewashed cottages, and the water lapped upon the shore&mdash;these
- things were unchanged, undisturbed, unaffected, untouched. It seemed
- curiously improper that it should be so&mdash;that the sense of values was
- somehow lost.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had come from the courtroom with his brain in a state of numbed shock,
- as it were, like a wound that has taken the nerve centres by surprise and
- had not yet begun to throb. It was instinct, the instinct to fight on, the
- instinct of self-preservation that had bade him grope his way to Lemoyne,
- the counsel for the defence. &ldquo;I have friends who have money,&rdquo; he had said.
- &ldquo;Appeal the case&mdash;spare no effort&mdash;I will see that the expenses
- are met.&rdquo; And after that he had driven back to St. Marleau, and after that
- again he had lived through a succession of blurred hours, obeying
- mechanically a sense of routine&mdash;he had talked to the villagers, he
- had eaten supper with Valérie and her mother, he had gone to bed and lain
- awake, he had said mass in the church that morning&mdash;mass!
- </p>
- <p>
- Was it the heat of the day! His brow was feverish. He took off his hat,
- and turned to let the breeze from the river fan his face and head. It was
- only this afternoon, a little while ago, that he had emerged from that
- numbed stupor, and now the hurt and the smarting of the wound had come.
- His brain was clear now&mdash;<i>terribly</i> clear. Better that the
- stupor, which was a kindly thing, had remained! He had said mass that
- morning. &ldquo;<i>Lavabo inter innocentes manus meas</i>&mdash;I will wash my
- hands among the innocent.&rdquo; In the sight of holy God, he had said that; at
- God's holy altar as he had spoken, symbolising his words, he had washed
- his fingers in water. It had not seemed to matter so much then, he had
- even mocked cynically at those same words the night that Madame Lafleur
- had shown him the altar cloth&mdash;but that other voice, those other
- words had not been pounding at his ears then, as now. And now they were
- joined together, his voice and that other voice, his words and those other
- words: &ldquo;I will wash my hands among the innocent&mdash;hanged by the neck
- until you are dead, and may God have mercy on your soul.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stood by the roadside hatless. Through the open doorway of a cottage a
- few yards away he could see old grandmother Frenier, who was exceedingly
- poor, and deaf, and far up in the eighties, contentedly at work with her
- spinning-wheel; on the shore, where the tide was half out and the sand of
- the beach had merged into oozy mud, two bare-footed children overturned
- the rocks of such size as were not beyond their strength, laughing
- gleefully as they captured the sea-worms, whose nippers could pinch with
- no little degree of ferocity, and with which, later, no doubt, they
- intended to fish for tommy-cods; also there was sunlight, and sparkling
- water, and some one driving along the road toward him in a buckboard; and
- he could hear Bouchard in the carpenter shop alternately hammering and
- whistling&mdash;the whistling was out of tune, it was true, but what it
- lacked in melody it made up in spirit. This was reality, this was
- actuality, happiness and peace, and contentment, and serenity; and he,
- standing here on the road, was an integral part of the scene&mdash;no
- painter would leave out the village curé standing hatless on the road&mdash;the
- village curé would, indeed, stand out as the central figure, like a
- benediction upon all the rest. Why then should he not in truth, as in
- semblance, enter into this scene of tranquillity? Where did they come
- from, those words that were so foreign to all about him, where had they
- found birth, and why were they seared into his brain so that he could not
- banish them? Surely they were but an hallucination&mdash;he had only to
- look around him to find evidence of that. Surely they had no basis in
- fact, those words&mdash;&ldquo;hanged by the neck until you are dead, and may
- God have mercy on your soul.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They seemed to fade slowly away, old grandmother Frenier and her
- spinning-wheel, and the children puddling in the mud, and the buckboard
- coming along the road; and he no longer heard the whistling from the
- carpenter shop&mdash;it seemed to fade out like a picture on a cinema
- screen, while another crept there, at first intangible and undefined, to
- supplant the first. It was sombre and dark, and a narrow space, and a
- shadowy human form. Then there came a ray of light&mdash;sunlight, only
- the gladness and the brightness were not in the sunlight because it had
- first to pass through an opening where there were iron bars. But the ray
- of light, nevertheless, grew stronger, and the picture took form. There
- were bare walls, and bare floors, and a narrow cot&mdash;and it was a
- cell. And the shadowy form became more distinct&mdash;it was a man, whose
- back was turned, who stood at the end of the cell, and whose hands were
- each clutched around one of the iron bars, and who seemed to be striving
- to thrust his head out into the sunlight, for his head, too, was pressed
- close against the iron bars. And there was something horribly familiar in
- the figure. And then the head turned slowly, and the sunlight, that was
- robbed of its warmth and its freedom, slanted upon a pale cheek, and ashen
- lips, and eyes that were torture-burned; and the face was the face of the
- man who was&mdash;to be hanged by the neck until he was dead, and upon
- whose soul that voice had implored the mercy of God.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond stared at his hat which was lying in the road. How had it got
- there? He did not remember that he had dropped it. He had been holding it
- in his hand. This buckboard that was approaching would run over it. He
- stooped and picked it up, and mechanically began to brush away the dust.
- That figure in the buckboard seemed to be familiar, too. Yes, of course,
- it was Monsieur Dupont, the assistant chief of the Tournayville police&mdash;the
- man who always answered his own questions, and clucked with his tongue as
- though he were some animal learning to talk. But Monsieur Dupont mattered
- little now. It was not old grandmother Frenier and her spinning-wheel that
- was reality&mdash;it was Father François Aubert in the condemned cell of
- the Tournayville jail, waiting to be hanged by the neck until he was dead
- for the murder of Théophile Blondin.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond put on his hat with forced calmness. He must settle this with
- himself; he could not afford to lose his poise&mdash;either mentally or
- physically. He laid no claim to the heroic or to the quixotic&mdash;he did
- not want to die in the stead of that man, or in the stead of any other
- man. Neither was he a coward&mdash;no man had ever called Raymond
- Chapelle, or Arthur Leroy, or Three-Ace Artie a coward. He was a gambler&mdash;and
- there was still a chance. There was the appeal. He was gambling now for
- both their lives. He would lay down no hand, he would fight as he had
- always fought&mdash;to the end&mdash;while a chance remained. There was
- still a chance&mdash;the appeal. It was long odds, he knew that&mdash;but
- it was a chance&mdash;and he was a gambler. He could only wait now for the
- turn of the final card. He would not tolerate consideration beyond that
- point&mdash;not if with all his might he could force his brain to leave
- that &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo; alone. It was weeks yet to the date set for the
- execution of Henri Mentone for the murder of Théophile Blondin, and it
- would be weeks yet before the appeal was acted upon. He could only wait
- now&mdash;here&mdash;here in St. Marleau, as the good young Father Aubert.
- He could not run away, or disappear, like a pitiful coward, until that
- appeal had had its answer. Afterwards&mdash;no, there was no &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;&mdash;not
- <i>now!</i> Now, it was the ubiquitous Monsieur Dupont, the short little
- man with the sharp features, and the roving black eyes that glanced
- everywhere at once, who was calling to him, and clambering out of the
- buckboard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are surprised to see me, eh, Monsieur le Curé?&rdquo; clucked Monsieur
- Dupont. &ldquo;Yes, you are surprised. Very well! But what would you say, eh, if
- I told you that I had come to arrest Monsieur le Curé of St. Marleau? Eh&mdash;what
- would you say to that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Arrest! Curious, the cold, calculating alertness that swept upon him at
- that word! What had happened?
- </p>
- <p>
- Was the game up&mdash;now? Curious, how he measured appraisingly&mdash;and
- almost contemptuously&mdash;the physique of this man before him. And then,
- under his breath, he snarled an oath at the other. Curse Monsieur Dupont
- and his perverted sense of humour! It was not the first time Monsieur
- Dupont had startled him. Monsieur Dupont was grinning broadly&mdash;like
- an ape!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I imagine,&rdquo; said Raymond placidly, &ldquo;that what I would say, Monsieur
- Dupont, would be to inquire as to the nature of the charge against
- Monsieur le Curé of St. Marleau.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I,&rdquo; said Monsieur Dupont, &ldquo;would at once reply&mdash;assault. Assault&mdash;bodily
- harm and injury&mdash;assault upon the person of one Jacques Bourget.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Raymond&mdash;and smiled. &ldquo;Yes, I believe there have been
- rumours of it in the village, Monsieur Dupont. Several have spoken to me
- about it, and I even understand that the Curé of St. Marleau pleads
- guilty.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Monsieur Dupont puckered up his face, and burst into a guffaw.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>'Cré nom</i>&mdash;ah, pardon&mdash;but it is excusable, one bad
- little word, eh? Yes, it is excusable. But imagine&mdash;fancy! The good,
- young Father Aubert&mdash;and Jacques Bourget! I would have liked to have
- seen it. Yes, I would! Monsieur le Curé, you do not look it, but you are
- magnificent. Monsieur le Curé, I lift my hat to you. <i>Bon Dieu</i>&mdash;ah,
- pardon again&mdash;but you were not gentle with Jacques Bourget, whom one
- would think could eat you alive! And you told me nothing about it&mdash;you
- are modest, eh? Yes, you are modest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have had no opportunity to be modest.&rdquo; Raymond laughed, &ldquo;since, so I
- understand, Bourget encountered some of the villagers on his way home that
- afternoon, and gave me a reputation that, to say the least of it, left me
- with little to be modest about.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe you,&rdquo; chuckled Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;I believe you, Monsieur le
- Curé, since I, too, got the story from Jacques Bourget himself. He desired
- to swear out a warrant for your arrest. You have not seen Bourget for
- several days, eh, Monsieur le Curé? No, you have not seen him. But I know
- very well how to handle such as he! He will swear out no warrant. On the
- contrary, he would very gladly feed out of anybody's hand just now&mdash;even
- yours, Monsieur le Curé. I have the brave Jacques Bourget in jail at the
- present moment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In jail?&rdquo; Raymond's puzzled frown was genuine. &ldquo;But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait a minute, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Dupont's smile was
- suddenly gone. He tapped Raymond impressively on the shoulder. &ldquo;There is
- more in this than appears on the surface, Monsieur le Curé. You see? Yes,
- you see. Well then, listen! He talked no longer of a warrant when I
- threatened him with arrest for getting whisky at Mother Blondin's. I had
- him frightened. And that brings us to Mother Blondin, which is one of the
- reasons I am here this afternoon&mdash;but we will return to Mother
- Blondin's case in a moment. You remember, eh, that I caught Bourget
- driving on the road the night Mentone tried to escape, and that I made him
- drive the prisoner to Tournayville? Yes, you remember. Very good! This
- morning his wife comes to Tournayville to say that he has not been seen
- since that night. We make a search. He is not hard to find. He has been
- drunk ever since&mdash;we find him in a room over one of the saloons just
- beginning to get sober again. Also, we find that since that night Bourget,
- who never has any money, has spent a great deal of money. Where did
- Bourget get that money? You begin to see, eh, Monsieur le Curé? Yes, you
- begin to see.&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont laid his forefinger sagaciously along the
- side of his nose. &ldquo;Very good! I begin to question. I am instantly
- suspicious. Bourget is very sullen and morose. He talks only of a warrant
- against you. I seize upon that story again to threaten him with, if he
- does not tell where he got the money. I put him in jail, where I shall
- keep him for two or three days to teach him a lesson before letting him
- go. It is another Bourget, a very lamblike Bourget, Monsieur le Curé,
- before I am through; though I have to promise him immunity for turning
- king's evidence. Do you see what is coming, Monsieur le Curé? No, you do
- not. Most certainly you do not! Very well then, listen! I am on the track
- of Mentone's accomplice. Bourget was in the plot. It was Bourget who was
- to drive Mentone away that night&mdash;to the St. Eustace station&mdash;after
- they had throttled you. Now, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Dupont's
- eyes were afire; Monsieur Dupont assumed an attitude; Monsieur Dupont's
- arms wrapped themselves in a fold upon his breast&mdash;&ldquo;now, Monsieur le
- Curé, what do you say to that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is amazing!&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's hands, palms outward, were lifted in a
- gesture eminently clerical. &ldquo;Amazing! I can hardly credit it. Bourget then
- knows who this accomplice is?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No&mdash;<i>tonnerre</i>&mdash;that is the bad luck of it!&rdquo; scowled
- Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;But there is also good luck in it. I am on the scent. I
- am on the trail. I shall succeed, shall I not? Yes, certainly, I shall
- succeed. Very well then, listen! It was dark that night. The man went to
- Bourget's house and called Bourget outside. Bourget could not see what the
- fellow looked like. He gave Bourget fifty dollars, and promised still
- another fifty as soon as Bourget had Mentone in the wagon. And it was on
- your account, Monsieur le Curé, that he went to Bourget.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond was incredulous.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On mine?&rdquo; he gasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, certainly&mdash;on yours. It was to offer Bourget a chance to
- revenge himself on you. You see, eh? Yes, you see. He said he had heard of
- what you had done to Bourget. Very well! We have only to analyse that a
- little, and instantly we have a clue. You see where that brings us, eh,
- Monsieur le Curé?&rdquo; Raymond shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I must confess, I don't,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hah! No? <i>Tiens!</i>&rdquo; ejaculated Monsieur Dupont almost pityingly. &ldquo;It
- is easy to be seen, Monsieur le Curé, that you would make a very poor
- police officer, and an equally poor criminal&mdash;the law would have its
- fingers on you while you were wondering what to do. It is so, is it not?
- Yes, it is so. You are much better as a priest. As a priest&mdash;I pay
- you the compliment, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;you are incomparable. Very
- good! Listen, then! I will explain. The fellow said he had heard of your
- fight with Bourget. Splendid! Excellent! He must then have heard of it
- from <i>some one</i>. Therefore he has been seen in the neighbourhood by
- some one besides Bourget. Who is that 'some one' who has talked with a
- stranger, and who can very likely tell us what that stranger looks like,
- where Bourget cannot? I do not say that it is certain, but that it is
- likely. It may not have been so dark when he talked to this 'some one'&mdash;eh?
- In any case it is enough to go on. Now, you see, Monsieur le Curé, why I
- am here&mdash;I shall begin to question everybody; and for your part,
- Monsieur le Curé, you can do a great deal in letting the parish know what
- we are after.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond looked at Monsieur Dupont with admiration. Monsieur Dupont had set
- himself another &ldquo;vigil&rdquo;!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Without doubt, Monsieur Dupont!&rdquo; he assured the other heartily.
- &ldquo;Certainly, I will do my utmost to help you. I will have a notice posted
- on the church door.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; cried Monsieur Dupont, with a gratified smile. &ldquo;And now another
- matter&mdash;and one that will afford you satisfaction, Monsieur le Curé.
- In a day or so, I will see that Mother Blondin is the source of no more
- trouble in St. Marleau&mdash;or anywhere else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mother Blondin?&rdquo; repeated Raymond&mdash;and now he was suddenly conscious
- that he was in some way genuinely disturbed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Twice in the past we have searched her
- place. We knew she sold whisky. But she was too sharp for us&mdash;and
- those who bought knew how to keep their mouths shut. But with Bourget as a
- witness, it is different, eh? You see? Yes, you see. She is a fester, a
- sore. We will clean up the place; we will put her in jail. The air around
- here will be the sweeter for it, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Raymond soberly. &ldquo;No, Monsieur Dupont&rdquo;&mdash;his hands reached
- out and clasped on Monsieur Dupont's shoulders. He knew now what was
- disturbing him. It was that surge of pity for the proscribed old woman,
- that sense of miserable distress that he had experienced more than once
- before. The scene of that morning, when she had clung to the palings of
- the fence outside the graveyard while they shovelled the earth upon the
- coffin of her son, rose vividly before him. And it was he again who was
- bringing more trouble upon her now through his dealings with Jacques
- Bourget. Yes, it was pity&mdash;and more. It was a swiftly matured, but
- none the less determined, resolve to protect her. &ldquo;No, Monsieur Dupont, I
- beg of you&rdquo;&mdash;he shook his head gravely&mdash;&ldquo;no, Monsieur Dupont,
- you will not do that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Heh! No? And why not?&rdquo; demanded Monsieur Dupont in jerky astonishment. &ldquo;I
- thought you would ask for nothing better. She is already an <i>excommuniée</i>,
- and&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And she has suffered enough,&rdquo; said Raymond earnestly. &ldquo;It would seem that
- sorrow and misery had been the only life she had ever known. She is too
- old a woman now to have her home taken from her, and herself sent to jail.
- She is none too well, as it is. It would kill her. A little sympathy, a
- little kindness, Monsieur Dupont&mdash;it will succeed far better.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bah!&rdquo; sniffed Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;A little sympathy, a little kindness! And
- will that stop the whisky selling that the law demands shall be stopped,
- Monsieur le Curé?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will guarantee that,&rdquo; said Raymond calmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont clucked vigorously with his tongue. &ldquo;You will stop
- that! And besides other things, do you perform miracles, Monsieur le Curé?
- How will you do that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must leave it to me&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's hands tightened in friendly
- fashion on Monsieur Dupont's shoulders&mdash;&ldquo;I will guarantee it. If that
- is a miracle, I will attempt it. If I do not succeed I will tell you so,
- and then you will do as you see fit. You will agree, will you not,
- Monsieur Dupont?&mdash;and I shall be deeply grateful to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont shrugged his shoulders helplessly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have to tell you again that you are too soft-hearted, Monsieur le Curé.
- Yes, there is no other name for it&mdash;soft-hearted. And you will be
- made a fool of. I warn you! Well&mdash;very well! Try it, if you like. I
- give you a week. If at the end of a week&mdash;well, you understand? Yes,
- you understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand,&rdquo; said Raymond; and, with a final dap on Monsieur Dupont's
- shoulders, he dropped his hands. &ldquo;And I am of the impression that Monsieur
- le Curé is not the only one who is&mdash;soft-hearted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bah! Nothing of the sort! Nothing of the sort!&rdquo; snorted Monsieur Dupont
- in a sort of pleased repudiation, as he climbed back into the buckboard.
- &ldquo;It is only to open your eyes.&rdquo; He picked up the reins. &ldquo;I shall spend the
- rest of the day around here on that other business. Do not forget about
- the notice, Monsieur le Curé.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It shall be posted on the church door this afternoon,&rdquo; Raymond promised.
- </p>
- <p>
- He stood for a moment looking after Monsieur Dupont, as the other drove
- off; and then, turning abruptly, he walked rapidly along in the opposite
- direction, and, reaching the station road that led past old Mother
- Blondin's door, began to climb the hill. Yes, decidedly he would post a
- notice on the church door for Monsieur Dupont! If in any way he could aid
- Monsieur Dupont to lay hands on this accomplice of Henri Mentone, he&mdash;the
- derision that had crept to his lips faded away, and into the dark eyes
- came a sudden weariness. There was humour doubtless in the picture of
- Monsieur Dupont buttonholing every one he met, as he flitted indefatigably
- all over the country in pursuit for his mare's nest; but, somehow, he,
- Raymond, was not in the mood for laughter&mdash;for even a grim laughter.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a man waiting to be hanged; and, besides the man waiting to be
- hanged, there was&mdash;Valérie.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was Valérie who, come what would, some day, near or distant, whether
- he escaped or not, must inevitably know him finally for the man he was.
- Not that it would change her life, it was only those devils of hell who
- tried to insinuate that she cared; but to him it was a thought pregnant
- with an agony so great that he could <i>pray</i>&mdash;he who had thought
- never to bow the knee in sincerity to God&mdash;yes, that he could pray,
- without mimicry, without that hideous profanation upon his lips, that he
- might not stand despised, a contemptuous thing, a sacrilegious profligate,
- in the eyes of the woman whom he loved.
- </p>
- <p>
- He clenched his hands. He was not logical. If he cared so much as that why&mdash;no,
- here was specious argument! He <i>was</i> logical. His love for Valerie,
- great as it might be, great as it was, in the final analysis was hopeless.
- If he escaped, he could never return to the village, he could never return
- to her&mdash;to be recognised as the good, young Father Aubert; if he did
- not escape, if he&mdash;no, that was the &ldquo;afterwards,&rdquo; he would not
- consent to think of that&mdash;only if he did not escape there would be
- more than the hopelessness of this love to concern him, there would be
- death. Yes, he was logical. The love he knew for Valérie was but to mock
- him, to tantalise him with a vista of what, under other circumstances, he
- might have claimed by right of his manhood's franchise&mdash;if he had
- not, years ago, from a boy almost, bartered away that franchise to the
- devil. Well, was he to whimper now, and turn, like a craven thing, from
- the bitter dregs that, while the cup was still full and the dregs yet afar
- off, he had held in bald contempt and incredulous raillery! The dregs were
- here now. They were not bitter on his lips, they were bitter in his soul;
- they were bitter almost beyond endurance&mdash;but was he to whimper! Yes,
- he was logical.
- </p>
- <p>
- All else might be hopeless; but it was not hopeless that he might save his
- life. He had a right to fight for that, and he would fight for it as any
- man would fight&mdash;to the last.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had climbed the hill now, and was approaching old Mother Blondin's
- door. Logical! Yes, he was logical&mdash;but life was not all logic. In
- the abstract logic was doubtless a panacea that was all-embracing; in the
- presence of the actual it shrank back a futile thing from the dull gnawing
- of the heart and the misery of the soul. Perhaps that was why he was
- standing here at Mother Blondin's door now. God knew, she was miserable
- enough; God knew, that the dregs too were now at her lips! They were not
- unlike&mdash;old Mother Blon-din and himself. Theirs was a common cup.
- </p>
- <p>
- He knocked upon the door&mdash;and, as he knocked, he caught sight of the
- old woman's shrivelled face peering at him none too pleasantly from the
- window. And then her step, sullen and reluctant, crossed the floor, and
- she held the door open grudgingly a little way; and the space thus opened
- she blocked completely with her body.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What do you want?&rdquo; she demanded sourly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I would like to come in, Madame Blondin,&rdquo; Raymond answered pleasantly. &ldquo;I
- would like to have a little talk with you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you can't come in!&rdquo; she snarled defiantly. &ldquo;I don't want to talk to
- you, and I don't want you coming here! It is true I may have been fool
- enough to say you had a good heart, but I want nothing to do with you. You
- are perhaps not as bad as some of them; but you are all full of tricks
- with your smirking mouths! No priest would come here if he were not up to
- something. I am an <i>excommuniée</i>&mdash;eh? Well, I am satisfied!&rdquo; Her
- voice was beginning to rise shrilly. &ldquo;I don't know what you want, and I
- don't want to know; but you can't wheedle around me just because Jacques
- Bourget knocked me down, and you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is on account of Jacques Bourget that I want to speak to you,&rdquo; Raymond
- interposed soothingly. &ldquo;Bourget has been locked up in jail.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She stared at him, blinking viciously behind her glasses.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah! I thought so! That is like the whole tribe of you! You had him
- arrested!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Raymond. &ldquo;I did not have him arrested. You remember the note
- that was read out at the trial, Madame Blcndin&mdash;about the attempted
- escape of Henri Mentone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well?&rdquo;&mdash;Madame Blondin's animosity at the sight of a <i>soutane</i>
- was forgotten for the moment in a newly aroused interest. &ldquo;Well&mdash;what
- of it? I remember! What of it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It seems,&rdquo; said Raymond, &ldquo;that Monsieur Dupont has discovered that
- Bourget was to help in the escape.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Blondin cackled suddenly in unholy mirth. &ldquo;And so they arrested
- him, eh? Well, I am glad! Do you hear? I am glad! I hope they wring his
- neck for him! He would help the murderer of my son to escape, would he? I
- hope they hang him with the other!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They will not hang him,&rdquo; Raymond replied. &ldquo;He has given all the
- information in his possession to the police, and he is to go free. But it
- was because of that afternoon here that he was persuaded to help in the
- escape. He expected to revenge himself on me: and that story, too, Madame
- Blondin, is now known to the police. Bourget has confessed to buying
- whisky here, and is ready to testify as a witness against you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Le maudit!</i>&rdquo; Mother Blondin's voice rose in a virulent scream. &ldquo;I
- will tear his eyes out! Do you hear? I will show Jacques Bourget what he
- will get for telling on me! He has robbed me! He never pays! Well, he will
- pay for this! He will pay for this! I will find some one who will cut his
- tongue out! They are not all like Jacques Bourget, they are&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do not quite understand, Madame Blondin,&rdquo; Raymond interrupted
- gravely. &ldquo;It is not with Jacques Bourget that you are concerned now, it is
- with the police. Monsieur Dupont came to the village this afternoon&mdash;indeed,
- he is here now. He said he had evidence enough at last to close up this
- place and put you in jail, and that he was going to do so. You are in a
- very serious situation, Madame Blondin&rdquo;&mdash;he made as though to step
- forward&mdash;&ldquo;will you not let me come in, as a friend, and talk it over
- with you, and see what we can do?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mother Blondin's hand was like a claw in its bony thinness, as it gripped
- hard over the edge of the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, you will not come in!&rdquo; she shouted. &ldquo;You, or your Monsieur Dupont, or
- the police&mdash;you will not come in! Eh&mdash;they will take my home
- from me&mdash;all I've got&mdash;they will put me in jail&rdquo;&mdash;she was
- twisting her head about in a sort of pitiful inventory of her
- surroundings. &ldquo;They have been trying to run me out of St. Marleau for a
- long time&mdash;all the <i>good</i> people, the saintly people&mdash;you,
- and your hypocrites. They cross to the other side of the road to get out
- of old Mother Blondin's way! And so at last, between you, you have beaten
- an old woman, who has no one to protect her since you have killed her son!
- It is a victory&mdash;eh! Go tell them to ring the church bells&mdash;go
- tell them&mdash;go tell them! And on Sunday, eh, you will have something
- to preach about! It will make a fine sermon!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And somehow there came a lump into Raymond's throat. There was something
- fine in this wretched, tattered, unkempt figure before him&mdash;something
- of the indomitable, of the unconquerable in her spirit, misapplied though
- it was. Her voice fought bravely to hold its defiant, infuriated ring, to
- show no sign of the misery that had stolen into the dim old eyes, and was
- quivering on the wrinkled lips, but the voice had broken&mdash;once almost
- in a sob.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, no, Madame Blondin&rdquo;&mdash;he reached out his hand impulsively to lay
- it over the one that was clutched upon the door&mdash;&ldquo;you must not&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She snatched her hand away&mdash;and suddenly thrust her head through the
- partially open doorway into his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is not Bourget, it is not Jacques Bourget!&rdquo; she cried fiercely. &ldquo;It is
- you! If you had not come that afternoon when you had no business to come,
- this would not have happened. It is you, who&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is true,&rdquo; said Raymond quietly. &ldquo;And that is why I am here now. I
- have had a talk with Monsieur Dupont, and he will give you another
- chance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She still held her face close to his.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not believe you!&rdquo; she flung out furiously. &ldquo;I do not believe you! It
- is some trick you are trying to play! I know Monsieur Dupont! I know him!
- He would give no one a chance if he could help it! I have been too much
- for him for a long time, and if he had evidence against me now he would
- give me not a minute to sell any more of&mdash;of what he thinks I sell
- here!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That also is true,&rdquo; said Raymond, as quietly as before. &ldquo;He could not
- very well permit you to go on breaking the law if he could prevent it. But
- in exchange for his promise, I have given him a pledge that you will not
- sell any more whisky.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She straightened up&mdash;and stared at him, half in amazement, half in
- crafty suspicion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, then, so it is you, and not Monsieur Dupont, who is going to stop it&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
- she exclaimed, with a shrill laugh. &ldquo;And how do you intend to do it&mdash;eh?
- How do you intend to do it? Tell me that!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think it will be very simple,&rdquo; said Raymond&mdash;and his dark eyes,
- full of a kindly sympathy, looked into hers. &ldquo;To save your home, and you,
- I have pledged myself to Monsieur Dupont that this will stop, and so&mdash;well,
- Madame Blondin, and so I have come to put you upon your honour to make
- good my pledge.&rdquo; She craned her head forward again to peer into his face.
- She looked at him for a long minute without a word. Her lips alternately
- tightened and were tremulous. The fingers of her hand plucked at the
- door's edge. And then she threw back her head in a quavering, jeering
- laugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ha, ha! Old Mother Blondin upon her honour&mdash;think of that! You, a
- smooth-tongued priest&mdash;and me, an <i>excommuniée!</i> Ha, ha! Think
- of that! And what did Monsieur Dupont say, eh&mdash;what did Monsieur
- Dupont say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He said what I know is not true,&rdquo; said Raymond simply. &ldquo;He said you would
- make a fool of me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, he said that!&rdquo;&mdash;she jerked her head forward again sharply.
- &ldquo;Well, Monsieur Dupont is wrong, and you are right. I would not do that,
- because I could not&mdash;since you have already made one of yourself! Ha,
- ha! Old Mother Blondin upon her <i>honour!</i> Ha, ha! It is a long while
- since I have heard that&mdash;and from a priest&mdash;ha, ha! How could
- any one make a fool of a fool!&rdquo; Her voice was high-pitched again, fighting
- for its defiance; but, somehow, where she strove to infuse venom, there
- seemed only a pathetic wistfulness instead. &ldquo;And so you would trust old
- Mother Blondin&mdash;eh? Well&rdquo;&mdash;she slammed the door suddenly in his
- face, and her voice came muffled through the panels&mdash;&ldquo;well, you are a
- fool!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The bolt within rasped into place&mdash;and Raymond, turned away, and
- began to descend the hill.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mother Blondin for the moment was in the grip of a sullen pride that bade
- her rise in arms against this fresh outlook on life; but Mother Blondin
- would close and bolt yet another door, unless he was very much mistaken&mdash;the
- rear door, and in the faces of her erstwhile and unhallowed clientele!
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, he had pity for the old woman who had no kin now, and who had no
- friends. Pity! He owed her more than that! So then&mdash;there came a
- sudden thought&mdash;so then, why not? He would not long be curé of St.
- Marleau, but while he was&mdash;well, he was the curé of St. Marleau! He
- could not remove the ban of excommunication, that was beyond the authority
- of a mere curé, it would require at least Monsignor the Bishop to do that;
- but he could remove the ban&mdash;of ostracism! Yes, decidedly, the good,
- young Father Aubert could do that! He was vaguely conscious that there
- were degrees of excommunication, and he seemed to remember that Valérie
- had said it was but a minor one that had been laid upon Mother Blondin,
- and that the villagers of their own accord had drawn more and more aloof.
- It would, therefore, not be very difficult.
- </p>
- <p>
- He quickened his step, and, reaching the bottom of the hill, made his way
- at once toward the carpenter shop. He could see Madame Bouchard hoeing in
- the little garden patch between the road and the front of the shop. It was
- Madame Bouchard that he now desired to see.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens! Bon jour</i>, Madame Bouchard!&rdquo; he called out to her, as he
- approached. &ldquo;I am come a penitent! I did not deserve your bread! I am sure
- that you are vexed with me! But I have not seen you since to thank you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She came forward to where Raymond now leaned upon the fence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; she exclaimed laughingly. &ldquo;How can you say such
- things! Fancy! The idea! Vexed with you! It is only if you really liked
- it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;H'm!&rdquo; drawled Raymond teasingly, pretending to deliberate. &ldquo;When do you
- bake again, Madame Bouchard?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She laughed outright now.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To-morrow, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;and I shall see that you are not
- forgotten.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a long way off&mdash;to-morrow,&rdquo; said Raymond mournfully; and then,
- with a quick smile: &ldquo;But only one loaf this time, Madame Bouchard, instead
- of two.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nonsense!&rdquo; she returned. &ldquo;It is a great pleasure. And what are two little
- loaves!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A great deal,&rdquo; said Raymond, suddenly serious. &ldquo;A very great deal, Madame
- Bouchard; and especially so if you send one of the two loaves to some one
- else that I know of.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some one else?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond. &ldquo;To Mother Blondin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To&mdash;Mother Blondin!&rdquo;&mdash;Madame Bouchard stared in utter
- amazement. &ldquo;But&mdash;but, Monsieur le Curé, you are not in earnest! She&mdash;she
- is an <i>excommuniée</i>, and we&mdash;we do not&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think it would make her very glad,&rdquo; said Raymond softly. &ldquo;And Mother
- Blondin I think has&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was on the tip of his tongue to say that Mother Blondin was not likely
- now to sell any more whisky at the tavern, but he checked himself. It was
- Mother Blondin who must be left to tell of that herself. If he spread such
- a tale, she would be more likely than not to rebel at a situation which
- she would probably conceive was being thrust forcibly down her throat;
- and, in pure spite at what she might also conceive to be a self-preening
- and boastful spirit on his part for his superiority over her, sell all the
- more, no matter what the consequences to herself. And so he changed what
- he was about to say. &ldquo;And Mother Blondin I think has known but little
- gladness in her life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&mdash;but, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she gasped, &ldquo;what would the neighbours
- say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hope,&rdquo; said Raymond, &ldquo;that they would say they too would send her
- loaves&mdash;of kindness.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Bouchard leaned heavily upon her hoe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is many years, Monsieur le Curé, since almost I was a little girl,
- that any one has willingly had anything to do with the old woman on the
- hill.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond gently. &ldquo;And will you think of that, Madame Bouchard,
- when you bake to-morrow&mdash;the many years&mdash;and the few that are
- left&mdash;for the old woman on the hill.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The tears had sprung to Madame Bouchard's eyes. He left her standing
- there, leaning on the hoe.
- </p>
- <p>
- He went on along the road toward the <i>presbytère</i>. It had been a
- strange afternoon&mdash;an illogical one, an imaginary one almost. It
- seemed to have been a jumble of complexities, and incongruities, and
- unrealities&mdash;there was the man who was to be hanged by the neck until
- he was dead; and Monsieur Dupont who, through a very natural deduction and
- not because he was a fool, for Monsieur Dupont was very far from a fool,
- was now vainly engaged like a dog circling around in a wild effort to
- catch his own tail; and there was Mother Blondin who had another window to
- gaze from; and Madame Bouchard who had still another. Yes, it had been a
- strange afternoon&mdash;only now that voice in the courtroom was beginning
- to ring in his ears again. &ldquo;Father&mdash;Father François Aubert&mdash;help
- me&mdash;I do not understand.&rdquo; And the gnawing was at his soul again, and
- again his hat was lifted from his head to cool his fevered brow.
- </p>
- <p>
- And as he reached the church there came to him the sound of organ notes,
- and instead of crossing to the <i>presbytère</i> he stepped softly inside
- to listen&mdash;it would be Valérie&mdash;Valérie, and Gauthier Beaulieu,
- the altar boy, probably, who often pumped the organ for her when she was
- at practice. But as he stepped inside the music ceased, and instead he
- heard them talking in the gallery, and in the stillness of the church
- their voices came to him distinctly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Valérie&rdquo;&mdash;yes, that was the boy's voice&mdash;&ldquo;Valérie, why do they
- call him the good, young Father Aubert?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Such a question!&rdquo; Valérie laughed. &ldquo;Why do you call him that yourself?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't&mdash;any more,&rdquo; asserted the boy. &ldquo;Not after what I saw at mass
- this morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond drew his breath in sharply. What was this! What was this that
- Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar boy, had seen at mass! He had fooled the boy&mdash;the
- boy could not have seen anything! He drew back, opening the door
- cautiously. They were coming down the stairs now&mdash;but he must hear&mdash;hear
- what it was that Gauthier Beaulieu had seen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, what do you mean, Gauthier?&rdquo; Valérie asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I mean what I say,&rdquo; insisted the boy doggedly. &ldquo;It is not right to call
- him that! When he was kneeling there this morning, and I guess it was the
- bright light because the stained window was open, for I never saw it
- before, I saw his hair all specked with white around his temples. And a
- man with white in his hair isn't young, is he! And I saw it, Valérie&mdash;honest,
- I did!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your eyes should have been closed,&rdquo; said Valérie. &ldquo;And&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond was crossing the green to the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVIII&mdash;THE CALL IN THE NIGHT
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T was very dark
- here in the front room, and somehow the darkness seemed tangible to the
- touch, like something oppressive, like the folds of a pall that was spread
- over him, and which he could not thrust aside. And it was still, and very
- quiet&mdash;save for the voices, and save that it seemed he could hear
- that faltering, irregular step from the rear room, where there was no
- longer any step to hear.
- </p>
- <p>
- Surely it would be daylight soon&mdash;the merciful daylight. The darkness
- and the night were meant only for sleep, and it was an eternity since he
- had slept&mdash;no, not an eternity, only a week&mdash;it was only a week
- since he had slept. No, that was not true either&mdash;there had been
- hours, not many of them, but there had been hours when his eyes had been
- closed and he had not been conscious of his surroundings, but those hours
- had been even more horrible than when he had tossed on his bed awake. They
- had brought neither rest nor oblivion&mdash;they were full of dreams that
- were hideous&mdash;and the dreams would not leave him when he was awake&mdash;and
- the sleep when it came was a curse because the dreams remained to cast an
- added blight upon his wakefulness&mdash;and he had come even to fight
- against sleep and to resist it because the dreams remained.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dreams! There was always the dream of the Walled Place which&mdash;no! Not
- that&mdash;<i>now!</i> Not that! Yes! The dream of the Walled Place. See&mdash;it
- went like this: He was in a sort of cavernous gloom in which he could not
- see very distinctly, but he was obsessed with the knowledge that there
- were hidden things from which he must escape. So he would run frantically
- around and around, following four square walls which were so high that the
- tops merged into the gloom; and the walls, as he touched them with his
- hands, seeking an opening, were wet with a slime that grew upon them.
- Then, looming out of the centre of this place, he would suddenly see what
- it was that he was running away from. There was a form, a human form, with
- something black over its head, that swayed to and fro, and was suspended
- from a bar that reached across from one wall to another; and on the top of
- this bar there roosted a myriad winged creatures like gigantic bats, only
- their eyes blazed, and they had enormous claws&mdash;and suddenly these
- vampires would rise with a terrifying crackling of their wings, and
- shrill, abominable screams, and swirl and circle over him, drawing nearer
- and nearer until his blood ran cold&mdash;and then, shrieking like a
- maniac, he would run again around and around the walls, beating at the
- slime until his hands bled. And the screaming things with outstretched
- talons followed him, and he stumbled and fell, and fell again, and
- shrieked out in his terror of these inhuman vultures that had roosted
- above the swaying thing with the black-covered head&mdash;and just as they
- were settling upon him there was an opening in the wall where there had
- been no opening before, and with his last strength he struggled toward it&mdash;and
- the way was blocked. The opening had become a gate that was all studded
- with iron spikes which if he rushed upon it would impale him, and which
- Valerie was closing&mdash;and as she closed it her head was averted, and
- one hand was thrown across her eyes, its palm toward him, as though she
- would not look upon his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's hands were wet with perspiration. They slipped from the arms of
- his chair, and hung downward at his sides. What time was it? It had been
- midnight when he had risen fully dressed from his bed in the rear room&mdash;that
- he occupied now that they had taken the man away to jail&mdash;and had
- come in here to sit at the desk. Since then the clock had struck many
- times, the half hours, and the hours. Ah&mdash;listen! It was striking
- again. One&mdash;two&mdash;three! Three o'clock! It was still a long way
- off, the daylight&mdash;the merciful daylight. The voices did not plague
- him so constantly in the warmth of the sunshine. Three o'clock! It would
- be five o'clock before the dawn came.
- </p>
- <p>
- They had changed, those voices, in the last week&mdash;at least there was
- a new voice that had come, and an old one that did not recur so
- insistently. &ldquo;Father&mdash;Father François Aubert&mdash;help me&mdash;I do
- not understand&rdquo;&mdash;yes, that was still dinning forever in his ears;
- but, instead of that voice which said some one was to be hanged by the
- neck until dead, the new voice had quite a different thing to say. It was
- the voice of the &ldquo;afterwards.&rdquo; Hark! There it was now: &ldquo;What fine and
- subtle shade of distinction is there between being hanged and imprisoned
- for life; what difference does it make, what difference could it make,
- what difference will it make&mdash;why do you temporise?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had fought with all his strength against that &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;&mdash;and it
- was stronger than he. He could not evade the issue that was flung at him,
- and flung again and again until his brain writhed in agony with it. He was
- a gambler, but he was not a blind gambler. He did not want the man to lose
- his life, or his freedom for all of life&mdash;he did not want to lose his
- own life. While the appeal was pending <i>something</i> might happen, a
- thousand things might happen, there was always, always a chance. He would
- not throw away that chance&mdash;only a fool who had lost his nerve would
- do that. But he was not blind. The chance was one where the odds against
- him staggered him&mdash;there was so little chance that, fight as he would
- to escape it, logic and plain common sense had forced upon him the
- &ldquo;afterwards.&rdquo; And these days while the appeal was pending were like
- remorseless steps that led on and on to end only upon the brink of a
- yawning chasm, whose depth and whose blackness were as the depth and
- blackness of hell, and over which he sprang suddenly erect, his head flung
- back, the strong jaws clamped like a vise. Who had brought this torture
- upon him? He could not sleep! He knew no repose! God, or devil, or power
- infernal&mdash;who was it? Neither sleep nor repose might be his, but he
- was unbroken yet, and he could still fight! He asked only that&mdash;that
- the author of this torment stand before him&mdash;and fight! Why should
- he, unless the one meagre hope that something might happen in the meantime
- be fulfilled, why should he stand faced with the choice of swinging like a
- felon from the gallows, or of allowing that other innocent man to go to
- his doom? Yes, why should he submit to this torture, when that
- scarred-faced blackguard had brought his death upon himself&mdash;why
- should he submit to it, when it was so easy to escape it all! Once, that
- night in Ton-Nugget Camp, he had flung down the gauntlet in the face of
- God, and in the face of hell, and in the face of man, and in the face of
- beast. Was he a weakling and a fool now who had not sense enough to seize
- his opportunity to be quit of this, and to go his way, and live again the
- full, red-blooded, reckless life that he had lived since he was a boy, and
- that now, a young man still, beckoned to him with allurements as yet
- untasted! To-morrow&mdash;no, to-day when the daylight came&mdash;he had
- only to borrow Bouchard's boat, and the boat upturned would be found, and
- St. Mar-leau would mourn the loss of the good, young Father Aubert whose
- body had been swept out to sea, and the law would take its course on the
- man in the condemned cell, and Three-Ace Artie would be as free and
- untrammelled as the air&mdash;yes, and a coward, and a crawling thing, and&mdash;the
- paroxysm of fury passed. He sagged against the desk. This was the
- &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;&mdash;but why should it come now! Between now and then there
- was a chance that something might intervene. He had only been trying to
- delude himself when he had said that in a life sentence there was all of
- time to plan and plot&mdash;he knew that. And he knew, too, that he was no
- more content that the man should be imprisoned for life than that the man
- should hang&mdash;that one was the equal of the other. He knew that this
- &ldquo;all of time&rdquo; was ended when the appeal was decided. He knew all that&mdash;that
- voice would not let him juggle with myths any more. But that moment had
- not come yet&mdash;there were still weeks before it would come&mdash;and
- in those weeks there lay a hope, a chance, a gambling chance that
- something might happen. And even in the appeal there lay a hope too, not
- that the sentence might be commuted to life imprisonment, that changed
- nothing now, but that they might perhaps after all consider the man's
- condition sufficient reason for not holding him to account for murder, and
- might therefore, instead, place him under medical treatment somewhere
- until, if ever, he recovered. He, Raymond, had not struck the man, he had
- not in even a remote particular been responsible for the man's wound, or
- the ensuing condition, and if the man were turned over to medical
- supervision the man automatically ceased to have any claim upon him.
- </p>
- <p>
- But that was not likely to happen&mdash;it was only one of those thousand
- things that <i>might</i> happen&mdash;nothing was likely to happen except
- that the man would be hanged. And when that time came, if the appeal were
- lost and every one of those thousand chances swept away, and the only
- thing that could save the man's life would be to&mdash;God, would he never
- stop this! Would his mind never, even through utter exhaustion, cease its
- groping in this horrible turmoil! On, on, on! His brain was remorselessly
- driven on! It was like&mdash;like a slave that, already lacerated and
- bleeding, was lashed on again to renewed effort by some monstrous, brutal
- and inhuman master!
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, when that time came, and if that chance were gone, and supposing he
- gave himself up to stand in the other's place, could he in any way evade
- the rope, wriggle away from that dangling noose? Was there a loophole in
- the evidence anywhere? If only in some way he could prove that the act had
- been committed in self-defence! He had feared to risk such a plea that
- night, because he had feared that his own past would condemn him out of
- hand; and, moreover, however that might have been, the man lying in the
- road, whom he had thought dead, had seemed to offer the means of washing
- his hands for good and all of the whole matter. Self-defence! Ha, ha!
- Listen to those devils laugh! It was his own hand that had tied the knot
- in the noose so that it would never slip&mdash;it was he who had so
- cunningly supplied all the attendant details that irrevocably placed the
- stamp of robbery and murder upon the doings of that night. Here there was
- no delusion; here, where delusion was sought again, there was no delusion&mdash;if
- he gave himself up he would hang&mdash;hang by the neck until he was dead&mdash;and,
- since he had desecrated God's holy places, he would hang without the mercy
- of God upon his soul. Well, what odds did that make&mdash;whether there
- was mercy of God upon his soul-or not! Was there anything in common
- between&mdash;no, that was not what he had to think about now&mdash;it was
- quite another matter.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suppose, when he was forced to fling down his hand finally, that instead
- of giving himself up, or instead of making it appear that the good, young
- Father Aubert was dead&mdash;suppose that he simply made an escape from
- St. Marleau such as he had planned for Henri Mentone that night? He could
- at least secure a few hours' start, and then, from somewhere, before it
- was too late, send back, say, a written confession. He could always do
- that. Surely that would save the man. They would hunt for him, Raymond, as
- they would hunt for a wild beast that had run amuck, and they would hunt
- for him for the rest of his life, and in the end they might even catch him&mdash;but
- that was the chance he would have to accept. Yes, here was another way&mdash;only
- why did not this way bring rest, and repose, and satisfaction, and sleep?
- And why ask the question? He knew&mdash;he knew why! It was&mdash;Valérie.
- It was not a big way, it was not a man's way&mdash;and in Valerie's eyes
- at the last, not absolving him, not even that she might endure the better,
- for it could not intimately affect her, there was left to him only the one
- redeeming act, the one thing that would lift him above contempt and
- loathing, and that was that she should know him&mdash;for a <i>man</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Life, the mere act of breathing, of knowing a concrete existence, was not
- everything; it did not embrace everything, it was not even a state that
- was not voluntarily to be surrendered to greater things, to&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A fool and a woman's face, and blatant sophistry, and mock heroics!&rdquo;&mdash;that
- inner monitor, with its gibe and sneer, was back again. Its voice, too,
- must make itself heard!
- </p>
- <p>
- He raised his hands and pressed them tight against his throbbing temples.
- This was hell's debating society, and he must listen to the arguments and
- decide upon their merits and pronounce upon them, for he was the presiding
- officer and the decision remained with him! How they gabbled, and
- shrieked, and whispered, and jeered, and interrupted each other, and would
- not keep order&mdash;those voices! Though now for the moment that inner
- voice kept drowning all the others out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You had your chance! If you hadn't turned squeamish that night when all
- you needed to do was to hold a pillow over the man's face for a few
- minutes, you wouldn't have had any of this now! How much good will it do
- you what <i>she</i> thinks&mdash;when they get through burying you in lime
- under the jail walls!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was dark, very dark here in the room. That was the window over there in
- that direction, but there was not even any grayness showing, no sign yet
- of daylight&mdash;no sign yet of daylight. Why would they not let him
- alone, these voices, until the time came when he <i>must</i> act? That was
- all he asked. In the interval something might&mdash;his hands dropped to
- his sides, and he half slipped, half fell into his chair, and his head
- went forward over the desk. Was all that to begin over again&mdash;and
- commence with the dream of the Walled Place! No, no; he would not let it&mdash;<i>he
- would not let it!</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- He would think about something else; force himself to think&mdash;rationally&mdash;about
- something else. Well then, the man in the condemned cell, whom he had not
- dared refuse to visit, and whom he had gone twice that week to see? No&mdash;-not
- that, either! The man was always sitting on that cursed cot with his hands
- clasped dejectedly between his knees, and the iron bars robbed the
- sunlight of warmth, and it was cold, and the man's eyes haunted him. No&mdash;not
- that, either! He had to go and see the man again to-morrow&mdash;and that
- was enough&mdash;and that was enough!
- </p>
- <p>
- Well then, Mother Blondin? Yes, that was better! He could even laugh
- ironically at that&mdash;at old Mother Blondin. Old Mother Blondin was
- falling under the spell of the example set by the good, young Father
- Aubert! Some of the old habitués, he had heard, were beginning to grumble
- because it was becoming difficult to obtain whisky at the tavern. The
- Madame Bouchards were crowding the habitues out; and the old woman on the
- hill, even if with occasional sullen and stubborn relapses, was slowly
- yielding to the advances of St. Marleau that he had inaugurated through
- the carpenter's v/ife. Ah&mdash;he had thought to laugh at this, had he!
- Laugh! He might well keep his head buried miserably in his arms here upon
- the desk! Laugh! It brought instead only a profound and bitter loneliness.
- He was alone, utterly alone, isolated and cut off in a world where there
- was the sound of no human voice, the touch of no human hand, alone&mdash;amidst
- people whose smiles greeted him on every hand, amidst people who admired
- and loved him, and listened reverently to the words of God that fell from
- his lips. But they loved, and admired, and gave their friendship, not to
- the man he was, but to the man they thought he was&mdash;to the good,
- young Father Aubert. That was what was actuating even Mother Blondin! And
- the life that he had led as the good, young Father Aubert was being held
- up to him now as in a mental mirror that lay bare to his gaze his naked
- soul. They loved him, these people; they had faith in him&mdash;and a
- pure, unswerving faith in the religion, and in the God as whose holy
- priest he masqueraded!
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's lips twisted in pain. The love of these people struck to the
- heart, and the pang hurt. It would have been a glad thing to have won this
- love&mdash;for himself. And he was requiting what they gave in their
- ignorance by defiling what meant most in life to them&mdash;the holy
- things they worshipped. It was strange&mdash;strange how of late he had
- sought, in a sort of pitiful atonement for the wrong he had done them, to
- put sincerity into the words that, before, he had only mumbled at the
- church altar! Yes, he had earned their love and their respect, and he was
- the good, young Father Aubert, and the life he had led amongst them was a
- blasphemous lie&mdash;but it had not been the motives of a hypocrite that
- had actuated him. It had not been that the devil desired to pose as a
- saint. He stood acquitted before even God of that. He had sought only,
- fought only, asked only&mdash;for his life.
- </p>
- <p>
- A sham, a pretence, a lie&mdash;it was abhorrent, damnable&mdash;it was
- not even Three-Ace Artie's way&mdash;and he was chained to it in every
- word and thought and act. There&mdash;that thing that loomed up through
- the darkness there a few inches from him&mdash;that was one of the lies.
- That was a typewriter he had rented in Tour-nayville and had brought back
- when returning from his last visit to the jail. Personal letters had begun
- to arrive for Father François Aubert. He might duplicate a signature, but
- he could not imitate pages of the man's writings. And he could not dictate
- a letter to-the man's <i>mother</i>&mdash;and meet Valérie's eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie! Out in that world where he was set apart, out in that world of
- inhuman isolation, this was the loneliness that was greatest of all.
- Valérie! Valérie! It seemed as though he were held in some machiavellian
- bondage, free to move and act, free in all things save one&mdash;he could
- not pass the border of his prison-land. But he, Raymond Chapelle, could
- look out over the border of his prison-land, and watch this woman, whose
- face was pure and beautiful, as she walked about, and talked, and was
- constantly in the company of a young priest, who was the good, young
- Father Aubert, the Curé of St. Marleau. And because he had watched her
- hungrily for many days, and knew the smile that came so gladly to the
- sweet lips, and because he had looked into the clear, steadfast eyes, and
- listened to her voice, and because she was just Valérie, he had come to
- the knowledge of a great love&mdash;and a great, torturing, envious
- jealousy of this man, cloaked in priestly garb, who was forever at her
- side.
- </p>
- <p>
- His lips moved, but no sound came from them. Valérie! Valérie! Why had she
- not come into his life before! Before&mdash;when? Before that night at
- Mother Blondin's? Was he not man enough to look the truth in the face!
- That night was only a culminating incident of a life that went back many
- years to the days when&mdash;when there had been no Valérie either! But it
- was too late to think of that now&mdash;now that Valérie had come, come as
- a final, terrible punishment, holding up before him, through bitter
- contrast, the hollow worthlessness of the stakes that, when the choice had
- been freely his, he had chosen to play for!
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie! Valérie! His soul was calling out to her. A life with Valérie!
- What would it not have meant? The dear love that she might have given him&mdash;the
- priceless love that he might have won! Gone! Gone forever! No, it was not
- gone, for it had never been. He thanked God for that. Yes, there must be a
- God who had brought this about, for while he flouted this God in the dress
- of this God's priest, this God utilised that very act to save Valérie, who
- trusted this God, from the misery and sorrow and hopelessness that must
- have come to her with love. She could not love a priest; there could be no
- thought of such a thing for Valérie. This God had set that barrier there&mdash;to
- protect her. Yes, he thanked God for that; he thanked God he had not
- brought this hurt upon her&mdash;and those minions of hell, who tried to
- tantalise, and with their insidious deviltry tried to make him think
- otherwise, were powerless here. But that did not appease the yearning;
- that did not answer the cry of his heart and soul.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie! Valérie! Valérie! He was calling to her with all his strength
- from the border of that prison-land. Valérie! Valérie! Would his voice not
- reach her! Would she not turn her head and smile! Valérie! Valérie! He
- wanted her now in his hour of agony, in this hour of terrible loneliness,
- in this hour when his brain rocked and reeled on the verge of madness.
- </p>
- <p>
- How still it was&mdash;and how dark! There were no voices now&mdash;only
- the voice of his soul calling, calling, calling for Valérie&mdash;calling
- for what he could never have&mdash;calling for the touch of her hand to
- guide him&mdash;calling for her smile to help him on his way. Yes, Valérie&mdash;he
- was calling Valérie&mdash;he was calling to her from the depths of his
- being. Out into the night, out into the everywhere, he was flinging his
- piteous, soundless cry, and God, if God would, might listen, and know that
- His revenge was taken; and hell might listen, and shriek its mirth&mdash;they
- would not silence him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie! Valérie! No, there was no answer. There would never be an answer&mdash;but
- he would always call. Through the years to come, if there were those years
- to reckon with, he would call as he was calling now. Valérie! Valérie!
- Valérie! She would not hear&mdash;she would not answer&mdash;she would not
- know. But he would call&mdash;because he loved her.
- </p>
- <p>
- A sob shook his bowed shoulders. A hand in agony gathered and crushed a
- fold of flesh from the forehead that lay upon it. Valérie! Valérie! He did
- not cry out. He made no sound. It was still, still as the living death in
- that prison-land&mdash;and then&mdash;and then he was swaying to his feet,
- and clutching with both hands at the desk, for support. Valérie! The door
- was open, and a soft light filled the room. Valérie! Valérie was standing
- there on the threshold, holding a lamp in her hand. It was phantasm! A
- vision! It was not real! It was not Valérie! His mind was a broken thing
- at last! It was not Valérie&mdash;but that was Valérie's voice&mdash;that
- was Valérie's voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lamp shook a little unsteadily in her hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you call?&rdquo; she asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not answer&mdash;only looked at her, as though in truth she were a
- vision that had come to him. She was in dressing-gown; and her hair,
- loosely knotted, framed her face in dark, waving tresses; and her eyes
- were wide, startled and perplexed, as they fixed upon him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I thought I heard you call,&rdquo; she faltered.
- </p>
- <p>
- All the gladness, all the joy in life, all that the world could hold
- seemed for an instant his. All else was forgotten&mdash;all else but that
- singing in his heart&mdash;all else but that fierce, elemental,
- triumphant, mighty joy lifting him high to a pinnacle that reared itself
- supreme, commanding and immortal, far beyond the reach of that sea of
- torment which had engulfed him. Valérie had heard him call&mdash;and she
- had answered&mdash;and she was here. Valérie was here&mdash;she had come
- to him. Valérie had heard him call&mdash;and she was here. And then
- beneath his feet that pinnacle, so supreme, commanding and immortal,
- seemed to dissolve away, and that sea of torment closed over him again,
- and all those voices that plagued him, mocking, jeering, screaming,
- shrieking, were like a horrible requiem ringing in his ears. She had heard
- him call&mdash;and he had made no sound&mdash;only his soul had spoken..
- And she had answered. And she was here&mdash;here now&mdash;standing there
- on the threshold. <i>Why?</i> He dared not answer. It was a blessed thing,
- a wonderful, glorious thing&mdash;-and it was a terrible thing, a thing of
- misery and despair. What was he doing now&mdash;<i>answering</i> that
- &ldquo;why&rdquo;! No, no&mdash;it was not true&mdash;it could not be true. He had
- thanked God that it could not be so. It was not that&mdash;<i>that</i> was
- not the reason she had heard him call&mdash;that was not the reason she
- was here. It was not! It was not! It was only those insidious&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- He heard himself speaking; he was conscious that his voice by some miracle
- was low, grave, contained. &ldquo;No, Mademoiselle Valérie, I did not call.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The colour was slowly leaving her cheeks, and into her eyes came creeping
- confusion and dismay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It&mdash;it is strange,&rdquo; she said nervously. &ldquo;I was asleep, and I thought
- I heard you call for&mdash;for help, and I got up and lighted the lamp,
- and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Was that his laugh&mdash;quiet, gentle, reassuring? Was he so much in
- command of himself as that? Was it the gambler, or the priest, or&mdash;great
- God!&mdash;the lover now? She was here&mdash;she had come to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was a dream, Mademoiselle Valérie,&rdquo; he was saying. &ldquo;A very terrible
- dream, I am afraid, if I was the subject of it; but, see, it is nothing to
- cause you distress, and to-morrow you will laugh over it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not reply at once. She was very pale now; and her lips, though
- tightly closed, were quivering. Nor did she look at him. Her eyes were on
- the floor. Her hand mechanically drew and held the dressing-gown closer
- about her throat.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had not moved from the side of the desk, nor she from the threshold of
- the door&mdash;and now she looked up suddenly, and held the lamp in her
- hand a little higher, and her eyes searched his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It must be very late&mdash;very, very late,&rdquo; she said steadily. &ldquo;And you
- have not gone to bed. There is something the matter. What is it? Will you
- tell me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, yes!&rdquo; he said&mdash;and smiled. &ldquo;But, yes&mdash;I will tell you. It
- is very simple. I think perhaps I was overtired. In any case, I was
- restless and could not sleep, and so I came in here, and&mdash;well, since
- I must confess&mdash;I imagine I finally fell asleep in my chair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is that all?&rdquo; she asked&mdash;and there was a curious insistence in her
- voice. &ldquo;You look as though you were ill. Are you telling me all?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Everything!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;And I am not ill, Mademoiselle Valérie&rdquo;&mdash;he
- laughed again&mdash;&ldquo;you would hear me complain fast enough if I were! I
- am not a model patient.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head, as though she would not enter into the lightness of
- his reply; and again her eyes sought the floor. And, as he watched her,
- the colour now came and went from her cheeks, and there was trouble in her
- face, and hesitancy, and irresolution.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, Mademoiselle Valérie?&rdquo;&mdash;his forced lightness was gone
- now. She was frightened, and nervous, and ill at ease&mdash;that she
- should be standing here like this at this hour of night, of course. Yes,
- that was it. Naturally that would be so. He lifted his hand and drew it
- heavily across his forehead. She was frightened. If he might only take her
- in his arms, and draw her head to his shoulder, and hold her there, and
- soothe her! It seemed that all his being cried to him to do that. &ldquo;Well,
- why don't you?&rdquo;&mdash;that inner voice was flashing the suggestion quick
- upon him&mdash;&ldquo;well, why don't you? You could do it as a priest, in the
- rôle of priest, you know&mdash;like a father to one of his flock. Go
- ahead, here's your chance&mdash;be the priest, be the priest! Don't you
- want to hold her in your arms&mdash;be the priest, be the priest!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She had not answered his question. He found himself answering it for her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, Mademoiselle Valérie? You must not let a dream affect you,
- you know. It is gone now. And you can see that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is strange&rdquo;&mdash;she spoke almost to herself. &ldquo;I&mdash;I was so sure
- that I heard you call.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Why was he not moving toward her? Why was he clinging in a sort of
- tenacious frenzy to the desk? Why was he not obeying the promptings of
- that inner voice? It would be quite a natural thing to do what that voice
- prompted&mdash;and Valérie, Valérie who would never be his, would for a
- moment, snatched out of all eternity, be in his arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you must not let such a thing as a dream affect you&rdquo;&mdash;he seemed
- to be speaking without volition of his own, and he seemed stupidly able to
- say but the same thing over again. &ldquo;And, see, it is over, and you are
- awake now to find that no one is really in trouble after all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then she raised her head&mdash;and suddenly, but as though she were
- afraid even of her own act, as though she still fought against some
- decision she had forced upon herself, she walked slowly forward into the
- room, and set the lamp down upon the desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, there is some one in trouble&rdquo;&mdash;the words came steadily, but
- scarcely above a whisper; and her hand was tense about the white throat
- now, where before it had mechanically clutched at the dressing-gown. &ldquo;I am
- in trouble&mdash;Father Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You&mdash;Valérie!&rdquo; He was conscious, even in his startled exclamation,
- of a strange and disturbing prescience. Father Aubert&mdash;he could not
- remember when she had called him that before&mdash;<i>Father</i> Aubert.
- It was very rarely that she called him that, it was almost always Monsieur
- le Curé. And he&mdash;her name&mdash;he had called her Valérie&mdash;not
- Mademoiselle Valérie&mdash;but Valérie, as once before, when she had stood
- out there in the hall the night they had taken that man away, her name had
- sprung spontaneously to his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, and bowed her head. &ldquo;I am in trouble, father; for I have
- sinned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sinned&mdash;Valérie&rdquo;&mdash;the words were stumbling on his lips. How
- fast that white throat throbbed! Valérie, pure and innocent, meant perhaps
- to confess to&mdash;<i>Father</i> Aubert. Well, she should not, and she
- would not! Not that! She should not have to remember in the &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;
- that she had bared her soul at the shrine of profanity. Back again into
- his voice he forced a cheery, playful reassurance. &ldquo;It cannot be a very
- grievous sin that Mademoiselle Valérie has been guilty of! Of that, I am
- sure! And to-morrow&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; she cried out. &ldquo;You do not know! See, be indulgent with me now,
- father&mdash;I am in trouble&mdash;in very deep and terrible trouble. I&mdash;I
- cannot even confess and ask you for absolution&mdash;but you can help me&mdash;do
- not try to put me off&mdash;I&mdash;I may not have the courage again. See,
- I&mdash;I am not very brave, and I am not very strong, and the tears are
- not far off. Help me to do what I want to do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Valérie!&rdquo; he scarcely breathed her name. Help her to do what she wanted
- to do! There was another prescience upon him now; but one that he could
- not understand, save that it seemed to be pointing toward the threshold of
- a moment that he was to remember all his life.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sit down there in your chair, father, please&rdquo;&mdash;her voice was very
- low again. &ldquo;Sit there, and let me kneel before you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stepped back as from a blow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, Valérie, you shall not kneel to me&rdquo;&mdash;he did not know what he was
- saying now. Kneel! Valérie kneel to him! &ldquo;You shall not kneel to me, I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Yes!</i>&rdquo; The word came feverishly. The composure that she had been
- fighting to retain was slipping from her. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;I must! I must!&rdquo; She
- was close upon him, forcing him back toward the chair. Her eyes, dry and
- wide before, were swimming with sudden tears. &ldquo;Oh, don't you understand!
- Oh, don't you understand! I am not kneeling to you as a man, I am kneeling
- to you as&mdash;as a&mdash;a <i>priest</i>&mdash;a priest of God&mdash;for&mdash;for
- I have sinned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was on her knees&mdash;and, with a mental cry of anguish, Raymond
- slipped down into the chair. Yes, he understood&mdash;now&mdash;at last!
- He understood what, pray God, she should never realise he understood! She&mdash;Valérie&mdash;cared.
- And she was trying now&mdash;God, the cruelty of it!&mdash;and she was
- trying now to save herself, to protect herself, by forcing upon herself an
- actual physical acceptance of him as a priest. No! It was not so! It could
- not be so! He did <i>not</i> understand!
- </p>
- <p>
- He would not have it so! He would not! It was only hell's trickery again&mdash;only
- that&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lay your hands on my head, father.&rdquo; She caught his hands and lifted them,
- and laid them upon her bowed head&mdash;and as his hands touched her she
- seemed to tremble for an instant, and her hands tightened upon his. &ldquo;Hold
- them there for a little while, father,&rdquo; she murmured&mdash;and took her
- own hands away, and clasped them before her hidden face.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's countenance was ashen as he bent forward. What had that voice
- prompted him to do? Be the priest? Well, he was being the priest now&mdash;and
- he knew torment in the depths of a sacrilege at last before which his soul
- shrank back appalled. The soft hair was silken to the touch of his hands,
- and yet it burned and seared him as with brands of fire. It was Valérie's
- hair. It was Valérie's head that was bowed before him. It was Valérie, the
- one to whom his soul had called, who was kneeling to him&mdash;as a priest
- of God&mdash;to save herself!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say the <i>Pater Noster</i> with me, father,&rdquo; she whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- He bent his head still lower&mdash;lower now that she might not by any
- chance glimpse his face. Like death it must look. He pressed his hands in
- assent upon her head&mdash;but it was Valérie's voice alone that faltered
- through the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;.... <i>Sanctificetur nomen tuum</i>&mdash;hallowed be Thy name... <i>fiat
- voluntas tua</i>&mdash;Thy will be done.... <i>et dimitte nobis débita
- nostra</i>&mdash;and forgive us our trespasses... <i>et ne nos inducas in
- tentationem</i>&mdash;and lead us not into temptation... <i>sed libera nos
- a malo</i>&mdash;but deliver us from evil... Amen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The lamp burned upon the desk; it lighted up the room&mdash;but before
- Raymond's eyes was only a blur, and nothing was distinct. And there was
- silence&mdash;silence for a long time.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Valérie spoke again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am stronger now,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I&mdash;I think God showed me the way. You
- have been very good to me to-night&mdash;not to question me&mdash;just to
- let me have my way. And now bless me, father, and I will go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bless Valérie&mdash;ask God's blessing on Valérie&mdash;would that be
- profanation? God's blessing on Valérie! Ay, he could ask that! Profligate,
- sinner, sham and mocker, he could ask that in reverence and sincerity&mdash;God's
- blessing upon Valérie&mdash;because he loved her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;God keep you, Valérie,&rdquo; he said, and fought the tremor from his voice.
- &ldquo;God keep you, Valérie&mdash;and bless you&mdash;and guard you through all
- your life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She rose from her knees, and turning quickly because her cheeks were wet,
- picked up the lamp, and walked to the door. At the threshold she paused,
- but did not look back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-night, father,&rdquo; she said simply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-night, Valérie,&rdquo; he answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was dark again in the room. He had risen from his chair as Valérie had
- risen from her knees&mdash;and now his hand felt out for the chair again,
- and he sank down, and, as when she had come to him, his head was buried
- again in his arms upon the desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie cared! Valérie loved him! Valérie, too, had been through her hour
- of torment. &ldquo;Not as a man&mdash;as a priest, a priest of God.&rdquo; No, he
- would not believe that, he would not let himself believe that. It could
- not be so! She was troubled, in distress&mdash;about something else. What
- time was it now? Not daylight yet&mdash;the merciful daylight&mdash;no
- sign of daylight yet? If it were true&mdash;what then? If she cared&mdash;what
- then?
- </p>
- <p>
- If Valérie loved him&mdash;what then? What was he to do in the
- &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;? It would not be himself alone who was to bear the burden
- then. It was not true, of course; he would not believe it, he would not
- let himself believe it. But if it were true how would Valérie endure the
- hanging by the neck until he was dead of the man she loved, or the
- knowledge of what he was, or the death by accident&mdash;of the man she
- loved!
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not stir now. He made no sound, no movement&mdash;and his head lay
- in his outflung arms. And time passed, and through the window crept the
- gray of dawn&mdash;and presently it was daylight&mdash;the merciful
- daylight&mdash;and the night was gone. But he was scarcely conscious of it
- now. It grew lighter still, and filled the room&mdash;that merciful
- daylight. And his brain, sick and stumbling and weary, reeled on and on,
- and there was the dream of the Walled Place again, and Valérie was closing
- the gate that was studded with iron spikes&mdash;and there was no way out.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then very slowly, like a man rousing from a stupor, his head came up
- from the desk, and he listened. From across the green came the sound of
- the church bells ringing for early mass. And as he listened the bells
- seemed to catch up the tempo of some refrain. What was it? Yes, he knew
- now. It was the opening of the mass&mdash;the words he would have to go in
- there presently and say. Were they mocking him, those bells! Was this what
- the daylight, the merciful daylight had brought&mdash;only a crowning,
- pitiless, merciless jeer! His face, strained and haggard, lifted suddenly
- a little higher. Was it only mockery, or could it be&mdash;see, they
- seemed to peal more softly now&mdash;could it be that they held another
- meaning&mdash;like voices calling in compassion to him because he was
- lost? No&mdash;his mind was dazed&mdash;it could not mean that&mdash;for
- him. But listen! They were repeating it over and over again. It was the
- call to mass, for it was daylight, and the beginning of a new day. Listen!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Introibo ad altare Dei</i>&mdash;I will go in unto the Altar of God.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIX&mdash;THE TWO SINNERS
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>NTROIBO ad altare
- Dei&mdash;I will go in unto the Altar of God.&rdquo; It had been days, another
- week of them, since the morning when he had raised his head to that call
- for early mass,' and his brain, stumbling and confused, had set those
- words in a refrain to the tempo of the pealing bells.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was midnight now&mdash;another night&mdash;the dreaded night. They were
- not all like that other night, not all so pitiless&mdash;that would have
- been beyond physical endurance. But they were bad, all the nights were
- bad. They seemed cunningly just to skirt the border edge of strain that
- could be endured, and cunningly just to evade the breaking point.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was midnight. On the table beside the bed stood the lighted lamp; and
- beside the lamp, topped by a prayer-book, was a little pile of François
- Aubert's books; and the bed was turned neatly down, disclosing invitingly
- the cool, fresh sheets. These were Madame Lafleur's kindly and well-meant
- offices. Madame La-fleur knew that he did not sleep very well. Each
- evening she came in here and set the lamp on the table, and arranged the
- books, and turned down the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- This was the same rocking-chair he sat in now that he had sat in night
- after night, and watched a man with bandaged head lying on that same bed&mdash;watched
- and waited for the man to die. The man was not there any more&mdash;there
- were just the cool, fresh sheets. The man was in Tournayville. He had seen
- the man again that afternoon&mdash;and now it was the man who was waiting
- to die.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will go in unto the Altar of God.&rdquo; With a curious hesitancy he reached
- out and took the prayer-book from the table, and abstractedly began to
- finger its pages. What did those words mean? They had been with him
- incessantly, insistently, since that morning when he had groped for their
- meaning as between the bitterest of mockeries and a sublime sincerity.
- They did not mock him now, they held no sting of irony. It was very
- strange. They had not mocked him all that week. He had been glad, eager,
- somehow, to repeat them to himself. Did they mean&mdash;peace?
- </p>
- <p>
- Peace! If he could have peace&mdash;even for to-night. If he could lie
- down between those cool, fresh sheets&mdash;and sleep! He was physically
- weary. He had made himself weary each night in the hope that weariness
- might bring a dreamless rest. He had thrown himself feverishly into the
- rôle of the Curé of St. Marleau; he had walked miles and driven miles;
- there was not a cottage in the parish upon whose door he had not knocked,
- and with whose occupants he had not shared-the personal joys and sorrows
- of the moment; and he had sat with the sick&mdash;with old Mother Blondin
- that morning, for instance, who seemed quite ill and feeble, and who in
- the last few days had taken to her bed. Yes, it was strange! He had done
- all this, too, with a certain sincerity that was not alone due to an
- effort to find forgetfulness during the day and weariness that would bring
- repose at night. He had found neither the forgetfulness nor the repose;
- but he had found a sort of wistful joy in the kindly acts of the good,
- young Father Aubert!
- </p>
- <p>
- He had found neither the forgetfulness nor the repose. He could not forget
- the &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;&mdash;the day that must irrevocably come&mdash;unless
- something, some turn of fate, some unforeseen thing intervened. <i>Something!</i>
- It was a pitiful thing to cling to&mdash;a pitiful thing even for a
- gambler's chance! But he clung to it now more desperately, more
- tenaciously than ever before. It was not only his life now, it was not
- only the life of the condemned man in that cell&mdash;it was Valérie. He
- might blindfold his mental vision; he might crush back, and trample down,
- and smother the thought, and refuse to admit it&mdash;but in his soul he
- believed she cared. And if she cared, and if that &ldquo;something&rdquo; did not
- happen, and he was forced, in whatever way he finally must choose, to play
- the last card&mdash;there was Valérie. If she cared&mdash;there was
- Valérie to suffer too! If he hanged instead of that man&mdash;there was
- Valérie! If he confessed from a safe distance after flight&mdash;there was
- Valérie to endure the shame! If the good, young Father Aubert died by
- &ldquo;accident&rdquo;&mdash;there was the condemned man in the death cell to pay the
- penalty&mdash;and Valérie to know the grief! Choice! What choice was
- there? Who called this ghastly impasse a choice! He could only wait&mdash;wait
- and cling to that hope, which in itself, because it was so paltry a thing
- to lean on, but added to the horror and suspense of the hours and days
- that stretched between now and the &ldquo;afterwards.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Something&rdquo; might happen&mdash;yes, something might happen&mdash;but
- nothing had happened yet&mdash;nothing yet&mdash;and his brain, day and
- night, would not stop mangling and tearing itself to pieces&mdash;and
- would not let him rest&mdash;and there was no peace&mdash;none&mdash;not
- even for a few short hours.
- </p>
- <p>
- His fingers were still mechanically turning the pages of the prayer-book.
- &ldquo;I will go in unto the Altar of God.&rdquo; Why did those words keep on running
- insistently through his mind? Did they suggest&mdash;peace?
- </p>
- <p>
- Well, if they did, why wasn't there something practical about them,
- something tangible, something he could lay material hands upon, and sense,
- and feel? The Altar, of God! Was there in very reality a God? He had
- chosen once to deny it contemptuously; and he had chosen once to despise
- religion as cant and chicanery cleverly practised upon the gullible and
- the weak-minded to the profit of those who pretended to interpret it! But
- there were beautiful words here in this book; and religion, if this were
- religion, must therefore be beautiful too&mdash;if one could believe. He
- remembered those words at the burial of Théophile Blondin&mdash;years, an
- eternity ago that was&mdash;&ldquo;I am the resurrection and the life... he that
- believeth in Me... shall never die.&rdquo; He had repeated them over and over to
- himself that morning&mdash;he had spoken them aloud, in what had seemed
- then an unaccountable sincerity, to old Mother Blondin as she had clung to
- the palings of the cemetery fence that morning. Yes, they were beautiful
- words&mdash;if one could believe.
- </p>
- <p>
- And here were others! What were these words here? He was staring at an
- open page before him, staring and staring at it. What were these other
- words here? It was not that he had never seen them before&mdash;but why
- was the book open at this place now&mdash;at these last few words of the
- <i>Benedictus? &ldquo;Per viscera misericordiæ Dei nostri... illuminare his qui
- in tenebris et in umbra mortis sedent: ad dirigendos pedes nostros in viam
- pacis</i>&mdash;Through the tender mercy of our God... to enlighten those
- who sit in darkness and in the shade of death: to direct our feet into the
- way of peace.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Were they but words&mdash;mere words&mdash;these? They were addressed to
- him&mdash;definitely to him, were they not? He sat in darkness, in an
- agony of darkness, lost, unable to find his way, and he sat&mdash;in the
- shade of death! Was there a God, a God who had tender mercy, a God&mdash;to
- direct his feet into the way of peace?
- </p>
- <p>
- The book slipped from his fingers, and dropped to the floor&mdash;and, his
- lips compressed, he stood up from the chair. If there was a God who had
- mercy, mercy of any kind&mdash;it was mercy he asked now. Where was this
- mercy? Where was this way of peace? Where was&mdash;a strange, bewildered,
- incredulous wonder was creeping into his face. Was that it&mdash;the Altar
- of God? Was that where there was peace&mdash;in unto the Altar of God? He
- had asked for a practical application of the words. Is that what they
- meant&mdash;that he should actually go&mdash;in unto the Altar of God&mdash;in
- there in the church&mdash;now?
- </p>
- <p>
- It seemed to stagger him for a moment. Numbly he stooped and picked up the
- prayer-book, and closed it, and laid it back on the table&mdash;and stood
- irresolute. Something, he was conscious, was impelling him to go there.
- Well, why not? If there was a God, if there was a God who had tender
- mercy, if it was that God whose words were suggesting a way of peace&mdash;why
- not put that God to the test! Once, on the afternoon just before he had
- attempted that man's escape, he had yielded to a previous impulse, and had
- gone into the church. It had been quiet, still and restful, he remembered;
- and he remembered that he had come away strangely calmed. But since then a
- cataclysm had swept over him; then he had been in a state of mind that,
- compared with now, was one even of peace&mdash;but even so, it was quiet,
- still and restful there, he remembered.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was crossing the room slowly, hesitantly, toward the door. Well, why
- not? If there was a God, and this impulse emanated from God&mdash;why not
- put it to the test? If it was all a hollow fraud, a myth, a superstition
- to which he was weak enough to yield, he would at least be no worse off
- than to sit here in that chair, or to lie upon the bed and toss the hours
- away until morning came!
- </p>
- <p>
- Well, he would go! He stepped softly out into the hall, closed his door
- behind him, groped his way in the darkness to the front door of the <i>presbytère</i>,
- opened it&mdash;and stood still for an instant, listening. Neither Valérie
- nor her mother, asleep upstairs, had been disturbed he was sure. If they
- had&mdash;well, they would assign no ulterior motive to his going out&mdash;it
- was only that Monsieur le Curé, poor man, did not sleep well!
- </p>
- <p>
- He closed the door quietly, and went down the steps&mdash;and at the
- bottom paused again. He became suddenly conscious that there was a great
- quiet and a great serenity in the night&mdash;and a great beauty. There
- were stars, a myriad stars in a perfect sky; and the moonlight bathed the
- church green in a radiance that made of it a velvet carpet, marvellously
- wrought in shadows of many hues. There, along the road, a whitewashed
- cottage stood out distinctly, and still further along another, and yet
- another&mdash;like little fortresses whose tranquillity was impregnable.
- And the moonlight, and the lullaby of the lapping water on the shore, and
- the night sounds that were the chirping of the little grass-things, were
- like some benediction breathed softly upon the earth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To direct our feet into the way of peace&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond murmured the
- words with a sudden overpowering sense of yearning and wistfulness
- sweeping upon him. And then, as suddenly, he was tense, alert, straining
- his eyes toward the front of the church. Was that a shadow there that
- moved, cast perhaps by the swaying branch of some tree? It was a very
- curious branch if that were so! The shadow seemed to have appeared
- suddenly from around the corner of the church and to be creeping toward
- the door. It was too far across the green to see distinctly, even with the
- moonlight as bright as it was, but it seemed as though he could see the
- church door open and close again&mdash;and now the shadow had disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mechanically Raymond rubbed his eyes. It was strange, so very strange that
- it must surely be only a trick of the imagination. The moonlight was
- always deceptive and lent itself easily to hallucinations, and at that
- distance he certainly could not be sure. And besides, at this hour, after
- midnight, why should any one go stealing into the church? And yet he could
- have sworn he had seen the door open! And stare as he would now, the
- shadow that had crept along the low platform above the church steps was no
- longer visible.
- </p>
- <p>
- He hesitated a moment. It was even an added incentive for him to go into
- the church, but suppose some one was there, and he should be seen? He
- smiled a little wanly&mdash;and stepped forward across the green. Well,
- what of it! Was he not the Curé of St. Mar-leau? It would be only another
- halo for the head of the good, young Father Aubert! It would require but a
- word of explanation from him, he could even tell the truth&mdash;and they
- would call him the <i>devout</i>, good, young Father Aubert! Only, instead
- of entering by one of the main doors, he would go in through the sacristy.
- He was not even likely to be seen himself in that way; and, if there was
- any one there, he should be able to discover who it was, and what he or
- she was doing there.
- </p>
- <p>
- He passed on along the side of the church, his footsteps soundless on the
- sward, reached the door of the sacristy, opened it silently, and stepped
- inside. It was intensely dark here. Treading on tiptoe, he traversed the
- little room, and finally, after a moment's groping, his fingers closed on
- the knob of the door that opened on the interior of the church.
- </p>
- <p>
- A sound broke the stillness. Yes, there was some one out there! Raymond
- cautiously pulled the door ajar. Came that sound again. It was very loud&mdash;and
- yet it was only the creak of a footstep that seemed to come from somewhere
- amongst the aisles. It echoed back from the high vaulted roof with a great
- noise. It seemed to give pause, to terrify with its own alarm whoever was
- out there, for now as he listened there was silence again.
- </p>
- <p>
- Still cautiously and still a little wider, Raymond opened the door, and
- now he could see out into the body of the church&mdash;and for a moment,
- as though gazing upon some mystic scene, he stood there wrapt, immovable.
- Above the tops of the high, stained windows, it was as though a vast
- canopy of impenetrable blackness were spread from end to end of the
- edifice; and slanting from the edge of this canopy in a series of parallel
- rays the moonlight, coloured into curious solemn tints, filtered across
- from one wall to the other. And the aisles were like little dark alleyways
- leading away as into some immensity beyond. And here, looming up, a
- statue, the figure of some white-robed saint, drew, as it were, a holy
- light about it, and seemed to take on life and breathe into the stillness
- a sense of calm and pure and unchanging presence. And the black canopy and
- the little dark alleyways seemed to whisper of hidden things that kept
- ward over this abode of God. And there was no sound&mdash;and there was
- awe and solemnity in this silence. And on the altar, very near him, the
- Altar of God that he had come to seek, the single altar light burned like
- a tiny scintillating jewel in its setting of moon rays. And there, shadowy
- against the wall, just outside the chancel rail, was the great cross.
- There seemed something that spoke of the immutable in that. The first
- little wooden church above whose doors it had been reared was gone, and
- there was a church of stone now with a golden, metal cross upon its spire,
- but this great cross of wood was still here. It was a very precious relic
- to St. Marleau, and so it hung there on the wall of the new church between
- the two windows nearest the altar.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then his eyes, travelling down the length of the cross, fixed upon its
- base&mdash;and the spell that had held him was gone. It was blacker there,
- very much blacker! There was a patch of blackness there that seemed to
- move and waver slightly&mdash;and it was neither shadow, nor yet the
- support built out to hold the base of the cross. Some one was crouching
- there. Well, what should he do? Remain in hiding here, or go out there as
- the Curé of St. Marleau and see who it was? Something urged him to go;
- caution bade him remain where he was. He knew a sudden resentment. He had
- put God to the test&mdash;and, instead of peace, he had found a prowler in
- the church!
- </p>
- <p>
- Ah&mdash;what was that! That low, broken sound&mdash;like a sob! Yes, it
- came again&mdash;and the echoes whispered it back from everywhere. It was
- a woman. A woman was sobbing there at the foot of the cross. Who was it?
- Came a thought that stabbed with pain. Not Valérie! It could not be
- Valérie&mdash;kneeling there under a load that was beyond her strength! It
- could not be Valérie in anguish and grief greater than she could bear
- because&mdash;because she loved a man whom she believed to be a priest of
- God! No&mdash;not Valérie! But if it were!
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew back a little. If it were Valérie she should not know that he had
- seen. At least he could save her that. He would wait until whoever it was
- had left the church, and if it were Valérie she would go back to the <i>presbytère</i>,
- and in that way he would know.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now&mdash;what were those words now? She was praying out there as she
- sobbed. And slowly an amazed and incredulous wonder spread over Raymond's
- face. No, it was not Valérie! That was not Valérie's voice! Those
- mumbling, hesitant, uncertain words, as though the memory were pitifully
- at fault, were not Valérie's. It was not Valérie! He recognised the voice
- now. It was the old woman on the hill&mdash;old Mother Blondin!
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond stared for a moment helplessly out through the crack of the
- sacristy door which he held ajar, out into those curiously tinted moon
- rays, and past the altar with its tiny light, to where that dark shadow
- lay against the wall. Old Mother Blondin! Old Mother Blondin, the heretic,
- was out there&mdash;<i>praying in the church!</i> Why? What had brought
- her there? Old Mother Blondin who was supposed to be ill in her bed&mdash;he
- had seen her there that morning! She had been sick for the last few days,
- and worse if anything that morning&mdash;and now&mdash;now she was here&mdash;praying
- in the church.
- </p>
- <p>
- What had brought her here? What motive had brought this about, that, with
- its strength of purpose, must have supplied physical strength as well, for
- she must almost literally have had to crawl down the hill in her feeble
- state? Had she too come seeking for&mdash;peace! Was it coincidence that
- they two, who had reached the lees and dregs of that common cup, should be
- here together, at this strange hour, at the Altar of God! Was it only
- coincidence&mdash;nothing more? Was he ready to believe, would he admit so
- much, that it was <i>more</i> than&mdash;coincidence?
- </p>
- <p>
- A sense of solemnity and of awe that mingled with a sense of profound
- compassion for old Mother Blon-din sobbing there in her misery took
- possession of him, and he seemed moved now as by an impulse beyond and
- outside himself&mdash;to go to her&mdash;to comfort and soothe her, if he
- could. And slowly he opened the sacristy door, and stepped out into the
- chancel, and into the moonlight that fell softly across the altar's edge&mdash;and
- he called her name.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a cry, wild, unrestrained&mdash;a cry of terror that seemed to
- swirl about the church, and from the black canopy above that hid the
- vaulted roof was hurled back in a thousand echoes. But with the cry, as
- the dark form from against the wall sprang erect, Raymond caught a sharp,
- ominous cracking sound&mdash;and, as he looked, high up on the wall, the
- arms of the huge cross seemed to waver and begin to tilt forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a bound, as he saw her danger, Raymond cleared the chancel rail, and
- the next instant had caught at the base of the cross and steadied it. In
- her terror as she had jumped to her feet, she had knocked against it and
- forced it almost off the sort of shelf, or ledge, that had been built out
- from the wall to support it; and at the same time, he could see now, one
- or more of the wall fastenings at the top had given away. It was very
- heavy and unmanageable, but he finally succeeded in getting it far enough
- back into position to make it temporarily secure.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned then to face Mother Blondin. She seemed oblivious, unconscious
- of her escape, though her face in the moonlight held a ghastly colour. She
- was staring at him with eyes that burned feverishly in their deep sockets.
- She was not crying now, but there were still tears, undried, that clung to
- her withered cheeks. One bony hand reached out and clutched at the back of
- a pew, for she was swaying on her feet; but the other was clenched and
- knotted&mdash;and suddenly she raised it and shook it in his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it is I! I&mdash;Mother Blondin!&rdquo; she choked. &ldquo;Mother Blondin&mdash;the
- old hag&mdash;the <i>excommuniée!</i> You saw me come in&mdash;eh? And you
- have come to put me out&mdash;to put old Mother Blondin, the <i>excommuniée</i>,
- out&mdash;eh? I have no right here&mdash;here&mdash;eh? Well, who said I
- had any right! Put me out&mdash;put me out&mdash;put me&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo;
- The clenched hand opened, clawed queerly at her face, as though to clear
- away something that had gathered before her eyes and would not let her see&mdash;and
- she reeled heavily backward.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's arm went around her shoulders.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are ill, Madame Blondin&mdash;ill and weak,&rdquo; he said soothingly.
- &ldquo;See&rdquo;&mdash;he half lifted, half supported her into the pew&mdash;&ldquo;sit
- down here for a moment and rest. I am afraid I frightened you. I am very
- sorry. Perhaps it would have been better if I had left you by yourself;
- but I heard you sobbing out here, and I thought that I might perhaps help
- you&mdash;and so I came&mdash;and so&mdash;you are better now, are you
- not?&mdash;-and so, you see, it was not to drive you out of the church.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She looked at him in a sort of angry unbelief.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; she exclaimed fiercely. &ldquo;Why do you tell me that, eh? Why do you
- tell me that? I have no right here&mdash;and you are a priest. That is
- your business&mdash;to drive me out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Raymond gravely; &ldquo;it is not my business. And I think you would
- go very far, Madame Blondin, before you would find a priest who would
- drive you from his church under the circumstances in which I have found
- you here to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well then, I will go myself!&rdquo; she said defiantly&mdash;and made as though
- to rise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, not yet&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond pressed her quietly back into the seat. &ldquo;You
- must rest for a little while. Why, this morning, you know, you were
- seriously ill in bed. Surely you were not alone in the house to-night,
- that there was no one to prevent you getting up&mdash;I asked Madame
- Bouchard to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Madame Bouchard came to spend the night, but I did not want her, and I
- sent her home,&rdquo; she interrupted brusquely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You should not have done that, Madame Blondin,&rdquo; Raymond remonstrated
- kindly. &ldquo;But even then, you are very weak, and I do not see how you
- managed to get here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her face set hard with the old stubborn indomitableness that he knew so
- well.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I walked!&rdquo; she said shortly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hands were twisting together in her lap. There was dust covering her
- skirt thickly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And fell,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Will you tell me why you came?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because I was a fool&rdquo;&mdash;her lips were working, her hands kept
- twisting over each other in her lap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I heard you praying,&rdquo; said Raymond gently. &ldquo;What brought you here
- to-night, Madame Blondin?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head now, and turned her face away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The moonlight fell on the sparse, gray hair, and the thin, drooping
- shoulders, and the unkempt, shabby clothing. It seemed to enfold her in an
- infinite sympathy all its own. And suddenly Raymond found that his eyes
- were wet. It did not seem so startling and incongruous a thing that she
- should be here at midnight in the church&mdash;at the Altar of God. And
- yet&mdash;and yet why had she come? Something within himself demanded in a
- strange wistfulness the answer to that question, as though in the answer
- she would answer for them both, for the two who had no <i>right</i> here
- in this sacred place unless&mdash;unless, if there were a God, that God in
- His own way had meant to&mdash;direct their feet into the way of peace.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Madame Blondin&rdquo;&mdash;his voice was very low, trembling with earnestness&mdash;&ldquo;Madame
- Blondin, do you believe in God?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hands stopped their nervous movements, and clasped hard one upon the
- other.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No!&rdquo; she cried out sharply. &ldquo;No&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; And then her voice
- faltered, and she burst suddenly into tears. &ldquo;I&mdash;I don't know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His arm was still about her shoulders, and now his hand tightened a little
- upon her. She was crying softly. He was silent now&mdash;staring before
- him at that tiny flame burning in the moon rays on the altar. Well,
- suppose she did! Suppose even Mother Blondin believed, though she would
- fight on until she was beaten to her knees before she would
- unconditionally admit it, did that mean anything to him? Mother Blondin
- had not stood before that altar there with a crucifix upon her breast, and&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was speaking again&mdash;brushing the tears away with the back of her
- hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Once I did&mdash;once I believed,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;That was when I was a girl,
- and&mdash;and for a little while afterward. I used to come to the church
- then, and I used to believe. And then after Pierre died I married Blondin,
- and after that very soon I came no more. It is forty years&mdash;forty
- years&mdash;it was the old church then. The ban came before this one was
- built&mdash;I was never in here before&mdash;it is only the old cross
- there, the cross that was on the old church, that I know. Forty years is a
- long time&mdash;a long time&mdash;I am seventy-two now&mdash;seventy-two.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was crying again softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond, and his own voice choked, &ldquo;and to-night&mdash;after
- forty years?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wanted to come&rdquo;&mdash;she seemed almost to be whispering to herself&mdash;&ldquo;I
- wanted to come. Blondin said there was no God, but I remembered that when
- I was a girl&mdash;forty years ago&mdash;there was a God here. I&mdash;I
- wanted to come and see&mdash;and&mdash;and I&mdash;I don't know&mdash;I&mdash;I
- couldn't remember the prayers very well, and so maybe if God is still here
- He did not understand. Pierre always said there was a God, and he used to
- come here with me to mass; but Blondin said the priests were all liars,
- and I began to drink with Blondin, and he said they were all liars when he
- died, and no one except the ones that came to buy the <i>whiskey-blanc</i>
- would have anything to do with us, and&mdash;and I believed him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And Pierre?&rdquo; Raymond asked softly. &ldquo;Who was Pierre?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pierre?&rdquo; She turned her head and looked at him&mdash;and somehow, perhaps
- it was the tint of the moon rays, somehow the old, hard face was
- transfigured, and seemed to glow with untold sweetness, and a smile of
- tenderness mingled with the tears. &ldquo;Pierre? Ah, he was a good boy, Pierre.
- Yes, I have been happy! Who shall say I have not been happy? There were
- three years of it&mdash;three years of it&mdash;and then Pierre died. I
- was eighteen, eighteen on the day that Pierre and I were married. And it
- was a great day in the village&mdash;all the village was <i>en fête</i>.
- You would not believe that! But it is true. It is a long time between
- eighteen and seventy-two, and I was not like I am now, and Pierre was
- loved by every one. It is hard to believe, eh? And there are not many now
- who remember. But there is old Grandmother Frenier. She will tell you that
- I am telling you the truth about Pierre Letellier.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Letellier!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;it came in a low, involuntary cry from Raymond.
- Letellier! Where had he heard that name before? What strange stirring of
- the memory was this that the name had brought? Letellier! Was it&mdash;could
- it be&mdash;&mdash;?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, monsieur?&rdquo;&mdash;she had caught at his sleeve. &ldquo;Ah, you had
- perhaps heard that the Letelliers all moved away from here&mdash;and you
- did not know that I was once a Letellier? They sold everything and went
- away because of me a few years after I married Blondin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond mechanically. &ldquo;But tell me more about yourself and
- Pierre&mdash;and&mdash;and those happy years. You had children&mdash;a&mdash;a
- son, perhaps?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;yes, monsieur!&rdquo; There was a glad eagerness in her voice&mdash;and
- then a broken sob&mdash;and the old eyes brimmed anew with tears. &ldquo;There
- was little Jean. He was born just a few months after his father died. He&mdash;he
- was just like Pierre. He was four years old when I married Blondin, and&mdash;and
- when he was ten he ran away.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The altar light, that tiny light there seemed curiously transparent. He
- could see through it, not to the body of the altar behind it, but through
- it to a vast distance that did not measure miles, and he could see the
- interior of a shack whose window pane was thickly frosted and in whose
- doorway stood a man, and the man was Murdock Shaw who had come to bring
- Canuck John's dying message&mdash;and he could hear Murdock Shaw's words:
- &ldquo;'Tell Three-Ace Artie&mdash;give good-bye message&mdash;my mother and&mdash;&mdash;'
- And then he died.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not know where he went&rdquo;&mdash;old Mother Blon-din's faltering voice,
- too, seemed a vast distance away&mdash;&ldquo;I&mdash;I have never heard of him
- since then. He is dead, perhaps; but, if he is alive, I hope&mdash;I hope
- that he will never know. Yes&mdash;there were three years of happiness,
- monsieur&mdash;and then it was finished. Monsieur, I&mdash;I will go now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's head on his crossed arms was bowed on the back of the pew before
- him. Letellier! It was the forgotten name come back to him. This was
- Canuck John's mother&mdash;and this was Théophile Blondin's mother&mdash;and
- he had come to St. Marleau to deliver to her a message of death&mdash;and
- he had delivered it in the killing of her other son! Was this the peace
- that he had come here to seek to-night? Was this the hand of God that had
- led him here? What did it mean? Was it God who had brought Mother Blondin
- here to-night? Would it bring her comfort&mdash;to believe in God again?
- Was he here for <i>that?</i> Here, that a word from him, whom she thought
- a priest, might turn the scales and bring her to her God of the many years
- ago? Was this God's way&mdash;to use him, who masqueraded as God's priest,
- and through whom this woman's son had been killed&mdash;was this God's way
- to save old Mother Blondin?
- </p>
- <p>
- She touched his arm timidly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you praying for me, monsieur?&rdquo; she whispered tremulously. &ldquo;It&mdash;it
- is too late for that&mdash;that was forty years ago. And&mdash;and I will
- go now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He raised his head and looked at the old, withered, tear-stained face. The
- question of his own belief did not enter here. If she went now without a
- word from him, without a priestly word, she went forever. They were
- beautiful words&mdash;and, if one believed, they brought comfort. And she
- was near, very near to that old belief again. And they were near, very
- near to his own lips too, those words.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is not too late,&rdquo; he said brokenly. &ldquo;Listen! Do you remember the <i>Benedictus?</i>
- Give me your hand, and we will kneel, and say it together.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She drew back, and shook her head, and tried to speak&mdash;but no words
- came, only her lips quivered.
- </p>
- <p>
- He held out his hand to her&mdash;held it silently there for a long time&mdash;and
- then, hesitantly, she laid her hand in his.
- </p>
- <p>
- And kneeling there in the pew, old Mother Blondin and Raymond Chapelle,
- Raymond began the solemn words of the <i>Benedictus</i>. Low his voice
- was, and the tears crept to his eyes as the thin hand clutched and clasped
- spasmodically at his own. And as he came to the end, the tears held back
- no longer and rolled hot upon his cheeks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;... Through the tender mercy of our God... to enlighten those who sit in
- darkness, and in the shade of death: to direct our feet into the way of
- peace&rdquo;&mdash;his voice died away.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was sobbing bitterly. He helped her to her feet as she sought to rise,
- and, holding tightly to her arm for she swayed unsteadily, he led her down
- the aisle. And they came to the church door, and out upon the green. And
- here she paused, as though she expected him to leave her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will walk up the hill with you, Mother Blondin,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I do not
- think you are strong enough to go alone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- They started on along the road. She walked very slowly, very feebly, and
- leaned heavily upon him. And neither spoke. And they turned up the hill.
- And halfway up the hill he lifted her in his arms and carried her, for her
- strength was gone. And somehow he knew that when she had left her bed that
- night to stumble down this hill to the moonlit church she had left it for
- the last time&mdash;save one.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was speaking again&mdash;almost inaudibly. He bent his head to catch
- the words.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is forty years,&rdquo; said old Mother Blondin. &ldquo;Forty years&mdash;it is a
- long time&mdash;forty years.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XX&mdash;AN UNCOVERED SOUL
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T hung there
- precariously. All through the mass that morning Raymond's eyes had kept
- straying to the great cross on the wall that old Mother Blondin had
- disturbed the night before. No one else, it was true, had appeared to
- notice it; but, having no reason to do so, no one else, very probably, had
- given it any particular attention&mdash;nevertheless, a single strand of
- cord on one end of the horizontal beam was all that now prevented the
- cross from pitching outward from the wall and crashing down into the body
- of the church.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door of the sacristy leading into the chancel was open, and, in the
- sacristy now, Raymond's eyes fixed uneasily again on the huge, squared
- timbers of the cross. The support at the base held the weight of course,
- but the balance and adjustment was gone, and the slightest jar would be
- all that was necessary to snap that remaining cord above. Massive and
- unwieldy, the cross itself must be at least seven feet in height; and,
- though this was of course imagination, it seemed to waver there now
- ominously, as if to impress upon him the fact that in the cause of its
- insecurity he was not without a personal responsibility.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had removed his surplice and stole; Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar boy,
- had gone; and there was only old Narcisse Pélude, the aged sacristan, who
- was still puttering about the room. And the church was empty now, save
- that he could still hear Valérie moving around up there in the little
- organ loft.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond passed his hand wearily across his eyes. He was very tired.
- Valérie was lingering intentionally&mdash;and he knew why. He had not
- returned to the <i>presbytère</i>, his bed had not been slept in. Valérie
- and her mother could not have helped but discover that, and they would be
- anxious, and worried, and perhaps a little frightened&mdash;and that was
- why Valérie was lingering now, waiting for him. He had not dared to leave
- old Mother Blondin alone through the night. She had been very ill. And he
- had not gone to any one near at hand, to Madame Bouchard, for instance, to
- get her to take his place, for that would have entailed explanations
- which, not on his own account, but for old Mother Blondin's sake, he had
- not cared to make; and so, when the bell for mass had rung that morning,
- he had still been at the bedside of the old woman on the hill. And he had
- left her only then because she was sleeping quietly, and the immediate
- crisis seemed safely past.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes, from the cross, rested speculatively for a moment on the
- bent figure of the aged sacristan. He could make those explanations to
- Valérie, he could go out there now and in a sort of timely corroboration
- of the story repair the damage done to the cross, and she would
- understand; but he could not publicly make those explanations. If it was
- to be known in the village that old Mother Blondin had come here to the
- church, it was for old Mother Blondin herself, and for no one else, to
- tell it. It was the same attitude he had adopted toward her once before.
- True, Mother Blondin had changed very greatly since then; but a tactless
- word from any one, a sneer, the suggestion of triumph over her, and the
- old sullen defiance might well rise supreme again&mdash;and old Mother
- Blondin, he knew now, had not very long to live. Valérie and her mother
- would very readily, and very sympathetically understand. He could tell
- Valérie, indeed he was forced to do so in order to explain his own absence
- from the <i>presbytère</i>; but to others, to the village, to old Narcisse
- Pélude here, since the broken fastenings of the cross must be replaced,
- old Mother Blondin's name need not be mentioned.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Narcisse, how long has that great cross hung there on the wall?&rdquo; he
- inquired abruptly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah&mdash;the great cross! Yes&mdash;Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; The old man laid
- down a vestment that he had been carefully folding, and wagged his head.
- &ldquo;It is very old&mdash;very old, that cross. You will see how old it is
- when I tell you it was made by the grandfather of the present Bouchard,
- whose pew is right underneath it. Grandfather Bouchard was one of the
- first in St. Mar-leau, and you must know, Monsieur le Curé, that St.
- Marleau was then a very small place. It was the Grandfather Bouchard who
- built most of the old wooden church, and there was a little cupola for the
- bell, and above the cupola was that cross. Yes, Monsieur le Curé, there
- have been changes in St. Marleau, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But how long has it hung there on the wall, Narcisse?&rdquo; Raymond
- interrupted with a tolerant smile&mdash;Narcisse had been known at times
- to verge on garrulity!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I am telling you, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; said the old sacristan
- earnestly. &ldquo;We began to build this fine stone church, and when it was
- finished the little old wooden church was torn down, and we brought the
- cross here, and it has been here ever since, and that is thirty-two&mdash;no,
- thirty-three years ago, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;it will be thirty-three
- years this coming November.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And in those thirty-three years,&rdquo; observed Raymond, &ldquo;I imagine that the
- cross has remained untouched?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, yes, Monsieur le Curé! Untouched&mdash;yes, of course! It was
- consecrated by Monsignor the Bishop himself&mdash;not the present bishop,
- Monsieur le Curé will understand, but the old bishop who is since dead,
- and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quite so,&rdquo; said Raymond. &ldquo;Well, come here, nearer to the door, Narcisse.
- Now, look at the cross very carefully, and see if you can discover why I
- asked you if it had remained untouched all those years?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man strained his eyes across the chancel to the opposite wall&mdash;and
- shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, Monsieur le Curé, I see nothing&mdash;only the cross there as usual.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look higher up,&rdquo; prompted Raymond. &ldquo;Do you not see that all but one of
- the fastenings are broken, and that it is about to fall?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fall? About to fall?&rdquo; The old man rubbed his eyes, and stared, and rubbed
- his eyes again. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;it is true! I see now! The cords have
- rotted away. It is no wonder&mdash;in all that time. I&mdash;I should have
- thought of that long, long ago.&rdquo; He turned a white face to Raymond. &ldquo;It&mdash;it
- is the mercy of God that it did not happen, Monsieur le Curé, with anybody
- there! It would have killed Bouchard, and madame, and the children! It
- would have crushed them to death! Monsieur le Curé, I am a <i>misérable!</i>
- I am an old man, and I forget, but that is not an excuse. Yes, Monsieur le
- Curé, I am a <i>misérable!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond laid his hand on the old sacristan's shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We will see that it does not fall on the excellent Bouchard, or on
- madame, or on the children,&rdquo; he smiled. &ldquo;Therefore, bring a ladder and
- some stout cord, Narcisse, and we will fix it at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man stared again at the cross for a moment, then started hurriedly
- toward the sacristy door that gave on the side of the church.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;yes&mdash;at once,&rdquo; he agreed anxiously.
- &ldquo;There is a ladder beside the shed that is long enough. I will get it
- immediately. I am an old man, and I forget, but I am none the less a <i>misérable</i>.
- If Monsieur le Curé had not happened to notice it, and it had fallen on
- Bouchard! Monsieur le Curé is very good not to blame me, but I am none the
- less&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man, shaking his head, and still talking, had disappeared through
- the doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- Old Narcisse Pélude&mdash;the self-styled <i>misérable!</i> The old man
- had taken it quite to heart! Raymond shrugged his shoulders whimsically.
- Well, so much the better! It was for old Mother Blondin to tell her own
- story&mdash;if she chose! He wondered, with a curious and seemingly
- unaccountable wistfulness, if she ever would! It had been a night that had
- left him strangely moved, strangely bewildered, unable even yet to focus
- his mind clearly and logically upon it. He could tell Valérie of old
- Mother Blondin, of how the old woman on the hill had come here seeking
- peace; he could not tell her that he, too, had come in the hope that he
- might find what old Mother Blondin had sought&mdash;at the Altar of God!
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie! Yes, he was strangely moved this morning. And now a yearning and
- an agony surged upon him. Valérie! Between Valérie's coming to him that
- night in the stillness of the hours just before the dawn, and his coming
- here to the church last night, there lay an analogy of souls near-spent,
- clutching at what they might to save themselves. Peace, and the seeking of
- a way, he had come for; and peace, and the seeking of a way, she had come
- for then. It seemed as though he could see that scene again&mdash;that
- room in the <i>presbytère</i>, and the lamp upon the desk, and that slim,
- girlish form upon her knees before him; and it seemed as though he could
- feel the touch again of that soft, dark, silken hair, as she laid his
- hands upon her bowed head; and it seemed as though he could hear her voice
- again, as it faltered through the <i>Pater Noster</i>: &ldquo;Hallowed be Thy
- name... and lead us not into temptation... but deliver us from evil.&rdquo; Had
- he, in any measure, found what he had sought last night? He did not know.
- He had knelt and prayed with old Mother Blondin. The <i>Benedictus</i>, as
- he had repeated it, had seemed real. He had known a profound solemnity,
- and the sense of that solemnity had remained with him, was with him now&mdash;and
- yet he blasphemed that solemnity, and the Altar of God, and this holy
- place in standing here at this very moment decked out in his stolen <i>soutane</i>
- and the crucifix that hung from his neck! Illogical? Why did he do it
- then? His eyes were on the floor. Illogical? It was to save his life&mdash;it
- was because he was fighting to save his life. It was not to repudiate the
- sincerity with which he had repeated the words of the <i>Benedictus</i> to
- old Mother Blondin&mdash;it was to save his life. Whatever he had found
- here, whether a deeper meaning in these holy symbolisms, he had not found
- the way&mdash;no other way but to blaspheme on with his <i>soutane</i>
- cloaked around him. And she&mdash;Valérie? Had she found what she had
- sought that night? He did not know. Refuse to acknowledge it, attempt to
- argue himself into disbelief, if he would, he knew that when she had knelt
- there that night in the front room of the <i>presbytère</i> she cared. And
- since then? Had she, in any measure, found what she had sought? Had she
- crushed back the love, triumphed over it until it remained only a memory
- in her life? He did not know. She had given no sign. They had never spoken
- of that night again. Only&mdash;only it seemed as though of late there had
- come a shadow into the fresh, young face, and a shadow into the dark,
- steadfast eyes, a shadow that had not been there on the night when he had
- first come to St. Marleau, and she and he had bent together over the
- wounded man upon the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Subconsciously he had been listening for her step; and now, as he heard
- her descending the stairs from the organ loft, he stepped out from the
- sacristy into the chancel, and down into the nave of the church. He could
- see her now, and she had seen him. She had halted at the foot of the
- stairs under the gallery at the back of the church. Valérie! How sweet and
- beautiful she looked this morning! There was just a tinge of rising colour
- in her cheeks, a little smile, half tremulous, half gay on the parted
- lips, a dainty gesture of severity and playfulness in the shake of her
- head, as he approached.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Father Aubert,&rdquo; she exclaimed, &ldquo;you do not know how relieved we were,
- mother and I, when we saw you enter the church this morning for mass! We&mdash;we
- were really very anxious about you; and we did not know what to think when
- mother called you as usual half an hour before the mass, and found that
- you were not there, and that you had not slept in your bed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I know,&rdquo; said Raymond gravely; &ldquo;and that is what I have come to
- speak to you about now. I was afraid you would be anxious, but I knew you
- would understand&mdash;though you would perhaps wonder a little&mdash;when
- I told you what kept me away last night. Let us walk down the side aisle
- there to the chancel, Mademoiselle Valérie, and I will explain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A bewildered little pucker gathered on her forehead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The side aisle, Father Aubert?&rdquo; she repeated in a puzzled way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; come,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You will see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He led her down the aisle, and, halting before the cross, pointed upward.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, the fastenings, all but one, are broken!&rdquo; she cried out instantly.
- &ldquo;It is a miracle that it has not fallen! What does it mean?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is the story of last night, Mademoiselle Valerie,&rdquo; he answered with a
- sober smile. &ldquo;Sit down in the pew there, and I will tell you. I have sent
- Narcisse for a ladder, and we will repair the damage presently, but there
- will be time before he gets back. He believes that the fastenings have
- grown old and rotten, which is true; and that they parted simply from age,
- which is not quite so much the fact. I have allowed him to form his own
- conclusions; I have even encouraged him to believe in them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was sitting in the pew now. The bewildered little pucker had grown
- deeper. She kept glancing back and forth from Raymond, standing before her
- in the aisle, to the broken fastenings of the cross high up on the wall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But that is what any one would naturally think,&rdquo; she said slowly. &ldquo;I
- thought so myself. I&mdash;I do not quite understand, Father Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think you know,&rdquo; said Raymond quietly, &ldquo;that some nights I do not sleep
- very well, Mademoiselle Valerie. Last night was one of those. When
- midnight came I was still wakeful, and I had not gone to bed. I was very
- restless; I knew I could not sleep, and so I decided to go out for a
- little while.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said impulsively; &ldquo;I know. I heard you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You heard me?&rdquo; He looked at her in quick surprise. &ldquo;But I thought I had
- been very careful indeed to make no noise. I&mdash;I did not think that I
- had wakened&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A flush came suddenly to her cheeks, and she turned her head aside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I was not asleep,&rdquo; she said hurriedly. &ldquo;Go on, Father Aubert, I
- did not mean to interrupt you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond did not speak for a moment. He was not looking at her now&mdash;he
- dared not trust his eyes to drink deeper of that flush that had come with
- the simple statement that she too had been awake. Valérie! Valérie! It was
- the silent voice of his soul calling her. And suddenly he seemed to be
- looking out from his prison land upon the present scene&mdash;upon Valérie
- and the good, young Father Aubert together, looking upon them both, as he
- had looked upon them together many times. And suddenly he hated that
- figure in priestly dress with a deadly hate&mdash;because Valérie had
- tossed upon her bed awake, and had not slept; and because, as though
- gifted with prophetic vision, he could see the shadow in Valérie's fresh,
- pure face change and deepen into misery immeasurable, and the young life,
- barely on its threshold, be robbed of youth with its joy and gladness, and
- with sorrow grow prematurely old.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You went out, Father Aubert,&rdquo; she prompted. &ldquo;And then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old sacristan would be back with the ladder very shortly, at almost
- any minute now&mdash;and he had to tell Valérie about old Mother Blondin
- and the cross before Narcisse returned. He looked up. He found himself
- speaking at first mechanically, and then low and earnestly, swayed
- strangely by his own words. And so, standing there in the aisle of the
- church, he told Valerie the story of the night, of the broken cross, of
- the broken life so near its end. And there was amazement, and wonder, and
- surprise in Valerie's face as she listened, and then a tender sympathy&mdash;and
- at the end, the dark eyes, as they lifted to his, were filled with tears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is very wonderful,&rdquo; she said almost to herself. &ldquo;Old Mother Blondin&mdash;it
- could be only God who brought her here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond did not answer. The old sacristan had entered the church, and was
- bringing the ladder down the aisle. It was the sacristan who spoke,
- catching sight of Valérie, as Raymond, taking one end of the ladder,
- raised it against the wall beside the cross.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens!</i>&rdquo; The old man lifted the coil of thin rope which he held,
- and with the back of his hand mopped away a bead of perspiration from his
- forehead. &ldquo;You have seen then what has happened, mademoiselle! Father
- Aubert has made light of it; but what will Monsieur le Curé, your uncle,
- say when he hears of it! Yes, it is true&mdash;I am a <i>misérable</i>&mdash;I
- do not deserve to be sacristan any longer! It was consecrated by Monsignor
- the Bishop, that cross, when the church was consecrated, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond took the cord quietly from the old man's hand, and began to mount
- the ladder. He went up slowly&mdash;not that the ladder was insecure, but
- that his mind and thoughts were far removed from the mere mechanical task
- which he had set himself to perform. Valérie's words had set that turmoil
- at work in his soul again. She had not hesitated to say that it was God
- who had brought old Mother Blondin here. And he too believed that now.
- Peace he had not found, nor the way, but he believed that now. Therefore
- he must believe now that there was a God&mdash;yes, the night had brought
- him that. And if there was a God, was it God who had led him, as old
- Mother Blondin had been led, to fall upon his knees in that pew below
- there where Valérie now sat, and <i>pray?</i> Had he prayed for old Mother
- Blondin's sake <i>alone?</i> Was God partial then? Old Mother Blondin, he
- knew, even if her surrender were not yet complete, had found the way. He
- had not. He had found no way&mdash;to save that man who was to be hanged
- by the neck until he was dead&mdash;to save Valérie from shame and misery
- if she cared, if she still cared&mdash;to save himself! Old Mother Blondin
- alone had found the way. Was it because she was the lesser sinner of the
- two&mdash;because he had blasphemed God beyond all recall&mdash;because he
- still dared to blaspheme God&mdash;because he had stood again that morning
- at the altar and had officiated as God's holy priest&mdash;because he
- stood here now in God's house, an impostor, an intruder and a defiler! No
- way! And yet <i>through him</i> old Mother Blondin had found her God
- again! Was it irony&mdash;God's irony&mdash;God's answer, irrefutable, to
- his former denial of God's existence!
- </p>
- <p>
- No way! Ten feet below him Valérie and the old sacristan talked and
- watched; the weather-beaten timbers of the great cross were within reach
- of his hands; there, inside the chancel rail, was the altar&mdash;all
- these things were real, were physically real. It did not seem as though it
- could be so. It seemed as though, instead, he were taking part in some
- horrible, and horribly vivid dream-life. Only there would be no awakening!
- There was no way&mdash;he would twist this cord about the iron hooks on
- the cross and the iron hook on the wall, and descend, and go through
- another day, and be the good, young Father Aubert, and toss through
- another night, and wait, clinging to the miserable hope, spurned even by
- his gambler's instinct, that &ldquo;something&rdquo; might happen&mdash;wait for the
- deciding of that appeal, and picture the doomed man in the death cell, and
- dream his dreams, and watch Valérie from his prison land, and know through
- the hours and minutes torment and merciless unrest. Yes, he believed there
- was a God. He believed that God had brought them both here, old Mother
- Blondin to cling to the foot of the cross, and himself to find her there&mdash;but
- to him there had come no peace&mdash;no way. His blasphemy, his
- desecration of God's altar and God's church had been made to serve God's
- ends&mdash;old Mother Blondin had found the way. But that purpose was
- accomplished now. How much longer, then, would God suffer this to
- continue? Not long! To-morrow, the next day, the day after, would come the
- answer to the appeal&mdash;and then he must choose. Choose! Choose what?
- What was there to choose where&mdash;his hands gripped hard on the rung of
- the ladder. Enough! Enough of this! It was terrible enough in the nights!
- There was no end to it! It would go on and on&mdash;the same ghoulish
- cycle over and over again. He would not let it master him now, for there
- would be no end to it! He was here to fix the cross. To fix God's cross,
- the consecrated cross&mdash;it was a fitting task for one who walked
- always with that symbol suspended from his neck! It was curious how that
- symbol had tangled up his hands the night his fingers had crept toward
- that white throat on the bed! Even the garb of priest that he wore God
- turned to account, and&mdash;no! He lifted his hand and swept it fiercely
- across his eyes. Enough! That was enough! It was only beginning somewhere
- else in the cycle that inevitably led around into all the rest again.
- </p>
- <p>
- He fought his mind back to his immediate surroundings. He was above the
- horizontal arm of the cross now, and he could see and appreciate how
- narrowly a catastrophe had been averted the night before. It was, as
- Valérie had said, a miracle that the cross had not fallen, for the single
- strand of cord that still held it was frayed to a threadlike thinness.
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced above him, decided to make the vertical beam, or centre, of the
- cross secure first by passing the cord around the upper hook in the wall
- that was still just a little beyond his reach, stepped quickly up to the
- next rung of the ladder&mdash;and lurched suddenly, pitching heavily to
- one side. It was his <i>soutane</i>, the garb of priest, the garb of God's
- holy priest&mdash;his foot had caught in the skirt of his <i>soutane</i>.
- He flung out his hands against the wall to save himself. It was too late!
- The ladder swayed against the cross&mdash;the threadlike fastening snapped&mdash;and
- the massive arms of the cross lunged outward toward him, pushing the
- ladder back. A cry, hoarse, involuntary, burst from his lips&mdash;it was
- echoed by another, a cry from Valérie, a cry that rang in terror through
- the church. Two faces, white with horror, looking up at him from below,
- flashed before his eyes&mdash;and he was plunging backward, downward with
- the ladder&mdash;and hurtling through the air behind it, the mighty cross,
- with arms outspread as though in vengeance and to defy escape, pursued and
- rushed upon him, and&mdash;&mdash; There was a terrific crash, the rip and
- rend and tear of splintering wood&mdash;and blackness.
- </p>
- <p>
- There came at first a dull sense of pain; then the pain began to increase
- in intensity. There were insistent murmurings; there were voices. He was
- coming back to consciousness; but he seemed to be coming very slowly, for
- he could not move or make any sign. His side commenced to cause him agony.
- His head ached and throbbed as though it were being pounded under quick
- and never-ending hammer blows; and yet it seemed to be strangely and
- softly cushioned. The murmurings continued. He began to distinguish words&mdash;and
- then suddenly his brain was cleared, cleared as by some terrific mental
- shock that struck to the soul, uplifting it in a flood of glory, engulfing
- it in a fathomless and abysmal misery. It was Valerie&mdash;it was
- Valerie's voice&mdash;Valerie whispering in a frightened, terrified,
- almost demented way&mdash;whispering that she <i>loved</i> him, imploring
- him to speak.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;... Oh, will no one come! Can Narcisse find no one! I&mdash;I cannot
- bring him back to consciousness! Speak to me! Speak to me! You must&mdash;you
- shall! It is I who have sinned in loving you. It is I who have sinned and
- made God angry, and brought this upon you. But God will not let you die&mdash;because&mdash;because&mdash;it
- was my sin&mdash;and&mdash;and you would never know. I&mdash;I promised
- God that you would never know. And you&mdash;you shall not die! You shall
- not! You shall not! Speak to me&mdash;oh, speak to me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Speak to her! Speak to Valerie! Not even to whisper her name&mdash;when
- the blood in a fiery tide whipped through his veins; when impulse born of
- every fibre of his being prompted him to lift his arms to her face, so
- close to his that he could feel her breath upon his cheek, and draw it
- closer, closer, until it lay against his own, and to hold it there, and
- find her lips, and feel them cling to his! There was a physical agony from
- his hurts upon him that racked him from head to foot&mdash;but there was
- an agony deeper still that was in his soul. His head was pillowed on her
- knee, but even to open his eyes and look up into that pure face he loved
- was denied him, even to whisper a word that would allay her fears and
- comfort her was denied him. From Valérie's own lips had come the bitterest
- and dearest words that he would ever hear. He could temporise no longer
- now. He could juggle no more with his false and inconsistent arguments.
- Valérie cared, Valérie loved him&mdash;as he had known she cared, as he
- had known she loved him. A moan was on his lips, forced there by a sudden
- twinge of pain that seemed unendurable. He choked it back. She must not
- know that he had heard&mdash;he must simulate unconsciousness. He could
- not save her from much now, from the &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo; that was so close upon
- him&mdash;but he could save her from this. She should not know! God's
- cross in God's church... his blasphemy, his sacrilege had been answered...
- the very garb of priest had repaid him for its profanation and struck him
- down... and Valérie... Valérie was here... holding him... and Valérie
- loved him... but Valérie must not know... it was between Valérie and her
- God... she must not know that he had heard.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hands were caressing his face, smoothing back his hair, bathing his
- forehead with the water which had been her first thought perhaps before
- she had sent Narcisse for help. Valérie's hands! Like fire, they were,
- upon him, torturing him with a torture beyond the bodily torment he was
- suffering; and like the tenderest, gladdest joy he had ever known, they
- were. A priest of God&mdash;and Valérie! No, it went deeper far than that;
- it was a life of which this was but the inevitable and bitter culmination&mdash;and
- Valérie. But for that, in a surge of triumphant ecstasy, victor of a prize
- beyond all price, his arms might have swept out in the full tide of his
- manhood's strength around her, claiming her surrender&mdash;a surrender
- that would have been his right&mdash;a surrender that would have been
- written deep in love and trust and faith and glory in those dark,
- tear-dimmed eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now her hands closed softly, and remained still, and held his face
- between them&mdash;and she was gazing down at him. He could see her, he
- had no need to open his eyes for that&mdash;he could see the sweet,
- quivering lips; the love, the terror, the yearning, the fear mingling in
- the white, beautiful face. And then suddenly, with a choked sob, she bent
- forward and kissed him, and laid her face against his cheek.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He will not speak to me!&rdquo;&mdash;her voice was breaking. &ldquo;Then listen, my
- lover&mdash;my lover, who cannot hear&mdash;my lover, who will never know.
- Is it wrong to kiss you, is it making my sin the greater to tell you&mdash;you
- who will not hear. There is only God to know. And out of all my life it is
- for just this once&mdash;for just this once. Afterwards, if you live, I
- will ask God to forgive&mdash;for it is only for this once&mdash;this once
- out of all my life. And&mdash;and&mdash;if you die&mdash;then&mdash;then I
- will ask God to be merciful and&mdash;and take me too. You did not know I
- loved you so, and I had never thought to tell you. And if you live you
- will never know, because you are God's priest, and my sin is very
- terrible, but&mdash;but I&mdash;I shall know that you are somewhere, a big
- and brave and loyal man, and glad in your life, and&mdash;and loved, as
- all love you here in St. Marleau. All through my life I will love you&mdash;all
- through my life&mdash;and&mdash;and I will remember that for just this
- once, for this moment out of all the years, I gave myself to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She drew him closer. An agony that was maddening shot through his side as
- she moved him. If he might only clench his teeth deep in his lips that he
- might not scream out! But he could not do that for Valeric would see&mdash;and
- Valérie must not know. Tighter and tighter she held him in her strong,
- young arms&mdash;and now, like the bursting wide of flood-gates, there was
- passion in her voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I love you! I love you! I love you! And I am afraid&mdash;and I am
- afraid! For I am only a woman, and it is a woman's love. Would you turn
- from me if you knew? No, no&mdash;I&mdash;I do not know what I am saying&mdash;only
- that you are here with my arms around you&mdash;and that&mdash;that your
- face is so pale&mdash;and that&mdash;and that you will not speak to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was crying. She bent lower until, as a mother clasps a child, his head
- lay upon her breast and shoulder, and her own head was buried on his
- breast. And again with the movement came excruciating pain, and now a
- weakness, a giddy swirling of his senses. It passed. He opened his eyes
- for an instant, for she could not see him now. He was lying just inside
- the chancel rail, and almost at the altar's foot. The sunlight streamed
- through the windows of the church, but they were in shadow, Valérie and
- he, in a curious shadow&mdash;it seemed to fall in a straight line across
- them both, and yet be spread out in two wide arms that completely covered
- them. And at first he could not understand, and then he saw that the great
- cross lay forward with its foot against the wall and the arms upon the
- shattered chancel rail&mdash;and the shadow was the shadow of the cross.
- What did it mean? Was it there premonitory of a wrath still unappeased,
- that was still to know fulfilment; or was it there in pity&mdash;on
- Valérie&mdash;into whose life he had brought a sorrow that would never
- know its healing? He closed his eyes again&mdash;the giddiness had come
- once more.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I promised God that he would never know&rdquo;&mdash;she was speaking
- scarcely above her breath, and the passion was gone out from her voice
- now, and there was only pleading and entreaty. &ldquo;Mary, dear and holy
- Mother, have pity, and listen, and forgive&mdash;and bring him back to
- life. It came, and it was stronger than I&mdash;the love. But I will keep
- my promise to God&mdash;always&mdash;always. Forgive my sin, if it is not
- too great for forgiveness, and help me to endure&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- her voice broke in a sob, and was still.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her lips touched his brow gently; her hands smoothed back his hair.
- Dizziness and torturing pain were sweeping over him in swiftly alternating
- flashes. There were beads of agony standing out, he knew, upon his
- forehead&mdash;but they were mingled and were lost in the tears that
- suddenly fell hot upon him. Valerie! Valerie! God give him strength that
- he might not writhe, that he might not moan. No, he need not fear that&mdash;the
- pain was not so great now&mdash;it seemed to be passing gradually, very
- gradually, even soothingly, away&mdash;there were other voices&mdash;they
- seemed a long way off&mdash;there seemed to be footsteps and the closing
- of a door&mdash;and the footsteps came nearer and nearer&mdash;but as they
- came nearer they grew fainter and fainter&mdash;and blackness fell again.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXI&mdash;THE CONDEMNED CELL
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE reins lay idly
- in Raymond's hand. The horse, left to its own initiative, ambled lazily to
- the crest of a little rise that commanded a view of the town of
- Tournayville beyond. Raymond's eyes, lifting from the dash-board, ignoring
- the general perspective, fixed and held on a single detail, to the right,
- and perhaps a mile away&mdash;a high, rectangular, gray stone wall, that
- inclosed a gray, rectangular stone building.
- </p>
- <p>
- His eyes reverted to the dash-board. It was nearly two weeks now since he
- had seen that cold and narrow space with its iron bars, and the figure
- that huddled on the cot clasping its hands dejectedly between its knees&mdash;nearly
- two weeks. It was ten days since he had been struck down in the church&mdash;and
- in another ten days, over yonder, inside that gray stone wall, a man was
- to be hung by the neck until he was dead. Ten days forward&mdash;ten days
- backward&mdash;ten days.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ten days! In the ten days just past he had sought, in a deeper, more
- terrible anguish of mind than even in those days when he had thought the
- bitterest dregs were already at his lips, for the answer to these ten days
- to come&mdash;for now there was Valerie, Valérie's love, no longer a
- probability against which he might argue fiercely, desperately with
- himself, but an actual, real, existent, living thing, glorious and
- wonderful&mdash;and terrible as a hand of death stretching out a pointing
- finger to the &ldquo;afterwards.&rdquo; And there was God.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes&mdash;God! He was still the curé of St. Marleau, still the good, young
- Father Aubert; but since that morning when he had been struck down at the
- foot of God's altar he had not entered the church&mdash;and he had been no
- more a priest, profaning that holy place. It was not fear, a craven,
- superstitious fear that the hand which had struck him once would deal him
- physical injury again; it was not that&mdash;it was&mdash;what? He did not
- know. His mind was chaos there&mdash;chaos where it groped for a definite,
- tangible expression of his attitude toward God. There was a God. It was
- God who had drawn old Mother Blondin to the church that night, and had
- made him the instrument of her recovered faith&mdash;and the instrument of
- his own punishment when, in her fright which he had caused, she had
- loosened the great cross upon the wall. It was not coincidence, it was not
- superstition&mdash;deep in his consciousness lay the memory of that night
- when, with the old woman's hand in his, he had knelt and prayed; and deep
- in his consciousness was the sure knowledge that when he had prayed he had
- prayed in the presence of God. But he could get no further&mdash;it was as
- though he looked on God from afar off. Here turmoil took command. There
- was Valérie; the man who was to die; himself; the inflexible, immutable
- approach, the closing in upon him of that day of final reckoning. And God
- had shown him no way. He seemed to recognise an avenging God, not one to
- love. He could not say that he had the impulse to revere as the simple
- people of St. Marleau had, as Valérie had&mdash;and yet since that morning
- when they had carried him unconscious to the <i>presbytère</i> he had not
- again entered the church, he had not again stood before God's altar in his
- blasphemous, stolen garb of priest!
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's thumb nail made abstracted little markings on the leather rein
- in his hand. Yes, that was true; profanation seemed to have acquired a
- new, and personal, and intimate meaning&mdash;and he had not gone.
- Circumstances had aided him. The solicitude of Madame Lafleur had made it
- easy for him to linger in bed, and subsequently to remain confined to his
- room long after his broken ribs, and the severe contusions he had received
- in his fall, had healed sufficiently to let him get about again. And he
- had allowed Madame Lafleur to &ldquo;persuade&rdquo; him! It had not been difficult as
- far as the early morning mass was concerned, for, with the curé sick in
- bed, the mass, it would be expected, would be temporarily dispensed with;
- but a Sunday had intervened. But even that he had solved. If some one from
- somewhere must say mass that day, it must be some one who would not by any
- chance have ever known or met the real Father François Aubert. There was
- Father Décan, the prison chaplain of Tour-nayville. He had never met
- Father Décan, even when visiting the jail, but since Father Décan had not
- recognised the prisoner, Father Décan obviously would have no suspicions
- of one Raymond Chapelle&mdash;and so he had sent a request to Father Décan
- to celebrate mass on the preceding Sunday, and Father Décan had complied.
- </p>
- <p>
- The thumb nail bit a little deeper into the leather. Yesterday was the
- first day he had been out. This morning he had again deliberately
- dispensed with the mass, but to-day was Saturday&mdash;and to-morrow would
- be Sunday&mdash;and to-morrow St. Marleau would gather to hear the good,
- young Father Aubert preach again! Was God playing with him! Did God not
- see that he had twisted, and turned, and struggled, and planned that he
- might not blaspheme and profane God's altar again! Did God not see that he
- revolted at the thought! And yet God had shown him no other way. What else
- could he do? What else was there to do? He was still with his life at
- stake, with the life of another at stake&mdash;and there was Valérie&mdash;Valérie&mdash;Valérie!
- </p>
- <p>
- A sharp cry of pain came involuntarily to his lips, and found utterance&mdash;and
- startled the horse into a reluctant jogging for a few paces. Valérie! He
- had scarcely seen her in all those ten days. It was Madame Lafleur who had
- taken care of him. Valérie had not purposely avoided him&mdash;it was not
- that&mdash;only she had gone to live practically all the time at old
- Mother Blondin's. The old woman was dying. For three days now she had not
- roused from unconsciousness. This morning she had been very low. By the
- time he returned she might be dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dead! These were the closing hours of his own life in St. Marleau, the end
- here, too, was very near&mdash;and the closing hours, with sinister,
- ominous significance, seemed to be all encompassed about and permeated
- with death. It was not only old Mother Blon-din. There was the man in the
- death cell, whom he was on his way to see now, this afternoon, who was
- waiting for death&mdash;for death on a dangling rope&mdash;for death that
- was not many days off. Yesterday Father Décan had driven out to say that
- the prisoner was in a pitiful state of mental collapse, imploring,
- begging, entreating that Father Aubert should come to him&mdash;and so
- this afternoon Father Aubert, the good, young Father Aubert, was on his
- way&mdash;to the cell of death.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's lips moved silently. This was the very threshold of the
- &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;&mdash;the threshold of that day&mdash;the day of wrath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Dies ilia, dies ira, calamitatis et miserio, dies magna et am ara
- valde</i>&mdash;That day, a day of wrath, of wasting, and of misery, a
- great day, and exceeding bitter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Unbidden had come the words. Set his face was, and white. If all else were
- false, if God were but the transition from the fairy tales of childhood to
- the fairy tale of maturity, if religion were but a shell, a beautiful
- shell that was empty, a storehouse of wonderful architectural beauty that
- held no treasure within&mdash;at least those words were true&mdash;a day
- of wrath, and exceeding bitter. And that day was upon him; and there was
- no way to go, no turn to take, only the dark, mocking pathways of the maze
- that possessed no opening, only the dank, slimy walls of that Walled Place
- against which he beat and bruised his fists in impotent despair. There was
- the man who was to be hanged&mdash;and himself&mdash;and Valerie&mdash;and
- he knew now that Valérie loved him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The horse ambled on through the outskirts of the town. Occasionally
- Raymond mechanically turned out for a passing team, and acknowledged
- mechanically the respectful salutation. In his mind a new thought was
- germinating and taking form. He had said that God-had shown him no way.
- Was he so sure of that? If God had led him to the church that night, and
- had brought through him an eleventh hour reversion of faith to old Mother
- Blondin, and had forced the acceptance of divine existence upon himself,
- was he so sure that in the breaking of the fastenings of the cross, that
- it might fall and strike him down, there lay only a crowning punishment,
- only a thousandfold greater anguish, only bitter, helpless despair, in
- that it had been the means whereby, from Valérie's own lips, he had come
- to the knowledge of Valérie's love? Was he so sure of that? Was he so sure
- that in the very coming to him of the knowledge of her love he was not
- being shown the way he was to take!
- </p>
- <p>
- The buckboard turned from the road it had been following, and took the one
- leading to the jail. Subconsciously Raymond guided the horse now, and
- subconsciously he was alive to his surroundings and to the passers-by&mdash;but
- his mind worked on and on with the thought that now obsessed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suppose that his choice of saving one of the two lay between this man in
- the condemned cell and Valerie&mdash;which would he choose? He laughed
- sharply aloud in ironical derision. Which would he choose! It was pitiful,
- it was absurd&mdash;the question! Pitiful? Absurd? Well, but was it not
- precisely the choice he was called upon to make&mdash;to choose between
- Valérie and the man in the condemned cell? Was that not what the knowledge
- of her love meant? She loved him; from her own lips, as she had poured out
- her soul, thinking there was none but God to hear, he had learned the full
- measure of her love&mdash;a love that would never die, deep, and pure, and
- sinless&mdash;a love that was but the stronger for the sorrow it had to
- bear&mdash;a cherished, hallowed love around which her very life had
- entwined itself until life and love were one for always.
- </p>
- <p>
- The gray stone walls of the jail, cold, dreary, forbidding, loomed up a
- little way ahead. The reins were loose upon the dashboard, but clenched in
- a mighty grip in Raymond's hand. He could save the man in there from death&mdash;but
- he could save Valérie from what would be worse than death to her. He could
- save her from the shame, the agony, the degradation that would kill that
- pure soul of hers, that would imbitter, wreck and ruin that young life, if
- he, the object of her love, should dangle as a felon from the gallows
- almost before her eyes, or flee, leaving to that love, a felon's heritage.
- Yes, he could save Valérie from that; and if he could save Valérie from
- that, what did the man in the condemned cell count for in the balance? The
- man meant nothing to him&mdash;nothing&mdash;nothing! It was Valérie!
- There was the &ldquo;accident&rdquo;&mdash;so easy, so sure&mdash;the &ldquo;death&rdquo; of the
- good, young Father Aubert&mdash;the upturned boat&mdash;the body
- supposedly washed out to sea. Long ago, in the first days of his life in
- St. Marleau, he had worked out the details, and the plan could not fail.
- There would be her grief, of course; he could not stand between her and
- her grief for the loss of the one she loved&mdash;but it would be a grief
- without bitterness, a memory without shame.
- </p>
- <p>
- Did the man in the condemned cell count for anything against that! It
- would save Valerie, and&mdash;his face set suddenly in rigid lines, and
- his lips drew tight together&mdash;and it would save <i>himself!</i> It
- was the one alternative to either giving himself up to stand in the
- other's place, or of becoming a fugitive, branding himself as such, and
- saving the condemned man by a confession sent, say, to the Bishop, who, he
- remembered, knew the real François Aubert personally, and could therefore
- at once identify the man. Yes, it was the one alternative&mdash;and that
- alternative would save&mdash;himself! Wait! Was he sure that it was only
- Valérie of whom he was thinking? Was he sure that he was sincere? Was he
- sure there were no coward promptings&mdash;to save himself?
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment the tense and drawn expression in his face held as he groped
- in mind and soul for the answer; and then his lips parted in a bitter
- smile. It was not much to boast of! Three-Ace Artie a coward? Ask of the
- men of that far Northland whose lives ran hand in hand with death, ask of
- the men of the Yukon, ask of the men who knew! Gambler, roué, whatever
- else they might have called him, no man had ever called him coward! If his
- actual death, rather than his supposititious death, could save Valérie the
- better, in his soul he knew that he would not have hesitated. Why then
- should he hesitate about this man! If it lay between Valérie and this man,
- why should he hesitate! If he would give his own life to save Valérie from
- suffering and shame, why should he consider this man's life&mdash;this man
- who meant nothing to him&mdash;nothing!
- </p>
- <p>
- Well, had he decided? He was at the jail now. Was he satisfied that this
- was the way? Yes! Yes&mdash;<i>yes!</i> He told himself with fierce
- insistence that it was&mdash;an insistence that by brute force beat down
- an opposition that somehow seemed miserably seeking to intrude itself. Yes&mdash;it
- was the way! There was only the appeal, that one chance to wait for, and
- once that was refused he would borrow Bouchard's boat&mdash;Bouchard's new
- boat&mdash;and to-morrow, or the next day, or the next, whenever it might
- be, instead of looking for him at mass in church, St. Marleau would look
- along the shore in search of the body of the good, young Father Aubert.
- </p>
- <p>
- He tied his horse, and knocked upon the jail gate, and presently the gate
- was opened.
- </p>
- <p>
- The attendant touched his cap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Salut</i>, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; he said respectfully, as he stepped
- aside for Raymond to enter. &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé had a very narrow escape.
- The blessed saints be praised! It is good to see him. He is quite well
- again?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quite,&rdquo; said Raymond pleasantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man closed the gate, and led the way across a narrow courtyard to the
- jail building. The jail was pretentious neither in size nor in staff&mdash;the
- man who had opened the gate acted as one of the turnkeys as well.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is to see the prisoner Mentone that Monsieur le Curé has come, of
- course?&rdquo; suggested the attendant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Raymond answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- The turnkey nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Pauvre diable!</i> He will be glad! He has been calling for you all
- the time. It did no good to tell him you were sick, and Father Décan could
- do nothing with him. He has been very bad&mdash;not hard to manage, you
- understand, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;but he does not sleep except when he is
- exhausted, because he says there is only a little while left and he will
- live that much longer if he keeps awake. <i>Tiens!</i> I have never had a
- murderer here to be hanged before, and I do not like it. I dream of the
- man myself!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond made no reply. They had entered the jail now, and the turnkey was
- leading the way along a cell-flanked corridor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I dream of him every night, and the job ahead of us&mdash;and so
- does Jacques, the other turnkey.&rdquo; The man nodded his head again; then,
- over his shoulder: &ldquo;He has a visitor with him now, Monsieur le Curé, but
- that will not matter&mdash;it is Monsieur l'Avocat, Monsieur Lemoyne, you
- know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne! Lemoyne&mdash;here! Why? Raymond reached out impulsively, and,
- catching the turnkey's arm, brought the man to a sudden halt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur Lemoyne, you say!&rdquo; he exclaimed sharply. &ldquo;What is Monsieur
- Lemoyne doing here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&mdash;but, I do not know, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; the turnkey, taken by
- surprise, stammered. &ldquo;He comes often, he is often here, it is the
- privilege of the prisoner's lawyer. I&mdash;I thought that perhaps
- Monsieur le Curé would care to see him too. But perhaps Monsieur le Curé
- would prefer to wait until he has gone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's hand fell away from the other's arm. &ldquo;No&mdash;I will
- see him. I was afraid for the moment that he might have brought&mdash;bad
- news. That was all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, yes, I understand, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;the turnkey nodded once
- more. &ldquo;But I do not know. Monsieur Lemoyne said nothing when he came in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Afraid! Afraid that Lemoyne had brought the answer to that appeal! Well,
- what if Lemoyne had! Had he, Raymond, not known always what the answer
- would be, and had he not just decided what he would do when that answer
- was received&mdash;had he not decided that between the man and Valérie
- there could be no hesitation, no more faltering, or tormenting&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- The cell door swung open.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Enter, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The turnkey's voice seemed far away. Mechanically Raymond stepped forward.
- The door clanged raucously behind him. There came a cry, a choked cry, a
- strangling cry, that mingled a pitiful joy with terror and despair&mdash;and
- a figure with outstretched arms, a figure with gaunt, white, haggard face
- was stumbling toward him; and now the figure had flung itself upon its
- knees, and was clutching at him convulsively with its arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father&mdash;Father François Aubert&mdash;father, have pity upon me&mdash;father,
- tell them to have pity upon me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet he scarcely saw this figure, scarcely heard the voice, though his
- hands were laid upon the bowed head that was buried in the skirt of his <i>soutane</i>.
- He was looking at that other figure, at Lemoyne, the young lawyer, who
- stood at the far end of the cell near the iron-barred window. There were
- tears in Lemoyne's eyes; and Lemoyne held a document in his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank God that you have come, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; Lemoyne said huskily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond steadied his voice&mdash;&ldquo;bad news?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne silently extended the document.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were a great many words, a great many sentences written on the
- paper. If he read them all, Raymond was not conscious of it; he was
- conscious only that, in summary, he had grasped their meaning&mdash;<i>the
- man must die</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man's head was still buried in Raymond's <i>soutane</i>, his hands
- still clasped tightly at Raymond's knees. Raymond did not speak&mdash;the
- question was in his eyes as they met Lemoyne's.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne shook his head hopelessly, and, taking the document back from
- Raymond, returned it slowly to his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will leave you alone with him, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;it will be
- better,&rdquo; he said in a low voice. He stepped across the cell, and for a
- moment laid his hand on the shoulder of the kneeling man. &ldquo;Courage, Henri&mdash;I
- will come back to-morrow,&rdquo; he whispered, and passed on to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond stepped to Lemoyne's side, as the lawyer rattled
- upon the door for the turnkey. &ldquo;There&mdash;there is nothing more that can
- be done?&rdquo; His throat was dry, even his undertone rasped and grated in his
- own ears. &ldquo;Nothing?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing!&rdquo; Lemoyne's wet eyes lifted to meet Raymond's, and again he shook
- his head. &ldquo;I shall ask, as a matter of course, that the sentence be
- commuted to life imprisonment&mdash;but it will not be granted. It&mdash;it
- would be cruelty even to suggest it to him, Monsieur le Curé.&rdquo; And then,
- as the door opened, he wrung Raymond's hand, and went hurriedly from the
- cell.
- </p>
- <p>
- Slowly Raymond turned away from the door. There was hollow laughter in his
- soul. A mocking voice was in his ears&mdash;that inner voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, <i>that</i> is decided! Now put your own decision into effect, and
- have done with this! Have done with it&mdash;do you hear! Have done with
- it&mdash;have done with it&mdash;once for all!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His eyes swept the narrow cell, its white walls, the bare, cold floor, the
- cot with its rumpled blanket, the iron bars on the window that sullenly
- permitted an oblong shaft of sunlight to fall obliquely on the floor&mdash;and
- upon the figure that, still upon its knees, held out its arms imploringly
- to him, that cried again to him piteously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father&mdash;Father Aubert&mdash;help me&mdash;tell them to have pity
- upon me&mdash;save me, father&mdash;Father François Aubert&mdash;save me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond, though he fought to shift his eyes again to those iron bars,
- to the sunlight's shaft, to anywhere, could not take them from that
- figure. The man was distraught, stricken, beside himself; weakness,
- illness, the weeks of confinement, the mental anguish, crowned in this
- moment as he saw his last hope swept away, had done their work. The tears
- raced down the pallid cheeks; the eyes were like&mdash;like they had been
- in the courtroom that day&mdash;like dumb beast's in agony.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Soothe him, quiet him,&rdquo; snarled that voice savagely, &ldquo;and do it as
- quickly as you can&mdash;and get out of here! Tell him about that God that
- you think you've come to believe is not a myth, if you like&mdash;tell him
- anything that will let you get away&mdash;and remember Valérie. Do you
- think this scene here in this cell, and that thing grovelling on the floor
- is the sum of human misery? Then picture Valérie nursing shame and horror
- and degradation in her soul! What is this man to you! Remember Valérie!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes&mdash;Valérie! That was true! Only&mdash;if only he could avoid the
- man's eyes! Well, why did not he, Raymond, speak, why did he not act, why
- did he not do something&mdash;instead of standing here impotently over the
- other, and simply hold the man's hands&mdash;yes, that was what he was
- doing&mdash;that was what felt so hot, so feverishly hot&mdash;those hands
- that laced their fingers so frantically around his.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My son,&rdquo;&mdash;the words were coming by sheer force of will&mdash;&ldquo;do not
- give way like this. Try and calm yourself. See&rdquo;&mdash;he stooped, and,
- raising the other by the shoulders, drew him to the cot&mdash;&ldquo;sit here,
- and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You will not go, father&mdash;you will not go?&rdquo;&mdash;the man was passing
- his hands up and down Raymond's arms, patting them, caressing them, as
- though to assure and reassure himself that Raymond was there. &ldquo;They told
- me that you were hurt, and&mdash;and I was afraid, for there is no one
- else, father&mdash;no one else&mdash;only&mdash;only you&mdash;and you are
- here now&mdash;you are here now&mdash;and&mdash;and you will stay with me,
- father?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond numbly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you are here&rdquo;&mdash;it was as though the man were whispering to
- himself, and a smile had lighted up the wan face. &ldquo;See, I am not afraid
- any more, for you have come. Monsieur Lemoyne said that I must die, that
- there was no hope any more, that&mdash;that I would have to be hanged, but
- you will not let them, father, you will not let them&mdash;for you have
- come now&mdash;you have come&mdash;Father François Aubert, my friend, you
- have come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's hand, resting on the cot behind the other's back, picked up and
- clenched a fold of blanket. There was something horrible, abominable,
- hellish in the man's trustful smile, in the man's faith, that was the
- faith of a child in the parent's omnipotence, in this man crying upon his
- own name as a magic talisman that would open to him the gates of life!
- What answer was there to make? He could not sit here dumb&mdash;and yet he
- could not speak. There were things a <i>priest</i> should say&mdash;a
- priest who was here to comfort a man condemned to death, a man who was to
- be hanged by the neck until he was dead. He should talk to the other of
- God, of the tender mercy of God, of the life that was to come where there
- was no more death. But talk to the man like that&mdash;when he, Raymond,
- was sending the other to his doom; when the other, not he, should be
- sitting here in this <i>soutane</i>; when he had already robbed the man of
- his identity, and even at this moment purposed robbing him of his life!
- Act Father François Aubert to Father François Aubert here in this prison
- cell under the shadow of that dangling rope, tell him of God, of God's
- tender mercy, supplicate to God for that mercy, <i>pray</i> with his lips
- for that mercy while he stabbed the man to death! He shivered, and it
- seemed as though his fingers would tear and rend through the blanket in
- the fierceness of their clutch&mdash;it was the one logical, natural thing
- that a priest should say, that he, in his priestly dress, should say! <i>No!</i>
- He neither would nor could! It was hideous! No human soul could touch
- depths as black as that&mdash;and the man was clinging to him&mdash;clinging
- to him&mdash;and&mdash;-
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Remember Valérie!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;it came like a curling lash, that inner
- voice, curt, brutal, contemptuous. &ldquo;Are you going to weaken again?
- Remember what it cost you once&mdash;and remember that it is for Valérie's
- sake this time!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The strong jaws set together. Yes&mdash;Valérie! Yes&mdash;he would
- remember. He would not falter now&mdash;he would go through with it, and
- have done with it. Between this man's life and a lifelong misery for
- Valerie there could be no hesitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Henri Mentone, my son,&rdquo; he said gravely, &ldquo;I adjure you to be brave. I
- have come, it is true, and I will come often, but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The words that Raymond's brain was stumbling, groping for, the
- &ldquo;something,&rdquo; the &ldquo;anything&rdquo; to say, found no expression. The man suddenly
- appeared to be paying no attention; his head was turned in a tense,
- listening attitude; there was horror in the white face; and now the
- other's hands closed like steel bands around Raymond's wrists.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; whispered the man wildly. &ldquo;Listen! Oh, my God&mdash;listen!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Startled, Raymond turned his head about, looking quickly around the cell.
- There was nothing&mdash;there was no sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you hear it!&rdquo;&mdash;the other's voice was guttural and choked now,
- and he shook fiercely at Raymond's wrists. &ldquo;I thought it had gone away
- when you came, but there it is again. I&mdash;I thought you had told them
- to stop! Don't you hear it&mdash;don't you hear it! Don't you hear them <i>hammering!</i>
- Listen! Listen! There it is!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond felt the blood ebb swiftly from his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No&mdash;try and compose yourself. There is nothing&mdash;nothing, my son&mdash;it
- is only&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tell you, yes!&rdquo; cried the man frantically. &ldquo;I hear it! I hear it! You
- say, no; and I tell you, yes! I have heard it night and day. It comes from
- there&mdash;see!&rdquo;&mdash;he swept one hand toward the barred window, and
- suddenly, leaping to his feet, dragged at Raymond with almost superhuman
- strength, forcing Raymond up from the cot and across the cell. &ldquo;Come, and
- I will show you! It is out there! They are hammering out there now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man's face was ghastly, the frenzy with which he pulled was ghastly&mdash;and
- now at the window he thrust out his arm through the bars, far out up to
- the armpit, far out with horrible eagerness, and pointed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There! There! You cannot see, but it is just around the corner of the
- building&mdash;between the building and the wall. You cannot see, but it
- is just around the corner there that they are building it! Listen to them!
- Listen to them&mdash;hammering&mdash;hammering&mdash;hammering!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sweat was on Raymond's forehead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come away!&rdquo; he said hoarsely. &ldquo;In the name of God, come away!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, you hear it now!&rdquo;&mdash;the condemned man drew in his arm, until his
- fingers clawed and picked at the bars. &ldquo;They will not stop, and it is
- because I cannot remember&mdash;because I cannot remember&mdash;here&mdash;here&mdash;here&rdquo;&mdash;he
- swung clear of the window&mdash;and suddenly raising his clenched fists
- began to beat with almost maniacal fury at his temples. &ldquo;If I could
- remember, they would stop&mdash;they would&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Henri! My son!&rdquo; Raymond cried out sharply&mdash;and caught at the other's
- hands. A crimson drop had oozed from the man's bruised skin, and now was
- trickling down the colourless, working face. &ldquo;You do not know what you are
- doing! Listen to me! Listen! Let me go!&rdquo;&mdash;the man wrenched and fought
- furiously to break Raymond's hold. &ldquo;They will not stop out there&mdash;they
- are hammering&mdash;don't you hear them hammering&mdash;and it is because
- I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; The snarl, the fury in the voice was suddenly a
- sob. The man was like a child again, helpless, stricken, chidden; and as
- Raymond's hands unlocked, the man reached out his arms and put them around
- Raymond's neck, and hid his face upon Raymond's shoulder. &ldquo;Forgive me,
- father&mdash;forgive me!&rdquo; he pleaded brokenly. &ldquo;Forgive me&mdash;it is
- sometimes more than I can bear.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's arms mechanically tightened around the shaking shoulders; and
- mechanically he drew the other slowly back to the cot. Something was
- gnawing at his soul until his soul grew sick and faint. Hell shrieked its
- abominable approval in his ears, as he sat down upon the cot still holding
- the other&mdash;and shrieked the louder, until the cell seemed to ring and
- ring again with its unholy mirth, as the man pressed his lips to the
- crucifix on Raymond's breast.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father, I do not want to die&rdquo;&mdash;the man spoke brokenly again. &ldquo;They
- say I killed a man. How could I have killed a man, father? See&rdquo;&mdash;he
- straightened back, and held out both his hands before Raymond's eyes&mdash;&ldquo;see,
- father, surely these hands have never harmed any one. I cannot remember&mdash;I
- do not remember anything they say I did. Surely if I could remember, I
- could make them know that I am innocent. But I cannot remember. Father,
- must I die because I cannot remember? Must I, father&rdquo;&mdash;the man's face
- was gray with anguish. &ldquo;I have prayed to God to make me remember, father,
- and&mdash;and He does not answer&mdash;He does not answer&mdash;and I hear
- only that hammering&mdash;and sometimes in the night there is something
- that tightens and tightens around my throat, and&mdash;and it is horrible.
- Father&mdash;Father François Aubert&mdash;tell them to have pity upon me&mdash;you
- believe that I am innocent, don't you&mdash;you believe, father&mdash;yes,
- yes!&rdquo;&mdash;he clutched at Raymond's shoulders&mdash;&ldquo;yes, yes, y°u
- believe&mdash;look into my eyes, look into my face&mdash;look, father&mdash;look&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Look! Look into that face, look into those eyes! He could not look.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My son, be still!&rdquo;&mdash;the words were wrung in sudden agony from
- Raymond's lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew the other's head to his shoulder again, and held the other there&mdash;that
- he might not look&mdash;that the eyes and the face might be hidden from
- him. And the form in his arms shook with convulsive sobs, and clung to
- him, and called him by its own name, and called him friend&mdash;this
- stricken man who was to die&mdash;for whom he, Raymond, was building &ldquo;it&rdquo;
- out there under the shadow of the jail wall&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;God,
- he too could hear that <i>hammering</i> and&mdash;&ldquo;Fool, remember
- Valérie!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The sweat beads multiplied upon Raymond's forehead. His face was
- bloodless; his grip so tight upon the other that the man cried out, yet in
- turn but clung the closer. Yes, that voice was right&mdash;right&mdash;right!
- It was only that for the moment he was unnerved. It was this man's life
- for Valérie&mdash;this man's life for Valérie. It would only be a few days
- more, and then it would be over in a second, before even the man knew it&mdash;but
- with Valérie it would be for all of life, and there would be years and
- years&mdash;yes, yes, it was only that he had been unnerved for the
- instant&mdash;it was this man's life for Valérie&mdash;if he would give
- his own life, why shouldn't he give this man's&mdash;why shouldn't&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- His brain, his mind, his thoughts seemed suddenly to be inert, to be held
- in some strangely numbed, yet fascinated suspension. He was staring at the
- shaft of sunlight that fought for its right against those iron bars to
- enter this place of death. He stared and stared at it&mdash;something&mdash;a
- face&mdash;seemed to be emerging slowly out of the sunlight, to be taking
- form just beyond, just outside those iron bars, to become framed in the
- gray, pitiless stone of the window slit, to be pressed against those iron
- bars, to be looking in.
- </p>
- <p>
- And suddenly he pushed the man violently and without heed from him, until
- the man fell forward on the cot, and Raymond, lurching upward himself,
- stood rocking upon his feet. It was clear, distinct now, that face looking
- in through those iron bars. It was Valerie's face&mdash;Valerie's&mdash;Valerie's
- face. It was beautiful as he had never seen it beautiful before. The sweet
- lips were parted in a smile of infinite tenderness and pity, and the dark
- eyes looked out through a mist of compassion, not upon him, but upon the
- figure behind him on the prison cot. He reached out his arms. His lips
- moved silently&mdash;Valérie! And then she seemed to turn her head and
- look at him, and her eyes swam deeper in their tears, and there was a
- wondrous light of love in her face, and with the love a condemnation that
- was one of sorrow and of bitter pain. She seemed to speak; he seemed to
- hear her voice: &ldquo;That life is not yours to give. I have sinned, my lover,
- in loving you. Is my sin to be beyond all forgiveness because out of my
- love has been born the guilt of murder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The voice was gone. The face had faded out of that shaft of sunlight&mdash;only
- the iron bars were there now. Raymond's outstretched arms fell to his side&mdash;and
- then he turned, and dropped upon his knees beside the cot, and hid his
- face in his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- Murder! Yes, it was murder&mdash;murder that desecrated, that vilified,
- that made a wanton thing of that pure love, that brave and sinless love,
- that Valerie had given him. And he would have linked the vilest and the
- blackest crime, hideous the more in the Judas betrayal with which he would
- have accomplished it, with Valerie&mdash;with Valerie's love! His hands,
- locked about his face, trembled. He was weak and nerveless in a Titanic
- revulsion of soul and mind and body. And horror was upon him, a horror of
- himself&mdash;and yet, too, a strange and numbed relief. It was not he, it
- was not he as he knew himself, who had meant to do this thing&mdash;it was
- not Raymond Chapelle who had thought and argued that this was the way.
- See! His soul recoiled, blasted, shrivelled now from before it! It was
- because his brain had been tormented, not to the verge of madness, but had
- been flung across that border-line for a space into the gibbering realms
- beyond where reason tottered and was lost.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was conscious that the man was sitting upright on the edge of the cot,
- conscious that the man's hands were plucking pitifully at the sleeve of
- his <i>soutane</i>, conscious that the man was pleading again
- hysterically: &ldquo;Father, you will tell them that you know I am innocent.
- They will believe you, father&mdash;they will believe you. They say I did
- it, father, but I cannot remember, or&mdash;or, perhaps, I could make them
- believe me, too. You will not let me die, father&mdash;because&mdash;because
- I cannot remember. You will save me, father&rdquo;&mdash;the man's voice was
- rising, passing beyond control&mdash;&ldquo;Father François Aubert, for the pity
- of Christ's love, tell me that you will not let me die&mdash;tell me&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond raised his head. His face was strangely composed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush, my son&rdquo;&mdash;he scarcely recognised his own voice&mdash;it was
- quiet, low, gentle, like one soothing a child. &ldquo;Hush, my son, you will not
- die.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father! Father Aubert!&rdquo;&mdash;the man was lurching forward toward him;
- the white, hollow face was close to his; the burning deep-sunk eyes with a
- terrible hunger in them looked into his. &ldquo;I will not die! I will not die!
- You said that, father? You said that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; Raymond's lips were dry, he moistened them with his tongue. &ldquo;Calm
- yourself now, my son&mdash;you need no longer have any fear.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A sob broke from the man's lips. His hands covered his face; he began to
- rock slowly back and forth upon the cot. He crooned to himself:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will not die&mdash;I am to live&mdash;I will not die&mdash;I am to
- live....&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then suddenly, in a paroxysm of returning fear, he was on his feet,
- dragging Raymond up from his knees, and, catching at Raymond's crucifix,
- lifted it wildly to Raymond's lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Swear it, father!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Swear it on the cross! Swear by God's holy
- Son that I will not die! Swear it on the blessed cross!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I swear it,&rdquo; Raymond answered in a steady voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no sound, no cry now&mdash;only a transfigured face, glad with a
- mighty joy. And then the man's hands went upward queerly, seeking his
- temples&mdash;and the swaying form lay in Raymond's arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man stirred after a moment, and opened his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you there, father&mdash;my friend?&rdquo; he whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Raymond said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man's hold tightened, and he sighed like one over-weary who had found
- repose.
- </p>
- <p>
- And sitting there upon the edge of the cot, Raymond held the other in his
- arms&mdash;and the sunlight's shaft through the barred window grew shorter&mdash;and
- shadows crept into the narrow cell. At times there came low sobs; at times
- the man's hand was raised to feel and touch Raymond's face, at times to
- touch the crucifix on Raymond's breast. And then at last the other moved
- no more, and the breathing became deep and regular, and a peaceful smile
- came and lingered on the lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond laid the other gently back upon the cot, and, crossing to the
- cell door, knocked softly upon it for the turnkey. And as the door was
- opened, he laid his finger across his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He is asleep,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Do not disturb him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Asleep!&rdquo;&mdash;the turnkey in amazement thrust his head inside the cell;
- and then he looked in wonder at Raymond. &ldquo;Asleep&mdash;but Monsieur
- Lemoyne told me of the news when he went out. Asleep&mdash;after that! The
- man who never sleeps!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But Raymond only shook his head, and did not answer, and walked on down
- the corridor, and out into the courtyard. It was dusk now. He seemed to be
- moving purely by intuition. It was not the way&mdash;the man was to live.
- His mind was obsessed with that. It was not the way. There were two ways
- left&mdash;two out of the three.
- </p>
- <p>
- The turnkey, who had followed in respectful silence, spoke again as he
- opened the jail gates.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Au revoir</i>, Monsieur le Cure&rdquo;&mdash;he lifted his cap. &ldquo;Monsieur le
- Curé will return to-morrow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To-morrow! Raymond's hands fumbled with the halter, as he untied the
- horse. To-morrow! There were two ways left, and the time was short.
- To-morrow&mdash;what would to-morrow bring!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; he said, unconscious that his reply had been long delayed&mdash;and
- found that he was speaking to closed gates, and that the turnkey was gone.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond smiled as he seated himself in the buckboard and drove
- away&mdash;the smile a curious twitching of the lips. The turnkey was a
- tactful man who would not intrude upon Monsieur le Curé's so easily
- understood sorrow for the condemned man!
- </p>
- <p>
- He drove on through the town, and turned into the St. Marleau road that
- wound its way for miles along the river's shore. And as he had driven
- slowly on his way to the jail, so he drove slowly on his return to the
- village, the horse left almost to guide itself and to set its own pace.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dusk deepened, and the road grew dark&mdash;it seemed fitting that the
- road should grow dark. There were two ways left. The jaws of the trap were
- narrowing&mdash;one of the three ways was gone. There were two left.
- Either he must stand in that other's place, and hang in that other's
- place; or run for it with what start he could, throw them off his trail if
- he could, and write from somewhere a letter that would exonerate the other
- and disclose the priest's identity&mdash;-a letter to the Bishop
- unquestionably, if the letter was to be written at all, for the Bishop,
- not only because he knew the man personally and could at once establish
- his identity, but because, in the very nature of the case, with the life
- of one of his own curés at stake, the Bishop, above all other men, would
- have both the incentive and the power to act. Two ways! One was a ghastly,
- ignominious death, to hang by the neck until he was dead&mdash;the other
- was to be a fugitive from the law, to become a hunted, baited beast,
- fighting every moment with his wits for the right to breathe. There were
- two ways! One was death&mdash;one held a chance for life. And the time was
- short.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the horse that turned of its own accord in past the church, and
- across the green to the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- He left the horse standing there&mdash;Narcisse would come and get it
- presently&mdash;and went up the steps, and entered the house. The door of
- the front room was open, a light burned upon his desk. Along the hall,
- from the dining room, Madame Lafleur came hurrying forward smilingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Supper is ready, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she called out cheerily. &ldquo;Poor man,
- you must be tired&mdash;it was a long drive to take so soon after your
- illness, and before you were really strong again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am late,&rdquo; said Raymond; &ldquo;that is the main thing, Madame Lafleur. I put
- you always, it seems, to a great deal of trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tut!&rdquo; she expostulated, shaking her head at him as she smiled. &ldquo;It is
- scarcely seven o'clock. Trouble! The idea! We did not wait for you,
- Monsieur le Curé, because Valérie had to hurry back to Madame Blondin.
- Madame Blondin is very, very low, Monsieur le Curé. Doctor Arnaud, when he
- left this afternoon, said that&mdash;but I will tell you while you are
- eating your supper. Only first&mdash;yes&mdash;wait&mdash;it is there on
- your desk. Monsieur Labbée sent it over from the station this afternoon&mdash;a
- telegram, Monsieur le Curé.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A telegram! He glanced swiftly at her face. It told him nothing. Why
- should it!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; he said, and stepping into the front room, walked over to the
- desk, picked up the yellow-envelope, tore it open calmly, and read the
- message.
- </p>
- <p>
- His back was toward the door. He laid the slip of paper down upon the
- desk, and with that curious trick of his stretched out his hand in front
- of him, and held it there, and stared at it. It was steady&mdash;without
- tremor. It was well that it was so. He would need his nerve now. He had
- been quite right&mdash;the time was short. There remained&mdash;<i>one
- hour</i>. In an hour from now, on the evening train, Monsignor the Bishop,
- who was personally acquainted with Father François Aubert, would arrive in
- St. Marleau.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXII&mdash;HOW RAYMOND BADE FAREWELL TO ST. MARLEAU
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>N hour! There lay
- an hour between himself&mdash;and death. Primal, elemental, savage in its
- intensity, tigerish in its coming, there surged upon him the demand for
- life&mdash;to live&mdash;to fight for self-preservation. And yet how clear
- his brain was, and how swiftly it worked! Life! There lay an hour between
- himself&mdash;and death. The horse was still outside. The overalls, the
- old coat, the old hat belonging to the sacristan were still at his
- disposal in the shed. He would ostentatiously set out to drive to the
- station to meet the Bishop, hide the horse and buckboard in the woods just
- before he got there, change his clothes, run on the rest of the way,
- remain concealed on the far side of the tracks until the train arrived&mdash;and,
- as Monsignor the Bishop descended from one side of the train to the
- platform, he, Raymond, would board it from the other. There would then, of
- course, be no one to meet the Bishop. The Bishop would wait patiently no
- doubt for a while; then Labbée perhaps would manage to procure a vehicle
- of some sort, or the Bishop might even walk. Eventually, of course, it
- would appear that Father Aubert had set out for the station and had not
- since been seen&mdash;but it would be a good many hours before the truth
- began to dawn on any one. There would be alarm only at first for the <i>safety</i>
- of the good, young Father Aubert&mdash;and meanwhile he would have reached
- Halifax, say One could not ask for a better start than that!
- </p>
- <p>
- Life! With the crisis upon him, his mind held on no other thing. Life&mdash;the
- human impulse to live and not to die! No other thing&mdash;but life! It
- was an hour before the train was due&mdash;he could drive to the station
- easily in half an hour. There was no hurry&mdash;but there was Madame
- Lafleur who, he was conscious, was watching him from the doorway&mdash;Madame
- Lafleur, and Madame Lafleur's supper. He would have need of food, there
- was no telling when he would have another chance to eat; and there was
- Madame Lafleur, too, to enlist as an unwitting accomplice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;it was Madame Lafleur speaking a little timidly
- from the doorway&mdash;&ldquo;it&mdash;it is not bad news that Monsieur le Curé
- has received?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bad news!&rdquo; Raymond picked up the telegram, and, turning from the desk,
- walked toward her. &ldquo;Bad news!&rdquo; he smiled. &ldquo;But on the contrary, my dear
- Madame Lafleur! I was thinking only of just what was the best thing to do,
- since it is now quite late, and I did not receive the telegram this
- afternoon, as I otherwise should had I not been away. Listen! Monsignor
- the Bishop, who is on his way&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond glanced deliberately at the
- message&mdash;&ldquo;yes, he says to Halifax&mdash;who then is on his way to
- Halifax, will stop off here this evening.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Lafleur was instantly in a flutter of excitement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;&mdash;her comely cheeks grew rosy, and her eyes
- shone with pleasure. &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;Monsignor the Bishop! He
- will spend the night here?&rdquo; she demanded eagerly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond patted her shoulder playfully, as he led her toward the dining
- room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he will spend the night here, Madame Lafleur&rdquo;&mdash;it was strange
- that he could laugh teasingly, naturally. &ldquo;But first, a little supper for
- a mere curé, eh, Madame Lafleur&mdash;since Monsignor the Bishop will
- undoubtedly have dined on the train.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; She shook her head at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then,&rdquo; laughed Raymond, as he seated himself at the table, &ldquo;since the
- horse is already outside, I will drive over to the station and meet him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He ate rapidly, and, strangely enough, with an appetite. Madame Lafleur
- bustled about him, quite unable to keep still in her excitement. She
- talked, and he answered her. He did not know what she said; his replies
- were perfunctory. There was an excuse to be made for going to the shed
- instead of getting directly into the buckboard and driving off. Madame
- Lafleur would undoubtedly and most naturally watch him off from the front
- door. But&mdash;yes, of course&mdash;that was simple&mdash;absurdly
- simple! Well then, another thing&mdash;it would mean at least a good hour
- to him if the village was not on tiptoe with expectancy awaiting the
- Bishop's arrival, and thus be ready to start out to discover what had
- happened to the good, young Father Aubert on the instant that the alarm
- was given; or, worse still, that any one, learning of the Bishop's
- expected arrival, should enthusiastically drive over to the station as a
- sort of self-appointed delegation of welcome, just a few minutes behind
- himself. In that case anything might happen. No, it would not do at all!
- Every minute of delay and confusion on the part of St. Marleau, and
- Labbée, and Madame Lafleur no less than the others, was priceless to him
- now. He remembered his own experience. It would take Labbée a long time to
- find a horse and wagon; and Madame Lafleur, on her part, would think
- nothing of a prolonged delay in his return&mdash;if he left her with the
- suggestion, that the train might be late! Well, there was no reason why he
- should not accomplish all this. So far, it was quite evident, since Madame
- Lafleur had had no inkling of what the telegram contained, that no one
- knew anything about it; and that Labbée, whom he was quite prepared to
- credit with being loose-tongued enough to have otherwise spread the news,
- had not associated the Bishop's official signature&mdash;with Monsignor
- the Bishop! It was natural enough. The telegram was signed simply&mdash;&ldquo;Montigny&rdquo;&mdash;not
- the Bishop of Montigny.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had eaten enough&mdash;he pushed back his chair and stood up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think perhaps, Madame Lafleur,&rdquo; he said reflectively, &ldquo;that it would be
- as well not to say anything to any one until Monsignor arrives.&rdquo; He handed
- her the telegram. &ldquo;It would appear that his visit is not an official one,
- and he may prefer to rest and spend a quiet evening. We can allow him to
- decide that for himself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Lafleur adjusted her spectacles, and read the message.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, yes, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she agreed heartily. &ldquo;Monsignor will tell us
- what he desires; and if he wishes to see any one in the village this
- evening, it will not be too late when you return. But, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;she
- glanced at the clock&mdash;&ldquo;hadn't you better hurry?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond quickly; &ldquo;that's so! I had!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Lafleur accompanied him to the front door, carrying a lamp. At the
- foot of the steps Raymond paused, and looked back at her. It had grown
- black now, and there was no moon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll run around to the shed and get a lantern,&rdquo; he called up to her&mdash;and,
- without waiting for a reply, hurried around the corner of the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed a little harshly, his lips were tightly set, as he reached the
- shed door, opened it, and closed it behind him. He struck a match, found
- and lighted a lantern, procured a small piece of string, tucked the
- sacristan's overalls, and the old coat and hat swiftly under his <i>soutane</i>&mdash;and
- a moment later was back beside the buckboard again.
- </p>
- <p>
- He tied the lantern in front of the dash-board, and climbed into the seat.
- Madame Lafleur was still standing in the doorway. He hesitated an instant,
- as he picked up the reins. The sweet, motherly old face smiled at him. A
- pang came and found lodgment in his heart. It was like that, standing
- there in the lamp-lit doorway of the <i>presbytère</i>, that he had seen
- her for the first time&mdash;as he saw her now for the last. He had grown
- to love the silver-haired little old lady with her heart of gold&mdash;and
- so he looked&mdash;and a mist came before his eyes, for this was his
- good-bye.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You will be back in an hour?&rdquo; she called out. &ldquo;You forget, Madame
- Lafleur&rdquo;&mdash;he forced himself to laugh in the old playful, teasing way&mdash;&ldquo;that
- the train is sometimes more than an hour late itself!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that is true!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;<i>Au revoir</i>, then, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He answered quietly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-night, Madame Lafleur!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He drove out across the green, and past the church, and, a short distance
- down the road, where he could no longer be seen from the windows of the <i>presbytère</i>,
- he leaned forward and extinguished the lantern. He smiled curiously to
- himself. It was the only act that appeared at all in consonance with
- escape! He was a fugitive now, a fugitive for life&mdash;and a fugitive
- running for his life. It seemed as though he should be standing up in the
- buckboard, and lashing at the horse until the animal was flecked with
- foam, and the buckboard rocked and swayed with a mad speed along the road.
- Instead&mdash;he had turned off and was on the station road now&mdash;the
- horse was labouring slowly up the steep hill. It seemed as though there
- should be haste, furious haste, a wild abandon in his flight&mdash;that
- there should be no time to mark, or see, or note, as he was noting now,
- the twinkling lights of the quiet village nestling below him there along
- the river's shore. It seemed that his blood should be whipping madly
- through his veins&mdash;instead he was contained, composed, playing his
- last hand with the old-time gambler's nerve that precluded a false lead,
- that calculated deliberately, methodically, and with deadly coolness, the
- value of every card. And yet, beneath this nerve-imposed veneer, he was
- conscious of a thousand emotions that battered and seethed and raged at
- their barriers, and sought to fling themselves upon him and have him for
- their prey.
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed coldly out into the night. It was not the fool who tore like a
- madman, boisterously, blindly, into the open that would escape! He had
- ample time. He had seen to that, even if he had appeared to accept Madame
- Lafleur's injunction to hurry. He need reach the station but a minute or
- so ahead of the train. Meanwhile, the minor details&mdash;were there any
- that he had overlooked? What about the <i>soutane</i> and the clerical
- hat, for instance, after he had exchanged them for the sacristan's things?
- Should he hide them where he left the horse and buckboard in the woods? He
- shook his head after a moment. No; they would probably find the horse
- before morning, and they might find the <i>soutane</i>. There must be no
- trace of Father Aubert&mdash;the longer they searched the better. And
- then, more important still, when finally the alarm was spread, the
- description that would be sent out would be that of a man dressed as a
- priest. No; he would take them with him, wrap them up in a bundle around a
- stone, and somewhere miles away, say, throw them from the car into the
- water as the train crossed a bridge. So much for that! Was there anything
- else, anything that he&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- A lighted window glowed yellow in the darkness from a little distance
- away. He had come to the top of the rise. It was old Mother Blondin's
- cottage. He had meant to urge the horse into a trot once the level was
- gained&mdash;but instead the horse was forgotten, and the animal plodded
- slowly forward at the same pace at which it had ascended the hill.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes were fixed upon the light. Old Mother Blondin's cottage&mdash;and
- in that room, beyond that light, old Mother Blondin, the old woman on the
- hill, the <i>excommuniée</i>, lay dying. And there was a shadow on the
- window shade&mdash;the shadow of one sitting in a chair&mdash;a woman's
- shadow&mdash;Valerie!
- </p>
- <p>
- He stopped the horse, and, sitting there in the buck-board opposite the
- cottage, he raised his hand slowly and took his hat from his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go on&mdash;fool!&rdquo;&mdash;with a snarl, vicious as the cut of a whip-lash,
- came that inner voice. &ldquo;You may have time&mdash;but you have none to throw
- away!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be still!&rdquo; answered Raymond's soul. &ldquo;This is my hour. Be still!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Valerie! That shadow on the window he knew was Valerie&mdash;and within
- was that other shadow, the shadow of death. This was his good-bye to old
- Mother Blondin, who had drunk of the common cup with him, and knelt with
- him in the moonlit church, her hand in his, outcasts, sealing a most
- strange bond&mdash;and this was his good-bye to Valérie. Valérie&mdash;a
- shadow there on the window shade. That was all&mdash;a shadow&mdash;all
- that she could ever be, nothing more tangible in his life through the
- years to come, if there were years, than a shadow that did not smile, that
- did not speak to him, that did not touch his hand, or lift brave eyes to
- look into his. A shadow&mdash;that was all&mdash;a shadow. It was brutal,
- cruel, remorseless, yet immeasurably true in its significance, this
- good-bye&mdash;this good-bye to Valérie&mdash;a shadow.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shadow moved, and was gone; from miles away, borne for a great
- distance on the clear night air, came faintly the whistle of a train&mdash;and
- Raymond, springing suddenly erect, his teeth clenched together, snatched
- at the whip and laid it across the horse's back.
- </p>
- <p>
- The wagon lurched forward, and he staggered with the plunge and jerk&mdash;and
- his whip fell again. And he laughed now&mdash;no longer calm&mdash;and
- lashed the horse. It was not time that he was racing, there was ample
- time, the train was still far away; it was his thoughts&mdash;to outrun
- them, to distance them, to leave them behind him, to know no other thing
- than that impulse for life that alone until now so far this night had
- swayed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- And he laughed&mdash;and horse and wagon tore frantically along the road,
- and the woods were about him now, and it was black, black as the mouth of
- Satan's pit and the roadway to it were black. He was flung back into his
- seat&mdash;and he laughed at that. Life&mdash;and he had doddled along the
- road, preening himself on his magnificent apathy! Life&mdash;and the
- battle and the fight for it was the blood afire, reckless of fear and of
- odds, the laugh of defiance, the joy of combat, the clenched fist shaken
- in the face of hell itself! Life&mdash;in the mad rush for it was appeal!
- On! The wagon reeled like a drunken thing, and the wheels twisted in the
- ruts; a patch of starlight seeping through the branches overhead made a
- patch of gloom in the inky blackness underneath, and in this patch of
- gloom wavering tree trunks, like uncouth monsters as they flitted by,
- snatched at the wheel-hubs to wreck and overturn the wagon, but he was too
- quick for them, too quick&mdash;they always missed. On! Away from memory,
- away from those good-byes, away from every thought save that of life&mdash;life,
- and the right to live&mdash;life, and the fight to hurl that gibbet with
- its dangling rope a smashed and battered and splintered thing against the
- jail wall where they would strangle him to death and bury him in their
- cursed lime!
- </p>
- <p>
- On! Why did not the beast go faster! Were those white spots that danced
- before his eyes a lather of foam on the animal's flanks? On&mdash;along
- the road to life! Faster! Faster! It was not fast enough&mdash;for
- thoughts were swift, and they were racing behind him now in their pursuit,
- and coming closer, and they would overtake him unless he could go faster&mdash;faster!
- Faster, or they would be upon him, and&mdash;<i>a big and brave and loyal
- man</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- A low cry, a cry of sudden, overmastering hurt, was drowned in the furious
- pound of the horse's hoofs, in the rattle and the creaking of the wagon,
- and in the screech and grinding of the wagon's jolt and swing. And,
- unconscious that he held the reins, unconscious that he tightened them,
- his hands, clenched, went upward to his face. There was no black road, no
- plunging horse, no mad, insensate rush, ungoverned and unguided, no wagon
- rocking demoniacally through the night&mdash;there was a woman who knelt
- in the aisle of a church, and in her arms she held a man, and across the
- shattered chancel rail there lay a mighty cross, and the shadow of the
- cross fell upon them both, and the woman's eyes were filled with tears,
- and she spoke: &ldquo;A big and brave and loyal man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tighter against his face he pressed his clenched hands, unconscious that
- the horse responded to the check and gradually slowed its pace. Valérie!
- The woman was Valerie&mdash;and he was the man! God, the hurt of it&mdash;the
- hurt of those words ringing now in his ears! She had given him her all&mdash;her
- love, her faith, her trust. And in return, he&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- The reins dropped from his hands, and his head bowed forward. Life! Yes,
- there was life this way for him&mdash;and for Valerie the bitterest of
- legacies. He would bequeath to her the belief that she had given her love
- not only to a felon but to a <i>coward.</i> A coward! And no man, he had
- boasted, had ever called him a coward. Pitiful boast! Life for himself&mdash;for
- Valerie the fuller measure of misery! Yes, he loved Valérie&mdash;he loved
- her with a traitor's and a coward's love!
- </p>
- <p>
- His lips were drawn together until they were bloodless. In retrospect his
- life passed swiftly, unbidden before him&mdash;and strewn on every hand
- was wreckage. And here was the final, crowning act of all&mdash;the
- coward's act&mdash;the coward afraid at the end to face the ruin he had,
- disdainful, callous, contemptuous then of consequence, so consistently
- wrought since boyhood! If he got away and wrote a letter it would save the
- man's life, it was true; but it was also true that he ran because he was
- cornered and at the end of his resources, and because what he might write
- would, in any case, be instantly discovered if he did not run&mdash;and to
- plead his own innocence in that letter, in the face of glaring proof to
- the contrary, in the face of the evidence he had so carefully budded
- against another, smacked only of the grovelling whine of the condemned
- wretch afraid. None would believe him. None! It was paltry, the police
- were inured to that; all criminals were eager to protest their innocence,
- and pule out their tale of extenuating circumstances. None would believe
- him. Valérie would not believe.
- </p>
- <p>
- Folds of his cheeks were gripped and crushed in his hands until the finger
- nails bit into the flesh. He <i>was</i> innocent. He had not <i>murdered</i>
- that scarred-faced drunken hound&mdash;only Valérie would neither believe
- nor know; and in Valérie's eyes he would stand a loathsome thing, and in
- her soul would be a horror, and a misery, and a shame that was measured
- only by the greatness and the depth of the love she had given him, for in
- that greatness and that depth lay, too, the greatness and the depth of
- that love's dishonour and that love's abasement. But if&mdash;but if&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment he did not stir or move, his eyes seeing nothing, fixed
- before him&mdash;and then steadily his head came up and poised far back on
- the broad, square shoulders, and the tight lips parted in a strange and
- sudden smile. If he drove to the station and met Monsignor the Bishop, and
- drove Monsignor the Bishop back to St. Marleau&mdash;then she would
- believe. No one else could or would believe him, the proof was irrefutable
- against him, they would convict him, and the sentence would be death; but
- she in her splendid love would believe him, and know that she had loved&mdash;a
- man. There had been three ways, but one had gone that afternoon; and then
- there had been two ways, but there was only one now, the man's way, for
- the other was the coward's way. And, taking this, he could lift his head
- and stand before them all, for in Valérie's face and in Valérie's eyes
- there would not be&mdash;-what was worse than death. To save Valérie from
- what he could&mdash;not from sorrow, not from grief, that he could not do&mdash;but
- that she might know that her love had been given where it was held a
- sacred, a priceless and a hallowed thing, and was not outraged and was not
- degraded because it had been given to him! To save Valerie from what he
- could&mdash;to save himself in his own eyes from the self-abasing
- knowledge that through a craven fear he had bartered away his manhood and
- his self-respect, that through fear he ran, and that through fear he hid,
- and that through fear, though he was innocent, he dared not stand&mdash;a
- man!
- </p>
- <p>
- He stopped the horse, and stepped down to the ground; and, searching for a
- match, found one, and lighted the lantern where it hung upon the
- dash-board. He was calm now, not with that calmness desperately imposed by
- will and nerve, but with a calmness that was like to&mdash;peace. And,
- standing there, the lantern light fell upon him, and gleamed upon the
- crucifix upon his breast. And he lifted the crucifix, and, wondering, held
- it in his hand, and looked at it. It was here in these woods and on this
- road that he had first hung it about his neck in insolent and bald denial
- of the Figure that it bore. It was very strange! He had meant it then to
- save his life; and now&mdash;he let it slip gently from his fingers, and
- climbed back into the buckboard&mdash;and now it seemed, as though
- strengthening him in the way he saw at last, in the way he was to take, as
- though indeed it were the way itself, came radiating from it, like a
- benediction, a calm and holy&mdash;peace.
- </p>
- <p>
- And there was no more any turmoil.
- </p>
- <p>
- And he picked up the reins and drove on along the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIII&mdash;MONSIGNOR THE BISHOP
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE train had come
- and gone, as Raymond reached the station platform. He had meant it so. He
- had meant to avoid the lights from the car windows that would have
- illuminated the otherwise dark platform; to avoid, if possible, a
- disclosure in Labbée's, the station agent's, presence. Afterwards, Labbée
- would know, as all would know&mdash;but not now. It was not easy to tell;
- the words perhaps would not come readily even when alone with Monsignor
- the Bishop, as they drove back together to the village.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were but two figures on the platform&mdash;Labbée, who held a
- satchel in his hand; and a tall, slight form in clerical attire.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, Father Aubert&mdash;<i>salut!</i>&rdquo; Labbée called out. &ldquo;You are late;
- but we saw your light coming just as the train pulled out, and so&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well, François, my son!&rdquo;&mdash;it was a rich, mellow voice that
- broke in on the station agent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond stood up and lifted his hat&mdash;lifted it so that it but shaded
- his face the more.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsignor!&rdquo; he said, in a low voice. &ldquo;This is a great honour.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Honour!&rdquo; the Bishop responded heartily. &ldquo;Why should I not come, I&mdash;but
- do I sit on this side?&rdquo;&mdash;he had stepped down into the buckboard, as
- he grasped Raymond's hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's wide-brimmed clerical hat was far over
- his eyes. The lantern on the front of the dash-board left them in shadow;
- Labbée's lantern for the moment was behind them, as the station agent
- stowed the Bishop's valise under the seat. He took up the reins, and with
- an almost abrupt &ldquo;goodnight&rdquo; to the station agent, started the horse
- forward along the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-night!&rdquo; Labbée shouted after them. &ldquo;Goodnight, Monsignor!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-night!&rdquo; the Bishop called back&mdash;and turned to Raymond. &ldquo;Yes, as
- I was saying,&rdquo; he resumed, &ldquo;why should I not come? I was passing through
- St. Marleau in any case. I have heard splendid things of my young friend,
- the curé, here. I wanted to see for myself, and to tell him how pleased
- and gratified I was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are very good, Monsignor,&rdquo; Raymond answered, his voice still low and
- hurried.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excellent!&rdquo; pursued the Bishop. &ldquo;Most excellent! I do not know when I
- have been so pleased over anything. The parish perhaps&rdquo;&mdash;he laughed
- pleasantly&mdash;&ldquo;would not object if Father Allard prolonged his holiday
- a little&mdash;eh&mdash;François, my son?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hardly that, Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;he dared indulge in little more than
- monosyllables&mdash;it was even strange the Bishop had not already noticed
- that his voice was not the voice of Father François Aubert. And yet what
- did it matter? In a moment, in five minutes, in half an hour, the Bishop
- would know all&mdash;he would have told the Bishop all. Why should he
- strive now to keep up a deception that he was voluntarily to acknowledge
- almost the next instant? It was not argument in his mind, not argument
- again that brought indecision and chaotic hesitancy, it was not that&mdash;the
- way was clear, there was only one way, the way that he would take&mdash;?
- and yet, perhaps because it was so very human, because perhaps he sought
- for still more strength, because perhaps it was so almost literally the
- final, closing act of his life, he waited and clung to that moment more,
- and to that five minutes more.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; said the Bishop happily, &ldquo;we will perhaps have to look
- around and see if we cannot find for you a parish of your own, my son. And
- who knows&mdash;eh&mdash;perhaps we have already found it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- How queerly the lantern jerked its rays up and down the horse's legs, and
- cast its shadows along the road! He heard himself speaking again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are very good, Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;they were the same words with which
- he had replied before&mdash;he uttered them mechanically.
- </p>
- <p>
- He felt the Bishop's hand close gently, yet firmly, upon his shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;François, my son&rdquo;&mdash;the voice had suddenly become grave&mdash;&ldquo;what
- is the matter? You act strangely. Your voice does not somehow seem natural&mdash;it
- is very hoarse. You have a cold perhaps, or perhaps you are ill?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, Monsignor&mdash;I am not ill.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then&mdash;but, you alarm me, my son!&rdquo; exclaimed the Bishop anxiously.
- &ldquo;Something has happened?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Monsignor&mdash;something has happened.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- How curiously his mind seemed to be working! He was conscious that the
- Bishop's hand remained in kindly pressure on his shoulder as though
- inviting his confidence, conscious that the man beside him maintained a
- sympathetic, tactful silence, waiting for him to speak; but his thoughts
- for the moment now were not upon the immediate present, but upon the
- immediate afterwards when his story had been told.
- </p>
- <p>
- The buckboard rattled on along the road; it entered the wooded stretch&mdash;and
- still went on. When he had told this man beside him all, they would drive
- into the village. Then presently they would set out for Tournayville, and
- Monsieur Dupont, and the jail. But before that&mdash;there was Valérie. He
- turned his head still further away&mdash;even in the blackness his face
- must show its ashen whiteness. There was Valérie&mdash;Valérie who would
- believe&mdash;but Valérie who was to suffer, and to know agony and sorrow&mdash;and
- he, who loved her, must look into her face and see the smile die out of
- it, and the quiver come to her lips, and see her eyes fill, while with his
- own hands he dealt her the blow, which, soften it as he would, must still
- strike her down. It was the only way&mdash;the way of peace. It seemed
- most strange that peace should lie in that black hour ahead for Valérie
- and for himself&mdash;that peace should lie in death&mdash;and yet within
- him, quiet, undismayed, calm and untroubled in its own immortal truth, was
- the knowledge that it was so.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond lifted his head suddenly&mdash;through the-trees there showed the
- glimmer of a light&mdash;as it had showed that other night when he had
- walked here in the storm. Had they come thus far&mdash;in silence!
- Involuntarily he stopped the horse. It was the light from old Mother
- Blondin's cottage, and here was the spot where he had stumbled that night
- over the priest whom he had thought dead, as the other lay sprawled across
- the road. It was strange again&mdash;most strange! He had not deliberately
- chosen this spot to tell&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;François, my son&mdash;what is it?&rdquo;&mdash;the Bishop's voice was full of
- deep concern.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment Raymond did not move, and he did not speak. Then he laid down
- the reins, and, leaning forward, untied the lantern from the dash-board&mdash;and,
- taking off his hat, held up the lantern between them until the light fell
- full upon his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a quick and startled cry from the Bishop, and then for an
- instant&mdash;silence. And Raymond looked into the other's face, even as
- the other looked into his. It was a face full of dignity and strength and
- quiet, an aged, kindly face, crowned with hair that was silver-white; but
- the blue eyes that spoke of tranquillity were widened now in amazement,
- surprise and consternation.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then the Bishop spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Something has happened to François,&rdquo; he said, in a hesitant, troubled
- way, &ldquo;and you have come from Tournayville to take his place perhaps, or
- perhaps to&mdash;to be with him. Is it as serious as that&mdash;and you
- were loath to break the news, my son? And yet&mdash;and yet I do not
- understand. The station agent said nothing to indicate that anything was
- wrong, though perhaps he might not have heard; and he called you Father
- Aubert, though, too, that possibly well might be, for it was dark, and I
- myself did not see your face. My son, I fear that I am right. Tell me,
- then! You are a priest from Tournayville, or from a neighbouring parish?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am not a priest,&rdquo; said Raymond steadily.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Bishop drew back sharply, as though he had been struck a blow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not a priest&mdash;and in those clothes!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, Monsignor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The fine old face grew set and stern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And Francois Aubert, then&mdash;<i>where is Father Francois Aubert?</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's lips were white&mdash;&ldquo;he is in the condemned
- cell at Tournayville&mdash;under sentence of death&mdash;he is&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Condemned&mdash;to death! François Aubert&mdash;condemned to death!&rdquo;&mdash;the
- Bishop was grasping with one hand at the back of the seat. And then
- slowly, still grasping at the seat, he pulled himself up and stood erect,
- and raised his other hand over Raymond in solemnity and adjuration. &ldquo;In
- the name of God, what does this mean? Who are you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am Raymond Chapelle,&rdquo; Raymond answered&mdash;and abruptly lowered the
- lantern, and a twisted smile of pain gathered on his lips. &ldquo;You have heard
- the name, Monsignor&mdash;all French Canada has heard it.&rdquo; The Bishop's
- hand dropped heavily to his side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I have heard it,&rdquo; he said sternly. &ldquo;I have heard that it was a proud
- name dishonoured, a princely fortune dissolutely wasted. And you are
- Raymond Chapelle, you say! I have heard this much, that you had
- disappeared, but after that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond put his head down into his hands, and drew his hands tightly
- across his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is the end of the story,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Listen, Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;he
- raised his head again. &ldquo;You have heard, too, of the murder of Théophile
- Blondin that was committed here a little while ago. It is for that murder
- that François Aubert was tried, found guilty, and sentenced to be hanged.&rdquo;
- He paused an instant, his lips tight. &ldquo;Monsignor, it is I who killed
- Théophile Blondin. It is I who, since that night, have lived here as the
- curé&mdash;as Father François Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- How ghastly white the aged face was! As ghastly as his own must be! The
- other's hands were gripping viselike at his shoulders.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you mad!&rdquo; the Bishop whispered hoarsely. &ldquo;Do you know what you are
- saying!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know&rdquo;&mdash;there was a sort of unnatural calm and finality in
- Raymond's tones now. &ldquo;I was on the train the night that Father Aubert came
- to St. Marleau. I had a message for the mother of a man who was killed in
- the Yukon, Monsignor. The mother lived here. There was a wild storm that
- night. There was no wagon to be had, and we both walked from the station.
- But I did not walk with the priest. You, who have heard of Raymond
- Chapelle, know why&mdash;I despised a priest&mdash;I knew no God.
- Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;he turned and pointed suddenly&mdash;&ldquo;you see that light
- through the trees? It is the light I saw that night, as I stumbled over
- the body of a man lying here in the road. The man was Father Aubert. The
- limb of a tree had fallen and struck him on the head. I thought him dead.
- I went over to that house for help.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused again. The Bishop's hands, withdrawn,* were clasped now upon a
- golden crucifix&mdash;it was like his own crucifix, only it was larger,
- much larger than his own. But the Bishop's white face was still close to
- his; and the blue eyes seemed to have grown darker, and were upon him in a
- fixed, tense way, as though to read his soul.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then?&rdquo;&mdash;he saw the Bishop's lips move, he did not hear the
- Bishop speak.
- </p>
- <p>
- At times the horse moved restively; at times there came the chirping of
- insects from the woods; at times a breeze stirred and whispered through
- the leaves. Raymond, staring at the yellow flicker of the lantern, set now
- upon the floor of the buckboard at their feet, spoke on, in his voice that
- same unnatural calm. It seemed almost as though he himself were listening
- to some stranger speak. It was the story of that night he told, the story
- of the days and nights that followed, the story of old Mother Blondin, the
- story of the cross, the story of the afternoon in the condemned cell, the
- story of his ride for liberty of an hour ago, the story of his sacrilege
- and his redemption&mdash;the story of all, without reservation, save the
- story of Valérie's love, for that was between Valérie and her God.
- </p>
- <p>
- And when he had done, a silence fell between them and endured for a great
- while.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond looked up at last to face the condemnation he thought to
- see in the other's eyes&mdash;and found instead that the silver hair was
- bare of covering, and that the tears were flowing unchecked down the
- other's cheeks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;God's ways are beyond all understanding&rdquo;&mdash;the Bishop seemed to be
- speaking to himself. He brushed the tears now from his cheeks, as he
- looked at Raymond. &ldquo;It is true there is not any proof, and without proof
- that it was in self-defence, then&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is the end,&rdquo; said Raymond simply&mdash;and, standing up, took the
- sacristan's old coat from under his <i>soutane</i>. &ldquo;We will drive to the
- village, Monsignor; and then, if you will, to the jail in Tournayville.&rdquo;
- Slowly he unbuttoned his <i>soutane</i> from top to bottom, and took it
- off, and laid it over the back of the seat; and, standing there erect, his
- face white, his eyes half closed, like a soldier in unconditional
- surrender, he unclasped the crucifix from around his neck, and held it out
- to the Bishop&mdash;and bowed his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- He felt the Bishop's hands close over his, and over the crucifix, and
- gently press it back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cling to it, my son&rdquo;&mdash;the Bishop's voice was broken. &ldquo;It is yours,
- for you have found it&mdash;and, with it, pardon, and the faith that is
- more precious than life, than the life you are offering to surrender now.
- It seems as though it were God's mysterious way, the hand of God&mdash;the
- hand of God that would not let you lose your soul. And now, my son, kneel
- down, for I would pray for a brave man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A quiet pressure upon his shoulders brought Raymond to his knees. His
- eyes, were wet; he covered his face with his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father, have mercy upon us&rdquo;&mdash;the Bishop's voice was tremulous and
- low. &ldquo;Lord, have mercy upon us. Look down in pity upon this man whom Thou
- hast brought unto Thyself, and who now in expiation of his past offences
- offers his life that another may not die. Father, grant us Thy divine
- mercy. Father, show us the way, if there be a way, and if it be Thy will,
- that he may not drink of this final cup; and if that may not be, then in
- Thy love continue unto him the strength Thou gavest him to bring him thus
- far upon his road.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And silence fell again between them. And there was a strange gladness in
- Raymond's heart that this man, where he had thought no man would, should
- have believed. It altered no fact, the cold and brutal evidence, clear cut
- before a jury would not be a scene such as this, for the evidence in the
- light of logic and before the law would say he <i>lied</i>; it held out no
- hope, he knew that well&mdash;but it brought peace again. And so he rose
- from his knees, and feeling out blindly for the old sacristan's coat, put
- it on, and spoke to the horse, and the buckboard moved forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- And a little way along, just around the turn of the road, they came out of
- the woods in front of old Mother Blondin's cottage. And standing by the
- roadside in the darkness was a figure. And a voice called out:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is that you, Father Aubert? I went to the <i>presbytère</i> for you, and
- mother said you had gone to meet Monsignor. I have been waiting here to
- catch you on the way back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Valérie.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIV&mdash;THE OLD WOMAN ON THE HILL
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>HE came forward
- toward the buckboard, and into the lantern light&mdash;and stopped
- suddenly, looking from Raymond to the Bishop in a bewildered and startled
- way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why&mdash;why, Father Aubert,&rdquo; she stammered, &ldquo;I&mdash;I hardly knew you
- in that coat. I&mdash;Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;she bent her knee reverently&mdash;&ldquo;I&rdquo;&mdash;her
- eyes were searching their faces&mdash;&ldquo;I&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes fixed ahead of him, and he was silent. Valérie! Ay, it was
- the end! He had thought to see her before they should take him to
- Tournayville&mdash;but he had thought to see her alone. And even then he
- had not known what he should say to her&mdash;what words to speak&mdash;or
- whether she should know from him his love. He was conscious that the
- Bishop was fumbling with his crucifix, as though loath to take the
- initiative upon himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Valérie who spoke&mdash;hurriedly, as though in a nervous effort to
- bridge the awkward silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mother Blondin became conscious a little while ago. She asked for Father
- Aubert, and&mdash;and begged for the Sacrament. I ran down to the <i>presbytère</i>,
- and when mother told me that Monsignor was coming I&mdash;-I brought back
- the bag that my uncle, Father Allard, takes with him to&mdash;to the
- dying. Oh, Monsignor, I thought that perhaps&mdash;perhaps&mdash;she is an
- <i>excommuniée</i>, Monsignor&mdash;but she is a penitent. And when I got
- back she was unconscious again, and then I came down here to wait by the
- side of the road so that I would not miss you, for Madame Bouchard is
- there, and she was to call me if&mdash;if there was any change. And so&mdash;and
- so&mdash;you will go to her, Monsignor, will you not&mdash;and Father
- Aubert&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Her lips quivered suddenly, for
- Raymond's white face was lifted now, and his eyes met hers. &ldquo;Oh, what is
- the matter?&rdquo; she cried out in fear. &ldquo;Why do you look like that, Father
- Aubert&mdash;and why do you wear that coat, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My daughter&rdquo;&mdash;the Bishop's grave voice interrupted her. He rose from
- his seat, and, moving past Raymond, stepped to the ground. &ldquo;My daughter,
- Father Aubert is&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No!&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond, too, had stepped to the ground. &ldquo;No, Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;his
- voice caught, then was steadied as he fought fiercely for self-control&mdash;&ldquo;I
- will tell her, Monsignor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- How clearly her face was defined in the lantern light, how pure it was,
- and, in its purity, how far removed from the story that he had to tell!
- And how beautiful it was, even in its startled fear and wonder&mdash;the
- sweet lips parted; the dark eyes wide, disturbed and troubled, as they
- held upon his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father Aubert!&rdquo;&mdash;it was a quick cry, but low, and one of
- apprehension.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mademoiselle Valérie&rdquo;&mdash;the words came slowly; it seemed as though
- his soul faltered now, and had not strength to say this thing&mdash;&ldquo;I am
- not Father Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not move. She repeated the words with long pauses between, as
- though she groped dazedly in her mind for their meaning and significance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You&mdash;are&mdash;not&mdash;Father&mdash;Aubert?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Bishop, hands clasped behind his back, his head bowed, had withdrawn a
- few paces out of the lantern light toward the rear of the buckboard.
- Raymond's hands closed and gripped upon the wheel-tire against which he
- stood&mdash;closed tighter and tighter until it seemed the tendons in his
- hand must snap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father Aubert is the man you know as Henri Mentone&rdquo;&mdash;his eyes were
- upon her hungrily, pleading, searching for some sign, a smile, a gesture
- of sympathy that would help him to go on&mdash;and her hands were clasped
- suddenly, wildly to her bosom. &ldquo;When you came upon me in the road that
- night I had just changed clothes with him. I&mdash;I was trying to
- escape.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She closed her eyes. Her face became a deathly white, and she swayed a
- little on her feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You&mdash;you are not a&mdash;a priest?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was the only way I saw to save my life. He had been struck by the
- falling limb of a tree. I thought that he was dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To save your life?&rdquo;&mdash;she spoke with a curious, listless apathy, her
- eyes still closed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was I,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;not Father Aubert, who fought with Théophile Blondin
- that night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her eyes were open wide now&mdash;wide upon him with terror.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was you&mdash;<i>you</i> who killed Théophile Blondin?&rdquo;&mdash;her
- voice was dead, scarce above a whisper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I caught him in the act of robbing his mother&mdash;I had gone to the
- house for help after finding Father Aubert&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's voice grew
- passionate now in its pleading. He must make her believe! He must make her
- believe! It was the one thing left to him&mdash;and to her. &ldquo;It was in
- self-defence. He sprang at me, and we fought. And afterwards, when he
- snatched up the revolver from the <i>armoire</i>, it went off in his own
- hand as I struggled to take it from him. But I could not prove it. Every
- circumstance pointed to premeditated theft on my part&mdash;and murder.
- And&mdash;and my life before that was&mdash;was a ruined life that would
- but&mdash;but make conviction certain if I were found there. My only
- chance lay in getting away. But there was no time&mdash;nowhere to go. And
- so&mdash;and so I ran back to where Father Aubert lay, and put on his
- clothes, meaning to gain a few hours' time that way, and in the noise of
- the storm I did not hear you coming until it was too late to run.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- How mercilessly hard her hands seemed to press at her bosom!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I do not understand&rdquo;&mdash;it was as though she spoke to herself.
- &ldquo;There was another&mdash;a man who, with Jacques Bourget, tried to have
- Henri&mdash;Henri Mentone escape.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was I,&rdquo; said Raymond. &ldquo;I took Narcisse Pélude's old clothes from the
- shed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She cried out a little&mdash;like a sharp and sudden moan, it was, as from
- unendurable pain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then&mdash;and then you lived here as&mdash;as a priest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And&mdash;and to-night?&rdquo;&mdash;her eyes were closed again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To-night,&rdquo; said Raymond, and turned away his head, &ldquo;to-night I am going
- to&mdash;to Tournayville.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To your death&rdquo;&mdash;it was again as though she were speaking to herself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is no other way,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I thought there was another way. I
- meant at first to escape to-night when I learned that Monsignor was
- coming. I took this coat, Narcisse Pélude's old clothes from the shed
- again, the clothes I wore the night I went to Jacques Bourget, and I meant
- to escape on the train. But&rdquo;&mdash;he hesitated now, groping desperately
- for words&mdash;he could not tell her of that ride along the road; he had
- no right to tell her of his love, he saw that now, he had no right to tell
- her that, to make it the harder, the more cruel for her; he had no right
- to trespass on his knowledge of her love for him, to let her glean from
- any words of his a hint of that; he had the right only, for her sake and
- for his own, that, in her eyes and in her soul, the stain of murder and of
- theft should not rest upon him&mdash;&ldquo;but&rdquo;&mdash;the words seemed weak,
- inadequate&mdash;&ldquo;but I could not go. Instead, I gave myself up to
- Monsignor. Mademoiselle&rdquo;&mdash;how bitterly full of irony was that word&mdash;mademoiselle&mdash;mademoiselle
- to Valérie&mdash;like a gulf between them&mdash;mademoiselle to Valérie,
- who was dearest in life to him&mdash;&ldquo;Mademoiselle Valérie&rdquo;&mdash;he was
- pleading again, his soul in his voice&mdash;&ldquo;it was in self-defence that
- night. It was that way that Théophile Blondin was killed. I could not
- prove it then, and&mdash;and the evidence is even blacker against me now
- through the things that I have done in an effort to escape. But&mdash;but
- it was in that way that Théophile Blondin was killed. The law will not
- believe. I know that. But you&mdash;you&mdash;&rdquo; his voice broke. The love,
- the yearning for her was rushing him onward beyond self-control, and near,
- very near to his lips, struggling and battling for expression, were the
- words he was praying God now for the strength not to speak.
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not answer him. She only moved away. Her white face was set
- rigidly, and the dark eyes that had been full upon him were but a blur
- now, for she was moving slowly backward, away from him, toward where the
- Bishop stood. And she passed out of the lantern light and into the
- shadows. And in the shadows her hand was raised from her bosom and was
- held before her face&mdash;and it seemed as though she held it, as she had
- held it in the dream of that Walled Place; that she held it, as she had
- held it to shut out the sight of his face from her, as she had closed upon
- him that door with its studded spikes. And like a stricken man he stood
- there, gripping at the buckboard's wheel. She did not believe him. Valérie
- did not believe him! There was agony to come, black depths of torment
- yawning just before him when the numbness from the blow had passed&mdash;but
- now he was stunned. She did not believe him! That man there, whom he had
- thought would turn with bitter words upon him, had believed him&mdash;but
- Valérie&mdash;Valérie&mdash;Valérie did not believe him! Ay, it was the
- end! The agony and the torment were coming now. It was the dream come
- true. The studded gate clanged shut, and the horror, without hope, without
- smile, without human word, of that Walled Place with its slimy walls was
- his, and, over the shrieking of those winged and hideous things, that
- swaying carrion seemed to scream the louder: &ldquo;<i>Dies ilia, dies iro</i>&mdash;that
- day, a day of wrath, of wasting, and of misery, a great day, and exceeding
- bitter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not move. Through that blur and through the shadows he watched her,
- watched her as she reached the Bishop, and sank down upon the ground, and
- clasped her hands around the Bishop's knees. And then he heard her speak&mdash;and
- it seemed to Raymond that, as though stilled by a mighty uplift that swept
- upon him, the beating of his heart had ceased.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsignor!&rdquo; she cried out piteously. &ldquo;Monsignor! Monsignor! It is true
- that they will not believe him! I was at the trial, Monsignor, I know the
- evidence, and I know that they will not believe him. He is going to&mdash;to
- his&mdash;death&mdash;to save that man. Oh, Monsignor&mdash;Monsignor, is
- there no other way?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Slowly, mechanically, as slowly as she had retreated from him, Raymond
- moved toward the kneeling figure. The Bishop was speaking now&mdash;he had
- laid his hands upon her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My daughter,&rdquo; he said gently, &ldquo;what other way would you have him take? It
- is a brave man's way, and for that I honour him; but it is more, it is the
- way of one who has come out of the darkness into the light, and for that
- my heart is full of thankfulness to God. It is the way of atonement, not
- for any wrong he has done the church, for he could do the church no wrong,
- for the church is pure and holy and beyond the reach of any human hand or
- act to soil, for it is God's church&mdash;but atonement to God for those
- sins of sacrilege and unbelief that lay between himself and God alone. And
- so, my daughter, if in those sins he has been brought to see and
- understand, and in his heart has sought and found God's pardon and
- forgiveness, he could do no other thing than that which he has done
- to-night.&rdquo; The Bishop's voice had faltered; he brushed his hand across his
- cheek as though to wipe away a tear. &ldquo;It is God's way, my daughter. There
- could be no other way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She rose to her feet, her face covered by her hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No other way&rdquo;&mdash;the words were lifeless on her lips, save that they
- were broken with a sob. And then, suddenly, she drew herself erect, and
- there was a pride and a glory in the poise of her head, and her voice rang
- clear and there was no tremor in it, and in it was only the pride and only
- the glory that was in the head held high, and in the fair, white, uplifted
- face. &ldquo;Listen, Monsignor! I thought he was a priest, and I promised God
- that he should never know&mdash;but to-night all that is changed.
- Monsignor, does it matter that he has no thought of me! He is going to his
- death, Monsignor, and he shall not face this alone because I was ashamed
- and dared not speak. I love him, Monsignor&mdash;I love him, and I believe
- him, and&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Valérie!</i>&rdquo; Raymond's hands reached out to her. Weak he was. It
- seemed as though in his knees there was no strength. &ldquo;Valérie!&rdquo; he cried,
- and stumbled toward her.
- </p>
- <p>
- And she put out her hand and held him back for an instant as her eyes
- searched his face&mdash;and then into hers there came a wondrous light.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I did not know,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;I did not know you cared.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His arms were still outstretched, and now she came into them, and for a
- moment she lifted her face to his, and, for a moment that was glad beyond
- all gladness, he drank with his lips from her lips and from the trembling
- eyelids. And then the tears came, and she was sobbing on his breast, and
- with her arms tight about his neck she clung to him&mdash;and closer still
- his own arms enwrapped her&mdash;and he forgot&mdash;and he forgot&mdash;<i>that
- it was only for a moment</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- And so he held her there, his face buried in the dark, soft masses of her
- hair&mdash;and he forgot. And then out of this forgetfulness, this
- transport of blinding joy, there came a voice, low and shaken with emotion&mdash;the
- Bishop's voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is some one calling from the house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond lifted up his head. A woman's figure was framed in the now open
- and lighted doorway of the cottage. It was Madame Bouchard; and now he
- heard Madame Bouchard as she called again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Valerie! Father Aubert! Come! Come quickly! Madame Blondin is conscious
- again, but she is very weak.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew his breath in sharply as one in bitter pain, and then gently he
- took Valerie's arms from about him, and his shoulders squared. He had had
- his moment. This was reality now. He heard Valérie cry out, and saw her
- run toward the cottage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsignor,&rdquo; he said hoarsely, and, moving back, lifted the <i>soutane</i>
- from the buckboard's seat, &ldquo;Monsignor, she must not know&mdash;and she has
- asked for me. It is for her sake, Monsignor&mdash;that she be not
- disillusioned in her death, and lose the faith that she has found again.
- Monsignor, it is for the last time, not to perform any office, Monsignor,
- for you will do that, but that she may not die in the belief that God,
- through me, has only mocked her at the end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand, my son,&rdquo; the Bishop answered simply. &ldquo;Put it on&mdash;and
- come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And so Raymond put on the <i>soutane</i> again, and they hurried toward
- the cottage. And at the doorway Madame Bouchard courtesied in reverence to
- the Bishop, and Raymond heard her say something about the horse, and that
- she would remain within call; and then they passed on into Mother
- Blondin's room.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a bare room, poor and meagre in its furnishings&mdash;a single rag
- mat upon the floor; a single chair, and upon the chair the black bag that
- Valerie had brought from the <i>presbytère</i>; and beside the rough
- wooden bed, made perhaps by the Grandfather Bouchard in the old carpenter
- shop by the river bank, was a small table, and upon the table a lamp, and
- some cups with pewter spoons laid across their tops.
- </p>
- <p>
- Extraneous things, these details seemed to Raymond to have intruded
- themselves upon him as by some strange and vivid assertiveness of their
- own, for he was not conscious that he had looked about him&mdash;that he
- had looked anywhere but at that white and pitifully sunken face that was
- straining upward from the pillows, and at Valérie who knelt at the bedside
- and supported old Mother Blondin in her arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quick!&rdquo; Valerie cried anxiously. &ldquo;Give her a teaspoonful from that first
- cup on the table. She has been trying to say something, and&mdash;and I do
- not understand. Oh, be quick! It is something about that man in the
- prison.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old woman's head bobbed jerkily, as though she fought for strength to
- hold it up; the eyes, half closed, were dulled; and she struggled,
- gasping, for her breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;the prison&mdash;the man&rdquo;&mdash;the words were almost
- inarticulate. Raymond, beside her now, was holding the spoonful of
- stimulant to her lips. She swallowed it eagerly. &ldquo;I&mdash;I lied&mdash;I
- lied&mdash;at the trial. Hold me&mdash;tighter. Do not let me&mdash;go.
- Not yet&mdash;not&mdash;not until&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Her body seemed to
- straighten, then wrench backward, and her eyes closed, and her voice died
- away.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond felt the Bishop's hand close tensely on his shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is this she says, my son?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not know,&rdquo; he said huskily.
- </p>
- <p>
- The eyes opened again, clearer now&mdash;and recognition came into them as
- they met Raymond's. And there came a smile, and she reached out her hand
- to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You, father&mdash;I&mdash;I was afraid you would not come in time. I&mdash;I
- am stronger now. Give Valerie the cup, and kneel, father&mdash;don't you
- remember&mdash;like that night in the church&mdash;and hold my hand&mdash;and&mdash;and
- do not let it go because&mdash;because then I&mdash;I should be afraid
- that God&mdash;that God would not forgive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He took her hand between both his own, and knelt beside the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will not let it go,&rdquo; he said&mdash;and tried to keep the choking from
- his throat. &ldquo;What is it that you want to say&mdash;Mother Blondin?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her fingers twined over his, and clung tighter and tighter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That man, father&mdash;he&mdash;he must not hang. I&mdash;I cannot go to
- God with that on my soul. I lied at the trial&mdash;I lied. I hated God
- then. I wanted only revenge because my son was dead. I said I recognised
- him again, but&mdash;but that is not true, for the light was low, and&mdash;and
- I do not see well&mdash;but&mdash;but that&mdash;that does not matter,
- father&mdash;it is not that&mdash;for it must have been that man. But it
- was not that man who&mdash;who tried to rob me&mdash;it&mdash;it was my
- own son. That man is innocent&mdash;innocent&mdash;I tell you&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- She raised herself wildly up in bed. &ldquo;Why do you look at me like that,
- Father Aubert&mdash;with that white face&mdash;is it too late&mdash;too
- late&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;will God not forgive?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is not too late. Go on, Mother Blondin&rdquo;&mdash;it was his lips that
- formed the words; it was not his voice, it could not be&mdash;that quiet
- voice speaking so softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her face grew calmer. The fear was gone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is not too late&mdash;it is not too late&mdash;and&mdash;and God will
- forgive,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Listen then, father&mdash;listen, and pray for
- me. I&mdash;I was sure Théophile had been robbing me. I watched behind the
- door that night. I saw him go to take the money. And&mdash;and then that
- man came in, and Théophile rushed at him with a stick of wood. The man had&mdash;had
- done nothing. It was in self-defence he fought. And then I&mdash;I helped
- Théophile. It was Théophile who took the revolver to kill him, and&mdash;and&mdash;it
- went off in Théophile's hand, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; she sighed heavily, and
- sank back on the pillow.
- </p>
- <p>
- The room seemed to sway before Raymond&mdash;and
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie's face, across the bed, seemed to move slowly before him with a
- pendulum-like movement, and her face was very white, and in it was wonder,
- and a great dawning hope, and awe. And he put his head down upon the
- coverlet, but his hands still held old Mother Blondin's hand between them.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then she spoke again, with greater difficulty now; and somehow her
- other hand had found Raymond's head, and her fingers played tremblingly
- through his hair.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You will tell them, father&mdash;and&mdash;and this other father here
- will tell them&mdash;and&mdash;and Valérie will bear witness&mdash;and&mdash;and
- the man will live. And you will tell him, father, how God came again and
- made me tell the truth because you were good, and&mdash;and because you
- made be believe again in&mdash;in you&mdash;and God&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A broken cry came from Raymond. The scalding tears were in his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush, my son!&rdquo;&mdash;it was the Bishop's grave and gentle voice. &ldquo;God has
- done a wondrous thing tonight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was silence in the little room.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then suddenly Raymond lifted his head&mdash;and the room was no more,
- and in its place was the moonlit church of that other night, and he saw
- again the old withered face transfigured into one of tender sweetness and
- ineffable love.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pierre, monsieur?&rdquo;&mdash;her mind was wandering now&mdash;they were the
- words she had spoken as she had sat beside him in the pew. &ldquo;Ah, he was a
- good boy, Pierre&mdash;have you not heard of Pierre Letellier? And there
- was little Jean&mdash;little Jean&mdash;he went away, monsieur, and I&mdash;I
- do not know where&mdash;where he is&mdash;I do not know&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's voice was breaking, as he leaned forward toward her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He is with God, Mother Blondin. Jean&mdash;Jean has sent you a message.
- His last thoughts were of you&mdash;his mother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old eyes flamed with a dying fire.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jean&mdash;my son! My little Jean&mdash;his&mdash;his mother.&rdquo; A smile
- lighted up her face, and hovered on her lips; and her hand, clinging to
- Raymond's, tightened.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; And then her fingers slipped from their
- hold, and fell away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Bishop's arm was around Raymond's shoulders.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go now, my son&mdash;and you, my daughter,&rdquo; he said gently. &ldquo;It is very
- near the end, and the time is short.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond rose blindly from his knees. Mother Blondin was very still, and a
- pallor, gray and premonitory, had crept into her face. Her eyes were
- closed. He raised the thin hand, and touched it with his lips&mdash;and
- turned away.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Valérie passed out of the room with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- And by the open window of the room beyond, Valérie knelt down, and he
- knelt down beside her.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was quiet without&mdash;and there was no sound, save now the murmur of
- the Bishop's voice from the inner room. He was to live&mdash;and not to
- die. To go free! To give himself up&mdash;but to be set free&mdash;and
- there were to be the years with Valérie. He could not understand it yet in
- all its fulness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie was crying softly. With a great tenderness he put his arm about
- her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was the <i>Benedictus</i>&mdash;'into the way of peace'&mdash;that you
- said for her that night,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Say it now again, my lover&mdash;for
- her&mdash;and for us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew her closer to him, and, with her wet cheek against his own, they
- repeated the words together.
- </p>
- <p>
- And after a little time she raised her hands, and held his face between
- them, and looked into his face for a long while, and there was a great
- gladness, and a great love, and a great trust in the tear-wet eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not know your name,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is Raymond,&rdquo; he answered.
- </p>
- <h3>
- THE END
- </h3>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Sin That Was His, by Frank L. Packard
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIN THAT WAS HIS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 51983-h.htm or 51983-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/1/9/8/51983/
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &ldquo;Project
-Gutenberg&rdquo;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&ldquo;the
-Foundation&rdquo; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; appears, or with which the
-phrase &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &ldquo;Project
-Gutenberg&rdquo; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than &ldquo;Plain Vanilla ASCII&rdquo; or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &ldquo;Plain
-Vanilla ASCII&rdquo; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, &ldquo;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation.&rdquo;
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain &ldquo;Defects,&rdquo; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &ldquo;Right
-of Replacement or Refund&rdquo; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
- </body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/51983-h/images/0001.jpg b/old/51983-h/images/0001.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 50ae9b3..0000000
--- a/old/51983-h/images/0001.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51983-h/images/0009.jpg b/old/51983-h/images/0009.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 4b2d91e..0000000
--- a/old/51983-h/images/0009.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51983-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/51983-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 50ae9b3..0000000
--- a/old/51983-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/51983-h/images/enlarge.jpg b/old/51983-h/images/enlarge.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 5a9bcf3..0000000
--- a/old/51983-h/images/enlarge.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/51983-h.htm.2021-01-24 b/old/old/51983-h.htm.2021-01-24
deleted file mode 100644
index cfbd018..0000000
--- a/old/old/51983-h.htm.2021-01-24
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,13843 +0,0 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
-
-<!DOCTYPE html
- PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
-
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
- <head>
- <title>
- The Sin That Was His, by Frank L. Packard
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
-
- body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
- P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
- H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
- hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
- .foot { margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%; text-align: justify; font-size: 80%; font-style: italic;}
- blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
- .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
- .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
- .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
- .xx-small {font-size: 60%;}
- .x-small {font-size: 75%;}
- .small {font-size: 85%;}
- .large {font-size: 115%;}
- .x-large {font-size: 130%;}
- .indent5 { margin-left: 5%;}
- .indent10 { margin-left: 10%;}
- .indent15 { margin-left: 15%;}
- .indent20 { margin-left: 20%;}
- .indent30 { margin-left: 30%;}
- .indent40 { margin-left: 40%;}
- div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
- div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
- .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
- .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
- .pagenum {position: absolute; right: 1%; font-size: 0.6em;
- font-variant: normal; font-style: normal;
- text-align: right; background-color: #FFFACD;
- border: 1px solid; padding: 0.3em;text-indent: 0em;}
- .side { float: left; font-size: 75%; width: 15%; padding-left: 0.8em;
- border-left: dashed thin; text-align: left;
- text-indent: 0; font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;
- font-weight: bold; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: solid 1px;}
- .head { float: left; font-size: 90%; width: 98%; padding-left: 0.8em;
- border-left: dashed thin; text-align: center;
- text-indent: 0; font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;
- font-weight: bold; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: solid 1px;}
- p.pfirst, p.noindent {text-indent: 0}
- span.dropcap { float: left; margin: 0 0.1em 0 0; line-height: 0.8 }
- pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
-
-</style>
- </head>
- <body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sin That Was His, by Frank L. Packard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Sin That Was His
-
-Author: Frank L. Packard
-
-Release Date: May 3, 2016 [EBook #51983]
-Last Updated: March 13, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIN THAT WAS HIS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- THE SIN THAT WAS HIS
- </h1>
- <h2>
- By Frank L. Packard
- </h2>
- <h4>
- The Copp Clark Co. Toronto, Canada
- </h4>
- <h3>
- 1917
- </h3>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0001.jpg" alt="0001 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0001.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0009.jpg" alt="0009 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0009.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>CONTENTS</b>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I&mdash;THREE-ACE ARTIE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II&mdash;THE TOAST </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III&mdash;THE CURÉ </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV&mdash;ON THE ROAD TO ST. MARLEAU </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V&mdash;THE &ldquo;MURDER&rdquo; </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI&mdash;THE JAWS OF THE TRAP </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII&mdash;AT THE PRESBYTÈRE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII&mdash;THOU SHALT NOT KILL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX&mdash;UNTIL THE DAWN </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X&mdash;KYRIE ELEISON </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI&mdash;&ldquo;HENRI MENTONE&rdquo; </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII&mdash;HIS BROTHER'S KEEPER </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII&mdash;THE CONFEDERATE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV&mdash;THE HOUSE ON THE POINT </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV&mdash;HOW HENRI MENTONE RODE WITH
- JACQUES BOURGET </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI&mdash;FOR THE MURDER OF THÉOPHILE
- BLONDIN </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII&mdash;THE COMMON CUP </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII&mdash;THE CALL IN THE NIGHT </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX&mdash;THE TWO SINNERS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX&mdash;AN UNCOVERED SOUL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI&mdash;THE CONDEMNED CELL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII&mdash;HOW RAYMOND BADE FAREWELL TO
- ST. MARLEAU </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII&mdash;MONSIGNOR THE BISHOP </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV&mdash;THE OLD WOMAN ON THE HILL </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I&mdash;THREE-ACE ARTIE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>F Arthur Leroy,
- commonly known throughout the Yukon as Three-Ace Artie, Ton-Nugget Camp
- knew a good deal&mdash;and equally knew very little. He had drifted in
- casually one day, and, evidently finding the environment remuneratively to
- his liking, had stayed. He was a bird of passage&mdash;tarrying perhaps
- for the spring clean-up.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was not exactly elegant in his apparel, for the conditions of an
- out-post mining camp did not lend themselves to elegance; but he was
- immeasurably the best dressed and most scrupulously groomed man that side
- of Dawson. His hands, for instance, were very soft and white; but then, he
- did no work&mdash;that is, of a nature to impair their nicety.
- </p>
- <p>
- His name was somewhat confusing. It might be either French or English,
- according to the twist that was given to its pronunciation&mdash;and
- Three-Ace Artie could give it either twist with equal facility. He
- confessed to being a Canadian&mdash;which was the only confession of any
- nature whatsoever that Three-Ace Artie had ever been known to make. He
- spoke English in a manner that left no doubt in the world but that it was
- his native language&mdash;except in the mind of Canuck John, the only
- French Canadian in the camp, who was equally positive that in the person
- of Three-Ace Artie he had unquestionably found a compatriot born to the
- French tongue.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few old-timers around Dawson might have remembered, if it had not been
- so commonplace an occurrence when it happened, that Leroy, as a very young
- man, had toiled in over the White Pass; though that being only a matter of
- some four years ago at this time, Leroy was still a very young man, even
- if somewhat of a change had taken place in his appearance&mdash;due
- possibly, or possibly not, to the rigours of the climate. Three-Ace Artie
- since then had grown a full beard. But Leroy's arrival, being but one of
- so many, the old-timers had found in it nothing to remember.
- </p>
- <p>
- Other and more definite particulars concerning Three-Ace Artie, however,
- were in the possession of Ton-Nugget Camp. Three-Ace Artie had no
- temperance proclivities&mdash;but he never drank during business hours. No
- one had ever seen a glass at his elbow when there was a pack of cards on
- the table! Frankly a professional gambler, he was admitted to be a good
- one&mdash;and square. He was polished, but not too suave; he was
- unquestionably possessed of far more than an ordinary education, but he
- never permitted his erudition to become objectionable; and he had a
- reputation for coolness and nerve that Ton-Nugget Camp had seen enhanced
- on several occasions and belied on none. He was of medium height, broad
- shouldered, and muscular; he had black hair and black eyes; under the
- beard the jaw was square; unruffled, he was genial; ruffled, he was known
- to be dangerous; and, still too young to show the markings of an
- ungracious life, his forehead was unwrinkled, and his skin clear and
- fresh.
- </p>
- <p>
- Also, during his three months' sojourn in Ton-Nugget Camp, he was
- credited, not without reason, in having won considerably more than he had
- lost. Upon these details rested whatever claim to an intimate
- acquaintanceship with Three-Ace Artie the camp could boast; for the rest,
- Ton-Nugget Camp, in common with the Yukon in general, was quite privileged
- to hazard as many guesses as it pleased!
- </p>
- <p>
- In a word, such was Three-Ace Artie's status in Ton-Nugget Camp when there
- arrived one afternoon a young man, little more than a boy, patently fresh
- from the East. And here, though Ton-Nugget Camp was quick to take the
- newcomer's measure, and, ignoring the other's claim to the self-conferred
- title of Gerald Rogers, promptly dubbed him the Kid, it permitted, through
- lack of observation, a slight detail to escape its notice that might
- otherwise perhaps have suggested a new and promising field for its guesses
- concerning Three-Ace Artie.
- </p>
- <p>
- Though at no more distant a date than a few days previous to his arrival,
- the Kid had probably never seen a &ldquo;poke&rdquo; in his life before, much less one
- filled with currency in the shape of gold dust, he had, in the first flush
- of his entry to MacDonald's, and with the life-long air of one accustomed
- to doing nothing else, flung a very new and pleasantly-filled poke in the
- general direction of the scales at the end of the bar, and, leaning back
- against the counter, supporting himself on his elbows, proceeded to &ldquo;set
- them up&rdquo; for all concerned. MacDonald's, collectively and individually,
- which is to say no small portion of the camp, for MacDonald's was at once
- hotel, store, bar and general hang-out, obeyed the invitation without
- undue delay, and was in the act of enjoying the newcomer's hospitality
- when Three-Ace Artie strolled in.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some one nearest the bar reached out a glass to the gambler over the
- intervening heads, the cluster of men broke away that the ceremony of
- introduction with the stranger might be duly performed&mdash;and
- Ton-Nugget Camp, failing to note the sudden tightening of the gambler's
- fingers around his glass, the startled flash in the dark eyes that was
- instantly veiled by half dropped, sleepy lids, heard only Three-Ace
- Artie's, &ldquo;Glad to know you, Mr. Rogers,&rdquo; in the gambler's usual and
- quietly modulated voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- Following that, however, not being entirely unsophisticated, Ton-Nugget
- Camp stuck its tongue in its cheek and awaited developments&mdash;meanwhile
- making the most of its own opportunities, for the Kid, boisterous, loose
- with his money, was obviously too shining a mark for even amateurs to
- overlook. Ton-Nugget Camp, therefore, was, while expectant, quite content
- that Three-Ace Artie should, through motives which it attributed to
- professional delicacy, avoid rather than make any hurried advances toward
- intimacy with the newcomer; since, not feeling the restraint of any
- professional ethics itself, Ton-Nugget Camp was enabled to take up a few
- little collections on its own account via the stud poker route at the
- expense of the Kid.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two days passed, during which Three-Ace Artie, besides being little in
- evidence, refrained entirely from pressing his attentions upon the
- stranger; but despite this, thanks to the adroitness of certain members of
- the community and his own all too frequent attendance upon the bar,
- matters were not flourishing with the Kid. The Kid drank far more than was
- good for him, played far more than was good for him, and, flushed and
- fuddled with liquor, played none too well. True, there were those in the
- camp who offered earnest, genuine and well-meant advice, amongst them a
- grim old Presbyterian by the name of Murdock Shaw, who was credited with
- being the head of an incipient, and therefore harmless, reform movement&mdash;but
- this advice the Kid, quite as warmly as it was offered, consigned to other
- climes in conjunction with its progenitors; and, as a result, all that was
- left of his original poke at the expiration of those two days was an empty
- chamois bag from which, possibly by way of compensation, the offensive
- newness had been considerably worn off.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he's got any more,&rdquo; said the amateurs, licking their lips, &ldquo;here's
- hopin' that Three-Ace Artie 'll keep on overlookin' the bet!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, the next afternoon, the Kid flashed another poke, quite as new
- and quite as pleasantly-nurtured as its predecessor&mdash;and Three-Ace
- Artie seemed to awake suddenly to the knock of opportunity at his door.
- </p>
- <p>
- With just what finesse and aplomb the gambler inveigled the Kid into the
- game no one was prepared co say&mdash;it was a detail of no moment, except
- to Three-Ace Artie, who could be confidently trusted to take care of such
- matters, when moved to do so, with the courtly and genial graciousness of
- one conferring a favour on the other! But, be that as it may, the first
- intimation the few loungers who were in MacDonald's at the time had that
- anything was in the wind was the sight of MacDonald, behind the bar,
- obligingly exchanging the pokes of both men For poker chips. The loungers
- present thereupon immediately expressed their interest by congregating
- around the table as Three-Ace Artie and the Kid sat down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stud?&rdquo; suggested Three-Ace Artie, with an engaging smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid, already none too sober, nodded his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And table stakes!&rdquo; he supplemented, with a somewhat lordly flourish of
- the replenished glass that he had carried with him from the bar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; murmured the gambler.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was still early afternoon, but an afternoon of the long-night of the
- northern winter, sunless, with only a subdued twilight without, and the
- big metal lamps, hanging from the ceiling, were lighted. In the centre of
- the room a box-stove alternately crackled and purred, its sheet-iron sides
- glowing dull red. The bare, rough-boarded room, save for the little group,
- was empty. Behind the bar, with a sort of curious, cynical smile that
- supplied no additional beauty to his shrewd, hard-lined visage, MacDonald
- himself propped his bullet-head in his hands, elbows on the counter, to
- watch the proceedings.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie and the Kid began to play. Occasionally the door opened,
- admitting a miner who took a brisk, fore-intentioned step or two toward
- the bar&mdash;and catching sight of the game in progress, as though
- magnet-drawn, immediately changed his direction and joined those already
- around the table. But neither Three-Ace Artie nor the Kid appeared to pay
- any attention to the constantly augmenting number of spectators. The game
- see-sawed, fortune smiling with apparently unbiased fickleness first on
- one, then on the other. The Kid grew a little more noisy, a little more
- intoxicated&mdash;as MacDonald, from a mere spectator, became an attendant
- at the Kid's frequent beck and call. Three-Ace Artie was entirely
- professional&mdash;there was no glass at Three-Ace Artie's elbow, when he
- lost he smiled good-humouredly, when he won he smoothed over the other's
- discomfiture with self-deprecatory tact; he was unperturbed and cordial,
- he bet sparingly and in moderation&mdash;to enjoy the game, as it were,
- for the game's own sake, the stakes being, as it were again, simply to
- supply a little additional zest and tang, and for no other reason
- whatever!
- </p>
- <p>
- And, then, little by little, the Kid began to force the game; and, as the
- stakes grew higher, began to lose steadily, with the result that an hour
- of play saw most of the chips, instead of a glass, flanking Three-Ace
- Artie's elbow&mdash;and saw a large proportion of Ton-Nugget Camp, to whom
- the word in some mysterious manner had gone forth, flanking the table five
- and six deep.
- </p>
- <p>
- The more the Kid lost, the more he drank. Whatever ease of manner,
- whatever composure he had originally possessed was gone now. His hair
- straggled unkemptly over his forehead, his cheeks were flushed, his lips
- worked constantly on the butt of an unlighted cigarette.
- </p>
- <p>
- The crowd pressed a little closer, leaned a little further over the table.
- There was something almost fascinating in the deftness with which the
- soft, white hands of Three-Ace Artie caressed the cards, there was
- something almost fascinating, too, in the cool impassiveness of the
- gambler's poise, and in the sort of languid selfpossession that lighted
- the dark eyes; but Ton-Nugget Camp had lived too long in familiarity with
- Three-Ace Artie to be interested in the gambler's personality at that
- moment&mdash;its interest was centred in the game. The play now had all
- the earmarks of a grand finale. There were big stakes on the table&mdash;and
- the last of the Kid's chips. The crowd raised itself on tiptoes. Both men
- turned their &ldquo;hole&rdquo; cards. Three-Ace Artie reached out calmly, drew the
- chips toward him, smiled almost apologetically, and, picking up the deck,
- riffled the cards tentatively&mdash;the opposite side of the table was
- bare of stakes.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment the Kid circled his lips with the tip of his tongue, and
- flirted his hair back from his forehead with an uncertain, jerky motion of
- his hand; then he snatched up his glass, spilled a portion of its
- contents, gulped down the remainder, and began to fumble under his vest,
- finally wrenching out a money-belt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go on&mdash;what do you think!&rdquo; he said thickly. &ldquo;I ain't done yet! I'll
- get mine back, an' yours, too! Table stakes&mdash;eh? I'll get you this
- time&mdash;b'God! Table stakes&mdash;eh&mdash;again? What do you say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; murmured Three-Ace Artie politely.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then the crowd shuffled its feet uneasily. Murdock Shaw, who had edged
- his way close to the table, leaned over and touched the Kid's shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'd cut it out, if I was you, son,&rdquo; he advised bluntly. &ldquo;You're drunk&mdash;and
- a mark!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A sort of quick, sibilant intake of breath came from the circle around the
- table. Like a flash, one of Three-Ace Artie's hands, from the deck of
- cards, vanished under the table; and the dark eyes, the slumber gone from
- their depths, narrowed dangerously on Murdock Shaw. Then Three-Ace Artie
- smiled&mdash;unpleasantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It isn't as though you were <i>new</i> in the Yukon, Murdock&rdquo;&mdash;there
- was a deadliness in the quiet, level tones. &ldquo;What's the idea?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Like magic, to right and left, on each side of the table, the crowd
- cleared a line behind the two men&mdash;then silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- The gambler's hand remained beneath the table; his eyes cold, alert, never
- wavering for the fraction of a second from the miner's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- Perhaps a minute passed. The miner did not speak or move, save that his
- lips tightened and the tan of his face took on a deeper hue.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then Three-Ace Artie spoke again:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you <i>calling</i>, Murdock?&rdquo; he inquired softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The miner hesitated an instant, then turned abruptly on his heel.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I call you,&rdquo; he said evenly, over his shoulder, &ldquo;it will break you
- for keeps&mdash;and you won't have long to wait, either!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid, who had been alternating a maudlin gaze from the face of one man
- to the other, stood up now, and, hanging to the back of his chair, watched
- the miner's retreat in a fuddled way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, go chase yourself!&rdquo; he called out, in sudden inspiration&mdash;and,
- glancing around for approval, laughed boisterously at his own drunken
- humour.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door closed on Murdock Shaw. The Kid slipped down into his chair,
- dumped a handful of American double-eagles out of the money-belt&mdash;and,
- reaching again for his glass, banged it on the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gimme another!&rdquo; he shouted in the direction of the bar. &ldquo;Hey&mdash;Mac&mdash;d'ye
- hear! Gimme another drink!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie's hands were above the table again&mdash;the slim,
- delicate, tapering fingers shuffling, riffling, and reshuffling the cards.
- </p>
- <p>
- MacDonald approached the table, and picked up the empty glass.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; commanded the Kid ponderously, and scowled suddenly in the throes
- of another inspiration. He pointed a finger at Three-Ace Artie. &ldquo;Say&mdash;give
- him one, too!&rdquo; He wagged his head sapiently. &ldquo;If he wants any more chance
- at my money, he's got to have one, too! That's what! Old guy's right about
- that! I'm the only one that's drunk&mdash;you've got to drink, too!
- What'll you have&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The group had closed in around the table again, and now all eyes were
- riveted, curiously, expectantly, upon Three-Ace Artie. If the gambler had
- one fixed principle from which, as Ton-Nugget Camp had excellent reasons
- for knowing, neither argument nor cajolery had ever moved him, it was that
- of refusing to drink while he played&mdash;but now, while all eyes were on
- Three-Ace Artie, Three-Ace Artie's eyes were on the pile of American gold
- that the Kid had displayed. There was a quick little curve to the
- gambler's lips, that became a slightly tolerant, slightly good-natured
- smile&mdash;and then the crowd nodded significantly to itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, certainly!&rdquo; said Three-Ace Artie pleasantly. &ldquo;Give me the same,
- Mac.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's the talk!&rdquo; applauded the Kid.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie pushed the cards across the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is a new game!&rdquo; announced the Kid. &ldquo;Cut for deal. Table stakes!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They cut. Three-Ace Artie won, riffled the cards several times, passed
- them over to be cut again, and dealt the first card apiece face down.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid examined his card in approved fashion by pulling it slightly over
- the edge of the table and secretively turning up one corner; then, still
- face down, he pushed it back, and, MacDonald, returning with the glasses
- from the bar at that moment, reached greedily for his own and tossed it
- off. He nodded with heavy satisfaction as Three-Ace Artie drained the
- other glass. Again he examined his card as before.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's a pretty good card!&rdquo; he stated with owlish gravity. &ldquo;Worth pretty
- good bet!&rdquo; He laid a stack of his gold eagles upon the card.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie placed an equivalent number of chips upon his own card,
- and dealt another apiece&mdash;face up now on the table. An eight-spot of
- spades fell to the Kid; a ten-spot of diamonds to Three-Ace Artie.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Worth jus' much as before!&rdquo; declared the Kid&mdash;and laid another stack
- of eagles upon the card.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mine's worth a little more this time,&rdquo; smiled Three-Ace Artie&mdash;and
- doubled the bet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure!&rdquo; mumbled the Kid. &ldquo;Sure thing!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again Three-Ace Artie dealt&mdash;a king of hearts to the Kid; a deuce of
- hearts to himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid's hand seemed to tremble eagerly, as he fumbled with his gold
- eagles. He glanced furtively at the gambler&mdash;and then, as though
- trying to read in Three-Ace Artie's face how far he might safely egg the
- other on, he began to drop coin after coin upon his cards.
- </p>
- <p>
- The crowd stirred a little uncomfortably. The Kid had undoubtedly the
- better hand so far, but he had made a fool play&mdash;a blind man could
- have read through the back of the card that was so carefully guarded face
- down on the table. The Kid had a pair of kings against a possible pair of
- tens or deuces on the gambler's side.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie imperturbably &ldquo;saw&rdquo; the bet&mdash;and coolly dealt the
- fourth card. Another king fell to the Kid; another deuce to himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid's eyes were burning feverishly now. He bet again, laughing,
- chuckling drunkenly as he swept forward a generous share of his remaining
- gold&mdash;and with a quiet, unostentatiously appraising glance at what
- was left of the pile of eagles, Three-Ace Artie raised heavily.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then, for the first time, the Kid hesitated, and a momentary frightened
- look flashed across his face. He lifted the corner of his &ldquo;hole&rdquo; card
- again and again nervously, as though to assure himself that he had made no
- mistake&mdash;and finally laughed with raucous confidence again, and,
- pushing the hair out of his eyes, demanded another drink, and returned the
- raise.
- </p>
- <p>
- The onlookers sucked in their breath&mdash;but this time approved the
- Kid's play. The cards showed a pair of deuces and a ten-spot spread out
- before Three-Ace Artie, a pair of kings and an eight-spot in front of the
- Kid. But the Kid had already given his hand away, and with a king in the
- &ldquo;hole,&rdquo; making three kings, Three-Ace Artie could not possibly win unless
- his &ldquo;hole&rdquo; card was a deuce or a ten, and on top of that that his next and
- final card should be a deuce or ten as well. It looked all the Kid's way.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie again &ldquo;saw&rdquo; the other's raise&mdash;and dealt the last
- card.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a sudden shuffling of feet, as the crowd leaned tensely forward.
- A jack fell face up before the Kid&mdash;a ten-spot fell before the
- gambler. Three-Ace Artie showed two pairs&mdash;it all depended now on
- what he held as his &ldquo;hole&rdquo; card.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the Kid, either because he was too fuddled to take the possibilities
- into account, or because he was drunkenly obsessed with the invincibility
- of his own three kings, laughed hilariously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I got you!&rdquo; he cried&mdash;and bet half of his remaining gold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie's smile was cordial.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Might as well go all the way then,&rdquo; he suggested&mdash;and raised to the
- limit of the Kid's last gold eagle.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid laughed again. He had played cunningly&mdash;quite cunningly. The
- gambler had fallen into the trap. All his hand showed was two kings.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll see you! I'll see you!&rdquo;&mdash;he was lurching excitedly in his
- chair, as he pushed the rest of his money forward. &ldquo;This is the time
- little old two pairs are no good!&rdquo; He turned his &ldquo;hole&rdquo; card triumphantly.
- &ldquo;Three kings&rdquo; he gurgled&mdash;and reached for the stakes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just a minute,&rdquo; objected Three-Ace Artie blandly.
- </p>
- <p>
- He faced his other card. &ldquo;I've got another ten here. Full house&mdash;three
- tens and a pair of deuces.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A dead silence fell upon the room. The Kid, lurching in his chair, stared
- in a dazed, stunned way at the other's cards&mdash;and then his face went
- a deathly white. One hand crept aimlessly to his forehead and brushed
- across his eyes; and after a moment, leaning heavily upon the table, he
- stood up, still swaying. But he was not swaying from drunkenness now. The
- shock seemed to have sobered him, bringing a haggard misery into his eyes.
- The crowd watched, making no comment. Three-Ace Artie, without lifting his
- eyes, was calmly engaged in stacking the gold eagles into little piles in
- front of him. The Kid moistened his lips with his tongue, attempted to
- speak&mdash;and succeeded only in * swallowing hard once or twice. Then,
- with a pitiful effort to pull himself together, he forced a smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I can't play any more,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'm cleaned out&rdquo;&mdash;and
- turned away from the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- The crowd made way for him, following him with its eyes as he crossed the
- room and disappeared through a back door at the side of the bar, making
- evidently for his &ldquo;hotel&rdquo; room upstairs. Three-Ace Artie said nothing&mdash;he
- was imperturbably pocketing the gold eagles now. The crowd drifted away
- from the table, dispersed around the room, and some went out. Three-Ace
- Artie rose from the table and carried the chips back to the bar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Guess I'll cash in, Mac,&rdquo; he drawled.
- </p>
- <p>
- The proprietor pushed the two pokes across the bar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Step up, gentlemen!&rdquo; invited the gambler amiably, wheeling with his back
- against the bar to face the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- An air of uneasiness, an awkward tension had settled upon the place. Some
- few more went out; but the others, as though glad of the relief afforded
- the situation by Three-Ace Artie's invitation, stepped promptly forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie's hand encircled a stiff four-fingers of raw spirit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here's how!&rdquo; he said&mdash;and drained his glass.
- </p>
- <p>
- Somebody &ldquo;set them up&rdquo; again; Three-Ace Artie repeated the performance&mdash;and
- MacDonald's resumed its normal poise.
- </p>
- <p>
- For perhaps half an hour Three-Ace Artie leaned against the bar, joining
- in a dice game that some one had inaugurated; and then, interest in this
- lagging, with a yawn and a casual remark about going up to his shack for a
- snooze, he put on his overcoat, pulled his fur cap well down over his
- ears, sauntered to the door&mdash;and, with a cheery wave of his hand,
- went out.
- </p>
- <p>
- But once outside the door, Three-Ace Artie's nonchalance dropped from him,
- and he stood motionless in the dull light of the winter afternoon peering
- sharply up and down the camp's single shack-lined street. There was no one
- in sight. He turned quickly then, and, treading noiselessly in the snow,
- stole along beside the building to a door at the further end. He opened
- this cautiously, stepped inside, and, in semidarkness here, halted again
- to listen. The sounds from the adjoining barroom reached him plainly, but
- that was all. Satisfied that he was unobserved, he moved swiftly forward
- to where, at the end of the sort of passageway which he had entered, a
- steep, ladder-like stairway led upward. He mounted this stealthily, gained
- the landing above, and, groping his way now along a narrow hallway,
- suddenly flung open a door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who's there!&rdquo; came a quick, startled cry from within.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't talk so loud&mdash;damn it!&rdquo; growled Three-Ace
- </p>
- <p>
- Artie, in a hoarse whisper. &ldquo;You can hear yourself think through these
- partitions!&rdquo; He struck a match, and lighted a candle which he found on the
- combination table and washing-stand near the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid's face, drawn and colourless, loomed up in the yellow light from
- the edge of the bed, as he bent forward, blinking in a kind of miserable
- wonder at Three-Ace Artie.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You!&rdquo; he gasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie closed the door softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some high-roller, you are, aren't you!&rdquo; he observed caustically.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kid did not answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a full minute Three-Ace Artie eyed the other in silence&mdash;then he
- laughed shortly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know which of us is the bigger damn fool&mdash;you trying to buy
- a through ticket to hell; or yours truly for what I'm going to do now!
- Maybe you have learned your lesson, maybe you haven't; but anyway I am
- going to take the chance. I'm not here to preach, but I'll push a little
- personal advice out of long experience your way. The booze and the
- pasteboards won't get you anywhere&mdash;except into the kind of mess you
- are up against now. If you are hankering for more of it, go to it&mdash;that's
- all. It's your hunt!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He flung the Kid's poke suddenly upon the table, and piled the gold eagles
- beside it.
- </p>
- <p>
- A flush crept into the Kid's cheeks. He leaned further forward, staring
- helplessly, now at Three-Ace Artie, now at the money on the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W-what do you mean?&rdquo; he stammered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It isn't very hard to guess, is it?&rdquo; said Three-Ace Artie quietly.
- &ldquo;Here's your money&mdash;but there's just one little condition tied to it.
- I can't afford to let the impression get around that I'm establishing any
- precedents&mdash;see? And if the boys heard of this they'd think I was
- suffering from softening of the brain! You get away from here without
- saying anything to anybody&mdash;and stay away. Bixley, one of the boys,
- is going over to the next camp this afternoon&mdash;and you go with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You&mdash;you're giving me back the money?&rdquo; faltered the Kid.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it sort of looks that way,&rdquo; smiled Three-Ace Artie.
- </p>
- <p>
- A certain dignity came to the Kid&mdash;and he held out his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a white man,&rdquo; he said huskily. &ldquo;But I can't accept it. I took it
- pretty hard down there perhaps, it seemed to get me all of a sudden when
- the booze went out; but I'm not all yellow. You won it&mdash;I can't take
- it back. It's yours.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; it's not mine&rdquo;&mdash;Three-Ace Artie was still smiling. &ldquo;That's the
- way to talk, Kid. I like that. But you're wrong&mdash;it's yours by
- rights.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By rights?&rdquo; The Kid hesitated, studying Three-Ace Artie's face. &ldquo;You
- mean,&rdquo; he ventured slowly, &ldquo;that the game wasn't on the level&mdash;that
- you stacked the cards?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never stacked a card on a man in my life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I don't understand what you mean,&rdquo; said the Kid. &ldquo;How can it be mine
- by rights?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's simple enough,&rdquo; replied Three-Ace Artie. &ldquo;I'm paying back a little
- debt I owe, that's all. I figured the boys had pecked around about deep
- enough on the outskirts of your pile, and that it was about time for me to
- sit in and save the rest. I cleaned you out a little faster than I
- expected, a little faster perhaps than the next man will if you try it
- again&mdash;but not any the less thoroughly. It's the 'next man' I'm
- trying to steer you away from, Kid.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I know&rdquo;&mdash;the Kid spoke almost mechanically. &ldquo;But a debt?&rdquo;&mdash;his
- eyes were searching the gambler's face perplexedly now. Then suddenly:
- &ldquo;Who are you?&rdquo; he demanded. &ldquo;There's something familiar about you. I
- thought there was the first time I saw you the other afternoon. And yet I
- can't place you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't try,&rdquo; said Three-Ace Artie softly. He reached out and laid his hand
- on the other's shoulder. &ldquo;It wouldn't do you or me any good. There are
- some things best forgotten. I'm telling you the truth, that's all you need
- to know. You're entitled to the money&mdash;and another chance. Let it go
- at that. You agree to the bargain, don't you? You leave here with Bixley
- this afternoon&mdash;and this is between you and me, Kid, and no one else
- on earth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment the Kid's gaze held steadily on Three-Ace Artie; then his
- eyes filled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; I'll go,&rdquo; he said in a low voice. &ldquo;I guess I'm not going to forget
- this&mdash;or you. I don't know what I would have done, and I want to tell
- you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never mind that!&rdquo; interrupted Three-Ace Artie with sudden gruffness.
- &ldquo;It's what you do from now on that counts. You've got to hurry now. Any of
- the boys will show you Bixley's shack, if you don't know where it is. Just
- tell Bixley what you want, and he'll take you along. He'll be glad of
- company on the trail. Shake!&rdquo; He caught the other's hand, wrung it in a
- hard grip&mdash;and turned to the door. &ldquo;Good luck to you, Kid!&rdquo; he said&mdash;and
- closed the door behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- As cautiously as he had entered, Three-Ace Artie made his way downstairs
- again; and, once outside, started briskly in the direction of his shack,
- that he had acquired, bag and baggage, shortly after his arrival in the
- camp, from a miner who was pulling out. It was some three or four hundred
- yards from MacDonald's, and as he went along, feet crunching in the snow
- from his swinging stride, he began quite abruptly to whistle a cheery air.
- It was too bitterly cold, however, to whistle, so instead he resorted to
- humming pleasantly to himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- He stamped the snow from his feet as he reached the shack, opened the
- door, and went in. A few embers still glowed in the box-stove, and he
- threw on a stick of wood and opened the damper. He lighted a lamp, and
- stood for a moment looking around him. There was a bunk at one side of the
- shack, the table, the stove, a single chair, a few books on a rude shelf,
- a kit bag in one corner, a skin of some sort on the floor, and a small
- cupboard containing supplies and cooking utensils. Three-Ace Artie,
- however, did not appear to be obsessed with the inventory of his
- surroundings. There was a whimsical smile on his lips, as he pulled off
- his fur cap and tossed it on the bunk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I guess,&rdquo; said Three-Ace Artie, &ldquo;it will give the Recording Angel quite a
- shock to chalk one up on the other side of the page for me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II&mdash;THE TOAST
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HREE-ACE ARTIE,
- sprawled comfortably cally at the book he held in his hand, a copy of
- Hugo's <i>Claude Gueux</i> in French, tossed it to the foot of the bunk,
- and sat up, dangling his legs over the edge.
- </p>
- <p>
- A mood that had long been a stranger to him, a mellow mood, as he had
- defined it to himself, had kept him away from MacDonald's that night. It
- was the glow of self-benediction, as it were, ever since he had left the
- boy's room that afternoon, though it had puzzled him to some extent to
- explain its effect upon himself&mdash;that, for instance, the corollary
- should take the form of a quiet evening, a pipe, and Hugo.
- </p>
- <p>
- He shrugged his shoulders. It had been so nevertheless. His shoulders
- lifted again&mdash;it was decidedly an incongruous proceeding for one
- known as Three-Ace Artie!
- </p>
- <p>
- His thoughts reverted to the Kid. No one had come to the shack since he
- had returned from the hotel, but he knew the Kid had left the camp, for he
- had watched from the shack window as Bixley and the boy had passed down
- the street together. The Kid would not play the fool again for a while,
- that was certain&mdash;whatever he did eventually.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie stared introspectively at the lamp, out at full length
- upon his bunk, yawned, and looked at his watch. It was already after
- midnight. He glanced a little quizzically.
- </p>
- <p>
- Kid, of course! He had been conscious of an inward flame for a moment&mdash;then
- for the third time shrugged his shoulders.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I guess I'll turn in,&rdquo; he muttered.
- </p>
- <p>
- He bent down to untie a shoe lace&mdash;and straightened up quickly again.
- A footstep sounded from without, there was a knock upon the door, the door
- opened&mdash;and with the inrush of air the lamp flared up. Three-Ace
- Artie reached out swiftly to the top of the chimney, protecting the flame
- with the flat of his hand, and, as the door closed again, stared with cool
- surprise at his visitor. The last time he had seen Sergeant Marden, of the
- Royal North-West Mounted Police, had been the year before at
- Two-Strike-Mountain, where each had followed a gold rush&mdash;for quite
- different reasons!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello, sergeant!&rdquo; he drawled. &ldquo;I didn't know you were in camp.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just got in around supper-time,&rdquo; replied the other. &ldquo;I've been up on the
- Creek for the last few weeks.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie smiled facetiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any luck?&rdquo; he inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I got my man,&rdquo; said the sergeant quietly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; murmured Three-Ace Artie softly. &ldquo;You've got a reputation for
- doing that, sergeant.&rdquo; He laughed pleasantly. &ldquo;But you haven't dropped in
- on <i>me</i> officially, have you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sergeant Marden, big, thick-set, with a strong, kindly face, with gray
- eyes that lighted now in a gravely humorous way shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I'm playing the 'old friend' rôle to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; exclaimed Three-Ace Artie heartily. &ldquo;Peel off your duds then, and&mdash;will
- you have the bunk, or the chair? Take your choice&mdash;only make yourself
- at home.&rdquo; He stepped over to the cupboard, and, while the sergeant pulled
- off his cap and mitts, and unbuttoned and threw back his overcoat,
- Three-Ace Artie procured a bottle of whisky and two glasses, which he set
- upon the table. &ldquo;Help yourself, sergeant,&rdquo; he invited cordially.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sergeant shook his head again, as he drew the chair toward him and sat
- down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't think I'll take anything to-night,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No?&rdquo;&mdash;Three-Ace Artie's voice expressed the polite regret of a
- perfect host. &ldquo;Well, fill your pipe then,&rdquo; he suggested hospitably, as he
- seated himself on the edge of the bunk. He began to fill his own pipe
- deliberately, apparently wholly preoccupied for the moment with that
- homely operation&mdash;but his mind was leaping in lightning flashes back
- over the range of the four years that he had spent in the Yukon. What <i>exactly</i>
- did Sergeant Marden of the Royal North-West Mounted want with him
- to-night? He had known the other for a good while, it was true&mdash;but
- not in a fashion to warrant the sergeant in making a haphazard social call
- at midnight after what must have been a long, hard day on the trail.
- </p>
- <p>
- A match, drawn with a long sweep under the table, crackled; Sergeant
- Marden lighted his pipe, and flipped the match-stub stovewards.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It looks as though Canuck John wouldn't pull through the night,&rdquo; he said
- gravely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Canuck John!&rdquo; Three-Ace Artie sat up with a jerk, and glanced sharply at
- the other. &ldquo;What's that you say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sergeant Marden removed his pipe slowly from his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, you know, don't you?&rdquo; he asked in surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I don't know!&rdquo; returned Three-Ace Artie quickly. &ldquo;I haven't been out
- of this shack since late this afternoon; but I saw him this morning, and
- he was all right then. What's happened?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He shot himself just after supper&mdash;accident, of course&mdash;old
- story, cleaning a gun,&rdquo; said the sergeant tersely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good God!&rdquo; cried Three-Ace Artie, in a low, shocked way&mdash;and then he
- was on his feet, and reaching for his cap and coat. &ldquo;I'll go up there and
- see him. You don't mind, sergeant, if I leave you here? I guess I knew
- Canuck John better than any one else in camp did, and&mdash;&rdquo; His coat
- half on, he paused suddenly, his brows gathering in a frown. &ldquo;After
- supper, you said!&rdquo; he muttered slowly. &ldquo;Why, that's hours ago!&rdquo; Then, his
- voice rasping: &ldquo;It's damned queer no one came to tell me about this!
- There's something wrong here!&rdquo; He struggled into his coat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's been unconscious ever since they found him,&rdquo; said Sergeant Marden,
- his eyes fixed on the bowl of his pipe as he prodded the dottle down with
- his forefinger. &ldquo;The doctor's just come. You couldn't do any good by going
- up there, and&rdquo;&mdash;his eyes lifted and met Three-Ace Artie's meaningly&mdash;&ldquo;take
- it all around, I guess it would be just as well if you didn't go. Murdock
- Shaw and some of the boys are there, and&mdash;well, they seem to feel
- they don't want you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment Three-Ace Artie stood motionless, regarding the other in a
- half angry, half puzzled way; then, his weight on both hands, he leaned
- forward over the table toward Sergeant Marden.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In plain English, and in as few words as you can put it, what in hell do
- you mean by that?&rdquo; he demanded levelly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, if you want it that way, I'll tell you,&rdquo; said Sergeant Marden
- quietly. &ldquo;I guess perhaps the short cut's best. They've given you until
- to-morrow morning to get out of Ton-Nugget Camp.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I beg your pardon?&rdquo; inquired Three-Ace Artie with ominous politeness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sergeant Marden produced a poke partially filled with gold dust and laid
- it on the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's that?&rdquo;&mdash;Three-Ace Artie's eyes were hard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's the price you paid Sam MacBride for this shack and contents when he
- went away. The boys say they want to play fair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Three-Ace Artie laughed&mdash;not pleasantly. Methodically he
- removed his overcoat, hung it on its peg, and sat down again on the edge
- of the bunk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let's see the rest of your hand, sergeant&rdquo;&mdash;his voice was deadly
- quiet. &ldquo;I don't quite get the idea.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wasn't here myself this afternoon,&rdquo; said Sergeant Marden; &ldquo;but they
- seem to feel that the sort of thing that happened kind of gives the
- community a bad name, and that separating a youngster, when he's drunk,
- from his last dollar is a bit too raw even for Ton-Nugget Camp. That's
- about the size of the way it was put up to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It seemed to Three-Act Artie that in some way he had not quite heard
- aright; or that, if he had, he was being made the object of some, unknown
- to its authors, stupendously ironical joke&mdash;and then, as he glanced
- at the officer's grim, though not altogether unfriendly countenance, and
- from Sergeant Marden to the bag of gold upon the table, a bitter, furious
- anger surged upon him. His clenched fist reached out and fell smashing
- upon the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So that's it, is it!&rdquo; he said between his teeth. &ldquo;This is some of Murdock
- Shaw's work&mdash;the snivelling, psalm-singing hypocrite! Well, he can't
- get away with it! I've a few friends in camp myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fairweather friends, I should say,&rdquo; qualified the sergeant, busy again
- with his pipe bowl. &ldquo;You said yourself that no one had been near the shack
- here. The camp appears to be pretty well of one mind on the subject.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Including the half dozen or more who started after the Kid to begin
- with!&rdquo;&mdash;Three-Ace Artie's laugh was savage, full of menace. &ldquo;Are they
- helping to run me out of camp, too!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You seem to have got a little of <i>everybody's</i> money,&rdquo; suggested
- Sergeant Marden pointedly. &ldquo;Anyway, I haven't seen any sign of them
- putting up a fight for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quite so!&rdquo; There was a sudden cold self-possession in Three-Ace Artie's
- tones. &ldquo;Well, I can put up quite a fight for myself, thank you. I'm not
- going! It's too bad Shaw didn't have the nerve to come here and tell me
- this. I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wouldn't let him,&rdquo; interposed the sergeant, with a curious smile.
- &ldquo;That's why I came myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie studied the other's face for an instant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, go on!&rdquo; he jerked out. &ldquo;What's the answer to that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That I am going on to Dawson in the morning, and that I thought perhaps
- you might be willing to come along.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie's under jaw crept out the fraction of an inch, and his
- eyes narrowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought you said you weren't here officially!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not&mdash;at least, not yet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it sounds mighty like an arrest to me!&rdquo; snarled Three-Ace Artie. He
- stood up abruptly, and once more leaned over the table. His dark eyes
- flashed. &ldquo;But that doesn't go either&mdash;not in the Yukon! You can't
- hold me for anything I've done, and you ought to know better than to think
- you can do any bluffing with me and get away with it! Murdock Shaw is.
- evidently running this little game. I gave him a chance to call my hand
- this afternoon&mdash;and he lay down like a whipped pup! That chance is
- still open to him&mdash;but he can't do it by proxy! That's exactly where
- you and I stand, Marden&mdash;don't try the arrest game!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not going to&mdash;at least, not yet,&rdquo; said the sergeant again. &ldquo;It's
- not a question of law. The day may come when the lid goes on out here, but
- so far the local millennium hasn't dawned. There's no dispute there. I
- told you I came in here on the 'old friend' basis, and I meant it. I've
- known you off and on a bit for quite a while; and I always liked you for
- the reputation you had of playing square. There's no talk of crookedness
- now, though I must confess you've pulled something a little thinner than I
- thought it was in you to do. However, let that go. I don't want to butt in
- on this unless I have to&mdash;and that's why I'm trying to get you to
- come away with me in the morning. If you don't, there'll be trouble, and
- then I'll have to take a hand whether I want to or not.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By God!&rdquo;&mdash;the oath came fiercely, involuntarily from Three-Ace
- Artie's lips. The irony of it all was upon him again. The injustice of it
- galled and maddened him. And yet&mdash;tell them the truth of the matter?
- He would have seen every last one of them consigned to the bottomless pit
- first! The turbulent soul of the man was aflame. &ldquo;Run out of camp, eh!&rdquo;&mdash;-it
- was a devil's laugh that echoed around the shack. &ldquo;That means being run
- out of the Yukon! I'd have to get out, wouldn't I&mdash;out of the Yukon&mdash;ha,
- ha!&mdash;my name would smell everywhere to high heaven!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not sure but that's exactly what I would do if I were you,&rdquo; said
- Sergeant Marden simply. &ldquo;The fact you've got to face is that you're
- black-balled&mdash;and the easiest way to swallow a nasty dose is to
- swallow it in a gulp, isn't it?&rdquo; He got up from his chair and laid his
- hand on Three-Ace Artie's shoulder. &ldquo;Look here, Leroy,&rdquo; he said earnestly,
- &ldquo;you've got a cool enough head on you not to play the fool, and you're a
- big enough sport to stand for the cards whatever way they turn. I want you
- to say that you'll come along with me in the morning&mdash;I'll get out of
- here early before any one is about, or I'll go now if you like, if that
- will help any. It's the sensible thing to do. Well?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know, Marden&mdash;I don't know!&rdquo; Three-Ace Artie flung out
- shortly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you do,&rdquo; insisted the sergeant quietly. &ldquo;You know a fight wouldn't
- get you anywhere&mdash;if you got one or two of them, Murdock Shaw for
- instance, you'd simply be hung for your pains. They mean business, and I
- don't want any trouble&mdash;why make any for me when it can't do you any
- good? I'm putting it to you in a friendly way; and, besides that, it's
- common sense, isn't it?&rdquo; His grip tightened in a kindly pressure on
- Three-Ace Artie's shoulder. &ldquo;I'm right, ain't I? What do you say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you're right enough!&rdquo;&mdash;a hard smile twisted Three-Ace Artie's
- lips. &ldquo;There's no argument about that. I'd have to go anyway, I know that&mdash;but
- I'm not keen on going without giving them a run for their money that
- they'd remember for the rest of their lives!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And at the same time put a crimp into your own,&rdquo; said Sergeant Marden
- soberly. He held out his hand. &ldquo;You'll come, won't you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Twice Three-Ace Artie paced the length of the shack. Logically, as he had
- admitted, Marden was right; but battling against logic was a sullen fury
- that prompted him to throw consequences to the winds, and, with his back
- to the wall, invite Ton-Nugget Camp to a showdown. And then, abruptly, the
- gambler's instinct to throw down a beaten hand, when bluff would be of no
- avail and holding it would only increase his loss, turned the scales, and
- he halted before Sergeant Marden.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll go,&rdquo; he said tersely.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was genuine relief in the officer's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I'll stick to my end of the bargain!&rdquo; the sergeant exclaimed
- heartily. &ldquo;When do you want to start?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It makes damned little odds to me!&rdquo; Three-Ace Artie answered gruffly.
- &ldquo;Suit yourself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said the sergeant. &ldquo;In that case I'll put in a few hours'
- sleep, and we'll get away before the camp is stirring.&rdquo; He buttoned up his
- overcoat, put on his cap, and moved toward the door. &ldquo;I've got a team of
- huskies, and there's room on the sled for anything you want to bring
- along. You can get it ready, and I'll call for you here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie nodded curtly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sergeant Marden reached out to open the door, and, with his hand on the
- latch, hesitated.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't go up there, Leroy,&rdquo; he said earnestly, jerking his head in the
- direction of the upper end of the camp. &ldquo;Canuck John is unconscious, as I
- told you&mdash;there's nothing you could do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But Three-Ace Artie had turned his back. To Canuck John and Sergeant
- Marden he was equally oblivious for the moment. He heard the door close,
- heard the sergeant's footsteps outside recede and die away. He was staring
- now at the bag of gold upon the table. It seemed to mock and jeer at him,
- and suddenly his hands at his sides curled into clenched and knotted fists&mdash;and
- after a moment he spoke aloud in French.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was the first decent thing I ever did in my life&rdquo;&mdash;he was smiling
- in a sort of horrible mirth. &ldquo;Do you appreciate that, my very dear friend
- Raymond? It is exquisite! <i>Sacré nom de Dieu</i>, it is magnificent! It
- was the first decent thing you ever did in your life&mdash;think of that,
- <i>mon brave!</i> And see how well you are paid for it! They are running
- you out of camp!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned and flung himself down on the bunk, his hands still fiercely
- clenched. Black-balled, Sergeant Marden had called it! Well, it was not
- the first time he had been black-balled! Here, in the Yukon, the name of
- Three-Ace Artie was to be a stench to the nostrils; elsewhere, in the city
- of his birth, he, last of his race, had already dragged an honoured and
- patrician name in the mire.
- </p>
- <p>
- A red flame of anger swept his cheeks. What devil's juggling with the
- cards had brought that young fool across his path, and brought the
- memories of the days gone by, and brought him an indulgence in weak,
- mawkish sentimentality! A debt, he had told the boy!
- </p>
- <p>
- The red flamed into his face again&mdash;and yet again. Curse the
- memories! Once aroused they would not down. Even the old schooldays
- crowded themselves upon him&mdash;and at that he jeered out at himself in
- bitter raillery. Brilliant, clever in those days, outstripping many beyond
- his years, as glib with his Latin as with his own French tongue, his
- father had designed him for the Roman Catholic priesthood, and he, Raymond
- Chapelle, the son of the rich seigneur, of one of the oldest families in
- French Canada, instead of becoming a priest of God had become&mdash;Three-Ace
- Artie, the pariah of Ton-Nugget Camp!
- </p>
- <p>
- Would it not make all hell scream with glee! It brought unholy humour to
- himself. He&mdash;a priest of God! But he had not journeyed very far along
- that road&mdash;even before he had finished school he had had a fling or
- two! It had been easy enough. There was no mother, and he did not know his
- father very well. There had been great style and ceremony in that huge,
- old, lumbering, gray-stone mansion in Montreal&mdash;but never a home! His
- father had seemed concerned about him in one respect only&mdash;a sort of
- austere pride in his accomplishments at school. Produce proof of that, and
- money was unstinted. It had come very easily, that money&mdash;and gone
- riotously even as a boy. Then he had entered college, and half way through
- his course his father had died. He had travelled fast after that&mdash;so
- fast that only a blur of wreckage loomed up out of those few years. A
- passion for gambling, excess without restraint, a <i>roué</i> life&mdash;and
- his patrimony, large as it was, was gone. Family after family turned their
- backs upon him, and his clubs shut their doors in his face! And then the
- Yukon&mdash;another identity&mdash;and as much excitement as he could
- snatch out of his new life!
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a snarl now on his lips. It had been a furious pace back there
- in Montreal, but whose business was it save his own! He was not whimpering
- about it. He could swallow his own medicine without asking anybody else to
- make a wry face over it for him! Regrets? What should he regret&mdash;save
- that he had lost the money that would enable him to maintain the old pace!
- Regrets! He would not even be thinking of it now if that young fool had
- not crossed his path, and he, the bigger fool of the two, had not tried to
- play the game of the blind leading the blind!
- </p>
- <p>
- Repay a debt! Fie had not even displayed originality&mdash;only a sort of
- absurd mimicry of the boy's father! He was taunting himself now, mocking
- at himself mercilessly. What good had it done! How much different would it
- be with young Rogers than it had been with himself when Rogers' father, an
- old and intimate friend of his own father's, had taken him home one night
- just before the final crash, and had talked till dawn in kindly
- earnestness, pleading with him to change his ways before it was too late!
- True, it had had its effect. The effect had lasted two days! But somehow,
- for all that, he had never been able to forget the old gentleman's face,
- and the gray hairs, and the soft, gentle voice, and the dull glow of the
- fire in the grate that constantly found a reflection in the moist eyes
- fixed so anxiously upon him.
- </p>
- <p>
- What imp of perversity had inspired him to consider that a debt, and
- prompt him to repay it to the son! Why had he not left well enough alone!
- What infernal trick of memory had caused him to recognise the boy at the
- moment of their first meeting! He had known the other in the old days only
- in the casual way that one of twenty-two would know a boy of fifteen still
- in short trousers!
- </p>
- <p>
- He started up from the bunk impulsively, walked to the stove, wrenched the
- door open, flung in another stick of wood savagely, and began to pace the
- shack with the sullen fury of a caged beast. The passion within the man
- was rising to white heat. Run out of Ton-Nugget Camp! The story would
- spread. A nasty story! It meant that he was run out of the Yukon&mdash;his
- four years here, and not unprofitable years, at an end! It was a life he
- had grown to like because it was untrammelled; a life in which, at least
- in intervals, when the surplus cash was in hand, he could live in Dawson
- for a brief space at a dizzier pace than ever!
- </p>
- <p>
- He was Three-Ace Artie here&mdash;or Arthur Leroy&mdash;it did not matter
- which&mdash;one took one's choice! And now&mdash;what was he to be next&mdash;and
- where!
- </p>
- <p>
- Tell them what he had done, crawl to them, beg them to let him stay&mdash;never!
- If he answered them at all, it would be in quite a different way, and&mdash;his
- eyes fixed again upon the bag of gold that Sergeant Marden had left on the
- table. A bone flung to a cur as he was kicked from the door! The finger
- nails bit into the palms of Three-Ace Artie's hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Damn you!&rdquo; he gritted, white-lipped. &ldquo;Damn every one of you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And this was his reward for the only decent thing that he could remember
- ever having done in his life&mdash;the thought with all its jibing mockery
- was back once more. It added fuel to his fury. It was he, not the Kid, who
- had had his lesson! And it was a lesson he would profit by! If it was the
- only decent thing he had ever done&mdash;it would be the last! They had
- intended him for a priest of God in the old days! He threw back his head
- and laughed until the room reverberated with his hollow mirth. He had come
- too damnably near to acting the part that afternoon, it seemed! A priest
- of God! Blasphemy, unbridled, unlicensed, filled his soul. He snatched up
- the bottle of whisky, and poured a glass full to the brim.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A toast!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;On your feet, Raymond! Up, Monsieur Leroy! Artie,
- Three-Ace Artie&mdash;a toast! Drink deep, <i>mes braves!</i>&rdquo; He lifted
- the glass above his head. &ldquo;To our liege lord henceforth, praying pardon
- for our lapse from grace! To his Satanic Majesty&mdash;and hell!&rdquo; He
- drained the glass to its dregs, and bowed satirically. &ldquo;I can not do
- honour to the toast, sire, by snapping the goblet stem.&rdquo; He held up the
- glass again. &ldquo;It is only a jelly tumbler, and so&mdash;&rdquo; It struck with a
- crash against the wall of the shack, as he hurled it from him, and smashed
- to splinters.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment, clawing at his throat as the raw spirit burned him, staring
- at the broken glass upon the floor, he stood there; then, with a short
- laugh, he pushed both table and chair closer to the stove and sat down&mdash;and
- it was as though it were some strange vigil that he had set himself to
- keep. Occasionally he laughed, occasionally he filled the other glass and
- drank in gulps, occasionally he thought of Canuck John, who spoke English
- very poorly and whose eager snatching at the opportunity to speak French
- had brought about a certain intimacy between them, and, thinking of Canuck
- John, there came a sort of wondering frown as at the intrusion of some
- utterly extraneous thing, occasionally as his eyes encountered the bag of
- gold there came a glitter into their depths and his lips parted, hard
- drawn, over set teeth; but for the most part he sat with a fixed, grim
- smile, his hands opening and shutting on his knees, staring straight
- before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once he got up, and, making the circuit of the shack, collected his
- personal belongings and packed them into his kit bag&mdash;and from under
- a loose plank in the corner of the room took out a half dozen large and
- well-filled pokes, tucked them carefully away beneath the clothing in the
- bag, strapped up the bag, replaced the loosened plank, and returned to his
- chair.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sullen, bitter, desperate, soul reckless with the knowledge that all men's
- hands were against him, as his were against them, he sat there. The hours
- passed unreckoned and unnoticed. There was no dawn to come, for there was
- no sun to rise; but it grew a little lighter. A stillness as of the dead
- hung over Ton-Nugget Camp; and then out of the stillness a dog barked&mdash;and
- became a yapping chorus as others joined in.
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached out mechanically for the bottle&mdash;it was empty. He stared
- at it for a moment in bewildered surprise. It had been full, untouched
- when he had placed it on the table. He stood up&mdash;steadily, firmly. He
- stretched out his hand in front of him, and studied it critically&mdash;there
- was not a tremor. His hand dropped to his side. One could absorb a good
- deal of liquor under mental stress without resultant physical effect! He
- was not drunk. Only his nerves were raw and on edge. That bag of gold on
- the table! His eyes narrowed again upon it for the hundredth time. It
- flaunted itself in his face. It had become symbolic of the unanimous
- contempt with which Ton-Nugget Camp bade him be gone! Damn their cursed
- insolence! It was an entirely inadequate reply to go away and simply leave
- it lying there on the table&mdash;and yet what else was there to do? The
- dogs were barking again. That would be Marden harnessing up his huskies.
- The sergeant would be along now in another minute or two.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned from the table, picked up his overcoat, put it on, and buttoned
- it to the throat. He put on his cap, jerked his kit bag up from the floor,
- slung one strap over his shoulder, moved toward the door&mdash;and paused
- to gaze back around the room. The lamp burned on the table, the empty
- whisky bottle, the glass, the bag of gold beside it; in the stove a knot
- crackled with a report like a pistol shot. Slowly his eyes travelled
- around over the familiar surroundings, his home of four months; and slowly
- the colour mounted in his cheeks&mdash;and suddenly, his eyes aflame, a
- low, tigerish cry on his lips, he flung the kit bag from his shoulder to
- the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- They would tell the story through the Yukon of how he had fleeced and
- robbed a drunken boy of his last cent on earth&mdash;but they would never
- tell the story of how he had slunk away in the darkness like a whipped and
- mangy cur! He feared neither God nor devil, norman, nor beast! That had
- been his lifelong boast, his creed. He feared them now no more than he had
- ever feared them! He listened. There was a footstep without, but that was
- Marden's. Not one of all the camp afoot to risk contamination by bidding
- him goodbye! Well, it was not good-bye yet! Ton-Nugget Camp would
- remember, his adieu! Passion was rocking the man to the soul, the sense of
- bitter injury, smarting like a gaping wound, was maddening him beyond all
- self-control. He tore loose the top button of his coat&mdash;and turned
- sharply to face the door. Here was Marden now. He wanted no quarrel with
- Mar-den, but&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- The door opened. He felt himself mechanically push his cap back on his
- forehead, felt a sort of unholy joy sweep in a wild, ungovernable surge
- upon him, felt every muscle of his body stiffen and grow rigid in a fierce
- and savage elation, and he heard a sound that he meant for a laugh chortle
- from his lips. It was not Marden standing there&mdash;it was Murdock Shaw.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then he spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come in, and shut the door, Murdock,&rdquo; he said in a velvet voice. &ldquo;I
- thought my luck was out tonight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's not worth while,&rdquo; the miner answered. &ldquo;Mar-den's getting ready to go
- now, and I only came to bring you a message from Canuck John.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've got one for you that you'll remember longer!&rdquo;&mdash;Three-Ace
- Artie's smile was ghastly, as he moved back toward the table in a kind of
- inimical guarantee that the floor space should be equally divided between
- them. &ldquo;Come in, Murdock, if you are a man&mdash;<i>and shut that door</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The miner did not move.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Canuck John is dead,&rdquo; he said tersely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's that to do with me&mdash;or you and me!&rdquo;&mdash;there was a rasp in
- Three-Ace Artie's voice now. &ldquo;It's you who have started me on the little
- journey that I'm going to take, you know, and it's only decent to use the
- time that's left in bidding me good-bye.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't come here to quarrel with you,&rdquo; Shaw said shortly. &ldquo;Canuck John
- regained consciousness for a moment before he died. He couldn't talk much&mdash;just
- a few words. We don't any of us know his real name, or where his home is.
- From what he said, it seems you do. He said: 'Tell Three-Ace Artie&mdash;give
- goodbye message&mdash;my mother and&mdash;' And then he died.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-Ace Artie's fingers were twisting themselves around the bag of gold
- that he had picked up from the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought so!&rdquo; he snarled. &ldquo;You were yellow this afternoon. I thought you
- hadn't the nerve to come here, unless you figured you were safe some way
- or another. And so you think you are going to hide behind a dead man and
- the sanctimonious pathos of a dying message! Well, I'll see you both
- damned first! Do you hear!&rdquo; White to the lips with the fury that,
- gathering all through the night, was breaking now, he started toward the
- other, his hand clutching the bag of gold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Involuntarily the miner stepped back still closer to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's not the way out for you!&rdquo; whispered Three-Ace Artie hoarsely. &ldquo;If
- you take it, I'll drop you in the snow before you're ten yards up the
- street! Damn you, we'll play this hand out now for keeps! You've started
- something, and we'll finish it. You've rid the camp and rid Alaska of a
- tainted smell, have you? You sneaked around behind my back with your
- cursed righteousness to give me a push further on the road to hell! I know
- your kind&mdash;and, by God, I know your breed! Four years ago on the
- White Pass you took a man's last dollar for a hunk of bread. He could pay
- or starve! You sleek skunk&mdash;do you remember? Your conscience has been
- troubling you perhaps, and so you went around the camp and collected this,
- did you&mdash;<i>this!</i>&rdquo; He held up the bag of gold above his head.
- &ldquo;No? You didn't recognise me again? Well, no matter&mdash;take it back!
- Tell Ton-Nugget Camp I gave it back to you&mdash;to keep!&rdquo; In a flash his
- arm swept forward, and, with all his strength behind it, he hurled the bag
- at the other's head.
- </p>
- <p>
- It struck full on the miner's forehead&mdash;and dropped with a soft thud
- on the floor. The man reeled backward, swayed, and clawed at the wall of
- the shack for support&mdash;and while he swayed a red spot dyed his
- forehead, and a crimson stream ran zigzag down over eye and cheek.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Three-Ace Artie laughed, and stooped, and picked up his kit bag, and
- swung one strap over one shoulder as before&mdash;Sergeant Marden,
- stern-faced, was standing on the threshold of the open door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I guess my luck is out after all. You win, Murdock!&rdquo; smiled Three-Ace
- Artie grimly&mdash;and brushed past the sergeant out of the shack.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dog-team was standing before the door. He dropped his kit bag on the
- sled, and strode on down the street. Here and there lights were beginning
- to show from the shack windows. Once a face was pressed against a pane to
- watch him go by, but no voice spoke to him. It was silent, and it was
- dark.
- </p>
- <p>
- Only the snow was white. And it was cold&mdash;cold as death.
- </p>
- <p>
- Presently Sergeant Marden and the dog-team caught up with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He'll need a stitch or two in his head,&rdquo; said the sergeant gruffly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond Chapelle, alias Arthur Leroy, alias Three-Ace Artie, made no
- reply. In his soul was anarchy; in his heart a bitter mockery that picked
- a quarrel with Almighty God.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III&mdash;THE CURÉ
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">R</span>AYMOND CHAPELLE,
- once known as Three-Ace Artie, and now, if the cardcase in his pocket
- could be relied upon for veracity, as one Henri Mentone&mdash;though the
- cardcase revealed neither when nor where that metamorphosis had taken
- place, nor yet again the nature of Monsieur Henri Mentone's pursuits in
- life&mdash;was engaged in the rather futile occupation of staring out
- through the car window into a black and objectless night. He was not,
- however, deeply concerned with the night, for at times he shifted his gaze
- around the smoking compartment, which he had to himself, and smiled
- cynically. The winter of the Yukon had changed to the springtime of lower
- French Canada&mdash;it was a far cry from Ton-Nugget Camp, from Dawson and
- the Pacific, to the little village of St. Marleau on the banks of the St.
- Lawrence, where the river in its miles of breadth was merging with the
- Atlantic Ocean!
- </p>
- <p>
- St. Marleau! That was where Canuck John had lived, where the old folks
- were now&mdash;if they were still alive. The cynical smile deepened. The
- only friend he had was&mdash;a dead man! The idea rather pleased him, as
- it had pleased him ever since he had started for the East. Perhaps there
- was a certain sentimentality connected with what he was about to do, but
- not the sickly, fool sentimentality that he had been weak enough to be
- guilty of with the Kid in Ton-Nugget Camp! He was through with that! Here,
- if it was sentiment at all, it was a sentiment that appealed to his
- sporting instincts. Canuck John had put it up to him&mdash;and died. It
- was a sort of trust; and the only man who trusted him was&mdash;a dead
- man. He couldn't throw a dead man down!
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed softly, drumming with his carefully manicured fingers on the
- window pane. Besides, there was too much gossip circulating between the
- Pacific Coast and Alaska to make it profitable for a gambler who had been
- kicked out of the Yukon for malpractice to linger in that locality&mdash;even
- if he had shaved off his beard! The fingers, from the window pane, felt in
- a sort of grimly ruminative way over the smooth, clean-shaven face. So, as
- well East as anywhere, providing always that he gave Montreal a wide berth&mdash;which
- he had!
- </p>
- <p>
- Canuck John, of course, had not meant to impose any greater trust than the
- mere writing of a letter. But, like Murdock Shaw and the rest of
- Ton-Nugget Camp, he, Raymond, did not know Canuck John's name. If Canuck
- John had ever told him, and he had a hazy recollection that the other once
- had done so, he had completely forgotten it. Of St. Marleau, however,
- Canuck John had spoken scores of times. That made a letter still possible,
- of course&mdash;to the postmaster of St. Marleau. But it was many years
- since Canuck John had left there; Canuck John could not write himself and
- therefore his people would have had no knowledge of his whereabouts, and
- to write the postmaster that a man known as Canuck John had died in
- Ton-Nugget Camp was, to say the least of it, open to confusing
- possibilities in view of the fact that in those many and intervening years
- Canuck John was not likely to have been the only one who had left his
- native village to seek a wider field. And since he, Raymond, was coming
- East in any event, he was rather glad than otherwise that for the moment
- he had a definite objective in view.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anyway, Canuck John had been a good sort&mdash;and that was all there was
- to it! And, meanwhile, this filled in, as it were, a hiatus in his own
- career, for he had not quite made up his mind exactly in what direction,
- or against whom specifically, he could pit his wits in future&mdash;to the
- best advantage to himself. One thing only was certain, henceforth he would
- be hampered by no maudlin consideration of ethics, such, for instance, as
- had enabled him to state truthfully to the Kid that he had never stacked a
- card in his life. To the winds with all that! He had had his lesson! Fish
- to his net, hereafter, would be all that came his way! If every man's hand
- was against him, his own would not remain palsied! For the moment he was
- in funds, flush, and well provided for; and for the moment it was St.
- Marleau and his dead friend's sorry legacy&mdash;to those who might be
- dead themselves! That remained to be seen! After that, as far as he was
- concerned, it was <i>sauve qui peut</i>, and&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Henri Mentone looked up&mdash;and, with no effort to conceal his
- displeasure, Monsieur Henri Mentone scowled. A young priest had entered
- the smoking compartment, and was now in the act of settling himself on the
- opposite seat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good evening,&rdquo; nodded the other pleasantly. &ldquo;I think we have been
- travelling companions since Quebec.&rdquo; He produced a cigar, lighted it, and
- smiled. &ldquo;It is not a very pleasant night, is it? There appears to be a
- very high wind.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond Chapelle rattled a newspaper out of his pocket, rattled it open
- brusquely&mdash;and retired behind it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It appears to be windy!&rdquo; he growled uninvitingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced at the remainder of his cigar. It was a very good cigar, and he
- did not care to sacrifice it by giving the other all the elbow room that
- the entire smoking compartment of the car afforded&mdash;as he, otherwise,
- would not have hesitated an instant to do! If his soul had nurtured any
- one especial hatred in its late period of bitter and blasphemous fury, it
- was a hatred of religion and all connected with it. He detested the sight
- of a priest. It always made him think of that night in Ton-Nugget Camp
- when memories had got the better of him. A priest of God! He hated them
- all. And he made no distinction as between creeds. They were all alike.
- They were Murdock Shaws! And he, if his father had had his way, would now
- be wearing a <i>soutane</i>, and dangling a crucifix from his neck, and
- sporting one of those damnable round hats like the man in front of him!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know this country at all?&rdquo; inquired the priest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not,&rdquo; Raymond answered curtly from behind his paper.
- </p>
- <p>
- The other did not appear to notice the rebuff.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No more do I,&rdquo; he said engagingly. &ldquo;I have never been below Quebec
- before, and I am afraid, unfortunately, that I am about to suffer for my
- ignorance. I am going to St. Marleau.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond lowered his paper, and for the first time gave the other more than
- a casual glance. He found his <i>vis-à-vis</i> to be dark-eyed, of rather
- pleasant features&mdash;this he admitted grudgingly&mdash;and a young man
- of, he judged, about his own age.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is the matter with St. Marleau?&rdquo; Personal interest prompted him to
- ask the question; nothing could prompt him to infuse even a hint of
- affability into his tones.
- </p>
- <p>
- The priest shrugged his shoulders, and smiled whimsically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The matter with St. Marleau is that it is on the bank of the river, and
- that the station is three miles away. I have been talking to the
- conductor. I did not know that before.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond had not known it before either. The information did not please
- him. He had taken it as a matter of course that the railroad would set him
- down at the village itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; he prompted sourly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was what caused me to take a particular interest in the weather&rdquo;&mdash;the
- priest waved his cigar philosophically. &ldquo;I shall have to walk, I presume.
- I am not expected until to-morrow, and the conductor tells me there is
- nothing but a small station where we stop.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond would have to walk too.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is unfortunate!&rdquo; he observed sarcastically. &ldquo;I should have thought
- that you would have provided against any such contingencies by making
- inquiries before you started.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is true,&rdquo; admitted the priest simply. &ldquo;I am entirely to blame, and I
- must not complain. I was pleasurably over-excited perhaps. It is my first
- charge, you see. The curé of St. Marleau, Father Allard, went away
- yesterday for a vacation&mdash;for the summer&mdash;his first in many
- years&mdash;he is quite an old man&rdquo;&mdash;the young priest was waxing
- garrulous, and was no longer interesting. Raymond peered out of the car
- window with a new and personal concern in the weather. There was no rain,
- but the howl of the wind was distinctly audible over the roar of the
- train.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was to have arrived to-morrow, as I said&rdquo;&mdash;the priest was rattling
- on&mdash;&ldquo;but having my preparations all completed to-day and nothing to
- detain me, I&mdash;well, as you see, I am here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond was picturing realistically, and none too happily, a three-mile
- walk on a stormy night over a black, rutted country road. The prospect was
- not a soothing one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur is perhaps a commercial traveller?&rdquo; ventured the young curé
- amiably, by way of continuing the conversation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond folded his paper deliberately, and replaced it in his pocket.
- There was a quick, twisted smile on his lips, but for the first time his
- voice was cordiality itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;On the contrary, I make my living precisely as does
- Monsieur le Curé, except perhaps that I have not always the same certainty
- of success.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; The young priest leaned forward interestingly. &ldquo;Then you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond, and now a snarl crept into his voice. &ldquo;I let some one
- else toil for the money&mdash;while I hold out the hat!&rdquo; He rose abruptly,
- and flung his cigar viciously in the general direction of the cuspidor. &ldquo;I
- am a parasite on my fellow men, monsieur&mdash;a gambler,&rdquo; he said evenly,
- and walked to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- Over his shoulder he caught the amazement on the young priest's face, then
- the quick, deep flush of indignation&mdash;and then the corridor shut him
- off from the other, and he chuckled savagely to himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- He passed on into the main body of the car, took his bag from the rack
- over the seat that he had occupied, and went on into the next car in the
- rear. The priest, he had noticed, had previously been occupying the same
- car as himself. He wanted no more of the other! And as for making a
- companion of him on the walk from the station to St. Marleau, he would
- sooner have walked with the devil! As a matter of fact, he was prepared to
- admit he would not have been wholly averse to the devil's company. But a
- priest of God! The cynical smile was back on his lips. They were all alike&mdash;he
- despised them all. But he nevertheless confessed to a certain
- commiseration; he was sorry for God&mdash;the devil was much less poorly
- served!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV&mdash;ON THE ROAD TO ST. MARLEAU
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">R</span>AYMOND descended
- from the train on the opposite side from the station platform. He proposed
- that Monsieur le Curé, <i>pro tem</i>., of St. Marleau, should have a
- start sufficient to afford a guarantee against the possibility of any
- further association with the other that night!
- </p>
- <p>
- A furious gust of wind eddied down the length of the train, caught at his
- travelling bag, and banged it violently against his knees. He swore
- earnestly to himself, as he picked his way further back across the siding
- tracks to guard against the chance of being seen from the platform when
- the train started on again. It was obviously not going to be a pleasant
- experience, that walk! It was bad enough where he stood, here on the
- trackside, somewhat sheltered by the train; in the open the wind promised
- to attain the ferocity of a young tornado!
- </p>
- <p>
- The train pulled out; and across the tracks a light glimmered from a
- window, and behind the light a building loomed up black and formless. The
- light, filtering out on the platform, disclosed two figures&mdash;the
- priest, and, evidently, the station agent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond sat down on his bag and waited. It was intensely dark, and he was
- far enough away to be secure from observation. He grinned maliciously, as
- he watched a shadowy sort of pantomime in which the priest clutched and
- struggled continually with his <i>soutane</i> as the wind kept wrapping it
- around his legs.
- </p>
- <p>
- The other might be less infatuated with skirts by the time St. Marleau was
- reached!
- </p>
- <p>
- The two figures moved down the platform together, and Raymond lost sight
- of them in the darkness. He rose, picked up his bag, walked a few yards
- along the track in the opposite direction to that which they had taken,
- crossed over the mainline, and clambered upon the platform. Here he
- stumbled over a trunk. The curé's, presumably! He continued on along the
- platform slowly&mdash;under the circumstances a little information from
- the station agent would not come in amiss. He jammed his slouch hat firmly
- down on his head, and yanked the brim savagely over his eyes against the
- wind. This was likely to prove considerably more than he had bargained
- for! Three miles of it! And for what! He began to call himself a fool. And
- then, the station agent returning alone from the lower end of the
- platform, head down, buffeting the wind, and evidently making for the
- curé's trunk to house it for the night, Raymond stepped forward and
- accosted the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man brought himself up with a jerk. Raymond drew the other into the
- shelter of the station wall. In the meagre light from the window a few
- yards away, he could make out the man's face but very indistinctly; and
- the other, in his turn, appeared equally at a disadvantage, save that,
- possibly, expecting it to be an acquaintance from the village, he found a
- stranger instead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>'Cré nom!</i>&rdquo; ejaculated the man in surprise. &ldquo;And where did you come
- from?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From the train&mdash;naturally,&rdquo; Raymond answered. &ldquo;You were busy with
- some one, and I waited.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that is so! I see!&rdquo; The other nodded his head. &ldquo;It was Father
- Aubert, the young curé who is come to the village. He has but just
- started, and if you are going to St. Marleau, and hurry, you will have
- company over the road.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never mind about him!&rdquo; said Raymond shortly. &ldquo;I am not looking for that
- kind of company!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens!</i>&rdquo; exclaimed the man a little blankly. &ldquo;Not that kind of
- company&mdash;but that is strange! It is a bad night and a lonely walk&mdash;and,
- I do not know him of course, but he seemed very pleasant, the young curé.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I daresay,&rdquo; said Raymond, and shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;But I do not
- intend to walk at all if I can help it. Is there no horse to be had around
- here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, no!&rdquo;&mdash;the other's tones expressed mild reproof at the question.
- &ldquo;If there had been, I would have procured it for the curé. There is
- nothing. It is as near to the village as anywhere.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And that is three miles!&rdquo; muttered Raymond irritably.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is three miles by the road, true, monsieur; but the village itself is
- not nearly so far. There is a short cut. If you take the path that leads
- straight ahead where the road turns off to the left to circle the woods,
- it will bring you to the brow of the hill overlooking the village and the
- river, and you will come out just where the road swings in again at the
- tavern. You save at least a mile.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond brightened.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah! A tavern!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;That is better! I was beginning to think the
- cursed&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&mdash;wait!&rdquo; the man laughed suddenly. &ldquo;It is not what you think! I
- should not advise you to go there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No?&rdquo; inquired Raymond, &ldquo;and why not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She is an old hag, an <i>excommuniée</i>, old Mother Blondin, who lives
- there&mdash;and her son, who is come back for the past week from God knows
- where with a scar all over his ugly face, is no better. It is not a tavern
- at all. That is a name we have for it amongst ourselves. We call it the
- tavern because it is said that she makes her own <i>whiskey-blanc</i> and
- sells it on the sly, and that there are some who buy it&mdash;though when
- her son is back she could not very well have enough for any customers. He
- has been drunk for a week, and he is a devil.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your Mother Blondin is evidently no fool!&rdquo; observed Raymond ironically.
- &ldquo;And so it is said there are some who buy it&mdash;eh? And in turn I
- suppose she could buy out every farmer in the village! She should have
- money, your Mother Blondin! Hers is a profitable business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the other. &ldquo;For me, that is the way I look at it. It is gossip
- that her stocking is well lined; but I believe the gossip. It is perhaps
- well for her if it is so, for she will need it. She is getting old and
- does not see very well, though, <i>bon Dieu</i>, she is still sharp enough
- with her wits! But&rdquo;&mdash;his shoulders lifted in a shrug&mdash;&ldquo;the way
- to the village, eh? Well, whether you take the road or the path, you
- arrive at Mother Blondin's. You go down the hill from there, and the
- village is on each side of you along the bank of the river. Ask at the
- first house, and they will show you the way to Madame Dussault's&mdash;that
- is the only place to go. She keeps a boarding house whenever there is
- anybody to board, for it is not often that any stranger comes to St.
- Marleau. Are you going to stay long?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know,&rdquo; said Raymond pleasantly&mdash;and ignored the implied
- invitation for further confidences.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, if you like,&rdquo; offered the station agent, &ldquo;you can leave your bag
- here, and it can go over with the cure's trunk in the morning. He said he
- would send somebody for it then. You won't find it easy carrying that bag
- a night like this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it's only a small one; I guess I can manage it all right,&rdquo; said
- Raymond lightly. He extended his hand&mdash;the priest was far enough
- along by now so that he would not overtake the other; and, though it was
- still early, not much after eight o'clock, the countryside was not given
- to keeping late hours, and, if he was to reach St. Marleau before this
- Dussault household, for instance, had retired for the night, it was time
- he started. &ldquo;Much obliged for the information! Goodnight!&rdquo; he smiled, and
- picked up his bag&mdash;and a moment later, the station behind him, was
- battling in the face of furious wind gusts along the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was very dark; and the road was execrable, full of ruts and hollows
- into which he was continually stumbling. He had a flashlight in his bag;
- but, bad as the walking was, it was, after all, he decided, the lesser of
- the two evils&mdash;if he used the flashlight, he ran a very large risk of
- inviting the companionship of the priest ahead of him! Also, he had not
- gone very far before he heartily regretted that he had not foregone the
- few little conveniences that the bag contained, and had left the thing
- behind. The wind, as it was, threatened to relieve him of it a score of
- times. Occasionally he halted and turned his back, and stood still for a
- breathing spell. His mood, as he went along, became one that combined a
- sullen stubbornness to walk ten miles, if necessary, once he had started,
- and an acrimonious and savage jeer at himself for having ever been fool
- enough to bring about his present discomfiture.
- </p>
- <p>
- Finally, however, he reached the turn of the road referred to by the
- station agent, and here he stood for a moment debating with himself the
- advisability of taking the short cut. His eyes grown accustomed to the
- darkness, he could distinguish his surroundings with some distinctness,
- and he made out a beaten track that led off in the same direction which,
- until then, he had been following; but also, a little beyond this again,
- he made out a black stretch of wooded land. He shook his head doubtfully.
- The short cut was a mere path at best, and he might, or might not, be able
- to follow it through the trees. If he lost it, and it would be altogether
- too easy a thing to do, his predicament would not be enviable. It was
- simply a question of whether the mile he might save thereby was worth the
- risk. He shook his head again&mdash;this time decisively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not much on the 'straight and narrow' anyhow!&rdquo; he muttered
- facetiously&mdash;and started on again, following the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gradually the road and the trees began to converge; and presently, the
- road swerving again, this time sharply toward the river, he found himself
- travelling through the woods, and injected into the midst of what seemed
- like the centre of some unearthly and demoniacal chorus rehearsing its
- parts&mdash;the wind shrieked through the upper branches of the trees, and
- moaned disconsolately through the lower ones; it cried and sobbed; it
- screamed, and mourned, and sighed; and in the darkness, still blacker
- shapes, like weird, beckoning arms, the limbs swayed to and fro. And now
- and then there came a loud, ominous crackle, and then a crash, as a
- branch, dried and rotten, came hurtling to the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Damn it,&rdquo; confessed Raymond earnestly to himself, &ldquo;I don't like this! I
- wish St. Marleau was where Canuck John is now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He quickened his pace&mdash;or, rather, tried to do so; but it was much
- blacker here than out in the open, and besides the road now appeared to be
- insanely full of twists and turns, and in spite of his efforts his
- progress was no faster.
- </p>
- <p>
- It seemed interminable, never-ending. He went on and on. A branch crashed
- down louder than before somewhere ahead of him. He snarled in consonance
- with the wind-shrieks and the wind-moans that now came to hold a personal
- malevolence in their pandemonium for himself. His coat caught once on a
- projecting branch and was torn. He cursed Canuck John, and cursed himself
- with abandon. And then abruptly, as the road twisted again, he caught the
- glimmer of a light through the trees&mdash;and his eyes upon the light,
- rather than upon the ground to pick his way, he stumbled suddenly and
- pitched forward over something that was uncannily soft and yielding to the
- touch.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a startled cry, Raymond picked himself up. It was the body of a man
- sprawled across the road. He wrenched open his bag, and, whipping out his
- flashlight, turned it upon the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man lay upon his back, motionless, inert; the white, ghastly face,
- blood-streaked, was twisted at a sharp angle to the body, disclosing a
- gaping wound in the head that extended from the temple back across the
- skull&mdash;and a yard away, mute testimony to its tragic work, lay the
- rotten limb of a tree, devoid of leaves, perhaps ten feet in length and of
- the thickness of one's two fists, its end jagged and splintered where it
- had snapped away from its parent trunk.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the priest&mdash;Father Aubert, the young curé of St. Marleau.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V&mdash;THE &ldquo;MURDER&rdquo;
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">R</span>AYMOND stooped to
- the other's side. He called the man's name&mdash;there was no answer. He
- lifted the priest's head&mdash;it sagged limply back again. He felt
- quickly for the heart beat&mdash;there was no sign of life. And then
- Raymond stood up again.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the nature of the man that, the sudden shock of his discovery once
- over, he should be cool and unperturbed. His nerves were not easily put to
- rout under any circumstances, and a life in the Great North, where the raw
- edges were turned only too often, left him, if not calloused, at least
- composed and, in a philosophical way, unmoved at the sight before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tough luck&mdash;even for a priest!&rdquo; he muttered, not irreverently. &ldquo;The
- man's dead, right enough.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced around him, and his eyes fixed again on the glimmer of light
- through the trees. That was the tavern undoubtedly&mdash;old Mother
- Blondin's, the ex<i>communiée</i>. He shrugged his shoulders, and a grim
- smile flickered across his lips. She too had her quarrel with the church,
- but even so she would hardly refuse temporary sanctuary to a dead man. The
- priest couldn't be left here lying in the road, and if Mother Blondin's
- son was not too drunk to help carry the body to the house, it would solve
- the problem until word could be got to the village.
- </p>
- <p>
- He took up his bag&mdash;he could not be cumbered with that when he
- returned to get the priest&mdash;and, the trees sparser here on what was
- obviously the edge of the woods, with the window light to guide him and
- his flashlight to open the way, he left the road and began to run directly
- toward the light.
- </p>
- <p>
- A hundred yards brought him out into a clearing&mdash;and then to his
- disgust he discovered that, apart possibly from another rent or two in his
- clothing, he had gained nothing by leaving the road. It had evidently
- swung straight in toward the house from a point only a few yards further
- on from where he had left the priest, for he was now alongside of it
- again!
- </p>
- <p>
- He grinned derisively at himself, slipped his flashlight into his pocket&mdash;and,
- on the point of starting toward the house, which, with only a small yard
- in front of it, was set practically on the edge of the road itself, he
- halted abruptly. There was only one lighted window that he could see, and
- this was now suddenly darkened by a shadowy form from within, and
- indistinctly he could make out a face pressed close against the window
- pane.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond instinctively remained motionless. The face held there, peering
- long and intently out into the night. It was rather strange! His own
- approach could not have been heard, for the howl of the wind precluded any
- possibility of that; and neither could he be seen out here in the
- darkness. What was it that attracted and seemed to fascinate the watcher
- at the window? Mechanically, he turned his head to look behind and around
- him. There was nothing&mdash;only the trees swaying in the woods; the
- scream and screech, and the shrill whistling of the wind; and, in addition
- now, a rumbling bass, low, yet perfectly distinct, the sullen roar of
- beating waves. He looked back at the window&mdash;the face was gone.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond moved forward curiously. There was no curtain on the window, and a
- step or two nearer enabled him to see within. It was a typical
- bare-floored room of the <i>habitant</i> class of smaller house that
- combined a living room and kitchen in one, the front door opening directly
- upon it. There was a stove at one end, with a box of cordwood beside it;
- drawn against the wall was a table, upon which stood a lighted lamp; and a
- little distance from the table, also against the wall, was an old,
- gray-painted, and somewhat battered <i>armoire</i>, whose top was strewn
- with crockeryware and glass dishes&mdash;there was little else in
- evidence, save a few home-made chairs with thong-laced seats.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's brows gathered in a puzzled frown. Diagonally across the room
- from the window and directly opposite the stove was a closed door, and
- here, back turned, the man who had been peering out of the window&mdash;for
- the man was the only occupant of the room&mdash;was crouched with his ear
- against the panel. His bewilderment growing, Raymond watched the other.
- The man straightened up after a moment, faced around into the room, and,
- swaying slightly, a vicious smile of satisfaction on his lips, moved
- stealthily in the direction of the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now Raymond had no difficulty in recognising the man from the station
- agent's vivid, if cursory, description. It was Mother Blondin's son. A
- devil, the agent had called the other&mdash;and the man looked it! An ugly
- white scar straggled from cheek bone to twisted lip, the eyes were narrow
- and close set, the hair shaggy, and the long arms dangling from a powerful
- frame made Raymond think of a gorilla.
- </p>
- <p>
- Reaching the table, the man paused, looked furtively all around the room,
- and again appeared to be listening intently; then he stretched out his
- hand and turned the lamp half down.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's frown deepened. The other was undoubtedly more or less drunk,
- but that did not explain the peculiar and, as it were, ominous way in
- which he was acting. What was the man up to? And where was Mother Blondin?
- </p>
- <p>
- The man moved down the room in the direction of the stove; and, the light
- dim now, Raymond stepped close to the window for a better view. The man
- halted at the end of the room, once more looked quickly all about him,
- gazed fixedly for an instant at the closed door where previously he had
- held his ear to the panel&mdash;and reached suddenly up above his head,
- the fingers of both hands working and clawing in a sort of mad haste at an
- interstice in the wall where the rough-squared timbers came imperfectly
- together.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond smiled sardonically. He understood now. It was old Mother
- Blondin's &ldquo;stocking&rdquo;! She had perhaps not been as generous as the son
- considered she might have been! The man was engaged in the filial
- occupation of robbing his own mother!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Worthy offspring&mdash;if the old dame doesn't belie her reputation!&rdquo;
- muttered Raymond&mdash;and stepped to the front door. &ldquo;However, it's an
- ill wind that blows nobody good, and, if the priest suffered, Mother
- Blondin can at least thank my interruption incident thereto for the
- salvage of her cash.&rdquo; He opened the door and walked in coolly. &ldquo;Good
- evening!&rdquo; he said pleasantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man whirled from the wall&mdash;and with a scream, half of pain and
- half of startled, furious surprise, was jerked back against the wall
- again. His hand was caught as though in a trap. The hiding place had quite
- evidently been intended by Mother Blondin for no larger a hand than her
- own! The man had obviously wormed and wriggled his hand in between the
- timbers&mdash;and his hand would not come out with any greater ease than
- it had gone in! He wrenched at it, snarling and cursing now, stamping with
- his feet, and hurling his maledictions at Raymond's head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is not my fault, my friend,&rdquo; said Raymond calmly. &ldquo;Shall I help you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He started forward&mdash;and stopped halfway across the room. The man had
- torn his hand loose, sending a rain of coin clinking to the floor, and,
- fluttering after it like falling leaves, a score or two of banknotes as
- well; and now, leaping around, he snatched up a heavy piece of the
- cordwood, and, swinging it about his head, his face working murderously,
- sprang toward Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- The bag dropped from Raymond's hand, and his face hardened. He had not
- bargained for this, but if&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a snarl and an oath the man was upon him; the cordwood whistled in
- its downward sweep, aimed full at his head. He parried the blow with his
- forearm, and, with a lightning-like movement, side-stepped and sent his
- right fist crashing to the other's jaw.
- </p>
- <p>
- It staggered the man for an instant&mdash;but only for an instant.
- Bellowing with rage, dropping the cordwood, heedless of the blows that
- Raymond battered into his face, by sheer bulk and weight he closed, his
- arms circling Raymond's neck, his fingers feeling for a throat-hold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Around the room they staggered, swaying, lurching. The man was half drunk,
- and, caught in the act of thievery, his fury was demoniacal. Again and
- again Raymond tried to throw the other off. The man was too big, too
- powerful for close quarters, and his only chance was an opportunity to use
- his fists. They panted heavily, the breath of the one hot on the other's
- cheek; and then, as they swung, Raymond was conscious that the door of the
- rear room was open, and that a woman was standing on the threshold. It was
- only a glance he got&mdash;of an old hag-like face, of steel-rimmed
- spectacles, of tumbling and dishevelled gray hair&mdash;the man's fingers
- at last were tightening like a vise around his throat.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the other, too, had seen the woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Voleur!</i> Thief!&rdquo; he yelled hoarsely. &ldquo;Smash him on the head with
- the stick, mother, while I hold him!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You devil!&rdquo; gritted Raymond&mdash;and with a wrench, a twist, his
- strength massed for the one supreme effort, he tore himself loose, hurling
- the other backward and away from him.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a crash of breaking glass as the man smashed into the <i>armoire</i>;
- a wild laugh from the woman in the doorway&mdash;and, for the first time,
- a cry from Raymond's lips. The man snatched up a revolver from the top of
- the <i>armoire</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- But quick as the other was, Raymond was quicker as he sprang and clutched
- at the man's hand. His face was sternly white now with the consciousness
- that he was fighting for no less than his life. Here, there, now across
- the room, now back again they reeled and stumbled, struggling for
- possession of the weapon, as Raymond strove to tear it from his
- antagonist's grasp. And now the woman, screaming, ran forward and picked
- up the piece of cordwood, and circling them, screaming still, aimed her
- blows at Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- One struck him on the head, dazing him a little... his brain began to
- whirl... he could not wrench the revolver from the man's hand... it seemed
- as though he had been trying through an eternity... his hands seemed to be
- losing their strength... another desperate jerk from the other like that
- and his hold would be gone, the revolver in the unfettered possession of
- this whisky-maddened brute, whose lips, like fangs, were flecked with
- slaver, in whose eyes, bloodshot, burned the light of murder... his
- fingers were slipping from their grip, and&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a blinding flash; the roar of the report; the revolver clattered
- to the floor; a great, ungainly bulk seemed to Raymond to waver and sway
- before him in most curious fashion, then totter and crash with an impact
- that shook the house&mdash;or was it that ghastly, howling wind!&mdash;to
- the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond reeled back against the <i>armoire</i>, and hung there gasping,
- panting for his breath, sweeping his hand again and again across his
- forehead. He was abominably dizzy. The room was swinging around and
- around; there were two figures, now on the ceiling, now on the floor&mdash;a
- man who lay flat on his back with his arms and legs grotesquely extended,
- and whose shirt was red-splotched; and a hag with streaming gray hair, who
- rocked and crooned over the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dead! Dead! Dead!&rdquo;&mdash;the wail rose into a high and piercing falsetto.
- The hag was on her feet and running wildly for the front door. &ldquo;Murder!
- Thief! Murder! Murder!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The horrible screeching died away; and a gust of wind, swirling in through
- the door that blew open after the woman, took up the refrain: &ldquo;Murder&mdash;murder&mdash;<i>murder!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His head ached and swam. He was conscious that he should set his wits at
- work, that he should think&mdash;that somehow he was in peril. He groped
- his way unsteadily to where his bag lay on the floor. As he reached it,
- the wind blew the lamp out. He felt around inside the bag, found his
- flask, and drank greedily.
- </p>
- <p>
- The stimulant cleared his brain. He stood up, and stared around him in the
- darkness. His mind was active enough now&mdash;grimly active. If he were
- caught, he would swing for murder! He had only acted in self-defence, he
- had not even fired the shot, the revolver had gone off in the man's own
- hand&mdash;but there wasn't a chance for him, if he were caught. The old
- hag's testimony that he had come there as a thief&mdash;that was what
- undoubtedly she believed, and undoubtedly what she would swear&mdash;would
- damn him. And&mdash;cursed irony!&mdash;that conversation with the station
- agent, innocent enough then, would corroborate her now! Nor had he any
- reputation to fall back upon to bolster up his story if he faced the issue
- and told the truth. Reputation! He could not even give a plausible account
- of himself without making matters worse. A gambler from the Klondike! The
- <i>roué</i> of Montreal! Would that save him!
- </p>
- <p>
- His only hope was to run for it&mdash;and at once. It could not be very
- far to the village, and it would not be long before that precious old hag
- had alarmed the community and returned with the villagers at her heels.
- But where would he go? There were no trains! It would be a man-hunt
- through the woods, and with so meagre a start that sooner or later they
- would get him. And even if he evaded them at first he would have no chance
- to get very far away from that locality, and ultimately he would have to
- reckon on the arrival of the police. It was probable that old Mother
- Blondin could not recognise him again, for the light had been turned down
- and she was partially blind; and he was certain that the station agent
- would not know his face again either&mdash;but both could, and would,
- supply a general description of his dress, appearance and build that would
- serve equally as well to apprehend him in that thinly populated country
- where, under such circumstances, to be even a stranger was sufficient to
- invite suspicion.
- </p>
- <p>
- Well, if to run for it was his only chance, he would take it! He stooped
- for his bag, and, in the act, stood suddenly motionless in a rigid sort of
- way. No! There was perhaps another plan! It seemed to Raymond that he held
- his breath in suspense until his brain should pass judgment upon it. The
- priest! The dead priest, only a little way off out there on the road! No&mdash;it
- was not visionary, nor wild, nor mad. If they <i>found</i> the man that
- they supposed had murdered the old woman's son, they would not search any
- further. That was absurdly obvious! The priest was not expected until
- to-morrow. The only person who knew that the priest had arrived, and who
- knew of his, Raymond's, arrival, was the station agent. But the quarry
- once run to earth, there would be no reason for anybody, as might
- otherwise be the case in a far-flung pursuit, going to the station on a
- night like this. The priest's arrival therefore would not become known to
- the villagers until the next morning at the earliest, and quite probably
- not until much later, when some one from the village should drive over to
- meet the train by which he was expected to arrive. As a minimum,
- therefore, that gave him ten or twelve hours' start&mdash;and with ten or
- twelve hours free from pursuit, he could take very good care of the
- &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;! Yes, it was the way! The only way! From what the priest had
- said in the train, it was evident that he was a total stranger here, and
- so, being unknown, the deception would not be discovered until the station
- agent told his story. Furthermore, the wound in the priest's head from the
- falling limb of the tree would be attributed to the blow the old hag had
- struck <i>him</i> on the head with the cordwood! The inference, plausible
- enough, would be that he had run from the house wounded, only to drop at
- last to the ground on the spot where the priest, <i>dressed as the
- murderer</i>, was found! And besides&mdash;yes&mdash;there was other
- evidence he could add! The revolver, for instance!
- </p>
- <p>
- Quick now, his mind made up, Raymond snatched the flashlight from his
- pocket, swept the ray around the floor, located the weapon, and, running
- to it, picked it up and put it in his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- Every second was counting now. It might be five, or ten, or fifteen
- minutes before they got back from the village, he did not know&mdash;but
- every moment was priceless. There was still work to be done out there on
- the road, even after he was through here!
- </p>
- <p>
- He was across the room now by the rear wall, gathering up the coins and
- bills that the dead man had scattered on the floor. These, like the
- revolver, he transferred to his pocket. A thief, had been their cry. That
- was the motive! Well, he would corroborate it! There would be no mistake&mdash;until
- to-morrow&mdash;about their having found the guilty man!
- </p>
- <p>
- His hand was a slimmer hand than Blondin's&mdash;it slipped easily into
- the chink between the timbers. It was like a hollow bowl inside, and there
- was more money there. He scooped it out. Twice his hand went in again,
- until the hiding place was empty; and then, running back across the room,
- he grabbed up his bag, and rushed from the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- An instant he paused to listen as he reached the road; but there was only
- the howl of the storm, no sound that he could hear as yet from the
- direction of the village&mdash;though, full of ominous possibilities, he
- did not know how far away the village was!
- </p>
- <p>
- He ran on again at top speed, flashing his way along with his light, the
- wind at his back aiding him now. It would not matter if a stray gleam were
- seen by any one, if he could only complete his work in time&mdash;it would
- only be proof, instead of inference, that the murderer had run from the
- house along the road to the spot where he was found.
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached the priest, set down his bag, and, taking up the broken limb of
- the tree, carried it ten yards away around the turn of the road, and flung
- it in amongst the trees; then he was back once more, and bending over the
- priest. He worked swiftly now, but coolly and with grim composure,
- removing the priest's outer garments. He noted with intense relief that
- there was no blood on the clerical collar&mdash;that the blood, due to the
- twisted position of the other's head, had trickled from the cheek directly
- to the ground. It would have been an awkward thing&mdash;blood on the
- collar!
- </p>
- <p>
- It was not easy work. The limp form seemed a ton-weight in his arms, as he
- lifted it now this way, now that, to get off the other's clothes. And at
- times he recoiled from it, though the stake he was playing for was his
- life. It was unnerving business, and the hideous moaning of the wind made
- it worse. And mostly he must work by the sense of touch, for he could not
- hold the flashlight and still use both hands. But it was done at last, and
- now he took off his own clothes, and hastily donned the priest's.
- </p>
- <p>
- He must be careful now&mdash;a single slip, something overlooked in his
- pockets perhaps might ruin everything, and the ten or twelve hours' start,
- that was all he asked for, would be lost; but, equally, the pockets must
- not be too bare! He was hurriedly going through his discarded garments
- now. Mother Blondin's money and the revolver, of course, must be found
- there.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cardcase, yes, that could not do any harm... there were no letters, no
- one ever wrote to him... the trifling odds and ends must be left in the
- pockets too, they lent colour if nothing else... but his own money was
- quite a different matter, and he had the big sum in bills of large
- denominations with him that he had exchanged for the pokes of gold dust
- which he had brought from the Yukon. He tucked this money securely away
- under the <i>soutane</i> he was now wearing, and once more bent over the
- priest.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had now to dress the priest in his, Raymond's, clothes. It was not
- readily accomplished; it was even more difficult than it had been to
- undress the man; and besides, as he worked now, he found himself fighting
- to maintain his coolness against a sort of reckless haste to have done
- with it that was creeping upon him. It seemed that he had been hours at
- the work, that with every second now the villagers in full cry must come
- upon him. Curse it, could he never button that collar and knot that tie!
- Why did the man's head wobble like that! The vest now! Now the coat!
- </p>
- <p>
- He stood up finally at the end, and flirted his hand across his brow. His
- forehead was clammy wet. He shivered a little; then, lips tight, he pulled
- himself together. He must make certain, absolutely certain that he had
- done nothing, or left nothing undone to rob him of those few precious
- hours that were so necessary to his escape.
- </p>
- <p>
- He nodded after a moment in a kind of ghastly approval&mdash;he had even
- hung the other's crucifix around his neck! There remained only the
- exchange of hats, and&mdash;yes, the bag&mdash;was there anything in the
- bag that would betray him? He dropped his own hat on the ground a yard
- away from the priest's head where the other's hat had rolled, picked up
- the priest's hat, and put it on&mdash;then bent down over the bag.
- </p>
- <p>
- He lifted his head suddenly, straining his ears to listen. What was that!
- Only the howl and unearthly moaning of the wind? It must have been, and
- his nerves were becoming over-strung, for the wind was blowing from the
- direction of the village, and it seemed as though the sound he had thought
- he heard, that he could not have defined, had come from the other
- direction. But the bag! Was there anything in it that he should not leave?
- He turned the flashlight into its interior, began to rummage through its
- contents&mdash;and then, kneeling there, it was as though he were suddenly
- frozen into that posture, bereft of all power of movement.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was only a lantern&mdash;but it seemed as though he were bathed in a
- blistering flood of light that poured full upon him, that burst suddenly,
- without warning, from around the turn of the road in the direction away
- from the village. He felt the colour ebb from his face; he knew a sickly
- consciousness of doom. He was caught&mdash;caught in the priest's clothes!
- Shadowy outlined there, was a horse and wagon. A woman, carrying the
- lantern, was running toward him&mdash;a man followed behind. The wind rose
- in demoniacal derision&mdash;the damnable wind that, responsible for
- everything that night, had brought this crowning disaster upon him!
- </p>
- <p>
- A girl's voice rang out anxiously:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it? Oh, what is it? What has happened?&rdquo; Raymond felt himself grow
- unnaturally calm. He leaned solicitously over the priest's form.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not know&rdquo;&mdash;he was speaking with sober concern. &ldquo;I found this
- man lying here as I came along. He has a wound of some sort in his head,
- and I am afraid that he is dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man, stepping forward, crossed himself hurriedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl, with a sharp little cry, knelt down on the other side of the
- priest&mdash;and in the lantern's glimmer Raymond caught a glimpse of
- great dark eyes, of truant hair, wind-tossed, that blew about a young,
- sweet face that was full now of troubled sympathy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you,&rdquo; she said quickly; &ldquo;you are the new curé, monsieur. The station
- agent told us you had come, and we drove fast, my uncle and I, to try and
- catch up with you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes were on the priest's form. There was no need to simulate
- concern now, it was genuine enough, and it was as if something cold and
- icy were closing around his heart. He was not sure&mdash;great God, it was
- not possible!&mdash;but he thought&mdash;he thought the priest had moved.
- If that were so, he was doubly trapped! Cries came suddenly from the
- direction of the village, from the direction of old Mother Blondin's
- house. He heard himself acknowledging her remark with grave deliberation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I am Father Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI&mdash;THE JAWS OF THE TRAP
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">V</span>OLEUR! Thief!
- Murder! Murder!&rdquo;&mdash;it rose a high, piercing shriek, and the wind
- seemed to catch up the words and eddy them around, and toss them hither
- and thither until the storm and the night and the woods were full of
- ghouls chanting and screaming and gibbering their hideous melody: &ldquo;<i>Voleur!</i>
- Thief! Murder! Murder!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl, from the other side of the prostrate priest, rose in quick alarm
- to her feet, and lifted the lantern high above her head to peer down the
- road.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;What does it mean? See the lights there! Listen!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The lantern lifted now, Raymond could no longer see the priest's face. He
- slipped his hand in desperately under the man's vest. He had felt there
- once before for the heart beat when he had first stumbled upon the other.
- In God's name, where was his nerve! He needed it now more than he had ever
- needed it in all his dare-devil career before. He had <i>thought</i> the
- priest had moved. If the man were alive, he, Raymond, was not only in a
- thousandfold worse case than if he had run for it and taken his chances&mdash;he
- had forfeited whatever chance there might have been. The mere fact that he
- had attempted to disguise himself, to assume the priest's garments as a
- means of escape, damned him utterly, irrevocably upon the spot. His hand
- pressed hard against the other's body. Yes, there was life there, a faint
- fluttering of the heart. No&mdash;no, it was only himself&mdash;a tremor
- in his own fingers. And then a miserable sense of disaster fell upon him.
- The wind howled, those shrieks still rang out, there came hoarse shouts
- and the pound of running feet, but above it all, distinct, like a knell of
- doom, came a low moan from the priest upon the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sharply, as though it were being suddenly seared and burned, Raymond
- snatched away his hand; and his hand struck against something hard, and
- mechanically he gripped at it. The man was <i>alive!</i> The glare of
- lanterns, many of them, flashed from the turn of the road. The village was
- upon the scene. The impulse seized him to run. There was the horse and
- wagon standing there. His lips tightened. Madness! That would be but the
- act of a fool! It was his wits, his brain, his nerve that was his only
- hope now&mdash;that cool, callous nerve that had never failed him in a
- crisis before.
- </p>
- <p>
- A form, unkempt, with gray, streaming, dishevelled hair, rushed upon him
- and the priest, and thrust a lantern into the faces of them both. It was
- the old hag, old Mother Blondin.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here he is! Here he is!&rdquo; she screamed. &ldquo;It is he!&rdquo;&mdash;her voice kept
- rising until, in a torrent of blasphemous invective, it attained an
- ear-splitting falsetto.
- </p>
- <p>
- It seemed to Raymond that a hundred voices were all talking at once; that
- the villagers now, as they closed in and clustered around him, were as a
- multitude in their numbers; and there was light now, a blaze of it, from a
- host of accursed lanterns jiggling up and down, each striving to thrust
- itself a little further forward than its fellow. And then upon Raymond
- settled a sort of grim, cold, ironical composure. The stakes were very
- high.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you want your life, play for it!&rdquo; urged a voice within him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old hag, in an abandoned paroxysm of grief, rage and fury, was
- cursing, and shaking her lantern and her doubled fist at the priest; and,
- not content with that, she now began to kick viciously at the unconscious
- form.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond rose from his knees, and laid one hand quietly upon her arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Peace, my daughter!&rdquo; he said softly. &ldquo;You are in the presence of Holy
- Church, and in the presence perhaps of death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She whirled upon him, her wrinkled old face, if possible, contorted more
- furiously than before.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Holy Church!&rdquo; she raved. &ldquo;Holy Church! Ha, ha! What have I to do with
- Holy Church that kicked me from its doors! Will Holy Church give me back
- my son? And what have you to do with this, you smooth-faced hypocrite! It
- is the law I want, not you to stand there and mumble while you smugly paw
- your crucifix!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It came quick and sharp&mdash;an angry sibilant murmur from the crowd, a
- threatening forward movement. Mechanically, Raymond's fingers fell away
- from the crucifix. It was the crucifix, dangling from his neck, that he
- had unconsciously grasped as he had snatched away his hand from the
- priest's body&mdash;and it was the crucifix that, equally unconscious of
- it, he had been grasping ever since. Strange that in his agitation he
- should have grasped at a crucifix! Strange that the act and his
- unconscious poise, as he held the crucifix, should have lent
- verisimilitude to the part he played, the rôle in which he sought
- sanctuary from death!
- </p>
- <p>
- His hand raised again. The murmuring ceased; the threatening stir was
- instantly checked. And then Raymond took the old woman by the shoulders,
- and with kindly force placed her in the arms of the two nearest men.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She does not know what she is saying,&rdquo; he said gently. &ldquo;The poor woman is
- distraught. Take her home. I do not understand, but she speaks of her son
- being given back to her, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a murder, <i>mon père</i>,&rdquo; broke in one of the men excitedly. &ldquo;She
- came running to the village a few minutes ago to tell us that her son had
- been killed. It is this man here in the road who did it. She recognises
- him, you see. There is the wound in his head, and she said she struck him
- there with a piece of wood while he was struggling with her son.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old woman was in hysteria now, alternately sobbing and laughing, but
- no longer struggling.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Murdered! Her son&mdash;murdered!&rdquo; Raymond gasped in a startled way. &ldquo;Ah,
- then, be very good to her! It is no wonder that she is beside herself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They led her laughing and crying away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The law! The law! I demand the law on him!&rdquo;&mdash;her voice, now
- guttural, now shrill, quavering, virulent, out of control, floated back. &ldquo;<i>Sacré
- nom de Dieu</i>, a life for a life, he is the murderer of my son!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And now, save for the howling of the storm, a silence fell upon the scene.
- Raymond glanced quickly about him. What was it now, what was it&mdash;ah,
- he understood! They were waiting for <i>him</i>. As though it were the
- most obvious thing in the world to do, as though no one would dream of
- doing anything else, the villagers, collectively and singly, laid the
- burden of initiative upon his clerically garbed shoulders. Raymond dropped
- upon his knees again beside the priest, pretending to make a further
- examination of the other's wound. He could gain a moment or two that way,
- a moment in which to think. The man, though still unconscious, was moaning
- constantly now. At any moment the priest might regain his senses. One
- thing was crucial, vital&mdash;in some way he must manouvre so that the
- other should not be removed from his own immediate surveillance until he
- could find some loophole of escape. Once the man began to talk, unless he,
- Raymond, were beside the other to stop the man's mouth, or at least to act
- as interpreter for the other's ramblings&mdash;the man was sure to ramble
- at first, or at least people could be made to believe so&mdash;he,
- Raymond, would be cornered like a rat in a trap, and, more to be feared
- even than the law, the villagers, in their fury at the sacrilege they
- would consider he had put upon them in the desecration of their priest,
- would show him scant ceremony and little mercy.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was cool enough now, quite cool&mdash;with the grim coolness of a man
- who realises that his life depends upon his keeping his head. Still he
- bent over the priest. He heard a girl's voice speaking rapidly&mdash;that
- would be the girl with the great dark eyes who had come upon him with the
- lantern, for there was no other woman here now since he had got rid
- temporarily of that damnable old hag.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;... It is Father Aubert, the new curé. Labbée, at the station, told us he
- had arrived unexpectedly. We have brought his trunk that he was going to
- send for in the morning, and we drove fast hoping to catch up with him so
- that he would not have to walk all the way. We found him here kneeling
- beside that man there, that he had stumbled over as he came along. Labbée
- told us, too, of the other. He said the man seemed anxious to avoid
- Monsieur le Curé, and hung around the station until Father Aubert had got
- well started toward St. Marleau. He must have taken the path to the
- tavern, or he would not have been here ahead of Monsieur le Curé, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond reached into the open travelling bag on the ground beside him,
- took out the first article coming to hand that would at all serve the
- purpose, a shirt, and, tearing it, made pretense at binding up the
- priest's head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My thanks to you, mademoiselle!&rdquo; he muttered soberly under his breath.
- &ldquo;If it were not for the existence of that path&mdash;&mdash;!&rdquo; He shrugged
- his shoulders, and, his head lowered, a twisted smile flickered upon his
- lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl had ceased speaking. They were all clustered around him, watching
- him. Short exclamations, bearing little evidence of good will toward the
- unconscious man, came from first one and then another.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;... <i>Meurtrier!</i>... He will hang in any case! ... The better for him
- if he dies there!... What does it matter, the blackguard!...&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond rose to his feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said reprovingly. &ldquo;It is not for us to think in that way. For us,
- there is only a very badly wounded man here who needs our help and care.
- We will give that first, and leave the rest in the hands of those who have
- the right to judge him if he lives. See now, some of you lift him as
- carefully as possible into the wagon. I will hold his head on my lap, and
- we will get to the village as quickly as we can.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a strange procession then that began to wend its way toward the
- village of St. Marleau. The wagon proved to be a sort of buckboard, and
- Raymond, clambering upon it, sitting with his back propped against the
- seat, held the priest's head upon his knees. Upon the seat itself the girl
- and her uncle resumed their places. With the unconscious man stretched out
- at full length there was no room for the trunk; but, eager to be of
- service to their new curé, so kind and gentle and tender to even a
- criminal for whom the law held nothing in reserve but the gallows and a
- rope, who was tolerant even of Mother Blondin in her blasphemies, the
- villagers quarrelled amongst themselves for the privilege of carrying it.
- </p>
- <p>
- They moved slowly&mdash;that the wounded man might not be too severely
- jarred. Constantly the numbers around the wagon were augmented. Women
- began to appear amongst them. The entire village was aroused. St. Marleau
- in all its history had known no such excitement before. A murder in St.
- Marleau&mdash;and the murderer caught, and dying they said, was being
- brought back to the village in the arms of the young curé, who had, a
- cause even for added excitement, arrived that evening instead of to-morrow
- as had been expected. Tongues clacked and wagged. It was like a furious
- humming accompaniment to the howling of the wind. But out of respect to
- the curé who held the dying man on his knees, they did not press too
- closely about the wagon.
- </p>
- <p>
- They passed the &ldquo;tavern,&rdquo; which was lighted now in every window, and some
- left the wagon at this point and went to the &ldquo;tavern,&rdquo; and others who had
- collected at the &ldquo;tavern&rdquo; joined the wagon. They began to descend the
- hill. And now along the road below, to right and left, lights twinkled
- from every house. They met people coming up the hill. There were even
- children now.
- </p>
- <p>
- Head bent over the priest, that twisted smile was back on Raymond's lips.
- The man moaned at intervals, but showed no further sign of returning
- consciousness. Would the other live&mdash;or die? Raymond's hands, hidden
- under the priest's head, were clenched. It was a question of his own life
- or the other's now&mdash;wasn't it? What hell-inspired ingenuity had flung
- him into this hideous maze in which at every twist and turn, as he sought
- some avenue of escape, he but found, instead, the way barred against him,
- his retreat cut off, and peril, like some soulless, immutable thing,
- closing irrevocably down upon him! He dared not leave the priest; he dared
- not surrender the other for an instant&mdash;lest consciousness should
- return. <i>But if the man died!</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's face, as a ghastly temptation came, was as white as the upturned
- face between his knees. If the man died it would be simple enough. For a
- few days, for whatever time was necessary, he could play the rôle of
- priest, and then in some way&mdash;his brain was not searching out details
- now, there was only the sure confidence in himself that he would be equal
- to the occasion if only the chance were his&mdash;then in some way,
- without attendant hue and cry, without the police of every city in America
- loosed upon him, since the &ldquo;murderer&rdquo; of the old hag's son would be dead,
- he could disappear from St. Marleau. But the man was not dead&mdash;yet.
- And why should he even think the man would die! Because he <i>hoped</i>
- for it? His lips twitched; and his hands, with a slow, curious movement,
- unclenched, and clenched again&mdash;and then with a sort of mental
- wrench, his brain, alert and keen, was coping with the immediate
- situation, the immediate danger.
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl and her uncle were talking earnestly together on the seat. And
- now, for all that he had not thrust himself forward in what had so far
- transpired, the man appeared to be of some standing and authority in the
- neighbourhood, for, turning from the girl, he called sharply to one of the
- crowd. A villager hurried in response to the side of the wagon, and
- Raymond, listening, caught snatches of the terse, low-toned instructions
- that were given.
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor at Tournayville, and at the same time the police... yes&mdash;to-night...
- at once....
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Bien sur!</i>&rdquo; said the villager briskly, and disappeared in the
- crowd.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the girl spoke. Raymond could not hear very distinctly, but it was
- something about her mother being unprepared, and from that about a room
- downstairs, and he guessed that they were discussing where they would take
- the wounded man.
- </p>
- <p>
- He straightened up suddenly. That was a subject which concerned him very
- intimately. There was only one place where the priest could go, and that
- was where he, Raymond, went. They were on the village street now, and,
- twisting his head around to look ahead, he could make out the shadowy form
- of the church steeple close at hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur,&rdquo; he called quietly to the man on the seat, &ldquo;we will take this
- poor fellow to the <i>presbytère</i>, of course.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, but, Father Aubert&rdquo;&mdash;the girl turned toward him quickly&mdash;&ldquo;we
- were just speaking of that. It would not be at all comfortable for you.
- You see, even your own room there will not be ready for you, since you
- were not expected to-night, and you will have to take Father Allard's, so
- that if this man went there, too, there would be no bed at all for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hardly think I shall need any bed to-night, mademoiselle,&rdquo; Raymond said
- gravely. &ldquo;The man appears to be in a very critical condition. I know a
- little something of medicine, and I could not think of leaving him until&mdash;I
- think I heard your uncle say they were going to Tournayville for a doctor&mdash;until
- the doctor arrives.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; said the man, screwing around in his seat, &ldquo;that
- is so. I have sent for the doctor, and also for the police&mdash;but it is
- eight miles to Tournayville, and on a night like this there will be a long
- while to wait, even if the doctor is to be found at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have done well, monsieur,&rdquo; commended Raymond&mdash;but under his
- breath, with a savage, ironical jeer at himself, he added: &ldquo;And especially
- about the police, curse you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; insisted the girl anxiously, &ldquo;I am sure that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mademoiselle is very kind, and it is very thoughtful of her,&rdquo; Raymond
- interposed gratefully; &ldquo;but under the circumstances I think the <i>presbytère</i>
- will be best. Yes; I think we must decide on the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, yes, certainly&mdash;if that is Monsieur le Curé's wish,&rdquo; agreed the
- man. &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé should know best. Valérie, jump down, and run on
- ahead to tell your mother that we are coming.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie! So that was the girl's name! It seemed a strangely incongruous
- thought that here, with his back against the wall, literally fighting for
- his life, the name should seem somehow to be so appropriate to that
- dark-eyed face, with its truant, wind-tossed hair, that had come upon him
- so suddenly out of the darkness; that face, sweet, troubled, in distress,
- that he had glimpsed for an instant in the lantern's light. Valérie! But
- what was her other name? What had her mother to do with the <i>presbytère</i>,
- that the uncle should have sent her on with that message? And who was the
- uncle, this man here, and what was his name? And how much of all this was
- he, as Father Aubert, supposed already to know? The curé of the village,
- Father Allard&mdash;what correspondence, for instance, had passed between
- him and Father Aubert? A hundred questions were on his lips. He dared not
- ask a single one. They had turned in off the road now and were passing by
- the front of the church. He lowered his head close down to the priest's.
- The man still moaned in that same low and, as it were, purely mechanical
- way. Some one in the crowd spoke:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They are taking him to the <i>presbytère</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the rear of the wagon, amongst the bobbing lanterns, surrounded by
- awe-struck children and no less awe-struck women, he saw the trunk being
- trundled along by two men, each grasping one end by the handle. The crowd
- took up its spokesman's lead.
- </p>
- <p>
- ... To the <i>presbytère</i>.... They are going to the <i>presbytère</i>....
- The curé is taking him to the <i>presbytère</i>...
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, damn you!&rdquo; gritted Raymond between his teeth. &ldquo;To the <i>presbytère</i>&mdash;for
- the devil's masquerade!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VII&mdash;AT THE PRESBYTÈRE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T was Valerie who
- held the lamp; and beside her in the doorway stood a gentle-faced,
- silverhaired, slim little old lady&mdash;and the latter was another
- Valerie, only a Valerie whom the years in their passing had touched in a
- gentle, kindly way, as though the whitening hair and the age creeping upon
- her were but a crowning. And Raymond, turning to mount the stoop of the <i>presbytère</i>,
- as some of the villagers lifted the wounded priest from the wagon, drew
- his breath in sharply, and for an instant faltered in his step. It was as
- though, framed there in the doorway, those two forms of the women, those
- two faces that seemed to radiate an innate sanctity, were like guardian
- angels to bar the way against a hideous and sacrilegious invasion of some
- holy thing within. And Valerie's eyes, those great, deep, dark eyes burned
- into him. And her face, that he saw now for the first time plainly, was
- very beautiful, and with a beauty that was not of feature alone&mdash;for
- her expression seemed to write a sort of creed upon her face, a creed that
- frankly mirrored faith in all around her, a faith that, never having been
- startled, or dismayed, or disillusioned, and knowing no things for evil,
- accepted all things for good.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond's step faltered. It seemed as though he had never seen a
- woman's face like that&mdash;that it was holding him now in a thrall that
- robbed his surroundings momentarily of their danger and their peril.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, the next instant, that voice within him was speaking again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You fool!&rdquo; it whispered fiercely. &ldquo;What are you doing! If you want your
- life, play for it! Look around you! A false move, a rational word from the
- lips of that limp thing they are carrying there behind you, and these
- people, who believe where you mock, who would kneel if you but lifted your
- hand in sign of benediction, would turn upon you with the merciless fury
- of wild beasts! You fool! You fool! Do you like the feel of hemp, as it
- tightens around your neck!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond lifted his head, and his eyes, and with measured pace
- walked forward up the steps to where the two women stood.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie's introduction was only another warning to him to be upon his
- guard&mdash;she seemed to imply that he naturally knew her mother's name.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father Aubert, this is my mother,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a sort of old-world grace, the elder woman bowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she said quickly, &ldquo;what a terrible thing to have
- happened! Valérie has just told me. And what a welcome to the parish for
- you! Not even a room, with that <i>pauvre</i> unfortunate, <i>misérable</i>
- and murderer though he is, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it is a welcome of the heart, I can see that,&rdquo; Raymond interposed,
- and smiled gravely, and took both of the old lady's hands in his own. &ldquo;And
- that is worth far more than the room, which, in any case, I shall hardly
- need to-night. It is you, not I, who should have cause to grumble, for, to
- my own unexpected arrival, I bring you the added trouble and inconvenience
- of this very badly wounded and, I fear, dying man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&mdash;that!&rdquo; she exclaimed simply. &ldquo;But Monsieur le Curé would never
- have thought of doing otherwise! Valérie meant only kindness, but she
- should not have made any other suggestion. It is for nothing else, if not
- this, the <i>presbytère! Le pauvre misérable</i>&rdquo;&mdash;she crossed
- herself reverently&mdash;&ldquo;even if he has blood that thought of doing
- otherwise! Valérie meant only kindness, but she should not have made any
- other suggestion. It is for nothing else, if not this, the <i>presbytère!
- Le pauvre misérable</i>&rdquo;&mdash;she crossed herself reverently&mdash;&ldquo;even
- if he has blood that is not his own upon him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They were coming up the steps, carrying the wounded priest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This way!&rdquo; said the little old lady softly. &ldquo;Valérie, dear, hold your
- lamp so that they can see. Ah, <i>le pauvre misérable</i>; ah, Monsieur le
- Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl leading, they passed down a short hallway, entered a bedroom at
- the rear of the house, and Valérie set the lamp upon the table.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond motioned to the men to lay the priest upon the bed. He glanced
- quietly about him, as he moved to the priest's side. He must get these
- people away&mdash;there were reasons why he should be alone. Alone! His
- brain was like some horrible, swirling vortex. Why alone? For what
- reasons? Not that hellish purpose that had flashed so insidiously upon him
- out there on the ride down to the <i>presbytère!</i> Not that! Strange how
- outwardly calm, how deadly calm, how composed and self-possessed he was,
- when such a thought had even for an instant's space found lodgment in his
- soul. It was well that he was calm, he would need to be calm&mdash;he was
- doing what that inner monitor had told him to do&mdash;he was playing the
- game&mdash;he was playing for his life. Well, he had only to dismiss these
- men now, who hung so curiously awe-struck about the bed, and then get rid
- of the women&mdash;no, they had gone now; Valérie, with her beautiful
- face, and those great dark eyes; and the mother, whose gray hair did not
- seem to bring age with it at all, and&mdash;no, they were back again&mdash;no,
- they were not&mdash;those were not women's steps entering the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had been making pretence at loosening the priest's collar, and he
- looked up now. The trunk! He had forgotten all about the trunk. The
- newcomers were two men carrying the trunk. They set it down against the
- wall near the door. It was a little more than probable that they had
- seized the opportunity afforded by the trunk to see what was going on in
- the room. They would be favoured amongst their fellows without! They, too,
- hats in hand, stared, curious and awe-struck, toward the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank you, all of you,&rdquo; Raymond heard himself saying in a low tone. &ldquo;But
- go now, my friends, go quietly; madame and her daughter will give me any
- further assistance that may be needed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They filed obediently from the room&mdash;on tiptoe&mdash;their coarse,
- heavy boots squeaking the more loudly therefor. Raymond's hands sought the
- priest's collar again, to loosen it this time with a definite object in
- view. He had changed only his outer garments with the other. He dared not
- have the priest undressed until he had made sure that there were no
- tell-tale marks on the underclothing; a laundry number, perhaps, that the
- police would pounce instantly upon. He found himself experiencing a sort
- of facetious soul-grin&mdash;detectives always laid great stress upon
- laundry marks!
- </p>
- <p>
- Again he was interrupted. With the collar in his hand, his own collar,
- that he had removed now from the priest's neck, he turned to see Valérie
- and her mother entering the room. They were very capable, those two&mdash;too
- capable! They were carrying basins of water, and cloths that were
- obviously intended for bandages. He had not meant to use any bandages, he
- had meant to&mdash;what?
- </p>
- <p>
- He forced a grave smile of approval to his lips, and nodded his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- The elder woman glanced about her a little in surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, are the men gone!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;<i>Tiens!</i> The stupids! But I
- will call one of them back, and he will help you undress <i>le pauvre</i>,
- Father Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was only an instant before Raymond answered; but it seemed, before he
- did so, that he had been listening in a kind of panic for long minutes
- dragged out interminably to that inner voice that kept telling him to play
- the game, play the game, and that only fools lost their heads at
- insignificant little unexpected denouements. She was only suggesting that
- the man should be undressed; whereas the man must under no circumstances
- be undressed until&mdash;until&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think perhaps we had better not attempt it in his condition until the
- doctor arrives, madame,&rdquo; he said slowly, thoughtfully, as though his words
- were weighted with deliberation. &ldquo;It might do far more harm than good. For
- the present, I think it would be better simply to loosen his clothing, and
- make him as comfortable as possible in that way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; I think so, too,&rdquo; said Valérie&mdash;she had moved a little table to
- the bedside, and was arranging the basins of water and the cloths upon it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; agreed the little old lady simply. &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé knows
- best.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Valérie, speaking in hushed tones, as she cast an anxious look
- at the white, blood-stained face upon the bed, &ldquo;and I think it is a mercy
- that Father Aubert knows something about medicine, for otherwise the
- doctor might be too late. I will help you, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;everything
- is ready.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He knew nothing about medicine&mdash;there was nothing he knew less about!
- What fiend had prompted him to make such a claim!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am afraid, mademoiselle,&rdquo; he said soberly, &ldquo;that my knowledge is far
- too inadequate for such a case as this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We will be able to do something at least, father&rdquo;&mdash;there was a
- brave, troubled smile in her eyes as she lifted them for an instant to
- his; and then, bending forward, with deft fingers she removed the torn
- piece of shirt from the wounded man's head.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, between them, while the mother watched and wrung out the cloths,
- they dressed the wound, a ghastly, unsightly thing across the side of the
- man's skull&mdash;only it was Valerie, not he, who was efficient. And
- strangely, as once before, but a little while before, when out there in
- front of the house, it was Valerie, and not the man, and not the wound,
- and not the peril in which he stood that was dominant, swaying him for the
- moment. There was a wondrous tenderness in her hands as she worked with
- the bandages, and sometimes her hands touched his; and sometimes, close
- together, as they leaned over the bed together, her hair, dark, luxuriant,
- brushed his cheek; and the low-collared blouse disclosed a bare and
- perfect throat that was white like ivory; and the half parted lips were
- tender like the touch of her fingers; and in her face at sight of the
- gruesome wound, bringing an added whiteness, was dismay, and struggling
- with dismay was a wistful earnestness and resolution that was born of her
- woman's sympathy; and she seemed to steal upon and pervade his senses as
- though she were some dream-created vision, for she was not reality at all
- since his subconsciousness told him that in actual reality no one existed
- at all except that moaning thing upon the bed&mdash;that moaning thing
- upon the bed and himself&mdash;himself, who seemed to be swinging by a
- precarious hold, from which even then his fingers were slipping away, over
- some bottomless abyss that yawned below him. &ldquo;Valérie! Valérie!&rdquo; He was
- repeating her name to himself, as though calling to her for aid from the
- edge of that black gulf, and&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fool!&rdquo; jeered that inner voice. &ldquo;Have you never seen a pretty girl
- before? She'd be the first to turn upon you, if she knew!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You lie!&rdquo; retorted another self.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where's Three-Ace Artie gone?&rdquo; inquired the voice with cold contempt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond straightened up. Valérie, turning from the bed, gathered the
- basins and soiled cloths together, and moved quietly from the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Will he live, father?&rdquo;&mdash;it was the little gray-haired woman,
- Valérie's mother, Valérie's older self, who was looking up into his face
- so anxiously, whose lips quivered a little as she spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- Would the man <i>live!</i> A devil's laugh seemed suddenly to possess
- Raymond's soul. They would be alone together, that gasping, white-faced
- thing on the bed, and himself; they would be alone together before the
- doctor came&mdash;he would see to that. There had been interruption,
- confusion... his brain itself was confusion... extraneous thoughts had
- intervened... but they would be <i>alone</i> presently. And&mdash;great
- God!&mdash;what hellish mockery!&mdash;she asked <i>him</i> if this man
- would <i>live!</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am afraid&rdquo;&mdash;he was not looking at her; his hand, clutching at the
- skirt of the <i>soutane</i> he wore, closed and tightened and clenched&mdash;&ldquo;I
- am afraid he will not live.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, <i>le pauvre!</i>&rdquo; she whispered, and her eyes filled with tears.
- &ldquo;Ah, Monsieur le Curé, I do not know these things so well as you. It is
- true that he is a very guilty man, but is not God very good and tender and
- full of compassion, father? Oh, I should not dare to say these things, for
- it is you who know what is right and best&rdquo;&mdash;she had caught his
- sleeve, and was leading him across the room. &ldquo;And Mother Church, Monsieur
- le Curé, is very merciful and very tender and very compassionate too&mdash;and,
- oh&mdash;and, oh&mdash;can there not be mercy and love even for such as he&mdash;must
- he lose his soul too, as well as his life?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond, in a blind, wondering way, stared at her. The tears were
- streaming down her cheeks now. They had halted before a low, old-fashioned
- cupboard, an <i>armoire</i> much like the <i>armoire</i> in the old hag's
- house, and now she opened the doors in the lower portion, and took out a
- worn and rusty black leather bag, and set it upon the top of the <i>armoire</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is only to show you where it is, father, if&mdash;if it might be so&mdash;even
- for him&mdash;the Sacrament&rdquo;&mdash;and, turning, she crossed the room, and
- meeting Valérie upon the threshold drew the girl away with her, and closed
- the door softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a bag such as the parish priests carried with them on their visits
- to the sick and dying. Raymond eyed it sullenly. The Sacrament!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What have I to do with that!&rdquo; he snarled beneath his breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you not a priest of God?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He whirled like a flash, startled, sweeping his glances around the room.
- And then he laughed in smothered, savage relief. It was only that voice
- within that chose a cursed mockery this time to put him upon his guard.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was staring now at the sprawled form on the bed, at a red stain that
- was already creeping through the fresh bandages. His face grew hard and
- set; a flush came and died away, leaving it an ashen gray.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then he stepped to the door&mdash;and listened&mdash;and locked it.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VIII&mdash;THOU SHALT NOT KILL
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T seemed as though
- the stillness of death were already in the room; a stillness that was
- horrible and unnerving in contrast with the shrill swirling of the wind
- without, and the loud roar and pound of the waves breaking upon the shore
- close at hand beneath the windows.
- </p>
- <p>
- His face still set as in a rigid mould, features drawn in hard, sharp
- lines, then ashen gray now even upon the lips, Raymond crossed from the
- door to the nearer of the two windows. It was black outside, inky black,
- unnaturally black, relieved only by a wavering, irregular line of white
- where the waves broke into foam along the rocky beach&mdash;and this line,
- as it wavered, and wriggled, and advanced, and receded seemed to lend an
- uncanny ghostlike aspect to the blackness, and, as he strained his eyes
- out of the window, he shuddered suddenly and drew back. But the next
- instant he snarled fiercely to himself. Was he to lose his nerve because
- it was black outside, and because the waves were running high and creaming
- along the shore! He would have something shortly that would warrant him in
- losing his nerve if he faltered now&mdash;the hemp around his neck,
- rasping, chafing at his throat, the horrible prickling as the rough
- strands grew taut!
- </p>
- <p>
- He clutched at his throat mechanically, rubbing it with his fingers
- mechanically&mdash;and, as fiercely as before, snarled again. Enough of
- this! He was neither fool nor child. There was a sure way out from that
- dangling noose, cornered, trapped though he was&mdash;and he knew the way
- now. He reached up and drew down the window shade, and passed quickly to
- the other window and drew down the shade there as well.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then he turned, and stepped to the bed, and bent over the priest.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was the underclothing first. He must make sure of that&mdash;that
- there would be no marks of identification&mdash;that there would be
- nothing to rise up against him, a mute and mocking witness to his undoing.
- He loosened the man's clothing. It would not be necessary to take off the
- outer garments. It was much easier here with the man on a bed, and a light
- in the room than it had been out there on the road, and&mdash;ah! Lips
- compressed, he nodded sharply to himself. The undergarments were new. That
- precluded laundry marks&mdash;unless the man had had some marking put upon
- them himself. No, there was nothing&mdash;nothing but the maker's tag sewn
- in on the shirt at the back of the neck. He turned the priest over on the
- bed to complete his examination. There was nothing on any other part of
- the garments. The socks, then, perhaps? He pulled up the trousers' legs
- hurriedly. No, there was nothing there, either. He reached out to turn the
- priest over again&mdash;and paused. He could snip that maker's tag from
- the neck of the shirt just as easily in the position in which the man now
- lay, and&mdash;and the man's face would not be staring up at him. There
- was a cursed, senseless accusation in that white face, and the lip muscles
- twitched as though the man were about to shout aloud, to scream out&mdash;<i>murder!</i>
- If only the fool had died out there in the woods, and would stop that
- infernal low moaning noise, and those strangling inhalations as he gasped
- for breath!
- </p>
- <p>
- Automatically, Raymond's fingers sought his penknife in its accustomed
- place in his vest pocket&mdash;and slipped down a smooth, unobstructed
- surface. His eyes followed his fingers in a sort of dazed, perplexed way,
- and then he laughed a little huskily. The <i>soutane!</i> He had forgotten
- for the moment that he was a priest of God! It was the other who wore the
- vest, it was in the other's pocket that the knife was to be found. He had
- forgotten the devil's masquerade in the devil's whispering that was in his
- soul!
- </p>
- <p>
- He snatched the knife from the vest pocket, opened it, cut away the cloth
- tag, and with infinite pains removed the threads that had held the tag in
- place. He returned the knife to the vest pocket, and tucked the little tag
- away in one of his own pockets; then hastily rearranged the other's
- clothing again, and turned the man back into his original position upon
- the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now! He glanced furtively all around the room. His hands crept out,
- and advanced toward the priest. It was a very easy thing to do. No one
- would know. No one but would think the man had died naturally. <i>Died!</i>
- It was the first time he had allowed his mind to frame a concrete
- expression that would fit the black thing that was in his soul.
- </p>
- <p>
- A bead of sweat spurted out from his forehead. His hands somehow would not
- travel very fast, but they were all the time creeping nearer to the
- priest's throat. He had only to keep on forcing them on their way... and
- it was not very far to go... and, once there, it would only take an
- instant. God, if that white face would not stare up at him like that...
- the eyes were closed of course... but still it stared.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond touched his lips with the tip of his tongue, and again and again
- circled the room with his eyes. Was that somebody there outside the
- window? Was that a step out there in the passageway? Were those <i>voices</i>
- that chattered and gibbered from everywhere?
- </p>
- <p>
- He jerked back his hands, and they fell to his sides, and he shivered.
- What was it? What was the matter? What was it that he had to do? It wasn't
- murder. That was a lie! The man wouldn't live anyhow, but he might live
- long enough to talk. It was his life or the other's, wasn't it? If he were
- caught now, there was no power on earth could save him. On earth? What did
- he mean by that? What other power was there? It was only a trite phrase he
- had used.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was he hesitating about? It was the only chance he had.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get it done! Get it done, and over with, you squeamish fool!&rdquo; prodded
- that inner voice savagely.
- </p>
- <p>
- His hands crept out again. Of course! Of course! He knew that. He must get
- it done and over with. Only&mdash;only, great God, why did his hands
- tremble so! He lifted one of them to his forehead and drew it away
- dripping wet. What did that voice want to keep nagging him for! He knew
- what he had to do. It was the only way. If the priest were dead, he,
- Raymond, would be safe. There would be no question as to who the murderer
- of Blondin was&mdash;and the priest would be buried and that would be the
- end of it. And&mdash;yes! He had it all now. It was almost too simple! He,
- Raymond, as the curé of the village, after a day or two, would meet with
- an accident. A boating accident&mdash;yes, that was it! They would find an
- upturned boat and his hat floating on the water perhaps&mdash;but they
- would never find the body! He need only, in the interval of those few
- days, gather together from somewhere some clothes into which he could
- change, hide in the woods after the &ldquo;accident,&rdquo; and at night make his
- final escape.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; snapped the voice impatiently. &ldquo;I've been telling you that
- all along! There would be no further investigation as to the murder; and
- only a sorrowful search along the shore, free from all suspicion, for the
- body of Father Aubert. Well, why don't you act? Are you going to fling
- your life away? Are you afraid? Have you forgotten that it is growing
- late, that very soon now the doctor and the police will be here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Afraid! No; he wasn't afraid of God or devil, or man or beast&mdash;that
- was his creed, wasn't it? Only that damnable face still stared up at him,
- and he couldn't get his hands near enough to&mdash;to do the work.
- </p>
- <p>
- Slowly, inch by inch, his face as white and set as chiselled marble, his
- hands crept forward again. How soft the bare, exposed throat looked that
- was almost at his finger tips now. Would it <i>feel</i> soft to the touch,
- or&mdash;he swayed unsteadily, and crouched back, that cold shiver passing
- over him. It was strange that he should shiver, that he should find it
- cold. His brain was afire, and it whirled, and whirled, and whirled; and
- devils laughed in his soul&mdash;and yet he stood aghast at the abhorrent
- deed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wait! He would be able to think clearly in an instant. He must do it&mdash;or
- die himself. Yes, yes; it was the <i>touch</i> of his flesh against the
- other's flesh from which he shrank, the <i>feel</i> of his fingers on the
- other's throat that held him back&mdash;that was it! Wait! He would remedy
- that. That would have been a crude, mad way in any case. What had he been
- thinking of! It would have left a mark. It would have been sure to have
- left a mark. Perhaps they would not have noticed it, but it would have
- invited the risk. There was a better way, a much better way&mdash;and a
- way in which that face wouldn't be able to stare up at him any more, a way
- in which he wouldn't hear that moaning, and that rattling, and that
- struggling for breath. The man was almost dead now. It was only necessary
- to take that other pillow there, and hold it tightly over the other's
- face. <i>That</i> wouldn't leave any mark. Yes, the pillow! Why hadn't he
- thought of that before! It would have been all over by now.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once more his hands began to creep up and outward. He leaned far over the
- bed, reaching for the pillow&mdash;and something came between the pillow
- and his hands. He glanced downward in a startled way. It was the crucifix
- hanging from his neck. With a snarl, he swung it away. It came back and
- struck against his knuckles. He tried to wrench it from his neck. It would
- not come&mdash;but, instead, one hand slipped through the chain, and
- pushed the crucifix outward, and for an instant held it there between him
- and that white, staring face. He pulled his hand away. And the crucifix
- swung backward and forward. And he reached again for the pillow, and the
- crucifix was still between. And his hands, trembling, grew tangled in the
- chain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thou shalt not kill!&rdquo;&mdash;it was not that inner voice; it was a voice
- like the girl's, like Valerie's, soft and full of a divine compassion. And
- her fingers in tenderness seemed to be working with that bandaged head;
- and the dark eyes, deep and steadfast, were searching his soul. &ldquo;Thou
- shalt not kill!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And with a low, horror-stricken cry, Raymond staggered backward from the
- bed, and dropped into a chair, and buried his face in his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IX&mdash;UNTIL THE DAWN
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE man upon the
- bed moaned continuously now; the wind swirled around the corners of the
- house; the waves pounded in dull, heavy thuds upon the shore without&mdash;but
- Raymond heard none of it. It seemed as though he were exhausted, spent,
- physically weak, as from some Titanic struggle. He did not move. He sat
- there, head bowed, his hands clasped over his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, after a long time, a shudder shook his frame&mdash;and he rose
- mechanically from his chair. The door was locked, and subconsciously he
- realised that it should not be found locked when that somebody&mdash;who
- was it?&mdash;yes, he remembered now&mdash;the doctor from Tournayville,
- and the police&mdash;it should not be found locked when the doctor and the
- police arrived, because they would naturally ask him to account for the
- reason of it. He crossed to the door, unlocked it, and returned to the
- chair.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now he stared at the crucifix upon his breast. For the second time
- that night it had played a strange and unaccountable rôle. He lifted his
- hand to his head. His head still ached from the blow the old hag had
- struck him with the piece of wood. That was what was the matter. His head
- ached and he could not therefore think logically, otherwise he would not
- be fool enough to hold the crucifix responsible for&mdash;for preventing
- him from what he had been about to do a little while ago.
- </p>
- <p>
- His face grew cynical in its expression. The crucifix had nothing to do
- with it, nor had the vision of the girl's eyes, nor had the imagined sound
- of Valérie's voice&mdash;those things were, all of them, but the form his
- true self had taken to express itself when he had so madly tormented
- himself with that hellish purpose. If it had not been things like that, it
- would have been something else. He could not have struck down a wounded
- and defenceless man, he could not have committed murder in cold blood like
- that. He had recoiled from the act, because it was an act that was beyond
- him to perform, that was all. That man there on the bed was as safe, as
- far as he, Raymond, was concerned, as though they were separated by a
- thousand miles.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sophistry!&rdquo; sneered that inner voice. &ldquo;You are a weak-kneed fool, and
- very far from a heroic soul that has been tried by fire! Well, you will
- pay for it!&rdquo; Raymond cast a quick startled glance at the bed, and half
- rose from his seat. What&mdash;again? Was that thought back again? He sank
- back in the chair, gripping the chair-arms until his knuckles cracked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I won't!&rdquo; he mumbled hoarsely. &ldquo;By God&mdash;I won't! Maybe&mdash;maybe
- the man will die.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then impulsively he was on his feet, and pacing the room, a sweep of
- anger upon him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What had I to do with all this!&rdquo; he cried, in low, fierce tones. &ldquo;And
- look at me!&rdquo;&mdash;he had halted before the dresser, and was glaring into
- the mirror. &ldquo;<i>Look at me!</i>&rdquo; A face whose pallor was enhanced by the
- black clerical garb gazed contortedly back at him; the crucifix, symbol of
- peace, hung from about his neck. He tucked it hastily inside the <i>soutane</i>.
- &ldquo;Look at me!&rdquo; he cried, and clenched his fist and shook it at the mirror.
- &ldquo;Three-Ace Artie! That's you there, Three-Ace Artie! God or the devil has
- stacked the cards on you, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He swung sharply about&mdash;listening; and, on the instant, with grave
- demeanour, his face soberly composed, faced the doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door opened, and two men stepped into the room. One was a big man,
- bearded, with a bluff and hearty cast of countenance that seemed
- peculiarly fitting to his immense breadth of shoulder; the other, a sort
- of foil as it were, was small, sharp featured, with roving black eyes
- that, as he stood on the threshold and on tiptoe impatiently peered over
- the big man's shoulder, darted quick little glances in all directions
- about him. The small man closed the door with a sort of fussily momentous
- air.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens</i>, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;the big man extended his hand to
- Raymond. &ldquo;I am Doctor Arnaud. And this is Monsieur Dupont, the assistant
- chief of police of Tournayville. Hum!&rdquo;&mdash;he glanced toward the bed.
- &ldquo;Hum!&rdquo;&mdash;he dropped Raymond's hand, and moved quickly to the bedside.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond shook hands with the little man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bad business! Bad business!&rdquo;&mdash;the assistant chief of police of
- Tournayville continued to send his darting glances about the room, and the
- while he made absurd clucking noises with his tongue. &ldquo;Yes, very bad&mdash;very
- bad! I came myself, you see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was much about the man that afforded Raymond an immense sense of
- relief. He was conscious that he infinitely preferred Monsieur Dupont,
- assistant chief of the Tournayville police, to Sergeant Marden, of the
- Royal North-West Mounted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond quietly, &ldquo;I am afraid it is a very serious matter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not at all! Not at all!&rdquo; clucked Monsieur Dupont, promptly contradicting
- himself. &ldquo;We've got our man&mdash;eh&mdash;what?&rdquo; He jerked his hand
- toward the bed. &ldquo;That's the main thing. Killed Théophile Blondin, did he?
- Well, quite privately, Monsieur le Curé, he might have done worse, though
- the law does not take that into account&mdash;no, not at all, not at all.
- Blondin, you understand, Monsieur le Curé, was quite well known to the
- police, and he was&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Dupont pinched his nose with his thumb
- and forefinger as though to escape an unsavoury odour&mdash;&ldquo;you
- understand, Monsieur le Curé?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I did not know,&rdquo; replied Raymond. &ldquo;You see, I only&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, yes!&rdquo; interrupted Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Know all that! Know all that!
- They told me on the drive out. You arrived this evening, and found this
- man lying on the road. Rude initiation to your pastorate, Monsieur le
- Curé. Too bad!&rdquo; He raised his voice. &ldquo;Well, Doctor Arnaud, what is the
- verdict&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come here and help me,&rdquo; said the doctor, over his shoulder. He was
- replacing the bandage, and now he looked around for an instant at Raymond.
- &ldquo;I can't improve any on that. It was excellent&mdash;excellent, Monsieur
- le Curé.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The credit is not mine,&rdquo; Raymond told him. &ldquo;It was Mademoiselle Valérie.
- But the man, doctor?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not a chance in a thousand&rdquo;&mdash;the doctor shook his head. &ldquo;Concussion
- of the brain. We'll get his clothes off, and make him comfortable. That's
- about all we can do. He'll probably not last through the night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will help you,&rdquo; offered Raymond, stepping forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's not necessary, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;Monsieur Dupont
- here can&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; interposed Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Let Monsieur le Curé help you. We will
- kill two birds with one stone that way. We have still to visit the Blondin
- house. We do not know this man's name. We know nothing about him. While
- you are undressing him, I will search through his clothing. Eh? Perhaps we
- shall find something. I do not swallow whole all the story I have heard.
- We shall see what we shall see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond glanced swiftly at Monsieur Dupont. Because the man clucked with
- his tongue and had an opinion of himself, he was perhaps a very long way
- from being either stupid or a fool. Monsieur Dupont might not prove so
- preferable to Sergeant Marden as he had been so quick to imagine.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; agreed Raymond. &ldquo;Monsieur Dupont is right, I am sure. I will assist
- you, doctor, while he makes his search.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont stepped briskly around to the far side of the bed, and
- peered intently into the unconscious man's face, as he waited for Raymond
- and the doctor to hand him the first article of clothing. He kept clucking
- with his tongue, and once his eyes narrowed significantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond experienced a sense of disquiet. Was the man simply posing for
- effect, or was he acting naturally&mdash;or was there something that had
- really aroused the other's suspicions. He handed the priest's coat, or,
- rather, his own, to Monsieur Dupont.
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont began to go through the pockets&mdash;like one accustomed
- to the task.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hah, hah!&rdquo; he ejaculated suddenly. &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé, Monsieur le
- Docteur, I call you both to witness! All this loose money in the side
- pocket! The side pocket, mind you, and the money loose! It bears out the
- story that they say Mother Blondin tells about the robbery. I was not
- quite ready to believe it before. See!&rdquo; He dumped the money on the bed.
- &ldquo;You are witnesses.&rdquo; He gathered up the money again and replaced it in the
- pocket. &ldquo;And here&rdquo;&mdash;from another pocket he produced the revolver&mdash;&ldquo;you
- are witnesses again.&rdquo; He broke the revolver. &ldquo;Ah&mdash;h'm&mdash;one shot
- fired! You see for yourselves? Yes, you see. Very well! Continue,
- messieurs! There may be something more, though it would certainly appear
- that nothing more was necessary.&rdquo; He nodded crisply at both Raymond and
- the doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- The vest yielded up the cardcase. Monsieur Dupont shuffled over the dozen
- or so of neatly printed cards that it contained.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Là, là!</i>&rdquo; said he sharply. &ldquo;Our friend is evidently a smooth one.
- One of the clever kind that uses his brains. Very nice cards&mdash;very
- plausible sort of thing, eh? Yes, they are. Very! Henri Mentone, eh? Henri
- Mentone, alias something&mdash;from nowhere. Well, messieurs, is there
- still by any chance something else?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was nothing else. Monsieur Dupont, however, was not satisfied until
- he had examined, even more minutely than Raymond had previously done, the
- priest's undergarments. The doctor turned from the bed. Monsieur Dupont
- rolled all the clothing into a bundle, and tucked it under his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, let us go, doctor!&rdquo; jerked out Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;If he dies, he
- dies&mdash;eh? In any case he can't run away. If he dies, there is Mother
- Blondin to consider, eh? She struck the blow. They would not do much to
- her perhaps, but she would have to be held. It is the law. If he does not
- die, that is another matter. In any case I shall remain in the village to
- keep an eye on them both&mdash;yes? Well then, well then&mdash;eh? &mdash;let
- us go!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor glanced hesitantly toward the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have done all that is possible for the moment,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but perhaps I
- had better call madame. She and mademoiselle have insisted on sitting up
- out there in the front room.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's head was bowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do not call them,&rdquo; he said gravely. &ldquo;If the man is about to die, it is my
- place to stay, doctor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;er&mdash;yes, that is so,&rdquo; acquiesced the doctor. &ldquo;Very well
- then, I'll pack them off to bed. I shan't be long at Mother Blondin's.
- Must pay an official visit&mdash;I'm the coroner, Monsieur le Curé. I'll
- be back as soon as possible, and meanwhile if he shows any change&rdquo;&mdash;he
- nodded in the direction of the bed&mdash;&ldquo;send for me at once. I'll
- arrange to have some one of the men remain out there within call.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said Raymond simply. &ldquo;You will be gone&mdash;how long,
- doctor?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, say, an hour&mdash;certainly not any longer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said Raymond again.
- </p>
- <p>
- He accompanied them to the door, and closed it softly behind them as they
- stepped from the room. And now he experienced a sort of cool complacency,
- an uplift, the removal as of some drear foreboding that had weighed him
- down. The peril in a very large measure had vanished. The policeman had
- swallowed the bait, hook and all; and the doctor had said there was not
- one chance in a thousand that the man would live until morning. Therefore
- the problem resolved itself simply into a matter of two or three days in
- which he should continue in the rôle of curé&mdash;after that the
- &ldquo;accident,&rdquo; and this accursed St. Marleau could go into mourning for him,
- if it liked, or do anything else it liked! He would be through with it!
- </p>
- <p>
- But those two or three days! It was not altogether a simple affair, that.
- If only he could go now&mdash;at once! Only that, of course, would arouse
- suspicion&mdash;even if the man did not regain consciousness, and did not
- blurt out something before he died. But why should he keep harping on that
- point? Any fool could see that his safest game was to play the hand he
- held until the &ldquo;murderer&rdquo; was dead and buried, and the matter legally
- closed forever. He had already decided that a dozen times, hadn't he? Well
- then, these two or three days! He must plan for these two or three days.
- There were things he should know, that he would be expected to know&mdash;not
- mere church matters; his Latin, the training of the old school days, a
- prayer-book, and his wits would carry him through anything of such a
- nature which might intervene in that short time. But, for instance, the
- mother of Valérie&mdash;who was she? How did she come to be in charge of
- the <i>presbytère?</i> What was her name&mdash;and Valérie's? It would be
- very strange indeed if, coming there for the summer to supply for Father
- Allard, he was not acquainted with all such details.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's glance fell upon the trunk. The next instant he was hunting
- through his pockets, but making an awkward business of it thanks to the
- unaccustomed skirt of his <i>soutane</i>. A bunch of keys, however,
- rewarded his efforts. He stepped over to the trunk, trying first one key
- and then another. Finally, he found the right one, unlocked the trunk&mdash;and,
- suddenly, his hand upon the uplifted lid, the blood left his face, and he
- stood as though paralysed, staring at the doorway. He was caught&mdash;caught
- in the act. True, she had knocked, but she had opened the door at the same
- time. The little old lady, Valerie's mother, was standing there looking at
- him&mdash;and the trunk was open.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;it is only to tell you that we have made up
- a couch for you in the front room that you can use when the doctor
- returns.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He found his voice. Somehow she did not seem at all surprised that he had
- the trunk open.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is very kind and thoughtful of you, madame.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Mais, non!</i>&rdquo; she exclaimed, with a smile. &ldquo;But, no! And if you need
- anything before the doctor gets back, father, you have only to call. We
- shall hear you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will call if I need you&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond was conscious that he was
- speaking, but that the words came only in a queer, automatic kind of a
- way.
- </p>
- <p>
- She poked her head around the door for a sort of anxious, pitying,
- quick-flung glance at the bed; then looked questioningly at Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Ah, le pauvre! Le pauvre misérable!</i>&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Good-night,
- Monsieur le Curé. Do not fail to call if you want us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The door closed. As once before in a night of vigil, in that far-north
- shack, Raymond stretched out his hand before him to study it. It was not
- steady now&mdash;it trembled and shook. He looked at the trunk&mdash;and
- then a low, hollow laugh was on his lips. A fool and a child he was, and
- his nerves must be near the breaking point. Was there anything strange,
- was there anything surprising in the fact that Monsieur le Curé should be
- discovered in the act of opening Monsieur le Curé's trunk! And it had
- brought a panic upon him&mdash;and his hand was shaking like an old man's.
- He was in a pretty state, when coolness was the only thing that stood
- between him and&mdash;the gallows! Damn that cursed moaning from the bed!
- Would it never cease!
- </p>
- <p>
- For a time he stood there without moving; and then, his composure
- regained, the square jaw clamped defiantly against his weakness, he drew
- up a chair, and, sitting down, began to rummage through the trunk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;François Aubert&mdash;eh?&rdquo; he muttered, as he picked up a prayerbook and
- found the fly-leaf autographed. &ldquo;So my name is François! Well, that is
- something!&rdquo; He opened another book, and, on the fly-leaf again, read an
- inscription. &ldquo;'To my young friend'&mdash;eh? and from the Bishop! The
- Bishop of Montigny, is it? Well, that also is something! I am then
- personally acquainted with this Monsignor Montigny! I will remember that!
- And&mdash;ha, these!&mdash;with any luck, I shall find what I want here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He took up a package of letters, ran them over quickly&mdash;and frowned
- in disappointment. They were all addressed in a woman's hand. He was not
- interested in that. It was the correspondence from Father Allard that he
- wanted. He was about to return the letters to the trunk and resume his
- search, when he noticed that the topmost envelope bore the St. Marleau
- postmark. He opened it hurriedly&mdash;and his frown changed to a nod of
- satisfaction. It was, after all, what he wanted. Father Allard was blessed
- with the services of a secretary, that was the secret&mdash;Father
- Allard's signature was affixed at the bottom of the neatly written page.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond leaned back in his chair, and proceeded to read the letters.
- Little by little he pieced together, from references here and there, the
- information that he sought. It was a sort of family arrangement, as it
- were. The old lady was Father Allard's sister, and her name was Lafleur;
- and the husband was dead, since, in one instance, Father Allard referred
- to her as the &ldquo;Widow Lafleur,&rdquo; instead of his customary &ldquo;my sister, Madame
- Lafleur.&rdquo; And the uncle, who it now appeared was the notary and likewise
- the mayor of the village, was Father Allard's brother.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond returned the letters to the trunk, and commenced a systematic
- examination of the rest of its contents, which, apart from a somewhat
- sparse wardrobe, consisted mainly of books of a theological nature. He was
- still engaged in this occupation, when he heard the front door open and
- close. He snatched the prayer-book out of the trunk, shut down the lid,
- and, with a finger between the closed pages of the book, stood up as the
- doctor came briskly into the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm back a little ahead of time, you see,&rdquo; announced Doctor Arnaud with a
- pleasant nod, and stepped at once across the room to the wounded man.
- </p>
- <p>
- For perhaps five minutes the doctor remained at the bedside; then, closing
- his little black bag, he laid it upon the table, and turned to Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, father,&rdquo; he said cheerily, &ldquo;I understand there's a couch all ready
- for you in the front room. I'll be here for the balance of the night. You
- go and get some sleep.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond motioned toward the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is there any change?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- The doctor shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Raymond quietly, &ldquo;my place is still here.&rdquo; He smiled soberly.
- &ldquo;The couch is for you, doctor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But,&rdquo; protested the doctor, &ldquo;I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The man is dying. My place is here,&rdquo; said Raymond again. &ldquo;If you are
- needed, I have only to call you from the next room. There is no reason why
- both of us should sit up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hum&mdash;<i>tiens</i>&mdash;well, well!&rdquo;&mdash;the doctor pulled at his
- beard. &ldquo;No, of course, not&mdash;no reason why both should sit up. And if
- you insist&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not insist,&rdquo; interposed Raymond, smiling again. &ldquo;It is only that in
- any case I shall remain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are a fine fellow, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; said the bluff doctor heartily.
- He clapped both hands on Raymond's shoulders. &ldquo;A fine fellow, Monsieur le
- Curé! Well, I will go then&mdash;I was, I confess it, up all last night.&rdquo;
- He moved over to the door&mdash;and paused on the threshold. &ldquo;It is quite
- possible that the man may revive somewhat toward the end, in which case&mdash;Monsieur
- Dupont has suggested it&mdash;a little stimulation may enable us to obtain
- a statement from him. You understand? So you will call me on the instant,
- father, if you notice anything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On the instant,&rdquo; said Raymond&mdash;and as the door closed behind the
- doctor, he went back to his seat in the chair.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man would die, the doctor had said so again. That was assured. Raymond
- fingered the prayer-book that he still held abstractedly. That was
- assured. It seemed to relieve his brain from any further necessity of
- thinking, thinking, thinking&mdash;his brain was very weary. Also he was
- physically weary and tired. But he was safe. Perhaps a few days of this
- damnable masquerade, but then it would be over.
- </p>
- <p>
- He began to turn the pages of the prayer-book&mdash;and then, with a
- whimsical shrug of his shoulders, he began to read. He must put the night
- in somehow, therefore why not put it in to advantage? To refresh his
- memory a little with the ritual would be a safeguard against those few
- days that he must still remain in St. Marleau&mdash;as Father François
- Aubert!
- </p>
- <p>
- He read for a little while, then got up and went to the bed to look at the
- white face upon it, to listen to the laboured breathing that stood between
- them both&mdash;and death. He could see no change. He returned to his
- chair, and resumed his reading.
- </p>
- <p>
- At intervals he did the same thing over again&mdash;only at last, instead
- of reading, he dozed in his chair. Finally, he slept&mdash;not heavily,
- but fitfully, lightly, a troubled sleep that came only through bodily
- exhaustion, and that was full of alarm and vague, haunting dreams.
- </p>
- <p>
- The night passed. The morning light began to find its way in through the
- edges of the drawn window shades. And suddenly Raymond sat upright in his
- chair. He had heard a step along the hall. The prayer-book had fallen to
- the floor. He picked it up. What was that noise&mdash;that low moaning
- from the bed? Not dead! The man wasn't dead yet! And&mdash;yes&mdash;it
- was daylight!
- </p>
- <p>
- The door opened. It was Valerie. How fresh her face was&mdash;fresh as the
- morning dew! What a contrast to the wan and haggard countenance he knew he
- raised to hers!
- </p>
- <p>
- And she paused in the doorway, and looked at him, and looked toward the
- bed, and back again to him, and the sweet face was beautiful with a
- woman's tenderness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, how good you are, Monsieur le Curé, and how tired you must be,&rdquo; she
- said.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER X&mdash;KYRIE ELEISON
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>T. MARLEAU was
- agog. St. Marleau was hysterical. St. Marleau was on tiptoe. It was in the
- throes of excitement, and the excitement was sustained by expectancy. It
- wagged its head in sapient prognostication of it did not quite know what;
- it shook its head in a sort of amazed wonder that such things should be
- happening in its own midst; and it nodded its head with a profound
- respect, not unmixed with veneration, for its young curé&mdash;the good,
- young Father Aubert, as St. Marleau, old and young, had taken to calling
- him, since it would not have been natural to have called him anything
- else.
- </p>
- <p>
- The good, young Father Aubert! Ah, yes&mdash;was he not to be loved and
- respected! Had he not, for three nights and two days now, sacrificed
- himself, until he had grown pale and wan, to watch like a mother at the
- bedside of the dying murderer, who did not die! It was very splendid of
- the young curé; for, though Madame Lafleur and her daughter beseeched him
- to take rest and to let them watch in his stead, he would not listen to
- them, saying that he was stronger than they and better able to stand it,
- and that, since it was he who had had the stranger brought to the <i>presbytère</i>,
- it was he who should see that no one else was put to any more
- inconvenience than could be avoided.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ah, yes,&mdash;it was most certainly the good, young Father Aubert! For,
- on the short walks he took for the fresh air, the very short walks, always
- hurrying back to the murderer's bedside, did he not still find time for a
- friendly and cheery word for every one he met? It was a habit, that, of
- his, which on the instant twined itself around the heart of St. Marleau,
- that where all were strangers to him, and in spite of his own anxiety and
- weariness, he should be so kindly interested in all the little details of
- each one's life, as though they were indeed a part of his own. How could
- one help but love the young curé who stopped one on the village street,
- and, man, woman or child, laid his hand in frank and gentle fashion upon
- one's shoulder, and asked one's name, and where one lived, and about one's
- family, and for the welfare of those who were dear to one? And did not
- both Madame Lafleur and her daughter speak constantly of how devout he
- was, that he was never without a prayer-book in his hand? Ah, indeed, it
- was the good, young Father Aubert!
- </p>
- <p>
- But this in no whit allayed the hysteria, the excitement and the
- expectancy under which St. Marleau laboured. A murder in St. Marleau! That
- alone was something that the countryside would talk about for years to
- come. And it was not only the murder; it was&mdash;what was to happen
- next! It was Mother Blondin's son who had been murdered by the stranger,
- and Mother Blondin, though not under arrest, was being watched by the
- police, who waited for the man in the <i>presbytère</i> to die. It was
- Mother Blondin who had struck the murderer, and if the murderer died then
- she would be responsible for the man's death. What, then, would they do
- with Mother Blondin?
- </p>
- <p>
- St. Marleau, not being well versed in the law, did not know; it knew only
- that the assistant chief of the Tournayville police had installed himself
- in the Tavern where he could see that Mother Blondin did not run away,
- since the man at the <i>presbytère</i> did not need any police watching,
- and that this assistant chief of the Tournayville police was as dumb as an
- oyster, and looked only very wise, like one who has great secrets locked
- in his bosom, when questions were put to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, another thing&mdash;the funeral of Théophile Blondin. It was
- only this morning&mdash;the third morning after the murder&mdash;that that
- had been decided. Mother Blondin had raved and cursed and sworn that she
- would not let the body of her son enter the church. But Mother Blondin was
- not, perhaps, as much heretic as she wanted, or pretended, to be. Mother
- Blondin, perhaps, could not escape the faith of the years when she was
- young; and, while she scoffed and blasphemed, in her soul God was stronger
- than she, and she was afraid to stand between her dead son and the rites
- of Holy Church in which, through her own wickedness, she could not longer
- participate. But, however that might be, the people of St. Marleau, that
- is those who were good Christians and had respect for themselves, were
- concerned little with such as Mother Blondin, or, for that matter, with
- her son&mdash;but the funeral of a man who had been murdered right in
- their midst, and that was now to take place! Ah, that was quite another
- matter!
- </p>
- <p>
- And so St. Marleau gathered in a sort of breathless unanimity that morning
- to the tolling of the bell, as the funeral procession of Théophile Blondin
- began to wend its way down the hill&mdash;and within the sacred precincts
- of the church the villagers, as best they might, hushed their excitement
- in solemn and decorous silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- And at the church door, in surplice and stole, the altar boy beside him,
- as the cortège approached, stood Raymond Chapelle&mdash;the good, young
- Father Aubert.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was very pale; the dark eyes were sunk deep in their sockets from three
- sleepless nights, and from the torment of constant suspense, where each
- moment in the countless hours had been pregnant with the threat of
- discovery, where each second had swung like some horrible pendulum
- hesitating between safety&mdash;and the gallows. He could not escape this
- sacrilege that he was about to commit. There was no escape from it. They
- had thought it strange, perhaps, that he had not said mass on those two
- mornings that were gone. It was customary; but he knew, too, that it was
- not absolutely obligatory&mdash;and so, through one excuse and another, he
- had evaded it. And even if it had been obligatory, he would still have had
- to find some way out, to have taken the law temporarily, as it were, into
- his own hands&mdash;for he would not have dared to celebrate the mass.
- Dared? Because of the sacrilege, the meddling with sacred things? Ah, no!
- What was his creed&mdash;that he feared neither God nor devil, nor man nor
- beast! What was that toast he had drunk that night in Ton-Nugget Camp&mdash;he,
- and Three-Ace Artie, and Arthur Leroy, and Raymond Chapelle! No; it was
- not <i>that</i> he feared&mdash;it was this sharp-eyed altar boy, this lad
- of twelve, who at the mass would be always at his elbow. But he was no
- longer afraid of the boy, for now he was ready. He had realised that he
- could not escape performing some of the offices of a priest, no matter
- what happened to that cursed fool lying over yonder there in the <i>presbytère</i>
- upon the bed, who seemed to get better rather than worse, and so&mdash;he
- had overheard Madame Lafleur confide it to the doctor&mdash;he had been of
- a devoutness rarely seen. Through the nights and through the days, spurred
- on by a sharper, sterner prod than his father's gold in the old school
- days had been, he had poured and studied over the ritual and the
- theological books that he had found in the priest's trunk, until now,
- committing to memory like a parrot, he was thoroughly master of anything
- that might arise&mdash;especially this burial of Théophile Blondin which
- he had foreseen was not likely to be avoided, in spite of the attitude of
- that miserable old hag, the mother.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's head was slightly bowed, his eyes lowered&mdash;but his eyes,
- nevertheless, were allowing nothing to escape them. They were extremely
- clumsy, and infernally slow out there in bringing the casket into the
- church! He would see to it that things moved with more despatch presently!
- There was another reason why he had not dared to act as a priest in the
- church before&mdash;that man over there in the <i>presbytère</i> upon the
- bed. He had, on that first morning, not dared to leave the other, and it
- had been the same yesterday morning. True, to avert suspicion, he had gone
- out sometimes, but never far, never out of call of the <i>presbytère</i>&mdash;which
- was a very different matter from being caught in the midst of a service
- where his hands would have been tied and he could not have instantly
- returned. It was strange, very strange about the wounded priest, who,
- instead of dying, appeared to be stronger, though he lay in a sort of
- comatose condition&mdash;and now the doctor even held out hopes of the
- man's recovery! Suppose&mdash;suppose the priest should regain
- consciousness now, at this moment, while he was in the act of conducting
- the funeral, in the other's stead, over the body of the man for whose
- murder, in <i>his</i>, Raymond's, stead, the other was held guilty! He was
- juggling with ghastly dice! But he could not have escaped this&mdash;there
- was no way to avoid this funeral of the son of that old hag who had run
- screaming, &ldquo;murder&mdash;murder&mdash;murder,&rdquo; into the storm that night.
- </p>
- <p>
- He raised his head. It was the gambler now, steel-nerved, accepting the
- chances against him, to all outward appearances impassive, who stood there
- in the garb of priest. He was cool, possessed, sure of himself, cynical of
- all things holy, disdainful of all things spiritual, contemptuous of these
- villagers around him that he fooled&mdash;as he would have been
- contemptuous of himself to have hesitated at the plunge, desperate though
- it was, that was his one and only chance for liberty and life.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ha! At last&mdash;eh? They had brought Théophile Blondin to the door!
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond's voice, rich, full-toned, stilled that queer, subdued,
- composite sound of breathings, of the rustle of garments, of slight,
- involuntary movements&mdash;of St. Marleau crowded in the pews in
- strained, tense waiting.
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>&ldquo;'Si iniquitates observaveris, Domine; Domine quis sustinebit?</i>&mdash;If
- Thou, O Lord, wilt mark iniquities; Lord, who shall abide it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was curious that the service should begin like that, curious that he
- had not before found any meaning or significance in the words. He had
- learned them like a parrot. &ldquo;If Thou, O Lord, wilt mark iniquities....&rdquo; He
- bowed his head to hide the tightening of his lips. Bah, what was this!
- Some inner consciousness inanely attempting to suggest that there was not
- only significance in the words, but that the significance was personal,
- that the very words from his lips, performing the office of priest,
- desecrating God's holy place, was iniquity, black, blasphemous and
- abhorrent in God's sight&mdash;if there were a God!
- </p>
- <p>
- Ah, that was it&mdash;if there were a God! He was reciting now the <i>De
- Profundis</i> in a purely mechanical way. &ldquo;Out of the depths....&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- If there were a God&mdash;yes, that was it! He had never believed there
- was, had he? He did not believe it now&mdash;but he would make one
- concession. What he was doing was not in intent blasphemous, neither was
- it to mock&mdash;it was to save his life. He was a man with a halter
- strangling around his neck. And if there was a God, who then had brought
- all this about? Who then was responsible, and who then should accept the
- consequences? Not he! He had not sought from choice to play the part of
- priest! He had not sought the life of this dead man in the coffin there in
- front of him! He had not sought to&mdash;yes, curse it, it was the word to
- use&mdash;kill the drunken, besotted, worthless fool!
- </p>
- <p>
- A cold anger came, steadying his nerves. It was too bad that in some way
- he could not wreck a vengeance on the corpse for all this&mdash;the
- miserable, rum-steeped hound who had got him into this hellish fix.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were bearing the body into the church toward the head of the nave. He
- was at the <i>Subvenite</i> now. &ldquo;'...Kyrie eleison.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The boyish treble, hushed yet clear, of young Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar
- boy, rose from beside him in the responses:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Christe eleison&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lord, have mercy.... From the gate of hell,&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Deliver his soul, O Lord.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again! That sense of solemnity, that personal implication in the words! It
- was coincidence, nothing more. No; it was not even that! He was simply
- twisting the meaning, allowing himself to be played with by a warped
- imagination. He was not a weak fool, was he, to let this get the better of
- him? And, besides, he would hurry through with it, and since he would say
- neither office nor mass it would not take long. It must be hot this summer
- morning, though he had not noticed it particularly when he had left the <i>presbytère</i>.
- The church seemed heavy and oppressive. Strange how the pews were all
- lined with eyes staring at him!
- </p>
- <p>
- The tread of feet up the aisle died away. The bier was set at the head of
- the nave, and lighted candles placed around it. There fell a silence,
- utter and profound.
- </p>
- <p>
- Why was it now that his lips scarcely moved, that his voice was scarcely
- audible; why that sudden foreboding, intangible yet present everywhere, at
- his temerity, at his unhallowed, hideous perversion of sanctity in that he
- should pray as a priest of God, in the habiliments of one of God's
- ministers, in God's church&mdash;ay, it was a devil's masquerade, for he,
- if never before, stood branded now, sealing that blasphemous toast, a
- disciple of hell.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'<i>Non intres in judicium cum servo tuo, Domine</i>....' Enter not into
- judgment with Thy servant, O Lord....&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And so he denied God, did he? And so he was callous and indifferent, and
- scoffed at the possibility of a church, simply because it was a church,
- being the abiding place of a higher, holier, omnipotent presence? Why,
- then, that hoarseness in his throat&mdash;why, then, did he not shout his
- parrot words high to the vaulted roof in triumphant defiance? Why that
- struggle with his will to finish the prayer?
- </p>
- <p>
- From the little organ loft in the gallery over the door, floated now the
- notes of the <i>Responsory</i>, and the voices of the choir rolled
- solemnly through the church:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'<i>Libera me, Domine, de morte æterna....</i>' Deliver me, O Lord, from
- eternal death....&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Death! Eternal death! What was death? There was a dead man there in the
- casket&mdash;dead because he and the man had fought together, and the
- other had been killed. And he was burying, in a church, as a priest, he,
- who was the one upon whom the law would set its claws if it but knew, the
- man that he had killed! It came suddenly, with terrific force, blotting
- out those wavering candle flames around the coffin, the scene of that
- night. The wind was howling; that white-scarred face was cheek to cheek
- with him; they lunged and staggered around that dimly lighted room, he and
- the man who lay dead there in the coffin. They struggled for the revolver;
- that old hag circled about them like a swirling hawk&mdash;that blinding
- flash&mdash;the acrid smell of powder&mdash;the room revolving around and
- around&mdash;and the dead man, who was here in the coffin now, had lain
- sprawled out there on the floor. He shivered&mdash;and cursed himself
- fiercely the next instant&mdash;it seemed as though the casket suddenly
- opened, and that ugly, venomous, scarred face lifted up and leered at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'<i>Dies ilia, dies iræ...,''</i>&rdquo; came the voices of the choir. &ldquo;That
- day, a day of wrath....&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His jaws clenched. He pulled himself together. That was Valerie up there
- playing the little organ; Valerie with the great, dark eyes, and the
- beautiful face; Valerie, who thought it so unselfish of him because he had
- had a couch made up in the room in order that he might not leave the
- wounded man. The wounded man! Following the order of the service, Raymond
- was putting incense into the censer while the <i>Responsory</i> was being
- sung, and his fingers gripped hard upon the vessel. Again that thought to
- torture and torment him! Had he not enough to do to go through with this!
- Who was with the wounded man now? That officious, nosing fool, who preened
- himself on the strength of being assistant-chief of police of some pitiful
- little town that no one outside of its immediate vicinity had ever heard
- of before? Or was it Madame Lafleur? But what, after all, did it matter
- who was there&mdash;if the man should happen to regain his senses? Ha, ha!
- Would it not be a delectable sight if that police officer should arrest
- him, strip these priestly trappings from him just as he left the church!
- It would be quite a dramatic scene, would it not&mdash;quite too damnably
- dramatic! He was swinging with that infernal pendulum between liberty and
- death. He was, at that moment, if ever a man was, or had been, the sport
- of fate. He had not liked the looks of the wounded priest half an hour ago
- when he had left the <i>presbytère</i> for the sacristy&mdash;it had
- seemed as though the man were beginning to look <i>healthy.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'<i>Kyrie eleison....'</i>&rdquo; The <i>Responsory</i> was over. In a purely
- mechanical way again he was proceeding with the service. As the ritual
- prescribed, he passed round the bier with sprinkler and censer&mdash;and
- presently he found himself reciting the last prayer of that part of the
- service held within the church; and then the bier was being lifted and
- borne down the aisle again.
- </p>
- <p>
- Out into the sunlight, to the smell of the fields, to the breeze from the
- river wafting upon his cheek! He drew in a deep breath&mdash;and almost at
- the same instant passed his hand heavily across his eyes. He had thought
- that stifling heat, that overwhelming oppressiveness all in the atmosphere
- of the church; but here was the sunlight, and here the fields, and here
- the soft breeze blowing from the water&mdash;yet that sense of foreboding,
- a prescience, a weight upon him that sank deep to the soul, remained with
- him still.
- </p>
- <p>
- Slowly the procession passed around the green in front of the church, and
- through the gate of the whitewashed fence into the little burial ground
- beyond on the river's bank. They were chanting <i>In Paradisum</i>, but
- Valerie was no longer with the choir, for now, as they passed through the
- gate, he saw her, a slim figure all in white, hurry across the green
- toward the <i>presbytère.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- What was this before him! It was not the smell of fields, but the smell of
- freshly turned earth&mdash;a grave. The grave of Théophile Blondin, the
- man whom he had fought with&mdash;and killed. And he was a priest of God,
- burying Théophile Blondin. What ghastly, hellish travesty! What were those
- words returning to his memory, coming to him out of the dim past when he
- was still a boy, and still susceptible to the teachings of the fathers who
- had sought to guide him into the church&mdash;God is not mocked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;God is not mocked! God is not mocked!&rdquo;&mdash;the words seemed to echo and
- reverberate around him, they seemed to be thundered in a voice of
- vengeance. &ldquo;God is not mocked!&rdquo;&mdash;and he was <i>blessing</i> the grave
- of Théophile Blondir!
- </p>
- <p>
- Did these people, gathered, clustered about him, not hear that voice! Why
- did they not hear it? It was not the <i>Benedictus</i> that was being sung
- that prevented them from hearing it, for he could scarcely hear the <i>Benedictus.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's lips moved. &ldquo;I am not mocking God,&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;I do not
- believe in God, but I am not mocking. I am asking only for my life. I am
- taking only the one chance I have. I did not intend to kill the fool&mdash;he
- killed himself. I am no murderer. I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He shivered suddenly
- again, as once in the church he had shivered before. His hands
- outstretched seemed to be creeping again toward a bare throat that lay
- exposed upon a bed, the feel of soft, pulsing flesh seemed upon his finger
- tips. And then a diabolical chortle seemed to rattle in his ears. So
- murder was quite foreign to him, eh? And he did not believe in God? And he
- was quite above and apart from all such nonsense? And therein, of course,
- lay the reason why the tumbling of this dead thing into a grave left him
- so cool and imperturbable; and why the solemn words of the service had no
- meaning; and why it was a matter of supreme unconcern to him, provided he
- was not caught at it, that he took God's words upon his lips, and God's
- garb upon his shoulders!
- </p>
- <p>
- White-faced, Raymond lifted his head. The <i>Benedictus</i> was ended, and
- now the words came slowly from his lips in a strange, awed, almost
- wondering way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>'Requiem oternam.... Ego sum resurrectio et vita....'</i> I am the
- Resurrection and the Life: he that believeth in Me, although he be dead,
- shall live: and every one who liveth, and believeth in Me, shall never
- die.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His voice faltered a little, steadied by a tremendous effort of will, and
- went on again, low-toned, through the responses and short prayer that
- closed the service. &ldquo;'<i>Kyrie eleison'...</i> not into temptation.... '<i>Requiem
- oternam</i>.'... '<i>Requiescat in pace'...</i> through the mercy of
- God.... 'Amen.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Forgotten for the moment was that grim pendulum that hovered over the bed
- in the <i>presbytère</i> yonder, and by the side of the grave Raymond
- stood and looked down on the coffin of Théophile Blondin. The people began
- to disperse, but he was scarcely conscious of it. It seemed that he had
- run the gamut of every human emotion since he had met the funeral
- procession at the church door; but here was another now&mdash;an
- incomprehensible, quiet, chastened, questioning mood. They were very
- beautiful words, these, that he was repeating to himself. He did not
- believe them, but they were very beautiful, and to one who did believe
- they must offer more than all of life could hold.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I am the resurrection and the life... he that be-lieveth in Me... shall
- never die.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was another gateway in the little whitewashed fence, a smaller one
- that gave on the sacristy at the side and toward the rear of the church.
- Slowly, head bowed, absorbed, unconscious of the rôle he played so well,
- Raymond walked toward the gate, and through it, and, raising his head,
- paused. A shrivelled and dishevelled form crouched there against the
- palings. It was old Mother Blondin.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond stared&mdash;and suddenly a wave of immeasurable pity,
- mingling a miserable sense of distress, swept upon him. In there was
- forbidden ground to her; and in there was her son&mdash;killed in a fight
- with him. She had come around here to the side, unobserved, unless Dupont
- were lurking somewhere about, to be as near at the last as she could. An
- old hag, wretched, dissolute&mdash;but human above all things else,
- huddling before the dying embers of mother-love. She did not look up; her
- forehead was pressed close against the fence as she peered inside; a
- withered, dirty hand clutched fiercely at a paling on each side of her
- face.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond stepped toward her, and spontaneously laid his hand upon her
- shoulder. And strange words were on his lips, but they were sincere words
- out of a heart torn and troubled and dismayed, out of a soul that had
- recoiled as before some tremendous cataclysm. And his words were the words
- he had been repeating over and over to himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I am the resurrection and the life...' My poor, poor woman, let me help
- you. See, you must not mourn that way alone. Come, let me take you back to
- your home&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She rose to her feet, and looked at him, and for an instant the hard, set,
- wrinkled face seemed to soften, and into the blear eyes seemed to spring a
- mist of tears&mdash;then her face contorted into livid fury, and she
- struck at his hand, flinging it from her shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You go to hell!&rdquo; she snarled. &ldquo;You, and all like you, you go to hell!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was gone&mdash;shuffling around the corner of the church.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond laughed a little. It was like a dash of cold water in the
- face. He had been a fool&mdash;a fool all morning, a fool to let mere
- words, mere environment have any influence upon him, a fool to
- sentimentality in talking to her like that, mawkish to have used the
- words! He would have said what she had said to any one else, if he had
- been in her place&mdash;only more bitterly, more virulently, if that were
- possible.
- </p>
- <p>
- He shrugged his shoulders, and moved on toward the sacristy to divest
- himself of his surplice and stole&mdash;and again he paused, this time in
- the doorway, and turned around, as a voice cried out his name.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father Aubert!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Valérie, running swiftly toward him from the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond stood still and waited. Intuitively he knew. Something had
- happened in the <i>presbytère</i> at last. He was the gambler again, cool,
- imperturbable, steel-nerved, with the actual crisis upon him. It was the
- turn of the card, the throw of the dice, that was all. Was it life&mdash;or
- death? It was Valérie who was to pronounce the sentence. She reached him,
- breathless, flushed. He smiled at her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé&mdash;Father Aubert,&rdquo; she panted, &ldquo;come quickly! He can
- speak! He has regained consciousness!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XI&mdash;&ldquo;HENRI MENTONE&rdquo;
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">V</span>ALERIE'S flushed
- face was lifted eagerly to his. She had caught impetuously at the sleeve
- of his <i>soutane</i>, and was urging him forward. And yet he was walking
- with deliberate measured tread across the green toward the <i>presbytère</i>.
- Strange how the blood seemed to be hammering feverishly at his temples!
- Every impulse prompted him to run, as a man running for his life, to reach
- the <i>presbytère</i>, to reach that room, to shut the door upon himself
- and that man whose return to consciousness meant&mdash;what? But it was
- too late to run now. Too late! Already the news seemed to have spread.
- Those who had been the last to linger at the grave of Théophile Blondin
- were gathering, on their way out from the little burying ground, around
- the door of the <i>presbytère</i>. It would appear bizarre, perhaps, that
- the curé should come tearing across the green with vestments flying simply
- because a man had regained consciousness! Ha, ha! Yes, very bizarre! Why
- should their curé run like one demented just because a man had regained
- consciousness! If the man were at his last gasp now, were just about to
- die&mdash;that would be different! He found a bitter mirth in that. Yes,
- decidedly, they would understand that! But as it was, they would think
- their curé had gone suddenly mad, perhaps, or they would think, perhaps&mdash;something
- else.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dice were thrown, the card was turned&mdash;against him. His luck was
- out. It was like walking tamely to where the noose dangled and awaited his
- neck to walk toward those gaping people clustered around the door, to walk
- into the <i>presbytère</i>. But it was his only chance. Yes, there was a
- chance&mdash;one chance left. If he could hold out until evening, until
- darkness!
- </p>
- <p>
- Until evening, until darkness&mdash;with the night before him in which to
- attempt his escape! But there were still eight hours or more to evening.
- There were only a few more steps to go before he reached the <i>presbytère</i>.
- The distance was pitifully short. In those few steps he must plan
- everything; plan that that accursed noose swaying before his eyes should&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Dies illa, dies iræ</i>&mdash;that day, a day of wrath.&rdquo; What brought
- those words flashing through his mind! He had said them once that morning&mdash;but
- a little while ago&mdash;in church&mdash;as a priest&mdash;at Théophile
- Blondin's funeral. Damn it, they were not meant for him! They did not mean
- to-day. They were not premonitory. He was not beaten yet!
- </p>
- <p>
- In the shed behind the <i>presbytère</i> there was a pair of the old
- sacristan's overalls, and an old coat, and an old hat. He had noticed them
- yesterday. They would serve his purpose&mdash;a man in a pair of overalls
- and a dirty, torn coat would not look much like a priest. Yes, yes; that
- would do, it was the way&mdash;when night came. He would have the
- darkness, and he would hide the next day, and the day after, and travel
- only by night. It invited pursuit of course, the one thing that next to
- capture itself he had struggled and plotted to avoid, but it was the only
- chance now, and, if luck turned again, he might succeed in making his way
- out of the country&mdash;when night came.
- </p>
- <p>
- But until then! What until then? That was where his danger lay now&mdash;in
- those hours until darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; whispered Raymond fiercely to himself. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;if only you keep
- your head!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What was the matter with him? Had he forgotten! It was what he had been
- prepared to face that night when he had brought the priest to the <i>presbytère</i>,
- should the man then have recovered sufficiently to speak. It should be
- still easier now to make any one believe that the man was wandering in his
- mind, was not yet lucid or coherent after so long a lapse from
- consciousness. And the very story that the man would tell must sound like
- the ravings of a still disordered mind! He, Raymond, would insist that the
- man be kept very quiet during the day; he, Raymond, would stay beside the
- other's bed. Was he not the curé! Would they not obey him, show deference
- to his judgment and his wishes&mdash;until night came!
- </p>
- <p>
- They were close to the <i>presbytère</i> now, close to the little gaping
- crowd that surrounded the door; and, as though conscious for the first
- time that she was clinging to his arm, Valérie, in sudden embarrassment at
- her own eagerness, hurriedly dropped her hand to her side. And, at the
- act, Raymond looked at her quickly, in an almost startled way. Strange!
- But then his brain was in turmoil! Strange that extraneous things, things
- that had nothing to do with the one grim purpose of saving his neck should
- even for an instant assert themselves! But then they&mdash;no, she&mdash;had
- done that before. He remembered now... when they were putting on that
- bandage.
- </p>
- <p>
- When that crucifix had tangled up his hands, and she had seemed to stand
- before him to save him from himself... those dark eyes, that pure, sweet
- face, the tender, womanly sympathy&mdash;the antithesis of himself! And
- to-night, when night came, when the night he longed for came, when the
- night that meant his only chance for life came, he&mdash;what was this!&mdash;this
- sudden pang of yearning that ignored, with a most curious authority, as
- though it had the right to ignore, the desperate, almost hopeless peril
- that was closing down upon him, that seemed to make the coming of the
- night now a thing he would put off, a thing to regret and to dread, that
- bade him search for some other way, some other plan that would not
- necessitate&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A fool and a pretty face!&rdquo;&mdash;it was the gibe and sneer and prod of
- that inward monitor. &ldquo;See all these people who are so reverently making
- way for you, and eying you with affection and simple humility, see the
- rest of them coming back from all directions because the <i>murderer</i>
- is about to tell his story&mdash;well, see how they will make way for you,
- and with what affection and humility they will eye you when you come out
- of that house again, if all the wits the devil ever gave you are not about
- you now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He spoke to her quietly, controlling his voice:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have not told me yet what he said, mademoiselle?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He did not say much&mdash;only to ask where he was and for a drink of
- water.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had no time to ask more. They had reached the group before the <i>presbytère</i>
- now, and the buzz of conversation, the eager, excited exchange of
- questions and answers was hushed, as, with one accord, men and women made
- way for their curé. And Raymond, lifting his hand in a kindly, yet
- authoritative gesture, cautioning patience and order, mounted the steps of
- the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, inside the doorway, Raymond quickened his step. From the closed
- door at the end of the short hallway came the low murmur of voices. It was
- Madame Lafleur probably who was there with the other now. How much, how
- little had the man said&mdash;since Valérie had left the room? Raymond's
- lips tightened grimly. It was fortunate that Madame Lafleur had so great a
- respect for the cloth! He had nothing to fear from her. He could make her
- believe anything. He could twist her around his finger, and&mdash;he
- opened the door softly&mdash;and stood, as though turned suddenly rigid,
- incapable of movement, upon the threshold&mdash;and his hand upon the
- doorknob closed tighter and tighter in a vise-like grip. Across the room
- stood, not Madame Lafleur, but Monsieur Dupont, the assistant chief of the
- Tournayville police, and in Monsieur Dupont's hand was a notebook, and
- upon Monsieur Dupont's lips, as he turned and glanced quickly toward the
- door, there played an enigmatical smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah! It is Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; observed Monsieur Dupont smoothly. &ldquo;Well,
- come in, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;come in, and shut the door. I promise you,
- you will find it interesting. What? Yes, very interesting!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur Dupont is here!&rdquo;&mdash;the words seemed to come to Raymond
- as from some great distance behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned. It was Valérie. Of course, it was Valérie! He had forgotten.
- She had naturally followed him along the hall to the door. What did this
- Dupont mean by what he had said? What had Dupont already learned&mdash;that
- was so <i>interesting!</i> It would not do to have Valérie here, if&mdash;if
- he and Dupont&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps, Mademoiselle Valérie,&rdquo; he said gravely, &ldquo;it would be as well if
- you did not come in. Monsieur Dupont appears to be officially engaged.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, of course!&rdquo; she agreed readily. &ldquo;I did not know that any one was
- here. I left the man alone when I ran out to find you. I will come back
- when Monsieur Dupont has gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond smiled, and stepped inside the room, and closed the door, and
- leaned with his back against it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Dupont tapped with his pencil on
- the notebook&mdash;&ldquo;I have it all down here. All! Everything that he has
- said.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond had not even glanced toward the bed&mdash;his eyes, cool, steady
- now, were on the officer, watching the other like a hawk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; he prompted calmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Dupont made that infernal clucking noise with his
- tongue&mdash;&ldquo;I have&mdash;nothing! Did I not tell you it was interesting?
- Yes, very interesting! Very!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Was the man playing with him? How clever was this Dupont? No fool, at any
- rate! He had already shown that, in spite of his absurd mannerisms.
- Raymond's hand began to toy with the crucifix on his breast, while his
- fingers surreptitiously loosened several buttons of his <i>soutane</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing?&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's eyebrows were raised in mild surprise. &ldquo;But
- Mademoiselle Valérie told me he had regained consciousness.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Monsieur Dupont, &ldquo;I heard her say so to some one as she left
- the house. I was keeping an eye on that <i>vieille sauvage</i>, Mother
- Blondin. But this&mdash;ah! Quite a more significant matter! Yes&mdash;quite!
- You will understand, Monsieur le Curé, that I lost no time in reaching
- here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And now for the first time Raymond looked swiftly toward the bed. It was
- only for the barest fraction of a second that he permitted his eyes to
- leave the police officer; but in that glance he had met coal black eyes,
- all pupils they seemed, fixed in a sort of intense penetration upon him.
- The man was still lying on his back, he had noticed that&mdash;but it was
- the eyes, disconcerting, full of something he could not define, boring
- into him, that dominated all else. He stepped nonchalantly toward Monsieur
- Dupont.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is astonishing that he has said nothing,&rdquo; he murmured softly. &ldquo;Will
- you permit me, Monsieur Dupont&rdquo;&mdash;he held out his hand&mdash;&ldquo;to see
- your book?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The book? H'm! Well, why not?&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont shrugged his shoulders as
- he placed the notebook in Raymond's hand. &ldquo;It is not customary&mdash;but,
- why not!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then upon Raymond came relief. It surged upon him until he could have
- laughed out hysterically, laughed like a fool in this Monsieur Dupont's
- face&mdash;this Monsieur Dupont who was the assistant chief of the police
- force of Tournayville. It was true! Dupont had at least told the truth. So
- far Dupont had learned nothing. Raymond's face was impassive as he
- scrutinised the page before him. Written with a flourish on the upper
- line, presumably to serve as a caption, were the words:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The Murderer, Henri Mentone,&rdquo; and beneath: &ldquo;Evades direct answers.
- Hardened type&mdash;knows his way about. Pretends ignorance. Stubborn.
- Wily rascal&mdash;yes, very!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond handed the notebook back to Monsieur Dupont.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is perhaps not so strange after all, Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; he remarked
- with a thoughtful air. &ldquo;We must not forget that the poor fellow has but
- just recovered consciousness. He is hardly likely to be either lucid or
- rational.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bah!&rdquo; ejaculated Monsieur Dupont grimly. &ldquo;He is as lucid as I am. But I
- am not through with him yet! He is not the first of his kind I have had
- upon my hook!&rdquo; He leaned toward the bed. &ldquo;Now, then, my little Apache, you
- will answer my questions! Do you understand? No more evasions! None at
- all! They will do you no good, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's hand fell upon Monsieur Dupont's shoulder. Though he had not
- looked again until now, he was conscious that those eyes from the bed had
- never for an instant swerved from his face. Now he met them steadily. He
- addressed Monsieur Dupont, but he spoke to the man on the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you warned him, Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; he said soberly, &ldquo;that anything he
- says will be used against him? And have you told him that he is not
- obliged to answer? He is weak yet and at a disadvantage. He would be quite
- justified in waiting until he was stronger, and entirely competent to
- weigh his own words.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont was possessed of an inconsistency all his own.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tonnerre!</i>&rdquo; he snapped. &ldquo;And what is the use of warning him when he
- will not answer at all?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You appear not quite to have given up hope!&rdquo; observed Raymond dryly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;H'm!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont scowled. &ldquo;Very well, then&rdquo;&mdash;he leaned once
- more over the bed, and addressed the man&mdash;&ldquo;you understand? It is as
- Monsieur le Curé says. I warn you. You are not obliged to answer. Now then&mdash;your
- name, your age, your birthplace?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond shifted his position to the foot of the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Damn those eyes! Move where he would, they never left his face. The man
- had paid no attention to Monsieur Dupont. Why, in God's name, why did the
- man keep on staring and gazing so fixedly at him&mdash;and why had the man
- refused to answer Dupont's questions&mdash;and why had not the man with
- his first words poured out his story eagerly!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well!&rdquo; prodded Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Did you not hear&mdash;eh? Your
- name?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man's eyes followed Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where am I?&rdquo; he asked faintly.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was too querulous, that tone, too genuinely weak and peevish to smack
- of trickery&mdash;and suddenly upon Raymond there came again that nervous
- impulse to laugh out aloud. So that was the secret of it, was it? There
- was a sort of sardonic humour then in the situation! The suggestion, the
- belief he had planned to convey to shield himself&mdash;that the man was
- still irrational&mdash;was, in fact, the truth! But how long would that
- condition last? He must put an end to this&mdash;get this cursed Dupont
- away!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where am I?&rdquo; muttered the man again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens!</i>&rdquo; clucked Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;You see, Monsieur le Curé! You
- see? Yes, you see. He plays the game well&mdash;with finesse, eh?&rdquo; He
- turned to the man. &ldquo;Where are you, eh? Well, you are better off where you
- are now than where you will be in a few days! I promise you that! Now,
- again&mdash;your name?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; said Raymond, a little severely. &ldquo;You will arrive at
- nothing like this. The man is not himself. To-morrow he will be stronger.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bah! Nonsense! Stronger!&rdquo; jerked out Monsieur Dupont derisively. &ldquo;Our fox
- is quite strong enough! Monsieur le Curé, you are not a police officer&mdash;do
- not let your pity deceive you. And permit me to continue!&rdquo; He slipped his
- hand into his pocket, and adroitly flashed a visiting card suddenly before
- the man's eyes. &ldquo;Well, since you cannot recall your name, this will
- perhaps be of assistance! You see, Monsieur Henri Mentone, that you get
- yourself nowhere by refusing to answer!&rdquo; Once more the man shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont complacently returned the card to his pocket. &ldquo;Now
- we will continue. You see now where you stand. Your age?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the man shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He does not know!&rdquo; remarked Monsieur Dupont caustically. &ldquo;Very convenient
- memory! Yes&mdash;very! Well, will you tell us where you came from?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For the fourth time the man shook his head&mdash;and at that instant
- Raymond edged close to Monsieur Dupont's side. What was that in those eyes
- now&mdash;that something that was creeping into them&mdash;that <i>dawning</i>
- light, as they searched his face!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He does not know that, either!&rdquo; complained Monsieur Dupont sarcastically.
- &ldquo;Magnificent! Yes&mdash;very! He knows nothing at all! He&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a low cry, the man struggled to his elbow, propping himself up in
- bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I know!&rdquo;&mdash;his voice, high-pitched, rang through the room. &ldquo;I
- know now!&rdquo; He raised his hand and pointed at Raymond. &ldquo;<i>I know you!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's hand was thrust into the breast of his <i>soutane</i>, where he
- had unbuttoned it beneath the crucifix&mdash;and Raymond's fingers closed
- upon the stock of an automatic in his upper left-hand vest pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor fellow!&rdquo; murmured Raymond pityingly. &ldquo;You see, Monsieur Dupont&rdquo;&mdash;he
- moved still a little closer&mdash;&ldquo;you have gone too far. You have excited
- him. He is incoherent. He does not know what he is saying.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont was clucking with his tongue, as he eyed the man
- speculatively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, yes; I know you now!&rdquo; cried the man again. &ldquo;Oh, monsieur, monsieur!&rdquo;&mdash;both
- hands were suddenly thrust out to Raymond, and there was a smile on the
- trembling lips, an eager flush dyeing the pale cheeks. &ldquo;It is you,
- monsieur! I have been very sick, have I not? It&mdash;it was like a dream.
- I&mdash;I was trying to remember&mdash;your face. It is your face that I
- have seen so often bending over me. Was that not it, monsieur&mdash;monsieur,
- you who have been so good&mdash;was that not it? You would lift me upon my
- pillow, and give me something cool to drink. And was it not you, monsieur,
- who sat there in that chair for long, long hours? It seems as though I saw
- you there always&mdash;many, many times.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was like a shock, a revulsion so strong that for the moment it unnerved
- him. Raymond scarcely heard his own voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said&mdash;his forehead was damp, as he brushed his hand across
- it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont blew out his cheeks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Nom d'un nom!</i>&rdquo; he exploded. &ldquo;Ah, your pardon, Monsieur le Curé!
- But it is mild, a very mild oath, is it not&mdash;under the circumstances?
- Yes&mdash;very! I admire cleverness&mdash;yes, I do! The man has a head!
- What an appeal to the emotions! Poignant! Yes, that's the word&mdash;poignant.
- Looking for sympathy! Trying to make an ally of you, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get rid of the fool! Get rid of the fool!&rdquo; prompted that inward monitor
- impatiently.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond, with a significant look, plucked at Monsieur Dupont's sleeve, and
- led the other across the room away from the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think so?&rdquo; he asked, in a lowered voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Eh?&rdquo; inquired Monsieur blankly. &ldquo;Think what?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What you just said&mdash;that he is trying to make an ally of me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, that&mdash;<i>zut!</i>&rdquo; sniffed Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;But what else?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then suppose&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond dropped his voice still lower&mdash;&ldquo;then
- suppose you leave him with me until tomorrow. And meanwhile&mdash;you
- understand?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont pondered the suggestion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, very well&mdash;why not?&rdquo; decided Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Perhaps not a
- bad idea&mdash;perhaps not. And if it does not succeed&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur
- Dupont shrugged his shoulders&mdash;&ldquo;well, we know everything anyhow; and
- I will make him pay through the nose for his tricks! But he is under
- arrest, Monsieur le Curé, you understand that? There is a cell in the jail
- at Tournayville that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Naturally&mdash;when he is able to be moved,&rdquo; agreed Raymond readily. &ldquo;We
- will speak to the doctor about that. In the meantime he probably could not
- walk across this room. He is quite safe here. I will be responsible for
- him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I will put a flea in the doctor's ear!&rdquo; announced Monsieur Dupont,
- moving toward the door. &ldquo;The assizes are next week, and after the assizes,
- say, another six weeks and&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Dupont's tongue clucked
- eloquently several times against the roof of his mouth. &ldquo;We will not keep
- him waiting long!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont opened the door, and, standing on the
- threshold where he was hidden from the bed, laid his forefinger along the
- side of his nose. &ldquo;You are wrong, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;he had raised
- his voice to carry through the room. &ldquo;But still you may be right! You are
- too softhearted; yes, that is it&mdash;soft-hearted. Well, he has you to
- thank for it. I would not otherwise consider it&mdash;it is against my
- best judgment. I bid you good-bye, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond closed the door&mdash;but it was a moment, standing there with his
- back to the bed, before he moved. His face was set, the square jaws
- clamped, a cynical smile flickering on his lips. It had been close&mdash;but
- of the two, as between Monsieur Dupont and himself and the gallows,
- Monsieur Dupont had been the nearer to death! He saw Monsieur Dupont in
- his mind's-eye sprawled on the floor. It would not have been difficult to
- have stopped forever any outcry from that weak thing upon the bed. And
- then the window; and after that&mdash;God knew! And it would have been
- God's affair! It was God Who had instituted that primal law that lay upon
- every human soul, the law of self-preservation; and it was God's choosing,
- not his, that he was here! Who was to quarrel with him if he stopped at
- nothing in his fight for life! Well, Dupont was gone now! That danger was
- past. He had only to reckon now with Valérie and her mother&mdash;until
- night came. He raised his hand heavily to his forehead and pushed back his
- hair. Valérie! Until night came! Fool! What was Valérie to him! And yet&mdash;he
- jeered at himself in a sort of grim derision&mdash;and yet, if it were not
- his one chance for life, he would not go to-night. He could call himself a
- fool, if he would; that ubiquitous and caustic other self, that was the
- cool, calculating, unemotional personification of Three-Ace Artie, could
- call him a fool, if it would&mdash;those dark eyes of Valérie's&mdash;no,
- not that&mdash;it was not eyes, nor hair, nor lips, they were only part of
- Valérie&mdash;it was Valérie, like some rare fragrance, fresh and pure and
- sweet in her young womanhood, that&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur!&rdquo;&mdash;the man was calling from the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond turned, and walked back across the room, and drew a chair
- to the bedside, and sat down. And Raymond smiled&mdash;but not at the
- bandaged, outstretched form before him. A fool! Well, so be it! The fool
- would sit here for the rest of the morning, and the rest of the afternoon,
- and listen to the babbling wanderings of another fool who had not had
- sense enough to die; and he would play this cursed rôle of saint, and
- fumble with his crucifix, and mumble his * Latin, and keep this
- Mademoiselle Valérie, who meant nothing to him, from the room&mdash;until
- to-night. And&mdash;what was this other fool saying?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur&mdash;monsieur, who was that man who just went out?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond answered mechanically:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was Monsieur Dupont, the assistant chief of the Tournayville police.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was he doing here?&rdquo; asked the other slowly, as though trying to
- puzzle out the answer to his own question. &ldquo;Why was he asking me all those
- questions?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond, tight-lipped, looked the man in the eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've had enough of this, haven't we?&rdquo; he challenged evenly. &ldquo;I thought
- at first you were still irrational. You're not&mdash;that is now quite
- evident. Well&mdash;we are alone&mdash;what is your object? You had a
- chance to tell Dupont your story!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A pitiful, stunned look crept into the man's face. He stretched out his
- hand over the coverlet toward Raymond. &ldquo;You&mdash;you, too, monsieur!&rdquo; he
- said numbly. &ldquo;What does it mean? What does it mean?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It startled Raymond. There was trickery here, it could be nothing else&mdash;and
- yet there was sincerity too genuine to be assumed in the other's words and
- acts. Raymond sat back in his chair, and for a long minute, brows knitted,
- studied the man. It was possible, of course, that the other might not have
- recognised him&mdash;they had only been together for a few moments in the
- smoking compartment of the train, and, dressed now as a priest, that might
- well be the case&mdash;but why not the story then?&mdash;why not the
- simple statement that he was the new curé coming to the village, that he
- had been struck down and&mdash;bah! What was the man's game! Well, he
- would force the issue, that was all! He leaned over the bed; and, his hand
- upon the other's, his fingers closed around the man's wrist until, beneath
- their tips, they could gauge the throb of the other's pulse. And his eyes,
- steel-hard, were on the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am the curé,&rdquo; he said, in a low, level tone, &ldquo;of St. Marleau&mdash;while
- Father Allard is away. My name is&mdash;<i>François Aubert</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And mine,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;is&rdquo;&mdash;he shook his head&mdash;&ldquo;mine is&rdquo;&mdash;his
- face grew piteously troubled&mdash;&ldquo;it is strange&mdash;I do not remember
- that either.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There had been no tell-tale nervous flutter of the man's pulse. Raymond's
- hand fell away from the other's wrist. What was this curious, almost
- uncanny presentiment that was creeping upon him! Was it possible that the
- man was telling the <i>truth!</i> Was it possible that&mdash;his own brain
- was whirling now&mdash;he steadied himself, forcing himself to speak.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you not read the card that Dupont showed you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the other. &ldquo;Henri Mentone&mdash;is that my name?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you not know!&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's tone was suddenly sharp, incisive.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; the other answered. &ldquo;No, I cannot remember.&rdquo; He reached out his arms
- imploringly to Raymond again. &ldquo;Oh, monsieur, what does it mean? I do not
- know where I am&mdash;I do not know how I came here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are in the <i>presbytère</i> at St. Marleau,&rdquo; said Raymond, still
- sharply. Was it true; or was the man simply magnificent in duplicity? No&mdash;there
- could be no reason, no valid reason for the man to play a part?&mdash;no
- reason why he should have withheld his story from Dupont. It was not
- logical. He, Raymond, who alone knew all the story, knew that. It must be
- true&mdash;but he dared not yet drop his guard. He must be sure&mdash;his
- life depended on his being sure. He was speaking again&mdash;uncompromisingly:
- &ldquo;You were picked up unconscious on the road by the tavern during the storm
- three nights ago&mdash;you remember the storm, of course?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again that piteously troubled look was on the other's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, monsieur, I do not remember,&rdquo; he said tremulously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; persisted Raymond, &ldquo;before the storm&mdash;you surely
- remember that! Where you came from? Where you lived? Your people?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where I came from, my&mdash;my people&rdquo;&mdash;the man repeated the words
- automatically. He swept his hand across his bandaged head. &ldquo;It is gone,&rdquo;
- he whispered miserably. &ldquo;I&mdash;it is gone. There&mdash;there is nothing.
- I do not remember anything except a girl in this room saying she would run
- for the curé, and then that man came in.&rdquo; A new trouble came into his
- eyes. &ldquo;That man&mdash;you said he was a police officer&mdash;why was he
- here? And&mdash;you have not told me yet&mdash;why should he ask me
- questions?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was still a card to play. Raymond leaned again over the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All this will not help you,&rdquo; he said sternly. &ldquo;Far better that you should
- confide in me! The proof against you is overwhelming. You are already
- condemned. You murdered Théophile Blondin that night, and stole Mother
- Blondin's money. Mother Blondin struck you that blow upon the head as you
- ran from the house. You were found on the road; and in your pockets was
- Mother Blondin's money&mdash;and her son's revolver, with which you shot
- him. In a word, you are under arrest for murder.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Murder!&rdquo;&mdash;the man, wide-eyed, horror-stricken, was staring at
- Raymond&mdash;and then he was clawing himself frantically into an upright
- position in the bed. &ldquo;No, no! Not that! It cannot be true! Not&mdash;<i>murder!</i>&rdquo;
- His voice rose into a piercing cry, and rang, and rang again through the
- room. He reached out his arms. &ldquo;You are a priest, monsieur&mdash;by that
- holy crucifix, by the dear Christ's love, tell me that it is not so! Tell
- me! Murder! It is not true! It cannot be true! No, no&mdash;no! Monsieur&mdash;father&mdash;do
- you not hear me crying to you, do you not&mdash;&rdquo; His voice choked and was
- still. His face was buried in his hands, and great sobs shook his
- shoulders.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond turned his head away&mdash;and Raymond's face was gray and
- drawn. There was no longer room for doubt. That blow upon the skull had
- blotted out the man's memory, left it&mdash;a blank.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XII&mdash;HIS BROTHER'S KEEPER
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>ATHER ALLARD'S
- desk had been moved into the front room. Raymond, on a very thin piece of
- paper, was tracing the signature inscribed on the fly-leaf of the
- prayer-book&mdash;François Aubert. Before him lay a number of letters
- written that morning by Valérie&mdash;parish letters, a letter to the
- bishop&mdash;awaiting his signature. Valérie, who had been private
- secretary to her uncle, was now private secretary to&mdash;François
- Aubert!
- </p>
- <p>
- The day before yesterday he had signed a letter in this manner, and
- Valérie, who was acquainted with the signature from her uncle's
- correspondence, had had no suspicions. Raymond placed his tracing over the
- bottom of one of the letters, and, bearing down heavily as he wrote,
- obtained an impression on the letter itself. The impression served as a
- guide, and he signed&mdash;François Aubert.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was simple enough, this expedient in lieu of a piece of carbon paper
- that he had no opportunity to buy, and for which, from the notary perhaps,
- Valérie's other uncle, who alone in the village might be expected to have
- such a thing, he had not dared to make the request; but it was tedious and
- laborious&mdash;and besides, for the moment, his mind was not upon his
- task.
- </p>
- <p>
- He signed another, and still another, his face deeply lined as he worked,
- wrinkles nesting in strained little puckers around the corners of his eyes&mdash;and
- suddenly, while there were yet two of the letters to be signed, he sat
- back in his chair, staring unseeingly before him. From the rear room came
- that footstep, slow, irregular, uncertain. It was Henri Mentone. Dupont's
- &ldquo;flea&rdquo; in the doctor's ear had had its effect. Henri Mentone was taking
- his exercise&mdash;from the bed to the window, from the window to the
- door, from the door to the bed, and over again. In the three days since
- the man had recovered consciousness, he had made rapid strides toward
- recovering his strength as well, though he still spent part of the day in
- bed&mdash;this afternoon, for instance, he was to be allowed out for a
- little while in the open air.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes fixed on the open window where the morning sunlight
- streamed into the room. Yes, the man was getting on his feet rapidly
- enough to suit even Monsieur Dupont. The criminal assizes began at
- Tournayville the day after to-morrow. And the day after to-morrow Henri
- Mentone was to stand his trial for the murder of Théophile Blondin!
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's fingers tightened upon the penholder until it cracked warningly,
- recalling him to himself. He had not gone that night. Gone! He laughed
- mockingly. The man had lost his memory! Who would have thought of that&mdash;and
- what it meant? If the man had died, or even if the man had talked and so
- <i>forced</i> him to accept pursuit as his one and only chance, the issue
- would have been clear cut. But the man, curse him, had not died; nor had
- he told his story&mdash;and to all appearances at least, except for still
- being naturally a little weak, was as well as any one. Gone! Gone&mdash;that
- night! Great God, they would <i>hang</i> the fool for this!
- </p>
- <p>
- The sweat beads crept out on Raymond's forehead. No, no&mdash;not that!
- They thought the man was shamming now, but they would surely realise
- before it was too late that he was not. They would convict him of course,
- the evidence was damning, overwhelming, final&mdash;but they would not
- hang a man who could not remember. No, they wouldn't hang him. But what
- they would do was horrible enough&mdash;they would sentence the man for
- life, and keep him in the infirmary perhaps of some penitentiary. For life&mdash;that
- was all.
- </p>
- <p>
- The square jaw was suddenly out-thrust. Well, what of it! He, Raymond, was
- safe as it was. It was his life, or the other's. In either case it would
- be an innocent man who suffered. As far as actual murder was concerned, he
- was no more guilty than this priest who had had nothing to do with it.
- Besides, they would hang him, Raymond, and they wouldn't hang the other.
- Of course, they didn't believe the man now! Why should they? They did not
- know what he, Raymond, knew; they had only the evidence before them that
- was conclusive enough to convict a saint from Heaven! Ha, ha! Why, even
- the man himself was beginning to believe in his own guilt! Sometimes the
- man was as a caged beast in an impotent fury; and&mdash;and sometimes he
- would cling like a frightened child with his arms around his, Raymond's,
- neck.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was warm here in the room, warm with the bright, glorious sunlight of
- the summer morning. Why did he shiver like that? And this&mdash;why <i>this?</i>
- The smell of incense; those organ notes rising and swelling through the
- church; the voices of the choir; the bowed heads everywhere! He surged up
- from his chair, and, rocking on his feet, his hands clenched upon the edge
- of the desk. Before what dread tribunal was this that he was being called
- suddenly to account! Yesterday&mdash;yesterday had been Sunday&mdash;and
- yesterday he had celebrated mass. His own voice seemed to sound again in
- his ears: &ldquo;<i>Introibo ad altare Dei</i>&mdash;I will go in unto the Altar
- of God.... <i>Ab homme iniquo et dolosoerue me</i>&mdash;Deliver me from
- the unjust and deceitful man.... <i>In quorum manibus iniquitates sunt</i>&mdash;In
- whose hands are iniquities.... <i>Hic est enim Calix sanguinis mei novi et
- æterni testamenti: mysterium fidei</i>&mdash;For this is the Chalice of My
- Blood of the new and eternal testament: the mystery of faith....&rdquo; No&mdash;no,
- no! He had not profaned those holy things, those holy vessels. He had not
- done it! It was a lie! He had fooled even Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar
- boy.
- </p>
- <p>
- He sank back into his chair like a man exhausted, and drew his hand across
- his eyes. It was nothing! He was quite calm again. Those words, the
- church, those holy things had nothing to do with Henri Mentone. If any one
- should think otherwise, that one was a fool! Had Three-Ace Artie ever been
- swayed by &ldquo;mystery of faith&rdquo;&mdash;or been called a coward! Yes, that was
- it&mdash;a coward! It was true that he had as much right to life as that
- pitiful thing in the back room, but it was he who had put that other's
- life in jeopardy! That creed&mdash;that creed of his, born of the far
- Northland where men were men, fearing neither God nor devil, nor man, nor
- beast&mdash;it was better than those trembling words which had just been
- upon his lips. True, he was safe now, if he let them dispose of this Henri
- Mentone&mdash;but to desert the other would be a coward's act. Well, what
- then&mdash;what then! Confess&mdash;and with meek, uplifted eyes, like
- some saintly martyr, stand upon the gibbet and fasten the noose around his
- own neck? <i>No!</i> Well then, what&mdash;<i>what?</i> The tormented look
- was back in Raymond's eyes. There was a way, a way by which he could give
- the man a chance, a way by which they both might have their chance, only
- the difficulties so far had seemed insurmountable&mdash;a problem that he
- had not yet been able to solve&mdash;and the time was short. Yes, the way
- was there, if only&mdash;&mdash;.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a swift movement, incredibly swift, alert in an instant, his hand
- swept toward the desk. Some one was knocking at the door. His fingers
- closed on the thin piece of paper that had served him in tracing the
- signature of Francois Aubert, and crushed it into a little ball in the
- palm of his hand. The door opened. There were dark eyes there, dark hair,
- a slim figure, a sweet, quiet smile, a calm, an untroubled peace, a
- pervading radiance. It was unreal. It could not exist. There was only a
- ghastly turmoil, agony, dismay and strife everywhere&mdash;his soul told
- him so! This was Valérie. God, how tired he was, how weary! Once he had
- seen those arms supporting that wounded man's head so tenderly&mdash;like
- a soothing caress. If he might, just for a moment, know that too, it would
- bring him&mdash;rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- She came lightly across the room and stood before the desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is for the letters, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she smiled. &ldquo;I am going down to
- the post-office.&rdquo; She picked up the little pile of correspondence; and,
- very prettily business-like, began to run through it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Impulsively Raymond reached out to take the letters from her&mdash;and,
- instead, his hand slipped inside his <i>soutane</i>, and dropped the
- crushed ball of paper into one of his pockets. It was too late, of course!
- She would already have noticed the omission of the two signatures.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are two there that I have not yet signed,&rdquo; observed Raymond
- casually.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; so I see!&rdquo; she answered brightly. &ldquo;I was just going to tell you how
- terribly careless you were, Monsieur le Curé! Well, you can sign them now,
- while I am putting the others in their envelopes. Here they are.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He took the two letters from her hand&mdash;and laid them deliberately
- aside upon the desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was not carelessness,&rdquo; he said laughingly; &ldquo;except that I should not
- have allowed them to get mixed up with the others. There are some changes
- that I think I should like to make before they go. They are not important&mdash;to-morrow
- will do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; she said. Then, in pretended consternation: &ldquo;I hope the
- mistakes weren't mine!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No&mdash;not yours&rdquo;&mdash;he spoke abstractedly now. He was watching her
- as she folded the letters and sealed the envelopes. How quickly she
- worked! In a minute now she would go and leave him alone again to listen
- to those footfalls from the other room. He wanted rest for his stumbling
- brain; and, yes&mdash;he wanted her. He could have reached out and caught
- her hands, and drawn that dark head bending over the desk closer to him,
- and held her there&mdash;a prisoner. He brushed his hands hurriedly over
- his forehead. A prisoner! What did he mean by that? Oh, yes, the thought
- was born of the idea that he was already a jailor. He had been a jailor
- for three days now&mdash;of that man there, who was too weak to get away.
- He had appointed himself jailor&mdash;and Monsieur Dupont had confirmed
- the appointment. What had that to do with Valérie? He only wanted her to
- stay because&mdash;a fool, was he!&mdash;because he wanted to torture
- himself a little more. Well, it was exquisite torture then, her presence,
- her voice, her smile! Love? Well, what if he loved! Days and days their
- lives had been spent together now. How long was it? A week&mdash;no, it
- must be more than a week&mdash;it seemed as though it had been as long as
- he could remember. Yes, he loved her! He knew that now&mdash;scoff, sneer
- and gibe if that inner voice would! He loved her! He loved Valérie!
- Madness? Well, what of that, too! Did he dispute it! Yes, it was madness&mdash;and
- in more ways than one! He was fighting for his life in this devil's
- masquerade, and he might win; but he could not fight for or win his love.
- That was just dangled before his eyes as the final Satanic touch to this
- hell-born conspiracy that engulfed him! He was in the garb of a priest!
- How those hell demons must shake their very souls out with laughter in
- their damnable glee! He could not even touch her; he could say no word,
- his tongue was tied; nor look at her&mdash;he was in the garb of a priest!
- He&mdash;what was this! A fire seemed in his veins. Her hand in his!
- Across the desk, her hand had crept softly into his!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur&mdash;Monsieur le Curé&mdash;you are ill!&rdquo; she cried anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond found himself upon his feet, his other hand laid over
- hers&mdash;and he forced a smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;no&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond shook his head&mdash;&ldquo;no, Mademoiselle Valérie,
- I am not ill.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are worn out, then!&rdquo; she insisted tremulously. &ldquo;And it is our fault.
- We should have made you let us help you more. You have been up night after
- night with that man, and in the daytime there was the parish work, and you
- have never had any rest. And yesterday in the church you looked so tired&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The dark eyes were misty; the sweet face was very close to his. If he
- might bend a little, just a very little, that glad wealth of hair would
- brush his cheek.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A little tired, perhaps&mdash;yes&mdash;mademoiselle,&rdquo; he said, in a low
- voice. &ldquo;But it is nothing!&rdquo; He released her hand, and, turning abruptly
- from the desk, walked to the window.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had followed him with her eyes, turned to look after him&mdash;he
- sensed that. There was silence in the room. He did not speak. He did not
- dare to speak until&mdash;ah!&mdash;this should bring him to his senses
- quickly enough!
- </p>
- <p>
- He was staring out through the window. A buck-board had turned in from the
- road, and was coming across the green toward the <i>presbytère</i>. Dupont
- and Doctor Arnaud! They were coming for Henri Mentone now&mdash;<i>now!</i>
- He had let the time slip by until it was too late&mdash;because he had not
- been able to fight his way through the odds against him! And then there
- came a wan smile to Raymond's lips. No! His fears were groundless.
- Three-Ace Artie would have seen that at once! The buckboard was
- single-seated, there was room only for two&mdash;and Monsieur Dupont could
- be well trusted to look after his own comfort when he took the man away.
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew back from the window, and faced around&mdash;and the thrill that
- had come from the touch of her hand was back again, as he caught her gaze
- upon him. What was it that was in those eyes, that was in her face? She
- had been looking at him like that, he knew, all the time that he had been
- standing at the window. They were still misty, those eyes&mdash;she could
- not hide that, though she lowered them hurriedly now. And that faint flush
- tinging her cheeks! Did it mean that she&mdash;Fool! He knew what it
- meant! It meant that if he cared to seek for any added self-torture with
- his madman's imaginings, he could find it readily to hand. She&mdash;to
- have any thought but that prompted by her woman's sympathy, her tender
- anxiety for another's trouble! She&mdash;who thought him a priest, and,
- pure in her faith as in her soul, would have recoiled in horror from&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- He steadied his voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur Dupont and the doctor have just arrived,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- She looked up, her face serious now.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They have come for Henri Mentone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, not yet, I imagine,&rdquo; he answered; &ldquo;since they have only a one-seated
- buckboard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will be glad when he has gone!&rdquo; she exclaimed impulsively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Glad?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;for your sake,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He has brought you to the verge of
- illness yourself.&rdquo; She was looking down again, shuffling the sealed
- envelopes abstractedly. &ldquo;And it is not only I who say so&mdash;it is all
- St. Marleau. St. Marleau loves you for it, for your care of him, Monsieur
- le Curé&mdash;but also St. Marlbau thinks more of its curé than it does of
- one who has taken another's life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond did not reply&mdash;he was listening now to the footsteps of
- Monsieur Dupont and the doctor, as they passed by along the hallway
- outside. Came then a sharp, angry voice raised querulously from the rear
- room&mdash;that was Henri Mentone. Monsieur Dupont's voice snapped in
- reply; and then the voices merged into a confused buzz and murmur. He
- glanced quickly at Valérie. She, too, was listening. Her head was turned
- toward the door, he could not see her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- He walked slowly across the room to her side by the desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do not think, mademoiselle,&rdquo; he asked gravely, &ldquo;that it is possible
- the man is telling the truth, that he really cannot remember anything that
- happened that night&mdash;and before?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Every one knows he is guilty,&rdquo; she said thoughtfully. &ldquo;The evidence
- proves it absolutely. Why, then, should one believe him? If there was even
- a little doubt of his guilt, no matter how little, it might be different,
- and one might wonder then; but as it is&mdash;no.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And it is not only you who say so&rdquo;&mdash;he smiled, using her own words&mdash;&ldquo;it
- is all St. Marleau?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, all St. Marleau&mdash;and every one else, including Monsieur le
- Curé, even if he has sacrificed himself for the man,&rdquo; she smiled in
- return. Her brows puckered suddenly. &ldquo;Sometimes I am afraid of him,&rdquo; she
- said nervously. &ldquo;Yesterday I ran from the room. He was in a fury.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's face grew grave.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah! You did not tell me that, mademoiselle,&rdquo; he said soberly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I am sorry I have told you now, if it is going to worry you,&rdquo; she
- said quickly. &ldquo;You must not say anything to him. The next time I went in
- he was so sorry that it was pitiful.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In a fury&mdash;at times! Was it strange! Was it strange if one did not
- sit unmoved to watch, fettered, bound, impotent, a horrible doom creeping
- inexorably upon one! Was it strange if at times, all recollection blotted
- out, conscious only that one was powerless to avert that creeping terror,
- one should experience a paroxysm of fury that rocked one to the very soul&mdash;and
- at times in anguish left one like a helpless child! He had seen the man
- like that&mdash;many times in the last few days. And he, too, had seen
- that same terror creep like a dread thing out of the night upon himself to
- hover over him; and he could see it now lurking there, ever present&mdash;but
- he, Raymond, could fight!
- </p>
- <p>
- The door of the rear room opened and closed; and Monsieur Dupont's voice
- resounded from the hall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where is Monsieur le Curé? Ho, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie looked toward him inquiringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shall I tell them you are here?&rdquo; she asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond nodded mechanically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;if you will, please.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He leaned against the desk, his hands gripping its edge behind his back.
- What was it now that this Monsieur Dupont wanted? He was never sure of
- Dupont. And this morning his brain was fagged, and he did not want to cope
- with this infernal Monsieur Dupont! He watched Valérie walk across the
- room, and disappear outside in the hall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé is here,&rdquo; he heard her say. &ldquo;Will you walk in?&rdquo; And
- then, at some remark in the doctor's voice which he did not catch: &ldquo;No; he
- is not busy. I was just going to take his letters to the postoffice. He
- heard Monsieur Dupont call.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, as the two men stepped in through the doorway, Raymond spoke
- quietly:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good morning, Monsieur Dupont! Good morning, Doctor Arnaud!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hah! Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont wagged his head vigorously. &ldquo;He
- is in a very pretty temper this morning, our friend in there&mdash;eh?
- Yes, very pretty! You have noticed it? Yes, you have noticed it. It would
- seem that he is beginning to realise at last that his little tricks are
- going to do him no good!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond waved his hand toward chairs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You will sit down?&rdquo; he invited courteously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No&rdquo;&mdash;Doctor Arnaud smiled, as he answered for them both. &ldquo;No, not
- this morning, Monsieur le Curé. We are returning at once to Tournayville.
- I have an important case there, and Monsieur Dupont has promised to have
- me back before noon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Monsieur Dupont, &ldquo;we stopped only to tell you&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur
- Dupont jerked his hand in the direction of the rear room&mdash;&ldquo;that we
- will take him away to-morrow morning. Doctor Arnaud says he will be quite
- able to go. We will see what the taste of a day in jail will do for him
- before he goes into the dock&mdash;what? He is very fortunate! Yes, very!
- There are not many who have only one day in jail before they are tried!
- Yes! To-morrow morning! You look surprised, Monsieur le Curé, that it
- should be so soon. Yes, you look surprised!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On the contrary,&rdquo; observed Raymond impassively, &ldquo;when I saw you drive up
- a few minutes ago, I thought you had come to take him away at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, not at all!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont indulged in a significant smile. &ldquo;No&mdash;not
- at all! I take not even that chance of cheating the court out of his
- appearance&mdash;I do not wish to house him for months until the next
- assizes. I take no chances on a relapse. He has been quite safe here. Yes&mdash;quite!
- He will be quite safe for another twenty-four hours in your excellent
- keeping, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;since he is still too weak to run far
- enough to have it do him any good!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You pay a high compliment to my vigilance, Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; said
- Raymond, with a faint smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hah!&rdquo; cried Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Hah!&rdquo;&mdash;he began to chuckle. &ldquo;Do you
- hear that, Monsieur le Docteur Arnaud? I thought it had escaped him! He
- has a sense of humour, our estimable curé! You see, do you not? Yes, you
- see. Well, we will go now!&rdquo; He pushed the doctor from the room. &ldquo;<i>Au
- revoir</i> Monsieur le Curé! It is understood then? To-morrow morning! <i>Au
- revoir</i>&mdash;till to-morrow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont bowed, and whisked himself out of sight. Raymond went to
- the door, closed it, and mechanically began to pace up and down the room.
- He heard Monsieur Dupont and the doctor clamber into the buckboard, and
- heard the buckboard drive off. There was moisture upon his forehead again.
- He swept it away. To-morrow morning! He had until to-morrow morning in
- which to act&mdash;if he was to act at all. But the way! He could not see
- the way. It was full of peril. The risk was too great to be overcome! He
- dared not even approach that man in there with any plan. There was
- something horribly sardonic in that! If he was to act, he must act now, at
- once&mdash;there was only the afternoon and the night left.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are safe as it is,&rdquo; whispered that inner voice insidiously. &ldquo;The
- man's condemnation by the law will dispose of the killing of Théophile
- Blondin forever. It will be as a closed book. And then&mdash;have you
- forgotten?&mdash;there is your own plan for getting away after a little
- while. It cannot fail, that plan. Besides, they will not sentence the man
- to hang, they will be sure to see that his memory is really gone; whereas
- they will surely hang you if you are caught&mdash;as you will be, if you
- are fool enough to attempt the impossible now. What did you ever get out
- of being quixotic? Do you remember that little affair in Ton-Nugget Camp?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My God, what shall I do?&rdquo; Raymond cried out aloud. &ldquo;If&mdash;if only I
- could see the way!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you can't!&rdquo; sneered the voice viciously. &ldquo;Haven't you tried hard
- enough to satisfy even that remarkably tender conscience that you seem to
- have picked up somewhere so suddenly! You&mdash;who were going to kill the
- man with your own hands! Let well enough alone!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was silent now in the rear room. Raymond halted in the centre of the
- floor and listened. There were no footsteps; no sound of voice&mdash;only
- silence. He laughed a little harshly. What was the man doing? Planning his
- <i>own</i> escape! Again Raymond laughed in bitter mirth. God speed to the
- man in any such plans&mdash;only the man, as Monsieur Dupont had most
- sagaciously suggested, would not get very far alone. But still it would be
- humorous, would it not, if the man should succeed alone, where he,
- Raymond, had utterly failed so far to work out any plan that would
- accomplish the same end! There was the open window to begin with, the man
- had been told now probably that he was to be taken away to-morrow morning,
- and&mdash;why was there such absolute stillness from that other room? The
- partitions were very thin, and&mdash;Raymond, as mechanically as he had
- set to pacing up and down the room, turned to the door, passed out into
- the hall, and walked softly along to the door of the rear room. He
- listened there again. There was still silence. He opened the door, stepped
- across the threshold&mdash;and a strange white look crept into his face,
- and he stood still.
- </p>
- <p>
- Upon the floor at the bedside knelt Henri Mentone, and at the opening of
- the door the man did not look up. There was no fury now; it was the child,
- helpless in despair and grief. His hands were outflung across the
- coverlet, his head was buried in his arms&mdash;and there was no movement,
- save only a convulsive tremor that shook the thin shoulders. And there was
- no sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- And the whiteness deepened in Raymond's face&mdash;and, as he looked,
- suddenly the scene was blurred before his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond stepped back into the hall, and closed the door again,
- and on Raymond's lips was a queer, twisted smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To-morrow morning, I think you said, Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; he whispered.
- &ldquo;Well, to-morrow morning, Monsieur Dupont&mdash;he will be gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIII&mdash;THE CONFEDERATE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HERE had been a
- caller, there had been parish matters, there had been endless things
- through endless hours which he had been unable to avoid&mdash;except in
- mind. He had attended to them subconsciously, as it were; his mind had
- never for an instant left Henri Mentone. And it was beginning to take form
- now, a plan whereby he might effect the other's escape.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sitting at his desk, he looked at his watch as he heard Valérie and her
- mother go upstairs. It was a quarter past three. Later on in the
- afternoon, in another hour or thereabouts Madame Lafleur would take Henri
- Mentone for a few steps here and there about the green, or sit with him
- for a little fresh air on the porch of the <i>presbytère</i>. Raymond
- smiled ironically. As jailor he had delegated the task to Madame Lafleur&mdash;since,
- as he had told both Valérie and her mother at the noonday meal, he was
- going out to make pastoral visits that afternoon. Meanwhile&mdash;he had
- just looked into Henri Mentone's room&mdash;the man was lying on his bed
- asleep. If he worked quickly now&mdash;while Valérie and her mother were
- upstairs, and the man was lying on his bed!
- </p>
- <p>
- He picked up a pen, and drew a piece of paper toward him. Everything
- hinged on his being able to procure a confederate. He, the curé of St.
- Marleau, must procure a confederate by some means, and naturally without
- the confederate knowing that Monsieur le Curé was doing so&mdash;and,
- almost as essential, a confederate who had no love for Monsieur le Curé!
- It was not a very simple matter! That was the problem with which he had
- racked his brains for the last three days. Not that the minor details were
- lacking in difficulties either; he, as the curé, must not appear even
- remotely in the plan; he, as the curé, dared not even suggest escape to
- Henri Mentone&mdash;but he could overcome all that if only he could secure
- a confederate. That was the point upon which everything depended.
- </p>
- <p>
- His pen poised in his hand, he stared across the room. Yes, he saw it now&mdash;a
- gambler's chance. But the time was short now, short enough to make him
- welcome any chance. He would go to Mother Blondin's. He might find a man
- there such as he sought, one of those who already had offended the law by
- frequenting the dissolute old hag's illicit still. He could ask, of
- course, who these men were without exciting any suspicion, and if luck
- failed him that afternoon he would do so, and it would be like a shot
- still left in his locker; but if, in his rôle of curé, he could actually
- trap one of them drinking there, and incense the man, even fight with him,
- it would make success almost certain. Yes, yes&mdash;he could see it all
- now&mdash;clearly&mdash;afterwards, when it grew dark, he would go to the
- man in a far different rôle from that of a curé, and the man would be at
- his disposal. Yes, if he could trap one of them there&mdash;but before
- anything else Henri Mentone must be prepared for the attempt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond began to write slowly, in a tentative sort of way, upon the paper
- before him. Henri Mentone, remembering nothing of the events of that
- night, must be left in no doubt as to the genuineness and good faith of
- the note, or of the vital necessity of acting upon its instructions. At
- the expiration of a few minutes, Raymond read over what he had written. He
- scored out a word here and there; and then, on another sheet of paper, in
- a scrawling, illiterate hand, he wrote out a slangy, ungrammatical version
- of the original draft. He read it again now:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The memory game won't go, Henri. They've got you cold, but they don't
- know there was two of us in it at the old woman's that night, so keep up
- your nerve, for I ain't for laying down on a pal. I got it fixed for a
- getaway for you to-night. Keep the back window open, and be ready at any
- time after dark&mdash;see? Leave-the rest to me. If that mealy-mouthed
- priest gets in the road, so much the worse for him. I'll take care of him
- so he won't be any trouble to any one except a doctor, and mabbe not much
- to a doctor&mdash;get me? I'd have been back sooner, only I had to beat it
- for you know where to get the necessary coin. Here's some to keep you
- going in case we have to separate in a hurry to-night.&mdash;&mdash;Pierre.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond nodded to himself. Henri Mentone might not relish the suggestion
- of any violence offered to the &ldquo;mealy-mouthed priest,&rdquo; for he had come to
- look upon Father François Aubert as his only friend, and, except in his
- fits of fury, to cling dependently upon him; but then there would be no
- violence offered to Father François Aubert, and the suggestion supplied a
- final touch of authenticity to the note, since Henri Mentone would realise
- that escape was impossible unless in some way the curé could be got out of
- the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond destroyed the original draft, and took out his pocketbook. He
- smiled curiously, as he examined its contents. It was the gold of the
- Yukon, the gold of Ton-Nugget Camp, that he had changed into banknotes of
- large denominations. He selected two fifty-dollar bills. It was not enough
- to carry the man far, or to take care of the man until he was on his feet,
- nor were fifty-dollar bills the most convenient denomination for a man
- under the present circumstances; but that was not their purpose&mdash;they
- would act as a guarantee of one &ldquo;Pierre&rdquo; and &ldquo;Pierre's&rdquo; plan, and to-night
- he would give the man more without stint, and supplement it with some
- small bills from his roll of &ldquo;petty cash.&rdquo; He folded the money in the
- note, found a small piece of string in one of the drawers of the desk,
- stood up, took his hat, tiptoed softly across the room, out into the hall,
- and from the hall to the front porch.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here, he stood quietly for a moment, looking about him; and then,
- satisfied that he was unobserved, that neither Valérie nor her mother had
- noticed his exit, he walked quickly around to the back of the house&mdash;and
- paused again, this time beneath the open window of Henri Mentone's room.
- Here, too, but even more sharply now, he looked about him&mdash;then
- stooped ana picked up a small stone. He tied the note around this, and,
- crouched low by the window, called softly: &ldquo;Henri! Henri!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He heard a rustle, the creak of the bed, as though the man, startled and
- suddenly roused, were jerking himself up into an upright position.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is Pierre!&rdquo; Raymond called again. &ldquo;<i>Courage, mon vieux!</i> Have no
- fear! All is arranged for tonight. But do not come to the window&mdash;we
- must be careful. Here&mdash;<i>voici!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;he tossed the note in
- over the sill. &ldquo;Until dark&mdash;tu comprends, Henri? I will be back then.
- Be ready!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He heard the man cry out in a low voice, and the creak of the bed again,
- and the man's step on the floor&mdash;and, stooping low, Raymond darted
- around the corner of the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- A moment later he was standing again in the hallway of the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Madame Lafleur!&rdquo; he called up the stairs. &ldquo;It is only to tell you
- that I am going out now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;yes. Very well, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she
- answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond closed the front door behind him, and, walking sedately across the
- green and past the church, gained the road. It was Mother Blondin's now,
- but he would not go by the station road&mdash;further along the village
- street, where the houses thinned out and were scattered more apart, he
- could climb up the little hill without being seen, and by walking through
- the woods would come out on the path whose existence had once already done
- him such excellent service. And the path, as an approach to Mother
- Blondin's this afternoon, offered certain very important strategical
- advantages.
- </p>
- <p>
- But now for the moment he was in the heart of the village, and from the
- doorways and garden patches of the little squat, curved-roof, whitewashed
- houses of rough-squared logs that flanked the road on either side, voices
- called out to him cheerily as he walked along. He answered them&mdash;all
- of them. He was even conscious, in spite of the worry of his mind, of a
- curious and not altogether unwelcome wonder. They were simple folk, these
- people, big-hearted and kindly, free and open-handed with the little they
- had, and they appeared to have grown fond of him in the few days he had
- been in St. Marleau, to look up to him, to trust him, to have faith in
- him, and to accept him as a friend, offering a frank friendship in return.
- </p>
- <p>
- His hands were clasped behind his back as he walked along, and suddenly
- his fingers laced tightly over one another. The pleasurable wonder of it
- was gone. He was playing well this rôle of saint! He was a gambler&mdash;Three-Ace
- Artie of Ton-Nugget Camp; a gambler&mdash;too unclean even for the Yukon.
- But he was no hypocrite! He would have liked to have torn these saintly
- trappings from his body, wrenched off his <i>soutane</i> and hurled it in
- the faces of these people, and bade them keep their friendship and their
- trust&mdash;tell them that he asked for nothing that they gave because
- they believed him other than he was. He was no hypocrite&mdash;he was a
- man fighting desperately for that for which every one had a right to
- fight, for which instinct bade even an insect fight&mdash;his life! He did
- not despise this proffered friendship, the smile of eye and lip, the ring
- of genuine sincerity in the voices that called to him&mdash;but they were
- not his, they were not meant for Three-Ace Artie, they were not meant for
- Raymond Chapelle. Somehow&mdash;it was a grotesque thought&mdash;he envied
- himself in the rôle of curé for these things. But they were not his. It
- was strange even that he, in whose life there had been naught but riot and
- ruin, should still be able to simulate so well the better things, to carry
- through, not the rôle of priest, that was a matter of ritual, a matter of
- keeping his head and his nerve, but the far kindlier and intimate rôle of
- <i>father</i> to the parish! Yes, it was very strange, and&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Bon jour</i>, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond halted. It was Madame Bouchard, the carpenter's wife. With a sort
- of long-handled wooden paddle, she was removing huge loaves of bread from
- the queer-looking outdoor oven which, though built of a mixture of stone
- and brick, resembled very much, through being rounded over at the top, an
- exaggerated beehive. A few yards further in from the edge of the road
- Bouchard himself was at work upon a boat in front of his shop. Above the
- shop was the living quarters of the family, and here, on a narrow veranda,
- peering over, a half dozen scantily clad and very small children clung to
- the railings.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond sniffed the air luxuriously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens</i>, Madame Bouchard!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Your husband is to be envied!
- The smell of the bread is enough to make one hungry!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The carpenter laid down his tools, and looked up, laughing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Salut</i>, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; he called.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If Monsieur le Curé would like one&rdquo;&mdash;Madame Bouchard's cheeks had
- grown a little rosy&mdash;&ldquo;I&mdash;I will send one to the <i>presbytère</i>
- for him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond had eaten of St. Marleau bread before. The taste was sour, and it
- required little short of a deftly wielded axe to make any impression upon
- the crust.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are too good, too generous, Madame Bouchard,&rdquo; he said, shaking his
- forefinger at her chidingly. &ldquo;And yet&rdquo;&mdash;he smiled broadly&mdash;&ldquo;if
- there is enough to spare, there is nothing I know of that would delight me
- more.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, she can spare it!&rdquo; declared the carpenter heartily, coming
- forward. &ldquo;Stanislaus will carry you two presently. And, <i>tiens</i>,
- Monsieur le Curé, you like to row a boat&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond, on the point of shaking his head, checked himself. A boat! One of
- these days&mdash;soon, if this devil's trap would only open a little&mdash;there
- was his own escape to be managed. He had planned that carefully... a
- boating accident... the boat recovered... the curé's body swept out
- somewhere in those twenty-five miles of river breadth that stretched away
- before him now, and from there&mdash;who could doubt it!&mdash;to the sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I am very fond of it, but as yet I have not found time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; exclaimed the carpenter. &ldquo;Well, in two or three days it will be
- finished, the best boat in St. Marleau&mdash;and Monsieur le Curé will be
- welcome to it as much as he likes. It is a nice row to the islands out
- there&mdash;three miles&mdash;to gather the sea-gull eggs&mdash;and the
- islands themselves are very pretty. It is a great place for a picnic,
- Monsieur le Curé.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excellent!&rdquo; said Raymond enthusiastically. &ldquo;That is exactly what I shall
- do.&rdquo; He clapped the carpenter playfully upon the shoulder. &ldquo;So&mdash;eh,
- Monsieur Bouchard,&mdash;you will lose no time in finishing the boat!&rdquo; He
- turned to Madame Bouchard. &ldquo;<i>Au revoir</i>, madame&mdash;and very many
- thanks to you. I shall think of you at supper to-night, I promise you!&rdquo; He
- waved his hand to the children on the veranda, and once more started along
- the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Bouchard's voice, speaking to her husband, reached him. The words
- were not intended for his ears, and he did not catch them all. It was
- something about&mdash;&ldquo;the good, young Father Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A wan smile crept to Raymond's lips. For the moment at least, he was in a
- softened, chastened mood. &ldquo;The good, young Father Aubert&rdquo;&mdash;well, let
- it be so! They would never know, these people of St. Marleau. Somehow, he
- was relieved at that. He did not want them to know. Somehow, he, too,
- wanted for himself just what they would have&mdash;a memory&mdash;the
- memory of a good, young Father Aubert.
- </p>
- <p>
- At a bend in the road, where the road edged in against the slope of the
- hill, hiding him from view, Raymond clambered up the short ascent. In a
- clump of small cedars at the top, he paused and looked back. The great
- sweep of river, widening into the Gulf of St. Lawrence, with no breath of
- air to stir its surface, shimmered like a mirror under the afternoon sun.
- A big liner, outward bound, and perhaps ten miles from shore, seemed as
- though it were painted there. To the right, close in, was the little group
- of islands, with bare, rounded, rocky peaks, to which the carpenter had
- referred. About him, from distant fields, came the occasional voice of a
- man calling to his horses, the faint whir of a reaper, and a sort of
- pervading, drowsy murmur of insect life. Below him, nestled along the
- winding road, were the little whitewashed houses, quiet, secure, tranquil,
- they seemed to lie there; and high above them all, as though to typify the
- scene, to set its seal upon it, from the steeple of the church there
- gleamed in the sunlight a golden cross, the symbol of peace&mdash;such as
- he wore upon his breast!
- </p>
- <p>
- With a quick intake of his breath, a snarl smothered in a low, confused
- cry, as he glanced involuntarily downward at his crucifix, he gathered up
- the skirts of his <i>soutane</i>, and, as though to vent his emotion in
- physical exertion, began to force his way savagely through the bushes and
- undergrowth.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had other things to do than waste time in toying with visionary
- sentiment! There was one detail in that scene of <i>peace</i> he had not
- seen&mdash;that man in the rear room of the <i>presbytère</i> who was
- going to trial for the murder of Théophile Blondin, because he was decked
- out in the clothes of one Raymond Chapelle, alias Henri Mentone. It would
- be well perhaps for Raymond Chapelle to remember that, and to remember
- nothing else for the remainder of the afternoon!
- </p>
- <p>
- He went on through the woods, heading as nearly as he could judge in a
- direction that would bring him out at the rear of the tavern. And now he
- laughed shortly to himself. Peace! There would be a peace that would
- linger long in somebody's memory at Mother Blondin's this afternoon, if
- only luck were with him! He was on a priestly mission&mdash;to console,
- bring comfort to the old hag for the loss of her son&mdash;and, quite
- incidentally, to precipitate a fight with any of the loungers who might be
- burying their noses in Mother Blondin's home-made <i>whiskey-blanc!</i> He
- laughed out again. St. Marleau would talk of that, too, and applaud the
- righteousness of the good, young Father Au^ bert&mdash;but he would attain
- the object he sought. He, the good, young Father Aubert, the man with a
- rope around his neck, whose hands were against everyman's, had too many
- friends in St. Marleau&mdash;he needed an <i>enemy</i> now! It was the one
- thing that would make the night's work sure.
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached the edge of the wood to find himself even nearer the tavern
- than he had expected&mdash;and to find, too, that he would not have to lie
- long in wait for a visitor to Mother Blondin's. There was one there
- already. So far then, he could have asked for no better luck. He caught
- the sound of voices&mdash;the old hag's, high-pitched and querulous; a
- man's, rough and domineering. Looking cautiously through the fringe of
- trees that still sheltered him, Raymond discovered that he was separated
- from Mother Blondin's back door by a matter of but a few yards of
- clearing. The door was open, and a man, heavy-built, in a red-checkered
- shirt, a wide-brimmed hat of coarse straw, was forcing his way past the
- shrivelled old woman. As the man turned his head sideways, Raymond caught
- a glimpse of the other's face. It was not a pleasant face. The eyes were
- black, narrow and shifty under a low brow; and a three days' growth of
- black stubble on his jaws added to his exceedingly dirty and unkempt
- appearance.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mother Blondin's voice rose furiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You will pay first!&rdquo; she screamed. &ldquo;I know you too well, Jacques Bourget!
- Do you understand? The money! You will pay me first!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Or otherwise you will tell the police, eh?&rdquo; the man guffawed
- contemptuously. He pushed his way inside the house, and pushed a table
- that stood in the centre of the room roughly back against the wall. &ldquo;You
- shut your mouth!&rdquo; he jeered at her&mdash;and, stooping down, lifted up a
- trap door in the floor. &ldquo;Now trot along quick for some glasses, so you can
- keep count of all we both drink!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are a thief, a robber, a <i>crapule</i>, a&mdash;&rdquo; she burst into a
- stream of blasphemous invective. Her wrinkled face grew livid with
- ungovernable rage. She shook a bony fist at him. &ldquo;I will show you what you
- will get for this! You think I am alone&mdash;eh? You think I am an old
- woman that you can rob as you like&mdash;eh? You think my whisky is for
- your guzzling throat without pay&mdash;eh? Well, I will show you, you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man made a threatening movement toward her, and she retreated back out
- of Raymond's sight&mdash;evidently into an inner room, for her voice, as
- virago-like as ever, was muffled now.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bring me a glass, and waste no time about it!&rdquo; the man called after her.
- &ldquo;And if you do not hold your tongue, something worse will happen to you
- than the loss of a drop out of your bottle!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man turned, and descended to the cellar through the trapdoor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond softly to himself. &ldquo;Yes, I think Monsieur Jacques
- Bourget is the man I came to find.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stepped out from the trees, walked noiselessly across to the house,
- and, reaching the doorway, remained standing quietly upon the threshold.
- He could hear the man moving about in the cellar below; from the inner
- room came Mother Blondin's incessant mutterings, mingled with a savage
- rattling of crockery. Raymond smiled ominously&mdash;and then Raymond's
- face grew stern with well-simulated clerical disapproval.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man's head, back turned, showed above the level of the floor. Into the
- doorway from the inner room came Mother Blondin&mdash;and halted there,
- her withered old jaw sagging downward in dumfounded surprise until it
- displayed her almost toothless gums. The man gained his feet, turned
- around&mdash;and, with a startled oath, dropped the bottle he was
- carrying. It crashed to the floor, broke, and the contents began to
- trickle back over the edge of the trapdoor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Sacristi!</i>&rdquo; shouted the man, his face flaring up into an angry red.
- He thrust his head forward truculently from his shoulders, and glared at
- Raymond. &ldquo;<i>Sacré nom de Dieu</i>, it is the saintly priest!&rdquo; he sneered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My son,&rdquo; said Raymond gravely, &ldquo;do not blaspheme! And have respect for
- the Church!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bah!&rdquo; snarled the man. &ldquo;Do you think I care for you&mdash;or your
- church!&rdquo; He looked suddenly at Mother Blondin. &ldquo;Hah!&rdquo;&mdash;he jumped
- across the room toward her. &ldquo;So that is what you meant by not being alone&mdash;eh?
- I did not understand! You would trick me, would you! You would sell me out
- for the price of a drink&mdash;and&mdash;ha, ha&mdash;to a priest! Well&rdquo;&mdash;he
- had her now by the shoulders&mdash;&ldquo;I will take a turn at showing you what
- I will do! Eh&mdash;why did you not warn me he was here?&rdquo; He caught her
- head, and banged it brutally against the wall. &ldquo;Eh&mdash;why did&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond, too, was across the room. It was strange! Most strange! He had
- intended to seek an occasion to quarrel. The occasion was made for him. He
- had no longer any desire to quarrel&mdash;he was possessed of an
- overwhelming desire to get his fingers around the throat of this cur who
- banged that straggling, dishevelled gray hair against the wall. He was not
- quite sure that it was himself who spoke. No, of course, it was not! It
- was Monsieur le Curé&mdash;the good, young Father Aubert. He was between
- them now, only Mother Blondin had fallen to the floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My son,&rdquo; he said placidly, &ldquo;since you will not respect the Church for one
- reason, I will teach you to respect it for another.&rdquo; He pointed to old
- Mother Blcndin, who, more terrified than hurt perhaps, was getting to her
- knees, moaning and wringing her hands. &ldquo;You have heard, though I fear you
- may have forgotten it, of the Mosaic law. An eye for an eye, my son. I
- intend to do to you exactly what you have done to this woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man, drawn back, eyed him first in angry bewilderment, and then with
- profound contempt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'd better get out of here!&rdquo; he said roughly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Presently&mdash;when I have thrown you out&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond was calmly
- tucking up the skirts of his <i>soutane</i>. &ldquo;And&rdquo;&mdash;the flat of his
- hand landed with a stinging blow across the other's cheek&mdash;&ldquo;you see
- that I do not take even you off your guard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man reeled back&mdash;and then, with a bull-like roar of rage, head
- down, rushed at Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was not Monsieur le Curé now&mdash;it was Raymond Chapelle, alias
- Arthur Leroy, alias Three-Ace Artie, cold, contained, quick and lithe as a
- panther, and with a panther's strength. A crash&mdash;a lightning right
- whipped to the point of Bourget's jaw&mdash;and Bourget's head jolted back
- quivering on his shoulders like a tuning fork. And like a flash, before
- the other could recover, a left and right smashed full again into
- Bourget's face.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a scream, Mother Blondin crawled and scuttled into the doorway of the
- inner room. The man, bellowing with mad dismay, his hands outstretched,
- his fingers crooked to tear at Raymond's flesh if they could but reach it,
- rushed again.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now Raymond, wary of the other's strength and bulk, gave ground; and
- now he side-stepped and swung, battering his blows into Bourget's face;
- and now he ran craftily from the other. Chairs and table crashed to the
- floor; their heels crunched in the splinters of the broken bottle. The
- man's face began to bleed profusely from both nose and a cut lip. They
- were not tactics that Bourget understood. He clawed, he kept his head
- down, he rushed in blind clumsiness&mdash;and always Raymond was just
- beyond his reach.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again and again they circled the room, Bourget, big, lumbering, awkward,
- futilely expending his strength, screaming oaths with gasping breath. And
- again and again, springing aside as the man charged blindly by, Raymond
- with a grim fury rained in his blows. It was something like that other
- night&mdash;here in Mother Blon-din's. She was shrieking again now from
- the doorway:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Kill him! The <i>misérable!</i> Hah, Jacques Bourget, are you a
- jack-in-the-box only to bob your head backward every time you are hit! I
- did not bring the priest here! <i>Sacré nom</i>, you cannot blame me! I
- had nothing to do with it! <i>Sacré nom&mdash;sacré nom&mdash;sacré nom&mdash;kill
- him!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Kill who? Who did she mean&mdash;the man or himself? Raymond did not know.
- She was just a blurred object of rage and tumbled hair dancing in a frenzy
- up and down there in the doorway. He ran again. Bourget, like a stunned
- fool, was covering his face with his arms as he dashed forward. Ah, yes,
- Bourget was trying to crush him back into the corner there, and&mdash;no!&mdash;the
- maniacal rush had faltered, the man was swaying on his feet. And then
- Raymond, crouched to elude the man, sprang instead at the other's throat,
- his hands closed like a vise, and with the impact of his body both lurched
- back against the wall by the rear doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My son,&rdquo; panted Raymond, &ldquo;you remember&mdash;an eye for an eye&rdquo;&mdash;he
- smashed the man's head back against the wall&mdash;and then, gathering all
- his strength, flung the other from him out through the open door.
- </p>
- <p>
- The fight was out of the man. For a moment he lay sprawled on the grass.
- Then he raised himself up, and got upon his knees. His face was bruised
- and blood-stained almost beyond recognition. He shook both fists at
- Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By God, I'll get you for this!&rdquo;&mdash;the man's voice was guttural with
- unbridled passion. &ldquo;I'll get you, you censer-swinging devil! I'll twist
- your neck with the chain of your own crucifix! Damn you to the pit! You're
- not through with me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go!&rdquo; said Raymond sternly. &ldquo;Go&mdash;and be glad that I have treated you
- no worse!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He shut the door in the man's face; and, turning abruptly, walked across
- the floor to where Mother Blondin, quiet for the moment, gaped at him from
- the threshold of the other room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He will not trouble you any more, Madame Blondin, I imagine,&rdquo; he said
- quietly. &ldquo;See, it is over!&rdquo; He smiled at her reassuringly&mdash;he needed
- to know now only where the man lived. &ldquo;I should be sorry to think he was
- one of my parishioners. Where does he come from?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He is a farmer, and he lives in the house on the point a mile and a
- quarter up the road&rdquo;&mdash;the answer had come automatically; she was
- listening, without looking at Raymond, to the threats and oaths that
- Jacques Bourget, as he evidently moved away for his voice kept growing
- fainter, still bawled from without. And then hate and sullen viciousness
- was in her face again. Her hair had tumbled to her shoulders and straggled
- over her forehead. She jabbed at it with both hands, sweeping it from her
- eyes, and leered at him fiercely. &ldquo;You dirty spy!&rdquo; she croaked hoarsely.
- &ldquo;I know you&mdash;I know all of you priests! You are all alike! Sneaks!
- Sneaks! Meddlers and sneaks! But you'll get to hell some day&mdash;like
- the rest of us! Ha, ha&mdash;to hell! You can't fool the devil! I know
- you. That's what you sneaked up here for&mdash;to spy on me, to find
- something against me that the police weren't sharp enough to find, so that
- you could get rid of me, get me out of St. Marleau! I know! They've been
- trying that for a long time!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To turn you over to the police,&rdquo; said Raymond gently, &ldquo;would never save
- you from yourself. I came to talk to you a little about your son&mdash;to
- see if in any way I could help you, or be of comfort to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She stared at him for an instant, wondering and perplexed; and then the
- snarl was on her lips again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You lie! No priest comes here for that! I am an <i>excommuniée</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are a woman in sorrow,&rdquo; Raymond said simply.
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not answer him&mdash;only drew back into the other room.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond followed her. It was the room where he had fought that night&mdash;with
- Théophile Blondin. His eyes swept it with a hurried glance. There was the
- <i>armoire</i> from which Théophile Blondin had snatched the revolver&mdash;and
- there was the spot on the floor where the dead man had fallen. And here
- was the old hag with the streaming hair, as it had streamed that night,
- who had run shrieking into the storm that he had murdered her son. And the
- whole scene began to live itself over again in his mind in minute detail.
- It seemed to possess an unhealthy fascination that bade him linger, and at
- the same time to fill him with an impulse to rush away from it. And the
- impulse was the stronger; and, besides, it would be evening soon, and
- there was that man in the <i>presbytère</i>, and there was much to do, and
- he had his confederate now&mdash;one Jacques Bourget.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shall not stay now&rdquo;&mdash;he smiled, as he turned to Mother Blondin,
- and held out his hand. &ldquo;You are upset over what has happened. Another
- time. But you will remember, will you not, that I would like to help you
- in any way I can?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She reached out her hand mechanically to take his that was extended to
- her, and suddenly, muttering, jerked it back&mdash;and Raymond, appearing
- not to notice, smiled again, and, crossing the room, went out through the
- front door.
- </p>
- <p>
- He went slowly across the little patch of yard, and on along the road in
- the direction of the village, and now his lips thinned in a grim smile.
- Yes, St. Marleau would hear of this, his chivalrous protection of Mother
- Blondin&mdash;and place another halo on his head! The devil's sense of
- humour was of a brand all its own!
- </p>
- <p>
- The more he twisted and squirmed and wriggled to get out of the trap,
- desperate to the extent that he would hesitate at nothing, the more he
- became&mdash;the good, young Father Aubert! Even that dissolute old hag,
- whose hatred for the church and all pertaining to it was the most dominant
- passion in her life, was not far from the point where she would tolerate a
- priest&mdash;if the priest were the good, young Father Aubert!
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached the point where the road began to descend the hill, and,
- pausing, looked back. Yes&mdash;even Mother Blondin, the <i>excommuniée!</i>
- She was standing in the doorway, dirty, unkempt, disreputable, and,
- shading her eyes with her hand, was gazing after him. Yes, even she&mdash;whose
- son had been killed in a fight with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond, fumbling suddenly with his hat, lifted it to Mother Blondin,
- and went on down the hill.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIV&mdash;THE HOUSE ON THE POINT
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T was late, a good
- half hour after the usual supper time, when Raymond returned to the <i>presbytère</i>.
- He had done a very strange thing. He had gone into the church, and sat
- there in the silence and the quiet of the sacristy&mdash;and twilight had
- come unnoticed. It was the quiet he had sought, respite for a mind that
- had suddenly seemed nerve-racked to the breaking point as he had come down
- the hill from Mother Blondin's. It had been dim, and still, and cool, and
- restful in there&mdash;in the church. There was still Valerie, still the
- priest who had not died, still his own peril and danger, and still the
- hazard of the night before him; all that had not been altered; all that
- still remained&mdash;but in a measure, strangely, somehow, he was calmed.
- He was full of apologies now to Madame Lafleur, as he sat down to supper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it is nothing!&rdquo; she said, placing a lamp upon the table. She sat down
- herself; and added simply, as though, indeed, no reason could be more
- valid: &ldquo;I saw you go into the church, Monsieur le Curé.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond, his eyes now on Valerie's empty seat. &ldquo;And where is
- Mademoiselle Valerie? Taking our <i>pauvre</i> Mentone his supper?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; she answered quickly. &ldquo;I took him his supper myself a little
- while ago&mdash;though I do not know whether he will eat it or not.
- Valerie went over to her uncle's about halfpast five. She said something
- about going for a drive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond cut his slice of cold pork without comment. He was conscious of a
- dismal sense of disappointment, a depression, a falling of his spirits
- again. The room seemed cold and dead without Valérie there, without her
- voice, without her smile. And then there came a sense of pique, of
- irritation, unreasonable no doubt, but there for all that. Why had she not
- included him in the drive? Fool! Had he forgotten? He could not have gone
- if she had&mdash;he had other things to do than drive that evening!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Madame Lafleur, significantly reverting to her former remark,
- as she handed him his tea, &ldquo;yes, I do not know if the poor fellow will eat
- anything or not.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond glanced at her quickly. What was the matter? Had anything been
- discovered! And then his eyes were on his plate again. Madame Lafleur's
- face, whatever her words might be intended to convey, was genuinely
- sympathetic, nothing more.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not eat?&rdquo; he repeated mildly. &ldquo;And why not, Madame Lafleur?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am sure I do not know,&rdquo; she replied, a little anxiously. &ldquo;I have never
- seen him so excited. I thought it was because he was to be taken away
- to-morrow morning. And so, when we went out this afternoon, I tried to say
- something to him about his going away that would cheer him up. And would
- you believe it, Monsieur le Curé, he just stared at me, and then, as
- though I had said something droll, he&mdash;fancy, Monsieur le Curé, from
- a man who was going to be tried for his life&mdash;he laughed until I
- thought he would never stop. And after that he would say nothing at all;
- and since he has come in he has not been for an instant still. Do you not
- hear him, Monsieur le Curé?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond heard very distinctly. His ears had caught the sounds from the
- moment he had entered the <i>presbytère</i>. Up and down, up and down,
- from that back room came the stumbling footfalls; then silence for a
- moment, as though from exhaustion the man had sunk down into a chair; and
- then the pacing to and fro again. Raymond's lips tightened in
- understanding, as he bent his head over his plate. Like himself, the man
- in there was waiting&mdash;for darkness!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He is over-excited,&rdquo; he said gravely. &ldquo;And being still so weak, the news
- that he is to go to-morrow, I am afraid, has been too much for him. I have
- no doubt he was verging on hysteria when he laughed at you like that,
- Madame Lafleur.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I hope we shall not have any trouble with him,&rdquo; said Madame
- Lafleur nervously. &ldquo;I mean that I hope he won't be taken sick again. He
- did not look at the tray at all when I took it in; he kept his eyes on me
- all the time, as though he were trying to read something in my face.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor fellow!&rdquo; murmured Raymond.
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Lafleur nodded her gray head in sympathetic assent.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, yes, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;the poor fellow!&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;It is a
- terrible thing that he has done; but it is also terrible to think of what
- he will have to face. Do you think it wrong, Monsieur le Curé, to wish
- almost that he might escape?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Escape! Curse it&mdash;what was the matter with Madame Lafleur to-night?
- Or was it something the matter with himself?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not wrong, perhaps,&rdquo; he said, smiling at her, &ldquo;if you do not connive at
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, but, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; she exclaimed reprovingly. &ldquo;What a thing to
- say! But I would never do that! Still, it is all very sad, and I am
- heartily glad that I am not to be a witness at the trial like you and
- Valérie. And they say that Madame Blondin, and Monsieur Labbée, the
- station agent, and a lot of the villagers are to go too.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I believe so,&rdquo; Raymond nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Lafleur, in quaint consternation, suddenly changed the subject.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, but I forgot to tell you!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;The bread! Madame Bouchard
- sent you two loaves all fresh and hot. Do you like it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The bread! He had been conscious neither that the bread was sour, nor that
- the crust was unmanageable. He became suddenly aware that the morsel in
- his mouth was not at all like the baking of Madame Lafleur.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are all too good to me here in St. Marleau,&rdquo; he protested.
- </p>
- <p>
- He checked her reply with a chiding forefinger, and a shake of his head&mdash;and
- presently, the meal at an end, pushed back his chair, and strolled to the
- window. He stood there for a moment looking out. It was dark now&mdash;dark
- enough for his purpose.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a beautiful night, Madame Lafleur,&rdquo; he said enthusiastically. &ldquo;I am
- almost tempted to go out again for a little walk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, yes, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;why not!&rdquo; Madame Lafleur was quite
- anxious that he should go. Madame Lafleur was possessed of that enviable
- disposition that was instantly responsive to the interests and pleasures
- of others.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;why not!&rdquo; smiled Raymond, patting her arm as he passed by her
- on his way to the door. &ldquo;Well, I believe I will.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But outside in the hall he hesitated. Should he go first to the man in the
- rear room? He had intended to do so before he went out&mdash;to probe the
- other, as it were, to satisfy himself, perhaps more by the man's acts and
- looks than by words, that Henri Mentone had entered into the plans for the
- night. But he was satisfied of that now. Madame Lafleur's conversation had
- left no doubt but that the man's unusual restlessness and excitement were
- due to his being on the <i>qui vive</i> of expectancy. No, there was no
- use, therefore, in going to the man now, it would only be a waste of
- valuable time.
- </p>
- <p>
- This decision taken, Raymond walked to the front door and down the steps
- of the porch. Here he turned, and, choosing the opposite side of the house
- from the kitchen and dining room, where he might have been observed by
- Madame Lafleur, yet still moving deliberately as though he were but
- sauntering idly toward the beach, made his way around to the rear of the
- <i>presbytère</i>. It was quite dark. There were stars, but no moon.
- Behind here, between the back of the house and the shed, there was no
- possibility of his being seen. The only light came from Henri Mentone's
- room, and the shades there were drawn.
- </p>
- <p>
- He opened the shed door silently, stepped inside, and closed the door
- behind him. He struck a match, held it above his head&mdash;and almost
- instantly extinguished it, as he located the sacristan's overalls, and the
- old coat and hat.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now Raymond worked quickly. He stripped off his <i>soutane</i>, drew
- on the overalls, turning the bottoms well up over his own trousers,
- slipped on the coat, tucked the hat into one of the coat pockets, and put
- on his <i>soutane</i> again. It was very simple&mdash;the <i>soutane</i>
- hid everything. He smiled grimly, as he, stepped outside again&mdash;the
- Monsieur le Curé who came out, was the Monsieur le Curé who had gone in.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond chose the beach. The village street meant that he would be delayed
- by being forced to stop and talk with any one he might meet, to say
- nothing of the possibility of having the ruinous, if well meaning,
- companionship of some one foisted upon him&mdash;while, even if seen,
- there would be nothing strange in the fact that the curé should be taking
- an evening walk along the shore.
- </p>
- <p>
- He started off at a brisk pace along the stretch of sand just behind the
- <i>presbytère</i>. It was a mile and a quarter to the point&mdash;to
- Jacques Bourget's. At the end of the sandy stretch Raymond went more
- slowly&mdash;the shore line as a promenade left much to be desired&mdash;there
- was a seemingly interminable ledge of slate rock over which he had need to
- pick his way carefully. He negotiated this, and was rewarded with another
- short sandy strip&mdash;but only to encounter the slate rocks again with
- their ubiquitous little pools of water in the hollows, which he must avoid
- warily.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sometimes he slipped; once he fell. The grim smile was back on his lips.
- There seemed to be something ironical even in these minor difficulties
- that stood between him and the effecting of the other's escape! There
- seemed to be a world of irony in the fact that he who sought escape
- himself should plan another's rather than his own! It was the devil's
- toils, that was all, the devil's damnable ingenuity, and hell's
- incomparable sense of humour! He had either to desert the man; or stand in
- the man's place himself, and dangle from the gallows for his pains; or get
- the man away. Well, he had no desire to dangle from the gallows&mdash;or
- to desert the man! He had chosen the third and only course left open to
- him. If he got the man away, if the man succeeded in making his escape, it
- would not only save the man, but he, Raymond, would have nothing
- thereafter to fear&mdash;the Curé of St. Marleau in due course would meet
- with his deplorable and fatal accident! True, the man would always live in
- the shadow of pursuit, a thing that he, Raymond, had been willing to
- accept for himself only as a last resort, but there was no help for that
- in the other's case now. He would give the man more money, plenty of it.
- The man should be across the border and in the States early to-morrow,
- then New York, and a steamer for South America. Yes, it should
- unquestionably succeed. He had worked out all those details while he was
- still racking his brain for a &ldquo;Jacques Bourget,&rdquo; and he would give the man
- minute instructions at the last moment when he gave him more money&mdash;that
- hundred dollars was only an evidence of good faith and of the loyalty of
- one &ldquo;Pierre.&rdquo; The only disturbing factor in the plan was the man's
- physical condition. The man was still virtually an invalid&mdash;otherwise
- the police would have been neither justified in so doing, nor for a moment
- have been willing to leave him in the <i>presbytère</i>, as they had.
- Monsieur Dupont was no fool, and it was perfectly true that the man had
- not the slightest chance in the world of getting away&mdash;alone. But,
- aided as he, Raymond, proposed to aid the other, the man surely would be
- able to stand the strain of travelling, for a man could do much where his
- life was at stake. Yes, after all, why worry on that score! It was only
- the night and part of the next day. Then the man could rest quietly at a
- certain address in New York, while waiting for his steamer. Yes,
- unquestionably, the man, with his life in the balance, would be able to
- manage that.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond was still picking his way over the ledges, still slipping and
- stumbling, and now, recovering from a fall that had brought him to his
- knees, he gave his undivided attention to his immediate task. It seemed a
- very long mile and a quarter, but at the expiration of perhaps another
- twenty minutes he was at the end of it, and halted to take note of his
- surroundings. He could just distinguish the village road edging away on
- his left; while ahead of him, but a little to his right, out on the wooded
- point, he caught the glimmer of a light through the trees. That would be
- Jacques Bourget's house.
- </p>
- <p>
- He now looked cautiously about him. There was no other house in sight. His
- eyes swept the road up and down as far as he could see&mdash;there was no
- one, no sign of life. He listened&mdash;there was nothing, save the
- distant lapping of the water far out, for the tide was low on the mud
- flats.
- </p>
- <p>
- A large rock close at hand suggested a landmark that could not be
- mistaken. He stepped toward it, took off his <i>soutane</i>, and laid the
- garment down beside the rock; he removed his clerical collar and his
- clerical hat, and placed them on top of the <i>soutane</i>, taking care,
- however, to cover the white collar with the hat&mdash;then, turning down
- the trouser legs of the overalls, and turning up the collar of the
- threadbare coat, he took the battered slouch hat from his pocket and
- pulled it far down over his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Behold,&rdquo; said Raymond cynically, &ldquo;behold Pierre&mdash;what is his other
- name? Well, what does it matter? Pierre&mdash;Desforges. Desforges will do
- as well as any&mdash;behold Pierre Desforges!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He left the beach, went up the little rise of ground that brought him
- amongst the trees, and made his way through the latter toward the lighted
- window of the house. Arrived here, he once more looked about him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The house was isolated, far back from the road; and, in the darkness and
- the shadows cast by the trees, would have been scarcely discernible, save
- that it was whitewashed, and but for the yellow glow diffused from the
- window. He approached the door softly, and listened. A woman's voice, and
- then a man's, snarling viciously, reached him. &ldquo;... <i>le sacré maudit
- curé!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond laughed low. Jacques Bourget and his wife appeared to have an
- engrossing topic of conversation, if they had been at it since afternoon!
- Also Jacques Bourget appeared to be of an unforgiving nature!
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no veranda, not even a step, the door was on a level with the
- ground; and, from the little Raymond could see of the house now that he
- was close beside it, it appeared to be as down-at-the-heels and as
- shiftless as its proprietor. He leaned forward to avail himself of the
- light from the window, and, taking out a roll of bills, of smaller
- denominations than those which he carried in his pocketbook, he counted
- out five ten-dollar notes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jacques Bourget from within was still in the midst of a blasphemous
- tirade. Raymond rapped sharply on the door with his knuckles. Bourget's
- voice ceased instantly, and there was silence for a moment. Raymond rapped
- again&mdash;and then, as a chair leg squeaked upon the floor, and there
- came the sound of a heavy tread approaching the door, he drew quickly back
- into the shadows at one side.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door was flung open, and Bourget's face, battered and cut, an eye
- black and swollen, his lip puffed out to twice its normal size, peered out
- into the darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who's there?&rdquo; he called out gruffly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;S-sh! Don't talk so loud!&rdquo; Raymond cautioned in a guarded voice. &ldquo;Are you
- Jacques Bourget?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man, with a start, turned his face in the direction of Raymond's
- voice. Mechanically he dropped his own voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mabbe I am, and mabbe I'm not,&rdquo; he growled suspiciously. &ldquo;What do you
- want?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to talk to you if you are Jacques Bourget,&rdquo; Raymond answered. &ldquo;And
- if you are Jacques Bourget I can put you in the way of turning a few
- dollars tonight, to say nothing of another little matter that will be to
- your liking.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man hesitated, then drew back a little in the doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, come in,&rdquo; he invited. &ldquo;There's no one but the old woman here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The old woman is one old woman too many,&rdquo; Raymond said roughly. &ldquo;I'm not
- on exhibition. You come out here, and shut the door. You've nothing to be
- afraid of&mdash;the only thing I have to do with the police is to keep
- away from them, and that takes me all my time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ain't worrying about the police,&rdquo; said Bourget shrewdly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Maybe not,&rdquo; returned Raymond. &ldquo;I didn't say you were. I said I was. I've
- got a hundred dollars here that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A woman appeared suddenly in the doorway behind Bourget.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it? Who is it, Jacques?&rdquo; she shrilled out inquisitively.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bourget, for answer, swore at her, pushed her back, and, slamming the door
- behind him, stepped outside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what is it? And who are you?&rdquo; he demanded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My name is Desforges&mdash;Pierre Desforges,&rdquo; said Raymond, his voice
- still significantly low. &ldquo;That doesn't mean anything to you&mdash;and it
- doesn't matter. What I want you to do is to drive a man to the second
- station from here to-night&mdash;St. Eustace is the name, isn't it?&mdash;and
- you get a hundred dollars for the trip.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; Bourget's voice mingled incredulity and avarice. &ldquo;A
- hundred dollars for that, eh? Are you trying to make a fool of me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond held the bills up before the man's face. &ldquo;Feel the money, if you
- can't see it!&rdquo; he suggested, with a short laugh. &ldquo;That's what talks.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Bon Dieu!</i>&rdquo; ejaculated Bourget. &ldquo;Yes, it is so! Well, who am I to
- drive? You? You are running away! Yes, Î understand! They are after you&mdash;eh?
- I am to drive you, eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Raymond. He drew the man close to him in the darkness, and
- placed his lips to Bourget's ear. &ldquo;<i>Henri Mentone</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bourget, startled, sprang back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>What! Who!</i>&rdquo; he cried out loudly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I told you not to talk so loud!&rdquo; snapped Raymond. &ldquo;You heard what I
- said.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bourget twisted his head furtively about.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, '<i>cré nom&mdash;no!</i>&rdquo; he said huskily. &ldquo;It is too much risk! If
- one were caught at that&mdash;eh? <i>Bien non, merci!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's no chance of your being caught&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's voice was smooth
- again. &ldquo;It is only nine miles to St. Eustace&mdash;you will be back and in
- bed long before daylight. Who is to know anything about it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and you!&rdquo;&mdash;Bourget was still twisting his head about furtively.
- &ldquo;What do I know about you? What have you to do with this?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will tell you,&rdquo; said Raymond, and into the velvet softness of his voice
- there crept an ominous undertone; &ldquo;and at the same time I will tell you
- that you will be very wise to keep your mouth shut. You understand? If I
- trust you, it is to make you trust me. Henri Mentone is my pal. I was
- there the night Théophile Blondin was killed. But I made my escape. I do
- not desert a pal, only I had no money. Well, I have the money now, and I
- am back. And I am just in time&mdash;eh? They say he is well enough to be
- taken away in the morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Mon Dieu</i>, you were there at the killing!&rdquo; muttered Bourget
- hoarsely. &ldquo;No&mdash;I do not like it! No&mdash;it is too much risk!&rdquo; His
- voice grew suddenly sharp with undisguised suspicion. &ldquo;And why did you
- come to me, eh? Why did you come to me? Who sent you here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I came because Mentone must be driven to St. Eustace&mdash;because he is
- not strong enough to walk,&rdquo; said Raymond coolly. &ldquo;And no one sent me here.
- I heard of your fight this afternoon. The curé is telling around the
- village that if he could not change the aspect of your heart, there was no
- doubt as to the change in the aspect of your face.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Sacré nom!</i>&rdquo; gritted Bourget furiously. &ldquo;He said that! I will show
- him! I am not through with him yet! But what has he to do with this that
- you come here? Eh? I do not understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Simply,&rdquo; said Raymond meaningly, &ldquo;that Monsieur le Curé is the one with
- whom we shall have to deal in getting Mentone away.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hah!&rdquo; exclaimed Bourget fiercely. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;I am listening now! Well?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He sits a great deal of the time in the room with Mentone,&rdquo; explained
- Raymond, with a callous laugh. &ldquo;Very well. Mentone has been warned. If
- this fool of a curé knows no better than to sit there all night tonight, I
- will find some reason for calling him outside, and in the darkness where
- he will recognise no one we shall know what to do with him, and when we
- are through we will tie him and gag him and throw him into the shed where
- he will not be found until morning. On the other hand, if we are able to
- get Mentone away without the curé knowing it, you will still not be
- without your revenge. He is responsible for Mentone, and if Mentone gets
- away through the curé's negligence, the curé will get into trouble with
- the police.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I like the first plan better,&rdquo; decided Bourget, with an ugly sneer. &ldquo;He
- talks of my face, does he! <i>Nom de Dieu,</i> he will not be able to talk
- of his own! And a hundred dollars&mdash;eh? You said a hundred dollars?
- Well, if there is no more risk than that in the rest of the plan, <i>sacré
- nom</i>, you can count on Jacques Bourget&rdquo;. . .
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is no risk at all,&rdquo; said Raymond. &ldquo;And as to which plan&mdash;we
- shall see. We shall have to be guided by the circumstances, eh? And for
- the rest&mdash;listen! I will return by the beach, and watch the <i>presbytère</i>.
- You give me time to get back, then harness your horse and drive down there&mdash;drive
- past the <i>presbytère</i>. I will be listening, and will hear you. Then
- after you have gone a little way beyond, turn around and come back, and I
- will know that it is you. If you drive in behind the church to where the
- people tie their horses at mass on Sundays, you can wait there without
- being seen by any one passing by on the road. I will come and let you know
- how things are going. We may have to wait a while after that until
- everything is quiet, but in that way we will be ready to act the minute it
- is safe to do so.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All that is simple enough,&rdquo; Bourget grunted in agreement. &ldquo;And then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then,&rdquo; said Raymond, &ldquo;we will get Mentone out through the window of
- his room. There is a train that passes St. Eustace at ten minutes after
- midnight&mdash;and that is all. The St. Eustace station, I understand, is
- like the one here&mdash;far from the village, and with no houses about. He
- can hide near the station until traintime; and, without having shown
- yourself, you can drive back home and go to bed. It is your wife only that
- you have to think of&mdash;she will say nothing, eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Baptême!</i>&rdquo; snorted Bourget contemptuously. &ldquo;She has learned before
- now when to keep her tongue where it belongs! And you? You are coming,
- too?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think I am a fool, Bourget?&rdquo; inquired Raymond shortly. &ldquo;When they
- find Mentone is gone, they will know he must have had an accomplice, for
- he could not get far alone. They will be looking for two of us travelling
- together. I will go the other way. That makes it safe for Mentone&mdash;and
- safe for me. I can walk to Tournayville easily before daylight; and in
- that way we shall both give the police the slip.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Diable!</i>&rdquo; grunted Bourget admiringly. &ldquo;You have a head!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is good enough to take care of us all in a little job like
- to-night's,&rdquo; returned Raymond, with a shrug of his shoulders. &ldquo;Well, do
- you understand everything? For if you do, there's no use wasting any
- time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;I have it all!&rdquo; Bourget's voice grew vicious again. &ldquo;That <i>sacré
- maudit curé!</i> Yes, I understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond thrust the banknotes he had been holding into Bourget's hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here are fifty dollars to bind the bargain,&rdquo; he said crisply. &ldquo;You get
- the other fifty at the church. If you don't get them, all you've got to do
- is drive off and leave Mentone in the lurch. That's fair, isn't it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bourget shuffled back to the edge of the lighted window, counted the
- money, and shoved it into his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Bon Dieu!</i>&rdquo; Bourget's puffed lip twisted into a satisfied grin. &ldquo;I
- do not mind telling you, my Pierre Desforges, that it is long since I have
- seen so much.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, the other fifty is just as good,&rdquo; said Raymond in grim pleasantry.
- He stepped back and away from the house. &ldquo;At the church then, Bourget&mdash;in,
- say, three-quarters of an hour.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will be there,&rdquo; Bourget answered. &ldquo;Have no fear&mdash;I will be there!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right!&rdquo; Raymond called back&mdash;and a moment later gained the beach
- again.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the rock, he once more put on his <i>soutane</i>; and, running now
- where the sandy stretches gave him opportunity, scrambling as rapidly as
- he could over the ledges of slate rock, he headed back for the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was as good as done! There was a freeness to his spirits now&mdash;a
- weight and an oppression lifted from him. Henri Mentone would stand in no
- prisoner's dock the day after to-morrow to answer for the murder of
- Théophile Blondin! And it was very simple&mdash;now that Bourget's aid had
- been enlisted. He smiled ironically as he went along. It would not even be
- necessary to pommel Monsieur le Curé into a state of insensibility! Madame
- Lafleur retired very early&mdash;by nine o'clock at the latest&mdash;as
- did Valérie. As soon as he heard Bourget drive up to the church, he would
- go to the man to allay any impatience, and as evidence that the plan was
- working well. He would return then to the <i>presbytère</i>&mdash;it was a
- matter only of slipping on and off his <i>soutane</i> to appear as Father
- Aubert to Madame Lafleur and Valérie, and as Pierre Desforges to Jacques
- Bourget. And the moment Madame Lafleur and Valérie were in bed, he would
- extinguish the light in the front room as proof that Monsieur le Curé,
- too, had retired, run around to the back of the house, get Henri Mentone
- out of the window, and hand him over to Bourget, explaining that
- everything had worked even more smoothly than he had hoped for, that all
- were in bed, and that there was no chance of the escape being discovered
- until morning. Bourget, it was true, was very likely to be disappointed in
- the measure of the revenge wrecked upon the curé, but Bourget's feelings
- in the matter, since Bourget then would have no choice but to drive Henri
- Mentone to St. Eustace, were of little account.
- </p>
- <p>
- And as far as Henri Mentone was concerned, it was very simple too. The man
- would have ample time and opportunity to get well out of reach. He,
- Raymond, would take care that the man's disappearance was not discovered
- any earlier than need be in the morning! It would then be a perfectly
- natural supposition&mdash;a supposition which he, Raymond, would father&mdash;that
- the man, in his condition, could not be far away, but had probably only
- gone restlessly and aimlessly from the house; and at first no one would
- even think of such a thing as escape. They would look for him around the
- <i>presbytère</i>, and close at hand on the beach. It would be impossible
- that, weak as he was, the man had gone far! The search would perhaps be
- extended to the village by the time Monsieur Dupont arrived for his
- vanished prisoner. Then they would extend the search still further, to the
- adjacent fields and woods, and it would certainly be noontime before the
- alternative that the man, aided by an accomplice, had got away became the
- only tenable conclusion. But even then Monsieur Dupont would either have
- to drive three miles to the station to reach the telegraph, or return to
- Tournayville&mdash;and by that time Henri Mentone would long since have
- been in the United States.
- </p>
- <p>
- And after that&mdash;Raymond smiled ironically again&mdash;-well after
- that, it would be Monsieur Dupont's move!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XV&mdash;HOW HENRI MENTONE RODE WITH JACQUES BOURGET
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T was eight
- o'clock&mdash;the clock was striking in the kitchen&mdash;as Raymond
- entered the <i>presbytère</i> again. He stepped briskly to the door of the
- front room, opened it, and paused&mdash;no, before going in there to wait,
- it would be well first to let Madame Lafleur know that he was back, to
- establish the fact that it was <i>after</i> his return that the man had
- escaped, that his evening walk could in no way be connected with what
- would set all St. Marleau by the ears in the morning. And so he passed on
- to the dining room, which Madame Lafleur used as a sitting room as well.
- She was sewing beside the table lamp.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Always busy, Madame Lafleur!&rdquo; he called out cheerily, from the threshold.
- &ldquo;Well, and has Mademoiselle Valérie returned?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, it is you, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; she exclaimed, dropping her work on her
- knees. &ldquo;And did you enjoy your walk? No, Valérie has not come back here
- yet, though I am sure she must have got back to her uncle's by now. Did
- you want her for anything, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;to write letters? I can
- go over and tell her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, no&mdash;not at all!&rdquo; said Raymond hastily. He indicated the rear
- room with an inclination of his head. &ldquo;And our <i>pauvre</i> there?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Lafleur's sweet, motherly face grew instantly troubled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can hear him tossing on the bed yourself, Monsieur le Curé. I have
- just been in to see him. He has one of his bad moods. He said he wanted
- nothing except to be left alone. But I think he will soon be quiet. Poor
- man, he is so weak he will be altogether exhausted&mdash;it is only his
- mind that keeps him restless.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a very sad affair,&rdquo; he said slowly, &ldquo;a very sad affair!&rdquo; He lifted
- a finger and shook it playfully at Madame Lafleur. &ldquo;But we must think of
- you too&mdash;eh? Do not work too late, Madame Lafleur!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She answered him seriously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Only to finish this, Monsieur le Curé. See, it is an altar cloth&mdash;for
- next Sunday.&rdquo; She held it up. &ldquo;It is you who work too hard and too late.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a cross on a satin background. He stared at it. It had been hidden
- on her lap before. He had not been thinking of&mdash;a cross. For the
- moment, assured of Henri Mentone's escape, he had been more light of heart
- than at any time since he had come to St. Mar-leau; and, for the moment,
- he had forgotten that he was a meddler with holy things, that he was&mdash;a
- priest of God! It seemed as though this were being flaunted suddenly now
- as a jeering reminder before his eyes; and with it he seemed as suddenly
- to see the chancel, the altar of the church where the cloth was to play
- its part&mdash;and himself kneeling there&mdash;and, curse the vividness
- of it! he heard his own lips at their sacrilegious work: &ldquo;<i>Lavabo inter
- innocentes manus meas: et circumdabo altare tuum, Domine</i>.... I will
- wash my hands among the innocent: and I will compass Thine altar, O Lord.&rdquo;
- And so he stared at this cross she held before him, fighting to bring a
- pleased and approving smile to the lips that fought in turn for their
- right to snarl a defiant mockery.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, you like it, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; cried Madame Lafleur happily. &ldquo;I am
- so glad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond smiled for answer, and went from the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- And in the front room he lighted the lamp upon his desk, and stood there
- looking down at the two letters that still awaited the signature of&mdash;Francois
- Aubert. &ldquo;I will wash my hands among the innocent&rdquo;&mdash;he raised his
- hands, and they were clenched into hard and knotted fists. Words! Words!
- They were only words. And what did their damnable insinuations matter to
- him! Others might listen devoutly and believe, as he mouthed them in his
- surplice and stole&mdash;but for himself they were no more than the
- mimicry of sounds issuing from a parrot's beak! It was absurd then that
- they should affect him at all. He would better laugh and jeer at them, and
- all this holy entourage with which he cloaked himself, for these things
- were being made to serve his own ends, were being turned to his own
- account, and&mdash;it was Three-Ace Artie now, and he laughed hoarsely
- under his breath&mdash;for once they were proving of some real and
- tangible value! Madame Lafleur, and her cross, and her altar cloth! He
- laughed again. Well, while she was busy with her churchly task, that she
- no doubt fondly believed would hurry her exit through the purgatory to
- come, he would busy himself a little in getting as speedily as possible
- out of the purgatory of the present. These letters now. While he was
- waiting, and there was an opportunity, he would sign them. It would be
- easier to say that he had decided not to make any changes in them after
- all, than to have new ones written and then have to find another
- opportunity for signing the latter. He reached for the prayer-book to make
- a tracing of the signature that was on the fly-leaf&mdash;and suddenly
- drew back his hand, and stood motionless, listening.
- </p>
- <p>
- From the road came the rumble of wheels. The sound grew louder. The
- vehicle passed by the <i>presbytère</i>, going in the direction of
- Tournayville. The sound died away. Still Raymond listened&mdash;even more
- intently than before. Jacques Bourget did not own the only horse and wagon
- in St. Marleau, but Bourget was to turn around a little way down the road,
- and return to the church. A minute, two passed, another; and then Raymond
- caught the sound of a wheel-tire rasping and grinding against the body of
- a wagon, as though the latter were being turned in a narrow space&mdash;then
- presently the rattle of wheels again, coming back now toward the church.
- And now by the church he heard the wagon turn in from the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond relaxed from his strained attitude of attention. Jacques Bourget,
- it was quite evident, intended to earn the balance of his money! Well, for
- a word then between Pierre Desforges and Jacques Bourget&mdash;pending the
- time that Madame Lafleur and her altar cloth should go to bed. The letters
- could wait.
- </p>
- <p>
- He moved stealthily and very slowly across the room. Madame Lafleur must
- not hear him leaving the house. He would be gone only a minute&mdash;just
- to warn Bourget to keep very quiet, and to satisfy the man that everything
- was going well. He could strip off his <i>soutane</i> and leave it under
- the porch.
- </p>
- <p>
- Cautiously he opened the door, an inch at a time that it might not creak,
- and stepped out into the hall on tiptoe&mdash;and listened. Madame
- Lafleur's rocking chair squeaked back and forth reassuringly. She had
- perhaps had enough of her altar cloth for a while! How could one do fine
- needle work&mdash;and rock! And why that fanciful detail to flash across
- his mind! And&mdash;his face was suddenly set, his lips tight-drawn
- together&mdash;<i>what was this!</i> These footsteps that had made no
- sound in crossing the green, but were quick and heavy upon the porch
- outside! He drew back upon the threshold of his room. And then the front
- door was thrust open. And in the doorway was Dupont, Monsieur Dupont, the
- assistant chief of the Tournayville police, and behind Dupont was another
- man, and behind the man was&mdash;yes&mdash;it was Valerie.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens! 'Cré nom d'un chien!</i>&rdquo; clucked Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Ha,
- Monsieur le Curé, you heard us&mdash;eh? But you did not hear us until we
- were at the door&mdash;and a man posted at the back of the house by that
- window there, eh? No, you did not hear us. Well, we have nipped the little
- scheme in the bud, eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dupont <i>knew!</i> Raymond's hand tightened on the door jamb&mdash;and,
- as once before, his other hand crept in under his crucifix, and under the
- breast of his <i>soutane</i> to his revolver.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not understand&rdquo;&mdash;he spoke deliberately, gravely. &ldquo;You speak of
- a scheme, Monsieur Dupont? I do not understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, you do not understand!&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Duponts face screwed up into a
- cryptic smile. &ldquo;No, of course, you do not understand! Well, you will in a
- moment! But first we will attend to Monsieur Henri Mentone! Now then,
- Marchand&rdquo;&mdash;he addressed his companion, and pointed to the rear room&mdash;&ldquo;that
- room in there, and handcuff him to you. You had better stay where you are,
- Monsieur le Curé. Come along, Marchand!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dupont and his companion ran into Henri Mentone's room. Raymond heard
- Madame Lafleur cry out in sudden consternation. It was echoed by a cry in
- Henri Mentone's voice. But he was looking at Valérie, who had stepped into
- the hall. She was very pale. What had she to do with this? What did it
- mean? Had she discovered that he&mdash;no, Dupont would not have rushed
- away in that case, but then&mdash;His lips moved: &ldquo;You&mdash;Valérie!&rdquo; How
- very pale she was&mdash;and how those dark eyes, deep with something he
- could not fathom, sought his face, only to be quickly veiled by their long
- lashes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do not look like that, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;as though I had done
- wrong.&rdquo; she said in a low, hurried tone. &ldquo;I am sorry for the man too; but
- the police were to have taken him away to-morrow morning in any case. And
- if I went for Monsieur Dupont to-night, it was&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You went for Monsieur Dupont?&rdquo;&mdash;he repeated her words dazedly, as
- though he had not heard aright. &ldquo;It was you who brought Monsieur Dupont
- here just now&mdash;from Tournayville! But&mdash;but, I do not understand
- at all!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Valérie! Valérie!&rdquo;&mdash;it was Madame Lafleur, pale and excited, who had
- rushed to her daughter's side. &ldquo;Valérie, speak quickly! What are they
- doing? What does all this mean?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie's arm stole around her mother's shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I was just telling Father Aubert, mother,&rdquo; she said, a little
- tremulously. &ldquo;You&mdash;you must not be nervous. See, it was like this.
- You had just taken the man for a little walk about the green this
- afternoon&mdash;you remember? When I came out of the house a few minutes
- later to join you, I saw what I thought looked like some money sticking
- out from one end of a folded-up piece of paper that was lying on the grass
- just at the bottom of the porch steps. I was sure, of course, that it was
- only a trick my imagination was playing on me, but I stooped down and
- picked it up. It was money, a great deal of money, and there was writing
- on the paper. I read it, and then I was afraid. It was from some friend of
- that man's in there, and was a plan for him to make his escape to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Escape!&rdquo;&mdash;Madame Lafleur drew closer to her daughter, as she glanced
- apprehensively toward the rear room.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dupont's voice floated menacingly out into the hall&mdash;came a gruff
- oath from his companion&mdash;the sound of a chair over-turned&mdash;and
- Henri Mentone's cry, pitched high.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a curiously futile way Raymond's hand dropped from the breast of his <i>soutane</i>
- to his side. Valérie and her mother seemed to be swirling around in
- circles in the hall before him. He forced himself to speak naturally:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie's eyes were on her mother.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I did not want to alarm you, mother,&rdquo; she went on rapidly; &ldquo;and so I told
- you I was going for a drive. I ran to uncle's house. He was out somewhere.
- I could go as well as any one, and if Henri Mentone had a friend lurking
- somewhere in the village there would be nothing to arouse suspicion in a
- girl driving alone; and, besides, I did not know who this friend might be,
- and I did not know who to trust. I told old Adèle that I wanted to go for
- a drive, and she helped me to harness the horse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And now, as Raymond listened, those devils, that had chuckled and
- screeched as the lumpy earth had thudded down on the lid of Théophile
- Blondin's coffin, were at their hell-carols again. It was not just luck,
- just the unfortunate turn of a card that the man had dropped the money and
- the note. It was more than that. It seemed to hold a grim, significant
- premonition&mdash;for the future. Those devils did well to chuckle!
- Struggle as he would, they had woven their net too cunningly for his
- escape. It was those devils who had torn his coat that night in the storm,
- as he had tried to force his way through the woods. It was <i>his</i> coat
- that Henri Mentone was wearing. He remembered now that the lining of the
- pocket on the inside had been ripped across. It was those devils who had
- seen to that&mdash;for this&mdash;knowing what was to come. A finger
- seemed to wag with hideous jocularity before his eyes&mdash;the finger of
- fate. He looked at Valerie. It was nothing for her to have driven to
- Tournayville, she had probably done it a hundred times before, but it
- seemed a little strange that Henri Mentone's possible escape should have
- been, apparently, so intimate and personal a matter to her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You were afraid, you said, Mademoiselle Valerie,&rdquo; he said slowly. &ldquo;Afraid&mdash;that
- he would escape?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head&mdash;and the colour mounted suddenly in her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of what then?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of what was in the note,&rdquo; she said, in a low voice. &ldquo;I knew I had time,
- for nothing was to be done until the <i>presbytère</i> was quiet for the
- night; but the plan then was to&mdash;to put you out of the way, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His voice was suddenly hoarse.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you were afraid&mdash;for me? It was for me that you have done this?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not answer. The colour was still in her cheeks&mdash;her eyes were
- lowered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The blessed saints!&rdquo; cried Madame Lafleur, crossing herself. &ldquo;The devils!
- They would do harm to Father Aubert! Well, I am sorry for that man no
- longer! He&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They were coming along the hall&mdash;Henri Mentone handcuffed to Monsieur
- Dupont's companion, and Monsieur Dupont himself in the rear.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; Henri Mentone called out wildly. &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé, do
- not&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Enough! Hold your tongue!&rdquo; snapped Monsieur Dupont, giving the man a push
- past Raymond toward the front door. &ldquo;Do you appeal to Monsieur le Curé
- because he has been good to you&mdash;or because you intended to knock
- Monsieur le Curé on the head to-night! Bah! Hurry him along, Marchand!&rdquo;
- Monsieur Dupont paused before Valérie and her mother. &ldquo;You will do me a
- favour, mesdames? A very great favour&mdash;yes? You will retire instantly
- to bed&mdash;instantly. I have my reasons. Yes, that is right&mdash;go at
- once.&rdquo; He turned to Raymond. &ldquo;And you, Monsieur le Curé, you will wait for
- me here, eh? Yes, you will wait. I will be back on the instant.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The hall was empty. In a subconscious sort of way Raymond stepped back
- into his room, and, reaching the desk, stood leaning heavily against it.
- His brain would tolerate no single coherent thought. Valérie had done this
- for fear of harm to him, Valérie had... there was Jacques Bourget who if
- he attempted now to... it was no wonder that Henri Mentone had been
- restless all evening, knowing that he had lost the note, and not daring to
- question... the day after to-morrow there was to be a trial at the
- criminal assizes... Valérie had not met his eyes, but there had been the
- crimson colour in her face, and she had done this to save <i>him</i>...
- were they still laughing, those hell-devils... were they now engaged in
- making Valérie love him, and making her torture her soul because she was
- so pure that no thought could strike her more cruelly than that love
- should come to her for a priest? Ah, his brain was logical now! His hands
- clenched, and unclenched, and clenched again. Impotent fury was upon him.
- If it were true! Damn them to the everlasting place from whence they came!
- But it was not true! It was but another trick of theirs to make him writhe
- the more&mdash;to make <i>him</i> believe she cared!
- </p>
- <p>
- A footstep! He looked up. Monsieur Dupont was back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens!</i>&rdquo; cried Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Well, you have had an escape,
- Monsieur le Curé! An escape! Yes, you have! But I do not take all the
- credit. No, I do not. She is a fine girl, that Valérie Lafleur. If she
- were a man she would have a career&mdash;with the police. I would see to
- it! But you do not know yet what it is all about, Monsieur le Curé, eh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There was a note and money that Mademoiselle Valérie said she found&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's
- voice was steady, composed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Zut!</i>&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont laid his forefinger along the side of his
- nose impressively. &ldquo;That is the least of it! There is an accomplice&mdash;two
- of them in it! You would not have thought that, eh, Monsieur le Curé? No,
- you would not. Very well, then&mdash;listen! I have this Mentone safe, and
- now I, Dupont, will give this accomplice a little surprise. There will be
- the two of them at the trial for the murder of Théophile Blondin! The
- grand jury is still sitting. You understand, Monsieur le Curé? Yes, you
- understand. You are listening?&rdquo;...
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am listening,&rdquo; said Raymond gravely&mdash;and instinctively glanced
- toward the window. It might still have been Jacques Bourget who had turned
- down there on the road; or, if not, then the man would be along at any
- minute. In either case, he must find some way to warn Bourget. &ldquo;I am
- listening, Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; he said again. &ldquo;You propose to lay a trap for
- this accomplice?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is already laid,&rdquo; announced Monsieur Dupont complacently. &ldquo;They will
- discover with whom they are dealing! I returned at once with Mademoiselle
- Valérie. I brought two men with me; but you will observe, Monsieur le
- Curé, that I did not bring two teams&mdash;nothing to arouse suspicion&mdash;nothing
- to indicate that I was about to remove our friend Mentone to-night. It
- would be a very simple matter to secure a team here when I was ready for
- it. You see, Monsieur le Curé? Yes, you see. Very well! My plans worked
- without a hitch. Just as we approached the church, we met a man named
- Jacques Bourget driving alone in a buckboard. Nothing could be better. It
- was excellent. I stopped him. I requisitioned him and his horse and his
- wagon in the name of the law. I made him turn around, and told him to
- follow us back here after a few minutes. You see, Monsieur le Curé? Yes,
- you see. Monsieur Jacques Bourget is now on his way to Tournayville with
- one of my officers and the prisoner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's fingers were playing nonchalantly with the chain of his
- crucifix. Raymond's face was unmoved. It was really funny, was it not! No
- wonder those denizens of hell were shrieking with abandoned glee in his
- ears. This time they had a right to be amused. It was really very funny&mdash;that
- Jacques Bourget should be driving Henri Mentone away from St. Marleau!
- Well, and now&mdash;what?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are to be congratulated, Monsieur Dupont,&rdquo; he murmured. &ldquo;But the
- accomplice&mdash;the other one, who is still at large?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, the other one!&rdquo; said Monsieur Dupont, and laid his hand
- confidentially on Raymond's arm. &ldquo;The other&mdash;heh, <i>mon Dieu</i>,
- Monsieur le Curé, but you wear heavy clothes for the summertime!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the bulk of the sacristan's old coat! There was a smile in
- Raymond's eyes, a curious smile, as he searched the other's face. One
- could never be sure of Monsieur Dupont.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A coat always under my <i>soutane</i> in the evenings&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's
- voice was tranquil, and he did not withdraw his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A coat&mdash;yes&mdash;of course!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont nodded his head. &ldquo;Why
- not! Well then, the other&mdash;listen. All has been done very quietly. No
- alarm raised. None at all! I have sent Madame Lafleur and her daughter to
- bed. The plan was that the accomplice should come to the back window for
- Mentone. But they would not make the attempt until late&mdash;until all in
- the village was quiet. That is evident, is it not? Yes, it is evident.
- Very good! You sleep here in this room, Monsieur le Curé? Yes? Well, you
- too will put out your light and retire at once. I will go into Mentone's
- room, and wait there in the dark for our other friend to come to the
- window. I will be Henri Mentone. You see? Yes, you see. It is simple, is
- it not? Yes, it is simple. Before morning I will have the man in a cell
- alongside of Henri Mentone. Do you see any objections to the plan,
- Monsieur le Curé?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Only that it might prove very dangerous&mdash;for you,&rdquo; said Raymond
- soberly. &ldquo;If the man, who is certain to be a desperate character, attacked
- you before you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dangerous! Bah!&rdquo; exclaimed Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;That is part of my business.
- I do not consider that! I have my other officer outside there now by the
- shed. As soon as the man we are after approaches the window, the officer
- will leap upon him and overpower him. And now, Monsieur le Curé, to bed&mdash;eh?
- And the light out!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At once!&rdquo; agreed Raymond. &ldquo;And I wish you every success, Monsieur Dupont!
- If you need help you have only to call; or, if you like, I will go in
- there and stay with you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, no&mdash;not at all!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont moved toward the door. &ldquo;It is
- not necessary. Nothing can go wrong. We may have to wait well through the
- night, and there is no reason why you should remain up too. <i>Tiens!</i>
- Fancy! Imagine! Did I not tell you that Mentone was a hardened rascal? Two
- of them! Well, we will see if the second one can remember any better than
- the first? The light, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;do not forget! He will not
- come while there is a sound or a light about the house!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont
- waved his hand, and the door closed on Monsieur Dupont.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond, still leaning against the desk, heard the other walk along the
- hall, and enter the rear room&mdash;and then all was quiet. He leaned over
- and blew out the lamp. Nothing must be allowed to frustrate Monsieur
- Dupont's plans!
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, in the darkness, for a long time Raymond stood there. And
- thinking of Monsieur Dupont's dangerous vigil in the other room, he
- laughed; and thinking of Valérie, he knew a bitter joy; and thinking of
- Henri Mentone, his hands knotted at his sides, and his face grew strained
- and drawn. And after that long time was past, he fumbled with his hands
- outstretched before him like a blind man feeling his way, and flung
- himself down upon the couch.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVI&mdash;FOR THE MURDER OF THÉOPHILE BLONDIN
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HEY sat on two
- benches by themselves, the witnesses in the trial of Henri Mentone for the
- murder of Théophile Blondin. On one side of Raymond was Valérie, on the
- other was Mother Blondin; and there was Labbée, the station agent, and
- Monsieur Dupont, and Doctor Arnaud. And on the other bench were several of
- the villagers, and two men Raymond did not know, and another man, a crown
- surveyor, who had just testified to the difference in time and distance
- from the station to Madame Blondin's as between the road and the path&mdash;thus
- establishing for the prosecution the fact that by following the path there
- had been ample opportunity for the crime to have been committed by one who
- had left the station after the curé had already started toward the village
- and yet still be discovered by the curé on the road near the tavern. The
- counsel appointed by the court for the defence had allowed the testimony
- to go unchallenged. It was obvious. It did not require a crown surveyor to
- announce the fact&mdash;even an urchin from St. Marleau was already aware
- of it. The villagers too had testified. They had testified that Madame
- Blondin had come running into the village screaming out that her son had
- been murdered; and that they had gone back with her to her house and had
- found the dead body of her son lying on the floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was stiflingly hot in the courtroom; and the courtroom was crowded to
- its last available inch of space.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were many there from Tournayville&mdash;but there was all of St.
- Marleau. It was St. Marleau's own and particular affair. Since early
- morning, since very early morning, Raymond had seen and heard the vehicles
- of all descriptions rattling past the <i>presbytère</i>, the occupants
- dressed in their Sunday clothes. It was a <i>jour de fête</i>. St. Marleau
- did not every day have a murder of its own! The fields were deserted; only
- the very old and the children had not come. They were not all in the room,
- for there was not place for them all&mdash;those who had not been on hand
- at the opening of the doors had been obliged to content themselves with
- gathering outside to derive what satisfaction they could from their
- proximity to the fateful events that were transpiring within; and they had
- at least seen the prisoner led handcuffed from the jail that adjoined the
- courthouse, and had been rewarded to the extent of being able to view with
- intense and bated interest people they had known all their lives, such as
- Valérie, and Mother Blondin, and the more privileged of their fellows who
- had been chosen as witnesses, as these latter disappeared inside the
- building!
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes roved around the courtroom, and rested upon the judge upon
- the bench. His first glance at the judge, taken at the moment the other
- had entered the room, had brought a certain, quick relief. Far from
- severity, the white-haired man sitting there in his black gown had a
- kindly, genial face. He found his first impressions even strengthened now.
- His eyes passed on to the crown prosecutor; and here, too, he found cause
- for reassurance. The man was middle-aged, shrewd-faced, and somewhat
- domineering. He was crisp, incisive, and had been even unnecessarily blunt
- and curt in his speech and manner so far&mdash;he was not one who would
- enlist the sympathy of a jury. On the other hand&mdash;Raymond's eyes
- shifted again, to hold on the clean-cut, smiling face of the prisoner's
- counsel&mdash;Lemoyne, that was the lawyer's name he had been told, was
- young, pleasant-voiced, magnetic. Raymond experienced a sort of grim
- admiration, as he looked at this man. No man in the courtroom knew better
- than Lemoyne the hopelessness of his case, and yet he sat there confident,
- smiling, undisturbed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes sought the floor. It was a foregone conclusion that the
- verdict would be guilty. There was not a loophole for defence. But they
- would not hang the man. He clung to that. Lemoyne could at least fight for
- the man's life. They would not hang a man who could not remember. They had
- beaten him, Raymond, the night before last; and at first he had been like
- a man stunned with the knowledge that his all was on the table and that
- the cards in his hand were worthless&mdash;and then had come a sort of
- philosophical calm, the gambler's optimism&mdash;the hand was still to be
- played. They would sentence the man for life, and&mdash;well, there was
- time enough in a lifetime for another chance. Somehow&mdash;in some way&mdash;he
- did not know now&mdash;but in some way he would see that there was another
- chance. He would not desert the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again he raised his eyes, but this time as though against his will, as
- though they were impelled and drawn in spite of himself across the room.
- That was Raymond Chapelle, alias Arthur Leroy, alias Three-Ace Artie,
- alias Henri Mentone, sitting there in the prisoner's box; at least, that
- gaunt, thin-faced, haggard man there was dressed in Raymond Chapelle's
- clothes&mdash;and <i>he</i>, François Aubert, the priest, the curé, in his
- <i>soutane</i>, with his crucifix around his neck, sat here amongst the
- witnesses at the trial of Raymond Chapelle, who had killed Théophile
- Blondin in the fight that night. One would almost think the man <i>knew!</i>
- How the man's eyes burned into him, how they tormented and plagued him!
- They were sad, those eyes, pitiful&mdash;they were helpless&mdash;they
- seemed to seek him out as the only <i>friend</i> amongst all these bobbing
- heads, and these staring, gaping faces.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Marcien Labbée!&rdquo;&mdash;the clerk's voice snapped through the courtroom.
- &ldquo;Marcien Labbée!&rdquo; The clerk was a very fussy and important short little
- man, who puffed his cheeks in and out, and clawed at his white
- side-whiskers. &ldquo;Marcien Labbée!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The station agent rose from the bench, entered the witness box, and was
- sworn.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a few crisp questions, the crown prosecutor established the time of
- the train's arrival, and the fact that the curé and another man had got
- off at the station. The witness explained that the curé had started to
- walk toward the village before the other man appeared on the platform.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And this other man&rdquo;&mdash;the crown prosecutor whirled sharply around,
- and pointed toward Henri Mentone&mdash;&ldquo;do you recognise him as the
- prisoner at the bar?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Labbée shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was very dark,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I could not swear to it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;His general appearance then? His clothes? They correspond with what you
- remember of the man?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Labbée answered. &ldquo;There is no doubt of that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And as I understand it, you told the man that Monsieur le Curé had just
- started a moment before, and that if he went at once he would have company
- on the walk to the village?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He said that he was not looking for that kind of company.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a sudden, curious, restrained movement through the courtroom;
- and, here and there, a villager, with pursed lips, nodded his head. It was
- quite evident to those from St. Marleau at least that such as Henri
- Mentone would not care for the company of their curé.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You gave the man directions as to the short cut to the village?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You may tell the court and the gentlemen of the jury what was said then.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Labbée, who had at first appeared a little nervous, now pulled down his
- vest, and looked around him with an air of importance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I told him that the path came out at the tavern. When I said 'tavern,' he
- was at once very interested. I thought then it was because he was glad to
- know there was a place to stay&mdash;it was such a terrible night, you
- understand? So I told him it was only a name we gave it, and that it was
- no place for one to go. I told him it was kept by an old woman, who was an
- <i>excommuniée</i>, and who made whisky on the sly, and that her son was&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Misérable!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;it was Mother Blondin, in a furious scream. Her
- eyes, under her matted gray hair, glared fiercely at Labbée.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Silence!&rdquo; roared the clerk of the court, leaping to his feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's hand closed over the clenched, bony fist that Mother Blondin had
- raised, and gently lowered it to her lap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He will do you no harm, Madame Blondin,&rdquo; he whispered reassuringly. &ldquo;And
- see, you must be careful, or you will get into serious trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hand trembled with passion in his, but she did not draw it away. It
- was strange that she did not! It was strange that he felt pity for her
- when so much was at stake, when pity was such a trivial and inconsequent
- thing! This was a murder trial, a trial for the killing of this woman's
- son. It was strange that he should be holding the <i>mother's</i> hand,
- and&mdash;it was Raymond who drew his hand away. He clasped it over his
- other one until the knuckles grew white.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then?&rdquo; prompted the crown prosecutor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then, I do not remember how it came about,&rdquo; Labbée continued, &ldquo;he
- spoke of Madame Blondin having money&mdash;enough to buy out any one
- around there. I said it was true that it was the gossip that she had made
- a lot, and that she had a well-filled stocking hidden away somewhere.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Crapule!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;Mother Blondin's voice, if scarcely audible this
- time, had lost none of its fury.
- </p>
- <p>
- The clerk contented himself with a menacing gesture toward his own
- side-whiskers. The crown prosecutor paid no attention to the interruption.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did the man give any reason for coming to St. Marleau?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you ask him how long he intended to remain?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; he said he didn't know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He had a travelling bag with him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This one?&rdquo;&mdash;the crown prosecutor held up Raymond's travelling bag
- from the table beside him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I cannot say,&rdquo; Labbée replied. &ldquo;It was too dark on the platform.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quite so! But it was of a size sufficient, in your opinion, to cause the
- man inconvenience in carrying it in such a storm, so you offered to have
- it sent over with Monsieur le Curé's trunk in the morning?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He said he could carry it all right.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He started off then with the bag along the road toward St. Marleau?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The crown prosecutor glanced inquiringly toward the prisoner's counsel.
- The latter shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You may step down, Monsieur Labbée,&rdquo; directed the crown prosecutor. &ldquo;Call
- Madame Blondin!&rdquo; There was a stir in the courtroom now. Heads craned
- forward as the old woman shuffled across the floor to the witness box&mdash;Mother
- Blondin was quite capable of anything&mdash;even of throwing to the ground
- the Holy Book upon which the clerk would swear her! Mother Blondin,
- however, did nothing of the sort. She gripped at the edge of the witness
- box, mumbling at the clerk, and all the while straining her eyes through
- her steel-bowed spectacles at the prisoner across the room. And then her
- lips began to work curiously, her face to grow contorted&mdash;and
- suddenly the courtroom was in an uproar. She was shaking both scranny
- fists at Henri Mentone, and screaming at the top of her voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is the man! That is the man!&rdquo;&mdash;her voice became ungovernable,
- insensate, it rose shrilly, it broke, it rose piercingly again. &ldquo;That is
- the man! The law! The law! I demand the law on him! He killed my son! He
- did it! I tell you, he did it! He&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Chairs and benches were scraping on the floor. Little cries of nervous
- terror came from the women; involuntarily men stood up the better to look
- at both Mother Blondin and the accused. It was a sensation! It was
- something to talk about in St. Marleau over the stoves in the coming
- winter. It was something of which nothing was to be missed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Order! Silence! Order!&rdquo; bawled the clerk.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie had caught Raymond's sleeve. He did not look at her. He was
- looking at Henri Mentone&mdash;at the look of dumb horror on the man's
- face&mdash;and then at a quite different figure in the prisoner's dock,
- whose head was bent down until it could scarcely be seen, and whose face
- was covered by his hands. He tried to force a grim complacence into his
- soul. It was absolutely certain that <i>he</i> had nothing to fear from
- the trial. Nothing! The other Henri Mentone, the other priest, was
- answering for the killing of that night, and&mdash;who was this speaking?
- The crown prosecutor? He had not thought the man could be so suave and
- gentle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Try and calm yourself, Madame Blondin. You have a perfect right to demand
- the punishment of the law upon the murderer of your son, and that is what
- we are here for now, and that is why I want you to tell us just as quietly
- as possible what happened that night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She stared truculently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Everybody knows what happened!&rdquo; she snarled at him. &ldquo;He killed my son!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How did he kill your son?&rdquo; inquired the crown prosecutor, with a sudden,
- crafty note of scepticism in his voice. &ldquo;How do you know he did?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I saw him! I tell you, I saw him! I heard my son shout '<i>voleur</i>'
- and cry for help&rdquo;&mdash;Mother Blon-din's words would not come fast enough
- now. &ldquo;I was in the back room. When I opened the door he was fighting my
- son. He tried to steal my money. Some of it was on the floor. My son cried
- for help again. I ran and got a stick of wood. My son tried to get his
- revolver from the <i>armoire</i>. This man got it away from him. I struck
- the man on the head with the wood, then he shot my son, and I ran out for
- help.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you positively identify the prisoner as the man who shot your son?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, yes! Have I not told you so often enough!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And this&rdquo;&mdash;the crown prosecutor handed her a revolver&mdash;&ldquo;do you
- identify this?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; it was my son's.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You kept your money in a hiding place, Madame Blondin, I understand&mdash;in
- a hollow between two of the logs in the wall of the room? Is that so?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; it is so!&rdquo;&mdash;Mother Blondin's voice grew shrill again. &ldquo;But I
- will find a better place for it, if I ever get it back again! The police
- are as great thieves as that man! They took it from him, and now they keep
- it from me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is here, Madame Blondin,&rdquo; said the lawyer soothingly, opening a large
- envelope. &ldquo;It will be returned to you after the trial. How much was
- there?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know very well how much!&rdquo; she shrilled out suspiciously. &ldquo;You cannot
- cheat me! I know! There were all my savings, years of savings&mdash;there
- was more than five hundred dollars.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A little gasp went around the courtroom. Five hundred dollars! It was a
- fortune! Gossip then had not lied&mdash;it had been outdone!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now this hiding place, Madame Blondin&mdash;you had never told any one
- about it? Not even your son?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It would seem then that this man must have known about it in some way.
- Had you been near it a short time previous to the fight?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I told you I had, didn't I? I told Monsieur Dupont all that once.&rdquo; Mother
- Blondin was growing unmanageable again. &ldquo;I went there to put some money in
- not five minutes before I heard my son call for help.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your son then was not in the room when you went to put this money away?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; of course, he wasn't! I have told that to Monsieur Dupont, too. I
- heard him coming downstairs just as I left the room.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is all, Madame Blondin, thank you, unless&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; The crown
- prosecutor turned again toward the counsel for the defence.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne rose, and, standing by his chair without approaching the witness
- box, took a small penknife from his pocket, and held it up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Madame Blondin,&rdquo; he said gently, &ldquo;will you tell me what I am holding in
- my hand?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mother Blondin squinted, set her glasses further on her nose, and shook
- her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not know,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do not see very well, Madame Blondin?&rdquo;&mdash;sympathetically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it you have got there&mdash;eh? What is it?&rdquo; she demanded
- sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne glanced at the jury&mdash;and smiled. He restored the penknife to
- his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a penknife, Madame Blondin&mdash;one of my own. An object that any
- one would recognise&mdash;unless one did not see very well. Are you quite
- sure, Madame Blondin&mdash;quite sure on second thoughts&mdash;that you
- see well enough to identify the prisoner so positively as the man who was
- fighting with your son?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The jury, with quick meaning glances at one another, with a new interest,
- leaned forward in their seats. There was a tense moment&mdash;a sort of
- bated silence in the courtroom. And then, as Mother Blondin answered, some
- one tittered audibly, the spell was broken, the point made by the defence
- swept away, turned even into a weapon against itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you will give me a stick of wood and come closer, close enough so that
- I can hit you over the head with it,&rdquo; said Mother Blondin, and cackled
- viciously, &ldquo;you will see how well I can see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Blondin stepped down.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then there came upon Raymond a thrill, a weakness, a quick tightening
- of his muscles. The clerk had called his name. He walked mechanically to
- the witness stand. It was coming now. He must be on his guard. But he had
- thought out everything very carefully, and&mdash;no, almost before he knew
- it, he was back in his seat again. He had been asked only if he had
- followed the road all the way from the station, to describe how he had
- found the man, and to identify the prisoner as that man. He was to be
- recalled. Le-moyne had not asked him a single question.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mademoiselle Valérie Lafleur!&rdquo; called the clerk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; she whispered tremulously. &ldquo;I&mdash;I do not want
- to go. It&mdash;it is such a terrible thing to <i>have</i> to say anything
- that would help to send a man to death&mdash;I&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mademoiselle Valérie Lafleur!&rdquo; snapped the clerk. &ldquo;Will the witness have
- the goodness to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond did not hear her testimony; he knew only that she, too, identified
- the man as the one she had seen lying unconscious in the road, and that
- the note she had found was read and placed in evidence&mdash;in his ears,
- like a dull, constant dirge, were those words of hers with which she had
- left him&mdash;&ldquo;it is such a terrible thing to have to say anything that
- would help to send a man to death.&rdquo; Who was it that was sending the man to
- death? Not he! He had tried to save the man. It wasn't death, anyway. The
- man's guilt would appear obvious, of course&mdash;Lemoyne, the lawyer,
- could not alter that; but he had still faith in Lemoyne. Lemoyne would
- make his defence on the man's condition. Lemoyne would come to that.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My son!&rdquo; croaked old Mother Blondin fiercely, at his side. &ldquo;My son! What
- I know, I know! But the law&mdash;the law on the man who killed my son!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pull yourself together, you fool!&rdquo; rasped that inner voice. &ldquo;Do you want
- everybody in the courtroom staring at you. Listen to the incomparable
- Dupont telling how clever he was!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, Dupont was on the stand now. Dupont was testifying to finding the
- revolver and money in the prisoner's pockets. He verified the amount.
- Dupont had his case at his fingers' tips, and he sketched it, with an
- amazing conciseness for Monsieur Dupont, from the moment he had been
- notified of the crime up to the time of the attempted escape. He was
- convinced that, in spite of all precautions, the prisoner's accomplice had
- taken alarm&mdash;since he, Dupont, had sat the night in the room waiting
- for the unknown's appearance, and neither he nor his deputy, who had
- remained until daylight hiding in the shed where he could watch the
- prisoner's window, had seen or heard anything. On cross-examination he
- admitted that pressure had been brought to bear upon the prisoner in an
- effort to trip the man up in his story, but that the prisoner had
- unswervingly held to the statement that he could remember nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- The voices droned through the courtroom. It was Doctor Arnaud now
- identifying the man. They were always identifying the man! Why did not he,
- the saintly curé of St. Marleau&mdash;no, it was Three-Ace Artie&mdash;why
- did not he, Three-Ace Artie, laugh outright in all their faces! It was not
- hard to identify the man. He had seen to that very thoroughly, more
- thoroughly than even he had imagined that night in the storm when all the
- devils of hell were loosed to shriek around him, and he had changed
- clothes with a <i>dead</i> man. A dead man&mdash;yes, that was the way it
- should have been! Did he not remember how limply the man's neck and head
- wagged on the shoulders, and how the body kept falling all over in
- grotesque attitudes instead of helping him to get its clothes off! Only
- the dead man had come to life! That was the man over there inside that box
- with the little wood-turned decorations all around the railing&mdash;no,
- he wouldn't look&mdash;but that man there who was the colour of soiled
- chalk, and whose eyes, with the hurt of a dumb beast in them, kept turning
- constantly in this direction, over here, here where the witnesses sat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Doctor Arnaud&rdquo;&mdash;it was the counsel for the defence speaking, and
- suddenly Raymond was listening with strained attention&mdash;&ldquo;you have
- attended the prisoner from the night he was found unconscious in the road
- until the present time?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, monsieur.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have heard me in cross-examination ask Mademoiselle Lafleur and
- Monsieur Dupont if at any time during this period the prisoner, by act,
- manner or word, swerved from his statement that he could remember nothing,
- either of the events of that night, or of prior events in his life. You
- have heard both of these witness testify that he had not done so. I will
- ask you now if you are in a position to corroborate their testimony?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am,&rdquo; replied Doctor Arnaud. &ldquo;He has said nothing else to my knowledge.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, doctor, in your professional capacity, will you kindly tell the
- court and the gentlemen of the jury whether or not loss of memory could
- result from a blow upon the head.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It could&mdash;certainly,&rdquo; stated Doctor Arnaud. &ldquo;There is no doubt of
- that, but it depends on the&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just a moment, doctor, if you please; we will come to that&rdquo;&mdash;Lemoyne,
- as Raymond knew well that Le-moyne himself was fully aware, was treading
- on thin and perilous ice, but on Lemoyne's lips, as he interrupted, was an
- engaging smile. &ldquo;This loss of memory now. Will you please help us to
- understand just what it means? Take a hypothetical case. Could a man, for
- example, read and write, do arithmetic, say, appear normal in all other
- ways, and still have lost the memory of his name, his parents, his
- friends, his home, his previous state?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Doctor Arnaud. &ldquo;That is quite true. He might lose the memory
- of all those things, and still retain everything he has acquired by
- education.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is a medical fact?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, certainly, it is a medical fact.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And is it not also a medical fact, doctor, that this condition has been
- known to have been caused by a blow&mdash;I will not say so slight, for
- that would be misleading&mdash;but by a blow that did not even cause a
- wound, and I mean by wound a gash, a cut, or the tearing of the flesh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; that, too, is so.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne paused. He looked at Henri Mentone, and suddenly it seemed as
- though a world of sympathy and pity were in his face. He turned and looked
- at the jury&mdash;at each one of the twelve men, but almost as though he
- did not see them. There was a mist in his eyes. It was silent again in the
- courtroom. His voice was low and grave as he spoke again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Doctor Arnaud, are you prepared to state professionally under oath that
- it is impossible that the blow received by the prisoner at the bar should
- have caused him to lose his memory?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo; Doctor Arnaud shook his head. &ldquo;No; I would not say that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne's voice was still grave.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You admit then, Doctor Arnaud, that it is possible?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Doctor Arnaud hesitated. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It is possible, of course.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is all, doctor&rdquo;&mdash;Lemoyne sat down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One moment!&rdquo;&mdash;the crown prosecutor, crisp, curt, incisive, was on
- his feet. &ldquo;Loss of memory is not insanity, doctor?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is the prisoner in your professional judgment insane?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; declared Doctor Arnaud emphatically. &ldquo;Most certainly not!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a nod, the crown prosecutor dismissed the witness.
- </p>
- <p>
- A buzz, whisperings, ran around the room. Raymond's eyes were fixed
- sombrely on the floor. Relief had come with Lemoyne's climax, but now in
- Doctor Arnaud's reply to the crown prosecutor he sensed catastrophe. A
- sentence for life was the best that could be hoped for, but suppose&mdash;suppose
- Lemoyne should fail to secure even that! No, no&mdash;they would not hang
- the man! Even Doctor Arnaud had been forced to admit that he might have
- lost his memory. That would be strong enough for any jury, and&mdash;they
- were calling his name again, and he was rising, and walking a second time
- to the witness stand. Surely all these people <i>knew</i>. Was not his
- face set, and white, and drawn! See that ray of sunlight coming in through
- that far window, and how it did not deviate, but came straight toward him,
- and lay upon the crucifix on his breast, to draw all eyes upon it, upon
- that Figure on the Cross, the Man Betrayed. God, he had not meant this! He
- had thought the priest already dead that night. It was a dead man he had
- meant should answer for the killing of that ugly, scarred-faced, drunken
- blackguard, Théophile Blondin. That couldn't do a dead man any harm! It
- was a dead man, a dead man, a dead man&mdash;not this living, breathing
- one who&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; said the crown prosecutor, &ldquo;you were present in the
- prisoner's room with Monsieur Dupont and Doctor Arnaud, when Monsieur
- Dupont made a search of the accused's clothing?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Raymond answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you identify this revolver as the one taken from the prisoner's
- pocket?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What was it Valérie had said&mdash;that it was such a terrible thing to
- have to say anything that would help to send a man to death? But the man
- was not going to death. It was to be a life sentence&mdash;and afterwards,
- after the trial, there would be time to think, and plot, and plan.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is the same one,&rdquo; said Raymond in a low voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You also saw Monsieur Dupont take a large number of loose bills from the
- prisoner's pocket?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know their amount?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. Monsieur Dupont did not count them at the time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There were a great many, however, crumpled in the pocket, as though they
- had been hastily thrust there?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Why did that man in the prisoner's dock look at him like that&mdash;not in
- accusation&mdash;it was worse than that&mdash;it was in a sorrowful sort
- of wonder, and a numbed despair. Those devils were laughing in his ears&mdash;he
- was telling the <i>truth!</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is all, I think, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; said the crown prosecutor
- abruptly.
- </p>
- <p>
- All! There came a bitter and abysmal irony. Puppets! All were puppets upon
- a set stage&mdash;from the judge on the bench to that dismayed thing
- yonder who wrung his hands before the imposing majesty of the law! All!
- That was all, was it&mdash;the few words he had said? Who then was the
- author of every word that had been uttered in the room, who then had
- pulled the strings that jerked these automatons about in their every
- movement! Ah, here was Lemoyne this time, the prisoner's counsel. This
- time there was to be a cross-examination. Yes, certainly, he would like to
- help Lemoyne, but Lemoyne must not try to trap him. Lemoyne, too, was a
- puppet, and therefore Lemoyne could not be expected to know how very true
- it was that &ldquo;Henri Mentone&rdquo; was on trial for his life, and that &ldquo;Henri
- Mentone&rdquo; would fight for that life with any weapon he could grasp, and
- that Lemoyne would do the prisoner an ill turn to put &ldquo;Henri Mentone&rdquo; on
- the defensive! Well&mdash;he brushed his hand across his forehead, and
- fixed his eyes steadily on Lemoyne&mdash;he was ready for the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;Lemoyne had come very close to the witness stand,
- and Lemoyne's voice was soberly modulated&mdash;&ldquo;Monsieur le Curé, I have
- only one question to ask you. You have been with this unfortunate man
- since the night you found him on the road, you have nursed him night and
- day as a mother would a child, you have not been long in St. Marleau, but
- in that time, so I am told, and I can very readily see why, you have come
- to be called the good, young Father Aubert by all your parish. Monsieur le
- Curé, you have been constantly with this man, for days and nights you have
- scarcely left his side, and so I come to the question that, it seems to
- me, you, of all others, are best qualified to answer.&rdquo; Lemoyne paused. He
- had placed his two hands on the edge of the witness box, and was looking
- earnestly into Raymond's face. &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé, do you believe that when
- the prisoner says that he remembers nothing of the events of that night,
- that he has no recollection of the crime of which he is accused&mdash;do
- you believe, Monsieur le Curé, that he is telling the truth?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There had been silence in the courtroom before&mdash;it was a silence now
- that seemed to palpitate and throb, a <i>living</i> silence. Instinctively
- the crown prosecutor had made as though to rise from his chair; and then,
- as if indifferent, had changed his mind. No one else in the room had
- moved. Raymond glanced around him. They were waiting&mdash;for his answer.
- The word of the good, young Father Aubert would go far. Lemoyne's eyes
- were pleading mutely&mdash;for the one ground of defence, the one chance
- for his client's life. But Lemoyne did not need to plead&mdash;for that!
- They must not hang the man! They were waiting&mdash;for his answer. Still
- the silence held. And then Raymond raised his right hand solemnly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As God is my judge,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I firmly believe that the man is telling
- the truth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Benches creaked, there was the rustle of garments, a sort of unanimous and
- involuntary long-drawn sigh; and it seemed to Raymond that, as all eyes
- turned on the prisoner, they held a kindlier and more tolerant light. And
- then, as he walked back to the other witnesses and took his seat, he heard
- the crown prosecutor speak&mdash;as though disposing of the matter in
- blunt disdain:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The prosecution rests.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie laid her hand over his.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am so glad&mdash;so glad you said that,&rdquo; she whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont leaned forward, and clucked his tongue very softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hah, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; He wagged his head indulgently. &ldquo;Well, I suppose
- you could not help it&mdash;eh? No, you could not. I have told you before
- that you are too soft-hearted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There were two witnesses for the defence&mdash;Doctor Arnaud's two
- fellow-practitioners in Tournayville. Their testimony was virtually that
- of Doctor Arnaud in cross-examination. To each of them the crown
- prosecutor put the same question&mdash;and only one. Was the prisoner
- insane? Each answered in the negative.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, a moment later, Lemoyne, rising to sum up for the defence,
- walked soberly forward to the jury-box, and halted before the twelve men.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen of the jury,&rdquo; he began quietly, &ldquo;you have heard the
- professional testimony of three doctors, one of them a witness for the
- prosecution, who all agree that the wound received by the prisoner might
- result in loss of memory. You have heard the testimony of that good man,
- the curé of St. Marleau, who gave his days and nights to the care and
- nursing of the one whose life, gentlemen, now lies in your hands; you have
- heard him declare in the most solemn and impressive manner that he
- believed the prisoner had no remembrance, no recollection of the night on
- which the crime was committed. Who should be better able to form an
- opinion as to whether, as the prosecution pretends, the prisoner is
- playing a part, or as to whether he is telling the truth, than the one who
- has been with him from that day to this, and been with him in the most
- intimate way, more than any one else? And I ask you, too, to weigh well
- and remember the character of the man, whom his people call the good,
- young Father Aubert, who has so emphatically testified to this effect. His
- words were not lightly spoken, and they were pure in motive. You have
- heard other witnesses&mdash;all witnesses for the defence, gentlemen&mdash;assert
- that they have seen nothing, heard nothing, that would indicate that the
- prisoner was playing a part. Gentlemen, every scrap of evidence that has
- been introduced but goes to substantiate the prisoner's story. Is it
- possible, do you believe for an instant, that a man could with his first
- conscious breath assume such a part, and, sick and wounded and physically
- weak, play it through without a slip, or sign, or word, or act that would
- so much as hint at duplicity? But that is not all. Gentlemen, I will ask
- you to come with me in thought to a scene that occurred this morning an
- hour before this trial began, and I would that the gift of words were mine
- to make you see that scene as I saw it.&rdquo; He turned and swept out his hand
- toward the prisoner. &ldquo;That man was in his cell, on his knees beside his
- cot. He did not look up as I entered, and I did not disturb him. We were
- alone together there. After a few minutes he raised his head. There was
- agony in his face such as I have never seen before on a human countenance.
- I spoke to him then. I told him that professional confidence was sacred, I
- warned him of the peril in which he stood, I pleaded with him to help me
- save his life, to tell me all, everything, not to tie my hands. Gentlemen
- of the jury, do you know his answer? It was a simple one&mdash;and spoken
- as simply. 'When you came in I was asking God to give me back my memory
- before it was too late.' That is what he said, gentlemen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There were tears in Lemoyne's eyes&mdash;there were tears in other eyes
- throughout the courtroom. There was a cry in Raymond's heart that went out
- to Le-moyne. He had not failed! He had not failed! Le-moyne had not
- failed!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen, he did not know.&rdquo; Lemoyne's voice rose now in impassioned
- pleading&mdash;and he spoke on with that eloquence that is born only of
- conviction and in the soul. It was the picture of the man's helplessness
- he drew; the horror of an innocent man entangled in seemingly
- incontrovertible evidence, and doomed to a frightful death. He played upon
- the emotions with a master touch&mdash;and as the minutes passed sobs
- echoed back from every quarter of the room&mdash;and in the jury box men
- brushed their hands across their eyes. And at the end he was very quiet
- again, and his words were very low.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen of the jury, I believe in my soul that this man is innocent. I
- ask you to believe that he is innocent. I ask you to believe that if he
- could tell of the events of that night he would stand before you a martyr
- to a cruel chain of circumstance. And I ask you to remember the terrible
- responsibility that rests upon you of passing judgment upon a man,
- helpless, impotent, and alone, and who, deprived of all means of
- self-defence, has only you to look to&mdash;for his life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was buoyancy in Raymond's heart. Lemoyne had not failed! He had been
- magnificent&mdash;triumphant! Even the judge was fumbling awkwardly with
- the papers on his desk. What did it matter now what the crown prosecutor
- might say? No one doubted perhaps that the man was guilty, but the spell
- that Lemoyne had cast would remain, and there would be mercy. A chill
- came, a chill like death&mdash;if it were not so, what would he have to
- face!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen of the jury&rdquo;&mdash;the crown prosecutor was speaking now&mdash;&ldquo;I
- should do less than justice to my learned friend if I did not admit that I
- was affected by his words; but I should also do less than justice to the
- laws of this land, to you, and to myself if I did not tell you that
- emotion has no place in the consideration of this case, and that fact
- alone must be the basis of your verdict. I shall not keep you long. I have
- only a few words to say. The court will instruct you that if the prisoner
- is sane he is accountable to the law for his crime. We are concerned, not
- with his loss of memory, though my learned friend has made much of that,
- but with his sanity. The court will also instruct you on that point. I
- shall not, therefore, discuss the question of the prisoner's mental
- condition, except to recall to your minds that the medical testimony has
- been unanimous in declaring that the accused is not insane; and except to
- say that, in so far as loss of memory is concerned, it is plainly evident
- that he was in full possession of all his faculties at the time the murder
- was committed, and that I am personally inclined to share the opinion of
- his accomplice in crime&mdash;a man, gentlemen, whom we may safely presume
- is even a better judge of the prisoner's character than is the curé of St.
- Marleau&mdash;who, from the note you have heard read, has certainly no
- doubt that the prisoner is not only quite capable of attempting such a
- deception, but is actually engaged in practising it at the present moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I pass on to the facts' brought out by the evidence. On the night of the
- crime, a man answering the general description of the prisoner arrived at
- the St. Marleau station. It was a night when one, and especially a
- stranger, would naturally be glad of company on the three-mile walk to the
- village. The man refused the company of the curé. Why? He, as it later
- appears, had very good reasons of his own! It was such a night that it
- would be all one would care to do to battle against the wind without being
- hampered by a travelling bag. He refused the station agent's offer to keep
- the bag until morning and send it over with the curé's trunk. Why? It is
- quite evident, in view of what followed, that he did not expect to be
- there the next morning! He drew from the station agent, corroborating
- presumably the information previously obtained either by himself or this
- unknown accomplice, the statement that Madame Blondin was believed to have
- a large sum of money hidden away somewhere in her house. That was the man,
- gentlemen, who answers the general description of the prisoner. Within
- approximately half an hour later Madame Blondin's house is robbed, and, in
- an effort to protect his mother's property, Théophile Blondin is shot and
- killed. The question perhaps arises as to how the author of this crime
- knew the exact hiding place where the money was kept. But it is not
- material, in as much as we know that he was in a position to be in
- possession of that knowledge. He might have been peering in through the
- window when Madame Blondin, as she testified, was at the hiding place a
- few minutes before he broke into her house&mdash;or his accomplice, still
- unapprehended, may, as I have previously intimated, already have
- discovered it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And now we pass entirely out of the realm of conjecture. You have heard
- the testimony of the murdered man's mother, who both saw and participated
- in the struggle. The man who murdered Théophile Blondin, who was actually
- seen to commit the act, is identified as the prisoner at the bar. He was
- struck over the head by Madame Blondin with a stick of wood, which
- inflicted a serious wound. We can picture him running from the house,
- after Madame Blondin rushed out toward the village to give the alarm. He
- did not, however, get very far&mdash;he was himself too badly hurt. He was
- found lying unconscious on the road a short distance away. Again the
- identification is complete&mdash;and in his pocket is found the motive for
- the crime, Madame Blondin's savings&mdash;and in his pocket is found the
- weapon, Théophile Blondin's revolver, with which the murder was committed.
- Gentlemen, I shall not take up your time, or the time of this court
- needlessly. No logical human being could doubt the prisoner's guilt for an
- instant. I ask you, gentlemen of the jury, to return a verdict in
- accordance with the evidence.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond did not look up, as the crown prosecutor sat down. &ldquo;No logical
- human being could doubt the prisoner's guilt for an instant.&rdquo; That was
- true, wasn't it? No human being&mdash;save only <i>one</i>. Well, he had
- expected that&mdash;it was even a tribute to his own quick wit. Puppets!
- Yes, puppets&mdash;they were all puppets&mdash;all but himself. But if
- there was guilt, there was also mercy. They would show mercy to a man who
- could not remember. How many times had he said that to himself! Well, he
- had been right, hadn't he? He had more reason to believe it now than he
- had had to believe it before. Lemoyne had, beyond the shadow of a doubt,
- convinced every one in the courtroom that the man could not remember.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Order! Attention! Silence!&rdquo; rapped out the clerk pompously.
- </p>
- <p>
- The judge had turned in his seat to face the jury.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen of the jury,&rdquo; he said impassively, &ldquo;it is my province to
- instruct you in the law as it applies to this case, and as it applies to
- the interpretation of the evidence before you. There must be no confusion
- in your minds as to the question of the prisoner's mental condition. The
- law does not hold accountable, nor does it bring to trial any person who
- is insane. The law, however, does not recognise loss of memory as
- insanity. There has been no testimony to indicate that the prisoner is
- insane, or even that he was not in an entirely normal condition of mind at
- the time the crime was committed; there has been the testimony of three
- physicians that he is not insane. You have therefore but one thing to
- consider. If, from the evidence, you believe that the prisoner killed
- Théophile Blondin, it is your duty to bring in a verdict of guilty; on the
- other hand, the prisoner is entitled to the benefit of any reasonable
- doubt as to his guilt that may exist in your minds. You may retire,
- gentlemen, for your deliberations.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a hurried, whispered consultation amongst the twelve men in the
- jury box. It brought Raymond no surprise that the jury did not leave the
- room. It brought him no surprise that the figure with the thin, pale face,
- who was dressed in Raymond Chapelle's clothes, should be ordered to stand
- and face those twelve men, and hear the word &ldquo;guilty&rdquo; fall from the
- foreman's lips. He had known it, every one had known it&mdash;it was the
- judge now, that white-haired, kindly-faced man, upon whom he riveted his
- attention. A sentence for life... yes, that was terrible enough... but
- there was a way... there would be some way in the days to come... he had
- fastened this crime upon a dead man to save his own life... not on this
- living one whose eyes now he could not meet across the room, though he
- could feel them upon him, feel them staring, staring at his naked soul...
- he would find some way... there would be time, there was all of time in a
- sentence for life... he would not desert the man, he would&mdash;&mdash;-
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Henri Mentone&rdquo;&mdash;the judge was speaking again&mdash;&ldquo;you have been
- found guilty by a jury of your peers of the murder of one Théophile
- Blondin. Have you anything to say why the sentence of this court should
- not be passed upon you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no answer. What was the man doing? Was he crying? Trembling? Was
- there that old nameless horror in the face? Were his lips quivering as a
- child's lips quiver when it is broken-hearted? Raymond dared not look;
- dared not look anywhere now save at the white-haired, kindly-faced&mdash;yes,
- he was kindly-faced&mdash;judge. And then suddenly he found himself
- swaying weakly, and his shoulder bumped into old Mother Blondin. Not that&mdash;great
- God&mdash;not that! That kindly-faced man was putting a <i>black hat</i>
- on his head, and standing up. Everybody was standing up. He, too, was
- standing up, only he was not steady on his feet. Was Valérie's hand on his
- arm in nervous terror, or to support him! Some one was speaking. The words
- were throbbing through his brain. Yes, throbbing&mdash;throbbing and
- clanging like hammer blows&mdash;that was why he could not hear them all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;... the sentence of this court... place of confinement... thence to the
- place of execution... hanged by the neck until you are dead, and may God
- have mercy on your soul.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond looked; and through the solemn silence, and through the
- doom that hung upon the room, there came a cry. It was Henri Mentone. The
- man's hands were stretched out, the tears were streaming down his cheeks.
- And was this mockery&mdash;or a joke of hell! Then why did not everybody
- howl and scream with mirth! The man was calling upon himself to save
- himself! No, no&mdash;he, Raymond, was going mad to call it mockery or
- mirth. It was ghastly, horrible, pitiful beyond human understanding, it
- tore at the heart and the soul&mdash;the man was doing what that Figure
- upon the Cross had once been bade to do&mdash;his own name was upon his
- own lips, he was calling upon himself to save himself. And the voice in
- agony rang through the crowded room, and people sobbed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father&mdash;Father Francois Aubert, help me, do not leave me! I do not
- know&mdash;I do not understand. Father&mdash;<i>Father François Aubert</i>,
- help me&mdash;I do not understand!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond, groping out behind him, flung his arm across the back of the
- bench, and, sinking down, his head fell forward, and his face was hidden.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens</i>,&rdquo; said Mother Blondin sullenly, as though forced to admit it
- against her will, &ldquo;he has a good heart, even if he is a priest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVII&mdash;THE COMMON CUP
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T seemed as though
- it were an immeasurable span of time since that voice had rung through the
- courtroom. He could hear it yet&mdash;he was hearing it always. &ldquo;Father&mdash;Father
- François Aubert&mdash;help me&mdash;I do not know&mdash;I do not
- understand.&rdquo; And sometimes it was pitiful beyond that of any human cry
- before; and sometimes it was dominant in its ghastly irony. And yet that
- was only yesterday, and it was only the afternoon of the next day now.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were wild roses, and wild raspberries growing here along the side of
- the road, and the smoke wreathed upward from the chimneys of the
- whitewashed cottages, and the water lapped upon the shore&mdash;these
- things were unchanged, undisturbed, unaffected, untouched. It seemed
- curiously improper that it should be so&mdash;that the sense of values was
- somehow lost.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had come from the courtroom with his brain in a state of numbed shock,
- as it were, like a wound that has taken the nerve centres by surprise and
- had not yet begun to throb. It was instinct, the instinct to fight on, the
- instinct of self-preservation that had bade him grope his way to Lemoyne,
- the counsel for the defence. &ldquo;I have friends who have money,&rdquo; he had said.
- &ldquo;Appeal the case&mdash;spare no effort&mdash;I will see that the expenses
- are met.&rdquo; And after that he had driven back to St. Marleau, and after that
- again he had lived through a succession of blurred hours, obeying
- mechanically a sense of routine&mdash;he had talked to the villagers, he
- had eaten supper with Valérie and her mother, he had gone to bed and lain
- awake, he had said mass in the church that morning&mdash;mass!
- </p>
- <p>
- Was it the heat of the day! His brow was feverish. He took off his hat,
- and turned to let the breeze from the river fan his face and head. It was
- only this afternoon, a little while ago, that he had emerged from that
- numbed stupor, and now the hurt and the smarting of the wound had come.
- His brain was clear now&mdash;<i>terribly</i> clear. Better that the
- stupor, which was a kindly thing, had remained! He had said mass that
- morning. &ldquo;<i>Lavabo inter innocentes manus meas</i>&mdash;I will wash my
- hands among the innocent.&rdquo; In the sight of holy God, he had said that; at
- God's holy altar as he had spoken, symbolising his words, he had washed
- his fingers in water. It had not seemed to matter so much then, he had
- even mocked cynically at those same words the night that Madame Lafleur
- had shown him the altar cloth&mdash;but that other voice, those other
- words had not been pounding at his ears then, as now. And now they were
- joined together, his voice and that other voice, his words and those other
- words: &ldquo;I will wash my hands among the innocent&mdash;hanged by the neck
- until you are dead, and may God have mercy on your soul.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stood by the roadside hatless. Through the open doorway of a cottage a
- few yards away he could see old grandmother Frenier, who was exceedingly
- poor, and deaf, and far up in the eighties, contentedly at work with her
- spinning-wheel; on the shore, where the tide was half out and the sand of
- the beach had merged into oozy mud, two bare-footed children overturned
- the rocks of such size as were not beyond their strength, laughing
- gleefully as they captured the sea-worms, whose nippers could pinch with
- no little degree of ferocity, and with which, later, no doubt, they
- intended to fish for tommy-cods; also there was sunlight, and sparkling
- water, and some one driving along the road toward him in a buckboard; and
- he could hear Bouchard in the carpenter shop alternately hammering and
- whistling&mdash;the whistling was out of tune, it was true, but what it
- lacked in melody it made up in spirit. This was reality, this was
- actuality, happiness and peace, and contentment, and serenity; and he,
- standing here on the road, was an integral part of the scene&mdash;no
- painter would leave out the village curé standing hatless on the road&mdash;the
- village curé would, indeed, stand out as the central figure, like a
- benediction upon all the rest. Why then should he not in truth, as in
- semblance, enter into this scene of tranquillity? Where did they come
- from, those words that were so foreign to all about him, where had they
- found birth, and why were they seared into his brain so that he could not
- banish them? Surely they were but an hallucination&mdash;he had only to
- look around him to find evidence of that. Surely they had no basis in
- fact, those words&mdash;&ldquo;hanged by the neck until you are dead, and may
- God have mercy on your soul.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They seemed to fade slowly away, old grandmother Frenier and her
- spinning-wheel, and the children puddling in the mud, and the buckboard
- coming along the road; and he no longer heard the whistling from the
- carpenter shop&mdash;it seemed to fade out like a picture on a cinema
- screen, while another crept there, at first intangible and undefined, to
- supplant the first. It was sombre and dark, and a narrow space, and a
- shadowy human form. Then there came a ray of light&mdash;sunlight, only
- the gladness and the brightness were not in the sunlight because it had
- first to pass through an opening where there were iron bars. But the ray
- of light, nevertheless, grew stronger, and the picture took form. There
- were bare walls, and bare floors, and a narrow cot&mdash;and it was a
- cell. And the shadowy form became more distinct&mdash;it was a man, whose
- back was turned, who stood at the end of the cell, and whose hands were
- each clutched around one of the iron bars, and who seemed to be striving
- to thrust his head out into the sunlight, for his head, too, was pressed
- close against the iron bars. And there was something horribly familiar in
- the figure. And then the head turned slowly, and the sunlight, that was
- robbed of its warmth and its freedom, slanted upon a pale cheek, and ashen
- lips, and eyes that were torture-burned; and the face was the face of the
- man who was&mdash;to be hanged by the neck until he was dead, and upon
- whose soul that voice had implored the mercy of God.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond stared at his hat which was lying in the road. How had it got
- there? He did not remember that he had dropped it. He had been holding it
- in his hand. This buckboard that was approaching would run over it. He
- stooped and picked it up, and mechanically began to brush away the dust.
- That figure in the buckboard seemed to be familiar, too. Yes, of course,
- it was Monsieur Dupont, the assistant chief of the Tournayville police&mdash;the
- man who always answered his own questions, and clucked with his tongue as
- though he were some animal learning to talk. But Monsieur Dupont mattered
- little now. It was not old grandmother Frenier and her spinning-wheel that
- was reality&mdash;it was Father François Aubert in the condemned cell of
- the Tournayville jail, waiting to be hanged by the neck until he was dead
- for the murder of Théophile Blondin.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond put on his hat with forced calmness. He must settle this with
- himself; he could not afford to lose his poise&mdash;either mentally or
- physically. He laid no claim to the heroic or to the quixotic&mdash;he did
- not want to die in the stead of that man, or in the stead of any other
- man. Neither was he a coward&mdash;no man had ever called Raymond
- Chapelle, or Arthur Leroy, or Three-Ace Artie a coward. He was a gambler&mdash;and
- there was still a chance. There was the appeal. He was gambling now for
- both their lives. He would lay down no hand, he would fight as he had
- always fought&mdash;to the end&mdash;while a chance remained. There was
- still a chance&mdash;the appeal. It was long odds, he knew that&mdash;but
- it was a chance&mdash;and he was a gambler. He could only wait now for the
- turn of the final card. He would not tolerate consideration beyond that
- point&mdash;not if with all his might he could force his brain to leave
- that &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo; alone. It was weeks yet to the date set for the
- execution of Henri Mentone for the murder of Théophile Blondin, and it
- would be weeks yet before the appeal was acted upon. He could only wait
- now&mdash;here&mdash;here in St. Marleau, as the good young Father Aubert.
- He could not run away, or disappear, like a pitiful coward, until that
- appeal had had its answer. Afterwards&mdash;no, there was no &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;&mdash;not
- <i>now!</i> Now, it was the ubiquitous Monsieur Dupont, the short little
- man with the sharp features, and the roving black eyes that glanced
- everywhere at once, who was calling to him, and clambering out of the
- buckboard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are surprised to see me, eh, Monsieur le Curé?&rdquo; clucked Monsieur
- Dupont. &ldquo;Yes, you are surprised. Very well! But what would you say, eh, if
- I told you that I had come to arrest Monsieur le Curé of St. Marleau? Eh&mdash;what
- would you say to that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Arrest! Curious, the cold, calculating alertness that swept upon him at
- that word! What had happened?
- </p>
- <p>
- Was the game up&mdash;now? Curious, how he measured appraisingly&mdash;and
- almost contemptuously&mdash;the physique of this man before him. And then,
- under his breath, he snarled an oath at the other. Curse Monsieur Dupont
- and his perverted sense of humour! It was not the first time Monsieur
- Dupont had startled him. Monsieur Dupont was grinning broadly&mdash;like
- an ape!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I imagine,&rdquo; said Raymond placidly, &ldquo;that what I would say, Monsieur
- Dupont, would be to inquire as to the nature of the charge against
- Monsieur le Curé of St. Marleau.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I,&rdquo; said Monsieur Dupont, &ldquo;would at once reply&mdash;assault. Assault&mdash;bodily
- harm and injury&mdash;assault upon the person of one Jacques Bourget.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Raymond&mdash;and smiled. &ldquo;Yes, I believe there have been
- rumours of it in the village, Monsieur Dupont. Several have spoken to me
- about it, and I even understand that the Curé of St. Marleau pleads
- guilty.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Monsieur Dupont puckered up his face, and burst into a guffaw.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>'Cré nom</i>&mdash;ah, pardon&mdash;but it is excusable, one bad
- little word, eh? Yes, it is excusable. But imagine&mdash;fancy! The good,
- young Father Aubert&mdash;and Jacques Bourget! I would have liked to have
- seen it. Yes, I would! Monsieur le Curé, you do not look it, but you are
- magnificent. Monsieur le Curé, I lift my hat to you. <i>Bon Dieu</i>&mdash;ah,
- pardon again&mdash;but you were not gentle with Jacques Bourget, whom one
- would think could eat you alive! And you told me nothing about it&mdash;you
- are modest, eh? Yes, you are modest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have had no opportunity to be modest.&rdquo; Raymond laughed, &ldquo;since, so I
- understand, Bourget encountered some of the villagers on his way home that
- afternoon, and gave me a reputation that, to say the least of it, left me
- with little to be modest about.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe you,&rdquo; chuckled Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;I believe you, Monsieur le
- Curé, since I, too, got the story from Jacques Bourget himself. He desired
- to swear out a warrant for your arrest. You have not seen Bourget for
- several days, eh, Monsieur le Curé? No, you have not seen him. But I know
- very well how to handle such as he! He will swear out no warrant. On the
- contrary, he would very gladly feed out of anybody's hand just now&mdash;even
- yours, Monsieur le Curé. I have the brave Jacques Bourget in jail at the
- present moment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In jail?&rdquo; Raymond's puzzled frown was genuine. &ldquo;But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait a minute, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Dupont's smile was
- suddenly gone. He tapped Raymond impressively on the shoulder. &ldquo;There is
- more in this than appears on the surface, Monsieur le Curé. You see? Yes,
- you see. Well then, listen! He talked no longer of a warrant when I
- threatened him with arrest for getting whisky at Mother Blondin's. I had
- him frightened. And that brings us to Mother Blondin, which is one of the
- reasons I am here this afternoon&mdash;but we will return to Mother
- Blondin's case in a moment. You remember, eh, that I caught Bourget
- driving on the road the night Mentone tried to escape, and that I made him
- drive the prisoner to Tournayville? Yes, you remember. Very good! This
- morning his wife comes to Tournayville to say that he has not been seen
- since that night. We make a search. He is not hard to find. He has been
- drunk ever since&mdash;we find him in a room over one of the saloons just
- beginning to get sober again. Also, we find that since that night Bourget,
- who never has any money, has spent a great deal of money. Where did
- Bourget get that money? You begin to see, eh, Monsieur le Curé? Yes, you
- begin to see.&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont laid his forefinger sagaciously along the
- side of his nose. &ldquo;Very good! I begin to question. I am instantly
- suspicious. Bourget is very sullen and morose. He talks only of a warrant
- against you. I seize upon that story again to threaten him with, if he
- does not tell where he got the money. I put him in jail, where I shall
- keep him for two or three days to teach him a lesson before letting him
- go. It is another Bourget, a very lamblike Bourget, Monsieur le Curé,
- before I am through; though I have to promise him immunity for turning
- king's evidence. Do you see what is coming, Monsieur le Curé? No, you do
- not. Most certainly you do not! Very well then, listen! I am on the track
- of Mentone's accomplice. Bourget was in the plot. It was Bourget who was
- to drive Mentone away that night&mdash;to the St. Eustace station&mdash;after
- they had throttled you. Now, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;Monsieur Dupont's
- eyes were afire; Monsieur Dupont assumed an attitude; Monsieur Dupont's
- arms wrapped themselves in a fold upon his breast&mdash;&ldquo;now, Monsieur le
- Curé, what do you say to that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is amazing!&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's hands, palms outward, were lifted in a
- gesture eminently clerical. &ldquo;Amazing! I can hardly credit it. Bourget then
- knows who this accomplice is?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No&mdash;<i>tonnerre</i>&mdash;that is the bad luck of it!&rdquo; scowled
- Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;But there is also good luck in it. I am on the scent. I
- am on the trail. I shall succeed, shall I not? Yes, certainly, I shall
- succeed. Very well then, listen! It was dark that night. The man went to
- Bourget's house and called Bourget outside. Bourget could not see what the
- fellow looked like. He gave Bourget fifty dollars, and promised still
- another fifty as soon as Bourget had Mentone in the wagon. And it was on
- your account, Monsieur le Curé, that he went to Bourget.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond was incredulous.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On mine?&rdquo; he gasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, certainly&mdash;on yours. It was to offer Bourget a chance to
- revenge himself on you. You see, eh? Yes, you see. He said he had heard of
- what you had done to Bourget. Very well! We have only to analyse that a
- little, and instantly we have a clue. You see where that brings us, eh,
- Monsieur le Curé?&rdquo; Raymond shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I must confess, I don't,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hah! No? <i>Tiens!</i>&rdquo; ejaculated Monsieur Dupont almost pityingly. &ldquo;It
- is easy to be seen, Monsieur le Curé, that you would make a very poor
- police officer, and an equally poor criminal&mdash;the law would have its
- fingers on you while you were wondering what to do. It is so, is it not?
- Yes, it is so. You are much better as a priest. As a priest&mdash;I pay
- you the compliment, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;you are incomparable. Very
- good! Listen, then! I will explain. The fellow said he had heard of your
- fight with Bourget. Splendid! Excellent! He must then have heard of it
- from <i>some one</i>. Therefore he has been seen in the neighbourhood by
- some one besides Bourget. Who is that 'some one' who has talked with a
- stranger, and who can very likely tell us what that stranger looks like,
- where Bourget cannot? I do not say that it is certain, but that it is
- likely. It may not have been so dark when he talked to this 'some one'&mdash;eh?
- In any case it is enough to go on. Now, you see, Monsieur le Curé, why I
- am here&mdash;I shall begin to question everybody; and for your part,
- Monsieur le Curé, you can do a great deal in letting the parish know what
- we are after.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond looked at Monsieur Dupont with admiration. Monsieur Dupont had set
- himself another &ldquo;vigil&rdquo;!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Without doubt, Monsieur Dupont!&rdquo; he assured the other heartily.
- &ldquo;Certainly, I will do my utmost to help you. I will have a notice posted
- on the church door.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; cried Monsieur Dupont, with a gratified smile. &ldquo;And now another
- matter&mdash;and one that will afford you satisfaction, Monsieur le Curé.
- In a day or so, I will see that Mother Blondin is the source of no more
- trouble in St. Marleau&mdash;or anywhere else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mother Blondin?&rdquo; repeated Raymond&mdash;and now he was suddenly conscious
- that he was in some way genuinely disturbed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;Twice in the past we have searched her
- place. We knew she sold whisky. But she was too sharp for us&mdash;and
- those who bought knew how to keep their mouths shut. But with Bourget as a
- witness, it is different, eh? You see? Yes, you see. She is a fester, a
- sore. We will clean up the place; we will put her in jail. The air around
- here will be the sweeter for it, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Raymond soberly. &ldquo;No, Monsieur Dupont&rdquo;&mdash;his hands reached
- out and clasped on Monsieur Dupont's shoulders. He knew now what was
- disturbing him. It was that surge of pity for the proscribed old woman,
- that sense of miserable distress that he had experienced more than once
- before. The scene of that morning, when she had clung to the palings of
- the fence outside the graveyard while they shovelled the earth upon the
- coffin of her son, rose vividly before him. And it was he again who was
- bringing more trouble upon her now through his dealings with Jacques
- Bourget. Yes, it was pity&mdash;and more. It was a swiftly matured, but
- none the less determined, resolve to protect her. &ldquo;No, Monsieur Dupont, I
- beg of you&rdquo;&mdash;he shook his head gravely&mdash;&ldquo;no, Monsieur Dupont,
- you will not do that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Heh! No? And why not?&rdquo; demanded Monsieur Dupont in jerky astonishment. &ldquo;I
- thought you would ask for nothing better. She is already an <i>excommuniée</i>,
- and&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And she has suffered enough,&rdquo; said Raymond earnestly. &ldquo;It would seem that
- sorrow and misery had been the only life she had ever known. She is too
- old a woman now to have her home taken from her, and herself sent to jail.
- She is none too well, as it is. It would kill her. A little sympathy, a
- little kindness, Monsieur Dupont&mdash;it will succeed far better.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bah!&rdquo; sniffed Monsieur Dupont. &ldquo;A little sympathy, a little kindness! And
- will that stop the whisky selling that the law demands shall be stopped,
- Monsieur le Curé?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will guarantee that,&rdquo; said Raymond calmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You!&rdquo; Monsieur Dupont clucked vigorously with his tongue. &ldquo;You will stop
- that! And besides other things, do you perform miracles, Monsieur le Curé?
- How will you do that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must leave it to me&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's hands tightened in friendly
- fashion on Monsieur Dupont's shoulders&mdash;&ldquo;I will guarantee it. If that
- is a miracle, I will attempt it. If I do not succeed I will tell you so,
- and then you will do as you see fit. You will agree, will you not,
- Monsieur Dupont?&mdash;and I shall be deeply grateful to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Monsieur Dupont shrugged his shoulders helplessly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have to tell you again that you are too soft-hearted, Monsieur le Curé.
- Yes, there is no other name for it&mdash;soft-hearted. And you will be
- made a fool of. I warn you! Well&mdash;very well! Try it, if you like. I
- give you a week. If at the end of a week&mdash;well, you understand? Yes,
- you understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand,&rdquo; said Raymond; and, with a final dap on Monsieur Dupont's
- shoulders, he dropped his hands. &ldquo;And I am of the impression that Monsieur
- le Curé is not the only one who is&mdash;soft-hearted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bah! Nothing of the sort! Nothing of the sort!&rdquo; snorted Monsieur Dupont
- in a sort of pleased repudiation, as he climbed back into the buckboard.
- &ldquo;It is only to open your eyes.&rdquo; He picked up the reins. &ldquo;I shall spend the
- rest of the day around here on that other business. Do not forget about
- the notice, Monsieur le Curé.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It shall be posted on the church door this afternoon,&rdquo; Raymond promised.
- </p>
- <p>
- He stood for a moment looking after Monsieur Dupont, as the other drove
- off; and then, turning abruptly, he walked rapidly along in the opposite
- direction, and, reaching the station road that led past old Mother
- Blondin's door, began to climb the hill. Yes, decidedly he would post a
- notice on the church door for Monsieur Dupont! If in any way he could aid
- Monsieur Dupont to lay hands on this accomplice of Henri Mentone, he&mdash;the
- derision that had crept to his lips faded away, and into the dark eyes
- came a sudden weariness. There was humour doubtless in the picture of
- Monsieur Dupont buttonholing every one he met, as he flitted indefatigably
- all over the country in pursuit for his mare's nest; but, somehow, he,
- Raymond, was not in the mood for laughter&mdash;for even a grim laughter.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a man waiting to be hanged; and, besides the man waiting to be
- hanged, there was&mdash;Valérie.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was Valérie who, come what would, some day, near or distant, whether
- he escaped or not, must inevitably know him finally for the man he was.
- Not that it would change her life, it was only those devils of hell who
- tried to insinuate that she cared; but to him it was a thought pregnant
- with an agony so great that he could <i>pray</i>&mdash;he who had thought
- never to bow the knee in sincerity to God&mdash;yes, that he could pray,
- without mimicry, without that hideous profanation upon his lips, that he
- might not stand despised, a contemptuous thing, a sacrilegious profligate,
- in the eyes of the woman whom he loved.
- </p>
- <p>
- He clenched his hands. He was not logical. If he cared so much as that why&mdash;no,
- here was specious argument! He <i>was</i> logical. His love for Valerie,
- great as it might be, great as it was, in the final analysis was hopeless.
- If he escaped, he could never return to the village, he could never return
- to her&mdash;to be recognised as the good, young Father Aubert; if he did
- not escape, if he&mdash;no, that was the &ldquo;afterwards,&rdquo; he would not
- consent to think of that&mdash;only if he did not escape there would be
- more than the hopelessness of this love to concern him, there would be
- death. Yes, he was logical. The love he knew for Valérie was but to mock
- him, to tantalise him with a vista of what, under other circumstances, he
- might have claimed by right of his manhood's franchise&mdash;if he had
- not, years ago, from a boy almost, bartered away that franchise to the
- devil. Well, was he to whimper now, and turn, like a craven thing, from
- the bitter dregs that, while the cup was still full and the dregs yet afar
- off, he had held in bald contempt and incredulous raillery! The dregs were
- here now. They were not bitter on his lips, they were bitter in his soul;
- they were bitter almost beyond endurance&mdash;but was he to whimper! Yes,
- he was logical.
- </p>
- <p>
- All else might be hopeless; but it was not hopeless that he might save his
- life. He had a right to fight for that, and he would fight for it as any
- man would fight&mdash;to the last.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had climbed the hill now, and was approaching old Mother Blondin's
- door. Logical! Yes, he was logical&mdash;but life was not all logic. In
- the abstract logic was doubtless a panacea that was all-embracing; in the
- presence of the actual it shrank back a futile thing from the dull gnawing
- of the heart and the misery of the soul. Perhaps that was why he was
- standing here at Mother Blondin's door now. God knew, she was miserable
- enough; God knew, that the dregs too were now at her lips! They were not
- unlike&mdash;old Mother Blon-din and himself. Theirs was a common cup.
- </p>
- <p>
- He knocked upon the door&mdash;and, as he knocked, he caught sight of the
- old woman's shrivelled face peering at him none too pleasantly from the
- window. And then her step, sullen and reluctant, crossed the floor, and
- she held the door open grudgingly a little way; and the space thus opened
- she blocked completely with her body.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What do you want?&rdquo; she demanded sourly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I would like to come in, Madame Blondin,&rdquo; Raymond answered pleasantly. &ldquo;I
- would like to have a little talk with you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, you can't come in!&rdquo; she snarled defiantly. &ldquo;I don't want to talk to
- you, and I don't want you coming here! It is true I may have been fool
- enough to say you had a good heart, but I want nothing to do with you. You
- are perhaps not as bad as some of them; but you are all full of tricks
- with your smirking mouths! No priest would come here if he were not up to
- something. I am an <i>excommuniée</i>&mdash;eh? Well, I am satisfied!&rdquo; Her
- voice was beginning to rise shrilly. &ldquo;I don't know what you want, and I
- don't want to know; but you can't wheedle around me just because Jacques
- Bourget knocked me down, and you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is on account of Jacques Bourget that I want to speak to you,&rdquo; Raymond
- interposed soothingly. &ldquo;Bourget has been locked up in jail.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She stared at him, blinking viciously behind her glasses.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah! I thought so! That is like the whole tribe of you! You had him
- arrested!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Raymond. &ldquo;I did not have him arrested. You remember the note
- that was read out at the trial, Madame Blcndin&mdash;about the attempted
- escape of Henri Mentone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well?&rdquo;&mdash;Madame Blondin's animosity at the sight of a <i>soutane</i>
- was forgotten for the moment in a newly aroused interest. &ldquo;Well&mdash;what
- of it? I remember! What of it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It seems,&rdquo; said Raymond, &ldquo;that Monsieur Dupont has discovered that
- Bourget was to help in the escape.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Blondin cackled suddenly in unholy mirth. &ldquo;And so they arrested
- him, eh? Well, I am glad! Do you hear? I am glad! I hope they wring his
- neck for him! He would help the murderer of my son to escape, would he? I
- hope they hang him with the other!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They will not hang him,&rdquo; Raymond replied. &ldquo;He has given all the
- information in his possession to the police, and he is to go free. But it
- was because of that afternoon here that he was persuaded to help in the
- escape. He expected to revenge himself on me: and that story, too, Madame
- Blondin, is now known to the police. Bourget has confessed to buying
- whisky here, and is ready to testify as a witness against you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Le maudit!</i>&rdquo; Mother Blondin's voice rose in a virulent scream. &ldquo;I
- will tear his eyes out! Do you hear? I will show Jacques Bourget what he
- will get for telling on me! He has robbed me! He never pays! Well, he will
- pay for this! He will pay for this! I will find some one who will cut his
- tongue out! They are not all like Jacques Bourget, they are&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do not quite understand, Madame Blondin,&rdquo; Raymond interrupted
- gravely. &ldquo;It is not with Jacques Bourget that you are concerned now, it is
- with the police. Monsieur Dupont came to the village this afternoon&mdash;indeed,
- he is here now. He said he had evidence enough at last to close up this
- place and put you in jail, and that he was going to do so. You are in a
- very serious situation, Madame Blondin&rdquo;&mdash;he made as though to step
- forward&mdash;&ldquo;will you not let me come in, as a friend, and talk it over
- with you, and see what we can do?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mother Blondin's hand was like a claw in its bony thinness, as it gripped
- hard over the edge of the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, you will not come in!&rdquo; she shouted. &ldquo;You, or your Monsieur Dupont, or
- the police&mdash;you will not come in! Eh&mdash;they will take my home
- from me&mdash;all I've got&mdash;they will put me in jail&rdquo;&mdash;she was
- twisting her head about in a sort of pitiful inventory of her
- surroundings. &ldquo;They have been trying to run me out of St. Marleau for a
- long time&mdash;all the <i>good</i> people, the saintly people&mdash;you,
- and your hypocrites. They cross to the other side of the road to get out
- of old Mother Blondin's way! And so at last, between you, you have beaten
- an old woman, who has no one to protect her since you have killed her son!
- It is a victory&mdash;eh! Go tell them to ring the church bells&mdash;go
- tell them&mdash;go tell them! And on Sunday, eh, you will have something
- to preach about! It will make a fine sermon!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And somehow there came a lump into Raymond's throat. There was something
- fine in this wretched, tattered, unkempt figure before him&mdash;something
- of the indomitable, of the unconquerable in her spirit, misapplied though
- it was. Her voice fought bravely to hold its defiant, infuriated ring, to
- show no sign of the misery that had stolen into the dim old eyes, and was
- quivering on the wrinkled lips, but the voice had broken&mdash;once almost
- in a sob.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, no, Madame Blondin&rdquo;&mdash;he reached out his hand impulsively to lay
- it over the one that was clutched upon the door&mdash;&ldquo;you must not&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She snatched her hand away&mdash;and suddenly thrust her head through the
- partially open doorway into his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is not Bourget, it is not Jacques Bourget!&rdquo; she cried fiercely. &ldquo;It is
- you! If you had not come that afternoon when you had no business to come,
- this would not have happened. It is you, who&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That is true,&rdquo; said Raymond quietly. &ldquo;And that is why I am here now. I
- have had a talk with Monsieur Dupont, and he will give you another
- chance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She still held her face close to his.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not believe you!&rdquo; she flung out furiously. &ldquo;I do not believe you! It
- is some trick you are trying to play! I know Monsieur Dupont! I know him!
- He would give no one a chance if he could help it! I have been too much
- for him for a long time, and if he had evidence against me now he would
- give me not a minute to sell any more of&mdash;of what he thinks I sell
- here!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That also is true,&rdquo; said Raymond, as quietly as before. &ldquo;He could not
- very well permit you to go on breaking the law if he could prevent it. But
- in exchange for his promise, I have given him a pledge that you will not
- sell any more whisky.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She straightened up&mdash;and stared at him, half in amazement, half in
- crafty suspicion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, then, so it is you, and not Monsieur Dupont, who is going to stop it&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
- she exclaimed, with a shrill laugh. &ldquo;And how do you intend to do it&mdash;eh?
- How do you intend to do it? Tell me that!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think it will be very simple,&rdquo; said Raymond&mdash;and his dark eyes,
- full of a kindly sympathy, looked into hers. &ldquo;To save your home, and you,
- I have pledged myself to Monsieur Dupont that this will stop, and so&mdash;well,
- Madame Blondin, and so I have come to put you upon your honour to make
- good my pledge.&rdquo; She craned her head forward again to peer into his face.
- She looked at him for a long minute without a word. Her lips alternately
- tightened and were tremulous. The fingers of her hand plucked at the
- door's edge. And then she threw back her head in a quavering, jeering
- laugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ha, ha! Old Mother Blondin upon her honour&mdash;think of that! You, a
- smooth-tongued priest&mdash;and me, an <i>excommuniée!</i> Ha, ha! Think
- of that! And what did Monsieur Dupont say, eh&mdash;what did Monsieur
- Dupont say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He said what I know is not true,&rdquo; said Raymond simply. &ldquo;He said you would
- make a fool of me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, he said that!&rdquo;&mdash;she jerked her head forward again sharply.
- &ldquo;Well, Monsieur Dupont is wrong, and you are right. I would not do that,
- because I could not&mdash;since you have already made one of yourself! Ha,
- ha! Old Mother Blondin upon her <i>honour!</i> Ha, ha! It is a long while
- since I have heard that&mdash;and from a priest&mdash;ha, ha! How could
- any one make a fool of a fool!&rdquo; Her voice was high-pitched again, fighting
- for its defiance; but, somehow, where she strove to infuse venom, there
- seemed only a pathetic wistfulness instead. &ldquo;And so you would trust old
- Mother Blondin&mdash;eh? Well&rdquo;&mdash;she slammed the door suddenly in his
- face, and her voice came muffled through the panels&mdash;&ldquo;well, you are a
- fool!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The bolt within rasped into place&mdash;and Raymond, turned away, and
- began to descend the hill.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mother Blondin for the moment was in the grip of a sullen pride that bade
- her rise in arms against this fresh outlook on life; but Mother Blondin
- would close and bolt yet another door, unless he was very much mistaken&mdash;the
- rear door, and in the faces of her erstwhile and unhallowed clientele!
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, he had pity for the old woman who had no kin now, and who had no
- friends. Pity! He owed her more than that! So then&mdash;there came a
- sudden thought&mdash;so then, why not? He would not long be curé of St.
- Marleau, but while he was&mdash;well, he was the curé of St. Marleau! He
- could not remove the ban of excommunication, that was beyond the authority
- of a mere curé, it would require at least Monsignor the Bishop to do that;
- but he could remove the ban&mdash;of ostracism! Yes, decidedly, the good,
- young Father Aubert could do that! He was vaguely conscious that there
- were degrees of excommunication, and he seemed to remember that Valérie
- had said it was but a minor one that had been laid upon Mother Blondin,
- and that the villagers of their own accord had drawn more and more aloof.
- It would, therefore, not be very difficult.
- </p>
- <p>
- He quickened his step, and, reaching the bottom of the hill, made his way
- at once toward the carpenter shop. He could see Madame Bouchard hoeing in
- the little garden patch between the road and the front of the shop. It was
- Madame Bouchard that he now desired to see.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens! Bon jour</i>, Madame Bouchard!&rdquo; he called out to her, as he
- approached. &ldquo;I am come a penitent! I did not deserve your bread! I am sure
- that you are vexed with me! But I have not seen you since to thank you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She came forward to where Raymond now leaned upon the fence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; she exclaimed laughingly. &ldquo;How can you say such
- things! Fancy! The idea! Vexed with you! It is only if you really liked
- it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;H'm!&rdquo; drawled Raymond teasingly, pretending to deliberate. &ldquo;When do you
- bake again, Madame Bouchard?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She laughed outright now.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To-morrow, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;and I shall see that you are not
- forgotten.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a long way off&mdash;to-morrow,&rdquo; said Raymond mournfully; and then,
- with a quick smile: &ldquo;But only one loaf this time, Madame Bouchard, instead
- of two.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nonsense!&rdquo; she returned. &ldquo;It is a great pleasure. And what are two little
- loaves!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A great deal,&rdquo; said Raymond, suddenly serious. &ldquo;A very great deal, Madame
- Bouchard; and especially so if you send one of the two loaves to some one
- else that I know of.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some one else?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond. &ldquo;To Mother Blondin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To&mdash;Mother Blondin!&rdquo;&mdash;Madame Bouchard stared in utter
- amazement. &ldquo;But&mdash;but, Monsieur le Curé, you are not in earnest! She&mdash;she
- is an <i>excommuniée</i>, and we&mdash;we do not&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think it would make her very glad,&rdquo; said Raymond softly. &ldquo;And Mother
- Blondin I think has&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was on the tip of his tongue to say that Mother Blondin was not likely
- now to sell any more whisky at the tavern, but he checked himself. It was
- Mother Blondin who must be left to tell of that herself. If he spread such
- a tale, she would be more likely than not to rebel at a situation which
- she would probably conceive was being thrust forcibly down her throat;
- and, in pure spite at what she might also conceive to be a self-preening
- and boastful spirit on his part for his superiority over her, sell all the
- more, no matter what the consequences to herself. And so he changed what
- he was about to say. &ldquo;And Mother Blondin I think has known but little
- gladness in her life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&mdash;but, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she gasped, &ldquo;what would the neighbours
- say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hope,&rdquo; said Raymond, &ldquo;that they would say they too would send her
- loaves&mdash;of kindness.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Bouchard leaned heavily upon her hoe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is many years, Monsieur le Curé, since almost I was a little girl,
- that any one has willingly had anything to do with the old woman on the
- hill.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond gently. &ldquo;And will you think of that, Madame Bouchard,
- when you bake to-morrow&mdash;the many years&mdash;and the few that are
- left&mdash;for the old woman on the hill.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The tears had sprung to Madame Bouchard's eyes. He left her standing
- there, leaning on the hoe.
- </p>
- <p>
- He went on along the road toward the <i>presbytère</i>. It had been a
- strange afternoon&mdash;an illogical one, an imaginary one almost. It
- seemed to have been a jumble of complexities, and incongruities, and
- unrealities&mdash;there was the man who was to be hanged by the neck until
- he was dead; and Monsieur Dupont who, through a very natural deduction and
- not because he was a fool, for Monsieur Dupont was very far from a fool,
- was now vainly engaged like a dog circling around in a wild effort to
- catch his own tail; and there was Mother Blondin who had another window to
- gaze from; and Madame Bouchard who had still another. Yes, it had been a
- strange afternoon&mdash;only now that voice in the courtroom was beginning
- to ring in his ears again. &ldquo;Father&mdash;Father François Aubert&mdash;help
- me&mdash;I do not understand.&rdquo; And the gnawing was at his soul again, and
- again his hat was lifted from his head to cool his fevered brow.
- </p>
- <p>
- And as he reached the church there came to him the sound of organ notes,
- and instead of crossing to the <i>presbytère</i> he stepped softly inside
- to listen&mdash;it would be Valérie&mdash;Valérie, and Gauthier Beaulieu,
- the altar boy, probably, who often pumped the organ for her when she was
- at practice. But as he stepped inside the music ceased, and instead he
- heard them talking in the gallery, and in the stillness of the church
- their voices came to him distinctly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Valérie&rdquo;&mdash;yes, that was the boy's voice&mdash;&ldquo;Valérie, why do they
- call him the good, young Father Aubert?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Such a question!&rdquo; Valérie laughed. &ldquo;Why do you call him that yourself?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't&mdash;any more,&rdquo; asserted the boy. &ldquo;Not after what I saw at mass
- this morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond drew his breath in sharply. What was this! What was this that
- Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar boy, had seen at mass! He had fooled the boy&mdash;the
- boy could not have seen anything! He drew back, opening the door
- cautiously. They were coming down the stairs now&mdash;but he must hear&mdash;hear
- what it was that Gauthier Beaulieu had seen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, what do you mean, Gauthier?&rdquo; Valérie asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I mean what I say,&rdquo; insisted the boy doggedly. &ldquo;It is not right to call
- him that! When he was kneeling there this morning, and I guess it was the
- bright light because the stained window was open, for I never saw it
- before, I saw his hair all specked with white around his temples. And a
- man with white in his hair isn't young, is he! And I saw it, Valérie&mdash;honest,
- I did!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your eyes should have been closed,&rdquo; said Valérie. &ldquo;And&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond was crossing the green to the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVIII&mdash;THE CALL IN THE NIGHT
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T was very dark
- here in the front room, and somehow the darkness seemed tangible to the
- touch, like something oppressive, like the folds of a pall that was spread
- over him, and which he could not thrust aside. And it was still, and very
- quiet&mdash;save for the voices, and save that it seemed he could hear
- that faltering, irregular step from the rear room, where there was no
- longer any step to hear.
- </p>
- <p>
- Surely it would be daylight soon&mdash;the merciful daylight. The darkness
- and the night were meant only for sleep, and it was an eternity since he
- had slept&mdash;no, not an eternity, only a week&mdash;it was only a week
- since he had slept. No, that was not true either&mdash;there had been
- hours, not many of them, but there had been hours when his eyes had been
- closed and he had not been conscious of his surroundings, but those hours
- had been even more horrible than when he had tossed on his bed awake. They
- had brought neither rest nor oblivion&mdash;they were full of dreams that
- were hideous&mdash;and the dreams would not leave him when he was awake&mdash;and
- the sleep when it came was a curse because the dreams remained to cast an
- added blight upon his wakefulness&mdash;and he had come even to fight
- against sleep and to resist it because the dreams remained.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dreams! There was always the dream of the Walled Place which&mdash;no! Not
- that&mdash;<i>now!</i> Not that! Yes! The dream of the Walled Place. See&mdash;it
- went like this: He was in a sort of cavernous gloom in which he could not
- see very distinctly, but he was obsessed with the knowledge that there
- were hidden things from which he must escape. So he would run frantically
- around and around, following four square walls which were so high that the
- tops merged into the gloom; and the walls, as he touched them with his
- hands, seeking an opening, were wet with a slime that grew upon them.
- Then, looming out of the centre of this place, he would suddenly see what
- it was that he was running away from. There was a form, a human form, with
- something black over its head, that swayed to and fro, and was suspended
- from a bar that reached across from one wall to another; and on the top of
- this bar there roosted a myriad winged creatures like gigantic bats, only
- their eyes blazed, and they had enormous claws&mdash;and suddenly these
- vampires would rise with a terrifying crackling of their wings, and
- shrill, abominable screams, and swirl and circle over him, drawing nearer
- and nearer until his blood ran cold&mdash;and then, shrieking like a
- maniac, he would run again around and around the walls, beating at the
- slime until his hands bled. And the screaming things with outstretched
- talons followed him, and he stumbled and fell, and fell again, and
- shrieked out in his terror of these inhuman vultures that had roosted
- above the swaying thing with the black-covered head&mdash;and just as they
- were settling upon him there was an opening in the wall where there had
- been no opening before, and with his last strength he struggled toward it&mdash;and
- the way was blocked. The opening had become a gate that was all studded
- with iron spikes which if he rushed upon it would impale him, and which
- Valerie was closing&mdash;and as she closed it her head was averted, and
- one hand was thrown across her eyes, its palm toward him, as though she
- would not look upon his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's hands were wet with perspiration. They slipped from the arms of
- his chair, and hung downward at his sides. What time was it? It had been
- midnight when he had risen fully dressed from his bed in the rear room&mdash;that
- he occupied now that they had taken the man away to jail&mdash;and had
- come in here to sit at the desk. Since then the clock had struck many
- times, the half hours, and the hours. Ah&mdash;listen! It was striking
- again. One&mdash;two&mdash;three! Three o'clock! It was still a long way
- off, the daylight&mdash;the merciful daylight. The voices did not plague
- him so constantly in the warmth of the sunshine. Three o'clock! It would
- be five o'clock before the dawn came.
- </p>
- <p>
- They had changed, those voices, in the last week&mdash;at least there was
- a new voice that had come, and an old one that did not recur so
- insistently. &ldquo;Father&mdash;Father François Aubert&mdash;help me&mdash;I do
- not understand&rdquo;&mdash;yes, that was still dinning forever in his ears;
- but, instead of that voice which said some one was to be hanged by the
- neck until dead, the new voice had quite a different thing to say. It was
- the voice of the &ldquo;afterwards.&rdquo; Hark! There it was now: &ldquo;What fine and
- subtle shade of distinction is there between being hanged and imprisoned
- for life; what difference does it make, what difference could it make,
- what difference will it make&mdash;why do you temporise?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had fought with all his strength against that &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;&mdash;and it
- was stronger than he. He could not evade the issue that was flung at him,
- and flung again and again until his brain writhed in agony with it. He was
- a gambler, but he was not a blind gambler. He did not want the man to lose
- his life, or his freedom for all of life&mdash;he did not want to lose his
- own life. While the appeal was pending <i>something</i> might happen, a
- thousand things might happen, there was always, always a chance. He would
- not throw away that chance&mdash;only a fool who had lost his nerve would
- do that. But he was not blind. The chance was one where the odds against
- him staggered him&mdash;there was so little chance that, fight as he would
- to escape it, logic and plain common sense had forced upon him the
- &ldquo;afterwards.&rdquo; And these days while the appeal was pending were like
- remorseless steps that led on and on to end only upon the brink of a
- yawning chasm, whose depth and whose blackness were as the depth and
- blackness of hell, and over which he sprang suddenly erect, his head flung
- back, the strong jaws clamped like a vise. Who had brought this torture
- upon him? He could not sleep! He knew no repose! God, or devil, or power
- infernal&mdash;who was it? Neither sleep nor repose might be his, but he
- was unbroken yet, and he could still fight! He asked only that&mdash;that
- the author of this torment stand before him&mdash;and fight! Why should
- he, unless the one meagre hope that something might happen in the meantime
- be fulfilled, why should he stand faced with the choice of swinging like a
- felon from the gallows, or of allowing that other innocent man to go to
- his doom? Yes, why should he submit to this torture, when that
- scarred-faced blackguard had brought his death upon himself&mdash;why
- should he submit to it, when it was so easy to escape it all! Once, that
- night in Ton-Nugget Camp, he had flung down the gauntlet in the face of
- God, and in the face of hell, and in the face of man, and in the face of
- beast. Was he a weakling and a fool now who had not sense enough to seize
- his opportunity to be quit of this, and to go his way, and live again the
- full, red-blooded, reckless life that he had lived since he was a boy, and
- that now, a young man still, beckoned to him with allurements as yet
- untasted! To-morrow&mdash;no, to-day when the daylight came&mdash;he had
- only to borrow Bouchard's boat, and the boat upturned would be found, and
- St. Mar-leau would mourn the loss of the good, young Father Aubert whose
- body had been swept out to sea, and the law would take its course on the
- man in the condemned cell, and Three-Ace Artie would be as free and
- untrammelled as the air&mdash;yes, and a coward, and a crawling thing, and&mdash;the
- paroxysm of fury passed. He sagged against the desk. This was the
- &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;&mdash;but why should it come now! Between now and then there
- was a chance that something might intervene. He had only been trying to
- delude himself when he had said that in a life sentence there was all of
- time to plan and plot&mdash;he knew that. And he knew, too, that he was no
- more content that the man should be imprisoned for life than that the man
- should hang&mdash;that one was the equal of the other. He knew that this
- &ldquo;all of time&rdquo; was ended when the appeal was decided. He knew all that&mdash;that
- voice would not let him juggle with myths any more. But that moment had
- not come yet&mdash;there were still weeks before it would come&mdash;and
- in those weeks there lay a hope, a chance, a gambling chance that
- something might happen. And even in the appeal there lay a hope too, not
- that the sentence might be commuted to life imprisonment, that changed
- nothing now, but that they might perhaps after all consider the man's
- condition sufficient reason for not holding him to account for murder, and
- might therefore, instead, place him under medical treatment somewhere
- until, if ever, he recovered. He, Raymond, had not struck the man, he had
- not in even a remote particular been responsible for the man's wound, or
- the ensuing condition, and if the man were turned over to medical
- supervision the man automatically ceased to have any claim upon him.
- </p>
- <p>
- But that was not likely to happen&mdash;it was only one of those thousand
- things that <i>might</i> happen&mdash;nothing was likely to happen except
- that the man would be hanged. And when that time came, if the appeal were
- lost and every one of those thousand chances swept away, and the only
- thing that could save the man's life would be to&mdash;God, would he never
- stop this! Would his mind never, even through utter exhaustion, cease its
- groping in this horrible turmoil! On, on, on! His brain was remorselessly
- driven on! It was like&mdash;like a slave that, already lacerated and
- bleeding, was lashed on again to renewed effort by some monstrous, brutal
- and inhuman master!
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, when that time came, and if that chance were gone, and supposing he
- gave himself up to stand in the other's place, could he in any way evade
- the rope, wriggle away from that dangling noose? Was there a loophole in
- the evidence anywhere? If only in some way he could prove that the act had
- been committed in self-defence! He had feared to risk such a plea that
- night, because he had feared that his own past would condemn him out of
- hand; and, moreover, however that might have been, the man lying in the
- road, whom he had thought dead, had seemed to offer the means of washing
- his hands for good and all of the whole matter. Self-defence! Ha, ha!
- Listen to those devils laugh! It was his own hand that had tied the knot
- in the noose so that it would never slip&mdash;it was he who had so
- cunningly supplied all the attendant details that irrevocably placed the
- stamp of robbery and murder upon the doings of that night. Here there was
- no delusion; here, where delusion was sought again, there was no delusion&mdash;if
- he gave himself up he would hang&mdash;hang by the neck until he was dead&mdash;and,
- since he had desecrated God's holy places, he would hang without the mercy
- of God upon his soul. Well, what odds did that make&mdash;whether there
- was mercy of God upon his soul-or not! Was there anything in common
- between&mdash;no, that was not what he had to think about now&mdash;it was
- quite another matter.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suppose, when he was forced to fling down his hand finally, that instead
- of giving himself up, or instead of making it appear that the good, young
- Father Aubert was dead&mdash;suppose that he simply made an escape from
- St. Marleau such as he had planned for Henri Mentone that night? He could
- at least secure a few hours' start, and then, from somewhere, before it
- was too late, send back, say, a written confession. He could always do
- that. Surely that would save the man. They would hunt for him, Raymond, as
- they would hunt for a wild beast that had run amuck, and they would hunt
- for him for the rest of his life, and in the end they might even catch him&mdash;but
- that was the chance he would have to accept. Yes, here was another way&mdash;only
- why did not this way bring rest, and repose, and satisfaction, and sleep?
- And why ask the question? He knew&mdash;he knew why! It was&mdash;Valérie.
- It was not a big way, it was not a man's way&mdash;and in Valerie's eyes
- at the last, not absolving him, not even that she might endure the better,
- for it could not intimately affect her, there was left to him only the one
- redeeming act, the one thing that would lift him above contempt and
- loathing, and that was that she should know him&mdash;for a <i>man</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Life, the mere act of breathing, of knowing a concrete existence, was not
- everything; it did not embrace everything, it was not even a state that
- was not voluntarily to be surrendered to greater things, to&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A fool and a woman's face, and blatant sophistry, and mock heroics!&rdquo;&mdash;that
- inner monitor, with its gibe and sneer, was back again. Its voice, too,
- must make itself heard!
- </p>
- <p>
- He raised his hands and pressed them tight against his throbbing temples.
- This was hell's debating society, and he must listen to the arguments and
- decide upon their merits and pronounce upon them, for he was the presiding
- officer and the decision remained with him! How they gabbled, and
- shrieked, and whispered, and jeered, and interrupted each other, and would
- not keep order&mdash;those voices! Though now for the moment that inner
- voice kept drowning all the others out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You had your chance! If you hadn't turned squeamish that night when all
- you needed to do was to hold a pillow over the man's face for a few
- minutes, you wouldn't have had any of this now! How much good will it do
- you what <i>she</i> thinks&mdash;when they get through burying you in lime
- under the jail walls!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was dark, very dark here in the room. That was the window over there in
- that direction, but there was not even any grayness showing, no sign yet
- of daylight&mdash;no sign yet of daylight. Why would they not let him
- alone, these voices, until the time came when he <i>must</i> act? That was
- all he asked. In the interval something might&mdash;his hands dropped to
- his sides, and he half slipped, half fell into his chair, and his head
- went forward over the desk. Was all that to begin over again&mdash;and
- commence with the dream of the Walled Place! No, no; he would not let it&mdash;<i>he
- would not let it!</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- He would think about something else; force himself to think&mdash;rationally&mdash;about
- something else. Well then, the man in the condemned cell, whom he had not
- dared refuse to visit, and whom he had gone twice that week to see? No&mdash;-not
- that, either! The man was always sitting on that cursed cot with his hands
- clasped dejectedly between his knees, and the iron bars robbed the
- sunlight of warmth, and it was cold, and the man's eyes haunted him. No&mdash;not
- that, either! He had to go and see the man again to-morrow&mdash;and that
- was enough&mdash;and that was enough!
- </p>
- <p>
- Well then, Mother Blondin? Yes, that was better! He could even laugh
- ironically at that&mdash;at old Mother Blondin. Old Mother Blondin was
- falling under the spell of the example set by the good, young Father
- Aubert! Some of the old habitués, he had heard, were beginning to grumble
- because it was becoming difficult to obtain whisky at the tavern. The
- Madame Bouchards were crowding the habitues out; and the old woman on the
- hill, even if with occasional sullen and stubborn relapses, was slowly
- yielding to the advances of St. Marleau that he had inaugurated through
- the carpenter's v/ife. Ah&mdash;he had thought to laugh at this, had he!
- Laugh! He might well keep his head buried miserably in his arms here upon
- the desk! Laugh! It brought instead only a profound and bitter loneliness.
- He was alone, utterly alone, isolated and cut off in a world where there
- was the sound of no human voice, the touch of no human hand, alone&mdash;amidst
- people whose smiles greeted him on every hand, amidst people who admired
- and loved him, and listened reverently to the words of God that fell from
- his lips. But they loved, and admired, and gave their friendship, not to
- the man he was, but to the man they thought he was&mdash;to the good,
- young Father Aubert. That was what was actuating even Mother Blondin! And
- the life that he had led as the good, young Father Aubert was being held
- up to him now as in a mental mirror that lay bare to his gaze his naked
- soul. They loved him, these people; they had faith in him&mdash;and a
- pure, unswerving faith in the religion, and in the God as whose holy
- priest he masqueraded!
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's lips twisted in pain. The love of these people struck to the
- heart, and the pang hurt. It would have been a glad thing to have won this
- love&mdash;for himself. And he was requiting what they gave in their
- ignorance by defiling what meant most in life to them&mdash;the holy
- things they worshipped. It was strange&mdash;strange how of late he had
- sought, in a sort of pitiful atonement for the wrong he had done them, to
- put sincerity into the words that, before, he had only mumbled at the
- church altar! Yes, he had earned their love and their respect, and he was
- the good, young Father Aubert, and the life he had led amongst them was a
- blasphemous lie&mdash;but it had not been the motives of a hypocrite that
- had actuated him. It had not been that the devil desired to pose as a
- saint. He stood acquitted before even God of that. He had sought only,
- fought only, asked only&mdash;for his life.
- </p>
- <p>
- A sham, a pretence, a lie&mdash;it was abhorrent, damnable&mdash;it was
- not even Three-Ace Artie's way&mdash;and he was chained to it in every
- word and thought and act. There&mdash;that thing that loomed up through
- the darkness there a few inches from him&mdash;that was one of the lies.
- That was a typewriter he had rented in Tour-nayville and had brought back
- when returning from his last visit to the jail. Personal letters had begun
- to arrive for Father François Aubert. He might duplicate a signature, but
- he could not imitate pages of the man's writings. And he could not dictate
- a letter to-the man's <i>mother</i>&mdash;and meet Valérie's eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie! Out in that world where he was set apart, out in that world of
- inhuman isolation, this was the loneliness that was greatest of all.
- Valérie! Valérie! It seemed as though he were held in some machiavellian
- bondage, free to move and act, free in all things save one&mdash;he could
- not pass the border of his prison-land. But he, Raymond Chapelle, could
- look out over the border of his prison-land, and watch this woman, whose
- face was pure and beautiful, as she walked about, and talked, and was
- constantly in the company of a young priest, who was the good, young
- Father Aubert, the Curé of St. Marleau. And because he had watched her
- hungrily for many days, and knew the smile that came so gladly to the
- sweet lips, and because he had looked into the clear, steadfast eyes, and
- listened to her voice, and because she was just Valérie, he had come to
- the knowledge of a great love&mdash;and a great, torturing, envious
- jealousy of this man, cloaked in priestly garb, who was forever at her
- side.
- </p>
- <p>
- His lips moved, but no sound came from them. Valérie! Valérie! Why had she
- not come into his life before! Before&mdash;when? Before that night at
- Mother Blondin's? Was he not man enough to look the truth in the face!
- That night was only a culminating incident of a life that went back many
- years to the days when&mdash;when there had been no Valérie either! But it
- was too late to think of that now&mdash;now that Valérie had come, come as
- a final, terrible punishment, holding up before him, through bitter
- contrast, the hollow worthlessness of the stakes that, when the choice had
- been freely his, he had chosen to play for!
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie! Valérie! His soul was calling out to her. A life with Valérie!
- What would it not have meant? The dear love that she might have given him&mdash;the
- priceless love that he might have won! Gone! Gone forever! No, it was not
- gone, for it had never been. He thanked God for that. Yes, there must be a
- God who had brought this about, for while he flouted this God in the dress
- of this God's priest, this God utilised that very act to save Valérie, who
- trusted this God, from the misery and sorrow and hopelessness that must
- have come to her with love. She could not love a priest; there could be no
- thought of such a thing for Valérie. This God had set that barrier there&mdash;to
- protect her. Yes, he thanked God for that; he thanked God he had not
- brought this hurt upon her&mdash;and those minions of hell, who tried to
- tantalise, and with their insidious deviltry tried to make him think
- otherwise, were powerless here. But that did not appease the yearning;
- that did not answer the cry of his heart and soul.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie! Valérie! Valérie! He was calling to her with all his strength
- from the border of that prison-land. Valérie! Valérie! Would his voice not
- reach her! Would she not turn her head and smile! Valérie! Valérie! He
- wanted her now in his hour of agony, in this hour of terrible loneliness,
- in this hour when his brain rocked and reeled on the verge of madness.
- </p>
- <p>
- How still it was&mdash;and how dark! There were no voices now&mdash;only
- the voice of his soul calling, calling, calling for Valérie&mdash;calling
- for what he could never have&mdash;calling for the touch of her hand to
- guide him&mdash;calling for her smile to help him on his way. Yes, Valérie&mdash;he
- was calling Valérie&mdash;he was calling to her from the depths of his
- being. Out into the night, out into the everywhere, he was flinging his
- piteous, soundless cry, and God, if God would, might listen, and know that
- His revenge was taken; and hell might listen, and shriek its mirth&mdash;they
- would not silence him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie! Valérie! No, there was no answer. There would never be an answer&mdash;but
- he would always call. Through the years to come, if there were those years
- to reckon with, he would call as he was calling now. Valérie! Valérie!
- Valérie! She would not hear&mdash;she would not answer&mdash;she would not
- know. But he would call&mdash;because he loved her.
- </p>
- <p>
- A sob shook his bowed shoulders. A hand in agony gathered and crushed a
- fold of flesh from the forehead that lay upon it. Valérie! Valérie! He did
- not cry out. He made no sound. It was still, still as the living death in
- that prison-land&mdash;and then&mdash;and then he was swaying to his feet,
- and clutching with both hands at the desk, for support. Valérie! The door
- was open, and a soft light filled the room. Valérie! Valérie was standing
- there on the threshold, holding a lamp in her hand. It was phantasm! A
- vision! It was not real! It was not Valérie! His mind was a broken thing
- at last! It was not Valérie&mdash;but that was Valérie's voice&mdash;that
- was Valérie's voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lamp shook a little unsteadily in her hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you call?&rdquo; she asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not answer&mdash;only looked at her, as though in truth she were a
- vision that had come to him. She was in dressing-gown; and her hair,
- loosely knotted, framed her face in dark, waving tresses; and her eyes
- were wide, startled and perplexed, as they fixed upon him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I thought I heard you call,&rdquo; she faltered.
- </p>
- <p>
- All the gladness, all the joy in life, all that the world could hold
- seemed for an instant his. All else was forgotten&mdash;all else but that
- singing in his heart&mdash;all else but that fierce, elemental,
- triumphant, mighty joy lifting him high to a pinnacle that reared itself
- supreme, commanding and immortal, far beyond the reach of that sea of
- torment which had engulfed him. Valérie had heard him call&mdash;and she
- had answered&mdash;and she was here. Valérie was here&mdash;she had come
- to him. Valérie had heard him call&mdash;and she was here. And then
- beneath his feet that pinnacle, so supreme, commanding and immortal,
- seemed to dissolve away, and that sea of torment closed over him again,
- and all those voices that plagued him, mocking, jeering, screaming,
- shrieking, were like a horrible requiem ringing in his ears. She had heard
- him call&mdash;and he had made no sound&mdash;only his soul had spoken..
- And she had answered. And she was here&mdash;here now&mdash;standing there
- on the threshold. <i>Why?</i> He dared not answer. It was a blessed thing,
- a wonderful, glorious thing&mdash;-and it was a terrible thing, a thing of
- misery and despair. What was he doing now&mdash;<i>answering</i> that
- &ldquo;why&rdquo;! No, no&mdash;it was not true&mdash;it could not be true. He had
- thanked God that it could not be so. It was not that&mdash;<i>that</i> was
- not the reason she had heard him call&mdash;that was not the reason she
- was here. It was not! It was not! It was only those insidious&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- He heard himself speaking; he was conscious that his voice by some miracle
- was low, grave, contained. &ldquo;No, Mademoiselle Valérie, I did not call.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The colour was slowly leaving her cheeks, and into her eyes came creeping
- confusion and dismay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It&mdash;it is strange,&rdquo; she said nervously. &ldquo;I was asleep, and I thought
- I heard you call for&mdash;for help, and I got up and lighted the lamp,
- and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Was that his laugh&mdash;quiet, gentle, reassuring? Was he so much in
- command of himself as that? Was it the gambler, or the priest, or&mdash;great
- God!&mdash;the lover now? She was here&mdash;she had come to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was a dream, Mademoiselle Valérie,&rdquo; he was saying. &ldquo;A very terrible
- dream, I am afraid, if I was the subject of it; but, see, it is nothing to
- cause you distress, and to-morrow you will laugh over it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not reply at once. She was very pale now; and her lips, though
- tightly closed, were quivering. Nor did she look at him. Her eyes were on
- the floor. Her hand mechanically drew and held the dressing-gown closer
- about her throat.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had not moved from the side of the desk, nor she from the threshold of
- the door&mdash;and now she looked up suddenly, and held the lamp in her
- hand a little higher, and her eyes searched his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It must be very late&mdash;very, very late,&rdquo; she said steadily. &ldquo;And you
- have not gone to bed. There is something the matter. What is it? Will you
- tell me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, yes!&rdquo; he said&mdash;and smiled. &ldquo;But, yes&mdash;I will tell you. It
- is very simple. I think perhaps I was overtired. In any case, I was
- restless and could not sleep, and so I came in here, and&mdash;well, since
- I must confess&mdash;I imagine I finally fell asleep in my chair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is that all?&rdquo; she asked&mdash;and there was a curious insistence in her
- voice. &ldquo;You look as though you were ill. Are you telling me all?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Everything!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;And I am not ill, Mademoiselle Valérie&rdquo;&mdash;he
- laughed again&mdash;&ldquo;you would hear me complain fast enough if I were! I
- am not a model patient.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head, as though she would not enter into the lightness of
- his reply; and again her eyes sought the floor. And, as he watched her,
- the colour now came and went from her cheeks, and there was trouble in her
- face, and hesitancy, and irresolution.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, Mademoiselle Valérie?&rdquo;&mdash;his forced lightness was gone
- now. She was frightened, and nervous, and ill at ease&mdash;that she
- should be standing here like this at this hour of night, of course. Yes,
- that was it. Naturally that would be so. He lifted his hand and drew it
- heavily across his forehead. She was frightened. If he might only take her
- in his arms, and draw her head to his shoulder, and hold her there, and
- soothe her! It seemed that all his being cried to him to do that. &ldquo;Well,
- why don't you?&rdquo;&mdash;that inner voice was flashing the suggestion quick
- upon him&mdash;&ldquo;well, why don't you? You could do it as a priest, in the
- rôle of priest, you know&mdash;like a father to one of his flock. Go
- ahead, here's your chance&mdash;be the priest, be the priest! Don't you
- want to hold her in your arms&mdash;be the priest, be the priest!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She had not answered his question. He found himself answering it for her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, Mademoiselle Valérie? You must not let a dream affect you,
- you know. It is gone now. And you can see that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is strange&rdquo;&mdash;she spoke almost to herself. &ldquo;I&mdash;I was so sure
- that I heard you call.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Why was he not moving toward her? Why was he clinging in a sort of
- tenacious frenzy to the desk? Why was he not obeying the promptings of
- that inner voice? It would be quite a natural thing to do what that voice
- prompted&mdash;and Valérie, Valérie who would never be his, would for a
- moment, snatched out of all eternity, be in his arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you must not let such a thing as a dream affect you&rdquo;&mdash;he seemed
- to be speaking without volition of his own, and he seemed stupidly able to
- say but the same thing over again. &ldquo;And, see, it is over, and you are
- awake now to find that no one is really in trouble after all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then she raised her head&mdash;and suddenly, but as though she were
- afraid even of her own act, as though she still fought against some
- decision she had forced upon herself, she walked slowly forward into the
- room, and set the lamp down upon the desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, there is some one in trouble&rdquo;&mdash;the words came steadily, but
- scarcely above a whisper; and her hand was tense about the white throat
- now, where before it had mechanically clutched at the dressing-gown. &ldquo;I am
- in trouble&mdash;Father Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You&mdash;Valérie!&rdquo; He was conscious, even in his startled exclamation,
- of a strange and disturbing prescience. Father Aubert&mdash;he could not
- remember when she had called him that before&mdash;<i>Father</i> Aubert.
- It was very rarely that she called him that, it was almost always Monsieur
- le Curé. And he&mdash;her name&mdash;he had called her Valérie&mdash;not
- Mademoiselle Valérie&mdash;but Valérie, as once before, when she had stood
- out there in the hall the night they had taken that man away, her name had
- sprung spontaneously to his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, and bowed her head. &ldquo;I am in trouble, father; for I have
- sinned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sinned&mdash;Valérie&rdquo;&mdash;the words were stumbling on his lips. How
- fast that white throat throbbed! Valérie, pure and innocent, meant perhaps
- to confess to&mdash;<i>Father</i> Aubert. Well, she should not, and she
- would not! Not that! She should not have to remember in the &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;
- that she had bared her soul at the shrine of profanity. Back again into
- his voice he forced a cheery, playful reassurance. &ldquo;It cannot be a very
- grievous sin that Mademoiselle Valérie has been guilty of! Of that, I am
- sure! And to-morrow&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; she cried out. &ldquo;You do not know! See, be indulgent with me now,
- father&mdash;I am in trouble&mdash;in very deep and terrible trouble. I&mdash;I
- cannot even confess and ask you for absolution&mdash;but you can help me&mdash;do
- not try to put me off&mdash;I&mdash;I may not have the courage again. See,
- I&mdash;I am not very brave, and I am not very strong, and the tears are
- not far off. Help me to do what I want to do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Valérie!&rdquo; he scarcely breathed her name. Help her to do what she wanted
- to do! There was another prescience upon him now; but one that he could
- not understand, save that it seemed to be pointing toward the threshold of
- a moment that he was to remember all his life.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sit down there in your chair, father, please&rdquo;&mdash;her voice was very
- low again. &ldquo;Sit there, and let me kneel before you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stepped back as from a blow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, Valérie, you shall not kneel to me&rdquo;&mdash;he did not know what he was
- saying now. Kneel! Valérie kneel to him! &ldquo;You shall not kneel to me, I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Yes!</i>&rdquo; The word came feverishly. The composure that she had been
- fighting to retain was slipping from her. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;I must! I must!&rdquo; She
- was close upon him, forcing him back toward the chair. Her eyes, dry and
- wide before, were swimming with sudden tears. &ldquo;Oh, don't you understand!
- Oh, don't you understand! I am not kneeling to you as a man, I am kneeling
- to you as&mdash;as a&mdash;a <i>priest</i>&mdash;a priest of God&mdash;for&mdash;for
- I have sinned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was on her knees&mdash;and, with a mental cry of anguish, Raymond
- slipped down into the chair. Yes, he understood&mdash;now&mdash;at last!
- He understood what, pray God, she should never realise he understood! She&mdash;Valérie&mdash;cared.
- And she was trying now&mdash;God, the cruelty of it!&mdash;and she was
- trying now to save herself, to protect herself, by forcing upon herself an
- actual physical acceptance of him as a priest. No! It was not so! It could
- not be so! He did <i>not</i> understand!
- </p>
- <p>
- He would not have it so! He would not! It was only hell's trickery again&mdash;only
- that&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lay your hands on my head, father.&rdquo; She caught his hands and lifted them,
- and laid them upon her bowed head&mdash;and as his hands touched her she
- seemed to tremble for an instant, and her hands tightened upon his. &ldquo;Hold
- them there for a little while, father,&rdquo; she murmured&mdash;and took her
- own hands away, and clasped them before her hidden face.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's countenance was ashen as he bent forward. What had that voice
- prompted him to do? Be the priest? Well, he was being the priest now&mdash;and
- he knew torment in the depths of a sacrilege at last before which his soul
- shrank back appalled. The soft hair was silken to the touch of his hands,
- and yet it burned and seared him as with brands of fire. It was Valérie's
- hair. It was Valérie's head that was bowed before him. It was Valérie, the
- one to whom his soul had called, who was kneeling to him&mdash;as a priest
- of God&mdash;to save herself!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say the <i>Pater Noster</i> with me, father,&rdquo; she whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- He bent his head still lower&mdash;lower now that she might not by any
- chance glimpse his face. Like death it must look. He pressed his hands in
- assent upon her head&mdash;but it was Valérie's voice alone that faltered
- through the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;.... <i>Sanctificetur nomen tuum</i>&mdash;hallowed be Thy name... <i>fiat
- voluntas tua</i>&mdash;Thy will be done.... <i>et dimitte nobis débita
- nostra</i>&mdash;and forgive us our trespasses... <i>et ne nos inducas in
- tentationem</i>&mdash;and lead us not into temptation... <i>sed libera nos
- a malo</i>&mdash;but deliver us from evil... Amen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The lamp burned upon the desk; it lighted up the room&mdash;but before
- Raymond's eyes was only a blur, and nothing was distinct. And there was
- silence&mdash;silence for a long time.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Valérie spoke again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am stronger now,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I&mdash;I think God showed me the way. You
- have been very good to me to-night&mdash;not to question me&mdash;just to
- let me have my way. And now bless me, father, and I will go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bless Valérie&mdash;ask God's blessing on Valérie&mdash;would that be
- profanation? God's blessing on Valérie! Ay, he could ask that! Profligate,
- sinner, sham and mocker, he could ask that in reverence and sincerity&mdash;God's
- blessing upon Valérie&mdash;because he loved her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;God keep you, Valérie,&rdquo; he said, and fought the tremor from his voice.
- &ldquo;God keep you, Valérie&mdash;and bless you&mdash;and guard you through all
- your life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She rose from her knees, and turning quickly because her cheeks were wet,
- picked up the lamp, and walked to the door. At the threshold she paused,
- but did not look back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-night, father,&rdquo; she said simply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-night, Valérie,&rdquo; he answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was dark again in the room. He had risen from his chair as Valérie had
- risen from her knees&mdash;and now his hand felt out for the chair again,
- and he sank down, and, as when she had come to him, his head was buried
- again in his arms upon the desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie cared! Valérie loved him! Valérie, too, had been through her hour
- of torment. &ldquo;Not as a man&mdash;as a priest, a priest of God.&rdquo; No, he
- would not believe that, he would not let himself believe that. It could
- not be so! She was troubled, in distress&mdash;about something else. What
- time was it now? Not daylight yet&mdash;the merciful daylight&mdash;no
- sign of daylight yet? If it were true&mdash;what then? If she cared&mdash;what
- then?
- </p>
- <p>
- If Valérie loved him&mdash;what then? What was he to do in the
- &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;? It would not be himself alone who was to bear the burden
- then. It was not true, of course; he would not believe it, he would not
- let himself believe it. But if it were true how would Valérie endure the
- hanging by the neck until he was dead of the man she loved, or the
- knowledge of what he was, or the death by accident&mdash;of the man she
- loved!
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not stir now. He made no sound, no movement&mdash;and his head lay
- in his outflung arms. And time passed, and through the window crept the
- gray of dawn&mdash;and presently it was daylight&mdash;the merciful
- daylight&mdash;and the night was gone. But he was scarcely conscious of it
- now. It grew lighter still, and filled the room&mdash;that merciful
- daylight. And his brain, sick and stumbling and weary, reeled on and on,
- and there was the dream of the Walled Place again, and Valérie was closing
- the gate that was studded with iron spikes&mdash;and there was no way out.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then very slowly, like a man rousing from a stupor, his head came up
- from the desk, and he listened. From across the green came the sound of
- the church bells ringing for early mass. And as he listened the bells
- seemed to catch up the tempo of some refrain. What was it? Yes, he knew
- now. It was the opening of the mass&mdash;the words he would have to go in
- there presently and say. Were they mocking him, those bells! Was this what
- the daylight, the merciful daylight had brought&mdash;only a crowning,
- pitiless, merciless jeer! His face, strained and haggard, lifted suddenly
- a little higher. Was it only mockery, or could it be&mdash;see, they
- seemed to peal more softly now&mdash;could it be that they held another
- meaning&mdash;like voices calling in compassion to him because he was
- lost? No&mdash;his mind was dazed&mdash;it could not mean that&mdash;for
- him. But listen! They were repeating it over and over again. It was the
- call to mass, for it was daylight, and the beginning of a new day. Listen!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Introibo ad altare Dei</i>&mdash;I will go in unto the Altar of God.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIX&mdash;THE TWO SINNERS
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>NTROIBO ad altare
- Dei&mdash;I will go in unto the Altar of God.&rdquo; It had been days, another
- week of them, since the morning when he had raised his head to that call
- for early mass,' and his brain, stumbling and confused, had set those
- words in a refrain to the tempo of the pealing bells.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was midnight now&mdash;another night&mdash;the dreaded night. They were
- not all like that other night, not all so pitiless&mdash;that would have
- been beyond physical endurance. But they were bad, all the nights were
- bad. They seemed cunningly just to skirt the border edge of strain that
- could be endured, and cunningly just to evade the breaking point.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was midnight. On the table beside the bed stood the lighted lamp; and
- beside the lamp, topped by a prayer-book, was a little pile of François
- Aubert's books; and the bed was turned neatly down, disclosing invitingly
- the cool, fresh sheets. These were Madame Lafleur's kindly and well-meant
- offices. Madame La-fleur knew that he did not sleep very well. Each
- evening she came in here and set the lamp on the table, and arranged the
- books, and turned down the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- This was the same rocking-chair he sat in now that he had sat in night
- after night, and watched a man with bandaged head lying on that same bed&mdash;watched
- and waited for the man to die. The man was not there any more&mdash;there
- were just the cool, fresh sheets. The man was in Tournayville. He had seen
- the man again that afternoon&mdash;and now it was the man who was waiting
- to die.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will go in unto the Altar of God.&rdquo; With a curious hesitancy he reached
- out and took the prayer-book from the table, and abstractedly began to
- finger its pages. What did those words mean? They had been with him
- incessantly, insistently, since that morning when he had groped for their
- meaning as between the bitterest of mockeries and a sublime sincerity.
- They did not mock him now, they held no sting of irony. It was very
- strange. They had not mocked him all that week. He had been glad, eager,
- somehow, to repeat them to himself. Did they mean&mdash;peace?
- </p>
- <p>
- Peace! If he could have peace&mdash;even for to-night. If he could lie
- down between those cool, fresh sheets&mdash;and sleep! He was physically
- weary. He had made himself weary each night in the hope that weariness
- might bring a dreamless rest. He had thrown himself feverishly into the
- rôle of the Curé of St. Marleau; he had walked miles and driven miles;
- there was not a cottage in the parish upon whose door he had not knocked,
- and with whose occupants he had not shared-the personal joys and sorrows
- of the moment; and he had sat with the sick&mdash;with old Mother Blondin
- that morning, for instance, who seemed quite ill and feeble, and who in
- the last few days had taken to her bed. Yes, it was strange! He had done
- all this, too, with a certain sincerity that was not alone due to an
- effort to find forgetfulness during the day and weariness that would bring
- repose at night. He had found neither the forgetfulness nor the repose;
- but he had found a sort of wistful joy in the kindly acts of the good,
- young Father Aubert!
- </p>
- <p>
- He had found neither the forgetfulness nor the repose. He could not forget
- the &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;&mdash;the day that must irrevocably come&mdash;unless
- something, some turn of fate, some unforeseen thing intervened. <i>Something!</i>
- It was a pitiful thing to cling to&mdash;a pitiful thing even for a
- gambler's chance! But he clung to it now more desperately, more
- tenaciously than ever before. It was not only his life now, it was not
- only the life of the condemned man in that cell&mdash;it was Valérie. He
- might blindfold his mental vision; he might crush back, and trample down,
- and smother the thought, and refuse to admit it&mdash;but in his soul he
- believed she cared. And if she cared, and if that &ldquo;something&rdquo; did not
- happen, and he was forced, in whatever way he finally must choose, to play
- the last card&mdash;there was Valérie. If she cared&mdash;there was
- Valérie to suffer too! If he hanged instead of that man&mdash;there was
- Valérie! If he confessed from a safe distance after flight&mdash;there was
- Valérie to endure the shame! If the good, young Father Aubert died by
- &ldquo;accident&rdquo;&mdash;there was the condemned man in the death cell to pay the
- penalty&mdash;and Valérie to know the grief! Choice! What choice was
- there? Who called this ghastly impasse a choice! He could only wait&mdash;wait
- and cling to that hope, which in itself, because it was so paltry a thing
- to lean on, but added to the horror and suspense of the hours and days
- that stretched between now and the &ldquo;afterwards.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Something&rdquo; might happen&mdash;yes, something might happen&mdash;but
- nothing had happened yet&mdash;nothing yet&mdash;and his brain, day and
- night, would not stop mangling and tearing itself to pieces&mdash;and
- would not let him rest&mdash;and there was no peace&mdash;none&mdash;not
- even for a few short hours.
- </p>
- <p>
- His fingers were still mechanically turning the pages of the prayer-book.
- &ldquo;I will go in unto the Altar of God.&rdquo; Why did those words keep on running
- insistently through his mind? Did they suggest&mdash;peace?
- </p>
- <p>
- Well, if they did, why wasn't there something practical about them,
- something tangible, something he could lay material hands upon, and sense,
- and feel? The Altar, of God! Was there in very reality a God? He had
- chosen once to deny it contemptuously; and he had chosen once to despise
- religion as cant and chicanery cleverly practised upon the gullible and
- the weak-minded to the profit of those who pretended to interpret it! But
- there were beautiful words here in this book; and religion, if this were
- religion, must therefore be beautiful too&mdash;if one could believe. He
- remembered those words at the burial of Théophile Blondin&mdash;years, an
- eternity ago that was&mdash;&ldquo;I am the resurrection and the life... he that
- believeth in Me... shall never die.&rdquo; He had repeated them over and over to
- himself that morning&mdash;he had spoken them aloud, in what had seemed
- then an unaccountable sincerity, to old Mother Blondin as she had clung to
- the palings of the cemetery fence that morning. Yes, they were beautiful
- words&mdash;if one could believe.
- </p>
- <p>
- And here were others! What were these words here? He was staring at an
- open page before him, staring and staring at it. What were these other
- words here? It was not that he had never seen them before&mdash;but why
- was the book open at this place now&mdash;at these last few words of the
- <i>Benedictus? &ldquo;Per viscera misericordiæ Dei nostri... illuminare his qui
- in tenebris et in umbra mortis sedent: ad dirigendos pedes nostros in viam
- pacis</i>&mdash;Through the tender mercy of our God... to enlighten those
- who sit in darkness and in the shade of death: to direct our feet into the
- way of peace.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Were they but words&mdash;mere words&mdash;these? They were addressed to
- him&mdash;definitely to him, were they not? He sat in darkness, in an
- agony of darkness, lost, unable to find his way, and he sat&mdash;in the
- shade of death! Was there a God, a God who had tender mercy, a God&mdash;to
- direct his feet into the way of peace?
- </p>
- <p>
- The book slipped from his fingers, and dropped to the floor&mdash;and, his
- lips compressed, he stood up from the chair. If there was a God who had
- mercy, mercy of any kind&mdash;it was mercy he asked now. Where was this
- mercy? Where was this way of peace? Where was&mdash;a strange, bewildered,
- incredulous wonder was creeping into his face. Was that it&mdash;the Altar
- of God? Was that where there was peace&mdash;in unto the Altar of God? He
- had asked for a practical application of the words. Is that what they
- meant&mdash;that he should actually go&mdash;in unto the Altar of God&mdash;in
- there in the church&mdash;now?
- </p>
- <p>
- It seemed to stagger him for a moment. Numbly he stooped and picked up the
- prayer-book, and closed it, and laid it back on the table&mdash;and stood
- irresolute. Something, he was conscious, was impelling him to go there.
- Well, why not? If there was a God, if there was a God who had tender
- mercy, if it was that God whose words were suggesting a way of peace&mdash;why
- not put that God to the test! Once, on the afternoon just before he had
- attempted that man's escape, he had yielded to a previous impulse, and had
- gone into the church. It had been quiet, still and restful, he remembered;
- and he remembered that he had come away strangely calmed. But since then a
- cataclysm had swept over him; then he had been in a state of mind that,
- compared with now, was one even of peace&mdash;but even so, it was quiet,
- still and restful there, he remembered.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was crossing the room slowly, hesitantly, toward the door. Well, why
- not? If there was a God, and this impulse emanated from God&mdash;why not
- put it to the test? If it was all a hollow fraud, a myth, a superstition
- to which he was weak enough to yield, he would at least be no worse off
- than to sit here in that chair, or to lie upon the bed and toss the hours
- away until morning came!
- </p>
- <p>
- Well, he would go! He stepped softly out into the hall, closed his door
- behind him, groped his way in the darkness to the front door of the <i>presbytère</i>,
- opened it&mdash;and stood still for an instant, listening. Neither Valérie
- nor her mother, asleep upstairs, had been disturbed he was sure. If they
- had&mdash;well, they would assign no ulterior motive to his going out&mdash;it
- was only that Monsieur le Curé, poor man, did not sleep well!
- </p>
- <p>
- He closed the door quietly, and went down the steps&mdash;and at the
- bottom paused again. He became suddenly conscious that there was a great
- quiet and a great serenity in the night&mdash;and a great beauty. There
- were stars, a myriad stars in a perfect sky; and the moonlight bathed the
- church green in a radiance that made of it a velvet carpet, marvellously
- wrought in shadows of many hues. There, along the road, a whitewashed
- cottage stood out distinctly, and still further along another, and yet
- another&mdash;like little fortresses whose tranquillity was impregnable.
- And the moonlight, and the lullaby of the lapping water on the shore, and
- the night sounds that were the chirping of the little grass-things, were
- like some benediction breathed softly upon the earth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To direct our feet into the way of peace&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond murmured the
- words with a sudden overpowering sense of yearning and wistfulness
- sweeping upon him. And then, as suddenly, he was tense, alert, straining
- his eyes toward the front of the church. Was that a shadow there that
- moved, cast perhaps by the swaying branch of some tree? It was a very
- curious branch if that were so! The shadow seemed to have appeared
- suddenly from around the corner of the church and to be creeping toward
- the door. It was too far across the green to see distinctly, even with the
- moonlight as bright as it was, but it seemed as though he could see the
- church door open and close again&mdash;and now the shadow had disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mechanically Raymond rubbed his eyes. It was strange, so very strange that
- it must surely be only a trick of the imagination. The moonlight was
- always deceptive and lent itself easily to hallucinations, and at that
- distance he certainly could not be sure. And besides, at this hour, after
- midnight, why should any one go stealing into the church? And yet he could
- have sworn he had seen the door open! And stare as he would now, the
- shadow that had crept along the low platform above the church steps was no
- longer visible.
- </p>
- <p>
- He hesitated a moment. It was even an added incentive for him to go into
- the church, but suppose some one was there, and he should be seen? He
- smiled a little wanly&mdash;and stepped forward across the green. Well,
- what of it! Was he not the Curé of St. Mar-leau? It would be only another
- halo for the head of the good, young Father Aubert! It would require but a
- word of explanation from him, he could even tell the truth&mdash;and they
- would call him the <i>devout</i>, good, young Father Aubert! Only, instead
- of entering by one of the main doors, he would go in through the sacristy.
- He was not even likely to be seen himself in that way; and, if there was
- any one there, he should be able to discover who it was, and what he or
- she was doing there.
- </p>
- <p>
- He passed on along the side of the church, his footsteps soundless on the
- sward, reached the door of the sacristy, opened it silently, and stepped
- inside. It was intensely dark here. Treading on tiptoe, he traversed the
- little room, and finally, after a moment's groping, his fingers closed on
- the knob of the door that opened on the interior of the church.
- </p>
- <p>
- A sound broke the stillness. Yes, there was some one out there! Raymond
- cautiously pulled the door ajar. Came that sound again. It was very loud&mdash;and
- yet it was only the creak of a footstep that seemed to come from somewhere
- amongst the aisles. It echoed back from the high vaulted roof with a great
- noise. It seemed to give pause, to terrify with its own alarm whoever was
- out there, for now as he listened there was silence again.
- </p>
- <p>
- Still cautiously and still a little wider, Raymond opened the door, and
- now he could see out into the body of the church&mdash;and for a moment,
- as though gazing upon some mystic scene, he stood there wrapt, immovable.
- Above the tops of the high, stained windows, it was as though a vast
- canopy of impenetrable blackness were spread from end to end of the
- edifice; and slanting from the edge of this canopy in a series of parallel
- rays the moonlight, coloured into curious solemn tints, filtered across
- from one wall to the other. And the aisles were like little dark alleyways
- leading away as into some immensity beyond. And here, looming up, a
- statue, the figure of some white-robed saint, drew, as it were, a holy
- light about it, and seemed to take on life and breathe into the stillness
- a sense of calm and pure and unchanging presence. And the black canopy and
- the little dark alleyways seemed to whisper of hidden things that kept
- ward over this abode of God. And there was no sound&mdash;and there was
- awe and solemnity in this silence. And on the altar, very near him, the
- Altar of God that he had come to seek, the single altar light burned like
- a tiny scintillating jewel in its setting of moon rays. And there, shadowy
- against the wall, just outside the chancel rail, was the great cross.
- There seemed something that spoke of the immutable in that. The first
- little wooden church above whose doors it had been reared was gone, and
- there was a church of stone now with a golden, metal cross upon its spire,
- but this great cross of wood was still here. It was a very precious relic
- to St. Marleau, and so it hung there on the wall of the new church between
- the two windows nearest the altar.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then his eyes, travelling down the length of the cross, fixed upon its
- base&mdash;and the spell that had held him was gone. It was blacker there,
- very much blacker! There was a patch of blackness there that seemed to
- move and waver slightly&mdash;and it was neither shadow, nor yet the
- support built out to hold the base of the cross. Some one was crouching
- there. Well, what should he do? Remain in hiding here, or go out there as
- the Curé of St. Marleau and see who it was? Something urged him to go;
- caution bade him remain where he was. He knew a sudden resentment. He had
- put God to the test&mdash;and, instead of peace, he had found a prowler in
- the church!
- </p>
- <p>
- Ah&mdash;what was that! That low, broken sound&mdash;like a sob! Yes, it
- came again&mdash;and the echoes whispered it back from everywhere. It was
- a woman. A woman was sobbing there at the foot of the cross. Who was it?
- Came a thought that stabbed with pain. Not Valérie! It could not be
- Valérie&mdash;kneeling there under a load that was beyond her strength! It
- could not be Valérie in anguish and grief greater than she could bear
- because&mdash;because she loved a man whom she believed to be a priest of
- God! No&mdash;not Valérie! But if it were!
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew back a little. If it were Valérie she should not know that he had
- seen. At least he could save her that. He would wait until whoever it was
- had left the church, and if it were Valérie she would go back to the <i>presbytère</i>,
- and in that way he would know.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now&mdash;what were those words now? She was praying out there as she
- sobbed. And slowly an amazed and incredulous wonder spread over Raymond's
- face. No, it was not Valérie! That was not Valérie's voice! Those
- mumbling, hesitant, uncertain words, as though the memory were pitifully
- at fault, were not Valérie's. It was not Valérie! He recognised the voice
- now. It was the old woman on the hill&mdash;old Mother Blondin!
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond stared for a moment helplessly out through the crack of the
- sacristy door which he held ajar, out into those curiously tinted moon
- rays, and past the altar with its tiny light, to where that dark shadow
- lay against the wall. Old Mother Blondin! Old Mother Blondin, the heretic,
- was out there&mdash;<i>praying in the church!</i> Why? What had brought
- her there? Old Mother Blondin who was supposed to be ill in her bed&mdash;he
- had seen her there that morning! She had been sick for the last few days,
- and worse if anything that morning&mdash;and now&mdash;now she was here&mdash;praying
- in the church.
- </p>
- <p>
- What had brought her here? What motive had brought this about, that, with
- its strength of purpose, must have supplied physical strength as well, for
- she must almost literally have had to crawl down the hill in her feeble
- state? Had she too come seeking for&mdash;peace! Was it coincidence that
- they two, who had reached the lees and dregs of that common cup, should be
- here together, at this strange hour, at the Altar of God! Was it only
- coincidence&mdash;nothing more? Was he ready to believe, would he admit so
- much, that it was <i>more</i> than&mdash;coincidence?
- </p>
- <p>
- A sense of solemnity and of awe that mingled with a sense of profound
- compassion for old Mother Blon-din sobbing there in her misery took
- possession of him, and he seemed moved now as by an impulse beyond and
- outside himself&mdash;to go to her&mdash;to comfort and soothe her, if he
- could. And slowly he opened the sacristy door, and stepped out into the
- chancel, and into the moonlight that fell softly across the altar's edge&mdash;and
- he called her name.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a cry, wild, unrestrained&mdash;a cry of terror that seemed to
- swirl about the church, and from the black canopy above that hid the
- vaulted roof was hurled back in a thousand echoes. But with the cry, as
- the dark form from against the wall sprang erect, Raymond caught a sharp,
- ominous cracking sound&mdash;and, as he looked, high up on the wall, the
- arms of the huge cross seemed to waver and begin to tilt forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a bound, as he saw her danger, Raymond cleared the chancel rail, and
- the next instant had caught at the base of the cross and steadied it. In
- her terror as she had jumped to her feet, she had knocked against it and
- forced it almost off the sort of shelf, or ledge, that had been built out
- from the wall to support it; and at the same time, he could see now, one
- or more of the wall fastenings at the top had given away. It was very
- heavy and unmanageable, but he finally succeeded in getting it far enough
- back into position to make it temporarily secure.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned then to face Mother Blondin. She seemed oblivious, unconscious
- of her escape, though her face in the moonlight held a ghastly colour. She
- was staring at him with eyes that burned feverishly in their deep sockets.
- She was not crying now, but there were still tears, undried, that clung to
- her withered cheeks. One bony hand reached out and clutched at the back of
- a pew, for she was swaying on her feet; but the other was clenched and
- knotted&mdash;and suddenly she raised it and shook it in his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, it is I! I&mdash;Mother Blondin!&rdquo; she choked. &ldquo;Mother Blondin&mdash;the
- old hag&mdash;the <i>excommuniée!</i> You saw me come in&mdash;eh? And you
- have come to put me out&mdash;to put old Mother Blondin, the <i>excommuniée</i>,
- out&mdash;eh? I have no right here&mdash;here&mdash;eh? Well, who said I
- had any right! Put me out&mdash;put me out&mdash;put me&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo;
- The clenched hand opened, clawed queerly at her face, as though to clear
- away something that had gathered before her eyes and would not let her see&mdash;and
- she reeled heavily backward.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's arm went around her shoulders.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are ill, Madame Blondin&mdash;ill and weak,&rdquo; he said soothingly.
- &ldquo;See&rdquo;&mdash;he half lifted, half supported her into the pew&mdash;&ldquo;sit
- down here for a moment and rest. I am afraid I frightened you. I am very
- sorry. Perhaps it would have been better if I had left you by yourself;
- but I heard you sobbing out here, and I thought that I might perhaps help
- you&mdash;and so I came&mdash;and so&mdash;you are better now, are you
- not?&mdash;-and so, you see, it was not to drive you out of the church.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She looked at him in a sort of angry unbelief.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; she exclaimed fiercely. &ldquo;Why do you tell me that, eh? Why do you
- tell me that? I have no right here&mdash;and you are a priest. That is
- your business&mdash;to drive me out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Raymond gravely; &ldquo;it is not my business. And I think you would
- go very far, Madame Blondin, before you would find a priest who would
- drive you from his church under the circumstances in which I have found
- you here to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well then, I will go myself!&rdquo; she said defiantly&mdash;and made as though
- to rise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, not yet&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond pressed her quietly back into the seat. &ldquo;You
- must rest for a little while. Why, this morning, you know, you were
- seriously ill in bed. Surely you were not alone in the house to-night,
- that there was no one to prevent you getting up&mdash;I asked Madame
- Bouchard to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Madame Bouchard came to spend the night, but I did not want her, and I
- sent her home,&rdquo; she interrupted brusquely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You should not have done that, Madame Blondin,&rdquo; Raymond remonstrated
- kindly. &ldquo;But even then, you are very weak, and I do not see how you
- managed to get here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her face set hard with the old stubborn indomitableness that he knew so
- well.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I walked!&rdquo; she said shortly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hands were twisting together in her lap. There was dust covering her
- skirt thickly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And fell,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Will you tell me why you came?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because I was a fool&rdquo;&mdash;her lips were working, her hands kept
- twisting over each other in her lap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I heard you praying,&rdquo; said Raymond gently. &ldquo;What brought you here
- to-night, Madame Blondin?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head now, and turned her face away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The moonlight fell on the sparse, gray hair, and the thin, drooping
- shoulders, and the unkempt, shabby clothing. It seemed to enfold her in an
- infinite sympathy all its own. And suddenly Raymond found that his eyes
- were wet. It did not seem so startling and incongruous a thing that she
- should be here at midnight in the church&mdash;at the Altar of God. And
- yet&mdash;and yet why had she come? Something within himself demanded in a
- strange wistfulness the answer to that question, as though in the answer
- she would answer for them both, for the two who had no <i>right</i> here
- in this sacred place unless&mdash;unless, if there were a God, that God in
- His own way had meant to&mdash;direct their feet into the way of peace.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Madame Blondin&rdquo;&mdash;his voice was very low, trembling with earnestness&mdash;&ldquo;Madame
- Blondin, do you believe in God?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hands stopped their nervous movements, and clasped hard one upon the
- other.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No!&rdquo; she cried out sharply. &ldquo;No&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; And then her voice
- faltered, and she burst suddenly into tears. &ldquo;I&mdash;I don't know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His arm was still about her shoulders, and now his hand tightened a little
- upon her. She was crying softly. He was silent now&mdash;staring before
- him at that tiny flame burning in the moon rays on the altar. Well,
- suppose she did! Suppose even Mother Blondin believed, though she would
- fight on until she was beaten to her knees before she would
- unconditionally admit it, did that mean anything to him? Mother Blondin
- had not stood before that altar there with a crucifix upon her breast, and&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was speaking again&mdash;brushing the tears away with the back of her
- hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Once I did&mdash;once I believed,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;That was when I was a girl,
- and&mdash;and for a little while afterward. I used to come to the church
- then, and I used to believe. And then after Pierre died I married Blondin,
- and after that very soon I came no more. It is forty years&mdash;forty
- years&mdash;it was the old church then. The ban came before this one was
- built&mdash;I was never in here before&mdash;it is only the old cross
- there, the cross that was on the old church, that I know. Forty years is a
- long time&mdash;a long time&mdash;I am seventy-two now&mdash;seventy-two.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was crying again softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond, and his own voice choked, &ldquo;and to-night&mdash;after
- forty years?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wanted to come&rdquo;&mdash;she seemed almost to be whispering to herself&mdash;&ldquo;I
- wanted to come. Blondin said there was no God, but I remembered that when
- I was a girl&mdash;forty years ago&mdash;there was a God here. I&mdash;I
- wanted to come and see&mdash;and&mdash;and I&mdash;I don't know&mdash;I&mdash;I
- couldn't remember the prayers very well, and so maybe if God is still here
- He did not understand. Pierre always said there was a God, and he used to
- come here with me to mass; but Blondin said the priests were all liars,
- and I began to drink with Blondin, and he said they were all liars when he
- died, and no one except the ones that came to buy the <i>whiskey-blanc</i>
- would have anything to do with us, and&mdash;and I believed him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And Pierre?&rdquo; Raymond asked softly. &ldquo;Who was Pierre?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pierre?&rdquo; She turned her head and looked at him&mdash;and somehow, perhaps
- it was the tint of the moon rays, somehow the old, hard face was
- transfigured, and seemed to glow with untold sweetness, and a smile of
- tenderness mingled with the tears. &ldquo;Pierre? Ah, he was a good boy, Pierre.
- Yes, I have been happy! Who shall say I have not been happy? There were
- three years of it&mdash;three years of it&mdash;and then Pierre died. I
- was eighteen, eighteen on the day that Pierre and I were married. And it
- was a great day in the village&mdash;all the village was <i>en fête</i>.
- You would not believe that! But it is true. It is a long time between
- eighteen and seventy-two, and I was not like I am now, and Pierre was
- loved by every one. It is hard to believe, eh? And there are not many now
- who remember. But there is old Grandmother Frenier. She will tell you that
- I am telling you the truth about Pierre Letellier.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Letellier!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;it came in a low, involuntary cry from Raymond.
- Letellier! Where had he heard that name before? What strange stirring of
- the memory was this that the name had brought? Letellier! Was it&mdash;could
- it be&mdash;&mdash;?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, monsieur?&rdquo;&mdash;she had caught at his sleeve. &ldquo;Ah, you had
- perhaps heard that the Letelliers all moved away from here&mdash;and you
- did not know that I was once a Letellier? They sold everything and went
- away because of me a few years after I married Blondin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond mechanically. &ldquo;But tell me more about yourself and
- Pierre&mdash;and&mdash;and those happy years. You had children&mdash;a&mdash;a
- son, perhaps?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;yes, monsieur!&rdquo; There was a glad eagerness in her voice&mdash;and
- then a broken sob&mdash;and the old eyes brimmed anew with tears. &ldquo;There
- was little Jean. He was born just a few months after his father died. He&mdash;he
- was just like Pierre. He was four years old when I married Blondin, and&mdash;and
- when he was ten he ran away.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The altar light, that tiny light there seemed curiously transparent. He
- could see through it, not to the body of the altar behind it, but through
- it to a vast distance that did not measure miles, and he could see the
- interior of a shack whose window pane was thickly frosted and in whose
- doorway stood a man, and the man was Murdock Shaw who had come to bring
- Canuck John's dying message&mdash;and he could hear Murdock Shaw's words:
- &ldquo;'Tell Three-Ace Artie&mdash;give good-bye message&mdash;my mother and&mdash;&mdash;'
- And then he died.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not know where he went&rdquo;&mdash;old Mother Blon-din's faltering voice,
- too, seemed a vast distance away&mdash;&ldquo;I&mdash;I have never heard of him
- since then. He is dead, perhaps; but, if he is alive, I hope&mdash;I hope
- that he will never know. Yes&mdash;there were three years of happiness,
- monsieur&mdash;and then it was finished. Monsieur, I&mdash;I will go now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's head on his crossed arms was bowed on the back of the pew before
- him. Letellier! It was the forgotten name come back to him. This was
- Canuck John's mother&mdash;and this was Théophile Blondin's mother&mdash;and
- he had come to St. Marleau to deliver to her a message of death&mdash;and
- he had delivered it in the killing of her other son! Was this the peace
- that he had come here to seek to-night? Was this the hand of God that had
- led him here? What did it mean? Was it God who had brought Mother Blondin
- here to-night? Would it bring her comfort&mdash;to believe in God again?
- Was he here for <i>that?</i> Here, that a word from him, whom she thought
- a priest, might turn the scales and bring her to her God of the many years
- ago? Was this God's way&mdash;to use him, who masqueraded as God's priest,
- and through whom this woman's son had been killed&mdash;was this God's way
- to save old Mother Blondin?
- </p>
- <p>
- She touched his arm timidly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you praying for me, monsieur?&rdquo; she whispered tremulously. &ldquo;It&mdash;it
- is too late for that&mdash;that was forty years ago. And&mdash;and I will
- go now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He raised his head and looked at the old, withered, tear-stained face. The
- question of his own belief did not enter here. If she went now without a
- word from him, without a priestly word, she went forever. They were
- beautiful words&mdash;and, if one believed, they brought comfort. And she
- was near, very near to that old belief again. And they were near, very
- near to his own lips too, those words.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is not too late,&rdquo; he said brokenly. &ldquo;Listen! Do you remember the <i>Benedictus?</i>
- Give me your hand, and we will kneel, and say it together.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She drew back, and shook her head, and tried to speak&mdash;but no words
- came, only her lips quivered.
- </p>
- <p>
- He held out his hand to her&mdash;held it silently there for a long time&mdash;and
- then, hesitantly, she laid her hand in his.
- </p>
- <p>
- And kneeling there in the pew, old Mother Blondin and Raymond Chapelle,
- Raymond began the solemn words of the <i>Benedictus</i>. Low his voice
- was, and the tears crept to his eyes as the thin hand clutched and clasped
- spasmodically at his own. And as he came to the end, the tears held back
- no longer and rolled hot upon his cheeks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;... Through the tender mercy of our God... to enlighten those who sit in
- darkness, and in the shade of death: to direct our feet into the way of
- peace&rdquo;&mdash;his voice died away.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was sobbing bitterly. He helped her to her feet as she sought to rise,
- and, holding tightly to her arm for she swayed unsteadily, he led her down
- the aisle. And they came to the church door, and out upon the green. And
- here she paused, as though she expected him to leave her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will walk up the hill with you, Mother Blondin,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I do not
- think you are strong enough to go alone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- They started on along the road. She walked very slowly, very feebly, and
- leaned heavily upon him. And neither spoke. And they turned up the hill.
- And halfway up the hill he lifted her in his arms and carried her, for her
- strength was gone. And somehow he knew that when she had left her bed that
- night to stumble down this hill to the moonlit church she had left it for
- the last time&mdash;save one.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was speaking again&mdash;almost inaudibly. He bent his head to catch
- the words.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is forty years,&rdquo; said old Mother Blondin. &ldquo;Forty years&mdash;it is a
- long time&mdash;forty years.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XX&mdash;AN UNCOVERED SOUL
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T hung there
- precariously. All through the mass that morning Raymond's eyes had kept
- straying to the great cross on the wall that old Mother Blondin had
- disturbed the night before. No one else, it was true, had appeared to
- notice it; but, having no reason to do so, no one else, very probably, had
- given it any particular attention&mdash;nevertheless, a single strand of
- cord on one end of the horizontal beam was all that now prevented the
- cross from pitching outward from the wall and crashing down into the body
- of the church.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door of the sacristy leading into the chancel was open, and, in the
- sacristy now, Raymond's eyes fixed uneasily again on the huge, squared
- timbers of the cross. The support at the base held the weight of course,
- but the balance and adjustment was gone, and the slightest jar would be
- all that was necessary to snap that remaining cord above. Massive and
- unwieldy, the cross itself must be at least seven feet in height; and,
- though this was of course imagination, it seemed to waver there now
- ominously, as if to impress upon him the fact that in the cause of its
- insecurity he was not without a personal responsibility.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had removed his surplice and stole; Gauthier Beaulieu, the altar boy,
- had gone; and there was only old Narcisse Pélude, the aged sacristan, who
- was still puttering about the room. And the church was empty now, save
- that he could still hear Valérie moving around up there in the little
- organ loft.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond passed his hand wearily across his eyes. He was very tired.
- Valérie was lingering intentionally&mdash;and he knew why. He had not
- returned to the <i>presbytère</i>, his bed had not been slept in. Valérie
- and her mother could not have helped but discover that, and they would be
- anxious, and worried, and perhaps a little frightened&mdash;and that was
- why Valérie was lingering now, waiting for him. He had not dared to leave
- old Mother Blondin alone through the night. She had been very ill. And he
- had not gone to any one near at hand, to Madame Bouchard, for instance, to
- get her to take his place, for that would have entailed explanations
- which, not on his own account, but for old Mother Blondin's sake, he had
- not cared to make; and so, when the bell for mass had rung that morning,
- he had still been at the bedside of the old woman on the hill. And he had
- left her only then because she was sleeping quietly, and the immediate
- crisis seemed safely past.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes, from the cross, rested speculatively for a moment on the
- bent figure of the aged sacristan. He could make those explanations to
- Valérie, he could go out there now and in a sort of timely corroboration
- of the story repair the damage done to the cross, and she would
- understand; but he could not publicly make those explanations. If it was
- to be known in the village that old Mother Blondin had come here to the
- church, it was for old Mother Blondin herself, and for no one else, to
- tell it. It was the same attitude he had adopted toward her once before.
- True, Mother Blondin had changed very greatly since then; but a tactless
- word from any one, a sneer, the suggestion of triumph over her, and the
- old sullen defiance might well rise supreme again&mdash;and old Mother
- Blondin, he knew now, had not very long to live. Valérie and her mother
- would very readily, and very sympathetically understand. He could tell
- Valérie, indeed he was forced to do so in order to explain his own absence
- from the <i>presbytère</i>; but to others, to the village, to old Narcisse
- Pélude here, since the broken fastenings of the cross must be replaced,
- old Mother Blondin's name need not be mentioned.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Narcisse, how long has that great cross hung there on the wall?&rdquo; he
- inquired abruptly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah&mdash;the great cross! Yes&mdash;Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; The old man laid
- down a vestment that he had been carefully folding, and wagged his head.
- &ldquo;It is very old&mdash;very old, that cross. You will see how old it is
- when I tell you it was made by the grandfather of the present Bouchard,
- whose pew is right underneath it. Grandfather Bouchard was one of the
- first in St. Mar-leau, and you must know, Monsieur le Curé, that St.
- Marleau was then a very small place. It was the Grandfather Bouchard who
- built most of the old wooden church, and there was a little cupola for the
- bell, and above the cupola was that cross. Yes, Monsieur le Curé, there
- have been changes in St. Marleau, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But how long has it hung there on the wall, Narcisse?&rdquo; Raymond
- interrupted with a tolerant smile&mdash;Narcisse had been known at times
- to verge on garrulity!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I am telling you, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; said the old sacristan
- earnestly. &ldquo;We began to build this fine stone church, and when it was
- finished the little old wooden church was torn down, and we brought the
- cross here, and it has been here ever since, and that is thirty-two&mdash;no,
- thirty-three years ago, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;it will be thirty-three
- years this coming November.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And in those thirty-three years,&rdquo; observed Raymond, &ldquo;I imagine that the
- cross has remained untouched?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, yes, Monsieur le Curé! Untouched&mdash;yes, of course! It was
- consecrated by Monsignor the Bishop himself&mdash;not the present bishop,
- Monsieur le Curé will understand, but the old bishop who is since dead,
- and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quite so,&rdquo; said Raymond. &ldquo;Well, come here, nearer to the door, Narcisse.
- Now, look at the cross very carefully, and see if you can discover why I
- asked you if it had remained untouched all those years?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man strained his eyes across the chancel to the opposite wall&mdash;and
- shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, Monsieur le Curé, I see nothing&mdash;only the cross there as usual.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look higher up,&rdquo; prompted Raymond. &ldquo;Do you not see that all but one of
- the fastenings are broken, and that it is about to fall?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fall? About to fall?&rdquo; The old man rubbed his eyes, and stared, and rubbed
- his eyes again. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;it is true! I see now! The cords have
- rotted away. It is no wonder&mdash;in all that time. I&mdash;I should have
- thought of that long, long ago.&rdquo; He turned a white face to Raymond. &ldquo;It&mdash;it
- is the mercy of God that it did not happen, Monsieur le Curé, with anybody
- there! It would have killed Bouchard, and madame, and the children! It
- would have crushed them to death! Monsieur le Curé, I am a <i>misérable!</i>
- I am an old man, and I forget, but that is not an excuse. Yes, Monsieur le
- Curé, I am a <i>misérable!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond laid his hand on the old sacristan's shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We will see that it does not fall on the excellent Bouchard, or on
- madame, or on the children,&rdquo; he smiled. &ldquo;Therefore, bring a ladder and
- some stout cord, Narcisse, and we will fix it at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man stared again at the cross for a moment, then started hurriedly
- toward the sacristy door that gave on the side of the church.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;yes&mdash;at once,&rdquo; he agreed anxiously.
- &ldquo;There is a ladder beside the shed that is long enough. I will get it
- immediately. I am an old man, and I forget, but I am none the less a <i>misérable</i>.
- If Monsieur le Curé had not happened to notice it, and it had fallen on
- Bouchard! Monsieur le Curé is very good not to blame me, but I am none the
- less&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man, shaking his head, and still talking, had disappeared through
- the doorway.
- </p>
- <p>
- Old Narcisse Pélude&mdash;the self-styled <i>misérable!</i> The old man
- had taken it quite to heart! Raymond shrugged his shoulders whimsically.
- Well, so much the better! It was for old Mother Blondin to tell her own
- story&mdash;if she chose! He wondered, with a curious and seemingly
- unaccountable wistfulness, if she ever would! It had been a night that had
- left him strangely moved, strangely bewildered, unable even yet to focus
- his mind clearly and logically upon it. He could tell Valérie of old
- Mother Blondin, of how the old woman on the hill had come here seeking
- peace; he could not tell her that he, too, had come in the hope that he
- might find what old Mother Blondin had sought&mdash;at the Altar of God!
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie! Yes, he was strangely moved this morning. And now a yearning and
- an agony surged upon him. Valérie! Between Valérie's coming to him that
- night in the stillness of the hours just before the dawn, and his coming
- here to the church last night, there lay an analogy of souls near-spent,
- clutching at what they might to save themselves. Peace, and the seeking of
- a way, he had come for; and peace, and the seeking of a way, she had come
- for then. It seemed as though he could see that scene again&mdash;that
- room in the <i>presbytère</i>, and the lamp upon the desk, and that slim,
- girlish form upon her knees before him; and it seemed as though he could
- feel the touch again of that soft, dark, silken hair, as she laid his
- hands upon her bowed head; and it seemed as though he could hear her voice
- again, as it faltered through the <i>Pater Noster</i>: &ldquo;Hallowed be Thy
- name... and lead us not into temptation... but deliver us from evil.&rdquo; Had
- he, in any measure, found what he had sought last night? He did not know.
- He had knelt and prayed with old Mother Blondin. The <i>Benedictus</i>, as
- he had repeated it, had seemed real. He had known a profound solemnity,
- and the sense of that solemnity had remained with him, was with him now&mdash;and
- yet he blasphemed that solemnity, and the Altar of God, and this holy
- place in standing here at this very moment decked out in his stolen <i>soutane</i>
- and the crucifix that hung from his neck! Illogical? Why did he do it
- then? His eyes were on the floor. Illogical? It was to save his life&mdash;it
- was because he was fighting to save his life. It was not to repudiate the
- sincerity with which he had repeated the words of the <i>Benedictus</i> to
- old Mother Blondin&mdash;it was to save his life. Whatever he had found
- here, whether a deeper meaning in these holy symbolisms, he had not found
- the way&mdash;no other way but to blaspheme on with his <i>soutane</i>
- cloaked around him. And she&mdash;Valérie? Had she found what she had
- sought that night? He did not know. Refuse to acknowledge it, attempt to
- argue himself into disbelief, if he would, he knew that when she had knelt
- there that night in the front room of the <i>presbytère</i> she cared. And
- since then? Had she, in any measure, found what she had sought? Had she
- crushed back the love, triumphed over it until it remained only a memory
- in her life? He did not know. She had given no sign. They had never spoken
- of that night again. Only&mdash;only it seemed as though of late there had
- come a shadow into the fresh, young face, and a shadow into the dark,
- steadfast eyes, a shadow that had not been there on the night when he had
- first come to St. Marleau, and she and he had bent together over the
- wounded man upon the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Subconsciously he had been listening for her step; and now, as he heard
- her descending the stairs from the organ loft, he stepped out from the
- sacristy into the chancel, and down into the nave of the church. He could
- see her now, and she had seen him. She had halted at the foot of the
- stairs under the gallery at the back of the church. Valérie! How sweet and
- beautiful she looked this morning! There was just a tinge of rising colour
- in her cheeks, a little smile, half tremulous, half gay on the parted
- lips, a dainty gesture of severity and playfulness in the shake of her
- head, as he approached.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Father Aubert,&rdquo; she exclaimed, &ldquo;you do not know how relieved we were,
- mother and I, when we saw you enter the church this morning for mass! We&mdash;we
- were really very anxious about you; and we did not know what to think when
- mother called you as usual half an hour before the mass, and found that
- you were not there, and that you had not slept in your bed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I know,&rdquo; said Raymond gravely; &ldquo;and that is what I have come to
- speak to you about now. I was afraid you would be anxious, but I knew you
- would understand&mdash;though you would perhaps wonder a little&mdash;when
- I told you what kept me away last night. Let us walk down the side aisle
- there to the chancel, Mademoiselle Valérie, and I will explain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A bewildered little pucker gathered on her forehead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The side aisle, Father Aubert?&rdquo; she repeated in a puzzled way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; come,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You will see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He led her down the aisle, and, halting before the cross, pointed upward.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, the fastenings, all but one, are broken!&rdquo; she cried out instantly.
- &ldquo;It is a miracle that it has not fallen! What does it mean?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is the story of last night, Mademoiselle Valerie,&rdquo; he answered with a
- sober smile. &ldquo;Sit down in the pew there, and I will tell you. I have sent
- Narcisse for a ladder, and we will repair the damage presently, but there
- will be time before he gets back. He believes that the fastenings have
- grown old and rotten, which is true; and that they parted simply from age,
- which is not quite so much the fact. I have allowed him to form his own
- conclusions; I have even encouraged him to believe in them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was sitting in the pew now. The bewildered little pucker had grown
- deeper. She kept glancing back and forth from Raymond, standing before her
- in the aisle, to the broken fastenings of the cross high up on the wall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But that is what any one would naturally think,&rdquo; she said slowly. &ldquo;I
- thought so myself. I&mdash;I do not quite understand, Father Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think you know,&rdquo; said Raymond quietly, &ldquo;that some nights I do not sleep
- very well, Mademoiselle Valerie. Last night was one of those. When
- midnight came I was still wakeful, and I had not gone to bed. I was very
- restless; I knew I could not sleep, and so I decided to go out for a
- little while.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said impulsively; &ldquo;I know. I heard you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You heard me?&rdquo; He looked at her in quick surprise. &ldquo;But I thought I had
- been very careful indeed to make no noise. I&mdash;I did not think that I
- had wakened&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A flush came suddenly to her cheeks, and she turned her head aside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I was not asleep,&rdquo; she said hurriedly. &ldquo;Go on, Father Aubert, I
- did not mean to interrupt you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond did not speak for a moment. He was not looking at her now&mdash;he
- dared not trust his eyes to drink deeper of that flush that had come with
- the simple statement that she too had been awake. Valérie! Valérie! It was
- the silent voice of his soul calling her. And suddenly he seemed to be
- looking out from his prison land upon the present scene&mdash;upon Valérie
- and the good, young Father Aubert together, looking upon them both, as he
- had looked upon them together many times. And suddenly he hated that
- figure in priestly dress with a deadly hate&mdash;because Valérie had
- tossed upon her bed awake, and had not slept; and because, as though
- gifted with prophetic vision, he could see the shadow in Valérie's fresh,
- pure face change and deepen into misery immeasurable, and the young life,
- barely on its threshold, be robbed of youth with its joy and gladness, and
- with sorrow grow prematurely old.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You went out, Father Aubert,&rdquo; she prompted. &ldquo;And then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old sacristan would be back with the ladder very shortly, at almost
- any minute now&mdash;and he had to tell Valérie about old Mother Blondin
- and the cross before Narcisse returned. He looked up. He found himself
- speaking at first mechanically, and then low and earnestly, swayed
- strangely by his own words. And so, standing there in the aisle of the
- church, he told Valerie the story of the night, of the broken cross, of
- the broken life so near its end. And there was amazement, and wonder, and
- surprise in Valerie's face as she listened, and then a tender sympathy&mdash;and
- at the end, the dark eyes, as they lifted to his, were filled with tears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is very wonderful,&rdquo; she said almost to herself. &ldquo;Old Mother Blondin&mdash;it
- could be only God who brought her here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond did not answer. The old sacristan had entered the church, and was
- bringing the ladder down the aisle. It was the sacristan who spoke,
- catching sight of Valérie, as Raymond, taking one end of the ladder,
- raised it against the wall beside the cross.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Tiens!</i>&rdquo; The old man lifted the coil of thin rope which he held,
- and with the back of his hand mopped away a bead of perspiration from his
- forehead. &ldquo;You have seen then what has happened, mademoiselle! Father
- Aubert has made light of it; but what will Monsieur le Curé, your uncle,
- say when he hears of it! Yes, it is true&mdash;I am a <i>misérable</i>&mdash;I
- do not deserve to be sacristan any longer! It was consecrated by Monsignor
- the Bishop, that cross, when the church was consecrated, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond took the cord quietly from the old man's hand, and began to mount
- the ladder. He went up slowly&mdash;not that the ladder was insecure, but
- that his mind and thoughts were far removed from the mere mechanical task
- which he had set himself to perform. Valérie's words had set that turmoil
- at work in his soul again. She had not hesitated to say that it was God
- who had brought old Mother Blondin here. And he too believed that now.
- Peace he had not found, nor the way, but he believed that now. Therefore
- he must believe now that there was a God&mdash;yes, the night had brought
- him that. And if there was a God, was it God who had led him, as old
- Mother Blondin had been led, to fall upon his knees in that pew below
- there where Valérie now sat, and <i>pray?</i> Had he prayed for old Mother
- Blondin's sake <i>alone?</i> Was God partial then? Old Mother Blondin, he
- knew, even if her surrender were not yet complete, had found the way. He
- had not. He had found no way&mdash;to save that man who was to be hanged
- by the neck until he was dead&mdash;to save Valérie from shame and misery
- if she cared, if she still cared&mdash;to save himself! Old Mother Blondin
- alone had found the way. Was it because she was the lesser sinner of the
- two&mdash;because he had blasphemed God beyond all recall&mdash;because he
- still dared to blaspheme God&mdash;because he had stood again that morning
- at the altar and had officiated as God's holy priest&mdash;because he
- stood here now in God's house, an impostor, an intruder and a defiler! No
- way! And yet <i>through him</i> old Mother Blondin had found her God
- again! Was it irony&mdash;God's irony&mdash;God's answer, irrefutable, to
- his former denial of God's existence!
- </p>
- <p>
- No way! Ten feet below him Valérie and the old sacristan talked and
- watched; the weather-beaten timbers of the great cross were within reach
- of his hands; there, inside the chancel rail, was the altar&mdash;all
- these things were real, were physically real. It did not seem as though it
- could be so. It seemed as though, instead, he were taking part in some
- horrible, and horribly vivid dream-life. Only there would be no awakening!
- There was no way&mdash;he would twist this cord about the iron hooks on
- the cross and the iron hook on the wall, and descend, and go through
- another day, and be the good, young Father Aubert, and toss through
- another night, and wait, clinging to the miserable hope, spurned even by
- his gambler's instinct, that &ldquo;something&rdquo; might happen&mdash;wait for the
- deciding of that appeal, and picture the doomed man in the death cell, and
- dream his dreams, and watch Valérie from his prison land, and know through
- the hours and minutes torment and merciless unrest. Yes, he believed there
- was a God. He believed that God had brought them both here, old Mother
- Blondin to cling to the foot of the cross, and himself to find her there&mdash;but
- to him there had come no peace&mdash;no way. His blasphemy, his
- desecration of God's altar and God's church had been made to serve God's
- ends&mdash;old Mother Blondin had found the way. But that purpose was
- accomplished now. How much longer, then, would God suffer this to
- continue? Not long! To-morrow, the next day, the day after, would come the
- answer to the appeal&mdash;and then he must choose. Choose! Choose what?
- What was there to choose where&mdash;his hands gripped hard on the rung of
- the ladder. Enough! Enough of this! It was terrible enough in the nights!
- There was no end to it! It would go on and on&mdash;the same ghoulish
- cycle over and over again. He would not let it master him now, for there
- would be no end to it! He was here to fix the cross. To fix God's cross,
- the consecrated cross&mdash;it was a fitting task for one who walked
- always with that symbol suspended from his neck! It was curious how that
- symbol had tangled up his hands the night his fingers had crept toward
- that white throat on the bed! Even the garb of priest that he wore God
- turned to account, and&mdash;no! He lifted his hand and swept it fiercely
- across his eyes. Enough! That was enough! It was only beginning somewhere
- else in the cycle that inevitably led around into all the rest again.
- </p>
- <p>
- He fought his mind back to his immediate surroundings. He was above the
- horizontal arm of the cross now, and he could see and appreciate how
- narrowly a catastrophe had been averted the night before. It was, as
- Valérie had said, a miracle that the cross had not fallen, for the single
- strand of cord that still held it was frayed to a threadlike thinness.
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced above him, decided to make the vertical beam, or centre, of the
- cross secure first by passing the cord around the upper hook in the wall
- that was still just a little beyond his reach, stepped quickly up to the
- next rung of the ladder&mdash;and lurched suddenly, pitching heavily to
- one side. It was his <i>soutane</i>, the garb of priest, the garb of God's
- holy priest&mdash;his foot had caught in the skirt of his <i>soutane</i>.
- He flung out his hands against the wall to save himself. It was too late!
- The ladder swayed against the cross&mdash;the threadlike fastening snapped&mdash;and
- the massive arms of the cross lunged outward toward him, pushing the
- ladder back. A cry, hoarse, involuntary, burst from his lips&mdash;it was
- echoed by another, a cry from Valérie, a cry that rang in terror through
- the church. Two faces, white with horror, looking up at him from below,
- flashed before his eyes&mdash;and he was plunging backward, downward with
- the ladder&mdash;and hurtling through the air behind it, the mighty cross,
- with arms outspread as though in vengeance and to defy escape, pursued and
- rushed upon him, and&mdash;&mdash; There was a terrific crash, the rip and
- rend and tear of splintering wood&mdash;and blackness.
- </p>
- <p>
- There came at first a dull sense of pain; then the pain began to increase
- in intensity. There were insistent murmurings; there were voices. He was
- coming back to consciousness; but he seemed to be coming very slowly, for
- he could not move or make any sign. His side commenced to cause him agony.
- His head ached and throbbed as though it were being pounded under quick
- and never-ending hammer blows; and yet it seemed to be strangely and
- softly cushioned. The murmurings continued. He began to distinguish words&mdash;and
- then suddenly his brain was cleared, cleared as by some terrific mental
- shock that struck to the soul, uplifting it in a flood of glory, engulfing
- it in a fathomless and abysmal misery. It was Valerie&mdash;it was
- Valerie's voice&mdash;Valerie whispering in a frightened, terrified,
- almost demented way&mdash;whispering that she <i>loved</i> him, imploring
- him to speak.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;... Oh, will no one come! Can Narcisse find no one! I&mdash;I cannot
- bring him back to consciousness! Speak to me! Speak to me! You must&mdash;you
- shall! It is I who have sinned in loving you. It is I who have sinned and
- made God angry, and brought this upon you. But God will not let you die&mdash;because&mdash;because&mdash;it
- was my sin&mdash;and&mdash;and you would never know. I&mdash;I promised
- God that you would never know. And you&mdash;you shall not die! You shall
- not! You shall not! Speak to me&mdash;oh, speak to me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Speak to her! Speak to Valerie! Not even to whisper her name&mdash;when
- the blood in a fiery tide whipped through his veins; when impulse born of
- every fibre of his being prompted him to lift his arms to her face, so
- close to his that he could feel her breath upon his cheek, and draw it
- closer, closer, until it lay against his own, and to hold it there, and
- find her lips, and feel them cling to his! There was a physical agony from
- his hurts upon him that racked him from head to foot&mdash;but there was
- an agony deeper still that was in his soul. His head was pillowed on her
- knee, but even to open his eyes and look up into that pure face he loved
- was denied him, even to whisper a word that would allay her fears and
- comfort her was denied him. From Valérie's own lips had come the bitterest
- and dearest words that he would ever hear. He could temporise no longer
- now. He could juggle no more with his false and inconsistent arguments.
- Valérie cared, Valérie loved him&mdash;as he had known she cared, as he
- had known she loved him. A moan was on his lips, forced there by a sudden
- twinge of pain that seemed unendurable. He choked it back. She must not
- know that he had heard&mdash;he must simulate unconsciousness. He could
- not save her from much now, from the &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo; that was so close upon
- him&mdash;but he could save her from this. She should not know! God's
- cross in God's church... his blasphemy, his sacrilege had been answered...
- the very garb of priest had repaid him for its profanation and struck him
- down... and Valérie... Valérie was here... holding him... and Valérie
- loved him... but Valérie must not know... it was between Valérie and her
- God... she must not know that he had heard.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hands were caressing his face, smoothing back his hair, bathing his
- forehead with the water which had been her first thought perhaps before
- she had sent Narcisse for help. Valérie's hands! Like fire, they were,
- upon him, torturing him with a torture beyond the bodily torment he was
- suffering; and like the tenderest, gladdest joy he had ever known, they
- were. A priest of God&mdash;and Valérie! No, it went deeper far than that;
- it was a life of which this was but the inevitable and bitter culmination&mdash;and
- Valérie. But for that, in a surge of triumphant ecstasy, victor of a prize
- beyond all price, his arms might have swept out in the full tide of his
- manhood's strength around her, claiming her surrender&mdash;a surrender
- that would have been his right&mdash;a surrender that would have been
- written deep in love and trust and faith and glory in those dark,
- tear-dimmed eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now her hands closed softly, and remained still, and held his face
- between them&mdash;and she was gazing down at him. He could see her, he
- had no need to open his eyes for that&mdash;he could see the sweet,
- quivering lips; the love, the terror, the yearning, the fear mingling in
- the white, beautiful face. And then suddenly, with a choked sob, she bent
- forward and kissed him, and laid her face against his cheek.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He will not speak to me!&rdquo;&mdash;her voice was breaking. &ldquo;Then listen, my
- lover&mdash;my lover, who cannot hear&mdash;my lover, who will never know.
- Is it wrong to kiss you, is it making my sin the greater to tell you&mdash;you
- who will not hear. There is only God to know. And out of all my life it is
- for just this once&mdash;for just this once. Afterwards, if you live, I
- will ask God to forgive&mdash;for it is only for this once&mdash;this once
- out of all my life. And&mdash;and&mdash;if you die&mdash;then&mdash;then I
- will ask God to be merciful and&mdash;and take me too. You did not know I
- loved you so, and I had never thought to tell you. And if you live you
- will never know, because you are God's priest, and my sin is very
- terrible, but&mdash;but I&mdash;I shall know that you are somewhere, a big
- and brave and loyal man, and glad in your life, and&mdash;and loved, as
- all love you here in St. Marleau. All through my life I will love you&mdash;all
- through my life&mdash;and&mdash;and I will remember that for just this
- once, for this moment out of all the years, I gave myself to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She drew him closer. An agony that was maddening shot through his side as
- she moved him. If he might only clench his teeth deep in his lips that he
- might not scream out! But he could not do that for Valeric would see&mdash;and
- Valérie must not know. Tighter and tighter she held him in her strong,
- young arms&mdash;and now, like the bursting wide of flood-gates, there was
- passion in her voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I love you! I love you! I love you! And I am afraid&mdash;and I am
- afraid! For I am only a woman, and it is a woman's love. Would you turn
- from me if you knew? No, no&mdash;I&mdash;I do not know what I am saying&mdash;only
- that you are here with my arms around you&mdash;and that&mdash;that your
- face is so pale&mdash;and that&mdash;and that you will not speak to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was crying. She bent lower until, as a mother clasps a child, his head
- lay upon her breast and shoulder, and her own head was buried on his
- breast. And again with the movement came excruciating pain, and now a
- weakness, a giddy swirling of his senses. It passed. He opened his eyes
- for an instant, for she could not see him now. He was lying just inside
- the chancel rail, and almost at the altar's foot. The sunlight streamed
- through the windows of the church, but they were in shadow, Valérie and
- he, in a curious shadow&mdash;it seemed to fall in a straight line across
- them both, and yet be spread out in two wide arms that completely covered
- them. And at first he could not understand, and then he saw that the great
- cross lay forward with its foot against the wall and the arms upon the
- shattered chancel rail&mdash;and the shadow was the shadow of the cross.
- What did it mean? Was it there premonitory of a wrath still unappeased,
- that was still to know fulfilment; or was it there in pity&mdash;on
- Valérie&mdash;into whose life he had brought a sorrow that would never
- know its healing? He closed his eyes again&mdash;the giddiness had come
- once more.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I promised God that he would never know&rdquo;&mdash;she was speaking
- scarcely above her breath, and the passion was gone out from her voice
- now, and there was only pleading and entreaty. &ldquo;Mary, dear and holy
- Mother, have pity, and listen, and forgive&mdash;and bring him back to
- life. It came, and it was stronger than I&mdash;the love. But I will keep
- my promise to God&mdash;always&mdash;always. Forgive my sin, if it is not
- too great for forgiveness, and help me to endure&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- her voice broke in a sob, and was still.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her lips touched his brow gently; her hands smoothed back his hair.
- Dizziness and torturing pain were sweeping over him in swiftly alternating
- flashes. There were beads of agony standing out, he knew, upon his
- forehead&mdash;but they were mingled and were lost in the tears that
- suddenly fell hot upon him. Valerie! Valerie! God give him strength that
- he might not writhe, that he might not moan. No, he need not fear that&mdash;the
- pain was not so great now&mdash;it seemed to be passing gradually, very
- gradually, even soothingly, away&mdash;there were other voices&mdash;they
- seemed a long way off&mdash;there seemed to be footsteps and the closing
- of a door&mdash;and the footsteps came nearer and nearer&mdash;but as they
- came nearer they grew fainter and fainter&mdash;and blackness fell again.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXI&mdash;THE CONDEMNED CELL
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE reins lay idly
- in Raymond's hand. The horse, left to its own initiative, ambled lazily to
- the crest of a little rise that commanded a view of the town of
- Tournayville beyond. Raymond's eyes, lifting from the dash-board, ignoring
- the general perspective, fixed and held on a single detail, to the right,
- and perhaps a mile away&mdash;a high, rectangular, gray stone wall, that
- inclosed a gray, rectangular stone building.
- </p>
- <p>
- His eyes reverted to the dash-board. It was nearly two weeks now since he
- had seen that cold and narrow space with its iron bars, and the figure
- that huddled on the cot clasping its hands dejectedly between its knees&mdash;nearly
- two weeks. It was ten days since he had been struck down in the church&mdash;and
- in another ten days, over yonder, inside that gray stone wall, a man was
- to be hung by the neck until he was dead. Ten days forward&mdash;ten days
- backward&mdash;ten days.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ten days! In the ten days just past he had sought, in a deeper, more
- terrible anguish of mind than even in those days when he had thought the
- bitterest dregs were already at his lips, for the answer to these ten days
- to come&mdash;for now there was Valerie, Valérie's love, no longer a
- probability against which he might argue fiercely, desperately with
- himself, but an actual, real, existent, living thing, glorious and
- wonderful&mdash;and terrible as a hand of death stretching out a pointing
- finger to the &ldquo;afterwards.&rdquo; And there was God.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes&mdash;God! He was still the curé of St. Marleau, still the good, young
- Father Aubert; but since that morning when he had been struck down at the
- foot of God's altar he had not entered the church&mdash;and he had been no
- more a priest, profaning that holy place. It was not fear, a craven,
- superstitious fear that the hand which had struck him once would deal him
- physical injury again; it was not that&mdash;it was&mdash;what? He did not
- know. His mind was chaos there&mdash;chaos where it groped for a definite,
- tangible expression of his attitude toward God. There was a God. It was
- God who had drawn old Mother Blondin to the church that night, and had
- made him the instrument of her recovered faith&mdash;and the instrument of
- his own punishment when, in her fright which he had caused, she had
- loosened the great cross upon the wall. It was not coincidence, it was not
- superstition&mdash;deep in his consciousness lay the memory of that night
- when, with the old woman's hand in his, he had knelt and prayed; and deep
- in his consciousness was the sure knowledge that when he had prayed he had
- prayed in the presence of God. But he could get no further&mdash;it was as
- though he looked on God from afar off. Here turmoil took command. There
- was Valérie; the man who was to die; himself; the inflexible, immutable
- approach, the closing in upon him of that day of final reckoning. And God
- had shown him no way. He seemed to recognise an avenging God, not one to
- love. He could not say that he had the impulse to revere as the simple
- people of St. Marleau had, as Valérie had&mdash;and yet since that morning
- when they had carried him unconscious to the <i>presbytère</i> he had not
- again entered the church, he had not again stood before God's altar in his
- blasphemous, stolen garb of priest!
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's thumb nail made abstracted little markings on the leather rein
- in his hand. Yes, that was true; profanation seemed to have acquired a
- new, and personal, and intimate meaning&mdash;and he had not gone.
- Circumstances had aided him. The solicitude of Madame Lafleur had made it
- easy for him to linger in bed, and subsequently to remain confined to his
- room long after his broken ribs, and the severe contusions he had received
- in his fall, had healed sufficiently to let him get about again. And he
- had allowed Madame Lafleur to &ldquo;persuade&rdquo; him! It had not been difficult as
- far as the early morning mass was concerned, for, with the curé sick in
- bed, the mass, it would be expected, would be temporarily dispensed with;
- but a Sunday had intervened. But even that he had solved. If some one from
- somewhere must say mass that day, it must be some one who would not by any
- chance have ever known or met the real Father François Aubert. There was
- Father Décan, the prison chaplain of Tour-nayville. He had never met
- Father Décan, even when visiting the jail, but since Father Décan had not
- recognised the prisoner, Father Décan obviously would have no suspicions
- of one Raymond Chapelle&mdash;and so he had sent a request to Father Décan
- to celebrate mass on the preceding Sunday, and Father Décan had complied.
- </p>
- <p>
- The thumb nail bit a little deeper into the leather. Yesterday was the
- first day he had been out. This morning he had again deliberately
- dispensed with the mass, but to-day was Saturday&mdash;and to-morrow would
- be Sunday&mdash;and to-morrow St. Marleau would gather to hear the good,
- young Father Aubert preach again! Was God playing with him! Did God not
- see that he had twisted, and turned, and struggled, and planned that he
- might not blaspheme and profane God's altar again! Did God not see that he
- revolted at the thought! And yet God had shown him no other way. What else
- could he do? What else was there to do? He was still with his life at
- stake, with the life of another at stake&mdash;and there was Valérie&mdash;Valérie&mdash;Valérie!
- </p>
- <p>
- A sharp cry of pain came involuntarily to his lips, and found utterance&mdash;and
- startled the horse into a reluctant jogging for a few paces. Valérie! He
- had scarcely seen her in all those ten days. It was Madame Lafleur who had
- taken care of him. Valérie had not purposely avoided him&mdash;it was not
- that&mdash;only she had gone to live practically all the time at old
- Mother Blondin's. The old woman was dying. For three days now she had not
- roused from unconsciousness. This morning she had been very low. By the
- time he returned she might be dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dead! These were the closing hours of his own life in St. Marleau, the end
- here, too, was very near&mdash;and the closing hours, with sinister,
- ominous significance, seemed to be all encompassed about and permeated
- with death. It was not only old Mother Blon-din. There was the man in the
- death cell, whom he was on his way to see now, this afternoon, who was
- waiting for death&mdash;for death on a dangling rope&mdash;for death that
- was not many days off. Yesterday Father Décan had driven out to say that
- the prisoner was in a pitiful state of mental collapse, imploring,
- begging, entreating that Father Aubert should come to him&mdash;and so
- this afternoon Father Aubert, the good, young Father Aubert, was on his
- way&mdash;to the cell of death.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's lips moved silently. This was the very threshold of the
- &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;&mdash;the threshold of that day&mdash;the day of wrath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Dies ilia, dies ira, calamitatis et miserio, dies magna et am ara
- valde</i>&mdash;That day, a day of wrath, of wasting, and of misery, a
- great day, and exceeding bitter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Unbidden had come the words. Set his face was, and white. If all else were
- false, if God were but the transition from the fairy tales of childhood to
- the fairy tale of maturity, if religion were but a shell, a beautiful
- shell that was empty, a storehouse of wonderful architectural beauty that
- held no treasure within&mdash;at least those words were true&mdash;a day
- of wrath, and exceeding bitter. And that day was upon him; and there was
- no way to go, no turn to take, only the dark, mocking pathways of the maze
- that possessed no opening, only the dank, slimy walls of that Walled Place
- against which he beat and bruised his fists in impotent despair. There was
- the man who was to be hanged&mdash;and himself&mdash;and Valerie&mdash;and
- he knew now that Valérie loved him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The horse ambled on through the outskirts of the town. Occasionally
- Raymond mechanically turned out for a passing team, and acknowledged
- mechanically the respectful salutation. In his mind a new thought was
- germinating and taking form. He had said that God-had shown him no way.
- Was he so sure of that? If God had led him to the church that night, and
- had brought through him an eleventh hour reversion of faith to old Mother
- Blondin, and had forced the acceptance of divine existence upon himself,
- was he so sure that in the breaking of the fastenings of the cross, that
- it might fall and strike him down, there lay only a crowning punishment,
- only a thousandfold greater anguish, only bitter, helpless despair, in
- that it had been the means whereby, from Valérie's own lips, he had come
- to the knowledge of Valérie's love? Was he so sure of that? Was he so sure
- that in the very coming to him of the knowledge of her love he was not
- being shown the way he was to take!
- </p>
- <p>
- The buckboard turned from the road it had been following, and took the one
- leading to the jail. Subconsciously Raymond guided the horse now, and
- subconsciously he was alive to his surroundings and to the passers-by&mdash;but
- his mind worked on and on with the thought that now obsessed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suppose that his choice of saving one of the two lay between this man in
- the condemned cell and Valerie&mdash;which would he choose? He laughed
- sharply aloud in ironical derision. Which would he choose! It was pitiful,
- it was absurd&mdash;the question! Pitiful? Absurd? Well, but was it not
- precisely the choice he was called upon to make&mdash;to choose between
- Valérie and the man in the condemned cell? Was that not what the knowledge
- of her love meant? She loved him; from her own lips, as she had poured out
- her soul, thinking there was none but God to hear, he had learned the full
- measure of her love&mdash;a love that would never die, deep, and pure, and
- sinless&mdash;a love that was but the stronger for the sorrow it had to
- bear&mdash;a cherished, hallowed love around which her very life had
- entwined itself until life and love were one for always.
- </p>
- <p>
- The gray stone walls of the jail, cold, dreary, forbidding, loomed up a
- little way ahead. The reins were loose upon the dashboard, but clenched in
- a mighty grip in Raymond's hand. He could save the man in there from death&mdash;but
- he could save Valérie from what would be worse than death to her. He could
- save her from the shame, the agony, the degradation that would kill that
- pure soul of hers, that would imbitter, wreck and ruin that young life, if
- he, the object of her love, should dangle as a felon from the gallows
- almost before her eyes, or flee, leaving to that love, a felon's heritage.
- Yes, he could save Valérie from that; and if he could save Valérie from
- that, what did the man in the condemned cell count for in the balance? The
- man meant nothing to him&mdash;nothing&mdash;nothing! It was Valérie!
- There was the &ldquo;accident&rdquo;&mdash;so easy, so sure&mdash;the &ldquo;death&rdquo; of the
- good, young Father Aubert&mdash;the upturned boat&mdash;the body
- supposedly washed out to sea. Long ago, in the first days of his life in
- St. Marleau, he had worked out the details, and the plan could not fail.
- There would be her grief, of course; he could not stand between her and
- her grief for the loss of the one she loved&mdash;but it would be a grief
- without bitterness, a memory without shame.
- </p>
- <p>
- Did the man in the condemned cell count for anything against that! It
- would save Valerie, and&mdash;his face set suddenly in rigid lines, and
- his lips drew tight together&mdash;and it would save <i>himself!</i> It
- was the one alternative to either giving himself up to stand in the
- other's place, or of becoming a fugitive, branding himself as such, and
- saving the condemned man by a confession sent, say, to the Bishop, who, he
- remembered, knew the real François Aubert personally, and could therefore
- at once identify the man. Yes, it was the one alternative&mdash;and that
- alternative would save&mdash;himself! Wait! Was he sure that it was only
- Valérie of whom he was thinking? Was he sure that he was sincere? Was he
- sure there were no coward promptings&mdash;to save himself?
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment the tense and drawn expression in his face held as he groped
- in mind and soul for the answer; and then his lips parted in a bitter
- smile. It was not much to boast of! Three-Ace Artie a coward? Ask of the
- men of that far Northland whose lives ran hand in hand with death, ask of
- the men of the Yukon, ask of the men who knew! Gambler, roué, whatever
- else they might have called him, no man had ever called him coward! If his
- actual death, rather than his supposititious death, could save Valérie the
- better, in his soul he knew that he would not have hesitated. Why then
- should he hesitate about this man! If it lay between Valérie and this man,
- why should he hesitate! If he would give his own life to save Valérie from
- suffering and shame, why should he consider this man's life&mdash;this man
- who meant nothing to him&mdash;nothing!
- </p>
- <p>
- Well, had he decided? He was at the jail now. Was he satisfied that this
- was the way? Yes! Yes&mdash;<i>yes!</i> He told himself with fierce
- insistence that it was&mdash;an insistence that by brute force beat down
- an opposition that somehow seemed miserably seeking to intrude itself. Yes&mdash;it
- was the way! There was only the appeal, that one chance to wait for, and
- once that was refused he would borrow Bouchard's boat&mdash;Bouchard's new
- boat&mdash;and to-morrow, or the next day, or the next, whenever it might
- be, instead of looking for him at mass in church, St. Marleau would look
- along the shore in search of the body of the good, young Father Aubert.
- </p>
- <p>
- He tied his horse, and knocked upon the jail gate, and presently the gate
- was opened.
- </p>
- <p>
- The attendant touched his cap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Salut</i>, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; he said respectfully, as he stepped
- aside for Raymond to enter. &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé had a very narrow escape.
- The blessed saints be praised! It is good to see him. He is quite well
- again?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quite,&rdquo; said Raymond pleasantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man closed the gate, and led the way across a narrow courtyard to the
- jail building. The jail was pretentious neither in size nor in staff&mdash;the
- man who had opened the gate acted as one of the turnkeys as well.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is to see the prisoner Mentone that Monsieur le Curé has come, of
- course?&rdquo; suggested the attendant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Raymond answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- The turnkey nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Pauvre diable!</i> He will be glad! He has been calling for you all
- the time. It did no good to tell him you were sick, and Father Décan could
- do nothing with him. He has been very bad&mdash;not hard to manage, you
- understand, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;but he does not sleep except when he is
- exhausted, because he says there is only a little while left and he will
- live that much longer if he keeps awake. <i>Tiens!</i> I have never had a
- murderer here to be hanged before, and I do not like it. I dream of the
- man myself!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond made no reply. They had entered the jail now, and the turnkey was
- leading the way along a cell-flanked corridor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I dream of him every night, and the job ahead of us&mdash;and so
- does Jacques, the other turnkey.&rdquo; The man nodded his head again; then,
- over his shoulder: &ldquo;He has a visitor with him now, Monsieur le Curé, but
- that will not matter&mdash;it is Monsieur l'Avocat, Monsieur Lemoyne, you
- know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne! Lemoyne&mdash;here! Why? Raymond reached out impulsively, and,
- catching the turnkey's arm, brought the man to a sudden halt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur Lemoyne, you say!&rdquo; he exclaimed sharply. &ldquo;What is Monsieur
- Lemoyne doing here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&mdash;but, I do not know, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; the turnkey, taken by
- surprise, stammered. &ldquo;He comes often, he is often here, it is the
- privilege of the prisoner's lawyer. I&mdash;I thought that perhaps
- Monsieur le Curé would care to see him too. But perhaps Monsieur le Curé
- would prefer to wait until he has gone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's hand fell away from the other's arm. &ldquo;No&mdash;I will
- see him. I was afraid for the moment that he might have brought&mdash;bad
- news. That was all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, yes, I understand, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;the turnkey nodded once
- more. &ldquo;But I do not know. Monsieur Lemoyne said nothing when he came in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Afraid! Afraid that Lemoyne had brought the answer to that appeal! Well,
- what if Lemoyne had! Had he, Raymond, not known always what the answer
- would be, and had he not just decided what he would do when that answer
- was received&mdash;had he not decided that between the man and Valérie
- there could be no hesitation, no more faltering, or tormenting&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- The cell door swung open.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Enter, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The turnkey's voice seemed far away. Mechanically Raymond stepped forward.
- The door clanged raucously behind him. There came a cry, a choked cry, a
- strangling cry, that mingled a pitiful joy with terror and despair&mdash;and
- a figure with outstretched arms, a figure with gaunt, white, haggard face
- was stumbling toward him; and now the figure had flung itself upon its
- knees, and was clutching at him convulsively with its arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father&mdash;Father François Aubert&mdash;father, have pity upon me&mdash;father,
- tell them to have pity upon me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet he scarcely saw this figure, scarcely heard the voice, though his
- hands were laid upon the bowed head that was buried in the skirt of his <i>soutane</i>.
- He was looking at that other figure, at Lemoyne, the young lawyer, who
- stood at the far end of the cell near the iron-barred window. There were
- tears in Lemoyne's eyes; and Lemoyne held a document in his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank God that you have come, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; Lemoyne said huskily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond steadied his voice&mdash;&ldquo;bad news?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne silently extended the document.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were a great many words, a great many sentences written on the
- paper. If he read them all, Raymond was not conscious of it; he was
- conscious only that, in summary, he had grasped their meaning&mdash;<i>the
- man must die</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man's head was still buried in Raymond's <i>soutane</i>, his hands
- still clasped tightly at Raymond's knees. Raymond did not speak&mdash;the
- question was in his eyes as they met Lemoyne's.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lemoyne shook his head hopelessly, and, taking the document back from
- Raymond, returned it slowly to his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will leave you alone with him, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;it will be
- better,&rdquo; he said in a low voice. He stepped across the cell, and for a
- moment laid his hand on the shoulder of the kneeling man. &ldquo;Courage, Henri&mdash;I
- will come back to-morrow,&rdquo; he whispered, and passed on to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond stepped to Lemoyne's side, as the lawyer rattled
- upon the door for the turnkey. &ldquo;There&mdash;there is nothing more that can
- be done?&rdquo; His throat was dry, even his undertone rasped and grated in his
- own ears. &ldquo;Nothing?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing!&rdquo; Lemoyne's wet eyes lifted to meet Raymond's, and again he shook
- his head. &ldquo;I shall ask, as a matter of course, that the sentence be
- commuted to life imprisonment&mdash;but it will not be granted. It&mdash;it
- would be cruelty even to suggest it to him, Monsieur le Curé.&rdquo; And then,
- as the door opened, he wrung Raymond's hand, and went hurriedly from the
- cell.
- </p>
- <p>
- Slowly Raymond turned away from the door. There was hollow laughter in his
- soul. A mocking voice was in his ears&mdash;that inner voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, <i>that</i> is decided! Now put your own decision into effect, and
- have done with this! Have done with it&mdash;do you hear! Have done with
- it&mdash;have done with it&mdash;once for all!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His eyes swept the narrow cell, its white walls, the bare, cold floor, the
- cot with its rumpled blanket, the iron bars on the window that sullenly
- permitted an oblong shaft of sunlight to fall obliquely on the floor&mdash;and
- upon the figure that, still upon its knees, held out its arms imploringly
- to him, that cried again to him piteously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father&mdash;Father Aubert&mdash;help me&mdash;tell them to have pity
- upon me&mdash;save me, father&mdash;Father François Aubert&mdash;save me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond, though he fought to shift his eyes again to those iron bars,
- to the sunlight's shaft, to anywhere, could not take them from that
- figure. The man was distraught, stricken, beside himself; weakness,
- illness, the weeks of confinement, the mental anguish, crowned in this
- moment as he saw his last hope swept away, had done their work. The tears
- raced down the pallid cheeks; the eyes were like&mdash;like they had been
- in the courtroom that day&mdash;like dumb beast's in agony.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Soothe him, quiet him,&rdquo; snarled that voice savagely, &ldquo;and do it as
- quickly as you can&mdash;and get out of here! Tell him about that God that
- you think you've come to believe is not a myth, if you like&mdash;tell him
- anything that will let you get away&mdash;and remember Valérie. Do you
- think this scene here in this cell, and that thing grovelling on the floor
- is the sum of human misery? Then picture Valérie nursing shame and horror
- and degradation in her soul! What is this man to you! Remember Valérie!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes&mdash;Valérie! That was true! Only&mdash;if only he could avoid the
- man's eyes! Well, why did not he, Raymond, speak, why did he not act, why
- did he not do something&mdash;instead of standing here impotently over the
- other, and simply hold the man's hands&mdash;yes, that was what he was
- doing&mdash;that was what felt so hot, so feverishly hot&mdash;those hands
- that laced their fingers so frantically around his.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My son,&rdquo;&mdash;the words were coming by sheer force of will&mdash;&ldquo;do not
- give way like this. Try and calm yourself. See&rdquo;&mdash;he stooped, and,
- raising the other by the shoulders, drew him to the cot&mdash;&ldquo;sit here,
- and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You will not go, father&mdash;you will not go?&rdquo;&mdash;the man was passing
- his hands up and down Raymond's arms, patting them, caressing them, as
- though to assure and reassure himself that Raymond was there. &ldquo;They told
- me that you were hurt, and&mdash;and I was afraid, for there is no one
- else, father&mdash;no one else&mdash;only&mdash;only you&mdash;and you are
- here now&mdash;you are here now&mdash;and&mdash;and you will stay with me,
- father?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond numbly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, you are here&rdquo;&mdash;it was as though the man were whispering to
- himself, and a smile had lighted up the wan face. &ldquo;See, I am not afraid
- any more, for you have come. Monsieur Lemoyne said that I must die, that
- there was no hope any more, that&mdash;that I would have to be hanged, but
- you will not let them, father, you will not let them&mdash;for you have
- come now&mdash;you have come&mdash;Father François Aubert, my friend, you
- have come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's hand, resting on the cot behind the other's back, picked up and
- clenched a fold of blanket. There was something horrible, abominable,
- hellish in the man's trustful smile, in the man's faith, that was the
- faith of a child in the parent's omnipotence, in this man crying upon his
- own name as a magic talisman that would open to him the gates of life!
- What answer was there to make? He could not sit here dumb&mdash;and yet he
- could not speak. There were things a <i>priest</i> should say&mdash;a
- priest who was here to comfort a man condemned to death, a man who was to
- be hanged by the neck until he was dead. He should talk to the other of
- God, of the tender mercy of God, of the life that was to come where there
- was no more death. But talk to the man like that&mdash;when he, Raymond,
- was sending the other to his doom; when the other, not he, should be
- sitting here in this <i>soutane</i>; when he had already robbed the man of
- his identity, and even at this moment purposed robbing him of his life!
- Act Father François Aubert to Father François Aubert here in this prison
- cell under the shadow of that dangling rope, tell him of God, of God's
- tender mercy, supplicate to God for that mercy, <i>pray</i> with his lips
- for that mercy while he stabbed the man to death! He shivered, and it
- seemed as though his fingers would tear and rend through the blanket in
- the fierceness of their clutch&mdash;it was the one logical, natural thing
- that a priest should say, that he, in his priestly dress, should say! <i>No!</i>
- He neither would nor could! It was hideous! No human soul could touch
- depths as black as that&mdash;and the man was clinging to him&mdash;clinging
- to him&mdash;and&mdash;-
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Remember Valérie!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;it came like a curling lash, that inner
- voice, curt, brutal, contemptuous. &ldquo;Are you going to weaken again?
- Remember what it cost you once&mdash;and remember that it is for Valérie's
- sake this time!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The strong jaws set together. Yes&mdash;Valérie! Yes&mdash;he would
- remember. He would not falter now&mdash;he would go through with it, and
- have done with it. Between this man's life and a lifelong misery for
- Valerie there could be no hesitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Henri Mentone, my son,&rdquo; he said gravely, &ldquo;I adjure you to be brave. I
- have come, it is true, and I will come often, but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The words that Raymond's brain was stumbling, groping for, the
- &ldquo;something,&rdquo; the &ldquo;anything&rdquo; to say, found no expression. The man suddenly
- appeared to be paying no attention; his head was turned in a tense,
- listening attitude; there was horror in the white face; and now the
- other's hands closed like steel bands around Raymond's wrists.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; whispered the man wildly. &ldquo;Listen! Oh, my God&mdash;listen!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Startled, Raymond turned his head about, looking quickly around the cell.
- There was nothing&mdash;there was no sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you hear it!&rdquo;&mdash;the other's voice was guttural and choked now,
- and he shook fiercely at Raymond's wrists. &ldquo;I thought it had gone away
- when you came, but there it is again. I&mdash;I thought you had told them
- to stop! Don't you hear it&mdash;don't you hear it! Don't you hear them <i>hammering!</i>
- Listen! Listen! There it is!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond felt the blood ebb swiftly from his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No&mdash;try and compose yourself. There is nothing&mdash;nothing, my son&mdash;it
- is only&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tell you, yes!&rdquo; cried the man frantically. &ldquo;I hear it! I hear it! You
- say, no; and I tell you, yes! I have heard it night and day. It comes from
- there&mdash;see!&rdquo;&mdash;he swept one hand toward the barred window, and
- suddenly, leaping to his feet, dragged at Raymond with almost superhuman
- strength, forcing Raymond up from the cot and across the cell. &ldquo;Come, and
- I will show you! It is out there! They are hammering out there now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man's face was ghastly, the frenzy with which he pulled was ghastly&mdash;and
- now at the window he thrust out his arm through the bars, far out up to
- the armpit, far out with horrible eagerness, and pointed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There! There! You cannot see, but it is just around the corner of the
- building&mdash;between the building and the wall. You cannot see, but it
- is just around the corner there that they are building it! Listen to them!
- Listen to them&mdash;hammering&mdash;hammering&mdash;hammering!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sweat was on Raymond's forehead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come away!&rdquo; he said hoarsely. &ldquo;In the name of God, come away!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, you hear it now!&rdquo;&mdash;the condemned man drew in his arm, until his
- fingers clawed and picked at the bars. &ldquo;They will not stop, and it is
- because I cannot remember&mdash;because I cannot remember&mdash;here&mdash;here&mdash;here&rdquo;&mdash;he
- swung clear of the window&mdash;and suddenly raising his clenched fists
- began to beat with almost maniacal fury at his temples. &ldquo;If I could
- remember, they would stop&mdash;they would&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Henri! My son!&rdquo; Raymond cried out sharply&mdash;and caught at the other's
- hands. A crimson drop had oozed from the man's bruised skin, and now was
- trickling down the colourless, working face. &ldquo;You do not know what you are
- doing! Listen to me! Listen! Let me go!&rdquo;&mdash;the man wrenched and fought
- furiously to break Raymond's hold. &ldquo;They will not stop out there&mdash;they
- are hammering&mdash;don't you hear them hammering&mdash;and it is because
- I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; The snarl, the fury in the voice was suddenly a
- sob. The man was like a child again, helpless, stricken, chidden; and as
- Raymond's hands unlocked, the man reached out his arms and put them around
- Raymond's neck, and hid his face upon Raymond's shoulder. &ldquo;Forgive me,
- father&mdash;forgive me!&rdquo; he pleaded brokenly. &ldquo;Forgive me&mdash;it is
- sometimes more than I can bear.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's arms mechanically tightened around the shaking shoulders; and
- mechanically he drew the other slowly back to the cot. Something was
- gnawing at his soul until his soul grew sick and faint. Hell shrieked its
- abominable approval in his ears, as he sat down upon the cot still holding
- the other&mdash;and shrieked the louder, until the cell seemed to ring and
- ring again with its unholy mirth, as the man pressed his lips to the
- crucifix on Raymond's breast.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father, I do not want to die&rdquo;&mdash;the man spoke brokenly again. &ldquo;They
- say I killed a man. How could I have killed a man, father? See&rdquo;&mdash;he
- straightened back, and held out both his hands before Raymond's eyes&mdash;&ldquo;see,
- father, surely these hands have never harmed any one. I cannot remember&mdash;I
- do not remember anything they say I did. Surely if I could remember, I
- could make them know that I am innocent. But I cannot remember. Father,
- must I die because I cannot remember? Must I, father&rdquo;&mdash;the man's face
- was gray with anguish. &ldquo;I have prayed to God to make me remember, father,
- and&mdash;and He does not answer&mdash;He does not answer&mdash;and I hear
- only that hammering&mdash;and sometimes in the night there is something
- that tightens and tightens around my throat, and&mdash;and it is horrible.
- Father&mdash;Father François Aubert&mdash;tell them to have pity upon me&mdash;you
- believe that I am innocent, don't you&mdash;you believe, father&mdash;yes,
- yes!&rdquo;&mdash;he clutched at Raymond's shoulders&mdash;&ldquo;yes, yes, y°u
- believe&mdash;look into my eyes, look into my face&mdash;look, father&mdash;look&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Look! Look into that face, look into those eyes! He could not look.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My son, be still!&rdquo;&mdash;the words were wrung in sudden agony from
- Raymond's lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew the other's head to his shoulder again, and held the other there&mdash;that
- he might not look&mdash;that the eyes and the face might be hidden from
- him. And the form in his arms shook with convulsive sobs, and clung to
- him, and called him by its own name, and called him friend&mdash;this
- stricken man who was to die&mdash;for whom he, Raymond, was building &ldquo;it&rdquo;
- out there under the shadow of the jail wall&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;God,
- he too could hear that <i>hammering</i> and&mdash;&ldquo;Fool, remember
- Valérie!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The sweat beads multiplied upon Raymond's forehead. His face was
- bloodless; his grip so tight upon the other that the man cried out, yet in
- turn but clung the closer. Yes, that voice was right&mdash;right&mdash;right!
- It was only that for the moment he was unnerved. It was this man's life
- for Valérie&mdash;this man's life for Valérie. It would only be a few days
- more, and then it would be over in a second, before even the man knew it&mdash;but
- with Valérie it would be for all of life, and there would be years and
- years&mdash;yes, yes, it was only that he had been unnerved for the
- instant&mdash;it was this man's life for Valérie&mdash;if he would give
- his own life, why shouldn't he give this man's&mdash;why shouldn't&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- His brain, his mind, his thoughts seemed suddenly to be inert, to be held
- in some strangely numbed, yet fascinated suspension. He was staring at the
- shaft of sunlight that fought for its right against those iron bars to
- enter this place of death. He stared and stared at it&mdash;something&mdash;a
- face&mdash;seemed to be emerging slowly out of the sunlight, to be taking
- form just beyond, just outside those iron bars, to become framed in the
- gray, pitiless stone of the window slit, to be pressed against those iron
- bars, to be looking in.
- </p>
- <p>
- And suddenly he pushed the man violently and without heed from him, until
- the man fell forward on the cot, and Raymond, lurching upward himself,
- stood rocking upon his feet. It was clear, distinct now, that face looking
- in through those iron bars. It was Valerie's face&mdash;Valerie's&mdash;Valerie's
- face. It was beautiful as he had never seen it beautiful before. The sweet
- lips were parted in a smile of infinite tenderness and pity, and the dark
- eyes looked out through a mist of compassion, not upon him, but upon the
- figure behind him on the prison cot. He reached out his arms. His lips
- moved silently&mdash;Valérie! And then she seemed to turn her head and
- look at him, and her eyes swam deeper in their tears, and there was a
- wondrous light of love in her face, and with the love a condemnation that
- was one of sorrow and of bitter pain. She seemed to speak; he seemed to
- hear her voice: &ldquo;That life is not yours to give. I have sinned, my lover,
- in loving you. Is my sin to be beyond all forgiveness because out of my
- love has been born the guilt of murder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The voice was gone. The face had faded out of that shaft of sunlight&mdash;only
- the iron bars were there now. Raymond's outstretched arms fell to his side&mdash;and
- then he turned, and dropped upon his knees beside the cot, and hid his
- face in his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- Murder! Yes, it was murder&mdash;murder that desecrated, that vilified,
- that made a wanton thing of that pure love, that brave and sinless love,
- that Valerie had given him. And he would have linked the vilest and the
- blackest crime, hideous the more in the Judas betrayal with which he would
- have accomplished it, with Valerie&mdash;with Valerie's love! His hands,
- locked about his face, trembled. He was weak and nerveless in a Titanic
- revulsion of soul and mind and body. And horror was upon him, a horror of
- himself&mdash;and yet, too, a strange and numbed relief. It was not he, it
- was not he as he knew himself, who had meant to do this thing&mdash;it was
- not Raymond Chapelle who had thought and argued that this was the way.
- See! His soul recoiled, blasted, shrivelled now from before it! It was
- because his brain had been tormented, not to the verge of madness, but had
- been flung across that border-line for a space into the gibbering realms
- beyond where reason tottered and was lost.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was conscious that the man was sitting upright on the edge of the cot,
- conscious that the man's hands were plucking pitifully at the sleeve of
- his <i>soutane</i>, conscious that the man was pleading again
- hysterically: &ldquo;Father, you will tell them that you know I am innocent.
- They will believe you, father&mdash;they will believe you. They say I did
- it, father, but I cannot remember, or&mdash;or, perhaps, I could make them
- believe me, too. You will not let me die, father&mdash;because&mdash;because
- I cannot remember. You will save me, father&rdquo;&mdash;the man's voice was
- rising, passing beyond control&mdash;&ldquo;Father François Aubert, for the pity
- of Christ's love, tell me that you will not let me die&mdash;tell me&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond raised his head. His face was strangely composed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush, my son&rdquo;&mdash;he scarcely recognised his own voice&mdash;it was
- quiet, low, gentle, like one soothing a child. &ldquo;Hush, my son, you will not
- die.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father! Father Aubert!&rdquo;&mdash;the man was lurching forward toward him;
- the white, hollow face was close to his; the burning deep-sunk eyes with a
- terrible hunger in them looked into his. &ldquo;I will not die! I will not die!
- You said that, father? You said that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; Raymond's lips were dry, he moistened them with his tongue. &ldquo;Calm
- yourself now, my son&mdash;you need no longer have any fear.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A sob broke from the man's lips. His hands covered his face; he began to
- rock slowly back and forth upon the cot. He crooned to himself:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will not die&mdash;I am to live&mdash;I will not die&mdash;I am to
- live....&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And then suddenly, in a paroxysm of returning fear, he was on his feet,
- dragging Raymond up from his knees, and, catching at Raymond's crucifix,
- lifted it wildly to Raymond's lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Swear it, father!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Swear it on the cross! Swear by God's holy
- Son that I will not die! Swear it on the blessed cross!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I swear it,&rdquo; Raymond answered in a steady voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no sound, no cry now&mdash;only a transfigured face, glad with a
- mighty joy. And then the man's hands went upward queerly, seeking his
- temples&mdash;and the swaying form lay in Raymond's arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man stirred after a moment, and opened his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you there, father&mdash;my friend?&rdquo; he whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Raymond said.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man's hold tightened, and he sighed like one over-weary who had found
- repose.
- </p>
- <p>
- And sitting there upon the edge of the cot, Raymond held the other in his
- arms&mdash;and the sunlight's shaft through the barred window grew shorter&mdash;and
- shadows crept into the narrow cell. At times there came low sobs; at times
- the man's hand was raised to feel and touch Raymond's face, at times to
- touch the crucifix on Raymond's breast. And then at last the other moved
- no more, and the breathing became deep and regular, and a peaceful smile
- came and lingered on the lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Raymond laid the other gently back upon the cot, and, crossing to the
- cell door, knocked softly upon it for the turnkey. And as the door was
- opened, he laid his finger across his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He is asleep,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Do not disturb him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Asleep!&rdquo;&mdash;the turnkey in amazement thrust his head inside the cell;
- and then he looked in wonder at Raymond. &ldquo;Asleep&mdash;but Monsieur
- Lemoyne told me of the news when he went out. Asleep&mdash;after that! The
- man who never sleeps!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But Raymond only shook his head, and did not answer, and walked on down
- the corridor, and out into the courtyard. It was dusk now. He seemed to be
- moving purely by intuition. It was not the way&mdash;the man was to live.
- His mind was obsessed with that. It was not the way. There were two ways
- left&mdash;two out of the three.
- </p>
- <p>
- The turnkey, who had followed in respectful silence, spoke again as he
- opened the jail gates.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Au revoir</i>, Monsieur le Cure&rdquo;&mdash;he lifted his cap. &ldquo;Monsieur le
- Curé will return to-morrow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To-morrow! Raymond's hands fumbled with the halter, as he untied the
- horse. To-morrow! There were two ways left, and the time was short.
- To-morrow&mdash;what would to-morrow bring!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; he said, unconscious that his reply had been long delayed&mdash;and
- found that he was speaking to closed gates, and that the turnkey was gone.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond smiled as he seated himself in the buckboard and drove
- away&mdash;the smile a curious twitching of the lips. The turnkey was a
- tactful man who would not intrude upon Monsieur le Curé's so easily
- understood sorrow for the condemned man!
- </p>
- <p>
- He drove on through the town, and turned into the St. Marleau road that
- wound its way for miles along the river's shore. And as he had driven
- slowly on his way to the jail, so he drove slowly on his return to the
- village, the horse left almost to guide itself and to set its own pace.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dusk deepened, and the road grew dark&mdash;it seemed fitting that the
- road should grow dark. There were two ways left. The jaws of the trap were
- narrowing&mdash;one of the three ways was gone. There were two left.
- Either he must stand in that other's place, and hang in that other's
- place; or run for it with what start he could, throw them off his trail if
- he could, and write from somewhere a letter that would exonerate the other
- and disclose the priest's identity&mdash;-a letter to the Bishop
- unquestionably, if the letter was to be written at all, for the Bishop,
- not only because he knew the man personally and could at once establish
- his identity, but because, in the very nature of the case, with the life
- of one of his own curés at stake, the Bishop, above all other men, would
- have both the incentive and the power to act. Two ways! One was a ghastly,
- ignominious death, to hang by the neck until he was dead&mdash;the other
- was to be a fugitive from the law, to become a hunted, baited beast,
- fighting every moment with his wits for the right to breathe. There were
- two ways! One was death&mdash;one held a chance for life. And the time was
- short.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the horse that turned of its own accord in past the church, and
- across the green to the <i>presbytère</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- He left the horse standing there&mdash;Narcisse would come and get it
- presently&mdash;and went up the steps, and entered the house. The door of
- the front room was open, a light burned upon his desk. Along the hall,
- from the dining room, Madame Lafleur came hurrying forward smilingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Supper is ready, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she called out cheerily. &ldquo;Poor man,
- you must be tired&mdash;it was a long drive to take so soon after your
- illness, and before you were really strong again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am late,&rdquo; said Raymond; &ldquo;that is the main thing, Madame Lafleur. I put
- you always, it seems, to a great deal of trouble.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tut!&rdquo; she expostulated, shaking her head at him as she smiled. &ldquo;It is
- scarcely seven o'clock. Trouble! The idea! We did not wait for you,
- Monsieur le Curé, because Valérie had to hurry back to Madame Blondin.
- Madame Blondin is very, very low, Monsieur le Curé. Doctor Arnaud, when he
- left this afternoon, said that&mdash;but I will tell you while you are
- eating your supper. Only first&mdash;yes&mdash;wait&mdash;it is there on
- your desk. Monsieur Labbée sent it over from the station this afternoon&mdash;a
- telegram, Monsieur le Curé.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A telegram! He glanced swiftly at her face. It told him nothing. Why
- should it!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; he said, and stepping into the front room, walked over to the
- desk, picked up the yellow-envelope, tore it open calmly, and read the
- message.
- </p>
- <p>
- His back was toward the door. He laid the slip of paper down upon the
- desk, and with that curious trick of his stretched out his hand in front
- of him, and held it there, and stared at it. It was steady&mdash;without
- tremor. It was well that it was so. He would need his nerve now. He had
- been quite right&mdash;the time was short. There remained&mdash;<i>one
- hour</i>. In an hour from now, on the evening train, Monsignor the Bishop,
- who was personally acquainted with Father François Aubert, would arrive in
- St. Marleau.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXII&mdash;HOW RAYMOND BADE FAREWELL TO ST. MARLEAU
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>N hour! There lay
- an hour between himself&mdash;and death. Primal, elemental, savage in its
- intensity, tigerish in its coming, there surged upon him the demand for
- life&mdash;to live&mdash;to fight for self-preservation. And yet how clear
- his brain was, and how swiftly it worked! Life! There lay an hour between
- himself&mdash;and death. The horse was still outside. The overalls, the
- old coat, the old hat belonging to the sacristan were still at his
- disposal in the shed. He would ostentatiously set out to drive to the
- station to meet the Bishop, hide the horse and buckboard in the woods just
- before he got there, change his clothes, run on the rest of the way,
- remain concealed on the far side of the tracks until the train arrived&mdash;and,
- as Monsignor the Bishop descended from one side of the train to the
- platform, he, Raymond, would board it from the other. There would then, of
- course, be no one to meet the Bishop. The Bishop would wait patiently no
- doubt for a while; then Labbée perhaps would manage to procure a vehicle
- of some sort, or the Bishop might even walk. Eventually, of course, it
- would appear that Father Aubert had set out for the station and had not
- since been seen&mdash;but it would be a good many hours before the truth
- began to dawn on any one. There would be alarm only at first for the <i>safety</i>
- of the good, young Father Aubert&mdash;and meanwhile he would have reached
- Halifax, say One could not ask for a better start than that!
- </p>
- <p>
- Life! With the crisis upon him, his mind held on no other thing. Life&mdash;the
- human impulse to live and not to die! No other thing&mdash;but life! It
- was an hour before the train was due&mdash;he could drive to the station
- easily in half an hour. There was no hurry&mdash;but there was Madame
- Lafleur who, he was conscious, was watching him from the doorway&mdash;Madame
- Lafleur, and Madame Lafleur's supper. He would have need of food, there
- was no telling when he would have another chance to eat; and there was
- Madame Lafleur, too, to enlist as an unwitting accomplice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;it was Madame Lafleur speaking a little timidly
- from the doorway&mdash;&ldquo;it&mdash;it is not bad news that Monsieur le Curé
- has received?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bad news!&rdquo; Raymond picked up the telegram, and, turning from the desk,
- walked toward her. &ldquo;Bad news!&rdquo; he smiled. &ldquo;But on the contrary, my dear
- Madame Lafleur! I was thinking only of just what was the best thing to do,
- since it is now quite late, and I did not receive the telegram this
- afternoon, as I otherwise should had I not been away. Listen! Monsignor
- the Bishop, who is on his way&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond glanced deliberately at the
- message&mdash;&ldquo;yes, he says to Halifax&mdash;who then is on his way to
- Halifax, will stop off here this evening.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Lafleur was instantly in a flutter of excitement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;&mdash;her comely cheeks grew rosy, and her eyes
- shone with pleasure. &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur le Curé&mdash;Monsignor the Bishop! He
- will spend the night here?&rdquo; she demanded eagerly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond patted her shoulder playfully, as he led her toward the dining
- room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he will spend the night here, Madame Lafleur&rdquo;&mdash;it was strange
- that he could laugh teasingly, naturally. &ldquo;But first, a little supper for
- a mere curé, eh, Madame Lafleur&mdash;since Monsignor the Bishop will
- undoubtedly have dined on the train.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo; She shook her head at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then,&rdquo; laughed Raymond, as he seated himself at the table, &ldquo;since the
- horse is already outside, I will drive over to the station and meet him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He ate rapidly, and, strangely enough, with an appetite. Madame Lafleur
- bustled about him, quite unable to keep still in her excitement. She
- talked, and he answered her. He did not know what she said; his replies
- were perfunctory. There was an excuse to be made for going to the shed
- instead of getting directly into the buckboard and driving off. Madame
- Lafleur would undoubtedly and most naturally watch him off from the front
- door. But&mdash;yes, of course&mdash;that was simple&mdash;absurdly
- simple! Well then, another thing&mdash;it would mean at least a good hour
- to him if the village was not on tiptoe with expectancy awaiting the
- Bishop's arrival, and thus be ready to start out to discover what had
- happened to the good, young Father Aubert on the instant that the alarm
- was given; or, worse still, that any one, learning of the Bishop's
- expected arrival, should enthusiastically drive over to the station as a
- sort of self-appointed delegation of welcome, just a few minutes behind
- himself. In that case anything might happen. No, it would not do at all!
- Every minute of delay and confusion on the part of St. Marleau, and
- Labbée, and Madame Lafleur no less than the others, was priceless to him
- now. He remembered his own experience. It would take Labbée a long time to
- find a horse and wagon; and Madame Lafleur, on her part, would think
- nothing of a prolonged delay in his return&mdash;if he left her with the
- suggestion, that the train might be late! Well, there was no reason why he
- should not accomplish all this. So far, it was quite evident, since Madame
- Lafleur had had no inkling of what the telegram contained, that no one
- knew anything about it; and that Labbée, whom he was quite prepared to
- credit with being loose-tongued enough to have otherwise spread the news,
- had not associated the Bishop's official signature&mdash;with Monsignor
- the Bishop! It was natural enough. The telegram was signed simply&mdash;&ldquo;Montigny&rdquo;&mdash;not
- the Bishop of Montigny.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had eaten enough&mdash;he pushed back his chair and stood up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think perhaps, Madame Lafleur,&rdquo; he said reflectively, &ldquo;that it would be
- as well not to say anything to any one until Monsignor arrives.&rdquo; He handed
- her the telegram. &ldquo;It would appear that his visit is not an official one,
- and he may prefer to rest and spend a quiet evening. We can allow him to
- decide that for himself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Lafleur adjusted her spectacles, and read the message.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, yes, Monsieur le Curé,&rdquo; she agreed heartily. &ldquo;Monsignor will tell us
- what he desires; and if he wishes to see any one in the village this
- evening, it will not be too late when you return. But, Monsieur le Curé&rdquo;&mdash;she
- glanced at the clock&mdash;&ldquo;hadn't you better hurry?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Raymond quickly; &ldquo;that's so! I had!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Lafleur accompanied him to the front door, carrying a lamp. At the
- foot of the steps Raymond paused, and looked back at her. It had grown
- black now, and there was no moon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll run around to the shed and get a lantern,&rdquo; he called up to her&mdash;and,
- without waiting for a reply, hurried around the corner of the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed a little harshly, his lips were tightly set, as he reached the
- shed door, opened it, and closed it behind him. He struck a match, found
- and lighted a lantern, procured a small piece of string, tucked the
- sacristan's overalls, and the old coat and hat swiftly under his <i>soutane</i>&mdash;and
- a moment later was back beside the buckboard again.
- </p>
- <p>
- He tied the lantern in front of the dash-board, and climbed into the seat.
- Madame Lafleur was still standing in the doorway. He hesitated an instant,
- as he picked up the reins. The sweet, motherly old face smiled at him. A
- pang came and found lodgment in his heart. It was like that, standing
- there in the lamp-lit doorway of the <i>presbytère</i>, that he had seen
- her for the first time&mdash;as he saw her now for the last. He had grown
- to love the silver-haired little old lady with her heart of gold&mdash;and
- so he looked&mdash;and a mist came before his eyes, for this was his
- good-bye.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You will be back in an hour?&rdquo; she called out. &ldquo;You forget, Madame
- Lafleur&rdquo;&mdash;he forced himself to laugh in the old playful, teasing way&mdash;&ldquo;that
- the train is sometimes more than an hour late itself!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, that is true!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;<i>Au revoir</i>, then, Monsieur le Curé!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He answered quietly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-night, Madame Lafleur!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He drove out across the green, and past the church, and, a short distance
- down the road, where he could no longer be seen from the windows of the <i>presbytère</i>,
- he leaned forward and extinguished the lantern. He smiled curiously to
- himself. It was the only act that appeared at all in consonance with
- escape! He was a fugitive now, a fugitive for life&mdash;and a fugitive
- running for his life. It seemed as though he should be standing up in the
- buckboard, and lashing at the horse until the animal was flecked with
- foam, and the buckboard rocked and swayed with a mad speed along the road.
- Instead&mdash;he had turned off and was on the station road now&mdash;the
- horse was labouring slowly up the steep hill. It seemed as though there
- should be haste, furious haste, a wild abandon in his flight&mdash;that
- there should be no time to mark, or see, or note, as he was noting now,
- the twinkling lights of the quiet village nestling below him there along
- the river's shore. It seemed that his blood should be whipping madly
- through his veins&mdash;instead he was contained, composed, playing his
- last hand with the old-time gambler's nerve that precluded a false lead,
- that calculated deliberately, methodically, and with deadly coolness, the
- value of every card. And yet, beneath this nerve-imposed veneer, he was
- conscious of a thousand emotions that battered and seethed and raged at
- their barriers, and sought to fling themselves upon him and have him for
- their prey.
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed coldly out into the night. It was not the fool who tore like a
- madman, boisterously, blindly, into the open that would escape! He had
- ample time. He had seen to that, even if he had appeared to accept Madame
- Lafleur's injunction to hurry. He need reach the station but a minute or
- so ahead of the train. Meanwhile, the minor details&mdash;were there any
- that he had overlooked? What about the <i>soutane</i> and the clerical
- hat, for instance, after he had exchanged them for the sacristan's things?
- Should he hide them where he left the horse and buckboard in the woods? He
- shook his head after a moment. No; they would probably find the horse
- before morning, and they might find the <i>soutane</i>. There must be no
- trace of Father Aubert&mdash;the longer they searched the better. And
- then, more important still, when finally the alarm was spread, the
- description that would be sent out would be that of a man dressed as a
- priest. No; he would take them with him, wrap them up in a bundle around a
- stone, and somewhere miles away, say, throw them from the car into the
- water as the train crossed a bridge. So much for that! Was there anything
- else, anything that he&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- A lighted window glowed yellow in the darkness from a little distance
- away. He had come to the top of the rise. It was old Mother Blondin's
- cottage. He had meant to urge the horse into a trot once the level was
- gained&mdash;but instead the horse was forgotten, and the animal plodded
- slowly forward at the same pace at which it had ascended the hill.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes were fixed upon the light. Old Mother Blondin's cottage&mdash;and
- in that room, beyond that light, old Mother Blondin, the old woman on the
- hill, the <i>excommuniée</i>, lay dying. And there was a shadow on the
- window shade&mdash;the shadow of one sitting in a chair&mdash;a woman's
- shadow&mdash;Valerie!
- </p>
- <p>
- He stopped the horse, and, sitting there in the buck-board opposite the
- cottage, he raised his hand slowly and took his hat from his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go on&mdash;fool!&rdquo;&mdash;with a snarl, vicious as the cut of a whip-lash,
- came that inner voice. &ldquo;You may have time&mdash;but you have none to throw
- away!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be still!&rdquo; answered Raymond's soul. &ldquo;This is my hour. Be still!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Valerie! That shadow on the window he knew was Valerie&mdash;and within
- was that other shadow, the shadow of death. This was his good-bye to old
- Mother Blondin, who had drunk of the common cup with him, and knelt with
- him in the moonlit church, her hand in his, outcasts, sealing a most
- strange bond&mdash;and this was his good-bye to Valérie. Valérie&mdash;a
- shadow there on the window shade. That was all&mdash;a shadow&mdash;all
- that she could ever be, nothing more tangible in his life through the
- years to come, if there were years, than a shadow that did not smile, that
- did not speak to him, that did not touch his hand, or lift brave eyes to
- look into his. A shadow&mdash;that was all&mdash;a shadow. It was brutal,
- cruel, remorseless, yet immeasurably true in its significance, this
- good-bye&mdash;this good-bye to Valérie&mdash;a shadow.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shadow moved, and was gone; from miles away, borne for a great
- distance on the clear night air, came faintly the whistle of a train&mdash;and
- Raymond, springing suddenly erect, his teeth clenched together, snatched
- at the whip and laid it across the horse's back.
- </p>
- <p>
- The wagon lurched forward, and he staggered with the plunge and jerk&mdash;and
- his whip fell again. And he laughed now&mdash;no longer calm&mdash;and
- lashed the horse. It was not time that he was racing, there was ample
- time, the train was still far away; it was his thoughts&mdash;to outrun
- them, to distance them, to leave them behind him, to know no other thing
- than that impulse for life that alone until now so far this night had
- swayed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- And he laughed&mdash;and horse and wagon tore frantically along the road,
- and the woods were about him now, and it was black, black as the mouth of
- Satan's pit and the roadway to it were black. He was flung back into his
- seat&mdash;and he laughed at that. Life&mdash;and he had doddled along the
- road, preening himself on his magnificent apathy! Life&mdash;and the
- battle and the fight for it was the blood afire, reckless of fear and of
- odds, the laugh of defiance, the joy of combat, the clenched fist shaken
- in the face of hell itself! Life&mdash;in the mad rush for it was appeal!
- On! The wagon reeled like a drunken thing, and the wheels twisted in the
- ruts; a patch of starlight seeping through the branches overhead made a
- patch of gloom in the inky blackness underneath, and in this patch of
- gloom wavering tree trunks, like uncouth monsters as they flitted by,
- snatched at the wheel-hubs to wreck and overturn the wagon, but he was too
- quick for them, too quick&mdash;they always missed. On! Away from memory,
- away from those good-byes, away from every thought save that of life&mdash;life,
- and the right to live&mdash;life, and the fight to hurl that gibbet with
- its dangling rope a smashed and battered and splintered thing against the
- jail wall where they would strangle him to death and bury him in their
- cursed lime!
- </p>
- <p>
- On! Why did not the beast go faster! Were those white spots that danced
- before his eyes a lather of foam on the animal's flanks? On&mdash;along
- the road to life! Faster! Faster! It was not fast enough&mdash;for
- thoughts were swift, and they were racing behind him now in their pursuit,
- and coming closer, and they would overtake him unless he could go faster&mdash;faster!
- Faster, or they would be upon him, and&mdash;<i>a big and brave and loyal
- man</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- A low cry, a cry of sudden, overmastering hurt, was drowned in the furious
- pound of the horse's hoofs, in the rattle and the creaking of the wagon,
- and in the screech and grinding of the wagon's jolt and swing. And,
- unconscious that he held the reins, unconscious that he tightened them,
- his hands, clenched, went upward to his face. There was no black road, no
- plunging horse, no mad, insensate rush, ungoverned and unguided, no wagon
- rocking demoniacally through the night&mdash;there was a woman who knelt
- in the aisle of a church, and in her arms she held a man, and across the
- shattered chancel rail there lay a mighty cross, and the shadow of the
- cross fell upon them both, and the woman's eyes were filled with tears,
- and she spoke: &ldquo;A big and brave and loyal man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tighter against his face he pressed his clenched hands, unconscious that
- the horse responded to the check and gradually slowed its pace. Valérie!
- The woman was Valerie&mdash;and he was the man! God, the hurt of it&mdash;the
- hurt of those words ringing now in his ears! She had given him her all&mdash;her
- love, her faith, her trust. And in return, he&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- The reins dropped from his hands, and his head bowed forward. Life! Yes,
- there was life this way for him&mdash;and for Valerie the bitterest of
- legacies. He would bequeath to her the belief that she had given her love
- not only to a felon but to a <i>coward.</i> A coward! And no man, he had
- boasted, had ever called him a coward. Pitiful boast! Life for himself&mdash;for
- Valerie the fuller measure of misery! Yes, he loved Valérie&mdash;he loved
- her with a traitor's and a coward's love!
- </p>
- <p>
- His lips were drawn together until they were bloodless. In retrospect his
- life passed swiftly, unbidden before him&mdash;and strewn on every hand
- was wreckage. And here was the final, crowning act of all&mdash;the
- coward's act&mdash;the coward afraid at the end to face the ruin he had,
- disdainful, callous, contemptuous then of consequence, so consistently
- wrought since boyhood! If he got away and wrote a letter it would save the
- man's life, it was true; but it was also true that he ran because he was
- cornered and at the end of his resources, and because what he might write
- would, in any case, be instantly discovered if he did not run&mdash;and to
- plead his own innocence in that letter, in the face of glaring proof to
- the contrary, in the face of the evidence he had so carefully budded
- against another, smacked only of the grovelling whine of the condemned
- wretch afraid. None would believe him. None! It was paltry, the police
- were inured to that; all criminals were eager to protest their innocence,
- and pule out their tale of extenuating circumstances. None would believe
- him. Valérie would not believe.
- </p>
- <p>
- Folds of his cheeks were gripped and crushed in his hands until the finger
- nails bit into the flesh. He <i>was</i> innocent. He had not <i>murdered</i>
- that scarred-faced drunken hound&mdash;only Valérie would neither believe
- nor know; and in Valérie's eyes he would stand a loathsome thing, and in
- her soul would be a horror, and a misery, and a shame that was measured
- only by the greatness and the depth of the love she had given him, for in
- that greatness and that depth lay, too, the greatness and the depth of
- that love's dishonour and that love's abasement. But if&mdash;but if&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment he did not stir or move, his eyes seeing nothing, fixed
- before him&mdash;and then steadily his head came up and poised far back on
- the broad, square shoulders, and the tight lips parted in a strange and
- sudden smile. If he drove to the station and met Monsignor the Bishop, and
- drove Monsignor the Bishop back to St. Marleau&mdash;then she would
- believe. No one else could or would believe him, the proof was irrefutable
- against him, they would convict him, and the sentence would be death; but
- she in her splendid love would believe him, and know that she had loved&mdash;a
- man. There had been three ways, but one had gone that afternoon; and then
- there had been two ways, but there was only one now, the man's way, for
- the other was the coward's way. And, taking this, he could lift his head
- and stand before them all, for in Valérie's face and in Valérie's eyes
- there would not be&mdash;-what was worse than death. To save Valérie from
- what he could&mdash;not from sorrow, not from grief, that he could not do&mdash;but
- that she might know that her love had been given where it was held a
- sacred, a priceless and a hallowed thing, and was not outraged and was not
- degraded because it had been given to him! To save Valerie from what he
- could&mdash;to save himself in his own eyes from the self-abasing
- knowledge that through a craven fear he had bartered away his manhood and
- his self-respect, that through fear he ran, and that through fear he hid,
- and that through fear, though he was innocent, he dared not stand&mdash;a
- man!
- </p>
- <p>
- He stopped the horse, and stepped down to the ground; and, searching for a
- match, found one, and lighted the lantern where it hung upon the
- dash-board. He was calm now, not with that calmness desperately imposed by
- will and nerve, but with a calmness that was like to&mdash;peace. And,
- standing there, the lantern light fell upon him, and gleamed upon the
- crucifix upon his breast. And he lifted the crucifix, and, wondering, held
- it in his hand, and looked at it. It was here in these woods and on this
- road that he had first hung it about his neck in insolent and bald denial
- of the Figure that it bore. It was very strange! He had meant it then to
- save his life; and now&mdash;he let it slip gently from his fingers, and
- climbed back into the buckboard&mdash;and now it seemed, as though
- strengthening him in the way he saw at last, in the way he was to take, as
- though indeed it were the way itself, came radiating from it, like a
- benediction, a calm and holy&mdash;peace.
- </p>
- <p>
- And there was no more any turmoil.
- </p>
- <p>
- And he picked up the reins and drove on along the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIII&mdash;MONSIGNOR THE BISHOP
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE train had come
- and gone, as Raymond reached the station platform. He had meant it so. He
- had meant to avoid the lights from the car windows that would have
- illuminated the otherwise dark platform; to avoid, if possible, a
- disclosure in Labbée's, the station agent's, presence. Afterwards, Labbée
- would know, as all would know&mdash;but not now. It was not easy to tell;
- the words perhaps would not come readily even when alone with Monsignor
- the Bishop, as they drove back together to the village.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were but two figures on the platform&mdash;Labbée, who held a
- satchel in his hand; and a tall, slight form in clerical attire.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, Father Aubert&mdash;<i>salut!</i>&rdquo; Labbée called out. &ldquo;You are late;
- but we saw your light coming just as the train pulled out, and so&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well, François, my son!&rdquo;&mdash;it was a rich, mellow voice that
- broke in on the station agent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond stood up and lifted his hat&mdash;lifted it so that it but shaded
- his face the more.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsignor!&rdquo; he said, in a low voice. &ldquo;This is a great honour.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Honour!&rdquo; the Bishop responded heartily. &ldquo;Why should I not come, I&mdash;but
- do I sit on this side?&rdquo;&mdash;he had stepped down into the buckboard, as
- he grasped Raymond's hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's wide-brimmed clerical hat was far over
- his eyes. The lantern on the front of the dash-board left them in shadow;
- Labbée's lantern for the moment was behind them, as the station agent
- stowed the Bishop's valise under the seat. He took up the reins, and with
- an almost abrupt &ldquo;goodnight&rdquo; to the station agent, started the horse
- forward along the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-night!&rdquo; Labbée shouted after them. &ldquo;Goodnight, Monsignor!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-night!&rdquo; the Bishop called back&mdash;and turned to Raymond. &ldquo;Yes, as
- I was saying,&rdquo; he resumed, &ldquo;why should I not come? I was passing through
- St. Marleau in any case. I have heard splendid things of my young friend,
- the curé, here. I wanted to see for myself, and to tell him how pleased
- and gratified I was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are very good, Monsignor,&rdquo; Raymond answered, his voice still low and
- hurried.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excellent!&rdquo; pursued the Bishop. &ldquo;Most excellent! I do not know when I
- have been so pleased over anything. The parish perhaps&rdquo;&mdash;he laughed
- pleasantly&mdash;&ldquo;would not object if Father Allard prolonged his holiday
- a little&mdash;eh&mdash;François, my son?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hardly that, Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;he dared indulge in little more than
- monosyllables&mdash;it was even strange the Bishop had not already noticed
- that his voice was not the voice of Father François Aubert. And yet what
- did it matter? In a moment, in five minutes, in half an hour, the Bishop
- would know all&mdash;he would have told the Bishop all. Why should he
- strive now to keep up a deception that he was voluntarily to acknowledge
- almost the next instant? It was not argument in his mind, not argument
- again that brought indecision and chaotic hesitancy, it was not that&mdash;the
- way was clear, there was only one way, the way that he would take&mdash;?
- and yet, perhaps because it was so very human, because perhaps he sought
- for still more strength, because perhaps it was so almost literally the
- final, closing act of his life, he waited and clung to that moment more,
- and to that five minutes more.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; said the Bishop happily, &ldquo;we will perhaps have to look
- around and see if we cannot find for you a parish of your own, my son. And
- who knows&mdash;eh&mdash;perhaps we have already found it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- How queerly the lantern jerked its rays up and down the horse's legs, and
- cast its shadows along the road! He heard himself speaking again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are very good, Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;they were the same words with which
- he had replied before&mdash;he uttered them mechanically.
- </p>
- <p>
- He felt the Bishop's hand close gently, yet firmly, upon his shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;François, my son&rdquo;&mdash;the voice had suddenly become grave&mdash;&ldquo;what
- is the matter? You act strangely. Your voice does not somehow seem natural&mdash;it
- is very hoarse. You have a cold perhaps, or perhaps you are ill?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, Monsignor&mdash;I am not ill.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then&mdash;but, you alarm me, my son!&rdquo; exclaimed the Bishop anxiously.
- &ldquo;Something has happened?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Monsignor&mdash;something has happened.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- How curiously his mind seemed to be working! He was conscious that the
- Bishop's hand remained in kindly pressure on his shoulder as though
- inviting his confidence, conscious that the man beside him maintained a
- sympathetic, tactful silence, waiting for him to speak; but his thoughts
- for the moment now were not upon the immediate present, but upon the
- immediate afterwards when his story had been told.
- </p>
- <p>
- The buckboard rattled on along the road; it entered the wooded stretch&mdash;and
- still went on. When he had told this man beside him all, they would drive
- into the village. Then presently they would set out for Tournayville, and
- Monsieur Dupont, and the jail. But before that&mdash;there was Valérie. He
- turned his head still further away&mdash;even in the blackness his face
- must show its ashen whiteness. There was Valérie&mdash;Valérie who would
- believe&mdash;but Valérie who was to suffer, and to know agony and sorrow&mdash;and
- he, who loved her, must look into her face and see the smile die out of
- it, and the quiver come to her lips, and see her eyes fill, while with his
- own hands he dealt her the blow, which, soften it as he would, must still
- strike her down. It was the only way&mdash;the way of peace. It seemed
- most strange that peace should lie in that black hour ahead for Valérie
- and for himself&mdash;that peace should lie in death&mdash;and yet within
- him, quiet, undismayed, calm and untroubled in its own immortal truth, was
- the knowledge that it was so.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond lifted his head suddenly&mdash;through the-trees there showed the
- glimmer of a light&mdash;as it had showed that other night when he had
- walked here in the storm. Had they come thus far&mdash;in silence!
- Involuntarily he stopped the horse. It was the light from old Mother
- Blondin's cottage, and here was the spot where he had stumbled that night
- over the priest whom he had thought dead, as the other lay sprawled across
- the road. It was strange again&mdash;most strange! He had not deliberately
- chosen this spot to tell&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;François, my son&mdash;what is it?&rdquo;&mdash;the Bishop's voice was full of
- deep concern.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment Raymond did not move, and he did not speak. Then he laid down
- the reins, and, leaning forward, untied the lantern from the dash-board&mdash;and,
- taking off his hat, held up the lantern between them until the light fell
- full upon his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a quick and startled cry from the Bishop, and then for an
- instant&mdash;silence. And Raymond looked into the other's face, even as
- the other looked into his. It was a face full of dignity and strength and
- quiet, an aged, kindly face, crowned with hair that was silver-white; but
- the blue eyes that spoke of tranquillity were widened now in amazement,
- surprise and consternation.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then the Bishop spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Something has happened to François,&rdquo; he said, in a hesitant, troubled
- way, &ldquo;and you have come from Tournayville to take his place perhaps, or
- perhaps to&mdash;to be with him. Is it as serious as that&mdash;and you
- were loath to break the news, my son? And yet&mdash;and yet I do not
- understand. The station agent said nothing to indicate that anything was
- wrong, though perhaps he might not have heard; and he called you Father
- Aubert, though, too, that possibly well might be, for it was dark, and I
- myself did not see your face. My son, I fear that I am right. Tell me,
- then! You are a priest from Tournayville, or from a neighbouring parish?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am not a priest,&rdquo; said Raymond steadily.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Bishop drew back sharply, as though he had been struck a blow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not a priest&mdash;and in those clothes!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, Monsignor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The fine old face grew set and stern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And Francois Aubert, then&mdash;<i>where is Father Francois Aubert?</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's lips were white&mdash;&ldquo;he is in the condemned
- cell at Tournayville&mdash;under sentence of death&mdash;he is&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Condemned&mdash;to death! François Aubert&mdash;condemned to death!&rdquo;&mdash;the
- Bishop was grasping with one hand at the back of the seat. And then
- slowly, still grasping at the seat, he pulled himself up and stood erect,
- and raised his other hand over Raymond in solemnity and adjuration. &ldquo;In
- the name of God, what does this mean? Who are you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am Raymond Chapelle,&rdquo; Raymond answered&mdash;and abruptly lowered the
- lantern, and a twisted smile of pain gathered on his lips. &ldquo;You have heard
- the name, Monsignor&mdash;all French Canada has heard it.&rdquo; The Bishop's
- hand dropped heavily to his side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I have heard it,&rdquo; he said sternly. &ldquo;I have heard that it was a proud
- name dishonoured, a princely fortune dissolutely wasted. And you are
- Raymond Chapelle, you say! I have heard this much, that you had
- disappeared, but after that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond put his head down into his hands, and drew his hands tightly
- across his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is the end of the story,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Listen, Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;he
- raised his head again. &ldquo;You have heard, too, of the murder of Théophile
- Blondin that was committed here a little while ago. It is for that murder
- that François Aubert was tried, found guilty, and sentenced to be hanged.&rdquo;
- He paused an instant, his lips tight. &ldquo;Monsignor, it is I who killed
- Théophile Blondin. It is I who, since that night, have lived here as the
- curé&mdash;as Father François Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- How ghastly white the aged face was! As ghastly as his own must be! The
- other's hands were gripping viselike at his shoulders.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you mad!&rdquo; the Bishop whispered hoarsely. &ldquo;Do you know what you are
- saying!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know&rdquo;&mdash;there was a sort of unnatural calm and finality in
- Raymond's tones now. &ldquo;I was on the train the night that Father Aubert came
- to St. Marleau. I had a message for the mother of a man who was killed in
- the Yukon, Monsignor. The mother lived here. There was a wild storm that
- night. There was no wagon to be had, and we both walked from the station.
- But I did not walk with the priest. You, who have heard of Raymond
- Chapelle, know why&mdash;I despised a priest&mdash;I knew no God.
- Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;he turned and pointed suddenly&mdash;&ldquo;you see that light
- through the trees? It is the light I saw that night, as I stumbled over
- the body of a man lying here in the road. The man was Father Aubert. The
- limb of a tree had fallen and struck him on the head. I thought him dead.
- I went over to that house for help.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused again. The Bishop's hands, withdrawn,* were clasped now upon a
- golden crucifix&mdash;it was like his own crucifix, only it was larger,
- much larger than his own. But the Bishop's white face was still close to
- his; and the blue eyes seemed to have grown darker, and were upon him in a
- fixed, tense way, as though to read his soul.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then?&rdquo;&mdash;he saw the Bishop's lips move, he did not hear the
- Bishop speak.
- </p>
- <p>
- At times the horse moved restively; at times there came the chirping of
- insects from the woods; at times a breeze stirred and whispered through
- the leaves. Raymond, staring at the yellow flicker of the lantern, set now
- upon the floor of the buckboard at their feet, spoke on, in his voice that
- same unnatural calm. It seemed almost as though he himself were listening
- to some stranger speak. It was the story of that night he told, the story
- of the days and nights that followed, the story of old Mother Blondin, the
- story of the cross, the story of the afternoon in the condemned cell, the
- story of his ride for liberty of an hour ago, the story of his sacrilege
- and his redemption&mdash;the story of all, without reservation, save the
- story of Valérie's love, for that was between Valérie and her God.
- </p>
- <p>
- And when he had done, a silence fell between them and endured for a great
- while.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Raymond looked up at last to face the condemnation he thought to
- see in the other's eyes&mdash;and found instead that the silver hair was
- bare of covering, and that the tears were flowing unchecked down the
- other's cheeks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;God's ways are beyond all understanding&rdquo;&mdash;the Bishop seemed to be
- speaking to himself. He brushed the tears now from his cheeks, as he
- looked at Raymond. &ldquo;It is true there is not any proof, and without proof
- that it was in self-defence, then&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is the end,&rdquo; said Raymond simply&mdash;and, standing up, took the
- sacristan's old coat from under his <i>soutane</i>. &ldquo;We will drive to the
- village, Monsignor; and then, if you will, to the jail in Tournayville.&rdquo;
- Slowly he unbuttoned his <i>soutane</i> from top to bottom, and took it
- off, and laid it over the back of the seat; and, standing there erect, his
- face white, his eyes half closed, like a soldier in unconditional
- surrender, he unclasped the crucifix from around his neck, and held it out
- to the Bishop&mdash;and bowed his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- He felt the Bishop's hands close over his, and over the crucifix, and
- gently press it back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cling to it, my son&rdquo;&mdash;the Bishop's voice was broken. &ldquo;It is yours,
- for you have found it&mdash;and, with it, pardon, and the faith that is
- more precious than life, than the life you are offering to surrender now.
- It seems as though it were God's mysterious way, the hand of God&mdash;the
- hand of God that would not let you lose your soul. And now, my son, kneel
- down, for I would pray for a brave man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A quiet pressure upon his shoulders brought Raymond to his knees. His
- eyes, were wet; he covered his face with his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father, have mercy upon us&rdquo;&mdash;the Bishop's voice was tremulous and
- low. &ldquo;Lord, have mercy upon us. Look down in pity upon this man whom Thou
- hast brought unto Thyself, and who now in expiation of his past offences
- offers his life that another may not die. Father, grant us Thy divine
- mercy. Father, show us the way, if there be a way, and if it be Thy will,
- that he may not drink of this final cup; and if that may not be, then in
- Thy love continue unto him the strength Thou gavest him to bring him thus
- far upon his road.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And silence fell again between them. And there was a strange gladness in
- Raymond's heart that this man, where he had thought no man would, should
- have believed. It altered no fact, the cold and brutal evidence, clear cut
- before a jury would not be a scene such as this, for the evidence in the
- light of logic and before the law would say he <i>lied</i>; it held out no
- hope, he knew that well&mdash;but it brought peace again. And so he rose
- from his knees, and feeling out blindly for the old sacristan's coat, put
- it on, and spoke to the horse, and the buckboard moved forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- And a little way along, just around the turn of the road, they came out of
- the woods in front of old Mother Blondin's cottage. And standing by the
- roadside in the darkness was a figure. And a voice called out:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is that you, Father Aubert? I went to the <i>presbytère</i> for you, and
- mother said you had gone to meet Monsignor. I have been waiting here to
- catch you on the way back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Valérie.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIV&mdash;THE OLD WOMAN ON THE HILL
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>HE came forward
- toward the buckboard, and into the lantern light&mdash;and stopped
- suddenly, looking from Raymond to the Bishop in a bewildered and startled
- way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why&mdash;why, Father Aubert,&rdquo; she stammered, &ldquo;I&mdash;I hardly knew you
- in that coat. I&mdash;Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;she bent her knee reverently&mdash;&ldquo;I&rdquo;&mdash;her
- eyes were searching their faces&mdash;&ldquo;I&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's eyes fixed ahead of him, and he was silent. Valérie! Ay, it was
- the end! He had thought to see her before they should take him to
- Tournayville&mdash;but he had thought to see her alone. And even then he
- had not known what he should say to her&mdash;what words to speak&mdash;or
- whether she should know from him his love. He was conscious that the
- Bishop was fumbling with his crucifix, as though loath to take the
- initiative upon himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Valérie who spoke&mdash;hurriedly, as though in a nervous effort to
- bridge the awkward silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mother Blondin became conscious a little while ago. She asked for Father
- Aubert, and&mdash;and begged for the Sacrament. I ran down to the <i>presbytère</i>,
- and when mother told me that Monsignor was coming I&mdash;-I brought back
- the bag that my uncle, Father Allard, takes with him to&mdash;to the
- dying. Oh, Monsignor, I thought that perhaps&mdash;perhaps&mdash;she is an
- <i>excommuniée</i>, Monsignor&mdash;but she is a penitent. And when I got
- back she was unconscious again, and then I came down here to wait by the
- side of the road so that I would not miss you, for Madame Bouchard is
- there, and she was to call me if&mdash;if there was any change. And so&mdash;and
- so&mdash;you will go to her, Monsignor, will you not&mdash;and Father
- Aubert&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Her lips quivered suddenly, for
- Raymond's white face was lifted now, and his eyes met hers. &ldquo;Oh, what is
- the matter?&rdquo; she cried out in fear. &ldquo;Why do you look like that, Father
- Aubert&mdash;and why do you wear that coat, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My daughter&rdquo;&mdash;the Bishop's grave voice interrupted her. He rose from
- his seat, and, moving past Raymond, stepped to the ground. &ldquo;My daughter,
- Father Aubert is&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No!&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond, too, had stepped to the ground. &ldquo;No, Monsignor&rdquo;&mdash;his
- voice caught, then was steadied as he fought fiercely for self-control&mdash;&ldquo;I
- will tell her, Monsignor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- How clearly her face was defined in the lantern light, how pure it was,
- and, in its purity, how far removed from the story that he had to tell!
- And how beautiful it was, even in its startled fear and wonder&mdash;the
- sweet lips parted; the dark eyes wide, disturbed and troubled, as they
- held upon his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father Aubert!&rdquo;&mdash;it was a quick cry, but low, and one of
- apprehension.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mademoiselle Valérie&rdquo;&mdash;the words came slowly; it seemed as though
- his soul faltered now, and had not strength to say this thing&mdash;&ldquo;I am
- not Father Aubert.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not move. She repeated the words with long pauses between, as
- though she groped dazedly in her mind for their meaning and significance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You&mdash;are&mdash;not&mdash;Father&mdash;Aubert?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Bishop, hands clasped behind his back, his head bowed, had withdrawn a
- few paces out of the lantern light toward the rear of the buckboard.
- Raymond's hands closed and gripped upon the wheel-tire against which he
- stood&mdash;closed tighter and tighter until it seemed the tendons in his
- hand must snap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father Aubert is the man you know as Henri Mentone&rdquo;&mdash;his eyes were
- upon her hungrily, pleading, searching for some sign, a smile, a gesture
- of sympathy that would help him to go on&mdash;and her hands were clasped
- suddenly, wildly to her bosom. &ldquo;When you came upon me in the road that
- night I had just changed clothes with him. I&mdash;I was trying to
- escape.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She closed her eyes. Her face became a deathly white, and she swayed a
- little on her feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You&mdash;you are not a&mdash;a priest?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was the only way I saw to save my life. He had been struck by the
- falling limb of a tree. I thought that he was dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To save your life?&rdquo;&mdash;she spoke with a curious, listless apathy, her
- eyes still closed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was I,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;not Father Aubert, who fought with Théophile Blondin
- that night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her eyes were open wide now&mdash;wide upon him with terror.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was you&mdash;<i>you</i> who killed Théophile Blondin?&rdquo;&mdash;her
- voice was dead, scarce above a whisper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I caught him in the act of robbing his mother&mdash;I had gone to the
- house for help after finding Father Aubert&rdquo;&mdash;Raymond's voice grew
- passionate now in its pleading. He must make her believe! He must make her
- believe! It was the one thing left to him&mdash;and to her. &ldquo;It was in
- self-defence. He sprang at me, and we fought. And afterwards, when he
- snatched up the revolver from the <i>armoire</i>, it went off in his own
- hand as I struggled to take it from him. But I could not prove it. Every
- circumstance pointed to premeditated theft on my part&mdash;and murder.
- And&mdash;and my life before that was&mdash;was a ruined life that would
- but&mdash;but make conviction certain if I were found there. My only
- chance lay in getting away. But there was no time&mdash;nowhere to go. And
- so&mdash;and so I ran back to where Father Aubert lay, and put on his
- clothes, meaning to gain a few hours' time that way, and in the noise of
- the storm I did not hear you coming until it was too late to run.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- How mercilessly hard her hands seemed to press at her bosom!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I&mdash;I do not understand&rdquo;&mdash;it was as though she spoke to herself.
- &ldquo;There was another&mdash;a man who, with Jacques Bourget, tried to have
- Henri&mdash;Henri Mentone escape.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was I,&rdquo; said Raymond. &ldquo;I took Narcisse Pélude's old clothes from the
- shed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She cried out a little&mdash;like a sharp and sudden moan, it was, as from
- unendurable pain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then&mdash;and then you lived here as&mdash;as a priest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And&mdash;and to-night?&rdquo;&mdash;her eyes were closed again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To-night,&rdquo; said Raymond, and turned away his head, &ldquo;to-night I am going
- to&mdash;to Tournayville.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To your death&rdquo;&mdash;it was again as though she were speaking to herself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is no other way,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I thought there was another way. I
- meant at first to escape to-night when I learned that Monsignor was
- coming. I took this coat, Narcisse Pélude's old clothes from the shed
- again, the clothes I wore the night I went to Jacques Bourget, and I meant
- to escape on the train. But&rdquo;&mdash;he hesitated now, groping desperately
- for words&mdash;he could not tell her of that ride along the road; he had
- no right to tell her of his love, he saw that now, he had no right to tell
- her that, to make it the harder, the more cruel for her; he had no right
- to trespass on his knowledge of her love for him, to let her glean from
- any words of his a hint of that; he had the right only, for her sake and
- for his own, that, in her eyes and in her soul, the stain of murder and of
- theft should not rest upon him&mdash;&ldquo;but&rdquo;&mdash;the words seemed weak,
- inadequate&mdash;&ldquo;but I could not go. Instead, I gave myself up to
- Monsignor. Mademoiselle&rdquo;&mdash;how bitterly full of irony was that word&mdash;mademoiselle&mdash;mademoiselle
- to Valérie&mdash;like a gulf between them&mdash;mademoiselle to Valérie,
- who was dearest in life to him&mdash;&ldquo;Mademoiselle Valérie&rdquo;&mdash;he was
- pleading again, his soul in his voice&mdash;&ldquo;it was in self-defence that
- night. It was that way that Théophile Blondin was killed. I could not
- prove it then, and&mdash;and the evidence is even blacker against me now
- through the things that I have done in an effort to escape. But&mdash;but
- it was in that way that Théophile Blondin was killed. The law will not
- believe. I know that. But you&mdash;you&mdash;&rdquo; his voice broke. The love,
- the yearning for her was rushing him onward beyond self-control, and near,
- very near to his lips, struggling and battling for expression, were the
- words he was praying God now for the strength not to speak.
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not answer him. She only moved away. Her white face was set
- rigidly, and the dark eyes that had been full upon him were but a blur
- now, for she was moving slowly backward, away from him, toward where the
- Bishop stood. And she passed out of the lantern light and into the
- shadows. And in the shadows her hand was raised from her bosom and was
- held before her face&mdash;and it seemed as though she held it, as she had
- held it in the dream of that Walled Place; that she held it, as she had
- held it to shut out the sight of his face from her, as she had closed upon
- him that door with its studded spikes. And like a stricken man he stood
- there, gripping at the buckboard's wheel. She did not believe him. Valérie
- did not believe him! There was agony to come, black depths of torment
- yawning just before him when the numbness from the blow had passed&mdash;but
- now he was stunned. She did not believe him! That man there, whom he had
- thought would turn with bitter words upon him, had believed him&mdash;but
- Valérie&mdash;Valérie&mdash;Valérie did not believe him! Ay, it was the
- end! The agony and the torment were coming now. It was the dream come
- true. The studded gate clanged shut, and the horror, without hope, without
- smile, without human word, of that Walled Place with its slimy walls was
- his, and, over the shrieking of those winged and hideous things, that
- swaying carrion seemed to scream the louder: &ldquo;<i>Dies ilia, dies iro</i>&mdash;that
- day, a day of wrath, of wasting, and of misery, a great day, and exceeding
- bitter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not move. Through that blur and through the shadows he watched her,
- watched her as she reached the Bishop, and sank down upon the ground, and
- clasped her hands around the Bishop's knees. And then he heard her speak&mdash;and
- it seemed to Raymond that, as though stilled by a mighty uplift that swept
- upon him, the beating of his heart had ceased.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsignor!&rdquo; she cried out piteously. &ldquo;Monsignor! Monsignor! It is true
- that they will not believe him! I was at the trial, Monsignor, I know the
- evidence, and I know that they will not believe him. He is going to&mdash;to
- his&mdash;death&mdash;to save that man. Oh, Monsignor&mdash;Monsignor, is
- there no other way?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Slowly, mechanically, as slowly as she had retreated from him, Raymond
- moved toward the kneeling figure. The Bishop was speaking now&mdash;he had
- laid his hands upon her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My daughter,&rdquo; he said gently, &ldquo;what other way would you have him take? It
- is a brave man's way, and for that I honour him; but it is more, it is the
- way of one who has come out of the darkness into the light, and for that
- my heart is full of thankfulness to God. It is the way of atonement, not
- for any wrong he has done the church, for he could do the church no wrong,
- for the church is pure and holy and beyond the reach of any human hand or
- act to soil, for it is God's church&mdash;but atonement to God for those
- sins of sacrilege and unbelief that lay between himself and God alone. And
- so, my daughter, if in those sins he has been brought to see and
- understand, and in his heart has sought and found God's pardon and
- forgiveness, he could do no other thing than that which he has done
- to-night.&rdquo; The Bishop's voice had faltered; he brushed his hand across his
- cheek as though to wipe away a tear. &ldquo;It is God's way, my daughter. There
- could be no other way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She rose to her feet, her face covered by her hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No other way&rdquo;&mdash;the words were lifeless on her lips, save that they
- were broken with a sob. And then, suddenly, she drew herself erect, and
- there was a pride and a glory in the poise of her head, and her voice rang
- clear and there was no tremor in it, and in it was only the pride and only
- the glory that was in the head held high, and in the fair, white, uplifted
- face. &ldquo;Listen, Monsignor! I thought he was a priest, and I promised God
- that he should never know&mdash;but to-night all that is changed.
- Monsignor, does it matter that he has no thought of me! He is going to his
- death, Monsignor, and he shall not face this alone because I was ashamed
- and dared not speak. I love him, Monsignor&mdash;I love him, and I believe
- him, and&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Valérie!</i>&rdquo; Raymond's hands reached out to her. Weak he was. It
- seemed as though in his knees there was no strength. &ldquo;Valérie!&rdquo; he cried,
- and stumbled toward her.
- </p>
- <p>
- And she put out her hand and held him back for an instant as her eyes
- searched his face&mdash;and then into hers there came a wondrous light.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I did not know,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;I did not know you cared.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His arms were still outstretched, and now she came into them, and for a
- moment she lifted her face to his, and, for a moment that was glad beyond
- all gladness, he drank with his lips from her lips and from the trembling
- eyelids. And then the tears came, and she was sobbing on his breast, and
- with her arms tight about his neck she clung to him&mdash;and closer still
- his own arms enwrapped her&mdash;and he forgot&mdash;and he forgot&mdash;<i>that
- it was only for a moment</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- And so he held her there, his face buried in the dark, soft masses of her
- hair&mdash;and he forgot. And then out of this forgetfulness, this
- transport of blinding joy, there came a voice, low and shaken with emotion&mdash;the
- Bishop's voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is some one calling from the house.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond lifted up his head. A woman's figure was framed in the now open
- and lighted doorway of the cottage. It was Madame Bouchard; and now he
- heard Madame Bouchard as she called again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Valerie! Father Aubert! Come! Come quickly! Madame Blondin is conscious
- again, but she is very weak.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew his breath in sharply as one in bitter pain, and then gently he
- took Valerie's arms from about him, and his shoulders squared. He had had
- his moment. This was reality now. He heard Valérie cry out, and saw her
- run toward the cottage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Monsignor,&rdquo; he said hoarsely, and, moving back, lifted the <i>soutane</i>
- from the buckboard's seat, &ldquo;Monsignor, she must not know&mdash;and she has
- asked for me. It is for her sake, Monsignor&mdash;that she be not
- disillusioned in her death, and lose the faith that she has found again.
- Monsignor, it is for the last time, not to perform any office, Monsignor,
- for you will do that, but that she may not die in the belief that God,
- through me, has only mocked her at the end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand, my son,&rdquo; the Bishop answered simply. &ldquo;Put it on&mdash;and
- come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And so Raymond put on the <i>soutane</i> again, and they hurried toward
- the cottage. And at the doorway Madame Bouchard courtesied in reverence to
- the Bishop, and Raymond heard her say something about the horse, and that
- she would remain within call; and then they passed on into Mother
- Blondin's room.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a bare room, poor and meagre in its furnishings&mdash;a single rag
- mat upon the floor; a single chair, and upon the chair the black bag that
- Valerie had brought from the <i>presbytère</i>; and beside the rough
- wooden bed, made perhaps by the Grandfather Bouchard in the old carpenter
- shop by the river bank, was a small table, and upon the table a lamp, and
- some cups with pewter spoons laid across their tops.
- </p>
- <p>
- Extraneous things, these details seemed to Raymond to have intruded
- themselves upon him as by some strange and vivid assertiveness of their
- own, for he was not conscious that he had looked about him&mdash;that he
- had looked anywhere but at that white and pitifully sunken face that was
- straining upward from the pillows, and at Valérie who knelt at the bedside
- and supported old Mother Blondin in her arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quick!&rdquo; Valerie cried anxiously. &ldquo;Give her a teaspoonful from that first
- cup on the table. She has been trying to say something, and&mdash;and I do
- not understand. Oh, be quick! It is something about that man in the
- prison.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old woman's head bobbed jerkily, as though she fought for strength to
- hold it up; the eyes, half closed, were dulled; and she struggled,
- gasping, for her breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes&mdash;the prison&mdash;the man&rdquo;&mdash;the words were almost
- inarticulate. Raymond, beside her now, was holding the spoonful of
- stimulant to her lips. She swallowed it eagerly. &ldquo;I&mdash;I lied&mdash;I
- lied&mdash;at the trial. Hold me&mdash;tighter. Do not let me&mdash;go.
- Not yet&mdash;not&mdash;not until&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Her body seemed to
- straighten, then wrench backward, and her eyes closed, and her voice died
- away.
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond felt the Bishop's hand close tensely on his shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is this she says, my son?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond shook his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not know,&rdquo; he said huskily.
- </p>
- <p>
- The eyes opened again, clearer now&mdash;and recognition came into them as
- they met Raymond's. And there came a smile, and she reached out her hand
- to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You, father&mdash;I&mdash;I was afraid you would not come in time. I&mdash;I
- am stronger now. Give Valerie the cup, and kneel, father&mdash;don't you
- remember&mdash;like that night in the church&mdash;and hold my hand&mdash;and&mdash;and
- do not let it go because&mdash;because then I&mdash;I should be afraid
- that God&mdash;that God would not forgive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He took her hand between both his own, and knelt beside the bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will not let it go,&rdquo; he said&mdash;and tried to keep the choking from
- his throat. &ldquo;What is it that you want to say&mdash;Mother Blondin?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her fingers twined over his, and clung tighter and tighter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That man, father&mdash;he&mdash;he must not hang. I&mdash;I cannot go to
- God with that on my soul. I lied at the trial&mdash;I lied. I hated God
- then. I wanted only revenge because my son was dead. I said I recognised
- him again, but&mdash;but that is not true, for the light was low, and&mdash;and
- I do not see well&mdash;but&mdash;but that&mdash;that does not matter,
- father&mdash;it is not that&mdash;for it must have been that man. But it
- was not that man who&mdash;who tried to rob me&mdash;it&mdash;it was my
- own son. That man is innocent&mdash;innocent&mdash;I tell you&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- She raised herself wildly up in bed. &ldquo;Why do you look at me like that,
- Father Aubert&mdash;with that white face&mdash;is it too late&mdash;too
- late&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;will God not forgive?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is not too late. Go on, Mother Blondin&rdquo;&mdash;it was his lips that
- formed the words; it was not his voice, it could not be&mdash;that quiet
- voice speaking so softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her face grew calmer. The fear was gone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is not too late&mdash;it is not too late&mdash;and&mdash;and God will
- forgive,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Listen then, father&mdash;listen, and pray for
- me. I&mdash;I was sure Théophile had been robbing me. I watched behind the
- door that night. I saw him go to take the money. And&mdash;and then that
- man came in, and Théophile rushed at him with a stick of wood. The man had&mdash;had
- done nothing. It was in self-defence he fought. And then I&mdash;I helped
- Théophile. It was Théophile who took the revolver to kill him, and&mdash;and&mdash;it
- went off in Théophile's hand, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; she sighed heavily, and
- sank back on the pillow.
- </p>
- <p>
- The room seemed to sway before Raymond&mdash;and
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie's face, across the bed, seemed to move slowly before him with a
- pendulum-like movement, and her face was very white, and in it was wonder,
- and a great dawning hope, and awe. And he put his head down upon the
- coverlet, but his hands still held old Mother Blondin's hand between them.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then she spoke again, with greater difficulty now; and somehow her
- other hand had found Raymond's head, and her fingers played tremblingly
- through his hair.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You will tell them, father&mdash;and&mdash;and this other father here
- will tell them&mdash;and&mdash;and Valérie will bear witness&mdash;and&mdash;and
- the man will live. And you will tell him, father, how God came again and
- made me tell the truth because you were good, and&mdash;and because you
- made be believe again in&mdash;in you&mdash;and God&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A broken cry came from Raymond. The scalding tears were in his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hush, my son!&rdquo;&mdash;it was the Bishop's grave and gentle voice. &ldquo;God has
- done a wondrous thing tonight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was silence in the little room.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then suddenly Raymond lifted his head&mdash;and the room was no more,
- and in its place was the moonlit church of that other night, and he saw
- again the old withered face transfigured into one of tender sweetness and
- ineffable love.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pierre, monsieur?&rdquo;&mdash;her mind was wandering now&mdash;they were the
- words she had spoken as she had sat beside him in the pew. &ldquo;Ah, he was a
- good boy, Pierre&mdash;have you not heard of Pierre Letellier? And there
- was little Jean&mdash;little Jean&mdash;he went away, monsieur, and I&mdash;I
- do not know where&mdash;where he is&mdash;I do not know&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond's voice was breaking, as he leaned forward toward her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He is with God, Mother Blondin. Jean&mdash;Jean has sent you a message.
- His last thoughts were of you&mdash;his mother.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old eyes flamed with a dying fire.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jean&mdash;my son! My little Jean&mdash;his&mdash;his mother.&rdquo; A smile
- lighted up her face, and hovered on her lips; and her hand, clinging to
- Raymond's, tightened.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; And then her fingers slipped from their
- hold, and fell away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Bishop's arm was around Raymond's shoulders.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go now, my son&mdash;and you, my daughter,&rdquo; he said gently. &ldquo;It is very
- near the end, and the time is short.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Raymond rose blindly from his knees. Mother Blondin was very still, and a
- pallor, gray and premonitory, had crept into her face. Her eyes were
- closed. He raised the thin hand, and touched it with his lips&mdash;and
- turned away.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Valérie passed out of the room with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- And by the open window of the room beyond, Valérie knelt down, and he
- knelt down beside her.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was quiet without&mdash;and there was no sound, save now the murmur of
- the Bishop's voice from the inner room. He was to live&mdash;and not to
- die. To go free! To give himself up&mdash;but to be set free&mdash;and
- there were to be the years with Valérie. He could not understand it yet in
- all its fulness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Valérie was crying softly. With a great tenderness he put his arm about
- her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was the <i>Benedictus</i>&mdash;'into the way of peace'&mdash;that you
- said for her that night,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Say it now again, my lover&mdash;for
- her&mdash;and for us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew her closer to him, and, with her wet cheek against his own, they
- repeated the words together.
- </p>
- <p>
- And after a little time she raised her hands, and held his face between
- them, and looked into his face for a long while, and there was a great
- gladness, and a great love, and a great trust in the tear-wet eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do not know your name,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is Raymond,&rdquo; he answered.
- </p>
- <h3>
- THE END
- </h3>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Sin That Was His, by Frank L. Packard
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIN THAT WAS HIS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 51983-h.htm or 51983-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/1/9/8/51983/
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &ldquo;Project
-Gutenberg&rdquo;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&ldquo;the
-Foundation&rdquo; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; appears, or with which the
-phrase &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &ldquo;Project
-Gutenberg&rdquo; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than &ldquo;Plain Vanilla ASCII&rdquo; or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &ldquo;Plain
-Vanilla ASCII&rdquo; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, &ldquo;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation.&rdquo;
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain &ldquo;Defects,&rdquo; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &ldquo;Right
-of Replacement or Refund&rdquo; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
- </body>
-</html>