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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/6178.txt b/6178.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7c42b4c --- /dev/null +++ b/6178.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2101 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook Pierre And His People, V5, by G. Parker +#6 in our series by Gilbert Parker + Contents: + Antoine And Angelique + The Cipher + A Tragedy Of Nobodies + A Sanctuary Of The Plains + +Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the +copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing +this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. + +This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project +Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the +header without written permission. + +Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the +eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is +important information about your specific rights and restrictions in +how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a +donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**EBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers***** + + +Title: Pierre And His People, [Tales of the Far North], Volume 5. + +Author: Gilbert Parker + +Release Date: July, 2004 [EBook #6178] +[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] +[This file was first posted on August 27, 2002] + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + + + + + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PIERRE AND HIS PEOPLE, V5, PARKER *** + + + +This eBook was produced by David Widger <widger@cecomet.net> + + + +[NOTE: There is a short list of bookmarks, or pointers, at the end of the +file for those who may wish to sample the author's ideas before making an +entire meal of them. D.W.] + + + + + +PIERRE AND HIS PEOPLE + +TALES OF THE FAR NORTH + +By Gilbert Parker + +Volume 5. + + +ANTOINE AND ANGELIQUE +THE CIPHER +A TRAGEDY OF NOBODIES +A SANCTUARY OF THE PLAINS + + + + +ANTOINE AND ANGELIQUE + +"The birds are going south, Antoine--see--and it is so early!" + +"Yes, Angelique, the winter will be long." + +There was a pause, and then: "Antoine, I heard a child cry in the night, +and I could not sleep." + +"It was a devil-bird, my wife; it flies slowly, and the summer is dead." + +"Antoine, there was a rushing of wings by my bed before the morn was +breaking." + +"The wild-geese know their way in the night, Angelique; but they flew by +the house and not near thy bed." + +"The two black squirrels have gone from the hickory tree." + +"They have hidden away with the bears in the earth; for the frost comes, +and it is the time of sleep." + +"A cold hand was knocking at my heart when I said my aves last night, my +Antoine." + +"The heart of a woman feels many strange things: I cannot answer, my +wife." + +"Let us go also southward, Antoine, before the great winds and the wild +frost come." + +"I love thee, Angelique, but I cannot go." + +"Is not love greater than all?" + +"To keep a pledge is greater." + +"Yet if evil come?" + +"There is the mine." + +"None travels hither; who should find it?" + +He said to me, my wife: 'Antoine, will you stay and watch the mine until +I come with the birds northward, again?' and I said: 'I will stay, and +Angelique will stay; I will watch the mine.'" + +"This is for his riches, but for our peril, Antoine." + +"Who can say whither a woman's fancy goes? It is full of guessing. It +is clouds and darkness to-day, and sunshine--so much--to-morrow. I +cannot answer." + +"I have a fear; if my husband loved me--" + +"There is the mine," he interrupted firmly. + +"When my heart aches so--" + +"Angelique, there is the mine." + +"Ah, my Antoine!" + +And so these two stayed on the island of St. Jean, in Lake Superior, +through the purple haze of autumn, into the white brilliancy of winter, +guarding the Rose Tree Mine, which Falding the Englishman and his +companions had prospected and declared to be their Ophir. + +But St. Jean was far from the ways of settlement, and there was little +food and only one hut, and many things must be done for the Rose Tree +Mine in the places where men sell their souls for money; and Antoine and +Angelique, French peasants from the parish of Ste. Irene in Quebec, were +left to guard the place of treasure, until, to the sound of the laughing +spring, there should come many men and much machinery, and the sinking of +shafts in the earth, and the making, of riches. + +But when Antoine and Angelique were left alone in the waste, and God +began to draw the pale coverlet of frost slowly across land and water, +and to surround St. Jean with a stubborn moat of ice, the heart of the +woman felt some coming danger, and at last broke forth in words of timid +warning. When she once had spoken she said no more, but stayed and +builded the heaps of earth about the house, and filled every crevice +against the inhospitable Spirit of Winds, and drew her world closer and +closer within those two rooms where they should live through many months. + +The winter was harsh, but the hearts of the two were strong. They loved; +and Love is the parent of endurance, the begetter of courage. And every +day, because it seemed his duty, Antoine inspected the Rose Tree Mine; +and every day also, because it seemed her duty, Angelique said many aves. +And one prayer was much with her--for spring to come early that the child +should not suffer: the child which the good God was to give to her and +Antoine. + +In the first hours of each evening Antoine smoked, and Angelique sang the +old songs which their ancestors learned in Normandy. One night Antoine's +face was lighted with a fine fire as he talked of happy days in the +parish of Ste. Irene; and with that romantic fervour of his race which +the stern winters of Canada could not kill, he sang, 'A la Claire +Fontaine,' the well-beloved song-child of the 'voyageurs'' hearts. + +And the wife smiled far away into the dancing flames--far away, because +the fire retreated, retreated to the little church where they two were +wed; and she did as most good women do--though exactly why, man the +insufficient cannot declare--she wept a little through her smiles. But +when the last verse came, both smiles and tears ceased. Antoine sang it +with a fond monotony: + + "Would that each rose were growing + Upon the rose-tree gay, + And that the fatal rose-tree + Deep in the ocean lay. + 'I ya longtemps que je t'aime + Jamais je ne t'oublierai." + +Angelique's heart grew suddenly heavy. From the rose-tree of the song +her mind fled and shivered before the leafless rose-tree by the mine; and +her old dread came back. + +Of course this was foolish of Angelique; of course the wise and great +throw contumely on all such superstition; and knowing women will smile +at each other meaningly, and with pity for a dull man-writer, and will +whisper, "Of course, the child." But many things, your majesties, are +hidden from your wisdom and your greatness, and are given to the simple +--to babes, and the mothers of babes. + +It was upon this very night that Falding the Englishman sat with other +men in a London tavern, talking joyously. "There's been the luck of +Heaven," he said, "in the whole exploit. We'd been prospecting for +months. As a sort of try in a back-water we rowed over one night to an +island and pitched tents. Not a dozen yards from where we camped was a +rose-tree-think of it, Belgard, a rose-tree on a rag-tag island of Lake +Superior! 'There's luck in odd numbers, says Rory O'More.' 'There's +luck here,' said I; and at it we went just beside the rose-tree. What's +the result? Look at that prospectus: a company with a capital of two +hundred thousand; the whole island in our hands in a week; and Antoine +squatting on it now like Bonaparte on Elbe." + +"And what does Antoine get out of this?" said Belgard. + +"Forty dollars a month and his keep." + +"Why not write him off twenty shares to propitiate the gods--gifts unto +the needy, eh!--a thousand-fold--what?" + +"Yes; it might be done, Belgard, if--" + +But someone just then proposed the toast, "The Rose Tree Mine!" and the +souls of these men waxed proud and merry, for they had seen the +investor's palm filled with gold, the maker of conquest. While Antoine +was singing with his wife, they were holding revel within the sound of +Bow Bells. And far into the night, through silent Cheapside, a rolling +voice swelled through much laughter thus: + + "Gai Ion la, gai le rosier, + Du joli mois de Mai." + +The next day there were heavy heads in London; but the next day, also, +a man lay ill in the hut on the island of St. Jean. + +Antoine had sung his last song. He had waked in the night with a start +of pain, and by the time the sun was halting at noon above the Rose Tree +Mine, he had begun a journey, the record of which no man has ever truly +told, neither its beginning nor its end; because that which is of the +spirit refuseth to be interpreted by the flesh. Some signs there be, but +they are brief and shadowy; the awe of It is hidden in the mind of him +that goeth out lonely unto God. + +When the call goes forth, not wife nor child nor any other can hold the +wayfarer back, though he may loiter for an instant on the brink. The +poor medicaments which Angelique brings avail not; these soothing hands +and healing tones, they pass through clouds of the middle place between +heaven and earth to Antoine. It is only when the second midnight comes +that, with conscious, but pensive and far-off, eyes, he says to her: +"Angelique, my wife." + +For reply her lips pressed his cheek, and her fingers hungered for his +neck. Then: "Is there pain now Antoine?" + +"There is no pain, Angelique." + +He closed his eyes slowly; her lips framed an ave. "The mine," he said, +"the mine--until the spring." + +"Yes, Antoine, until the spring." + +"Have you candles--many candles, Angelique?" + +"There are many, my husband." + +"The ground is as iron; one cannot dig, and the water under the ice is +cruel--is it not so, Angelique?" + +"No axe could break the ground, and the water is cruel," she said. + +"You will see my face until the winter is gone, my wife." + +She bowed her head, but smoothed his hand meanwhile, and her throat was +quivering. + +He partly slept--his body slept, though his mind was feeling its way to +wonderful things. But near the morning his eyes opened wide, and he +said: "Someone calls out of the dark, Angelique." + +And she, with her hand on her heart, replied: "It is the cry of a dog, +Antoine." + +"But there are footsteps at the door, my wife." + +"Nay, Antoine; it is the snow beating upon the window." + +"There is the sound of wings close by--dost thou not hear them, +Angelique?" + +"Wings--wings," she falteringly said: "it is the hot blast through the +chimney; the night is cold, Antoine." + +"The night is very cold," he said; and he trembled. . . "I hear, O my +wife, I hear the voice of a little child . . . the voice is like thine, +Angelique." + +And she, not knowing what to reply, said softly: + +"There is hope in the voice of a child;" and the mother stirred within +her; and in the moment he knew also that the Spirits would give her the +child in safety, that she should not be alone in the long winter. + +The sounds of the harsh night had ceased--the snapping of the leafless +branches, the cracking of the earth, and the heaving of the rocks: the +Spirits of the Frost had finished their work; and just as the grey +forehead of dawn appeared beyond the cold hills, Antoine cried out +gently: "Angelique . . . Ah, mon Capitaine . . . Jesu" . . . +and then, no more. + +Night after night Angelique lighted candles in the place where Antoine +smiled on in his frozen silence; and masses were said for his soul--the +masses Love murmurs for its dead. The earth could not receive him; its +bosom was adamant; but no decay could touch him; and she dwelt alone with +this, that was her husband, until one beautiful, bitter day, when, with +no eye save God's to see her, and no human comfort by her, she gave birth +to a man-child. And yet that night she lighted the candles at the dead +man's head and feet, dragging herself thither in the cold; and in her +heart she said that the smile on Antoine's face was deeper than it had +been before. + +In the early spring, when the earth painfully breathed away the frost +that choked it, with her child for mourner, and herself for sexton and +priest, she buried Antoine with maimed rites: but hers were the prayers +of the poor, and of the pure in heart; and she did not fret because, +in the hour that her comrade was put away into the dark, the world was +laughing at the thought of coming summer. + +Before another sunrise, the owners of the island of St. Jean claimed what +was theirs; and because that which had happened worked upon their hearts, +they called the child St. Jean, and from that time forth they made him to +enjoy the goodly fruits of the Rose Tree Mine. + + + + + +THE CIPHER + +Hilton was staying his horse by a spring at Guidon Hill when he first +saw her. She was gathering may-apples; her apron was full of them. He +noticed that she did not stir until he rode almost upon her. Then she +started, first without looking round, as does an animal, dropping her +head slightly to one side, though not exactly appearing to listen. +Suddenly she wheeled on him, and her big eyes captured him. The look +bewildered him. She was a creature of singular fascination. Her face +was expressive. Her eyes had wonderful light. She looked happy, yet +grave withal; it was the gravity of an uncommon earnestness. She gazed +through everything, and beyond. She was young--eighteen or so. + +Hilton raised his hat, and courteously called a good-morning at her. She +did not reply by any word, but nodded quaintly, and blinked seriously and +yet blithely on him. He was preparing to dismount. As he did so he +paused, astonished that she did not speak at all. Her face did not have +a familiar language; its vocabulary was its own. He slid from his horse, +and, throwing his arm over its neck as it stooped to the spring, looked +at her more intently, but respectfully too. She did not yet stir, but +there came into her face a slight inflection of confusion or perplexity. +Again he raised his hat to her, and, smiling, wished her a good-morning. +Even as he did so a thought sprung in him. Understanding gave place to +wonder; he interpreted the unusual look in her face. + +Instantly he made a sign to her. To that her face responded with a +wonderful speech--of relief and recognition. The corners of her apron +dropped from her fingers, and the yellow may-apples fell about her feet. +She did not notice this. She answered his sign with another, rapid, +graceful, and meaning. He left his horse and advanced to her, holding +out his hand simply--for he was a simple and honest man. Her response to +this was spontaneous. The warmth of her fingers invaded him. Her eyes +were full of questioning. He gave a hearty sign of admiration. She +flushed with pleasure, but made a naive, protesting gesture. + +She was deaf and dumb. + +Hilton had once a sister who was a mute. He knew that amazing primal +gesture-language of the silent race, whom God has sent like one-winged +birds into the world. He had watched in his sister just such looks of +absolute nature as flashed from this girl. They were comrades on the +instant; he reverential, gentle, protective; she sanguine, candid, +beautifully aboriginal in the freshness of her cipher-thoughts. She saw +the world naked, with a naked eye. She was utterly natural. She was the +maker of exquisite, vital gesture-speech. + +She glided out from among the may-apples and the long, silken grass, to +charm his horse with her hand. As she started to do so, he hastened to +prevent her, but, utterly surprised, he saw the horse whinny to her +cheek, and arch his neck under her white palm--it was very white. Then +the animal's chin sought her shoulder and stayed placid. He had never +done so to anyone before save Hilton. Once, indeed, he had kicked a +stableman to death. He lifted his head and caught with playful shaking +lips at her ear. Hilton smiled; and so, as we said, their comradeship +began. + +He was a new officer of the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort Guidon. She was +the daughter of a ranchman. She had been educated by Father Corraine, +the Jesuit missionary, Protestant though she was. He had learned the +sign-language while assistant-priest in a Parisian chapel for mutes. He +taught her this gesture-tongue, which she, taking, rendered divine; and, +with this, she learned to read and write. + +Her name was Ida. + +Ida was faultless. Hilton was not; but no man is. To her, however, he +was the best that man can be. He was unselfish and altogether honest, +and that is much for a man. + +When Pierre came to know of their friendship he shook his head +doubtfully. One day he was sitting on the hot side of a pine near his +mountain hut, soaking in the sun. He saw them passing below him, along +the edge of the hill across the ravine. He said to someone behind him +in the shade, who was looking also," What will be the end of that, eh?" + +And the someone replied: "Faith, what the Serpent in the Wilderness +couldn't cure." + +"You think he'll play with her?" + +"I think he'll do it without wishin' or willin', maybe. It'll be a case +of kiss and ride away." + +There was silence. Soon Pierre pointed down again. She stood upon a +green mound with a cool hedge of rock behind her, her feet on the margin +of solid sunlight, her forehead bared. Her hair sprinkled round her as +she gently threw back her head. Her face was full on Hilton. She was +telling him something. Her gestures were rhythmical, and admirably +balanced. Because they were continuous or only regularly broken, it was +clear she was telling him a story. Hilton gravely, delightedly, nodded +response now and then, or raised his eyebrows in fascinated surprise. +Pierre, watching, was only aware of vague impressions--not any distinct +outline of the tale. At last he guessed it as a perfect pastoral-birds, +reaping, deer, winds, sundials, cattle, shepherds, hunting. To Hilton it +was a new revelation. She was telling him things she had thought, she +was recalling her life. + +Towards the last, she said in gesture: "You can forget the winter, but +not the spring. You like to remember the spring. It is the beginning. +When the daisy first peeps, when the tall young deer first stands upon +its feet, when the first egg is seen in the oriole's nest, when the sap +first sweats from the tree, when you first look into the eye of your +friend--these you want to remember. . . ." + +She paused upon this gesture--a light touch upon the forehead, then the +hands stretched out, palms upward, with coaxing fingers. She seemed lost +in it. Her eyes rippled, her lips pressed slightly, a delicate wine +crept through her cheek, and tenderness wimpled all. Her soft breast +rose modestly to the cool texture of her dress. Hilton felt his blood +bound joyfully; he had the wish of instant possession. But yet he could +not stir, she held him so; for a change immediately passed upon her. She +glided slowly from that almost statue-like repose into another gesture. +Her eyes drew up from his, and looked away to plumbless distance, all +glowing and childlike, and the new ciphers slowly said: + +"But the spring dies away. We can only see a thing born once. And it +may be ours, yet not ours. I have sighted the perfect Sharon-flower, far +up on Guidon, yet it was not mine; it was too distant; I could not reach +it. I have seen the silver bullfinch floating along the canon. I called +to it, and it came singing; and it was mine, yet I could not hear its +song, and I let it go; it could not be happy so with me. . . . +I stand at the gate of a great city, and see all, and feel the great +shuttles of sounds, the roar and clack of wheels, the horses' hoofs +striking the ground, the hammer of bells; all: and yet it is not mine; +it is far, far away from me. It is one world, mine is another; and +sometimes it is lonely, and the best things are not for me. But I have +seen them, and it is pleasant to remember, and nothing can take from us +the hour when things were born, when we saw the spring--nothing--never!" + +Her manner of speech, as this went on, became exquisite in fineness, +slower, and more dream-like, until, with downward protesting motions of +the hand, she said that "nothing--never!" Then a great sigh surged up +her throat, her lips parted slightly, showing the warm moist whiteness of +her teeth, her hands falling lightly, drew together and folded in front +of her. She stood still. + +Pierre had watched this scene intently, his chin in his hands, his elbows +on his knees. Presently he drew himself up, ran a finger meditatively +along his lip, and said to himself: "It is perfect. She is carved from +the core of nature. But this thing has danger for her. . . . +'bien!' . . . ah!" + +A change in the scene before him caused this last expression of surprise. + +Hilton, rousing from the enchanting pantomime, took a step towards her; +but she raised her hand pleadingly, restrainingly, and he paused. With +his eyes he asked her mutely why. She did not answer, but, all at once +transformed into a thing of abundant sprightliness, ran down the +hillside, tossing up her arms gaily. Yet her face was not all +brilliance. Tears hung at her eyes. But Hilton did not see these. +He did not run, but walked quickly, following her; and his face had a +determined look. Immediately, a man rose up from behind a rock on the +same side of the ravine, and shook clenched fists after the departing +figures; then stood gesticulating angrily to himself, until, chancing +to look up, he sighted Pierre, and straightway dived into the underbrush. +Pierre rose to his feet, and said slowly: "Hilton, here may be trouble +for you also. It is a tangled world." + +Towards evening Pierre sauntered to the house of Ida's father. Light of +footstep, he came upon the girl suddenly. They had always been friends +since the day when, at uncommon risk, he rescued her dog from a freshet +on the Wild Moose River. She was sitting utterly still, her hands folded +in her lap. He struck his foot smartly on the ground. She felt the +vibration, and looked up. He doffed his hat, and she held out her hand. +He smiled and took it, and, as it lay in his, looked at it for a moment +musingly. She drew it back slowly. He was then thinking that it was the +most intelligent hand he had ever seen. . . . He determined to play a +bold and surprising game. He had learned from her the alphabet of the +fingers--that is, how to spell words. He knew little gesture-language. +He, therefore, spelled slowly: "Hawley is angry, because you love +Hilton." The statement was so matter-of-fact, so sudden, that the girl +had no chance. She flushed and then paled. She shook her head firmly, +however, and her fingers slowly framed the reply: "You guess too much. +Foolish things come to the idle." + +"I saw you this afternoon," he silently urged. + +Her fingers trembled slightly. "There was nothing to see." She knew he +could not have read her gestures. "I was telling a story." + +"You ran from him--why?" His questioning was cruel that he might in the +end be kind. + +"The child runs from its shadow, the bird from its nest, the fish jumps +from the water--that is nothing." She had recovered somewhat. + +But he: "The shadow follows the child, the bird comes back to its nest, +the fish cannot live beyond the water. But it is sad when the child, in +running, rushes into darkness, and loses its shadow; when the nest falls +from the tree; and the hawk catches the happy fish. . . . Hawley saw +you also." + +Hawley, like Ida, was deaf and dumb. He lived over the mountains, but +came often. It had been understood that, one day, she should marry him. +It seemed fitting. She had said neither yes nor no. And now? + +A quick tremor of trouble trailed over her face, then it became very +still. Her eyes were bent upon the ground steadily. Presently a bird +hopped near, its head coquetting at her. She ran her hand gently along +the grass towards it. The bird tripped on it. She lifted it to her +chin, at which it pecked tenderly. Pierre watched her keenly-admiring, +pitying. He wished to serve her. At last, with a kiss upon its head, +she gave it a light toss into the air, and it soared, lark-like, straight +up, and hanging over her head, sang the day into the evening. Her eyes +followed it. She could feel that it was singing. She smiled and lifted +a finger lightly towards it. Then she spelled to Pierre this: "It is +singing to me. We imperfect things love each other." + +"And what about loving Hawley, then?" Pierre persisted. She did not +reply, but a strange look came upon her, and in the pause Hilton came +from the house and stood beside them. At this, Pierre lighted a +cigarette, and with a good-natured nod to Hilton, walked away. + +Hilton stooped over her, pale and eager. "Ida," he gestured, "will you +answer me now? Will you be my wife?" + +She drew herself together with a little shiver. "No," was her steady +reply. She ruled her face into stillness, so that it showed nothing of +what she felt. She came to her feet wearily, and drawing down a cool +flowering branch of chestnut, pressed it to her cheek. "You do not love +me?" he asked nervously. + +"I am going to marry Luke Hawley," was her slow answer. She spelled the +words. She used no gesture to that. The fact looked terribly hard and +inflexible so. Hilton was not a vain man, and he believed he was not +loved. His heart crowded to his throat. + +"Please go away, now," she begged with an anxious gesture. While the +hand was extended, he reached and brought it to his lips, then quickly +kissed her on the forehead, and walked away. She stood trembling, and as +the fingers of one hand hung at her side, they spelled mechanically these +words: "It would spoil his life. I am only a mute--a dummy!" + +As she stood so, she felt the approach of someone. She did not turn +instantly, but with the aboriginal instinct, listened, as it were, with +her body; but presently faced about--to Hawley. He was red with anger. +He had seen Hilton kiss her. He caught her smartly by the arm, but, awed +by the great calmness of her face, dropped it, and fell into a fit of +sullenness. She spoke to him: he did not reply. She touched his arm: he +still was gloomy. All at once the full price of her sacrifice rushed +upon her; and overpowered her. She had no help at her critical hour, not +even from this man she had intended to bless. There came a swift +revulsion, all passions stormed in her at once. Despair was the +resultant of these forces. She swerved from him immediately, and ran +hard towards the high-banked river! + +Hawley did not follow her at once: he did not guess her purpose. She had +almost reached the leaping-place, when Pierre shot from the trees, and +seized her. The impulse of this was so strong, that they slipped, and +quivered on the precipitous edge: but Pierre righted then, and presently +they were safe. + +Pierre held her hard by both wrists for a moment. Then, drawing her +away, he loosed her, and spelled these words slowly: "I understand. But +you are wrong. Hawley is not the man. You must come with me. It is +foolish to die." + +The riot of her feelings, her momentary despair, were gone. It was +even pleasant to be mastered by Pierre's firmness. She was passive. +Mechanically she went with him. Hawley approached. She looked at +Pierre. Then she turned on the other. "Yours is not the best love," she +signed to him; "it does not trust; it is selfish." And she moved on. + +But, an hour later, Hilton caught her to his bosom, and kissed her full +on the lips. . . . And his right to do so continues to this day. + + + + + + +A TRAGEDY OF NOBODIES + +At Fort Latrobe sentiment was not of the most refined kind. Local +customs were pronounced and crude in outline; language was often highly +coloured, and action was occasionally accentuated by a pistol shot. For +the first few months of its life the place was honoured by the presence +of neither wife, nor sister, nor mother. Yet women lived there. + +When some men did bring wives and children, it was noticed that the girl +Blanche was seldom seen in the streets. And, however it was, there grew +among the men a faint respect for her. They did not talk of it to each +other, but it existed. It was known that Blanche resented even the most +casual notice from those men who had wives and homes. She gave the +impression that she had a remnant of conscience. + +"Go home," she said to Harry Delong, who asked her to drink with him on +New Year's Day. "Go home, and thank God that you've got a home--and a +wife." + +After Jacques, the long-time friend of Pretty Pierre, came to Fort +Latrobe, with his sulky eye and scrupulously neat attire, Blanche +appeared to withdraw still more from public gaze, though no one saw any +connection between these events. The girl also became fastidious in her +dress, and lost all her former dash and smart aggression of manner. She +shrank from the women of her class, for which, as might be expected, she +was duly reviled. But the foxes have holes, and the birds of the air +have nests, nor has it been written that a woman may not close her ears, +and bury herself in darkness, and travel alone in the desert with her +people--those ghosts of herself, whose name is legion, and whose slow +white fingers mock more than the world dare at its worst. + +Suddenly, she was found behind the bar of Weir's Tavern at Cedar Point, +the resort most frequented by Jacques. Word went about among the men +that Blanche was taking a turn at religion, or, otherwise, reformation. +Soldier Joe was something sceptical on this point from the fact that she +had developed a very uncertain temper. This appeared especially +noticeable in her treatment of Jacques. She made him the target for her +sharpest sarcasm. Though a peculiar glow came to his eyes at times, he +was never roused from his exasperating coolness. When her shafts were +unusually direct and biting, and the temptation to resent was keen, he +merely shrugged his shoulders, almost gently, and said: "Eh, such women!" + +Nevertheless, there were men at Fort Latrobe who prophesied trouble, +for they knew there was a deep strain of malice in the French half-breed +which could be the more deadly because of its rare use. He was not +easily moved, he viewed life from the heights of a philosophy which could +separate the petty from the prodigious. His reputation was not wholly +disquieting; he was of the goats, he had sometimes been found with the +sheep, he preferred to be numbered with the transgressors. Like Pierre, +his one passion was gambling. There were legends that once or twice in +his life he had had another passion, but that some Gorgon drew out his +heartstrings painfully, one by one, and left him inhabited by a pale +spirit now called Irony, now Indifference--under either name a fret and +an anger to women. + +At last Blanche's attacks on Jacques called out anxious protests from +men like rollicking Soldier Joe, who said to her one night, "Blanche, +there's a devil in Jacques. Some day you'll startle him, and then he'll +shoot you as cool as he empties the pockets of Freddy Tarlton over +there." + +And Blanche replied: "When he does that, what will you do, Joe?" + +"Do? Do?" The man stroked his beard softly. "Why, give him ditto-- +cold." + +"Well, then, there's nothing to row about, is there?" And Soldier Joe +was not on the instant clever enough to answer her sophistry; but when +she left him and he had thought awhile, he said, convincingly: + +"But where would you be then, Blanche? . . . That's the point." + +One thing was known and certain: Blanche was earning her living by +honest, if not high-class, labour. Weir the tavern-keeper said she was +"worth hundreds" to him. But she grew pale, her eyes became peculiarly +brilliant, her voice took a lower key, and lost a kind of hoarseness it +had in the past. Men came in at times merely to have a joke at her +expense, having heard of her new life; but they failed to enjoy their own +attempts at humour. Women of her class came also, some with half- +uncertain jibes, some with a curious wistfulness, and a few with scornful +oaths; but the jibes and oaths were only for a time. It became known +that she had paid the coach fare of Miss Dido (as she was called) to the +hospital at Wapiti, and had raised a subscription for her maintenance +there, heading it herself with a liberal sum. Then the atmosphere round +her became less trying; yet her temper remained changeable, and had it +not been that she was good-looking and witty, her position might have +been insecure. As it was, she ruled in a neutral territory where she was +the only woman. One night, after an inclement remark to Jacques, in the +card-room, Blanche came back to the bar, and not noticing that, while she +was gone, Soldier Joe had entered and laid himself down on a bench in a +corner, she threw her head passionately forward on her arms as they +rested on the counter, and cried: "O my God! my God!" + +Soldier Joe lay still as if sleeping, and when Blanche was called away +again he rose, stole out, went down to Freddy Tarlton's office, and +offered to bet Freddy two to one that Blanche wouldn't live a year. +Joe's experience of women was limited. He had in his mind the case +of a girl who had accidentally smothered her child; and so he said: + +"Blanche has something on her mind that's killing her, Freddy. When +trouble fixes on her sort it kills swift and sure. They've nothing to +live for but life, and it isn't good enough, you see, for--for--" +Joe paused to find out where his philosophy was taking him. + +Freddy Tarlton finished the sentence for him: "For an inner sorrow is a +consuming fire." + +Fort Latrobe soon had an unexpected opportunity to study Soldier Joe's +theory. One night Jacques did not appear at Weir's Tavern as he had +engaged to do, and Soldier Joe and another went across the frozen river +to his log-hut to seek him. They found him by a handful of fire, +breathing heavily and nearly unconscious. One of the sudden and +frequently fatal colds of the mountains had fastened on him, and he had +begun a war for life. Joe started back at once for liquor and a doctor, +leaving his comrade to watch by the sick man. + +He could not understand why Blanche should stagger and grow white when he +told her; nor why she insisted on taking the liquor herself. He did not +yet guess the truth. + +The next day all Fort Latrobe knew that Blanche was nursing Jacques, on +what was thought to be his no-return journey. The doctor said it was a +dangerous case, and he held out little hope. Nursing might bring +him through, but the chance was very slight. Blanche only occasionally +left the sick man's bedside to be relieved by Soldier Joe and Freddy +Tarlton. It dawned on Joe at last, it had dawned on Freddy before, what +Blanche meant by the heart-breaking words uttered that night in Weir's +Tavern. Down through the crust of this woman's heart had gone something +both joyful and painful. Whatever it was, it made Blanche a saving +nurse, a good apothecary; for, one night the doctor pronounced Jacques +out of danger, and said that a few days would bring him round if he was +careful. + +Now, for the first time, Jacques fully comprehended all Blanche had done +for him, though he had ceased to wonder at her changed attitude to him. +Through his suffering and his delirium had come the understanding of it. +When, after the crisis, the doctor turned away from the bed, Jacques +looked steadily into Blanche's eyes, and she flushed, and wiped the wet +from his brow with her handkerchief. He took the handkerchief from her +fingers gently before Soldier Joe came over to the bed. + +The doctor had insisted that Blanche should go to Weir's Tavern and get +the night's rest, needed so much, and Joe now pressed her to keep her +promise. Jacques added an urging word, and after a time she started. +Joe had forgotten to tell her that a new road had been made on the ice +since she had crossed, and that the old road was dangerous. Wandering +with her thoughts she did not notice the spruce bushes set up for signal, +until she had stepped on a thin piece of ice. It bent beneath her. She +slipped: there was a sudden sinking, a sharp cry, then another, piercing +and hopeless--and it was the one word--"Jacques!" Then the night was +silent as before. But someone had heard the cry. Freddy Tarlton was +crossing the ice also, and that desolating Jacques! had reached his ears. +When he found her he saw that she had been taken and the other left. +But that other, asleep in his bed at the sacred moment when she parted, +suddenly waked, and said to Soldier Joe: "Did you speak, Joe? Did you +call me?" + +But Joe, who had been playing cards with himself, replied, "I haven't +said a word." + +And Jacques then added: "Perhaps I dream--perhaps." + +On the advice of the doctor and Freddy Tarlton, the bad news was kept +from Jacques. When she did not come the next day, Joe told him that she +couldn't; that he ought to remember she had had no rest for weeks, and +had earned a long rest. And Jacques said that was so. + +Weir began preparations for the funeral, but Freddy Tarlton took them out +of his hands--Freddy Tarlton, who visited at the homes of Fort Latrobe. +But he had the strength of his convictions such as they were. He began +by riding thirty miles and back to ask the young clergyman at Purple Hill +to come and bury Blanche. She'd reformed and been baptised, Freddy said +with a sad sort of humour. And the clergyman, when he knew all, said +that he would come. Freddy was hardly prepared for what occurred when he +got back. Men were waiting for him, anxious to know if the clergyman was +coming. They had raised a subscription to cover the cost of the funeral, +and among them were men such as Harry Delong. + +"You fellows had better not mix yourselves up in this," said Freddy. + +But Harry Delong replied quickly: "I am going to see the thing through." +And the others endorsed his words. When the clergyman came, and looked +at the face of this Magdalene, he was struck by its comeliness and quiet. +All else seemed to have been washed away. On her breast lay a knot of +white roses--white roses in this winter desert. + +One man present, seeing the look of wonder in the clergyman's eyes, said +quietly: "My--my wife sent them. She brought the plant from Quebec. It +has just bloomed. She knows all about her." + +That man was Harry Delong. The keeper of his home understood the other +homeless woman. When she knew of Blanche's death she said: "Poor girl, +poor girl!" and then she had gently added, "Poor Jacques!" + +And Jacques, as he sat in a chair by the fire four days after the +tragedy, did not know that the clergyman was reading over a grave on +the hillside, words which are for the hearts of the quick as for the +untenanted dead. + +To Jacques's inquiries after Blanche, Soldier Joe had made changing and +vague replies. At last he said that she was ill; then, that she was very +ill, and again, that she was better, almighty better--now. The third day +following the funeral, Jacques insisted that he would go and see her. +The doctor at length decided he should be taken to Weir's Tavern, where, +they declared, they would tell him all. And they took him, and placed +him by the fire in the card-room, a wasted figure, but fastidious in +manner and scrupulously neat in person as of old. Then he asked for +Blanche; but even now they had not the courage for it. The doctor +nervously went out, as if to seek her; and Freddy Tarlton said, "Jacques, +let us have a little game, just for quarters, you know. Eh?" + +The other replied without eagerness: "Voila, one game, then!" + +They drew him to the table, but he played listlessly. His eyes shifted +ever to the door. Luck was against him. Finally he pushed over a silver +piece, and said: "The last. My money is all gone. 'Bien!'" He lost +that too. + +Just then the door opened, and a ranchman from Purple Hill entered. He +looked carelessly round, and then said loudly: + +"Say, Joe, so you've buried Blanche, have you? Poor old girl!" + +There was a heavy silence. No one replied. Jacques started to his feet, +gazed around searchingly, painfully, and presently gave a great gasp. +His hands made a chafing motion in the air, and then blood showed on his +lips and chin. He drew a handkerchief from his breast. + +"Pardon! . . . Pardon!" he faintly cried in apology, and put it to +his mouth. + +Then he fell backwards in the arms of Soldier Joe, who wiped a moisture +from the lifeless cheek as he laid the body on a bed. + +In a corner of the stained handkerchief they found the word, + +Blanche. + + + + + + +A SANCTUARY OF THE PLAINS + +Father Corraine stood with his chin in his hand and one arm supporting +the other, thinking deeply. His eyes were fixed on the northern horizon, +along which the sun was casting oblique rays; for it was the beginning of +the winter season. + +Where the prairie touched the sun it was responsive and radiant; but on +either side of this red and golden tapestry there was a tawny glow and +then a duskiness which, curving round to the north and east, became blue +and cold--an impalpable but perceptible barrier rising from the earth, +and shutting in Father Corraine like a prison wall. And this shadow +crept stealthily on and invaded the whole circle, until, where the +radiance had been, there was one continuous wall of gloom, rising are +upon are to invasion of the zenith, and pierced only by some intrusive +wandering stars. + +And still the priest stood there looking, until the darkness closed down +on him with an almost tangible consistency. Then he appeared to remember +himself, and turned away with a gentle remonstrance of his head, and +entered the hut behind him. He lighted a lamp, looked at it doubtfully, +blew it out, set it aside, and lighted a candle. This he set in the one +window of the room which faced the north and west. + +He went to a door opening into the only other room in the hut, and with +his hand on the latch looked thoughtfully and sorrowfully at something in +the corner of the room where he stood. He was evidently debating upon +some matter,--probably the removal of what was in the corner to the other +room. If so, he finally decided to abandon the intention. He sat down +in a chair, faced the candle, again dropped his chin upon his hand, and +kept his eyes musingly on the light. He was silent and motionless a long +time, then his lips moved, and he seemed to repeat something to himself +in whispers. + +Presently he took a well-worn book from his pocket, and read aloud from +it softly what seemed to be an office of his Church. His voice grew +slightly louder as he continued, until, suddenly, there ran through the +words a deep sigh which did not come from himself. He raised his head +quickly, started to his feet, and turning round, looked at that something +in the corner. It took the form of a human figure, which raised itself +on an elbow and said: "Water--water--for the love of God!" + +Father Corraine stood painfully staring at the figure for a moment, and +then the words broke from him "Not dead--not dead--wonderful!" Then he +stepped quickly to a table, took therefrom a pannikin of water, and +kneeling, held it to the lips of the gasping figure of a woman, throwing +his arm round the shoulder, and supporting the head on his breast. Again +he spoke "Alive--alive! Blessed be Heaven!" + +The hands of the woman seized the hand of the priest, which held the +pannikin, and kissed it, saying faintly: "You are good to me. . . . +But I must sleep--I must sleep--I am so tired; and I've--very far--to go +--across the world." + +This was said very slowly, then the head thick with brown curls dropped +again on the priest's breast, heavy with sleep. Father Corraine, +flushing slightly at first, became now slightly pale, and his brow was a +place of war between thankfulness and perplexity. But he said something +prayerfully, then closed his lips firmly, and gently laid the figure +down, where it was immediately clothed about with slumber. Then he rose, +and standing with his eyes bent upon the sleeper and his fingers clasping +each other tightly before him, said: "Poor girl! So, she is alive. And +now what will come of it?" + +He shook his grey head in doubt, and immediately began to prepare some +simple food and refreshment for the sufferer when she should awake. In +the midst of doing so he paused and repeated the words, "And what will +come of it?" Then he added: "There was no sign of pulse nor heart-beat +when I found her. But life hides itself where man cannot reach it." + +Having finished his task, he sat down, drew the book of holy offices +again from his bosom, and read it, whisperingly, for a time; then fell to +musing, and, after a considerable time, knelt down as if in prayer. +While he knelt, the girl, as if startled from her sleep by some inner +shock, opened her eyes wide and looked at him, first with bewilderment, +then with anxiety, then with wistful thankfulness. "Oh, I thought-- +I thought when I awoke before that it was a woman. But it is the good +Father Corraine--Corraine, yes, that was the name." + +The priest's clean-shaven face, long hair, and black cassock had, in her +first moments of consciousness, deceived her. Now a sharp pain brought +a moan to her lips; and this drew the priest's attention. He rose, and +brought her some food and drink. "My daughter," he said, "you must take +these." Something in her face touched his sensitive mind, and he said, +solemnly: "You are alone with me and God, this hour. Be at peace. Eat." + +Her eyes swam with instant tears. "I know--I am alone--with God," she +said. Again he gently urged the food upon her, and she took a little; +but now and then she put her hand to her side as if in pain. And once, +as she did so, she said: "I've far to go and the pain is bad. Did they +take him away?" + +Father Corraine shook his head. "I do not know of whom you speak," he +replied. "When I went to my door this morning I found you lying there. +I brought you in, and, finding no sign of life in you, sent Featherfoot, +my Indian, to Fort Cypress for a trooper to come; for I feared that there +had been ill done to you, somehow. This border-side is but a rough +country. It is not always safe for a woman to travel alone." + +The girl shuddered. "Father," she said "Father Corraine, I believe you +are?" (Here the priest bowed his head.) "I wish to tell you all, so +that if ever any evil did come to me, if I should die without doin' +what's in my heart to do, you would know, and would tell him if you ever +saw him, how I remembered, and kept rememberin' him always, till my heart +got sick with waitin', and I came to find him far across the seas." + +"Tell me your tale, my child," he patiently said. Her eyes were on the +candle in the window questioningly. "It is for the trooper--to guide +him," the other remarked. "'Tis past time that he should be here. When +you are able you can go with him to the Fort. You will be better cared +for there, and will be among women." + +"The man--the man who was kind to me--I wish I knew of him," she said. + +"I am waiting for your story, my child. Speak of your trouble, whether +it be of the mind and body, or of the soul." + +"You shall judge if it be of the soul," she answered. + +"I come from far away. I lived in old Donegal since the day that I was +born there, and I had a lover, as brave and true a lad as ever trod the +world. But sorrow came. One night at Farcalladen Rise there was a crack +of arms and a clatter of fleeing hoofs, and he that I loved came to me +and said a quick word of partin', and with a kiss--it's burnin' on my +lips yet--askin' pardon, father, for speech of this to you--and he was +gone, an outlaw, to Australia. For a time word came from him. Then I +was taken ill and couldn't answer his letters, and a cousin of my own, +who had tried to win my love, did a wicked thing. He wrote a letter to +him and told him I was dyin', and that there was no use of farther words +from him. And never again did word come to me from him. But I waited, +my heart sick with longin' and full of hate for the memory of the man +who, when struck with death, told me of the cruel deed he had done +between us two." + +She paused, as she had to do several times during the recital, through +weariness or pain; but, after a moment, proceeded. "One day, one +beautiful day, when the flowers were like love to the eye, and the larks +singin' overhead, and my thoughts goin' with them as they swam until they +were lost in the sky, and every one of them a prayer for the lad livin' +yet, as I hoped, somewhere in God's universe--there rode a gentleman down +Farcalladen Rise. He stopped me as I walked, and said a kind good-day to +me; and I knew when I looked into his face that he had word for me--the +whisperin' of some angel, I suppose, and I said to him as though he had +asked me for it, 'My name is Mary Callen, sir.' + +"At that he started, and the colour came quick to his face; and he said: +'I am Sir Duke Lawless. I come to look for Mary Callen's grave. Is +there a Mary Callen dead, and a Mary Callen livin'? and did both of them +love a man that went from Farcalladen Rise one wild night long ago?' + +"'There's but one Mary Callen,' said I, 'but the heart of me is dead, +until I hear news that brings it to life again?' + +"'And no man calls you wife?' he asked. + +"'No man, Sir Duke Lawless,' answered I. 'And no man ever could, save +him that used to write me of you from the heart of Australia; only there +was no Sir to your name then.' + +"'I've come to that since,' said he. + +"'Oh, tell me,' I cried, with a quiverin' at my heart, 'tell me, is he +livin'?' + +"And he replied: 'I left him in the Pipi Valley of the Rocky Mountains a +year ago.' + +"'A year ago!' said I, sadly. + +"'I'm ashamed that I've been so long in comin' here,' replied he; 'but, +of course, he didn't know that you were alive, and I had been parted from +a lady for years--a lover's quarrel--and I had to choose between courtin' +her again and marryin' her, or comin' to Farcalladen Rise at once. Well, +I went to the altar first.' + +"'Oh, sir, you've come with the speed of the wind, for now that I've news +of him, it is only yesterday that he went away, not years agone. But +tell me, does he ever think of me?' I questioned. + +"'He thinks of you,' he said, 'as one for whom the masses for the dead +are spoken; but while I knew him, first and last, the memory of you was +with him.' + +"With that he got off his horse, and said: 'I'll walk with you to his +father's home.' + +"'You'll not do that,' I replied; 'for it's level with the ground. God +punish them that did it! And they're lyin' in the glen by the stream +that he loved and galloped over many a time.' + +"'They are dead--they are dead, then,' said he, with his bridle swung +loose on his arm and his hat off reverently. + +"'Gone home to Heaven together,' said I, 'one day and one hour, and a +prayer on their lips for the lad; and I closin' their eyes at the last. +And before they went they made me sit by them and sing a song that's +common here with us; for manny and manny of the strength and pride of +Farcalladen Rise have sailed the wide seas north and south, and +otherwhere, and comin' back maybe and maybe not.' + +"'Hark,' he said, very gravely, 'and I'll tell you what it is, for I've +heard him sing it, I know, in the worst days and the best days that ever +we had, when luck was wicked and big against us and we starvin' on the +wallaby track; or when we found the turn in the lane to brighter days.' + +"And then with me lookin' at him full in the eyes, gentleman though he +was,--for comrade he had been with the man I loved,--he said to me there, +so finely and kindly, it ought to have brought the dead back from their +graves to hear, these words: + + "'You'll travel far and wide, dear, but you'll come back again, + You'll come back to your father and your mother in the glen, + Although we should be lyin' 'neath the heather grasses then + You'll be comin' back, my darlin'!' + + "'You'll see the icebergs sailin' along the wintry foam, + The white hair of the breakers, and the wild swans as they roam; + But you'll not forget the rowan beside your father's home-- + You'll be comin' back, my darlin'.'" + +Here the girl paused longer than usual, and the priest dropped his +forehead in his hand sadly. + +"I've brought grief to your kind heart, father," she said. + +"No, no," he replied, "not sorrow at all; but I was born on the Liffey +side, though it's forty years and more since I left it, and I'm an old +man now. That song I knew well, and the truth and the heart of it too. +. . . I am listening." + +"Well, together we went to the grave of the father and mother, and the +place where the home had been, and for a long time he was silent, as +though they who slept beneath the sod were his, and not another's; +but at last he said: + +"'And what will you do? I don't quite know where he is, though; when +last I heard from him and his comrades, they were in the Pipi Valley.' + +"My heart was full of joy; for though I saw how touched he was because of +what he saw, it was all common to my sight, and I had grieved much, but +had had little delight; and I said: + +"'There's only one thing to be done. He cannot come back here, and I +must go to him--that is,' said I, 'if you think he cares for me still, +--for my heart quakes at the thought that he might have changed.' + +"'I know his heart,' said he, 'and you'll find him, I doubt not, the +same, though he buried you long ago in a lonely tomb,--the tomb of a +sweet remembrance, where the flowers are everlastin'.' Then after more +words he offered me money with which to go; but I said to him that the +love that couldn't carry itself across the sea by the strength of the +hands and the sweat of the brow was no love at all; and that the harder +was the road to him the gladder I'd be, so that it didn't keep me too +long, and brought me to him at last. + +"He looked me up and down very earnestly for a minute, and then he said: +'What is there under the roof of heaven like the love of an honest woman! +It makes the world worth livin' in.' + +"'Yes,' said I, 'when love has hope, and a place to lay its head.' + +"'Take this,' said he--and he drew from his pocket his watch--'and carry +it to him with the regard of Duke Lawless, and this for yourself'-- +fetching from his pocket a revolver and putting it into my hands; 'for +the prairies are but rough places after all, and it's better to be safe +than--worried. . . . Never fear though but the prairies will bring +back the finest of blooms to your cheek, if fair enough it is now, and +flush his eye with pride of you; and God be with you both, if a sinner +may say that, and breakin' no saint's prerogative.' And he mounted to +ride away, havin' shaken my hand like a brother; but he turned again +before he went, and said: 'Tell him and his comrades that I'll shoulder +my gun and join them before the world is a year older, if I can. For +that land is God's land, and its people are my people, and I care not +who knows it, whatever here I be.' + +"I worked my way across the sea, and stayed awhile in the East earning +money to carry me over the land and into the Pipi Valley. I joined a +party of emigrants that were goin' westward, and travelled far with them. +But they quarrelled and separated, I goin' with these that I liked best. +One night though, I took my horse and left; for I knew there was evil in +the heart of a man who sought me continually, and the thing drove me mad. +I rode until my horse could stumble no farther, and then I took the +saddle for a pillow and slept on the bare ground. And in the morning I +got up and rode on, seein' no house nor human being for manny and manny a +mile. When everything seemed hopeless I came suddenly upon a camp. But +I saw that there was only one man there, and I should have turned back, +but that I was worn and ill, and, moreover, I had ridden almost upon him. +But he was kind. He shared his food with me, and asked me where I was +goin'. I told him, and also that I had quarrelled with those of my party +and had left them nothing more. He seemed to wonder that I was goin' to +Pipi Valley; and when I had finished my tale he said: 'Well, I must tell +you that I am not good company for you. I have a name that doesn't pass +at par up here. To speak plain truth, troopers are looking for me, and +--strange as it may be--for a crime which I didn't commit. That is the +foolishness of the law. But for this I'm making for the American border, +beyond which, treaty or no treaty, a man gets refuge.' + +"He was silent after that, lookin' at me thoughtfully the while, but in a +way that told me I might trust him, evil though he called himself. At +length he said: 'I know a good priest, Father Corraine, who has a cabin +sixty miles or more from here, and I'll guide you to him, if so be you +can trust a half-breed and a gambler, and one men call an outlaw. If +not, I'm feared it'll go hard with you; for the Cypress Hills are not +easy travel, as I've known this many a year. And should you want a name +to call me, Pretty Pierre will do, though my godfathers and godmothers +did different for me before they went to Heaven.' And nothing said he +irreverently, father." + +Here the priest looked up and answered: "Yes, yes, I know him well--an +evil man, and yet he has suffered too . . . Well, well, my daughter?" + +"At that he took his pistol from his pocket and handed it. 'Take that,' +he said. 'It will make you safer with me, and I'll ride ahead of you, +and we shall reach there by sundown, I hope.' + +"And I would not take his pistol, but, shamed a little, showed him the +one Sir Duke Lawless gave me. 'That's right,' he said, 'and, maybe, it's +better that I should carry mine, for, as I said, there are anxious +gentlemen lookin' for me, who wish to give me a quiet but dreary home. +And see,' he added, 'if they should come you will be safe, for they sit +in the judgment seat, and the statutes hang at their saddles, and I'll +say this for them, that a woman to them is as a saint of God out here +where women and saints are few.' + +"I do not speak as he spoke, for his words had a turn of French; but I +knew that, whatever he was, I should travel peaceably with him. Yet I +saw that he would be runnin' the risk of his own safety for me, and I +told him that I could not have him do it; but he talked me lightly down, +and we started. We had gone but a little distance, when there galloped +over a ridge upon us, two men of the party I had left, and one, I saw, +was the man I hated; and I cried out and told Pretty Pierre. He wheeled +his horse, and held his pistol by him. They said that I should come with +them, and they told a dreadful lie--that I was a runaway wife; but Pierre +answered them they lied. At this, one rode forward suddenly, and +clutched me at my waist to drag me from my horse. At this, Pierre's +pistol was thrust in his face, and Pierre bade him cease, which he did; +but the other came down with a pistol showin', and Pierre, seein' they +were determined, fired; and the man that clutched at me fell from his +horse. Then the other drew off; and Pierre got down, and stooped, and +felt the man's heart, and said to the other: 'Take your friend away, for +he is dead; but drop that pistol of yours on the ground first.' And the +man did so; and Pierre, as he looked at the dead man, added: 'Why did he +make me kill him?' + +"Then the two tied the body to the horse, and the man rode away with it. +We travelled on without speakin' for a long time, and then I heard him +say absently: 'I am sick of that. When once you have played shuttlecock +with human life, you have to play it to the end--that is the penalty. +But a woman is a woman, and she must be protected.' Then afterward he +turned and asked me if I had friends in Pipi Valley; and because what he +had done for me had worked upon me, I told him of the man I was goin' to +find. And he started in his saddle, and I could see by the way he +twisted the mouth of his horse that I had stirred him." + +Here the priest interposed: "What is the name of the man in Pipi Valley +to whom you are going?" + +And the girl replied: "Ah, father, have I not told you? It is Shon +McGann--of Farcalladen Rise." + +At this, Father Corraine seemed suddenly troubled, and he looked +strangely and sadly at her. But the girl's eyes were fastened on the +candle in the window, as if she saw her story in it; and she continued: +"A colour spread upon him, and then left him pale; and he said: 'To Shon +McGann--you are going to him? Think of that--that!' For an instant I +thought a horrible smile played upon his face, and I grew frightened, and +said to him: 'You know him. You are not sorry that you are helping me? +You and Shon McGann are not enemies?' + +"After a moment the smile that struck me with dread passed, and he said, +as he drew himself up with a shake: 'Shon McGann and I were good friends- +as good as ever shared a blanket or split a loaf, though he was free of +any evil, and I failed of any good.... Well, there came a change. We +parted. We could meet no more; but who could have guessed this thing? +Yet, hear me--I am no enemy of Shon McGann, as let my deeds to you +prove.' And he paused again, but added presently: 'It's better you should +have come now than two years ago. + +"And I had a fear in my heart, and to this asked him why. 'Because then +he was a friend of mine,' he said, 'and ill always comes to those who are +such.' I was troubled at this, and asked him if Shon was in Pipi Valley +yet. 'I do not know,' said he, 'for I've travelled long and far from +there; still, while I do not wish to put doubt into your mind, I have a +thought he may be gone. . . . He had a gay heart,' he continued, 'and +we saw brave days together.' + +"And though I questioned him, he told me little more, but became silent, +scannin' the plains as we rode; but once or twice he looked at me in a +strange fashion, and passed his hand across his forehead, and a grey look +came upon his face. I asked him if he was not well. 'Only a kind of +fightin' within,' he said; 'such things soon pass, and it is well they +do, or we should break to pieces.' + +"And I said again that I wished not to bring him into danger. And he +replied that these matters were accordin' to Fate; that men like him must +go on when once the die is cast, for they cannot turn back. It seemed to +me a bitter creed, and I was sorry for him. Then for hours we kept an +almost steady silence, and comin' at last to the top of a rise of land he +pointed to a spot far off on the plains, and said that you, father, lived +there; and that he would go with me still a little way, and then leave +me. I urged him to go at once, but he would not, and we came down into +the plains. He had not ridden far when he said sharply: + +"'The Riders of the Plains, those gentlemen who seek me, are there--see! +Ride on or stay, which you please. If you go you will reach the priest, +if you stay here where I shall leave you, you will see me taken perhaps, +and it may be fightin' or death; but you will be safe with them. On the +whole, it is best, perhaps, that you should ride away to the priest. +They might not believe all that you told them, ridin' with me as you +are.' + +"But I think a sudden madness again came upon me. Rememberin' what +things were done by women for refugees in old Donegal, and that this man +had risked his life for me, I swung my horse round nose and nose with +his, and drew my revolver, and said that I should see whatever came to +him. He prayed me not to do so wild a thing; but when I refused, and +pushed on along with him, makin' at an angle for some wooded hills, I saw +that a smile played upon his face. We had almost reached the edge of the +wood when a bullet whistled by us. At that the smile passed and a +strange look came upon him, and he said to me: + +"'This must end here. I think you guess I have no coward's blood; but I +am sick to the teeth of fightin'. I do not wish to shock you, but I +swear, unless you turn and ride away to the left towards the priest's +house, I shall save those fellows further trouble by killin' myself here; +and there,' said he, 'would be a pleasant place to die--at the feet of a +woman who trusted you.' + +"I knew by the look in his eye he would keep his word. "'Oh, is this +so?' I said. + +"'It is so,' he replied, 'and it shall be done quickly, for the courage +to death is on me.' + +"'But if I go, you will still try to escape?' I said. And he answered +that he would. Then I spoke a God-bless-you, at which he smiled and +shook his head, and leanin' over, touched my hand, and spoke low: 'When +you see Shon McGann, tell him what I did, and say that we are even now. +Say also that you called Heaven to bless me.' Then we swung away from +each other, and the troopers followed after him, but let me go my way; +from which, I guessed, they saw I was a woman. And as I rode I heard +shots, and turned to see; but my horse stumbled on a hole and we fell +together, and when I waked, I saw that the poor beast's legs were broken. +So I ended its misery, and made my way as best I could by the stars to +your house; but I turned sick and fainted at the door, and knew no more +until this hour. . . . You thought me dead, father?" + +The priest bowed his head, and said: "These are strange, sad things, my +child; and they shall seem stranger to you when you hear all." + +"When I hear all! Ah, tell me, father, do you know Shon McGann? Can you +take me to him?" + +"I know him, but I do not know where he is. He left the Pipi Valley +eighteen months ago, and I never saw him afterwards; still I doubt not he +is somewhere on the plains, and we shall find him--we shall find him, +please Heaven." + +"Is he a good lad, father?" + +"He is brave, and he was always kind. He came to me before he left the +valley--for he had trouble--and said to me: 'Father, I am going away, and +to what place is far from me to know, but wherever it is, I'll live a +life that's fit for men, and not like a loafer on God's world;' and he +gave me money for masses to be said--for the dead." + +The girl put out her hand. "Hush! hush!" she said. "Let me think. +Masses for the dead.... What dead? Not for me; he thought me dead long, +long ago." + +"No; not for you," was the slow reply. + +She noticed his hesitation, and said: "Speak. I know that there is +sorrow on him. Someone--someone--he loved?" + +"Someone he loved," was the reply. + +"And she died?" The priest bowed his head. + +"She was his wife--Shon's wife?" and Mary Callen could not hide from her +words the hurt she felt. + +"I married her to him, but yet she was not his wife." There was a keen +distress in the girl's voice. "Father, tell me, tell me what you mean." + +"Hush, and I will tell you all. He married her, thinking, and she +thinking, that she was a widowed woman. But her husband came back. +A terrible thing happened. The woman believing, at a painful time, that +he who came back was about to take Shon's life, fired at him, and wounded +him, and then killed herself." + +Mary Callen raised herself upon her elbow, and looked at the priest in +piteous bewilderment. "It is dreadful," she said. . . . "Poor woman! +. . . And he had forgotten--forgotten me. I was dead to him, and am +dead to him now. There's nothing left but to draw the cold sheet of the +grave over me. Better for me if I had never come--if I had never come, +and instead were lyin' by his father and mother beneath the rowan." + +The priest took her wrist firmly in his. "These are not brave nor +Christian words, from a brave and Christian girl. But I know that grief +makes one's words wild. Shon McGann shall be found. In the days when I +saw him most and best, he talked of you as an angel gone, and he had +never sought another woman had he known that you lived. The Mounted +Police, the Riders of the Plains, travel far and wide. But now, there +has come from the farther West a new detachment to Fort Cypress, and they +may be able to help us. But listen. There is something more. The man +Pretty Pierre, did he not speak puzzling words concerning himself and +Shon McGann? And did he not say to you at the last that they were even +now? Well, can you not guess?" + +Mary Callen's bosom heaved painfully and her eyes stared so at the candle +in the window that they seemed to grow one with the flame. At last a new +look crept into them; a thought made the lids close quickly as though it +burned them. When they opened again they were full of tears that shone +in the shadow and dropped slowly on her cheeks and flowed on and on, +quivering too in her throat. + +The priest said: "You understand, my child?" + +And she answered: "I understand. Pierre, the outlaw, was her husband." + +Father Corraine rose and sat beside the table, his book of offices open +before him. At length he said: "There is much that might be spoken; for +the Church has words for every hour of man's life, whatever it be; but +there comes to me now a word to say, neither from prayer nor psalm, but +from the songs of a country where good women are; where however poor the +fireside, the loves beside it are born of the love of God, though the +tongue be angry now and then, the foot stumble, and the hand quick at a +blow." Then, with a soft, ringing voice, he repeated: + + "'New friends will clasp your hand, dear, new faces on you smile-- + You'll bide with them and love them, but you'll long for us the while; + + For the word across the water, and the farewell by the stile-- + For the true heart's here, my darlin'.'" + +Mary Callen's tears flowed afresh at first; but soon after the voice +ceased she closed her eyes and her sobs stopped, and Father Corraine sat +down and became lost in thought as he watched the candle. Then there +went a word among the spirits watching that he was not thinking of the +candle, or of them that the candle was to light on the way, nor even of +this girl near him, but of a summer forty years gone when he was a goodly +youth, with the red on his lip and the light in his eye, and before him, +leaning on a stile, was a lass with-- + + " . . . cheeks like the dawn of day." + +And all the good world swam in circles, eddying ever inward until it +streamed intensely and joyously through her eyes "blue as the fairy +flax." And he had carried the remembrance of this away into the world +with him, but had never gone back again. He had travelled beyond the +seas to live among savages and wear out his life in self-denial; and now +he had come to the evening of his life, a benignant figure in a lonely +land. And as he sat here murmuring mechanically bits of an office, his +heart and mind were with a sacred and distant past. Yet the spirits +recorded both these things on their tablets, as though both were worthy +of their remembrance. + +He did not know that he kept repeating two sentences over and over to +himself: + +"'Quoniam ipse liberavit me de laqueo venantium et a verbo aspero. +Quoniam angelis suis mandavit de te: ut custodiant te in omnibus viis +tuis.'" + +These he said at first softly to himself, but unconsciously his voice +became louder, so that the girl heard, and she said: + +"Father Corraine, what are those words? I do not understand them, but +they sound comforting." + +And he, waking from his dream, changed the Latin into English, and said: + + "'For he hath delivered me from the snare of the hunter, and from the + sharp sword. + For he hath given his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all + thy ways.'" + +"The words are good," she said. He then told her he was going out, but +that he should be within call, saying, at the same time, that someone +would no doubt arrive from Fort Cypress soon: and he went from the house. +Then the girl rose slowly, crept lamely to a chair and sat down. +Outside, the priest paced up and down, stopping now and then, and +listening as if for horses' hoofs. At last he walked some distance away +from the house, deeply lost in thought, and he did not notice that a man +came slowly, heavily, to the door of the hut, and opening it, entered. + +Mary Callen rose from her seat with a cry in which was timidity, pity, +and something of horror; for it was Pretty Pierre. She recoiled, but +seeing how he swayed with weakness, and that his clothes had blood upon +them, she helped him to a chair. He looked up at her with an enigmatical +smile, but he did not speak. "Oh," she whispered, "you are wounded!" + +He nodded; but still he did not speak. Then his lips moved dryly. She +brought him water. He drank deeply, and a sigh of relief escaped him. +"You got here safely," he now said. "I am glad of that--though you, too, +are hurt." + +She briefly told him how, and then he said: "Well, I suppose you know all +of me now?" + +"I know what happened in Pipi Valley," she said, timidly and wearily. +"Father Corraine told me." + +"Where is he?" + +When she had answered him, he said: "And you are willing to speak with me +still?" + +"You saved me," was her brief, convincing reply. "How did you escape? +Did you fight?" + +"No," he said. "It is strange. I did not fight at all. As I said to +you, I was sick of blood. These men were only doing their duty. I might +have killed two or three of them, and have escaped, but to what good? +When they shot my horse, my good Sacrament,--and put a bullet into this +shoulder, I crawled away still, and led them a dance, and doubled on +them; and here I am." + +"It is wonderful that they have not been here," she said. + +"Yes, it is wonderful; but be very sure they will be with that candle in +the window. Why is it there?" + +She told him. He lifted his brows in stoic irony, and said: "Well, we +shall have an army of them soon." He rose again to his feet. "I do not +wish to die, and I always said that I would never go to prison. Do you +understand?" + +"Yes," she replied. She went immediately to the window, took the candle +from it, and put it behind an improvised shade. No sooner was this done +than Father Corraine entered the room, and seeing the outlaw, said "You +have come here, Pierre?" And his face showed wonder and anxiety. + +"I have come, mon pere, for sanctuary." + +"For sanctuary! But, my son, if I vex not Heaven by calling you so, +why"--he saw Pierre stagger slightly. "But you are wounded." He put his +arm round the other's shoulder, and supported him till he recovered +himself. Then he set to work to bandage anew the wound, from which +Pierre himself had not unskilfully extracted the bullet. While doing so, +the outlaw said to him: + +"Father Corraine, I am hunted like a coyote for a crime I did not commit. +But if I am arrested they will no doubt charge me with other things-- +ancient things. Well, I have said that I should never be sent to gaol, +and I never shall; but I do not wish to die at this moment, and I do not +wish to fight. What is there left?" + +"How do you come here, Pierre?" + +He lifted his eyes heavily to Mary Callen, and she told Father Corraine +what had been told her. When she had finished, Pierre added: + +"I am no coward, as you will witness; but as I said, neither gaol nor +death do I wish. Well, if they should come here, and you said, Pierre is +not here, even though I was in the next room, they would believe you, and +they would not search. Well, I ask such sanctuary." + +The priest recoiled and raised his hand in protest. Then, after a +moment, he said: + +"How do you deserve this? Do you know what you ask?" + +"Ah, oui, I know it is immense, and I deserve nothing: and in return I +can offer nothing, not even that I will repent. And I have done no good +in the world; but still perhaps I am worth the saving, as may be seen in +the end. As for you, well, you will do a little wrong so that the end +will be right. So?" + +The priest's eyes looked out long and sadly at the man from under his +venerable brows, as though he would see through him and beyond him to +that end; and at last he spoke in a low, firm voice: + +"Pierre, you have been a bad man; but sometimes you have been generous, +and of a few good acts I know--" + +"No, not good," the other interrupted. "I ask this of your charity." + +"There is the law, and my conscience." + +"The law! the law!" and there was sharp satire in the half-breed's voice. +"What has it done in the West? Think, 'mon pere!' Do you not know a +hundred cases where the law has dealt foully? There was more justice +before we had law. Law--" And he named over swiftly, scornfully, a +score of names and incidents, to which Father Corraine listened intently. +"But," said Pierre, gently, at last, "but for your conscience, m'sieu', +that is greater than law. For you are a good man and a wise man; and you +know that I shall pay my debts of every kind some sure day. That should +satisfy your justice, but you are merciful for the moment, and you will +spare until the time be come, until the corn is ripe in the ear. Why +should I plead? It is foolish. Still, it is my whim, of which, perhaps, +I shall be sorry tomorrow . . . Hark!" he added, and then shrugged +his shoulders and smiled. There were sounds of hoof beats coming faintly +to them. Father Corraine threw open the door of the other room of the +hut, and said "Go in there--Pierre. We shall see . . . we shall see." + +The outlaw looked at the priest, as if hesitating; but, after, nodded +meaningly to himself, and entered the room and shut the door. The priest +stood listening. When the hoof-beats stopped, he opened the door, and +went out. In the dark he could see that men were dismounting from their +horses. He stood still and waited. Presently a trooper stepped forward +and said warmly, yet brusquely, as became his office: "Father Corraine, +we meet again!" + +The priest's face was overswept by many expressions, in which marvel and +trouble were uppermost, while joy was in less distinctness. + +"Surely," he said, "it is Shon McGann." + +"Shon McGann, and no other.--I that laughed at the law for many a year, +though never breaking it beyond repair,--took your advice, Father +Corraine, and here I am, holding that law now as my bosom friend at the +saddle's pommel. Corporal Shon McGann, at your service." + +They clasped hands, and the priest said: "You have come at my call from +Fort Cypress?" + +"Yes. But not these others. They are after a man that's played ducks +and drakes with the statutes--Heaven be merciful to him, I say. For +there's naught I treasure against him; the will of God bein' in it all, +with some doin' of the Devil, too, maybe." + +Pretty Pierre, standing with ear to the window of the dark room, heard +all this, and he pressed his upper lip hard with his forefinger, as if +something disturbed him. + +Shon continued. "I'm glad I wasn't sent after him as all these here +know; for it's little I'd like to clap irons on his wrists, or whistle +him to come to me with a Winchester or a Navy. So I'm here on my +business, and they're here on theirs. Though we come together it's +because we met each other hereaway. They've a thought that, maybe, +Pretty Pierre has taken refuge with you. They'll little like to disturb +you, I know. But with dead in your house, and you givin' the word of +truth, which none other could fall from your lips, they'll go on their +way to look elsewhere." + +The priest's face was pinched, and there was a wrench at his heart. He +turned to the others. A trooper stepped forward. + +"Father Corraine," he said, "it is my duty to search your house; but not +a foot will I stretch across your threshold if you say no, and give the +word that the man is not with you." + +"Corporal McGann," said the priest, "the woman whom I thought was dead +did not die, as you shall see. There is no need for inquiry. But she +will go with you to Fort Cypress. As for the other, you say that Father +Corraine's threshold is his own, and at his own command. His home is now +a sanctuary--for the afflicted." He went towards the door. As he did +so, Mary Callen, who had been listening inside the room with shaking +frame and bursting heart, dropped on her knees beside the table, her head +in her arms. The door opened. "See," said the priest, "a woman who is +injured and suffering." + +"Ah," rejoined the trooper, "perhaps it is the woman who was riding with +the half-breed. We found her dead horse." + +The priest nodded. Shon McGann looked at the crouching figure by the +table pityingly. As he looked he was stirred, he knew not why. And she, +though she did not look, knew that his gaze was on her; and all her will +was spent in holding her eyes from his face, and from crying out to him. + +"And Pretty Pierre," said the trooper, "is not here with her?" + +There was an unfathomable sadness in the priest's eyes, as, with a slight +motion of the hand towards the room, he said: "You see--he is not here." + +The trooper and his men immediately mounted; but one of them, young Tim +Kearney, slid from his horse, and came and dropped on his knee in front +of the priest. + +"It's many a day," he said, "since before God or man I bent a knee--more +shame to me for that, and for mad days gone; but I care not who knows it, +I want a word of blessin' from the man that's been out here like a saint +in the wilderness, with a heart like the Son o' God." + +The priest looked at the man at first as if scarce comprehending this act +so familiar to him, then he slowly stretched out his hand, said some +words in benediction, and made the sacred gesture. But his face had a +strange and absent look, and he held the hand poised, even when the man +had risen and mounted his horse. One by one the troopers rode through +the faint belt of light that stretched from the door, and were lost in +the darkness, the thud of their horses' hoofs echoing behind them. But a +change had come over Corporal Shon McGann. He looked at Father Corraine +with concern and perplexity. He alone of those who were there had caught +the unreal note in the proceedings. His eyes were bent on the darkness +into which the men had gone, and his fingers toyed for an instant with +his whistle; but he said a hard word of himself under his breath, and +turned to meet Father Corraine's hand upon his arm. + +"Shon McGann," the priest said, "I have words to say to you concerning +this poor girl," + +"You wish to have her taken to the Fort, I suppose? What was she doing +with Pretty Pierre?" + +"I wish her taken to her home." + +"Where is her home, father?" And his eyes were cast with trouble on the +girl, though he could assign no cause for that. + +"Her home, Shon,"--the priest's voice was very gentle--"her home was +where they sing such words as these of a wanderer: + + "'You'll hear the wild birds singin' beneath a brighter sky,' + The roof-tree of your home, dear, it will be grand and high; + But you'll hunger for the hearthstone where a child you used to lie, + You'll be comin' back, my darlin'."' + +During these words Shon's face ran white, then red; and now he stepped +inside the door like one in a dream, and the girl's face was lifted to +his as though he had called her. "Mary--Mary Callen!" he cried. His +arms spread out, then dropped to his side, and he fell on his knees by +the table facing her, and looked at her with love and horror warring in +his face; for the remembrance that she had been with Pierre was like the +hand of the grave upon him. Moving not at all, she looked at him, a numb +despondency in her face. Suddenly Shon's look grew stern, and he was +about to rise; but Father Corraine put a hand on his shoulder, and said: +"Stay where you are, man--on your knees. There is your place just now. +Be not so quick to judge, and remember your own sins before you charge +others without knowledge. Listen now to me." + +And he spoke Mary Callen's tale as he knew it, and as she had given it to +him, not forgetting to mention that she had been told the thing which had +occurred in Pipi Valley. + +The heroic devotion of this woman, and Pretty Pierre's act of friendship +to her, together with the swift panorama of his past across the seas, +awoke the whole man in Shon, as the staunch life that he had lately led +rendered it possible. There was a grave, kind look upon his face when he +rose at the ending of the tale, and came to her, saying: + +"Mary, it is I who need forgiveness. Will you come now to the home you +wanted?" and he stretched his arms to her. . . . + +An hour after, as the three sat there, the door of the other room opened, +and Pretty Pierre came out silently, and was about to pass from the hut; +but the priest put a hand on his arm, and said: + +"'Where do you go, Pierre?" + +Pierre shrugged his shoulder slightly: + +"I do not know. 'Mon Dieu!'--that I have put this upon you!--you that +never spoke but the truth." + +"You have made my sin of no avail," the priest replied; and he motioned +towards Shon McGann, who was now risen to his feet, Mary clinging to his +arm. "Father Corraine," said Shon, "it is my duty to arrest this man; +but I cannot do it, would not do it, if he came and offered his arms for +the steel. I'll take the wrong of this now, sir, and such shame as there +is in that falsehood on my shoulders. And she here and I, and this man +too, I doubt not, will carry your sin--as you call it--to our graves, +without shame." + +Father Corraine shook his head sadly, and made no reply, for his soul was +heavy. He motioned them all to sit down. And they sat there by the +light of a flickering candle, with the door bolted and a cassock hung +across the window, lest by any chance this uncommon thing should be seen. +But the priest remained in a shadowed corner, with a little book in his +hand, and he was long on his knees. And when morning came they had +neither slept nor changed the fashion of their watch, save for a moment +now and then, when Pierre suffered from the pain of his wound, and +silently passed up and down the little room. + +The morning was half gone when Shon McGann and Mary Callen stood beside +their horses, ready to mount and go; for Mary had persisted that she +could travel--joy makes such marvellous healing. When the moment of +parting came, Pierre was not there. Mary whispered to her lover +concerning this. The priest went to the door of the but and called him. +He came out slowly. + +"Pierre," said Shon, "there's a word to be said between us that had best +be spoken now, though it's not aisy. It's little you or I will care to +meet again in this world. There's been credit given and debts paid by +both of us since the hour when we first met; and it needs thinking to +tell which is the debtor now, for deeds are hard to reckon; but, before +God, I believe it's meself;" and he turned and looked fondly at Mary +Callen. + +And Pierre replied: "Shon McGann, I make no reckoning close; but we will +square all accounts here, as you say, and for the last time; for never +again shall we meet, if it's within my will or doing. But I say I am the +debtor; and if I pay not here, there will come a time!" and he caught +his shoulder as it shrunk in pain of his wound. He tapped the wound +lightly, and said with irony: "This is my note of hand for my debt, Shon +McGann. Eh, bien!" + +Then he tossed his fingers indolently towards Shon, and turning his eyes +slowly to Mary Callen, raised his hat in good-bye. She put out her hand +impulsively to him, but Pierre, shaking his head, looked away. Shon put +his hand gently on her arm. "No, no," he said in a whisper, "there can +be no touch of hands between us." + +And Pierre, looking up, added: "C'est vrai. That is the truth. You go-- +home. I got to hide. So--so." And he turned and went into the hut. + +The others set their faces northward, and Father Corraine walked beside +Mary Callen's horse, talking quietly of their future life, and speaking, +as he would never speak again, of days in that green land of their birth. +At length, upon a dividing swell of the prairie, he paused to say +farewell. + +Many times the two turned to see, and he was there, looking after them; +his forehead bared to the clear inspiring wind, his grey hair blown back, +his hands clasped. Before descending the trough of a great landwave, +they turned for the last time, and saw him standing motionless, the one +solitary being in all their wide horizon. + +But outside the line of vision there sat a man in a prairie hut, whose +eyes travelled over the valley of blue sky stretching away beyond the +morning, whose face was pale and cold. For hours he sat unmoving, and +when, at last, someone gently touched him on the shoulder, he only shook +his head, and went on thinking. He was busy with the grim ledger of his +life. + + + + +ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS: + +An inner sorrow is a consuming fire +Philosophy which could separate the petty from the prodigious +Remember your own sins before you charge others + + + + + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PIERRE AND HIS PEOPLE, V5, PARKER *** + +*********** This file should be named 6178.txt or 6178.zip *********** + +This eBook was produced by David Widger + +Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US +unless a copyright notice is included. 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