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<h2> XVI. BE SAINT OR IMP </h2>
<p>Immediately I opened the packet. As Doltaire had said, the two books of
poems I had lent Alixe were there, and between the pages of one lay a
letter addressed to me. It was, indeed, a daring thing to make Doltaire
her messenger. But she trusted to his habits of courtesy; he had no small
meannesses—he was no spy or thief.</p>
<p>DEAR ROBERT (the letter ran): I know not if this will ever reach you, for
I am about to try a perilous thing, even to make Monsieur Doltaire my
letter-carrier. Bold as it is, I hope to bring it through safely.</p>
<p>You must know that my mother now makes Monsieur Doltaire welcome to our
home, for his great talents and persuasion have so worked upon her that
she believes him not so black as he is painted. My father, too, is not
unmoved by his amazing address and complaisance. I do not think he often
cares to use his arts—he is too indolent; but with my father, my
mother, and my sister he has set in motion all his resources.</p>
<p>Robert, all Versailles is here. This Monsieur Doltaire speaks for it. I
know not if all courts in the world are the same, but if so, I am at heart
no courtier; though I love the sparkle, the sharp play of wit and word,
the very touch-and-go of weapons. I am in love with life, and I wish to
live to be old, very old, that I will have known it all, from helplessness
to helplessness again, missing nothing, even though much be sad to feel
and bear. Robert, I should have gone on many years, seeing little, knowing
little, I think, if it had not been for you and for your troubles, which
are mine, and for this love of ours, builded in the midst of sorrows.
Georgette is now as old as when I first came to love you, and you were
thrown into the citadel, and yet in feeling and experience, I am ten years
older than she; and necessity has made me wiser. Ah, if necessity would
but make me happy too, by giving you your liberty, that on these many
miseries endured we might set up a sure home. I wonder if you think—if
you think of that: a little home away from all these wars, aloof from
vexing things.</p>
<p>But there! all too plainly I am showing you my heart. Yet it is so great a
comfort to speak on paper to you, in this silence here. Can you guess
where is that HERE, Robert? It is not the Chateau St. Louis—no. It
is not the Manor. It is the chateau, dear Chateau Alixe—my father
has called it that—on the Island of Orleans. Three days ago I was
sick at heart, tired of all the junketings and feastings, and I begged my
mother to fetch me here, though it is yet but early spring, and snow is on
the ground.</p>
<p>First, you must know that this new chateau is built upon, and is joined
to, the ruins of an old one, owned long years ago by the Baron of
Beaugard, whose strange history you must learn some day, out of the papers
we have found here. I begged my father not to tear the old portions of the
manor down, but, using the first foundations, put up a house half castle
and half manor. Pictures of the old manor were found, and so we have a
place that is no patchwork, but a renewal. I made my father give me the
old surviving part of the building for my own, and so it is.</p>
<p>It is all set on high ground abutting on the water almost at the point
where I am, and I have the river in my sight all day. Now, think yourself
in the new building. You come out of a dining-hall, hung all about with
horns and weapons and shields and such bravery, go through a dark, narrow
passage, and then down a step or two. You open a door, bright light breaks
on your eyes, then two steps lower, and you are here with me. You might
have gone outside the dining-hall upon a stone terrace, and so have come
along to the deep window where I sit so often. You may think of me hiding
in the curtains, watching you, though you knew it not till you touched the
window and I came out quietly, startling you, so that your heart would
beat beyond counting.</p>
<p>As I look up towards the window, the thing first in sight is the cage,
with the little bird which came to me in the cathedral the morning my
brother got lease of life again: you DO remember—is it not so? It
never goes from my room, and though I have come here but for a week I
muffled the cage well and brought it over; and there the bird swings and
sings the long day through. I have heaped the window-seats with soft furs,
and one of these I prize most rarely. It was a gift—and whose, think
you? Even a poor soldier’s. You see I have not all friends among the great
folk. I often lie upon that soft robe of sable—ay, sable, Master
Robert—and think of him who gave it to me. Now I know you are
jealous, and I can see your eyes flash up. But you shall at once be
soothed. It is no other than Gabord’s gift. He is now of the Governor’s
body-guard, and I think is by no means happy, and would prefer service
with the Marquis de Montcalm, who goes not comfortably with the Intendant
and the Governor.</p>
<p>One day Gabord came to our house on the ramparts, and, asking for me,
blundered out, “Aho, what shall a soldier do with sables? They are for
gentles and for wrens to snuggle in. Here comes a Russian count oversea,
and goes mad in tavern. Here comes Gabord, and saves count from ruddy
crest for kissing the wrong wench. Then count falls on Gabord’s neck, and
kisses both his ears, and gives him sables, and crosses oversea again; and
so good-bye to count and his foolery. And sables shall be ma’m’selle’s, if
she will have them.” He might have sold the thing for many louis, and yet
he brought it to me; and he would not go till he had seen me sitting on
it, muffling my hands and face in the soft fur.</p>
<p>Just now, as I am writing, I glance at the table where I sit—a small
brown table of oak, carved with the name of Felise, Baroness of Beaugard.
She sat here; and some day, when you hear her story, you will know why I
begged Madame Lotbiniere to give it to me in exchange for another, once
the King’s. Carved, too, beneath her name, are the words, “Oh, tarry thou
the Lord’s leisure.”</p>
<p>And now you shall laugh with me at a droll thing Georgette has given me to
wipe my pen upon. There are three little circles of deerskin and one of
ruby velvet, stitched together in the centre. Then, standing on the velvet
is a yellow wooden chick, with little eyes of beads, and a little wooden
bill stuck in most quaintly, and a head that twists like a weathercock. It
has such a piquant silliness of look that I laugh at it most heartily, and
I have an almost elfish fun in smearing its downy feathers. I am sure you
did not think I could be amused so easily. You shall see this silly chick
one day, humorously ugly and all daubed with ink.</p>
<p>There is a low couch in one corner of the room, and just above hangs a
picture of my mother. In another corner is a little shelf of books, among
them two which I have studied constantly since you were put in prison—your
great Shakespeare, and the writings of one Mr. Addison. I had few means of
studying at first, so difficult it seemed, and all the words sounded hard;
but there is your countryman, one Lieutenant Stevens of Rogers’ Rangers, a
prisoner, and he has helped me, and is ready to help you when the time
comes for stirring. I teach him French; and though I do not talk of you,
he tells me in what esteem you are held in Virginia and in England, and is
not slow to praise you on his own account, which makes me more forgiving
when he would come to sentiment!</p>
<p>In another corner is my spinning-wheel, and there stands a harpsichord,
just where the soft sun sends in a ribbon of light; and I will presently
play for you a pretty song. I wonder if you can hear it? Where I shall sit
at the harpsichord the belt of sunlight will fall across my shoulder, and,
looking through the window, I shall see your prison there on the Heights;
the silver flag with its gold lilies on the Chateau St. Louis; the great
guns of the citadel; and far off at Beauport the Manor House and garden
which you and I know so well, and the Falls of Montmorenci, falling like
white flowing hair from the tall cliff.</p>
<p>You will care to know of how these months have been spent, and what news
of note there is of the fighting between our countries. No matters of
great consequence have come to our ears, save that it is thought your navy
may descend on Louisburg; that Ticonderoga is also to be set upon, and
Quebec to be besieged in the coming summer. From France the news is
various. Now, Frederick of Prussia and England defeat the allies, France,
Russia, and Austria; now, they, as Monsieur Doltaire says, “send the great
Prussian to verses and the megrims.” For my own part, I am ever glad to
hear that our cause is victorious, and letters that my brother writes me
rouse all my ardour for my country. Juste has grown in place and favour,
and in his latest letter he says that Monsieur Doltaire’s voice has got
him much advancement. He also remarks that Monsieur Doltaire has
reputation for being one of the most reckless, clever, and cynical men in
France. Things that he has said are quoted at ball and rout. Yet the King
is angry with him, and La Pompadour’s caprice may send him again to the
Bastile. These things Juste heard from D’Argenson, Minister of War,
through his secretary, with whom he is friendly.</p>
<p>I will now do what I never thought to do: I will send you here some
extracts from my journal, which will disclose to you the secrets of a
girl’s troubled heart. Some folk might say that I am unmaidenly in this.
But I care not, I fear not.</p>
<p>December 24. I was with Robert to-day. I let him see what trials I had had
with Monsieur Doltaire, and what were like to come. It hurt me to tell
him, yet it would have hurt me more to withhold them. I am hurt whichever
way it goes. Monsieur Doltaire rouses the worst parts of me. On the one
hand I detest him for his hatred of Robert and for his evil life, yet on
the other I must needs admire him for his many graces—why are not
the graces of the wicked horrible?—for his singular abilities, and
because, gamester though he may be, he is no public robber. Then, too, the
melancholy of his birth and history claims some sympathy. Sometimes when I
listen to him speak, hear the almost piquant sadness of his words, watch
the spirit of isolation which, by design or otherwise, shows in him, for
the moment I am conscious of a pity or an interest which I flout in wiser
hours. This is his art, the potent danger of his personality.</p>
<p>To-night he came, and with many fine phrases wished us a happy day
to-morrow, and most deftly worked upon my mother and Georgette by looking
round and speaking with a quaint sort of raillery—half pensive, it
was—of the peace of this home-life of ours; and indeed, he did it so
inimitably that I was not sure how much was false and how much true. I
tried to avoid him to-day, but my mother as constantly made private speech
between us easy. At last he had his way, and then I was not sorry; for
Georgette was listening to him with more colour than she is wont to wear.
I would rather see her in her grave than with her hand in his, her sweet
life in his power. She is unschooled in the ways of the world, and she
never will know it as I now do. How am I sounding all the depths! Can a
woman walk the dance with evil, and be no worse for it by-and-bye? Yet for
a cause, for a cause! What can I do? I can not say, “Monsieur Doltaire,
you must not speak with me, or talk with me; you are a plague-spot.” No, I
must even follow this path, so it but lead at last to Robert and his
safety.</p>
<p>Monsieur, having me alone at last, said to me, “I have kept my word as to
the little boast: this Captain Moray still lives.”</p>
<p>“You are not greater than I thought,” said I.</p>
<p>He professed to see but one meaning in my words, and answered, “It was
then mere whim to see me do this thing, a lady’s curious mind, eh? My
faith, I think your sex are the true scientists: you try experiment for no
other reason than to see effect.”</p>
<p>“You forget my deep interest in Captain Moray,” said I, with airy
boldness.</p>
<p>He laughed. He was disarmed. How could he think I meant it! “My
imagination halts,” he rejoined. “Millennium comes when you are
interested. And yet,” he continued, “it is my one ambition to interest
you, and I will do it, or I will say my prayers no more.”</p>
<p>“But how can that be done no more,<br/>
Which ne’er was done before?”<br/></p>
<p>I retorted, railing at him, for I feared to take him seriously.</p>
<p>“There you wrong me,” he said. “I am devout; I am a lover of the
Scriptures—their beauty haunts me; I go to mass—its dignity
affects me; and I have prayed, as in my youth I wrote verses. It is not a
matter of morality, but of temperament. A man may be religious and yet be
evil. Satan fell, but he believed and he admired, as the English Milton
wisely shows it.”</p>
<p>I was most glad that my father came between us at that moment; but before
Monsieur left, he said to me, “You have challenged me. Beware: I have
begun this chase. Yet I would rather be your follower, rather have your
arrow in me, than be your hunter.” He said it with a sort of warmth, which
I knew was a glow in his senses merely; he was heated with his own
eloquence.</p>
<p>“Wait,” returned I. “You have heard the story of King Artus?”</p>
<p>He thought a moment. “No, no. I never was a child as other children. I was
always comrade to the imps.”</p>
<p>“King Artus,” said I, “was most fond of hunting.” (It is but a legend with
its moral, as you know.) “It was forbidden by the priests to hunt while
mass was being said. One day, at the lifting of the host, the King,
hearing a hound bay, rushed out, and gathered his pack together; but as
they went, a whirlwind caught them up into the air, where they continue to
this day, following a lonely trail, never resting, and all the game they
get is one fly every seventh year. And now, when all on a sudden at night
you hear the trees and leaves and the sleepy birds and crickets stir, it
is the old King hunting—for the fox he never gets.”</p>
<p>Monsieur looked at me with curious intentness. “You have a great gift,” he
said; “you make your point by allusion. I follow you. But see: when I am
blown into the air I shall not ride alone. Happiness is the fox we ride to
cover, you and I, though we find but a firefly in the end.”</p>
<p>“A poor reply,” I remarked easily; “not worthy of you.”</p>
<p>“As worthy as I am of you,” he rejoined; then he kissed my hand. “I will
see you at mass to-morrow.”</p>
<p>Unconsciously, I rubbed the hand he kissed with my handkerchief.</p>
<p>“I am not to be provoked,” he said. “It is much to have you treat my kiss
with consequence.”</p>
<p>March 25. No news of Robert all this month. Gabord has been away in
Montreal. I see Voban only now and then, and he is strange in manner, and
can do nothing. Mathilde is better—so still and desolate, yet not
wild; but her memory is all gone, all save for that “Francois Bigot is a
devil.” My father has taken anew a strong dislike to Monsieur Doltaire,
because of talk that is abroad concerning him and Madame Cournal. I once
thought she was much sinned against, but now I am sure she is not to be
defended. She is most defiant, though people dare not shut their doors
against her. A change seemed to come over her all at once, and over her
husband also. He is now gloomy and taciturn, now foolishly gay, yet he is
little seen with the Intendant, as before. However it be, Monsieur
Doltaire and Bigot are no longer intimate. What should I care for that, if
Monsieur Doltaire had no power, if he were not the door between Robert and
me? What care I, indeed, how vile he is, so he but serve my purpose? Let
him try my heart and soul and senses as he will; I will one day purify
myself of his presence and all this soiling, and find my peace in Robert’s
arms—or in the quiet of a nunnery.</p>
<p>This morning I got up at sunrise, it being the Annunciation of the Virgin,
and prepared to go to mass in the chapel of the Ursulines. How peaceful
was the world! So still, so still. The smoke came curling up here and
there through the sweet air of spring, a snowbird tripped along the white
coverlet of the earth, and before a Calvary, I saw a peasant kneel and say
an Ave as he went to market. There was springtime in the sun, in the smell
of the air; springtime everywhere but in my heart, which was all winter. I
seemed alone—alone—alone. I felt the tears start. But that was
for a moment only, I am glad to say, for I got my courage again, as I did
the night before when Monsieur Doltaire placed his arm at my waist, and
poured into my ears a torrent of protestations.</p>
<p>I did not move at first. But I could feel my cheeks go to stone, and
something clamp my heart. Yet had ever man such hateful eloquence! There
is that in him—oh, shame! oh, shame!—which goes far with a
woman. He has the music of passion, and though it is lower than love, it
is the poetry of the senses. I spoke to him calmly, I think, begging him
place his merits where they would have better entertainment; but I said
hard, cold things at last, when other means availed not; which presently
made him turn upon me in another fashion.</p>
<p>His words dropped slowly, with a consummate carefulness, his manner was
pointedly courteous, yet there was an underpressure of force, of will,
which made me see the danger of my position. He said that I was quite
right; that he would wish no privilege of a woman which was not given with
a frank eagerness; that to him no woman was worth the having who did not
throw her whole nature into the giving. Constancy—that was another
matter. But a perfect gift while there was giving at all—that was
the way.</p>
<p>“There is something behind all this,” he said. “I am not so vain as to
think any merits of mine would influence you. But my devotion, my
admiration of you, the very force of my passion, should move you. Be you
ever so set against me—and I do not think you are—you should
not be so strong to resist the shock of feeling. I do not know the cause,
but I will find it out; and when I do, I shall remove it or be myself
removed.” He touched my arm with his fingers. “When I touch you like
that,” he said, “summer riots in my veins. I will not think that this
which rouses me so is but power upon one side, and effect upon the other.
Something in you called me to you, something in me will wake you yet. Mon
Dieu, I could wait a score of years for my touch to thrill you as yours
does me! And I will—I will.”</p>
<p>“You think it suits your honour to force my affections?” I asked; for I
dared not say all I wished.</p>
<p>“What is there in this reflecting on my honour?” he answered. “At
Versailles, believe me, they would say I strive here for a canonizing. No,
no; think me so gallant that I follow you to serve you, to convince you
that the way I go is the way your hopes will lie. Honour? To fetch you to
the point where you and I should start together on the Appian Way, I would
traffic with that, even, and say I did so, and would do so a thousand
times, if in the end it put your hand in mine. Who, who can give you what
I offer, can offer? See: I have given myself to a hundred women in my time—but
what of me? That which was a candle in a wind, and the light went out.
There was no depth, no life, in that; only the shadow of a man was there
those hundred times. But here, now, the whole man plunges into this sea,
and he will reach the lighthouse on the shore, or be broken on the reefs.
Look in my eyes, and see the furnace there, and tell me if you think that
fire is for cool corners in the gardens at Neuilly or for the Hills of—”
He suddenly broke off, and a singular smile followed. “There, there,” he
said, “I have said enough. It came to me all at once how droll my speech
would sound to our people at Versailles. It is an elaborate irony that the
occasional virtues of certain men turn and mock them. That is the penalty
of being inconsistent. Be saint or imp; it is the only way. But this imp
that mocks me relieves you of reply. Yet I have spoken truth, and again
and again I will tell it you, till you believe according to my gospel.”</p>
<p>How glad I was that he himself lightened the situation! I had been driven
to despair, but this strange twist in his mood made all smooth for me.
“That ‘again and again’ sounds dreary,” said I. “It might almost appear I
must sometime accept your gospel, to cure you of preaching it, and save me
from eternal drowsiness.”</p>
<p>We were then most fortunately interrupted. He made his adieus, and I went
to my room, brooded till my head ached, then fell a-weeping, and wished
myself out of the world, I was so sick and weary. Now and again a hot
shudder of shame and misery ran through me, as I thought of monsieur’s
words to me. Put them how he would, they sound an insult now, though as he
spoke I felt the power of his passion. “If you had lived a thousand years
ago, you would have loved a thousand times,” he said to me one day.
Sometimes I think he spoke truly; I have a nature that responds to all
eloquence in life.</p>
<p>Robert, I have bared my heart to thee. I have hidden nothing. In a few
days I shall go back to the city with my mother, and when I can I will
send news; and do thou send me news also, if thou canst devise a safe way.
Meanwhile, I have written my brother Juste to be magnanimous, and to try
for thy freedom. He will not betray me, and he may help us. I have begged
him to write to thee a letter of reconcilement.</p>
<p>And now, comrade of my heart, do thou have courage. I also shall be strong
as I am ardent. Having written thee, I am cheerful once more; and when
again I may, I will open the doors of my heart that thou mayst come in.
That heart is thine, Robert. Thy</p>
<p>ALIXE,</p>
<p>who loves thee all her days.</p>
<p>P.S.—I have found the names and places of the men who keep the guard
beneath thy window. If there is chance for freedom that way, fix the day
some time ahead, and I will see what may be done. Voban fears nothing; he
will act secretly for me.</p>
<p>The next day I arranged for my escape, which had been long in planning.</p>
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