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<h2> XXV. IN THE CATHEDRAL. </h2>
<p>I awoke with the dawn, and, dressing, looked out of the window, seeing the
brindled light spread over the battered roofs and ruins of the Lower Town.
A bell was calling to prayers in the Jesuit College not far away, and
bugle-calls told of the stirring garrison. Soldiers and stragglers passed
down the street near by, and a few starved peasants crept about the
cathedral with downcast eyes, eager for crumbs that a well-fed soldier
might cast aside. Yet I knew that in the Intendant’s Palace and among the
officers of the army there was abundance, with revelry and dissipation.</p>
<p>Presently I drew to the trap-door of my loft, and, raising it gently, came
down the ladder to the little hallway, and softly opened the door of the
room where Labrouk’s body lay. Candles were burning at his head and his
feet, and two peasants sat dozing in chairs near by. I could see Labrouk’s
face plainly in the flickering light: a rough, wholesome face it was,
refined by death, yet unshaven and unkempt, too. Here was work for Voban’s
shears and razor. Presently there was a footstep behind me, and, turning,
I saw in the half-light the widowed wife.</p>
<p>“Madame,” said I in a whisper, “I too weep with you. I pray for as true an
end for myself.”</p>
<p>“He was of the true faith, thank the good God,” she said sincerely. She
passed into the room, and the two watchers, after taking refreshment, left
the house. Suddenly she hastened to the door, called one back, and,
pointing to the body, whispered something. The peasant nodded and turned
away. She came back into the room, stood looking at the face of the dead
man for a moment, and bent over and kissed the crucifix clasped in the
cold hands. Then she stepped about the room, moving a chair and sweeping
up a speck of dust in a mechanical way. Presently, as if she again
remembered me, she asked me to enter the room. Then she bolted the outer
door of the house. I stood looking at the body of her husband, and said,
“Were it not well to have Voban the barber?”</p>
<p>“I have sent for him and for Gabord,” she replied. “Gabord was Jean’s good
friend. He is with General Montcalm. The Governor put him in prison
because of the marriage of Mademoiselle Duvarney, but Monsieur Doltaire
set him free, and now he serves General Montcalm.</p>
<p>“I have work in the cathedral,” continued the poor woman, “and I shall go
to it this morning as I have always gone. There is a little unused closet
in a gallery where you may hide, and still see all that happens. It is
your last look at the lady, and I will give it to you, as you gave me to
know of my Jean.”</p>
<p>“My last look?” I asked eagerly.</p>
<p>“She goes into the nunnery to-morrow, they say,” was the reply. “Her
marriage is to be set aside by the bishop to-day—in the cathedral.
This is her last night to live as such as I—but no, she will be
happier so.”</p>
<p>“Madame,” said I, “I am a heretic, but I listened when your husband said,
‘Mon grand homme de Calvaire, bon soir!’ Was the cross less a cross
because a heretic put it to his lips? Is a marriage less a marriage
because a heretic is the husband? Madame, you loved your Jean; if he were
living now, what would you do to keep him. Think, madame, is not love more
than all?”</p>
<p>She turned to the dead body. “Mon petit Jean!” she murmured, but made no
reply to me, and for many minutes the room was silent. At last she turned,
and said, “You must come at once, for soon the priests will be at the
church. A little later I will bring you some breakfast, and you must not
stir from there till I come to fetch you—no.”</p>
<p>“I wish to see Voban,” said I.</p>
<p>She thought a moment. “I will try to fetch him to you by-and-bye,” she
said. She did not speak further, but finished the sentence by pointing to
the body.</p>
<p>Presently, hearing footsteps, she drew me into another little room. “It is
the grandfather,” she said. “He has forgotten you already, and he must not
see you again.”</p>
<p>We saw the old man hobble into the room we had left, carrying in one arm
Jean’s coat and hat. He stood still, and nodded at the body and mumbled to
himself; then he went over and touched the hands and forehead, nodding
wisely; after which he came to his armchair, and, sitting down, spread the
coat over his knees, put the cap on it, and gossiped with himself:</p>
<p>“In eild our idle fancies all return,<br/>
The mind’s eye cradled by the open grave.”<br/></p>
<p>A moment later, the woman passed from the rear of the house to the vestry
door of the cathedral. After a minute, seeing no one near, I followed,
came to the front door, entered, and passed up a side aisle towards the
choir. There was no one to be seen, but soon the woman came out of the
vestry and beckoned to me nervously. I followed her quick movements, and
was soon in a narrow stairway, coming, after fifty steps or so, to a sort
of cloister, from which we went into a little cubiculum, or cell, with a
wooden lattice door which opened on a small gallery. Through the lattices
the nave amid choir could be viewed distinctly.</p>
<p>Without a word the woman turned and left me, and I sat down on a little
stone bench and waited. I saw the acolytes come and go, and priests move
back and forth before the altar; I smelt the grateful incense as it rose
when mass was said; I watched the people gather in little clusters at the
different shrines, or seek the confessional, or kneel to receive the
blessed sacrament. Many who came were familiar—among them
Mademoiselle Lucie Lotbiniere. Lucie prayed long before a shrine of the
Virgin, and when she rose at last her face bore signs of weeping. Also I
noticed her suddenly start as she moved down the aisle, for a figure came
forward from seclusion and touched her arm. As he half turned I saw that
it was Juste Duvarney. The girl drew back from him, raising her hand as if
in protest, and it struck me that her grief and her repulse of him had to
do with putting Alixe away into a nunnery.</p>
<p>I sat hungry and thirsty for quite three hours, and then the church became
empty, and only an old verger kept a seat by the door, half asleep, though
the artillery of both armies was at work, and the air was laden with the
smell of powder. (Until this time our batteries had avoided firing on the
churches.) At last I heard footsteps near me in the dark stairway, and I
felt for my pistols, for the feet were not those of Labrouk’s wife. I
waited anxiously, and was overjoyed to see Voban enter my hiding-place,
bearing some food. I greeted him warmly, but he made little demonstration.
He was like one who, occupied with some great matter, passed through the
usual affairs of life with a distant eye. Immediately he handed me a
letter, saying:</p>
<p>“M’sieu’, I give my word to hand you this—in a day or a year, as I
am able. I get your message to me this morning, and then I come to care
for Jean Labrouk, and so I find you here, and I give the letter. It come
to me last night.”</p>
<p>The letter was from Alixe. I opened it with haste, and, in the dim light,
read:</p>
<p>MY BELOVED HUSBAND: Oh, was there no power in earth or heaven to bring me
to your arms to-day?</p>
<p>To-morow they come to see my marriage annulled by the Church. And every
one will say it is annulled—every one but me. I, in God’s name, will
say no, though it break my heart to oppose myself to them all.</p>
<p>Why did my brother come back? He has been hard—O, Robert, he has
been hard upon me, and yet I was ever kind to him! My father, too, he
listens to the Church, and, though he likes not Monsieur Doltaire, he
works for him in a hundred ways without seeing it. I, alas! see it too
well, and my brother is as wax in monsieur’s hands. Juste loves Lucie
Lotbiniere—that should make him kind. She, sweet friend, does not
desert me, but is kept from me. She says she will not yield to Juste’s
suit until he yields to me. If—oh, if Madame Jamond had not gone to
Montreal!</p>
<p>... As I was writing the foregoing sentence, my father asked to see me,
and we have had a talk—ah, a most bitter talk!</p>
<p>“Alixe,” said he, “this is our last evening together, and I would have it
peaceful.”</p>
<p>“My father,” said I, “it is not my will that this evening be our last; and
for peace, I long for it with all my heart.”</p>
<p>He frowned, and answered, “You have brought me trouble and sorrow. Mother
of God! was it not possible for you to be as your sister Georgette? I gave
her less love, yet she honours me more.”</p>
<p>“She honours you, my father, by a sweet, good life, and by marriage into
an honourable family, and at your word she gives her hand to Monsieur
Auguste de la Darante. She marries to your pleasure, therefore she has
peace and your love. I marry a man of my own choosing, a bitterly wronged
gentleman, and you treat me as some wicked thing. Is that like a father
who loves his child?”</p>
<p>“The wronged gentleman, as you call him, invaded that which is the pride
of every honest gentleman,” he said.</p>
<p>“And what is that?” asked I quietly, though I felt the blood beating at my
temples.</p>
<p>“My family honour, the good name and virtue of my daughter.”</p>
<p>I got to my feet, and looked my father in the eyes with an anger and a
coldness that hurts me now when I think of it, and I said, “I will not let
you speak so to me. Friendless though I be, you shall not. You have the
power to oppress me, but you shall not slander me to my face. Can not you
leave insults to my enemies?”</p>
<p>“I will never leave you to the insults of this mock marriage,” answered
he, angrily also. “Two days hence I take command of five thousand
burghers, and your brother Juste serves with General Montcalm. There is to
be last fighting soon between us and the English. I do not doubt of the
result, but I may fall, and your brother also, and, should the English
win, I will not leave you to him you call your husband. Therefore you
shall be kept safe where no alien hands may reach you. The Church will
hold you close.”</p>
<p>I calmed myself again while listening to him, and I asked, “Is there no
other way?”</p>
<p>He shook his head.</p>
<p>“Is there no Monsieur Doltaire?” said I. “He has a king’s blood in his
veins!”</p>
<p>He looked sharply at me. “You are mocking,” he replied. “No, no, that is
no way, either. Monsieur Doltaire must never mate with daughter of mine. I
will take care of that; the Church is a perfect if gentle jailer.”</p>
<p>I could bear it no longer. I knelt to him. I begged him to have pity on
me. I pleaded with him; I recalled the days when, as a child, I sat upon
his knee and listened to the wonderful tales he told; I begged him, by the
memory of all the years when he and I were such true friends to be kind to
me now, to be merciful—even though he thought I had done wrong—to
be merciful. I asked him to remember that I was a motherless girl, and
that if I had missed the way to happiness he ought not to make my path
bitter to the end. I begged him to give me back his love and confidence,
and, if I must for evermore be parted from you, to let me be with him, not
to put me away into a convent.</p>
<p>Oh, how my heart leaped when I saw his face soften! “Well, well,” he said,
“if I live, you shall be taken from the convent; but for the present, till
this fighting is over, it is the only safe place. There, too, you shall be
safe from Monsieur Doltaire.”</p>
<p>It was poor comfort. “But should you be killed, and the English take
Quebec?” said I.</p>
<p>“When I am dead,” he answered, “when I am dead, then there is your
brother.”</p>
<p>“And if he speaks for Monsieur Doltaire?” asked I.</p>
<p>“There is the Church and God always,” he answered.</p>
<p>“And my own husband, the man who saved your life, my father,” I urged
gently; and when he would have spoken I threw myself into his arms—the
first time in such long, long weeks!—and, stopping his lips with my
fingers, burst into tears on his breast. I think much of his anger against
me passed, yet before he left he said he could not now prevent the
annulment of the marriage, even if he would, for other powers were at
work; which powers I supposed to be the Governor, for certain reasons of
enmity to my father and me—alas! how changed is he, the vain old
man!—and Monsieur Doltaire, whose ends I knew so well. So they will
unwed us to-morrow, Robert; but be sure that I shall never be unwed in my
own eyes, and that I will wait till I die, hoping you will come and take
me—oh, Robert, my husband—take me home.</p>
<p>If I had one hundred men, I would fight my way out of this city, and to
you; but, dear, I have none, not even Gabord, who is not let come near me.
There is but Voban. Yet he will bear you this, if it be possible, for he
comes to-night to adorn my fashionable brother. The poor Mathilde I have
not seen of late. She has vanished. When they began to keep me close, and
carried me off at last into the country, where we were captured by the
English, I could not see her, and my heart aches for her.</p>
<p>God bless you, Robert, and farewell. How we shall smile, when all this
misery is done! Oh, say we shall, say we shall smile, and all this misery
cease. Will you not take me home? Do you still love thy wife, thy</p>
<p>ALIXE?</p>
<p>I bade Voban come to me at the little house behind the church that night
at ten o’clock, and by then I should have arranged some plan of action. I
knew not whether to trust Gabord or no. I was sorry now that I had not
tried to bring Clark with me. He was fearless, and he knew the town well;
but he lacked discretion, and that was vital.</p>
<p>Two hours of waiting, then came a scene which is burned into my brain. I
looked down upon a mass of people, soldiers, couriers of the woods,
beggars, priests, camp followers, and anxious gentlefolk, come from
seclusion, or hiding, or vigils of war, to see a host of powers torture a
young girl who by suffering had been made a woman long before her time.
Out in the streets was the tramping of armed men, together with the call
of bugles and the sharp rattle of drums. Presently I heard the hoofs of
many horses, and soon afterwards there entered the door, and way was made
for him up the nave, the Marquis de Vaudreuil and his suite, with the
Chevalier de la Darante, the Intendant, and—to my indignation—Juste
Duvarney.</p>
<p>They had no sooner taken their places than, from a little side door near
the vestry, there entered the Seigneur Duvarney and Alixe, who, coming
down slowly, took places very near the chancel steps. The Seigneur was
pale and stern, and carried himself with great dignity. His glance never
shifted from the choir, where the priests slowly entered and took their
places, the aged and feeble bishop going falteringly to his throne.
Alixe’s face was pale and sorrowful, and yet it had a dignity and
self-reliance that gave it a kind of grandeur. A buzz passed through the
building, yet I noted, too, with gladness that there were tears on many
faces.</p>
<p>A figure stole in beside Alixe. It was Mademoiselle Lotbiniere, who
immediately was followed by her mother. I leaned forward, perfectly
hidden, and listened to the singsong voices of the priests, the musical
note of the responses, heard the Kyrie Eleison, the clanging of the belfry
bell as the host was raised by the trembling bishop. The silence which
followed the mournful voluntary played by the organ was most painful to
me.</p>
<p>At that moment a figure stepped from behind a pillar, and gave Alixe a
deep, scrutinizing look. It was Doltaire. He was graver than I had ever
seen him, and was dressed scrupulously in black, with a little white lace
showing at the wrists and neck. A handsomer figure it would be hard to
see; and I hated him for it, and wondered what new devilry was in his
mind. He seemed to sweep the church with a glance. Nothing could have
escaped that swift, searching look. His eyes were even raised to where I
was, so that I involuntarily drew back, though I knew he could not see me.</p>
<p>I was arrested suddenly by a curious disdainful, even sneering smile which
played upon his face as he looked at Vaudreuil and Bigot. There was in it
more scorn than malice, more triumph than active hatred. All at once I
remembered what he had said to me the day before: that he had commission
from the King through La Pompadour to take over the reins of government
from the two confederates, and send them to France to answer the charges
made against them.</p>
<p>At last the bishop came forward, and read from a paper as follows:</p>
<p>“Forasmuch as a well-beloved child of our Holy Church, Mademoiselle Alixe
Duvarney, of the parish of Beauport and of this cathedral parish, in this
province of New France, forgetting her manifest duty and our sacred
teaching, did illegally and in sinful error make feigned contract of
marriage with one Robert Moray, captain in a Virginian regiment, a
heretic, a spy, and an enemy to our country; and forasmuch as this was
done in violence of all nice habit and commendable obedience to Mother
Church and our national uses, we do hereby declare and make void this
alliance until such time as the Holy Father at Rome shall finally approve
our action and proclaiming. And it is enjoined upon Mademoiselle Alixe
Duvarney, on peril of her soul’s salvation, to obey us in this matter, and
neither by word or deed or thought have commerce more with this notorious
and evil heretic and foe of our Church and of our country. It is also the
plain duty of the faithful children of our Holy Church to regard this
Captain Moray with a pious hatred, and to destroy him without pity; and
any good cunning or enticement which should lure him to the punishment he
so much deserves shall be approved. Furthermore, Mademoiselle Alixe
Duvarney shall, until such times as there shall be peace in this land, and
the molesting English are driven back with slaughter—and for all
time, if the heart of our sister incline to penitence and love of Christ—be
confined within the Convent of the Ursulines, and cared for with great
tenderness.”</p>
<p>He left off reading, and began to address himself to Alixe directly; but
she rose in her place, and while surprise and awe seized the congregation,
she said:</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, I must needs, at my father’s bidding, hear the annulment of
my marriage, but I will not hear this public exhortation. I am but a poor
girl, unlearned in the law, and I must needs submit to your power, for I
have no one here to speak for me. But my soul and my conscience I carry to
my Saviour, and I have no fear to answer Him. I am sorry that I have
offended against my people and my country and Holy Church, but I repent
not that I love and hold to my husband. You must do with me as you will,
but in this I shall never willingly yield.”</p>
<p>She turned to her father, and all the people breathed hard; for it passed
their understanding, and seemed most scandalous that a girl could thus
defy the Church, and answer the bishop in his own cathedral. Her father
rose, and then I saw her sway with faintness. I know not what might have
occurred, for the bishop stood with hand upraised and a great indignation
in his face, about to speak, when out of the desultory firing from our
batteries there came a shell, which burst even at the cathedral entrance,
tore away a portion of the wall, and killed and wounded a number of
people.</p>
<p>Then followed a panic which the priests in vain tried to quell. The people
swarmed into the choir and through the vestry. I saw Doltaire with Juste
Duvarney spring swiftly to the side of Alixe, and, with her father, put
her and Mademoiselle Lotbiniere into the pulpit, forming a ring round it,
and preventing the crowd from trampling on them, as, suddenly gone mad,
they swarmed past. The Governor, the Intendant, and the Chevalier de la
Darante did as much also for Madame Lotbiniere; and as soon as the crush
had in a little subsided, a number of soldiers cleared the way, and I saw
my wife led from the church. I longed to leap down there among them and
claim her, but that thought was madness, for I should have been food for
worms in a trice, so I kept my place.</p>
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