Olive rose suddenly, silently declined her mother"s aid, and went alone to their chamber in the half-story.
Madame Delphine wandered drearily from door to window, from window to door, and presently into the newly-furnished front room which now seemed dismal beyond degree. There was a great Argand lamp in one corner. How she had labored that day to prepare it for evening illumination! A little beyond it, on the wall, hung a crucifix. She knelt under it, with her eyes fixed upon it, and thus silently remained until its outline was undistinguishable in the deepening shadows of evening.
She arose. A few minutes later, as she was trying to light the lamp, an approaching step on the sidewalk seemed to pause. Her heart stood still. She softly laid the phosphorus-box out of her hands. A shoe grated softly on the stone step, and Madame Delphine, her heart beating in great thuds, without waiting for a knock, opened the door, bowed low, and exclaimed in a soft perturbed voice:
"Miche Vignevielle!"
He entered, hat in hand, and with that almost noiseless tread which we have noticed. She gave him a chair and closed the door; then hastened, with words of apology, back to her task of lighting the lamp. But her hands paused in their work again,--Olive"s step was on the stairs; then it came off the stairs; then it was in the next room, and then there was the whisper of soft robes, a breath of gentle perfume, and a snowy figure in the door. She was dressed for the evening.
"Maman?"
Madame Delphine was struggling desperately with the lamp, and at that moment it responded with a tiny bead of light.
"I am here, my daughter."
She hastened to the door, and Olive, all unaware of a third presence, lifted her white arms, laid them about her mother"s neck, and, ignoring her effort to speak, wrested a fervent kiss from her lips. The crystal of the lamp sent out a faint gleam; it grew; it spread on every side; the ceiling, the walls lighted up; the crucifix, the furniture of the room came back into shape.
"Maman!" cried Olive, with a tremor of consternation.
"It is Miche Vignevielle, my daughter----"
The gloom melted swiftly away before the eyes of the startled maiden, a dark form stood out against the farther wall, and the light, expanding to the full, shone clearly upon the unmoving figure and quiet face of Capitaine Lemaitre.
CHAPTER XII.
THE MOTHER BIRD.
One afternoon, some three weeks after Capitaine Lemaitre had called on Madame Delphine, the priest started to make a pastoral call and had hardly left the gate of his cottage, when a person, overtaking him, plucked his gown:
"Pere Jerome----"
He turned.
The face that met his was so changed with excitement and distress that for an instant he did not recognize it.
"Why, Madame Delphine----"
"Oh, Pere Jerome! I wan" see you so bad, so bad! _Mo oule dit quic"ose_,--I G.o.dd some" to tell you."
The two languages might be more successful than one, she seemed to think.
"We had better go back to my parlor," said the priest, in their native tongue.
They returned.
Madame Delphine"s very step was altered,--nervous and inelastic. She swung one arm as she walked, and brandished a turkey-tail fan.
"I was glad, ya.s.s, to kedge you," she said, as they mounted the front, outdoor stair; following her speech with a slight, unmusical laugh, and fanning herself with unconscious fury.
"_Fe chaud_," she remarked again, taking the chair he offered and continuing to ply the fan.
Pere Jerome laid his hat upon a chest of drawers, sat down opposite her, and said, as he wiped his kindly face:
"Well, Madame Carraze?"
Gentle as the tone was, she started, ceased fanning, lowered the fan to her knee, and commenced smoothing its feathers.
"Pere Jerome----" She gnawed her lip and shook her head.
"Well?"
She burst into tears.
The priest rose and loosed the curtain of one of the windows. He did it slowly--as slowly as he could, and, as he came back, she lifted her face with sudden energy, and exclaimed:
"Oh, Pere Jerome, de law is brogue! de law is brogue! I brogue it! "Twas me! "Twas me!"
The tears gushed out again, but she shut her lips very tight, and dumbly turned away her face. Pere Jerome waited a little before replying; then he said, very gently:
"I suppose dad muss "ave been by accyden", Madame Delphine?"
The little father felt a wish--one which he often had when weeping women were before him--that he were an angel instead of a man, long enough to press the tearful cheek upon his breast, and a.s.sure the weeper G.o.d would not let the lawyers and judges hurt her. He allowed a few moments more to pa.s.s, and then asked:
"_N"est-ce-pas_, Madame Delphine? Daz ze way, aint it?"
"No, Pere Jerome, no. My daughter--oh, Pere Jerome, I bethroath my lill"
girl--to a w"ite man!" And immediately Madame Delphine commenced savagely drawing a thread in the fabric of her skirt with one trembling hand, while she drove the fan with the other. "Dey goin" git marry."
On the priest"s face came a look of pained surprise. He slowly said:
"Is dad possib", Madame Delphine?"
"Ya.s.s," she replied, at first without lifting her eyes; and then again, "Ya.s.s," looking full upon him through her tears, "ya.s.s, "tis tru"."
He rose and walked once across the room, returned, and said, in the Creole dialect:
"Is he a good man--without doubt?"
"De bez in G.o.d"s world!" replied Madame Delphine, with a rapturous smile.
"My poor, dear friend," said the priest, "I am afraid you are being deceived by somebody."