"So, this is the little mongrel?" Raoul"s deep voice boomed in the cavernous log hall.
"Raoul," Pierre said, "this is your nephew, Auguste."
Pierre turned to Auguste and in Sauk said, "This is your uncle, Raoul.
He lives here with me and your grandfather. He speaks with a rough tongue, but do not fear him."
How could the boy not fear a man like Raoul?
"Auguste, is it? A fine French name for a redskin." Raoul set his fists on his hips, throwing back his blue jacket to show his gilt-handled pistol and a huge knife in its scabbard. At the sight of the weapons Pierre"s heart pounded.
Raoul went up to Auguste and stared into his face as Pierre stood tensely.
Raoul said, "Well, brother, you actually did it. You made yourself a son."
"I"m glad you admit that," said Pierre.
"Oh, I admit that. He"s got de Marion written all over his dirty face.
But don"t call him my "nephew." I reserve that t.i.tle for legitimate kin."
Pierre hoped Auguste"s knowledge of English was not enough to let him understand how he was being insulted. The boy looked from Pierre to Raoul as they spoke, his large, dark eyes watchful, his face expressionless.
"Raoul, stop this." It was Nicole, back from getting rid of the bucket.
"I"m Auguste"s aunt and you"re his uncle, and you might as well get used to it."
"And you are spoiling our dinner, Raoul," Elysee said. "Either sit and eat with us like a civilized man or leave us alone."
"Spoiling your dinner?" Raoul gave a bellow of laughter. "Mean to tell me it doesn"t spoil your dinner to see that savage puking in our great hall? Mean to tell me _he"s_ civilized?"
Pierre glanced across the table at his father and Frank Hopkins, who had both risen to their feet. Elysee"s eyes burned with anger. Frank held his little girl"s hand and looked sombrely at Raoul. The two Hopkins boys stared at their uncle.
_I pray G.o.d they don"t admire him. Boys have a way of looking up to men who behave like brutes._
Raoul turned to Nicole, his teeth flashing white under his thick black mustache. "You really want an Indian nephew? Have you forgot what Indians did to your sister?"
"No, I"ll never forget what happened to Helene," Nicole said. "None of us will. But Auguste had nothing to do with that."
"You didn"t watch your sister die," Raoul said. "So that just the sight of an Indian makes you want to kill."
Pierre saw that Raoul was working himself up into a rage. He would talk and talk, and every word he said would make him angrier, until at last, the explosion. A spasm of pain shot across Pierre"s stomach.
_Not now_, he prayed. _G.o.d, let the illness leave me alone until I can be alone with it._
Nicole"s cheeks were an even brighter red than was usual for her, but she spoke gently. "Raoul, you do have a living sister. If it had been me at Fort Dearborn instead of Helene--if I had been raped and murdered--I would be looking down from Heaven, and I would be hoping your wound would heal. I would pray that you would welcome Pierre"s son, your nephew, into your home."
"Stop saying that this filthy savage is my nephew," said Raoul. "Look at him standing there, staring at me. You know what the word mongrel means, redskin?"
Pierre felt a surge of pride as he saw Auguste standing straight and slender, gazing levelly at Raoul. Savage? Even though he had been sick only a moment ago, Auguste held himself as regally as a young prince.
"As for you, Nicole," Raoul went on, "don"t ever think you can speak for Helene. She may be in Heaven now, but she got there by way of h.e.l.l. No decent woman could imagine what she suffered."
Pierre almost screamed aloud as the pain in his belly stabbed him again.
He clutched at his stomach. Just when he needed all his strength!
Auguste looked into his eyes, then down at his hand.
"You hurt, Father," Auguste said in English. "Must sit down."
"Oh? He"s already got a few words of English?" said Raoul. "You"re training him to talk, eh? Like a parrot? Going to put him in a medicine show?"
Elysee suddenly spoke in a loud voice, "My friends--those who were invited to dine with us here today--will you please excuse us and give us privacy? We have family matters to discuss."
Silently, eyes cast down, the thirty or so servants and field workers who had been invited to celebrate the coming of Pierre"s son filed out of the hall.
Pierre thought, _In so many things I have failed today_.
"Raoul," Elysee said, "I have not forgiven Helene"s killers. But I am not stupid enough to hate all Indians, and neither should you be. Do you think whites have never tortured and killed Indian women?"
Raoul bared his teeth again. "If you can"t hate the Indians for what they did to your daughter and to me, then you never loved either one of us."
Pierre felt a sudden surge of anger. "Raoul, I forbid you to speak that way to our father. You are cruel and unjust."
"You owe _me_ justice, Pierre, you and Papa. Where was he when you abandoned me to the Indians? Where were you?"
Pierre"s legs shook. He could feel the rage radiating from Raoul; it was like standing too close to a red-hot stove.
Auguste said, "Father."
Pierre turned and looked into the dark young eyes.
Auguste spoke in Sauk. "Father, I am the cause of this man"s anger."
"There is much to explain, son," said Pierre. "Be patient and quiet, and all will be well."
Pierre saw fear struggling with resolution in his son"s face. A pallor in the fine olive skin showed that Auguste had not yet gotten over being sick. Auguste squared his shoulders and took a step toward Raoul. He raised his right hand in greeting.
"I greet uncle," he said solemnly in English.
"Keep this mongrel away from me, Pierre," Raoul said.
"Frank," said Nicole, "take the children out of here."
Frank picked Abigail up and carried her, with Tom and Benjamin trailing.
He walked off toward the kitchen, looking back over his shoulder at Nicole.
Elysee said, "Remember, Raoul, this is my grandson."
"Your grandson!" Raoul spat.