"'Heureuse'," I repeated. "Happy--happy; oh, I know how happy!"
He looked at me significantly for a moment, and I knew that his "fixed idea" had possession of him. He regarded me, Marcia Farrell, as the child of that "forest love" of nearly twenty-seven years ago.
"You say true; they were happy." Without preliminaries he told me the story he had related to Mr. Ewart and Jamie last year.
"Has Mr. Ewart or Jamie ever seen this tree, Andre?"
"No. I have told them both of my tree and the notches--but never of this other. You are the first to see it since her blue eyes watched him cut those letters. I have shown it to neither my young comrade nor to the seignior."
"And you say I am so like her?"
"As like as if you were her own child?"
He put up his hand suddenly to "feel the wind". There was a sudden strange movement among the tree tops.
"Come, come quickly, mademoiselle; we must get back. The wind is shifting to the southwest. It is blowing hot. I know the sign. The seignior will not want you to be out even with old Andre with this wind on the lake."
I looked at the pool; it was black. The singing waters of the torrent showed unearthly white against the intensified green. The sky became suddenly overcast with swiftly moving clouds. In a moment the wind was all about us; the sound of its going through the forest filled the air with a confused roar. The great trees were already swaying, as we ran down the trail to the lake--and found Mr. Ewart just drawing his canoe and ours high up and away from the already uneasy water. He was breathing quickly.
"There 's a storm coming, Andre--we saw it from the other side of the lake; coming hard, too, from the southwest. The lake will not be safe till it is over. We will stay here in the open even if we get wet. It is not safe in the woods; the trees are already breaking. I hear the crash of the branches."
"And the seignior did not trust mademoiselle with me?" Evidently he was disgruntled. "True, I am no longer in my first youth" (I saw Mr.
Ewart suppress a smile), "but years give caution, seignior--and I have many more than you."
Mr. Ewart laughed pleasantly. The sound of it dissipated Andre's anger--the quick resentment of old age.
"True, mon vieux camarade, you have the years; but I stand between you and mademoiselle when it comes to a matter of years. I must care for you both."
"I am content that it should be so, _moi_." He squatted by the canoes which he lashed to a small boulder.
No rain fell, but the wind was terrific in its force. We were obliged to lie flat on the sand. The air was filled with confused torrents of sound, so deafening that we could not make ourselves heard one to the other. It was over in ten minutes. The sky cleared, the sun shone; the lake waters subsided; the sounds died away, and very suddenly. In the minute's calm that followed it seemed as if, in all that land, there were no stirring of a leaf, a twig, or fin of fish, or wing of fowl. There was again a sudden change of wind, and we knew the very moment when the upper air currents, cool and crisp with a touch of Arctic frost, swept down upon the earth and brought refreshment. In another quarter of an hour there was no trace of the storm on the lake; but behind us, on each side of the trail, we saw great trees uprooted.
"I can leave you and Andre now, and with a clear conscience, to your fishing," he said, as he ran down his canoe.
I felt positively grateful to him for not insisting on taking me back with him; it would have hurt old Andre's pride as well as feelings.
"We 'll bring home fish enough for supper," I said with fine amateur a.s.surance.
"I warn you 'We are seven' plus the two Montagnais; they stay to-night."
"If I don't make good, Andre will." And Andre smiled in what I thought a particularly significant way.
We watched the swift course of his canoe over the lake. Just as he was about to round a small promontory, that would hide him from our sight, he stood up, and swung the dripping paddle high above his head. I waved my hand in answering greeting.
Andre turned to me with a smile. "The seignior has a look of that other--but he is not the same."
What an obsession it was with this man of ninety! I watched him preparing lines and bait. The canoe had pa.s.sed from sight.
"Andre," I said, speaking on the impulse of the moment, "I want to go back to camp."
"As you please, mademoiselle. I can fish on that side as well as this." Upon that he put up his pipe,--I verily believe it was still alive and his pockets must have been lined with asbestos,--and we embarked on our little voyage.
I used my paddle mechanically, for I was thinking: "Is it for one moment probable I have any connection with that girl? Is that past, I am trying so hard to eliminate from my life, to present itself here as a quant.i.ty with which I must reckon--here in my life in this wilderness? Is there no avoiding it? Andre is so sure. Jamie knows he is sure; Mr. Ewart knows this too. They can say nothing to me about it--it is a matter of such delicacy; and they do not know who I am; even my journal does not tell that, and I knew this when I gave it into his hands.
"But the Doctor--he knows. He knows from Cale and Delia Beaseley. He knows who I am; in all probability knows this very day, from those papers in his possession, my father's name; but he knows nothing of this new complication that Andre has brought about by his insistence that I am like some woman who camped here many years ago--
"Twenty-seven years! That must have been just before I was born--and the date--and that word 'heureuse' with a queer capital H--oh--"
Perhaps it was a groan that escaped my lips, for, like a searchlight, the logic of events illumined each factor in that tragedy in which my mother--
My paddle fouled--the canoe careened--
"Sit still, for the love of G.o.d, sit still!" Andre fairly shrieked at me.
"It's all right, Andre," I said quietly, to calm him.
"They say the lake has no bottom just here, mademoiselle--and if I had lost you for him--" he muttered, and continued to mutter, easing himself of his fright by swearing softly. He soon regained his composure; but was still frowning when I glanced behind me.
What had this searchlight shown me?
Just this:--that "heureuse" is French for happy--and the capital made it a proper name, "Happy". This word told me its own story. According to what Cale had said--and I had all detailed information from him--no trace of my mother was found although detectives had been put to work.
She had simply dropped out of sight, not to come to the surface until that night in December when she tried to end her young life from the North River pier. Was she not for a part of that year and three months here in these wilds?
Oh, what a far, far cry it must have been from this Canadian wilderness not made by man, to that other hundreds of miles away--that great metropolis, man made!
We paddled for the rest of the way in silence.
That evening we sat late around the camp fire, and before we separated for the night Mr. Ewart said, turning to me:
"I want a promise from you, Miss Farrell."
"What is it?"
"Caution, caution!" said the Doctor.
"That you will make no more _solitude a deux_ excursions, as John calls them, with old Andre. He is old, despite his seeming strength, and his age is beginning to tell on him. I see that he has failed much since last year."
"You 're right there, Gordon; she should not risk it with him," said Jamie, emphatically. "I 've noticed the change from last year when I have been out with him on the trails. Why, he fell asleep only the other day with his line in his hand and his bait in the water!"
"Did you see that?" said Mr. Ewart. "It happened, too, the other day with me. I was amazed, but not so much as I was last week when we were in the woods making the north trail. He sat down to smoke and, actually, his pipe dropped from his hand. I trod out the fire or there would have been a blaze. Apparently he was asleep. I watched him for an hour, when he seemed to come to himself. It was not a sleep; it was a lethargy. You say it is often so, John--the beginning of the end.
We must not let him know anything of this--dear old Andre!"
"He is already immortalized in that Odyssey of yours, Jamie. People won't forget him, for he lives again in that." The Doctor spoke with deep feeling.
"And your promise, Miss Farrell?"
"Since you insist, yes. But it is hard to give it; we have had so much pleasure together Andre and I; we have been great chums--dear old Andre!" Unconsciously I echoed Mr. Ewart's words.