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"Louis!"
"Madame!"
"What is the matter, sire?"
"Nothing, madame, nothing."
"Where is Paul?"
I did not know what to do, and looked at her completely helpless; for if I told her Paul was dead, she might relapse; and evasions must be temporary.
"The Indian took him," she cried.
"But the Indian didn't kill him, Eagle."
"How do you know?"
"Because Paul came to me."
"He came to you? Where?"
"At Fort Stephenson."
"Where is my child?"
"He is at Fort Stephenson."
"Bring him to me!"
"I can't bring him, Eagle."
"Then let me go to him."
I did not know what to say to her.
"And there were Cousin Philippe and Ernestine lying across the step. I have been thinking all night. Do you understand it?"
"Yes, I understand it, Eagle."
By the time I had come into the house her mind leaped forward in comprehension. The blanket she had held on her shoulders fell around her feet. It was a striped gay Indian blanket.
"You were attacked, and the settlement was burned."
"But whose house is this?"
"This is my house."
"Did you bring me to your house?"
"I wasn't there."
"No, I remember. You were not there. I saw you the last time at the Tuileries."
"When did you come to yourself, madame?"
"I have been sick, haven't I? But I have been sitting by this fire nearly all night, trying to understand. I knew I was alone, because Cousin Philippe and Ernestine--I want Paul!"
I looked at the floor, and must have appeared miserable. She pa.s.sed her hands back over her forehead many times as if brushing something away.
"If he died, tell me."
"I held him, Eagle."
"They didn't kill him?"
"No."
"Or scalp him?"
"The knife never touched him."
"But--"
"It was in battle."
"My child died in battle? How long have I been ill?"
"More than a year, Eagle."
"And he died in battle?"
"He had a wound in his side. He was brought into the fort, and I took care of him."
She burst out weeping, and laughed and wept, the tears running down her face and wetting her bosom.
"My boy! My little son! You held him! He died like a man!"
I put her on the settle, and all the cloud left her in that tempest of rain. Afterwards I wiped her face with my handkerchief and she sat erect and still.
A noise of many birds came from the ravine, and winged bodies darted past the door uttering the cries of spring. Abbe Edgeworth sauntered by and she saw him, and was startled.
"Who is that?"
"A priest."
"When did he come?"
"He rode here with me this morning."