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Marie advanced to the open window, where a few mosquitoes sang their mournful, high-pitched note. There was nothing, except the soft lightning playing incessantly through the hot air. 'It was your imagination,' she said, with a certain wondering contempt. 'Come and see for yourself.'
But he did not stir. 'I hear footsteps. There are men coming through the gra.s.s.'
'Well, the prairie is public. People have a right to pa.s.s if they like.
_Ciel!_ Get rid of this folly of yours.'
She drew him to a chair, then seated herself beside him, and opened the single vilely printed sheet published in Garry at that time under the t.i.tle of newspaper. That evening it was larger than usual.
He was completely beneath her influence, so obeyed her light touch, casting many furtive glances in the direction of the window, which was constantly flooded in a pale blue light. The thunder now commenced to roll and roar through the stifling night.
Outside, between the fence and the bush maple, still crouched the dark figure, never shifting her position, and always gazing into that room.
Occasionally she could even hear a portion of the conversation.
Marie's attention was drawn at once towards the black lettered headlines of the opening column. 'It is an account of Father Lecompte's death,'
she said solemnly.
'He is dead, then?' said Lamont, blankly, his thoughts on other things.
'You know he is. Didn't you listen to the bell tolling last night? You said it kept you awake.' Then she began to read from the closely printed sheet. 'The Archbishop has lost his right hand. The good priest, who fought with him so loyal-heartedly in his endeavours to quell the Indian rising, will be seen in our midst no more. During the Rebellion, when there were traitors--'
'The Rebellion!' he interrupted violently. 'You're always talking on that. I tell you, it's over and done with. I don't want to hear about the priest's death, Marie. Heaven knows this night is dismal enough without making it worse by reading such things.' Ho shuddered as he spoke.
With a little petulant movement his wife turned over the sheet. Her eyes were immediately caught by another headline, announcing far more significant intelligence. She read the paragraph that followed quickly, then turned to her husband, who sat motionless in his chair.
Sinclair, the simple-minded hunter, had reckoned without the journalist in the laying of his plans. He knew nothing of the searching curiosity of the reporter, with whom nothing is sacred, reputation least of all.
During a moment of incautious jubilation in official circles, the secret must have leaked into the ears of clerks, each a type of garrulity, and the keen-scented news maker, who could track copy in the air, had made the tidings his prey. The newspaper is always the criminal's most faithful ally, the friend when everything human has dropped away from him. Now it came very near to wrecking Sinclair's well-devised plans.
Marie spread the sheet across her knee and smoothed it out excitedly.
'Listen, Hugh. Here is something that really will interest you.'
He made no reply, nor was there any curiosity in his manner. Full of the startling intelligence, she continued quickly,--
'It is about the White Chief. He has been discovered.'
She bent her head to read from the paper, but at the moment a strange sound of deep gasping came to her ears. She looked up hurriedly, and then her own face for the moment grew white with fear.
He stood in the centre of the room, a livid hue crossing his face, knees knocking together in weakness of extreme terror, hands clutching at the table for support. His entire being was transformed.
Marie came forward, trembling. 'What is it? Tell me, Hugh--'
He reached out towards the paper, and tried in vain to speak. The shock had been so terrible, so fearfully sudden.
'It is _that_, then,' she said, with a strange light growing in her eyes. 'Would you like to hear the rest?'
She held the sheet beneath the lamplight. 'Information has been given by a man who for some time was believed to be dead, hunter Sinclair of St Andrews.'
It was all over now. There could be nothing worse than this, so strength, the unreasoning strength of despair, liberated his tongue and brought energy back to the limbs. He forgot the presence of his wife, everything save his awful position. He stood surrounded by a blood-red atmosphere, where lightnings blazed and thunders crashed; before him he saw the limp figure of Riel swaying at the rope's end; in his ears sounded the mad shouts and execrations of the people. He was a man by himself, outside all mercy, with a country shrieking for his blood.
'Sinclair is dead!' he cried, in an awful voice. 'He never rose, never moved. I could not have missed my aim. He is dead--dead.'
His wife shrank in her turn, the horrible truth worming into her heart.
'Speak!' she shouted at him. 'Tell me the meaning of this.'
He did not notice her. 'There is no one else. Spencer had no proofs.
Sinclair is dead.'
He shuddered frightfully, then staggered across the floor.
Motion removed the numbness from his mind. The first paralysing wave of terror had pa.s.sed, so now he saw again clearly. He looked upon his wife, with hatred growing in her eyes; he thought of the possible foes already in wait outside the door; he beheld the window, and knew that salvation lay there.
Thither he went, with an attempt at a smile upon his features. Ah, there was shelter and life in that dark night. But then the lightning burst forth wildly, converting the outer blackness into a weird atmosphere of shuddering blue.
He fell back with a shout no effort could repress. In the brief s.p.a.ce of light had been plainly visible a knot of men crossing the prairie in that direction.
But his wife had seen them, too. The dreadful truth, so far a suspicion, now became a certainty. Unwittingly she had taken to husband the vilest and most cowardly of all her country's treacherous sons.
'I see,' she said, bending forward like the snake about to strike. 'You are afraid of these men. They are coming here. Perhaps you know why.'
One minute of perfect coolness, and he would be safe. He could escape by the door, pa.s.s out at the back, reach open prairie, then make for the bush. None could touch him there. But he must first secure his weapons, which lay in the next room.
So he laughed feebly, and smiled in ghastly fashion upon his wife. 'It's all right, Marie, _cherie_. The heat has knocked me over altogether. I'm just going out for a bit.'
But as he crossed the floor, she stepped forward and put herself in his way.
'Where are you going?'
His tongue and throat were parched. All he could say was, 'I'll be back in a few minutes. I can't tell you.'
She held his arm. 'Before you go, tell me what you know of the White Chief?' There was a pause, broken by the rattling of the thunder, then her voice came again, 'Why did you try to kill Sinclair?'
He tried to move onward--naturally the one idea was immediate flight--but she hung to him.
'I can't tell you. I know nothing.'
Then she placed herself between him and the door. Her face was hard and stern.
'You shall not go. I believe you know who this villain is.'
Again he tried to laugh. 'Yes--but I couldn't tell you, or anyone. He's a friend, who often has done me good service. I can't forget him now. He lives in Garry, so I am going out to warn him. I shouldn't like to see him hung.'
The last words were spoken in a thick whisper, while he turned a frightened glance towards the window.
'You liar!' she burst forth. 'Why did you speak to me on fidelity to country? What was the reason of your fear, and why did you see an enemy in every pa.s.ser by? Why did you almost lose reason when I read that paragraph from the paper? Why did you yourself confess that you tried to shoot Sinclair?'
Deceit was now a useless weapon. The last resource lay in the power of a terrible name coupled with brute force.
'd.a.m.n you,' he said in a soft, sinister whisper, which had often aided him better than muscular strength, 'I AM THE WHITE CHIEF! Stand aside, and let me pa.s.s.'