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The Beloved Traitor.
by Frank L. Packard.
BOOK I: BERNAY-SUR-MER
-- I --
THE HOUSE ON THE BLUFF
It was a wilder gust than any that had gone before. It tore along the beach with maniacal fury; and, shrieking in a high, devilishly-gleeful falsetto, while the joints of the little inn, rheumatic with age, squeaked in its embrace, shook the Taverne du Bas Rhone much after the fashion of a terrier shaking a rat. And with that gust, loosening the dilapidated fastening on the cas.e.m.e.nt, a window crashed inward, shattering the pane against the wall.
"_Sacre bleu!_" shouted a man, springing smartly to his feet from his seat at a small table as the rain lashed him. "What a dog of a night!"
Against the opposite wall, tilted back in a chair, Papa Fregeau, the patron, a rotund, ap.r.o.ned little individual, stopped the humming of his song.
"_Tiens!_" said he fatuously. "But it is worse than that, Alcide, since it is bad for business--hah! Not a franc profit to-night--the Bas Rhone is desolated." And he resumed his song:
"In Languedoc, where the wine flows free, We drink to----"
"Hold your bibulous tongue, Jacques Fregeau, and get something with which to fix that window before we are as wet inside as you!"--it was Madame Fregeau, stout, middle-aged and rosy, already hurrying to the aid of the first speaker, who was wrestling with the dismantled fastening.
Usually the nightly resort of the little fishing village of Bernay-sur-Mer, the Bas Rhone, inn, cabaret, tavern or cafe, as it was variously styled, now held but two others in the room that was habitually crowded to suffocation. One was a young man, st.u.r.dily built, with a tanned, clean-cut face, smooth-shaven save for a small black moustache, whose rumpled black hair straggled in pleasing disarray over his forehead; the other was older, a man of forty, whose skin was bronzed almost to blackness from the Mediterranean sun. Both were in rough fishermen's dress, sitting at dominoes under the hanging lamp in the centre of the room. On the table, pushed to one side, were the remains of a simple meal of bread and cheese; and from the inside of the loaf, the younger man, somewhat to the detriment of his own game and to the advantage of his opponent, had plucked out a piece of the soft bread, which he had kneaded between his fingers into a plastic lump, and thereafter, with amazing skill and deftness, had been engaged in moulding into little faces, and heads, and figures of various sorts, as he played.
The older man spoke slowly now:
"It is twenty years since we have had the like--you do not remember that, Jean? You were too young."
Jean Laparde, an amused smile lurking in his dark eyes as he watched Jacques Fregeau waddle obediently to his wife's side, shook his head.
"I was on the _etoile_ that night," said the other, pulling at his beard. "The good G.o.d dealt hardly with us--we lost two when we beached; but not so hardly as with the _Antoinette_--none came to sh.o.r.e from her. It was a night just such as this."
"Ay, that is so," corroborated Papa Fregeau, removing his ap.r.o.n and stuffing it into the broken window pane. "It is, after all, small blame to any one that they stay indoors to-night and forget my profits."
"Profits!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Madame Fregeau tartly. "You drink them all up!"
She shook her short skirts, damp from her skirmish with the storm, and turned to Jean's companion at the table. "Pray the blessed Virgin,"
she said softly, crossing herself reverently, "that there be no boats out to-night, Pierre Lachance."
"And G.o.d for pity on them if there are!" returned the fisherman. "But there are none from Bernay-sur-Mer, that is sure." He played the last domino before him with a little triumphant flourish. "Ah, Jean, count--you are caught, my boy! It will teach you to pay more attention to the game, and less to the waste of Madame Fregeau's good bread!"
"She is used to that!" smiled Jean Laparde good-naturedly, as he faced his dominoes, disclosing the measure of his defeat, and, pushing back his chair, stood up.
"But," protested the other, "you are not going! We will play again.
See, it is early, the clock has but just struck eight."
"Not to-night, Pierre," said Jean, laughing now, as he began to b.u.t.ton his jacket around his throat. "Play with Alcide there."
"Chut!" cried Madame Fregeau, bustling forward, her eyes twinkling.
"The little minx will not expect you a night like this--Marie-Louise is too sensible a girl to be piqued for that. You are not going out to-night, Jean, _ma foi_!"
"And why not?" asked Jean innocently. "Why not, Mother Fregeau? What is a little wind, and a little rain, and a little walk along the beach?"
"But a night like this!" sighed Papa Fregeau dolorously, as he joined the group, his forefinger laid facetiously against the side of his stubby little nose. "_Nom d'un nom_! What constancy--what sublime constancy!"
"Ah, you laugh at that, _mon pet.i.t bete_!" exclaimed Madame Fregeau sharply, instantly changing front. "You are an old fool, Jacques Fregeau!"
"But I was a young one once, _ma belle_--eh?" insinuated Jacques, pinching his wife's plump cheek, and winking prodigiously at Jean Laparde. "It is of that you are thinking, eh?"
"You are ridiculous!" declared Madame Fregeau, blushing and pushing him away.
"You see, Jean?" said Jacques Fregeau plaintively, shrugging his shoulders. "You see, eh, _mon gaillard_? You see what you are coming to! Oh, _la, la_, once I was young like you, and Lucille, _ma cherie_, here, was like--eh?--like Marie-Louise. You see, eh? You see what you are coming to!"
There was a roar of laughter from the man at the table in the rear, that was echoed in a guffaw by Pierre Lachance, as Jean, leaning suddenly forward, caught Madame Fregeau's comely, motherly face between his hands and kissed her on both cheeks.
"I'd ask for no better luck, Jacques!" he cried--and ran for the door.
Laughing, and with a wave of his hand back at the little group, he opened the door, closed it behind him with a powerful wrench against the wind; and then, outside, stood still for a moment, as though taken utterly by surprise at the abandon of the night. He had not been out before that day. Like all, or nearly all of Bernay-sur-Mer he had remained snugly indoors--for what was a fisherman to do in weather like that! Mend nets? Well, yes, he had mended nets. One must do that.
He shrugged his shoulders, making a wry grimace. Nets! But the night was bad--much worse than he had imagined. And yet--yes--the storm was at its height now, but the wind had changed--by morning, thank the saints, it would be better.
It was black about him, inky black--all save a long, straggling, twinkling line of lights from the cottage windows that bordered the beach, and the dull yellow glow from the windows of the Bas Rhone at his side. Around him a veritable bedlam seemed loosed--the wind, like a horde of demons, shrieking, whistling and howling in unholy jubilee; while heavier, more ominous, in a deeper roar came the booming of the surf from where it broke upon the beach but little more than a hundred yards in front of him.
Jean Laparde stood hesitant. It was quite true; Mother Fregeau had been right! Marie-Louise would not expect him to-night, and it was a good mile from the village to the house on the bluff, and yet--he smiled a little, and suddenly, head down, struck out into the storm.
A flash of lightning, jagged, threw the night into a strange, tremulous luminance--the headlands of the little bay; the mighty combers, shaking their topped crests like manes, hurling themselves in impotent fury at the sh.o.r.e, then spreading in thin creamy layers to lick up wide, irregular patches of the beach; the sweep of the Mediterranean, so slow to anger, but a tumbling rage of waters now as far as the eye could reach; the whitewashed cottages; boats, dark objects without form or shape, drawn far up on the sand; the pale, yellowish-green of the sward stretching away behind the village; the road beneath his feet a pool of mud--and then blackness again, utter, impenetrable, absolute.
Jean pa.s.sed the last of the cottages--there were but four on that side of the Bas Rhone--and kept on, following the curve of the beach toward the eastern headland. But now, the lightness of spirit that had been with him but a few moments before was gone, and a restlessness, bordering on depression, took its place. What was it? The storm? No; it could not very well be that, for it had come often to him before, unbidden, unwelcomed, that same mood--even in the glorious sunlight, even in the midst of song as he fished the blue, sparkling waters that, more than anything else, had been his home ever since he could remember. It seemed, and it was a very strange and absurd fancy, but it was always the same, that a voice, wordless, without sound, talked speciously to him, talked him into a state of discontent that robbed him of all delight in his work, his environment and his surroundings, and, arrived at that stage, would suddenly bid him peremptorily to follow--and that was all. Follow! Where? He did not know. It made him angry, but it did not in any way lighten the mood that was forced upon him in spite of himself.
And now, as it always came, unsought and unexpected, this mood was upon him again; and, as he plunged through the storm, drawing the collar of his jacket more closely around his throat against the sheets of rain, he fought with himself to shake it off. It was absurd. And why should he be unhappy for something that was absurd? That was still more absurd! He was not sick, there was nothing the matter with him. He was strong--none was stronger than he, and he had matched himself against them all in Bernay-sur-Mer. True, it was a hard life, and there were not riches to be found in the nets--but there were friends--he was rich in friends--all Bernay-sur-Mer was his friend.
There were the Fregeaus, with whom he had lived at the Bas Rhone for over ten years now since his father had died. Madame Fregeau was a mother to him, and Jacques was the biggest-hearted man in the whole south of France. And, _mon Dieu_!--he began to smile now--there were--should he name every family in the village?--even to the children for whom he made the clay _poupees_, the dolls that in their play lives were, in turn, veritable children to them? Ah, to be in ugly mind--it was no less than a sin! There were candles to burn for that, and the good Father Anton would have a word to say if he knew! And best of all--there was Marie-Louise. There was none, none _pardieu_, in the whole wide sweep of France like Marie-Louise, with her eyes like stars, and her face fresh as the morning breeze across the sparkling waters, and a figure so beautiful, so lithe, so strong! What charm to see those young arms on the oars, the bosom heave, to feel the boat bound forward under the stroke, and hear her laugh ring out with the pure joy of life!
"Marie-Louise!" cried Jean Laparde aloud--and the wind seemed to catch up the words and echo them in a triumphant shout: "Marie-Louise!"
It was gone--that mood. And now, with the village well behind him, the lights blotted out and seeming to have left him isolated even from human proximity, another came--and he stood still--and this time it was the storm. And something within him, without will or volition of his, spontaneous, leapt out in consonance with the wild grandeur of the night to revel in it, atune with the t.i.tanic magnificence of the spectacle, as one who gazes upon a splendid canvas and, innate in appreciation, is lost in the conception to which the master brush has given life. And so he stood there for a long time immovable, his shoulders thrust a little forward, the rain streaming from his face, his eyes afire, wrapt, lost in the clashing elements before him--and fancy came. The play of the lightning was more vivid now, and the coast line took on changing shapes, as though seeking by new and swiftly conceived formations to foil and combat and thrust back and parry the furious attack of the breakers that hurled themselves onward in their mad, never-ending charge; while behind again, in sudden apparitions, like spectre battalions ma.s.sed in reserve, the white cottages appeared for an instant, and then, as though seeking a more strategic position, vanished utterly, until a flame-tongue crackling across the heavens searched them out again, laying their position bare once more; and the headlands, vanguards where the fight was hottest, were lost in a smother of spume and spray, like the smoke of battle swirling over them--and it was battle, and the thunder of the surf was the thunder of belching cannon, and the shriek of the wind was the shriek of hurtling sh.e.l.ls. It was battle--and some consciousness inborn in Jean Laparde awakened and filled him with understanding, and in the terror; and dismay and awe and strife and fierce elation was the great allegory of life, and suddenly he knew a lowly reverence for Him who had depicted this, and a joy, full of a strange indefinable yearning, in the divine genius of its execution.
"It is the great art of the _bon Dieu_," said Jean simply.
And after a little while he went forward on his way again.
The road led upward now in a gentle slope toward higher land, though still following the line of the beach. Near the extremity of the headland was the cottage that the village always called the "house on the bluff," and in a moment now he should be able to see the light.
There was always a light there every night, in good weather and in stormy--and never in fourteen years had it been otherwise, not since the night that Marie-Louise's father, the brother of old Gaston Bernier, steering for the headland in a gale had miscalculated his position and been drowned on the Perigeau Reef. From that day it had become a religion with Gaston, a sacred rite, that light; and, in time, it had become an inst.i.tution in Bernay-sur-Mer--not a fisherman in the village now but steered by it, not one but that, failing to sight it, would have taken it for granted that he was off his course and would have put about, braving even the wildest weather, until he had picked it up.
The light! Jean smiled to himself. He was very wet, but he had found a most wonderful joy in the storm--and, besides, what did a little wetting matter? In a few minutes now Marie-Louise would cry out in delight at seeing him, and he would fling off his drenched jacket and pull up a chair to the stove beside old Gaston, and they would light their pipes, and Marie-Louise would prepare the spiced wine, and--he halted as though stunned.
He had reached the big rock where the road made its second turn and ran directly to the house--and there was no light. It was the exact spot from which he should first be able to see it--a hundred times, on a hundred nights, he had looked for it, and found it there--by the turning at the big rock. He dashed the rain from his face with a sweep of his hand, and strained his eyes into the blackness. There was nothing there--only the blackness. He reached out mechanically and touched the rock, as though to a.s.sure himself that it was there--and then he laughed a little unnaturally. There must be some mistake--for fourteen years that light had burned in the window, and it could be seen from this point on the road--there must be some mistake. Perhaps just another step would bring it into view!
And then, as he moved forward, something cold gripped at Jean's heart.