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"Dash it all! But then one saw nothing but that devil in the front line.... There was no holding him...."
"Yes," chuckled the adjutant, "he has a way of his own of deserting in the face of the enemy!... He charges straight at them, the beggar!"
But Mme. Morestal grew frightened:
"A man wounded! I will go and prepare some bandages, get out the medicine-chest.... We have all that's wanted.... Will you come, Marthe?"
"Yes, mother," replied Marthe, without budging.
She did not remove her eyes from her husband and tried to read on Philippe's face the feelings that stirred him. She had first of all seen him go back to the drawing-room and cross the entrance-hall, as though he were thinking of the way out through the garden, which was still free. The sudden arrival of the riflemen pushed him back; and he talked to several of them in a low voice and gave them some bread and a flask of brandy. Then he returned to the terrace. His inaction, in the midst of the constant traffic to and fro, was obviously irksome to him. Twice he consulted the drawing-room clock; and Marthe guessed that he was thinking of the hour of the train and the time which he would need to reach Langoux Station. But she did not alarm herself. Every second was weaving bonds around him that tied him down without his knowing it; and it seemed to Marthe as though events had no other object than to make her husband's departure impossible.
The resistance, meanwhile, was being organized. Swiftly, the riflemen brought the bags of plaster, which the captain at once ordered to be placed between every pair of bal.u.s.ters. Each of the bags was of the height and width corresponding with the dimensions of the intervals and left an empty s.p.a.ce, a loop-hole, on either side. And old Morestal had even had the forethought to match the colour of the sacking with that of the parapet, so that it might not be suspected in the distance that there was a defence behind which sharpshooters lay hidden.
On either side of the terrace, the wall surrounding the garden was the object of similar cares. The captain ordered the soldiers to set out bags at the foot of the wall so as to make the top accessible from the inside.
But a sound of shouting recalled the captain to the drawing-room. The gardener's son came tumbling down from his observatory, yelling:
"Saboureux's Farm is on fire! You can see the smoke! You can see the flames!"
The captain leapt out on the terrace.
The smoke was whirling above the barn. Gleams kindled, faint as yet and hesitating. And, suddenly, as though set free, the flames shot up in angry spirals. The wind at once beat them down again. The roof of the house took fire. And, in a few minutes, it was a violent flare, accompanied by the quick blaze of the rotten beams, the dry thatch, the trusses of hay and straw heaped up by the hundred in the barn and in the sheds.
"To work!" shouted the captain, gleefully. "The Col du Diable is blocked by the flames.... They'll last for quite fifteen or twenty minutes ...
and the enemy have no other road...."
His excitement communicated itself to the men. Not one of them broke down beneath the weight of the bags, heavy though these were. The captain posted the non-commissioned officers at regular intervals, so that his orders could be pa.s.sed on from the terrace to every end of the property.
Lieutenant Fabregues came up. The materials were beginning to fall short and the lofty wall remained inaccessible to the marksmen in several places.
Mme. Morestal behaved like a heroine:
"Take the furniture, captain, the chairs, the tables. Break them up, if necessary.... Burn them even.... Do just as if my husband were here."
"M. Morestal said something about a stock of cartridges," asked the captain.
"In the boxes in the harness-room. Here are the keys."
The men redoubled their activity. The Old Mill was ransacked; and the soldiers pa.s.sed laden with mattresses, sofas, old oak chests, hangings also and carpets, with which they stopped up the holes and the windows.
"The flames are spreading," said the captain, going to the top of the staircase. "There's nothing left of Farmer Saboureux's buildings.... But by what miracle ...? Who set the place on fire?..."
"I did."
A peasant stood at the top of the steps, in a scorched blouse, with his face all blackened.
"You, Saboureux?"
"Yes, I," growled Saboureux, fiercely. "I had to.... I heard you over there: 'If we could only stop them,' says you. 'If I had half an hour to spare!'... Well, there's your half an hour for you.... I set fire to the shanty."
"And very nearly roasted me inside it," grinned Old Poussiere, who was with the farmer. "I was asleep in the straw...."
The captain nodded his head:
"By Jove, Farmer Saboureux, but that's a d.a.m.ned sportsmanlike thing you've done! I formed a wrong opinion of you. I apologize. May I shake you by the hand?"
The peasant put out his hand and then walked away, with his back bent in two. He sat down in a corner of the drawing-room. Poussiere also huddled into a chair, took a piece of bread from his pocket, broke it and gave half to Saboureux, as though he thought it only natural to share what he had with the man who had nothing left.
"Here's Duvauchel, sir!" announced a rifleman. "Here's Duvauchel!"
The staircase was too narrow and they had to bring the stretcher round by the garden. The captain ran to meet the wounded man, who made an effort to stand on his legs:
"What's up, Duvauchel? Are you hit?"
"Not I, sir, not I," said the man, whose face was livid and his eyes burning with fever. "A cherry-stone tickled my shoulder, by way of a lark. It's nothing...."
"But the blood's flowing...."
"It's nothing, I tell you, sir.... I know all about it.... Saw plenty of it as a greaser!... It won't show in five minutes ... and then I'm off...."
"Oh, of course, I forgot, you're deserting!..."
"Rather! The comrades are waiting for me...."
"Then begin by getting your wound dressed...."
"My wound dressed? Oh, that's a good one! I tell you, sir, it's nothing ... less than nothing ... a kiss ... a puff of wind...."
He stood up for an instant, but his eyelids flickered, his hands sought for support and he fell back upon the litter.
Mme. Morestal and Marthe hastened to his side:
"Let me, mamma, please," said Marthe, "I'm used to it.... But you've forgotten the absorbent wool ... and the peroxide of hydrogen.... Quick, mamma ... and more bandages, lots of bandages...."
Mme. Morestal went out. Marthe bent over the wounded man and felt his pulse without delay:
"Quite right, it's nothing," she said. "The artery is uninjured."
She uncovered the wound and, very tenderly, staunched the blood that trickled from it:
"The peroxide, quick, mamma."
She took the bottle which some one held out to her and, raising her head, saw Suzanne stooping like herself over the wounded man.
"M. Morestal is waking up," said the girl. "Mme. Morestal sent me in her stead...."
Marthe did not so much as start. She did not even feel as though an unpleasant memory had flitted through her mind, compelling her to make an effort to suppress her hatred:
"Unroll the bandages," she said.