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"Then why," burst out the husband afresh, "did you leave me to follow that beast of prey?"
Marguerite brought a sob from her breast which was like a sword through Klussman. He smoothed and smoothed her hair.
"But what did I ever do to thee, Marguerite?"
"I always liked you best," she said. "But he was a great lord. The women in barracks are so hateful, and a common soldier is naught."
"You would be the lady of a seignior," hissed Klussman.
"Thou knowest I was fit for that," retorted Marguerite with spirit.
"I know thou wert. It is marrying me that has been thy ruin." He groaned with his head hanging.
"We are not ruined yet," she said, "if you care for me."
"That was a stranger child?" he repeated.
"All the train knew it to be a motherless child. He had no right to thrust it on me."
"I demand no testimony of D'Aulnay's followers," said Klussman roughly.
He let her go from his arms, and stepped to the battlements. His gaze moved over the square of the fortress, and eastward to that blur of whiteness which hinted the enemy's tents, the hint being verified by a light or two.
"I have a word to tell you," said Marguerite, leaning beside her husband.
"I have this to tell thee," said the Swiss. "We must leave Acadia." His arm again fondled her, and he comforted his sore spirit with an instant's thought of home and peace somewhere.
"Yes. We can go to Pen.o.bscot," she said.
"Pen.o.bscot?" he repeated with suspicion.
"The king will give you a grant of Pen.o.bscot."
"The king will give it to--me?"
"Yes. And it is a great seigniory."
"How do you know the king will do that?"
"He told me to tell you; he promised it."
"The king? You never saw the king."
"No."
"D'Aulnay?"
"Yes."
"I would I had him by the throat!" burst out Klussman. Marguerite leaned her cheek on the stone and sighed. The bay seemed full of salty spice.
It was a night in which the human soul must beat against cas.e.m.e.nts to break free and roam the blessed dark. All of spring was in the air.
Directly overhead stood the north star, with slow constellations wheeling in review before him.
"So D'Aulnay sent you to spy on my lord, as my lord believed?"
"You shall not call me a spy. I came to my husband. I hate him," she added in a resentful burst. "He made me walk the marshes, miles and miles alone, carrying that child."
"Why the child?"
"Because the people from St. John would be sure to pity it."
"And what word did he send you to tell me?" demanded Klussman. "Give me that word."
Marguerite waited with her face downcast.
"It was kind of him to think of me," said the Swiss; "and to send you with the message!"
She felt mocked, and drooped against the wall. And in the midst of his scorn he took her face in his hands with a softness he could not master.
"Give me the word," he repeated. Marguerite drew his neck down and whispered, but before she finished whispering Klussman flung her against the cannon with an oath.
"I thought it would be, betray my lord's fortress to D'Aulnay de Charnisay! Go down stairs, Marguerite Klussman. When I have less matter in hand, I will flog thee! Hast thou no wit at all? To come from a man who broke faith with thee, and offer his faith to me! Bribe me with Pen.o.bscot to betray St. John to him!"
Marguerite sat on the floor. She whispered, gasping,--
"Tell not the whole fortress."
Klussman ceased to talk, but his heels rung on the stone as he paced the turret. He felt himself grow old as silence became ma.s.sive betwixt his wife and him. The moon rose, piercing the cannon embrasure, and showed Marguerite weeping against the wall. The ma.s.s of silence drove him resistless before her will. That soft and childlike shape did not propose treason to him. He understood that she thought only of herself and him. It was her method of bringing profit out of the times. He heard his relief stumble at the foot of the turret stairs, and went down the winding darkness to stop and send the soldier back to bed.
"I am not sleepy," said Klussman. "I slept last night. Go and rest till daybreak." And the man willingly went. Marguerite had not moved a fold of her gown when her husband again came into the lighted tower. The Swiss lifted her up and made her stand beside him while he stanched her tears.
"You hurt me when you threw me against the cannon," she said.
"I was rough. But I am too foolish fond to hold anger. It has worn me out to be hard on thee. I am not the man I was."
Marguerite clung around him. He dumbly felt his misfortune in being thralled by a nature of greater moral crudity than his own. But she was his portion in the world.
"You flung me against the cannon because I wanted you made a seignior."
"It was because D'Aulnay wanted me made a traitor."
"What is there to do, indeed?" murmured Marguerite. "He said if you would take the sentinels off the wall on the entrance side of the fort, at daybreak any morning, he will be ready to scale that wall."
"But how will he know I have taken the sentinels off?"
"You must hold up a ladder in your hands."
"The tower is between that side of the fort and D'Aulnay's camp. No one would see me standing with a ladder in my hands."