Part 6 (1/2)

The three tried to explain at once. They had had a lovely day, and Madame Ganeau, with her daughter and promised son-in-law, were along in the sail down the river. And Pierre had gone to see the result of a dispute--

”I sent him,” cried Jeanne, frankly. ”Oh, here he comes,” as Pierre ran up breathless.

”O my son, thou art safe--”

”It was no quarrel of mine,” said Pierre, ”and if it had been I have two good fists and a foot that can kick. It was that Jogue who hired his boat twice over and pretended to forget. But he gave back the money. He had told a lie, however, for he said Marsac took the canoe without his knowledge, and then he declared he had been so mixed up--I think he was half drunk--that he could not remember. They were going to hand him over to the guard, but he begged so piteously they let him off. Then he and Louis Marsac took another drink.”

Jeanne suddenly s.n.a.t.c.hed up her skirt and scrubbed her mouth vigorously.

”It has been a tiresome day,” exclaimed Pani, ”and thou must have a mouthful of supper, little one, and go to bed.”

She put her arm over the child's shoulder, with a caress; and Jeanne pressed her rosy cheek on the hand.

”I do not want any supper but I will go to bed at once,” she replied in a weary tone.

”It is said that at the eastward in the Colonies they keep just such a July day with flags and confusion and cannon firing and bells ringing.

One such day in a lifetime is enough for me,” declared Madame De Ber.

They kept the Fourth of July ever afterward, but this was really their national birthday.

Jeanne scrubbed her mouth again before she said her little prayer and in five minutes she was soundly asleep. But the man who had kissed her and who had been her childhood's friend staggered homeward after a roistering evening, never losing sight of the blow she had struck him.

”The tiger cat!” he said with what force he could summon. ”She shall pay for this, if it is ten years! In three or four years I will marry her and then I will train her to know who is master. She shall get down on her knees to me if she is handsome as a princess, if she were a queen's daughter.”

Laurent St. Armand went home to his father a good deal amused after all his disappointment and vexation, for he had been compelled to take an inferior canoe.

”_Mon pere_,” he said, as his father sat contentedly smoking, stretched out in a most comfortable fas.h.i.+on, ”I have seen your little gossip of the morning, and I came near being in a quarrel with a son of the trader De Marsac, but we settled it amicably and I should have had a much better opinion of him, if he had not stopped to drink Jogue's vile brandy. He's a handsome fellow, too.”

”And is the little girl his sister?”

”O no, not in anyway related.” Then Laurent told the story, guessing at the kiss from the blow that had followed.

”Good, I like that,” declared St. Armand. ”Whose child is it?”

”That I do not know, but she lives up near the Citadel and her name is Jeanne Angelot. Shall I find her for you to-morrow?”

”She is a brave little girl.”

”I do not like Marsac.”

”His mother was an Indian, the daughter of some chief, I believe. De Marsac is a shrewd fellow. He has great faith in the copper mines.

Strange how much wealth lies hidden in the earth! But the quarrel?” with a gesture of interest.

”Oh, it was nothing serious and came about Jogue's lying. I rated him well for it, but he had been drinking and there was not much satisfaction. Well, it has been a grand day and now we shall see who next rules the key to the Northwest. There is great agitation about the Mississippi river and the gulf at the South. It is a daring country, _mon pere_.”

The elder laughed with a softened approval.

Louis Marsac did not come near St. Joseph street the next day. He slept till noon, when he woke with a humiliating sense of having quite lost his balance, for he seldom gave way to excesses. It was late in the afternoon when he visited the old haunts and threw himself under Jeanne's oak. Was she very angry? Pouf! a child's anger. What a sweet mouth she had! And she was none the worse for her spirit. But she was a tempestuous little thing when you ran counter to her ideas, or whims, rather.

Since she had neither birth nor wealth, and was a mere child, there would be no lovers for several years, he could rest content with that a.s.surance. And if he wanted her then--he gave an indifferent nod.