Part 16 (1/2)

Madame La Tour came to the hall and sat briefly and alone at her own table to take her dinner and supper. Later in the siege she stood and merely took food from the cook's hands, talking with and comforting her women while she ate. The surgeon of the fort was away with La Tour. She laid bandages ready, and felt obliged to dress not only the first but every wound received.

Pierre Doucett was brought from one of the bastions stunned and bleeding, and his wife rose up with her baby in her arms, filling the hall with her cries. The baby and her neighbors' children were moved to join her. But the eye of her lady was as awful as Pierre's wound. Her outcry sunk to a whimper; she hushed the children, and swept them off the settle so Pierre could lie there, and even paid out the roll of bandage with one hand while her lady used it. Marie controlled her own faintness; for a woman on whom a man's labors are imposed must bear them.

The four little children stood with fingers in their mouths, looking at these grim tokens of war. All day long they heard the cras.h.i.+ng or thumping of b.a.l.l.s, and felt the leap and rebound of cannon. The cook, when he came down from a bastion to attend to his kettles, gave them nice bits to eat, and in spite of solemnity, they counted it a holiday to be in the hall. Pierre Doucett groaned upon his settle, and Madame La Tour being on the lookout in the turret, Pierre Doucett's wife again took to wailing over him. The other women comforted her with their ignorant sympathy, and Marguerite sat with her back to it all. But the children adapted themselves to the situation, and trooped across to the foot of the stairway to play war. On that grim pavement door which led down into the keep they shot each other with merry cannonading and were laid out in turn on the steps.

Le Rossignol pa.s.sed hours of that day sitting on the broad door-sill of the tower. She loved to watch the fiery rain; but she was also waiting for a lull in the cannonading that she might release her swan. He was always forbidden the rooms in the tower by her lady; for he was a pugnacious creature, quick to strike with beak or wings any one who irritated him. Especially did he seem tutored in the dwarf's dislike of Lady Dorinda. In peaceful times when she descended to the ground and took a sylvan excursion outside the fort, he ruffled all his feathers and pursued her even from the river. Le Rossignol had a forked branch with which she yoked him as soon as D'Aulnay's vessels alarmed the fort.

She also tied him by one leg under his usual shelter, the pent-house of the mill. He always sulked at restraint, but Le Rossignol maintained discipline. In the destruction of the oven and the reeling of the mill, Shubenacadie leaped upward and fell back flattened upon the ground. The fragments had scarcely settled before his mistress had him in her arms.

At the risk of her life she dragged him across to the entrance, and sat desolately crumbling away between her fingers such feathers as were singed upon him, and sleeking his long gasping neck. She swallowed piteously with suspense, but could not bring herself to examine his body. He had his feet; he had his wings; and finally he sat up of his own accord, and quavered some slight remark about the explosion.

”What ails thee?” exclaimed the dwarf indignantly. ”Thou great coward!

To lie down and gasp and sicken my heart for the singeing of a few feathers!”

She boxed the place where a swan's ear should be, and Shubenacadie bit her. It was a serene and happy moment for both of them. Le Rossignol opened the door and pushed him in. Shubenacadie stood awkwardly with his feet sprawled on the hall pavement, and looked at the scenes to which his mistress introduced him. He noticed Marguerite, and hissed at her.

”Be still, madman,” admonished the dwarf. ”Thou art an intruder here.

The peasants will drive thee up chimney. Low-born people, when they get into good quarters, always try to put their betters out.”

Shubenacadie waddled on, scarcely recovered from the prostration of his fright, and inclined to hold the inmates of the tower accountable for it. Marie had just left Pierre Doucett, and his nurses were so busy with him that the swan was not detected until he scattered the children from the stairs.

”Now, Mademoiselle Nightingale,” said Zelie, coming heavily across the flags, ”have we not enough strange cattle in this tower, that you must bring that creature in against my lady's orders?”

”He shall not stand out there under D'Aulnay's guns. Besides, Madame Marie hath need of him,” declared Le Rossignol impudently. ”She would have me ride to D'Aulnay's camp and bring her word how many men have fallen there to-day.”

Zelie s.h.i.+vered through her indignation.

”Do you tell me such a tale, when you were shut in the turret for that very sin?”

”Sin that is sin in peace is virtue in war,” responded Le Rossignol.

”Mount, Shubenacadie.”

”My lady will have his neck, wrung,” threatened Zelie.

”She dare not. The chimney will tumble in. The fort will be taken.”

”Art thou working against us?” demanded the maid wrathfully.

”Why should I work for you? You should, indeed, work for me. Pick me up this swan and carry him to the top of the stairs.”

”I will not do it!” cried Zelie, revolting through every atom of her ample bulk. ”Do I want to be lifted over the turret like thistledown?”

The dwarf laughed, and caught her swan by the back of his neck. With webbed toes and beating wings he fought every step; but she pulled herself up by the bal.u.s.trade and dragged him along. His bristling plumage sc.r.a.ped the upper floor until he and his wrath were shut within the dwarf's chamber.

”Naught but muscle and bone and fire and flax went to the making of that stunted wight,” mused Zelie, setting her knuckles in her hips. ”What a pity that she escapes powder and ball, when poor Pierre Doucett is shot down!--a man with wife and child, and useful to my lady besides.”

It was easy for Claude La Tour's widow to fill her idleness with visions of political alliance, but when D'Aulnay de Charnisay began to batter the walls round her ears, her common sense resumed sway. She could be of no use outside her apartment, so she took her meals there, trembling, but in her fas.h.i.+on resolute and courageous. The crash of cannon-shot was forever a.s.sociated with her first reception in Acadia. Therefore this siege was a torture to her memory as well as a peril to her body. The tower had no more sheltered place, however, than Lady Dorinda's room.

Zelie had orders to wait upon her with strict attention. The cannonading dying away as darkness lifted its wall between the opposed forces, she hoped for such sleep as could be had in a besieged place, and waited Zelie's knock. War, like a deluge, may drive people who detest each other into endurable contact; and when, without even a warning stroke on the panel, Le Rossignol slipped in as nimbly as a spider, Lady Dorinda felt no such indignation as she would have felt in ordinary times.