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"Yes, but folks won't understand," pleaded Jack, "and--and--I'd do as much for you--I wanted you to stand by me and tell me where to say 'yes' when the parson reads the words----"
"All right--I shall," I promised, laughing.
If only Hortense could know all this! That is the sorrow of rifted lives--the dark between, on each side the thoughts that yearn.
"And--and," Jack was stammering on, "I thought, perhaps, Mistress Rebecca 'd be willing to stand by Mizza," nodding to the young squaw, "that is, if you asked Rebecca," pleaded Jack.
"We'll see," said I.
For the New England conscience was something to reckon with!
"How did you come here?" I asked.
"Mizza snared rabbits and I stole back my musket when we ran away and did some shooting long as powder lasted----"
"And then?"
"And then we used bow and arrow. We hid in the bush till the hostiles quit cruisin'; but the spring storms caught us when we started for the coast. I s'pose I'm a better sailor on water than land, for split me for a herring if my eyes didn't go blind from snow! We hove to in the woods again, Mizza snaring rabbit and building a lodge and keepin' fire agoin' and carin' for me as if I deserved it. There I lay water-logged, odd's man--blind as a mole till the spring thaws came.
Then Mizza an' me built a raft; for sez I to Miz, though she didn't understand: 'Miz,' sez I, 'water don't flow uphill! If we rig up a craft, that river'll carry us to the bay!' But she only gets down on the ground the way she did with you and puts my foot on her neck.
Lordy," laughs Jack, "s'pose I don't know what a foot on a neck feels like? I sez: 'Miz, if you ever do that again, I'll throw you overboard!' Then the backwash came so strong from the bay, we had to wait till the floods settled. While we swung at anchorman, what d'y'
think happened? I taught Miz English. Soon as ever she knew words enough I told her if I was a captain I'd want a mate! She didn't catch the wind o' that, lad, till we were navigating our raft downstream agen the ice-jam. s.h.i.+p ahoy, you know, the ice was like to nip us, and lackin' a life-belt I put me arm round her waist! Ease your helm!
Port--a little! Haul away! But she understood--when she saw me save her from the jam before I saved myself."
And Jack Battle stood away arm's length from his Indian wife and laughed his pride.
"And by the time we'd got to the bay you'd gone, but Jean Groseillers sent us to the English s.h.i.+p that came out expecting to find Governor Brigdar at Nelson. We s.h.i.+pped with the company boat, and here we be."
"And what are you going to do?"
"Oh, I get work enough on the docks to pay for Mizza's lessons--"
"Lessons?"
"Yes--she's learning sewin' and readin' from the nuns, and as soon as she's baptized we're going to be married regular."
"Oh!" A sigh of relief escaped me. "Then you'll not need Rebecca for six months or so?"
"No; but you'll ask her?" pleaded Jack.
"If I'm here."
As they were going out Jack slipped back from the hallway to the fireplace, leaving Mizza outside.
"Ramsay?"
"Yes?"
"You think--it's--it's--all right?"
"What?"
"What I done about a mate?"
"Right?" I reiterated. "Here's my hand to you--blessing on the voyage, Captain Jack Battle!"
"Ah," smiled Jack, "you've been to the wilderness--you understand!
Other folks don't! That is the way it happens out there!"
He lingered as of old when there was more to come.
"Ramsay?"
"Sail away, captain!"
"Have you seen Hortense?" he asked, looking straight at me.
"Um--yes--no--that is--I have and I haven't."
"Why haven't you?"
"Because having become a grand lady, her ladys.h.i.+p didn't choose to see me."
Jack Battle turned on his heel and swore a seaman's oath.
"That--that's a lie," said he.
"Very well--it's a lie, but this is what happened," and I told him of the scene in the theatre. Jack pulled a puzzled face, looking askance as he listened.
"Why didn't you go round to her box, the way M. Radisson did to the king's?"
"You forget I am only a trader!"
"Pah," says Jack, "that is nothing!"
"You forget that Lieutenant Blood might have objected to my visit," and I told him of Blood.
"But how was Mistress Hortense to know that?"
Wounded pride hugs its misery, and I answered nothing.
At the door he stopped. "You go along with Radisson to Oxford," he called. "The court will be there."
CHAPTER XXVI
AT OXFORD
Rioting through London streets or playing second in M. Radisson's games of empire, it was possible to forget her, but not in Oxford with the court retinue all about and the hedgerows abloom and spring-time in the air. M. Radisson had gone to present his reports to the king. With a vague belief that chance might work some miracle, I accompanied M.