Three days passed. At Orléans the settlers had had two or three

brushes with marauding Mohawks. A letter from Father Chaumonot at the

mission in Onondaga reported favorable progress. D'Hérouville was

again out of hospital; and De Leviston had stolen quietly away to

Montreal, where he was shortly to succumb to the plague. Only three

persons knew of the remarkable conflict between the marquis and

D'Hérouville: the son, Brother Jacques, and the Vicomte d'Halluys, who

possessed that mysterious faculty of finding out many things of which

the majority were unaware. As for the marquis, Brother Jacques

fostered the belief that it had been only a wild dream.

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Each morning Madame de Brissac watched with growing eagerness the

lading of the good ship Henri IV. It seemed impossible to her that the

deception in regard to the Chevalier could continue much longer. Where

was the dénouement on which she had builded so fondly? She had put it

off so many times that perhaps it was now too late. Sooner or later

Victor would slip, and the mask would be at an end. And why not? Why

not have done with a comedy which had grown stale? Why not tell

Monsieur du Cévennes that she was Gabrielle Diane de Montbazon, she

whose miniature he had crushed beneath the heel of his riding boot?

Rather would she tell him than leave it to the offices of D'Hérouville

or the vicomte. Surely her purpose had been to bring him to his knees

and then laugh! Relent? Not while her cup still held a drop of pride.

She had been mad indeed. To have come here to Quebec with purpose and

impulse undefined! Daily she mocked her weakness. Truly she was the

daughter of her mother, extravagant, unbalanced, blown hither and

thither by caprice as a leaf is blown by an autumn wind.

The thought of him stirred her as nothing had ever before stirred her.

It was hate, it was wounded pride crying out for vengeance, it was the

barb of scorn urging her to give back in kind. And, heaven above! he

had been on his knees, and she had dallied with the moment of revenge

even as a cat dallies with a mouse. Diane! She detested the name.

Fool! And yet, why was he here? What was this sudden veil of mystery

which hid him from her secret eyes? Victor knew, and yet his love for

her was not so great that he could tell her another's secret. And the

governor knew, D'Hérouville, and the vicomte; and they were as silent

as stone. Love? A fillip of her finger for love! Happy indeed was

she to learn that neither the marquis nor the Chevalier would return to

France on the Henri IV. Such a way have the women.




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