Robert W. Chambers

Lorraine


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and the Moselle redder than the setting sun, and over all the land of France I see bayonets, moving, moving, like the Rhine in flood!"

      The light in her eyes died out; she straightened up; her lithe young body trembled.

      "I have never before told this to any one," she said, faintly; "my father does not listen when I speak. You are Jack Marche, are you not?"

      He did not answer, but stood awkwardly, folding and unfolding the crumpled maps.

      "You are the vicomte's nephew—a guest at the Château Morteyn?" she asked.

      "Yes," said Marche.

      "Then you are Monsieur Jack Marche?"

      He took off his shooting-cap and laughed frankly. "You find me carrying a gun on your grounds," he said; "I'm sure you take me for a poacher."

      She glanced at his leggings.

      "Now," he began, "I ask permission to explain; I am afraid that you will be inclined to doubt my explanation. I almost doubt it myself, but here it is. Do you know that there are wolves in these woods?"

      "Wolves?" she repeated, horrified.

      "I saw one; I followed it to this carrefour."

      She leaned against a tree; her hands fell to her sides.

      There was a silence; then she said, "You will not believe what I am going to say—you will call it superstition—perhaps stupidity. But do you know that wolves have never appeared along the Moselle except before a battle? Seventy years ago they were seen before the battle of Colmar. That was the last time. And now they appear again."

      "I may have been mistaken," he said, hastily; "those shaggy sheep-dogs from the Moselle are very much like timber-wolves in colour. Tell me, Mademoiselle de Nesville, why should you believe that we are going to have a war? Two weeks ago the Emperor spoke of the perfect tranquillity of Europe." He smiled and added, "France seeks no quarrels. Because a brute of a German comes sneaking into these woods to satisfy his national thirst for prying, I don't see why war should result."

      "War did result," she said, smiling also, and glancing at his torn shooting-coat; "I haven't even thanked you yet, Monsieur Marche—for your victory."

      With a sudden gesture, proud, yet half shy, she held out one hand, and he took it in his own hands, bronzed and brier scratched.

      "I thought," she said, withdrawing her fingers, "that I ought to give you an American 'shake hands.' I suppose you are wondering why we haven't met before. There are reasons."

      She looked down at her scarlet skirt, touched a triangular tear in it, and, partly turning her head, raised her arms and twisted the tangled hair into a heavy burnished knot at her neck.

      "You wear the costume of Lorraine," he ventured.

      "Is it not pretty? I love it. Alone in the house I always wear it, the scarlet skirts banded with black, the velvet bodice and silver chains—oh! he has broken my chain, too!"

      He leaned on his gun, watching her, fascinated with the grace of her white fingers twisting her hair.

      "To think that you should have first seen me so! What will they say at the Château Morteyn?"

      "But I shall tell nobody," laughed Marche.

      "Then you are very honourable, and I thank you. Mon Dieu, they talk enough about me—you have heard them—do not deny it, Monsieur Marche. It is always, 'Lorraine did this, Lorraine did that, Lorraine is shocking, Lorraine is silly, Lorraine—' O Dieu! que sais'je! Poor Lorraine!"

      "Poor Lorraine!" he repeated, solemnly. They both laughed outright.

      "I know all about the house-party at the Château Morteyn," she resumed, mending a tear in her velvet bodice with a hair-pin. "I was invited, as you probably know, Monsieur Marche; but I did not go, and doubtless the old vicomte is saying, 'I wonder why Lorraine does not come?' and Madame de Morteyn replies, 'Lorraine is a very uncertain quantity, my dear'—oh, I am sure that they are saying these things."

      "I think I heard some such dialogue yesterday," said Marche, much amused. Lorraine raised her head and looked at him.

      "You think I am a crazy child in tatters, neglected and wild as a falcon from the Vosges. I know you do. Everybody says so, and everybody pities me and my father. Why? Parbleu! he makes experiments with air-ships that they don't understand. Voilà! As for me, I am more than happy. I have my forest and my fields; I have my horses and my books. I dress as I choose; I go where I choose. Am I not happy, Monsieur Marche?"

      "I should say," he admitted, "that you are."

      "You see," she continued, with a pretty, confidential nod, "I can talk to you because you are the vicomte's American nephew, and I have heard all about you and your lovely sister, and it is all right—isn't it?"

      "It is," said Marche, fervently.

      "Of course. Now I shall tell you why I did not go to the Château and meet your sister and the others. Perhaps you will not comprehend. Shall I tell you?"

      "I'll try to comprehend," said Marche, laughing.

      "Well, then, would you believe it? I—Lorraine de Nesville—have outgrown my clothes, monsieur, and my beautiful new gowns are coming from Paris this week, and then—"

      "Then!" repeated Marche.

      "Then you shall see," said Lorraine, gravely.

      Jack, bewildered, fascinated, stood leaning on his gun, watching every movement of the lithe figure before him.

      "Until your gowns arrive, I shall not see you again?" he asked.

      She looked up quickly.

      "Do you wish to?"

      "Very much!" he blurted out, and then, aware of the undue fervor he had shown, repeated: "Very much—if you don't mind," in a subdued but anxious voice.

      Again she raised her eyes to his, doubtfully, perhaps a little wistfully.

      "It wouldn't be right, would it—until you are presented?"

      He was silent.

      "Still," she said, looking up into the sky, "I often come to the river below, usually after luncheon."

      "I wonder if there are any gudgeon there?" he said; "I could bring a rod—"

      "Oh, but are you coming? Is that right? I think there are fish there," she added, innocently, "and I usually come after luncheon."

      "And when your gowns arrive from Paris—"

      "Then! Then you shall see! Oh! I shall be a very different person; I shall be timid and silent and stupid and awkward, and I shall answer, 'Oui, monsieur;' 'Non, monsieur,' and you will behold in me the jeune fille of the romances."

      "Don't!" he protested.

      "I shall!" she cried, shaking out her scarlet skirts full breadth. "Good-by!"

      In a second she had gone, straight away through the forest, leaving in his ears the music of her voice, on his finger-tips the touch of her warm hand.

      He stood, leaning on his gun—a minute, an hour?—he did not know.

      Presently earthly sounds began to come back to drown the delicious voice in his ears; he heard the little river Lisse, flowing, flowing under green branches; he heard a throstle singing in the summer wind; he heard, far in the deeper forest, something passing—patter, patter, patter—over the dead leaves.

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