AT THE INN
When Quebec came into view Robert
stood up and looked long at the great rock and the
town that crowned it, hung on its slopes and nestled
at the foot of the cliffs below. Brilliant sunshine
gilded its buildings of stone and gray wood, and played
like burnished gold on the steeples of its many churches.
In the distance the streets leading up the steep cliffs
looked like mere threads, but in the upper town the
great public buildings, the Intendant’s Palace,
the Cathedral, Notre Dame de la Victoire, the convents
of the Ursuline Nuns and the Recollet Friars, the
Bishop’s Palace, and others raised for the glory
and might of France, were plainly visible.
In more than one place he saw the
Bourbon lilies floating and from the little boat on
which he stood in the stream it looked like a grim
and impregnable fortress of the Old World. The
wonderful glow of the air, and the vast river flowing
at its feet, magnified and colored everything.
It was a city ten times its real size and the distance
turned gray wood to gray stone. Everything was
solid, immovable, and it seemed fit to defy the world.
Robert felt a catch in his breath.
He had often seen Quebec, great and beautiful, in
his dreams, but the reality was equal to it and more.
To the American of that day Quebec was one of the
vital facts of life. From that fortress issued
the daring young French soldiers of fortune who led
the forays against New York and New England. It
was the seat of the power that threatened them continually.
Many of the Bostonnais, seized in their fields, had
been brought here as prisoners to be returned home
only after years, or never. From this citadel,
too, poured the stream of arms and presents for the
Indians who were to lie in ambush along the English
border, or to make murderous incursions upon the villages.
From it flowed the countless dangers that had threatened
the northern provinces almost continually for a century
and a half. The Bostonnais themselves, mark of
the initiative and energy that were to distinguish
them so greatly later on, made a mighty effort against
it, and doubtless would have succeeded, had they been
allowed to carry the fight to a finish.
No man from New York or New England
could look upon it without a mingling of powerful
emotions. It was the Carthage to their Rome.
He admired and yet he wished to conquer. He felt
that permanent safety could never come to the northern
border until the Bourbon lilies ceased to float over
the great fortress that looked down on the St. Lawrence.
Robert was not the only one who felt strong emotion.
Tayoga stood beside him, his nostrils expanding and
his gaze fierce:
“Stadacona!” he said under
his breath, “Stadacona of the Ganeagaono, our
great brother nation!”
But the emotion of de Galisonnière
was of pleasure only. His eyes sparkled with
joy and admiration. He was delighted to come back
to Quebec, the gay city that he beheld through the
eyes of youth and glowing recollections. He knew
the corruption and wickedness of Bigot and of Cadet
and of Pean and of the whole reckless circle about
the Intendant, but Quebec, with its gallant men and
its beautiful women; its manners of an Old World aristocracy
and its air of a royal court, had many pleasures,
and why should youth look too far into the future?
And yet another stood up and looked
at Quebec, with emotions all his own, and unlike those
of the three who were so young. Father Drouillard,
tall in his black robe, gazed fixedly at the rock,
and raised his hand in a gesture much like that with
which he had cursed the chateau of Count Jean de Mézy.
His eyes were set and stern, but, as the sun fell in
floods of burnished gold on the cathedral and the convents,
his accusing look softened, became sad, then pitying,
then hopeful.
“A wonderful sight, Father Drouillard,”
said Willet, who stood at his elbow and who also gazed
at Quebec with feelings quite his own. “I’ve
seen it before, but I can never see it too often.”
“Mr. Willet,” said the
priest, “you and I are greater in years than
these youths, and perhaps for that reason we can look
farther into the future. Youth fears nothing,
but age fears everything. You come to Quebec
now in peace, and I trust that you may never come in
war. I can feel, nay I can see the clouds gathering
over our two lands. Why should we fight?
On a continent so vast is there not room enough for
all?”
“Room and to spare,” replied
the hunter, “but as you say, Father Drouillard,
you and I have lived longer than these youths, and
age has to think. If left to themselves I’ve
no doubt that New France and the English colonies
could make a lasting peace, but the intrigues, the
jealousies and the hates of the courts at London and
Paris keep our forests, four thousand miles away,
astir. When the Huron buries his arrow in the
heart of a foe the motive that sent him to the deed
may have had its start in Europe, but the poor savage
never knows it.”
The priest sighed, and looked at Willet
with an awakened curiosity.
“I see that you’re a man
of education,” he said, “and that you think.
What you say is true, but the time will come when other
minds than those of vain and jealous courtiers will
sway the fortunes of all these vast regions.
I have asked you nothing of your mission in Quebec,
Mr. Willet, but I hope that I will see you again before
you return.”
“I hope so too,” said the hunter sincerely.
The Frontenac now drew in to
a wharf between the Royal Battery and the Dauphin’s
Battery, and Robert was still all eyes for the picturesque
sights that awaited him in the greatest French town
of the New World. De Galisonnière was hailed
joyously by young officers and he made joyous replies.
Robert, as they landed, saw anew and in greater detail
the immense strength of Quebec.
He beheld the line of huge earthworks
that Frontenac had built from the river St. Charles
to Cape Diamond, and he saw the massive redoubts lined
with heavy cannon. Now, he wondered at the boldness
of the New Englanders who had assailed the town with
so much vigor, and who might have taken it.
“I recommend to you,”
said de Galisonnière, “that you go to the Inn
of the Eagle in the Upper Town. It is kept by
Monsieur Berryer, who as a host is fully equal to
Monsieur Jolivet of Montreal, and the merits of Monsieur
Jolivet are not unknown to you.”
“They are not,” said Robert
heartily, “and we may thank you, Captain de
Galisonnière, for your great courtesy in bringing us
from Montreal. We can only hope for a time in
which we shall be able to repay your kindness.”
After they had slipped some silver
pieces to the boatmen and had said farewell to Captain
de Galisonnière, they took their way up a steep street,
a swarthy French-Canadian porter carrying their baggage.
Here, as at Montreal, the most attention was attracted
by Tayoga, and, if possible, the young Onondaga grew
more haughty in appearance and manner. His moccasined
feet spurned the ground, and he gazed about with a
fierce and defiant eye.
Robert knew well what was stirring
the spirit of the Onondaga. This was not the
Quebec of the French, it was the Stadacona of the Mohawks,
the great brother nation of the Onondagas, and the
French here were but interlopers and robbers.
But Robert soon lost thought of Tayoga
as he looked at the crowded city, and its mingling
of the splendid and the squalid, its French and French-Canadians,
its soldiers and priests and civilians and Indians,
its great stone houses, and its wooden huts, its young
officers in fine white uniforms and its swarthy habitants
in brown homespun. Albany had its Dutch, and
New York had its Dutch, too, and people from many parts
of Europe, but Quebec was different, something altogether
new, without a trace of English or Dutch about it,
and, for that reason, it made a great appeal to his
curiosity.
A light open carriage drawn by two
stout ponies passed them at an amazing pace considering
the steepness of the street, and they saw in it a
florid young man in a splendid costume, his powdered
hair tied in a queue.
“De Mézy,” said the priest, who was just
behind them.
Then they knew that it was the young
man, the companion of Bigot in his revels, against
whose chateau Father Drouillard had raised his threatening
hands. Now the priest spoke the name with the
most intense scorn and contempt, and Robert, feeling
that he might encounter de Mézy again in this pent-up
Quebec, gazed at his vanishing figure with curiosity.
They had their gay blades in New York and Albany and
even a few in Boston of the Puritans, but he had not
seen anybody like de Mézy.
“It is such as he who are pulling
down New France,” murmured Father Drouillard.
A moment or two later the priest said
farewell and departed in the direction of the cathedral.
“There goes a man,” said
Willet, as he looked after the tall figure in the
black robe. “I don’t share in the
feeling of church against church. I don’t
see any reason why Protestant should hate Catholic
and Catholic should hate Protestant. I’ve
lived long enough and seen enough to know that each
church holds good men, and unless I make a big mistake,
and I don’t think I make any mistake at all,
Father Drouillard is not only a good man, but he has
a head full of sense and he’s as brave as a lion,
too.”
“Lots of priests are,”
said Robert. “Nobody ever endured the Indian
tortures better than they. And what’s the
figure over the doorway, Dave?”
“That, Robert, is Le Chien d’Or,
The Golden Dog. It’s the sign put up by
Nicholas Jaquin, whom they often called Philibert.
This is his warehouse and he was one of the honnêtes
gens that we’ve been talking about.
He fought the corrupt officials, he tried to make
lower prices for the people, and beneath his Golden
Dog he wrote:”
“Je suis un chien qui ronge
l’os,
En le rongeant je prends mon repos;
Un jour viendra qui n’est
pas venu,
Que je mordrai qui m’aura
mordu.”
“That is, some day the dog will
bite those who have bitten him?”
“That’s about it, Robert,
and I suppose it generally comes true. If you
keep on striking people some of them in time will strike
you and strike you pretty hard.”
“And does Philibert still run
his warehouse beneath his sign of the Golden Dog?”
“No, Robert. He was too
brave, or not cautious enough, and they assassinated
him, but there are plenty of others like him.
The French are a brave and honest people, none braver
or more honest. I tell you so, because I know
them, but their government is corrupt through and
through. The House of Bourbon is dying of its
own poison. It may seem strange to you, hearing
me say it here in the Western world, so far from Versailles,
but I’m not the only one who says so.”
“But I like Quebec,” said
Robert. “I haven’t seen another city
that speaks to the eye so much.”
They were now well into the Upper
Town, and the porter guided them to the Inn of the
Eagle, where Monsieur Paul Berryer, the host, gave
them a welcome, and from whom they learned that the
Governor General, the Marquis Duquesne, was absent
in the east, but would return in two or three days.
Robert was not sorry for the delay, as it would give
them a chance to see the city, and perhaps, through
de Galisonnière, make acquaintances among the French
officers.
They were able to secure a large room
with three beds, and both Robert and Willet drew from
their small store of baggage suits quite in the fashion,
three-cornered hats, fine coats and waistcoats, knee
breeches, stockings and buckled shoes, and as a last
and crowning triumph they produced handsome small
swords or rapiers that they buckled to their belts.
“That canoe of ours wasn’t
large, but it brought a lot in it,” said the
hunter.
Robert surveyed himself in a small
glass, and his clothes brought great pride. A
chord in his nature responded to splendor of raiment,
and the surroundings of the great world. Quebec
might be corrupt but he could not hide from himself
his immense interest in it. He noticed, too, that
Willet wore his fine costume naturally.
“It’s not the first time
that you’ve been in such clothes, Dave,”
he said, “and it’s not the first time
that you’ve been in a society like that which
makes its home in Quebec.”
“No, it is not,” replied
Willet, “and some time, Robert, I’ll tell
you about those days, but not now.”
Tayoga remained in his dress of a
young Indian chief. Even if he had had any other
he would not have put it on, and the fine deerskin
and the lofty headdress became him and stamped him
for what he was, a prince of the forest. He held
in his heart, too, a deeper feeling against the French
than any that animated either Robert or Willet.
He could not forget that this was not Quebec, but
Stadacona of the Ganeagaono, whose rights were also
the rights of the other nations of the Hodenosaunee,
and it was here that Frontenac, who had slaughtered
the Iroquois, had made his home and fortress.
The heart of Tayoga of the clan of the Bear of the
nation Onondaga, of the great League of the Hodenosaunee,
burned within him and the blood in his veins would
not grow cool.
“I suppose, Dave,” said
Robert, “since we have to wait two days for the
Marquis Duquesne, that we might go forth at once and
begin seeing the town.”
“Food first,” said the
hunter. “We’ve come a long journey
on the river and we’ll test the quality of the,
inn.”
It was too cool for the little terrace
that adjoined the Inn of the Eagle, and Monsieur Berryer
had a table set for them in the great dining-room,
which had an oaken floor, oaken beams and much china
and glass on shelves about the walls, the whole forming
an apartment in which the host took a just pride.
It was gayer and brighter than the inns of Albany
and New York, and again Robert found his spirit responding
to it.
A fire of light wood that blazed and
sparkled merrily burned in a huge stone fireplace
at the end of the room, and its grateful warmth entered
into Robert’s blood. He suddenly felt a
great exaltation. He was glad to be there.
He was glad that Tayoga and Willet were with him.
He was glad that they had encountered dangers on their
journey because they had won a triumph in overcoming
them, and by the very act of victory they had increased
their own strength and confidence. His sensitive,
imaginative nature, easily kindled to supreme efforts,
thrilled with the thoughts of the great deeds they
might do.
His pleasure in the company and the
atmosphere increased. Everything about him made
a strong appeal to good taste. At the end of the
room, opposite the fireplace, stood a vast sideboard,
upon which china and glass, arranged in harmonious
groups, shone and glittered. The broad shelves
or niches in the walls held much cut glass, which now
and then threw back from many facets the ruddy light
of the fire. Before sitting down, they had dipped
their hands in a basin of white china filled with
water, and standing beside the door, and that too had
pleased Robert’s fastidious taste.
At their table each of the three found
an immaculate white napkin, a large white china plate
and goblet, knife, fork and spoon, all of silver,
polished to the last degree. Again Robert’s
nature responded and he looked at himself in his fine
dress in the glittering silver of the goblet.
Then his right hand stole down and caressed the hilt
of his rapier. He felt himself very much of a
gentleman, very much of a chevalier, fit to talk on
equal terms with St. Luc, de Galisonnière or the best
French officer of them all. And Willet, wearing
his costly costume with ease, was very much of a gentleman
too, and Tayoga, dressed as the forest prince, was
in his own way, and quite as good a way, as much of
a gentleman as either.
At least a dozen others were in the
great room, and many curious eyes were upon the three
visitors from the south. It was likely that the
presence of such marked figures as theirs would become
known quickly in Quebec. They had shown the papers
bearing their names at the gate by which they had
entered, and doubtless the news of their arrival had
been spread at once by the officer in command there.
Well, they would prove to the proud chevaliers of
Quebec how the Bostonnais could bear themselves, and
Robert’s pulses leaped.
They were served by an attentive and
quiet waiter, and the three, each in his own way,
watched everything that was going on. They were
aware that not all would be as friendly as de Galisonnière
or Father Drouillard, but they were fully prepared
to meet a challenge of any kind and uphold the honor
of their own people. Robert was hoping that de
Galisonnière might come, as he had recommended the
inn to them. He did not appear, but the others
who did so lingered and young Lennox knew that it
was because of the three, who received many hostile
glances, although most were intended for the Onondaga.
Robert was aware, too, that if the Iroquois had lost
this Stadacona of the Mohawks and had been ravaged
by Frontenac, they had taken a terrible revenge upon
the French and their chief allies, the Hurons.
For generations the Hodenosaunee had swept the villages
along the St. Lawrence with fire and tomahawk, slaying
and capturing their hundreds. But to Tayoga it
was and always would be the French who had struck
first, and the vital fact remained that they lived
upon land upon which the Iroquois themselves had once
lived, no man knew how long.
Robert saw that the looks were growing
more menacing, although the good Monsieur Berryer
glided among his guests, and counseled caution.
“Take no notice,” said
Willet in a low tone. “The French are polite,
and although they may not like us they will not molest
us.”
Robert followed his advice. Apparently
he had no thought except for his food, which was delicate,
but his ears did not miss any sound that could reach
them. He understood French well, and he caught
several whispers that made the red come to his cheeks.
Doubtless they thought he could not speak their language
or they would have been more careful.
Half way through the dinner and the
door was thrown open, admitting a gorgeous figure
and a great gust of words. It was a young man
in a brilliant uniform, his hair long, perfumed, powdered
and curled, and his face flushed. Robert recognized
him at once as that same Count Jean de Mézy who had
passed them in the flying carriage. Behind came
two officers of about the same age, but of lower rank,
seeking his favor and giving him adulation.
His roving eye traveled around the
room, and, resting upon the three guests, became inflamed.
“Ah, Nemours, and you, Le Moyne,”
he said, “look there and behold the two Bostonnais
and the Iroquois of whom we have heard, sitting here
in our own Inn of the Eagle!”
“But there is no war, not as
yet,” said Nemours, although he spoke in an
obsequious tone.
“But it will come,” said
de Mézy loudly, “and then, gentlemen, this lordly
Quebec of ours, which has known many English captives,
will hold multitudes of them.”
There were cries of “Silence!” “Not
so loud!”
“Don’t insult guests!”
but de Mézy merely laughed and said: “They
don’t understand! The slow-witted English
never know any tongue but their own.”
The red flush in Robert’s face
deepened and he moved angrily.
“Quiet, boy! Quiet!”
whispered the hunter. “He wants a quarrel,
and he is surrounded by his friends, while we’re
strangers in a strange land and a hostile city.
Take a trifle of the light white wine that Monsieur
Berryer is pouring for you. It won’t hurt
you.”
Robert steadied himself and sipped
a little. De Mézy and his satellites, Nemours
and Le Moyne, sat down noisily at a table and ordered
claret. De Mézy gave the cue. They talked
of the Bostonnais, not only of the two Bostonnais
who were present, but of the Bostonnais in all the
English colonies, applying the word to them whether
they came from Massachusetts or New York or Virginia.
Robert felt his pulses leaping and the hunter whispered
his warning once more.
De Mézy evidently was sincere in his
belief that the three understood no French, as he
continued to talk freely about the English colonies,
the prospect of war, and the superiority of French
troops to British or American. Meanwhile he and
his two satellites drank freely of the claret and
their faces grew more flushed. Robert could stand
it no longer.
“Tayoga,” he said clearly
and in perfect French, “it seems that in Quebec
there are people of loose speech, even as there are
in Albany and New York.”
“Our sachems tell us that such
is the way of man,” said the Onondaga, also
in pure French. “Vain boasters dwell too
in our own villages. For reasons that I do not
know, Manitou has put the foolish as well as the wise
into the world.”
“To travel, Tayoga, is to find
wisdom. We learn what other people know, and
we learn to value also the good that we have at home.”
“It is so, my friend Lennox.
It is only when we go into strange countries and listen
to the tongues of the idle and the foolish that we
learn the full worth of our own.”
“It is not wise, Tayoga, to
give a full rein to a loose tongue in a public place.”
“Our mothers teach us so, Lennox,
as soon as we leave our birch bark cradles.”
Willet had raised his hand in warning,
but he saw that it was too late. The young blood
in the veins of both Tayoga and Robert was hot, and
the Iroquois was stirred not less deeply than the
white man.
“The sachems tell us,”
he said, “that sometimes a man speaks foolish
words because he is born foolish, again he says them
at times because his temper or drink makes him foolish,
or he may say them because it is his wish to be foolish
and he has cultivated foolish ways all his life.
This last class is the worst of all, Lennox, my friend,
but there is a certain number of them in all lands,
as one finds when one travels.”
The Onondaga spoke with great clearness
and precision in his measured school French and a
moment of dead silence followed. Then Robert said:
“It is true, Tayoga. The
chiefs of the Hodenosaunee are great and wise men.
They have lived and seen much, and seeing they have
remembered. They know that speech was given to
man in order that he might convey his thoughts to
another, and not that he might make a fool of himself.”
An angry exclamation came from the
table at which de Mézy sat, and his satellites, Nemours
and Le Moyne, swept the three with looks meant to be
contemptuous. Monsieur Berryer raised deprecating
hands and was about to speak, but, probably seeing
that both hands and words would be of no avail, moved
quietly to one side. He did not like to have quarrels
in his excellent Inn of the Eagle, but they were no
new thing there, for the gilded youth of Quebec was
hot and intemperate.
“But when a man is foolish in
our village,” resumed Tayoga, “and the
words issue from his mouth in a stream like the cackling
of a jay bird, the chiefs do not send warriors to
punish him, but give him into the hands of the old
women, who bind him and beat him with sticks until
they can beat sense back into him.”
“A good way, Tayoga, a most
excellent way,” said Robert. “People
who have reached the years of maturity pay no attention
to the vaporings and madness of the foolish.”
He did not look around, but he heard
a gusty exclamation, the scrape of a chair on the
floor, and a hasty step. Then he felt a hot breath,
and, although he did not look up, he knew that de
Mézy, flushed with drink and anger, was standing over
him. The temperament that nature had given to
him, the full strength of which he was only discovering,
asserted itself. He too felt wrath inside, but
he retained all the presence of mind for which he
afterward became famous.
“Shall we go out and see more
of the city, Tayoga?” he asked.
“Not until I have had a word
with you, young sprig of a Bostonnais,” said
de Mézy, his florid face now almost a flaming red.
“Your pardon, sir,” said
Robert, with his uncommon fluency of speech, “I
have not the advantage of your acquaintance, which,
no doubt, is my loss, as I admit that there are many
good and brave men whom I do not know.”
“I am Jean de Mézy, a count
of France, a captain in the army of King Louis, and
one of the most valued friends of our able Intendant,
François Bigot.”
“I have heard of France, of
course, I have heard, equally of course, of His Majesty,
King Louis, I have even heard of the Intendant, François
Bigot, but, and sorry I am to say it, I have never
heard of the Count Jean de Mézy.”
A low laugh came from a distant corner
of the room, and the red of de Mézy’s face turned
to purple. His hand dropped to the hilt of his
sword, but Le Moyne whispered to him and he became
more collected.
“In Quebec,” he said,
throwing back his shoulders and raising his chin,
“an officer of His Majesty, King Louis, does
not accept an insult. We preserve our honor with
the edge of our swords, and for that reason I intend
to let a good quantity of the hot blood out of you
with mine. There is a good place near the St.
Louis gate, and the hour may be as early as you wish.”
“He is but a boy,” interposed Willet.
“But I know the sword,”
said Robert, who had made up his mind, and who was
measuring his antagonist. “I will meet you
tomorrow morning just after sunrise with the small
sword, and my seconds will confer with yours tonight.”
He stood up that they might see his
size. Although only a boy in years, he was as
large and strong as de Mézy, and his eyes were clearer
and his muscles much firmer. A hum of approval
came from the spectators, who now numbered more than
a score, but the approval was given for different
reasons. Some, and they belonged to the honnêtes
gens, were glad to see de Mézy rebuked and hoped
that he would be punished; others, the following of
Bigot, Cadet, Pean and their corrupt crowd, were eager
to see the Bostonnais suffer for his insolence to
one of their number. But most of them, both the
French of old France and the French of Canada, chivalric
of heart, were resolved to see fair play.
Monsieur Berryer shrugged his shoulders,
but made no protest. The affair to his mind managed
itself very well. There had been none of the
violence that he had apprehended. The quarrel
evidently was one of gentlemen, carried out in due
fashion, and the shedding of blood would occur in
the proper place and not in his inn. And yet it
would be an advertisement. Men would come to
point out where de Mézy had sat, and where the young
Bostonnais had sat, and to recount the words that each
had said. And then the red wine and the white
wine would flow freely. Oh, yes, the affair was
managing itself very well indeed, and the thrifty
Monsieur Berryer rubbed his hands together with satisfaction.
“We have beds here at the Inn
of the Eagle,” said Robert coolly—he
was growing more and more the master of speech; “you
can send your seconds this evening to see mine, and
they will arrange everything, although I tell you
now that I choose small swords. I hope my choice
suits you.”
“It is what I would have selected
myself,” said de Mézy, giving his antagonist
a stare of curiosity. Such coolness, such effrontery,
as he would have called it, was not customary in one
so young, and in an American too, because Americans
did not give much attention to the study of the sword.
New thoughts raced through his head. Could it
be possible that here, where one least expected it,
was some marvelous swordsman, a phenomenon? Did
that account for his indifference? A slight shudder
passed over the frame of Jean de Mézy, who loved his
dissolute life. But such thoughts vanished quickly.
It could not be possible. The confidence of the
young Bostonnais came from ignorance.
Robert had seen de Mézy’s face
fall, and he was confirmed in the course that he had
chosen already.
“Gusgaesata,” he said to Tayoga
in Iroquois.
“Ah, the deer buttons!”
the Onondaga said in English, then repeating it in
French.
“You will pardon us,”
said Robert carelessly to de Mézy, “but Tayoga,
who by the way is of the most ancient blood of the
Onondagas, and I often play a game of ours after dinner.”
His manner was that of dismissal,
and the red in de Mézy’s cheeks again turned
to purple. Worst of all, the little dart of terror
stabbed once more at his heart. The youth might
really be the dreaded marvel with the sword.
Such coolness in one so young at such a time could
come only from abnormal causes. Although he felt
himself dismissed he refused to go away and his satellites
remained with him. They would see what the two
youths meant to do.
Tayoga took from a pocket in his deerskin
tunic eight buttons about three quarters of an inch
in diameter and made of polished and shining elk’s
horn, except one side which had been burned to a darker
color. From another pocket he drew a handful
of beans and laid them in one heap. Then he shook
the buttons in the palm of his hand, and put them
down in the center of the table. Six white sides
were turned up and taking two beans from the common
heap he started a pile of his own. He threw again
and obtained seven whites. Then he took four beans.
A third throw and all coming up white twenty beans
were subtracted from the heap and added to his own
pile. But on the next throw only five of the whites
appeared, and as at least six of the buttons had to
be matched in order to continue his right of throwing
he resigned his place to Robert, who threw with varying
fortune until he lost in his turn to Tayoga.
“A crude Indian game,”
said de Mézy in a sneering tone, and the two satellites,
Nemours and Le Moyne, laughed once more. Robert
and Tayoga did not pay the slightest attention to
them, concentrating their whole attention upon the
sport, but Willet said quietly:
“I’ve seen wise chiefs
play it for hours, and the great men of the Hodenosaunee
would be great men anywhere.”
Angry words gathered on the lips of
de Mézy, but they were not spoken. He saw that
he was at a disadvantage, and that he would lose prestige
if he kept himself in a position to be snubbed before
his own people by two strange youths. At length
he said: “Farewell until morning,”
and stalked out, followed by his satellites.
Others soon followed but Robert and Tayoga went on
with their game of the deer buttons. They were
not interrupted until Monsieur Berryer bowed before
them and asked if they would have any more refreshment.
“No, thank you,” said
Robert, and then he added, as if by afterthought,
although he did not take his eyes from the buttons:
“What sort of a man at sword play is this de
Mézy?”
“Very good! Very good,
sir,” replied the innkeeper, “that is if
his eyes and head are clear.”
“Then if he is in good condition
it looks as if I ought to be careful.”
“Careful, sir! Careful!
One ought always to be careful in a duel!”
“In a way I suppose so.
Monsieur Berryer. But I fancy it depends a good
deal upon one’s opponent. There are some
who are not worth much trouble.”
Monsieur Berryer’s eyes stood
out. Robert had spoken with calculated effect.
He knew that his words uttered now would soon reach
the ears of Jean de Mézy, and it was worth while to
be considered a miraculous swordsman. He had
read the count’s mind when he stood at his elbow,
shuddering a little at the thought that a prodigy with
the blade might be sitting there, and he was resolved
to make the thought return once more and stay.
“And, sir, you distinguish between
swordsmen, and find it necessary to make preparation
only for the very best? And you so young too!”
said the wondering innkeeper.
“Youth in such times as ours
does not mean inexperience, Monsieur Berryer,”
said Willet.
“It is true, alas!” said
the innkeeper, soberly. “The world grows
old, and there are seas of trouble. I wish no
annoyance to any guests of mine. I know the courtesy
due to visitors in our Quebec, and I would have stopped
the quarrel had I been able, but the Count Jean de
Mézy is a powerful man, the friend and associate of
the Intendant, Monsieur Bigot.”
“I understand, Monsieur Berryer,”
said Robert, with calculated lightness; “your
courtesy is, in truth, great, but don’t trouble
yourself on our account. We are fully able to
take care of ourselves. Come, Tayoga, we’re
both tired of the game and so let’s to bed.”
Tayoga carefully put away the deer
buttons and the beans, and the three rose.