<SPAN name="chap19"></SPAN>
<h3> XIX </h3>
<p>With the slow approach of the storm which was advancing over the
wilderness, Carrigan felt more poignantly the growing unrest that was
in him. He heard the last of St. Pierre's voice, and after that the
fires on the distant shore died out slowly, giving way to utter
blackness. Faintly there came to him the far-away rumbling of thunder.
The air grew heavy and thick, and there was no sound of night-bird over
the breast of the river, and out of the thick cedar and spruce and
balsam there came no cry or whisper of the nocturnal life waiting in
silence for the storm to break. In that stillness David put out the
lights in the cabin and sat close to the window in darkness.</p>
<p>He was more than sleepless. Every nerve in his body demanded action,
and his brain was fired by strange thoughts until their vividness
seemed to bring him face to face with a reality that set his blood
stirring with an irresistible thrill. He believed he had made a
discovery, that St. Pierre had betrayed himself. What he had visioned,
the conclusion he had arrived at, seemed inconceivable, yet what his
own eyes had seen and his ears had heard pointed to the truth of it
all. The least he could say was that St. Pierre's love for Marie-Anne
Boulain was a strange sort of love. His attitude toward her seemed more
like that of a man in the presence of a child of whom he was fond in a
fatherly sort of way. His affection, as he had expressed it, was
parental and careless. Not for an instant had there been in it a
betrayal of the lover, no suggestion of the husband who cared deeply or
who might be made jealous by another man.</p>
<p>Sitting in darkness thickening with the nearer approach of storm, David
recalled the stab of pain mingled with humiliation that had come into
the eyes of St. Pierre's wife when she had stood facing her husband. He
heard again, with a new understanding, the low note of pathos in her
voice as in song she had called upon the Mother of Christ to hear
her—and help her. He had not guessed at the tragedy of it then. Now he
knew, and he thought of her lying awake in the gloom beyond the
bulkhead, her eyes were with tears. And St. Pierre had gone back to his
raft, singing in the night! Where before there had been sympathy for
him, there rose a sincere revulsion. There had been a reason for St.
Pierre's masterly possession of himself, and it had not been, as he had
thought, because of his bigness of soul. It was because he had not
cared. He was a splendid hypocrite, playing his game well at the
beginning, but betraying the lie at the end. He did not love Marie-Anne
as he, Dave Carrigan, loved her. He had spoken of her as a child, and
he had treated her as a child, and was serenely dispassionate in the
face of a situation which would have roused the spirit in most men. And
suddenly, recalling that thrilling hour in the white strip of sand and
all that had happened since, it flashed upon David that St. Pierre was
using his wife as the vital moving force in a game of his own—that
under the masquerade of his apparent faith and bigness of character he
was sacrificing her to achieve a certain mysterious something it the
scheme of his own affairs.</p>
<p>Yet he could not forget the infinite faith Marie-Anne Boulain had
expressed in her husband. There had been no hypocrisy in her waiting
and her watching for him, or in her belief that he would straighten out
the tangles of the dilemma in which she had become involved. Nor had
there been make-believe in the manner she had left him that day in her
eagerness to go to St. Pierre. Adding these facts as he had added the
others, he fancied he saw the truth staring at him out of the darkness
of his cabin room. Marie-Anne loved her husband. And St. Pierre was
merely the possessor, careless and indifferent, almost brutally
dispassionate in his consideration of her.</p>
<p>A heavy crash of thunder brought Carrigan back to a realization of the
impending storm. He rose to his feet in the chaotic gloom, facing the
bulkhead beyond which he was certain St. Pierre's wife lay wide awake.
He tried to laugh. It was inexcusable, he told himself, to let his
thoughts become involved in the family affairs of St. Pierre and
Marie-Anne. That was not his business. Marie-Anne, in the final
analysis, did not appear to be especially abused, and her mind was not
a child's mind. Probably she would not thank him for his interest in
the matter. She would tell him, like any other woman with pride, that
it was none of his business and that he was presuming upon forbidden
ground.</p>
<p>He went to the window. There was scarcely a breath of air, and
unfastening the screen, he thrust out his head and shoulders into the
night. It was so black that he could not see the shadow of the water
almost within reach of his hands, but through the chaos of gloom that
lay between him and the opposite shore he made out a single point of
yellow light. He was positive the light was in the cabin on the raft.
And St. Pierre was probably in that cabin.</p>
<p>A huge drop of rain splashed on his hand, and behind him he heard
sweeping over the forest tops the quickening march of the deluge. There
was no crash of thunder or flash of lightning when it broke. Straight
down, in an inundation, it came out of a sky thick enough to slit with
a knife. Carrigan drew in his head and shoulders and sniffed the sweet
freshness of it. He tried again to make out the light on the raft, but
it was obliterated.</p>
<p>Mechanically he began taking off his clothes, and in a few moments he
stood again at the window, naked. Thunder and lightning had caught up
with the rain, and in the flashes of fire Carrigan's ghost-white face
stared in the direction of the raft. In his veins was at work an
insistent and impelling desire. Over there was St. Pierre, he was
undoubtedly in the cabin, and something might happen if he, Dave
Carrigan, took advantage of storm and gloom to go to the raft.</p>
<p>It was almost a presentiment that drew his bare head and shoulders out
through the window, and every hunting instinct in him urged him to the
adventure. The stygian darkness was torn again by a flash of fire. In
it he saw the river and the vivid silhouette of the distant shore. It
would not be a difficult swim, and it would be good training for
tomorrow.</p>
<p>Like a badger worming his way out of a hole a bit too small for him,
Carrigan drew himself through the window. A lightning flash caught him
at the edge of the bateau, and he slunk back quickly against the cabin,
with the thought that other eyes might be staring out into that same
darkness. In the pitch gloom that followed he lowered himself quietly
into the river, thrust himself under water, and struck out for the
opposite shore.</p>
<p>When he came to the surface again it was in the glare of another
lightning flash. He flung the water from his face, chose a point
several hundred yards above the raft, and with quick, powerful strokes
set out in its direction. For ten minutes he quartered the current
without raising his head. Then he paused, floating unresistingly with
the slow sweep of the river, and waited for another illumination. When
it came, he made out the tented raft scarcely a hundred yards away and
a little below him. In the next darkness he found the edge of it and
dragged himself up on the mass of timbers.</p>
<p>The thunder had been rolling steadily westward, and David crouched low,
hoping for one more flash to illumine the raft. It came at last from a
mass of inky cloud far to the west, so indistinct that it made only dim
shadows out of the tents and shelters, but it was sufficient to give
him direction. Before its faint glare died out, he saw the deeper
shadow of the cabin forward.</p>
<p>For many minutes he lay where he had dragged himself, without making a
movement in its direction. Nowhere about him could he see a sign of
light, nor could he hear any sound of life. St. Pierre's people were
evidently deep in slumber.</p>
<p>Carrigan had no very definite idea of the next step in his adventure.
He had swum from the bateau largely under impulse, with no preconceived
scheme of action, urged chiefly by the hope that he would find St.
Pierre in the cabin and that something might come of it. As for
knocking at the door and rousing the chief of the Boulains from
sleep—he had at the present moment no very good excuse for that. No
sooner had the thought and its objection come to him than a broad shaft
of light shot with startling suddenness athwart the blackness of the
raft, darkened in another instant by an obscuring shadow. Swift as the
light itself David's eyes turned to the source of the unexpected
illumination. The door of St. Pierre's cabin was wide open. The
interior was flooded with lampglow, and in the doorway stood St. Pierre
himself.</p>
<p>The chief of the Boulains seemed to be measuring the weather
possibilities of the night. His subdued voice reached David, chuckling
with satisfaction, as he spoke to some one who was behind him in the
cabin.</p>
<p>"Pitch and brimstone, but it's black!" he cried. "You could carve it
with a knife, and stand it on end, AMANTE. But it's going west. In a
few hours the stars will be out."</p>
<p>He drew back into the cabin, and the door closed. David held his breath
in amazement, staring at the blackness where a moment before the light
had been. Who was it St. Pierre had called sweetheart? AMANTE! He could
not have been mistaken. The word had come to him clearly, and there was
but one guess to make. Marie-Anne was not on the bateau. She had played
him for a fool, had completely hoodwinked him in her plot with St.
Pierre. They were cleverer than he had supposed, and in darkness she
had rejoined her husband on the raft! But why that senseless play of
falsehood? What could be their object in wanting him to believe she was
still aboard the bateau?</p>
<p>He stood up on his feet and mopped the warm rain from his face, while
the gloom hid the grim smile that came slowly to his lips. Close upon
the thrill of his astonishment he felt a new stir in his blood which
added impetus to his determination and his action. He was not disgusted
with himself, nor was he embittered by what he had thought of a moment
ago as the lying hypocrisy of his captors. To be beaten in his game of
man-hunting was sometimes to be expected, and Carrigan always gave
proper credit to the winners. It was also "good medicine" to know that
Marie-Anne, instead of being an unhappy and neglected wife, had blinded
him with an exquisitely clever simulation. Just why she had done it,
and why St. Pierre had played his masquerade, it was his duty now to
find out.</p>
<p>An hour ago he would have cut off a hand before spying upon St.
Pierre's wife or eavesdropping under her window. Now he felt no
uneasiness of conscience as he approached the cabin, for Marie-Anne
herself had destroyed all reason for any delicate discrimination on his
part.</p>
<p>The rain had almost stopped, and in one of the near tents he heard a
sleepy voice. But he had no fear of chance discovery. The night would
remain dark for a long time, and in his bare feet he made no sound the
sharpest ears of a dog ten feet away might have heard. Close to the
cabin door, yet in such a way that the sudden opening of it would not
reveal him, he paused and listened.</p>
<p>Distinctly he heard St. Pierre's voice, but not the words. A moment
later came the soft, joyous laughter of a woman, and for an instant a
hand seemed to grip David's heart, filling it with pain. There was no
unhappiness in that laughter. It seemed, instead, to tremble in an
exultation of gladness.</p>
<p>Suddenly St. Pierre came nearer the door, and his voice was more
distinct. "Chere-coeur, I tell you it is the greatest joke of my life,"
he heard him say. "We are safe. If it should come to the worst, we can
settle the matter in another way. I can not but sing and laugh, even in
the face of it all. And she, in that very innocence which amuses me so,
has no suspicion—"</p>
<p>He turned, and vainly David keyed his ears to catch the final words.
The voices in the cabin grew lower. Twice he heard the soft laughter of
the woman. St. Pierre's voice, when he spoke, was unintelligible.</p>
<p>The thought that his random adventure was bringing him to an important
discovery possessed Carrigan. St. Pierre, he believed, had been on the
very edge of disclosing something which he would have given a great
deal to know. Surely in this cabin there must be a window, and the
window would be open—</p>
<p>Quietly he felt his way through the darkness to the shore side of the
cabin. A narrow bar of light at least partly confirmed his judgment.
There was a window. But it was almost entirely curtained, and it was
closed. Had the curtain been drawn two inches lower, the thin stream of
light would have been shut entirely out from the night.</p>
<p>Under this window David crouched for several minutes, hoping that in
the calm which was succeeding the storm it might be opened. The voices
were still more indistinct inside. He scarcely heard St. Pierre, but
twice again he heard the low and musical laughter of the woman. She had
laughed differently with HIM—and the grim smile settled on his lips as
he looked up at the narrow slit of light over his head. He had an
overwhelming desire to look in. After all, it was a matter of
professional business—and his duty.</p>
<p>He was glad the curtain was drawn so low. From experiments of his own
he knew there was small chance of those inside seeing him through the
two-inch slit, and he raised himself boldly until his eyes were on a
level with the aperture.</p>
<p>Directly in the line of his vision was St. Pierre's wife. She was
seated, and her back was toward him, so he could not see her face. She
was partly disrobed, and her hair was streaming loose about her. Once,
he remembered, she had spoken of fiery lights that came into her hair
under certain illumination. He had seen them in the sun, but never as
they revealed themselves now in that cabin lamp glow. He scarcely
looked at St. Pierre, who was on his feet, looking down upon her—not
until St. Pierre reached out and crumpled the smothering mass of
glowing tresses in his big hands, and laughed. It was a laugh filled
with the unutterable joy of possession. The woman rose to her feet. Up
through her hair went her two white, bare arms, encircling St. Pierre's
neck. The giant drew her close. Her slim form seemed to melt in his,
and their lips met.</p>
<p>And then the woman threw back her head, laughing, so that her glory of
hair fell straight down, and she was out of reach of St. Pierre's lips.
They turned. Her face fronted the window, and out in the night Carrigan
stifled a cry that almost broke from his lips. For a flash he was
looking straight into her eyes. Her parted lips seemed smiling at him;
her white throat and bosom were bared to him. He dropped down, his
heart choking him as he stumbled through the darkness to the edge of
the raft. There, with the lap of the water at his feet, he paused. It
was hard for him to get Breath. He stared through the gloom in the
direction of the bateau. Marie-Anne Boulain, the woman he loved, was
there! In her little cabin, alone, on the bateau, was St. Pierre's
wife, her heart crushed.</p>
<p>And in this cabin on the raft, forgetful of her degradation and her
grief, was the vilest wretch he had ever known—St. Pierre Boulain. And
with him, giving herself into his arms, caressing him with her lips and
hair, was the sister of the man he had helped to hang—CARMIN FANCHET!</p>
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