“I dunno, I dunno, but I’ll tell him the truth and take my chance.” Suddenly he swung round and stretched out appealing hands. “Haven’t you got any sense, m’sieu’? Don’t you see what you should do? Ma’m’selle Junia cares for you. I know it—I’ve seen it in her eyes often—often.”
With sudden vehemence Carnac caught the wrists of the other. “It can’t be, Denzil. I can’t tell you why yet. I’m going away. If Tarboe wants her—good—good; I must give her a chance.”
Denzil shrank. “There’s something wrong, m’sieu’,” he said. Then his eyes fastened on Carnac’s. Suddenly, with a strange, shining light in them, he added “It will all come right for you and her. I’ll live for that. If you go away, I’ll take good care of her.”
“Even if—” Carnac paused.
“Yes, even if he makes love to her. He’ll want to marry her, surelee.”
“Well, that’s not strange,” remarked Carnac.
CHAPTER XI. CARNAC’S TALK WITH HIS MOTHER
Carnac went slowly towards his father’s house on the hill. Fixed, as his mind was, upon all that had just happened, his eye took fondly from the gathering dusk pictures which the artist’s mind cherishes—the long roadway, with the maples and pines, the stump fences; behind which lay the garnered fields, where the plough had made ready the way for the Fall wheat; the robins twittering in the scattered trees; the cooing of the wood-pigeon; over all, the sky in its perfect purpling blue, and far down the horizon the evening-star slowly climbing. He noted the lizards slipping through the stones; he saw where the wheel of a wagon had crushed some wild flower-growth; he heard the far call of a milkmaid to the cattle; he caught the sweet breath of decaying verdure, and through all, the fresh, biting air of the new-land autumn, pleasantly stinging his face.
Something kept saying to his mind: “It’s all good. It’s life and light, and all good.” But his nerves were being tried; his whole nature was stirred.