She could not see his face, but she heard him say: “My love, my love,” very softly, as he rose to go; and she smiled sadly to herself. She folded her hands in her lap, and thought, not bitterly, not listlessly, but deeply. She wanted to consider all cheerfully now; she tried to do so. She was musing among those flying perceptions, those nebulous facts of a new life, experienced for the first time; she was now not herself as she had been; another woman was born; and she was feeling carefully along the unfamiliar paths which she must tread. She was not glad that these words ran through her mind continuously at first:

“A land of darkness as darkness itself, and of the shadow of
death without any order, and where the light is darkness.”

Her brave nature rose against the moody spirit which sought to take possession of her, and she cried out in her heart valiantly: “But there is order, there is order. I shall feel things as they ought to be. I think I could tell now what was true and what was false in man or woman; it would be in their presence not in their faces.”

She stopped speaking. She heard footsteps. Her father entered. Hugh Tryon had done his task gently, but the old planter, selfish and hard as he was, loved his daughter; and the meeting was bitter for him. The prop of his pride seemed shaken beyond recovery. But the girl’s calm comforted them all, and poignancy became dull pain. Before parting for the night Marie said to Hugh: “This is what I wish you to do for me to bring over two of your horses to Point Assumption on the river. There is a glen beyond that as you know, and from it runs the steep and dangerous Brocken Path across the hills. I wish you to wait there until M. Laflamme and Carbourd come by the river—that is their only chance. If they get across the hills they can easily reach the sea. I know that two of your horses have been over the path; they are sure-footed; they would know it in the night. Is it not so?”

“It is so. There are not a dozen horses in the colony that could be trusted on it at night, but mine are safe. I shall do all you wish.”

She put out both her hands and felt for his shoulders, and let them rest there for a moment, saying: “I ask much, and I can give no reward, except the gratitude of one who would rather die than break a promise. It isn’t much, but it is all that is worth your having. Good-night. Good-bye.”

“Good-night. Good-bye,” he gently replied; but he said something beneath his breath that sounded worth the hearing.

The next morning while her father was gone to consult the chief army-surgeon at Noumea, Marie strolled with Angers in the grounds. At length she said: “Angers, take me to the river, and then on down, until we come to the high banks.” With her hand on Angers’ arm, and in her face that passive gentleness which grows so sweetly from sightless eyes till it covers all the face, they passed slowly towards the river. When they came to the higher banks covered with dense scrub, Angers paused, and told Marie where they were.

“Find me the she-oak tree,” the girl said; “there is only one, you know.”

“Here it is, my dear. There, your hand is on it now.”