She cowered closer to the bed, and answered, “I do not know.”
Saint-Denis tried to sit up in bed, but was obliged to resign himself, with a gasp, to the straw pillows.
Night pressed against the unblinded window. A stir, not made by the wind, was heard at the door, and Frontenac, and Frontenac’s Recollet confessor, and Sainte-Helene’s two brothers from the citadel, came into the room. The governor of New France was imposing in presence. Perhaps there was no other officer in the province to whom he would have galloped in such haste from Quebec. It was a tidal moment in his affairs, and Frontenac knew the value of such moments better than most men. But Sainte-Helene did not know the governor was there. The Recollet father fell on his knees and at once began his office.
Longueuil sat down on Gaspard’s stool and covered his face against the wall. He had been hurt by a spent bullet, and one arm needed bandaging, but he said nothing about it, though the surgeon was now at liberty, standing and looking at a patient for whom nothing could be done. The sterner brothers watched, also, silent, as Normans taught themselves to be in trouble. The sons of Charles Le Moyne carried his name and the lilies of France from the Gulf of St. Lawrence to the Gulf of Mexico.
Anselm de Saint-Castin had fought two days alongside the man who lay dying. The boy had an ardent face, like his father’s. He was sorry, with the skin-deep commiseration of youth for those who fall, whose falling thins the crowded ranks of competition. But he was not for a moment unconscious of the girl hiding her head against her father from the sight of death. The hope of one man forever springing beside the grave of another must work sadness in God. Yet Sainte-Helene did not know any young supplanter was there. He did not miss or care for the fickle vanity of applause; he did not torment himself with the spectres of the mind, or feel himself shrinking with the littleness of jealousy; he did not hunger for a love that was not in the world, or waste a Titan’s passion on a human ewe any more. For him, the aching and bewilderment, exaltations and self-distrusts, animal gladness and subjection to the elements, were done.
Clementine’s father beckoned to the boy, and put her in his care.
“Take her home to the women,” Saint-Denis whispered. “She is not used to war and such sight as these. And bid some of the older ones stay with her.”
Anselm and Clementine went out, their hands just touching as he led her in wide avoidance of the figure on the floor. Sainte-Helene did not know the boy and girl left him, for starlight, for silence together, treading the silvered earth in one cadenced step, as he awaited that moment when the solitary spirit finds its utmost loneliness.