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The Right of Way
volume 6   Chapter L. The Passion Play at Chaudiere
Gilbert Parker
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       For the first time in its history Chaudiere was becoming notable in the eyes of the outside world.
       "We'll have more girth after this," said Filion Lacasse the saddler to the wife of the Notary, as, in front of the post-office, they stood watching a little cavalcade of habitants going up the road towards Four Mountains to rehearse the Passion Play.
       "If Dauphin's advice had been taken long ago, we'd have had a hotel at Four Mountains, and the city folk would be coming here for the summer," said Madame Dauphin, with a superior air.
       "Pish!" said a voice behind them. It was the Seigneur's groom, with a straw in his mouth. He had a gloomy mind.
       "There isn't a house but has two or three boarders. I've got three," said Filion Lacasse. "They come tomorrow."
       "We'll have ten at the Manor. But no good will come of it," said the groom.
       "No good! Look at the infidel tailor!" said Madame Dauphin. "He translated all the writing. He drew all the dresses, and made a hundred pictures--there they are at the Cure's house."
       "He should have played Judas," said the groom malevolently. "That'd be right for him."
       "Perhaps you don't like the Passion Play," said Madame Dauphin disdainfully.
       "We ain't through with it yet," said the death's-head groom.
       "It is a pious and holy mission," said Madame Dauphin. "Even that Jo Portugais worked night and day till he went away to Montreal, and he always goes to Mass now. He's to take Pontius Pilate when he comes back. Then look at Virginie Morrissette, that put her brother's eyes out quarrelling--she's to play Mary Magdalene."
       "I could fit the parts better," said the groom.
       "Of course. You'd have played St. John," said the saddler--" or, maybe, Christus himself!"
       "I'd have Paulette Dubois play Mary the sinner."
       "Magdalene repented, and knelt at the foot of the cross. She was sorry and sinned no more," said the Notary's wife in querulous reprimand.
       "Well, Paulette does all that," said the stolid, dark-visaged groom.
       Filion Lacasse's ears pricked up. "How do you know--she hasn't come back?"
       "Hasn't she, though! And with her child too--last night."
       "Her child!" Madame Dauphin was scandalised and amazed.
       The groom nodded. "And doesn't care who knows it. Seven years old, and as fine a child as ever was!"
       "Narcisse--Narcisse!" called Madame Dauphin to her husband, who was coming up the street. She hastily repeated the groom's news to him.
       The Notary stuck his hand between the buttons of his waistcoat. "Well, well, my dear Madame," he said consequentially, "it is quite true."
       "What do you know about it--whose child is it?" she asked, with curdling scorn.
       "'Sh-'sh!" said the Notary. Then, with an oratorical wave of his free hand: "The Church opens her arms to all--even to her who sinned much because she loved much, who, through woful years, searched the world for her child and found it not--hidden away, as it was, by the duplicity of sinful man"--and so on through tangled sentences, setting forth in broken terms Paulette Dubois's life.
       "How do you know all about it?" asked the saddler. "I've known it for years," said the Notary grandly--stoutly too, for he would freely risk his wife's anger that the vain-glory of the moment might be enlarged.
       "And you keep it even from madame!" said the saddler, with a smile too broad to be sarcastic. "Tiens! if I did that, my wife'd pick my eyes out with a bradawl."
       "It was a professional secret," said the Notary, with a desperate resolve to hold his position.
       "I'm going home, Dauphin--are you coming?" questioned his wife, with an air.
       "You will remain, and hear what I've got to say. This Paulette Dubois-- she should play Mary Magdalene, for--"
       "Look--look, what's that?" said the saddler. He pointed to a wagon coming slowly up the road. In front of it a team of dogs drew a cart. It carried some thing covered with black. "It's a funeral! There's the coffin. It's on Jo Portugais' little cart," added Filion Lacasse.
       "Ah, God be merciful, it's Rosalie Evanturel and Mrs. Flynn! And M'sieu' Evanturel in the coffin!" said Madame Dauphin, running to the door of the postoffice to call the Cure's sister.
       "There'll be use enough for the baker's Dead March now," remarked M. Dauphin sadly, buttoning up his coat, taking off his hat, and going forward to greet Rosalie. As he did so, Charley appeared in the doorway of his shop.
       "Look, Monsieur," said the Notary. "This is the way Rosalie Evanturel comes home with her father."
       "I will go for the Cure" Charley answered, turning white. He leaned against the doorway for a moment to steady himself, then hurried up the street. He did not dare meet Rosalie, or go near her yet. For her sake it was better not.
       "That tailor infidel has a heart. His eyes were leaking," said the Notary to Filion Lacasse, and went on to meet the mournful cavalcade.
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本书目录

Introduction
volume 1
   Chapter I. The Way to the Verdict
   Chapter II. What Came of the Trial
   Chapter III. After Five Years
   Chapter IV. Charley Makes a Discovery
   Chapter V. The Woman in Heliotrope
   Chapter VI. The Wind and the Shorn Lamb
   Chapter VII. "Peace, Peace, and There is no Peace"'
   Chapter VIII. The Cost of the Ornament
volume 2
   Chapter IX. Old Debts for New
   Chapter X. The Way in and the Way Out
   Chapter XI. The Raising of the Curtain
   Chapter XII. The Coming of Rosalie
   Chapter XIII. How Charley Went Adventuring and What He Found
   Chapter XIV. Rosalie, Charley, and the Man the Widow Plomondon Jilted
   Chapter XV. The Mark in the Paper
   Chapter XVI. Madame Dauphin Has a Mission
   Chapter XVII. The Tailor Makes a Midnight Foray
   Chapter XVIII. The Stealing of the Cross
volume 3
   Chapter XIX. The Sign From Heaven
   Chapter XX. The Return of the Tailor
   Chapter XXI. The Cure Has an Inspiration
   Chapter XXII. The Woman Who Saw
   Chapter XXIII. The Woman Who Did Not Tell
   Chapter XXIV. The Seigneur Takes a Hand in the Game
   Chapter XXV. The Colonel Tells His Story
   Chapter XXVI. A Song, a Bottle, and a Ghost
   Chapter XXVII. Out on the Old Trail
   Chapter XXVIII. The Seigneur Gives a Warning
volume 4
   Chapter XXIX. The Wild Ride
   Chapter XXX. Rosalie Warns Charley
   Chapter XXXI. Charley Stands at Bay
   Chapter XXXII. Jo Portugais Tells a Story
   Chapter XXXIII. The Edge of Life
   Chapter XXXIV. In Ambush
   Chapter XXXV. The Coming of Maximilian Cour and Another
   Chapter XXXVI. Barriers Swept Away
   Chapter XXXVII. The Challenge of Paulette Dubois
   Chapter XXXVIII. The Cure and the Seigneur Visit the Tailor
   Chapter XXXIX. The Scarlet Woman
   Chapter XL. As it Was in the Beginning
volume 5
   Chapter XLI. It Was Michaelmas Day
   Chapter XLII. A Trial and a Verdict
   Chapter XLIII. Jo Portugais Tells a Story
   Chapter XLIV. "Who Was Kathleen?"
   Chapter XLV. Six Months Go By
   Chapter XLVI. The Forgotten Man
   Chapter XLVII. One Was Taken and the Other Left
   Chapter XLVIII. "Where the Tree of Life is Blooming--"
   Chapter XLIX. The Open Gate
volume 6
   Chapter L. The Passion Play at Chaudiere
   Chapter LI. Face to Face
   Chapter LII. The Coming of Billy
   Chapter LIII. The Seigneur and the Cure Have a Suspicion
   Chapter LIV. M. Rossignol Slips the Leash
   Chapter LV. Rosalie Plays a Part
   Chapter LVI. Mrs. Flynn Speaks
   Chapter LVII. A Burning Fiery Furnace
   Chapter LVIII. With His Back to the Wall
   Chapter LIX. In Which Charley Meets a Stranger
   Chapter LX. The Hand at the Door
   Chapter LXI. The Cure Speaks
Epilogue