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The Right of Way
volume 6   Chapter LIII. The Seigneur and the Cure Have a Suspicion
Gilbert Parker
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       Presently the Seigneur and the Cure stood before the door of the tailor- shop. The Cure was about to knock, when the Seigneur laid a hand upon his arm.
       "There is no use; he has been gone several days," he said.
       "Gone--gone!" said the Cure.
       "I came to see him yesterday, and not finding him, I asked at the post- office." M. Rossignol's voice lowered. "He told Mrs. Flynn he was going into the hills, so Rosalie says."
       The Cure's face fell. "He went away also just before the play began. I almost fear that--that we get no nearer. His mind prompts him to do good and not evil, and yet--and yet. . . . I have dreamed a good dream, Maurice, but I sometimes fear I have dreamed in vain."
       "Wait-wait!"
       M. Loisel looked towards the post-office musingly. "I have thought sometimes that what man's prayers may not accomplish a woman's love might do. If--but, alas, what do we know of his past! Nothing. What do we know of his future? Nothing. What do we know of the human heart? Nothing--nothing!"
       The Seigneur was astounded. The Cure's meaning was plain. "What do you mean?" he asked, almost gruffly.
       "She--Rosalie--has changed--changed." In his heart he dwelt sorrowfully upon the fact that she had not been to confession to him for many, many months.
       "Since her father's death--since her illness?"
       "Since she went to Montreal seven months ago. Even while she was so ill these past weeks, she never asked for me; and when I came . . . Ah, if it is that her heart has gone out to the man, and his does not respond!"
       "A good thing, too!" said the other gloomily. "We don't know where he came from, and we do know that he is a pagan."
       "Yet there she sits now, hour after hour, day after day--so changed."
       "She has lost her father," urged M. Rossignol anxiously.
       "I know the grief of children--this is not such a grief. There is something more. But I cannot ask. If she were a sinner--but she is without fault. Have we not watched her grow up here, mirthful, brave, pure-souled--"
       "Fitted for any station," interposed the Seigneur huskily. Presently he laid a hand upon the Cure's arm. "Shall I ask her again?" he said, breathing hard. "Do you think she has found out her mistake?"
       The Cure was so taken aback that at first he could not speak. When he realised, however, he could scarce suppress a smile at the other's simple vanity. But he mastered himself, and said: "It is not that, Maurice. It is not you."
       "How did you know I had asked her?" asked his friend querulously.
       "You have just told me."
       M. Rossignol felt a kind of reproval in the Cure's tone. It made him a little nervous. "I'm an old fool, but she needed some one," he protested. "At least I am a gentleman, and she would not be thrown away."
       "Dear Maurice!" said the Cure, and linked his arm in the other's. "In all respects save one, it would have been to her advantage. But youth is the only comrade for youth. All else is evasion of life's laws."
       The Seigneur pressed his arm. "I thought you less worldly-wise than myself; I find you more," he said.
       "Not worldly-wise. Life is deeper than the world or worldly wisdom. Come, we will both go and see Rosalie."
       M. Rossignol suddenly stopped at the post-office door, and half turned towards the tailor-shop. "He is young. Suppose that he drew her love his way, but gave her nothing in return, and--"
       "If it were so"--the Cure paused, and his face darkened--"if it were so, he should leave her forever; and so my dream would end."
       "And Rosalie?"
       "Rosalie would forget. To remember, youth must see and touch and be near, else it wears itself out in excess of feeling. Youth feels more deeply than age, but it must bear daily witness."
       "Upon my honour, Cure, you shall write your little philosophies for the world," said M. Rossignol, and then knocked at the door.
       "I will go in alone, Maurice," the Cure urged. "Good-you are right," answered the other. "I will go write the proclamation denying strangers the valley after Wednesday. I will enforce it, too," he added, with vigour, and, turning, walked up the street, as Mrs. Flynn admitted the Cure to the post-office.
       A half-hour later M. Loisel again appeared at the post-office door, a pale, beautiful face at his shoulder.
       He had not been brave enough to say what was on his mind. But as he bade her good-bye, he plucked up needful courage.
       "Forgive me, Rosalie," he said, "but I have sometimes thought that you have more griefs than one. I have thought"--he paused, then went on bravely--"that there might be--there might be unwelcomed love, or love deceived."
       A mist came before her eyes, but she quietly and firmly answered: "I have never been deceived in love, Monsieur Loisel."
       "There, there!" he hurriedly and gently rejoined. "Do not be hurt, my child. I only want to help you." A moment afterwards he was gone.
       As the door closed behind him, she drew herself proudly up.
       "I have never been deceived," she said aloud. "I love him--love him--love him."
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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