The day after that on which Mr. Strafford paid his first visit to the jail at Cacouna, was the one fixed for Doctor Morton's funeral. Lucia knew that other friends would be with Bella, and was thankful to feel herself at liberty to stay at home—to be with her mother up to the moment of her going to that interview which Mr. Strafford advised, and to be on the spot at her return to hear without delay whatever its result might be. In the afternoon, while the whole town was occupied with the ceremony which had so deep and painful an interest for everybody, Mrs. Costello and her faithful friend started for the jail. They said little to each other on the way, but as they drew But though she had sufficient command over herself to do this, and even to join, as much as was necessary, in the short conversation which took place before they were admitted to the prisoner's cell, she could not afterwards remember anything clearly until the moment when she followed Mr. Strafford through a heavy door, and found herself in the presence of her husband. Then she seemed suddenly to wake, and the scene before her to flash at once and ineffaceably into her mind. It was a clean bare room, with a bed in one "Christian!" she said in a low and trembling voice. The prisoner slowly moved, as if waking from What a face! It needed all her pity to help her to repress a shudder; but there was no recognition in the dull heavy eyes. "Christian," she repeated. "See, I am your wife. I am Mary, who left Moose Island so many years ago." Still he looked at her in the same dull way, scarcely seeming to see her. "Mary," he repeated mechanically. "She went away." Then changing to his own language, he said with more energy, "She is hidden, but I shall find her; no fear," and his head sank down again upon his arm. His wife trembled as she heard the old threat which had pursued her for so long, but she would not be discouraged. She spoke again in Ojibway, "She is found. She wants to help and comfort her husband. She is here. Raise your head and look at her." He obeyed, and looked steadily at her, but still with the look of one but half awake. "No," he said slowly. "All lies. Mary is not like you. She has bright eyes, and brown hair, Mr. Strafford came forward. "Have you forgotten me, too, Christian?" he asked. Christian turned to him with something like recognition. "No. You were here yesterday. Tell them to let me go away." "It is because I want to persuade them to let you go, that I am here now, and your—this lady, whom you do not remember, also." "What does a squaw know? Send her away." A look passed between the two friends, and the wife moved to a little distance from her husband, where she was out of his sight. "I wish," Mr. Strafford said, "you could tell me exactly what you were doing the day they brought you here." "I was sleeping," Christian answered. "I lay under the bush, and went to sleep; and then they came and woke me, and brought me here. I want air!" he cried, suddenly changing his tone, and springing up, he rushed to the grated window, and seemed to gasp for breath. The small lattice stood Mrs. Costello was instantly at his side. In her strange, short married life she had given no caresses to her tyrant; now, upon this miserable wreck, she lavished all the compassionate tenderness of her heart. Mr. Strafford stood by helpless, yielding to the woman her natural place of comforter. For a moment, as she held his head upon her bosom and laid her cool soft hand upon his burning forehead, Christian seemed to recognize her; he looked up into her face piteously, and once or twice repeated to himself, "Mary, Mary," but memory would not help him further. She soothed him, however, much as if he had been some wretched sick child, and after a time persuaded him to lie down on his bed, where, almost immediately, he fell asleep. So they left him, and in going out, heard from the jailer that he often slept thus for hours together—rarely eating, and asking only for water and air. One thing had been effected by their visit. From Afterwards a council was held as to what could A separate consultation from which Lucia was excluded, ended in a decision to which she would certainly not have consented, however she might, later, be obliged to yield to it. This was, that if Mrs. Costello should feel herself called upon to avow her marriage for her husband's sake, Lucia should first be sent to England and confided to the care of her mother's cousin, George Wynter, so that she, at least, might be spared the hard task of facing her small familiar world under a new and degraded character. But of this plan Lucia suspected nothing. Her thoughts travelled as often as ever they had done, to that misty terra incognita which Canadians still call "Home," for now Maurice was there, and perhaps (but for that thought she reproved herself) Percy also; but she had now wholly given up her dreams of visiting it, and most surely would not have resumed them with the prospect of leaving her mother in sorrow and alone. |