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A Pagan Of The South
by
“How goes it, my friend?” said Shorland, bending over him.
Alencon Barre looked up, agony twitching his nostrils and a dry white line on his lips. “Ah, mon camarade,” he answered huskily, “it is in action–that is much; it is for France, that is more to me–everything. They would not let me serve France in Paris, but I die for her in New Caledonia. I have lived six-and-twenty years. I have loved the world. Many men have been kind, and once there was a woman–and I shall see her soon, quite soon. It is strange. The eyes will become blind, and then they will open, and–ah!” His fingers closed convulsively on those of Blake Shorland. When the ghastly tremor, the deadly corrosions of the poisoned spear passed he said: “So–so! It is the end. C’est bien, c’est bien!”
All round them the fight raged, and French soldiers were repeating English bravery in the Soudan.
“It is not against a great enemy, but it is good,” said the wounded man as he heard the conquering cries of a handful of soldiers punishing ten times their numbers. “You remember Prince Eugene and the assegais?”
“I remember.”
“Our Houses were enemies, but we were friends, he and I. And so, and so, you see, it is the same for both.”
Again the teeth of the devouring poison fastened on him, and, when it left him, a grey pallor had settled upon the face.
Blake Shorland said to him gently: “How do you feel about it all?”
As if in gentle protest the head moved slightly. “All’s well, all’s well,” the low voice said.
A pause, in which the cries of the wounded came through the smoke, and then the dying man, feeling the approach of another convulsion, said: “A cigarette, mon ami.”
Blake Shorland put a cigarette between his lips and lighted it.
“And now a little wine,” the fallen soldier added. The surgeon, who had come again for a moment, nodded and said: “It may help.”
Barre’s native servant brought a bottle of champagne intended to be drunk after the expected victory, but not in this fashion!
Shorland understood. This brave young soldier of a dispossessed family wished to show no fear of pain, no lack of outward and physical courage in the approaching and final shock. He must do something that was conventional, natural, habitual, that would take his mind from the thing itself. At heart he was right. The rest was a question of living like a strong-nerved soldier to the last. The tobacco-smoke curled feebly from his lips, and was swallowed up in the clouds of powder-smoke that circled round them. With his head on his native servant’s knee he watched Shorland uncork the bottle and pour the wine into the surgeon’s medicine-glass. It was put in his fingers; he sipped it once and then drank it all. “Again,” he said.
Again it was filled. The cigarette was smoked nearly to the end. Shorland must unburden his mind of one thought, and he said: “You took what was meant for me, my friend.”
“Ah, no, no! It was the fortune, we will say the good fortune. C’est bien!” Then, “The wine, the wine,” he said, and his fingers again clasped those of Shorland tremblingly. He took the glass in his right hand and lifted it. “God guard all at home, God keep France!” he said. He was about to place the glass to his lips, when a tremor seized him, and the glass fell from his hand. He fell back, his breath quick and vanishing, his eyes closing, and a faint smile upon his lips. “It is always the same with France,” he said; “always the same.” And he was gone.
V
The French had bought their victory dear with the death of Alencon Barre, their favourite officer. When they turned their backs upon a quelled insurrection, there was a gap that not even French buoyancy could fill. On the morning of the twenty-fifth they neared Noumea. Shorland thought of all that day meant to Luke and Clare. He was helpless to alter the course of events, to stay a terrible possibility.