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Medallion’s Whim
by
At that she rose with a little cry, and stared anxiously at him. He pointed to the book of songs. “Don’t be angry–I looked,” he said.
She breathed quick and hard, and said nothing, but her fingers laced and interlaced nervously in her lap. “If you were friends why don’t you go to him?” he said.
She shook her head mournfully. “We were more than friends, and that is different.”
“You were his wife?” said Medallion gently.
“It was different,” she replied, flushing. “France is not the same as here. We were to be married, but on the eve of our wedding-day there was an end to it all. Only five years ago I found out he was here.”
Then she became silent, and would, or could, speak no more; only, she said at last before he went: “You will not tell him, or any one?”
She need not have asked Medallion. He knew many secrets and kept them; which is not the usual way of good-humoured people.
But now, with the story told by the Avocat himself in his mind, he saw the end of the long romance. He came once more to the house of Madame Lecyr, and being admitted, said to her: “You must come at once with me.”
She trembled towards him. “He is worse–he is dying!”
He smiled. “Not dying at all. He needs you; come along. I’ll tell you as we go.”
But she hung back. Then he told her all he had seen and heard the evening before. Without a word further she prepared to go. On the way he turned to her and said: “You are Madame Lecyr?”
“I am as he left me,” she replied timidly, but with a kind of pride, too.
“Don’t mistake me,” he said. “I thought perhaps you had been married since.”
The Avocat sat in his little office, feebly fumbling among his papers, as Medallion entered on him and called to him cheerily: “We are coming to see you to-night, Garon–the Cure, our Little Chemist, and the Seigneur; coming to supper.”
The Avocat put out his hand courteously; but he said in a shrinking, pained voice: “No, no, not to-night, Medallion. I would wish no visitors this night–of all.”
Medallion stooped over him, and caught him by both arms gently. “We shall see,” he said. “It is the anniversary,” he whispered.
“Ah, pardon!” said the Avocat, with a reproving pride, and shrank back as if all his nerves had been laid bare. But Medallion turned, opened the door, went out, and let in a woman, who came forward and timidly raised her veil.
“Victor!” Medallion heard, then “Lulie!” and then he shut the door, and, with supper in his mind, went into the kitchen to see the housekeeper, who, in this new joy, had her own tragedy–humming to himself:
“But down there come from the lofty hills
Footsteps and eyes agleam,
Bringing the laughter of yesterday
Into the little house.”