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Mere Girauds Little Daughter
by
The eyes of the Cure had tears in them also.
“Yesterday I returned to St. Croix and found your mother absent,” he said. “I have had terrible fears for months, and when I found her house closed, they caused me to set out upon my journey at once.”
He did not ask any questions. He remembered too well the man of whom Valentin had written; the son who was “past his youth, and had evidently seen the world;” the pale aristocrat, who had exclaimed “Mon Dieu!” at the sight of Laure’s wondrous beauty.
“When the worst came to the worst,” said Valentin, “I vowed myself to the labor of sparing our mother. I have worked early and late to sustain myself in the part I played. It was not from Laure the money came. My God! Do you think I would have permitted my mother’s hand to have touched a gift of hers? She wrote the letters, but the money I had earned honestly. Heaven will justify me for my falsehood since I have suffered so much.”
“Yes,” responded the Cure, looking at his bent form with gentle, pitying eyes, “Heaven will justify you, my son.”
They watched by Laure until the morning, but she did not see them; she saw nothing; to-night it was the statue of marble which lay before them. But in the early morning, when the sky was dappled with pink and gold, and the air was fresh and cool, and a silence, even more complete than that of the night, seemed to reign, there came a change. The eyes they had seen closed for so many hours were opened, and the soft voice broke in upon the perfect stillness of the room:–
“The lilies in the garden are in bloom to-day. They were never so tall, and white, and fair before. I will gather them–for the altar–to give to the Virgin–at my confession. Mea culpa–Mea”–and all was over, and Mere Giraud fell upon her knees again, crying, as she had cried before, amid a passion of sobs and tears:–
“She has died, my child, the death of a blessed martyr.”
It was rather strange, the villagers said, that Madame Legrand should have been buried in the little graveyard at St. Croix instead of in some fine tomb at Pere la Chaise; but–it was terribly sad!–her husband was away, they knew not where, and it was Valentin’s wish, and Mere Giraud’s heart yearned so over her beloved one. So she was laid there, and a marble cross was placed at her head–a tall, beautiful cross–by Monsieur Legrand, of course. Only it was singular that he never came, though perhaps that is the way of the great–not to mourn long or deeply even for those who have been most lovely, and whom they have most tenderly loved.