PAGE 5
The Gunpowder Plot
by
A picture of Thorwaldsen’s bas-relief of “Morning” having been previously placed in the instrument, Edwards now removed the cap, and the beautiful flying female figure, with the infant in her arms, shone out upon the side of the house with marvelous vividness.
“By thunder!” said Whisky Jim, steadying himself, while every hair stood on end.
“Mon Dieu!” cried the bois brules, who had never seen a picture in their lives except in the cathedral of St. Boniface, at Fort Garry. “Mon Dieu! La Sainte Vierge!” And they fell on their knees before this apparition of the Blessed Virgin, and crossed themselves and prayed lustily.
But “Whisky Jim” straightened himself up, and hiccoughed, and stammered “By thunder!” and added some words which, being Saxon, I will not print.
“The devil!” cried Jim, a minute later, starting down the hill at full speed, for, by Edwards’s direction, the light had been shifted to the other tube in such a way as to dissolve the “Morning” into a hideous picture of the conventional horned and hoofed devil. The picture was originally meant to be comic, but it now set Jim to running for dear life.
“Oui, c’est le diable! le diable! le diable!” cried the frantic bois brules, breaking off their invocations to the Virgin most abruptly, and fleeing pellmell down the hill after Jim, falling over one another as they ran. Quick as a flash Edwards threw about him a sheet which he had ready, and pursued the fleeing Frenchmen. Jim had already seized the reins, and, on the plan of “the devil take the hindmost,” was driving at a pace that would have done him credit in the Central Park, up the trail toward Gager’s, leaving the half-breeds to get on as best they could. Bourdon stumbled and fell, and Edwards lavished some blows upon him that must have satisfied the bois brule that ghosts have a most solid corporeal existence.
Then Edwards returned and captured the keg of powder. He assured the Lindsleys that the superstitious half-breeds would never again venture within five miles of a house that was guarded by the Holy Virgin and the devil in partnership. And they never did. Even the Indians were afraid to approach the place, pronouncing it “Wakan,” or supernaturally inhabited. They regarded Lindsley as a “medicine-man” of great power.
But what a night that was! For Edwards stayed two hours, and made the acquaintance of Lindsley and his daughter. And how he talked, while Emilia thought she had never known how heaven felt before; and the old man forgot his inventions, and did not broach more than twenty of his theories in the two hours. He was so much interested in the tall trapper that he forgot the rest. Edwards ate a supper set out by the hands of Emilia, and left at three o’clock. He was at Pelican Lake next morning, and no man suspected his share in the affair except Gager, who had sense enough to say nothing. And Emilia lay down and dreamed of angels about the house. One was like Thorwaldsen’s “Morning,” and the other wore long hair and beard, and was very tall.
This abortive attempt to make a skyrocket out of Lindsley’s cabin wrought only good to Emilia at first. The father was now wholly in love with the trapper. He praised him at all hours.
“He is a philosopher, my daughter. He understands chemistry. He lives in the arcana of nature and reads her secrets. No foolish study of the heathen classics; no training after mediaeval fashion in one of our colleges, which are anachronisms, has perverted his taste. Here is the Emile worthy of my Emilia,” he would say, much to the daughter’s annoyance.
But when Edwards came the hours were golden. Hanging his wolf-skin cap behind the door, and shaking back his long locks as he took his seat, he would entrance father and daughter alike with his talk of adventure. From the time of his first visit new life came to the heart of Emilia; and Mr. Lindsley, whose every whim the trapper humored, was as much fascinated as his daughter. But now commenced a fierce battle in the heart of Emilia. Edwards loved her. By all the speech that his eyes were capable of, he told her so. And by all the beating of her own heart she knew that she loved the brown-faced, long-haired trapper in return. But what about the fair-eyed student, who for very love and disappointment had gone to the arctic seas? He was not at hand to plead his cause, and for this very reason her conscience pleaded it for him. When her soul had fed on the words of the trapper as upon manna in the wilderness, she took up the old photograph and the eyes reproached her. She shed bitter tears of penitence upon it for her disloyalty to the storm-tossed sailor, but rejoiced again when she saw the tall figure of the trapper coming down the trail. A desolate and lonely heart can not live forever on the memory of a dead love. And have ye not read what David did when he was an hungered? Do not, therefore, reproach a starving soul for partaking of this feast in the desert.