The Refugees eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 452 pages of information about The Refugees.

“No, monsieur,” said the guardsman, from the staircase.  “My uncle is out, but I am Captain de Catinat, at your service, and here is Mademoiselle Catinat, who is your hostess.”

The stranger ascended the stair, and paid his greetings to them both with the air of a man who was as shy as a wild deer, and yet who had steeled himself to carry a thing through.  He walked with them to the sitting-room, and then in an instant was gone again, and they heard his feet thudding upon the stairs.  Presently he was back, with a lovely glossy skin in his hands.  “The bear is for your father, mademoiselle,” said he.  “This little skin I have brought from America for you.  It is but a trifle, and yet it may serve to make a pair of mocassins or a pouch.”

Adele gave a cry of delight as her hands sank into the depths of its softness.  She might well admire it, for no king in the world could have had a finer skin.  “Ah, it is beautiful, monsieur,” she cried; “and what creature is it? and where did it come from?”

“It is a black fox.  I shot it myself last fall up near the Iroquois villages at Lake Oneida.”

She pressed it to her cheek, her white face showing up like marble against its absolute blackness.  “I am sorry my father is not here to welcome you, monsieur,” she said; “but I do so very heartily in his place.  Your room is above.  Pierre will show you to it, if you wish.”

“My room?  For what?”

“Why, monsieur, to sleep in!”

“And must I sleep in a room?”

De Catinat laughed at the gloomy face of the American.

“You shall not sleep there if you do not wish,” said he.

The other brightened at once and stepped across to the further window, which looked down upon the court-yard.  “Ah,” he cried.  “There is a beech-tree there, mademoiselle, and if I might take my blanket out yonder, I should like it better than any room.  In winter, indeed, one must do it, but in summer I am smothered with a ceiling pressing down upon me.”

“You are not from a town then?” said De Catinat.

“My father lives in New York—­two doors from the house of Peter Stuyvesant, of whom you must have heard.  He is a very hardy man, and he can do it, but I—­even a few days of Albany or of Schenectady are enough for me.  My life has been in the woods.”

“I am sure my father would wish you to sleep where you like and to do what you like, as long as it makes you happy.”

“I thank you, mademoiselle.  Then I shall take my things out there, and I shall groom my horse.”

“Nay, there is Pierre.”

“I am used to doing it myself.”

“Then I will come with you,” said De Catinat, “for I would have a word with you.  Until to-morrow, then, Adele, farewell!”

“Until to-morrow, Amory.”

The two young men passed downstairs together, and the guardsman followed the American out into the yard.

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The Refugees from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.