Old Kaskaskia eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 122 pages of information about Old Kaskaskia.

Old Kaskaskia eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 122 pages of information about Old Kaskaskia.

“Why does he not come up?  Does any one stay under water as long as this?  Oh, be quick!  Turn it,—­turn it over!” Angelique reached down with the men to grasp the slippery boat, her vivid will giving their clumsiness direction and force.  They got it free and turned it, dipping a little water as they did so; but she let herself into its wet hollow and bailed that out with her hands.  The two dropped directly after her, and with one push of the oars sent the boat over the spot where Colonel Menard had gone down.

“Which of you will go in?”

“Ma’amselle, I can’t swim,” piteously declared the older negro.

“Neither can I, ma’amselle,” pleaded the other.

“Then I shall have to go in myself.  I cannot swim, either, and I shall die, but I cannot help it.”

The desperate and useless impulse which so often perishes in words returned upon her with its absurdity as she stared down, trying to part the muddy atoms of the Mississippi.  The men held the boat in a scarcely visible stream moving from west to east through the gaps in the building.  They eyed her, waiting the motions of the Caucasian mind, but dumbly certain it was their duty to seize her if she tried to throw herself in.

They waited until Angelique hid her face upon a bench, shivering in her clinging garments with a chill which was colder than any the river gave.  A ghostly shadow of themselves and the boat and the collapsed figure of the girl began to grow upon the water.  More stones in the moist walls showed glistening surfaces as the light mounted.  The fact that they had lost their master, that his household was without a head, that the calamity of Kaskaskia involved their future, then took possession of both poor fellows, and the great heart of Africa shook the boat with sobs and groans and useless cries for help.

“Come out here, you black rascals!” called a voice from the log dam.

Angelique lifted her head.  Colonel Menard was in plain sight, resting his arms across a tree, and propping a sodden bundle on branches.  Neither Angelique nor his men had turned a glance through the eastern gap, or thought of the stream sweeping to the dam.  The spot where he sank, the broken floor, the inclosing walls, were their absorbing boundaries as to his fate.  As the slaves saw him, a droll and sheepish look came on their faces at having wailed his death in his living ears.  They shot through the door vigorously, and brought the boat with care alongside the trunk supporting him.

The colonel let them take tante-gra’mere in.  He was exhausted.  One arm and his cheek sunk on the side of the boat, and they drew him across it, steadying themselves by the foliage upreared by the tree.

He opened his eyes, and saw rose and pearl streaks in the sky.  The sun was mounting behind the bluffs.  Then a canopy of leaves intervened, and a whir of bird wings came to his ears.  The boat had reached dead water, and was moving over the submerged roadbed, and groping betwixt the stems of great pecan-trees,—­the great pecan-trees which stood sentinel on the river borders of his estate.  He noticed how the broken limbs flourished in the water, every leaf satisfied with the moisture it drew.

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Project Gutenberg
Old Kaskaskia from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.