The red glare of it was on her white face, upturned to her father's
with one last pleading of despair. She clutched his arm and shook his
great frame to and fro.
"Father, promise me you'll go over to New Salem to-night and tell
them to set him free and take me instead! Father!"
"We'll see about it, Madelon," answered David Hautville. There was a
tone in his voice which she had never heard before. It might have
come unconsciously to himself from some memory, so old that it was
itself forgotten, of his dead wife's voice over the child in her
cradle. Some echo of it might have yet lingered in the old father's
soul, through something finer than his instinct for sweet sounds from
human throat and viol--through his ear for love.
"Get the supper now, and we'll see about it," said David Hautville.
He began fumbling with clumsy fingers, all unused to women's gear, at
the string of this daughter's cloak; but she pulled herself away from
him suddenly, and the old hard lines came into her face. "We'll say
no more about it," said she. She lit a candle quickly at the hearth
fire, and was out of the room to put away her cloak and hood. Her
father lighted his lantern slowly and went back to the barn, plodding
meditatively through the snowy track, with the melting mood still
strong upon him. He was disposed to carry matters now with a high and
tender hand with the girl to bring her to reason, and he brought all
his crude diplomacy to bear upon the matter.
When he reached the barn his son Eugene stood in the doorway. He had
just come from the woods, and the smell of wounded cedar-trees was
strong about him. He stood leaning upon his axe as if it were a
staff. "Who's been out with the mare?" he asked.
"Your sister."
"Where?"
"To New Salem."
"To see _him_?"
David nodded grimly. His lantern cast a pale circle of light on the
snow about them.
"About--that?"
"To get him to own up she did it."
Eugene Hautville stared at his father, scowling his handsome dark
brows. He was the most graceful mannered of all the Hautville sons,
and by some accounted the best-looking.
"Is she crazy?" he said.
"No, she's a woman," returned his father, with a strange accent of
contempt and toleration.
"Did the coward lay it to her when she gave him the chance?" demanded
Eugene.
"No; she said he wouldn't, to shield her."
Eugene moved his axe suddenly; the lantern-light struck it, and there
was a bright flash of sharp steel
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