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"Yes."
"Then why conceal it? I couldn't very well be anxious now, seeing that you are here."
"That's just it!" cried Philippe, plunging at a venture along this path.
"That's just it! I did not want to tell you that I had spent the night looking for my father."
"The night! Then you knew before this morning that he had been carried off?"
"Yes, last evening."
"Last evening? But how? Who told you? You can only have known it by witnessing the arrest."
He hesitated for a second. He could have dated his interview with the deserter Baufeld to that particular moment. But he did not think of this; and he declared, in a firm tone:
"Well, yes, I was there ... or, at least, not far off...."
"And you heard the shots?"
"Yes, I heard the shots and also some cries of pain.... When I arrived on the scene of the fighting, there was no one there. Then I hunted about.... You understand, I was afraid that my father or M. Jorance had been hit by the bullets.... I hunted all night, following their track in the dark: a wrong track, first of all, which led me towards the Albern Woods. And then, this morning, I found Private Baufeld, who told me which way the attacking party had gone, and I pushed on to the factory and to the inn at Torins. But if I had told you all that, oh, by Jove, how you would have fretted about my fatigue! Why, I can picture you doing so, my poor Marthe!"
He pretended to be gay and careless. Marthe watched him in astonishment.
She nodded her head with a thoughtful air:
"Yes ... you are right...."
"Don't you think so? It was much simpler to tell you that I had just left my room, feeling fit and well, after a good night's rest.... Don't you agree with me, mother?... Besides, you yourself ..."
But, at that moment, a sound of voices rose under the windows on the garden-side and Catherine burst into the room, yelling:
"The master! The master!"
And Victor also bounded in:
"Here's the master coming! There he is!"
"Who? Who?" asked Mme. Morestal, hastening forward.
"M. Morestal! There he is! We saw him at the end of the garden.... Look, over there, near the water-fall...."
The old lady ran to one of the windows:
"Yes! He has seen us! O G.o.d, is it possible?"
Staggering with excitement, she leant heavily on Marthe's arm and dragged her to the staircase that led to the front hall and the steps.
They had hardly disappeared when Suzanne flung herself upon Philippe:
"Oh, please, Philippe ... please!" she implored.
He did not understand at first:
"What is it, Suzanne?"
"Please, please be careful. Don't let Marthe suspect...."
"Do you think ...?"
"I thought so, for a second.... She gave me such a queer look.... Oh, it would be terrible!... Please, please ..."
She left him quickly, but her words and the scared look in her eyes gave Philippe a real fright. Hitherto, he had felt towards Marthe only the embarra.s.sment provoked by the annoyance of having to tell a lie. He now suddenly perceived the full gravity of the situation, the peril which threatened Suzanne and which might shatter the happiness of his own household. One blunder ... and everything was discovered. And this thought, instead of clearing his brain forthwith, merely increased his confusion.
"I must save Suzanne," he repeated. "Above all, I must save Suzanne."
But he felt that he had no more power over the events at hand than a man has over the approaching storm. And a dull fear arose within his breast.
CHAPTER III
FATHER AND SON
Bare-headed, tangle-haired, his clothes torn, no collar, blood on his s.h.i.+rt, on his hands, on his face, blood everywhere, a wound in his neck, another on his lip, unrecognizable, horrible to look at, but magnificent in energy, heroic and triumphant: such was the appearance presented by old Morestal.
He chortled:
"Here!" he shouted.
An enormous laugh rolled from under his moustache:
"Morestal? Here!... Morestal, for the second time, a prisoner of the Teuton ... and, for the second time, free!"
Philippe stared at him in dismay, as though at an apparition.
"Well, sonny? Is that the way you welcome me home?"
He caught hold of a napkin and wiped his face with a great, wide gesture. Then he drew his wife to him:
"Kiss me, mother!... And you, Philippe! And you, Marthe!... And you too, my pretty Suzanne: once for myself and once for your father!...
Don't cry, my child.... Daddy's all right.... They're coddling him like an emperor, over there ... until they let him go. And that's not far off. By Heaven, no! I hope the French government ..."
He was talking like a drunken man, too fast and in an unsteady voice.
His wife tried to make him sit down. He protested:
"Rest? Quite unnecessary, mother. A Morestal never rests. My wounds?
Scratches! What? The doctor? If he sets foot in this house, I'll chuck him out of the window!"
"Still, you ought to take something...."