near the public window when she kept her
books, or would take a morsel of meat as she helped to remove the
dishes. She would stand sometimes for a minute leaning on the back of
her uncle's chair as he sat at his supper, and would say, when he bade
her to take her chair and eat with them, that she preferred picking and
stealing. In all things she worshipped her uncle, observing his
movements, caring for his wants, and carrying out his plans. She did
not worship her aunt, but she so served Madame Voss that had she been
withdrawn from the household Madame Voss would have found herself
altogether unable to provide for its wants. Thus Marie Bromar had
become the guardian angel of the Lion d'Or at Granpere.
There must be a word or two more said of the difference between
George Voss and his father which had ended in sending George to
Colmar; a word or two about that, and a word also of what occurred
between George and Marie. Then we shall be able to commence our
story without farther reference to things past. As Michel Voss was a
just, affectionate, and intelligent man, he would not probably have
objected to a marriage between the two young people, had the
proposition for such a marriage been first submitted to him, with a
proper amount of attention to his judgment and controlling power. But
the idea was introduced to him in a manner which taught him to think
that there was to be a clandestine love affair. To him George was still a
boy, and Marie not much more than a child, and--without much
thinking--he felt that the thing was improper.
'I won't have it, George,' he had said.
'Won't have what, father?'
'Never mind. You know. If you can't get over it in any other way, you
had better go away. You must do something for yourself before you can
think of marrying.'
'I am not thinking of marrying.'
'Then what were you thinking of when I saw you with Marie? I won't
have it for her sake, and I won't have it for mine, and I won't have it for
your own. You had better go away for a while.'
'I'll go away to-morrow if you wish it, father.' Michel had turned away,
not saying another word; and on the following day George did go away,
hardly waiting an hour to set in order his part of his father's business.
For it must be known that George had not been an idler in his father's
establishment. There was a trade of wood- cutting upon the
mountain-side, with a saw-mill turned by water beneath, over which
George had presided almost since he had left the school of the
commune. When his father told him that he was bound to do something
before he got married, he could not have intended to accuse him of
having been hitherto idle. Of the wood-cutting and the saw-mill George
knew as much as Marie did of the poultry and the linen. Michel was
wrong, probably, in his attempt to separate them. The house was large
enough, or if not, there was still room for another house to be built in
Granpere. They would have done well as man and wife. But then the
head of a household naturally objects to seeing the boys and girls
belonging to him making love under his nose without any reference to
his opinion. 'Things were not made so easy for me,' he says to himself,
and feels it to be a sort of duty to take care that the course of love shall
not run altogether smooth. George, no doubt, was too abrupt with his
father; or perhaps it might be the case that he was not sorry to take an
opportunity of leaving for a while Granpere and Marie Bromar. It
might be well to see the world; and though Marie Bromar was bright
and pretty, it might be that there were others abroad brighter and
prettier.
His father had spoken to him on one fine September afternoon, and
within an hour George was with the men who were stripping bark from
the great pine logs up on the side of the mountain. With them, and with
two or three others who were engaged at the saw-mills, he remained till
the night was dark. Then he came down and told something of his
intentions to his stepmother. He was going to Colmar on the morrow
with a horse and small cart, and would take with him what clothes he
had ready. He did not speak to Marie that night, but he said something
to his father about the timber and the mill. Gaspar Muntz, the head
woodsman, knew, he said, all about the business.
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