THREE of Madame's finest bronze turkeys were missing from the brood. It
was nearing Christmas, and that was the reason, perhaps, that even Monsieur
grew agitated when the discovery was made. The news was brought to the house by
Sévérin's boy, who had seen the troop at noon a half mile up the bayou three
short. Others reported the deficiency as even greater. So, at about two in the
afternoon, though a cold drizzle had begun to fall, popular feeling in the
matter was so strong that all the household forces turned out to search for the
missing gobblers.
Alice, the housemaid, went
down the river, and Polisson, the yard-boy, went up the bayou. Others crossed the fields, and Artemise was
rather vaguely instructed to "go look too."
Artemise is in some respects
an extraordinary person. In age she is anywhere between ten and fifteen, with a
head not unlike in shape and appearance to a dark chocolate-colored Easter-egg.
She talks almost wholly in monosyllables, and has big round glassy eyes, which
she fixes upon one with the placid gaze of an Egyptian sphinx.
The morning after my arrival
at the plantation, I was awakened by the rattling of cups at my bedside. It was
Artemise with the early coffee.
"Is it cold out?" I
asked, by way of conversation, as I sipped the tiny cup of ink-black coffee.
"Ya, 'm."
"Where do you sleep,
Artemise?" I further inquired, with the same intention as before.
"In uh hole," was
precisely what she said, with a pump-like motion of the arm that she habitually
uses to indicate a locality. What she meant was that she slept in the hall.
Again, another time, she came
with an armful of wood, and having deposited it upon the hearth, turned to
stare fixedly at me, with folded hands.
"Did Madame send you to
build a fire, Artemise?" I hastened to ask, feeling uncomfortable under
the look.
"Ya, 'm."
"Very well; make
it."
"Matches!" was all
she said.
There happened to be no
matches in my room, and she evidently considered that all personal
responsibility ceased in face of this first and not very serious obstacle.
Pages might be told of her unfathomable ways; but to the turkey hunt.
All afternoon the searching
party kept returning, singly and in couples, and in a more or less bedraggled
condition. All brought unfavorable reports. Nothing could be seen of the
missing fowls. Artemise had been absent probably an hour when she glided into
the hall where the family was assembled, and stood with crossed hands and
contemplative air beside the fire. We could see by the benign expression of her
countenance that she possibly had information to give, if any inducement were
offered her in the shape of a question.
"Have you found the
turkeys, Artemise?" Madame hastened to ask.
"Ya, 'm."
"You Artemise!"
shouted Aunt Florindy, the cook, who was passing through the hall with a batch
of newly baked light bread. "She 's a-lyin', mist'ess, if dey ever was! You foun' dem turkeys?"
turning upon the child. "Whar was you at, de whole blesse' time? Warn't
you stan'in' plank up agin de back o' de hen-'ous'? Never budged a inch? Don't
jaw me down, gal; don't jaw me!" Artemise was only gazing at Aunt Florindy
with unruffled calm. "I warn't gwine tell on 'er, but arter dat untroof, I
boun' to."
"Let her alone, Aunt
Florindy," Madame interfered. "Where are the turkeys, Artemise?"
"Yon'a," she simply
articulated, bringing the pump-handle motion of her arm into play.
"Where 'yonder'?" Madame
demanded, a little impatiently.
"In uh hen-'ous'!"
Sure enough! The three
missing turkeys had been accidentally locked up in the morning when the
chickens were fed.
Artemise, for some unknown
reason, had hidden herself during the search behind the hen-house, and had
heard their muffled gobble.
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