[When Wilderness Was King by Randall Parrish]@TWC D-Link bookWhen Wilderness Was King CHAPTER XII 15/16
My mother died when I was but a child, as I have already told you.
I scarce have memory of her, yet I bear her name, and, I am told, inherit many of her peculiarities.
She was the daughter of a great merchant at Montreal, and the blood of a noble family of France flowed in her veins.
She gave up all else to become my father's wife; nor did she ever live to regret it." Her voice was so low and plaintive that I hesitated to speak; yet finally, as she ceased, and silence fell between us, I asked another question: "And 't was then you voyaged into this wilderness with your father ?" "I have never since left him while he lived," she answered softly, her head resting upon her hand.
"But he also has gone now, and I merely wait opportunity to journey eastward." "He was a trader, you told me once ?" "A soldier first, Monsieur; a true and gallant soldier, but later he traded with the Indians for furs." I felt that she was weeping softly, although I could see but little, and I leaned in silence against the rough logs, gazing out into the black night, hesitating to break in upon her grief.
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