The Second G.A. Henty

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by G. A. Henty


  “So I did, you see,” Harry said; “but I did not dare to go in until we knew whether you had been taken too. If you had not come after a time we should have looked for another lodging, though I knew well enough that you would not tell them where you lived.”

  “No, indeed,” the old woman said. “They might have cut me in pieces without getting a single word from me as to where I lived. Still they might have found out somehow, for they would have been sure to have published the fact that I had been taken, with a description of me. Then the neighbours would have said, ‘This description is like Louise Moulin, and she is missing;’ and then they would have talked, and the end of it would have been you would have been discovered. Will you come home with us, Monsieur Sandwith?”

  “I will come after it’s dark, Louise. The less my visits are noticed the better.”

  “This is awful!” Harry said to himself as he turned away. “The marquis and his wife massacred, Ernest and Jules murdered, Marie in prison, Victor mad with fever, Jeanne and Virginie with no one to trust to but me, my people at home in a frightful state of mind about me. It is awful to think of. It’s enough to drive a fellow out of his senses. Well, I will go and see how Victor is going on. The doctor thought there was a change yesterday. Poor fellow! If he comes to his senses I shall have hard work to keep the truth about Marie from him. It would send him off again worse than ever if he had an idea of it.”

  “And how is your patient to-day, madame?” he asked, as Victor’s nurse opened the door to him.

  “He is quieter, much quieter,” she replied. “I think he is too weak to rave any longer; but otherwise he’s just the same. He lies with his eyes open, talking sometimes to himself, but I cannot make out any sense in what he says. The doctor has been here this morning, and he says that he thinks another two days will decide. If he does not take a turn then he will die. If he does, he may live, but even then he may not get his reason again. Poor young fellow! I feel for him almost as if he were my son, and so does Jacques.”

  “You are both very good, madame,” Harry said, “and my friend is fortunate indeed to have fallen into such good hands. I will sit with him for three or four hours now, and you had better go and get a little fresh air.”

  “That I will, monsieur. Jacques is asleep. He was up with him all last night, and I had a good night. He would have it so.”

  “Quite right!” Harry said. “You must not knock yourself up, madame. You are too useful to others for us to let you do that. Tomorrow night I will take my turn.”

  IN THE REIGN OF TERROR [Part 2]

  CHAPTER IX

  Robespierre

  After dark Harry presented himself at Louise Moulin’s.

  “Have you thought of anything, Harry?” was Jeanne’s first question. She was alone, for Louise was cooking, and Virginie had lain down and cried herself to sleep.

  “I have thought of a number of things,” he replied, for while he had been sitting by Victor’s bedside he had turned over in his mind every scheme by which he could get Marie out of prison, “but at present I have fixed upon nothing. I cannot carry out our original plan of seizing Marat. It would require more than one to carry out such a scheme, and the friend whom I relied upon before can no longer aid me.”

  “Who is it?” Jeanne asked quietly. “Is it Victor de Gisons?”

  “What! Bless me, Jeanne!” Harry exclaimed in surprise. “How did you guess that?”

  “I felt sure it was Victor all along,” the girl said. “In the first place, I never believed that he had gone away. Marie told me she had begged and prayed him to go, and that he had only gone to please her. She seemed to think it was right he should go, but I didn’t think so. A gentleman would not run away and leave anyone he liked behind, even if she told him. It was not likely. Why, here are you staying here and risking your life for us, though we are not related to you and have no claim upon you. And how could Victor run away? But as Marie seemed pleased to think he was safe, I said nothing; but I know, if he had gone, and some day they had been married, I should never have looked upon him as a brother. But I felt sure he wouldn’t do it, and that he was in Paris still. Then, again, you did not tell us the name of the friend who was working with you, and I felt sure you must have some reason for your silence. So, putting the two things together, I was sure that it was Victor. What has happened to him? Is he in prison too?”

  “No, he is not in prison, Jeanne,” Harry said, “but he is very ill.” And he related the whole circumstances of Victor’s fever. “I blamed myself awfully at first for having hit him so hard, as you may suppose, Jeanne; but the doctor says he thinks it made no difference, and that Victor’s delirium is due to the mental shock and not in any way to the blow on the head. Still I should not like your sister to know it. I am very glad you have guessed the truth, for it is a comfort to talk things over with you.”

  “Poor Marie!” Jeanne said softly. “It is well she never knew about it. The thought he had got safely away kept her up. And now, tell me about your plans. Could I not take Victor’s place and help you to seize Marat? I am not strong, you know; but I could hold a knife, and tell him I would kill him if he cried out. I don’t think I could, you know, but he wouldn’t know that.”

  “I am afraid that wouldn’t do, Jeanne,” Harry said with a slight smile, shaking his head. “It was a desperate enterprise for two of us. Besides, it would never do for you to run the risk of being separated from Virginie. Remember you are father and mother and elder sister to her now. The next plan I thought of was to try and get appointed as a warder in the prison, but that seems full of difficulties, for I know no one who could get me such a berth, and certainly they would not appoint a fellow at my age unless by some extraordinary influence. Then I thought if I let out I was English I might get arrested and lodged in the same prison, and might help her to get out then. From what I hear, the prisoners are not separated, but all live together.”

  “No, no, Harry,” Jeanne exclaimed in a tone of sharp pain, “you must not do that of all things. We have only you, and if you are once in prison you might never get out again; besides, there are lots of other prisons, and there is no reason why they should send you to La Force rather than anywhere else. No, I will never consent to that plan.”

  “I thought it seemed too doubtful myself,” Harry said. “Of course, if I knew that they would send me to La Force, I might risk it. I could hide a file and a steel saw about me, and might cut through the bars; but, as you say, there is no reason why they should send me there rather than anywhere else. I would kill that villain who arrested her—the scoundrel, after being a guest at the chateau!—but I don’t see that would do your sister any good, and would probably end in my being shut up. The most hopeful plan seems to me to try and bribe some of the warders. Some of them, no doubt, would be glad enough to take money if they could see their way to letting her out without fear of detection.”

  “But you know we thought of that before, Harry, and agreed it would be a terrible risk to try it, for the very first man you spoke to might turn round on you.”

  “Of course there is a certain risk, Jeanne, anyway. There is no getting a prisoner out of La Force without running some sort of risk; the thing is to fix on as safe a plan as we can. However, we must think it out well before we do try. A failure would be fatal, and I do not think there is any pressing danger just at present. It is hardly likely there will be any repetition of the wholesale work of the 2nd of September; and if they have anything like a trial of the prisoners, there are such numbers of them, so many arrested every day, that it may be a long time before they come to your sister. I do not mean that we should trust to that, only that there is time for us to make our plans properly. Have you thought of anything?”

  “I have thought of all sort of things since you left us this morning, Harry, but they are like yours, just vague sort of schemes that do not seem possible when you try to work them out. I do not know whether they let you inside the prisons to sell everything to the prisoners,
because if they did I might go in with something and see Marie, and find out how she could be got out.”

  Harry shook his head.

  “I do not think anyone would be allowed in like that, but if they did it would only be a few to whom the privilege would be granted.”

  “Yes, I thought of that, Harry; but one of them might be bribed perhaps to let me take her place.”

  “It might be possible,” Harry said, “but there would be a terrible risk, and I don’t think any advantage to compensate for it. Even if you did get to her and spoke to her, we should still be no nearer to getting her out. Still we mustn’t be disheartened. We can hardly expect to hit upon a scheme at once, and I don’t think either of our heads is very clear to-day; let us think it over quietly, and perhaps some other idea may occur to one of us, I expect it will be to you. Now, good-night; keep your courage up. I rely very much upon you, Jeanne, and you don’t know what a comfort it is to me that you are calm and brave, and that I can talk things over to you. I don’t know what I should do if I had it all on my own shoulders.”

  Jeanne made no answer, but her eyes were full of tears as she put her hands into Harry’s, and no sound came from her lips in answer to his good-night.

  “That girl’s a trump, and no mistake,” Harry said to himself as he descended the stairs. “She has got more pluck than most women, and is as cool and calm as if she were twice her age. Most girls would be quite knocked over if they were in her place. Her father and mother murdered, her sister in the hands of these wretches, and danger hanging over herself and Virginie! It isn’t that she doesn’t feel it. I can see she does, quite as much, if not more, than people who would sit down and howl and wring their hands. She is a trump, Jeanne is, and no mistake. And now about Marie. She must be got out somehow, but how? That is the question. I really don’t see any possible way except by bribing her guards, and I haven’t the least idea how to set about that. I think to-morrow I will tell Jacques and his wife all about it; they may know some of these men, though it isn’t likely that they do; anyhow, three heads are better than one.”

  Accordingly, next morning he took the kind-hearted couple into his counsel. When they heard that the young lady who had been arrested was the fiance of their sick lodger they were greatly interested, but they shook their heads when he told them that he was determined at all hazards to get her out of prison.

  “It isn’t the risk so much,” Jacques said, “that I look at. Life doesn’t seem of much account in these days; but how could it be done? Even if you made up your mind to be killed, I don’t see that would put her a bit nearer to getting out of prison; the place is too strong to break into or to break out of.”

  “No, I don’t think it is possible to succeed in that sort of way; but if the men who have the keys of the corridors could be bribed, and the guard at the gate put soundly to sleep by drugging their drink, it might be managed.”

  Jacques looked sharply at Harry to see if he was in earnest, and seeing that he was so, said drily:

  “Yes, if we could do those things we should, no doubt, see our way; but how could it be managed?”

  “That is just the point, Jacques. In the first place it will be necessary to find out in which corridor Mademoiselle de St. Caux is confined; in the second, to let her know that we are working for her, and to learn, if possible, from her whether, among those in charge of her, there is one man who shows some sort of feeling of pity and kindness; when that is done we should, of course, try to get hold of him. Of course he doesn’t remain in the prison all day. However, we can see about that after we have found out the first points.”

  “I know a woman who is sister to one of the warders,” Elise Medart said. “I don’t know whether he is there now or whether he has been turned out. Martha is a good soul, and I know that sometimes she has been inside the prison, I suppose to see her brother, for before the troubles the warders used to get out only once a month. What her brother is like I don’t know, but if he is like her he would, I think, be just the man to help you.”

  “Yes,” Jacques assented, “I didn’t think of Martha. She is a good soul and would do her best, I am sure.”

  “Thank you both,” Harry said; “but I do not wish you to run any risks. You have already incurred the greatest danger by sheltering my friend; I cannot let you hazard your lives farther. This woman may, as you say, be ready to help us, but her brother might betray the whole of us, and screen his sister by saying she had only pretended to enter into the plot in order to betray it.”

  “We all risk our lives every day,” Jacques said quietly. “I am sure we can trust Martha, and she will know whether she can rely completely upon her brother. If she can, we will set her to sound him. Elise will go and see her to-day, and you shall know what she thinks of it when you come this evening for your night’s watching.”

  Greatly pleased with this unexpected stroke of luck, Harry went off at once to tell Jeanne that the outline of a plan to rescue Marie had been fixed upon.

  The girl’s pale face brightened up at the news.

  “Perhaps,” she said, “we may be able to send a letter to her. I should like to send her just a line to say that Virginie and I are well. Do you think it can be done?”

  “I do not know, Jeanne. At any rate you can rely that, if it is possible and all goes well, she shall have it; but be sure and give no clue by which they might find you out, if the letter falls into wrong hands. Tell her we are working to get her free, and ask if she can suggest any way of escape; knowing the place she may see opportunities of which we know nothing. Write it very small, only on a tiny piece of paper, so that a man can hide it anywhere, slip it into her hand, or put it in her ration of bread.”

  Jeanne wrote the little note—a few loving words, and the message Harry had given her.

  “Do not sign your name to it,” Harry said; “she will know well enough who it comes from, and it is better in case it should fall into anyone else’s hands.”

  That evening Harry learned that the woman had consented to sound her brother, who was still employed in the prison. She had said she was sure that he would not betray her even if he refused to aid in the plan.

  “I am to see her to-morrow morning,” Elise said. “She will go straight from me to the prison. She says discipline is not nearly so strict as it used to be. There is a very close watch kept over the prisoners, but friends of the guards can go in and out without trouble, except that on leaving they have to be accompanied by the guard at the door, so as to be sure that no one is passing out in disguise. She says her brother is good-natured but very fond of money. He is always talking of retiring and settling down in a farm in Brittany, where he comes from, and she thinks that if he thought he could gain enough to do this he would be ready to run some risk, for he hates the terrible things that are being done now.”

  “He seems just the man for us,” Harry said. “Will you tell your friend, when you see her in the morning, that I will give her twenty louis and her brother a hundred if he can succeed in getting Marie out?”

  “I will tell them, sir. That offer will set his wits to work, I have no doubt.”

  Harry then gave her the note Jeanne had written, for the woman to hand to her brother for delivery if he proved willing to enter into their plan. Harry had a quiet night of watching, for Victor lay so still that his friend several times leant over him to see if he breathed. The doctor had looked in late and said that the crisis was at hand.

  “To-morrow your friend will either sink or he will turn the corner. He is asleep now and will probably sleep for many hours. He may never wake again; he may wake, recognize you for a few minutes, and then go off in a last stupor; he may wake stronger and with a chance of life. Here is a draught that you will give him as soon as he opens his eyes; pour besides three or four spoonfuls of soup down his throat, and if he keeps awake do the same every half hour.”

  It was not until ten o’clock in the morning that Victor opened his eyes. He looked vaguely round the room and the
re was no recognition in his eyes as they fell upon Harry’s face, but they had lost the wild expression they had worn while he had lain there, and Harry felt renewed hope as he lifted his head and poured the draught between his lips. Then he gave him a few spoonfuls of soup and had the satisfaction of seeing his eyes close again and his breathing become more and more regular.

  The doctor, when he came in and felt Victor’s pulse, nodded approval.

  “The fever has quite left him,” he said; “I think he will do now. It will be slow, very slow, but I think he will regain his strength; as to his mind, of that I can say nothing at present.”

  About mid-day Elise returned.

  “I have good news, monsieur,” she said at once. “I waited outside the prison till Martha came out. Her brother has agreed to help if he can, but he said that he did not think that it would be at all possible to get mademoiselle out. There are many of the men of the faubourgs mixed up with the old warders, and there is the greatest vigilance to ensure that none escape. There would be many doors to be opened, and the keys are all held by different persons. He says he will think it over, and if it is any way possible he will risk it. But he wishes first of all to declare that he does not think that any way of getting her out can be discovered. He will give her the note on the first opportunity, and get an answer from her, which he will send to his sister as soon as he gets a chance.”

  “That is all we can expect,” Harry said joyfully. “I did not expect that it would be an easy business, or that the man would be able to hit upon a scheme at once; but now that he has gone so far as to agree to carry notes, the thought that he may, if he succeeds, soon have his little farm in Brittany, will sharpen his wits up wonderfully.”

 

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