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Complete Works of Stanley J Weyman

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by Stanley J Weyman


  “May the devil take him!” exclaimed Croisette in just rage. But I said nothing, remembering that the cripple was a particular pet of Catherine’s. I thought instead of an occasion, not so very long ago, when the Vicomte being at home, we had had a great hawking party. Bezers and Catherine had ridden up the street together, and Catherine giving the cripple a piece of money, Bezers had flung to him all his share of the game. And my heart sank.

  Only for a moment, however. The man was gone; or was going at any rate. We stood silent and motionless, all watching, until, after what seemed a long interval, the little party of seven became visible on the white road far below us — to the northward, and moving in that direction. Still we watched them, muttering a word to one another, now and again, until presently the riders slackened their pace, and began to ascend the winding track that led to the hills and Cahors; and to Paris also, if one went far enough.

  Then at length with a loud “Whoop!” we dashed across the terrace, Croisette leading, and so through the courtyard to the parlour; where we arrived breathless. “He is off!” Croisette cried shrilly. “He has started for Paris! And bad luck go with him!” And we all flung up our caps and shouted.

  But no answer, such as we expected, came from the women folk. When we picked up our caps, and looked at Catherine, feeling rather foolish, she was staring at us with a white face and great scornful eyes. “Fools!” she said. “Fools!”

  And that was all. But it was enough to take me aback. I had looked to see her face lighten at our news; instead it wore an expression I had never seen on it before. Catherine, so kind and gentle, calling us fools! And without cause! I did not understand it. I turned confusedly to Croisette. He was looking at her, and I saw that he was frightened. As for Madame Claude, she was crying in the corner. A presentiment of evil made my heart sink like lead. What had happened?

  “Fools!” my cousin repeated with exceeding bitterness, her foot tapping the parquet unceasingly. “Do you think he would have stooped to avenge himself on YOU? On you! Or that he could hurt me one hundredth part as much here as — as—” She broke off stammering. Her scorn faltered for an instant. “Bah! he is a man! He knows!” she exclaimed superbly, her chin in the air, “but you are boys. You do not understand!”

  I looked amazedly at this angry woman. I had a difficulty in associating her with my cousin. As for Croisette, he stepped forward abruptly, and picked up a white object which was lying at her feet.

  “Yes, read it!” she cried, “read it! Ah!” and she clenched her little hand, and in her passion struck the oak table beside her, so that a stain of blood sprang out on her knuckles. “Why did you not kill him? Why did you not do it when you had the chance? You were three to one,” she hissed. “You had him in your power! You could have killed him, and you did not! Now he will kill me!”

  Madame Claude muttered something tearfully; something about Pavannes and the saints. I looked over Croisette’s shoulder, and read the letter. It began abruptly without any term of address, and ran thus, “I have a mission in Paris, Mademoiselle, which admits of no delay, your mission, as well as my own — to see Pavannes. You have won his heart. It is yours, and I will bring it you, or his right hand in token that he has yielded up his claim to yours. And to this I pledge myself.”

  The thing bore no signature. It was written in some red fluid — blood perhaps — a mean and sorry trick! On the outside was scrawled a direction to Mademoiselle de Caylus. And the packet was sealed with the Vidame’s crest, a wolf’s head.

  “The coward! the miserable coward!” Croisette cried. He was the first to read the meaning of the thing. And his eyes were full of tears — tears of rage.

  For me I was angry exceedingly. My veins seemed full of fire, as I comprehended the mean cruelty which could thus torture a girl.

  “Who delivered this?” I thundered. “Who gave it to Mademoiselle? How did it reach her hands? Speak, some one!”

  A maid, whimpering in the background, said that Francis had given it to her to hand to Mademoiselle.

  I ground my teeth together, while Marie, unbidden, left the room to seek Francis — and a stirrup leather. The Vidame had brought the note in his pocket no doubt, rightly expecting that he would not get an audience of my cousin. Returning to the gate alone he had seen his opportunity, and given the note to Francis, probably with a small fee to secure its transmission.

  Croisette and I looked at one another, apprehending all this. “He will sleep at Cahors to-night,” I said sullenly.

  The lad shook his head and answered in a low voice, “I am afraid not. His horses are fresh. I think he will push on. He always travels quickly. And now you know—”

  I nodded, understanding only too well.

  Catherine had flung herself into a chair. Her arms lay nerveless on the table. Her face was hidden in them. But now, overhearing us, or stung by some fresh thought, she sprang to her feet in anguish. Her face twitched, her form seemed to stiffen as she drew herself up like one in physical pain. “Oh, I cannot bear it!” she cried to us in dreadful tones. “Oh, will no one do anything? I will go to him! I will tell him I will give him up! I will do whatever he wishes if he will only spare him!”

  Croisette went from the room crying. It was a dreadful sight for us — this girl in agony. And it was impossible to reassure her! Not one of us doubted the horrible meaning of the note, its covert threat. Civil wars and religious hatred, and I fancy Italian modes of thought, had for the time changed our countrymen to beasts. Far more dreadful things were done then than this which Bezers threatened — even if he meant it literally — far more dreadful things were suffered. But in the fiendish ingenuity of his vengeance on her, the helpless, loving woman, I thought Raoul de Bezers stood alone. Alas! it fares ill with the butterfly when the cat has struck it down. Ill indeed!

  Madame Claude rose and put her arms round the girl, dismissing me by a gesture. I went out, passing through two or three scared servants, and made at once for the terrace. I felt as if I could only breathe there. I found Marie and St. Croix together, silent, the marks of tears on their faces. Our eyes met and they told one tale.

  We all spoke at the same time. “When?” we said. But the others looked to me for an answer.

  I was somewhat sobered by that, and paused to consider before I replied. “At daybreak to-morrow,” I decided presently. “It is an hour after noon already. We want money, and the horses are out. It will take an hour to bring them in. After that we might still reach Cahors to-night, perhaps; but more haste less speed you know. At daybreak to-morrow we will start.”

  They nodded assent.

  It was a great thing we meditated. No less than to go to Paris — the unknown city so far beyond the hills — and seek out M. de Pavannes, and warn him. It would be a race between the Vidame and ourselves; a race for the life of Kit’s suitor. Could we reach Paris first, or even within twenty-four hours of Bezers’ arrival, we should in all probability be in time, and be able to put Pavannes on his guard. It had been the first thought of all of us, to take such men as we could get together and fall upon Bezers wherever we found him, making it our simple object to kill him. But the lackeys M. le Vicomte had left with us, the times being peaceful and the neighbours friendly, were poor-spirited fellows. Bezers’ handful, on the contrary, were reckless Swiss riders — like master, like men. We decided that it would be wiser simply to warn Pavannes, and then stand by him if necessary.

  We might have despatched a messenger. But our servants — Gil excepted, and he was too old to bear the journey — were ignorant of Paris. Nor could any one of them be trusted with a mission so delicate. We thought of Pavannes’ courier indeed. But he was a Rochellois, and a stranger to the capital. There was nothing for it but to go ourselves.

  Yet we did not determine on this adventure with light hearts, I remember. Paris loomed big and awesome in the eyes of all of us. The glamour of the court rather frightened than allured us. We felt that shrinking from contact with the world which a country life engen
ders, as well as that dread of seeming unlike other people which is peculiar to youth. It was a great plunge, and a dangerous which we meditated. And we trembled. If we had known more — especially of the future — we should have trembled more.

  But we were young, and with our fears mingled a delicious excitement. We were going on an adventure of knight errantry in which we might win our spurs. We were going to see the world and play men’s parts in it! to save a friend and make our mistress happy!

  We gave our orders. But we said nothing to Catherine or Madame Claude; merely bidding Gil tell them after our departure. We arranged for the immediate despatch of a message to the Vicomte at Bayonne, and charged Gil until he should hear from him to keep the gates closed, and look well to the shoot of the kitchen midden. Then, when all was ready, we went to our pallets, but it was with hearts throbbing with excitement and wakeful eyes.

  “Anne! Anne!” said Croisette, rising on his elbow and speaking to me some three hours later, “what do you think the Vidame meant this morning when he said that about the ten days?”

  “What about the ten days?” I asked peevishly. He had roused me just when I was at last falling asleep.

  “About the world seeing that his was the true faith — in ten days?”

  “I am sure I do not know. For goodness’ sake let us go to sleep,” I replied. For I had no patience with Croisette, talking such nonsense, when we had our own business to think about.

  CHAPTER III.

  THE ROAD TO PARIS.

  The sun had not yet risen above the hills when we three with a single servant behind us drew rein at the end of the valley; and easing our horses on the ascent, turned in the saddle to take a last look at Caylus — at the huddled grey town, and the towers above it. A little thoughtful we all were, I think. The times were rough and our errand was serious. But youth and early morning are fine dispellers of care; and once on the uplands we trotted gaily forward, now passing through wide glades in the sparse oak forest, where the trees all leaned one way, now over bare, wind-swept downs; or once and again descending into a chalky bottom, where the stream bubbled through deep beds of fern, and a lonely farmhouse nestled amid orchards.

  Four hours’ riding, and we saw below us Cahors, filling the bend of the river. We cantered over the Vallandre Bridge, which there crosses the Lot, and so to my uncle’s house of call in the square. Here we ordered breakfast, and announced with pride that we were going to Paris.

  Our host raised his hands. “Now there!” he exclaimed, regret in his voice. “And if you had arrived yesterday you could have travelled up with the Vidame de Bezers! And you a small party — saving your lordships’ presence — and the roads but so-so!”

  “But the Vidame was riding with only half-a-dozen attendants also!” I answered, flicking my boot in a careless way.

  The landlord shook his head. “Ah, M. le Vidame knows the world!” he answered shrewdly. “He is not to be taken off his guard, not he! One of his men whispered me that twenty staunch fellows would join him at Chateauroux. They say the wars are over, but” — and the good man, shrugging his shoulders, cast an expressive glance at some fine flitches of bacon which were hanging in his chimney. “However, your lordships know better than I do,” he added briskly. “I am a poor man. I only wish to live at peace with my neighbours, whether they go to mass or sermon.”

  This was a sentiment so common in those days and so heartily echoed by most men of substance both in town and country, that we did not stay to assent to it; but having received from the worthy fellow a token which would insure our obtaining fresh cattle at Limoges, we took to the road again, refreshed in body, and with some food for thought.

  Five-and-twenty attendants were more than even such a man as Bezers, who had many enemies, travelled with in those days; unless accompanied by ladies. That the Vidame had provided such a reinforcement seemed to point to a wider scheme than the one with which we had credited him. But we could not guess what his plans were; since he must have ordered his people before he heard of Catherine’s engagement. Either his jealousy therefore had put him on the alert earlier, or his threatened attack on Pavannes was only part of a larger plot. In either case our errand seemed more urgent, but scarcely more hopeful.

  The varied sights and sounds however of the road — many of them new to us — kept us from dwelling over much on this. Our eyes were young, and whether it was a pretty girl lingering behind a troop of gipsies, or a pair of strollers from Valencia — JONGLEURS they still called themselves — singing in the old dialect of Provence, or a Norman horse-dealer with his string of cattle tied head and tail, or the Puy de Dome to the eastward over the Auvergne hills, or a tattered old soldier wounded in the wars — fighting for either side, according as their lordships inclined — we were pleased with all.

  Yet we never forgot our errand. We never I think rose in the morning — too often stiff and sore — without thinking “To-day or to-morrow or the next day—” as the case might be— “we shall make all right for Kit!” For Kit! Perhaps it was the purest enthusiasm we were ever to feel, the least selfish aim we were ever to pursue. For Kit!

  Meanwhile we met few travellers of rank on the road. Half the nobility of France were still in Paris enjoying the festivities which were being held to mark the royal marriage. We obtained horses where we needed them without difficulty. And though we had heard much of the dangers of the way, infested as it was said to be by disbanded troopers, we were not once stopped or annoyed.

  But it is not my intention to chronicle all the events of this my first journey, though I dwell on them with pleasure; or to say what I thought of the towns, all new and strange to me, through which we passed. Enough that we went by way of Limoges, Chateauroux and Orleans, and that at Chateauroux we learned the failure of one hope we had formed. We had thought that Bezers when joined there by his troopers would not be able to get relays; and that on this account we might by travelling post overtake him; and possibly slip by him between that place and Paris. But we learned at Chateauroux that his troop had received fresh orders to go to Orleans and await him there; the result being that he was able to push forward with relays so far. He was evidently in hot haste. For leaving there with his horses fresh he passed through Angerville, forty miles short of Paris, at noon, whereas we reached it on the evening of the same day — the sixth after leaving Caylus.

  We rode into the yard of the inn — a large place, seeming larger in the dusk — so tired that we could scarcely slip from our saddles. Jean, our servant, took the four horses, and led them across to the stables, the poor beasts hanging their heads, and following meekly. We stood a moment stamping our feet, and stretching our legs. The place seemed in a bustle, the clatter of pans and dishes proceeding from the windows over the entrance, with a glow of light and the sound of feet hurrying in the passages. There were men too, half-a-dozen or so standing at the doors of the stables, while others leaned from the windows. One or two lanthorns just kindled glimmered here and there in the semi-darkness; and in a corner two smiths were shoeing a horse.

  We were turning from all this to go in, when we heard Jean’s voice raised in altercation, and thinking our rustic servant had fallen into trouble, we walked across to the stables near which he and the horses were still lingering. “Well, what is it?” I said sharply.

  “They say that there is no room for the horses,” Jean answered querulously, scratching his head; half sullen, half cowed, a country servant all over.

  “And there is not!” cried the foremost of the gang about the door, hastening to confront us in turn. His tone was insolent, and it needed but half an eye to see that his fellows were inclined to back him up. He stuck his arms akimbo and faced us with an impudent smile. A lanthorn on the ground beside him throwing an uncertain light on the group, I saw that they all wore the same badge.

  “Come,” I said sternly, “the stables are large, and your horses cannot fill them. Some room must be found for mine.”

  “To be sure! Make way for the ki
ng!” he retorted. While one jeered “VIVE LE ROI!” and the rest laughed. Not good-humouredly, but with a touch of spitefulness.

  Quarrels between gentlemen’s servants were as common then as they are to-day. But the masters seldom condescended to interfere. “Let the fellows fight it out,” was the general sentiment. Here, however, poor Jean was over-matched, and we had no choice but to see to it ourselves.

  “Come, men, have a care that you do not get into trouble,” I urged, restraining Croisette by a touch, for I by no means wished to have a repetition of the catastrophe which had happened at Caylus. “These horses belong to the Vicomte de Caylus. If your master be a friend of his, as may very probably be the case, you will run the risk of getting into trouble.”

  I thought I heard, as I stopped speaking, a subdued muttering, and fancied I caught the words, “PAPEGOT! Down with the Guises!” But the spokesman’s only answer aloud was “Cock-a-doodle-doo!” “Cock-a-doodle-doo!” he repeated, flapping his arms in defiance. “Here is a cock of a fine hackle!” And so on, and so forth, while he turned grinning to his companions, looking for their applause.

  I was itching to chastise him, and yet hesitating, lest the thing should have its serious side, when a new actor appeared. “Shame, you brutes!” cried a shrill voice above us in the clouds it seemed. I looked up, and saw two girls, coarse and handsome, standing at a window over the stable, a light between them. “For shame! Don’t you see that they are mere children? Let them be,” cried one.

  The men laughed louder than ever; and for me, I could not stand by and be called a child. “Come here,” I said, beckoning to the man in the doorway. “Come here, you rascal, and I will give you the thrashing you deserve for speaking to a gentleman!”

  He lounged forward, a heavy fellow, taller than myself and six inches wider at the shoulders. My heart failed me a little as I measured him. But the thing had to be done. If I was slight, I was wiry as a hound, and in the excitement had forgotten my fatigue. I snatched from Marie a loaded riding-whip he carried, and stepped forward.

 

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