Complete Works of Stanley J Weyman

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by Stanley J Weyman


  “Have a care, little man!” cried the girl gaily — yet half in pity, I think. “Or that fat pig will kill you!”

  My antagonist did not join in the laugh this time. Indeed it struck me that his eye wandered and that he was not so ready to enter the ring as his mates were to form it. But before I could try his mettle, a hand was laid on my shoulder. A man appearing from I do not know where — from the dark fringe of the group, I suppose — pushed me aside, roughly, but not discourteously.

  “Leave this to me!” he said, coolly stepping before me. “Do not dirty your hands with the knave, master. I am pining for work and the job will just suit me! I will fit him for the worms before the nuns above can say an AVE!”

  I looked at the newcomer. He was a stout fellow; not over tall, nor over big; swarthy, with prominent features. The plume of his bonnet was broken, but he wore it in a rakish fashion; and altogether he swaggered with so dare-devil an air, clinking his spurs and swinging out his long sword recklessly, that it was no wonder three or four of the nearest fellows gave back a foot.

  “Come on!” he cried, boisterously, forming a ring by the simple process of sweeping his blade from side to side, while he made the dagger in his left hand flash round his head. “Who is for the game? Who will strike a blow for the little Admiral? Will you come one, two, three at once; or all together? Anyway, come on, you—” And he closed his challenge with a volley of frightful oaths, directed at the group opposite.

  “It is no quarrel of yours,” said the big man, sulkily; making no show of drawing his sword, but rather drawing back himself.

  “All quarrels are my quarrels! and no quarrels are your quarrels. That is about the truth, I fancy!” was the smart retort; which our champion rendered more emphatic by a playful lunge that caused the big bully to skip again.

  There was a loud laugh at this, even among the enemy’s backers. “Bah, the great pig!” ejaculated the girl above. “Spit him!” and she spat down on the whilom Hector — who made no great figure now.

  “Shall I bring you a slice of him, my dear?” asked my rakehelly friend, looking up and making his sword play round the shrinking wretch. “Just a tit-bit, my love?” he added persuasively. “A mouthful of white liver and caper sauce?”

  “Not for me, the beast!” the girl cried, amid the laughter of the yard.

  “Not a bit? If I warrant him tender? Ladies’ meat?”

  “Bah! no!” and she stolidly spat down again.

  “Do you hear? The lady has no taste for you,” the tormentor cried. “Pig of a Gascon!” And deftly sheathing his dagger, he seized the big coward by the ear, and turning him round, gave him a heavy kick which sent him spinning over a bucket, and down against the wall. There the bully remained, swearing and rubbing himself by turns; while the victor cried boastfully, “Enough of him. If anyone wants to take up his quarrel, Blaise Bure is his man. If not, let us have an end of it. Let someone find stalls for the gentlemen’s horses before they catch a chill; and have done with it. As for me,” he added, and then he turned to us and removed his hat with an exaggerated flourish, “I am your lordship’s servant to command.”

  I thanked him with a heartiness, half-earnest, half-assumed. His cloak was ragged, his trunk hose, which had once been fine enough, were stained, and almost pointless, He swaggered inimitably, and had led-captain written large upon him. But he had done us a service, for Jean had no further trouble about the horses. And besides one has a natural liking for a brave man, and this man was brave beyond question.

  “You are from Orleans,” he said respectfully enough, but as one asserting a fact, not asking a question.

  “Yes,” I answered, somewhat astonished, “Did you see us come in?”

  “No, but I looked at your boots, gentlemen,” he replied. “White dust, north; red dust, south. Do you see?”

  “Yes, I see,” I said, with admiration. “You must have been brought up in a sharp school, M. Bure.”

  “Sharp masters make sharp scholars,” he replied, grinning. And that answer I had occasion to remember afterwards.

  “You are from Orleans, also?” I asked, as we prepared to go in.

  “Yes, from Orleans too, gentlemen. But earlier in the day. With letters — letters of importance!” And bestowing something like a wink of confidence on us, he drew himself up, looked sternly at the stable-folk, patted himself twice on the chest, and finally twirled his moustaches, and smirked at the girl above, who was chewing straws.

  I thought it likely enough that we might find it hard to get rid of him. But this was not so. After listening with gratification to our repeated thanks, he bowed with the same grotesque flourish, and marched off as grave as a Spaniard, humming —

  “Ce petit homme tant joli!

  Qui toujours cause et toujours rit,

  Qui toujours baise sa mignonne,

  Dieu gard’ de mal ce petit homme!”

  On our going in, the landlord met us politely, but with curiosity, and a simmering of excitement also in his manner. “From Paris, my lords?” he asked, rubbing his hands and bowing low. “Or from the south?”

  “From the south,” I answered. “From Orleans, and hungry and tired, Master Host.”

  “Ah!” he replied, disregarding the latter part of my answer, while his little eyes twinkled with satisfaction. “Then I dare swear, my lords, you have not heard the news?” He halted in the narrow passage, and lifting the candle he carried, scanned our faces closely, as if he wished to learn something about us before he spoke.

  “News!” I answered brusquely, being both tired, and as I had told him, hungry. “We have heard none, and the best you can give us will be that our supper is ready to be served.”

  But even this snub did not check his eagerness to tell his news. “The Admiral de Coligny,” he said, breathlessly, “you have not heard what has happened to him?”

  “To the admiral? No, what?” I inquired rapidly. I was interested at last.

  For a moment let me digress. The few of my age will remember, and the many younger will have been told, that at this time the Italian queen-mother was the ruling power in France. It was Catharine de’ Medici’s first object to maintain her influence over Charles the Ninth — her son; who, ricketty, weak, and passionate, was already doomed to an early grave. Her second, to support the royal power by balancing the extreme Catholics against the Huguenots. For the latter purpose she would coquet first with one party, then with the other. At the present moment she had committed herself more deeply than was her wont to the Huguenots. Their leaders, the Admiral Gaspard de Coligny, the King of Navarre, and the Prince of Conde, were supposed to be high in favour, while the chiefs of the other party, the Duke of Guise, and the two Cardinals of his house, the Cardinal of Lorraine and the Cardinal of Guise, were in disgrace; which, as it seemed, even their friend at court, the queen’s favourite son, Henry of Anjou, was unable to overcome.

  Such was the outward aspect of things in August, 1572, but there were not wanting rumours that already Coligny, taking advantage of the footing given him, had gained an influence over the young king, which threatened Catharine de’ Medici herself. The admiral, therefore, to whom the Huguenot half of France had long looked as to its leader, was now the object of the closest interest to all; the Guise faction, hating him — as the alleged assassin of the Duke of Guise — with an intensity which probably was not to be found in the affection of his friends, popular with the latter as he was.

  Still, many who were not Huguenots had a regard for him as a great Frenchman and a gallant soldier. We — though we were of the old faith, and the other side — had heard much of him, and much good. The Vicomte had spoken of him always as a great man, a man mistaken, but brave, honest and capable in his error. Therefore it was that when the landlord mentioned him, I forgot even my hunger.

  “He was shot, my lords, as he passed through the Rue des Fosses, yesterday,” the man declared with bated breath. “It is not known whether he will live or die. Paris is in an uproar, and there a
re some who fear the worst.”

  “But,” I said doubtfully, “who has dared to do this? He had a safe conduct from the king himself.”

  Our host did not answer; shrugging his shoulders instead, he opened the door, and ushered us into the eating-room.

  Some preparations for our meal had already been made at one end of the long board. At the other was seated a man past middle age; richly but simply dressed. His grey hair, cut short about a massive head, and his grave, resolute face, square-jawed, and deeply-lined, marked him as one to whom respect was due apart from his clothes. We bowed to him as we took our seats.

  He acknowledged the salute, fixing us a moment with a penetrating glance; and then resumed his meal. I noticed that his sword and belt were propped against a chair at his elbow, and a dag, apparently loaded, lay close to his hand by the candlestick. Two lackeys waited behind his chair, wearing the badge we had remarked in the inn yard.

  We began to talk, speaking in low tones that we might not disturb him. The attack on Coligny had, if true, its bearing on our own business. For if a Huguenot so great and famous and enjoying the king’s special favour still went in Paris in danger of his life, what must be the risk that such an one as Pavannes ran? We had hoped to find the city quiet. If instead it should be in a state of turmoil Bezers’ chances were so much the better; and ours — and Kit’s, poor Kit’s — so much the worse.

  Our companion had by this time finished his supper. But he still sat at table, and seemed to be regarding us with some curiosity. At length he spoke. “Are you going to Paris, young gentlemen?” he asked, his tone harsh and high-pitched.

  We answered in the affirmative. “To-morrow?” he questioned.

  “Yes,” we answered; and expected him to continue the conversation. But instead he became silent, gazing abstractedly at the table; and what with our meal, and our own talk we had almost forgotten him again, when looking up, I found him at my elbow, holding out in silence a small piece of paper.

  I started his face was so grave. But seeing that there were half-a-dozen guests of a meaner sort at another table close by, I guessed that he merely wished to make a private communication to us; and hastened to take the paper and read it. It contained a scrawl of four words only —

  “Va chasser l’Idole.”

  No more. I looked at him puzzled; able to make nothing out of it. St. Croix wrinkled his brow over it with the same result. It was no good handing it to Marie, therefore.

  “You do not understand?” the stranger continued, as he put the scrap of paper back in his pouch.

  “No,” I answered, shaking my head. We had all risen out of respect to him, and were standing a little group about him.

  “Just so; it is all right then,” he answered, looking at us as it seemed to me with grave good-nature. “It is nothing. Go your way. But — I have a son yonder not much younger than you, young gentlemen. And if you had understood, I should have said to you, ‘Do not go! There are enough sheep for the shearer!’”

  He was turning away with this oracular saying when Croisette touched his sleeve. “Pray can you tell us if it be true,” the lad said eagerly, “that the Admiral de Coligny was wounded yesterday?”

  “It is true,” the other answered, turning his grave eyes on his questioner, while for a moment his stern look failed him, “It is true, my boy,” he added with an air of strange solemnity. “Whom the Lord loveth, He chasteneth. And, God forgive me for saying it, whom He would destroy, He first maketh mad.”

  He had gazed with peculiar favour at Croisette’s girlish face, I thought: Marie and I were dark and ugly by the side of the boy. But he turned from him now with a queer, excited gesture, thumping his gold-headed cane on the floor. He called his servants in a loud, rasping voice, and left the room in seeming anger, driving them before him, the one carrying his dag, and the other, two candles.

  When I came down early next morning, the first person I met was Blaise Bure. He looked rather fiercer and more shabby by daylight than candlelight. But he saluted me respectfully; and this, since it was clear that he did not respect many people, inclined me to regard him with favour. It is always so, the more savage the dog, the more highly we prize its attentions. I asked him who the Huguenot noble was who had supped with us. For a Huguenot we knew he must be.

  “The Baron de Rosny,” he answered; adding with a sneer, “He is a careful man! If they were all like him, with eyes on both sides of his head and a dag by his candle — well, my lord, there would be one more king in France — or one less! But they are a blind lot: as blind as bats.” He muttered something farther in which I caught the word “to-night.” But I did not hear it all; or understand any of it.

  “Your lordships are going to Paris?” he resumed in a different tone. When I said that we were, he looked at me in a shamefaced way, half timid, half arrogant. “I have a small favour to ask of you then,” he said. “I am going to Paris myself. I am not afraid of odds, as you have seen. But the roads will be in a queer state if there be anything on foot in the city, and — well, I would rather ride with you gentlemen than alone.”

  “You are welcome to join us,” I said. “But we start in half-an-hour. Do you know Paris well?”

  “As well as my sword-hilt,” he replied briskly, relieved I thought by my acquiescence, “And I have known that from my breeching. If you want a game at PAUME, or a pretty girl to kiss, I can put you in the way for the one or the other.”

  The half rustic shrinking from the great city which I felt, suggested to me that our swashbuckling friend might help us if he would. “Do you know M. de Pavannes?” I asked impulsively, “Where he lives in Paris, I mean?”

  “M. Louis de Pavannes?” quoth he.

  “Yes.”

  “I know—” he replied slowly, rubbing his chin and looking at the ground in thought— “where he had his lodgings in town a while ago, before — Ah! I do know! I remember,” he added, slapping his thigh, “when I was in Paris a fortnight ago I was told that his steward had taken lodgings for him in the Rue St. Antoine.”

  “Good!” I answered overjoyed. “Then we want to dismount there, if you can guide us straight to the house.”

  “I can,” he replied simply. “And you will not be the worse for my company. Paris is a queer place when there is trouble to the fore, but your lordships have got the right man to pilot you through it.”

  I did not ask him what trouble he meant, but ran indoors to buckle on my sword, and tell Marie and Croisette of the ally I had secured. They were much pleased, as was natural; so that we took the road in excellent spirits intending to reach the city in the afternoon. But Marie’s horse cast a shoe, and it was some time before we could find a smith. Then at Etampes, where we stopped to lunch, we were kept an unconscionable time waiting for it. And so we approached Paris for the first time at sunset. A ruddy glow was at the moment warming the eastern heights, and picking out with flame the twin towers of Notre Dame, and the one tall tower of St. Jacques la Boucherie. A dozen roofs higher than their neighbours shone hotly; and a great bank of cloud, which lay north and south, and looked like a man’s hand stretched over the city, changed gradually from blood-red to violet, and from violet to black, as evening fell.

  Passing within the gates and across first one bridge and then another, we were astonished and utterly confused by the noise and hubbub through which we rode. Hundreds seemed to be moving this way and that in the narrow streets. Women screamed to one another from window to window. The bells of half-a-dozen churches rang the curfew. Our country ears were deafened. Still our eyes had leisure to take in the tall houses with their high-pitched roofs, and here and there a tower built into the wall; the quaint churches, and the groups of townsfolk — sullen fellows some of them with a fierce gleam in their eyes — who, standing in the mouths of reeking alleys, watched us go by.

  But presently we had to stop. A crowd had gathered to watch a little cavalcade of six gentlemen pass across our path. They were riding two and two, lounging in their saddles an
d chattering to one another, disdainfully unconscious of the people about them, or the remarks they excited. Their graceful bearing and the richness of their dress and equipment surpassed anything I had ever seen. A dozen pages and lackeys were attending them on foot, and the sound of their jests and laughter came to us over the heads of the crowd.

  While I was gazing at them, some movement of the throng drove back Bure’s horse against mine. Bure himself uttered a savage oath; uncalled for so far as I could see. But my attention was arrested the next moment by Croisette, who tapped my arm with his riding whip. “Look!” he cried in some excitement, “is not that he?”

  I followed the direction of the lad’s finger — as well as I could for the plunging of my horse which Bure’s had frightened — and scrutinized the last pair of the troop. They were crossing the street in which we stood, and I had only a side view of them; or rather of the nearer rider. He was a singularly handsome man, in age about twenty-two or twenty-three with long lovelocks falling on his lace collar and cloak of orange silk. His face was sweet and kindly and gracious to a marvel. But he was a stranger to me.

  “I could have sworn,” exclaimed Croisette, “that that was Louis himself — M. de Pavannes!”

  “That?” I answered, as we began to move again, the crowd melting before us. “Oh, dear, no!”

  “No! no! The farther man!” he explained.

  But I had not been able to get a good look at the farther of the two. We turned in our saddles and peered after him. His back in the dusk certainly reminded me of Louis. Bure, however, who said he knew M. de Pavannes by sight, laughed at the idea. “Your friend,” he said, “is a wider man than that!” And I thought he was right there — but then it might be the cut of the clothes. “They have been at the Louvre playing paume, I’ll be sworn!” he went on. “So the Admiral must be better. The one next us was M. de Teligny, the Admiral’s son-in-law. And the other, whom you mean, was the Comte de la Rochefoucault.”

 

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