Complete Works of Stanley J Weyman

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Complete Works of Stanley J Weyman Page 119

by Stanley J Weyman

Here, however, he was not destined to enjoy his privacy long. At the last moment, as he was sitting down to his meal, with the boy in attendance, a bustle was heard outside. The voice of someone rating the landlord in no measured terms became audible, the noise growing louder as the speaker mounted the stairs. Presently a hand was laid on the latch, the door was thrown open, and a gentleman strode into the room whose swaggering air and angry gestures showed that he was determined to make good his footing. A lady, masked, and in a travelling habit, followed more quietly; and in the background could be seen three or four servants, together with the unfortunate landlord, who was very evidently divided between fear of his mysterious guest and the claims of the newcomers.

  The astrologer rose slowly from his seat. His peculiar aspect, his stature and leanness and black garb, which never failed to impress strangers, took the intruder somewhat aback. He hesitated, and removing his hat, began to utter a tardy apology. “I crave your pardon, sir,” he said ungraciously, “but we ride on after supper. We stay here only to eat, and they tell us there is no other chamber with even a degree of emptiness in it.”

  “You are welcome, M. de Vidoche,” the man in black answered.

  The intruder started and frowned. “You know my name,” he said, with a sneer. “But there, I suppose it is your business to know these things.”

  “It is my business to know,” the astrologer answered, unmoved. “Will not madame be seated?”

  “THE ASTROLOGER ROSE SLOWLY FROM HIS SEAT” ().

  The lady bowed, and taking off her mask with fingers which trembled a little, disclosed a fair, childish face, that would, have been pretty, and even charming, but for an expression of nervousness which seemed habitual to it. She shrank from the astrologer’s gaze, and, sitting down as far from him as the table permitted, pretended to busy herself in taking off her gloves. He was accustomed to be met in this way, and to see the timid quake before him; but it did not escape his notice that this lady shrank also at the sound of her husband’s voice, and when he spoke, listened with the pitiful air of propitiation which may be seen in a whipped dog. She was pale, and by the side of her husband seemed to lack colour. He was a man of singularly handsome exterior, dark-haired and hard-eyed, with a high, fresh complexion, and a sneering lip. His dress was in the extreme of the fashion, his falling collar vandyked, and his breeches open below the knee, where they were met by wide-mouthed boots. A great plume of feathers set off his hat, and he carried a switch as well as a sword.

  The astrologer read the story at a glance. “Madame is perhaps fatigued by the journey,” he said politely.

  “Madame is very easily fatigued,” the husband replied, throwing down his hat with a savage sneer, “especially when she is doing anything she does not like.”

  “You are for Paris,” Nôtredame answered, with apparent surprise. “I thought all ladies liked Paris. Now, if madame were leaving Paris and going to the country — —”

  “The country!” M. de Vidoche exclaimed, with an impatient oath. “She would bury herself there if she could!” And he added something under his breath, the point of which it was not very difficult to guess.

  Madame de Vidoche forced a smile, striving, woman-like, to cover all. “It is natural I should like Pinatel,” she said timidly, her eye on her husband. “I have lived there so much.”

  “Yes, madame, you are never tired of reminding me of that!” M. de Vidoche retorted harshly. Women who are afraid of their husbands say the right thing once in a hundred times. “You will tell this gentleman in a moment that I was a beggar when I married you! But if I was — —”

  “Oh, Charles!” she murmured faintly.

  “That is right! Cry now!” he exclaimed brutally. “Thank God, however, here is supper. And after supper we go on to Vernon. The roads are rutty, and you will have something else to do besides cry then.”

  The man in black, going on with his meal at the other end of the table, listened with an impassive face. Like all his profession, he seemed inclined to hear rather than to talk. But when supper came up with only one plate for the two — a mistake due to the crowded state of the inn — and M. de Vidoche fell to scolding very loudly, he seemed unable to refrain from saying a word in the innkeeper’s defence. “It is not so very unusual for the husband to share his wife’s plate,” he said coolly; “and sometimes a good deal more that is hers.”

  M. de Vidoche looked at him for a moment, as if he were minded to ask him what business it was of his; but he thought better of it, and instead said, with a scowl, “It is not so very unusual either for astrologers to make mistakes.”

  “Quacks,” the man in black said calmly.

  “I quite agree,” M. de Vidoche replied, with mock politeness. “I accept the correction.”

  “Yet there is one thing to be said even then,” the astrologer continued, slowly leaning forward, and, as if by chance, moving one of the candles so as to bring it directly between madame and himself. “I have noticed it, M. de Vidoche. They make mistakes sometimes in predicting marriages, and even births. But never in predicting — deaths.”

  M. de Vidoche, who may have had some key in his own breast which unlocked the full meaning of the other’s words, started and looked across at him. Whatever he read in the pale, sombre countenance which the removal of the candle fully revealed to him, and in which the eyes, burning vividly, seemed alone alive, he shuddered. He made no reply. His look dropped. Even a little of his high colour left his checks. He went on with his meal in silence. The four tall candles still burned dully on the table. But to M. de Vidoche they seemed on a sudden to be the candles that burn by the side of a corpse. In a flash he saw a room hung with black, a bed, and a silent covered form on it — a form with wan, fair hair — a woman’s. And then he saw other things.

  Clearly, the astrologer was no ordinary man.

  He seemed to take no notice, however, of the effect his words had produced. Indeed, he no longer urged his attentions on M. de Vidoche. He turned politely to madame, and made some commonplace observation on the roads. She answered it — inattentively.

  “You are looking at my boy,” he continued; for Jehan was waiting inside the door, watching with a frightened, fascinated gaze his master’s every act and movement. “I do not wonder that he attracts the ladies’ eyes.”

  “He is a handsome child,” she answered, smiling faintly.

  “Yes, he is good-looking,” the man in black rejoined. “There is one thing which men of science sell that he will never need.”

  “What is that?” she asked curiously, looking at the astrologer for the first time with attention.

  “A love-philtre,” he answered courteously. “His looks, like madame’s, will always supply its place.”

  She coloured, smiling a little sadly. “Are there such things?” she said. “Is it true? — I mean, I always thought that they were a child’s tale.”

  “No more than poisons and antidotes, madame,” he answered earnestly, “the preservative power of salt, or the destructive power of gunpowder. You take the Queen’s herb, you sneeze; the drug of Paracelsus, you sleep; wine, you see double. Why is the powder of attraction more wonderful than these? Or if you remain unconvinced,” he continued more lightly, “look round you, madame. You see young men loving old women, the high-born allying themselves with the vulgar, the ugly enchanting the beautiful. You see a hundred inexplicable matches. Believe me, it is we who make them. I speak without motive,” he added, bowing, “for Madame de Vidoche can never have need of other philtre than her eyes.”

  Madame, toying idly with a plate, her regards on the table, sighed. “And yet they say matches are made in heaven,” she murmured softly.

  “It is from heaven — from the stars — we derive our knowledge,” he answered, in the same tone.

  But his face! — it was well she did not see that! And before more passed, M. de Vidoche broke into the conversation. “What rubbish is this?” he said, speaking roughly to his wife. “Have you finished? Then let us pay t
his rascally landlord and be off. If you do not want to spend the night on the road, that is. Where are those fools of servants?”

  He rose, and went to the door and shouted for them, and came back and took up his cloak and hat with much movement and bustle. But it was noticeable in all he did that he never once met the astrologer’s eye or looked his way. Even when he bade him a surly “Good-night” — casually uttered in the midst of injunctions to his wife to be quick — he spoke over his shoulder; and he left the room in the same fashion, completely absorbed, it seemed, in the fastening of his cloak.

  Some, treated in this cavalier fashion, might have been hurt, and some might have resented it. But the man in black did neither. Left alone, he remained by the table in an expectant attitude, a sneering smile, which the light of the candles threw into high relief, on his grim visage. Suddenly the door opened, and M. de Vidoche, cloaked and covered, came in. Without raising his eyes, he looked round the room — for something he had mislaid, it seemed.

  “Oh, by the way,” he said suddenly, and without looking up.

  “My address?” the man in black interjected, with a devilish readiness. “The end of the Rue Touchet in the Quartier du Marais, near the river. Where, believe me,” he continued, with a mocking bow, “I shall give you madame’s horoscope with the greatest pleasure, or any other little matter you may require.”

  “I think you are the devil!” M. de Vidoche muttered wrathfully, his cheek growing pale.

  “Possibly,” the astrologer answered. “In that or any other case — au revoir!”

  When the landlord came up a little later to apologise to M. Solomon Nôtredame de Paris for the inconvenience to which he had unwillingly put him, he found his guest in high good-humour. “It is nothing, my friend — it is nothing,” M. Nôtredame said kindly. “I found my company good enough. This M. de Vidoche is of this country; and a rich man, I understand.”

  “Through his wife,” the host said cautiously. “Ah! so rich that she could build our old castle here from the ground again.”

  “Madame de Vidoche was of Pinatel.”

  “To be sure. Monsieur knows everything. By Jumiéges to the north. I have been there once. But she has a house in Paris besides, and estates, I hear, in the south — in Perigord.”

  “Ha!” the astrologer muttered. “Perigord again. That is odd, now.”

  CHAPTER IV.

  THE HOUSE WITH TWO DOORS.

  On the site of the old Palais des Tournelles, where was held the tournament in which Henry the Second was killed, Henry the Fourth built the Place Royale. You will not find it called by that name in any map of Paris of to-day; modern France, which has no history, traditions, or reverence, has carefully erased such landmarks in favour of her Grévys and Eiffels, her journalists and soap-boilers. But for all that, and though the Place Royale has now lost even its name, in the reign of the thirteenth Louis it was the centre of fashion. The Quartier du Marais, in which it stood, opposite the Ile de St. Louis, was then the Court quarter. It saw coaches come into common use among the nobility, and ruffs and primero go out, and a great many other queer things, such as Court quarters in those days looked to see.

  The back stairs of a palace, however, are seldom an improving or brilliant place; or if they can be said to be brilliant at all, their brightness is of a somewhat lurid and ghastly character. The king’s amusements — very royal and natural, no doubt, and, when viewed from the proper quarter, attractive enough — have another side; and that side is towards the back stairs. It is the same with the Court and its purlieus. They are the rough side of the cloth, the underside of the moss, the cancer under the fair linen. Secrets are no secrets there; and so it has always been. Things De Thou did not know, and Brantôme only guessed at, were household words there. They in the Court under-world knew all about that mysterious disease of which Gabrielle d’Estrées died after eating a citron at Zamet’s — all, more than we know now or has ever been printed. That little prick of a knife which made the second Wednesday in May, 1610, a day memorable in history, was gossip down there a month before. Henry of Condé’s death, Mazarin’s marriage, D’Eon’s sex, Cagliostro’s birth, were no mysteries in the by-ways of the Louvre and Petit Trianon. He who wrote “Under the king’s hearthstone are many cockroaches” knew his world — a seamy, ugly, vicious, dangerous world.

  If any street in the Paris of that day belonged to it, the Rue Touchet did; a little street a quarter of a mile from the Place Royale, on the verge of the Quartier du Marais. The houses on one side of the street had their backs to the river, from which they were divided only by a few paces of foul foreshore. These houses were older than the opposite row, were irregularly built, and piled high with gables and crooked chimneys. Here and there a beetle-browed passage led beneath them to the river; and one out of every two was a tavern, or worse. A fencing-school and a gambling-hell occupied the two largest. To the south-west the street ended in a cul-de-sac, being closed by a squat stone house, built out of the ruins of an old water gateway that had once stood there. The windows of this house were never unshuttered, the door was seldom opened in the daylight. It was the abode of Solomon Nôtredame. Once a week or so the astrologer’s sombre figure might be seen entering or leaving, and men at tavern doors would point at him, and slatternly women, leaning out of window, cross themselves. But few in the Rue Touchet knew that the house had a second door, which did not open on the water, as the back doors of the riverside houses did, but on a quiet street leading to it.

  M. Nôtredame’s house was, in fact, double, and served two sorts of clients. Great ladies and courtiers, wives of the long robe and city madams, came to the door in the quiet street, and knew nothing of the Rue Touchet. Through the latter, on the other hand, came those who paid in meal, if not in malt; lackeys and waiting-maids, and skulking apprentices and led-captains — the dregs of the quarter, sodden with vice and crime — and knowledge.

  The house was furnished accordingly. The clients of the Rue Touchet found the astrologer in a room divided into two by scarlet hangings, so arranged as to afford the visitor a partial view of the farther half, where the sullen glow of a furnace disclosed alembics and crucibles, mortars and retorts, a multitude of uncouth vessels and phials, and all the mysterious apparatus of the alchemist. Immediately about him the shuddering rascal found things still more striking. A dead hand hung over each door, a skeleton peeped from a closet. A stuffed alligator sprawled on the floor, and, by the wavering uncertain light of the furnace, seemed each moment to be awaking to life. Cabalistic signs and strange instruments and skull-headed staves were everywhere, with parchment scrolls and monstrous mandrakes, and a farrago of such things as might impose on the ignorant; who, if he pleased, might sit on a coffin, and, when he would amuse himself, found a living toad at his foot! Dimly seen, crowded together, ill-understood, these things were enough to overawe the vulgar, and had often struck terror into the boldest ruffians the Rue Touchet could boast.

  From this room a little staircase, closed at the top by a strong door, led to the chamber and antechamber in which the astrologer received his real clients. Here all was changed. Both rooms were hung, canopied, carpeted with black: were vast, death-like, empty. The antechamber contained two stools, and in the middle of the floor a large crystal ball on a bronze stand. That was all, except the silver hanging lamp, which burned blue, and added to the funereal gloom of the room.

  The inner chamber, which was lighted by six candles set in sconces round the wall, was almost as bare. A kind of altar at the farther end bore two great tomes, continually open. In the middle of the floor was an astrolabe on an ebony pillar, and the floor itself was embroidered in white, with the signs of the Zodiac and the twelve Houses arranged in a circle. A seat for the astrologer stood near the altar. And that was all. For power over such as visited him here Nôtredame depended on a higher range of ideas; on the more subtle forms of superstition, the influence of gloom and silence on the conscience: and above all, perhaps, on his knowledge of the
world — and them.

  Into the midst of all this came that shrinking, terrified little mortal, Jehan. It was his business to open the door into the quiet street, and admit those who called. He was forbidden to speak under the most terrible penalties, so that visitors thought him dumb. For a week after his coming he lived in a world of almost intolerable fear. The darkness and silence of the house, the funereal lights and hangings, the skulls and bones and horrid things he saw, and on which he came when he least expected them, almost turned his brain. He shuddered, and crouched hither and thither. His face grew white, and his eyes took a strange staring look, so that the sourest might have pitied him. It wanted, in a word, but a little to send the child stark mad; and but for his hardy training and outdoor life, that little would not have been wanting.

  He might have fled, for he was trusted at the door, and at any moment could have opened it and escaped. But Jehan never doubted his master’s power to find him and bring him back; and the thought did not enter his mind. After a week or so, familiarity wrought on him, as on all. The house grew less terrifying, the darkness lost its horror, the air of silence and dread its first paralysing influence. He began to sleep better. Curiosity, in a degree, took the place of fear. He fell to poring over the signs of the Zodiac, and to taking furtive peeps into the crystal. The toad became his playfellow. He fed it with cockroaches, and no longer wanted employment.

  The astrologer saw the change in the lad, and perhaps was not wholly pleased with it. By-and-by he took steps to limit it. One day he found Jehan playing with the toad with something of a boy’s abandon, making the uncouth creature leap over his hands, and tickling it with a straw. The boy rose on his entrance, and shrank away; for his fear of the man’s sinister face and silent ways was not in any way lessened. But Nôtredame called him back. “You are beginning to forget,” he said, eyeing the child grimly.

  The boy trembled under his gaze, but did not dare to answer.

 

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