“I have not the least idea where he is,” I said coldly. “Nor what you mean.” The smith’s tone had changed and grown savage and churlish.
“He has gone to Nîmes,” he answered.
“To Nîmes?” I cried in astonishment. “How do you know? It is more than I know.”
“I do know,” he answered. “And what is brewing there. And so do a great many more. But this time the St. Alais and their bullies, M. le Vicomte — ay, they are all there — will not escape us. We will break their necks. Yes, M. le Vicomte, make no mistake,” he continued, glaring at me, his eyes red with suspicion and anger, “mix yourselves up with none of this. We are the people! The people! Woe to the man or thing that stands in our way!”
“Go!” I said. “I have heard enough. Begone!”
He looked at me a moment as if he would answer me. But old habits overcame him, and with a sullen word of farewell he turned, and went round the house. A minute later I heard his horse trot down the avenue.
I had cut him short; nevertheless the instant he was gone I wished him back, that I might ask him more. The St. Alais at Nîmes? Father Benôit at Nîmes? And a plot brewing there in which all had a hand? In a moment the news opened a window, as it were, into a wider world, through which I looked, and no longer felt myself shut in by the lonely country round me and the lack of society. I looked and saw the great white dusty city of the south, and trouble rising in it, and in the middle of the trouble, looking at me wistfully, Denise de St. Alais.
Father Benôit had gone thither. Why might not I?
I walked up and down in a flutter of spirits, and the longer I considered it, the more I liked it; the longer I thought of the dull inaction in which I must spend my time at home, unless I consented to rub shoulders with Buton and his like, the more taken I was with the idea of leaving.
And after all why not? Why should I not go?
I had my commission in my pocket, wherein I was not only appointed to the National Guards, but described as ci-devant “President of the Council of Public Safety in the Province of Quercy”; and this taking the place of papers or passport would render travelling easy. My long illness would serve as an excuse for a change of air; and explain my absence from home; I had in the house as much money as I needed. In a word, I could see no difficulty, and nothing to hinder me, if I chose to go. I had only to please myself.
So the choice was soon made. The following day I mounted a horse for the first time, and rode two-thirds of a league on the road, and home again very tired.
Next morning I rode to St. Alais, and viewed the ruins of the house and returned; this time I was less fatigued.
Then on the following day, Sunday, I rested; and on the Monday I rode half-way to Cahors and back again. That evening I cleaned my pistols and overlooked Gil while he packed my saddle-bags, choosing two plain suits, one to pack and one to wear, and a hat with a small tricolour rosette. On the following morning, the 6th of March, I took the road; and parting from André on the outskirts of the village, turned my horse’s head towards Figeac with a sense of freedom, of escape from difficulties and embarrassments, of hope and anticipation, that made that first hour delicious; and that still supported me when the March day began to give place to the chill darkness of evening — evening that in an unknown, untried place is always sombre and melancholy.
CHAPTER XV.
AT MILHAU.
I met with many strange things on that journey. I found it strange to see, as I went, armed peasants in the fields; to light in each village on men drilling; to enter inns and find half a dozen rustics seated round a table with glasses and wine, and perhaps an inkpot before them, and to learn that they called themselves a Committee. But towards evening of the third day I saw a stranger thing than any of these. I was beginning to mount the valley of the Tarn which runs up into the Cevennes at Milhau; a north wind was blowing, the sky was overcast, the landscape grey and bare; a league before me masses of mountain stood up gloomily blue. On a sudden, as I walked wearily beside my horse, I heard voices singing in chorus; and looked about me. The sound, clear and sweet as fairy’s music, seemed to rise from the earth at my feet.
A few yards farther, and the mystery explained itself. I found myself on the verge of a little dip in the ground, and saw below me the roofs of a hamlet, and on the hither side of it a crowd of a hundred or more, men and women. They were dancing and singing round a great tree, leafless, but decked with flags: a few old people sat about the roots inside the circle, and but for the cold weather and the bleak outlook, I might have thought that I had come on a May-day festival.
My appearance checked the singing for a moment; then two elderly peasants made their way through the ring and came to meet me, walking hand in hand. “Welcome to Vlais and Giron!” cried one. “Welcome to Giron and Vlais!” cried the other. And then, before I could answer, “You come on a happy day,” cried both together.
I could not help smiling. “I am glad of that,” I said. “May I ask what is the reason of your meeting?”
“The Communes of Giron and Vlais, of Vlais and Giron,” they answered, speaking alternately, “are today one. To-day, Monsieur, old boundaries disappear; old feuds die. The noble heart of Giron, the noble heart of Vlais, beat as one.”
I could scarcely refrain from laughing at their simplicity; fortunately, at that moment, the circle round the tree resumed their song and dance, which had even in that weather a pretty effect, as of a Watteau fête. I congratulated the two peasants on the sight.
“But, Monsieur, this is nothing,” one of them answered with perfect gravity. “It is not only that the boundaries of communes are disappearing; those of provinces are of the past also. At Valence, beyond the mountains, the two banks of the Rhone have clasped hands and sworn eternal amity. Henceforth all Frenchmen are brothers; all Frenchmen are of all provinces!”
“That is a fine idea,” I said.
“No son of France will again shed French blood!” he continued.
“So be it.”
“Catholic and Protestant, Protestant and Catholic will live at peace! There will be no law-suits. Grain will circulate freely, unchecked by toils or dues. All will be free, Monsieur. All will be rich.”
They said more in the same sanguine simple tone, and with the same naïve confidence; but my thoughts strayed from them, attracted by a man, who, seated among the peasants at the foot of the tree, seemed to my eyes to be of another class. Tall and lean, with lank black hair, and features of a stern, sour cast, he had nothing of outward show to distinguish him from those round him. His dress, a rough hunting suit, was old and patched; the spurs on his brown, mud-stained boots were rusty and bent. Yet his carriage possessed an ease the others lacked; and in the way he watched the circling rustics I read a quiet scorn.
I did not notice that he heeded or returned my gaze, but I had not gone on my way a hundred paces, after taking leave of the two mayors and the revellers, before I heard a step, and looking round, saw the stranger coming after me. He beckoned, and I waited until he overtook me.
“You are going to Milhau?” he said, speaking abruptly, and with a strong country accent; yet in the tone of one addressing an equal.
“Yes, Monsieur,” I said. “But I doubt if I shall reach the town to-night.”
“I am going also,” he answered. “My horse is in the village.”
And without saying more he walked beside me until we reached the hamlet. There — the place was deserted — he brought from an outhouse a sorry mare, and mounted. “What do you think of that rubbish?” he said suddenly as we took the road again. I had watched his proceedings in silence.
“I fear that they expect too much,” I answered guardedly.
He laughed; a horse-laugh full of scorn. “They think that the millennium has come,” he said. “And in a month they will find their barns burned and their throats cut.”
“I hope not,” I said.
“Oh, I hope not,” he answered cynically. “I hope not, of course. But even s
o Vive la Nation! Vive la Revolution!”
“What? If that be its fruit?” I asked.
“Ay, why not?” he answered, his gloomy eyes fixed on me. “It is every one for himself, and what has the old rule done for me that I should fear to try the new? Left me to starve on an old rock and a dovecot; sheltered by bare stones, and eating out of a black pot! While women and bankers, scented fops and lazy priests prick it before the King! And why? Because I remain, sir, what half the nation once were.”
“A Protestant?” I hazarded.
“Yes, Monsieur. And a poor noble,” he answered bitterly. “The Baron de Géol, at your service.”
I gave him my name in return.
“You wear the tricolour,” he said; “yet you think me extreme? I answer, that that is all very well for you; but we are different people. You are doubtless a family man, M. le Vicomte, with a wife — —”
“On the contrary, M. le Baron.”
“Then a mother, a sister?”
“No,” I said, smiling. “I have neither. I am quite alone.”
“At least with a home,” he persisted, “means, friends, employment, or the chance of employment?”
“Yes,” I said, “that is so.”
“Whereas I — I,” he answered, growing guttural in his excitement, “have none of these things. I cannot enter the army — I am a Protestant! I am shut off from the service of the State — I am a Protestant! I cannot be a lawyer or a judge — I am a Protestant! The King’s schools are closed to me — I am a Protestant! I cannot appear at Court — I am a Protestant! I — in the eyes of the law I do not exist! I — I, Monsieur,” he continued more slowly, and with an air not devoid of dignity, “whose ancestors stood before Kings, and whose grandfather’s great-grandfather saved the fourth Henry’s life at Coutras — I do not exist!”
“But now?” I said, startled by his tone of passion.
“Ay, now,” he answered grimly, “it is going to be different. Now, it is going to be otherwise, unless these black crows of priests put the clock back again. That is why I am on the road.”
“You are going to Milhau?”
“I live near Milhau,” he answered. “And I have been from home. But I am not going home now. I am going farther — to Nîmes.”
“To Nîmes?” I said in surprise.
“Yes,” he said. And he looked at me askance and a trifle grimly, and did not say any more. By this time it was growing dark; the valley of the Tarn, along which our road lay, though fertile and pleasant to the eye in summer, wore at this season, and in the half-light, a savage and rugged aspect. Mountains towered on either side; and sometimes, where the road drew near the river, the rushing of the water as it swirled and eddied among the rocks below us, added its note of melancholy to the scene. I shivered. The uncertainty of my quest, the uncertainty of everything, the gloom of my companion, pressed upon me. I was glad when he roused himself from his brooding, and pointed to the lights of Milhau glimmering here and there on a little plain, where the mountains recede from the river.
“You are doubtless going to the inn?” he said, as we entered the outskirts. I assented. “Then we part here,” he continued. “To-morrow, if you are going to Nîmes —— But you may prefer to travel alone.”
“Far from it,” I said.
“Well, I shall be leaving the east gate — about eight o’clock,” he answered grudgingly. “Good-night, Monsieur.”
I bade him good-night, and leaving him there, rode into the town: passing through narrow, mean streets, and under dark archways and hanging lanterns, that swung and creaked in the wind, and did everything but light the squalid obscurity. Though night had fallen, people were moving briskly to and fro, or standing at their doors; the place, after the solitude through which I had ridden, had the air of a city; and presently I became aware that a little crowd was following my horse. Before I reached the inn, which stood in a dimly-lit square, the crowd had grown into a great one, and was beginning to press upon me; some who marched nearest to me staring up inquisitively into my face, while others, farther off, called to their neighbours, or to dim forms seen at basement windows, that it was he!
I found this somewhat alarming. Still they did not molest me; but when I halted they halted too, and I was forced to dismount almost in their arms. “Is this the inn?” I said to those nearest tome; striving to appear at my ease.
“Yes! yes!” they cried with one voice, “that is the inn!”
“My horse — —”
“We will take the horse! Enter! Enter!”
I had little choice, they flocked so closely round me; and, affecting carelessness, I complied, thinking that they would not follow, and that inside I should learn the meaning of their conduct. But the moment my back was turned they pressed in after me and beside me, and, almost sweeping me off my feet, urged me along the narrow passage of the house, whether I would or no. I tried to turn and remonstrate; but the foremost drowned my words in loud cries for “M. Flandre! M. Flandre!”
Fortunately the person addressed was not far off. A door towards which I was being urged opened, and he appeared. He proved to be an immensely stout man, with a face to match his body; and he gazed at us for a moment, astounded by the invasion. Then he asked angrily what was the matter. “Ventre de Ciel!” he cried. “Is this my house or yours, rascals? Who is this?”
“The Capuchin! The Capuchin!” cried a dozen voices.
“Ho! ho!” he answered, before I could speak. “Bring a light.”
Two or three bare-armed women whom the noise had brought to the door of the kitchen fetched candles, and raising them above their heads gazed at me curiously. “Ho! ho!” he said again. “The Capuchin is it? So you have got him.”
“Do I look like one?” I cried angrily, thrusting back those who pressed on me most closely. “Nom de Dieu! Is this the way you receive guests, Monsieur? Or is the town gone mad?”
“You are not the Capuchin monk?” he said, somewhat taken aback, I could see, by my boldness.
“Have I not said that I am not? Do monks in your country travel in boots and spurs?” I retorted.
“Then your papers!” he answered curtly. “Your papers! I would have you to know,” he continued, puffing out his cheeks, “that I am Mayor here as well as host, and I keep the jail as well as the inn. Your papers, Monsieur, if you prefer the one to the other.”
“Before your friends here?” I said contemptuously.
“They are good citizens,” he answered.
I had some fear, now I had come to the pinch, that the commission I carried might fail to produce all the effects with which I had credited it. But I had no choice, and ultimately nothing to dread; and after a momentary hesitation I produced it. Fortunately it was drawn in complimentary terms and gave the Mayor, I know not how, the idea that I was actually bound at the moment on an errand of state. When he had read it, therefore, he broke into a hundred apologies, craved leave to salute me, and announced to the listening crowd that they had made a mistake.
It struck me at the time as strange, that they, the crowd, were not at all embarrassed by their error. On the contrary, they hastened to congratulate me on my acquittal, and even patted me on the shoulder in their good humour; some went to see that my horse was brought in, or to give orders on my behalf, and the rest presently dispersed, leaving me fain to believe that they would have hung me to the nearest lanterne with the same stolid complaisance.
When only two or three remained, I asked the Mayor for whom they had taken me.
“A disguised monk, M. le Vicomte,” he said. “A very dangerous fellow, who is known to be travelling with two ladies — all to Nîmes; and orders have been sent from a high quarter to arrest him.”
“But I am alone!” I protested. “I have no ladies with me.”
He shrugged his shoulders. “Just so, M. le Vicomte,” he answered. “But we have got the two ladies. They were arrested this morning, while attempting to pass through the town in a carriage. We know, therefore, that he is n
ow alone.”
“Oh,” I said. “So now you only want him? And what is the charge against him?” I continued, remembering with a languid stirring of the pulses that a Capuchin monk had visited Father Benôit before his departure. It seemed to be strange that I should come upon the traces of another here.
“He is charged,” M. Flandre answered pompously, “with high treason against the nation, Monsieur. He has been seen here, there, and everywhere, at Montpellier, and Cette, and Albi, and as far away as Auch; and always preaching war and superstition, and corrupting the people.”
“And the ladies?” I said smiling. “Have they too been corrupting — —”
“No, M. le Vicomte. But it is believed that wishing to return to Nîmes, and learning that the roads were watched, he disguised himself and joined himself to them. Doubtless they are dévotes.”
“Poor things!” I said, with a shudder of compassion; every one seemed to be so good-tempered, and yet so hard. “What will you do with them?”
“I shall send for orders,” he answered. “In his case,” he continued airily, “I should not need them. But here is your supper. Pardon me, M. le Vicomte, if I do not attend on you myself. As Mayor I have to take care that I do not compromise — but you understand?”
I said civilly that I did; and supper being laid, as was then the custom in the smaller inns, in my bedroom, I asked him to take a glass of wine with me, and over the meal learned much of the state of the country, and the fermentation that was at work along the southern seaboard, the priests stirring up the people with processions and sermons. He waxed especially eloquent upon the excitement at Nîmes, where the masses were bigoted Romanists, while the Protestants had a following, too, with the hardy peasants of the mountains behind them. “There will be trouble, M. le Vicomte, there will be trouble there,” he said with meaning. “Things are going too well for the people la bas. They will stop them if they can.”
“And this man?”
“Is one of their missionaries.”
I thought of Father Benôit, and sighed. “By the way,” the Mayor said abruptly, gazing at me in moony thoughtfulness, “that is curious now!”
Complete Works of Stanley J Weyman Page 223