Baudichon grunted. “Rash!” he repeated. “I would like to know what he expects? I would like to know — —”
A cry as of a wild beast cut short the word: a blow, a shriek of pain followed, the door flew open; as they rose to their feet in wonder, into the room fell a lad — it was Louis — a red weal across his face, his arm raised to protect his head. Close on him, his eyes flaming, his cane quivering in the air, pressed Messer Blondel. In their presence he aimed another blow at the lad: but the blow fell short, and before he could raise his stick a third time the astonished looks of the three in the room reminded him where he was, and in a measure sobered him. But he was still unable to articulate: and the poor smarting wretch cowering behind the magistrates was not more deeply or more visibly moved.
“Steady, steady, Messer Blondel!” Fabri said. “I fear something untoward has happened. What is it?” And he put himself more decidedly between them.
“He has ruined us!”
“Not that, I hope?”
“Ruined us! Ruined us!” Blondel panted, his rage almost choking him. “He had it in his hands and let it go. He let it go!”
“That which you — —”
“That which I” — a pause— “commissioned him to get.”
“But you did not! Oh, worshipful gentlemen,” Gentilis wailed, turning to them, “indeed, he did not tell me to bring aught but papers! I swear he did not.”
“Whatever was there, I said! Whatever was there!” the Syndic screamed.
“No, worshipful sir!” amid a storm of sobs. “No, no! Indeed no! And how was I to know? There was naught but that in the box, and who would think treason lay in a — —”
“Mischief lay in it!”
“In a bottle!”
“And treason,” Blondel thundered, drowning his last word, “for aught you knew! Who are you to judge where treason lies, or may lie? Oh, pig, dog, fool,” he continued, carried away by a fresh paroxysm of rage, at the thought that he had had it in his grasp and let it go! “If I could score your back!” And he brandished his cane.
“You have scored his face pretty fairly,” Baudichon muttered. “To score his back too — —”
“Were nothing for the offence! Nothing! As you would say if you knew it,” Blondel panted.
“Indeed?”
“Ay.”
“Then I would like to know it. What is it he has done?”
“He has left undone that which he was ordered to do,” Blondel answered more soberly than he had yet spoken. He had recovered something of his power to reason. “That is what he has done. But for his default we should at this moment be in a position to seize Basterga.”
“Ay?”
“Ay, and to seize him with proof of his guilt! Proof and to spare.”
“But I could not know,” Louis whimpered. “Worshipful gentlemen, I could not know. I could not know what it was you wanted.”
“I told you to bring the contents of the box.”
“Letters, ay! Letters, worthy sir, but not — —”
“Silence, and go into that room!” Blondel pointed with a shaking finger to a small inner serving-room at the end of the parlour. “Go!” he repeated peremptorily, “and stay there until I come to you.”
Then, but not until the lad had taken his tear-bedabbled face into the closet and had closed the door behind him, the Syndic turned to the three. “I ask your pardon,” he said, making no attempt to disguise the agitation which still moved him. “But it was enough, it was more than enough, to try me.” He paused and wiped his brow, on which the sweat stood in beads. “He had under his hand the papers,” looking at them a little askance as if he doubted whether the explanation would pass, “that we need! The papers that would convict Basterga. And because they did not wear the appearance he expected — because they were disguised, you understand — they were in a bottle in fact — and were not precisely what he expected — —”
“He left them?”
“He left them.” There was something like a tear, a leaden drop, in the corner of the Fourth Syndic’s eye.
“Still if he had access to them once,” Petitot suggested briskly, “what has been done once may be done twice. He may gain access to them again. Why not?”
“He may, but he may not. Still, I should have thought of that and — and made allowance,” Blondel answered with a fair show of candour. “But too often an occasion let slip does not return, as you well know. The least disorder in the box he searched may put Basterga on the alert, and wreck my plans.”
They did not answer. They felt one and all, Petitot and Baudichon no less than Fabri, that they had done this man an injustice. His passion, his chagrin, his singleness of aim, the depth of his disappointment, disarmed even those who were in the daily habit of differing from him. Was this — this the man whom they had secretly accused of lukewarmness? And to whom they had hesitated to entrust the safety of the city? They had done him wrong. They had not credited him with a tithe of the feeling, the single-mindedness, the patriotism which it was plain he possessed.
They stood silent, while Blondel, aware of the precipice, to the verge of which his improvident passion had drawn him, watched them out of the corner of his eye, uncertain how far their comprehension of the scene had gone. He trembled to think how nearly he had betrayed his secret; and took the more shame to himself, inasmuch as in cooler blood he saw the lad’s error to be far from irremediable. As Petitot said, that which could be done so easily and quickly could be done a second time. If only he had not struck the lad! If only he had commanded himself, and spoken him fairly and sent him back! Almost by this time the remedium might be here. Ay, here, in the palm of his hand! The reflection stabbed Blondel so poignantly, the sense of his folly went so deep, he groaned aloud.
That groan fairly won over Baudichon, who was by nature of a kind heart. “Tut, tut,” he said; “you must not take it to heart, Messer Blondel. Try again.”
“Unless, indeed,” Petitot murmured, but with respect, “Messer Blondel knows the mistake to be fraught with consequences more grave than we suppose.”
The Fourth Syndic smiled awry: that was precisely what he did know. But “No,” he said, “the thing can be cured. I am sorry I lost my temper. Not a moment must be wasted, however. I will see this young man: if he raises any difficulty, I have still another agent whom I can employ. And by to-morrow at latest — —”
“You may still have the thing in your hands.”
“I think so. I certainly think so.”
“Good. Then till to-morrow,” Fabri answered, as he took his cap from the table and with the others turned towards the door. “Good luck, Messer Blondel. We are reassured. We feel that our interests are in good hands.”
“Yes,” said Petitot almost warmly. “Still, caution, caution! Messer Blondel. One bad man within the gates — —”
“May be hung!” Blondel cried gaily.
“Ay, may be! But unhung is a graver foe than five hundred men without! It is that I would have you bear in mind.”
“I will bear it in mind,” the Fourth Syndic answered. “And when I can hang him,” with a vindictive look, “be sure I will — and high as Haman!”
He attended them with solicitude to the door, being set by what had happened a little more upon his behaviour. That done and the outer door closed upon them, he returned to the parlour, but did not at once seek the young man, upon whom he had taken the precaution of turning the key.
Instead he stood a while, pondering with a pale face; a haggard, paler replica he seemed of the stiff, hard portrait on the panel over the mantel. He was wondering why he had let himself go so foolishly; he was recognising with a sinking heart that it was to his illness he owed it that he had so frequently of late lost control of himself.
For a man to discover that the power of self-mastery is passing from him is only a degree less appalling than the consciousness of insanity itself; and Blondel cowered, trembling under the thought. If aught could strengthen his purpose it was th
e suspicion that the insidious disease from which he suffered was already sapping the outworks of that mind on whose clever combinations he depended for his one chance of cure.
Yet while the thought strengthened, it terrified him. “I must make no second mistake — no second mistake!” he muttered, his eyes on the door of the serving-room. “No second mistake!” And he waited a while considering the matter in all its aspects. Should he tell Louis more than he had told him already? It seemed needless. To send the lad with curt, stern words to fetch that which he had omitted to bring — this seemed the more straight-forward way: and the more certain, too, since the lad had now seen the other magistrates, and could have no doubt of their concurrence or of the importance of the task entrusted to him. Blondel decided on that course, and advancing to the door he opened it and called to his prisoner to come out.
To his credit be it said the sight of the lad’s wealed face gave the Syndic something of a shock. He was soon to be more gravely shaken. Instigated partly by curiosity, partly by the desire to fix Louis’ scared faculties, he began by asking what was the aspect of the phial which the lad had omitted to bring. “What was its colour and size, and how full was it?” he proceeded, striving to speak gently and to make allowance for the cowering weakness of the youth before him. “Do you hear?” he urged. “Of what shape was it? You can tell that at least. You handled it, I suppose? You took it out of the metal box?”
Louis burst into tears.
Blondel had much ado — for it was true, he had small command of himself — not to strike the lad again. Instead, “Fool,” he said, “what do your tears help you or advance me? Speak, I tell you, and answer my question! What was the appearance of this flask or bottle, or what it was — that you left there?”
The lad sank to his knees. Fear and pain had robbed him of the petty cunning he possessed. He no longer knew what to tell nor what to withhold. And in a breath the truth was out. “Don’t strike me!” he wailed, guarding his smarting face with his arm. “And I’ll tell you all! I will indeed!”
The Syndic knew then that there was more to learn. “All?” he repeated, aghast.
“Ay, the truth. All the truth,” Louis moaned. “I didn’t see it. I did not go to it! I dared not! I swear I dared not.’”
“You did not see it?” the Syndic said slowly. “The phial? You did not see the phial?”
“No.”
This time Messer Blondel did not strike. He leant heavily upon the table; his face, which a moment before had been swollen with impatience, turned a sickly white. “You — you didn’t see it?” he muttered — his tone had sunk to a whisper. “You didn’t see it? Then all you told me was a lie? There was nothing — no bottle in the box? But how, then, did you know anything of a bottle? Did he” — with a sharp spasm of pain— “send you here to tell me this?”
“No, no! She told me. She looked — for me in the box.”
“Who?”
“Anne. Anne Royaume! I was afraid,” the lad continued, speaking with a little more confidence, as he saw that the Syndic made no movement to strike him, “and she said that she would look for me. She could go to his room, and run little risk. But if he had caught me there he would have killed me! Indeed he would!” Louis repeated desperately, as he read the storm-signs that began to darken the Syndic’s face.
“You told her then?”
“I could not do it myself! I could not indeed.”
He cowered lower; but he fared better than he expected. The Syndic drew a long fluttering breath, a breath of returning life, of returning hope. The colour, too, began to come back to his cheeks. After all, it might have been worse. He had thought it worse. He had thought himself discovered, tricked, discomfited by the man against whom he had pitted his wits, with his life for stake. Whereas — it seemed a small thing in comparison — this meant only the inclusion of one more in the secret, the running of one more risk, the hazarding another tongue. And the lad had not been so unwise. She had easier access to the room than he, and ran less risk of suspicion or detection. Why not employ her in place of the lad?
The youth grovelling before him wondered to see him calm, and plucking up spirit stood upright. “You must go back to her, and ask her to get it for you,” Blondel said firmly. “You can be back within the half-hour, bringing it.”
Louis began to shrink. His eyes sank. “She will not give it me,” he muttered.
“No?” Blondel, as he repeated the word, wondered at his own moderation. But the shock had been heavy; he felt the effect of it. He was languid, almost half-hearted. Moreover, a new idea had taken root in his mind. “You can try her,” he said.
“I can try her, but she will not give it me,” Louis repeated with a new obstinacy. As the Syndic grew mild he grew sullen. The change was in the other, not in himself. Subtly he knew that the Syndic was no longer in the mood to strike.
Blondel ruminated. It might be better, it might even be safer, if he saw the girl himself. The story — of treason and a bottle — which had imposed on his colleagues might not move her much. It might be wiser to attack her on other grounds, grounds on which women lay more open. And self-pity whispered with a tear that the truth, than which he could conceive nothing more moving, nothing more sublimely sad, might go farther with a woman than bribes or threats or the most skilful inventions. He made up his mind. He would tell the truth, or something like it, something as like it as he dared tell her.
“Very well,” he said, “you can go! But be silent! A word to him — I shall learn it sooner or later — and you perish on the wheel! You can go now. I shall put the matter in other hands.”
CHAPTER XIII.
A MYSTERY SOLVED.
Whether Basterga, seeing that Claude was less pliant than he had looked to find him, shunned occasion of collision with him, or the Paduan being in better spirits was less prone to fall foul of his companions, certain it is that life for a time after the outbreak at supper ran more quietly in the house in the Corraterie. Claude’s gloomy face — he had not forgiven — bade beware of him; and little save on the subject of Louis’ disfigured cheek — of which the most pointed questions could extract no explanation — passed among them at table. But outward peace was preserved and a show of ease. Grio’s brutal nature broke out once or twice when he had had wine; but discouraged by Basterga, he subsided quickly. And Louis, starting at a voice and trembling at a knock, with the fear of the Syndic always upon him, showed a nervousness which more than once drew the Italian’s eye to him. But on the whole a calm prevailed; a stranger entering at noon or during the evening meal might have deemed the party ill-assorted and silent, but lacking neither in amity nor ease.
Meantime, under cover of this calm, destined to be short-lived and holding in suspense the makings of a storm of no mean violence, two persons were drawing nearer to one another. A confidence, even a confidence not perfect, is a tie above most. Nor does love play at any time a higher part than when it repeats “I do not understand — I trust”. By the common light of day, which showed Anne moving to and fro about her household tasks, at once the minister and the providence of the home, the dark suspicion that had for a moment — a moment only! — mastered Claude’s judgment, lost shape and reality. It was impossible to see her bending over the hearth, or arranging her mother’s simple meal, it was impossible to witness her patience, her industry, her deftness, to behold her, ever gentle yet supporting with a man’s fortitude the trials of her position, trials of the bitterness of which she had given him proof — it was impossible, in a word, to watch her in her daily life, without perceiving the wickedness as well as the folly of the thought which had possessed him.
True, the more he saw of her the graver seemed the mystery; and the more deeply he wondered. But he no longer dreaded the answer to the riddle; nor did he fear to meet at some turn or corner a Megæra head that should freeze his soul. Wickedness there might be, cruelty there might be, and shame; but the blood ran too briskly in his veins and he had looked too often into the gi
rl’s candid eyes — reading something there which had not been there formerly — to fear to find either at her door.
He had taken to coming to the living-room a little before nightfall; there he would seat himself beside the hearth while she prepared the evening meal. The glow of the wood-fire, reflected in rows of burnished pewters, or given back by the night-backed casements, the savour of the coming meal, the bubbling of the black pot between which and the table her nimble feet carried her a dozen times in as many minutes, the pleasant, homely room with its touches of refinement and its winter comfort, these were excuses enough had he not brought the book which lay unheeded on his knee.
But in truth he offered her no excuse. With scarce a word an understanding had grown up between them that not a million words could have made more clear. Each played the appropriated part. He looked and she bore the look, and if she blushed the fire was warrant, and if he stared it was the blind man’s hour between day and night, and why should he not sit idle as well as another? Soon there was not a turn of her head or a line of her figure that he did not know; not a trick of her walk, not a pose of her hand as she waited for a pot to boil that he could not see in the dark; not a gleam from her hair as she stooped to the blaze, nor a turn of her wrist as she shielded her face that was not as familiar to him as if he had known her from childhood.
In these hours she let the mask fall. The apathy, which had been the least natural as it had been the most common garb of her young face, and which had grown to be the cover and veil of her feelings, dropped from her. Seated in the shadow, while she moved, now in the glow of the burning embers, now obscured, he read her mind without disguise — save in one dark nook — watched unrebuked the eye fall and the lip tremble, or in rarer moments saw the shy smile dimple the corner of her cheek. Not seldom she stood before him sad: sad without disguise, her bowed head and drooping shoulders the proof of gloomy thoughts, that strayed, he fancied, far from her work or her companion. And sometimes a tear fell and she wiped it away, making no attempt to hide it; and sometimes she would shiver and sigh as if in pain or fear.
Complete Works of Stanley J Weyman Page 415