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Complete Works of Stanley J Weyman

Page 448

by Stanley J Weyman


  Bound to his saddle, he could not save himself, but fortunately the soil was soft, the leg that was under the horse was not broken, and for a moment the animal made no effort to rise. Villeneuve, despair in his heart, and the sweat running down his face, had no power to rise. Nor would the power have availed him, for before he could have gone a dozen paces through the tangle of thorns, the troopers, some on horseback, and some on foot, were on him.

  The man from whom he had escaped was a couple of paces in front of the others. He had snatched up a stick, and black with rage, raised it to strike the prostrate horse. Had the blow fallen and the horse struggled to his feet, Villeneuve must have been trampled. Fortunately Baptist was in time to catch the man’s arm and stay the blow. “Fool!” he said. “Do you want to kill the man?”

  “Ay, by Heaven!” the fellow shrieked. “He nearly killed me!”

  “Well, you’ll not do it!” Baptist retorted, and he pushed him back. “Do you hear? I have no mind to account for his loss to the Captain, if you have.”

  “Do you think that I am going to be pitched on my head by a Jack-a-dandy like that,” the fellow snarled, “and do naught? And where is my share?”

  The grizzled man stooped, and, while one of his comrades held down the horse’s head, untied Villeneuve’s feet, and drew him from under the beast. “Share?” he answered with a sneer as he rose. “What time had we to find the thing?”

  “You have not found it?”

  “No — thanks to you! What kind of a guard do you call yourself?” Baptist continued ferociously. “By this time, had you done your part, we had done ours! If there is to be any accounting, you’ll account to us!”

  “Ay,” the others cried, “Baptist is right, my lad!”

  The man, seeing himself outnumbered, cast a devilish look at them. He turned on his heel. When he was gone a couple of paces, “Very good,” he said over his shoulder, “but when I get you alone — —”

  “You!” Baptist roared, and took three strides towards him. “You, when you get me alone! Stand to me now, then, and let them see what you will do!”

  But the malcontent, with the same look of hate, continued to retreat. Baptist jeered. “That is better!” he said. “But we knew what you were before! Now, lads, to horse, we’ve lost time enough!”

  Flinging a mocking laugh after the craven the troopers turned. But to meet with a surprise. By their horses’ heads stood a strange man smiling at them. “I arrest all here!” he said quietly. He had nothing but a riding switch in his hand, and Villeneuve’s eyes opened wide as he recognised in him the guest of the Tower Chamber. “In the King’s name, lay down your arms!”

  They stared at him as if he had fallen from the skies. Even Baptist lost the golden moment, and, in place of flinging himself upon the stranger, repeated, “Lay down our arms? Who, in the name of thunder, are you?”

  “No matter!” the other answered. “You are surrounded, my man. See! And see!” He pointed in two directions with his switch.

  Baptist glared through the bushes, and saw eight or ten horsemen posted along the hill-side above him. He looked across the brook, and there also were two or three stalwart figures, seated motionless in their saddles.

  The others looked helplessly to Baptist. “Understand,” he said, with uneasy defiance. “You will answer for this. We are the Captain of Vlaye’s men!”

  “I know naught of the Captain of Vlaye,” was the stern reply. “Surrender, and your lives shall be spared. Resist, and your blood be on your own heads!”

  Baptist counted heads rapidly, and saw that he was outnumbered. He gave the word, and after one fashion or another, some recklessly, some stolidly, the men threw down their arms. “Only — you will answer for this!” Baptist repeated.

  “I shall answer for it,” des Ageaux replied gravely. “In the meantime I desire a word with your prisoner. M. de Villeneuve, this way if you please.”

  He was proceeding to lead Charles a little apart. But his back had not been turned three seconds when a thing happened. The man who had slunk away before Baptist’s challenge had got to horse unnoticed. At a little distance from the others, he had not surrendered his arms. Whether he could not from where he was see the horsemen who guarded the further side of the brook, and so thought escape in that direction open, or he could not resist the temptation to wreak his spite on Baptist at all risks, he chose this moment to ride up behind him, draw a pistol from the holster, and fire it into the unfortunate man’s back. Then with a yell that echoed his victim’s death-cry he crashed through the undergrowth in the direction of the brook.

  But already, “Seize him! Seize him!” rose above the wood in a dozen voices. “On your life, seize him!”

  The order was executed almost as soon as uttered. As the horse leaping the water alighted on the lower bank, it swerved to avoid a trooper who barred the way. The turn surprised the rider; he lost his balance. Before he could get back into his seat, a trooper knocked him from the saddle with the flat of his sword. In a trice he was seized, disarmed, and dragged across the brook.

  But by that time Baptist, with three slugs under his shoulder-blade, lay still among the moss and briars, the hand that had beaten time to a thousand camp-ditties in a thousand quarters from Fontarabie to Flanders flung nerveless beside a wood-wren’s nest. As they gathered round him Charles, who had never seen a violent death, gazed on the limp form with a pale face, questioning, with that wonder which the thoughtful of all times have felt, whither the mind that a minute before looked from those sightless eyes had taken its flight.

  He was roused by the Lieutenant’s voice, speaking in tones measured and stern as fate. “Let him have five minutes,” he said, “and then — that tree will be best!”

  They began to drag the wretch, now pale as ashes, in the direction indicated. Half way to the tree the man began to struggle, breaking into piercing shrieks that he was Vlaye’s man, that they had no right ——

  “Stay, right he shall have!” des Ageaux cried solemnly. “He is judged and doomed by me, Governor of Périgord, for murder in Curia. In the King’s name! Now take him!”

  The wretch was dragged off, his judge to all appearance deaf to his cries. But Charles could close neither his ears nor his heart. The man had earned his doom richly. But to stand by while a fellow-creature, vainly shrieking for mercy, mercy, was strangled within his hearing, turned him sick and faint.

  Des Ageaux read his thoughts. “To spare here were to kill there,” he said coldly. “Learn, my friend, that to rule men is no work for a soft heart or a gentle hand. But you are shaken. Come this way,” he continued in a different tone; “you will be the better for some wine.” He took out a flask and gave it to Charles, who, excessively thirsty now he thought of it, drank greedily. “That is better,” des Ageaux went on, seeing the colour return to his cheeks. “Now I wish for information. Where are the nearest Crocans?”

  The young man’s face fell. “The nearest Crocans?” he muttered mechanically.

  “Yes.”

  “I — —”

  “Are there any within three hours’ ride of us?”

  But Charles had by this time pulled himself together. He held out his wrists. “I am your prisoner,” he said. “Call up your men and bind me. You can do with me as you please. But I am a Villeneuve, and I do not betray.”

  “Not even — —”

  “You saw me turn pale?” the young man continued. “Believe me, I can bear to go to the tree better than to see another dragged there!”

  Des Ageaux smiled. “Nay, but you mistake me, M. de Villenueve,” he said. “I ask you to betray no one. It is I who wish to enlist with you.”

  “With us?” Charles exclaimed. And he stared in bewilderment.

  “With you. In fact you see before you,” des Ageaux continued, his eyes twinkling, his hand stroking his short beard, “a Crocan. Frankly, and to be quite plain, I want their help; a little later my help may save them. They fear an attack by the Captain of Vlaye? I am prepared to ai
d them against him. Afterwards — —”

  “Ay, afterwards.”

  “If they will hear reason, what can be done in their behalf I will do! But there must be no Jacquerie, no burning, and no plundering. In a word,” with a flitting smile, “it is now for the Crocans to say whether the Captain of Vlaye shall earn the King’s pardon by quelling them — or they by quelling him.”

  “But you are the Governor of Périgord?” Charles exclaimed.

  “I am the King’s Lieutenant in Périgord, which is the same thing.”

  “And in this business?”

  “I am in the position of the finger which is set between the door and the jamb! But no matter for that, you will not understand. Only do you tell me where these Crocans lie, and we will visit them if it can be done before night. To-night I must be back” — with a peculiar look— “for I have other business.”

  Charles told him, and with joy. Ay, with joy. As a sail to the raft-borne seaman awash in the Biscayan Gulf, or a fountain to the parched wanderer in La Mancha, this and more to him was the prospect suddenly opened before his eyes. To be snatched at a word from the false position in which he had placed himself, and from which naught short of a miracle could save him! To find for ally, instead of the broken farmers and ruined clowns, the governor of a great province! To be free to carve his fortune with his right hand where he would! These, indeed, were blessings that a minute before had seemed as far from him as home from the seaman who feels his craft settling down in a shoreless water.

  CHAPTER X.

  MIDNIGHT ALARMS.

  Bonne’s first thought when her brother darted to the stranger’s rescue was to seek aid from Ampoule, who, it will be remembered, sat drinking beside the fire in the outer hall. But the man’s coarse address, and the nature of his employment at the moment, checked the impulse; and the girl returned to the window, and, flattening her face against the panes, sought to learn what fortune her brother had. The fire, still burning high, cast its light as far as the gateway. But the tower to which Roger had hastened, being in a line with the window, was not visible, and though Bonne pressed her face as closely as possible against the panes, she could discover nothing. Yet her brother did not come back. The murmur of jeers and laughter persisted, but he did not appear.

  She turned at last, impelled to seek aid from some one. But at sight of the room, womanish panic took her by the throat, and the hysterical fit almost overcame her. For what help, what hope of help, lay in any of those whom she saw round her? The Countess indeed had crept to her side, and cast her arm about her, but she was a child, and ashake already. For the others, the Vicomte sat sunk in lethargy, heeding no one, ignorant apparently that his son had left the room; and Fulbert, whose wits had exhausted themselves in the effort that had saved his mistress, stood faithful indeed, but brainless, dull, dumb. Only Solomon, who leant against the wall beside the door, his old face gloomy, his eyebrows knit, only to him could she look for a spark of comfort or suggestion. He, it was clear, appreciated the crisis, for he was listening intently, his head inclined, his hand on a weapon. But he was old, and there was not a man of Vlaye’s troopers who was not more than a match for him foot to foot.

  Still, he was her only hope, if her brother did not return. And she turned again to the casement, and, scarcely breathing, listened with a keenness of anxiety almost indescribable. If only Roger would return! Roger, who had seemed so weak a prop a few minutes before, and who, now that she had lost him, seemed everything! But the voices of Ampoule and his companion disputing in the outer hall rose louder, drowning more distant sounds; and the minutes were passing. And still Roger did not return.

  Then a thought came to her; or rather two thoughts. The first was that all now hung on her — and that steadied her. The second, that he whose grasp had brought the blood to her cheeks that morning had bidden her hold out to the last, fight to the last, play the man to the last; and this moved her to action. Better do anything than succumb like her father. She flew to Solomon, dragging the Countess with her.

  “We are not safe here,” she said. “These men are drinking. They have kept Roger, and that bodes us no good. Were it not better to go upstairs to the Tower Room?”

  “It were the best course,” the old man answered slowly, with his eyes on the Vicomte. “Out and away the best course, mademoiselle. Fulbert and I could guard the stairs awhile at any rate.”

  “Then let us go!”

  But he looked at the Vicomte. “If my lord says so,” he answered. All his life the Vicomte’s word had been his law.

  In a moment she was at her father’s side. “The Countess will be safer upstairs, sir,” she said, speaking with a boldness that surprised herself — but who could long remain in fear of the failing old man whose leaden eyes met hers with scarce a gleam of meaning? “The Countess is frightened here, sir,” she continued. “If you would guard us upstairs — —”

  “Have done!” he struck at her with feeble passion, and waved her off. “Let me alone.”

  “But — —”

  “Peace, girl, I say!” he repeated irascibly. “Who are you to fix comings and goings? Get to your stool and your needle. God knows,” in a burst of childish petulance, “what the world is coming to — when children order their elders! But since — there, begone! Begone!”

  She wrung her hands in despair. Outside, fuel was beginning to fail, the fire was burning low, the court growing dark. Within, the two guttering candles showed only the Vicomte’s figure sunk low in his chair, and here and there a pale face projected from the shadow. But the noise of riot and disorder did not slacken, rather it grew more menacing; and what was she to do? Desperate, she returned to the attack.

  “Sir,” she said, “there is no one to escort the Countess of Rochechouart to her room. She wishes to retire, and it is late.”

  He got abruptly to his feet, and looked about him with something of his ordinary air. “Where is the Countess?” he asked peevishly. And then addressing Solomon, “Take candles! Take candles!” he continued. “And you, sirrah, light the way! Don’t you know your duty? The Countess to her room! Mordieu, girl, we are fallen low indeed if we don’t know how to behave to our guests. Madame — or, to be sure, Mademoiselle la Comtesse,” with a puzzled look at the shrinking child, “let me have the honour. Things are out of gear to-night, and we must do the best we can. But to-morrow — to-morrow all shall be in order.”

  He marshalled Solomon out and followed, bowing the young Countess before him. Bonne overjoyed went next; Fulbert, like a patient dog, brought up the rear. All was not done yet, however, as Bonne knew; and she nerved herself for the effort. On the landing her father would have stopped, but she passed him lightly and opened the door that led by way of the roof, to the Tower Chamber. “This way!” she muttered to Solomon, as he hesitated. “The Countess is timid to-night, sir,” she continued aloud, “and craves leave to lie in the Tower as the room is empty.”

  He frowned. “Still this silliness!” he exclaimed, and then passing his hand over his brow, “There was something said about it, I remember. But I thought I — —”

  “Gave permission, sir? Yes!” Bonne murmured, pushing the girl steadily forward. “Solomon, do you hear? Light along the leads!”

  Great as was his fear of the Vicomte, the old porter succumbed to her will, and all were on the point of following, when a door on the landing opened, and the Abbess appeared on the threshold of her room. She held a light above her head, and with a sneer on her handsome face, contemplated the group.

  “What is this?” she asked. And then, gathering their intention from their looks — possibly she had had some inkling of it, “You do not mean to tell me,” she continued, partly in temper, and partly in feigned surprise, “that a half-dozen of roystering troopers, sir, are driving the Vicomte de Villeneuve from his own chamber? To take refuge among the owls and bats? For shame, sir, for shame!”

  Bonne tried to stay her by a gesture.

  In vain. “A fine tale they will have
to tell to-morrow!” the elder sister continued in tones of savage raillery. “M. de Villeneuve afraid of a handful of rascals, whom their master keeps within bounds with a stick! The Lord of Villeneuve bearded in his own house by a scum of riders!”

  “Peace, daughter!” the Vicomte cried; he even raised his hand in anger. “You lie! It is not I” — his head trembling— “I indeed, but the Countess! You don’t see her. The Countess of Rochechouart — —”

  “Oh!” said the Abbess. And, the light she held shining on her arrogant beauty, she swept a great curtsy, as if she had not seen her intended guest before; as if her scornful eyes had not from the first descried the girl; as if the small beginnings of hate, hate that scarcely knew itself, were not already in her breast. “Oh,” she said again, “it is the Countess of Rochechouart, is it, who is afraid?”

  “And with reason,” Bonne answered, intervening hurriedly, but in a low voice. “The men are drinking and growing violent. Roger went to them some time ago, and has not come back.”

  “Roger!” the Abbess ejaculated, shrugging her shoulders. “Did you think that he could do anything?”

  But she who of all those present seemed least likely to interfere spoke up at that. Whether the young Countess resented — Heaven knows why she should — the sneer at Roger’s expense, or only the contempt of herself which the Abbess’s manner expressed, she plucked up a spirit. After all she was not only a Rochechouart, but she was a woman; and there is in all women, even the meekest, a spark of temper that, being fanned by one of their own sex, blazes up. “It is true,” she replied coldly, her face faintly pink. “It is I who am afraid, mademoiselle. But it is not of the men downstairs. It is their master whom I fear.”

  “You fear M. de Vlaye?” the Abbess repeated. And she laughed aloud, a little over merrily, at the absurdity of the notion. “You — fear M. de Vlaye? Why? If I may venture to ask?”

 

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