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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Suitors of Yvonne, by Raphael Sabatini
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Suitors of Yvonne
+
+Author: Raphael Sabatini
+
+Posting Date: February 25, 2009 [EBook #3430]
+Release Date: September, 2002
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SUITORS OF YVONNE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Stuart Middleton
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SUITORS OF YVONNE
+
+Being a Portion of the Memoirs of the Sieur Gaston de Luynes
+
+
+By Rafael Sabatini
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+
+ I. OF HOW A BOY DRANK TOO MUCH WINE, AND WHAT CAME OF IT
+
+ II. THE FRUIT OF INDISCRETION
+
+ III. THE FIGHT IN THE HORSE-MARKET
+
+ IV. FAIR RESCUERS
+
+ V. MAZARIN, THE MATCH-MAKER
+
+ VI. OF HOW ANDREA BECAME LOVE­SICK
+
+ VII. THE CHÂTEAU DR CANAPLES
+
+ VIII. THE FORESHADOW OF DISASTER
+
+ IX. OF HOW A WHIP PROVED A BETTER ARGUMENT THAN A TONGUE
+
+ X. THE CONSCIENCE OF MALPERTUIS
+
+ XI. OF A WOMAN'S OBSTINACY
+
+ XII. THE RESCUE
+
+ XIII. THE HAND OF YVONNE
+
+ XIV. OF WHAT BEFELL AT REAUX
+
+ XV. OF MY RESURRECTION
+
+ XVI. THE WAY OF WOMAN
+
+ XVII. FATHER AND SON
+
+ XVIII. OF HOW I LEFT CANAPLES
+
+ XIX. OF MY RETURN TO PARIS
+
+ XX. OF HOW THE CHEVALIER DE CANAPLES BECAME A FRONDEUR
+
+ XXI. OF THE BARGAIN THAT ST. AUBAN DROVE WITH MY LORD CARDINAL
+
+ XXII. OF MY SECOND JOURNEY TO CANAPLES
+
+ XXIII. OF HOW ST. AUBAN CAME TO BLOIS
+
+ XXIV. OF THE PASSING OF ST. AUBAN
+
+ XXV. PLAY-ACTING
+
+ XXVI. REPARATION
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. OF HOW A BOY DRANK TOO MUCH WINE, AND WHAT CAME OF IT
+
+
+Andrea de Mancini sprawled, ingloriously drunk, upon the floor. His legs
+were thrust under the table, and his head rested against the chair from
+which he had slipped; his long black hair was tossed and dishevelled;
+his handsome, boyish face flushed and garbed in the vacant expression of
+idiocy.
+
+"I beg a thousand pardons, M. de Luynes," quoth he in the thick,
+monotonous voice of a man whose brain but ill controls his tongue,--"I
+beg a thousand pardons for the unseemly poverty of our repast. 'T is
+no fault of mine. My Lord Cardinal keeps a most unworthy table for
+me. Faugh! Uncle Giulio is a Hebrew--if not by birth, by instinct. He
+carries his purse-strings in a knot which it would break his heart to
+unfasten. But there! some day my Lord Cardinal will go to heaven--to the
+lap of Abraham. I shall be rich then, vastly rich, and I shall bid
+you to a banquet worthy of your most noble blood. The Cardinal's
+health--perdition have him for the niggardliest rogue unhung!"
+
+I pushed back my chair and rose. The conversation was taking a turn that
+was too unhealthy to be pursued within the walls of the Palais Mazarin,
+where there existed, albeit the law books made no reference to it, the
+heinous crime of lèse-Eminence--a crime for which more men had been
+broken than it pleases me to dwell on.
+
+"Your table, Master Andrea, needs no apology," I answered carelessly.
+"Your wine, for instance, is beyond praise."
+
+"Ah, yes! The wine! But, ciel! Monsieur," he ejaculated, for a moment
+opening wide his heavy eyelids, "do you believe 't was Mazarin provided
+it? Pooh! 'T was a present made me by M. de la Motte, who seeks my
+interest with my Lord Cardinal to obtain for him an appointment in
+his Eminence's household, and thus thinks to earn my good will. He's
+a pestilent creature, this la Motte," he added, with a hiccough,--"a
+pestilent creature; but, Sangdieu! his wine is good, and I'll speak to
+my uncle. Help me up, De Luynes. Help me up, I say; I would drink the
+health of this provider of wines."
+
+I hurried forward, but he had struggled up unaided, and stood swaying
+with one hand on the table and the other on the back of his chair. In
+vain did I remonstrate with him that already he had drunk overmuch.
+
+"'T is a lie!" he shouted. "May not a gentleman sit upon the floor from
+choice?"
+
+To emphasise his protestation he imprudently withdrew his hand from the
+chair and struck at the air with his open palm. That gesture cost him
+his balance. He staggered, toppled backward, and clutched madly at the
+tablecloth as he fell, dragging glasses, bottles, dishes, tapers, and a
+score of other things besides, with a deafening crash on to the floor.
+
+Then, as I stood aghast and alarmed, wondering who might have overheard
+the thunder of his fall, the fool sat up amidst the ruins, and filled
+the room with his shrieks of drunken laughter.
+
+"Silence, boy!" I thundered, springing towards him. "Silence! or we
+shall have the whole house about our ears."
+
+And truly were my fears well grounded, for, before I could assist him
+to rise, I heard the door behind me open. Apprehensively I turned, and
+sickened to see that that which I had dreaded most was come to pass. A
+tall, imposing figure in scarlet robes stood erect and scowling on the
+threshold, and behind him his valet, Bernouin, bearing a lighted taper.
+
+Mancini's laugh faded into a tremulous cackle, then died out, and with
+gaping mouth and glassy eyes he sat there staring at his uncle.
+
+Thus we stayed in silence while a man might count mayhap a dozen; then
+the Cardinal's voice rang harsh and full of anger.
+
+"'T is thus that you fulfil your trust, M. de Luynes!" he said.
+
+"Your Eminence--" I began, scarce knowing what I should say, when he cut
+me short.
+
+"I will deal with you presently and elsewhere." He stepped up to Andrea,
+and surveyed him for a moment in disgust. "Get up, sir!" he commanded.
+"Get up!"
+
+The lad sought to obey him with an alacrity that merited a kinder fate.
+Had he been in less haste perchance he had been more successful. As it
+was, he had got no farther than his knees when his right leg slid from
+under him, and he fell prone among the shattered tableware, mumbling
+curses and apologies in a breath.
+
+Mazarin stood gazing at him with an eye that was eloquent in scorn, then
+bending down he spoke quickly to him in Italian. What he said I know
+not, being ignorant of their mother tongue; but from the fierceness of
+his utterance I'll wager my soul 't was nothing sweet to listen to. When
+he had done with him, he turned to his valet.
+
+"Bernouin," said he, "summon M. de Mancini's servant and assist him to
+get my nephew to bed. M. de Luynes, be good enough to take Bernouin's
+taper and light me back to my apartments."
+
+Unsavoury as was the task, I had no choice but to obey, and to stalk on
+in front of him, candle in hand, like an acolyte at Notre Dame, and in
+my heart the profound conviction that I was about to have a bad quarter
+of an hour with his Eminence. Nor was I wrong; for no sooner had we
+reached his cabinet and the door had been closed than he turned upon me
+the full measure of his wrath.
+
+"You miserable fool!" he snarled. "Did you think to trifle with the
+trust which in a misguided moment I placed in you? Think you that, when
+a week ago I saved you from starvation to clothe and feed you and give
+you a lieutenancy in my guards, I should endure so foul an abuse as
+this? Think you that I entrusted M. de Mancini's training in arms to you
+so that you might lead him into the dissolute habits which have dragged
+you down to what you are--to what you were before I rescued you--to what
+you will be to-morrow when I shall have again abandoned you?"
+
+"Hear me, your Eminence!" I cried indignantly. "'T is no fault of mine.
+Some fool hath sent M. de Mancini a basket of wine and--"
+
+"And you showed him how to abuse it," he broke in harshly. "You have
+taught the boy to become a sot; in time, were he to remain under your
+guidance, I make no doubt but that he would become a gamester and a
+duellist as well. I was mad, perchance, to give him into your care; but
+I have the good fortune to be still in time, before the mischief has
+sunk farther, to withdraw him from it, and to cast you back into the
+kennel from which I picked you."
+
+"Your Eminence does not mean--"
+
+"As God lives I do!" he cried. "You shall quit the Palais Royal this
+very night, M. de Luynes, and if ever I find you unbidden within half a
+mile of it, I will do that which out of a misguided sense of compassion
+I do not do now--I will have you flung into an oubliette of the
+Bastille, where better men than you have rotted before to-day. Per Dio!
+do you think that I am to be fooled by such a thing as you?"
+
+"Does your Eminence dismiss me?" I cried aghast, and scarce crediting
+that such was indeed the extreme measure upon which he had determined.
+
+"Have I not been plain enough?" he answered with a snarl.
+
+I realised to the full my unenviable position, and with the realisation
+of it there overcame me the recklessness of him who has played his last
+stake at the tables and lost. That recklessness it was that caused me to
+shrug my shoulders with a laugh. I was a soldier of fortune--or should I
+say a soldier of misfortune?--as rich in vice as I was poor in virtue;
+a man who lived by the steel and parried the blows that came as best he
+might, or parried them not at all--but never quailed.
+
+"As your Eminence pleases," I answered coolly, "albeit methinks that for
+one who has shed his blood for France as freely as I have done, a little
+clemency were not unfitting."
+
+He raised his eyebrows, and his lips curled in a malicious sneer.
+
+"You come of a family, M. de Luynes," he said slowly, "that is famed for
+having shed the blood of others for France more freely than its own.
+You are, I believe, the nephew of Albert de Luynes. Do you forget the
+Marshal d'Ancre?"
+
+I felt the blood of anger hot in my face as I made haste to answer him:
+
+"There are many of us, Monseigneur, who have cause to blush for the
+families they spring from--more cause, mayhap, than hath Gaston de
+Luynes."
+
+In my words perchance there was no offensive meaning, but in my tone and
+in the look which I bent upon the Cardinal there was that which told him
+that I alluded to his own obscure and dubious origin. He grew livid, and
+for a moment methought he would have struck me: had he done so, then,
+indeed, the history of Europe would have been other than it is to-day!
+He restrained himself, however, and drawing himself to the full height
+of his majestic figure he extended his arm towards the door.
+
+"Go," he said, in a voice that passion rendered hoarse. "Go, Monsieur.
+Go quickly, while my clemency endures. Go before I summon the guard and
+deal with you as your temerity deserves."
+
+I bowed--not without a taint of mockery, for I cared little what might
+follow; then, with head erect and the firm tread of defiance, I stalked
+out of his apartment, along the corridor, down the great staircase,
+across the courtyard, past the guard,--which, ignorant of my disgrace,
+saluted me,--and out into the street.
+
+Then at last my head sank forward on my breast, and deep in thought I
+wended my way home, oblivious of all around me, even the chill bite of
+the February wind.
+
+In my mind I reviewed my wasted life, with the fleeting pleasures and
+the enduring sorrows that it had brought me--or that I had drawn from
+it. The Cardinal said no more than truth when he spoke of having saved
+me from starvation. A week ago that was indeed what he had done. He
+had taken pity on Gaston de Luynes, the nephew of that famous Albert de
+Luynes who had been Constable of France in the early days of the late
+king's reign; he had made me lieutenant of his guards and maître d'armes
+to his nephews Andrea and Paolo de Mancini because he knew that a better
+blade than mine could not be found in France, and because he thought it
+well to have such swords as mine about him.
+
+A little week ago life had been replete with fresh promises, the gates
+of the road to fame (and perchance fortune) had been opened to me anew,
+and now--before I had fairly passed that gate I had been thrust rudely
+back, and it had been slammed in my face because it pleased a fool to
+become a sot whilst in my company.
+
+There is a subtle poetry in the contemplation of ruin. With ruin itself,
+howbeit, there comes a prosaic dispelling of all idle dreams--a hard, a
+grim, a vile reality.
+
+Ruin! 'T is an ugly word. A fitting one to carve upon the tombstone of a
+reckless, godless, dissolute life such as mine had been.
+
+Back, Gaston de Luynes! back, to the kennel whence the Cardinal's hand
+did for a moment pluck you; back, from the morning of hope to the night
+of despair; back, to choose between starvation and the earning of a
+pauper's fee as a master of fence!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. THE FRUIT OF INDISCRETION
+
+
+Despite the dejection to which I had become a prey, I slept no less
+soundly that night than was my wont, and indeed it was not until late
+next morning when someone knocked at my door that I awakened.
+
+I sat up in bed, and my first thought as I looked round the handsome
+room--which I had rented a week ago upon receiving the lieutenancy in
+the Cardinal's guards--was for the position that I had lost and of the
+need that there would be ere long to seek a lodging more humble and
+better suited to my straitened circumstances. It was not without regret
+that such a thought came to me, for my tastes had never been modest, and
+the house was a fine one, situated in the Rue St. Antoine at a hundred
+paces or so from the Jesuit convent.
+
+I had no time, however, to indulge the sorry mood that threatened to
+beset me, for the knocking at my chamber door continued, until at length
+I answered it with a command to enter.
+
+It was my servant Michelot, a grizzled veteran of huge frame and
+strength, who had fought beside me at Rocroi, and who had thereafter
+become so enamoured of my person--for some trivial service he swore I
+had rendered him--that he had attached himself to me and my luckless
+fortunes.
+
+He came to inform me that M. de Mancini was below and craved immediate
+speech with me. He had scarce done speaking, however, when Andrea
+himself, having doubtless grown tired of waiting, appeared in the
+doorway. He wore a sickly look, the result of his last night's debauch;
+but, more than that, there was stamped upon his face a look of latent
+passion which made me think at first that he was come to upbraid me.
+
+"Ah, still abed, Luynes?" was his greeting as he came forward.
+
+His cloak was wet and his boots splashed, which told me both that he had
+come afoot and that it rained.
+
+"There are no duties that bid me rise," I answered sourly.
+
+He frowned at that, then, divesting himself of his cloak, he gave it
+to Michelot, who, at a sign from me, withdrew. No sooner was the door
+closed than the boy's whole manner changed. The simmering passion of
+which I had detected signs welled up and seemed to choke him as he
+poured forth the story that he had come to tell.
+
+"I have been insulted," he gasped. "Grossly insulted by a vile creature
+of Monsieur d'Orleans's household. An hour ago in the ante-chamber at
+the Palais Royal I was spoken of in my hearing as the besotted nephew of
+the Italian adventurer."
+
+I sat up in bed tingling with excitement at the developments which
+already I saw arising from his last night's imprudence.
+
+"Calmly, Andrea," I begged of him, "tell me calmly."
+
+"Mortdieu! How can I be calm? Ough! The thought of it chokes me. I was
+a fool last night--a sot. For that, perchance, men have some right to
+censure me. But, Sangdieu! that a ruffler of the stamp of Eugène de
+Canaples should speak of it--should call me the nephew of an Italian
+adventurer, should draw down upon me the cynical smile of a crowd of
+courtly apes--pah! I am sick at the memory of it!"
+
+"Did you answer him?"
+
+"Pardieu! I should be worthy of the title he bestowed upon me had I not
+done so. Oh, I answered him--not in words. I threw my hat in his face."
+
+"That was a passing eloquent reply!"
+
+"So eloquent that it left him speechless with amazement. He thought to
+bully with impunity, and see me slink into hiding like a whipped dog,
+terrified by his blustering tongue and dangerous reputation. But there!"
+he broke off, "a meeting has been arranged for four o'clock at St.
+Germain."
+
+"A meeting!" I exclaimed.
+
+"What else? Do you think the affront left any alternative?"
+
+"But--"
+
+"Yes, yes, I know," he interrupted, tossing his head. "I am going to be
+killed. Verville has sworn that there shall be one less of the Italian
+brood. That is why I have come to you, Luynes--to ask you to be my
+second. I don't deserve it, perhaps. In my folly last night I did you
+an ill turn. I unwittingly caused you to be stripped of your commission.
+But if I were on my death-bed now, and begged a favour of you, you would
+not refuse it. And what difference is there 'twixt me and one who is on
+his death-bed? Am I not about to die?"
+
+"Peste! I hope not," I made answer with more lightness than I felt. "But
+I'll stand by you with all my heart, Andrea."
+
+"And you'll avenge me?" he cried savagely, his Southern blood a-boiling.
+"You'll not let him leave the ground alive?"
+
+"Not unless my opponent commits the indiscretion of killing me first.
+Who seconds M. de Canaples?"
+
+"The Marquis de St. Auban and M. de Montmédy."
+
+"And who is the third in our party?"
+
+"I have none. I thought that perhaps you had a friend."
+
+"I! A friend?" I laughed bitterly. "Pshaw, Andrea! beggars have no
+friends. But stay; find Stanislas de Gouville. There is no better
+blade in Paris. If he will join us in this frolic, and you can hold off
+Canaples until either St. Auban or Montmédy is disposed of, we may yet
+leave the three of them on the field of battle. Courage, Andrea! Dum
+spiramus, speramus."
+
+My words seemed to cheer him, and when presently he left me to seek out
+the redoubtable Gouville, the poor lad's face was brighter by far than
+when he had entered my room.
+
+Down in my heart, however, I was less hopeful than I had led him to
+believe, and as I dressed after he had gone, 't was not without some
+uneasiness that I turned the matter over in my mind. I had, during the
+short period of our association, grown fond of Andrea de Mancini. Indeed
+the wonted sweetness of the lad's temper, and the gentleness of his
+disposition, were such as to breed affection in all who came in contact
+with him. In a way, too, methought he had grown fond of me, and I had
+known so few friends in life,--truth to tell I fear me that I had few of
+the qualities that engender friendship,--that I was naturally prone to
+appreciate a gift that from its rareness became doubly valuable.
+
+Hence was it that I trembled for the boy. He had shown aptitude with the
+foils, and derived great profit from my tuition, yet he was too raw by
+far to be pitted against so cunning a swordsman as Canaples.
+
+I had but finished dressing when a coach rumbled down the street and
+halted by my door. Naturally I supposed that someone came to visit
+Coupri, the apothecary,--to whom belonged this house in which I had my
+lodging,--and did not give the matter a second thought until Michelot
+rushed in, with eyes wide open, to announce that his Eminence, Cardinal
+Mazarin, commanded my presence in the adjoining room.
+
+Amazed and deeply marvelling what so extraordinary a visit might
+portend, I hastened to wait upon his Eminence.
+
+I found him standing by the window, and received from him a greeting
+that was passing curt and cavalier.
+
+"Has M. de Mancini been here?" he inquired peremptorily, disregarding
+the chair I offered him.
+
+"He has but left me, Monseigneur."
+
+"Then you know, sir, of the harvest which he has already reaped from the
+indiscretion into which you led him last night?"
+
+"If Monseigneur alludes to the affront put upon M. de Mancini touching
+his last night's indiscretion, by a bully of the Court, I am informed of
+it."
+
+"Pish, Monsieur! I do not follow your fine distinctions--possibly this
+is due to my imperfect knowledge of the language of France, possibly to
+your own imperfect acquaintance with the language of truth."
+
+"Monseigneur!"
+
+"Faugh!" he cried, half scornfully, half peevishly. "I came not here to
+talk of you, but of my nephew. Why did he visit you?"
+
+"To do me the honour of asking me to second him at St. Germain this
+evening."
+
+"And so you think that this duel is to be fought?--that my nephew is to
+be murdered?"
+
+"We will endeavour to prevent his being--as your Eminence daintily puts
+it--murdered. But for the rest, the duel, methinks, cannot be avoided."
+
+"Cannot!" he blazed. "Do you say cannot, M. de Luynes? Mark me well,
+sir: I will use no dissimulation with you. My position in France is
+already a sufficiently difficult one. Already we are threatened with a
+second Fronde. It needs but such events as these to bring my family into
+prominence and make it the butt for the ridicule that malcontents but
+wait an opportunity to slur it with. This affair of Andrea's will lend
+itself to a score or so of lampoons and pasquinades, all of which
+will cast an injurious reflection upon my person and position. That,
+Monsieur, is, methinks, sufficient evil to suffer at your hands. The
+late Cardinal would have had you broken on the wheel for less. I have
+gone no farther than to dismiss you from my service--a clemency for
+which you should be grateful. But I shall not suffer that, in addition
+to the harm already done, Andrea shall be murdered by Canaples."
+
+"I shall do my best to render him assistance."
+
+"You still misapprehend me. This duel, sir, must not take place."
+
+I shrugged my shoulders.
+
+"How does your Eminence propose to frustrate it? Will you arrest
+Canaples?"
+
+"Upon what plea, Monsieur? Think you I am anxious to have the whole of
+Paris howling in my ears?"
+
+"Then possibly it is your good purpose to enforce the late king's edict
+against duelling, and send your guards to St. Germain to arrest the men
+before they engage?"
+
+"Benone!" he sneered. "And what will Paris say if I now enforce a law
+that for ten years has been disregarded? That I feared for my nephew's
+skin and took this means of saving him. A pretty story to have on
+Paris's lips, would it not be?"
+
+"Indeed, Monseigneur, you are right, but I doubt me the duel will needs
+be fought."
+
+"Have I not already said that it shall not be fought?"
+
+Again I shrugged my shoulders. Mazarin grew tiresome with his
+repetitions.
+
+"How can it be avoided, your Eminence?"
+
+"Ah, Monsieur, that is your affair."
+
+"My affair?"
+
+"Assuredly. 'T was through your evil agency he was dragged into this
+business, and through your agency he must be extricated from it."
+
+"Your Eminence jests!"
+
+"Undoubtedly,--'t is a jesting matter," he answered with terrible irony.
+"Oh, I jest! Per Dio! yes. But I'll carry my jest so far as to have you
+hanged if this duel be fought--aye, whether my nephew suffers hurt or
+not. Now, sir, you know what fate awaits you; fight it--turn it aside--I
+have shown you the way. The door, M. de Luynes."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. THE FIGHT IN THE HORSE-MARKET
+
+
+I let him go without a word. There was that in his voice, in his eye,
+and in the gesture wherewith he bade me hold the door for him, that
+cleared my mind of any doubts touching the irrevocable character of his
+determination. To plead was never an accomplishment of mine; to argue, I
+saw, would be to waste the Cardinal's time to no purpose.
+
+And so I let him go,--and my curse with him,--and from my window I
+watched his coach drive away in the drizzling rain, scattering the
+crowd of awe-stricken loiterers who had collected at the rumour of his
+presence.
+
+With a fervent prayer that his patron saint, the devil, might see fit
+to overset his coach and break his neck before he reached the Palace, I
+turned from the window, and called Michelot.
+
+He was quick to answer my summons, bringing me the frugal measure of
+bread and wine wherewith it was my custom to break my fast. Then,
+whilst I munched my crust, I strode to and fro in the little chamber
+and exercised my wits to their utmost for a solution to the puzzle his
+Eminence had set me.
+
+One solution there was, and an easy one--flight. But I had promised
+Andrea de Mancini that I would stand beside him at St. Germain; there
+was a slender chance of saving him if I went, whilst, if I stayed away,
+there would be nothing left for his Eminence to do but to offer up
+prayers for the rest of his nephew's soul.
+
+Another idea I had, but it was desperate--and yet, so persistently did
+my thoughts revert to it that in the end I determined to accept it.
+
+I drank a cup of Armagnac, cheered myself with an oath or two, and again
+I called Michelot. When he came, I asked him if he were acquainted
+with M. de Canaples, to which he replied that he was, having seen the
+gentleman in my company.
+
+"Then," I said, "you will repair to M. de Canaples's lodging in the Rue
+des Gesvres, and ascertain discreetly whether he be at home. If he is,
+you will watch the house until he comes forth, then follow him, and
+bring me word thereafter where he is to be found. Should he be already
+abroad before you reach the Rue des Gesvres, endeavour to ascertain
+whither he has gone, and return forthwith. But be discreet, Michelot.
+You understand?"
+
+He assured me that he did, and left me to nurse my unpleasant thoughts
+for half an hour, returning at the end of that time with the information
+that M. de Canaples was seated at dinner in the "Auberge du Soleil."
+
+Naught could have been more attuned to my purpose, and straightway
+I drew on my boots, girt on my sword, and taking my hat and cloak, I
+sallied out into the rain, and wended my way at a sharp pace towards the
+Rue St. Honoré.
+
+One o'clock was striking as I crossed the threshold of the "Soleil" and
+flung my dripping cloak to the first servant I chanced upon.
+
+I glanced round the well-filled room, and at one of the tables I espied
+my quarry in company with St. Auban and Montmédy--the very gentlemen
+who were to fight beside him that evening--and one Vilmorin, as arrant a
+coxcomb and poltroon as could be found in France. With my beaver cocked
+at the back of my head, and a general bearing that for aggressiveness
+would be hard to surpass, I strode up to their table, and stood for a
+moment surveying them with an insolent stare that made them pause in
+their conversation. They raised their noble heads and bestowed upon me a
+look of haughty and disdainful wonder,--such a look as one might bestow
+upon a misbehaving lackey,--all save Vilmorin, who, with a coward's keen
+nose for danger, turned slightly pale and fidgeted in his chair. I was
+well known to all of them, but my attitude forbade all greeting.
+
+"Has M. de Luynes lost anything?" St. Auban inquired icily.
+
+"His wits, mayhap," quoth Canaples with a contemptuous shrug.
+
+He was a tall, powerfully built man, this Canaples, with a swart, cruel
+face that was nevertheless not ill-favoured, and a profusion of black
+hair.
+
+"There is a temerity in M. de Canaples's rejoinder that I had not looked
+for," I said banteringly.
+
+Canaples's brow was puckered in a frown.
+
+"Ha! And why not, Monsieur?"
+
+"Why not? Because it is not to be expected that one who fastens quarrels
+upon schoolboys would evince the courage to beard Gaston de Luynes."
+
+"Monsieur!" the four of them cried in chorus, so loudly that the hum
+of voices in the tavern became hushed, and all eyes were turned in our
+direction.
+
+"M. de Canaples," I said calmly, "permit me to say that I can find no
+more fitting expression for the contempt I hold you in than this."
+
+As I spoke I seized a corner of the tablecloth, and with a sudden tug I
+swept it, with all it held, on to the floor.
+
+Dame! what a scene there was! In an instant the four of them were on
+their feet,--as were half the occupants of the room, besides,--whilst
+poor Vilmorin, who stood trembling like a maid who for the first time
+hears words of love, raised his quavering voice to cry soothingly,
+"Messieurs, Messieurs!"
+
+Canaples was livid with passion, but otherwise the calmest in that room,
+saving perhaps myself. With a gesture he restrained Montmédy and St.
+Auban.
+
+"I shall be happy to give Master de Luynes all the proof of my courage
+that he may desire, and more, I warrant, than he will relish."
+
+"Bravely answered!" I cried, with an approving nod and a beaming smile.
+"Be good enough to lead the way to a convenient spot."
+
+"I have other business at the moment," he answered calmly. "Let us say
+to-morrow at--"
+
+"Faugh!" I broke in scornfully. "I knew it! Confess, Monsieur, that
+you dare not light me now lest you should be unable to keep your
+appointments for this evening."
+
+"Mille diables!" exclaimed St. Auban, "this insolence passes all
+bounds."
+
+"Each man in his turn if you please, gentlemen," I replied. "My present
+affair is with M. de Canaples."
+
+There was a hot answer burning on St. Auban's lips, but Canaples was
+beforehand with him.
+
+"Par la mort Dieu!" he cried; "you go too far, sir, with your 'dare' and
+'dare not.' Is a broken gamester, a penniless adventurer, to tell Eugène
+de Canaples what he dares? Come, sir; since you are eager for the taste
+of steel, follow me, and say your prayers as you go."
+
+With that we left the inn, amidst a prodigious hubbub, and made our way
+to the horse-market behind the Hôtel Vendôme. It was not to be expected,
+albeit the place we had chosen was usually deserted at such an hour,
+that after the fracas at the "Soleil" our meeting would go unattended.
+When we faced each other--Canaples and I--there were at least some
+twenty persons present, who came, despite the rain, to watch what they
+thought was like to prove a pretty fight. Men of position were they for
+the most part, gentlemen of the Court with here and there a soldier,
+and from the manner in which they eyed me methought they favoured me but
+little.
+
+Our preparations were brief. The absence of seconds disposed of all
+formalities, the rain made us impatient to be done, and in virtue of it
+Canaples pompously announced that he would not risk a cold by stripping.
+With interest did I grimly answer that he need fear no cold when I had
+done with him. Then casting aside my cloak, I drew, and, professing
+myself also disposed to retain my doublet, we forthwith engaged.
+
+He was no mean swordsman, this Canaples. Indeed, his reputation was
+already widespread, and in the first shock of our meeting blades I felt
+that rumour had been just for once. But I was strangely dispossessed
+of any doubts touching the outcome; this being due perchance to a vain
+confidence in my own skill, perchance to the spirit of contemptuous
+raillery wherewith I had from the outset treated the affair, and which
+had so taken root in my heart that even when we engaged I still, almost
+unwittingly, persisted in it.
+
+In my face and attitude there was the reflection of this bantering,
+flippant mood; it was to be read in the mocking disdain of my glance, in
+the scornful curl of my lip, and even in the turn of my wrist as I put
+aside my opponent's passes. All this, Canaples must have noted, and it
+was not without effect upon his nerves. Moreover, there is in steel a
+subtle magnetism which is the index of one's antagonist; and from the
+moment that our blades slithered one against the other I make no doubt
+but that Canaples grew aware of the confident, almost exultant mood in
+which I met him, and which told him that I was his master. Add to this
+the fact that whilst Canaples's nerves were unstrung by passion mine
+were held in check by a mind as calm and cool as though our swords were
+baited, and consider with what advantages I took my ground.
+
+He led the attack fiercely and furiously, as if I were a boy whose guard
+was to be borne down by sheer weight of blows. I contented myself with
+tapping his blade aside, and when at length, after essaying every
+trick in his catalogue, he fell back baffled, I laughed a low laugh of
+derision that drove him pale with fury.
+
+Again he came at me, almost before I was prepared for him, and his
+point, parried with a downward stroke and narrowly averted, scratched
+my thigh, but did more damage to my breeches than my skin, in exchange
+I touched him playfully on the shoulder, and the sting of it drove him
+back a second time. He was breathing hard by then, and would fain have
+paused awhile for breath, but I saw no reason to be merciful.
+
+"Now, sir," I cried, saluting him as though our combat were but on the
+point of starting--"to me! Guard yourself!"
+
+Again our swords clashed, and my blows now fell as swift on his blade
+as his had done awhile ago on mine. So hard did I press him that he was
+forced to give way before me. Back I drove him pace by pace, his
+wrist growing weaker at each parry, each parry growing wider, and the
+perspiration streaming down his ashen face. Panting he went, in that
+backward flight before my onslaught, defending himself as best he could,
+never thinking of a riposte--beaten already. Back, and yet back he went,
+until he reached the railings and could back no farther, and so
+broken was his spirit then that a groan escaped him. I answered with a
+laugh--my mood was lusty and cruel--and thrust at him. Then, eluding his
+guard, I thrust again, beneath it, and took him fairly in the middle of
+his doublet.
+
+He staggered, dropped his rapier, and caught at the railings, where for
+a moment he hung swaying and gasping. Then his head fell forward, his
+grip relaxed, and swooning he sank down into a heap.
+
+A dozen sprang to his aid, foremost amongst them being St. Auban and
+Montmédy, whilst I drew back, suddenly realising my own spent condition,
+to which the heat of the combat had hitherto rendered me insensible. I
+mastered myself as best I might, and, dissembling my hard breathing, I
+wiped my blade with a kerchief, an act which looked so calm and callous
+that it drew from the crowd--for a crowd it had become by then--an angry
+growl. 'T is thus with the vulgar; they are ever ready to sympathise
+with the vanquished without ever pausing to ask themselves if his
+chastisement may not be merited.
+
+In answer to the growl I tossed my head, and sheathing my sword I flung
+the bloodstained kerchief into their very midst. The audacity of the
+gesture left them breathless, and they growled no more, but stared.
+
+Then that outrageous fop, Vilmorin, who had been bending over Canaples,
+started up and coming towards me with a face that was whiter than that
+of the prostrate man, he proved himself so utterly bereft of wit by
+terror that for once he had the temerity to usurp the words and actions
+of a brave man.
+
+"You have murdered him!" he cried in a strident voice, and thrusting his
+clenched fist within an inch of my face. "Do you hear me, you knave? You
+have murdered him!"
+
+Now, as may be well conceived, I was in no mood to endure such words
+from any man, so was but natural that for answer I caught the dainty
+Vicomte a buffet that knocked him into the arms of the nearest
+bystander, and brought him to his senses.
+
+"Fool," I snarled at him, "must I make another example before you
+believe that Gaston de Luynes wears a sword?"
+
+"In the name of Heaven--" he began, putting forth his hands in a
+beseeching gesture; but what more he said was drowned by the roar of
+anger that burst from the onlookers, and it was like to have gone ill
+with me had not St. Auban come to my aid at that most critical juncture.
+
+"Messieurs!" he cried, thrusting himself before me, and raising his hand
+to crave silence, "hear me. I, a friend of M. de Canaples, tell you that
+you wrong M. de Luynes. 'T was a fair fight--how the quarrel arose is no
+concern of yours."
+
+Despite his words they still snarled and growled like the misbegotten
+curs they were. But St. Auban was famous for the regal supper parties he
+gave, to which all were eager to be bidden, and amidst that crowd, as I
+have said, there were a score or so of gentlemen of the Court, who--with
+scant regard for the right or wrong of the case and every regard to
+conciliate this giver of suppers--came to range themselves beside and
+around us, and thus protected me from the murderous designs of that
+rabble.
+
+Seeing how the gentlemen took my part, and deeming--in their blessed
+ignorance--that what gentlemen did must be perforce well done, they grew
+calm in the twinkling of an eye. Thereupon St. Auban, turning to me,
+counselled me in a whisper to be gone, whilst the tide of opinion flowed
+in my favour. Intent to act upon this good advice, I took a step towards
+the little knot that had collected round Canaples, and with natural
+curiosity inquired into the nature of his hurt.
+
+'T was Montmédy who answered me, scowling as he did so:
+
+"He may die of it, Monsieur. If he does not, his recovery will be at
+least slow and difficult."
+
+I had been wise had I held my peace and gone; but, like a fool, I must
+needs give utterance to what was in my mind.
+
+"Ah! At least there will be no duel at St. Germain this evening."
+
+Scarce had the words fallen from my lips when I saw in the faces of
+Montmédy and St. Auban and half a dozen others the evidence of their
+rashness.
+
+"So!" cried St. Auban in a voice that shook with rage. "That was your
+object, eh? That you had fallen low, Master de Luynes, I knew, but I
+dreamt not that in your fall you had come so low as this."
+
+"You dare?"
+
+"Pardieu! I dare more, Monsieur; I dare tell you--you, Gaston de Luynes,
+spy and bravo of the Cardinal--that your object shall be defeated.
+That, as God lives, this duel shall still be fought--by me instead of
+Canaples."
+
+"And I tell you, sir, that as God lives it shall not," I answered with a
+vehemence not a whit less than his own. "To you and to what other fools
+may think to follow in your footsteps, I say this: that not to-night
+nor to-morrow nor the next day shall that duel be fought. Cowards and
+poltroons you are, who seek to murder a beardless boy who has injured
+none of you! But, by my soul! every man who sends a challenge to that
+boy will I at once seek out and deal with as I have dealt with Eugène de
+Canaples. Let those who are eager to try another world make the attempt.
+Adieu, Messieurs!"
+
+And with a flourish of my sodden beaver, I turned and left them before
+they had recovered from the vehemence of my words.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. FAIR RESCUERS
+
+
+Like the calm of the heavens when pregnant with thunder was the calm of
+that crowd. And as brief it was; for scarce had I taken a dozen steps
+when my ears were assailed by a rumble of angry voices and a rush of
+feet. One glance over my shoulder, one second's hesitation whether I
+should stay and beard them, then the thought of Andrea de Mancini and of
+what would befall him did this canaille vent its wrath upon me decided
+my course and sent me hotfoot down the Rue Monarque. Howling and
+bellowing that rabble followed in my wake, stumbling over one another in
+their indecent haste to reach me.
+
+But I was fleet of foot, and behind me there was that that would lend
+wings to the most deliberate, so that when I turned into the open space
+before the Hôtel Vendôme I had set a good fifty yards betwixt myself and
+the foremost of my hunters.
+
+A coach was passing at that moment. I shouted, and the knave who drove
+glanced at me, then up the Rue Monarque at my pursuers, whereupon,
+shaking his head, he would have left me to my fate. But I was of another
+mind. I dashed towards the vehicle, and as it passed me I caught at
+the window, which luckily was open, and drawing up my legs I hung there
+despite the shower of mud which the revolving wheels deposited upon me.
+
+From the bowels of the coach I was greeted by a woman's scream; a pale
+face, and a profusion of fair hair flashed before my eyes.
+
+"Fear not, Madame," I shouted. "I am no assassin, but rather one
+who stands in imminent peril of assassination, and who craves your
+protection."
+
+More I would have said, but at that juncture the lash of the coachman's
+whip curled itself about my shoulders, and stung me vilely.
+
+"Get down, you rascal," he bellowed; "get down or I'll draw rein!"
+
+To obey him would have been madness. The crowd surged behind with hoots
+and yells, and had I let go I must perforce have fallen into their
+hands. So, instead of getting down as he inconsiderately counselled, I
+drew myself farther up by a mighty effort, and thrust half my body into
+the coach, whereupon the fair lady screamed again, and the whip caressed
+my legs. But within the coach sat another woman, dark of hair and
+exquisite of face, who eyed my advent with a disdainful glance. Her
+proud countenance bore the stamp of courage, and to her it was that I
+directed my appeal.
+
+"Madame, permit me, I pray, to seek shelter in your carriage, and suffer
+me to journey a little way with you. Quick, Madame! Your coachman is
+drawing rein, and I shall of a certainty be murdered under your very
+nose unless you bid him change his mind. To be murdered in itself is a
+trifling matter, I avow, but it is not nice to behold, and I would not,
+for all the world, offend your eyes with the spectacle of it."
+
+I had judged her rightly, and my tone of flippant recklessness won
+me her sympathy and aid. Quickly thrusting her head through the other
+window:
+
+"Drive on, Louis," she commanded. "Faster!" Then turning to me, "You may
+bring your legs into the coach if you choose, sir," she said.
+
+"Your words, Madame, are the sweetest music I have heard for months," I
+answered drily, as I obeyed her. Then leaning out of the carriage again
+I waved my hat gallantly to the mob which--now realising the futility of
+further pursuit--had suddenly come to a halt.
+
+"Au plaisir de vous revoir, Messieurs," I shouted. "Come to me one by
+one, and I'll keep the devil busy finding lodgings for you."
+
+They answered me with a yell, and I sat down content, and laughed.
+
+"You are not a coward, Monsieur," said the dark lady.
+
+"I have been accounted many unsavoury things, Madame, but my bitterest
+enemies never dubbed me that."
+
+"Why, then, did you run away?"
+
+"Why? Ma foi! because in the excessive humility of my soul I recognised
+myself unfit to die."
+
+She bit her lip and her tiny foot beat impatiently upon the floor.
+
+"You are trifling with me, Monsieur. Where do you wish to alight?"
+
+"Pray let that give you no concern; I can assure you that I am in no
+haste."
+
+"You become impertinent, sir," she cried angrily. "Answer me, where are
+you going?"
+
+"Where am I going? Oh, ah--to the Palais Royal."
+
+Her eyes opened very wide at that, and wandered over me with a look that
+was passing eloquent. Indeed, I was a sorry spectacle for any woman's
+eyes--particularly a pretty one's. Splashed from head to foot with mud,
+my doublet saturated and my beaver dripping, with the feather hanging
+limp and broken, whilst there was a rent in my breeches that had
+been made by Canaples's sword, I take it that I had not the air of a
+courtier, and that when I said that I went to the Palais Royal she might
+have justly held me to be the adventurous lover of some kitchen wench.
+But unto the Palais Royal go others besides courtiers and lovers--spies
+of the Cardinal, for instance, and in her sudden coldness and the next
+question that fell from her beauteous lips I read that she had guessed
+me one of these.
+
+"Why did the mob pursue you, Monsieur?"
+
+There was in her voice and gesture when she asked a question the
+imperiousness of one accustomed to command replies. This pretty
+queenliness it was that drove me to answer--as I had done before--in a
+bantering strain.
+
+"Why did the mob pursue me? Hum! Why does the mob pursue great men?
+Because it loves their company."
+
+Her matchless eyes flashed an angry glance, and the faint smile on my
+lips must have tried her temper sorely.
+
+"What did you do to deserve this affection?"
+
+"A mere nothing--I killed a man," I answered coolly. "Or, at least, I
+left him started on the road to--Paradise."
+
+The little flaxen-haired doll uttered a cry of horror, and covered her
+face with her small white hands. My inquisitor, however, sat rigid and
+unaffected. My answer had confirmed her suspicions.
+
+"Why did you kill him?"
+
+"Ma foi!" I replied, encouraging her thoughts, "because he sought to
+kill me."
+
+"Ah! And why did he seek to kill you?"
+
+"Because I disturbed him at dinner."
+
+"Have a care how you trifle, sir!" she retorted, her eyes kindling
+again.
+
+"Upon my honour, 't was no more than that. I pulled the cloth from
+the table whilst he ate. He was a quick-tempered gentleman, and my
+playfulness offended him. That is all."
+
+Doubt appeared in her eyes, and it may have entered her mind that
+perchance her judgment had been over-hasty.
+
+"Do you mean, sir, that you provoked a duel?"
+
+"Alas, Madame! It had become necessary. You see, M. de Canaples--"
+
+"Who?" Her voice rang sharp as the crack of a pistol.
+
+"Eh? M. de Canaples."
+
+"Was it he whom you killed?"
+
+From her tone, and the eager, strained expression of her face, it was
+not difficult to read that some mighty interest of hers was involved in
+my reply. It needed not the low moan that burst from her companion to
+tell me so.
+
+"As I have said, Madame, it is possible that he is not dead--nay, even
+that he will not die. For the rest, since you ask the question, my
+opponent was, indeed, M. de Canaples--Eugène de Canaples."
+
+Her face went deadly white, and she sank back in her seat as if every
+nerve in her body had of a sudden been bereft of power, whilst she of
+the fair hair burst into tears.
+
+A pretty position was this for me!--luckily it endured not. The girl
+roused herself from her momentary weakness, and, seizing the cord, she
+tugged it violently. The coach drew up.
+
+"Alight, sir," she hissed--"go! I wish to Heaven that I had left you to
+the vengeance of the people."
+
+Not so did I; nevertheless, as I alighted: "I am sorry, Madame, that you
+did not," I answered. "Adieu!"
+
+The coach moved away, and I was left standing at the corner of the Rue
+St. Honoré and the Rue des Bons Enfants, in the sorriest frame of mind
+conceivable. The lady in the coach had saved my life, and for that I was
+more grateful perchance than my life was worth. Out of gratitude sprang
+a regret for the pain that I had undoubtedly caused her, and the sorrow
+which it might have been my fate to cast over her life.
+
+Still, regret, albeit an admirable sentiment, was one whose existence
+was usually brief in my bosom. Dame! Had I been a man of regrets I might
+have spent the remainder of my days weeping over my past life. But
+the gods, who had given me a character calculated to lead a man
+into misfortune, had given me a stout heart wherewith to fight that
+misfortune, and an armour of recklessness against which remorse,
+regrets, aye, and conscience itself, rained blows in vain.
+
+And so it befell that presently I laughed myself out of the puerile
+humour that was besetting me, and, finding myself chilled by inaction in
+my wet clothes, I set off for the Palais Royal at a pace that was first
+cousin to a run.
+
+Ten minutes later I stood in the presence of the most feared and hated
+man in France.
+
+"Cospetto!" cried Mazarin as I entered his cabinet. "Have you swum the
+Seine in your clothes?"
+
+"No, your Eminence, but I have been serving you in the rain for the past
+hour."
+
+He smiled that peculiar smile of his that rendered hateful his otherwise
+not ill-favoured countenance. It was a smile of the lips in which the
+eyes had no part.
+
+"Yes," he said slowly, "I have heard of your achievements."
+
+"You have heard?" I ejaculated, amazed by the powers which this man
+wielded.
+
+"Yes, I have heard. You are a brave man, M. de Luynes."
+
+"Pshaw, your Eminence!" I deprecated; "the poor are always brave. They
+have naught to lose but their life, and that is not so sweet to them
+that they lay much store by it. Howbeit, Monseigneur, your wishes have
+been carried out. There will be no duel at St. Germain this evening."
+
+"Will there not? Hum! I am not so confident. You are a brave man, M. de
+Luynes, but you lack that great auxiliary of valour--discretion. What
+need to fling into the teeth of those fine gentlemen the reason you had
+for spitting Canaples, eh? You have provoked a dozen enemies for Andrea
+where only one existed."
+
+"I will answer for all of them," I retorted boastfully.
+
+"Fine words, M. de Luynes; but to support them how many men will you
+have to kill? Pah! What if some fine morning there comes one who,
+despite your vaunted swordsmanship, proves your master? What will become
+of that fool, my nephew, eh?"
+
+And his uncanny smile again beamed on me. "Andrea is now packing his
+valise. In an hour he will have left Paris secretly. He goes--but what
+does it signify where he goes? He is compelled by your indiscretion
+to withdraw from Court. Had you kept a close tongue in your foolish
+head--but there! you did not, and so by a thoughtless word you undid all
+that you had done so well. You may go, M. de Luynes. I have no further
+need of you--and thank Heaven that you leave the Palais Royal free to go
+whither your fancy takes you, and not to journey to the Bastille or to
+Vincennes. I am merciful, M. de Luynes--as merciful as you are brave;
+more merciful than you are prudent. One word of warning, M. de Luynes:
+do not let me learn that you are in my nephew's company, if you would
+not make me regret my clemency and repair the error of it by having you
+hanged. And now, adieu!"
+
+I stood aghast. Was I indeed dismissed? Albeit naught had been said, I
+had not doubted, since my interview with him that morning, that did I
+succeed in saving Andrea my rank in his guards--and thereby a means of
+livelihood--would be restored to me. And now matters were no better than
+they had been before. He dismissed me with the assurance that he was
+merciful. As God lives, it would have been as merciful to have hanged
+me!
+
+He met my astonished look with an eye that seemed to ask me why I
+lingered. Then reading mayhap what was passing in my thoughts, he raised
+a little silver whistle to his lips and blew softly upon it.
+
+"Bernouin," said he to his valet, who entered in answer to the summons,
+"reconduct M. de Luynes."
+
+I remember drawing down upon my bedraggled person the curious gaze of
+the numerous clients who thronged the Cardinal's ante-chamber, as I
+followed Bernouin to the door which opened on to the corridor, and which
+he held for me. And thus, for the second time within twenty-four hours,
+did I leave the Palais Royal to wend my way home to the Rue St. Antoine
+with grim despondency in my heart.
+
+I found Michelot on the point of setting out in search of me, with a
+note which had been brought to my lodging half an hour ago, and which
+its bearer had said was urgent. I took the letter, and bidding Michelot
+prepare me fresh raiment that I might exchange for my wet clothes, I
+broke the seal and read:
+
+
+"A thousand thanks, dear friend, for the service you have rendered me
+and of which his Eminence, my uncle, has informed me. I fear that you
+have made many enemies for yourself through an action which will likely
+go unrewarded, and that Paris is therefore as little suited at present
+to your health as it is to mine. I am setting out for Blois on a mission
+of exceeding delicacy wherein your advice and guidance would be of
+infinite value to me. I shall remain at Choisy until to-morrow morning,
+and should there be no ties to hold you in Paris, and you be minded to
+bear me company, join me there at the Hôtel du Connétable where I shall
+lie to-night. Your grateful and devoted
+
+"ANDRE."
+
+
+So! There was one at least who desired my company! I had not thought it.
+"If there be no ties to hold you in Paris," he wrote. Dame! A change
+of air would suit me vastly. I was resolved--a fig for the Cardinal's
+threat to hang me if I were found in his nephew's company!
+
+"My suit of buff, Michelot," I shouted, springing to my feet, "and my
+leather jerkin."
+
+He gazed at me in surprise.
+
+"Is Monsieur going a journey?"
+
+I answered him that I was, and as I spoke I began to divest myself of
+the clothes I wore. "Pack my suit of pearl grey in the valise, with what
+changes of linen I possess; then call Master Coupri that I may settle
+with him. It may be some time before we return."
+
+In less than half an hour I was ready for the journey, spurred
+and booted, with my rapier at my side, and in the pocket of my
+haut-de­chausses a purse containing some fifty pistoles--best part of
+which I had won from Vilmorin at lansquenet some nights before, and
+which moderate sum represented all the moneys that I possessed.
+
+Our horses were ready, my pistols holstered, and my valise strapped
+to Michelot's saddle. Despite the desperate outlook of my fortunes, of
+which I had made him fully cognisant, he insisted upon clinging to me,
+reminding me that at Rocroi I had saved his life and that he would leave
+me only when I bade him go.
+
+As four o'clock was striking at Nôtre Dame we crossed the Pont Neuf,
+and going by the Quai des Augustins and the Rue de la Harpe, we quitted
+Paris by the St. Michel Gate and took the road to Choisy. The rain
+had ceased, but the air was keen and cold, and the wind cut like a
+sword-edge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. MAZARIN, THE MATCH-MAKER
+
+
+Twixt Paris and Choisy there lies but a distance of some two leagues,
+which, given a fair horse, one may cover with ease in little more than
+half an hour. So that as the twilight was deepening into night we drew
+rein before the hostelry of the Connétable, in the only square the
+little township boasts, and from the landlord I had that obsequious
+reception which is ever accorded to him who travels with a body-servant.
+
+I found Andrea installed in a fair-sized and comfortable apartment, to
+the original decoration of which he added not a little by bestowing his
+boots in the centre of the floor, his hat, sword, and baldrick on the
+table, his cloak on one chair, and his doublet on another. He himself
+sat toasting his feet before the blazing logs, which cast a warm,
+reddish glow upon his sable hair and dainty shirt of cambric.
+
+He sprang up as I entered, and came towards me with a look of pleasure
+on his handsome, high-bred face, that did me good to see.
+
+"So, you have come, De Luynes," he cried, putting forth his hand. "I did
+not dare to hope that you would."
+
+"No," I answered. "Truly it was not to be expected that I could be
+easily lured from Paris just as my fortunes are nearing a high tide,
+and his Eminence proposing to make me a Marshal of France and create me
+Duke. As you say, you had scant grounds for hoping that my love for you
+would suffice to make me renounce all these fine things for the mere
+sake of accompanying you on your jaunt to Blois."
+
+He laughed, then fell to thanking me for having rid him of Canaples. I
+cut him short at last, and in answer to his questions told him what had
+passed 'twixt his Eminence and me that afternoon. Then as the waiter
+entered to spread our supper, the conversation assumed a less delicate
+character, until we were again alone with the table and its steaming
+viands between us.
+
+"You have not told me yet, Andrea, what takes you to Blois," quoth I
+then.
+
+"You shall learn. Little do you dream how closely interwoven are our
+morning adventures with this journey of mine. To begin with, I go to
+Blois to pay my dévoirs to the lady whom his Eminence has selected for
+my future wife."
+
+"You were then right in describing this as a mission of great delicacy."
+
+"More than you think--I have never seen the lady."
+
+"Never seen her? And you go a-wooing a woman you have never seen?"
+
+"It is so. I have never seen her; but his Eminence has, and 't is he
+who arranges the affair. Ah, the Cardinal is the greatest match­maker in
+France! My cousin Anna Martinozzi is destined for the Prince de Conti,
+my sisters Olympia and Marianne he also hopes to marry to princes of the
+blood, whilst I dare wager that he has thoughts of seating either Maria
+or Hortensia upon the throne of France as the wife of Louis XIV., as
+soon as his Majesty shall have reached a marriageable age. You may
+laugh, De Luynes, nevertheless all this may come to pass, for my uncle
+has great ambitions for his family, and it is even possible that should
+that poor, wandering youth, Charles II. of England, ever return to the
+throne of his fathers he may also become my brother-in-law. I am likely
+to become well connected, De Luynes, so make a friend of me whilst I
+am humble. So much for Mazarin's nieces. His nephews are too young for
+alliances just yet, saving myself; and for me his Eminence has
+chosen one of the greatest heiresses in France--Yvonne St. Albaret de
+Canaples."
+
+"Whom?" I shouted.
+
+He smiled.
+
+"Curious, is it not? She is the sister of the man whom I quarrelled
+with this morning, and whom you fought with this afternoon. Now you will
+understand my uncle's reasons for so strenuously desiring to prevent the
+duel at St. Germain. It appears that the old Chevalier de Canaples is
+as eager as the Cardinal to see his daughter wed to me, for his Eminence
+has promised to create me Duke for a wedding gift. 'T will cost him
+little, and 't will please these Canaples mightily. Naturally, had
+Eugène de Canaples and I crossed swords, matters would have been
+rendered difficult."
+
+"When did you learn all this?" I inquired.
+
+"To-day, after the duel, and when it was known what St. Auban and
+Montmédy had threatened me with. My uncle thought it well that I should
+withdraw from Paris. He sent for me and told me what I have told you,
+adding that I had best seize the opportunity, whilst my presence at
+Court was undesirable, to repair to Blois and get my wooing done. I in
+part agreed with him. The lady is very rich, and I am told that she is
+beautiful. I shall see her, and if she pleases me, I'll woo her. If not,
+I'll return to Paris."
+
+"But her brother will oppose you."
+
+"Her brother? Pooh! If he doesn't die of the sword-thrust you gave him,
+which I am told is in the region of the lung and passing dangerous, he
+will at least be abed for a couple of months to come."
+
+"But I, mon cher André? What rôle do you reserve for me, that you have
+desired me to go with you?"
+
+"The rôle of Mentor if you will. Methought you would prove a merry
+comrade to help one o'er a tedious journey, and knowing that there was
+little to hold you to Paris, and probably sound reasons why you should
+desire to quit it, meseemed that perhaps you would consent to bear me
+company. Who knows, my knight errant, what adventures may await you and
+what fortunes? If the heiress displeases me, it may be that she will
+please you--or mayhap there is another heiress at Blois who will fall
+enamoured of those fierce moustachios."
+
+I laughed with him at the improbability of such things befalling. I
+carried in my bosom too large a heart, and one that was the property of
+every wench I met--for just so long as I chanced to be in her company.
+
+It was no more than in harmony with this habit of mine, that when, next
+morning in the common-room of the Connétable, I espied Jeanneton, the
+landlord's daughter, and remarked that she was winsome and shapely, with
+a complexion that would not have dishonoured a rose-petal, I permitted
+myself to pinch her dainty cheek. She slapped mine in return, and in
+this pleasant manner we became acquainted.
+
+"Sweet Jeanneton," quoth I with a laugh, "that was mightily ill-done! I
+did but pinch your cheek as one may pinch a sweet-smelling bud, so that
+the perfume of it may cling to one's fingers."
+
+"And I, sir," was the pert rejoinder, "did but slap yours as one may
+slap a misbehaving urchin's; so that he may learn better manners."
+
+Nevertheless she was pleased with my courtly speech, and perchance also
+with my moustachios, for a smile took the place of the frown wherewith
+she had at first confronted me. Now, if I had uttered glib pleasantries
+in answer to her frowns, how many more did not her smiles wring from me!
+I discoursed to her in the very courtliest fashion of cows and pullets
+and such other matters as interesting to her as they were mysterious
+to me. I questioned her in a breath touching her father's pigs and
+the swain she loved best in that little township, to all of which she
+answered me with a charming wit, which would greatly divert you did I
+but recall her words sufficiently to set them down. In five minutes
+we had become the best friends in the world, which was attested by the
+protecting arm that I slipped around her waist, as I asked her whether
+she loved that village swain of hers better than she loved me, and
+refused to believe her when she answered that she did.
+
+Outside two men were talking, one calling for a farrier, and when
+informed that the only one in the village was absent and not likely to
+return till noon, demanding relays of horses. The other--probably the
+hostler--answered him that the Connétable was not a post-house and
+that no horses were to be had there. Then a woman's voice, sweet yet
+commanding, rose above theirs.
+
+"Very well, Guilbert," it said. "We will await this farrier's return."
+
+"Let me go, Monsieur!" cried Jeanneton. "Some one comes."
+
+Now for myself I cared little who might come, but methought that it was
+likely to do poor Jeanneton's fair name no benefit, if the arm of
+Gaston de Luynes were seen about her waist. And so I obeyed her, but not
+quickly enough; for already a shadow lay athwart the threshold, and in
+the doorway stood a woman, whose eye took in the situation before we had
+altered it sufficiently to avert suspicion. To my amazement I beheld the
+lady of the coach--she who had saved me from the mob in Place Vendôme,
+and touching whose identity I could have hazarded a shrewd guess.
+
+In her eyes also I saw the light of recognition which swiftly changed to
+one of scorn. Then they passed from me to the vanishing Jeanneton, and
+methought that she was about to call her back. She paused, however, and,
+turning to the lackey who followed at her heels.
+
+"Guilbert," she said, "be good enough to call the landlord, and bid him
+provide me with an apartment for the time that we may be forced to spend
+here."
+
+But at this juncture the host himself came hurrying forward with many
+bows and endless rubbing of hands, which argued untold deference. He
+regretted that the hostelry of the Connétable, being but a poor inn,
+seldom honoured as it was at that moment, possessed but one suite of
+private apartments, and that was now occupied by a most noble gentleman.
+The lady tapped her foot, and as at that moment her companion (who was
+none other than the fair-haired doll I had seen with her on the previous
+day) entered the room, she turned to speak with her, whilst I moved away
+towards the window.
+
+"Will this gentleman," she inquired, "lend me one of his rooms, think
+you?"
+
+"Hélas, Mademoiselle, he has but two, a bedroom and an ante-chamber, and
+he is still abed."
+
+"Oh!" she cried in pretty anger, "this is insufferable! 'T is your
+fault, Guilbert, you fool. Am I, then, to spend the day here in the
+common-room?"
+
+"No, no, Mademoiselle," exclaimed the host in his most soothing accents.
+"Only for an hour, or less, perhaps, until this very noble lord is
+risen, when assuredly--for he is young and very gallant--he will resign
+one or both of his rooms to you."
+
+More was said between them, but my attention was suddenly drawn
+elsewhere. Michelot burst into the room, disaster written on his face.
+
+"Monsieur," he cried, in great alarm, "the Marquis de St. Auban
+is riding down the street with the Vicomte de Vilmorin and another
+gentleman."
+
+I rapped out an oath at the news; they had got scent of Andrea's
+whereabouts, and were after him like sleuth-hounds on a trail.
+
+"Remain here, Michelot," I answered in a low voice. "Tell them that
+M. de Mancini is not here, that the only occupant of the inn is your
+master, a gentleman from Normandy, or Picardy, or where you will.
+See that they do not guess our presence--the landlord fortunately is
+ignorant of M. de Mancini's name."
+
+There was a clatter of horses' hoofs without, and I was barely in time
+to escape by the door leading to the staircase, when St. Auban's heavy
+voice rang out, calling the landlord.
+
+"I am in search of a gentleman named Andrea de Mancini," he said. "I am
+told that he has journeyed hither, and that he is here at present. Am I
+rightly informed?"
+
+I determined to remain where I was, and hear that conversation to the
+end.
+
+"There is a gentleman here," answered the host, "but I am ignorant of
+his name. I will inquire."
+
+"You may spare yourself the trouble," Michelot interposed. "That is not
+the gentleman's name. I am his servant."
+
+There was a moment's pause, then came Vilmorin's shrill voice.
+
+"You lie, knave! M. de Mancini is here. You are M. de Luynes's lackey,
+and where the one is, there shall we find the other."
+
+"M. de Luynes?" came a voice unknown to me. "That is Mancini's
+sword-blade of a friend, is it not? Well, why does he hide himself?
+Where is he? Where is your master, rascal?"
+
+"I am here, Messieurs," I answered, throwing wide the door, and
+appearing, grim and arrogant, upon the threshold.
+
+Mort de ma vie! Had they beheld the Devil, St. Auban and Vilmorin could
+not have looked less pleased than they did when their eyes lighted upon
+me, standing there surveying them with a sardonic grin.
+
+St. Auban muttered an oath, Vilmorin stifled a cry, whilst he who had so
+loudly called to know where I hid myself--a frail little fellow, in the
+uniform of the gardes du corps--now stood silent and abashed.
+
+The two women, who had withdrawn into a dark and retired corner of the
+apartment, stood gazing with interest upon this pretty scene.
+
+"Well, gentlemen?" I asked in a tone of persiflage, as I took a step
+towards them. "Have you naught to say to me, now that I have answered
+your imperious summons? What! All dumb?"
+
+"Our affair is not with you," said St. Auban, curtly.
+
+"Pardon! Why, then, did you inquire where I was?"
+
+"Messieurs," exclaimed Vilmorin, whose face assumed the pallor usual to
+it in moments of peril, "meseems we have been misinformed, and that M.
+de Mancini is not here. Let us seek elsewhere."
+
+"Most excellent advice, gentlemen," I commented,--"seek elsewhere."
+
+"Monsieur," cried the little officer, turning purple, "it occurs to me
+that you are mocking us."
+
+"Mocking you! Mocking you? Mocking a gentleman who has been tied to so
+huge a sword as yours. Surely--surely, sir, you do not think--"
+
+"I'll not endure it," he broke in. "You shall answer to me for this."
+
+"Have a care, sir," I cried in alarm as he rushed forward. "Have a care,
+sir, lest you trip over your sword."
+
+He halted, drew himself up, and, with a magnificent gesture: "I am
+Armand de Malpertuis, lieutenant of his Majesty's guards," he announced,
+"and I shall be grateful if you will do me the honour of taking a turn
+with me, outside."
+
+"I am flattered beyond measure, M. Malappris--"
+
+"Mal-per-tuis," he corrected furiously.
+
+"Malpertuis," I echoed. "I am honoured beyond words, but I do not wish
+to take a turn."
+
+"Mille diables, sir! Don't you understand? We must fight."
+
+"Must we, indeed? Again I am honoured; but, Monsieur, I don't fight
+sparrows."
+
+"Gentlemen! Gentlemen!" cried St. Auban, thrusting himself between us.
+"Malpertuis, have the goodness to wait until one affair is concluded
+before you create a second one. Now, M. de Luynes, will you tell me
+whether M. de Mancini is here or not?"
+
+"What if he should be?"
+
+"You will be wise to withdraw--we shall be three to two."
+
+"Three to two! Surely, Marquis, your reckoning is at fault. You cannot
+count the Vicomte there as one; his knees are knocking together; at best
+he is but a woman in man's clothes. As for your other friend, unless his
+height misleads me, he is but a boy. Therefore, Monsieur, you see that
+the advantage is with us. We are two men opposed to a man, a woman, and
+a child, so that--"
+
+"In Heaven's name, sir," cried St. Auban, again interposing himself
+betwixt me and the bellicose Malpertuis, "will you cease this
+foolishness? A word with you in private, M. de Luynes."
+
+I permitted him to take me by the sleeve, and lead me aside, wondering
+the while what curb it was that he was setting upon his temper, and what
+wily motives he might have for adopting so conciliatory a tone.
+
+With many generations to come, the name of César de St. Auban must
+perforce be familiar as that of one of the greatest roysterers and most
+courtly libertines of the early days of Louis XIV., as well as that of a
+rabid anti-cardinalist and frondeur, and one of the earliest of that new
+cabal of nobility known as the petits-maîtres, whose leader the Prince
+de Condé was destined to become a few years later. He was a man of about
+my own age, that is to say, between thirty-two and thirty-three, and
+of my own frame, tall, spare, and active. On his florid, débonnair
+countenance was stamped his character of bon-viveur. In dress he
+was courtly in the extreme. His doublet and haut-de-chausses were of
+wine-coloured velvet, richly laced, and he still affected the hanging
+sleeves of a fast-disappearing fashion. Valuable lace filled the tops
+of his black boots, a valuable jewel glistened here and there upon
+his person, and one must needs have pronounced him a fop but for the
+strength and resoluteness of his bearing, and the long rapier that hung
+from his gold-embroidered baldrick. Such in brief is a portrait of
+the man who now confronted me, his fine blue eyes fixed upon my face,
+wherein methinks he read but little, search though he might.
+
+"M. de Luynes," he murmured at last, "you appear to find entertainment
+in making enemies, and you do it wantonly."
+
+"Have you brought me aside to instruct me in the art of making friends?"
+
+"Possibly, M. de Luynes; and without intending an offence, permit me to
+remark that you need them."
+
+"Mayhap. But I do not seek them."
+
+"I have it in my heart to wish that you did; for I, M. de Luynes, seek
+to make a friend of you. Nay, do not smile in that unbelieving fashion.
+I have long esteemed you for those very qualities of dauntlessness and
+defiance which have brought you so rich a crop of hatred. If you
+doubt my words, perhaps you will recall my attitude towards you in the
+horse-market yesterday, and let that speak. Without wishing to remind
+you of a service done, I may yet mention that I stood betwixt you and
+the mob that sought to avenge my friend Canaples. He was my friend; you
+stood there, as indeed you have always stood, in the attitude of a foe.
+You wounded Canaples, maltreated Vilmorin, defied me; and yet but for my
+intervention, mille diables sir, you had been torn to pieces."
+
+"All this I grant is very true, Monsieur," I made reply, with deep
+suspicion in my soul. "Yet, pardon me, if I confess that to me it proves
+no more than that you acted as a generous enemy. Pardon my bluntness
+also--but what profit do you look to make from gaining my friendship?"
+
+"You are frank, Monsieur," he said, colouring slightly, "I will be none
+the less so. I am a frondeur, an anti-cardinalist. In a word, I am
+a gentleman and a Frenchman. An interloping foreigner, miserly,
+mean-souled, and Jesuitical, springs up, wins himself into the graces
+of a foolish, impetuous, wilful queen, and climbs the ladder which she
+holds for him to the highest position in France. I allude to Mazarin;
+this Cardinal who is not a priest; this minister of France who is not a
+Frenchman; this belittler of nobles who is not a gentleman."
+
+"Mort Dieu, Monsieur--"
+
+"One moment, M. de Luynes. This adventurer, not content with the
+millions which his avaricious talons have dragged from the people for
+his own benefit, seeks, by means of illustrious alliances, to enrich a
+pack of beggarly nieces and nephews that he has rescued from the squalor
+of their Sicilian homes to bring hither. His nieces, the Mancinis and
+Martinozzis, he is marrying to Dukes and Princes. 'T is not nice to
+witness, but 't is the affair of the men who wed them. In seeking,
+however, to marry his nephew Andrea to one of the greatest heiresses in
+France, he goes too far. Yvonne de Canaples is for some noble countryman
+of her own--there are many suitors to her hand--and for no nephew of
+Giulio Mazarini. Her brother Eugène, himself, thinks thus, and therein,
+M. de Luynes, you have the real motive of the quarrel which he provoked
+with Andrea, and which, had you not interfered, could have had but one
+ending."
+
+"Why do you tell me all this, Monsieur?" I inquired coldly, betraying
+none of the amazement his last words gave birth to.
+
+"So that you may know the true position of affairs, and, knowing it, see
+the course which the name you bear must bid you follow. Because Canaples
+failed am I here to-day. I had not counted upon meeting you, but since
+I have met you, I have set the truth before you, confident that you
+will now withdraw from an affair to which no real interest can bind you,
+leaving matters to pursue their course."
+
+He eyed me, methought, almost anxiously from under his brows, as he
+awaited my reply. It was briefer than he looked for.
+
+"You have wasted time, Monsieur."
+
+"How? You persist?"
+
+"Yes. I persist. Yet for the Cardinal I care nothing. Mazarin has
+dismissed me from his service unjustly and unpaid. He has forbidden me
+his nephew's company. In fact, did he know of my presence here with M.
+de Mancini, he would probably carry out his threat to hang me."
+
+"Ciel!" cried St. Auban, "you are mad, if that be so. France is divided
+into two parties, cardinalists and anti-cardinalists. You, sir, without
+belonging to either, stand alone, an enemy to both. Your attitude is
+preposterous!"
+
+"Nay, sir, not alone. There is Andrea de Mancini. The boy is my only
+friend in a world of enemies. I am growing fond of him, Monsieur, and
+I will stand by him, while my arm can wield a sword, in all that may
+advance his fortunes and his happiness. That, Monsieur, is my last
+word."
+
+"Do not forget, M. de Luynes," he said--his suaveness all departed of
+a sudden, and his tone full of menace and acidity--"do not forget that
+when a wall may not be scaled it may be broken through."
+
+"Aye, Monsieur, but many of those who break through stand in danger
+of being crushed by the falling stones," I answered, entering into the
+spirit of his allegory.
+
+"There are many ways of striking," he said.
+
+"And many ways of being struck," I retorted with a sneer.
+
+Our words grew sinister, our eyes waxed fiery, and more might have
+followed had not the door leading to the staircase opened at that moment
+to admit Andrea himself. He came, elegant in dress and figure, with a
+smile upon his handsome young face, whose noble features gave the lie
+to St. Auban's assertion that he had been drawn from a squalid Sicilian
+home. Such faces are not bred in squalor.
+
+In utter ignorance of the cabal against him, he greeted St. Auban--who
+was well known to him--with a graceful bow, and also Vilmorin, who stood
+in the doorway with Malpertuis, and who at the sight of Mancini grew
+visibly ill at ease. In coming to Choisy, the Vicomte had clearly
+expected to do no more than second St. Auban in the duel which he
+thought to see forced upon Andrea. He now realised that if a fight there
+was, he might, by my presence, be forced into it. Malpertuis looked
+fierce and tugged at his moustachios, whilst his companions returned
+Andrea's salutation--St. Auban gravely, and Vilmorin hesitatingly.
+
+"Ha, Gaston," said the boy, advancing towards me, "our host tells me
+that two ladies who have been shipwrecked here wish to do me the honour
+of occupying my apartments for an hour or so. Ha, there they are," he
+added, as the two girls came suddenly forward. Then bowing--"Mesdames, I
+am enchanted to set the poor room at your disposal for as long as it may
+please you to honour it."
+
+As the ladies--of whose presence St. Auban had been unaware--appeared
+before us, I shot a glance at the Marquis, and, from the start he gave
+upon beholding them, I saw that things were as I had suspected.
+
+Before they could reply to Andrea, St. Auban suddenly advanced:
+
+"Mesdemoiselles," quoth he, "forgive me if in this miserable light I did
+not earlier discover your presence and offer you my services. I do so
+now, with the hope that you will honour me by making use of them."
+
+"Merci, M. de St. Auban," replied the dark-haired one--whom I guessed
+to be none other than Yvonne de Canaples herself--"but, since this
+gentleman so gallantly cedes his apartments to us, all our needs are
+satisfied. It would be churlish to refuse that which is so graciously
+proffered."
+
+Her tone was cold in the extreme, as also was the inclination of her
+head wherewith she favoured the Marquis. In arrant contrast were the
+pretty words of thanks she addressed to Andrea, who stood by, blushing
+like a girl, and a damnable scowl did this contrast draw from St. Auban,
+a scowl that lasted until, escorted by the landlord, the two ladies had
+withdrawn.
+
+There was an awkward pause when they were gone, and methought from the
+look on St. Auban's face that he was about to provoke a fight after all.
+Not so, however, for, after staring at us like a clown whilst one might
+tell a dozen, he turned and strode to the door, calling for his horse
+and those of his companions.
+
+"Au révoir, M. de Luynes," he said significantly as he got into the
+saddle.
+
+"Au révoir, M. de Luynes," said also Malpertuis, coming close up to me.
+"We shall meet again, believe me."
+
+"Pray God that we may not, if you would die in your bed," I answered
+mockingly. "Adieu!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. OF HOW ANDREA BECAME LOVE-SICK
+
+
+With what fictions I could call to mind I put off Andrea's questions
+touching the peculiar fashion of St. Auban's leave-taking. Tell him
+the truth and expose to him the situation whereof he was himself the
+unconscious centre I dared not, lest his high-spirited impetuosity
+should cause him to take into his own hands the reins of the affair, and
+thus drive himself into irreparable disaster.
+
+Andrea himself showed scant concern, however, and was luckily content
+with my hurriedly invented explanations; his thoughts had suddenly found
+occupation in another and a gentler theme than the ill-humour of men,
+and presently his tongue betrayed them when he drew the conversation to
+the ladies to whom he had resigned his apartments.
+
+"Pardieu! Gaston," he burst out, "she is a lovely maid--saw you ever a
+bonnier?"
+
+"Indeed she is very beautiful," I answered, laughing to myself at the
+thought of how little he dreamt that it was of Yvonne St. Albaret de
+Canaples that he spoke, and not minded for the while to enlighten him.
+
+"If she be as kind and gentle as she is beautiful, Gaston, well--Uncle
+Giulio's plans are likely to suffer shipwreck. I shall not leave
+Choisy until I have spoken to her; in fact, I shall not leave until she
+leaves."
+
+"Nevertheless, we shall still be able to set out, as we had projected,
+after dining, for in an hour, or two at most, they will proceed on their
+journey."
+
+He was silent for some moments, then:
+
+"To the devil with the Cardinal's plans!" quoth he, banging his fist on
+the table. "I shall not go to Blois."
+
+"Pooh! Why not?"
+
+"Why not?" He halted for a moment, then in a meandering tone--"You have
+read perchance in story-books," he said, "of love being born from the
+first meeting of two pairs of eyes, as a spark is born of flint and
+steel, and you may have laughed at the conceit, as I have laughed at
+it. But laugh no more, Gaston; for I who stand before you am one who has
+experienced this thing which poets tell of, and which hitherto I have
+held in ridicule. I will not go to Blois because--because--enfin,
+because I intend to go where she goes."
+
+"Then, mon cher, you will go to Blois. You will go to Blois, if not as
+a dutiful nephew, resigned to obey his reverend uncle's wishes, at least
+because fate forces you to follow a pair of eyes that have--hum, what
+was it you said they did?"
+
+"Do you say that she is going to Blois? How do you know?"
+
+"Eh? How do I know? Oh, I heard her servant speaking with the hostler."
+
+"So much the better, then; for thus if his Eminence gets news of my
+whereabouts, the news will not awaken his ever-ready suspicions. Ciel!
+How beautiful she is! Noted you her eyes, her skin, and what hair, mon
+Dieu! Like threads of gold!"
+
+"Like threads of gold?" I echoed. "You are dreaming, boy. Oh, St. Gris!
+I understand; you are speaking of the fair-haired chit that was with
+her."
+
+He eyed me in amazement.
+
+"'T is you whose thoughts are wandering to that lanky, nose-in-the-air
+Madame who accompanied her."
+
+I began a laugh that I broke off suddenly as I realised that it was not
+Yvonne after all who had imprisoned his wits. The Cardinal's plans were,
+indeed, likely to miscarry if he persisted thus.
+
+"But 't was the nose-in-the-air Madame, as you call her, with whom you
+spoke!"
+
+"Aye, but it was the golden-haired lady that held my gaze. Pshaw! Who
+would mention them in a breath?"
+
+"Who, indeed?" said I, but with a different meaning.
+
+Thereafter, seeing him listless, I suggested a turn in the village to
+stretch our limbs before dining. But he would have none of it, and when
+I pressed the point with sound reasoning touching the benefits which
+health may cull from exercise, he grew petulant as a wayward child.
+She might descend whilst he was absent. Indeed, she might require some
+slight service that lay, perchance, in his power to render her. What
+an opportunity would he not lose were he abroad? She might even depart
+before we returned; and than that no greater calamity could just
+then befall him. No, he would not stir a foot from the inn. A fig for
+exercise! to the devil with health! who sought an appetite? Not he. He
+wished for no appetite--could contrive no base and vulgar appetite for
+food, whilst his soul, he swore, was being consumed by the overwhelming,
+all-effacing appetite to behold her.
+
+Such meandering fools are most of us at nineteen, when the heart is
+young--a flawless mirror ready to hold the image of the first fair maid
+that looks into it through our eyes, and as ready--Heaven knows!--to
+relinquish it when the substance is withdrawn.
+
+But I, who was not nineteen, and the mirror of whose heart--to pursue my
+metaphor--was dulled, warped, and cracked with much ill­usage, grew sick
+of the boy's enthusiasm and the monotony of a conversation which I could
+divert into no other channel from that upon which it had been started
+by a little slip of a girl with hair of gold and sapphire eyes--I use
+Andrea's words. And so I rose, and bidding him take root in the tavern,
+if so it pleased his fancy, I left him there.
+
+Wrapped in my cloak, for the air was raw and damp, I strode aimlessly
+along, revolving in my mind what had befallen at the Connétable that
+morning, and speculating upon the issue that this quaint affair might
+have. In matters of love, or rather, of matrimony--which is not quite
+the same thing--opposition is common enough. But the opposers
+are usually members of either of the interested families. Now the
+families--that is to say, the heads of the families--being agreed and
+even anxious to bring about the union of Yvonne de Canaples and Andrea
+de Mancini, it was something new to have a cabal of persons who, from
+motives of principle--as St. Auban had it--should oppose the alliance so
+relentlessly as to even resort to violence if no other means occurred
+to them. It seemed vastly probable that Andrea would be disposed of by
+a knife in the back, and more than probable that a like fate would be
+reserved for me, since I had constituted myself his guardian angel. For
+my own part, however, I had a pronounced distaste to ending my days in
+so unostentatious a fashion. I had also a notion that I should prove an
+exceedingly difficult person to assassinate, and that those who sought
+to slip a knife into me would find my hide peculiarly tough, and my hand
+peculiarly ready to return the compliment.
+
+So deeply did I sink into ponderings of this character that it was not
+until two hours afterwards that I again found myself drawing near the
+Connétable.
+
+I reached the inn to find by the door a coach, and by that coach Andrea;
+he stood bareheaded, despite the cold, conversing, with all outward
+semblances of profound respect, with those within it.
+
+So engrossed was he and so ecstatic, that my approach was unheeded, and
+when presently I noted that the coach was Mademoiselle de Canaples's, I
+ceased to wonder at the boy's unconsciousness of what took place around
+him.
+
+Clearly the farrier had been found at last, and the horse shod afresh
+during my absence. Loath to interrupt so pretty a scene, I waited,
+aloof, until these adieux should be concluded, and whilst I waited
+there came to me from the carriage a sweet, musical voice that was not
+Yvonne's.
+
+"May we not learn at least, Monsieur, the name of the gentleman to whose
+courtesy we are indebted for having spent the past two hours without
+discomfort?"
+
+"My name, Mademoiselle, is Andrea de Mancini, that of the humblest
+of your servants, and one to whom your thanks are a more than lavish
+payment for the trivial service he may have been fortunate enough to
+render you."
+
+Dame! What glibness doth a tongue acquire at Court!
+
+"M. Andrea de Mancini?" came Yvonne's voice in answer. "Surely a
+relative of the Lord Cardinal?"
+
+"His nephew, Mademoiselle."
+
+"Ah! My father, sir, is a great admirer of your uncle."
+
+From the half-caressing tone, as much as from the very words she
+uttered, I inferred that she was in ignorance of the compact into which
+his Eminence had entered with her father--a bargain whereof she was
+herself a part.
+
+"I am rejoiced, indeed, Mademoiselle," replied Andrea with a bow, as
+though the compliment had been paid to him. "Am I indiscreet in asking
+the name of Monsieur your father?"
+
+"Indiscreet! Nay, Monsieur. You have a right to learn the name of
+those who are under an obligation to you. My father is the Chevalier de
+Canaples, of whom it is possible that you may have heard. I am Yvonne de
+Canaples, of whom it is unlikely that you should have heard, and this is
+my sister Geneviève, whom a like obscurity envelops."
+
+The boy's lips moved, but no sound came from them, whilst his cheeks
+went white and red by turns. His courtliness of a moment ago had
+vanished, and he stood sheepish and gauche as a clown. At length he
+so far mastered himself as to bow and make a sign to the coachman, who
+thereupon gathered up his reins.
+
+"You are going presumably to Blois?" he stammered with a nervous laugh,
+as if the journey were a humorous proceeding.
+
+"Yes, Monsieur," answered Geneviève, "we are going home."
+
+"Why, then, it is possible that we shall meet again. I, too, am
+travelling in that direction. A bientôt, Mesdemoiselles!"
+
+The whip cracked, the coach began to move, and the creaking of its
+wheels drowned, so far as I was concerned, the female voices that
+answered his farewell. The coachman roused his horses into an amble; the
+amble became a trot, and the vehicle vanished round a corner. Some few
+idlers stopped to gaze stupidly after it, but not half so stupidly as
+did my poor Andrea, standing bareheaded where the coach had left him.
+
+I drew near, and laid my hand on his shoulder; at the touch he started
+like one awakened suddenly, and looked up.
+
+"Ah--you are returned, Gaston."
+
+"To find that you have made a discovery, and are overwhelmed by your
+error."
+
+"My error?"
+
+"Yes--that of falling in love with the wrong one. Hélas, it is but one
+of those ironical jests wherewith Fate amuses herself at every step
+of our lives. Had you fallen in love with Yvonne--and it passes my
+understanding why you did not--everything would have gone smoothly with
+your wooing. Unfortunately, you have a preference for fair hair--"
+
+"Have done," he interrupted peevishly. "What does it signify? To the
+devil with Mazarin's plans!"
+
+"So you said this morning."
+
+"Yes, when I did not even dream her name was Canaples."
+
+"Nevertheless, she is the wrong Canaples."
+
+"For my uncle--but, mille diables! sir, 't is I who am to wed, and I
+shall wed as my heart bids me."
+
+"Hum! And Mazarin?"
+
+"Faugh!" he answered, with an expressive shrug.
+
+"Well, since you are resolved, let us dine."
+
+"I have no appetite."
+
+"Let us dine notwithstanding. Eat you must if you would live; and unless
+you live--think of it!--you'll never reach Blois."
+
+"Gaston, you are laughing at me! I do not wish to eat."
+
+I surveyed him gravely, with my arms akimbo.
+
+"Can love so expand the heart of man that it fills even his stomach?
+Well, well, if you will not eat, at least have the grace to bear me
+company at table. Come, Andrea," and I took his arm, "let us ascend to
+that chamber which she has but just quitted. Who can tell but that we
+shall find there some token of her recent presence? If nothing more, at
+least the air will be pervaded by the perfume she affected, and since
+you scorn the humble food of man, you can dine on that."
+
+He smiled despite himself as I drew him towards the staircase.
+
+"Scoffer!" quoth he. "Your callous soul knows naught of love."
+
+"Whereas you have had three hours' experience. Pardieu! You shall
+instruct me in the gentle art."
+
+Alas, for those perfumes upon which I had proposed that he should feast
+himself. If any the beautiful Geneviève had left behind her, they had
+been smothered in the vulgar yet appetising odour of the steaming ragoût
+that occupied the table.
+
+I prevailed at length upon the love-lorn boy to take some food, but I
+could lead him to talk of naught save Geneviève de Canaples. Presently
+he took to chiding me for the deliberateness wherewith I ate, and
+betrayed thereby his impatience to be in the saddle and after her.
+I argued that whilst she saw him not she might think of him. But
+the argument, though sound, availed me little, and in the end I
+was forced--for all that I am a man accustomed to please myself--to
+hurriedly end my repast, and pronounce myself ready to start.
+
+As Andrea had with him some store of baggage--since his sojourn at Blois
+was likely to be of some duration--he travelled in a coach. Into this
+coach, then, we climbed--he and I. His valet, Silvio, occupied the seat
+beside the coachman, whilst my stalwart Michelot rode behind leading
+my horse by the bridle. In this fashion we set out, and ere long the
+silence of my thoughtful companion, the monotonous rumbling of the
+vehicle, and, most important of all factors, the good dinner that I had
+consumed, bred in me a torpor that soon became a sleep.
+
+From a dream that, bound hand and foot, I was being dragged by St. Auban
+and Malpertuis before the Cardinal, I awakened with a start to find
+that we were clattering already through the streets of Etrechy; so that
+whilst I had slept we had covered some six leagues. Twilight had already
+set in, and Andrea lay back idly in the carriage, holding a book which
+it was growing too dark to read, and between the leaves of which he had
+slipped his forefinger to mark the place where he had paused.
+
+His eyes met mine as I looked round, and he smiled. "I should not have
+thought, Gaston," he said, "that a man with so seared a conscience could
+have slept thus soundly."
+
+"I have not slept soundly," I grumbled, recalling my dream.
+
+"Pardieu! you have slept long, at least."
+
+"Out of self-protection; so that I might not hear the name of Geneviève
+de Canaples. 'T is a sweet name, but you render it monotonous."
+
+He laughed good-humouredly.
+
+"Have you never loved, Gaston?"
+
+"Often."
+
+"Ah--but I mean did you never conceive a great passion?"
+
+"Hundreds, boy."
+
+"But never such a one as mine!"
+
+"Assuredly not; for the world has never seen its fellow. Be good enough
+to pull the cord, you Cupid incarnate. I wish to alight."
+
+"You wish to alight! Why?"
+
+"Because I am sick of love. I am going to ride awhile with Michelot
+whilst you dream of her coral lips, her sapphire eyes, and what other
+gems constitute her wondrous personality."
+
+Two minutes later I was in the saddle riding with Michelot in the wake
+of the carriage. As I have already sought to indicate in these pages,
+Michelot was as much my friend as my servant. It was therefore no more
+than natural that I should communicate to him my fears touching what
+might come of the machinations of St. Auban, Vilmorin, and even,
+perchance, of that little firebrand, Malpertuis.
+
+Night fell while we talked, and at last the lights of Étampes, where we
+proposed to lie, peeped at us from a distance, and food and warmth.
+
+It was eight o'clock when we reached the town, and a few moments later
+we rattled into the courtyard of the Hôtel de l'Épée.
+
+Andrea was out of temper to learn that Mesdemoiselles de Canaples had
+reached the place two hours earlier, taken fresh horses, and proceeded
+on their journey, intending to reach Monnerville that night. He was even
+mad enough to propose that we should follow their example, but my sober
+arguments prevailed, and at Étampes we stayed till morning.
+
+Andrea withdrew early. But I, having chanced upon a certain M. de la
+Vrillière, a courtier of Vilmorin's stamp, with whom I had some slight
+acquaintance, and his purse being heavier than his wits, I spent a
+passing profitable evening in his company. This pretty gentleman hailed
+my advent with a delight that amazed me, and suggested that we should
+throw a main together to kill time. The dice were found, and so clumsily
+did he use them that in half an hour, playing for beggarly crowns, he
+had lost twenty pistoles. Next he lost his temper, and with an oath
+pitched the cubes into the fire, swearing that they were toys for
+children and that I must grant him his révanche with cards. The cards
+were furnished us, and with a fortune that varied little we played
+lansquenet until long past midnight. The fire died out in the grate, and
+the air grew chill, until at last, with a violent sneeze, La Vrillière
+protested that he would play no more.
+
+Cursing himself for the unluckiest being alive, the fool bade me
+good-night, and left me seventy pistoles richer than when I had met him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. THE CHÂTEAU DE CANAPLES
+
+
+Despite the strenuous efforts which Andrea compelled us to put forth, we
+did not again come up with Mesdemoiselles de Canaples, who in truth must
+have travelled with greater speed than ladies are wont to.
+
+This circumstance bred much discomfort in Andrea's bosom; for in it he
+read that his Geneviève thought not of him as he of her, else, knowing
+that he followed the same road, she would have retarded their progress
+so that he might overtake them. Thus argued he when on the following
+night, which was that of Friday, we lay at Orleans. But when towards
+noon on Saturday our journey ended with our arrival at Blois, he went so
+far as to conclude that she had hastened on expressly to avoid him. Now,
+from what I had seen of Mademoiselle Yvonne, methought I might hazard
+a guess that she it was who commanded in these--and haply, too, in
+other--matters, and that the manner of their journey had been such as
+was best to her wishes.
+
+With such an argument did I strive to appease Andrea's doubts; but all
+in vain--which is indeed no matter for astonishment, for to reason with
+a man in love is to reason with one who knows no reason.
+
+After a brief halt at the Lys de France--at which hostelry I hired
+myself a room--we set out for the Château de Canaples, which is situated
+on the left bank of the Loire, at a distance of about half a league from
+Blois in the direction of Tours.
+
+We cut a brave enough figure as we rode down the Rue Vieille attended by
+our servants, and many a rustic Blaisois stopped to gape at us, to nudge
+his companion, and point us out, whispering the word "Paris."
+
+I had donned my grey velvet doublet--deeming the occasion worthy of
+it--whilst Andrea wore a handsome suit of black, with gold lace,
+which for elegance it would have been difficult to surpass. An air of
+pensiveness added interest to his handsome face and courtly figure, and
+methought that Geneviève must be hard to please if she fell not a victim
+to his wooing.
+
+We proceeded along the road bordering the Loire, a road of rare beauty
+at any other season of the year, but now bare of foliage, grey, bleak,
+and sullen as the clouds overhead, and as cold to the eye as was the
+sharp wind to the flesh. As we rode I fell to thinking of what my
+reception at the Château de Canaples was likely to be, and almost to
+regret that I had permitted Andrea to persuade me to accompany him. Long
+ago I had known the Chevalier de Canaples, and for all the disparity
+in our ages--for he counted twice my years--we had been friends and
+comrades. That, however, was ten years ago, in the old days when I owned
+something more than the name of Luynes. To-day I appeared before him as
+a ruined adventurer, a soldier of fortune, a ruffler, a duellist who had
+almost slain his son in a brawl, whose details might be known to him,
+but not its origin. Seeing me in the company of Andrea de Mancini he
+might--who could say?--even deem me one of those parasites who cling to
+young men of fortune so that they may live at their expense. That the
+daughter would have formed such a conceit of me I was assured; it but
+remained to see with what countenance the father would greet me.
+
+From such speculations I was at length aroused by our arrival at the
+gates of the Canaples park. Seeing them wide open, we rode between
+the two massive columns of granite (each surmounted by a couchant lion
+holding the escutcheon of the Canaples) and proceeded at an ambling pace
+up the avenue. Through the naked trees the château became discernible--a
+brave old castle that once had been the stronghold of a feudal race
+long dead. Grey it was, and attuned, that day, to the rest of the grey
+landscape. But at its base the ivy grew thick and green, and here and
+there long streaks of it crept up almost to the battlements, whilst
+in one place it had gone higher yet and clothed one of the quaint old
+turrets. A moat there had once been, but this was now filled up and
+arranged into little mounds that became flower-beds in summer.
+
+Resigning our horses to the keeping of our servants, we followed the
+grave maître d'hôtel who had received us. He led us across the spacious
+hall, which had all the appearance of an armoury, and up the regal
+staircase of polished oak on to a landing wide and lofty. Here, turning
+to the left, he opened a door and desired us to give ourselves the
+trouble of awaiting the Chevalier. We entered a handsome room, hung
+in costly Dutch tapestry, and richly furnished, yet with a sobriety of
+colour almost puritanical. The long windows overlooked a broad terrace,
+enclosed in a grey stone balustrade, from which some half-dozen steps
+led to a garden below. Beyond that ran the swift waters of the Loire,
+and beyond that again, in the distance, we beheld the famous Château de
+Chambord, built in the days of the first Francis.
+
+I had but remarked these details when the door again opened, to admit
+a short, slender man in whose black hair and beard the hand of time had
+scattered but little of that white dust that marks its passage. His face
+was pale, thin, and wrinkled, and his grey eyes had a nervous, restless
+look that dwelt not long on anything. He was dressed in black, with
+simple elegance, and his deep collar and ruffles were of the finest
+point.
+
+"Welcome to Canaples, M. de Mancini!" he exclaimed, as he hurried
+forward, with a smile so winning that his countenance appeared
+transfigured by it. "Welcome most cordially! We had not hoped that you
+would arrive so soon, but fortunately my daughters, to whom you appear
+to have been of service at Choisy, warned me that you were journeying
+hither. Your apartments, therefore, are prepared for you, and we hope
+that you will honour Canaples by long remaining its guest."
+
+Andrea thanked him becomingly.
+
+"In truth," he added, "my departure from Paris was somewhat sudden,
+but I have a letter here from Monseigneur my uncle, which explains the
+matter."
+
+"No explanation is needed, my dear Andrea," replied the old nobleman,
+abandoning the formalities that had marked his welcoming speech. "How
+left you my Lord Cardinal?" he asked, as he took the letter.
+
+"In excellent health, but somewhat harassed, I fear, by the affairs of
+State."
+
+"Ah, yes, yes. But stay. You are not alone." And Canaples's grey eyes
+shot an almost furtive glance of inquiry in my direction. A second
+glance followed the first and the Chevalier's brows were knit. Then he
+came a step nearer, scanning my face.
+
+"Surely, surely, Monsieur," he exclaimed before Andrea had time to
+answer him. "Were you not at Rocroi?"
+
+"Your memory flatters me, Monsieur," I replied with a laugh. "I was
+indeed at Rocroi--captain in the regiment of chévaux-légers whereof you
+were Mestre de Champ."
+
+"His name," said Andrea, "is Gaston de Luynes, my very dear friend,
+counsellor, and, I might almost say, protector."
+
+"Pardieu, yes! Gaston de Luynes!" he ejaculated, seizing my hand in an
+affectionate grip. "But how have you fared since Rocroi was fought? For
+a soldier of such promise, one might have predicted great things in ten
+years."
+
+"Hélas, Monsieur! I was dismissed the service after Senlac."
+
+"Dismissed the service!"
+
+"Pah!" I laughed, not without bitterness, "'t is a long story and an
+ugly one, divided 'twixt the dice-box, the bottle, and the scabbard. Ten
+years ago I was a promising young captain, ardent and ambitious; to-day
+I am a broken ruffler, unrecognised by my family--a man without hope,
+without ambition, almost without honour."
+
+I know not what it was that impelled me to speak thus. Haply the wish
+that since he must soon learn to what depths Gaston de Luynes had sunk,
+he should at least learn it from my own lips at the outset.
+
+He shuddered at my concluding words, and had not Andrea at that moment
+put his arm affectionately upon my shoulder, and declared me the bravest
+fellow and truest friend in all the world, it is possible that the
+Chevalier de Canaples would have sought an excuse to be rid of me. Such
+men as he seek not the acquaintance of such men as I.
+
+To please Andrea was, however, of chief importance in his plans, and
+to that motive I owe it that he pressed me to remain a guest at the
+château. I declined the honour with the best grace I could command,
+determined that whilst Andrea remained at Canaples I would lodge at the
+Lys de France in Blois, independent and free to come or go as my fancy
+bade me. His invitation that I should at least dine at Canaples I
+accepted; but with the condition that he should repeat his invitation
+after he had heard something that I wished to tell him. He assented with
+a puzzled look, and when presently Andrea repaired to his apartments,
+and we were alone, I began.
+
+"You have doubtlessly received news, Monsieur, of a certain affair in
+which your son had recently the misfortune to be dangerously wounded?"
+
+We were standing by the great marble fireplace, and Canaples was resting
+one of his feet upon the huge brass andirons. He made a gesture of
+impatience as I spoke.
+
+"My son, sir, is a fool! A good-for-nothing fool! Oh, I have heard of
+this affair, a vulgar tavern brawl, the fifth in which his name has been
+involved and besmirched. I had news this morning by a courier dispatched
+me by my friend St. Simon, who imagines that I am deeply concerned in
+that young profligate. I learn that he is out of danger, and that in a
+month or so, he will be about again and ready to disgrace the name
+of Canaples afresh. But there, sir; I crave your pardon for the
+interruption."
+
+I bowed, and when in answer to my questions he told me that he was in
+ignorance of the details of the affair of which I spoke, I set about
+laying those details before him. Beginning with the original provocation
+in the Palais Royal and ending with the fight in the horse-market, I
+related the whole story to him, but in an impersonal manner, and keeping
+my own name out of my narrative. When I had done, Canaples muttered an
+oath of the days of the fourth Henry.
+
+"Ventre St. Gris! Does the dog carry his audacity so far as to dare come
+betwixt me and my wishes, and to strive against them? He sought to kill
+Mancini, eh? Would to Heaven he had died by the hand of this fellow who
+shielded the lad!"
+
+"Monsieur!" I cried, aghast at so unnatural an expression.
+
+"Pah!" he cried harshly. "He is my son in name alone, filial he never
+was."
+
+"Nevertheless, Monsieur, he is still your son, your heir."
+
+"My heir? And what, pray, does he inherit? A title--a barren, landless
+title! By his shameful conduct he alienated the affection of his uncle,
+and his uncle has disinherited him in favour of Yvonne. 'T is she who
+will be mistress of this château with its acres of land reaching from
+here to Blois, and three times as far on the other side. My brother,
+sir, was the rich Canaples, the owner of all this, and by his testament
+I am his heir during my lifetime, the estates going to Yvonne at my
+death. So that you see I have naught to leave; but if I had, not a
+dénier should go to my worthless son!"
+
+He spread his thin hands before the blaze, and for a moment there was
+silence. Then I proceeded to tell him of the cabal which had been formed
+against Mancini, and of the part played by St. Auban. At the mention of
+that name he started as if I had stung him.
+
+"What!" he thundered. "Is that ruffian also in the affair? Sangdieu! His
+motives are not far to seek. He is a suitor--an unfavoured suitor--for
+the hand of Yvonne, that seemingly still hopes. But you have not told
+me, Monsieur, the name of this man who has stood betwixt Andrea and his
+assassins."
+
+"Can you not guess, Monsieur?" quoth I, looking him squarely in the
+face. "Did you not hear Andrea call me, even now, his protector."
+
+"You? And with what motive, pray?"
+
+"At first, as I have told you, because the Cardinal gave me no choice
+in the matter touching your son. Since then my motive has lain in my
+friendship for the boy. He has been kind and affectionate to one who
+has known little kindness or affection in life. I seek to repay him by
+advancing his interests and his happiness. That, Monsieur, is why I am
+here to-day--to shield him from St. Auban and his fellows should they
+appear again, as I believe they will."
+
+The old man stood up and eyed me for a moment as steadily as his
+vacillating glance would permit him, then he held out his hand.
+
+"I trust, Monsieur," he said, "that you will do me the honour to dine
+with us, and that whilst you are at Blois we shall see you at Canaples
+as often as it may please you to cross its threshold."
+
+I took his hand, but without enthusiasm, for I understood that his words
+sprang from no warmth of heart for me, but merely from the fact that he
+beheld in me a likely ally to his designs of raising his daughter to the
+rank of Duchess.
+
+Eugène de Canaples may have been a good-for-nothing knave; still,
+methought his character scarce justified the callous indifference
+manifested by this selfish, weak-minded old man towards his own son.
+
+There was a knock at the door, and a lackey--the same Guilbert whom
+I had seen at Choisy in Mademoiselle's company--appeared with the
+announcement that the Chevalier was served.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. THE FORESHADOW OF DISASTER
+
+
+In the spacious dining salon of the Château de Canaples I found the two
+daughters of my host awaiting us--those same two ladies of the coach
+in Place Vendôme and of the hostelry at Choisy, the dark and stately
+icicle, Yvonne, and the fair, playful doll, Geneviève.
+
+I bowed my best bow as the Chevalier presented me, and from the corner
+of my eye, with inward malice, I watched them as I did so. Geneviève
+curtsied with a puzzled air and a sidelong glance at her sister. Yvonne
+accorded me the faintest, the coldest, inclination of her head, whilst
+her cheeks assumed a colour that was unwonted.
+
+"We have met before, I think, Monsieur," she said disdainfully.
+
+"True, Mademoiselle--once," I answered, thinking only of the coach.
+
+"Twice, Monsieur," she corrected, whereupon I recalled how she had
+surprised me with my arm about the waist of the inn-keeper's daughter,
+and had Heaven given me shame I might have blushed. But if sweet Yvonne
+thought to bring Gaston de Luynes to task for profiting by the good
+things which God's providence sent his way, she was led by vanity into a
+prodigious error.
+
+"Twice, indeed, Mademoiselle. But the service which you rendered me upon
+the first occasion was so present to my mind just now that it
+eclipsed the memory of our second meeting. I have ever since desired,
+Mademoiselle, that an opportunity might be mine wherein to thank you for
+the preservation of my life. I do so now, and at your service do I lay
+that life which you preserved, and which is therefore as much yours as
+mine."
+
+Strive as I might I could not rid my tone of an ironical inflection. I
+was goaded to it by her attitude, by the scornful turn of her lip and
+the disdainful glance of her grey eyes--she had her father's eyes,
+saving that her gaze was as steadfast as his was furtive.
+
+"What is this?" quoth Canaples. "You owe your life to my daughter? Pray
+tell me of it."
+
+"With all my heart," I made haste to answer before Mademoiselle could
+speak. "A week ago, I disagreed upon a question of great delicacy with a
+certain gentleman who shall be nameless. The obvious result attended
+our disagreement, and we fought 'neath the eyes of a vast company of
+spectators. Right was on my side, and the gentleman hurt himself upon
+my sword. Well, sir, the crowd snarled at me as though it were my fault
+that this had so befallen, and I flouted the crowd in answer. They were
+a hundred opposed to one, and so confident did this circumstance
+render them of their superiority, that for once those whelps displayed
+sufficient valour to attack me. I fled, and as a coach chanced to come
+that way, I clutched at the window and hung there. Within the coach
+there were two ladies, and one of them, taking compassion upon me,
+invited me to enter and thus rescued me. That lady, sir," I ended with a
+bow, "was Mademoiselle your daughter."
+
+In his eyes I read it that he had guessed the name of my nameless
+gentleman.
+
+The ladies were struck dumb by my apparent effrontery. Yvonne at last
+recovered sufficiently to ask if my presence at the château arose from
+my being attached to M. de Mancini. Now, "attached" is an unpleasant
+word. A courtier is attached to the King; a soldier to the army; there
+is humiliation in neither of these. But to a private gentleman, a man
+may be only attached as his secretary, his valet, or, possibly, as his
+bravo. Therein lay the sting of her carefully chosen word.
+
+"I am M. de Mancini's friend," I answered with simple dignity.
+
+For all reply she raised her eyebrows in token of surprise; Canaples
+looked askance; I bit my lip, and an awkward silence followed, which,
+luckily, was quickly ended by the appearance of Andrea.
+
+The ladies received him graciously, and a faint blush might, to
+searching eyes, have been perceived upon Geneviève's cheek.
+
+There came a delicate exchange of compliments, after which we got to
+table, and for my part I did ample justice to the viands.
+
+I sat beside Geneviève, and vis-à-vis with Andrea, who occupied the
+place of the honoured guest, at the host's right hand, with Yvonne
+beside him. Me it concerned little where I sat, since the repast was all
+that I could look for; not so the others. Andrea scowled at me because
+I was nearer to Geneviève than he, and Yvonne frowned at me for other
+reasons. By Geneviève I was utterly disregarded, and my endeavours to
+converse were sorely unsuccessful--for one may not converse alone.
+
+I clearly saw that Yvonne only awaited an opportunity to unmask me, and
+denounce me to her father as the man who had sought his son's life.
+
+This opportunity, however, came not until the moment of my departure
+from the château, that evening. I was crossing the hail with the
+Chevalier de Canaples, and we had stopped for a moment to admire a piece
+of old chain armour of the days of the Crusaders. Andrea and Geneviève
+had preceded us, and passed out through the open doorway, whilst Yvonne
+lingered upon the threshold looking back.
+
+"I trust, M. de Luynes," said Canaples, as we moved towards her, "that
+you will remember my invitation, and that whilst you remain at Biois
+we shall see you here as often as you may be pleased to come; indeed, I
+trust that you will be a daily visitor."
+
+Before I could utter a reply--"Father," exclaimed Mademoiselle, coming
+forward, "do you know to whom you are offering the hospitality of
+Canaples?"
+
+"Why that question, child? To M. de Luynes, M. de Mancini's friend."
+
+"And the would-be murderer of Eugène," she added fiercely.
+
+Canaples started.
+
+"Surely such affairs are not for women to meddle with," he cried.
+"Moreover, M. de Luynes has already given me all details of the affair."
+
+Her eyes grew very wide at that.
+
+"He has told you? Yet you invite him hither?" she exclaimed.
+
+"M. de Luynes has naught wherewith to reproach himself, nor have I.
+Those details which he has given me I may not impart to you; suffice it,
+however, that I am satisfied that his conduct could not have been other
+than it was, whereas that of my son reflects but little credit upon his
+name."
+
+She stamped her foot, and her eyes, blazing with anger, passed from one
+to the other of us.
+
+"And you--you believe this man's story?"
+
+"Yvonne!"
+
+"Possibly," I interposed, coolly, "Mademoiselle may have received some
+false account of it that justifies her evident unbelief in what I may
+have told you."
+
+It is not easy to give a lie unless you can prove it a lie. I made her
+realise this, and she bit her lip in vexation. Dame! What a pretty viper
+I thought her at that moment!
+
+"Let me add, Yvonne," said her father, "that M. de Luynes and I are
+old comrades in arms." Then turning to me--"My daughter, sir, is but
+a child, and therefore hasty to pass judgment upon matters beyond
+her understanding. Forget this foolish outburst, and remember only my
+assurance of an ever cordial welcome."
+
+"With all my heart," I answered, after a moment's deliberation, during
+which I had argued that for once I must stifle pride if I would serve
+Andrea.
+
+"Ough!" was all Mademoiselle's comment as she turned her back upon me.
+Nevertheless, I bowed and flourished my beaver to her retreating figure.
+
+Clearly Mademoiselle entertained for me exactly that degree of
+fondness which a pious hermit feels for the devil, and if I might
+draw conclusions from what evidences I had had of the strength of
+her character and the weakness of her father's, our sojourn at Blois
+promised to afford me little delectation. In fact, I foresaw many
+difficulties that might lead to disaster should our Paris friends appear
+upon the scene--a contingency this that seemed over-imminent.
+
+It was not my wont, howbeit, to brood over the evils that the future
+might hold, and to this I owe it that I slept soundly that night in my
+room at the Lys de France.
+
+It was a pleasant enough chamber on the first floor, overlooking the
+street, and having an alcove attached to it which served for Michelot.
+
+Next day I visited the Château de Canaples early in the afternoon. The
+weather was milder, and the glow of the sun heralded at last the near
+approach of spring and brightened wondrously a landscape that had
+yesterday worn so forbidding a look.
+
+This change it must have been that drew the ladies, and Andrea with
+them, to walk in the park, where I came upon them as I rode up. Their
+laughter rippled merrily and they appeared upon the best of terms until
+they espied me. My advent was like a cloud that foretells a storm, and
+drove Mesdemoiselles away, when they had accorded me a greeting that
+contained scant graciousness.
+
+All unruffled by this act, from which I gathered that Yvonne the strong
+had tutored Geneviève the frail concerning me, I consigned my horse to a
+groom of the château, and linked arms with Andrea.
+
+"Well, boy," quoth I, "what progress?"
+
+He smiled radiantly.
+
+"My hopes are all surpassed. It exceeds belief that so poor a thing as I
+should find favour in her eyes--what eyes, Gaston!" He broke off with a
+sigh of rapture.
+
+"Peste, you have lost no time. And so, already you know that you find
+favour, eh! How know you that?"
+
+"How? Need a man be told such things? There is an inexpressible--"
+
+"My good Andrea, seek not to express it, therefore," I interrupted
+hastily. "Let it suffice that the inexpressible exists, and makes you
+happy. His Eminence will doubtless share your joy! Have you written to
+him?"
+
+The mirth faded from the lad's face at the words, as the blossom fades
+'neath the blighting touch of frost. What he said was so undutiful
+from a nephew touching his uncle--particularly when that uncle is a
+prelate--that I refrain from penning it.
+
+We were joined just then by the Chevalier, and together we strolled
+round to the rose-garden--now, alas! naught but black and naked
+bushes--and down to the edge of the Loire, yellow and swollen by the
+recent rains.
+
+"How lovely must be this place in summer," I mused, looking across
+the water towards Chambord. "And, Dame," I cried, suddenly changing my
+meditations, "what an ideal fencing ground is this even turf!"
+
+"The swordsman's instinct," laughed Canaples.
+
+And with that our talk shifted to swords, swordsmen, and sword-play,
+until I suggested to Andrea that he should resume his practice,
+whereupon the Chevalier offered to set a room at our disposal.
+
+"Nay, if you will pardon me, Monsieur, 't is not a room we want," I
+answered. "A room is well enough at the outset, but it is the common
+error of fencing-masters to continue their tutoring on a wooden floor.
+It results from this that when the neophyte handles a real sword,
+and defends his life upon the turf, the ground has a new feeling; its
+elasticity or even its slipperiness discomposes him, and sets him at a
+disadvantage."
+
+He agreed with me, whilst Andrea expressed a wish to try the turf. Foils
+were brought, and we whiled away best part of an half-hour. In the end,
+the Chevalier, who had watched my play intently, offered to try a bout
+with me. And so amazed was he with the result, that he had not done
+talking of it when I left Canaples a few hours later--a homage this that
+earned me some more than ordinarily unfriendly glances from Yvonne.
+No doubt since the accomplishment was mine it became in her eyes
+characteristic of a bully and a ruffler.
+
+During the week that followed I visited the château with regularity, and
+with equal regularity did Andrea receive his fencing lessons. The object
+of his presence at Canaples, however, was being frustrated more and more
+each day, so far as the Cardinal and the Chevalier were concerned.
+
+He raved to me of Geneviève, the one perfect woman in all the world and
+brought into it by a kind Providence for his own particular delectation.
+In truth, love is like a rabid dog--whom it bites it renders mad; so
+open grew his wooing, and so ardent, that one evening I thought well to
+take him aside and caution him.
+
+"My dear Andrea," said I, "if you will love Geneviève, you will, and
+there's an end of it. But if you would not have the Chevalier pack you
+back to Paris and the anger of my Lord Cardinal, be circumspect, and at
+least when M. de Canaples is by divide your homage equally betwixt
+the two. 'T were well if you dissembled even a slight preference for
+Yvonne--she will not be misled by it, seeing how unmistakable at all
+other seasons must be your wooing of Geneviève."
+
+He was forced to avow the wisdom of my counsel, and to be guided by it.
+
+Nevertheless, I rode back to my hostelry in no pleasant frame of mind.
+It was more than likely that a short shrift and a length of hemp
+would be the acknowledgment I should anon receive from Mazarin for my
+participation in the miscarriage of his desires.
+
+I felt that disaster was on the wing. Call it a premonition; call it
+what you will. I know but this; that as I rode into the courtyard of
+the Lys de France, at dusk, the first man my eyes alighted on was the
+Marquis César de St. Auban, and, in conversation with him, six of the
+most arrant-looking ruffians that ever came out of Paris.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. OF HOW A WHIP PROVED A BETTER ARGUMENT THAN A TONGUE
+
+
+"I crave Monsieur's pardon, but there is a gentleman below who desires
+to speak with you immediately."
+
+"How does this gentleman call himself, M. l'Hote?"
+
+"M. le Marquis de St. Auban," answered the landlord, still standing in
+the doorway.
+
+It wanted an hour or so to noon on the day following that of St. Auban's
+arrival at Blois, and I was on the point of setting out for the château
+on an errand of warning.
+
+It occurred to me to refuse to see the Marquis, but remembering betimes
+that from your enemy's speech you may sometimes learn where to look for
+his next attack, I thought better of it and bade my host admit him.
+
+I strode over to the fire, and stirring the burning logs, I put my back
+to the blaze, and waited.
+
+Steps sounded on the stairs; there was the shuffling of the landlord's
+slippered feet and the firm tread of my visitor, accompanied by
+the jingle of spurs and the clank of his scabbard as it struck the
+balustrade. Then my door was again opened, and St. Auban, as superbly
+dressed as ever, was admitted.
+
+We bowed formally, as men bow who are about to cross swords, and whilst
+I waited for him to speak, I noted that his face was pale and bore the
+impress of suppressed anger.
+
+"So, M. de Luynes, again we meet."
+
+"By your seeking, M. le Marquis."
+
+"You are not polite."
+
+"You are not opportune."
+
+He smiled dangerously.
+
+"I learn, Monsieur, that you are a daily visitor at the Château de
+Canaples."
+
+"Well, sir, what of it?"
+
+"This. I have been to Canaples this morning and, knowing that you will
+learn anon, from that old dotard, what passed between us, I prefer that
+you shall hear it first from me."
+
+I bowed to conceal a smile.
+
+"Thanks to you, M. de Luynes, I was ordered from the house. I--César
+de St. Auban--have been ordered from the house of a provincial upstart!
+Thanks to the calumnies which you poured into his ears."
+
+"Calumnies! Was that the word?"
+
+"I choose the word that suits me best," he answered, and the rage that
+was in him at the affront he had suffered at the hands of the Chevalier
+de Canaples was fast rising to the surface. "I warned you at Choisy of
+what would befall. Your opposition and your alliance with M. de Mancini
+are futile. You think to have gained a victory by winning over to your
+side an old fool who will sacrifice his honour to see his daughter a
+duchess, but I tell you, sir--"
+
+"That you hope to see her a marchioness," I put in calmly. "You see, M.
+de St. Auban, I have learned something since I came to Blois."
+
+He grew livid with passion.
+
+"You shall learn more ere you quit it, you meddler! You shall be taught
+to keep that long nose of yours out of matters that concern you not."
+
+I laughed.
+
+"Loud threats!" I answered jeeringly.
+
+"Never fear," he cried, "there is more to follow. To your cost shall
+you learn it. By God, sir! do you think that I am to suffer a Sicilian
+adventurer and a broken tavern ruffler to interfere with my designs?"
+
+Still I kept my temper.
+
+"So!" I said in a bantering tone. "You confess that you have designs.
+Good! But what says the lady, eh? I am told that she is not yet
+outrageously enamoured of you, for all your beauty!"
+
+Beside himself with passion, his hand sought his sword. But the gesture
+was spasmodic.
+
+"Knave!" he snarled.
+
+"Knave to me? Have a care, St. Auban, or I'll find you a shroud for a
+wedding garment."
+
+"Knave!" he repeated with a snarl. "What price are you paid by that
+boy?"
+
+"Pardieu, St. Auban! You shall answer to me for this."
+
+"Answer for it? To you!" And he laughed harshly. "You are mad, my
+master. When did a St. Auban cross swords with a man of your stamp?"
+
+"M. le Marquis," I said, with a calmness that came of a stupendous
+effort, "at Choisy you sought my friendship with high-sounding talk of
+principles that opposed you to the proposed alliance, twixt the houses
+of Mancini and Canaples. Since then I have learned that your motives
+were purely personal. From my discovery I hold you to be a liar."
+
+"Monsieur!"
+
+"I have not yet done. You refuse to cross swords with me on the pretext
+that you do not fight men of my stamp. I am no saint, sir, I confess.
+But my sins cannot wash out my name--the name of a family accounted as
+good as that of St. Auban, and one from which a Constable of France
+has sprung, whereas yours has never yet bred aught but profligates and
+debauchees. You are little better than I am, Marquis; indeed, you do
+many things that I would not do, that I have never done. For instance,
+whilst refusing to cross blades with me, who am a soldier and a man
+of the sword, you seek to pick a fight with a beardless boy who hardly
+knows the use of a rapier, and who--wittingly at least--has done you no
+wrong. Now, my master, you may call me profligate, ruffler, gamester,
+duellist--what you will; but there are two viler things you cannot dub
+me, and which, methinks, I have proven you to be--liar and craven."
+
+And as I spoke the burning words, I stood close up to him and tapped his
+breast as if to drive the epithets into his very heart.
+
+Rage he felt, indeed, and his distorted countenance was a sight fearful
+to behold.
+
+"Now, my master," I added, setting my arms akimbo and laughing brutally
+in his face, "will you fight?"
+
+For a moment he wavered, and surely meseemed that I had drawn him. Then:
+
+"No," he cried passionately. "I will not do dishonour to my sword." And
+turning he made for the door, leaving me baffled.
+
+"Go, sir," I shouted, "but fame shall stalk fast behind you. Liar and
+craven will I dub you throughout the whole of France."
+
+He stopped 'neath the lintel, and faced me again.
+
+"Fool," he sneered. "You'll need dispatch to spread my fame so far. By
+this time to-morrow you'll be arrested. In three days you will be in the
+Bastille, and there shall you lie until you rot to carrion."
+
+"Loud threats again!" I laughed, hoping by the taunt to learn more.
+
+"Loud perchance, but not empty. Learn that the Cardinal has knowledge of
+your association with Mancini, and means to separate you. An officer
+of the guards is on his way to Blois. He is at Meung by now. He bears
+a warrant for your arrest and delivery to the governor of the Bastille.
+Thereafter, none may say what will betide." And with a coarse burst of
+laughter he left me, banging the door as he passed out.
+
+For a moment I stood there stricken by his parting words. He had sought
+to wound me, and in this he had succeeded. But at what cost to himself?
+In his blind rage, the fool had shown me that which he should have
+zealously concealed, and what to him was but a stinging threat was to me
+a timely warning. I saw the necessity for immediate action. Two things
+must I do; kill St. Auban first, then fly the Cardinal's warrant as
+best I could. I cast about me for means to carry out the first of these
+intentions. My eye fell upon my riding-whip, lying on a chair close to
+my hand, and the sight of it brought me the idea I sought. Seizing it, I
+bounded out of the room and down the stairs, three steps at a stride.
+
+Along the corridor I sped and into the common-room, which at the moment
+was tolerably full. As I entered by one door, the Marquis was within
+three paces of the other, leading to the courtyard.
+
+My whip in the air, I sprang after him; and he, hearing the rush of
+my onslaught, turned, then uttered a cry of pain as I brought the lash
+caressingly about his shoulders.
+
+"Now, master craven," I shouted, "will that change your mind?"
+
+With an almost inarticulate cry, he sought to draw there and then, but
+those about flung themselves upon us, and held us apart--I, passive
+and unresisting; the Marquis, bellowing, struggling, and foaming at the
+mouth.
+
+"To meet you now would be to murder you, Marquis," I said coolly. "Send
+your friends to me to appoint the time."
+
+"Soit!" he cried, his eyes blazing with a hate unspeakable. "At eight
+to-morrow morning I shall await you on the green behind the castle of
+Blois."
+
+"At eight o'clock I shall be there," I answered. "And now, gentlemen, if
+you will unhand me, I will return to my apartments."
+
+They let me go, but with many a growl and angry look, for in their eyes
+I was no more than a coarse aggressor, whilst their sympathy was all for
+St. Auban.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. THE CONSCIENCE OF MALPERTUIS
+
+
+And so back to my room I went, my task accomplished, and so pleased was
+I with what had passed that as I drew on my boots--preparing to set out
+to Canaples--I laughed softly to myself.
+
+St. Auban I would dispose of in the morning. As for the other members
+of the cabal, I deemed neither Vilmorin nor Malpertuis sufficiently
+formidable to inspire uneasiness. St. Auban gone, they too would vanish.
+There remained then Eugène de Canaples. Him, however, methought no great
+evil was to be feared from. In Paris he might be as loud-voiced as he
+pleased, but in his father's château--from what I had learned--'t was
+unlikely he would so much as show himself. Moreover, he was wounded, and
+before he had sufficiently recovered to offer interference it was
+more than probable that Andrea would have married one or the other of
+Mesdemoiselles de Canaples--though I had a shrewd suspicion that it
+would be the wrong one, and there again I feared trouble.
+
+As I stood up, booted and ready to descend, there came a gentle tap
+at my door, and, in answer to my "Enter," there stood before me a very
+dainty and foppish figure. I stared hard at the effeminate face and the
+long fair locks of my visitor, thinking that I had become the dupe of my
+eyes.
+
+"M. de Vilmorin!" I murmured in astonishment, as he came forward, having
+closed the door. "You here?"
+
+In answer, he bowed and greeted me with cold ceremoniousness.
+
+"I have been in Blois since yesterday, Monsieur."
+
+"In truth I might have guessed it, Vicomte. Your visit flatters me,
+for, of course, I take it, you are come to pay me your respects," I said
+ironically. "A glass of wine, Vicomte?"
+
+"A thousand thanks, Monsieur--no," he answered coldly in his mincing
+tones. "It is concerning your affair with M. le Marquis de St. Auban
+that I am come." And drawing forth a dainty kerchief, which filled the
+room with the scent of ambregris, he tapped his lips with it affectedly.
+
+"Do you come as friend or--in some other capacity?"
+
+"I come as mediator."
+
+"Mediator!" I echoed, and my brow grew dark. "Sdeath! Has St. Auban's
+courage lasted just so long as the sting of my whip?"
+
+He raised his eyebrows after a supercilious fashion that made me thirst
+to strike the chair from under him.
+
+"You misapprehend me; M. de St. Auban has no desire to avert the duel.
+On the contrary, he will not rest until the affront you have put upon
+him be washed out--"
+
+"It will be, I'll answer for it."
+
+"Your answer, sir, is characteristic of a fanfarron. He who promises
+most does not always fulfil most."
+
+I stared at him in amazement.
+
+"Shall I promise you something, Vicomte? Mortdieu! If you seek to pick a
+quarrel with me--"
+
+"God forbid!" he ejaculated, turning colour. And his suddenly awakened
+apprehensions swept aside the affectation that hitherto had marked his
+speech and manner.
+
+"Then, Monsieur, be brief and state the sum of this mediation."
+
+"It is this, Monsieur. In the heat of the moment, M. le Marquis gave
+you, in the hearing of half a score of people, an assignation for
+to-morrow morning. News of the affair will spread rapidly through Blois,
+and it is likely there will be no lack of spectators on the green to
+witness the encounter. Therefore, as my friend thinks this will be as
+unpalatable to you as it is to him, he has sent me to suggest a fresh
+rendezvous."
+
+"Pooh, sir," I answered lightly. "I care not, for myself, who comes.
+I am accustomed to a crowd. Still, since M. de St. Auban finds it
+discomposing, let us arrange otherwise."
+
+"There is yet another point. M. de St. Auban spoke to you, I believe, of
+an officer who is coming hither charged with your arrest. It is probable
+that he may reach Blois before morning, so that the Marquis thinks that
+to make certain you might consent to meet him to-night."
+
+"Ma foi. St. Auban is indeed in earnest then! Convey to him my
+expressions of admiration at this suddenly awakened courage. Be good
+enough, Vicomte, to name the rendezvous."
+
+"Do you know the chapel of St. Sulpice des Reaux?"
+
+"What! Beyond the Loire?"
+
+"Precisely, Monsieur. About a league from Chambord by the river side."
+
+"I can find the place."
+
+"Will you meet us there at nine o'clock to­night?"
+
+I looked askance at him.
+
+"But why cross the river? This side affords many likely spots!"
+
+"Very true, Monsieur. But the Marquis has business at Chambord
+this evening, after which there will be no reason--indeed, it will
+inconvenience him exceedingly--to return to Blois."
+
+"What!" I cried, more and more astonished. "St. Auban is leaving Blois?"
+
+"This evening, sir."
+
+"But, voyons, Vicomte, why make an assignation in such a place and at
+night, when at any hour of the day I can meet the Marquis on this side,
+without suffering the inconvenience of crossing the river?"
+
+"There will be a bright moon, well up by nine o'clock. Moreover,
+remember that you cannot, as you say, meet St. Auban on this side at any
+time he may appoint, since to-night or to-morrow the officer who is in
+search of you will arrive."
+
+I pondered for a moment. Then:
+
+"M. le Vicomte," I said, "in this matter of ground 't is I who have the
+first voice."
+
+"How so?"
+
+"Because the Marquis is the affronted one."
+
+"Therefore he has a right to choose."
+
+"A right, yes. But that is not enough. The necessity to fight is on his
+side. His honour is hurt, not mine; I have whipped him; I am content.
+Now let him come to me."
+
+"Assuredly you will not be so ungenerous."
+
+"I do not care about journeying to Reaux to afford him satisfaction."
+
+"Does Monsieur fear anything?"
+
+"Vicomte, you go too far!" I cried, my pride gaining the mastery. "Since
+it is asked of me,--I will go."
+
+"M. le Marquis will be grateful to you."
+
+"A fig for his gratitude," I answered, whereupon the Vicomte shrugged
+his narrow shoulders, and, his errand done, took his leave of me.
+
+When he was gone I called Michelot, to tell him of the journey I must go
+that night, so that he might hold himself in readiness.
+
+"Why--if Monsieur will pardon me," quoth he, "do you go to meet the
+Marquis de St. Auban at St. Sulpice des Reaux by night?"
+
+"Precisely what I asked Vilmorin. The Marquis desires it, and--what will
+you?--since I am going to kill the man, I can scarce do less than kill
+him on a spot of his own choosing."
+
+Michelot screwed up his face and scratched at his grey beard with his
+huge hand.
+
+"Does no suspicion of foul play cross your mind, Monsieur?" he inquired
+timidly.
+
+"Shame on you, Michelot," I returned with some heat. "You do not yet
+understand the ways of gentlemen. Think you that M. de St. Auban would
+stoop to such a deed as that? He would be shamed for ever! Pooh, I would
+as soon suspect my Lord Cardinal of stealing the chalices from Nôtre
+Dame. Go, see to my horse. I am riding to Canaples."
+
+As I rode out towards the château I fell to thinking, and my thoughts
+turning to Vilmorin, I marvelled at the part he was playing in this
+little comedy of a cabal against Andrea de Mancini. His tastes and
+instincts were of the boudoir, the ante-chamber, and the table. He wore
+a sword because it was so ordained by fashion, and because the hilt was
+convenient for the display of a jewel or two. Certainly 't was not for
+utility that it hung beside him, and no man had ever seen it drawn.
+Nature had made him the most pitiable coward begotten. Why then should
+he involve himself in an affair which promised bloodshed, and which must
+be attended by many a risk for him? There was in all this some mystery
+that I could not fathom.
+
+From the course into which they had slipped, my thoughts were diverted,
+when I was within half a mile of the château, by the sight of a horseman
+stationed, motionless, among the trees that bordered the road.
+It occurred to me that men take not such a position without
+purpose--usually an evil one. I slackened speed somewhat and rode on,
+watching him sharply. As I came up, he walked his horse forward to meet
+me, and I beheld a man in the uniform of the gardes du corps, in whom
+presently I recognised the little sparrow Malpertuis, with whom I had
+exchanged witticisms at Choisy. He was the one man wanting to complete
+the trinity that had come upon us at the inn of the Connétable.
+
+It flashed across my mind that he might be the officer charged with my
+arrest, and that he had arrived sooner than had been expected. If so,
+it was likely to go ill with him, for I was not minded to be taken until
+St. Auban's soul sped hellwards.
+
+He hailed me as I advanced, and indeed rode forward to meet me.
+
+"You are come at last, M. de Luynes," was his greeting. "I have waited
+for you this hour past."
+
+"How knew you I should ride this way?"
+
+"I learnt that you would visit Canaples before noon. Be good enough to
+quit the road, and pass under those trees with me. I have something to
+say to you, but it were not well that we should be seen together."
+
+"For the sake of your character or mine, M. Malappris?"
+
+"Malpertuis!" he snapped.
+
+"Malpertuis," I corrected. "You were saying that we should not be seen
+together."
+
+"St. Auban might hear of it."
+
+"Ah! And therefore?"
+
+"You shall learn." We were now under the trees, which albeit leafless
+yet screened us partly from the road. He drew rein, and I followed his
+example.
+
+"M. de Luynes," he began, "I am or was a member of the cabal formed
+against Mazarin's aims in the matter of the marriage of Mademoiselle
+de Canaples to his nephew. I joined hands with St. Auban, lured by his
+protestations that it is not meet that such an heiress as Yvonne de
+Canaples should be forced to marry a foreigner of no birth and less
+distinction, whilst France holds so many noble suitors to her hand. This
+motive, by which I know that even Eugène de Canaples was actuated, was,
+St. Auban gave me to understand, his only one for embarking upon this
+business, as it was also Vilmorin's. Now, M. de Luynes, I have to­day
+discovered that I had been duped by St. Auban and his dupe, Vilmorin.
+St. Auban lied to me; another motive brings him into the affair. He
+seeks himself, by any means that may present themselves, to marry
+Yvonne--and her estates; whilst the girl, I am told, loathes him beyond
+expression. Vilmorin again is actuated by no less a purpose. And so,
+what think you these two knaves--this master knave and his dupe--have
+determined? To carry off Mademoiselle by force!"
+
+"Sangdieu!" I burst out, and would have added more, but his gesture
+silenced me, and he continued:
+
+"Vilmorin believes that St. Auban is helping him in this, whereas St.
+Auban is but fooling him with ambiguous speeches until they have the
+lady safe. Then might will assert itself, and St. Auban need but show
+his fangs to drive the sneaking coward away from the prize he fondly
+dreams is to be his."
+
+"When do these gentlemen propose to carry out their plan? Have they
+determined that?" I inquired breathlessly.
+
+"Aye, they have. They hope to accomplish it this very day. Mademoiselle
+de Canaples has received a letter wherein she is asked to meet her
+anonymous writer in the coppice yonder, at the Angelus this evening, if
+she would learn news of great importance to her touching a conspiracy
+against her father."
+
+"Faugh!" I sneered. "'T is too poor a bait to lure her with."
+
+"Say you so? Believe me that unless she be dissuaded she will comply
+with the invitation, so cunningly was the letter couched. A closed
+carriage will be waiting at this very spot. Into this St. Auban,
+Vilmorin, and their bravos will thrust the girl, then away through Blois
+and beyond it, for a mile or so, in the direction of Meung, thereby
+misleading any chance pursuers. There they will quit the coach and take
+a boat that is to be in waiting for them and which will bear them back
+with the stream to Chambord. Thereafter, God pity the poor lady if they
+get thus far without mishap."
+
+"Mort de ma vie!" I cried, slapping my thigh, "I understand!" And to
+myself I thought of the assignation at St. Sulpice des Reaux, and the
+reason for this, as also St. Auban's resolution to so suddenly quit
+Blois, grew of a sudden clear to me. Also did I recall the riddle
+touching Vilmorin's conduct which a few moments ago I had puzzled over,
+and of which methought that I now held the solution.
+
+"What do you understand?" asked Malpertuis.
+
+"Something that was told me this morning," I made answer, then spoke of
+gratitude, wherein he cut me short.
+
+"I ask no thanks," he said curtly. "You owe me none. What I have done
+is not for love of you or Mancini--for I love neither of you. It is done
+because noblesse m'oblige. I told St. Auban that I would have no part in
+this outrage. But that is not enough; I owe it to my honour to attempt
+the frustration of so dastardly a plan. You, M. de Luynes, appear to
+be the most likely person to encompass this, in the interests of your
+friend Mancini; I leave the matter, therefore, in your hands. Good­day!"
+
+And with this abrupt leave-taking, the little fellow doffed his hat
+to me, and wheeling his horse he set spurs in its flanks, and was gone
+before a word of mine could have stayed him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. OF A WOMAN'S OBSTINACY
+
+
+"M. de Luynes is a wizard," quoth Andrea, laughing, in answer to
+something that had been said.
+
+It was afternoon. We had dined, and the bright sunshine and spring-like
+mildness of the weather had lured us out upon the terrace. Yvonne and
+Geneviève occupied the stone seat. Andrea had perched himself upon the
+granite balustrade, and facing them he sat, swinging his shapely legs
+to and fro as he chatted merrily, whilst on either side of him stood the
+Chevalier de Canaples and I.
+
+"If M. de Luynes be as great a wizard in other things as with the sword,
+then, pardieu, he is a fearful magician," said Canaples.
+
+I bowed, yet not so low but that I detected a sneer on Yvonne's lips.
+
+"So, pretty lady," said I to myself, "we shall see if presently your lip
+will curl when I show you something of my wizard's art."
+
+And presently my chance came. M. de Canaples found reason to leave us,
+and no sooner was he gone than Geneviève remembered that she had that
+day discovered a budding leaf upon one of the rose bushes in the garden
+below. Andrea naturally caused an argument by asserting that she was
+the victim of her fancy, as it was by far too early in the year. By
+that means these two found the plea they sought for quitting us, since
+neither could rest until the other was convinced.
+
+So down they went into that rose garden which methought was like to
+prove their fool's paradise, and Yvonne and I were left alone. Then she
+also rose, but as she was on the point of quitting me:
+
+"Mademoiselle," I ventured, "will you honour me by remaining for a
+moment? There is something that I would say to you."
+
+With raised eyebrows she gave me a glance mingled with that
+superciliousness which she was for ever bestowing upon me, and which,
+from the monotony of it alone, grew irksome.
+
+"What can you have to say to me, M. de Luynes?"
+
+"Will you not be seated? I shall not long detain you, nevertheless--"
+
+"If I stand, perchance you will be more brief. I am waiting, Monsieur."
+
+I shrugged my shoulders rudely. Why, indeed, be courteous where so
+little courtesy was met with?
+
+"A little while ago, Mademoiselle, when M. de Mancini dubbed me a wizard
+you were good enough to sneer. Now, a sneer, Mademoiselle, implies
+unbelief, and I would convince you that you were wrong to disbelieve."
+
+"If you have no other motive for detaining me, suffer me to depart," she
+interrupted with some warmth. "Whether you be a wizard or not is of no
+moment to me."
+
+"And yet I dare swear that you will be of a different mind within five
+minutes. A wizard is one who discloses things unknown to his fellow-men.
+I am about to convince you that I can do this, and by convincing you I
+am about to serve you."
+
+"I seek neither conviction nor service at your hands," she answered.
+
+"Your courtesy dumfounds me, Mademoiselle!"
+
+"No less than does your insolence dumfound me," she retorted, with
+crimson cheeks. "Do you forget, sir, that I know you for what you are--a
+gamester, a libertine, a duellist, the murderer of my brother?"
+
+"That your brother lives, Mademoiselle, is, methinks, sufficient proof
+that I have not murdered him."
+
+"You willed his death if you did not encompass it; so 't is all one.
+Do you not understand that it is because my father receives you here,
+thanks to M. de Mancini, your friend--a friendship easily understood
+from the advantages you must derive from it--that I consent to endure
+your presence and the insult of your glance? Is it not enough that
+I should do this, and have you not wit enough to discern it, without
+adding to my shame by your insolent call upon my courtesy?"
+
+Her words cut me as no words that I ever heard, and, more than her
+words, her tone of loathing and disgust unspeakable. For half that
+speech I should have killed a man--indeed, I had killed men for less
+than half. And yet, for all the passion that raged in my soul, I
+preserved upon my countenance a smiling mask. That smile exhausted her
+patience and increased her loathing, for with a contemptuous exclamation
+she turned away.
+
+"Tarry but a moment, Mademoiselle," I cried, with a sudden note of
+command. "Or, if you will go, go then; but take with you my assurance
+that before nightfall you will weep bitterly for it."
+
+My words arrested her. The mystery of them awakened her curiosity.
+
+"You speak in riddles, Monsieur."
+
+"Like a true wizard, Mademoiselle. You received a letter this morning in
+a handwriting unknown, and bearing no signature."
+
+She wheeled round and faced me again with a little gasp of astonishment.
+
+"How know you that? Ah! I understand; you wrote it!"
+
+"What shrewdness, Mademoiselle!" I laughed, ironically. "Come; think
+again. What need have I to bid you meet me in the coppice yonder? May I
+not speak freely with you here?"
+
+"You know the purport of that letter?"
+
+"I do, Mademoiselle, and I know more. I know that this hinted conspiracy
+against your father is a trumped-up lie to lure you to the coppice."
+
+"And for what purpose, pray?"
+
+"An evil one,--your abduction. Shall I tell you who penned that note,
+and who awaits you? The Marquis César de St. Auban."
+
+She shuddered as I pronounced the name, then, looking me straight
+between the eyes--"How come you to know these things?" she inquired.
+
+"What does it signify, since I know them?"
+
+"This, Monsieur, that unless I learn how, I can attach no credit to your
+preposterous story."
+
+"Not credit it!" I cried. "Let me assure you that I have spoken the
+truth; let me swear it. Go to the coppice at the appointed time, and
+things will fall out as I have predicted."
+
+"Again, Monsieur, how know you this?" she persisted, as women will.
+
+"I may not tell you."
+
+We stood close together, and her clear grey eyes met mine, her lip
+curling in disdain.
+
+"You may not tell me? You need not. I can guess." And she tossed her
+shapely head and laughed. "Seek some likelier story, Monsieur. Had you
+not spoken of it, 't is likely I should have left the letter unheeded.
+But your disinterested warning has determined me to go to this
+rendezvous. Shall I tell you what I have guessed? That this conspiracy
+against my father, the details of which you would not have me learn,
+is some evil of your own devising. Ah! You change colour!" she cried,
+pointing to my face. Then with a laugh of disdain she left me before I
+had sufficiently recovered from my amazement to bid her stay.
+
+"Ciel!" I cried, as I watched the tall, lissom figure vanish through the
+portals of the château. "Did ever God create so crass and obstinate a
+thing as woman?"
+
+It occurred to me to tell Andrea, and bid him warn her. But then she
+would guess that I had prompted him. Naught remained but to lay the
+matter before the Chevalier de Canaples. Already I had informed him of
+my fracas with St. Auban, and of the duel that was to be fought that
+night, and he, in his turn, had given me the details of his stormy
+interview with the Marquis, which had culminated in St. Auban's
+dismissal from Canaples. I had not hitherto deemed it necessary to alarm
+him with the news imparted to me by Malpertuis, imagining that did I
+inform Mademoiselle that would suffice.
+
+Now, however, as I have said, no other course was left me but to tell
+him of it. Accordingly, I went within and inquired of Guilbert, whom I
+met in the hall, where I might find the Chevalier. He answered me that
+M. de Canaples was not in the château. It was believed that he had gone
+with M. Louis, the intendant of the estates, to visit the vineyards at
+Montcroix.
+
+The news made me choke with impatience. Already it was close upon five
+o'clock, and in another hour the sun would set and the Angelus would
+toll the knell of Mademoiselle's preposterous suspicions, unless in the
+meantime I had speech with Canaples, and led him to employ a father's
+authority to keep his daughter indoors.
+
+Fuming at the contretemps I called for my horse and set out at a brisk
+trot for Montcroix. But my ride was fruitless. The vineyard peasants had
+not seen the Chevalier for over a week.
+
+Now, 'twixt Montcroix and the château there lies a good league, and to
+make matters worse, as I galloped furiously back to Canaples, an evil
+chance led me to mistake the way and pursue a track that brought me out
+on the very banks of the river, with a strong belt of trees screening
+the château from sight, and defying me to repair my error by going
+straight ahead.
+
+I was forced to retrace my steps, and before I had regained the point
+where I had gone astray a precious quarter of an hour was wasted, and
+the sun already hung, a dull red globe, on the brink of the horizon.
+
+Clenching my teeth, I tore at my horse's flanks, and with a bloody heel
+I drove the maddened brute along at a pace that might have cost us both
+dearly. I dashed, at last, into the quadrangle, and, throwing the reins
+to a gaping groom, I sprang up the steps.
+
+"Has the Chevalier returned?" I gasped breathlessly.
+
+"Not yet, Monsieur," answered Guilbert with a tranquillity that made me
+desire to strangle him. "Is Mademoiselle in the château?" was my next
+question, mechanically asked.
+
+"I saw her on the terrace some moments ago. She has not since come
+within."
+
+Like one possessed I flew across the intervening room and out on to the
+terrace. Geneviève and Andrea were walking there, deep in conversation.
+At another time I might have cursed their lack of prudence. At the
+moment I did not so much as remark it.
+
+"Where is Mademoiselle de Canaples?" I burst out.
+
+They gazed at me, as much astounded by my question and the abruptness of
+it as by my apparent agitation.
+
+"Has anything happened?" inquired Geneviève, her blue eyes wide open.
+
+"Yes--no; naught has happened. Tell me where she is. I must speak to
+her."
+
+"She was here a while ago," said Andrea, "but she left us to stroll
+along the river bank."
+
+"How long is it since she left you?"
+
+"A quarter of an hour, perhaps."
+
+"Something has happened!" cried Geneviève, and added more, maybe, but I
+waited not to hear.
+
+Muttering curses as I ran--for 't was my way to curse where pious souls
+might pray--I sped back to the quadrangle and my horse.
+
+"Follow me," I shouted to the groom, "you and as many of your fellows
+as you can find. Follow me at once--at once, mark you--to the coppice
+by the river." And without waiting for his answer, I sent my horse
+thundering down the avenue. The sun was gone, leaving naught but a
+roseate streak to tell of its passage, and at that moment a distant bell
+tinkled forth the Angelus.
+
+With whip, spur, and imprecations I plied my steed, a prey to such
+excitement as I had never known until that moment--not even in the
+carnage of battle.
+
+I had no plan. My mind was a chaos of thought without a single
+clear idea to light it, and I never so much as bethought me that
+single-handled I was about to attempt to wrest Yvonne from the hands of
+perchance half a dozen men. To save time I did not far pursue the road,
+but, clearing a hedge, I galloped ventre-à-terre across the meadow
+towards the little coppice by the waterside. As I rode I saw no sign of
+any moving thing. No sound disturbed the evening stillness save the dull
+thump of my horse's hoofs upon the turf, and a great fear arose in my
+heart that I might come too late.
+
+At last I reached the belt of trees, and my fears grew into certainty.
+The place was deserted.
+
+Then a fresh hope sprang up. Perchance, thinking of my warning, she had
+seen the emptiness of her suspicions towards me, and had pursued that
+walk of hers in another direction.
+
+But when I had penetrated to the little open space within that cluster
+of naked trees, I had proof overwhelming that the worst had befallen.
+Not only on the moist ground was stamped the impress of struggling feet,
+but on a branch I found a strip of torn green velvet, and, remembering
+the dress she had worn that day, I understood to the full the
+significance of that rag, and, understanding it, I groaned aloud.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. THE RESCUE
+
+
+Some precious moments did I waste standing with that green rag betwixt
+my fingers, and I grew sick and numb in body and in mind. She was gone!
+Carried off by a man I had reason to believe she hated, and whom God
+send she might have no motive to hate more deeply hereafter!
+
+The ugly thought swelled until it blotted out all others, and in its
+train there came a fury upon me that drove me to do by instinct that
+which earlier I should have done by reason. I climbed back into the
+saddle, and away across the meadow I went, journeying at an angle with
+the road, my horse's head turned in the direction of Blois. That road at
+last was gained, and on I thundered at a stretched gallop, praying that
+my hard-used beast might last until the town was reached.
+
+Now, as I have already said, I am not a man who easily falls a prey
+to excitement. It may have beset me in the heat of battle, when the
+fearsome lust of blood and death makes of every man a raving maniac,
+thrilled with mad joy at every stab he deals, and laughing with fierce
+passion at every blow he takes, though in the taking of it his course
+be run. But, saving at such wild times, never until then could I recall
+having been so little master of myself. There was a fever in me; all
+hell was in my blood, and, stranger still, and hitherto unknown at any
+season, there was a sickly fear that mastered me, and drew out great
+beads of sweat upon my brow. Fear for myself I have never known, for at
+no time has life so pampered me that the thought of parting company
+with it concerned me greatly. Fear for another I had not known till
+then--saving perchance the uneasiness that at times I had felt touching
+Andrea--because never yet had I sufficiently cared.
+
+Thus far my thoughts took me, as I rode, and where I have halted did
+they halt, and stupidly I went over their ground again, like one who
+gropes for something in the dark,--because never yet had I sufficiently
+cared--I had never cared.
+
+And then, ah Dieu! As I turned the thought over I understood, and,
+understanding, I pursued the sentence where I had left off.
+
+But, caring at last, I was sick with fear of what might befall the one I
+cared for! There lay the reason of the frenzied excitement whereof I had
+become the slave. That it was that had brought the moisture to my brow
+and curses to my lips; that it was that had caused me instinctively to
+thrust the rag of green velvet within my doublet.
+
+Ciel! It was strange--aye, monstrous strange, and a right good jest for
+fate to laugh at--that I, Gaston de Luynes, vile ruffler and worthless
+spadassin, should have come to such a pass; I, whose forefinger had for
+the past ten years uptilted the chin of every tavern wench I had chanced
+upon; I, whose lips had never known the touch of other than the lips of
+these; I, who had thought my heart long dead to tenderness and devotion,
+or to any fondness save the animal one for my ignoble self. Yet there I
+rode as if the Devil had me for a quarry,--panting, sweating, cursing,
+and well-nigh sobbing with rage at a fear that I might come too
+late,--all because of a proud lady who knew me for what I was and held
+me in contempt because of her knowledge; all for a lady who had not
+the kindness for me that one might spare a dog--who looked on me as
+something not good to see.
+
+Since there was no one to whom I might tell my story that he might mock
+me, I mocked myself--with a laugh that startled passers-by and which,
+coupled with the crazy pace at which I dashed into Blois, caused them, I
+doubt not, to think me mad. Nor were they wrong, for mad indeed I deemed
+myself.
+
+That I trampled no one underfoot in my furious progress through the
+streets is a miracle that passes my understanding.
+
+In the courtyard of the Lys de France I drew rein at last with a tug
+that brought my shuddering brute on to his haunches and sent those who
+stood about flying into the shelter of the doorways.
+
+"Another horse!" I shouted as I sprang to the ground. "Another horse at
+once!"
+
+Then as I turned to inquire for Michelot, I espied him leaning stolidly
+against the porte­cochère.
+
+"How long have you been there, Michelot?" I asked.
+
+"Half an hour, mayhap."
+
+"Saw you a closed carriage pass?"
+
+"Ten minutes ago I saw one go by, followed by M. de St. Auban and a
+gentleman who greatly resembled M. de Vilmorin, besides an escort of
+four of the most villainous knaves--"
+
+"That is the one," I broke in. "Quick, Michelot! Arm yourself and get
+your horse; I have need of you. Come, knave, move yourself!"
+
+At the end of a few minutes we set out at a sharp trot, leaving the
+curious ones whom my loud-voiced commands had assembled, to speculate
+upon the meaning of so much bustle. Once clear of the township we gave
+the reins to our horses, and our trot became a gallop as we travelled
+along the road to Meung, with the Loire on our right. And as we went I
+briefly told Michelot what was afoot, interlarding my explanations with
+prayers that we might come upon the kidnappers before they crossed the
+river, and curses at the flying pace of our mounts, which to my anxious
+mind seemed slow.
+
+At about a mile from Blois the road runs over an undulation of the
+ground that is almost a hill. From the moment that I had left Canaples
+as the Angelus was ringing, until the moment when our panting horses
+gained the brow of that little eminence, only half an hour had sped.
+Still in that half-hour the tints had all but faded from the sky, and
+the twilight shadows grew thicker around us with every moment. Yet not
+so thick had they become but that I could see a coach at a standstill
+in the hollow, some three hundred yards beneath us, and, by it, half a
+dozen horses, of which four were riderless and held by the two men who
+were still mounted. Then, breathlessly scanning the field between the
+road and the river, I espied five persons, half way across, and at the
+same distance from the water that we were from the coach. Two men, whom
+I supposed to be St. Auban and Vilmorin, were forcing along a woman,
+whose struggles, feeble though they appeared--yet retarded their
+progress in some measure. Behind them walked two others, musket on
+shoulder.
+
+I pointed them out to Michelot with a soft cry of joy. We were in time!
+
+Following with my eyes the course they appeared to be pursuing I saw by
+the bank a boat, in which two men were waiting. Again I pointed, this
+time to the boat.
+
+"Over the hedge, Michelot!" I cried. "We must ride in a straight line
+for the water and so intercept them. Follow me."
+
+Over the hedge we went, and down the gentle slope at as round a pace
+as the soft ground would with safety allow. I had reckoned upon being
+opposed to six or even eight men, whereas there were but four, one of
+whom I knew was hardly to be reckoned. Doubtless St. Auban had imagined
+himself safe from pursuit when he left two of his bravos with the
+horses, probably to take them on to Meung, and there cross with them and
+rejoin him. Two more, I doubted not, were those seated at the oars.
+
+I laughed to myself as I took in all this, but, even as I laughed, those
+in the field stood still, and sent up a shout that told me we had been
+perceived.
+
+"On, Michelot, on!" I shouted, spurring my horse forward. Then, in
+answer to their master's call, the two ruffians who had been doing duty
+as grooms came pounding into the field.
+
+"Ride to meet them, Michelot!" I cried. Obediently he wheeled to the
+left, and I caught the swish of his sword as it left the scabbard.
+
+St. Auban was now hurrying towards the river with his party. Already
+they were but fifty yards from the boat, and a hundred still lay between
+him and me. Furiously I pressed onward, and presently but half the
+distance separated us, whilst they were still some thirty yards from
+their goal.
+
+Then his two bravos faced round to meet me, and one, standing some fifty
+paces in ad­vance of the other, levelled his musket and fired. But in
+his haste he aimed too high; the bullet carried away my hat, and before
+the smoke had cleared I was upon him. I had drawn a pistol from my
+holster, but it was not needed; my horse passed over him before he could
+save himself from my fearful charge.
+
+In the fast-fading light a second musket barrel shone, and I saw the
+second ruffian taking aim at me with not a dozen yards between us. With
+the old soldier's instinct I wrenched at the reins till I brought my
+horse on to his haunches. It was high time, for simultaneously with my
+action the fellow blazed at me, and the scream of pain that broke from
+my steed told me that the poor brute had taken the bullet. With a bound
+that carried me forward some six paces, the animal sank, quivering, to
+the ground. I disengaged my feet from the stirrups as he fell, but the
+shock of it sent me rolling on the ground, and the ruffian, seeing me
+fallen, sprang forward, swinging his musket up above his head. I dodged
+the murderous downward stroke, and as the stock buried itself close
+beside me in the soft earth I rose on one knee and with a grim laugh I
+raised my pistol. I brought the muzzle within a hand's breadth of his
+face, then fired and shot him through the head. Perchance you'll say it
+was a murderous, cruel stroke: mayhap it was, but at such seasons
+men stay not to unravel niceties, but strike ere they themselves be
+stricken.
+
+Leaping over the twitching corpse, I got out my sword and sprang after
+St. Auban, who, with Vilmorin and Yvonne, careless of what might betide
+his followers, was now within ten paces of the boat.
+
+Pistol shots cracked behind me, and I wondered how Michelot was faring,
+but dared not pause to look.
+
+The twain in the boat stood up, wielding their great oars, and methought
+them on the point of coming to their master's aid, in which case my
+battle had truly been a lost one. But that craven Vilmorin did me good
+service then, for with a cry of fear at my approach, he abandoned his
+hold of Yvonne, whose struggles were keeping both the men back; thus
+freed, he fled towards the boat, and jumping in, he shouted to the men
+in his shrill, quavering voice, to put off. Albeit they disobeyed him
+contemptuously and waited for the Marquis; still they did not leave the
+boat, fearing, no doubt, that if they did so the coward would put off
+alone.
+
+As for St. Auban, Vilmorin's flight left him unequal to the task of
+dragging the girl along. She dug her heels into the ground, and, tug as
+he might, for all that he set both hands to work, he could not move her.
+In this plight I came upon him, and challenged him to stand and face me.
+
+With a bunch of oaths he got out his sword, but in doing so he was
+forced to remove one of his hands from the girl's arm. Seizing the
+opportunity with a ready wit and courage seldom found in women of her
+quality, she twisted herself from the grip of his left hand, and came
+staggering towards me for protection, holding up her pinioned wrists.
+With my blade I severed the cord, whereupon she plucked the gag from
+her mouth, and sank against my side, her struggles having left her weak
+indeed.
+
+As I set my arm about her waist to support her, my heart seemed to swell
+within me, and strange melodies shaped themselves within my soul.
+
+St. Auban bore down upon me with a raucous oath, but the glittering
+point of my rapier danced before his eyes and drove him back again.
+
+"To me, Vilmorin, you cowardly cur!" he shouted. "To me, you dogs!"
+
+He let fly at them a volley of blood-curdling oaths, then, without
+waiting to see if they obeyed him, he came at me again, and our swords
+met.
+
+"Courage, Mademoiselle," I whispered, as a sigh that was almost a groan
+escaped her. "Have no fear."
+
+But that fight was not destined to be fought, for, as again we engaged,
+there came the fall of running feet behind me. It flashed across my
+mind that Michelot had been worsted, and that my back was about to be
+assailed. But in St. Auban's face I saw, as in a mirror, that he who
+came was Michelot.
+
+"Mort de Christ!" snarled the Marquis, springing back beyond my reach.
+"What can a man do with naught but fools and poltroons to serve
+him? Faugh! We will continue our sword-play at St. Sulpice des Reaux
+to-night. Au revoir, M. de Luynes!"
+
+Turning, he sheathed his sword, and, running down to the river, bounded
+into the boat, where I heard him reviling Vilmorin with every foul name
+he could call to mind.
+
+My blood was aflame, and I was not minded to wait for our meeting
+at Reaux. Consigning Mademoiselle to the care of Michelot, who stood
+panting and bleeding from a wound in his shoulder, I turned back to my
+dead horse, and plucking the remaining pistol from the holster I ran
+down to the very edge of the water. The boat was not ten yards from
+shore, and my action had been unheeded by St. Auban, who was standing in
+the stern.
+
+Kneeling I took careful aim at him, and as God lives, I would have saved
+much trouble that was to follow had I been allowed to fire. But at that
+moment a hand was laid upon my arm, and Yvonne's sweet voice murmured in
+my ear:
+
+"You have fought a brave and gallant fight, M. de Luynes, and you have
+done a deed of which the knights of old might have been proud. Do not
+mar it by an act of murder."
+
+"Murder, Mademoiselle!" I gasped, letting my hand fall. "Surely there is
+no murder in this!"
+
+"A suspicion of it, I think, and so brave a man should have clean
+hands."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. THE HAND OF YVONNE
+
+
+We did not long remain upon the field of battle. Indeed, if we lingered
+at all it was but so that Mademoiselle might bandage Michelot's wound.
+And whilst she did so, my stout henchman related to us how it had fared
+with him, and how, having taken the two ruffians separately, he had been
+wounded by the first, whom he repaid by splitting his skull, whereupon
+the second one had discharged his pistol without effect, then made
+off towards the road, whilst Michelot, remembering that I might need
+assistance, had let him go.
+
+"There, good Michelot," quoth Mademoiselle, completing her task, "I have
+done what little I can. And now, M. de Luynes, let us go."
+
+It was close upon seven o'clock, and night was at hand. Already the moon
+was showing her large, full face above the tree-tops by Chambord, and
+casting a silver streak athwart the stream. The plash of oars from the
+Marquis's boat was waxing indistinct despite the stillness, whilst by
+the eye the boat itself was no longer to be distinguished.
+
+As I turned, my glance fell upon the bravo whom I had shot. He lay
+stiff and stark upon his back, his sightless eyes wide open and staring
+heavenwards, his face all blood-smeared and ghastly to behold.
+
+Mademoiselle shuddered. "Let us go," she repeated in a faint whisper;
+her eye had also fallen on that thing, and her voice was full of awe.
+She laid her hand upon my sleeve and 'neath the suasion of her touch I
+moved away.
+
+To our surprise and joy we found St. Auban's coach where we had left it,
+with two saddled horses tethered close by. The others had doubtless been
+taken by the coachman and the bravo who had escaped Michelot, both of
+whom had fled. These animals we looked upon as the spoils of war, and
+accordingly when we set out in the coach,--Mademoiselle having desired
+me to ride beside her therein,--Michelot wielding the reins, it was with
+those two horses tethered behind.
+
+"Monsieur de Luynes," said my companion softly, "I fear that I have done
+you a great injustice. Indeed, I know not how to crave your forgiveness,
+how to thank you, or how to hide my shame at those words I spoke to you
+this afternoon at Canaples."
+
+"Not another word on that score, Mademoiselle!"
+
+And to myself I thought of what recompense already had been mine. To me
+it had been given to have her lean trustingly upon me, my arm about her
+waist, whilst, sword in hand, I had fought for her. Dieu! Was that not
+something to have lived for?--aye, and to have died for, methought.
+
+"I deserved, Monsieur," she continued presently, "that you should have
+left me to my fate for all the odious things I uttered when you warned
+me of my peril,--for the manner in which I have treated you since your
+coming to Blois."
+
+"You have but treated me, Mademoiselle, in the only manner in which you
+could treat one so far beneath you, one who is utterly unworthy that you
+should bestow a single regret upon him."
+
+"You are strangely humble to-night, Monsieur. It is unwonted in you, and
+for once you wrong yourself. You have not said that I am forgiven."
+
+"I have naught to forgive."
+
+"Hélas! you have--indeed you have!"
+
+"Eh, bien!" quoth I, with a return of my old tone of banter, "I forgive
+then."
+
+Thereafter we travelled on in silence for some little while, my heart
+full of joy at being so near to her, and the friendliness which she
+evinced for me, and my mind casting o'er my joyous heart a cloud of some
+indefinable evil presage.
+
+"You are a brave man, M. de Luynes," she murmured presently, "and I have
+been taught that brave men are ever honourable and true."
+
+"Had they who taught you that known Gaston de Luynes, they would have
+told you instead that it is possible for a vile man to have the one
+redeeming virtue of courage, even as it is possible for a liar to have a
+countenance that is sweet and innocent."
+
+"There speaks that humble mood you are affecting, and which sits upon
+you as my father's clothes might do. Nay, Monsieur, I shall believe in
+my first teaching, and be deaf to yours."
+
+Again there was a spell of silence. At last--"I have been thinking,
+Monsieur," she said, "of that other occasion on which you rode with me.
+I remember that you said you had killed a man, and when I asked you why,
+you said that you had done it because he sought to kill you. Was that
+the truth?"
+
+"Assuredly, Mademoiselle. We fought a duel, and it is customary in a
+duel for each to seek to kill the other."
+
+"But why was this duel fought?" she cried, with some petulance.
+
+"I fear me, Mademoiselle, that I may not answer you," I said, recalling
+the exact motives, and thinking how futile appeared the quarrel which
+Eugène de Canaples had sought with Andrea when viewed in the light of
+what had since befallen.
+
+"Was the quarrel of your seeking?"
+
+"In a measure it was, Mademoiselle."
+
+"In a measure!" she echoed. Then persisting, as women will--"Will you
+not tell me what this measure was?"
+
+"Tenez, Mademoiselle," I answered in despair; "I will tell you just
+so much as I may. Your brother had occasion to be opposed to certain
+projects that were being formed in Paris by persons high in power
+around a beardless boy. Himself of too small importance to dare wage
+war against those powerful ones who would have crushed him, your brother
+sought to gain his ends by sending a challenge to this boy. The lad was
+high-spirited and consented to meet M. de Canaples, by whom he would
+assuredly have been murdered--'t is the only word, Mademoiselle--had I
+not intervened as I did."
+
+She was silent for a moment. Then--"I believe you, Monsieur," she said
+simply. "You fought, then, to shield another--but why?"
+
+"For three reasons, Mademoiselle. Firstly, those persons high in power
+chose to think it my fault that the quarrel had arisen, and threatened
+to hang me if the duel took place and the boy were harmed. Secondly,
+I myself felt a kindness for the boy. Thirdly, because, whatever sins
+Heaven may record against me, it has at least ever been my way to side
+against men who, confident of their superiority, seek, with the cowardly
+courage of the strong, to harm the weak. It is, Mademoiselle, the
+courage of the man who knows no fear when he strikes a woman, yet who
+will shake with a palsy when another man but threatens him."
+
+"Why did you not tell me all this before?" she whispered, after a pause.
+And methought I caught a quaver in her voice.
+
+I laughed for answer, and she read my laugh aright; presently she
+pursued her questions and asked me the name of the boy I had defended.
+But I evaded her, telling her that she must need no further details to
+believe me.
+
+"It is not that, Monsieur! I do believe you; I do indeed, but--"
+
+"Hark, Mademoiselle!" I cried suddenly, as the clatter of many hoofs
+sounded near at hand. "What is that?"
+
+A shout rang out at that moment. "Halt! Who goes there?"
+
+"Mon Dieu!" exclaimed Mademoiselle, drawing close up to me, and again
+the voice sounded, this time more sinister.
+
+"Halt, I say--in the King's name!"
+
+The coach came to a standstill, and through the window I beheld the
+shadowy forms of several mounted men, and the feeble glare of a lantern.
+
+"Who travels in the carriage, knave?" came the voice again.
+
+"Mademoiselle de Canaples," answered Michelot; then, like a fool, he
+must needs add: "Have a care whom you knave, my master, if you would
+grow old."
+
+"Pardieu! let us behold this Mademoiselle de Canaples who owns so
+fearful a warrior for a coachman."
+
+The door was flung rudely open, and the man bearing the lantern--whose
+rays shone upon a uniform of the Cardinal's guards--confronted us.
+
+With a chuckle he flashed the light in my face, then suddenly grew
+serious.
+
+"Peste! Is it indeed you, M. de Luynes?" quoth he; adding, with stern
+politeness, "It grieves me to disturb you, but I have a warrant for your
+arrest."
+
+He was fumbling in his doublet as he spoke, and during the time I had
+leisure to scan his countenance, recognising, to my surprise, a young
+lieutenant of the guards who had but recently served with me, and with
+whom I had been on terms almost of friendship. His words, "I have a
+warrant for your arrest," came like a bolt from the blue to enlighten
+me, and to remind me of what St. Auban had that morning told me, and
+which for the nonce I had all but forgotten.
+
+Upon hearing those same words, Yvonne, methought, grew pale, and her
+eyes were bent upon me with a look of surprise and pity.
+
+"Upon what charge am I arrested?" I enquired, with forced composure.
+
+"My warrant mentions none, M. de Luynes. It is here." And he thrust
+before me a paper, whose purport I could have read in its shape and
+seals. Idly my eye ran along the words:
+
+"By these presents I charge and empower my lieutenant, Jean de
+Montrésor, to seize where'er he may be found, hold, and conduct to Paris
+the Sieur Gaston de Luynes--"
+
+And so further, until the Cardinal's signature ended the legal verbiage.
+
+"In the King's name, M. de Luynes," said Montrésor, firmly yet
+deferentially, "your sword!"
+
+It would have been madness to do aught but comply with his request, and
+so I surrendered my rapier, which he in his turn delivered to one of his
+followers. Next I stepped down from the coach and turned to take leave
+of Mademoiselle, whereupon Montrésor, thinking that peradventure
+matters were as they appeared to be between us, and, being a man of fine
+feelings, signed to his men to fall back, whilst he himself withdrew a
+few paces.
+
+"Adieu, Mademoiselle!" I said simply. "I shall carry with me for
+consolation the memory that I have been of service to you, and I shall
+ever--during the little time that may be left me--be grateful to Heaven
+for the opportunity that it has afforded me of causing you--perchance
+without sufficient reason--to think better of me. Adieu, Mademoiselle!
+God guard you!"
+
+It was too dark to see her face, but my heart bounded with joy to catch
+in her voice a quaver that argued, methought, regret for me.
+
+"What does it mean, M. de Luynes? Why are they taking you?"
+
+"Because I have displeased my Lord Cardinal, albeit, Mademoiselle, I
+swear to you that I have no cause for shame at the reasons for which I
+am being arrested."
+
+"My father is Monseigneur de Mazarin's friend," she cried. "He is also
+yours. He shall exert for you what influence he possesses."
+
+"'T were useless, Mademoiselle. Besides, what does it signify? Again,
+adieu!"
+
+She spoke no answering word, but silently held out her hand. Silently
+I took it in mine, and for a moment I hesitated, thinking of what I
+was--of what she was. At last, moved by some power that was greater than
+my will, I stooped and pressed those shapely fingers to my lips. Then
+I stepped suddenly back and closed the carriage door, oppressed by a
+feeling akin to that of having done an evil deed.
+
+"Have I your permission to say a word to my servant, M. le Lieutenant?"
+I inquired.
+
+He bowed assent, whereat, stepping close up to the horror-stricken
+Michelot--
+
+"Drive straight to the Château de Canaples," I said in a low voice.
+"Thereafter return to the Lys de France and there wait until you hear
+from me. Here, take my purse; there are some fifty pistoles in it."
+
+"Speak but the word, Monsieur," he growled, "and I'll pistol a couple of
+these dogs."
+
+"Pah! You grow childish," I laughed, "or can you not see that fellow's
+musket?"
+
+"Pardieu! I'll risk his aim! I never yet saw one of these curs shoot
+straight."
+
+"No, no, obey me, Michelot. Think of Mademoiselle. Go! Adieu! If we
+should not meet again, mon brave," I finished, as I seized his loyal
+hand, "what few things of mine are at the hostelry shall belong to you,
+as well as what may be left of this money. It is little enough payment,
+Michelot, for all your faithfulness--"
+
+"Monsieur, Monsieur!" he cried.
+
+"Diable!" I muttered, "we are becoming women! Be off, you knave! Adieu!"
+
+The peremptoriness of my tone ended our leave-taking and caused him
+to grip his reins and bring down his whip. The coach moved on. A white
+face, on which the moonlight fell, glanced at me from the window,
+then to my staring eyes naught was left but the back of the retreating
+vehicle, with one of the two saddle-horses that had been tethered to it
+still ambling in its wake.
+
+"M. de Montrésor," I said, thrusting my bullet-pierced hat upon my head,
+"I am at your service."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. OF WHAT BEFELL AT REAUX. At my captor's bidding I mounted
+the horse which they had untethered from the carriage, and we started
+off along the road which the coach itself had disappeared upon a moment
+before. But we travelled at a gentle trot, which, after that evening's
+furious riding, was welcome to me.
+
+With bitterness I reflected as I rode that the very moment at which
+Mademoiselle de Canaples had brought herself to think better of me was
+like to prove the last we should spend together. Yet not
+altogether bitter was that reflection; for with it came also the
+consolation--whereof I had told her--that I had not been taken before
+she had had cause to change her mind concerning me.
+
+That she should care for me was too preposterous an idea to be
+nourished, and, indeed, it was better--much better--that M. de Montrésor
+had come before I, grown sanguine as lovers will, had again earned her
+scorn by showing her what my heart contained. Much better was it that I
+should pass for ever out of her life--as, indeed, methought I was
+like to pass out of all life--whilst I could leave in her mind a kind
+remembrance and a grateful regret, free from the stain that a subsequent
+possible presumption of mine might have cast o'er it.
+
+Then my thoughts shifted to Andrea. St. Auban would hear of my removal,
+and I cared not to think of what profit he might derive from it. To
+Yvonne also his presence must hereafter be a menace, and in that wherein
+tonight he had failed, he might, again, succeed. It was at this juncture
+of my reverie that M. de Montrésor's pleasant young voice aroused me.
+
+"You appear downcast, M. de Luynes."
+
+"I, downcast!" I echoed, throwing back my head and laughing. "Nay. I was
+but thinking.
+
+"Believe me, M. de Luynes," he said kindly, "when I tell you that
+it grieves me to be charged with this matter. I have done my best to
+capture you. That was my duty. But I should have rejoiced had I failed
+with the consciousness of having done all in my power."
+
+"Thanks, Montrésor," I murmured, and silence followed.
+
+"I have been thinking, Monsieur," he went on presently, "that possibly
+the absence of your sword causes you discomfort."
+
+"Eh? Discomfort? It does, most damnably!"
+
+"Give me your parole d'honneur that you will attempt no escape, and not
+only shall your sword be returned to you, but you shall travel to Paris
+with all comfort and dignity."
+
+Now, so amazed was I that I paused to stare at the officer who was young
+enough to make such a proposal to a man of my reputation. He turned his
+face towards me, and in the moonlight I could make out his questioning
+glance.
+
+"Eh, bien, Monsieur?"
+
+"I am more than grateful to you, M. de Montrésor," I replied, "and I
+freely give you my word of honour to seek no means of eluding you, nor
+to avail myself of any that may be presented to me."
+
+I said this loud enough for those behind to hear, so that no surprise
+was evinced when the lieutenant bade the man who bore my sword return it
+to me.
+
+If he who may chance to read these simple pages shall have gathered
+aught of my character from their perusal, he will marvel, perchance,
+that I should give the lieutenant my parole, instead rather of watching
+for an opportunity to--at least--attempt an escape. Preeminent in my
+thoughts, however, stood at that moment the necessity to remove St.
+Auban, and methought that by acting as I did I saw a way by which,
+haply, I might accomplish this. What might thereafter befall me seemed
+of little moment.
+
+"M. de Montrésor," I said presently, "your kindness impels me to set a
+further tax upon your generosity."
+
+"That is, Monsieur?"
+
+"Bid your men fall back a little, and I will tell you."
+
+He made a sign to his troopers, and when the distance between us had
+been sufficiently widened, I began:
+
+"There is a man at present across the river, yonder, who has done me
+no little injury, and with whom I have a rendezvous at nine o'clock
+to-night at St. Sulpice des Reaux, where our swords are to determine the
+difference between us. I crave, Monsieur, your permission to keep that
+appointment."
+
+"Impossible!" he answered curtly.
+
+I took a deep breath like a man who is about to jump an obstacle in his
+path.
+
+"Why impossible, Monsieur?"
+
+"Because you are a prisoner, and therefore no longer under obligation to
+keep appointments."
+
+"How would you feel, Montrésor, if, burning to be avenged upon a man
+who had done you irreparable wrong, you were arrested an hour before
+the time at which you were to meet this man, sword in hand, and your
+captor--whose leave you craved to keep the assignation--answered you
+with the word 'impossible'?"
+
+"Yes, yes, Monsieur," he replied impatiently. "But you forget my
+position. Let us suppose that I allow you to go to St. Sulpice des
+Reaux. What if you do not return?"
+
+"You mistrust me?" I exclaimed, my hopes melting.
+
+"You misapprehend me. I mean, what if you are killed?"
+
+"I do not think that I shall be."
+
+"Ah! But what if you are? What shall I say to my Lord Cardinal?"
+
+"Dame! That I am dead, and that he is saved the trouble of hanging me.
+The most he can want of me is my life. Let us suppose that you had
+come an hour later. You would have been forced to wait until after the
+encounter, and, did I fall, matters would be no different."
+
+The young man fell to thinking, but I, knowing that it is not well to
+let the young ponder overlong if you would bend them to your wishes,
+broke in upon his reflections--"See, Montrésor, yonder are the lights of
+Blois; by eight o'clock we shall be in the town. Come; grant me leave to
+cross the Loire, and by ten o'clock, or half-past at the latest, I shall
+return to sup with you or I shall be dead. I swear it."
+
+"Were I in your position," he answered musingly, "I know how I would be
+treated, and, pardieu! come what may I shall deal with you accordingly.
+You may go to your assignation, M. de Luynes, and may God prosper you."
+
+And thus it came to pass that shortly after eight o'clock, albeit
+a prisoner, I rode into the courtyard of the Lys de France, and,
+alighting, I stepped across the threshold of the inn, and strode up to
+a table at which I had espied Michelot. He sat nursing a huge measure
+of wine, into the depths of which he was gazing pensively, with an
+expression so glum upon his weather-beaten countenance that it defies
+depicting. So deep was he in his meditations, that albeit I stood by the
+table surveying him for a full minute, he took no heed of me.
+
+"Allons, Michelot!" I said at length. "Wake up."
+
+He started up with a cry of amazement; surprise chased away the grief
+that had been on his face, and a moment later joy unfeigned, and good to
+see, took the place of surprise.
+
+"You have escaped, Monsieur!" he cried, and albeit caution made him
+utter the words beneath his breath, a shout seemed to lurk somewhere in
+the whisper.
+
+Pressing his hand I sat down and briefly told him how matters stood, and
+how I came to be for the moment free. And when I had done I bade him,
+since his wound had not proved serious, to get his hat and cloak and go
+with me to find a boat.
+
+He obeyed me, and a quarter of an hour after we had quitted the hostelry
+he was rowing me across the stream, whilst, wrapped in my cloak, I sat
+in the stern, thinking of Yvonne.
+
+"Monsieur," said Michelot, "observe how swift is the stream. If I were
+to let the boat drift we should be at Tours to-morrow, and from there it
+would be easy to defy pursuit. We have enough money to reach Spain. What
+say you, Monsieur?"
+
+"Say, you rascal? Why, bend your back to the work and set me ashore by
+St. Sulpice in a quarter of an hour, or I'll forget that you have been
+my friend. Would you see me dishonoured?"
+
+"Sooner than see you dead," he grumbled as he resumed his task.
+Thereafter, whilst he rowed, Michelot entertained me with some quaint
+ideas touching that which fine gentlemen call honour, and to what sorry
+passes it was wont to bring them, concluding by thanking God that he was
+no gentleman and had no honour to lead him into mischief.
+
+At last, however, our journey came to an end, and I sprang ashore some
+five hundred paces from the little chapel, and almost exactly opposite
+the Château de Canaples. I stood for a moment gazing across the water at
+the lighted windows of the château, wondering which of those eyes that
+looked out upon the night might be that of Yvonne's chamber.
+
+Then, bidding Michelot await me, or follow did I not return in half an
+hour, I turned and moved away towards the chapel.
+
+There is a clearing in front of the little white edifice--which rather
+than a temple is but a monument to the martyr who is said to have
+perished on that spot in the days before Clovis.
+
+As I advanced into the centre of this open patch of ground, and stood
+clear of the black silhouettes of the trees, cast about me by the moon,
+two men appeared to detach themselves from the side wall of the chapel,
+and advanced to meet me.
+
+Albeit they were wrapped in their cloaks--uptilted behind by their
+protruding scabbards--it was not difficult to tell the tall figure and
+stately bearing of St. Auban and the mincing gait of Vilmorin.
+
+I doffed my hat in a grave salutation, which was courteously returned.
+
+"I trust, Messieurs, that I have not kept you waiting?"
+
+"I was on the point of expressing that very hope, Monsieur," returned
+St. Auban. "We have but arrived. Do you come alone?"
+
+"As you perceive."
+
+"Hum! M. le Vicomte, then, will act for both of us."
+
+I bowed in token of my satisfaction, and without more ado cast aside my
+cloak, pleased to see that the affair was to be conducted with decency
+and politeness, as such matters should ever be conducted, albeit
+impoliteness may have marked their origin.
+
+The Marquis, having followed my example and divested himself of his
+cloak and hat, unsheathed his rapier and delivered it to Vilmorin, who
+came across with it to where I stood. When he was close to me I saw
+that he was deadly pale; his teeth chattered, and the hand that held the
+weapon shook as with a palsy.
+
+"Mu--Monsieur," he stammered, "will it please you to lend me your sword
+that I may mu-measure it?"
+
+"What formalities!" I exclaimed with an amused smile, as I complied with
+his request. "I am afraid you have caught a chill, Vicomte. The night
+air is little suited to health so delicate."
+
+He answered me with a baleful glance, as silently he took my sword and
+set it--point to hilt--with St. Auban's. He appeared to have found some
+slight difference in the length, for he took two steps away from me,
+holding the weapons well in the light, where for a moment he surveyed
+them attentively. His hands shook so that the blades clattered one
+against the other the while. But, of a sudden, taking both rapiers by
+the hilt, he struck the blades together with a ringing clash, then
+flung them both behind him as far as he could contrive, leaving me
+thunderstruck with amazement, and marvelling whether fear had robbed him
+of his wits.
+
+Not until I perceived that the trees around me appeared to spring into
+life did it occur to me that that clashing of blades was a signal, and
+that I was trapped. With the realisation of it I was upon Vilmorin in a
+bound, and with both hands I had caught the dog by the throat before he
+thought of flight. The violence of my onslaught bore him to the ground,
+and I, not to release my choking grip, went with him.
+
+For a moment we lay together where we had fallen, his slender body
+twisting and writhing under me, his swelling face upturned and his
+protruding, horror-stricken eyes gazing into mine that were fierce and
+pitiless. Voices rang above me; someone stooped and strove to pluck me
+from my victim; then below the left shoulder I felt a sting of pain,
+first cold then hot, and I knew that I had been stabbed.
+
+Again I felt the blade thrust in, lower down and driven deeper; then, as
+the knife was for the second time withdrawn, and my flesh sucked at the
+steel,--the pain of it sending a shudder through me,--the instinct of
+preservation overcame the sweet lust to strangle Vilmorin. I let him go
+and, staggering to my feet, I turned to face those murderers who struck
+a defenceless man behind.
+
+Swords gleamed around me: one, two, three, four, five, six, I counted,
+and stood weak and dazed from loss of blood, gazing stupidly at the
+white blades. Had I but had my sword I should have laid about me, and
+gone down beneath their blows as befits a soldier. But the absence of
+that trusty friend left me limp and helpless--cowed for the first time
+since I had borne arms.
+
+Of a sudden I became aware that St. Auban stood opposite to me, hand on
+hip, surveying me with a malicious leer. As our eyes met--"So, master
+meddler," quoth he mockingly, "you crow less lustily than is your wont."
+
+"Hound!" I gasped, choking with rage, "if you are a man, if there be a
+spark of pride or honour left in your lying, cowardly soul, order your
+assassins to give me my sword, and, wounded though I be, I'll fight with
+you this duel that you lured me here to fight."
+
+He laughed harshly.
+
+"I told you but this morning, Master de Luynes, that a St. Auban does
+not fight men of your stamp. You forced a rendezvous upon me; you shall
+reap the consequences."
+
+Despite the weakness arising from loss of blood, I sprang towards him,
+beside myself with fury. But ere I had covered half the distance
+that lay between us my arms were gripped from behind, and in my spent
+condition I was held there, powerless, at the Marquis's mercy. He came
+slowly forward until we were but some two feet apart. For a second he
+stood leering at me, then, raising his hand, he struck me--struck a man
+whose arms another held!--full upon the face. Passion for the moment
+lent me strength, and in that moment I had wrenched my right arm free
+and returned his blow with interest.
+
+With an oath he got out a dagger that hung from his baldrick.
+
+"Sang du Christ! Take that, you dog!" he snarled, burying the blade in
+my breast as he spoke.
+
+"My God! You are murdering me!" I gasped.
+
+"Have you discovered it? What penetration!" he retorted, and those about
+him laughed at his indecent jest!
+
+He made a sign, and the man who had held me withdrew his hands. I
+staggered forward, deprived of his support, then a crashing blow took me
+across the head.
+
+I swayed for an instant, and with arms upheld I clutched at the air,
+as if I sought, by hanging to it, to save myself from falling; then the
+moon appeared to go dark, a noise as of the sea beating upon its shore
+filled my ears, and I seemed to be falling--falling--falling.
+
+A voice that buzzed and vibrated oddly, growing more distant at each
+word, reached me as I sank.
+
+"Come," it said. "Fling that carrion into the river."
+
+Then nothingness engulfed me.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. OF MY RESURRECTION
+
+
+Even as the blow which had plunged me into senselessness had imparted to
+me the sinking sensation which I have feebly endeavoured to depict,
+so did the first dim ray of returning consciousness bring with it the
+feeling that I was again being buoyed upwards through the thick
+waters that had enveloped me, to their surface, where intelligence and
+wakefulness awaited.
+
+And as I felt myself borne up and up in that effortless ascension, my
+senses awake and my reason still half-dormant, an exquisite sense of
+languor pervaded my whole being. Presently meseemed that the surface
+was gained at last, and an instinct impelled me to open my eyes upon the
+light, of which, through closed lids, I had become conscious.
+
+I beheld a fair-sized room superbly furnished, and flooded with amber
+sunlight suggestive in itself of warmth and luxury, the vision of which
+heightened the delicious torpor that held me in thrall. The bed I
+lay upon was such, I told myself, as would not have disgraced a royal
+sleeper. It was upheld by great pillars of black oak, carved with a
+score of fantastic figures, and all around it, descending from the dome
+above, hung curtains of rich damask, drawn back at the side that looked
+upon the window. Near at hand stood a table laden with phials and such
+utensils as one sees by the bedside of the wealthy sick. All this I
+beheld in a languid, unreasoning fashion through my half-open lids, and
+albeit the luxury of the room and the fine linen of my bed told me that
+this was neither my Paris lodging in the Rue St. Antoine, nor yet my
+chamber at the hostelry of the Lys de France, still I taxed not my brain
+with any questions touching my whereabouts.
+
+I closed my eyes, and I must have slept again: when next I opened them
+a burly figure stood in the deep bay of the latticed window, looking out
+through the leaded panes.
+
+I recognised the stalwart frame of Michelot, and at last I asked myself
+where I might be. It did not seem to occur to me that I had but to call
+him to receive an answer to that question. Instead, I closed my
+eyes again, and essayed to think. But just then there came a gentle
+scratching at the door, and I could hear Michelot tiptoeing across
+the room; next he and the one he had admitted tiptoed back towards my
+bedside, and as they came I caught a whisper in a voice that seemed to
+drag me to full consciousness.
+
+"How fares the poor invalid this morning?"
+
+"The fever is gone, Mademoiselle, and he may wake at any moment; indeed,
+it is strange that he should sleep so long."
+
+"He will be the better for it when he does awaken. I will remain here
+while you rest, Michelot. My poor fellow, you are almost as worn with
+your vigils as he is with the fever."
+
+"Pooh! I am strong enough, Mademoiselle," he answered. "I will get a
+mouthful of food and return, for I would be by when he wakes."
+
+Then their voices sank so low that as they withdrew I caught not what
+was said. The door closed softly and for a space there was silence,
+broken at last by a sigh above my head. With an answering sigh I
+opened wide my eyes and feasted them upon the lovely face of Yvonne de
+Canaples, as she bent over me with a look of tenderness and pity that at
+once recalled to me our parting when I was arrested.
+
+But suddenly meeting the stare of my gaze, she drew back with a
+half-stifled cry, whose meaning my dull wits sought not to interpret,
+but methought I caught from her lips the words, "Thank God!"
+
+"Where am I, Mademoiselle?" I inquired, and the faintness of my voice
+amazed me.
+
+"You know me!" she exclaimed, as though the thing were a miracle. Then
+coming forward again, and setting her cool, sweet hand upon my forehead,
+
+"Hush," she murmured in the accents one might use to soothe a child.
+"You are at Canaples, among friends. Now sleep."
+
+"At Canaples!" I echoed. "How came I here? I am a prisoner, am I not?"
+
+"A prisoner!" she exclaimed. "No, no, you are not a prisoner. You are
+among friends."
+
+"Did I then but dream that Montrésor arrested me yesterday on the road
+to Meung? Ah! I recollect! M. de Montrésor gave me leave on parole to go
+to Reaux."
+
+Then, like an avalanche, remembrance swept down upon me, and my memory
+drew a vivid picture of the happenings at St. Sulpice.
+
+"My God!" I cried. "Am I not dead, then?" And I sought to struggle up
+into a sitting posture, but that gentle hand upon my forehead restrained
+and robbed me of all will that was not hers.
+
+"Hush, Monsieur!" she said softly. "Lie still. By a miracle and the
+faithfulness of Michelot you live. Be thankful, be content, and sleep."
+
+"But my wounds, Mademoiselle?" I inquired feebly.
+
+"They are healed."
+
+"Healed?" quoth I, and in my amazement my voice sounded louder than it
+had yet done since my awakening. "Healed! Three such wounds as I took
+last night, to say naught of a broken head, healed?"
+
+"'T was not last night, Monsieur."
+
+"Not last night? Was it not last night that I went to Reaux?"
+
+"It is nearly a month since that took place," she answered with a smile.
+"For nearly a month have you lain unconscious upon that bed, with the
+angel of Death at your pillow. You have fought and won a silent battle.
+Now sleep, Monsieur, and ask no more questions until next you awaken,
+when Michelot shall tell you all that took place."
+
+She held a glass to my lips from which I drank gratefully, then, with
+the submissiveness of a babe, I obeyed her and slept.
+
+As she had promised, it was Michelot who greeted me when next I opened
+my eyes, on the following day. There were tears in his eyes--eyes that
+had looked grim and unmoved upon the horrors of the battlefield.
+
+From him I learned how, after they had flung me into the river, deeming
+me dead already, St. Auban and his men had made off. The swift stream
+swirled me along towards the spot where, in the boat, Michelot awaited
+my return all unconscious of what was taking place. He had heard the
+splash, and had suddenly stood up, on the point of going ashore, when
+my body rose within a few feet of him. He spoke of the agony of mind
+wherewith he had suddenly stretched forth and clutched me by my doublet,
+fearing that I was indeed dead. He had lifted me into the boat to find
+that my heart still beat and that the blood flowed from my wounds. These
+he had there and then bound up in the only rude fashion he was master
+of, and forthwith, thinking of Andrea and the Chevalier de Canaples,
+who were my friends, and of Mademoiselle, who was my debtor, also seeing
+that the château was the nearest place, he had rowed straight across to
+Canaples, and there I had lain during the four weeks that had elapsed,
+nursed by Mademoiselle, Andrea, and himself, and thus won back to life.
+
+Ah, Dieu! How good it was to know that someone there was still who cared
+for worthless Gaston de Luynes a little--enough to watch beside him and
+withhold his soul from the grim claws of Death.
+
+"What of M. de St. Auban?" I inquired presently.
+
+"He has not been seen since that night. Probably he feared that did he
+come to Blois, the Chevalier would find means of punishing him for the
+attempted abduction of Mademoiselle."
+
+"Ah, then Andrea is safe?"
+
+As if in answer to my question, the lad entered at that moment, and upon
+seeing me sitting up, talking to Michelot, he uttered an exclamation of
+joy, and hurried forward to my bedside.
+
+"Gaston, dear friend!" he cried, as he took my hand--and a thin,
+withered hand it was.
+
+We talked long together,--we three,--and anon we were joined by the
+Chevalier de Canaples, who offered me also, in his hesitating manner,
+his felicitations. And with me they lingered until Yvonne came to drive
+them with protestations from my bedside.
+
+Such, in brief, was the manner of my resurrection. For a week or so I
+still kept my chamber; then one day towards the middle of April, the
+weather being warm and the sun bright, Michelot assisted me to don my
+clothes, which hung strangely empty upon my gaunt, emaciated frame, and,
+leaning heavily upon my faithful henchman, I made my way below.
+
+In the salon I found the Chevalier de Canaples with Mesdemoiselles and
+Andrea awaiting me, and the kindness wherewith they overwhelmed me, as
+I sat propped up with pillows, was such that I asked myself again and
+again if, indeed, I was that same Gaston de Luynes who but a little
+while ago had held himself as destitute of friends as he was of fortune.
+I was the pampered hero of the hour, and even little Geneviève had a
+sunny smile and a kind word for me.
+
+Thereafter my recovery progressed with great strides, and gradually, day
+by day, I felt more like my old vigorous self. They were happy days, for
+Mademoiselle was often at my side, and ever kind to me; so kind was she
+that presently, as my strength grew, there fell a great cloud athwart my
+happiness--the thought that soon I must leave Canaples never to return
+there,--leave Mademoiselle's presence never to come into it again.
+
+I was Monsieur de Montrésor's prisoner. I had learned that in common
+with all others, save those at Canaples, he deemed me dead, and that,
+informed of it by a message from St. Auban, he had returned to Paris
+on the day following that of my journey to Reaux. Nevertheless, since
+I lived, he had my parole, and it was my duty as soon as I had regained
+sufficient strength, to journey to Paris and deliver myself into his
+hands.
+
+Nearer and nearer drew the dreaded hour in which I felt that I must
+leave Canaples. On the last day of April I essayed a fencing bout with
+Andrea, and so strong and supple did I prove myself that I was forced to
+realise that the time was come. On the morrow I would go.
+
+As I was on the point of returning indoors with the foils under my arm,
+Andrea called me back.
+
+"Gaston, I have something of importance to say to you. Will you take a
+turn with me down yonder by the river?"
+
+There was a serious, almost nervous look on his comely face, which
+arrested my attention. I dropped the foils, and taking his arm I went
+with him as he bade me. We seated ourselves on the grass by the edge of
+the gurgling waters, and he began:
+
+"It is now two months since we came to Blois: I, to pay my court to
+the wealthy Mademoiselle de Canaples; you, to watch over and protect
+me--nay, you need not interrupt me. Michelot has told me what St. Auban
+sought here, and the true motives of your journey to St. Sulpice. Never
+shall I be able to sufficiently prove my gratitude to you, my poor
+Gaston. But tell me, dear friend, you who from the outset saw how
+matters stood, why did you not inform St. Auban that he had no cause to
+hunt me down since I intended not to come between him and Yvonne?"
+
+"Mon Dieu!" I exclaimed, "that little fair-haired coquette has--"
+
+"Gaston," he interrupted, "you go too fast. I love Geneviève de
+Canaples. I have loved her, I think, since the moment I beheld her in
+the inn at Choisy, and, what is more, she loves me."
+
+"So that--?" I asked with an ill-repressed sneer.
+
+"We have plighted our troth, and with her father's sanction, or without
+it, she will do me the honour to become my wife."
+
+"Admirable!" I exclaimed. "And my Lord Cardinal?"
+
+"May hang himself on his stole for aught I care."
+
+"Ah! Truly a dutiful expression for a nephew who has thwarted his
+uncle's plans!"
+
+"My uncle's plans are like himself, cold and selfish in their ambition."
+
+"Andrea, Andrea! Whatever your uncle may be, to those of your blood, at
+least, he was never selfish."
+
+"Not selfish!" he cried. "Think you that he is enriching and contracting
+great alliances for us because he loves us? No, no. Our uncle seeks to
+gain our support and with it the support of those noble houses to which
+he is allying us. The nobility opposes him, therefore he seeks to find
+relatives among noblemen, so that he may weather the storm of which his
+far-seeing eyes have already detected the first dim clouds. What to him
+are my feelings, my inclinations, my affections? Things of no moment, to
+be sacrificed so that I may serve him in the manner that will bring him
+the most profit. Yet you call him not selfish! Were he not selfish, I
+should go to him and say: 'I love Geneviève de Canaples. Create me Duke
+as you would do, did I wed her sister, and the Chevalier de Canaples
+will not withstand our union.' What think you would be his answer?"
+
+"I have a shrewd idea what his answer would be," I replied slowly. "Also
+I have a shrewd idea of what he will say when he learns in what manner
+you have defied his wishes."
+
+"He can but order me away from Court, or, at most, banish me from
+France."
+
+"And then what will become of you--of you and your wife?"
+
+"What is to become of us?" he cried in a tone that was almost that of
+anger. "Think you that I am a pauper dependent upon my uncle's bounty?
+I have an estate near Palermo, which, for all that it does not yield
+riches, is yet sufficient to enable us to live with dignity and comfort.
+I have told Geneviève, and she is content."
+
+I looked at his flushed face and laughed.
+
+"Well, well!" said I. "If you are resolved upon it, it is ended."
+
+He appeared to meditate for a moment, then--"We have decided to be
+married by the Curé of St. Innocent on the day after to-morrow."
+
+"Crédieu!" I answered, with a whistle, "you have wasted no time in
+determining your plans. Does Yvonne know of it?"
+
+"We have dared tell nobody," he replied; and a moment later he added
+hesitatingly, "You, I know, will not betray us."
+
+"Do you know me so little that you doubt me on that score? Have no
+fear, Andrea, I shall not speak. Besides, to-morrow, or the next day at
+latest, I leave Canaples."
+
+"You do not mean that you are returning to the Lys de France!"
+
+"No. I am going farther than that. I am going to Paris."
+
+"To Paris?"
+
+"To Paris, to deliver myself up to M. de Montrésor, who gave me leave to
+go to Reaux some seven weeks ago."
+
+"But it is madness, Gaston!" he ejaculated.
+
+"All virtue is madness in a world so sinful; nevertheless I go. In a
+measure I am glad that things have fallen out with you as they have
+done, for when the news goes abroad that you have married Geneviève de
+Canaples and left the heiress free, your enemies will vanish, and you
+will have no further need of me. New enemies you will have perchance,
+but in your strife with them I could lend you no help, were I by."
+
+He sat in silence casting pebbles into the stream, and watching the
+ripples they made upon the face of the waters.
+
+"Have you told Mademoiselle?" he asked at length.
+
+"Not yet. I shall tell her to-day. You also, Andrea, must take her into
+your confidence touching your approaching marriage. That she will prove
+a good friend to you I am assured."
+
+"But what reason shall I give form my secrecy?" he inquired, and
+inwardly I smiled to see how the selfishness which love begets in us had
+caused him already to forget my affairs, and how the thought of his
+own approaching union effaced all thought of me and the doom to which I
+went.
+
+"Give no reason," I answered. "Let Genevieve tell her of what you
+contemplate, and if a reason she must have, let Geneviève bid her come
+to me. This much will I do for you in the matter; indeed, Andrea, it is
+the last service I am like to render you."
+
+"Sh! Here comes the Chevalier. She shall be told to-day."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. THE WAY OF WOMAN
+
+
+For all that I realised that this love of mine for Yvonne was as a child
+still-born--a thing that had no existence save in the heart that had
+begotten it--I rejoiced meanly at the thought that she was not destined
+to become Andrea's wife. For since I understood that this woman--who to
+me was like no other of her sex--was not for so poor a thing as Gaston
+de Luynes, like the dog in the fable I wished that no other might
+possess her. Inevitable it seemed that sooner or later one must come who
+would woo and win her. But ere that befell, my Lord Cardinal would have
+meted out justice to me--the justice of the rope meseemed--and I should
+not be by to gnash my teeth in jealousy.
+
+That evening, when the Chevalier de Canaples had gone to pay a visit to
+his vineyard,--the thing that, next to himself, he loved most in this
+world,--and whilst Geneviève and Andrea were vowing a deathless love to
+each other in the rose garden, their favourite haunt when the Chevalier
+was absent, I seized the opportunity for making my adieux to Yvonne.
+
+We were leaning together upon the balustrade of the terrace, and our
+faces were turned towards the river and the wooded shores beyond--a
+landscape this that was as alive and beautiful now as it had been dead
+and grey when first I came to Canaples two months ago.
+
+Scarce were my first words spoken when she turned towards me, and
+methought--but I was mad, I told myself--that there was a catch in her
+voice as she exclaimed, "You are leaving us, Monsieur?"
+
+"To-morrow morning I shall crave Monsieur your father's permission to
+quit Canaples."
+
+"But why, Monsieur? Have we not made you happy here?"
+
+"So happy, Mademoiselle," I answered with fervour, "that at times it
+passes my belief that I am indeed Gaston de Luynes. But go I must. My
+honour demands of me this sacrifice."
+
+And in answer to the look of astonishment that filled her wondrous eyes,
+I told her what I had told Andrea touching my parole to Montrésor, and
+the necessity of its redemption. As Andrea had done, she also dubbed it
+madness, but her glance was, nevertheless, so full of admiration, that
+methought to have earned it was worth the immolation of liberty--of life
+perchance; who could say?
+
+"Before I go, Mademoiselle," I pursued, looking straight before me as
+I spoke, and dimly conscious that her glance was bent upon my
+face--"before I go, I fain would thank you for all that you have done
+for me here. Your care has saved my life, Mademoiselle; your kindness,
+methinks, has saved my soul. For it seems to me that I am no longer the
+same man whom Michelot fished out of the Loire that night two months
+ago. I would thank you, Mademoiselle, for the happiness that has been
+mine during the past few days--a happiness such as for years has not
+fallen to my lot. To another and worthier man, the task of thanking you
+might be an easy one; but to me, who know myself to be so far beneath
+you, the obligation is so overwhelming that I know of no words to fitly
+express it."
+
+"Monsieur, Monsieur, I beseech you! Already you have said overmuch."
+
+"Nay, Mademoiselle; not half enough."
+
+"Have you forgotten, then, what you did for me? Our trivial service to
+you is but unseemly recompense. What other man would have come to my
+rescue as you came, with such odds against you--and forgetting the
+affronting words wherewith that very day I had met your warning? Tell
+me, Monsieur, who would have done that?"
+
+"Why, any man who deemed himself a gentleman, and who possessed such
+knowledge as I had."
+
+She laughed a laugh of unbelief.
+
+"You are mistaken, sir," she answered. "The deed was worthy of one of
+those preux chevaliers we read of, and I have never known but one man
+capable of accomplishing it."
+
+Those words and the tone wherein they were uttered set my brain on fire.
+I turned towards her; our glances met, and her eyes--those eyes that but
+a while ago had never looked on me without avowing the disdain wherein
+she had held me--were now filled with a light of kindliness, of
+sympathy, of tenderness that seemed more than I could endure.
+
+Already my hand was thrust into the bosom of my doublet, and my fingers
+were about to drag forth that little shred of green velvet that I had
+found in the coppice on the day of her abduction, and that I had kept
+ever since as one keeps the relic of a departed saint. Another moment
+and I should have poured out the story of the mad, hopeless passion that
+filled my heart to bursting, when of a sudden--"Yvonne, Yvonne!" came
+Geneviève's fresh voice from the other end of the terrace. The spell of
+that moment was broken.
+
+Methought Mademoiselle made a little gesture of impatience as she
+answered her sister's call; then, with a word of apology, she left me.
+
+Half dazed by the emotions that had made sport of me, I leaned over the
+balustrade, and with my elbows on the stone and my chin on my palms,
+I stared stupidly before me, thanking God for having sent Geneviève in
+time to save me from again earning Mademoiselle's scorn. For as I grew
+sober I did not doubt that with scorn she would have met the wild words
+that already trembled on my lips.
+
+I laughed harshly and aloud, such a laugh as those in Hell may vent.
+"Gaston, Gaston!" I muttered, "at thirty-two you are more a fool than
+ever you were at twenty."
+
+I told myself then that my fancy had vested her tone and look with a
+kindliness far beyond that which they contained, and as I thought of
+how I had deemed impatient the little gesture wherewith she had greeted
+Geneviève's interruption I laughed again.
+
+From the reverie into which, naturally enough, I lapsed, it was
+Mademoiselle who aroused me. She stood beside me with an unrest of
+manner so unusual in her, that straightway I guessed the substance of
+her talk with Geneviève.
+
+"So, Mademoiselle," I said, without waiting for her to speak, "you have
+learned what is afoot?"
+
+"I have," she answered. "That they love each other is no news to me.
+That they intend to wed does not surprise me. But that they should
+contemplate a secret marriage passes my comprehension."
+
+I cleared my throat as men will when about to embark upon a perilous
+subject with no starting-point determined.
+
+"It is time, Mademoiselle," I began, "that you should learn the true
+cause of M. de Mancini's presence at Canaples. It will enlighten you
+touching his motives for a secret wedding. Had things fallen out as was
+intended by those who planned his visit--Monsieur your father and my
+Lord Cardinal--it is improbable that you would ever have heard that
+which it now becomes necessary that I should tell you. I trust,
+Mademoiselle," I continued, "that you will hear me in a neutral
+spirit, without permitting your personal feelings to enter into your
+consideration of that which I shall unfold."
+
+"So long a preface augurs anything but well," she interposed, looking
+monstrous serious.
+
+"Not ill, at least, I hope. Hear me then. Your father and his Eminence
+are friends; the one has a daughter who is said to be very wealthy and
+whom he, with fond ambition, desires to see wedded to a man who can
+give her an illustrious name; the other possesses a nephew whom he can
+ennoble by the highest title that a man may bear who is not a prince of
+the blood,--and borne indeed by few who are not,--and whom he desires to
+see contract an alliance that will bring him enough of riches to enable
+him to bear his title with becoming dignity." I glanced at Mademoiselle,
+whose cheeks were growing an ominous red.
+
+"Well, Mademoiselle," I continued, "your father and Monseigneur de
+Mazarin appear to have bared their heart's desire to each other, and
+M. de Mancini was sent to Canaples to woo and win your father's elder
+daughter."
+
+A long pause followed, during which she stood with face aflame, averted
+eyes, and heaving bosom, betraying the feelings that stormed within
+her at the disclosure of the bargain whereof she had been a part. At
+length--"Oh, Monsieur!" she exclaimed in a choking voice, and clenching
+her shapely hands, "to think--"
+
+"I beseech you not to think, Mademoiselle," I interrupted calmly, for,
+having taken the first plunge, I was now master of myself. "The ironical
+little god, whom the ancients painted with bandaged eyes, has led M. de
+Mancini by the nose in this matter, and things have gone awry for the
+plotters. There, Mademoiselle, you have the reason for a clandestine
+union. Did Monsieur your father guess how Andrea's affections have"--I
+caught the word "miscarried" betimes, and substituted--"gone against his
+wishes, his opposition is not a thing to be doubted."
+
+"Are you sure there is no mistake?" she inquired after a pause. "Is all
+this really true, Monsieur?"
+
+"It is, indeed."
+
+"But how comes it that my father has seen naught of what has been so
+plain to me--that M. de Mancini was ever at my sister's side?"
+
+"Your father, Mademoiselle, is much engrossed in his vineyard. Moreover,
+when the Chevalier has been at hand he has been careful to show no
+greater regard for the one than for the other of you. I instructed him
+in this duplicity many weeks ago."
+
+She looked at me for a moment.
+
+"Oh, Monsieur," she cried passionately, "how deep is my humiliation! To
+think that I was made a part of so vile a bargain! Oh, I am glad that M.
+de Mancini has proved above the sordid task to which they set him--glad
+that he will dupe the Cardinal and my father."
+
+"So am not I, Mademoiselle," I exclaimed. She vouchsafed me a stare of
+ineffable surprise.
+
+"How?
+
+"Diable!" I answered. "I am M. de Mancini's friend. It was to shield him
+that I fought your brother; again, because of my attitude towards him
+was it that I went perilously near assassination at Reaux. Enemies
+sprang up about him when the Cardinal's matrimonial projects became
+known. Your brother picked a quarrel with him, and when I had dealt with
+your brother, St. Auban appeared, and after St. Auban there were others.
+When it is known that he has played this trick upon 'Uncle Giulio' his
+enemies will disappear; but, on the other hand, his prospects will all
+be blighted, and for that I am sorry."
+
+"So that was the motive of your duel with Eugène!"
+
+"At last you learn it."
+
+"And," she added in a curious voice, "you would have been better pleased
+had M. de Mancini carried out his uncle's wishes?"
+
+"It matters little what I would think, Mademoiselle," I answered
+guardedly, for I could not read that curious tone of hers.
+
+"Nevertheless, I am curious to hear your answer."
+
+What answer could I make? The truth--that for all my fine talk, I was
+at heart and in a sense right glad that she was not to become Andrea's
+wife--would have seemed ungallant. Moreover, I must have added the
+explanation that I desired to see her no man's wife, so that I might not
+seem to contradict myself. Therefore--
+
+"In truth, Mademoiselle," I answered, lying glibly, "it would have given
+me more pleasure had Andrea chosen to obey his Eminence."
+
+Her manner froze upon the instant.
+
+"In the consideration of your friend's advancement," she replied, half
+contemptuously, "you forget, M. de Luynes, to consider me. Am I, then, a
+thing to be bartered into the hands of the first fortune-hunter who
+woos me because he has been bidden so to do, and who is to marry me for
+political purposes? Pshaw, M. de Luynes!" she added, with a scornful
+laugh, "after all, I was a fool to expect aught else from--"
+
+She checked herself abruptly, and a sudden access of mercy left
+the stinging "you" unuttered. I stood by, dumb and sheepish, not
+understanding how the words that I had deemed gallant could have brought
+this tempest down upon my head. Before I could say aught that might have
+righted matters, or perchance made them worse--"Since you leave Canaples
+to-morrow," quoth she, "I will say 'Adieu,' Monsieur, for it is unlikely
+that we shall meet again."
+
+With a slight inclination of her head, and withholding her hand
+intentionally, she moved away, whilst I stood, as only a fool or a
+statue would stand, and watched her go.
+
+Once she paused, and, indeed, half turned, whereupon hope knocked at
+my heart again; but before I had admitted it, she had resumed her walk
+towards the house. Hungrily I followed her graceful, lissom figure with
+my eyes until she had crossed the threshold. Then, with a dull ache in
+my breast, I flung myself upon a stone seat, and, addressing myself to
+the setting sun for want of a better audience, I roundly cursed her sex
+for the knottiest puzzle that had ever plagued the mind of man in the
+unravelling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. FATHER AND SON
+
+
+"Gaston," quoth Andrea next morning, "you will remain at Canaples until
+to-morrow? You must, for to-morrow I am to be wed, and I would fain have
+your good wishes ere you go."
+
+"Nice hands, mine, to seek a benediction at," I grumbled.
+
+"But you will remain? Come, Gaston, we have been good friends, you and
+I, and who knows when next we shall meet? Believe me, I shall value your
+'God speed' above all others."
+
+"Likely enough, since it will be the only one you'll hear."
+
+But for all my sneers he was not to be put off. He talked and coaxed so
+winningly that in the end--albeit I am a man not easily turned from the
+course he has set himself--the affectionate pleading in his fresh young
+voice and the affectionate look in his dark eyes won me to his way.
+
+Forthwith I went in quest of the Chevalier, whom, at the indication of a
+lackey, I discovered in the room it pleased him to call his study--that
+same room into which we had been ushered on the day of our arrival at
+Canaples. I told him that on the morrow I must set out for Paris, and
+albeit he at first expressed a polite regret, yet when I had shown him
+how my honour was involved in my speedy return thither, he did not urge
+me to put off my departure.
+
+"It grieves me, sir, that you must go, and I deeply regret the motive
+that is taking you. Yet I hope that his Eminence, in recognition of the
+services you have rendered his nephew, will see fit to forget what cause
+for resentment he may have against you, and render you your liberty. If
+you will give me leave, Monsieur, I will write to his Eminence in this
+strain, and you shall be the bearer of my letter."
+
+I thanked him, with a smile of deprecation, as I thought of the true
+cause of Mazarin's resentment, which was precisely that of the plea upon
+which M. de Canaples sought to obtain for me my liberation.
+
+"And now, Monsieur," he pursued nervously, "touching Andrea and his
+visit here, I would say a word to you who are his friend, and may haply
+know something of his mind. It is over two months since he came here,
+and yet the--er--affair which we had hoped to bring about seems no
+nearer its conclusion than when first he came. Of late I have watched
+him and I have watched Yvonne; they are certainly good friends, yet not
+even the frail barrier of formality appears overcome betwixt them, and
+I am beginning to fear that Andrea is not only lukewarm in this matter,
+but is forgetful of his uncle's wishes and selfishly indifferent to
+Monseigneur's projects and mine, which, as he well knows, are the reason
+of his sojourn at my château. What think you of this, M. de Luynes?"
+
+He shot a furtive glance at me as he spoke, and with his long, lean
+forefinger he combed his beard in a nervous fashion.
+
+I gave a short laugh to cover my embarrassment at the question.
+
+"What do I think, Monsieur?" I echoed to gain time. Then, thinking that
+a sententious answer would be the most fitting,--"Ma foi! Love is as the
+spark that lies latent in flint and steel: for days and weeks these two
+may be as close together as you please, and naught will come of it; but
+one fine day, a hand--the hand of chance--will strike the one against
+the other, and lo!--the spark is born!"
+
+"You speak in parables, Monsieur," was his caustic comment.
+
+"'T is in parables that all religions are preached," I returned, "and
+love, methinks, is a great religion in this world."
+
+"Love, sir, love!" he cried petulantly. "The word makes me sick! What
+has love to do with this union? Love, sir, is a pretty theme for poets,
+romancers, and fools. The imagination of such a sentiment--for it is a
+sentiment that does not live save in the imagination--may serve to draw
+peasants and other low­bred clods into wedlock. With such as we--with
+gentlemen--it has naught to do. So let that be, Monsieur. Andrea de
+Mancini came hither to wed my daughter."
+
+"And I am certain, Monsieur," I answered stoutly, "that Andrea will wed
+your daughter."
+
+"You speak with confidence."
+
+"I know Andrea well. Signs that may be hidden to you are clear to me,
+and I have faith in my prophecy."
+
+He looked at me, and fell a victim to my confidence of manner. The
+petulancy died out of his face.
+
+"Well, well! We will hope. My Lord Cardinal is to create him Duke, and
+he will assume as title his wife's estate, becoming known to history as
+Andrea de Mancini, Duke of Canaples. Thus shall a great house be founded
+that will bear our name. You see the importance of it?"
+
+"Clearly."
+
+"And how reasonable is my anxiety?"
+
+"Assuredly."
+
+"And you are in sympathy with me?"
+
+"Pardieu! Why else did I go so near to killing your son?"
+
+"True," he mused. Then suddenly he added, "Apropos, have you heard that
+Eugène has become one of the leaders of these frondeur madmen?"
+
+"Ah! Then he is quite recovered?"
+
+"Unfortunately," he assented with a grimace, and thus our interview
+ended.
+
+That day wore slowly to its close. I wandered hither and thither in the
+château and the grounds, hungering throughout the long hours for a word
+with Mademoiselle--a glimpse of her, at least.
+
+But all day long she kept her chamber, the pretext being that she was
+beset by a migraine. By accident I came upon her that evening, at last,
+in the salon; yet my advent was the signal for her departure, and all
+the words she had for me were:
+
+"Still at Canaples, Monsieur? I thought you were to have left this
+morning." She looked paler than her wont, and her eyes were somewhat
+red.
+
+"I am remaining until to-morrow," said I awkwardly.
+
+"Vraiement!" was all she answered, and she was gone.
+
+Next morning the Chevalier and I breakfasted alone. Mademoiselle's
+migraine was worse. Geneviève was nursing, so her maid brought
+word--whilst Andrea had gone out an hour before and had not returned.
+
+The Chevalier shot me an apologetic glance across the board.
+
+"'T is a poor 'God speed' to you, M. de Luynes."
+
+I made light of it and turned the conversation into an indifferent
+channel, wherein it abided until, filling himself a bumper of Anjou, the
+Chevalier solemnly drank to my safe journey and good fortune in Paris.
+
+At that moment Andrea entered by the door abutting on the terrace
+balcony. He was flushed, and his eyes sparkled with a joyous fever.
+Profuse was he in his apologies, which, howbeit, were passing vague
+in character, and which he brought to a close by pledging me as the
+Chevalier had done already.
+
+As we rose, Geneviève appeared with the news that Yvonne was somewhat
+better, adding that she had come to take leave of me. Her composure
+surprised me gladly, for albeit in her eyes there was also a telltale
+light, the lids, demurely downcast as was her wont, amply screened it
+from the vulgar gaze.
+
+Andrea would tell his father-in-law of the marriage later in the day;
+and for all I am not a chicken-hearted man, still I had no stomach to be
+at hand when the storm broke.
+
+The moment having come for my departure, and Michelot awaiting me
+already with the horses in the courtyard, M. de Canaples left us to seek
+the letter which I was to carry to his Eminence. So soon as the door had
+closed upon him, Andrea came forward, leading his bride by the hand, and
+asked me to wish them happiness.
+
+"With all my heart," I answered; "and if happiness be accorded you in a
+measure with the fervency of my wishes then shall you, indeed, be happy.
+Each of you I congratulate upon the companion in life you have chosen.
+Cherish him, Mademoi--Madame, for he is loyal and true--and such are
+rare in this world."
+
+It is possible that I might have said more in this benign and fatherly
+strain--for it seemed to me that this new role I had assumed suited
+me wondrous well--but a shadow that drew our eyes towards the nearest
+window interrupted me. And what we saw there drew a cry from Andrea, a
+shudder from Geneviève, and from me a gasp that was half amazement, half
+dismay. For, leaning upon the sill, surveying us with a sardonic, evil
+grin, we beheld Eugène de Canaples, the man whom I had left with a
+sword-thrust through his middle behind the Hôtel Vendôme two months ago.
+Whence was he sprung, and why came he thus to his father's house?
+
+He started as I faced him, for doubtless St. Auban had boasted to him
+that he had killed me in a duel. For a moment he remained at the window,
+then he disappeared, and we could hear the ring of his spurred heel as
+he walked along the balcony towards the door.
+
+And simultaneously came the quick, hurrying steps of the Chevalier de
+Canaples, as he crossed the hall, returning with the letter he had gone
+to fetch.
+
+Geneviève shuddered again, and looked fearfully from one door to the
+other; Andrea drew a sharp breath like a man in pain, whilst I rapped
+out an oath to brace my nerves for the scene which we all three foresaw.
+Then in silence we waited, some subtle instinct warning us of the
+disaster that impended.
+
+The steps on the balcony halted, and a second later those in the hall;
+and then, as though the thing had been rehearsed and timed so that the
+spectators might derive the utmost effect from it, the doors opened
+together, and on the opposing thresholds, with the width of the room
+betwixt them, stood father and son confronted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. OF HOW I LEFT CANAPLES
+
+
+Whilst a man might tell a dozen did those two remain motionless, the
+one eyeing the other. But their bearing was as widely different as their
+figures; Eugène's stalwart frame stood firm and erect, insolence in
+every line of it, reflected perchance from the smile that lurked about
+the corners of his thin­lipped mouth.
+
+The hat, which he had not had the grace to doff, set jauntily upon his
+straight black hair, the jerkin of leather which he wore, and the stout
+sword which hung from the plainest of belts, all served to give him the
+air of a ruffler, or tavern knight.
+
+The Chevalier, on the other hand, stood as if turned to stone. From his
+enervated fingers the letter fluttered to the ground, and on his pale,
+thin face was to be read a displeasure mixed with fear.
+
+At length, with an oath, the old man broke the silence.
+
+"What seek you at Canaples?" he asked in a quivering voice, as he
+advanced into the room. "Are you so dead to shame that you dare present
+yourself with such effrontery? Off with your hat, sir!" he blazed,
+stamping his foot, and going from pale to crimson. "Off with your hat,
+or Mortdieu, I'll have you flung out of doors by my grooms."
+
+This show of vehemence, as sudden as it was unexpected, drew from Eugène
+a meek obedience that I had not looked for. Nevertheless, the young
+man's lip curled as he uncovered.
+
+"How fatherly is your greeting!" he sneered. The Chevalier's eyes
+flashed a glance that lacked no venom at his son.
+
+"What manner of greeting did you look for?" he returned hotly. "Did you
+expect me to set a ring upon your finger, and have the fattened calf
+killed in honour of your return? Sangdieu, sir! Have you come hither
+to show me how a father should welcome the profligate son who has
+dishonoured his name? Why are you here, unbidden? Answer me, sir!"
+
+A deep flush overspread Eugène's cheeks.
+
+"I had thought when I crossed the threshold that this was the Château de
+Canaples, or else that my name was Canaples--I know not which. Clearly
+I was mistaken, for here is a lady who has no word either of greeting or
+intercession for me, and who, therefore, cannot be my sister, and yonder
+a man whom I should never look to find in my father's house."
+
+I took a step forward, a hot answer on my lips, when from the doorway at
+my back came Yvonne's sweet voice.
+
+"Eugène! You here?"
+
+"As you see, Sister. Though had you delayed your coming 't is probable
+you would no longer have found me, for your father welcomes me with
+oaths and threatens me with his grooms."
+
+She cast a reproachful glance upon the Chevalier, 'neath which the anger
+seemed to die out of him; then she went forward with hands outstretched
+and a sad smile upon her lips.
+
+"Yvonne!" The Chevalier's voice rang out sharp and sudden.
+
+She stopped.
+
+"I forbid you to approach that man!"
+
+For a moment she appeared to hesitate; then, leisurely pursuing her way,
+she set her hands upon her brother's shoulders and embraced him.
+
+The Chevalier swore through set teeth; Geneviève trembled, Andrea looked
+askance, and I laughed softly at the Chevalier's discomfiture. Eugène
+flung his hat and cloak into a corner and strode across the room to
+where his father stood.
+
+"And now, Monsieur, since I have travelled all the way from Paris to
+save my house from a step that will bring it into the contempt of all
+France, I shall not go until you have heard me."
+
+The Chevalier shrugged his shoulders and made as if to turn away.
+Yvonne's greeting of her brother appeared to have quenched the spark of
+spirit that for a moment had glimmered in the little man's breast.
+
+"Monsieur," cried Eugène, "believe me that what I have to say is of the
+utmost consequence, and say it I will--whether before these strangers or
+in your private ear shall be as you elect."
+
+The old man glanced about him like one who seeks a way of escape. At
+last--"If say it you must," he growled, "say it here and now. And when
+you have said it, go."
+
+Eugène scowled at me, and from me to Andrea. To pay him for that scowl,
+I had it in my mind to stay; but, overcoming the clownish thought, I
+took Andrea by the arm.
+
+"Come, Andrea," I said, "we will take a turn outside while these family
+matters are in discussion."
+
+I had a shrewd idea what was the substance of Eugène's mission to
+Canaples--to expostulate with his father touching the proposed marriage
+of Yvonne to the Cardinal's nephew.
+
+Nor was I wrong, for when, some moments later, the Chevalier recalled us
+from the terrace, where we were strolling--"What think you he has come
+hither to tell me?" he inquired as we entered. He pointed to his son
+as he spoke, and passion shook his slender frame as the breeze shakes a
+leaf. Mademoiselle and Geneviève sat hand in hand--Yvonne deadly pale,
+Geneviève weeping.
+
+"What think you he has the effrontery to say? Têtedieu! it seems that he
+has profited little by the lesson you read him in the horse-market about
+meddling in matters which concern him not. He has come hither to tell me
+that he will not permit his sister to wed the Cardinal's nephew; that he
+will not have the estates of Canaples pass into the hands of a foreign
+upstart. He, forsooth--he! he! he!" And at each utterance of the pronoun
+he lunged with his forefinger in the direction of his son. "This he is
+not ashamed to utter before Yvonne herself!"
+
+"You compelled me to do so," cried Eugène angrily.
+
+"I?" ejaculated the Chevalier. "Did I compel you to come hither with
+your 'I will' and 'I will not'? Who are you, that you should give laws
+at Canaples? And he adds, sir," quoth the old knight excitedly, "that
+sooner than allow this marriage to take place he will kill M. de
+Mancini."
+
+"I shall be happy to afford him the opportunity!" shouted Andrea,
+bounding forward.
+
+Eugène looked up quickly and gave a short laugh. Thereupon followed a
+wild hubbub; everyone rushed forward and everyone talked; even little
+Geneviève--louder than all the rest.
+
+"You shall not fight! You shall not fight!" she cried, and her voice
+was so laden with command that all others grew silent and all eyes were
+turned upon her.
+
+"What affair is this of yours, little one?" quoth Eugène.
+
+"'T is this," she answered, panting, "that you need fear no marriage
+'twixt my sister and Andrea."
+
+In her eagerness she had cast caution to the winds of heaven. Her father
+and brother stared askance at her; I gave an inward groan.
+
+"Andrea!" echoed Eugène at last. "What is this man to you that you speak
+thus of him?"
+
+The girl flung herself upon her father's breast.
+
+"Father," she sobbed, "dear father, forgive!"
+
+The Chevalier's brow grew dark; roughly he seized her by the arms and,
+holding her at arm's length, scanned her face.
+
+"What must I forgive?" he inquired in a thick voice. "What is M. de
+Mancini to you?"
+
+Some sinister note in her father's voice caused the girl to grow of a
+sudden calm and to assume a rigidity that reminded me of her sister.
+
+"He is my husband!" she answered. And there was a note of pride--almost
+of triumph--in her voice.
+
+An awful silence followed the launching of that thunderbolt. Eugène
+stood with open mouth, staring now at Geneviève, now at his father.
+Andrea set his arm about his bride's waist, and her fair head was laid
+trustingly upon his shoulder. The Chevalier's eyes rolled ominously. At
+length he spoke in a dangerously calm voice.
+
+"How long is it--how long have you been wed?"
+
+"We were wed in Blois an hour ago," answered Geneviève.
+
+Something that was like a grunt escaped the Chevalier, then his eye
+fastened upon me, and his anger boiled up.
+
+"You knew of this?" he asked, coming towards me.
+
+"I knew of it."
+
+"Then you lied to me yesterday."
+
+I drew myself up, stiff as a broomstick.
+
+"I do not understand," I answered coldly.
+
+"Did you not give me your assurance that M. de Mancini would marry
+Yvonne?"
+
+"I did not, Monsieur. I did but tell you that he would wed your
+daughter. And, ma foi! your daughter he has wed."
+
+"You have fooled me, scélérat!" he blazed out. "You, who have been
+sheltered by--"
+
+"Father!" Yvonne interrupted, taking his arm. "M. de Luynes has behaved
+no worse than have I, or any one of us, in this matter."
+
+"No!" he cried, and pointed to Andrea. "'T is you who have wrought this
+infamy. Eugène," he exclaimed, turning of a sudden to his son, "you have
+a sword; wipe out this shame."
+
+"Shame!" echoed Geneviève. "Oh, father, where is the shame? If it were
+no shame for Andrea to marry Yvonne, surely--"
+
+"Silence!" he thundered. "Eugène--"
+
+But Eugène answered him with a contemptuous laugh.
+
+"You are quick enough to call upon my sword, now that things have not
+fallen out as you would have them. Where are your grooms now, Monsieur?"
+
+"Insolent hound!" cried his father indignantly. Then, letting fall his
+arms with something that was near akin to a sob--"Is there no one left
+to do aught but mock me?" he groaned.
+
+But this weakness was no more than momentary.
+
+"Out of my house, sir!" he blazed, turning upon Andrea, and for a moment
+methought he would have struck him. "Out of my house--you and this wife
+of yours!"
+
+"Father!" sobbed Geneviève, with hands outstretched in entreaty.
+
+"Out of my house," he repeated, "and you also, M. de Luynes. Away with
+you! Go with the master you have served so well." And, turning on his
+heel, he strode towards the door.
+
+"Father--dear father!" cried Geneviève, following him: he slammed the
+door in her face for answer.
+
+With a moan she sank down upon her knees, her frail body shaken by
+convulsive sobs--Dieu! what a bridal morn was hers!
+
+Andrea and Yvonne raised her and led her to a chair. Eugène watched them
+with a cynical eye, then laughed brutally, and, gathering up his hat and
+cloak, he moved towards the balcony door and vanished.
+
+"Is M. de Luynes still there?" quoth Geneviève presently.
+
+"I am here, Madame."
+
+"You had best set out, Monsieur," she said. "We shall follow soon--very
+soon."
+
+I took Andrea aside and asked him whither it was his intention to take
+his wife. He replied that they would go to Chambord, where they would
+remain for some weeks in the hope that the Chevalier might relent
+sufficiently to forgive them. Thereafter it was his purpose to take his
+bride home to his Sicilian demesne.
+
+Our farewells were soon spoken; yet none the less warm, for all its
+brevity, was my leave-taking of Andrea, and our wishes for each other's
+happiness were as fervent as the human heart can shape. We little
+thought that we were not destined to meet again for years.
+
+Yvonne's adieu was cold and formal--so cold and formal that it seemed to
+rob the sunshine of its glory for me as I stepped out into the open air.
+
+After all, what mattered it? I was a fool to have entertained a single
+tender thought concerning her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. OF MY RETURN TO PARIS
+
+
+Scant cause is there for me to tarry over the details of my return to
+Paris. A sad enough journey was it; as sad for my poor Michelot as for
+myself, since he rode with one so dejected as I.
+
+Things had gone ill, and I feared that when the Cardinal heard the story
+things would go worse, for Mazarin was never a tolerant man, nor one to
+be led by the gospel of mercy and forgiveness. For myself I foresaw the
+rope--possibly even the wheel; and a hundred times a day I dubbed myself
+a fool for obeying the voice of honour with such punctiliousness when
+so grim a reward awaited me. What mood was on me--me, Gaston de Luynes,
+whose honour had been long since besmirched and tattered until no
+outward semblance of honour was left?
+
+But swift in the footsteps of that question would come the
+answer--Yvonne. Ay, truly enough, it was because in my heart I had
+dared to hold a sentiment of love for her, the purest--nay, the only
+pure--thing my heart had held for many a year, that I would set nothing
+vile to keep company with that sentiment; that until my sun should
+set--and already it dropped swiftly towards life's horizon--my actions
+should be the actions of such a man as might win Yvonne's affections.
+
+But let that be. This idle restrospective mood can interest you but
+little; nor can you profit from it, unless, indeed, it be by noting
+how holy and cleansing to the heart of man is the love--albeit
+unrequited--that he bears a good woman.
+
+As we drew near Meung--where we lay on that first night of our
+journey--a light travelling chaise, going in the same direction, passed
+us at a gallop. As it flashed by, I caught a glimpse of Eugène de
+Canaples's swart face through the window. Whether the recognition was
+mutual I cannot say--nor does it signify.
+
+When we reached the Hôtel de la Couronne, half an hour later, we saw
+that same chaise disappearing round a corner of the street, whilst
+through the porte-cochère the hostler was leading a pair of horses,
+foam-flecked and steaming with sweat.
+
+Whither went Master Canaples at such a rate, and in a haste that caused
+him to travel day and night? To a goal he little looked for--or rather,
+which, in the madness of his headlong rush, he could not see. So I was
+to learn ere long.
+
+Next day I awoke betimes, and setting my window wide to let in the
+fresh, clean-smelling air of that May morning I made shift to dress.
+Save for the cackle of the poultry which had strayed into the courtyard,
+and the noisy yawns and sleep-laden ejaculations of the stable-boy, who
+was drawing water for the horses, all was still, for it had not yet gone
+five o'clock.
+
+But of a sudden a door opened somewhere, and a step rang out,
+accompanied by the jangle of spurs, and with it came a sharp, unpleasant
+voice calling for its owner's horse. There was a familiar sound in those
+shrill accents that caused me to thrust my head through the casement.
+But I was quick to withdraw it, as I recognised in the gaily dressed
+little fellow below my old friend Malpertuis.
+
+I know not what impulse made me draw back so suddenly. The action was as
+much the child of instinct as of the lately acquired habit of concealing
+my face from the gaze of all who were likely to spread abroad the news
+that I still lived.
+
+From behind my curtains I watched Malpertuis ride out of the yard,
+saying, in answer to a parting question of the landlord, who had come
+upon the scene, that he would breakfast at Beaugency.
+
+Then, as he rode down the street, he of a sudden raised his discordant
+voice and sang to the accompaniment of his horse's hoofs. And the burden
+of his song ran thus:
+
+ A frondeur wind
+ Got up to-day,
+ 'Gainst Mazarin
+ It blows, they say.
+
+I listened in amazement to his raven's voice.
+
+Whither was he bound, I asked myself, and whence a haste that made him
+set out fasting, with an anti-cardinalist ditty on his lips, and ride
+two leagues to seek a breakfast in a village that did not hold an inn
+where a dog might be housed in comfort?
+
+Like Eugène de Canaples, he also travelled towards a goal that he little
+dreamt of. And so albeit the one went south and the other north,
+these two men were, between them, drawing together the thread of this
+narrative of mine, as anon you shall learn.
+
+We reached Paris at dusk three days later, and we went straight to my
+old lodging in the Rue St. Antoine.
+
+Coupri started and gasped upon beholding me, and not until I had cursed
+him for a fool in a voice that was passing human would he believe that I
+was no ghost. He too had heard the rumour of my death.
+
+I dispatched Michelot to the Palais Royal, where--without permitting his
+motive to transpire--he was to ascertain for me whether M. de Montrésor
+was in Paris, whether he still dwelt at the Hôtel des Cloches, and at
+what hour he could be found there.
+
+Whilst he was away I went up to my room, and there I found a letter
+which Coupri informed me had been left by a lackey a month ago--before
+the report that I had been killed had reached Paris--and since lain
+forgotten. It was a delicate note, to which still hung the ghost of a
+perfume; there were no arms on the seal, but the writing I took to be
+that of my aunt, the Duchesse de Chevreuse, and vaguely marvelling what
+motive she could have had for communicating with me, I cut the silk.
+
+It was, indeed, from the Duchesse, but it contained no more than a
+request that I should visit her at her hôtel on the day following upon
+that on which she had written, adding that she had pleasing news for me.
+
+I thrust the note into my pocket with a sigh. Of what could it avail me
+now to present myself at her hôtel? Her invitation was for a month ago.
+Since then she would likely enough have heard the rumour that had been
+current, and would have ceased to expect me.
+
+I caught myself wondering whether the news might have caused her a pang
+of regret, and somehow methought this possible. For of all my relatives,
+Madame de Chevreuse was the only one--and she was but my aunt by
+marriage--who of late years had shown me any kindness, or even
+recognition. I marvelled what her pleasing news could be, and I
+concluded that probably she had heard of my difficulties, and wished
+once again to help me out of them. Well, my purse was hollow, indeed,
+at the moment, but I need not trouble her, since I was going somewhere
+where purses are not needed--on a journey to which no expenses are
+attached.
+
+In my heart, nevertheless, I blessed the gracious lady, who, for all the
+lies that the world may have told of her, was the kindest woman I had
+known, and the best--save one other.
+
+I was still musing when Michelot returned with the information that M.
+de Montrésor was to be found at the Hôtel des Cloches, whither he had
+gone to sup a few minutes before. Straightway I set out, bidding him
+attend me, and, muffled in my cloak, I proceeded at a brisk pace to the
+Rue des Fosses St. Germain, where the lieutenant's auberge was situated.
+
+I left Michelot in the common-room, and, preceded by the plump little
+woman who owned the house, I ascended to Montrésor's chamber. I found
+the young soldier at table, and, fortunately, alone. He rose as I
+entered, and as the hostess, retreating, closed the door, I doffed my
+hat, and letting fall my cloak revealed myself. His lips parted, and I
+heard the hiss of an indrawn breath as his astonished eyes fell upon my
+countenance. My laugh dispelled his doubts that I might be other than
+flesh and blood--yet not his doubts touching my identity. He caught up
+a taper and, coming forward, he cast the light on my face for a moment,
+then setting the candle back upon the table, he vented his surprise in
+an oath or two, which was natural enough in one of his calling.
+
+"'T is clear, Lieutenant," quoth I, as I detached my sword from the
+baldrick, "that you believed me dead. Fate willed, however, that I
+should be restored to life, and so soon as I had recovered sufficient
+strength to undertake the journey to Paris, I set out. I arrived an hour
+ago, and here I am, to redeem my word of honour, and surrender the sword
+and liberty which you but lent me."
+
+I placed my rapier on the table and waited for him to speak. Instead,
+however, he continued to stare at me for some moments, and when at last
+he did break the silence, it was to burst into a laugh that poured from
+his throat in rich, mellow peals, as he lay back in his chair.
+
+My wrath arose. Had I travelled from Blois, and done what I deemed the
+most honourable deed of my life, to be laughed at for my pains by a
+foppish young jackanapes of his Eminence's guards? Something of my
+displeasure must he have seen reflected on my face, for of a sudden he
+checked his mirth.
+
+"Forgive me, M. de Luynes," he gasped. "Pardieu, 't is no matter for
+laughter, and albeit I laughed with more zest than courtesy, I give you
+my word that my admiration for you vastly exceeds my amusement. M. de
+Luynes," he added, rising and holding out his hand to me, "there are
+liars in Paris who give you an evil name--men who laughed at me when
+they heard that I had given you leave to go on parole to St. Sulpice des
+Reaux that night, trusting to your word of honour that you would return
+if you lived. His Eminence dubbed me a fool and went near to dismissing
+me from his service, and yet I have now the proof that my confidence was
+not misplaced, since even though you were believed to be dead, you did
+not hesitate to bring me your sword."
+
+"Monsieur, spare me!" I exclaimed, for in truth his compliments waxed as
+irksome as had been his whilom merriment.
+
+He continued, however, his laudatory address, and when it was at last
+ended, and he paused exhausted alike in breath and brain, it was to take
+up my sword and return it to me with my parole, pronouncing me a free
+man, and advising me to let men continue to think me dead, and to
+withdraw from France. He cut short my half-protesting thanks, and
+calling the hostess bade her set another cover, whilst me he invited to
+share his supper. And as we ate he again urged upon me the advice that I
+should go abroad.
+
+"For by Heaven," he added, "Mazarin has been as a raging beast since the
+news was brought him yesterday of his nephew's marriage."
+
+"How?" I cried. "He has heard already?"
+
+"He has, indeed; and should he learn that your flesh still walks the
+earth, methinks it would go worse with you than it went even with Eugène
+de Canaples."
+
+In answer to the questions with which I excitedly plied him, I drew from
+him the story of how Eugène had arrived the day before in Paris, and
+gone straight to the Palais Royal. M. de Montrésor had been on guard
+in the ante-chamber, and in virtue of an excitement noticeable in
+Canaples's bearing, coupled with the ill-odour wherein already he was
+held by Mazarin, the lieutenant's presence had been commanded in the
+Cardinal's closet during the interview--for his Eminence was never like
+to acquire fame for valour.
+
+In his exultation at what had chanced, and at the manner in which
+Mazarin's Château en Espagne had been dispelled, Canaples used little
+caution, or even discretion, in what he said. In fact, from what
+Montrésor told me, I gathered that the fool's eagerness to be the first
+to bear the tidings to Mazarin sprang from a rash desire to gloat over
+the Cardinal's discomfiture. He had told his story insolently--almost
+derisively--and Mazarin's fury, driven beyond bounds already by what
+he had heard, became a very tempest of passion 'neath the lash of
+Canaples's impertinences. And, naturally enough, that tempest had burst
+upon the only head available--Eugène de Canaples's--and the Cardinal had
+answered his jibes with interest by calling upon Montrésor to arrest the
+fellow and bear him to the Bastille.
+
+When the astonished and sobered Canaples had indignantly asked upon what
+charge he was being robbed of his liberty, the Cardinal had laughed
+at him, and answered with his never-failing axiom that "He who sings,
+pays."
+
+"You sang lustily enough just now," his Eminence had added, "and you
+shall pay by lodging awhile in an oubliette of the Bastille, where you
+may lift up your voice to sing the De profundis."
+
+"Was my name not mentioned?" I anxiously inquired when Montrésor had
+finished.
+
+"Not once. You may depend that I should have remarked it. After I had
+taken Canaples away, the Cardinal, I am told, sat down, and, still
+trembling with rage, wrote a letter which he straightway dispatched to
+the Chevalier Armand de Canaples, at Blois.
+
+"No doubt," I mused, "he attributes much blame to me for what has come
+to pass."
+
+"Not a doubt of it. This morning he said to me that it was a pity your
+wings had not been clipped before you left Paris, and that his misplaced
+clemency had helped to bring him great misfortunes. You see, therefore,
+M. de Luynes, that your sojourn in France will be attended with great
+peril. I advise you to try Spain; 't is a martial country where a man of
+the sword may find honourable and even profitable employment."
+
+His counsel I deemed sound. But how follow it? Then of a sudden I
+bethought me of Madame de Chevreuse's friendly letter. Doubtless she
+would assist me once again, and in such an extremity as this. And with
+the conception of the thought came the resolution to visit her on the
+morrow. That formed, I gave myself up to the task of drinking M. de
+Montrésor under the table with an abandon which had not been mine for
+months. In each goblet that I drained, methought I saw Yvonne's sweet
+face floating on the surface of the red Armagnac; it looked now sad, now
+reproachful, still I drank on, and in each cup I pledged her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. OF HOW THE CHEVALIER DE CANAPLES BECAME A FRONDEUR
+
+
+It wanted an hour or so to noon next day as I drove across the Pont Neuf
+in a closed carriage, and was borne down the Rue St. Dominique to the
+portals of that splendid palace, facing the Jacobins, which bears the
+title of the "Hôtel de Luynes," and over the portals of which is carved
+the escutcheon of our house.
+
+Michelot--in obedience to the orders I had given him--got down only to
+be informed that Madame la Duchesse was in the country. The lackey who
+was summoned did not know where the lady might be found, nor when she
+might return to Paris. And so I was compelled to drive back almost
+despairingly to the Rue St. Antoine, and there lie concealed, nursing my
+impatience, until my aunt should return.
+
+Daily I sent Michelot to the Hôtel de Luynes to make the same inquiry,
+and to return daily with the same dispiriting reply--that there was no
+news of Madame la Duchesse.
+
+In this fashion some three weeks wore themselves out, during which
+period I lay in my concealment, a prey to weariness unutterable. I might
+not venture forth save at night, unless I wore a mask; and as masks
+were no longer to be worn without attracting notice--as during the late
+king's reign--I dared not indulge the practice.
+
+Certainly my ennui was greatly relieved by the visits of Montrésor,
+which grew very frequent, the lad appearing to have conceived a kindness
+for me; and during those three weeks our fellowship at nights over a
+bottle or two engendered naturally enough a friendship and an intimacy
+between us.
+
+I had written to Andrea on the morrow of my return to Paris, to tell
+him how kindly Montrésor had dealt with me, and some ten days later the
+following letter was brought me by the lieutenant--to whom, for safety,
+it had been forwarded:
+
+
+"MY VERY DEAR GASTON:
+
+I have no words wherewith to express my joy at the good news you send
+me, which terminates the anxiety that has been mine since you left us on
+the disastrous morning of our nuptials.
+
+The uncertainty touching your fate, the fear that the worst might have
+befallen you, and the realisation that I--for whom you have done so
+much--might do naught for you in your hour of need, has been the one
+cloud to mar the sunshine of my own bliss.
+
+That cloud your letter has dispelled, and the knowledge of your safety
+renders my happiness complete.
+
+The Chevalier maintains his unforgiving mood, as no doubt doth also my
+Lord Cardinal. But what to me are the frowns of either, so that my lady
+smile? My little Geneviève is yet somewhat vexed in spirit at all this,
+but I am teaching her to have faith in Time, the patron saint of all
+lovers who follow not the course their parents set them. And so that
+time may be allowed to intercede and appeal to the parent heart with
+the potent prayer of a daughter's absence, I shall take my lady from
+Chambord some three days hence. We shall travel by easy stages to
+Marseilles, and there take ship for Palermo.
+
+And so, dear, trusty friend, until we meet again, fare you well and
+may God hold you safe from the wickedness of man, devil, and my Lord
+Cardinal.
+
+For all that you have done for me, no words of mine can thank you,
+but should you determine to quit this France of yours, and journey to
+Palermo after me, you shall never want a roof to shelter you or a board
+to sit at, so long as roof and board are owned by him who signs himself,
+in love at least, your brother--
+
+"ANDREA DE MANCINI."
+
+
+With a sigh I set the letter down. A sigh of love and gratitude it was;
+a sigh also of regret for the bright, happy boy who had been the source
+alike of my recent joys and sorrows, and whom methought I was not
+likely to see again for many a day, since the peaceful vegetation of his
+Sicilian home held little attraction for me, a man of action.
+
+It was on the evening of the last Sunday in May, whilst the bell of
+the Jesuits, close by, was tinkling out its summons to vespers, that
+Montrésor burst suddenly into my room with the request that I should
+get my hat and cloak and go with him to pay a visit. In reply to my
+questions--"Monseigneur's letter to Armand de Canaples," he said, "has
+borne fruit already. Come with me and you shall learn how."
+
+He led me past the Bastille and up the Rue des Tournelles to the door
+of an unpretentious house, upon which he knocked. We were admitted by an
+old woman to whom Montrésor appeared to be known, for, after exchanging
+a word or two with her, he himself led the way upstairs and opened the
+door of a room for me.
+
+By the melancholy light of a single taper burning upon the table I
+beheld a fair-sized room containing a curtained bed.
+
+My companion took up the candle, and stepping to the bedside, he drew
+apart the curtains.
+
+Lying there I beheld a man whose countenance, despite its pallor and
+the bloody bandages about his brow, I recognised for that of the little
+spitfire Malpertuis.
+
+As the light fell upon his face, the little fellow opened his eyes, and
+upon beholding me at his side he made a sudden movement which wrung from
+him a cry of pain.
+
+"Lie still, Monsieur," said Montrésor quietly.
+
+But for all the lieutenant's remonstrances, he struggled up into a
+sitting posture, requesting Montrésor to set the pillows at his back.
+
+"Thank God you are here, M. de Luynes!" he said. "I learnt at Canaples
+that you were not dead."
+
+"You have been to Canaples?"
+
+"I was a guest of the Chevalier for twelve days. I arrived there on the
+day after your departure."
+
+"You!" I ejaculated. "Pray what took you to Canaples?"
+
+"What took me there?" he echoed, turning his feverish eyes upon me,
+almost with fierceness. "The same motive that led me to join hands with
+that ruffian St. Auban, when he spoke of waging war against Mancini; the
+same motive that led me to break with him when I saw through his plans,
+and when the abduction of Mademoiselle was on foot; the same motive that
+made me come to you and tell you of the proposed abduction so that you
+might interfere if you had the power, or cause others to do so if you
+had not."
+
+I lay back in my chair and stared at him. Was this, then, another suitor
+of Yvonne de Canaples, and were all men mad with love of her?
+
+Presently he continued:
+
+"When I heard that St. Auban was in Paris, having apparently abandoned
+all hope in connection with Mademoiselle, I obtained a letter from M. de
+la Rochefoucauld--who is an intimate friend of mine--and armed with this
+I set out. As luck would have it I got embroiled in the streets of Blois
+with a couple of cardinalist gentlemen, who chose to be offended by
+lampoon of the Fronde that I was humming. I am not a patient man, and I
+am even indiscreet in moments of choler. I ended by crying, 'Down with
+Mazarin and all his creatures,' and I would of a certainty have had my
+throat slit, had not a slight and elegant gentleman interposed, and,
+exercising a wonderful influence over my assailants, extricated me from
+my predicament. This gentleman was the Chevalier de Canaples. He was
+strangely enough in a mood to be pleased by an anti-cardinalist ditty,
+for his rage against Andrea de Mancini--which he took no pains to
+conceal--had extended already to the Cardinal, and from morn till night
+he did little else but revile the whole Italian brood--as he chose to
+dub the Cardinal's family."
+
+I recognised the old knight's weak, vacillating character in this, a
+creature of moods that, like the vane on a steeple, turns this way or
+that, as the wind blows.
+
+"I crave your patience, M. de Luynes," he continued, "and beg of you
+to hear my story so that you may determine whether you will save the
+Canaples from the danger that threatens them. I only ask that you
+dispatch a reliable messenger to Blois. But hear me out first. In virtue
+as much of La Rochefoucauld's letters as of the sentiments which the
+Chevalier heard me express, I became the honoured guest at his château.
+Three days after my arrival I sustained a shock by the unexpected
+appearance at Canaples of St. Auban. The Chevalier, however, refused
+him admittance, and, baffled, the Marquis was forced to withdraw. But he
+went no farther than Blois, where he hired himself a room at the Lys de
+France. The Chevalier hated him as a mad dog hates water--almost as much
+as he hated you. He spoke often of you, and always bitterly."
+
+Before I knew what I had said--
+
+"And Mademoiselle?" I burst out. "Did she ever mention my name?"
+
+Malpertuis looked up quickly at the question, and a wan smile flickered
+round his lips.
+
+"Once she spoke of you to me--pityingly, as one might speak of a dead
+man whose life had not been good."
+
+"Yes, yes," I broke in. "It matters little. Your story, M. Malpertuis."
+
+"After I had been at the château ten days, we learnt that Eugène de
+Canaples had been sent to the Bastille. The news came in a letter penned
+by his Eminence himself--a bitter, viperish letter, with a covert threat
+in every line. The Chevalier's anger went white hot as he read the
+disappointed Cardinal's epistle. His Eminence accused Eugène of being a
+frondeur; M. de Canaples, whose politics had grown sadly rusted in the
+country, asked me the meaning of the word. I explained to him the
+petty squabbles between Court and Parliament, in consequence of the
+extortionate imposts and of Mazarin's avariciousness. I avowed myself a
+partisan of the Fronde, and within three days the Chevalier--who but
+a little time before had sought an alliance with the Cardinal's
+family--had become as rabid a frondeur as M. de Gondi, as fierce an
+anti­cardinalist as M. de Beaufort.
+
+"I humoured him in his new madness, with the result that ere long from
+being a frondeur in heart, he thirsted to become a frondeur in deeds,
+and he ended by begging me to bear a letter from him to the Coadjutor
+of Paris, wherein he offered to place at M. de Gondi's disposal, towards
+the expenses of the civil war which he believed to be imminent,--as,
+indeed, it is,--the sum of sixty thousand livres.
+
+"Now albeit I had gone to Canaples for purposes of my own, and not as
+an agent of M. le Coadjuteur's, still for many reasons I saw fit to
+undertake the Chevalier's commission. And so, bearing the letter
+in question, which was hot and unguarded, and charged with endless
+treasonable matter, I set out four days later for Paris, arriving here
+yesterday.
+
+"I little knew that I had been followed by St. Auban. His suspicions
+must have been awakened, I know not how, and clearly they were confirmed
+when I stopped before the Coadjutor's house last night. I was about to
+mount the steps, when of a sudden I was seized from behind by half a
+dozen hands and dragged into a side street. I got free for a moment and
+attempted to defend myself, but besides St. Auban there were two others.
+They broke my sword and attempted to break my skull, in which they went
+perilously near succeeding, as you see. Albeit half-swooning, I had
+yet sufficient consciousness left to realise that my pockets were being
+emptied, and that at last they had torn open my doublet and withdrawn
+the treasonable letter from the breast of it.
+
+"I was left bleeding in the kennel, and there I lay for nigh upon an
+hour until a passer-by succoured me and carried out my request to be
+brought hither and put to bed."
+
+He ceased, and for some moments there was silence, broken only by the
+wounded man's laboured breathing, which argued that his narrative had
+left him fatigued. At last I sprang up.
+
+"The Chevalier de Canaples must be warned," I exclaimed.
+
+"'T is an ugly business," muttered Montrésor. "I'll wager a hundred that
+Mazarin will hang the Chevalier if he catches him just now."
+
+"He would not dare!" cried Malpertuis.
+
+"Not dare?" echoed the lieutenant. "The man who imprisoned the Princes
+of Condé and Conti, and the Duke of Beaufort, not dare hang a provincial
+knight with never a friend at Court! Pah, Monsieur, you do not know
+Cardinal Mazarin."
+
+I realised to the full how likely Montrésor's prophecy was to be
+fulfilled, and before I left Malpertuis I assured him that he had not
+poured his story into the ears of an indifferent listener, and that I
+would straightway find means of communicating with Canaples.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. OF THE BARGAIN THAT ST. AUBAN DROVE WITH MY LORD CARDINAL
+
+
+From the wounded man's bedside I wended my steps back to the Rue St.
+Antoine, resolved to start for Blois that very night; and beside me
+walked Montrésor, with bent head, like a man deep in thought.
+
+At my door I paused to take my leave of the lieutenant, for I was
+in haste to have my preparations made, and to be gone. But Montrésor
+appeared not minded to be dismissed thus easily.
+
+"What plan have you formed?" he asked.
+
+"The only plan there is to form--to set out for Canaples at once."
+
+"Hum!" he grunted, and again was silent. Then, suddenly throwing back
+his head, "Par la mort Dieu!" he cried, "I care not what comes of it;
+I'll tell you what I know. Lead the way to your chamber, M. de Luynes,
+and delay your departure until you have heard me."
+
+Surprised as much by his words as by the tone in which he uttered them,
+which was that of a man who is angry with himself, I passively did as I
+was bidden.
+
+Once within my little ante-chamber, he turned the key with his own
+hands, and pointing to the door of my bedroom--"In there, Monsieur,"
+quoth he, "we shall be safe from listeners."
+
+Deeper grew my astonishment at all this mystery, as we passed into the
+room beyond.
+
+"Now, M. de Luynes," he cried, flinging down his hat, "for no apparent
+reason I am about to commit treason; I am about to betray the hand that
+pays me."
+
+"If no reason exists, why do so evil a deed?" I inquired calmly. "I have
+learnt during our association to wish you well, Montrésor; if by telling
+me that which your tongue burns to tell, you shall have cause for shame,
+the door is yonder. Go before harm is done, and leave me alone to fight
+my battle out."
+
+He stood up, and for a moment he seemed to waver, then dismissing his
+doubts with an abrupt gesture, he sat down again.
+
+"There is no wrong in what I do. Right is with you, M. de Luynes, and
+if I break faith with the might I serve, it is because that might is
+an unjust one; I do but betray the false to the true, and there can be
+little shame in such an act. Moreover, I have a reason--but let that
+be."
+
+He was silent for a moment, then he resumed:
+
+"Most of that which you have learnt from Malpertuis to-night, I myself
+could have told you. Yes; St. Auban has carried Canaples's letter to the
+Cardinal already. I heard from his lips to-day--for I was present at the
+interview--how the document had been wrested from Malpertuis. For your
+sake, so that you might learn all he knew, I sought the fellow out, and
+having found him in the Rue des Tournelles, I took you thither."
+
+In a very fever of excitement I listened.
+
+"To take up the thread of the story where Malpertuis left off, let me
+tell you that St. Auban sought an audience with Mazarin this morning,
+and by virtue of a note which he desired an usher to deliver to his
+Eminence, he was admitted, the first of all the clients that for hours
+had thronged the ante-room. As in the instance of the audience to Eugène
+de Canaples, so upon this occasion did it chance that the Cardinal's
+fears touching St. Auban's purpose had been roused, for he bade me stand
+behind the curtains in his cabinet.
+
+"The Marquis spoke bluntly enough, and with rude candour he stated that
+since Mazarin had failed to bring the Canaples estates into his family
+by marriage, he came to set before his Eminence a proof so utter of
+Canaples's treason that it would enable him to snatch the estates
+by confiscation. The Cardinal may have been staggered by St. Auban's
+bluntness, but his avaricious instincts led him to stifle his feelings
+and bid the Marquis to set this proof before him. But St. Auban had
+a bargain to drive--a preposterous one methought. He demanded that in
+return for his delivering into the hands of Mazarin the person of Armand
+de Canaples together with an incontestable proof that the Chevalier was
+in league with the frondeurs, and had offered to place a large sum of
+money at their disposal, he was to receive as recompense the demesne
+of Canaples on the outskirts of Blois, together with one third of the
+confiscated estates. At first Mazarin gasped at his audacity, then
+laughed at him, whereupon St. Auban politely craved his Eminence's
+permission to withdraw. This the Cardinal, however, refused him, and
+bidding him remain, he sought to bargain with him. But the Marquis
+replied that he was unversed in the ways of trade and barter, and that
+he had no mind to enter into them. From bargaining the Cardinal passed
+on to threatening and from threatening to whining, and so on until the
+end--St. Auban preserving a firm demeanour--the comedy was played out
+and Mazarin fell in with his proposal and his terms.
+
+"Mille diables!" I cried. "And has St. Auban set out?"
+
+"He starts to-morrow, and I go with him. When finally the Cardinal
+had consented, the Marquis demanded and obtained from him a promise in
+writing, signed and sealed by Mazarin, that he should receive a third
+of the Canaples estates and the demesne on the outskirts of Blois, in
+exchange for the body of Armand de Canaples, dead or alive, and a proof
+of treason sufficient to warrant his arrest and the confiscation of his
+estates. Next, seeing in what regard the Seigneur is held by the people
+of Blois, and fearing that his arrest might be opposed by many of his
+adherents, the Marquis has demanded a troop of twenty men. This Mazarin
+has also granted him, entrusting the command of the troop to me, under
+St. Auban. Further, the Marquis has stipulated that the greatest secrecy
+is to be observed, and has expressed his purpose of going upon this
+enterprise disguised and masked, for--as he rightly opines--when months
+hence he enters into possession of the demesne of Canaples in the
+character of purchaser, did the Blaisois recognise in him the man who
+sold the Chevalier, his life would stand in hourly peril."
+
+I heard him through patiently enough; yet when he stopped, my pent-up
+feelings burst all bonds, and I resolved there and then to go in quest
+of that Judas, St. Auban, and make an end of his plotting, for all time.
+But Montrésor restrained me, showing me how futile such a course must
+prove, and how I risked losing all chance of aiding those at Canaples.
+
+He was right. First I must warn the Chevalier--afterwards I would deal
+with St. Auban.
+
+Someone knocked at that moment, and with the entrance of Michelot, my
+talk with Montrésor came perforce to an end. For Michelot brought me the
+news that for days I had been awaiting; Madame de Chevreuse had returned
+to Paris at last.
+
+But for Montrésor's remonstrances it is likely that I should have set
+out forthwith to wait upon her. I permitted myself, however, to be
+persuaded that the lateness of the hour would render my visit unwelcome,
+and so I determined in the end--albeit grudgingly--to put off my
+departure for Blois until the morrow.
+
+Noon had but struck from Nôtre Dame, next day, as I mounted the steps
+of the Hôtel de Luynes. My swagger, and that brave suit of pearl grey
+velvet with its silver lace, bore me unchallenged past the gorgeous
+suisse, who stood, majestic, in the doorway.
+
+But, for the first mincing lackey I chanced upon, more was needed to
+gain me an audience. And so, as I did not choose to speak my name, I
+drew a ring from my finger and bade him bear it to the Duchesse.
+
+He obeyed me in this, and presently returning, he bowed low and begged
+of me to follow him, for, as I had thought, albeit Madame de Chevreuse
+might not know to whom that ring belonged, yet the arms of Luynes carved
+upon the stone had sufficed to ensure an interview.
+
+I was ushered into a pretty boudoir, hung in blue and gold, which
+overlooked the garden, and wherein, reclining upon a couch, with a
+book of Bois Robert's verses in her white and slender hand, I found my
+beautiful aunt.
+
+Of this famous lady, who was the cherished friend and more than sister
+of Anne of Austria, much has been written; much that is good, and
+more--far more--that is ill, for those who have a queen for friend shall
+never lack for enemies. But those who have praised and those who have
+censured have at least been at one touching her marvellous beauty. At
+the time whereof I write it is not possible that she could be less than
+forty-six, and yet her figure was slender and shapely and still endowed
+with the grace of girlhood; her face delicate of tint, and little marked
+by time--or even by the sufferings to which, in the late king's reign,
+Cardinal de Richelieu had subjected her; her eyes were blue and peaceful
+as a summer sky; her hair was the colour of ripe corn. He would be a
+hardy guesser who set her age at so much as thirty.
+
+My appearance she greeted by letting fall her book, and lifting up her
+hands--the loveliest in France--she uttered a little cry of surprise.
+
+"Is it really you, Gaston?" she asked.
+
+Albeit it was growing wearisome to be thus greeted by all to whom I
+showed myself, yet I studied courtesy in my reply, and then, 'neath
+the suasion of her kindliness, I related all that had befallen me
+since first I had journeyed to Blois, in Andrea de Mancini's company,
+withholding, however, all allusions to my feelings towards Yvonne. Why
+betray them when they were doomed to be stifled in the breast that begat
+them? But Madame de Chevreuse had not been born a woman and lived six
+and forty years to no purpose.
+
+"And this maid with as many suitors as Penelope, is she very beautiful?"
+she inquired slyly.
+
+"France does not hold her equal," I answered, falling like a simpleton
+into the trap she had set me.
+
+"This to me?" quoth she archly. "Fi donc, Gaston! Your evil ways have
+taught you as little gallantry as dissimulation." And her merry ripple
+of laughter showed me how in six words I had betrayed that which I had
+been at such pains to hide.
+
+But before I could, by protestations, plunge deeper than I stood
+already, the Duchesse turned the conversation adroitly to the matter of
+that letter of hers, wherein she had bidden me wait upon her.
+
+A cousin of mine--one Marion de Luynes, who, like myself, had, through
+the evil of his ways, become an outcast from his family--was lately
+dead. Unlike me, however, he was no adventurous soldier of fortune, but
+a man of peace, with an estate in Provence that had a rent-roll of five
+thousand livres a year. On his death-bed he had cast about him for an
+heir, unwilling that his estate should swell the fortunes of the family
+that in life had disowned him. Into his ear some kindly angel had
+whispered my name, and the memory that I shared with him the frowns of
+our house, and that my plight must be passing pitiful, had set up a bond
+of sympathy between us, which had led him to will his lands to me. Of
+Madame de Chevreuse--who clearly was the patron saint of those of her
+first husband's nephews who chanced to tread ungodly ways--my cousin
+Marion had besought that she should see to the fulfilment of his last
+wishes.
+
+My brain reeled beneath the first shock of that unlooked-for news.
+Already I saw myself transformed from a needy adventurer into a
+gentleman of fortune, and methought my road to Yvonne lay open, all
+obstacles removed. But swiftly there followed the thought of my own
+position, and truly it seemed that a cruel irony lay in the manner
+wherein things had fallen out, since did I declare myself to be alive
+and claim the Provence estates, the Cardinal's claws would be quick to
+seize me.
+
+Thus much I told Madame de Chevreuse, but her answer cheered me, and
+said much for my late cousin's prudence.
+
+"Nay," she cried. "Marion was ever shrewd. Knowing that men who live by
+the sword, as you have lived, are often wont to die by the sword,--and
+that suddenly at times,--he has made provision that in the event of
+your being dead his estates shall come to me, who have been the most
+indulgent of his relatives. This, my dear Gaston, has already taken
+place, for we believed you dead; and therein fortune has been kind to
+you, for now, while receiving the revenues of your lands--which the
+world will look upon as mine--I shall contrive that they reach you
+wherever you may be, until such a time as you may elect to come to life
+again."
+
+Now but for the respect in which I held her, I could have taken the
+pretty Duchesse in my arms and kissed her.
+
+Restraining myself, however, I contented myself by kissing her hand, and
+told her of the journey I was going, then craved another boon of her.
+No matter what the issue of that journey, and whether I went alone or
+accompanied, I was determined to quit France and repair to Spain. There
+I would abide until the Parliament, the Court, or the knife of some
+chance assassin, or even Nature herself should strip Mazarin of his
+power.
+
+Now, at the Court of Spain it was well known that my aunt's influence
+was vast, and so, the boon I craved was that she should aid me to a
+position in the Spanish service that would allow me during my exile to
+find occupation and perchance renown. To this my aunt most graciously
+acceded, and when at length I took my leave--with such gratitude in my
+heart that what words I could think of seemed but clumsily to express
+it--I bore in the breast of my doublet a letter to Don Juan de
+Cordova--a noble of great prominence at the Spanish Court--and in the
+pocket of my haut-de-chausses a rouleau of two hundred gold pistoles, as
+welcome as they were heavy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. OF MY SECOND JOURNEY TO CANAPLES
+
+
+An hour after I had quitted the Hôtel de Luynes, Michelot and I left
+Paris by the barrier St. Michel and took the Orleans road. How different
+it looked in the bright June sunshine, to the picture which it had
+presented to our eyes on that February evening, four months ago, when
+last we had set out upon that same journey!
+
+Not only in nature had a change been wrought, but in my very self. My
+journey then had been aimless, and I had scarcely known whither I was
+bound nor had I fostered any great concern thereon. Now I rode in hot
+haste with a determined purpose, a man of altered fortunes and altered
+character.
+
+Into Choisy we clattered at a brisk pace, but at the sight of the inn
+of the Connétable such memories surged up that I was forced to draw rein
+and call for a cup of Anjou, which I drank in the saddle. Thereafter we
+rode without interruption through Longjumeau, Arpajon, and Etrechy, and
+so well did we use our horses that as night fell we reached Étampes.
+
+From inquiries that Michelot had made on the road, we learned that no
+troop such as that which rode with St. Auban had lately passed that way,
+so that 't was clear we were in front of them.
+
+But scarce had we finished supper in the little room which I had hired
+at the Gros Paon, when, from below, a stamping of hoofs, the jangle of
+arms, and the shouts of many men told me that we were overtaken.
+
+Clearly I did not burn with a desire to linger, but rather it seemed to
+me that although night had closed in, black and moonless, we must set
+out again, and push on to Monnerville, albeit our beasts were worn and
+the distance a good three leagues.
+
+With due precaution we effected our departure, and thereafter had a spur
+been needed to speed us on our way that spur we had in the knowledge
+that St. Auban came close upon our heels. At Monnerville we slept, and
+next morning we were early afoot; by four o'clock in the afternoon we
+had reached Orleans, whence--with fresh horses--we pursued our journey
+as far as Meung, where we lay that night.
+
+There we were joined by a sturdy rascal whom Michelot enlisted into my
+service, seeing that not only did my means allow, but the enterprise
+upon which I went might perchance demand another body servant. This
+recruit was a swart, powerfully built man of about my own age; trusty,
+and a lover of hard knocks, as Michelot--who had long counted him among
+his friends--assured me. He owned the euphonious name of Abdon.
+
+I spent twenty pistoles in suitable raiment and a horse for him, and as
+we left Meung next day the knave cut a brave enough figure that added
+not a little to my importance to have at my heels.
+
+This, however, so retarded our departure, that night had fallen by the
+time we reached Blois. Still our journey had been a passing swift one.
+We had left Paris on a Monday, the fourth of June--I have good cause to
+remember, since on that day I entered both upon my thirty-second year
+and my altered fortunes; on the evening of Wednesday we reached Blois,
+having covered a distance of forty-three leagues in less than three
+days.
+
+Bidding Michelot carry my valise to the hostelry of the Vigne d'Or,
+and there await my coming, I called to Abdon to attend me, and rode on,
+jaded and travel-stained though I was, to Canaples, realising fully that
+there was no time to lose.
+
+Old Guilbert, who came in answer to my knock at the door of the
+château, looked askance when he beheld me, and when I bade him carry my
+compliments to the Chevalier, with the message that I desired immediate
+speech of him on a matter of the gravest moment, he shook his grey head
+and protested that it would be futile to obey me. Yet, in the end,
+when I had insisted, he went upon my errand, but only to return with a
+disturbed countenance, to tell me that the Chevalier refused to see me.
+
+"But I must speak to him, Guilbert," I exclaimed, setting foot upon the
+top step. "I have travelled expressly from Paris."
+
+The man stood firm and again shook his head.
+
+"I beseech you not to insist, Monsieur. M. le Chevalier has sworn to
+dismiss me if I permit you to set foot within the château."
+
+"Mille diables! This is madness! I seek to serve him," I cried, my
+temper rising fast. "At least, Guilbert, will you tell Mademoiselle that
+I am here, and that I--"
+
+"I may carry no more messages for you, Monsieur," he broke in. "Listen!
+There is M. le Chevalier."
+
+In reality I could hear the old knight's voice, loud and shrill with
+anger, and a moment later Louis, his intendant, came across the hall.
+
+"Guilbert," he commanded harshly, "close the door. The night air is
+keen."
+
+My cheeks aflame with anger, I still made one last attempt to gain an
+audience.
+
+"Master Louis," I exclaimed, "will you do me the favour to tell M. de
+Canaples--"
+
+"You are wasting time, Monsieur," he interrupted. "M. de Canaples will
+not see you. He bids you close the door, Guilbert."
+
+"Pardieu! he shall see me!"
+
+"The door, Guilbert!"
+
+I took a step forward, but before I could gain the threshold, the door
+was slammed in my face, and as I stood there, quivering with anger and
+disappointment, I heard the bolts being shot within.
+
+I turned with an oath.
+
+"Come, Abdon," I growled, as I climbed once more into the saddle, "let
+us leave the fool to the fate he has chosen."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. OF HOW ST. AUBAN CAME TO BLOIS
+
+
+In silence we rode back to Blois. Not that I lacked matter for
+conversation. Anger and chagrin at the thought that I had come upon this
+journey to earn naught but an insult and to have a door slammed in my
+face made my gorge rise until it went near to choking me. I burned to
+revile Canaples aloud, but Abdon's was not the ear into which I might
+pour the hot words that welled up to my lips.
+
+Yet if silent, the curses that I heaped upon the Chevalier's crassness
+were none the less fervent, and to myself I thought with grim relish of
+how soon and how dearly he would pay for the affront he had put upon me.
+
+That satisfaction, however, endured not long; for presently I bethought
+me of how heavily the punishment would fall upon Yvonne--and yet, of how
+she would be left to the mercy of St. Auban, whose warrant from Mazarin
+would invest with almost any and every power at Canaples.
+
+I ground my teeth at the sudden thought, and for a moment I was on the
+point of going back and forcing my way into the château at the sword
+point if necessary, to warn and save the Chevalier in spite of himself
+and unthanked.
+
+It was not in such a fashion that I had thought to see my mission to
+Canaples accomplished; I had dreamt of gratitude, and gratitude unbars
+the door to much. Nevertheless, whether or not I earned it, I must
+return, and succeed where for want of insistence I had failed awhile
+ago.
+
+Of a certainty I should have acted thus, but that at the very moment
+upon which I formed the resolution Abdon drew my attention to a dark
+shadow by the roadside not twenty paces in front of us. This proved to
+be the motionless figure of a horseman.
+
+As soon as I was assured of it, I reined in my horse, and taking a
+pistol from the holster, I levelled it at the shadow, accompanying the
+act by a sonorous--
+
+"Who goes there?"
+
+The shadow stirred, and Michelot's voice answered me:
+
+"'T is I, Monsieur. They have arrived. I came to warn you."
+
+"Who has arrived?" I shouted.
+
+"The soldiers. They are lodged at the Lys de France."
+
+An oath was the only comment I made as I turned the news over in my
+mind. I must return to Canaples.
+
+Then another thought occurred to me. The Chevalier was capable of going
+to extremes to keep me from entering his house; he might for instance
+greet me with a blunderbuss. It was not the fear of that that deterred
+me, but the fear that did a charge of lead get mixed with my poor brains
+before I had said what I went to say, matters would be no better, and
+there would be one poor knave the less to adorn the world.
+
+"What shall we do, Michelot?" I groaned, appealing in my despair to my
+henchman.
+
+"Might it not be well to seek speech with M. de Montrésor?" quoth he.
+
+I shrugged my shoulders. Nevertheless, after a moment's deliberation I
+determined to make the attempt; if I succeeded something might come of
+it.
+
+And so I pushed on to Blois with my knaves close at my heels.
+
+Up the Rue Vieille we proceeded with caution, for the hostelry of the
+Vigne d'Or, where Michelot had hired me a room, fortunately overlooking
+the street, fronted the Lys de France, where St. Auban and his men were
+housed.
+
+I gained that room of mine without mishap, and my first action was to
+deal summarily with a fat and well-roasted capon which the landlord
+set before me--for an empty stomach is a poor comrade in a desperate
+situation. That meal, washed down with the best part of a bottle of red
+Anjou, did much to restore me alike in body and in mind.
+
+From my open window I gazed across the street at the Lys de France.
+The door of the common-room, opening upon the street, was set wide, and
+across the threshold came a flood of light in which there flitted the
+black figures of maybe a dozen amazed rustics, drawn thither for all the
+world as bats are drawn to a glare.
+
+And there they hovered with open mouths and stupid eyes, hearkening to
+the din of voices that floated out on the tranquil air, the snatches of
+ribald songs, the raucous bursts of laughter, the clink of glasses, the
+clank of steel, the rattle of dice, and the strange soldier oaths that
+fell with every throw, and which to them must have sounded almost as
+words of some foreign tongue.
+
+Whilst I stood by my window, the landlord entered my room, and coming up
+to me--
+
+"Thank Heaven they are not housed at the Vigne d'Or," he said. "It will
+take Maître Bernard a week to rid his house of the stench of leather.
+They are part of a stray company that is on its way to fight the
+Spaniards," he informed me. "But methinks they will be forced to spend
+two or three days at Blois; their horses are sadly jaded and will need
+that rest before they can take the road again, thanks to the pace at
+which their boy of an officer must have led them. There is a gentleman
+with them who wears a mask. 'T is whispered that he is a prince of
+the blood who has made a vow not to uncover his face until this war be
+ended, in expiation of some sin committed in mad Paris."
+
+I heard him in silence, and when he had done I thanked him for his
+information. So! This was the story that the crafty St. Auban had spread
+abroad to lull suspicion touching the real nature of their presence
+until their horses should be fit to undertake the return journey to
+Paris, or until he should have secured the person of M. de Canaples.
+
+Towards eleven o'clock, as the lights in the hostelry opposite were
+burning low, I descended, and made my way out into the now deserted
+street. The troopers had apparently seen fit--or else been ordered--to
+seek their beds, for the place had grown silent, and a servant was in
+the act of making fast the door for the night. The porte-cochère was
+half closed, and a man carrying a lantern was making fast the bolt,
+whistling aimlessly to himself. Through the half of the door that was
+yet open, I beheld a window from which the light fell upon a distant
+corner of the courtyard.
+
+I drew near the fellow with the lantern, in whom I recognised René, the
+hostler, and as I approached he flashed the light upon my face; then
+with a gasp--"M. de Luynes," he exclaimed, remembering me from the time
+when I had lodged at the Lys de France, three months ago.
+
+"Sh!" I whispered, pressing a louis d'or into his hand. "Whose window is
+that, René?" And I pointed towards the light.
+
+"That," he replied, "is the room of the lieutenant and the gentleman in
+the mask."
+
+"I must take a look at them, René, and whilst I am looking I shall
+search my pocket for another louis. Now let me in."
+
+"I dare not, Monsieur. Maître Bernard may call me, and if the doors are
+not closed--"
+
+"Dame!" I broke in. "I shall stay but a moment."
+
+"But--"
+
+"And you will have easily earned a louis d'or. If Bernard calls
+you--peste, tell him that you have let fall something, and that you are
+seeking it. There, let me pass."
+
+I got past him at last, and made my way swiftly towards the other end of
+the quadrangle.
+
+As I approached, the sound of voices smote my ear, for the lighted
+window stood open. I stopped within half a dozen paces of it, and
+climbed on to the step of a coach that stood there. Thence I could look
+straight into the room, whilst the darkness hid me from the eyes of
+those I watched.
+
+Three men there were; Montrésor, the sergeant of his troop, and a tall
+man dressed in black, and wearing a black silk mask. This I concluded
+to be St. Auban, despite the profusion of fair locks that fell upon his
+shoulders, concealing--I rightly guessed--his natural hair, which was as
+black as my own. It was a cunning addition to his disguise, and one well
+calculated to lead people on to the wrong scent hereafter.
+
+Presently, as I watched them, St. Auban spoke, and his voice was that
+of a man whose gums are toothless, or else whose nether lip is drawn
+in over his teeth whilst he speaks. Here again the dissimulation was as
+effective as it was simple.
+
+"So; that is concluded," were the words that reached me. "To-morrow
+we will install our men at the château, for while we remain here it is
+preposterous to lodge them at an inn. On the following day I hope that
+we may be able to set out again."
+
+"If we could obtain fresh horses--" began the sergeant, when he of the
+mask interrupted him.
+
+"Sangdieu! Think you my purse is bottomless? We return as we came, with
+the Cardinal's horses. What signify a day or two, after all? Come--call
+the landlord to light me to my room."
+
+I had heard enough. But more than that, whilst I listened, an idea had
+of a sudden sprung up in my mind which did away with the necessity
+of gaining speech with Montresor--a contingency, moreover, that now
+presented insuperable difficulties.
+
+So I got down softly from my perch and made my way out of the yard, and,
+after fulfilling my part of the bargain with René, across to the Vigne
+d'Or and to my room, there to sit and mature the plan that of a sudden I
+had conceived.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. OF THE PASSING OF ST. AUBAN
+
+
+Dame! What an ado there was next day in Blois, when the news came that
+the troopers had installed themselves at the Château de Canaples and
+that the Chevalier had been arrested for treason by order of the Lord
+Cardinal, and that he would be taken to Paris, and--probably--the
+scaffold.
+
+Men gathered in little knots at street corners, and with sullen brows
+and threatening gestures they talked of the affair; and the more
+they talked, the more clouded grew their looks, and more than one
+anti-cardinalist pasquinade was heard in Blois that day.
+
+Given a leader those men would have laid hands upon pikes and muskets,
+and gone to the Chevalier's rescue. As I observed them, the thought did
+cross my mind that I might contrive a pretty fight in the rose garden of
+Canaples were I so inclined. And so inclined I should, indeed, have been
+but for the plan that had come to me like an inspiration from above, and
+which methought would prove safer in the end.
+
+To carry out this plan of mine, I quitted Blois at nightfall, with my
+two knaves, having paid my reckoning at the Lys de France, and given
+out that we were journeying to Tours. We followed the road that leads to
+Canaples, until we reached the first trees bordering the park. There
+I dismounted, and, leaving Abdon to guard the horses, I made my way on
+foot, accompanied by Michelot, towards the garden.
+
+We gained this, and were on the point of quitting the shadow of the
+trees, when of a sudden, by the light of the crescent moon, I beheld
+a man walking in one of the alleys, not a hundred paces from where we
+stood. I had but time to seize Michelot by the collar of his pourpoint
+and draw him towards me. But as he trod precipitately backwards a twig
+snapped 'neath his foot with a report that in the surrounding stillness
+was like a pistol shot.
+
+I caught my breath as he who walked in the garden stood still, his face,
+wrapped in the shadows of his hat, turned towards us.
+
+"Who goes there?" he shouted. Then getting no reply he came resolutely
+forward, whilst I drew a pistol wherewith to welcome him did he come too
+near.
+
+On he came, and already I had brought my pistol to a level with his
+head, when fortunately he repeated his question, "Who goes there?"--and
+this time I recognised the voice of Montrésor, the very man I could then
+most wish to meet.
+
+"Hist! Montrésor!" I called softly. "'T is I--Luynes."
+
+"So!" he exclaimed, coming close up to me. "You have reached Canaples at
+last!"
+
+"At last?" I echoed.
+
+"Whom have you there?" he inquired abruptly.
+
+"Only Michelot."
+
+"Bid him fall behind a little."
+
+When Michelot had complied with this request, "You see, M. de Luynes,"
+quoth the officer, "that you have arrived too late."
+
+There was a certain coldness in his tone that made me seek by my reply
+to sound him.
+
+"Indeed, I trust not, my friend. With your assistance I hope to get M.
+de Canaples from the clutches of St. Auban."
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"It is impossible that I should help you," he replied with increasing
+coldness. "Already once for your sake have I broken faith to those who
+pay me, by setting you in a position to forestall St. Auban and get M.
+de Canaples away before his arrival. Unfortunately, you have dallied
+on the road, M. de Luynes, and Canaples is already a prisoner--a doomed
+one, I fear."
+
+"Is that your last word, Montrésor?" I inquired sadly.
+
+"I am sorry," he answered in softened tones, "but you must see that I
+cannot do otherwise. I warned you; more you cannot expect of me."
+
+I sighed, and stood musing for an instant. Then--"You are right,
+Montrésor. Nevertheless, I am still grateful to you for the warning you
+gave me in Paris. God pity and help Canaples! Adieu, Montrésor. I do not
+think that you will see me again."
+
+He took my hand, but as he did so he pushed me back into the shadow from
+which I had stepped to proffer it him.
+
+"Peste!" he ejaculated. "The moon was full upon your face, and did St.
+Auban chance to look out, he must have seen you."
+
+I followed the indication of his thumb, and noted the lighted window to
+which he pointed. A moment later he was gone, and as I joined Michelot,
+I chuckled softly to myself.
+
+For two hours and more I sat in the shrubbery, conversing in whispers
+with Michelot, and watching the lights in the château die out one by
+one, until St. Auban's window, which opened on to the terrace balcony,
+was the only one that was not wrapt in darkness.
+
+I waited a little while longer, then rising I cautiously made a tour of
+inspection. Peace reigned everywhere, and the only sign of life was the
+sentry, who with musket on shoulder paced in front of the main entrance,
+a silent testimony of St. Auban's mistrust of the Blaisois and of his
+fears of a possible surprise.
+
+Satisfied that everyone slept I retraced my steps to the shrubbery where
+Michelot awaited me, watching the square of light, and after exchanging
+word with him, I again stepped forth.
+
+When I was half way across the intervening space of garden, treading
+with infinite precaution, a dark shadow obscured the window, which a
+second later was thrown open. Crouching hastily behind a boxwood hedge,
+I watched St. Auban--for I guessed that he it was--as he leaned out and
+gazed skywards.
+
+For a little while he remained there, then he withdrew, leaving the
+casement open, and presently I caught the grating of a chair on the
+parquet floor within. If ever the gods favoured mortal, they favoured me
+at that moment.
+
+Stealthily as a cat I sprang towards the terrace, the steps to which I
+climbed on hands and knees. Stooping, I sped silently across it until I
+had gained the flower-bed immediately below the window that had drawn
+me to it. Crouching there--for did I stand upright my chin would be on a
+level with the sill--I paused to listen for some moments. The only sound
+I caught was a rustle, as of paper. Emboldened, I took a deep breath,
+and standing up I gazed straight into the chamber.
+
+By the light of four tapers in heavy silver sconces, I beheld St. Auban
+seated at a table littered with parchments, over which he was intently
+poring. His back was towards me, and his long black hair hung straight
+upon his shoulders. On the table, amid the papers, lay his golden wig
+and black mask, and on the floor in the centre of the room, his back and
+breast of blackened steel and his sword.
+
+It needed but little shrewdness to guess those parchments before him
+to be legal documents touching the Canaples estates, and his occupation
+that of casting up exactly what profit he would reap from his infamous
+work of betrayal.
+
+So intent was the hound upon his calculations that my cautious movements
+passed unheeded by him as I got astride of the window ledge. It was only
+when I swung my right leg into the room that he turned his head, but
+before his eyes reached me I was standing upright and motionless within
+the chamber.
+
+I have seen fear of many sorts writ large upon the faces of men of many
+conditions--from the awe that blanches the cheek of the boy soldier when
+first he hears the cannon thundering to the terror that glazes the eye
+of the vanquished swordsman who at every moment expects the deadly point
+in his heart. But never had I gazed upon a countenance filled with such
+abject ghastly terror as that which came over St. Auban's when his eyes
+met mine that night.
+
+He sprang up with an inarticulate cry that sank into something that I
+can but liken to the rattle which issues from the throat of expiring
+men. For a second he stood where he had risen, then terror loosened his
+knees, and he sank back into his chair. His mouth fell open, and the
+trembling lips were drawn down at the corners like those of a sobbing
+child; his cheeks turned whiter than the lawn collar at his throat, and
+his eyes, wide open in a horrid stare, were fixed on mine and, powerless
+to avert them, he met my gaze--cold, stern, and implacable.
+
+For a moment we remained thus, and I marvelled greatly to see a man
+whose heart, if full of evil, I had yet deemed stout enough, stricken by
+fear into so parlous and pitiful a condition.
+
+Then I had the explanation of it as he lifted his right hand and made
+the sign of the cross, first upon himself, then in the air, whilst his
+lips moved, and I guessed that to himself he was muttering some prayer
+of exorcising purport. There was the solution of the terror--sweat
+that stood out in beads upon his brow--he had deemed me a spectre; the
+spectre of a man he believed to have foully done to death on a spot
+across the Loire visible from the window at my back.
+
+At last he sufficiently mastered himself to break the awful silence.
+
+"What do you want?" he whispered; then, his voice gaining power as he
+used it--"Speak," he commanded. "Man or devil, speak!"
+
+I laughed for answer, harshly, mockingly; for never had I known a
+fiercer, crueller mood. At the sound of that laugh, satanical though may
+have been its ring, he sprang up again, and unsheathing a dagger he took
+a step towards me.
+
+"We shall see of what you are made," he cried. "If you blast me in the
+act, I'll strike you!"
+
+I laughed again, and raising my arm I gave him the nozzle of a pistol to
+contemplate.
+
+"Stand where you are, St. Auban, or, by the God above us, I'll send your
+ghost a-wandering," quoth I coolly.
+
+My voice, which I take it had nothing ghostly in it, and still more
+the levelled pistol, which of all implements is the most unghostly,
+dispelled his dread. The colour crept slowly back to his cheeks, and his
+mouth closed with a snap of determination.
+
+"Is it, indeed, you, master meddler?" he said. "Peste! I thought you
+dead these three months."
+
+"And you are overcome with joy to find that you were in error, eh,
+Marquis? We Luynes die hard."
+
+"It seems so, indeed," he answered with a cool effrontery past crediting
+in one who but a moment ago had looked so pitiful. "What do you seek at
+Canaples?"
+
+"Many things, Marquis. You among others."
+
+"You have come to murder me," he cried, and again alarm overspread his
+countenance.
+
+"Hoity, toity, Marquis! We do not all follow the same trade. Who talks
+of murder? Faugh!"
+
+Again he took a step towards me, but again the nozzle of my pistol drove
+him back. To have pistoled him there and then as he deserved would have
+brought the household about my ears, and that would have defeated my
+object. To have fallen upon him and slain him with silent steel would
+have equally embarrassed me, as you shall understand anon.
+
+"You and I had a rendezvous at St. Sulpice des Reaux," I said calmly,
+"to which you came with a band of hired assassins. For this you deserve
+to be shot like the dog you are. But I have it in my heart to be
+generous to you," I added in a tone of irony. "Come, take up your
+sword."
+
+"To what purpose?"
+
+"Do you question me? Take up your sword, man, and do my bidding; thus
+shall you have a slender chance of life. Refuse and I pistol you without
+compunction. So now put on that wig and mask."
+
+When he obeyed me in this--"Now listen, St. Auban," I said. "You and
+I are going together to that willow copse whither three months ago you
+lured Yvonne de Canaples for the purpose of abducting her. On that spot
+you and I shall presently face each other sword in hand, with none other
+to witness our meeting save God, in whose hands the issue lies. That is
+your chance; at the first sign that you meditate playing me any tricks,
+that chance is lost to you." And I tapped my pistol significantly. "Now
+climb out through that window."
+
+When he had done so, I bade him stand six paces away whilst I followed,
+and to discourage any foolish indiscretion on his part I again showed
+him my pistol.
+
+He answered me with an impatient gesture, and by the light that fell on
+his face I saw him sneer.
+
+"Come on, you fool," he snarled, "and have done threatening. I'll talk
+to you in the copse. And tread softly lest you arouse the sentry on the
+other side."
+
+Rejoiced to see the man so wide awake in him, I followed him closely
+across the terrace, and through the rose garden to the bank of the
+river. This we followed until we came at last to the belt of willows,
+where, having found a suitable patch of even and springy turf, I drew my
+sword and invited him to make ready.
+
+"Will you not strip?" he inquired sullenly.
+
+"I do not think so," I answered. "The night air is sharp. Nevertheless,
+do you make ready as best you deem fit, and that speedily, Monsieur."
+
+With an exclamation of contempt, he divested himself of his wig, mask,
+and doublet, then drawing his sword, he came forward, and announced
+himself at my disposal.
+
+As well you may conceive, we wasted no time in compliments, but
+straightway went to work, and that with a zest that drew sparks from our
+rapiers at the first contact.
+
+The Marquis attacked me furiously, and therein lay his only chance; for
+a fierce, rude sword-play that is easily dealt with in broad daylight
+is vastly discomposing in such pale moonshine as lighted us. I defended
+myself warily, for of a sudden I had grown conscious of the danger that
+I ran did he once by luck or strength get past my guard with that point
+of his which in the spare light I could not follow closely enough to
+feel secure.
+
+'Neath the fury of his onslaught I was compelled to break ground more
+than once, and each time he was so swift to follow up his advantage that
+I had ne'er a chance to retaliate.
+
+Still fear or doubt of the issue I had none. I needed but to wait until
+the Marquis's fury was spent by want of breath, to make an end of it.
+And presently that which I waited for came about. His attack began to
+lag in vigour, and the pressure of his blade to need less resistance,
+whilst his breathing grew noisy as that of a broken-winded horse. Then
+with the rage of a gambler who loses at every throw, he cursed and
+reviled me with every thrust or lunge that I turned aside.
+
+My turn was come; yet I held back, and let him spend his strength to the
+utmost drop, whilst with my elbow close against my side and by an easy
+play of wrist, I diverted each murderous stroke of his point that came
+again and again for my heart.
+
+When at last he had wasted in blasphemies what little breath his wild
+exertions had left him, I let him feel on his blade the twist that
+heralded my first riposte. He caught the thrust, and retreated a
+step, his blasphemous tongue silenced, and his livid face bathed in
+perspiration.
+
+Cruelly I toyed with him then, and with every disengagement I made him
+realise that he was mastered, and that if I withheld the coup de grâce
+it was but to prolong his agony. And to add to the bitterness of that
+agony of his, I derided him whilst I fenced; with a recitation of his
+many sins I mocked him, showing him how ripe he was for hell, and asking
+him how it felt to die unshriven with such a load upon his soul.
+
+Goaded to rage by my bitter words, he grit his teeth, and gathered what
+rags of strength were left him for a final effort, And before I knew
+what he was about, he had dropped on to his left knee, and with his body
+thrown forward and supported within a foot of the ground by his left
+arm, he came, like a snake, under my guard with his point directed
+upwards.
+
+So swift had been this movement and so unlooked-for, that had I not
+sprung backwards in the very nick of time, this narrative of mine had
+ne'er been written. With a jeering laugh I knocked aside his sword, but
+even as I disengaged, to thrust at him, he knelt up and caught my blade
+in his left hand, and for all that it ate its way through the flesh to
+the very bones of his fingers, he clung to it with that fierce strength
+and blind courage that is born of despair.
+
+Then raising himself on his knees again, he struck at me wildly. I swung
+aside, and as his sword, missing its goal, shot past me, I caught his
+wrist in a grip from which I contemptuously invited him to free himself.
+With that began a fierce tugging and panting on both sides, which,
+however, was of short duration, for presently, my blade, having severed
+the last sinew of his fingers, was set free. Simultaneously I let go
+his wrist, pushing his arm from me so violently that in his exhausted
+condition it caused him to fall over on his side.
+
+In an instant, however, he was up and at me again. Again our swords
+clashed--but once only. It was time to finish. With a vigorous
+disengagement I got past his feeble guard and sent my blade into him
+full in the middle of his chest and out again at his back until a foot
+or so of glittering steel protruded.
+
+A shudder ran through him, and his mouth worked oddly, whilst
+spasmodically he still sought, without avail, to raise his sword; then
+as I recovered my blade, a half-stifled cry broke from his lips, and
+throwing up his arms, he staggered and fell in a heap.
+
+As I turned him over to see if he were dead, his eyes met mine, and were
+full of piteous entreaty; his lips moved, and presently I caught the
+words:
+
+"I am sped, Luynes." Then struggling up, and in a louder voice: "A
+priest!" he gasped. "Get me a priest, Luynes. Jesu! Have mer--"
+
+A rush of blood choked him and cut short his utterance. He writhed and
+twitched for a moment, then his chin sank forward and he fell back,
+death starkening his limbs and glazing the eyes which stared hideously
+upwards at the cold, pitiless moon.
+
+Such was the passing of the Marquis César de St. Auban.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. PLAY-ACTING
+
+
+For a little while I stood gazing down at my work, my mind full of the
+unsolvable mysteries of life and death; then I bethought me that
+time stood not still for me, and that something yet remained to be
+accomplished ere my evening's task were done.
+
+And forthwith I made shift to do a thing at the memory of which my blood
+is chilled and my soul is filled with loathing even now--albeit the gulf
+of many years separates me from that June night at Canaples.
+
+To pass succinctly o'er an episode on which I have scant heart to tarry,
+suffice it you to know that using my sash as a rope I bound a heavy
+stone to St. Auban's ankle; then lifting the body in my arms, I half
+dragged, half bore it across the little stretch of intervening sward to
+the water's edge, and flung it in.
+
+As I write I have the hideous picture in my mind, and again I can see
+St. Auban's ghastly face grinning up at me through the moonlit waters,
+until at last it was mercifully swallowed up in their black depths, and
+naught but a circling wavelet that spread swiftly across the stream was
+left to tell of what had chanced.
+
+I dare not dwell upon the feelings that assailed me as I stooped to
+rinse the blood from my hands, nor yet of the feverish haste wherewith I
+tore my blood-stained doublet from my back, and hurled it wide into the
+stream. For all my callousness I was sick and unmanned by that which had
+befallen.
+
+No time, however, did I waste in mawkish sentiment, but setting my teeth
+hard, I turned away from the river, and back to the trampled ground of
+our recent conflict. There, with no other witness save the moon, I clad
+myself in the Marquis's doublet of black velvet; I set his mask of silk
+upon my face, his golden wig upon my head, and over that his sable hat
+with its drooping feather. Next I buckled on his sword belt, wherefrom
+hung his rapier that I had sheathed.
+
+In Blois that day I had taken the precaution--knowing the errand upon
+which I came--to procure myself haut-de-chausses of black velvet, and
+black leather boots with gilt spurs that closely resembled those which
+St. Auban had worn in life.
+
+Now, as I have already written, St. Auban and I were of much the same
+build and stature, and so methought with confidence that he would have
+shrewd eyes, indeed, who could infer from my appearance that I was
+other than the same masked gentleman who had that very day ridden into
+Canaples at the head of a troop of his Eminence's guards.
+
+I made my way swiftly back along the path that St. Auban and I had
+together trodden but a little while ago, and past the château until I
+came to the shrubbery where Michelot--faithful to the orders I had given
+him--awaited my return. From his concealment he had seen me leave the
+château with the Marquis, and as I suddenly loomed up before him now, he
+took me for the man whose clothes I wore, and naturally enough assumed
+that ill had befallen Gaston de Luynes. Of a certainty I had been
+pistolled by him had I not spoken in time. I lingered but to give him
+certain necessary orders; then, whilst he went off to join Abdon and see
+to their fulfilment, I made my way stealthily, with eyes keeping watch
+around me, across the terrace, and through the window into the room that
+St. Auban had left to follow me to his death.
+
+The tapers still burned, and in all respects the chamber was as it had
+been; the back and breast pieces still lay upon the floor, and on the
+table the littered documents. The door I ascertained had been locked on
+the inside, a precaution which St. Auban had no doubt taken so that none
+might spy upon the work that busied him.
+
+I closed and made fast the window, then I bethought me that, being in
+ignorance of the whereabouts of St. Auban's bed-chamber, I must perforce
+spend the night as best I could within that very room.
+
+And so I sat me down and pondered deeply o'er the work that was to come,
+the part I was about to play, and the details of its playing. In this
+manner did I while away perchance an hour; through the next one I must
+have slept, for I awakened with a start to find three tapers spent and
+the last one spluttering, and in the sky the streaks that heralded the
+summer dawn.
+
+Again I fell to thinking; again I slept, and woke again to find the
+night gone and the sunlight on my face. Someone knocked at the door, and
+that knocking vibrated through my brain and set me wide-awake, indeed.
+It was as the signal to uplift the curtain and let my play-acting
+commence.
+
+Hastily I rose and shot a glance at the mirror to see that my wig hung
+straight and that my mask was rightly adjusted. I started at my own
+reflection, for methought that from the glass 't was St. Auban who
+looked at me, as I had seen him look the night before when he had donned
+those things at my command.
+
+"Holà there, within!" came Montrésor's voice. "Monsieur le Capitaine!" A
+fresh shower of blows descended on the oak panels.
+
+I yawned with prodigious sonority, and overturned a chair with my foot.
+Then bracing myself for the ordeal, through which I looked to what scant
+information I possessed and my own mother wit, to bear me successfully,
+I strode across to admit my visitor.
+
+Muffling my voice, as I had heard St. Auban do at the inn, by drawing my
+nether lip over my teeth--
+
+"Pardieu!" quoth I, as I opened the door, "it seems, Lieutenant, that I
+must have fallen asleep over those musty documents."
+
+I trembled as I watched him, waiting for his reply, and I thanked Heaven
+that in the rôle I had assumed a mask was worn, not only because it
+hid my features, but because it hid the emotions which these might have
+betrayed.
+
+"I was beginning to fear," he replied coldly, and without so much as
+looking at me, "that worse had befallen you."
+
+I breathed again.
+
+"You mean--?"
+
+"Pooh, nothing," said he half contemptuously. "Only methinks 't were
+well whilst we remain at Canaples that you do not spend your nights in a
+room within such easy access of the terrace."
+
+"Your advice no doubt is sound, but as I shall not spend another night
+at Canaples, it comes too late."
+
+"You mean, Monsieur--?"
+
+"That we set out for Paris to-day."
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Oh, ça! I have just visited the stables, and there are not four horses
+fit for the journey. So that unless you have in mind the purchase of
+fresh animals--"
+
+"Pish! My purse is not bottomless," I broke in, repeating the very words
+that I heard St. Auban utter.
+
+"So you said once before, Monsieur. Still, unless you are prepared
+to take that course, the only alternative is to remain here until the
+horses are sufficiently recovered. But perhaps you think of walking?" he
+added with a sniff.
+
+"Such is your opinion, your time being worthless and it being of little
+moment where you spend it. I have conceived a plan."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"Has it not occurred to you that the danger which threatens us and which
+calls for the protection of a troop is only on this side of the Loire,
+where the Blaisois might be minded to attempt a rescue of the Chevalier?
+But over yonder, Chevalier, on the Chambord side, who cares a fig for
+the Lord of Canaples or his fate? None; is it not so?"
+
+He made an assenting gesture, whereupon I continued:
+
+"This being so, I have bethought me that it will suffice if I take but
+three or four men and the sergeant as an escort, and cross the river
+with our prisoner after nightfall, travelling along the opposite shore
+until we reach Orleans. What think you, Lieutenant?"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders again.
+
+"'T is you who command here," he answered with apathy, "not I."
+
+"Nevertheless, do you not think the plan a safe one, as well as one that
+will allay his Eminence's very natural impatience?"
+
+"Oh, it is safe enough, I doubt not," he replied coldly.
+
+"Your enthusiasm determines me," quoth I, with an irony that made him
+wince. "And we will follow the plan, since you agree with me touching
+its excellence. But keep the matter to yourself until an hour or so
+after sunset."
+
+He bowed, so utterly my dupe that I could have laughed at him.
+Then--"There is a little matter that I would mention," he said.
+"Mademoiselle de Canaples has expressed a wish to accompany her father
+to Paris and has asked me whether this will be permitted her."
+
+My heart leaped. Surely the gods fought on my side!
+
+"I cannot permit it," I answered icily.
+
+"Monsieur, you are pitiless," he protested in a tone of indignation for
+which I would gladly have embraced him.
+
+I feigned to ponder.
+
+"The matter needs consideration. Tell Mademoiselle that I will discuss
+it with her at noon, if she will condescend to await me on the terrace;
+I will then give her my definite reply. And now, Lieutenant, let us
+breakfast."
+
+As completely as I had duped Montrésor did I presently dupe those of
+the troopers with whom I came in contact, among others the sergeant--and
+anon the Chevalier himself.
+
+From the brief interview that I had with him I discovered that whilst he
+but vaguely suspected me to be St. Auban--and when I say "he
+suspected me" I mean he suspected him whose place I had taken--he was,
+nevertheless, aware of the profit which his captor, whoever he might be,
+derived from this business. It soon grew clear to me from what he said
+that St. Auban had mocked him with it whilst concealing his identity;
+that he had told him how he had obtained from Malpertuis the treasonable
+letter, and of the bargain which it had enabled him to strike with
+Mazarin. I did not long remain in his company, and, deeming the time
+not yet ripe for disclosures, I said little in answer to his lengthy
+tirades, which had, I guessed, for scope to trap me into betraying the
+identity he but suspected.
+
+It wanted a few minutes to noon as I left the room in which the old
+nobleman was confined, and by the door of which a trooper was stationed,
+musket on shoulder. With every pulse a-throbbing at the thought of my
+approaching interview with Mademoiselle, I made my way below and out
+into the bright sunshine, the soldiers I chanced to meet saluting me as
+I passed them.
+
+On the terrace I found Mademoiselle already awaiting me. She was
+standing, as often I had seen her stand, with her back turned towards
+me and her elbows resting upon the balustrade. But as my step
+sounded behind her, she turned, and stood gazing at me with a face so
+grief-stricken and pale that I burned to unmask and set her torturing
+fears at rest. I doffed my hat and greeted her with a silent bow, which
+she contemptuously disregarded.
+
+"My lieutenant tells me, Mademoiselle," said I in my counterfeited
+voice, "that it is your desire to bear Monsieur your father company upon
+this journey of his to Paris."
+
+"With your permission, sir," she answered in a choking voice.
+
+"It is a matter for consideration, Mademoiselle," I pursued. "There are
+in it many features that may have escaped you, and which I shall discuss
+with you if you will honour me by stepping into the garden below."
+
+"Why will not the terrace serve?"
+
+"Because I may have that to say which I would not have overheard."
+
+She knit her brows and stared at me as though she would penetrate the
+black cloth that hid my face. At last she shrugged her shoulders, and
+letting her arms fall to her side in a gesture of helplessness and
+resignation--
+
+"Soit; I will go with you," was all she said.
+
+Side by side we went down the steps as a pair of lovers might have
+gone, save that her face was white and drawn, and that her eyes looked
+straight before her, and never once, until we reached the gravel
+path below, at her companion. Side by side we walked along one of the
+rose-bordered alleys, until at length I stopped.
+
+"Mademoiselle," I said, speaking in the natural tones of that
+good-for-naught Gaston de Luynes, "I have already decided, and you have
+my permission to accompany your father."
+
+At the sound of my voice she started, and with her left hand clutching
+at the region of her heart, she stood, her head thrust forward, and on
+her face the look of one who is confronted with some awful doubt. That
+look was brief, however, and swift to replace it was one of hideous
+revelation.
+
+"In God's name, who are you?" she cried in accents that bespoke internal
+agony.
+
+"Already you have guessed it, Mademoiselle," I answered, and I would
+have added that which should have brought comfort to her distraught
+mind, when--
+
+"You!" she gasped in a voice of profound horror. "You! You, the Judas
+who has sold my father to the Cardinal for a paltry share in our
+estates. And I believed that mask of yours to hide the face of St.
+Auban!"
+
+Her words froze me into a stony mass of insensibility. There was no
+logic in my attitude; I see it now. Appearances were all against me, and
+her belief no more than justified. I overlooked all this, and instead of
+saving time by recounting how I came to be there and thus delivering her
+from the anguish that was torturing her, I stood, dumb and cruel, cut to
+the quick by her scorn and her suspicions that I was capable of such a
+thing as she imputed, and listening to the dictates of an empty pride
+that prompted me to make her pay full penalty.
+
+"Oh, God pity me!" she wailed. "Have you naught to say?"
+
+Still I maintained my mad, resentful silence. And presently, as one who
+muses--
+
+"You!" she said again. "You, whom I--" She stopped short. "Oh! The shame
+of it!" she moaned.
+
+Reason at last came uppermost, and as in my mind I completed her broken
+sentence, my heart gave a great throb and I was thawed to a gentler
+purpose.
+
+"Mademoiselle!" I exclaimed.
+
+But even as I spoke, she turned, and sweeping aside her gown that it
+might not touch me, she moved rapidly towards the steps we had just
+descended. Full of remorse, I sprang after her.
+
+"Mademoiselle! Hear me," I cried, and put forth my hand to stay her.
+Thereat she wheeled round and faced me, a blaze of fury in her grey
+eyes.
+
+"Dare not to touch me," she panted. "You thief, you hound!"
+
+I recoiled, and, like one turned to stone, I stood and watched her mount
+the steps, my feelings swaying violently between anger and sorrow. Then
+my eye fell upon Montrésor standing on the topmost step, and on his face
+there was a sneering, insolent smile which told me that he had heard the
+epithets she had bestowed upon me.
+
+Albeit I sought that day another interview with Yvonne, I did not gain
+it, and so I was forced to sun myself in solitude upon the terrace. But
+I cherished for my consolation that broken sentence of hers, whereby
+I read that the coldness which she had evinced for me before I left
+Canaples had only been assumed.
+
+And presently as I recalled what talks we had had, and one in particular
+from which it now appeared to me that her coldness had sprung, a light
+seemed suddenly to break upon my mind, as perchance it hath long ago
+broken upon the minds of those who may happen upon these pages, and
+whose wits in matters amorous are of a keener temper than were mine.
+
+I who in all things had been arrogant, presumptuous, and self-satisfied,
+had methought erred for once through over-humility.
+
+And, indeed, even as I sat and pondered on that June day, it seemed to
+me a thing incredible that she whom I accounted the most queenly and
+superb of women should have deigned to grant a tender thought to one so
+mean, so far beneath her as I had ever held myself to be.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI. REPARATION
+
+
+Things came to pass that night as I had planned, and the fates which of
+late had smiled upon me were kind unto the end.
+
+Soon after ten, and before the moon had risen, a silent procession
+wended its way from the château to the river. First went Montrésor and
+two of his men; next came the Chevalier with Mademoiselle, and on either
+side of them a trooper; whilst I, in head-piece and back and breast of
+steel, went last with Mathurin, the sergeant--who warmly praised the
+plan I had devised for the conveyance of M. de Canaples to Paris without
+further loss of time.
+
+Two boats which I had caused to be secretly procured were in readiness,
+and by these a couple of soldiers awaited us, holding the bridles of
+eight horses, one of which was equipped with a lady's saddle. Five of
+these belonged--or had belonged--to the Chevalier, whilst the others
+were three of those that had brought the troop from Paris, and which I,
+in the teeth of all protestations, had adjudged sufficiently recovered
+for the return journey.
+
+The embarkation was safely effected, M. de Canaples and Mademoiselle
+in one boat with Montrésor, Mathurin, and myself; the sergeant took the
+oars; Montrésor and I kept watch over our prisoner. In the other boat
+came the four troopers, who were to accompany us, and one other who
+was to take the boats, and Montrésor in them, back to Canaples. For the
+lieutenant was returning, so that he might, with the remainder of the
+troop, follow us to Paris so soon as the condition of the horses would
+permit it.
+
+The beasts we took with us were swimming the stream, guided and upheld
+by the men in the other boat.
+
+Just as the moon began to show her face our bow grated on the shore at
+the very point where I had intended that we should land. I sprang out
+and turned to assist Mademoiselle.
+
+But, disdaining my proffered hand, she stepped ashore unaided. The
+Chevalier came next, and after him Montrésor and Mathurin.
+
+Awhile we waited until the troopers brought their boat to land, then
+when they had got the snorting animals safely ashore, I bade them look
+to the prisoner, and requested Montrésor and Mathurin to step aside with
+me, as I had something to communicate to them.
+
+Walking between the pair, I drew them some twenty paces away from the
+group by the water, towards a certain thicket in which I had bidden
+Michelot await me.
+
+"It has occurred to me, Messieurs," I began, speaking slowly and
+deliberately as we paced along,--"it has occurred to me that despite all
+the precautions taken to carry out my Lord Cardinal's wishes--a work
+at least in which you, yourselves, have evinced a degree of zeal that I
+cannot too highly commend to his Eminence--the possibility yet remains
+of some mistake of trivial appearance, of some slight flaw that might
+yet cause the miscarriage of those wishes."
+
+They turned towards me, and although I could not make out the
+expressions of their faces, in the gloom, yet I doubted not but that
+they were puzzled ones at that lengthy and apparently meaningless
+harangue.
+
+The sergeant was the first to speak, albeit I am certain that he
+understood the less.
+
+"I venture, M. le Capitaine, to think that your fears, though very
+natural, are groundless."
+
+"Say you so?" quoth I, with a backward glance to assure myself that we
+were screened by the trees from the eyes of those behind us. "Say you
+so? Well, well, mayhap you are right, though you speak of my fears being
+groundless. I alluded to some possible mistake of yours--yours and M. de
+Montrésor's--not of mine. And, by Heaven, a monstrous flaw there is in
+this business, for if either of you so much as whisper I'll blow your
+brains out!"
+
+And to emphasise these words, as sinister as they were unlooked-for, I
+raised both hands suddenly from beneath my cloak, and clapped the cold
+nose of a pistol to the head of each of them.
+
+I was obeyed as men are obeyed who thus uncompromisingly prove the
+force of their commands. Seeing them resigned, I whistled softly, and
+in answer there was a rustle from among the neighbouring trees, and
+presently two shadows emerged from the thicket. In less time than it
+takes me to relate it, Montrésor and his sergeant found themselves
+gagged, and each securely bound to a tree.
+
+Then, with Michelot and Abdon following a short distance behind me,
+I made my way back to the troopers, and, feigning to stumble as I
+approached, I hurtled so violently against two of them that I knocked
+the pair headlong into the stream.
+
+Scarce was it done, and almost before the remaining three had realised
+it, there was a pistol at the head of each of them and sweet promises of
+an eternal hereafter being whispered in their ears. They bore themselves
+with charming discretion, and like lambs we led them each to a tree
+and dealt with them as we had dealt with their officers, whilst the
+Chevalier and his daughter watched us, bewildered and dumfounded at what
+they saw.
+
+As soon as the other two had crawled--all unconscious of the fates of
+their comrades--out of the river, we served them also in a like manner.
+
+Bidding Abdon and Michelot lead the horses, and still speaking in my
+assumed voice, I desired Mademoiselle and the Chevalier--who had not
+yet sufficiently recovered from his bewilderment to have found his
+tongue--to follow me. I led the way up the gentle slope to the spot
+where our first victims were pinioned.
+
+Montrésor's comely young face looked monstrous wicked in the moonlight,
+and his eyes rolled curiously as he beheld me. Stepping up to him I
+freed him of his gag--an act which I had almost regretted a moment
+later, for he cleared his throat with so lusty a torrent of profanity
+that methought the heavens must have fallen on us. At last when he was
+done with that--"Before you leave me in this plight, M. de St. Auban,"
+quoth he, "perchance you will satisfy me with an explanation of your
+unfathomable deeds and of this violence."
+
+"St. Auban!" exclaimed the Chevalier.
+
+"St. Auban!" cried Yvonne.
+
+And albeit wonder rang in both their voices, yet their minds I knew went
+different ways.
+
+"No, not St. Auban," I answered with a laugh and putting aside all
+counterfeit of speech.
+
+"Par la mort Dieu! I know that voice," cried Montrésor.
+
+"Mayhap, indeed! And know you not this face?" And as I spoke I whipped
+away my wig and mask, and thrust my countenance close up to his.
+
+"Thunder of God!" ejaculated the boy. Then--"Pardieu," he added, "there
+is Michelot! How came I not to recognise him?"
+
+"Since you would not assist me, Montrésor, you see I was forced to do
+without you."
+
+"But St. Auban?" he gasped. "Where is he?"
+
+"In heaven, I hope--but I doubt it sadly."
+
+"You have killed him?"
+
+There and then, as briefly as I might, I told him, whilst the others
+stood by to listen, how I had come upon the Marquis in the château the
+night before and what had passed thereafter.
+
+"And now," I said, as I cut his bonds, "it grieves me to charge you with
+an impolite errand to his Eminence, but--"
+
+"I'll not return to him," he burst out. "I dare not. Mon Dieu, you have
+ruined me, Luynes!"
+
+"Then come with me, and I'll build your fortunes anew and on a sounder
+foundation. I have an influential letter in my pocket that should
+procure us fortune in the service of the King of Spain."
+
+He needed little pressing to fall in with my invitation, so we set the
+sergeant free, and him instead I charged with a message that must have
+given Mazarin endless pleasure when it was delivered to him. But he had
+the Canaples estates wherewith to console himself and his never-failing
+maxim that "chi canta, paga." Touching the Canaples estates, however, he
+did not long enjoy them, for when he went into exile, two years later,
+the Parliament returned them to their rightful owner.
+
+The Chevalier de Canaples approached me timidly.
+
+"Monsieur," quoth he, "I have wronged you very deeply. And this generous
+rescue of one who has so little merited your aid truly puts me to so
+much shame that I know not what thanks to offer you."
+
+"Then offer none, Monsieur," I answered, taking his proffered hand.
+"Moreover, time presses and we have a possible pursuit to baffle. So to
+horse, Monsieurs."
+
+I assisted Mademoiselle to mount, and she passively suffered me to do
+her this office, having no word for me, and keeping her face averted
+from my earnest gaze.
+
+I sighed as I turned to mount the horse Michelot held for me; but
+methinks 't was more a sigh of satisfaction than of pain.
+
+ . . . . . . . .
+
+All that night we travelled and all next day until Tours was reached
+towards evening. There we halted for a sorely needed rest and for fresh
+horses.
+
+Three days later we arrived at Nantes, and a week from the night of the
+Chevalier's rescue we took ship from that port to Santander.
+
+That same evening, as I leaned upon the taffrail watching the distant
+coast line of my beloved France, whose soil meseemed I was not like to
+tread again for years, Yvonne came softly up behind me.
+
+"Monsieur," she said in a voice that trembled somewhat, "I have, indeed,
+misjudged you. The shame of it has made me hold aloof from you since we
+left Blois. I cannot tell you, Monsieur, how deep that shame has
+been, or with what sorrow I have been beset for the words I uttered at
+Canaples. Had I but paused to think--"
+
+"Nay, nay, Mademoiselle, 't was all my fault, I swear. I left you
+overlong the dupe of appearances."
+
+"But I should not have believed them so easily. Say that I am forgiven,
+Monsieur," she pleaded; "tell me what reparation I can make."
+
+"There is one reparation that you can make if you are so minded," I
+answered, "but 'tis a life-long reparation."
+
+They were bold words, indeed, but my voice played the coward and shook
+so vilely that it bereft them of half their boldness. But, ah, Dieu,
+what joy, what ecstasy was mine to see how they were read by her; to
+remark the rich, warm blood dyeing her cheeks in a bewitching blush; to
+behold the sparkle that brightened her matchless eyes as they met mine!
+
+"Yvonne!"
+
+"Gaston!"
+
+She was in my arms at last, and the work of reparation was begun whilst
+together we gazed across the sun-gilt sea towards the fading shores of
+France.
+
+If you be curious to learn how, guided by the gentle hand of her who
+plucked me from the vile ways that in my old life I had trodden, I have
+since achieved greatness, honour, and renown, History will tell you.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Suitors of Yvonne, by Raphael Sabatini
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+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Suitors of Yvonne, by Rafael Sabatini</title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ p { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
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+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
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+
+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold;'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Suitors of Yvonne, by Rafael Sabatini</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Suitors of Yvonne</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Rafael Sabatini</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 20, 2001 [eBook #3430]<br />
+[Most recently updated: January 27, 2021]</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: John Stuart Middleton, and David Widger</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SUITORS OF YVONNE ***</div>
+
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE SUITORS OF YVONNE
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Being a Portion of the Memoirs of the Sieur Gaston de Luynes
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Rafael Sabatini
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF HOW A BOY
+ DRANK TOO MUCH WINE, AND WHAT CAME OF IT <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE FRUIT OF
+ INDISCRETION <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ FIGHT IN THE HORSE-MARKET <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER
+ IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FAIR RESCUERS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0005">
+ CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MAZARIN, THE MATCH-MAKER <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF HOW ANDREA BECAME
+ LOVE-SICK <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ CHÂTEAU DE CANAPLES <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE FORESHADOW OF DISASTER <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF HOW A WHIP PROVED A
+ BETTER ARGUMENT THAN A TONGUE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0010">
+ CHAPTER X. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE CONSCIENCE OF MALPERTUIS <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF A WOMAN'S OBSTINACY
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ RESCUE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ HAND OF YVONNE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF
+ WHAT BEFELL AT REAUX. <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF MY RESURRECTION <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0016">
+ CHAPTER XVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE WAY OF WOMAN <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FATHER AND SON <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF HOW I LEFT
+ CANAPLES <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF
+ MY RETURN TO PARIS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF
+ HOW THE CHEVALIER DE CANAPLES BECAME A FRONDEUR <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF THE BARGAIN THAT
+ ST. AUBAN DROVE WITH MY LORD CARDINAL <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0022">
+ CHAPTER XXII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF MY SECOND JOURNEY TO CANAPLES <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF
+ HOW ST. AUBAN CAME TO BLOIS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER
+ XXIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OF THE PASSING OF ST. AUBAN <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;PLAY-ACTING <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;REPARATION <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. OF HOW A BOY DRANK TOO MUCH WINE, AND WHAT CAME OF IT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Andrea de Mancini sprawled, ingloriously drunk, upon the floor. His legs
+ were thrust under the table, and his head rested against the chair from
+ which he had slipped; his long black hair was tossed and dishevelled; his
+ handsome, boyish face flushed and garbed in the vacant expression of
+ idiocy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg a thousand pardons, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; quoth he in the thick,
+ monotonous voice of a man whose brain but ill controls his tongue,&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ beg a thousand pardons for the unseemly poverty of our repast. 'T is no
+ fault of mine. My Lord Cardinal keeps a most unworthy table for me. Faugh!
+ Uncle Giulio is a Hebrew&mdash;if not by birth, by instinct. He carries
+ his purse-strings in a knot which it would break his heart to unfasten.
+ But there! some day my Lord Cardinal will go to heaven&mdash;to the lap of
+ Abraham. I shall be rich then, vastly rich, and I shall bid you to a
+ banquet worthy of your most noble blood. The Cardinal's health&mdash;perdition
+ have him for the niggardliest rogue unhung!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I pushed back my chair and rose. The conversation was taking a turn that
+ was too unhealthy to be pursued within the walls of the Palais Mazarin,
+ where there existed, albeit the law books made no reference to it, the
+ heinous crime of lèse-Eminence&mdash;a crime for which more men had been
+ broken than it pleases me to dwell on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your table, Master Andrea, needs no apology,&rdquo; I answered carelessly.
+ &ldquo;Your wine, for instance, is beyond praise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, yes! The wine! But, ciel! Monsieur,&rdquo; he ejaculated, for a moment
+ opening wide his heavy eyelids, &ldquo;do you believe 't was Mazarin provided
+ it? Pooh! 'T was a present made me by M. de la Motte, who seeks my
+ interest with my Lord Cardinal to obtain for him an appointment in his
+ Eminence's household, and thus thinks to earn my good will. He's a
+ pestilent creature, this la Motte,&rdquo; he added, with a hiccough,&mdash;&ldquo;a
+ pestilent creature; but, Sangdieu! his wine is good, and I'll speak to my
+ uncle. Help me up, De Luynes. Help me up, I say; I would drink the health
+ of this provider of wines.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I hurried forward, but he had struggled up unaided, and stood swaying with
+ one hand on the table and the other on the back of his chair. In vain did
+ I remonstrate with him that already he had drunk overmuch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is a lie!&rdquo; he shouted. &ldquo;May not a gentleman sit upon the floor from
+ choice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To emphasise his protestation he imprudently withdrew his hand from the
+ chair and struck at the air with his open palm. That gesture cost him his
+ balance. He staggered, toppled backward, and clutched madly at the
+ tablecloth as he fell, dragging glasses, bottles, dishes, tapers, and a
+ score of other things besides, with a deafening crash on to the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, as I stood aghast and alarmed, wondering who might have overheard
+ the thunder of his fall, the fool sat up amidst the ruins, and filled the
+ room with his shrieks of drunken laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Silence, boy!&rdquo; I thundered, springing towards him. &ldquo;Silence! or we shall
+ have the whole house about our ears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And truly were my fears well grounded, for, before I could assist him to
+ rise, I heard the door behind me open. Apprehensively I turned, and
+ sickened to see that that which I had dreaded most was come to pass. A
+ tall, imposing figure in scarlet robes stood erect and scowling on the
+ threshold, and behind him his valet, Bernouin, bearing a lighted taper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mancini's laugh faded into a tremulous cackle, then died out, and with
+ gaping mouth and glassy eyes he sat there staring at his uncle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus we stayed in silence while a man might count mayhap a dozen; then the
+ Cardinal's voice rang harsh and full of anger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is thus that you fulfil your trust, M. de Luynes!&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Eminence&mdash;&rdquo; I began, scarce knowing what I should say, when he
+ cut me short.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will deal with you presently and elsewhere.&rdquo; He stepped up to Andrea,
+ and surveyed him for a moment in disgust. &ldquo;Get up, sir!&rdquo; he commanded.
+ &ldquo;Get up!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lad sought to obey him with an alacrity that merited a kinder fate.
+ Had he been in less haste perchance he had been more successful. As it
+ was, he had got no farther than his knees when his right leg slid from
+ under him, and he fell prone among the shattered tableware, mumbling
+ curses and apologies in a breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mazarin stood gazing at him with an eye that was eloquent in scorn, then
+ bending down he spoke quickly to him in Italian. What he said I know not,
+ being ignorant of their mother tongue; but from the fierceness of his
+ utterance I'll wager my soul 't was nothing sweet to listen to. When he
+ had done with him, he turned to his valet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bernouin,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;summon M. de Mancini's servant and assist him to get
+ my nephew to bed. M. de Luynes, be good enough to take Bernouin's taper
+ and light me back to my apartments.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unsavoury as was the task, I had no choice but to obey, and to stalk on in
+ front of him, candle in hand, like an acolyte at Notre Dame, and in my
+ heart the profound conviction that I was about to have a bad quarter of an
+ hour with his Eminence. Nor was I wrong; for no sooner had we reached his
+ cabinet and the door had been closed than he turned upon me the full
+ measure of his wrath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You miserable fool!&rdquo; he snarled. &ldquo;Did you think to trifle with the trust
+ which in a misguided moment I placed in you? Think you that, when a week
+ ago I saved you from starvation to clothe and feed you and give you a
+ lieutenancy in my guards, I should endure so foul an abuse as this? Think
+ you that I entrusted M. de Mancini's training in arms to you so that you
+ might lead him into the dissolute habits which have dragged you down to
+ what you are&mdash;to what you were before I rescued you&mdash;to what you
+ will be to-morrow when I shall have again abandoned you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hear me, your Eminence!&rdquo; I cried indignantly. &ldquo;'T is no fault of mine.
+ Some fool hath sent M. de Mancini a basket of wine and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you showed him how to abuse it,&rdquo; he broke in harshly. &ldquo;You have
+ taught the boy to become a sot; in time, were he to remain under your
+ guidance, I make no doubt but that he would become a gamester and a
+ duellist as well. I was mad, perchance, to give him into your care; but I
+ have the good fortune to be still in time, before the mischief has sunk
+ farther, to withdraw him from it, and to cast you back into the kennel
+ from which I picked you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Eminence does not mean&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As God lives I do!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;You shall quit the Palais Royal this very
+ night, M. de Luynes, and if ever I find you unbidden within half a mile of
+ it, I will do that which out of a misguided sense of compassion I do not
+ do now&mdash;I will have you flung into an oubliette of the Bastille,
+ where better men than you have rotted before to-day. Per Dio! do you think
+ that I am to be fooled by such a thing as you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does your Eminence dismiss me?&rdquo; I cried aghast, and scarce crediting that
+ such was indeed the extreme measure upon which he had determined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I not been plain enough?&rdquo; he answered with a snarl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I realised to the full my unenviable position, and with the realisation of
+ it there overcame me the recklessness of him who has played his last stake
+ at the tables and lost. That recklessness it was that caused me to shrug
+ my shoulders with a laugh. I was a soldier of fortune&mdash;or should I
+ say a soldier of misfortune?&mdash;as rich in vice as I was poor in
+ virtue; a man who lived by the steel and parried the blows that came as
+ best he might, or parried them not at all&mdash;but never quailed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As your Eminence pleases,&rdquo; I answered coolly, &ldquo;albeit methinks that for
+ one who has shed his blood for France as freely as I have done, a little
+ clemency were not unfitting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He raised his eyebrows, and his lips curled in a malicious sneer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You come of a family, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; he said slowly, &ldquo;that is famed for
+ having shed the blood of others for France more freely than its own. You
+ are, I believe, the nephew of Albert de Luynes. Do you forget the Marshal
+ d'Ancre?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I felt the blood of anger hot in my face as I made haste to answer him:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are many of us, Monseigneur, who have cause to blush for the
+ families they spring from&mdash;more cause, mayhap, than hath Gaston de
+ Luynes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my words perchance there was no offensive meaning, but in my tone and
+ in the look which I bent upon the Cardinal there was that which told him
+ that I alluded to his own obscure and dubious origin. He grew livid, and
+ for a moment methought he would have struck me: had he done so, then,
+ indeed, the history of Europe would have been other than it is to-day! He
+ restrained himself, however, and drawing himself to the full height of his
+ majestic figure he extended his arm towards the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go,&rdquo; he said, in a voice that passion rendered hoarse. &ldquo;Go, Monsieur. Go
+ quickly, while my clemency endures. Go before I summon the guard and deal
+ with you as your temerity deserves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I bowed&mdash;not without a taint of mockery, for I cared little what
+ might follow; then, with head erect and the firm tread of defiance, I
+ stalked out of his apartment, along the corridor, down the great
+ staircase, across the courtyard, past the guard,&mdash;which, ignorant of
+ my disgrace, saluted me,&mdash;and out into the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then at last my head sank forward on my breast, and deep in thought I
+ wended my way home, oblivious of all around me, even the chill bite of the
+ February wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my mind I reviewed my wasted life, with the fleeting pleasures and the
+ enduring sorrows that it had brought me&mdash;or that I had drawn from it.
+ The Cardinal said no more than truth when he spoke of having saved me from
+ starvation. A week ago that was indeed what he had done. He had taken pity
+ on Gaston de Luynes, the nephew of that famous Albert de Luynes who had
+ been Constable of France in the early days of the late king's reign; he
+ had made me lieutenant of his guards and maître d'armes to his nephews
+ Andrea and Paolo de Mancini because he knew that a better blade than mine
+ could not be found in France, and because he thought it well to have such
+ swords as mine about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little week ago life had been replete with fresh promises, the gates of
+ the road to fame (and perchance fortune) had been opened to me anew, and
+ now&mdash;before I had fairly passed that gate I had been thrust rudely
+ back, and it had been slammed in my face because it pleased a fool to
+ become a sot whilst in my company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a subtle poetry in the contemplation of ruin. With ruin itself,
+ howbeit, there comes a prosaic dispelling of all idle dreams&mdash;a hard,
+ a grim, a vile reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ruin! 'T is an ugly word. A fitting one to carve upon the tombstone of a
+ reckless, godless, dissolute life such as mine had been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Back, Gaston de Luynes! back, to the kennel whence the Cardinal's hand did
+ for a moment pluck you; back, from the morning of hope to the night of
+ despair; back, to choose between starvation and the earning of a pauper's
+ fee as a master of fence!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. THE FRUIT OF INDISCRETION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Despite the dejection to which I had become a prey, I slept no less
+ soundly that night than was my wont, and indeed it was not until late next
+ morning when someone knocked at my door that I awakened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sat up in bed, and my first thought as I looked round the handsome room&mdash;which
+ I had rented a week ago upon receiving the lieutenancy in the Cardinal's
+ guards&mdash;was for the position that I had lost and of the need that
+ there would be ere long to seek a lodging more humble and better suited to
+ my straitened circumstances. It was not without regret that such a thought
+ came to me, for my tastes had never been modest, and the house was a fine
+ one, situated in the Rue St. Antoine at a hundred paces or so from the
+ Jesuit convent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had no time, however, to indulge the sorry mood that threatened to beset
+ me, for the knocking at my chamber door continued, until at length I
+ answered it with a command to enter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was my servant Michelot, a grizzled veteran of huge frame and strength,
+ who had fought beside me at Rocroi, and who had thereafter become so
+ enamoured of my person&mdash;for some trivial service he swore I had
+ rendered him&mdash;that he had attached himself to me and my luckless
+ fortunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He came to inform me that M. de Mancini was below and craved immediate
+ speech with me. He had scarce done speaking, however, when Andrea himself,
+ having doubtless grown tired of waiting, appeared in the doorway. He wore
+ a sickly look, the result of his last night's debauch; but, more than
+ that, there was stamped upon his face a look of latent passion which made
+ me think at first that he was come to upbraid me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, still abed, Luynes?&rdquo; was his greeting as he came forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His cloak was wet and his boots splashed, which told me both that he had
+ come afoot and that it rained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are no duties that bid me rise,&rdquo; I answered sourly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He frowned at that, then, divesting himself of his cloak, he gave it to
+ Michelot, who, at a sign from me, withdrew. No sooner was the door closed
+ than the boy's whole manner changed. The simmering passion of which I had
+ detected signs welled up and seemed to choke him as he poured forth the
+ story that he had come to tell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been insulted,&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;Grossly insulted by a vile creature of
+ Monsieur d'Orleans's household. An hour ago in the ante-chamber at the
+ Palais Royal I was spoken of in my hearing as the besotted nephew of the
+ Italian adventurer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sat up in bed tingling with excitement at the developments which already
+ I saw arising from his last night's imprudence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Calmly, Andrea,&rdquo; I begged of him, &ldquo;tell me calmly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mortdieu! How can I be calm? Ough! The thought of it chokes me. I was a
+ fool last night&mdash;a sot. For that, perchance, men have some right to
+ censure me. But, Sangdieu! that a ruffler of the stamp of Eugène de
+ Canaples should speak of it&mdash;should call me the nephew of an Italian
+ adventurer, should draw down upon me the cynical smile of a crowd of
+ courtly apes&mdash;pah! I am sick at the memory of it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you answer him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardieu! I should be worthy of the title he bestowed upon me had I not
+ done so. Oh, I answered him&mdash;not in words. I threw my hat in his
+ face.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was a passing eloquent reply!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So eloquent that it left him speechless with amazement. He thought to
+ bully with impunity, and see me slink into hiding like a whipped dog,
+ terrified by his blustering tongue and dangerous reputation. But there!&rdquo;
+ he broke off, &ldquo;a meeting has been arranged for four o'clock at St.
+ Germain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A meeting!&rdquo; I exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What else? Do you think the affront left any alternative?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, yes, I know,&rdquo; he interrupted, tossing his head. &ldquo;I am going to be
+ killed. Verville has sworn that there shall be one less of the Italian
+ brood. That is why I have come to you, Luynes&mdash;to ask you to be my
+ second. I don't deserve it, perhaps. In my folly last night I did you an
+ ill turn. I unwittingly caused you to be stripped of your commission. But
+ if I were on my death-bed now, and begged a favour of you, you would not
+ refuse it. And what difference is there 'twixt me and one who is on his
+ death-bed? Am I not about to die?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peste! I hope not,&rdquo; I made answer with more lightness than I felt. &ldquo;But
+ I'll stand by you with all my heart, Andrea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you'll avenge me?&rdquo; he cried savagely, his Southern blood a-boiling.
+ &ldquo;You'll not let him leave the ground alive?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not unless my opponent commits the indiscretion of killing me first. Who
+ seconds M. de Canaples?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Marquis de St. Auban and M. de Montmédy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who is the third in our party?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have none. I thought that perhaps you had a friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I! A friend?&rdquo; I laughed bitterly. &ldquo;Pshaw, Andrea! beggars have no
+ friends. But stay; find Stanislas de Gouville. There is no better blade in
+ Paris. If he will join us in this frolic, and you can hold off Canaples
+ until either St. Auban or Montmédy is disposed of, we may yet leave the
+ three of them on the field of battle. Courage, Andrea! Dum spiramus,
+ speramus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My words seemed to cheer him, and when presently he left me to seek out
+ the redoubtable Gouville, the poor lad's face was brighter by far than
+ when he had entered my room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Down in my heart, however, I was less hopeful than I had led him to
+ believe, and as I dressed after he had gone, 't was not without some
+ uneasiness that I turned the matter over in my mind. I had, during the
+ short period of our association, grown fond of Andrea de Mancini. Indeed
+ the wonted sweetness of the lad's temper, and the gentleness of his
+ disposition, were such as to breed affection in all who came in contact
+ with him. In a way, too, methought he had grown fond of me, and I had
+ known so few friends in life,&mdash;truth to tell I fear me that I had few
+ of the qualities that engender friendship,&mdash;that I was naturally
+ prone to appreciate a gift that from its rareness became doubly valuable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence was it that I trembled for the boy. He had shown aptitude with the
+ foils, and derived great profit from my tuition, yet he was too raw by far
+ to be pitted against so cunning a swordsman as Canaples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had but finished dressing when a coach rumbled down the street and
+ halted by my door. Naturally I supposed that someone came to visit Coupri,
+ the apothecary,&mdash;to whom belonged this house in which I had my
+ lodging,&mdash;and did not give the matter a second thought until Michelot
+ rushed in, with eyes wide open, to announce that his Eminence, Cardinal
+ Mazarin, commanded my presence in the adjoining room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amazed and deeply marvelling what so extraordinary a visit might portend,
+ I hastened to wait upon his Eminence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I found him standing by the window, and received from him a greeting that
+ was passing curt and cavalier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has M. de Mancini been here?&rdquo; he inquired peremptorily, disregarding the
+ chair I offered him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has but left me, Monseigneur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you know, sir, of the harvest which he has already reaped from the
+ indiscretion into which you led him last night?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If Monseigneur alludes to the affront put upon M. de Mancini touching his
+ last night's indiscretion, by a bully of the Court, I am informed of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pish, Monsieur! I do not follow your fine distinctions&mdash;possibly
+ this is due to my imperfect knowledge of the language of France, possibly
+ to your own imperfect acquaintance with the language of truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monseigneur!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faugh!&rdquo; he cried, half scornfully, half peevishly. &ldquo;I came not here to
+ talk of you, but of my nephew. Why did he visit you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To do me the honour of asking me to second him at St. Germain this
+ evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so you think that this duel is to be fought?&mdash;that my nephew is
+ to be murdered?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will endeavour to prevent his being&mdash;as your Eminence daintily
+ puts it&mdash;murdered. But for the rest, the duel, methinks, cannot be
+ avoided.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cannot!&rdquo; he blazed. &ldquo;Do you say cannot, M. de Luynes? Mark me well, sir:
+ I will use no dissimulation with you. My position in France is already a
+ sufficiently difficult one. Already we are threatened with a second
+ Fronde. It needs but such events as these to bring my family into
+ prominence and make it the butt for the ridicule that malcontents but wait
+ an opportunity to slur it with. This affair of Andrea's will lend itself
+ to a score or so of lampoons and pasquinades, all of which will cast an
+ injurious reflection upon my person and position. That, Monsieur, is,
+ methinks, sufficient evil to suffer at your hands. The late Cardinal would
+ have had you broken on the wheel for less. I have gone no farther than to
+ dismiss you from my service&mdash;a clemency for which you should be
+ grateful. But I shall not suffer that, in addition to the harm already
+ done, Andrea shall be murdered by Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall do my best to render him assistance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You still misapprehend me. This duel, sir, must not take place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shrugged my shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How does your Eminence propose to frustrate it? Will you arrest
+ Canaples?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon what plea, Monsieur? Think you I am anxious to have the whole of
+ Paris howling in my ears?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then possibly it is your good purpose to enforce the late king's edict
+ against duelling, and send your guards to St. Germain to arrest the men
+ before they engage?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Benone!&rdquo; he sneered. &ldquo;And what will Paris say if I now enforce a law that
+ for ten years has been disregarded? That I feared for my nephew's skin and
+ took this means of saving him. A pretty story to have on Paris's lips,
+ would it not be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, Monseigneur, you are right, but I doubt me the duel will needs be
+ fought.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I not already said that it shall not be fought?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again I shrugged my shoulders. Mazarin grew tiresome with his repetitions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How can it be avoided, your Eminence?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Monsieur, that is your affair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My affair?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Assuredly. 'T was through your evil agency he was dragged into this
+ business, and through your agency he must be extricated from it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Eminence jests!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Undoubtedly,&mdash;'t is a jesting matter,&rdquo; he answered with terrible
+ irony. &ldquo;Oh, I jest! Per Dio! yes. But I'll carry my jest so far as to have
+ you hanged if this duel be fought&mdash;aye, whether my nephew suffers
+ hurt or not. Now, sir, you know what fate awaits you; fight it&mdash;turn
+ it aside&mdash;I have shown you the way. The door, M. de Luynes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. THE FIGHT IN THE HORSE-MARKET
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I let him go without a word. There was that in his voice, in his eye, and
+ in the gesture wherewith he bade me hold the door for him, that cleared my
+ mind of any doubts touching the irrevocable character of his
+ determination. To plead was never an accomplishment of mine; to argue, I
+ saw, would be to waste the Cardinal's time to no purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so I let him go,&mdash;and my curse with him,&mdash;and from my window
+ I watched his coach drive away in the drizzling rain, scattering the crowd
+ of awe-stricken loiterers who had collected at the rumour of his presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a fervent prayer that his patron saint, the devil, might see fit to
+ overset his coach and break his neck before he reached the Palace, I
+ turned from the window, and called Michelot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was quick to answer my summons, bringing me the frugal measure of bread
+ and wine wherewith it was my custom to break my fast. Then, whilst I
+ munched my crust, I strode to and fro in the little chamber and exercised
+ my wits to their utmost for a solution to the puzzle his Eminence had set
+ me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One solution there was, and an easy one&mdash;flight. But I had promised
+ Andrea de Mancini that I would stand beside him at St. Germain; there was
+ a slender chance of saving him if I went, whilst, if I stayed away, there
+ would be nothing left for his Eminence to do but to offer up prayers for
+ the rest of his nephew's soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another idea I had, but it was desperate&mdash;and yet, so persistently
+ did my thoughts revert to it that in the end I determined to accept it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I drank a cup of Armagnac, cheered myself with an oath or two, and again I
+ called Michelot. When he came, I asked him if he were acquainted with M.
+ de Canaples, to which he replied that he was, having seen the gentleman in
+ my company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;you will repair to M. de Canaples's lodging in the Rue
+ des Gesvres, and ascertain discreetly whether he be at home. If he is, you
+ will watch the house until he comes forth, then follow him, and bring me
+ word thereafter where he is to be found. Should he be already abroad
+ before you reach the Rue des Gesvres, endeavour to ascertain whither he
+ has gone, and return forthwith. But be discreet, Michelot. You
+ understand?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He assured me that he did, and left me to nurse my unpleasant thoughts for
+ half an hour, returning at the end of that time with the information that
+ M. de Canaples was seated at dinner in the &ldquo;Auberge du Soleil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Naught could have been more attuned to my purpose, and straightway I drew
+ on my boots, girt on my sword, and taking my hat and cloak, I sallied out
+ into the rain, and wended my way at a sharp pace towards the Rue St.
+ Honoré.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One o'clock was striking as I crossed the threshold of the &ldquo;Soleil&rdquo; and
+ flung my dripping cloak to the first servant I chanced upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I glanced round the well-filled room, and at one of the tables I espied my
+ quarry in company with St. Auban and Montmédy&mdash;the very gentlemen who
+ were to fight beside him that evening&mdash;and one Vilmorin, as arrant a
+ coxcomb and poltroon as could be found in France. With my beaver cocked at
+ the back of my head, and a general bearing that for aggressiveness would
+ be hard to surpass, I strode up to their table, and stood for a moment
+ surveying them with an insolent stare that made them pause in their
+ conversation. They raised their noble heads and bestowed upon me a look of
+ haughty and disdainful wonder,&mdash;such a look as one might bestow upon
+ a misbehaving lackey,&mdash;all save Vilmorin, who, with a coward's keen
+ nose for danger, turned slightly pale and fidgeted in his chair. I was
+ well known to all of them, but my attitude forbade all greeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has M. de Luynes lost anything?&rdquo; St. Auban inquired icily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His wits, mayhap,&rdquo; quoth Canaples with a contemptuous shrug.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a tall, powerfully built man, this Canaples, with a swart, cruel
+ face that was nevertheless not ill-favoured, and a profusion of black
+ hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is a temerity in M. de Canaples's rejoinder that I had not looked
+ for,&rdquo; I said banteringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Canaples's brow was puckered in a frown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! And why not, Monsieur?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not? Because it is not to be expected that one who fastens quarrels
+ upon schoolboys would evince the courage to beard Gaston de Luynes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur!&rdquo; the four of them cried in chorus, so loudly that the hum of
+ voices in the tavern became hushed, and all eyes were turned in our
+ direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. de Canaples,&rdquo; I said calmly, &ldquo;permit me to say that I can find no more
+ fitting expression for the contempt I hold you in than this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I spoke I seized a corner of the tablecloth, and with a sudden tug I
+ swept it, with all it held, on to the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dame! what a scene there was! In an instant the four of them were on their
+ feet,&mdash;as were half the occupants of the room, besides,&mdash;whilst
+ poor Vilmorin, who stood trembling like a maid who for the first time
+ hears words of love, raised his quavering voice to cry soothingly,
+ &ldquo;Messieurs, Messieurs!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Canaples was livid with passion, but otherwise the calmest in that room,
+ saving perhaps myself. With a gesture he restrained Montmédy and St.
+ Auban.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall be happy to give Master de Luynes all the proof of my courage
+ that he may desire, and more, I warrant, than he will relish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bravely answered!&rdquo; I cried, with an approving nod and a beaming smile.
+ &ldquo;Be good enough to lead the way to a convenient spot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have other business at the moment,&rdquo; he answered calmly. &ldquo;Let us say
+ to-morrow at&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faugh!&rdquo; I broke in scornfully. &ldquo;I knew it! Confess, Monsieur, that you
+ dare not light me now lest you should be unable to keep your appointments
+ for this evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mille diables!&rdquo; exclaimed St. Auban, &ldquo;this insolence passes all bounds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Each man in his turn if you please, gentlemen,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;My present
+ affair is with M. de Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a hot answer burning on St. Auban's lips, but Canaples was
+ beforehand with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par la mort Dieu!&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;you go too far, sir, with your 'dare' and
+ 'dare not.' Is a broken gamester, a penniless adventurer, to tell Eugène
+ de Canaples what he dares? Come, sir; since you are eager for the taste of
+ steel, follow me, and say your prayers as you go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that we left the inn, amidst a prodigious hubbub, and made our way to
+ the horse-market behind the Hôtel Vendôme. It was not to be expected,
+ albeit the place we had chosen was usually deserted at such an hour, that
+ after the fracas at the &ldquo;Soleil&rdquo; our meeting would go unattended. When we
+ faced each other&mdash;Canaples and I&mdash;there were at least some
+ twenty persons present, who came, despite the rain, to watch what they
+ thought was like to prove a pretty fight. Men of position were they for
+ the most part, gentlemen of the Court with here and there a soldier, and
+ from the manner in which they eyed me methought they favoured me but
+ little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our preparations were brief. The absence of seconds disposed of all
+ formalities, the rain made us impatient to be done, and in virtue of it
+ Canaples pompously announced that he would not risk a cold by stripping.
+ With interest did I grimly answer that he need fear no cold when I had
+ done with him. Then casting aside my cloak, I drew, and, professing myself
+ also disposed to retain my doublet, we forthwith engaged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was no mean swordsman, this Canaples. Indeed, his reputation was
+ already widespread, and in the first shock of our meeting blades I felt
+ that rumour had been just for once. But I was strangely dispossessed of
+ any doubts touching the outcome; this being due perchance to a vain
+ confidence in my own skill, perchance to the spirit of contemptuous
+ raillery wherewith I had from the outset treated the affair, and which had
+ so taken root in my heart that even when we engaged I still, almost
+ unwittingly, persisted in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my face and attitude there was the reflection of this bantering,
+ flippant mood; it was to be read in the mocking disdain of my glance, in
+ the scornful curl of my lip, and even in the turn of my wrist as I put
+ aside my opponent's passes. All this, Canaples must have noted, and it was
+ not without effect upon his nerves. Moreover, there is in steel a subtle
+ magnetism which is the index of one's antagonist; and from the moment that
+ our blades slithered one against the other I make no doubt but that
+ Canaples grew aware of the confident, almost exultant mood in which I met
+ him, and which told him that I was his master. Add to this the fact that
+ whilst Canaples's nerves were unstrung by passion mine were held in check
+ by a mind as calm and cool as though our swords were baited, and consider
+ with what advantages I took my ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He led the attack fiercely and furiously, as if I were a boy whose guard
+ was to be borne down by sheer weight of blows. I contented myself with
+ tapping his blade aside, and when at length, after essaying every trick in
+ his catalogue, he fell back baffled, I laughed a low laugh of derision
+ that drove him pale with fury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again he came at me, almost before I was prepared for him, and his point,
+ parried with a downward stroke and narrowly averted, scratched my thigh,
+ but did more damage to my breeches than my skin, in exchange I touched him
+ playfully on the shoulder, and the sting of it drove him back a second
+ time. He was breathing hard by then, and would fain have paused awhile for
+ breath, but I saw no reason to be merciful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, sir,&rdquo; I cried, saluting him as though our combat were but on the
+ point of starting&mdash;&ldquo;to me! Guard yourself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again our swords clashed, and my blows now fell as swift on his blade as
+ his had done awhile ago on mine. So hard did I press him that he was
+ forced to give way before me. Back I drove him pace by pace, his wrist
+ growing weaker at each parry, each parry growing wider, and the
+ perspiration streaming down his ashen face. Panting he went, in that
+ backward flight before my onslaught, defending himself as best he could,
+ never thinking of a riposte&mdash;beaten already. Back, and yet back he
+ went, until he reached the railings and could back no farther, and so
+ broken was his spirit then that a groan escaped him. I answered with a
+ laugh&mdash;my mood was lusty and cruel&mdash;and thrust at him. Then,
+ eluding his guard, I thrust again, beneath it, and took him fairly in the
+ middle of his doublet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He staggered, dropped his rapier, and caught at the railings, where for a
+ moment he hung swaying and gasping. Then his head fell forward, his grip
+ relaxed, and swooning he sank down into a heap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A dozen sprang to his aid, foremost amongst them being St. Auban and
+ Montmédy, whilst I drew back, suddenly realising my own spent condition,
+ to which the heat of the combat had hitherto rendered me insensible. I
+ mastered myself as best I might, and, dissembling my hard breathing, I
+ wiped my blade with a kerchief, an act which looked so calm and callous
+ that it drew from the crowd&mdash;for a crowd it had become by then&mdash;an
+ angry growl. 'T is thus with the vulgar; they are ever ready to sympathise
+ with the vanquished without ever pausing to ask themselves if his
+ chastisement may not be merited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In answer to the growl I tossed my head, and sheathing my sword I flung
+ the bloodstained kerchief into their very midst. The audacity of the
+ gesture left them breathless, and they growled no more, but stared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then that outrageous fop, Vilmorin, who had been bending over Canaples,
+ started up and coming towards me with a face that was whiter than that of
+ the prostrate man, he proved himself so utterly bereft of wit by terror
+ that for once he had the temerity to usurp the words and actions of a
+ brave man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have murdered him!&rdquo; he cried in a strident voice, and thrusting his
+ clenched fist within an inch of my face. &ldquo;Do you hear me, you knave? You
+ have murdered him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as may be well conceived, I was in no mood to endure such words from
+ any man, so was but natural that for answer I caught the dainty Vicomte a
+ buffet that knocked him into the arms of the nearest bystander, and
+ brought him to his senses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fool,&rdquo; I snarled at him, &ldquo;must I make another example before you believe
+ that Gaston de Luynes wears a sword?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the name of Heaven&mdash;&rdquo; he began, putting forth his hands in a
+ beseeching gesture; but what more he said was drowned by the roar of anger
+ that burst from the onlookers, and it was like to have gone ill with me
+ had not St. Auban come to my aid at that most critical juncture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Messieurs!&rdquo; he cried, thrusting himself before me, and raising his hand
+ to crave silence, &ldquo;hear me. I, a friend of M. de Canaples, tell you that
+ you wrong M. de Luynes. 'T was a fair fight&mdash;how the quarrel arose is
+ no concern of yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Despite his words they still snarled and growled like the misbegotten curs
+ they were. But St. Auban was famous for the regal supper parties he gave,
+ to which all were eager to be bidden, and amidst that crowd, as I have
+ said, there were a score or so of gentlemen of the Court, who&mdash;with
+ scant regard for the right or wrong of the case and every regard to
+ conciliate this giver of suppers&mdash;came to range themselves beside and
+ around us, and thus protected me from the murderous designs of that
+ rabble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing how the gentlemen took my part, and deeming&mdash;in their blessed
+ ignorance&mdash;that what gentlemen did must be perforce well done, they
+ grew calm in the twinkling of an eye. Thereupon St. Auban, turning to me,
+ counselled me in a whisper to be gone, whilst the tide of opinion flowed
+ in my favour. Intent to act upon this good advice, I took a step towards
+ the little knot that had collected round Canaples, and with natural
+ curiosity inquired into the nature of his hurt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'T was Montmédy who answered me, scowling as he did so:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He may die of it, Monsieur. If he does not, his recovery will be at least
+ slow and difficult.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had been wise had I held my peace and gone; but, like a fool, I must
+ needs give utterance to what was in my mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! At least there will be no duel at St. Germain this evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarce had the words fallen from my lips when I saw in the faces of
+ Montmédy and St. Auban and half a dozen others the evidence of their
+ rashness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So!&rdquo; cried St. Auban in a voice that shook with rage. &ldquo;That was your
+ object, eh? That you had fallen low, Master de Luynes, I knew, but I
+ dreamt not that in your fall you had come so low as this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You dare?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardieu! I dare more, Monsieur; I dare tell you&mdash;you, Gaston de
+ Luynes, spy and bravo of the Cardinal&mdash;that your object shall be
+ defeated. That, as God lives, this duel shall still be fought&mdash;by me
+ instead of Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I tell you, sir, that as God lives it shall not,&rdquo; I answered with a
+ vehemence not a whit less than his own. &ldquo;To you and to what other fools
+ may think to follow in your footsteps, I say this: that not to-night nor
+ to-morrow nor the next day shall that duel be fought. Cowards and
+ poltroons you are, who seek to murder a beardless boy who has injured none
+ of you! But, by my soul! every man who sends a challenge to that boy will
+ I at once seek out and deal with as I have dealt with Eugène de Canaples.
+ Let those who are eager to try another world make the attempt. Adieu,
+ Messieurs!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with a flourish of my sodden beaver, I turned and left them before
+ they had recovered from the vehemence of my words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. FAIR RESCUERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Like the calm of the heavens when pregnant with thunder was the calm of
+ that crowd. And as brief it was; for scarce had I taken a dozen steps when
+ my ears were assailed by a rumble of angry voices and a rush of feet. One
+ glance over my shoulder, one second's hesitation whether I should stay and
+ beard them, then the thought of Andrea de Mancini and of what would befall
+ him did this canaille vent its wrath upon me decided my course and sent me
+ hotfoot down the Rue Monarque. Howling and bellowing that rabble followed
+ in my wake, stumbling over one another in their indecent haste to reach
+ me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I was fleet of foot, and behind me there was that that would lend
+ wings to the most deliberate, so that when I turned into the open space
+ before the Hôtel Vendôme I had set a good fifty yards betwixt myself and
+ the foremost of my hunters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A coach was passing at that moment. I shouted, and the knave who drove
+ glanced at me, then up the Rue Monarque at my pursuers, whereupon, shaking
+ his head, he would have left me to my fate. But I was of another mind. I
+ dashed towards the vehicle, and as it passed me I caught at the window,
+ which luckily was open, and drawing up my legs I hung there despite the
+ shower of mud which the revolving wheels deposited upon me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the bowels of the coach I was greeted by a woman's scream; a pale
+ face, and a profusion of fair hair flashed before my eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not, Madame,&rdquo; I shouted. &ldquo;I am no assassin, but rather one who
+ stands in imminent peril of assassination, and who craves your
+ protection.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More I would have said, but at that juncture the lash of the coachman's
+ whip curled itself about my shoulders, and stung me vilely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get down, you rascal,&rdquo; he bellowed; &ldquo;get down or I'll draw rein!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To obey him would have been madness. The crowd surged behind with hoots
+ and yells, and had I let go I must perforce have fallen into their hands.
+ So, instead of getting down as he inconsiderately counselled, I drew
+ myself farther up by a mighty effort, and thrust half my body into the
+ coach, whereupon the fair lady screamed again, and the whip caressed my
+ legs. But within the coach sat another woman, dark of hair and exquisite
+ of face, who eyed my advent with a disdainful glance. Her proud
+ countenance bore the stamp of courage, and to her it was that I directed
+ my appeal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame, permit me, I pray, to seek shelter in your carriage, and suffer
+ me to journey a little way with you. Quick, Madame! Your coachman is
+ drawing rein, and I shall of a certainty be murdered under your very nose
+ unless you bid him change his mind. To be murdered in itself is a trifling
+ matter, I avow, but it is not nice to behold, and I would not, for all the
+ world, offend your eyes with the spectacle of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had judged her rightly, and my tone of flippant recklessness won me her
+ sympathy and aid. Quickly thrusting her head through the other window:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Drive on, Louis,&rdquo; she commanded. &ldquo;Faster!&rdquo; Then turning to me, &ldquo;You may
+ bring your legs into the coach if you choose, sir,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your words, Madame, are the sweetest music I have heard for months,&rdquo; I
+ answered drily, as I obeyed her. Then leaning out of the carriage again I
+ waved my hat gallantly to the mob which&mdash;now realising the futility
+ of further pursuit&mdash;had suddenly come to a halt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Au plaisir de vous revoir, Messieurs,&rdquo; I shouted. &ldquo;Come to me one by one,
+ and I'll keep the devil busy finding lodgings for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They answered me with a yell, and I sat down content, and laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not a coward, Monsieur,&rdquo; said the dark lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been accounted many unsavoury things, Madame, but my bitterest
+ enemies never dubbed me that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, did you run away?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why? Ma foi! because in the excessive humility of my soul I recognised
+ myself unfit to die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She bit her lip and her tiny foot beat impatiently upon the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are trifling with me, Monsieur. Where do you wish to alight?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pray let that give you no concern; I can assure you that I am in no
+ haste.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You become impertinent, sir,&rdquo; she cried angrily. &ldquo;Answer me, where are
+ you going?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where am I going? Oh, ah&mdash;to the Palais Royal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her eyes opened very wide at that, and wandered over me with a look that
+ was passing eloquent. Indeed, I was a sorry spectacle for any woman's eyes&mdash;particularly
+ a pretty one's. Splashed from head to foot with mud, my doublet saturated
+ and my beaver dripping, with the feather hanging limp and broken, whilst
+ there was a rent in my breeches that had been made by Canaples's sword, I
+ take it that I had not the air of a courtier, and that when I said that I
+ went to the Palais Royal she might have justly held me to be the
+ adventurous lover of some kitchen wench. But unto the Palais Royal go
+ others besides courtiers and lovers&mdash;spies of the Cardinal, for
+ instance, and in her sudden coldness and the next question that fell from
+ her beauteous lips I read that she had guessed me one of these.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did the mob pursue you, Monsieur?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was in her voice and gesture when she asked a question the
+ imperiousness of one accustomed to command replies. This pretty
+ queenliness it was that drove me to answer&mdash;as I had done before&mdash;in
+ a bantering strain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did the mob pursue me? Hum! Why does the mob pursue great men?
+ Because it loves their company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her matchless eyes flashed an angry glance, and the faint smile on my lips
+ must have tried her temper sorely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did you do to deserve this affection?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A mere nothing&mdash;I killed a man,&rdquo; I answered coolly. &ldquo;Or, at least, I
+ left him started on the road to&mdash;Paradise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little flaxen-haired doll uttered a cry of horror, and covered her
+ face with her small white hands. My inquisitor, however, sat rigid and
+ unaffected. My answer had confirmed her suspicions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did you kill him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ma foi!&rdquo; I replied, encouraging her thoughts, &ldquo;because he sought to kill
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! And why did he seek to kill you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I disturbed him at dinner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have a care how you trifle, sir!&rdquo; she retorted, her eyes kindling again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my honour, 't was no more than that. I pulled the cloth from the
+ table whilst he ate. He was a quick-tempered gentleman, and my playfulness
+ offended him. That is all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doubt appeared in her eyes, and it may have entered her mind that
+ perchance her judgment had been over-hasty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean, sir, that you provoked a duel?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas, Madame! It had become necessary. You see, M. de Canaples&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&rdquo; Her voice rang sharp as the crack of a pistol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh? M. de Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was it he whom you killed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From her tone, and the eager, strained expression of her face, it was not
+ difficult to read that some mighty interest of hers was involved in my
+ reply. It needed not the low moan that burst from her companion to tell me
+ so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As I have said, Madame, it is possible that he is not dead&mdash;nay,
+ even that he will not die. For the rest, since you ask the question, my
+ opponent was, indeed, M. de Canaples&mdash;Eugène de Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her face went deadly white, and she sank back in her seat as if every
+ nerve in her body had of a sudden been bereft of power, whilst she of the
+ fair hair burst into tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A pretty position was this for me!&mdash;luckily it endured not. The girl
+ roused herself from her momentary weakness, and, seizing the cord, she
+ tugged it violently. The coach drew up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alight, sir,&rdquo; she hissed&mdash;&ldquo;go! I wish to Heaven that I had left you
+ to the vengeance of the people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not so did I; nevertheless, as I alighted: &ldquo;I am sorry, Madame, that you
+ did not,&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;Adieu!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The coach moved away, and I was left standing at the corner of the Rue St.
+ Honoré and the Rue des Bons Enfants, in the sorriest frame of mind
+ conceivable. The lady in the coach had saved my life, and for that I was
+ more grateful perchance than my life was worth. Out of gratitude sprang a
+ regret for the pain that I had undoubtedly caused her, and the sorrow
+ which it might have been my fate to cast over her life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, regret, albeit an admirable sentiment, was one whose existence was
+ usually brief in my bosom. Dame! Had I been a man of regrets I might have
+ spent the remainder of my days weeping over my past life. But the gods,
+ who had given me a character calculated to lead a man into misfortune, had
+ given me a stout heart wherewith to fight that misfortune, and an armour
+ of recklessness against which remorse, regrets, aye, and conscience
+ itself, rained blows in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so it befell that presently I laughed myself out of the puerile humour
+ that was besetting me, and, finding myself chilled by inaction in my wet
+ clothes, I set off for the Palais Royal at a pace that was first cousin to
+ a run.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten minutes later I stood in the presence of the most feared and hated man
+ in France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cospetto!&rdquo; cried Mazarin as I entered his cabinet. &ldquo;Have you swum the
+ Seine in your clothes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, your Eminence, but I have been serving you in the rain for the past
+ hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled that peculiar smile of his that rendered hateful his otherwise
+ not ill-favoured countenance. It was a smile of the lips in which the eyes
+ had no part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said slowly, &ldquo;I have heard of your achievements.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have heard?&rdquo; I ejaculated, amazed by the powers which this man
+ wielded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I have heard. You are a brave man, M. de Luynes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw, your Eminence!&rdquo; I deprecated; &ldquo;the poor are always brave. They
+ have naught to lose but their life, and that is not so sweet to them that
+ they lay much store by it. Howbeit, Monseigneur, your wishes have been
+ carried out. There will be no duel at St. Germain this evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will there not? Hum! I am not so confident. You are a brave man, M. de
+ Luynes, but you lack that great auxiliary of valour&mdash;discretion. What
+ need to fling into the teeth of those fine gentlemen the reason you had
+ for spitting Canaples, eh? You have provoked a dozen enemies for Andrea
+ where only one existed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will answer for all of them,&rdquo; I retorted boastfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fine words, M. de Luynes; but to support them how many men will you have
+ to kill? Pah! What if some fine morning there comes one who, despite your
+ vaunted swordsmanship, proves your master? What will become of that fool,
+ my nephew, eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And his uncanny smile again beamed on me. &ldquo;Andrea is now packing his
+ valise. In an hour he will have left Paris secretly. He goes&mdash;but
+ what does it signify where he goes? He is compelled by your indiscretion
+ to withdraw from Court. Had you kept a close tongue in your foolish head&mdash;but
+ there! you did not, and so by a thoughtless word you undid all that you
+ had done so well. You may go, M. de Luynes. I have no further need of you&mdash;and
+ thank Heaven that you leave the Palais Royal free to go whither your fancy
+ takes you, and not to journey to the Bastille or to Vincennes. I am
+ merciful, M. de Luynes&mdash;as merciful as you are brave; more merciful
+ than you are prudent. One word of warning, M. de Luynes: do not let me
+ learn that you are in my nephew's company, if you would not make me regret
+ my clemency and repair the error of it by having you hanged. And now,
+ adieu!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I stood aghast. Was I indeed dismissed? Albeit naught had been said, I had
+ not doubted, since my interview with him that morning, that did I succeed
+ in saving Andrea my rank in his guards&mdash;and thereby a means of
+ livelihood&mdash;would be restored to me. And now matters were no better
+ than they had been before. He dismissed me with the assurance that he was
+ merciful. As God lives, it would have been as merciful to have hanged me!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He met my astonished look with an eye that seemed to ask me why I
+ lingered. Then reading mayhap what was passing in my thoughts, he raised a
+ little silver whistle to his lips and blew softly upon it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bernouin,&rdquo; said he to his valet, who entered in answer to the summons,
+ &ldquo;reconduct M. de Luynes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I remember drawing down upon my bedraggled person the curious gaze of the
+ numerous clients who thronged the Cardinal's ante-chamber, as I followed
+ Bernouin to the door which opened on to the corridor, and which he held
+ for me. And thus, for the second time within twenty-four hours, did I
+ leave the Palais Royal to wend my way home to the Rue St. Antoine with
+ grim despondency in my heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I found Michelot on the point of setting out in search of me, with a note
+ which had been brought to my lodging half an hour ago, and which its
+ bearer had said was urgent. I took the letter, and bidding Michelot
+ prepare me fresh raiment that I might exchange for my wet clothes, I broke
+ the seal and read:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A thousand thanks, dear friend, for the service you have rendered me and
+ of which his Eminence, my uncle, has informed me. I fear that you have
+ made many enemies for yourself through an action which will likely go
+ unrewarded, and that Paris is therefore as little suited at present to
+ your health as it is to mine. I am setting out for Blois on a mission of
+ exceeding delicacy wherein your advice and guidance would be of infinite
+ value to me. I shall remain at Choisy until to-morrow morning, and should
+ there be no ties to hold you in Paris, and you be minded to bear me
+ company, join me there at the Hôtel du Connétable where I shall lie
+ to-night. Your grateful and devoted
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;ANDRE.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So! There was one at least who desired my company! I had not thought it.
+ &ldquo;If there be no ties to hold you in Paris,&rdquo; he wrote. Dame! A change of
+ air would suit me vastly. I was resolved&mdash;a fig for the Cardinal's
+ threat to hang me if I were found in his nephew's company!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My suit of buff, Michelot,&rdquo; I shouted, springing to my feet, &ldquo;and my
+ leather jerkin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gazed at me in surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is Monsieur going a journey?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I answered him that I was, and as I spoke I began to divest myself of the
+ clothes I wore. &ldquo;Pack my suit of pearl grey in the valise, with what
+ changes of linen I possess; then call Master Coupri that I may settle with
+ him. It may be some time before we return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In less than half an hour I was ready for the journey, spurred and booted,
+ with my rapier at my side, and in the pocket of my haut-de­chausses a
+ purse containing some fifty pistoles&mdash;best part of which I had won
+ from Vilmorin at lansquenet some nights before, and which moderate sum
+ represented all the moneys that I possessed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our horses were ready, my pistols holstered, and my valise strapped to
+ Michelot's saddle. Despite the desperate outlook of my fortunes, of which
+ I had made him fully cognisant, he insisted upon clinging to me, reminding
+ me that at Rocroi I had saved his life and that he would leave me only
+ when I bade him go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As four o'clock was striking at Nôtre Dame we crossed the Pont Neuf, and
+ going by the Quai des Augustins and the Rue de la Harpe, we quitted Paris
+ by the St. Michel Gate and took the road to Choisy. The rain had ceased,
+ but the air was keen and cold, and the wind cut like a sword-edge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. MAZARIN, THE MATCH-MAKER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Twixt Paris and Choisy there lies but a distance of some two leagues,
+ which, given a fair horse, one may cover with ease in little more than
+ half an hour. So that as the twilight was deepening into night we drew
+ rein before the hostelry of the Connétable, in the only square the little
+ township boasts, and from the landlord I had that obsequious reception
+ which is ever accorded to him who travels with a body-servant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I found Andrea installed in a fair-sized and comfortable apartment, to the
+ original decoration of which he added not a little by bestowing his boots
+ in the centre of the floor, his hat, sword, and baldrick on the table, his
+ cloak on one chair, and his doublet on another. He himself sat toasting
+ his feet before the blazing logs, which cast a warm, reddish glow upon his
+ sable hair and dainty shirt of cambric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sprang up as I entered, and came towards me with a look of pleasure on
+ his handsome, high-bred face, that did me good to see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So, you have come, De Luynes,&rdquo; he cried, putting forth his hand. &ldquo;I did
+ not dare to hope that you would.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;Truly it was not to be expected that I could be easily
+ lured from Paris just as my fortunes are nearing a high tide, and his
+ Eminence proposing to make me a Marshal of France and create me Duke. As
+ you say, you had scant grounds for hoping that my love for you would
+ suffice to make me renounce all these fine things for the mere sake of
+ accompanying you on your jaunt to Blois.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laughed, then fell to thanking me for having rid him of Canaples. I cut
+ him short at last, and in answer to his questions told him what had passed
+ 'twixt his Eminence and me that afternoon. Then as the waiter entered to
+ spread our supper, the conversation assumed a less delicate character,
+ until we were again alone with the table and its steaming viands between
+ us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have not told me yet, Andrea, what takes you to Blois,&rdquo; quoth I then.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall learn. Little do you dream how closely interwoven are our
+ morning adventures with this journey of mine. To begin with, I go to Blois
+ to pay my dévoirs to the lady whom his Eminence has selected for my future
+ wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were then right in describing this as a mission of great delicacy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More than you think&mdash;I have never seen the lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never seen her? And you go a-wooing a woman you have never seen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is so. I have never seen her; but his Eminence has, and 't is he who
+ arranges the affair. Ah, the Cardinal is the greatest match­maker in
+ France! My cousin Anna Martinozzi is destined for the Prince de Conti, my
+ sisters Olympia and Marianne he also hopes to marry to princes of the
+ blood, whilst I dare wager that he has thoughts of seating either Maria or
+ Hortensia upon the throne of France as the wife of Louis XIV., as soon as
+ his Majesty shall have reached a marriageable age. You may laugh, De
+ Luynes, nevertheless all this may come to pass, for my uncle has great
+ ambitions for his family, and it is even possible that should that poor,
+ wandering youth, Charles II. of England, ever return to the throne of his
+ fathers he may also become my brother-in-law. I am likely to become well
+ connected, De Luynes, so make a friend of me whilst I am humble. So much
+ for Mazarin's nieces. His nephews are too young for alliances just yet,
+ saving myself; and for me his Eminence has chosen one of the greatest
+ heiresses in France&mdash;Yvonne St. Albaret de Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whom?&rdquo; I shouted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Curious, is it not? She is the sister of the man whom I quarrelled with
+ this morning, and whom you fought with this afternoon. Now you will
+ understand my uncle's reasons for so strenuously desiring to prevent the
+ duel at St. Germain. It appears that the old Chevalier de Canaples is as
+ eager as the Cardinal to see his daughter wed to me, for his Eminence has
+ promised to create me Duke for a wedding gift. 'T will cost him little,
+ and 't will please these Canaples mightily. Naturally, had Eugène de
+ Canaples and I crossed swords, matters would have been rendered
+ difficult.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When did you learn all this?&rdquo; I inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-day, after the duel, and when it was known what St. Auban and Montmédy
+ had threatened me with. My uncle thought it well that I should withdraw
+ from Paris. He sent for me and told me what I have told you, adding that I
+ had best seize the opportunity, whilst my presence at Court was
+ undesirable, to repair to Blois and get my wooing done. I in part agreed
+ with him. The lady is very rich, and I am told that she is beautiful. I
+ shall see her, and if she pleases me, I'll woo her. If not, I'll return to
+ Paris.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But her brother will oppose you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her brother? Pooh! If he doesn't die of the sword-thrust you gave him,
+ which I am told is in the region of the lung and passing dangerous, he
+ will at least be abed for a couple of months to come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I, mon cher André? What rôle do you reserve for me, that you have
+ desired me to go with you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The rôle of Mentor if you will. Methought you would prove a merry comrade
+ to help one o'er a tedious journey, and knowing that there was little to
+ hold you to Paris, and probably sound reasons why you should desire to
+ quit it, meseemed that perhaps you would consent to bear me company. Who
+ knows, my knight errant, what adventures may await you and what fortunes?
+ If the heiress displeases me, it may be that she will please you&mdash;or
+ mayhap there is another heiress at Blois who will fall enamoured of those
+ fierce moustachios.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I laughed with him at the improbability of such things befalling. I
+ carried in my bosom too large a heart, and one that was the property of
+ every wench I met&mdash;for just so long as I chanced to be in her
+ company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was no more than in harmony with this habit of mine, that when, next
+ morning in the common-room of the Connétable, I espied Jeanneton, the
+ landlord's daughter, and remarked that she was winsome and shapely, with a
+ complexion that would not have dishonoured a rose-petal, I permitted
+ myself to pinch her dainty cheek. She slapped mine in return, and in this
+ pleasant manner we became acquainted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sweet Jeanneton,&rdquo; quoth I with a laugh, &ldquo;that was mightily ill-done! I
+ did but pinch your cheek as one may pinch a sweet-smelling bud, so that
+ the perfume of it may cling to one's fingers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I, sir,&rdquo; was the pert rejoinder, &ldquo;did but slap yours as one may slap
+ a misbehaving urchin's; so that he may learn better manners.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless she was pleased with my courtly speech, and perchance also
+ with my moustachios, for a smile took the place of the frown wherewith she
+ had at first confronted me. Now, if I had uttered glib pleasantries in
+ answer to her frowns, how many more did not her smiles wring from me! I
+ discoursed to her in the very courtliest fashion of cows and pullets and
+ such other matters as interesting to her as they were mysterious to me. I
+ questioned her in a breath touching her father's pigs and the swain she
+ loved best in that little township, to all of which she answered me with a
+ charming wit, which would greatly divert you did I but recall her words
+ sufficiently to set them down. In five minutes we had become the best
+ friends in the world, which was attested by the protecting arm that I
+ slipped around her waist, as I asked her whether she loved that village
+ swain of hers better than she loved me, and refused to believe her when
+ she answered that she did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outside two men were talking, one calling for a farrier, and when informed
+ that the only one in the village was absent and not likely to return till
+ noon, demanding relays of horses. The other&mdash;probably the hostler&mdash;answered
+ him that the Connétable was not a post-house and that no horses were to be
+ had there. Then a woman's voice, sweet yet commanding, rose above theirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well, Guilbert,&rdquo; it said. &ldquo;We will await this farrier's return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me go, Monsieur!&rdquo; cried Jeanneton. &ldquo;Some one comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now for myself I cared little who might come, but methought that it was
+ likely to do poor Jeanneton's fair name no benefit, if the arm of Gaston
+ de Luynes were seen about her waist. And so I obeyed her, but not quickly
+ enough; for already a shadow lay athwart the threshold, and in the doorway
+ stood a woman, whose eye took in the situation before we had altered it
+ sufficiently to avert suspicion. To my amazement I beheld the lady of the
+ coach&mdash;she who had saved me from the mob in Place Vendôme, and
+ touching whose identity I could have hazarded a shrewd guess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In her eyes also I saw the light of recognition which swiftly changed to
+ one of scorn. Then they passed from me to the vanishing Jeanneton, and
+ methought that she was about to call her back. She paused, however, and,
+ turning to the lackey who followed at her heels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Guilbert,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;be good enough to call the landlord, and bid him
+ provide me with an apartment for the time that we may be forced to spend
+ here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at this juncture the host himself came hurrying forward with many bows
+ and endless rubbing of hands, which argued untold deference. He regretted
+ that the hostelry of the Connétable, being but a poor inn, seldom honoured
+ as it was at that moment, possessed but one suite of private apartments,
+ and that was now occupied by a most noble gentleman. The lady tapped her
+ foot, and as at that moment her companion (who was none other than the
+ fair-haired doll I had seen with her on the previous day) entered the
+ room, she turned to speak with her, whilst I moved away towards the
+ window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will this gentleman,&rdquo; she inquired, &ldquo;lend me one of his rooms, think
+ you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hélas, Mademoiselle, he has but two, a bedroom and an ante-chamber, and
+ he is still abed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she cried in pretty anger, &ldquo;this is insufferable! 'T is your fault,
+ Guilbert, you fool. Am I, then, to spend the day here in the common-room?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; exclaimed the host in his most soothing accents.
+ &ldquo;Only for an hour, or less, perhaps, until this very noble lord is risen,
+ when assuredly&mdash;for he is young and very gallant&mdash;he will resign
+ one or both of his rooms to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More was said between them, but my attention was suddenly drawn elsewhere.
+ Michelot burst into the room, disaster written on his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur,&rdquo; he cried, in great alarm, &ldquo;the Marquis de St. Auban is riding
+ down the street with the Vicomte de Vilmorin and another gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I rapped out an oath at the news; they had got scent of Andrea's
+ whereabouts, and were after him like sleuth-hounds on a trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Remain here, Michelot,&rdquo; I answered in a low voice. &ldquo;Tell them that M. de
+ Mancini is not here, that the only occupant of the inn is your master, a
+ gentleman from Normandy, or Picardy, or where you will. See that they do
+ not guess our presence&mdash;the landlord fortunately is ignorant of M. de
+ Mancini's name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a clatter of horses' hoofs without, and I was barely in time to
+ escape by the door leading to the staircase, when St. Auban's heavy voice
+ rang out, calling the landlord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am in search of a gentleman named Andrea de Mancini,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I am
+ told that he has journeyed hither, and that he is here at present. Am I
+ rightly informed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I determined to remain where I was, and hear that conversation to the end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is a gentleman here,&rdquo; answered the host, &ldquo;but I am ignorant of his
+ name. I will inquire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may spare yourself the trouble,&rdquo; Michelot interposed. &ldquo;That is not
+ the gentleman's name. I am his servant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a moment's pause, then came Vilmorin's shrill voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You lie, knave! M. de Mancini is here. You are M. de Luynes's lackey, and
+ where the one is, there shall we find the other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. de Luynes?&rdquo; came a voice unknown to me. &ldquo;That is Mancini's sword-blade
+ of a friend, is it not? Well, why does he hide himself? Where is he? Where
+ is your master, rascal?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am here, Messieurs,&rdquo; I answered, throwing wide the door, and appearing,
+ grim and arrogant, upon the threshold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mort de ma vie! Had they beheld the Devil, St. Auban and Vilmorin could
+ not have looked less pleased than they did when their eyes lighted upon
+ me, standing there surveying them with a sardonic grin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ St. Auban muttered an oath, Vilmorin stifled a cry, whilst he who had so
+ loudly called to know where I hid myself&mdash;a frail little fellow, in
+ the uniform of the gardes du corps&mdash;now stood silent and abashed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two women, who had withdrawn into a dark and retired corner of the
+ apartment, stood gazing with interest upon this pretty scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, gentlemen?&rdquo; I asked in a tone of persiflage, as I took a step
+ towards them. &ldquo;Have you naught to say to me, now that I have answered your
+ imperious summons? What! All dumb?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our affair is not with you,&rdquo; said St. Auban, curtly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon! Why, then, did you inquire where I was?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Messieurs,&rdquo; exclaimed Vilmorin, whose face assumed the pallor usual to it
+ in moments of peril, &ldquo;meseems we have been misinformed, and that M. de
+ Mancini is not here. Let us seek elsewhere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most excellent advice, gentlemen,&rdquo; I commented,&mdash;&ldquo;seek elsewhere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur,&rdquo; cried the little officer, turning purple, &ldquo;it occurs to me
+ that you are mocking us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mocking you! Mocking you? Mocking a gentleman who has been tied to so
+ huge a sword as yours. Surely&mdash;surely, sir, you do not think&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll not endure it,&rdquo; he broke in. &ldquo;You shall answer to me for this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have a care, sir,&rdquo; I cried in alarm as he rushed forward. &ldquo;Have a care,
+ sir, lest you trip over your sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He halted, drew himself up, and, with a magnificent gesture: &ldquo;I am Armand
+ de Malpertuis, lieutenant of his Majesty's guards,&rdquo; he announced, &ldquo;and I
+ shall be grateful if you will do me the honour of taking a turn with me,
+ outside.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am flattered beyond measure, M. Malappris&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mal-per-tuis,&rdquo; he corrected furiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Malpertuis,&rdquo; I echoed. &ldquo;I am honoured beyond words, but I do not wish to
+ take a turn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mille diables, sir! Don't you understand? We must fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Must we, indeed? Again I am honoured; but, Monsieur, I don't fight
+ sparrows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentlemen! Gentlemen!&rdquo; cried St. Auban, thrusting himself between us.
+ &ldquo;Malpertuis, have the goodness to wait until one affair is concluded
+ before you create a second one. Now, M. de Luynes, will you tell me
+ whether M. de Mancini is here or not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What if he should be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will be wise to withdraw&mdash;we shall be three to two.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Three to two! Surely, Marquis, your reckoning is at fault. You cannot
+ count the Vicomte there as one; his knees are knocking together; at best
+ he is but a woman in man's clothes. As for your other friend, unless his
+ height misleads me, he is but a boy. Therefore, Monsieur, you see that the
+ advantage is with us. We are two men opposed to a man, a woman, and a
+ child, so that&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In Heaven's name, sir,&rdquo; cried St. Auban, again interposing himself
+ betwixt me and the bellicose Malpertuis, &ldquo;will you cease this foolishness?
+ A word with you in private, M. de Luynes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I permitted him to take me by the sleeve, and lead me aside, wondering the
+ while what curb it was that he was setting upon his temper, and what wily
+ motives he might have for adopting so conciliatory a tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With many generations to come, the name of César de St. Auban must
+ perforce be familiar as that of one of the greatest roysterers and most
+ courtly libertines of the early days of Louis XIV., as well as that of a
+ rabid anti-cardinalist and frondeur, and one of the earliest of that new
+ cabal of nobility known as the petits-maîtres, whose leader the Prince de
+ Condé was destined to become a few years later. He was a man of about my
+ own age, that is to say, between thirty-two and thirty-three, and of my
+ own frame, tall, spare, and active. On his florid, débonnair countenance
+ was stamped his character of bon-viveur. In dress he was courtly in the
+ extreme. His doublet and haut-de-chausses were of wine-coloured velvet,
+ richly laced, and he still affected the hanging sleeves of a
+ fast-disappearing fashion. Valuable lace filled the tops of his black
+ boots, a valuable jewel glistened here and there upon his person, and one
+ must needs have pronounced him a fop but for the strength and resoluteness
+ of his bearing, and the long rapier that hung from his gold-embroidered
+ baldrick. Such in brief is a portrait of the man who now confronted me,
+ his fine blue eyes fixed upon my face, wherein methinks he read but
+ little, search though he might.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. de Luynes,&rdquo; he murmured at last, &ldquo;you appear to find entertainment in
+ making enemies, and you do it wantonly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you brought me aside to instruct me in the art of making friends?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Possibly, M. de Luynes; and without intending an offence, permit me to
+ remark that you need them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mayhap. But I do not seek them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have it in my heart to wish that you did; for I, M. de Luynes, seek to
+ make a friend of you. Nay, do not smile in that unbelieving fashion. I
+ have long esteemed you for those very qualities of dauntlessness and
+ defiance which have brought you so rich a crop of hatred. If you doubt my
+ words, perhaps you will recall my attitude towards you in the horse-market
+ yesterday, and let that speak. Without wishing to remind you of a service
+ done, I may yet mention that I stood betwixt you and the mob that sought
+ to avenge my friend Canaples. He was my friend; you stood there, as indeed
+ you have always stood, in the attitude of a foe. You wounded Canaples,
+ maltreated Vilmorin, defied me; and yet but for my intervention, mille
+ diables sir, you had been torn to pieces.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All this I grant is very true, Monsieur,&rdquo; I made reply, with deep
+ suspicion in my soul. &ldquo;Yet, pardon me, if I confess that to me it proves
+ no more than that you acted as a generous enemy. Pardon my bluntness also&mdash;but
+ what profit do you look to make from gaining my friendship?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are frank, Monsieur,&rdquo; he said, colouring slightly, &ldquo;I will be none
+ the less so. I am a frondeur, an anti-cardinalist. In a word, I am a
+ gentleman and a Frenchman. An interloping foreigner, miserly, mean-souled,
+ and Jesuitical, springs up, wins himself into the graces of a foolish,
+ impetuous, wilful queen, and climbs the ladder which she holds for him to
+ the highest position in France. I allude to Mazarin; this Cardinal who is
+ not a priest; this minister of France who is not a Frenchman; this
+ belittler of nobles who is not a gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mort Dieu, Monsieur&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One moment, M. de Luynes. This adventurer, not content with the millions
+ which his avaricious talons have dragged from the people for his own
+ benefit, seeks, by means of illustrious alliances, to enrich a pack of
+ beggarly nieces and nephews that he has rescued from the squalor of their
+ Sicilian homes to bring hither. His nieces, the Mancinis and Martinozzis,
+ he is marrying to Dukes and Princes. 'T is not nice to witness, but 't is
+ the affair of the men who wed them. In seeking, however, to marry his
+ nephew Andrea to one of the greatest heiresses in France, he goes too far.
+ Yvonne de Canaples is for some noble countryman of her own&mdash;there are
+ many suitors to her hand&mdash;and for no nephew of Giulio Mazarini. Her
+ brother Eugène, himself, thinks thus, and therein, M. de Luynes, you have
+ the real motive of the quarrel which he provoked with Andrea, and which,
+ had you not interfered, could have had but one ending.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why do you tell me all this, Monsieur?&rdquo; I inquired coldly, betraying none
+ of the amazement his last words gave birth to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So that you may know the true position of affairs, and, knowing it, see
+ the course which the name you bear must bid you follow. Because Canaples
+ failed am I here to-day. I had not counted upon meeting you, but since I
+ have met you, I have set the truth before you, confident that you will now
+ withdraw from an affair to which no real interest can bind you, leaving
+ matters to pursue their course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He eyed me, methought, almost anxiously from under his brows, as he
+ awaited my reply. It was briefer than he looked for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have wasted time, Monsieur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How? You persist?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. I persist. Yet for the Cardinal I care nothing. Mazarin has
+ dismissed me from his service unjustly and unpaid. He has forbidden me his
+ nephew's company. In fact, did he know of my presence here with M. de
+ Mancini, he would probably carry out his threat to hang me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ciel!&rdquo; cried St. Auban, &ldquo;you are mad, if that be so. France is divided
+ into two parties, cardinalists and anti-cardinalists. You, sir, without
+ belonging to either, stand alone, an enemy to both. Your attitude is
+ preposterous!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, sir, not alone. There is Andrea de Mancini. The boy is my only
+ friend in a world of enemies. I am growing fond of him, Monsieur, and I
+ will stand by him, while my arm can wield a sword, in all that may advance
+ his fortunes and his happiness. That, Monsieur, is my last word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not forget, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; he said&mdash;his suaveness all departed of
+ a sudden, and his tone full of menace and acidity&mdash;&ldquo;do not forget
+ that when a wall may not be scaled it may be broken through.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, Monsieur, but many of those who break through stand in danger of
+ being crushed by the falling stones,&rdquo; I answered, entering into the spirit
+ of his allegory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are many ways of striking,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And many ways of being struck,&rdquo; I retorted with a sneer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our words grew sinister, our eyes waxed fiery, and more might have
+ followed had not the door leading to the staircase opened at that moment
+ to admit Andrea himself. He came, elegant in dress and figure, with a
+ smile upon his handsome young face, whose noble features gave the lie to
+ St. Auban's assertion that he had been drawn from a squalid Sicilian home.
+ Such faces are not bred in squalor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In utter ignorance of the cabal against him, he greeted St. Auban&mdash;who
+ was well known to him&mdash;with a graceful bow, and also Vilmorin, who
+ stood in the doorway with Malpertuis, and who at the sight of Mancini grew
+ visibly ill at ease. In coming to Choisy, the Vicomte had clearly expected
+ to do no more than second St. Auban in the duel which he thought to see
+ forced upon Andrea. He now realised that if a fight there was, he might,
+ by my presence, be forced into it. Malpertuis looked fierce and tugged at
+ his moustachios, whilst his companions returned Andrea's salutation&mdash;St.
+ Auban gravely, and Vilmorin hesitatingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, Gaston,&rdquo; said the boy, advancing towards me, &ldquo;our host tells me that
+ two ladies who have been shipwrecked here wish to do me the honour of
+ occupying my apartments for an hour or so. Ha, there they are,&rdquo; he added,
+ as the two girls came suddenly forward. Then bowing&mdash;&ldquo;Mesdames, I am
+ enchanted to set the poor room at your disposal for as long as it may
+ please you to honour it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the ladies&mdash;of whose presence St. Auban had been unaware&mdash;appeared
+ before us, I shot a glance at the Marquis, and, from the start he gave
+ upon beholding them, I saw that things were as I had suspected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before they could reply to Andrea, St. Auban suddenly advanced:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mesdemoiselles,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;forgive me if in this miserable light I did
+ not earlier discover your presence and offer you my services. I do so now,
+ with the hope that you will honour me by making use of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Merci, M. de St. Auban,&rdquo; replied the dark-haired one&mdash;whom I guessed
+ to be none other than Yvonne de Canaples herself&mdash;&ldquo;but, since this
+ gentleman so gallantly cedes his apartments to us, all our needs are
+ satisfied. It would be churlish to refuse that which is so graciously
+ proffered.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her tone was cold in the extreme, as also was the inclination of her head
+ wherewith she favoured the Marquis. In arrant contrast were the pretty
+ words of thanks she addressed to Andrea, who stood by, blushing like a
+ girl, and a damnable scowl did this contrast draw from St. Auban, a scowl
+ that lasted until, escorted by the landlord, the two ladies had withdrawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was an awkward pause when they were gone, and methought from the
+ look on St. Auban's face that he was about to provoke a fight after all.
+ Not so, however, for, after staring at us like a clown whilst one might
+ tell a dozen, he turned and strode to the door, calling for his horse and
+ those of his companions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Au révoir, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; he said significantly as he got into the
+ saddle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Au révoir, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; said also Malpertuis, coming close up to me.
+ &ldquo;We shall meet again, believe me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pray God that we may not, if you would die in your bed,&rdquo; I answered
+ mockingly. &ldquo;Adieu!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. OF HOW ANDREA BECAME LOVE-SICK
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ With what fictions I could call to mind I put off Andrea's questions
+ touching the peculiar fashion of St. Auban's leave-taking. Tell him the
+ truth and expose to him the situation whereof he was himself the
+ unconscious centre I dared not, lest his high-spirited impetuosity should
+ cause him to take into his own hands the reins of the affair, and thus
+ drive himself into irreparable disaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrea himself showed scant concern, however, and was luckily content with
+ my hurriedly invented explanations; his thoughts had suddenly found
+ occupation in another and a gentler theme than the ill-humour of men, and
+ presently his tongue betrayed them when he drew the conversation to the
+ ladies to whom he had resigned his apartments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardieu! Gaston,&rdquo; he burst out, &ldquo;she is a lovely maid&mdash;saw you ever
+ a bonnier?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed she is very beautiful,&rdquo; I answered, laughing to myself at the
+ thought of how little he dreamt that it was of Yvonne St. Albaret de
+ Canaples that he spoke, and not minded for the while to enlighten him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If she be as kind and gentle as she is beautiful, Gaston, well&mdash;Uncle
+ Giulio's plans are likely to suffer shipwreck. I shall not leave Choisy
+ until I have spoken to her; in fact, I shall not leave until she leaves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nevertheless, we shall still be able to set out, as we had projected,
+ after dining, for in an hour, or two at most, they will proceed on their
+ journey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was silent for some moments, then:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To the devil with the Cardinal's plans!&rdquo; quoth he, banging his fist on
+ the table. &ldquo;I shall not go to Blois.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh! Why not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; He halted for a moment, then in a meandering tone&mdash;&ldquo;You
+ have read perchance in story-books,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;of love being born from the
+ first meeting of two pairs of eyes, as a spark is born of flint and steel,
+ and you may have laughed at the conceit, as I have laughed at it. But
+ laugh no more, Gaston; for I who stand before you am one who has
+ experienced this thing which poets tell of, and which hitherto I have held
+ in ridicule. I will not go to Blois because&mdash;because&mdash;enfin,
+ because I intend to go where she goes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, mon cher, you will go to Blois. You will go to Blois, if not as a
+ dutiful nephew, resigned to obey his reverend uncle's wishes, at least
+ because fate forces you to follow a pair of eyes that have&mdash;hum, what
+ was it you said they did?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you say that she is going to Blois? How do you know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh? How do I know? Oh, I heard her servant speaking with the hostler.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So much the better, then; for thus if his Eminence gets news of my
+ whereabouts, the news will not awaken his ever-ready suspicions. Ciel! How
+ beautiful she is! Noted you her eyes, her skin, and what hair, mon Dieu!
+ Like threads of gold!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Like threads of gold?&rdquo; I echoed. &ldquo;You are dreaming, boy. Oh, St. Gris! I
+ understand; you are speaking of the fair-haired chit that was with her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He eyed me in amazement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is you whose thoughts are wandering to that lanky, nose-in-the-air
+ Madame who accompanied her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I began a laugh that I broke off suddenly as I realised that it was not
+ Yvonne after all who had imprisoned his wits. The Cardinal's plans were,
+ indeed, likely to miscarry if he persisted thus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But 't was the nose-in-the-air Madame, as you call her, with whom you
+ spoke!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, but it was the golden-haired lady that held my gaze. Pshaw! Who
+ would mention them in a breath?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who, indeed?&rdquo; said I, but with a different meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereafter, seeing him listless, I suggested a turn in the village to
+ stretch our limbs before dining. But he would have none of it, and when I
+ pressed the point with sound reasoning touching the benefits which health
+ may cull from exercise, he grew petulant as a wayward child. She might
+ descend whilst he was absent. Indeed, she might require some slight
+ service that lay, perchance, in his power to render her. What an
+ opportunity would he not lose were he abroad? She might even depart before
+ we returned; and than that no greater calamity could just then befall him.
+ No, he would not stir a foot from the inn. A fig for exercise! to the
+ devil with health! who sought an appetite? Not he. He wished for no
+ appetite&mdash;could contrive no base and vulgar appetite for food, whilst
+ his soul, he swore, was being consumed by the overwhelming, all-effacing
+ appetite to behold her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such meandering fools are most of us at nineteen, when the heart is young&mdash;a
+ flawless mirror ready to hold the image of the first fair maid that looks
+ into it through our eyes, and as ready&mdash;Heaven knows!&mdash;to
+ relinquish it when the substance is withdrawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I, who was not nineteen, and the mirror of whose heart&mdash;to pursue
+ my metaphor&mdash;was dulled, warped, and cracked with much ill­usage,
+ grew sick of the boy's enthusiasm and the monotony of a conversation which
+ I could divert into no other channel from that upon which it had been
+ started by a little slip of a girl with hair of gold and sapphire eyes&mdash;I
+ use Andrea's words. And so I rose, and bidding him take root in the
+ tavern, if so it pleased his fancy, I left him there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wrapped in my cloak, for the air was raw and damp, I strode aimlessly
+ along, revolving in my mind what had befallen at the Connétable that
+ morning, and speculating upon the issue that this quaint affair might
+ have. In matters of love, or rather, of matrimony&mdash;which is not quite
+ the same thing&mdash;opposition is common enough. But the opposers are
+ usually members of either of the interested families. Now the families&mdash;that
+ is to say, the heads of the families&mdash;being agreed and even anxious
+ to bring about the union of Yvonne de Canaples and Andrea de Mancini, it
+ was something new to have a cabal of persons who, from motives of
+ principle&mdash;as St. Auban had it&mdash;should oppose the alliance so
+ relentlessly as to even resort to violence if no other means occurred to
+ them. It seemed vastly probable that Andrea would be disposed of by a
+ knife in the back, and more than probable that a like fate would be
+ reserved for me, since I had constituted myself his guardian angel. For my
+ own part, however, I had a pronounced distaste to ending my days in so
+ unostentatious a fashion. I had also a notion that I should prove an
+ exceedingly difficult person to assassinate, and that those who sought to
+ slip a knife into me would find my hide peculiarly tough, and my hand
+ peculiarly ready to return the compliment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So deeply did I sink into ponderings of this character that it was not
+ until two hours afterwards that I again found myself drawing near the
+ Connétable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I reached the inn to find by the door a coach, and by that coach Andrea;
+ he stood bareheaded, despite the cold, conversing, with all outward
+ semblances of profound respect, with those within it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So engrossed was he and so ecstatic, that my approach was unheeded, and
+ when presently I noted that the coach was Mademoiselle de Canaples's, I
+ ceased to wonder at the boy's unconsciousness of what took place around
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clearly the farrier had been found at last, and the horse shod afresh
+ during my absence. Loath to interrupt so pretty a scene, I waited, aloof,
+ until these adieux should be concluded, and whilst I waited there came to
+ me from the carriage a sweet, musical voice that was not Yvonne's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May we not learn at least, Monsieur, the name of the gentleman to whose
+ courtesy we are indebted for having spent the past two hours without
+ discomfort?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My name, Mademoiselle, is Andrea de Mancini, that of the humblest of your
+ servants, and one to whom your thanks are a more than lavish payment for
+ the trivial service he may have been fortunate enough to render you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dame! What glibness doth a tongue acquire at Court!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. Andrea de Mancini?&rdquo; came Yvonne's voice in answer. &ldquo;Surely a relative
+ of the Lord Cardinal?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His nephew, Mademoiselle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! My father, sir, is a great admirer of your uncle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the half-caressing tone, as much as from the very words she uttered,
+ I inferred that she was in ignorance of the compact into which his
+ Eminence had entered with her father&mdash;a bargain whereof she was
+ herself a part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am rejoiced, indeed, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; replied Andrea with a bow, as
+ though the compliment had been paid to him. &ldquo;Am I indiscreet in asking the
+ name of Monsieur your father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indiscreet! Nay, Monsieur. You have a right to learn the name of those
+ who are under an obligation to you. My father is the Chevalier de
+ Canaples, of whom it is possible that you may have heard. I am Yvonne de
+ Canaples, of whom it is unlikely that you should have heard, and this is
+ my sister Geneviève, whom a like obscurity envelops.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy's lips moved, but no sound came from them, whilst his cheeks went
+ white and red by turns. His courtliness of a moment ago had vanished, and
+ he stood sheepish and gauche as a clown. At length he so far mastered
+ himself as to bow and make a sign to the coachman, who thereupon gathered
+ up his reins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are going presumably to Blois?&rdquo; he stammered with a nervous laugh, as
+ if the journey were a humorous proceeding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Monsieur,&rdquo; answered Geneviève, &ldquo;we are going home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, it is possible that we shall meet again. I, too, am travelling
+ in that direction. A bientôt, Mesdemoiselles!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whip cracked, the coach began to move, and the creaking of its wheels
+ drowned, so far as I was concerned, the female voices that answered his
+ farewell. The coachman roused his horses into an amble; the amble became a
+ trot, and the vehicle vanished round a corner. Some few idlers stopped to
+ gaze stupidly after it, but not half so stupidly as did my poor Andrea,
+ standing bareheaded where the coach had left him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I drew near, and laid my hand on his shoulder; at the touch he started
+ like one awakened suddenly, and looked up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah&mdash;you are returned, Gaston.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To find that you have made a discovery, and are overwhelmed by your
+ error.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My error?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes&mdash;that of falling in love with the wrong one. Hélas, it is but
+ one of those ironical jests wherewith Fate amuses herself at every step of
+ our lives. Had you fallen in love with Yvonne&mdash;and it passes my
+ understanding why you did not&mdash;everything would have gone smoothly
+ with your wooing. Unfortunately, you have a preference for fair hair&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have done,&rdquo; he interrupted peevishly. &ldquo;What does it signify? To the devil
+ with Mazarin's plans!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you said this morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, when I did not even dream her name was Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nevertheless, she is the wrong Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For my uncle&mdash;but, mille diables! sir, 't is I who am to wed, and I
+ shall wed as my heart bids me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hum! And Mazarin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faugh!&rdquo; he answered, with an expressive shrug.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, since you are resolved, let us dine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no appetite.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us dine notwithstanding. Eat you must if you would live; and unless
+ you live&mdash;think of it!&mdash;you'll never reach Blois.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gaston, you are laughing at me! I do not wish to eat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I surveyed him gravely, with my arms akimbo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can love so expand the heart of man that it fills even his stomach? Well,
+ well, if you will not eat, at least have the grace to bear me company at
+ table. Come, Andrea,&rdquo; and I took his arm, &ldquo;let us ascend to that chamber
+ which she has but just quitted. Who can tell but that we shall find there
+ some token of her recent presence? If nothing more, at least the air will
+ be pervaded by the perfume she affected, and since you scorn the humble
+ food of man, you can dine on that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled despite himself as I drew him towards the staircase.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Scoffer!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Your callous soul knows naught of love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whereas you have had three hours' experience. Pardieu! You shall instruct
+ me in the gentle art.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas, for those perfumes upon which I had proposed that he should feast
+ himself. If any the beautiful Geneviève had left behind her, they had been
+ smothered in the vulgar yet appetising odour of the steaming ragoût that
+ occupied the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I prevailed at length upon the love-lorn boy to take some food, but I
+ could lead him to talk of naught save Geneviève de Canaples. Presently he
+ took to chiding me for the deliberateness wherewith I ate, and betrayed
+ thereby his impatience to be in the saddle and after her. I argued that
+ whilst she saw him not she might think of him. But the argument, though
+ sound, availed me little, and in the end I was forced&mdash;for all that I
+ am a man accustomed to please myself&mdash;to hurriedly end my repast, and
+ pronounce myself ready to start.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Andrea had with him some store of baggage&mdash;since his sojourn at
+ Blois was likely to be of some duration&mdash;he travelled in a coach.
+ Into this coach, then, we climbed&mdash;he and I. His valet, Silvio,
+ occupied the seat beside the coachman, whilst my stalwart Michelot rode
+ behind leading my horse by the bridle. In this fashion we set out, and ere
+ long the silence of my thoughtful companion, the monotonous rumbling of
+ the vehicle, and, most important of all factors, the good dinner that I
+ had consumed, bred in me a torpor that soon became a sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a dream that, bound hand and foot, I was being dragged by St. Auban
+ and Malpertuis before the Cardinal, I awakened with a start to find that
+ we were clattering already through the streets of Etrechy; so that whilst
+ I had slept we had covered some six leagues. Twilight had already set in,
+ and Andrea lay back idly in the carriage, holding a book which it was
+ growing too dark to read, and between the leaves of which he had slipped
+ his forefinger to mark the place where he had paused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His eyes met mine as I looked round, and he smiled. &ldquo;I should not have
+ thought, Gaston,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that a man with so seared a conscience could
+ have slept thus soundly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have not slept soundly,&rdquo; I grumbled, recalling my dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardieu! you have slept long, at least.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Out of self-protection; so that I might not hear the name of Geneviève de
+ Canaples. 'T is a sweet name, but you render it monotonous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laughed good-humouredly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you never loved, Gaston?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Often.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah&mdash;but I mean did you never conceive a great passion?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hundreds, boy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But never such a one as mine!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Assuredly not; for the world has never seen its fellow. Be good enough to
+ pull the cord, you Cupid incarnate. I wish to alight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You wish to alight! Why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I am sick of love. I am going to ride awhile with Michelot whilst
+ you dream of her coral lips, her sapphire eyes, and what other gems
+ constitute her wondrous personality.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two minutes later I was in the saddle riding with Michelot in the wake of
+ the carriage. As I have already sought to indicate in these pages,
+ Michelot was as much my friend as my servant. It was therefore no more
+ than natural that I should communicate to him my fears touching what might
+ come of the machinations of St. Auban, Vilmorin, and even, perchance, of
+ that little firebrand, Malpertuis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Night fell while we talked, and at last the lights of Étampes, where we
+ proposed to lie, peeped at us from a distance, and food and warmth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was eight o'clock when we reached the town, and a few moments later we
+ rattled into the courtyard of the Hôtel de l'Épée.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrea was out of temper to learn that Mesdemoiselles de Canaples had
+ reached the place two hours earlier, taken fresh horses, and proceeded on
+ their journey, intending to reach Monnerville that night. He was even mad
+ enough to propose that we should follow their example, but my sober
+ arguments prevailed, and at Étampes we stayed till morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrea withdrew early. But I, having chanced upon a certain M. de la
+ Vrillière, a courtier of Vilmorin's stamp, with whom I had some slight
+ acquaintance, and his purse being heavier than his wits, I spent a passing
+ profitable evening in his company. This pretty gentleman hailed my advent
+ with a delight that amazed me, and suggested that we should throw a main
+ together to kill time. The dice were found, and so clumsily did he use
+ them that in half an hour, playing for beggarly crowns, he had lost twenty
+ pistoles. Next he lost his temper, and with an oath pitched the cubes into
+ the fire, swearing that they were toys for children and that I must grant
+ him his révanche with cards. The cards were furnished us, and with a
+ fortune that varied little we played lansquenet until long past midnight.
+ The fire died out in the grate, and the air grew chill, until at last,
+ with a violent sneeze, La Vrillière protested that he would play no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cursing himself for the unluckiest being alive, the fool bade me
+ good-night, and left me seventy pistoles richer than when I had met him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. THE CHÂTEAU DE CANAPLES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Despite the strenuous efforts which Andrea compelled us to put forth, we
+ did not again come up with Mesdemoiselles de Canaples, who in truth must
+ have travelled with greater speed than ladies are wont to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This circumstance bred much discomfort in Andrea's bosom; for in it he
+ read that his Geneviève thought not of him as he of her, else, knowing
+ that he followed the same road, she would have retarded their progress so
+ that he might overtake them. Thus argued he when on the following night,
+ which was that of Friday, we lay at Orleans. But when towards noon on
+ Saturday our journey ended with our arrival at Blois, he went so far as to
+ conclude that she had hastened on expressly to avoid him. Now, from what I
+ had seen of Mademoiselle Yvonne, methought I might hazard a guess that she
+ it was who commanded in these&mdash;and haply, too, in other&mdash;matters,
+ and that the manner of their journey had been such as was best to her
+ wishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such an argument did I strive to appease Andrea's doubts; but all in
+ vain&mdash;which is indeed no matter for astonishment, for to reason with
+ a man in love is to reason with one who knows no reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a brief halt at the Lys de France&mdash;at which hostelry I hired
+ myself a room&mdash;we set out for the Château de Canaples, which is
+ situated on the left bank of the Loire, at a distance of about half a
+ league from Blois in the direction of Tours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We cut a brave enough figure as we rode down the Rue Vieille attended by
+ our servants, and many a rustic Blaisois stopped to gape at us, to nudge
+ his companion, and point us out, whispering the word &ldquo;Paris.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had donned my grey velvet doublet&mdash;deeming the occasion worthy of
+ it&mdash;whilst Andrea wore a handsome suit of black, with gold lace,
+ which for elegance it would have been difficult to surpass. An air of
+ pensiveness added interest to his handsome face and courtly figure, and
+ methought that Geneviève must be hard to please if she fell not a victim
+ to his wooing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We proceeded along the road bordering the Loire, a road of rare beauty at
+ any other season of the year, but now bare of foliage, grey, bleak, and
+ sullen as the clouds overhead, and as cold to the eye as was the sharp
+ wind to the flesh. As we rode I fell to thinking of what my reception at
+ the Château de Canaples was likely to be, and almost to regret that I had
+ permitted Andrea to persuade me to accompany him. Long ago I had known the
+ Chevalier de Canaples, and for all the disparity in our ages&mdash;for he
+ counted twice my years&mdash;we had been friends and comrades. That,
+ however, was ten years ago, in the old days when I owned something more
+ than the name of Luynes. To-day I appeared before him as a ruined
+ adventurer, a soldier of fortune, a ruffler, a duellist who had almost
+ slain his son in a brawl, whose details might be known to him, but not its
+ origin. Seeing me in the company of Andrea de Mancini he might&mdash;who
+ could say?&mdash;even deem me one of those parasites who cling to young
+ men of fortune so that they may live at their expense. That the daughter
+ would have formed such a conceit of me I was assured; it but remained to
+ see with what countenance the father would greet me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From such speculations I was at length aroused by our arrival at the gates
+ of the Canaples park. Seeing them wide open, we rode between the two
+ massive columns of granite (each surmounted by a couchant lion holding the
+ escutcheon of the Canaples) and proceeded at an ambling pace up the
+ avenue. Through the naked trees the château became discernible&mdash;a
+ brave old castle that once had been the stronghold of a feudal race long
+ dead. Grey it was, and attuned, that day, to the rest of the grey
+ landscape. But at its base the ivy grew thick and green, and here and
+ there long streaks of it crept up almost to the battlements, whilst in one
+ place it had gone higher yet and clothed one of the quaint old turrets. A
+ moat there had once been, but this was now filled up and arranged into
+ little mounds that became flower-beds in summer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Resigning our horses to the keeping of our servants, we followed the grave
+ maître d'hôtel who had received us. He led us across the spacious hall,
+ which had all the appearance of an armoury, and up the regal staircase of
+ polished oak on to a landing wide and lofty. Here, turning to the left, he
+ opened a door and desired us to give ourselves the trouble of awaiting the
+ Chevalier. We entered a handsome room, hung in costly Dutch tapestry, and
+ richly furnished, yet with a sobriety of colour almost puritanical. The
+ long windows overlooked a broad terrace, enclosed in a grey stone
+ balustrade, from which some half-dozen steps led to a garden below. Beyond
+ that ran the swift waters of the Loire, and beyond that again, in the
+ distance, we beheld the famous Château de Chambord, built in the days of
+ the first Francis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had but remarked these details when the door again opened, to admit a
+ short, slender man in whose black hair and beard the hand of time had
+ scattered but little of that white dust that marks its passage. His face
+ was pale, thin, and wrinkled, and his grey eyes had a nervous, restless
+ look that dwelt not long on anything. He was dressed in black, with simple
+ elegance, and his deep collar and ruffles were of the finest point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Welcome to Canaples, M. de Mancini!&rdquo; he exclaimed, as he hurried forward,
+ with a smile so winning that his countenance appeared transfigured by it.
+ &ldquo;Welcome most cordially! We had not hoped that you would arrive so soon,
+ but fortunately my daughters, to whom you appear to have been of service
+ at Choisy, warned me that you were journeying hither. Your apartments,
+ therefore, are prepared for you, and we hope that you will honour Canaples
+ by long remaining its guest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrea thanked him becomingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In truth,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;my departure from Paris was somewhat sudden, but I
+ have a letter here from Monseigneur my uncle, which explains the matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No explanation is needed, my dear Andrea,&rdquo; replied the old nobleman,
+ abandoning the formalities that had marked his welcoming speech. &ldquo;How left
+ you my Lord Cardinal?&rdquo; he asked, as he took the letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In excellent health, but somewhat harassed, I fear, by the affairs of
+ State.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, yes, yes. But stay. You are not alone.&rdquo; And Canaples's grey eyes shot
+ an almost furtive glance of inquiry in my direction. A second glance
+ followed the first and the Chevalier's brows were knit. Then he came a
+ step nearer, scanning my face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely, surely, Monsieur,&rdquo; he exclaimed before Andrea had time to answer
+ him. &ldquo;Were you not at Rocroi?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your memory flatters me, Monsieur,&rdquo; I replied with a laugh. &ldquo;I was indeed
+ at Rocroi&mdash;captain in the regiment of chévaux-légers whereof you were
+ Mestre de Champ.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His name,&rdquo; said Andrea, &ldquo;is Gaston de Luynes, my very dear friend,
+ counsellor, and, I might almost say, protector.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardieu, yes! Gaston de Luynes!&rdquo; he ejaculated, seizing my hand in an
+ affectionate grip. &ldquo;But how have you fared since Rocroi was fought? For a
+ soldier of such promise, one might have predicted great things in ten
+ years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hélas, Monsieur! I was dismissed the service after Senlac.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dismissed the service!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pah!&rdquo; I laughed, not without bitterness, &ldquo;'t is a long story and an ugly
+ one, divided 'twixt the dice-box, the bottle, and the scabbard. Ten years
+ ago I was a promising young captain, ardent and ambitious; to-day I am a
+ broken ruffler, unrecognised by my family&mdash;a man without hope,
+ without ambition, almost without honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I know not what it was that impelled me to speak thus. Haply the wish that
+ since he must soon learn to what depths Gaston de Luynes had sunk, he
+ should at least learn it from my own lips at the outset.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shuddered at my concluding words, and had not Andrea at that moment put
+ his arm affectionately upon my shoulder, and declared me the bravest
+ fellow and truest friend in all the world, it is possible that the
+ Chevalier de Canaples would have sought an excuse to be rid of me. Such
+ men as he seek not the acquaintance of such men as I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To please Andrea was, however, of chief importance in his plans, and to
+ that motive I owe it that he pressed me to remain a guest at the château.
+ I declined the honour with the best grace I could command, determined that
+ whilst Andrea remained at Canaples I would lodge at the Lys de France in
+ Blois, independent and free to come or go as my fancy bade me. His
+ invitation that I should at least dine at Canaples I accepted; but with
+ the condition that he should repeat his invitation after he had heard
+ something that I wished to tell him. He assented with a puzzled look, and
+ when presently Andrea repaired to his apartments, and we were alone, I
+ began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have doubtlessly received news, Monsieur, of a certain affair in
+ which your son had recently the misfortune to be dangerously wounded?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were standing by the great marble fireplace, and Canaples was resting
+ one of his feet upon the huge brass andirons. He made a gesture of
+ impatience as I spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My son, sir, is a fool! A good-for-nothing fool! Oh, I have heard of this
+ affair, a vulgar tavern brawl, the fifth in which his name has been
+ involved and besmirched. I had news this morning by a courier dispatched
+ me by my friend St. Simon, who imagines that I am deeply concerned in that
+ young profligate. I learn that he is out of danger, and that in a month or
+ so, he will be about again and ready to disgrace the name of Canaples
+ afresh. But there, sir; I crave your pardon for the interruption.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I bowed, and when in answer to my questions he told me that he was in
+ ignorance of the details of the affair of which I spoke, I set about
+ laying those details before him. Beginning with the original provocation
+ in the Palais Royal and ending with the fight in the horse-market, I
+ related the whole story to him, but in an impersonal manner, and keeping
+ my own name out of my narrative. When I had done, Canaples muttered an
+ oath of the days of the fourth Henry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ventre St. Gris! Does the dog carry his audacity so far as to dare come
+ betwixt me and my wishes, and to strive against them? He sought to kill
+ Mancini, eh? Would to Heaven he had died by the hand of this fellow who
+ shielded the lad!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur!&rdquo; I cried, aghast at so unnatural an expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pah!&rdquo; he cried harshly. &ldquo;He is my son in name alone, filial he never
+ was.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nevertheless, Monsieur, he is still your son, your heir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My heir? And what, pray, does he inherit? A title&mdash;a barren,
+ landless title! By his shameful conduct he alienated the affection of his
+ uncle, and his uncle has disinherited him in favour of Yvonne. 'T is she
+ who will be mistress of this château with its acres of land reaching from
+ here to Blois, and three times as far on the other side. My brother, sir,
+ was the rich Canaples, the owner of all this, and by his testament I am
+ his heir during my lifetime, the estates going to Yvonne at my death. So
+ that you see I have naught to leave; but if I had, not a dénier should go
+ to my worthless son!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spread his thin hands before the blaze, and for a moment there was
+ silence. Then I proceeded to tell him of the cabal which had been formed
+ against Mancini, and of the part played by St. Auban. At the mention of
+ that name he started as if I had stung him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; he thundered. &ldquo;Is that ruffian also in the affair? Sangdieu! His
+ motives are not far to seek. He is a suitor&mdash;an unfavoured suitor&mdash;for
+ the hand of Yvonne, that seemingly still hopes. But you have not told me,
+ Monsieur, the name of this man who has stood betwixt Andrea and his
+ assassins.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you not guess, Monsieur?&rdquo; quoth I, looking him squarely in the face.
+ &ldquo;Did you not hear Andrea call me, even now, his protector.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You? And with what motive, pray?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At first, as I have told you, because the Cardinal gave me no choice in
+ the matter touching your son. Since then my motive has lain in my
+ friendship for the boy. He has been kind and affectionate to one who has
+ known little kindness or affection in life. I seek to repay him by
+ advancing his interests and his happiness. That, Monsieur, is why I am
+ here to-day&mdash;to shield him from St. Auban and his fellows should they
+ appear again, as I believe they will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man stood up and eyed me for a moment as steadily as his
+ vacillating glance would permit him, then he held out his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust, Monsieur,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that you will do me the honour to dine with
+ us, and that whilst you are at Blois we shall see you at Canaples as often
+ as it may please you to cross its threshold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I took his hand, but without enthusiasm, for I understood that his words
+ sprang from no warmth of heart for me, but merely from the fact that he
+ beheld in me a likely ally to his designs of raising his daughter to the
+ rank of Duchess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eugène de Canaples may have been a good-for-nothing knave; still,
+ methought his character scarce justified the callous indifference
+ manifested by this selfish, weak-minded old man towards his own son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a knock at the door, and a lackey&mdash;the same Guilbert whom I
+ had seen at Choisy in Mademoiselle's company&mdash;appeared with the
+ announcement that the Chevalier was served.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. THE FORESHADOW OF DISASTER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the spacious dining salon of the Château de Canaples I found the two
+ daughters of my host awaiting us&mdash;those same two ladies of the coach
+ in Place Vendôme and of the hostelry at Choisy, the dark and stately
+ icicle, Yvonne, and the fair, playful doll, Geneviève.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I bowed my best bow as the Chevalier presented me, and from the corner of
+ my eye, with inward malice, I watched them as I did so. Geneviève curtsied
+ with a puzzled air and a sidelong glance at her sister. Yvonne accorded me
+ the faintest, the coldest, inclination of her head, whilst her cheeks
+ assumed a colour that was unwonted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have met before, I think, Monsieur,&rdquo; she said disdainfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, Mademoiselle&mdash;once,&rdquo; I answered, thinking only of the coach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Twice, Monsieur,&rdquo; she corrected, whereupon I recalled how she had
+ surprised me with my arm about the waist of the inn-keeper's daughter, and
+ had Heaven given me shame I might have blushed. But if sweet Yvonne
+ thought to bring Gaston de Luynes to task for profiting by the good things
+ which God's providence sent his way, she was led by vanity into a
+ prodigious error.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Twice, indeed, Mademoiselle. But the service which you rendered me upon
+ the first occasion was so present to my mind just now that it eclipsed the
+ memory of our second meeting. I have ever since desired, Mademoiselle,
+ that an opportunity might be mine wherein to thank you for the
+ preservation of my life. I do so now, and at your service do I lay that
+ life which you preserved, and which is therefore as much yours as mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strive as I might I could not rid my tone of an ironical inflection. I was
+ goaded to it by her attitude, by the scornful turn of her lip and the
+ disdainful glance of her grey eyes&mdash;she had her father's eyes, saving
+ that her gaze was as steadfast as his was furtive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is this?&rdquo; quoth Canaples. &ldquo;You owe your life to my daughter? Pray
+ tell me of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With all my heart,&rdquo; I made haste to answer before Mademoiselle could
+ speak. &ldquo;A week ago, I disagreed upon a question of great delicacy with a
+ certain gentleman who shall be nameless. The obvious result attended our
+ disagreement, and we fought 'neath the eyes of a vast company of
+ spectators. Right was on my side, and the gentleman hurt himself upon my
+ sword. Well, sir, the crowd snarled at me as though it were my fault that
+ this had so befallen, and I flouted the crowd in answer. They were a
+ hundred opposed to one, and so confident did this circumstance render them
+ of their superiority, that for once those whelps displayed sufficient
+ valour to attack me. I fled, and as a coach chanced to come that way, I
+ clutched at the window and hung there. Within the coach there were two
+ ladies, and one of them, taking compassion upon me, invited me to enter
+ and thus rescued me. That lady, sir,&rdquo; I ended with a bow, &ldquo;was
+ Mademoiselle your daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his eyes I read it that he had guessed the name of my nameless
+ gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ladies were struck dumb by my apparent effrontery. Yvonne at last
+ recovered sufficiently to ask if my presence at the château arose from my
+ being attached to M. de Mancini. Now, &ldquo;attached&rdquo; is an unpleasant word. A
+ courtier is attached to the King; a soldier to the army; there is
+ humiliation in neither of these. But to a private gentleman, a man may be
+ only attached as his secretary, his valet, or, possibly, as his bravo.
+ Therein lay the sting of her carefully chosen word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am M. de Mancini's friend,&rdquo; I answered with simple dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For all reply she raised her eyebrows in token of surprise; Canaples
+ looked askance; I bit my lip, and an awkward silence followed, which,
+ luckily, was quickly ended by the appearance of Andrea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ladies received him graciously, and a faint blush might, to searching
+ eyes, have been perceived upon Geneviève's cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There came a delicate exchange of compliments, after which we got to
+ table, and for my part I did ample justice to the viands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sat beside Geneviève, and vis-à-vis with Andrea, who occupied the place
+ of the honoured guest, at the host's right hand, with Yvonne beside him.
+ Me it concerned little where I sat, since the repast was all that I could
+ look for; not so the others. Andrea scowled at me because I was nearer to
+ Geneviève than he, and Yvonne frowned at me for other reasons. By
+ Geneviève I was utterly disregarded, and my endeavours to converse were
+ sorely unsuccessful&mdash;for one may not converse alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I clearly saw that Yvonne only awaited an opportunity to unmask me, and
+ denounce me to her father as the man who had sought his son's life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This opportunity, however, came not until the moment of my departure from
+ the château, that evening. I was crossing the hail with the Chevalier de
+ Canaples, and we had stopped for a moment to admire a piece of old chain
+ armour of the days of the Crusaders. Andrea and Geneviève had preceded us,
+ and passed out through the open doorway, whilst Yvonne lingered upon the
+ threshold looking back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; said Canaples, as we moved towards her, &ldquo;that you
+ will remember my invitation, and that whilst you remain at Biois we shall
+ see you here as often as you may be pleased to come; indeed, I trust that
+ you will be a daily visitor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before I could utter a reply&mdash;&ldquo;Father,&rdquo; exclaimed Mademoiselle,
+ coming forward, &ldquo;do you know to whom you are offering the hospitality of
+ Canaples?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why that question, child? To M. de Luynes, M. de Mancini's friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the would-be murderer of Eugène,&rdquo; she added fiercely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Canaples started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely such affairs are not for women to meddle with,&rdquo; he cried.
+ &ldquo;Moreover, M. de Luynes has already given me all details of the affair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her eyes grew very wide at that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has told you? Yet you invite him hither?&rdquo; she exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. de Luynes has naught wherewith to reproach himself, nor have I. Those
+ details which he has given me I may not impart to you; suffice it,
+ however, that I am satisfied that his conduct could not have been other
+ than it was, whereas that of my son reflects but little credit upon his
+ name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stamped her foot, and her eyes, blazing with anger, passed from one to
+ the other of us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you&mdash;you believe this man's story?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yvonne!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Possibly,&rdquo; I interposed, coolly, &ldquo;Mademoiselle may have received some
+ false account of it that justifies her evident unbelief in what I may have
+ told you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not easy to give a lie unless you can prove it a lie. I made her
+ realise this, and she bit her lip in vexation. Dame! What a pretty viper I
+ thought her at that moment!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me add, Yvonne,&rdquo; said her father, &ldquo;that M. de Luynes and I are old
+ comrades in arms.&rdquo; Then turning to me&mdash;&ldquo;My daughter, sir, is but a
+ child, and therefore hasty to pass judgment upon matters beyond her
+ understanding. Forget this foolish outburst, and remember only my
+ assurance of an ever cordial welcome.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With all my heart,&rdquo; I answered, after a moment's deliberation, during
+ which I had argued that for once I must stifle pride if I would serve
+ Andrea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ough!&rdquo; was all Mademoiselle's comment as she turned her back upon me.
+ Nevertheless, I bowed and flourished my beaver to her retreating figure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clearly Mademoiselle entertained for me exactly that degree of fondness
+ which a pious hermit feels for the devil, and if I might draw conclusions
+ from what evidences I had had of the strength of her character and the
+ weakness of her father's, our sojourn at Blois promised to afford me
+ little delectation. In fact, I foresaw many difficulties that might lead
+ to disaster should our Paris friends appear upon the scene&mdash;a
+ contingency this that seemed over-imminent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not my wont, howbeit, to brood over the evils that the future might
+ hold, and to this I owe it that I slept soundly that night in my room at
+ the Lys de France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a pleasant enough chamber on the first floor, overlooking the
+ street, and having an alcove attached to it which served for Michelot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day I visited the Château de Canaples early in the afternoon. The
+ weather was milder, and the glow of the sun heralded at last the near
+ approach of spring and brightened wondrously a landscape that had
+ yesterday worn so forbidding a look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This change it must have been that drew the ladies, and Andrea with them,
+ to walk in the park, where I came upon them as I rode up. Their laughter
+ rippled merrily and they appeared upon the best of terms until they espied
+ me. My advent was like a cloud that foretells a storm, and drove
+ Mesdemoiselles away, when they had accorded me a greeting that contained
+ scant graciousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All unruffled by this act, from which I gathered that Yvonne the strong
+ had tutored Geneviève the frail concerning me, I consigned my horse to a
+ groom of the château, and linked arms with Andrea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, boy,&rdquo; quoth I, &ldquo;what progress?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled radiantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My hopes are all surpassed. It exceeds belief that so poor a thing as I
+ should find favour in her eyes&mdash;what eyes, Gaston!&rdquo; He broke off with
+ a sigh of rapture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peste, you have lost no time. And so, already you know that you find
+ favour, eh! How know you that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How? Need a man be told such things? There is an inexpressible&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My good Andrea, seek not to express it, therefore,&rdquo; I interrupted
+ hastily. &ldquo;Let it suffice that the inexpressible exists, and makes you
+ happy. His Eminence will doubtless share your joy! Have you written to
+ him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mirth faded from the lad's face at the words, as the blossom fades
+ 'neath the blighting touch of frost. What he said was so undutiful from a
+ nephew touching his uncle&mdash;particularly when that uncle is a prelate&mdash;that
+ I refrain from penning it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were joined just then by the Chevalier, and together we strolled round
+ to the rose-garden&mdash;now, alas! naught but black and naked bushes&mdash;and
+ down to the edge of the Loire, yellow and swollen by the recent rains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How lovely must be this place in summer,&rdquo; I mused, looking across the
+ water towards Chambord. &ldquo;And, Dame,&rdquo; I cried, suddenly changing my
+ meditations, &ldquo;what an ideal fencing ground is this even turf!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The swordsman's instinct,&rdquo; laughed Canaples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with that our talk shifted to swords, swordsmen, and sword-play, until
+ I suggested to Andrea that he should resume his practice, whereupon the
+ Chevalier offered to set a room at our disposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, if you will pardon me, Monsieur, 't is not a room we want,&rdquo; I
+ answered. &ldquo;A room is well enough at the outset, but it is the common error
+ of fencing-masters to continue their tutoring on a wooden floor. It
+ results from this that when the neophyte handles a real sword, and defends
+ his life upon the turf, the ground has a new feeling; its elasticity or
+ even its slipperiness discomposes him, and sets him at a disadvantage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He agreed with me, whilst Andrea expressed a wish to try the turf. Foils
+ were brought, and we whiled away best part of an half-hour. In the end,
+ the Chevalier, who had watched my play intently, offered to try a bout
+ with me. And so amazed was he with the result, that he had not done
+ talking of it when I left Canaples a few hours later&mdash;a homage this
+ that earned me some more than ordinarily unfriendly glances from Yvonne.
+ No doubt since the accomplishment was mine it became in her eyes
+ characteristic of a bully and a ruffler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the week that followed I visited the château with regularity, and
+ with equal regularity did Andrea receive his fencing lessons. The object
+ of his presence at Canaples, however, was being frustrated more and more
+ each day, so far as the Cardinal and the Chevalier were concerned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He raved to me of Geneviève, the one perfect woman in all the world and
+ brought into it by a kind Providence for his own particular delectation.
+ In truth, love is like a rabid dog&mdash;whom it bites it renders mad; so
+ open grew his wooing, and so ardent, that one evening I thought well to
+ take him aside and caution him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Andrea,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;if you will love Geneviève, you will, and
+ there's an end of it. But if you would not have the Chevalier pack you
+ back to Paris and the anger of my Lord Cardinal, be circumspect, and at
+ least when M. de Canaples is by divide your homage equally betwixt the
+ two. 'T were well if you dissembled even a slight preference for Yvonne&mdash;she
+ will not be misled by it, seeing how unmistakable at all other seasons
+ must be your wooing of Geneviève.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was forced to avow the wisdom of my counsel, and to be guided by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, I rode back to my hostelry in no pleasant frame of mind. It
+ was more than likely that a short shrift and a length of hemp would be the
+ acknowledgment I should anon receive from Mazarin for my participation in
+ the miscarriage of his desires.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I felt that disaster was on the wing. Call it a premonition; call it what
+ you will. I know but this; that as I rode into the courtyard of the Lys de
+ France, at dusk, the first man my eyes alighted on was the Marquis César
+ de St. Auban, and, in conversation with him, six of the most
+ arrant-looking ruffians that ever came out of Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. OF HOW A WHIP PROVED A BETTER ARGUMENT THAN A TONGUE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I crave Monsieur's pardon, but there is a gentleman below who desires to
+ speak with you immediately.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How does this gentleman call himself, M. l'Hote?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. le Marquis de St. Auban,&rdquo; answered the landlord, still standing in the
+ doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It wanted an hour or so to noon on the day following that of St. Auban's
+ arrival at Blois, and I was on the point of setting out for the château on
+ an errand of warning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It occurred to me to refuse to see the Marquis, but remembering betimes
+ that from your enemy's speech you may sometimes learn where to look for
+ his next attack, I thought better of it and bade my host admit him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I strode over to the fire, and stirring the burning logs, I put my back to
+ the blaze, and waited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Steps sounded on the stairs; there was the shuffling of the landlord's
+ slippered feet and the firm tread of my visitor, accompanied by the jingle
+ of spurs and the clank of his scabbard as it struck the balustrade. Then
+ my door was again opened, and St. Auban, as superbly dressed as ever, was
+ admitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We bowed formally, as men bow who are about to cross swords, and whilst I
+ waited for him to speak, I noted that his face was pale and bore the
+ impress of suppressed anger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So, M. de Luynes, again we meet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By your seeking, M. le Marquis.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not polite.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not opportune.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled dangerously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I learn, Monsieur, that you are a daily visitor at the Château de
+ Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir, what of it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This. I have been to Canaples this morning and, knowing that you will
+ learn anon, from that old dotard, what passed between us, I prefer that
+ you shall hear it first from me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I bowed to conceal a smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanks to you, M. de Luynes, I was ordered from the house. I&mdash;César
+ de St. Auban&mdash;have been ordered from the house of a provincial
+ upstart! Thanks to the calumnies which you poured into his ears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Calumnies! Was that the word?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I choose the word that suits me best,&rdquo; he answered, and the rage that was
+ in him at the affront he had suffered at the hands of the Chevalier de
+ Canaples was fast rising to the surface. &ldquo;I warned you at Choisy of what
+ would befall. Your opposition and your alliance with M. de Mancini are
+ futile. You think to have gained a victory by winning over to your side an
+ old fool who will sacrifice his honour to see his daughter a duchess, but
+ I tell you, sir&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That you hope to see her a marchioness,&rdquo; I put in calmly. &ldquo;You see, M. de
+ St. Auban, I have learned something since I came to Blois.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He grew livid with passion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall learn more ere you quit it, you meddler! You shall be taught to
+ keep that long nose of yours out of matters that concern you not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Loud threats!&rdquo; I answered jeeringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never fear,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;there is more to follow. To your cost shall you
+ learn it. By God, sir! do you think that I am to suffer a Sicilian
+ adventurer and a broken tavern ruffler to interfere with my designs?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still I kept my temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So!&rdquo; I said in a bantering tone. &ldquo;You confess that you have designs.
+ Good! But what says the lady, eh? I am told that she is not yet
+ outrageously enamoured of you, for all your beauty!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beside himself with passion, his hand sought his sword. But the gesture
+ was spasmodic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knave!&rdquo; he snarled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knave to me? Have a care, St. Auban, or I'll find you a shroud for a
+ wedding garment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knave!&rdquo; he repeated with a snarl. &ldquo;What price are you paid by that boy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardieu, St. Auban! You shall answer to me for this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Answer for it? To you!&rdquo; And he laughed harshly. &ldquo;You are mad, my master.
+ When did a St. Auban cross swords with a man of your stamp?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. le Marquis,&rdquo; I said, with a calmness that came of a stupendous effort,
+ &ldquo;at Choisy you sought my friendship with high-sounding talk of principles
+ that opposed you to the proposed alliance, twixt the houses of Mancini and
+ Canaples. Since then I have learned that your motives were purely
+ personal. From my discovery I hold you to be a liar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have not yet done. You refuse to cross swords with me on the pretext
+ that you do not fight men of my stamp. I am no saint, sir, I confess. But
+ my sins cannot wash out my name&mdash;the name of a family accounted as
+ good as that of St. Auban, and one from which a Constable of France has
+ sprung, whereas yours has never yet bred aught but profligates and
+ debauchees. You are little better than I am, Marquis; indeed, you do many
+ things that I would not do, that I have never done. For instance, whilst
+ refusing to cross blades with me, who am a soldier and a man of the sword,
+ you seek to pick a fight with a beardless boy who hardly knows the use of
+ a rapier, and who&mdash;wittingly at least&mdash;has done you no wrong.
+ Now, my master, you may call me profligate, ruffler, gamester, duellist&mdash;what
+ you will; but there are two viler things you cannot dub me, and which,
+ methinks, I have proven you to be&mdash;liar and craven.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as I spoke the burning words, I stood close up to him and tapped his
+ breast as if to drive the epithets into his very heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rage he felt, indeed, and his distorted countenance was a sight fearful to
+ behold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, my master,&rdquo; I added, setting my arms akimbo and laughing brutally in
+ his face, &ldquo;will you fight?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment he wavered, and surely meseemed that I had drawn him. Then:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he cried passionately. &ldquo;I will not do dishonour to my sword.&rdquo; And
+ turning he made for the door, leaving me baffled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go, sir,&rdquo; I shouted, &ldquo;but fame shall stalk fast behind you. Liar and
+ craven will I dub you throughout the whole of France.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stopped 'neath the lintel, and faced me again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fool,&rdquo; he sneered. &ldquo;You'll need dispatch to spread my fame so far. By
+ this time to-morrow you'll be arrested. In three days you will be in the
+ Bastille, and there shall you lie until you rot to carrion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Loud threats again!&rdquo; I laughed, hoping by the taunt to learn more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Loud perchance, but not empty. Learn that the Cardinal has knowledge of
+ your association with Mancini, and means to separate you. An officer of
+ the guards is on his way to Blois. He is at Meung by now. He bears a
+ warrant for your arrest and delivery to the governor of the Bastille.
+ Thereafter, none may say what will betide.&rdquo; And with a coarse burst of
+ laughter he left me, banging the door as he passed out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment I stood there stricken by his parting words. He had sought to
+ wound me, and in this he had succeeded. But at what cost to himself? In
+ his blind rage, the fool had shown me that which he should have zealously
+ concealed, and what to him was but a stinging threat was to me a timely
+ warning. I saw the necessity for immediate action. Two things must I do;
+ kill St. Auban first, then fly the Cardinal's warrant as best I could. I
+ cast about me for means to carry out the first of these intentions. My eye
+ fell upon my riding-whip, lying on a chair close to my hand, and the sight
+ of it brought me the idea I sought. Seizing it, I bounded out of the room
+ and down the stairs, three steps at a stride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Along the corridor I sped and into the common-room, which at the moment
+ was tolerably full. As I entered by one door, the Marquis was within three
+ paces of the other, leading to the courtyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My whip in the air, I sprang after him; and he, hearing the rush of my
+ onslaught, turned, then uttered a cry of pain as I brought the lash
+ caressingly about his shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, master craven,&rdquo; I shouted, &ldquo;will that change your mind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With an almost inarticulate cry, he sought to draw there and then, but
+ those about flung themselves upon us, and held us apart&mdash;I, passive
+ and unresisting; the Marquis, bellowing, struggling, and foaming at the
+ mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To meet you now would be to murder you, Marquis,&rdquo; I said coolly. &ldquo;Send
+ your friends to me to appoint the time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Soit!&rdquo; he cried, his eyes blazing with a hate unspeakable. &ldquo;At eight
+ to-morrow morning I shall await you on the green behind the castle of
+ Blois.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At eight o'clock I shall be there,&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;And now, gentlemen, if
+ you will unhand me, I will return to my apartments.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They let me go, but with many a growl and angry look, for in their eyes I
+ was no more than a coarse aggressor, whilst their sympathy was all for St.
+ Auban.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. THE CONSCIENCE OF MALPERTUIS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ And so back to my room I went, my task accomplished, and so pleased was I
+ with what had passed that as I drew on my boots&mdash;preparing to set out
+ to Canaples&mdash;I laughed softly to myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ St. Auban I would dispose of in the morning. As for the other members of
+ the cabal, I deemed neither Vilmorin nor Malpertuis sufficiently
+ formidable to inspire uneasiness. St. Auban gone, they too would vanish.
+ There remained then Eugène de Canaples. Him, however, methought no great
+ evil was to be feared from. In Paris he might be as loud-voiced as he
+ pleased, but in his father's château&mdash;from what I had learned&mdash;'t
+ was unlikely he would so much as show himself. Moreover, he was wounded,
+ and before he had sufficiently recovered to offer interference it was more
+ than probable that Andrea would have married one or the other of
+ Mesdemoiselles de Canaples&mdash;though I had a shrewd suspicion that it
+ would be the wrong one, and there again I feared trouble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I stood up, booted and ready to descend, there came a gentle tap at my
+ door, and, in answer to my &ldquo;Enter,&rdquo; there stood before me a very dainty
+ and foppish figure. I stared hard at the effeminate face and the long fair
+ locks of my visitor, thinking that I had become the dupe of my eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. de Vilmorin!&rdquo; I murmured in astonishment, as he came forward, having
+ closed the door. &ldquo;You here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In answer, he bowed and greeted me with cold ceremoniousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been in Blois since yesterday, Monsieur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In truth I might have guessed it, Vicomte. Your visit flatters me, for,
+ of course, I take it, you are come to pay me your respects,&rdquo; I said
+ ironically. &ldquo;A glass of wine, Vicomte?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A thousand thanks, Monsieur&mdash;no,&rdquo; he answered coldly in his mincing
+ tones. &ldquo;It is concerning your affair with M. le Marquis de St. Auban that
+ I am come.&rdquo; And drawing forth a dainty kerchief, which filled the room
+ with the scent of ambregris, he tapped his lips with it affectedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you come as friend or&mdash;in some other capacity?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I come as mediator.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mediator!&rdquo; I echoed, and my brow grew dark. &ldquo;Sdeath! Has St. Auban's
+ courage lasted just so long as the sting of my whip?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He raised his eyebrows after a supercilious fashion that made me thirst to
+ strike the chair from under him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You misapprehend me; M. de St. Auban has no desire to avert the duel. On
+ the contrary, he will not rest until the affront you have put upon him be
+ washed out&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will be, I'll answer for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your answer, sir, is characteristic of a fanfarron. He who promises most
+ does not always fulfil most.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I stared at him in amazement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shall I promise you something, Vicomte? Mortdieu! If you seek to pick a
+ quarrel with me&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God forbid!&rdquo; he ejaculated, turning colour. And his suddenly awakened
+ apprehensions swept aside the affectation that hitherto had marked his
+ speech and manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, Monsieur, be brief and state the sum of this mediation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is this, Monsieur. In the heat of the moment, M. le Marquis gave you,
+ in the hearing of half a score of people, an assignation for to-morrow
+ morning. News of the affair will spread rapidly through Blois, and it is
+ likely there will be no lack of spectators on the green to witness the
+ encounter. Therefore, as my friend thinks this will be as unpalatable to
+ you as it is to him, he has sent me to suggest a fresh rendezvous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh, sir,&rdquo; I answered lightly. &ldquo;I care not, for myself, who comes. I am
+ accustomed to a crowd. Still, since M. de St. Auban finds it discomposing,
+ let us arrange otherwise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is yet another point. M. de St. Auban spoke to you, I believe, of
+ an officer who is coming hither charged with your arrest. It is probable
+ that he may reach Blois before morning, so that the Marquis thinks that to
+ make certain you might consent to meet him to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ma foi. St. Auban is indeed in earnest then! Convey to him my expressions
+ of admiration at this suddenly awakened courage. Be good enough, Vicomte,
+ to name the rendezvous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know the chapel of St. Sulpice des Reaux?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! Beyond the Loire?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Precisely, Monsieur. About a league from Chambord by the river side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can find the place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you meet us there at nine o'clock to­night?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I looked askance at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But why cross the river? This side affords many likely spots!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very true, Monsieur. But the Marquis has business at Chambord this
+ evening, after which there will be no reason&mdash;indeed, it will
+ inconvenience him exceedingly&mdash;to return to Blois.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; I cried, more and more astonished. &ldquo;St. Auban is leaving Blois?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This evening, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, voyons, Vicomte, why make an assignation in such a place and at
+ night, when at any hour of the day I can meet the Marquis on this side,
+ without suffering the inconvenience of crossing the river?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There will be a bright moon, well up by nine o'clock. Moreover, remember
+ that you cannot, as you say, meet St. Auban on this side at any time he
+ may appoint, since to-night or to-morrow the officer who is in search of
+ you will arrive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I pondered for a moment. Then:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. le Vicomte,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;in this matter of ground 't is I who have the
+ first voice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because the Marquis is the affronted one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Therefore he has a right to choose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A right, yes. But that is not enough. The necessity to fight is on his
+ side. His honour is hurt, not mine; I have whipped him; I am content. Now
+ let him come to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Assuredly you will not be so ungenerous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not care about journeying to Reaux to afford him satisfaction.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does Monsieur fear anything?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vicomte, you go too far!&rdquo; I cried, my pride gaining the mastery. &ldquo;Since
+ it is asked of me,&mdash;I will go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. le Marquis will be grateful to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A fig for his gratitude,&rdquo; I answered, whereupon the Vicomte shrugged his
+ narrow shoulders, and, his errand done, took his leave of me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he was gone I called Michelot, to tell him of the journey I must go
+ that night, so that he might hold himself in readiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why&mdash;if Monsieur will pardon me,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;do you go to meet the
+ Marquis de St. Auban at St. Sulpice des Reaux by night?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Precisely what I asked Vilmorin. The Marquis desires it, and&mdash;what
+ will you?&mdash;since I am going to kill the man, I can scarce do less
+ than kill him on a spot of his own choosing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michelot screwed up his face and scratched at his grey beard with his huge
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does no suspicion of foul play cross your mind, Monsieur?&rdquo; he inquired
+ timidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shame on you, Michelot,&rdquo; I returned with some heat. &ldquo;You do not yet
+ understand the ways of gentlemen. Think you that M. de St. Auban would
+ stoop to such a deed as that? He would be shamed for ever! Pooh, I would
+ as soon suspect my Lord Cardinal of stealing the chalices from Nôtre Dame.
+ Go, see to my horse. I am riding to Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I rode out towards the château I fell to thinking, and my thoughts
+ turning to Vilmorin, I marvelled at the part he was playing in this little
+ comedy of a cabal against Andrea de Mancini. His tastes and instincts were
+ of the boudoir, the ante-chamber, and the table. He wore a sword because
+ it was so ordained by fashion, and because the hilt was convenient for the
+ display of a jewel or two. Certainly 't was not for utility that it hung
+ beside him, and no man had ever seen it drawn. Nature had made him the
+ most pitiable coward begotten. Why then should he involve himself in an
+ affair which promised bloodshed, and which must be attended by many a risk
+ for him? There was in all this some mystery that I could not fathom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the course into which they had slipped, my thoughts were diverted,
+ when I was within half a mile of the château, by the sight of a horseman
+ stationed, motionless, among the trees that bordered the road. It occurred
+ to me that men take not such a position without purpose&mdash;usually an
+ evil one. I slackened speed somewhat and rode on, watching him sharply. As
+ I came up, he walked his horse forward to meet me, and I beheld a man in
+ the uniform of the gardes du corps, in whom presently I recognised the
+ little sparrow Malpertuis, with whom I had exchanged witticisms at Choisy.
+ He was the one man wanting to complete the trinity that had come upon us
+ at the inn of the Connétable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It flashed across my mind that he might be the officer charged with my
+ arrest, and that he had arrived sooner than had been expected. If so, it
+ was likely to go ill with him, for I was not minded to be taken until St.
+ Auban's soul sped hellwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hailed me as I advanced, and indeed rode forward to meet me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are come at last, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; was his greeting. &ldquo;I have waited for
+ you this hour past.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How knew you I should ride this way?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I learnt that you would visit Canaples before noon. Be good enough to
+ quit the road, and pass under those trees with me. I have something to say
+ to you, but it were not well that we should be seen together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the sake of your character or mine, M. Malappris?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Malpertuis!&rdquo; he snapped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Malpertuis,&rdquo; I corrected. &ldquo;You were saying that we should not be seen
+ together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;St. Auban might hear of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! And therefore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall learn.&rdquo; We were now under the trees, which albeit leafless yet
+ screened us partly from the road. He drew rein, and I followed his
+ example.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. de Luynes,&rdquo; he began, &ldquo;I am or was a member of the cabal formed
+ against Mazarin's aims in the matter of the marriage of Mademoiselle de
+ Canaples to his nephew. I joined hands with St. Auban, lured by his
+ protestations that it is not meet that such an heiress as Yvonne de
+ Canaples should be forced to marry a foreigner of no birth and less
+ distinction, whilst France holds so many noble suitors to her hand. This
+ motive, by which I know that even Eugène de Canaples was actuated, was,
+ St. Auban gave me to understand, his only one for embarking upon this
+ business, as it was also Vilmorin's. Now, M. de Luynes, I have to­day
+ discovered that I had been duped by St. Auban and his dupe, Vilmorin. St.
+ Auban lied to me; another motive brings him into the affair. He seeks
+ himself, by any means that may present themselves, to marry Yvonne&mdash;and
+ her estates; whilst the girl, I am told, loathes him beyond expression.
+ Vilmorin again is actuated by no less a purpose. And so, what think you
+ these two knaves&mdash;this master knave and his dupe&mdash;have
+ determined? To carry off Mademoiselle by force!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sangdieu!&rdquo; I burst out, and would have added more, but his gesture
+ silenced me, and he continued:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vilmorin believes that St. Auban is helping him in this, whereas St.
+ Auban is but fooling him with ambiguous speeches until they have the lady
+ safe. Then might will assert itself, and St. Auban need but show his fangs
+ to drive the sneaking coward away from the prize he fondly dreams is to be
+ his.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When do these gentlemen propose to carry out their plan? Have they
+ determined that?&rdquo; I inquired breathlessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, they have. They hope to accomplish it this very day. Mademoiselle de
+ Canaples has received a letter wherein she is asked to meet her anonymous
+ writer in the coppice yonder, at the Angelus this evening, if she would
+ learn news of great importance to her touching a conspiracy against her
+ father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faugh!&rdquo; I sneered. &ldquo;'T is too poor a bait to lure her with.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say you so? Believe me that unless she be dissuaded she will comply with
+ the invitation, so cunningly was the letter couched. A closed carriage
+ will be waiting at this very spot. Into this St. Auban, Vilmorin, and
+ their bravos will thrust the girl, then away through Blois and beyond it,
+ for a mile or so, in the direction of Meung, thereby misleading any chance
+ pursuers. There they will quit the coach and take a boat that is to be in
+ waiting for them and which will bear them back with the stream to
+ Chambord. Thereafter, God pity the poor lady if they get thus far without
+ mishap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mort de ma vie!&rdquo; I cried, slapping my thigh, &ldquo;I understand!&rdquo; And to
+ myself I thought of the assignation at St. Sulpice des Reaux, and the
+ reason for this, as also St. Auban's resolution to so suddenly quit Blois,
+ grew of a sudden clear to me. Also did I recall the riddle touching
+ Vilmorin's conduct which a few moments ago I had puzzled over, and of
+ which methought that I now held the solution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you understand?&rdquo; asked Malpertuis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something that was told me this morning,&rdquo; I made answer, then spoke of
+ gratitude, wherein he cut me short.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ask no thanks,&rdquo; he said curtly. &ldquo;You owe me none. What I have done is
+ not for love of you or Mancini&mdash;for I love neither of you. It is done
+ because noblesse m'oblige. I told St. Auban that I would have no part in
+ this outrage. But that is not enough; I owe it to my honour to attempt the
+ frustration of so dastardly a plan. You, M. de Luynes, appear to be the
+ most likely person to encompass this, in the interests of your friend
+ Mancini; I leave the matter, therefore, in your hands. Good­day!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with this abrupt leave-taking, the little fellow doffed his hat to me,
+ and wheeling his horse he set spurs in its flanks, and was gone before a
+ word of mine could have stayed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. OF A WOMAN'S OBSTINACY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. de Luynes is a wizard,&rdquo; quoth Andrea, laughing, in answer to something
+ that had been said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was afternoon. We had dined, and the bright sunshine and spring-like
+ mildness of the weather had lured us out upon the terrace. Yvonne and
+ Geneviève occupied the stone seat. Andrea had perched himself upon the
+ granite balustrade, and facing them he sat, swinging his shapely legs to
+ and fro as he chatted merrily, whilst on either side of him stood the
+ Chevalier de Canaples and I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If M. de Luynes be as great a wizard in other things as with the sword,
+ then, pardieu, he is a fearful magician,&rdquo; said Canaples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I bowed, yet not so low but that I detected a sneer on Yvonne's lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So, pretty lady,&rdquo; said I to myself, &ldquo;we shall see if presently your lip
+ will curl when I show you something of my wizard's art.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And presently my chance came. M. de Canaples found reason to leave us, and
+ no sooner was he gone than Geneviève remembered that she had that day
+ discovered a budding leaf upon one of the rose bushes in the garden below.
+ Andrea naturally caused an argument by asserting that she was the victim
+ of her fancy, as it was by far too early in the year. By that means these
+ two found the plea they sought for quitting us, since neither could rest
+ until the other was convinced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So down they went into that rose garden which methought was like to prove
+ their fool's paradise, and Yvonne and I were left alone. Then she also
+ rose, but as she was on the point of quitting me:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I ventured, &ldquo;will you honour me by remaining for a moment?
+ There is something that I would say to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With raised eyebrows she gave me a glance mingled with that
+ superciliousness which she was for ever bestowing upon me, and which, from
+ the monotony of it alone, grew irksome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What can you have to say to me, M. de Luynes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you not be seated? I shall not long detain you, nevertheless&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I stand, perchance you will be more brief. I am waiting, Monsieur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shrugged my shoulders rudely. Why, indeed, be courteous where so little
+ courtesy was met with?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A little while ago, Mademoiselle, when M. de Mancini dubbed me a wizard
+ you were good enough to sneer. Now, a sneer, Mademoiselle, implies
+ unbelief, and I would convince you that you were wrong to disbelieve.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you have no other motive for detaining me, suffer me to depart,&rdquo; she
+ interrupted with some warmth. &ldquo;Whether you be a wizard or not is of no
+ moment to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet I dare swear that you will be of a different mind within five
+ minutes. A wizard is one who discloses things unknown to his fellow-men. I
+ am about to convince you that I can do this, and by convincing you I am
+ about to serve you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I seek neither conviction nor service at your hands,&rdquo; she answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your courtesy dumfounds me, Mademoiselle!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No less than does your insolence dumfound me,&rdquo; she retorted, with crimson
+ cheeks. &ldquo;Do you forget, sir, that I know you for what you are&mdash;a
+ gamester, a libertine, a duellist, the murderer of my brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That your brother lives, Mademoiselle, is, methinks, sufficient proof
+ that I have not murdered him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You willed his death if you did not encompass it; so 't is all one. Do
+ you not understand that it is because my father receives you here, thanks
+ to M. de Mancini, your friend&mdash;a friendship easily understood from
+ the advantages you must derive from it&mdash;that I consent to endure your
+ presence and the insult of your glance? Is it not enough that I should do
+ this, and have you not wit enough to discern it, without adding to my
+ shame by your insolent call upon my courtesy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her words cut me as no words that I ever heard, and, more than her words,
+ her tone of loathing and disgust unspeakable. For half that speech I
+ should have killed a man&mdash;indeed, I had killed men for less than
+ half. And yet, for all the passion that raged in my soul, I preserved upon
+ my countenance a smiling mask. That smile exhausted her patience and
+ increased her loathing, for with a contemptuous exclamation she turned
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tarry but a moment, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I cried, with a sudden note of
+ command. &ldquo;Or, if you will go, go then; but take with you my assurance that
+ before nightfall you will weep bitterly for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My words arrested her. The mystery of them awakened her curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You speak in riddles, Monsieur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Like a true wizard, Mademoiselle. You received a letter this morning in a
+ handwriting unknown, and bearing no signature.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She wheeled round and faced me again with a little gasp of astonishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How know you that? Ah! I understand; you wrote it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What shrewdness, Mademoiselle!&rdquo; I laughed, ironically. &ldquo;Come; think
+ again. What need have I to bid you meet me in the coppice yonder? May I
+ not speak freely with you here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know the purport of that letter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do, Mademoiselle, and I know more. I know that this hinted conspiracy
+ against your father is a trumped-up lie to lure you to the coppice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And for what purpose, pray?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An evil one,&mdash;your abduction. Shall I tell you who penned that note,
+ and who awaits you? The Marquis César de St. Auban.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She shuddered as I pronounced the name, then, looking me straight between
+ the eyes&mdash;&ldquo;How come you to know these things?&rdquo; she inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does it signify, since I know them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, Monsieur, that unless I learn how, I can attach no credit to your
+ preposterous story.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not credit it!&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;Let me assure you that I have spoken the truth;
+ let me swear it. Go to the coppice at the appointed time, and things will
+ fall out as I have predicted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Again, Monsieur, how know you this?&rdquo; she persisted, as women will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I may not tell you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We stood close together, and her clear grey eyes met mine, her lip curling
+ in disdain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may not tell me? You need not. I can guess.&rdquo; And she tossed her
+ shapely head and laughed. &ldquo;Seek some likelier story, Monsieur. Had you not
+ spoken of it, 't is likely I should have left the letter unheeded. But
+ your disinterested warning has determined me to go to this rendezvous.
+ Shall I tell you what I have guessed? That this conspiracy against my
+ father, the details of which you would not have me learn, is some evil of
+ your own devising. Ah! You change colour!&rdquo; she cried, pointing to my face.
+ Then with a laugh of disdain she left me before I had sufficiently
+ recovered from my amazement to bid her stay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ciel!&rdquo; I cried, as I watched the tall, lissom figure vanish through the
+ portals of the château. &ldquo;Did ever God create so crass and obstinate a
+ thing as woman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It occurred to me to tell Andrea, and bid him warn her. But then she would
+ guess that I had prompted him. Naught remained but to lay the matter
+ before the Chevalier de Canaples. Already I had informed him of my fracas
+ with St. Auban, and of the duel that was to be fought that night, and he,
+ in his turn, had given me the details of his stormy interview with the
+ Marquis, which had culminated in St. Auban's dismissal from Canaples. I
+ had not hitherto deemed it necessary to alarm him with the news imparted
+ to me by Malpertuis, imagining that did I inform Mademoiselle that would
+ suffice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, however, as I have said, no other course was left me but to tell him
+ of it. Accordingly, I went within and inquired of Guilbert, whom I met in
+ the hall, where I might find the Chevalier. He answered me that M. de
+ Canaples was not in the château. It was believed that he had gone with M.
+ Louis, the intendant of the estates, to visit the vineyards at Montcroix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news made me choke with impatience. Already it was close upon five
+ o'clock, and in another hour the sun would set and the Angelus would toll
+ the knell of Mademoiselle's preposterous suspicions, unless in the
+ meantime I had speech with Canaples, and led him to employ a father's
+ authority to keep his daughter indoors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fuming at the contretemps I called for my horse and set out at a brisk
+ trot for Montcroix. But my ride was fruitless. The vineyard peasants had
+ not seen the Chevalier for over a week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, 'twixt Montcroix and the château there lies a good league, and to
+ make matters worse, as I galloped furiously back to Canaples, an evil
+ chance led me to mistake the way and pursue a track that brought me out on
+ the very banks of the river, with a strong belt of trees screening the
+ château from sight, and defying me to repair my error by going straight
+ ahead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was forced to retrace my steps, and before I had regained the point
+ where I had gone astray a precious quarter of an hour was wasted, and the
+ sun already hung, a dull red globe, on the brink of the horizon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clenching my teeth, I tore at my horse's flanks, and with a bloody heel I
+ drove the maddened brute along at a pace that might have cost us both
+ dearly. I dashed, at last, into the quadrangle, and, throwing the reins to
+ a gaping groom, I sprang up the steps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has the Chevalier returned?&rdquo; I gasped breathlessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not yet, Monsieur,&rdquo; answered Guilbert with a tranquillity that made me
+ desire to strangle him. &ldquo;Is Mademoiselle in the château?&rdquo; was my next
+ question, mechanically asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I saw her on the terrace some moments ago. She has not since come
+ within.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like one possessed I flew across the intervening room and out on to the
+ terrace. Geneviève and Andrea were walking there, deep in conversation. At
+ another time I might have cursed their lack of prudence. At the moment I
+ did not so much as remark it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is Mademoiselle de Canaples?&rdquo; I burst out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They gazed at me, as much astounded by my question and the abruptness of
+ it as by my apparent agitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has anything happened?&rdquo; inquired Geneviève, her blue eyes wide open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes&mdash;no; naught has happened. Tell me where she is. I must speak to
+ her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She was here a while ago,&rdquo; said Andrea, &ldquo;but she left us to stroll along
+ the river bank.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How long is it since she left you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A quarter of an hour, perhaps.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something has happened!&rdquo; cried Geneviève, and added more, maybe, but I
+ waited not to hear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Muttering curses as I ran&mdash;for 't was my way to curse where pious
+ souls might pray&mdash;I sped back to the quadrangle and my horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Follow me,&rdquo; I shouted to the groom, &ldquo;you and as many of your fellows as
+ you can find. Follow me at once&mdash;at once, mark you&mdash;to the
+ coppice by the river.&rdquo; And without waiting for his answer, I sent my horse
+ thundering down the avenue. The sun was gone, leaving naught but a roseate
+ streak to tell of its passage, and at that moment a distant bell tinkled
+ forth the Angelus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With whip, spur, and imprecations I plied my steed, a prey to such
+ excitement as I had never known until that moment&mdash;not even in the
+ carnage of battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had no plan. My mind was a chaos of thought without a single clear idea
+ to light it, and I never so much as bethought me that single-handled I was
+ about to attempt to wrest Yvonne from the hands of perchance half a dozen
+ men. To save time I did not far pursue the road, but, clearing a hedge, I
+ galloped ventre-à-terre across the meadow towards the little coppice by
+ the waterside. As I rode I saw no sign of any moving thing. No sound
+ disturbed the evening stillness save the dull thump of my horse's hoofs
+ upon the turf, and a great fear arose in my heart that I might come too
+ late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last I reached the belt of trees, and my fears grew into certainty. The
+ place was deserted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then a fresh hope sprang up. Perchance, thinking of my warning, she had
+ seen the emptiness of her suspicions towards me, and had pursued that walk
+ of hers in another direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when I had penetrated to the little open space within that cluster of
+ naked trees, I had proof overwhelming that the worst had befallen. Not
+ only on the moist ground was stamped the impress of struggling feet, but
+ on a branch I found a strip of torn green velvet, and, remembering the
+ dress she had worn that day, I understood to the full the significance of
+ that rag, and, understanding it, I groaned aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. THE RESCUE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Some precious moments did I waste standing with that green rag betwixt my
+ fingers, and I grew sick and numb in body and in mind. She was gone!
+ Carried off by a man I had reason to believe she hated, and whom God send
+ she might have no motive to hate more deeply hereafter!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ugly thought swelled until it blotted out all others, and in its train
+ there came a fury upon me that drove me to do by instinct that which
+ earlier I should have done by reason. I climbed back into the saddle, and
+ away across the meadow I went, journeying at an angle with the road, my
+ horse's head turned in the direction of Blois. That road at last was
+ gained, and on I thundered at a stretched gallop, praying that my
+ hard-used beast might last until the town was reached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as I have already said, I am not a man who easily falls a prey to
+ excitement. It may have beset me in the heat of battle, when the fearsome
+ lust of blood and death makes of every man a raving maniac, thrilled with
+ mad joy at every stab he deals, and laughing with fierce passion at every
+ blow he takes, though in the taking of it his course be run. But, saving
+ at such wild times, never until then could I recall having been so little
+ master of myself. There was a fever in me; all hell was in my blood, and,
+ stranger still, and hitherto unknown at any season, there was a sickly
+ fear that mastered me, and drew out great beads of sweat upon my brow.
+ Fear for myself I have never known, for at no time has life so pampered me
+ that the thought of parting company with it concerned me greatly. Fear for
+ another I had not known till then&mdash;saving perchance the uneasiness
+ that at times I had felt touching Andrea&mdash;because never yet had I
+ sufficiently cared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far my thoughts took me, as I rode, and where I have halted did they
+ halt, and stupidly I went over their ground again, like one who gropes for
+ something in the dark,&mdash;because never yet had I sufficiently cared&mdash;I
+ had never cared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then, ah Dieu! As I turned the thought over I understood, and,
+ understanding, I pursued the sentence where I had left off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, caring at last, I was sick with fear of what might befall the one I
+ cared for! There lay the reason of the frenzied excitement whereof I had
+ become the slave. That it was that had brought the moisture to my brow and
+ curses to my lips; that it was that had caused me instinctively to thrust
+ the rag of green velvet within my doublet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ciel! It was strange&mdash;aye, monstrous strange, and a right good jest
+ for fate to laugh at&mdash;that I, Gaston de Luynes, vile ruffler and
+ worthless spadassin, should have come to such a pass; I, whose forefinger
+ had for the past ten years uptilted the chin of every tavern wench I had
+ chanced upon; I, whose lips had never known the touch of other than the
+ lips of these; I, who had thought my heart long dead to tenderness and
+ devotion, or to any fondness save the animal one for my ignoble self. Yet
+ there I rode as if the Devil had me for a quarry,&mdash;panting, sweating,
+ cursing, and well-nigh sobbing with rage at a fear that I might come too
+ late,&mdash;all because of a proud lady who knew me for what I was and
+ held me in contempt because of her knowledge; all for a lady who had not
+ the kindness for me that one might spare a dog&mdash;who looked on me as
+ something not good to see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since there was no one to whom I might tell my story that he might mock
+ me, I mocked myself&mdash;with a laugh that startled passers-by and which,
+ coupled with the crazy pace at which I dashed into Blois, caused them, I
+ doubt not, to think me mad. Nor were they wrong, for mad indeed I deemed
+ myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That I trampled no one underfoot in my furious progress through the
+ streets is a miracle that passes my understanding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the courtyard of the Lys de France I drew rein at last with a tug that
+ brought my shuddering brute on to his haunches and sent those who stood
+ about flying into the shelter of the doorways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Another horse!&rdquo; I shouted as I sprang to the ground. &ldquo;Another horse at
+ once!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then as I turned to inquire for Michelot, I espied him leaning stolidly
+ against the porte­cochère.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How long have you been there, Michelot?&rdquo; I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Half an hour, mayhap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Saw you a closed carriage pass?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ten minutes ago I saw one go by, followed by M. de St. Auban and a
+ gentleman who greatly resembled M. de Vilmorin, besides an escort of four
+ of the most villainous knaves&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is the one,&rdquo; I broke in. &ldquo;Quick, Michelot! Arm yourself and get your
+ horse; I have need of you. Come, knave, move yourself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of a few minutes we set out at a sharp trot, leaving the
+ curious ones whom my loud-voiced commands had assembled, to speculate upon
+ the meaning of so much bustle. Once clear of the township we gave the
+ reins to our horses, and our trot became a gallop as we travelled along
+ the road to Meung, with the Loire on our right. And as we went I briefly
+ told Michelot what was afoot, interlarding my explanations with prayers
+ that we might come upon the kidnappers before they crossed the river, and
+ curses at the flying pace of our mounts, which to my anxious mind seemed
+ slow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At about a mile from Blois the road runs over an undulation of the ground
+ that is almost a hill. From the moment that I had left Canaples as the
+ Angelus was ringing, until the moment when our panting horses gained the
+ brow of that little eminence, only half an hour had sped. Still in that
+ half-hour the tints had all but faded from the sky, and the twilight
+ shadows grew thicker around us with every moment. Yet not so thick had
+ they become but that I could see a coach at a standstill in the hollow,
+ some three hundred yards beneath us, and, by it, half a dozen horses, of
+ which four were riderless and held by the two men who were still mounted.
+ Then, breathlessly scanning the field between the road and the river, I
+ espied five persons, half way across, and at the same distance from the
+ water that we were from the coach. Two men, whom I supposed to be St.
+ Auban and Vilmorin, were forcing along a woman, whose struggles, feeble
+ though they appeared&mdash;yet retarded their progress in some measure.
+ Behind them walked two others, musket on shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I pointed them out to Michelot with a soft cry of joy. We were in time!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Following with my eyes the course they appeared to be pursuing I saw by
+ the bank a boat, in which two men were waiting. Again I pointed, this time
+ to the boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Over the hedge, Michelot!&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;We must ride in a straight line for
+ the water and so intercept them. Follow me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over the hedge we went, and down the gentle slope at as round a pace as
+ the soft ground would with safety allow. I had reckoned upon being opposed
+ to six or even eight men, whereas there were but four, one of whom I knew
+ was hardly to be reckoned. Doubtless St. Auban had imagined himself safe
+ from pursuit when he left two of his bravos with the horses, probably to
+ take them on to Meung, and there cross with them and rejoin him. Two more,
+ I doubted not, were those seated at the oars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I laughed to myself as I took in all this, but, even as I laughed, those
+ in the field stood still, and sent up a shout that told me we had been
+ perceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On, Michelot, on!&rdquo; I shouted, spurring my horse forward. Then, in answer
+ to their master's call, the two ruffians who had been doing duty as grooms
+ came pounding into the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ride to meet them, Michelot!&rdquo; I cried. Obediently he wheeled to the left,
+ and I caught the swish of his sword as it left the scabbard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ St. Auban was now hurrying towards the river with his party. Already they
+ were but fifty yards from the boat, and a hundred still lay between him
+ and me. Furiously I pressed onward, and presently but half the distance
+ separated us, whilst they were still some thirty yards from their goal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then his two bravos faced round to meet me, and one, standing some fifty
+ paces in ad­vance of the other, levelled his musket and fired. But in his
+ haste he aimed too high; the bullet carried away my hat, and before the
+ smoke had cleared I was upon him. I had drawn a pistol from my holster,
+ but it was not needed; my horse passed over him before he could save
+ himself from my fearful charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the fast-fading light a second musket barrel shone, and I saw the
+ second ruffian taking aim at me with not a dozen yards between us. With
+ the old soldier's instinct I wrenched at the reins till I brought my horse
+ on to his haunches. It was high time, for simultaneously with my action
+ the fellow blazed at me, and the scream of pain that broke from my steed
+ told me that the poor brute had taken the bullet. With a bound that
+ carried me forward some six paces, the animal sank, quivering, to the
+ ground. I disengaged my feet from the stirrups as he fell, but the shock
+ of it sent me rolling on the ground, and the ruffian, seeing me fallen,
+ sprang forward, swinging his musket up above his head. I dodged the
+ murderous downward stroke, and as the stock buried itself close beside me
+ in the soft earth I rose on one knee and with a grim laugh I raised my
+ pistol. I brought the muzzle within a hand's breadth of his face, then
+ fired and shot him through the head. Perchance you'll say it was a
+ murderous, cruel stroke: mayhap it was, but at such seasons men stay not
+ to unravel niceties, but strike ere they themselves be stricken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaping over the twitching corpse, I got out my sword and sprang after St.
+ Auban, who, with Vilmorin and Yvonne, careless of what might betide his
+ followers, was now within ten paces of the boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pistol shots cracked behind me, and I wondered how Michelot was faring,
+ but dared not pause to look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The twain in the boat stood up, wielding their great oars, and methought
+ them on the point of coming to their master's aid, in which case my battle
+ had truly been a lost one. But that craven Vilmorin did me good service
+ then, for with a cry of fear at my approach, he abandoned his hold of
+ Yvonne, whose struggles were keeping both the men back; thus freed, he
+ fled towards the boat, and jumping in, he shouted to the men in his
+ shrill, quavering voice, to put off. Albeit they disobeyed him
+ contemptuously and waited for the Marquis; still they did not leave the
+ boat, fearing, no doubt, that if they did so the coward would put off
+ alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for St. Auban, Vilmorin's flight left him unequal to the task of
+ dragging the girl along. She dug her heels into the ground, and, tug as he
+ might, for all that he set both hands to work, he could not move her. In
+ this plight I came upon him, and challenged him to stand and face me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a bunch of oaths he got out his sword, but in doing so he was forced
+ to remove one of his hands from the girl's arm. Seizing the opportunity
+ with a ready wit and courage seldom found in women of her quality, she
+ twisted herself from the grip of his left hand, and came staggering
+ towards me for protection, holding up her pinioned wrists. With my blade I
+ severed the cord, whereupon she plucked the gag from her mouth, and sank
+ against my side, her struggles having left her weak indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I set my arm about her waist to support her, my heart seemed to swell
+ within me, and strange melodies shaped themselves within my soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ St. Auban bore down upon me with a raucous oath, but the glittering point
+ of my rapier danced before his eyes and drove him back again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To me, Vilmorin, you cowardly cur!&rdquo; he shouted. &ldquo;To me, you dogs!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He let fly at them a volley of blood-curdling oaths, then, without waiting
+ to see if they obeyed him, he came at me again, and our swords met.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Courage, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I whispered, as a sigh that was almost a groan
+ escaped her. &ldquo;Have no fear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But that fight was not destined to be fought, for, as again we engaged,
+ there came the fall of running feet behind me. It flashed across my mind
+ that Michelot had been worsted, and that my back was about to be assailed.
+ But in St. Auban's face I saw, as in a mirror, that he who came was
+ Michelot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mort de Christ!&rdquo; snarled the Marquis, springing back beyond my reach.
+ &ldquo;What can a man do with naught but fools and poltroons to serve him?
+ Faugh! We will continue our sword-play at St. Sulpice des Reaux to-night.
+ Au revoir, M. de Luynes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning, he sheathed his sword, and, running down to the river, bounded
+ into the boat, where I heard him reviling Vilmorin with every foul name he
+ could call to mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My blood was aflame, and I was not minded to wait for our meeting at
+ Reaux. Consigning Mademoiselle to the care of Michelot, who stood panting
+ and bleeding from a wound in his shoulder, I turned back to my dead horse,
+ and plucking the remaining pistol from the holster I ran down to the very
+ edge of the water. The boat was not ten yards from shore, and my action
+ had been unheeded by St. Auban, who was standing in the stern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kneeling I took careful aim at him, and as God lives, I would have saved
+ much trouble that was to follow had I been allowed to fire. But at that
+ moment a hand was laid upon my arm, and Yvonne's sweet voice murmured in
+ my ear:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have fought a brave and gallant fight, M. de Luynes, and you have
+ done a deed of which the knights of old might have been proud. Do not mar
+ it by an act of murder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Murder, Mademoiselle!&rdquo; I gasped, letting my hand fall. &ldquo;Surely there is
+ no murder in this!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A suspicion of it, I think, and so brave a man should have clean hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. THE HAND OF YVONNE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We did not long remain upon the field of battle. Indeed, if we lingered at
+ all it was but so that Mademoiselle might bandage Michelot's wound. And
+ whilst she did so, my stout henchman related to us how it had fared with
+ him, and how, having taken the two ruffians separately, he had been
+ wounded by the first, whom he repaid by splitting his skull, whereupon the
+ second one had discharged his pistol without effect, then made off towards
+ the road, whilst Michelot, remembering that I might need assistance, had
+ let him go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There, good Michelot,&rdquo; quoth Mademoiselle, completing her task, &ldquo;I have
+ done what little I can. And now, M. de Luynes, let us go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was close upon seven o'clock, and night was at hand. Already the moon
+ was showing her large, full face above the tree-tops by Chambord, and
+ casting a silver streak athwart the stream. The plash of oars from the
+ Marquis's boat was waxing indistinct despite the stillness, whilst by the
+ eye the boat itself was no longer to be distinguished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I turned, my glance fell upon the bravo whom I had shot. He lay stiff
+ and stark upon his back, his sightless eyes wide open and staring
+ heavenwards, his face all blood-smeared and ghastly to behold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mademoiselle shuddered. &ldquo;Let us go,&rdquo; she repeated in a faint whisper; her
+ eye had also fallen on that thing, and her voice was full of awe. She laid
+ her hand upon my sleeve and 'neath the suasion of her touch I moved away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To our surprise and joy we found St. Auban's coach where we had left it,
+ with two saddled horses tethered close by. The others had doubtless been
+ taken by the coachman and the bravo who had escaped Michelot, both of whom
+ had fled. These animals we looked upon as the spoils of war, and
+ accordingly when we set out in the coach,&mdash;Mademoiselle having
+ desired me to ride beside her therein,&mdash;Michelot wielding the reins,
+ it was with those two horses tethered behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur de Luynes,&rdquo; said my companion softly, &ldquo;I fear that I have done
+ you a great injustice. Indeed, I know not how to crave your forgiveness,
+ how to thank you, or how to hide my shame at those words I spoke to you
+ this afternoon at Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not another word on that score, Mademoiselle!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And to myself I thought of what recompense already had been mine. To me it
+ had been given to have her lean trustingly upon me, my arm about her
+ waist, whilst, sword in hand, I had fought for her. Dieu! Was that not
+ something to have lived for?&mdash;aye, and to have died for, methought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I deserved, Monsieur,&rdquo; she continued presently, &ldquo;that you should have
+ left me to my fate for all the odious things I uttered when you warned me
+ of my peril,&mdash;for the manner in which I have treated you since your
+ coming to Blois.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have but treated me, Mademoiselle, in the only manner in which you
+ could treat one so far beneath you, one who is utterly unworthy that you
+ should bestow a single regret upon him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are strangely humble to-night, Monsieur. It is unwonted in you, and
+ for once you wrong yourself. You have not said that I am forgiven.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have naught to forgive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hélas! you have&mdash;indeed you have!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh, bien!&rdquo; quoth I, with a return of my old tone of banter, &ldquo;I forgive
+ then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereafter we travelled on in silence for some little while, my heart full
+ of joy at being so near to her, and the friendliness which she evinced for
+ me, and my mind casting o'er my joyous heart a cloud of some indefinable
+ evil presage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a brave man, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; she murmured presently, &ldquo;and I have
+ been taught that brave men are ever honourable and true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Had they who taught you that known Gaston de Luynes, they would have told
+ you instead that it is possible for a vile man to have the one redeeming
+ virtue of courage, even as it is possible for a liar to have a countenance
+ that is sweet and innocent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There speaks that humble mood you are affecting, and which sits upon you
+ as my father's clothes might do. Nay, Monsieur, I shall believe in my
+ first teaching, and be deaf to yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again there was a spell of silence. At last&mdash;&ldquo;I have been thinking,
+ Monsieur,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;of that other occasion on which you rode with me. I
+ remember that you said you had killed a man, and when I asked you why, you
+ said that you had done it because he sought to kill you. Was that the
+ truth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Assuredly, Mademoiselle. We fought a duel, and it is customary in a duel
+ for each to seek to kill the other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But why was this duel fought?&rdquo; she cried, with some petulance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear me, Mademoiselle, that I may not answer you,&rdquo; I said, recalling
+ the exact motives, and thinking how futile appeared the quarrel which
+ Eugène de Canaples had sought with Andrea when viewed in the light of what
+ had since befallen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was the quarrel of your seeking?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In a measure it was, Mademoiselle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In a measure!&rdquo; she echoed. Then persisting, as women will&mdash;&ldquo;Will you
+ not tell me what this measure was?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tenez, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I answered in despair; &ldquo;I will tell you just so
+ much as I may. Your brother had occasion to be opposed to certain projects
+ that were being formed in Paris by persons high in power around a
+ beardless boy. Himself of too small importance to dare wage war against
+ those powerful ones who would have crushed him, your brother sought to
+ gain his ends by sending a challenge to this boy. The lad was
+ high-spirited and consented to meet M. de Canaples, by whom he would
+ assuredly have been murdered&mdash;'t is the only word, Mademoiselle&mdash;had
+ I not intervened as I did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was silent for a moment. Then&mdash;&ldquo;I believe you, Monsieur,&rdquo; she
+ said simply. &ldquo;You fought, then, to shield another&mdash;but why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For three reasons, Mademoiselle. Firstly, those persons high in power
+ chose to think it my fault that the quarrel had arisen, and threatened to
+ hang me if the duel took place and the boy were harmed. Secondly, I myself
+ felt a kindness for the boy. Thirdly, because, whatever sins Heaven may
+ record against me, it has at least ever been my way to side against men
+ who, confident of their superiority, seek, with the cowardly courage of
+ the strong, to harm the weak. It is, Mademoiselle, the courage of the man
+ who knows no fear when he strikes a woman, yet who will shake with a palsy
+ when another man but threatens him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did you not tell me all this before?&rdquo; she whispered, after a pause.
+ And methought I caught a quaver in her voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I laughed for answer, and she read my laugh aright; presently she pursued
+ her questions and asked me the name of the boy I had defended. But I
+ evaded her, telling her that she must need no further details to believe
+ me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not that, Monsieur! I do believe you; I do indeed, but&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hark, Mademoiselle!&rdquo; I cried suddenly, as the clatter of many hoofs
+ sounded near at hand. &ldquo;What is that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A shout rang out at that moment. &ldquo;Halt! Who goes there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mon Dieu!&rdquo; exclaimed Mademoiselle, drawing close up to me, and again the
+ voice sounded, this time more sinister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Halt, I say&mdash;in the King's name!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The coach came to a standstill, and through the window I beheld the
+ shadowy forms of several mounted men, and the feeble glare of a lantern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who travels in the carriage, knave?&rdquo; came the voice again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mademoiselle de Canaples,&rdquo; answered Michelot; then, like a fool, he must
+ needs add: &ldquo;Have a care whom you knave, my master, if you would grow old.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardieu! let us behold this Mademoiselle de Canaples who owns so fearful
+ a warrior for a coachman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door was flung rudely open, and the man bearing the lantern&mdash;whose
+ rays shone upon a uniform of the Cardinal's guards&mdash;confronted us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a chuckle he flashed the light in my face, then suddenly grew
+ serious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peste! Is it indeed you, M. de Luynes?&rdquo; quoth he; adding, with stern
+ politeness, &ldquo;It grieves me to disturb you, but I have a warrant for your
+ arrest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was fumbling in his doublet as he spoke, and during the time I had
+ leisure to scan his countenance, recognising, to my surprise, a young
+ lieutenant of the guards who had but recently served with me, and with
+ whom I had been on terms almost of friendship. His words, &ldquo;I have a
+ warrant for your arrest,&rdquo; came like a bolt from the blue to enlighten me,
+ and to remind me of what St. Auban had that morning told me, and which for
+ the nonce I had all but forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon hearing those same words, Yvonne, methought, grew pale, and her eyes
+ were bent upon me with a look of surprise and pity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon what charge am I arrested?&rdquo; I enquired, with forced composure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My warrant mentions none, M. de Luynes. It is here.&rdquo; And he thrust before
+ me a paper, whose purport I could have read in its shape and seals. Idly
+ my eye ran along the words:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By these presents I charge and empower my lieutenant, Jean de Montrésor,
+ to seize where'er he may be found, hold, and conduct to Paris the Sieur
+ Gaston de Luynes&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so further, until the Cardinal's signature ended the legal verbiage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the King's name, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; said Montrésor, firmly yet
+ deferentially, &ldquo;your sword!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would have been madness to do aught but comply with his request, and so
+ I surrendered my rapier, which he in his turn delivered to one of his
+ followers. Next I stepped down from the coach and turned to take leave of
+ Mademoiselle, whereupon Montrésor, thinking that peradventure matters were
+ as they appeared to be between us, and, being a man of fine feelings,
+ signed to his men to fall back, whilst he himself withdrew a few paces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Adieu, Mademoiselle!&rdquo; I said simply. &ldquo;I shall carry with me for
+ consolation the memory that I have been of service to you, and I shall
+ ever&mdash;during the little time that may be left me&mdash;be grateful to
+ Heaven for the opportunity that it has afforded me of causing you&mdash;perchance
+ without sufficient reason&mdash;to think better of me. Adieu,
+ Mademoiselle! God guard you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was too dark to see her face, but my heart bounded with joy to catch in
+ her voice a quaver that argued, methought, regret for me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does it mean, M. de Luynes? Why are they taking you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I have displeased my Lord Cardinal, albeit, Mademoiselle, I swear
+ to you that I have no cause for shame at the reasons for which I am being
+ arrested.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My father is Monseigneur de Mazarin's friend,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;He is also
+ yours. He shall exert for you what influence he possesses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T were useless, Mademoiselle. Besides, what does it signify? Again,
+ adieu!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She spoke no answering word, but silently held out her hand. Silently I
+ took it in mine, and for a moment I hesitated, thinking of what I was&mdash;of
+ what she was. At last, moved by some power that was greater than my will,
+ I stooped and pressed those shapely fingers to my lips. Then I stepped
+ suddenly back and closed the carriage door, oppressed by a feeling akin to
+ that of having done an evil deed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I your permission to say a word to my servant, M. le Lieutenant?&rdquo; I
+ inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bowed assent, whereat, stepping close up to the horror-stricken
+ Michelot&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Drive straight to the Château de Canaples,&rdquo; I said in a low voice.
+ &ldquo;Thereafter return to the Lys de France and there wait until you hear from
+ me. Here, take my purse; there are some fifty pistoles in it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak but the word, Monsieur,&rdquo; he growled, &ldquo;and I'll pistol a couple of
+ these dogs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pah! You grow childish,&rdquo; I laughed, &ldquo;or can you not see that fellow's
+ musket?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardieu! I'll risk his aim! I never yet saw one of these curs shoot
+ straight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no, obey me, Michelot. Think of Mademoiselle. Go! Adieu! If we should
+ not meet again, mon brave,&rdquo; I finished, as I seized his loyal hand, &ldquo;what
+ few things of mine are at the hostelry shall belong to you, as well as
+ what may be left of this money. It is little enough payment, Michelot, for
+ all your faithfulness&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur, Monsieur!&rdquo; he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Diable!&rdquo; I muttered, &ldquo;we are becoming women! Be off, you knave! Adieu!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peremptoriness of my tone ended our leave-taking and caused him to
+ grip his reins and bring down his whip. The coach moved on. A white face,
+ on which the moonlight fell, glanced at me from the window, then to my
+ staring eyes naught was left but the back of the retreating vehicle, with
+ one of the two saddle-horses that had been tethered to it still ambling in
+ its wake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. de Montrésor,&rdquo; I said, thrusting my bullet-pierced hat upon my head,
+ &ldquo;I am at your service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. OF WHAT BEFELL AT REAUX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At my captor's bidding I mounted the horse which they had untethered from
+ the carriage, and we started off along the road which the coach itself had
+ disappeared upon a moment before. But we travelled at a gentle trot,
+ which, after that evening's furious riding, was welcome to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With bitterness I reflected as I rode that the very moment at which
+ Mademoiselle de Canaples had brought herself to think better of me was
+ like to prove the last we should spend together. Yet not altogether bitter
+ was that reflection; for with it came also the consolation&mdash;whereof I
+ had told her&mdash;that I had not been taken before she had had cause to
+ change her mind concerning me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That she should care for me was too preposterous an idea to be nourished,
+ and, indeed, it was better&mdash;much better&mdash;that M. de Montrésor
+ had come before I, grown sanguine as lovers will, had again earned her
+ scorn by showing her what my heart contained. Much better was it that I
+ should pass for ever out of her life&mdash;as, indeed, methought I was
+ like to pass out of all life&mdash;whilst I could leave in her mind a kind
+ remembrance and a grateful regret, free from the stain that a subsequent
+ possible presumption of mine might have cast o'er it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then my thoughts shifted to Andrea. St. Auban would hear of my removal,
+ and I cared not to think of what profit he might derive from it. To Yvonne
+ also his presence must hereafter be a menace, and in that wherein tonight
+ he had failed, he might, again, succeed. It was at this juncture of my
+ reverie that M. de Montrésor's pleasant young voice aroused me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You appear downcast, M. de Luynes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I, downcast!&rdquo; I echoed, throwing back my head and laughing. &ldquo;Nay. I was
+ but thinking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Believe me, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; he said kindly, &ldquo;when I tell you that it
+ grieves me to be charged with this matter. I have done my best to capture
+ you. That was my duty. But I should have rejoiced had I failed with the
+ consciousness of having done all in my power.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thanks, Montrésor,&rdquo; I murmured, and silence followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been thinking, Monsieur,&rdquo; he went on presently, &ldquo;that possibly the
+ absence of your sword causes you discomfort.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh? Discomfort? It does, most damnably!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me your parole d'honneur that you will attempt no escape, and not
+ only shall your sword be returned to you, but you shall travel to Paris
+ with all comfort and dignity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, so amazed was I that I paused to stare at the officer who was young
+ enough to make such a proposal to a man of my reputation. He turned his
+ face towards me, and in the moonlight I could make out his questioning
+ glance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh, bien, Monsieur?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am more than grateful to you, M. de Montrésor,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;and I
+ freely give you my word of honour to seek no means of eluding you, nor to
+ avail myself of any that may be presented to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said this loud enough for those behind to hear, so that no surprise was
+ evinced when the lieutenant bade the man who bore my sword return it to
+ me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If he who may chance to read these simple pages shall have gathered aught
+ of my character from their perusal, he will marvel, perchance, that I
+ should give the lieutenant my parole, instead rather of watching for an
+ opportunity to&mdash;at least&mdash;attempt an escape. Preeminent in my
+ thoughts, however, stood at that moment the necessity to remove St. Auban,
+ and methought that by acting as I did I saw a way by which, haply, I might
+ accomplish this. What might thereafter befall me seemed of little moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. de Montrésor,&rdquo; I said presently, &ldquo;your kindness impels me to set a
+ further tax upon your generosity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is, Monsieur?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bid your men fall back a little, and I will tell you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made a sign to his troopers, and when the distance between us had been
+ sufficiently widened, I began:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is a man at present across the river, yonder, who has done me no
+ little injury, and with whom I have a rendezvous at nine o'clock to-night
+ at St. Sulpice des Reaux, where our swords are to determine the difference
+ between us. I crave, Monsieur, your permission to keep that appointment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Impossible!&rdquo; he answered curtly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I took a deep breath like a man who is about to jump an obstacle in his
+ path.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why impossible, Monsieur?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because you are a prisoner, and therefore no longer under obligation to
+ keep appointments.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How would you feel, Montrésor, if, burning to be avenged upon a man who
+ had done you irreparable wrong, you were arrested an hour before the time
+ at which you were to meet this man, sword in hand, and your captor&mdash;whose
+ leave you craved to keep the assignation&mdash;answered you with the word
+ 'impossible'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, yes, Monsieur,&rdquo; he replied impatiently. &ldquo;But you forget my position.
+ Let us suppose that I allow you to go to St. Sulpice des Reaux. What if
+ you do not return?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mistrust me?&rdquo; I exclaimed, my hopes melting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You misapprehend me. I mean, what if you are killed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not think that I shall be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! But what if you are? What shall I say to my Lord Cardinal?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dame! That I am dead, and that he is saved the trouble of hanging me. The
+ most he can want of me is my life. Let us suppose that you had come an
+ hour later. You would have been forced to wait until after the encounter,
+ and, did I fall, matters would be no different.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man fell to thinking, but I, knowing that it is not well to let
+ the young ponder overlong if you would bend them to your wishes, broke in
+ upon his reflections&mdash;&ldquo;See, Montrésor, yonder are the lights of
+ Blois; by eight o'clock we shall be in the town. Come; grant me leave to
+ cross the Loire, and by ten o'clock, or half-past at the latest, I shall
+ return to sup with you or I shall be dead. I swear it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Were I in your position,&rdquo; he answered musingly, &ldquo;I know how I would be
+ treated, and, pardieu! come what may I shall deal with you accordingly.
+ You may go to your assignation, M. de Luynes, and may God prosper you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus it came to pass that shortly after eight o'clock, albeit a
+ prisoner, I rode into the courtyard of the Lys de France, and, alighting,
+ I stepped across the threshold of the inn, and strode up to a table at
+ which I had espied Michelot. He sat nursing a huge measure of wine, into
+ the depths of which he was gazing pensively, with an expression so glum
+ upon his weather-beaten countenance that it defies depicting. So deep was
+ he in his meditations, that albeit I stood by the table surveying him for
+ a full minute, he took no heed of me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Allons, Michelot!&rdquo; I said at length. &ldquo;Wake up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He started up with a cry of amazement; surprise chased away the grief that
+ had been on his face, and a moment later joy unfeigned, and good to see,
+ took the place of surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have escaped, Monsieur!&rdquo; he cried, and albeit caution made him utter
+ the words beneath his breath, a shout seemed to lurk somewhere in the
+ whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pressing his hand I sat down and briefly told him how matters stood, and
+ how I came to be for the moment free. And when I had done I bade him,
+ since his wound had not proved serious, to get his hat and cloak and go
+ with me to find a boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He obeyed me, and a quarter of an hour after we had quitted the hostelry
+ he was rowing me across the stream, whilst, wrapped in my cloak, I sat in
+ the stern, thinking of Yvonne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur,&rdquo; said Michelot, &ldquo;observe how swift is the stream. If I were to
+ let the boat drift we should be at Tours to-morrow, and from there it
+ would be easy to defy pursuit. We have enough money to reach Spain. What
+ say you, Monsieur?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, you rascal? Why, bend your back to the work and set me ashore by St.
+ Sulpice in a quarter of an hour, or I'll forget that you have been my
+ friend. Would you see me dishonoured?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sooner than see you dead,&rdquo; he grumbled as he resumed his task.
+ Thereafter, whilst he rowed, Michelot entertained me with some quaint
+ ideas touching that which fine gentlemen call honour, and to what sorry
+ passes it was wont to bring them, concluding by thanking God that he was
+ no gentleman and had no honour to lead him into mischief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, however, our journey came to an end, and I sprang ashore some
+ five hundred paces from the little chapel, and almost exactly opposite the
+ Château de Canaples. I stood for a moment gazing across the water at the
+ lighted windows of the château, wondering which of those eyes that looked
+ out upon the night might be that of Yvonne's chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, bidding Michelot await me, or follow did I not return in half an
+ hour, I turned and moved away towards the chapel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a clearing in front of the little white edifice&mdash;which
+ rather than a temple is but a monument to the martyr who is said to have
+ perished on that spot in the days before Clovis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I advanced into the centre of this open patch of ground, and stood
+ clear of the black silhouettes of the trees, cast about me by the moon,
+ two men appeared to detach themselves from the side wall of the chapel,
+ and advanced to meet me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Albeit they were wrapped in their cloaks&mdash;uptilted behind by their
+ protruding scabbards&mdash;it was not difficult to tell the tall figure
+ and stately bearing of St. Auban and the mincing gait of Vilmorin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I doffed my hat in a grave salutation, which was courteously returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust, Messieurs, that I have not kept you waiting?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was on the point of expressing that very hope, Monsieur,&rdquo; returned St.
+ Auban. &ldquo;We have but arrived. Do you come alone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As you perceive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hum! M. le Vicomte, then, will act for both of us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I bowed in token of my satisfaction, and without more ado cast aside my
+ cloak, pleased to see that the affair was to be conducted with decency and
+ politeness, as such matters should ever be conducted, albeit impoliteness
+ may have marked their origin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis, having followed my example and divested himself of his cloak
+ and hat, unsheathed his rapier and delivered it to Vilmorin, who came
+ across with it to where I stood. When he was close to me I saw that he was
+ deadly pale; his teeth chattered, and the hand that held the weapon shook
+ as with a palsy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mu&mdash;Monsieur,&rdquo; he stammered, &ldquo;will it please you to lend me your
+ sword that I may mu-measure it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What formalities!&rdquo; I exclaimed with an amused smile, as I complied with
+ his request. &ldquo;I am afraid you have caught a chill, Vicomte. The night air
+ is little suited to health so delicate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He answered me with a baleful glance, as silently he took my sword and set
+ it&mdash;point to hilt&mdash;with St. Auban's. He appeared to have found
+ some slight difference in the length, for he took two steps away from me,
+ holding the weapons well in the light, where for a moment he surveyed them
+ attentively. His hands shook so that the blades clattered one against the
+ other the while. But, of a sudden, taking both rapiers by the hilt, he
+ struck the blades together with a ringing clash, then flung them both
+ behind him as far as he could contrive, leaving me thunderstruck with
+ amazement, and marvelling whether fear had robbed him of his wits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not until I perceived that the trees around me appeared to spring into
+ life did it occur to me that that clashing of blades was a signal, and
+ that I was trapped. With the realisation of it I was upon Vilmorin in a
+ bound, and with both hands I had caught the dog by the throat before he
+ thought of flight. The violence of my onslaught bore him to the ground,
+ and I, not to release my choking grip, went with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment we lay together where we had fallen, his slender body
+ twisting and writhing under me, his swelling face upturned and his
+ protruding, horror-stricken eyes gazing into mine that were fierce and
+ pitiless. Voices rang above me; someone stooped and strove to pluck me
+ from my victim; then below the left shoulder I felt a sting of pain, first
+ cold then hot, and I knew that I had been stabbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again I felt the blade thrust in, lower down and driven deeper; then, as
+ the knife was for the second time withdrawn, and my flesh sucked at the
+ steel,&mdash;the pain of it sending a shudder through me,&mdash;the
+ instinct of preservation overcame the sweet lust to strangle Vilmorin. I
+ let him go and, staggering to my feet, I turned to face those murderers
+ who struck a defenceless man behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swords gleamed around me: one, two, three, four, five, six, I counted, and
+ stood weak and dazed from loss of blood, gazing stupidly at the white
+ blades. Had I but had my sword I should have laid about me, and gone down
+ beneath their blows as befits a soldier. But the absence of that trusty
+ friend left me limp and helpless&mdash;cowed for the first time since I
+ had borne arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of a sudden I became aware that St. Auban stood opposite to me, hand on
+ hip, surveying me with a malicious leer. As our eyes met&mdash;&ldquo;So, master
+ meddler,&rdquo; quoth he mockingly, &ldquo;you crow less lustily than is your wont.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hound!&rdquo; I gasped, choking with rage, &ldquo;if you are a man, if there be a
+ spark of pride or honour left in your lying, cowardly soul, order your
+ assassins to give me my sword, and, wounded though I be, I'll fight with
+ you this duel that you lured me here to fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laughed harshly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told you but this morning, Master de Luynes, that a St. Auban does not
+ fight men of your stamp. You forced a rendezvous upon me; you shall reap
+ the consequences.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Despite the weakness arising from loss of blood, I sprang towards him,
+ beside myself with fury. But ere I had covered half the distance that lay
+ between us my arms were gripped from behind, and in my spent condition I
+ was held there, powerless, at the Marquis's mercy. He came slowly forward
+ until we were but some two feet apart. For a second he stood leering at
+ me, then, raising his hand, he struck me&mdash;struck a man whose arms
+ another held!&mdash;full upon the face. Passion for the moment lent me
+ strength, and in that moment I had wrenched my right arm free and returned
+ his blow with interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With an oath he got out a dagger that hung from his baldrick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sang du Christ! Take that, you dog!&rdquo; he snarled, burying the blade in my
+ breast as he spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My God! You are murdering me!&rdquo; I gasped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you discovered it? What penetration!&rdquo; he retorted, and those about
+ him laughed at his indecent jest!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made a sign, and the man who had held me withdrew his hands. I
+ staggered forward, deprived of his support, then a crashing blow took me
+ across the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I swayed for an instant, and with arms upheld I clutched at the air, as if
+ I sought, by hanging to it, to save myself from falling; then the moon
+ appeared to go dark, a noise as of the sea beating upon its shore filled
+ my ears, and I seemed to be falling&mdash;falling&mdash;falling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A voice that buzzed and vibrated oddly, growing more distant at each word,
+ reached me as I sank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; it said. &ldquo;Fling that carrion into the river.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then nothingness engulfed me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV. OF MY RESURRECTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Even as the blow which had plunged me into senselessness had imparted to
+ me the sinking sensation which I have feebly endeavoured to depict, so did
+ the first dim ray of returning consciousness bring with it the feeling
+ that I was again being buoyed upwards through the thick waters that had
+ enveloped me, to their surface, where intelligence and wakefulness
+ awaited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as I felt myself borne up and up in that effortless ascension, my
+ senses awake and my reason still half-dormant, an exquisite sense of
+ languor pervaded my whole being. Presently meseemed that the surface was
+ gained at last, and an instinct impelled me to open my eyes upon the
+ light, of which, through closed lids, I had become conscious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I beheld a fair-sized room superbly furnished, and flooded with amber
+ sunlight suggestive in itself of warmth and luxury, the vision of which
+ heightened the delicious torpor that held me in thrall. The bed I lay upon
+ was such, I told myself, as would not have disgraced a royal sleeper. It
+ was upheld by great pillars of black oak, carved with a score of fantastic
+ figures, and all around it, descending from the dome above, hung curtains
+ of rich damask, drawn back at the side that looked upon the window. Near
+ at hand stood a table laden with phials and such utensils as one sees by
+ the bedside of the wealthy sick. All this I beheld in a languid,
+ unreasoning fashion through my half-open lids, and albeit the luxury of
+ the room and the fine linen of my bed told me that this was neither my
+ Paris lodging in the Rue St. Antoine, nor yet my chamber at the hostelry
+ of the Lys de France, still I taxed not my brain with any questions
+ touching my whereabouts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I closed my eyes, and I must have slept again: when next I opened them a
+ burly figure stood in the deep bay of the latticed window, looking out
+ through the leaded panes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I recognised the stalwart frame of Michelot, and at last I asked myself
+ where I might be. It did not seem to occur to me that I had but to call
+ him to receive an answer to that question. Instead, I closed my eyes
+ again, and essayed to think. But just then there came a gentle scratching
+ at the door, and I could hear Michelot tiptoeing across the room; next he
+ and the one he had admitted tiptoed back towards my bedside, and as they
+ came I caught a whisper in a voice that seemed to drag me to full
+ consciousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How fares the poor invalid this morning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The fever is gone, Mademoiselle, and he may wake at any moment; indeed,
+ it is strange that he should sleep so long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He will be the better for it when he does awaken. I will remain here
+ while you rest, Michelot. My poor fellow, you are almost as worn with your
+ vigils as he is with the fever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh! I am strong enough, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I will get a
+ mouthful of food and return, for I would be by when he wakes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then their voices sank so low that as they withdrew I caught not what was
+ said. The door closed softly and for a space there was silence, broken at
+ last by a sigh above my head. With an answering sigh I opened wide my eyes
+ and feasted them upon the lovely face of Yvonne de Canaples, as she bent
+ over me with a look of tenderness and pity that at once recalled to me our
+ parting when I was arrested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But suddenly meeting the stare of my gaze, she drew back with a
+ half-stifled cry, whose meaning my dull wits sought not to interpret, but
+ methought I caught from her lips the words, &ldquo;Thank God!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where am I, Mademoiselle?&rdquo; I inquired, and the faintness of my voice
+ amazed me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know me!&rdquo; she exclaimed, as though the thing were a miracle. Then
+ coming forward again, and setting her cool, sweet hand upon my forehead,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush,&rdquo; she murmured in the accents one might use to soothe a child. &ldquo;You
+ are at Canaples, among friends. Now sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At Canaples!&rdquo; I echoed. &ldquo;How came I here? I am a prisoner, am I not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A prisoner!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;No, no, you are not a prisoner. You are
+ among friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did I then but dream that Montrésor arrested me yesterday on the road to
+ Meung? Ah! I recollect! M. de Montrésor gave me leave on parole to go to
+ Reaux.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, like an avalanche, remembrance swept down upon me, and my memory
+ drew a vivid picture of the happenings at St. Sulpice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My God!&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;Am I not dead, then?&rdquo; And I sought to struggle up into
+ a sitting posture, but that gentle hand upon my forehead restrained and
+ robbed me of all will that was not hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, Monsieur!&rdquo; she said softly. &ldquo;Lie still. By a miracle and the
+ faithfulness of Michelot you live. Be thankful, be content, and sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But my wounds, Mademoiselle?&rdquo; I inquired feebly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are healed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Healed?&rdquo; quoth I, and in my amazement my voice sounded louder than it had
+ yet done since my awakening. &ldquo;Healed! Three such wounds as I took last
+ night, to say naught of a broken head, healed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T was not last night, Monsieur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not last night? Was it not last night that I went to Reaux?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is nearly a month since that took place,&rdquo; she answered with a smile.
+ &ldquo;For nearly a month have you lain unconscious upon that bed, with the
+ angel of Death at your pillow. You have fought and won a silent battle.
+ Now sleep, Monsieur, and ask no more questions until next you awaken, when
+ Michelot shall tell you all that took place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She held a glass to my lips from which I drank gratefully, then, with the
+ submissiveness of a babe, I obeyed her and slept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she had promised, it was Michelot who greeted me when next I opened my
+ eyes, on the following day. There were tears in his eyes&mdash;eyes that
+ had looked grim and unmoved upon the horrors of the battlefield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From him I learned how, after they had flung me into the river, deeming me
+ dead already, St. Auban and his men had made off. The swift stream swirled
+ me along towards the spot where, in the boat, Michelot awaited my return
+ all unconscious of what was taking place. He had heard the splash, and had
+ suddenly stood up, on the point of going ashore, when my body rose within
+ a few feet of him. He spoke of the agony of mind wherewith he had suddenly
+ stretched forth and clutched me by my doublet, fearing that I was indeed
+ dead. He had lifted me into the boat to find that my heart still beat and
+ that the blood flowed from my wounds. These he had there and then bound up
+ in the only rude fashion he was master of, and forthwith, thinking of
+ Andrea and the Chevalier de Canaples, who were my friends, and of
+ Mademoiselle, who was my debtor, also seeing that the château was the
+ nearest place, he had rowed straight across to Canaples, and there I had
+ lain during the four weeks that had elapsed, nursed by Mademoiselle,
+ Andrea, and himself, and thus won back to life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ah, Dieu! How good it was to know that someone there was still who cared
+ for worthless Gaston de Luynes a little&mdash;enough to watch beside him
+ and withhold his soul from the grim claws of Death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What of M. de St. Auban?&rdquo; I inquired presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has not been seen since that night. Probably he feared that did he
+ come to Blois, the Chevalier would find means of punishing him for the
+ attempted abduction of Mademoiselle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, then Andrea is safe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As if in answer to my question, the lad entered at that moment, and upon
+ seeing me sitting up, talking to Michelot, he uttered an exclamation of
+ joy, and hurried forward to my bedside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gaston, dear friend!&rdquo; he cried, as he took my hand&mdash;and a thin,
+ withered hand it was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We talked long together,&mdash;we three,&mdash;and anon we were joined by
+ the Chevalier de Canaples, who offered me also, in his hesitating manner,
+ his felicitations. And with me they lingered until Yvonne came to drive
+ them with protestations from my bedside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, in brief, was the manner of my resurrection. For a week or so I
+ still kept my chamber; then one day towards the middle of April, the
+ weather being warm and the sun bright, Michelot assisted me to don my
+ clothes, which hung strangely empty upon my gaunt, emaciated frame, and,
+ leaning heavily upon my faithful henchman, I made my way below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the salon I found the Chevalier de Canaples with Mesdemoiselles and
+ Andrea awaiting me, and the kindness wherewith they overwhelmed me, as I
+ sat propped up with pillows, was such that I asked myself again and again
+ if, indeed, I was that same Gaston de Luynes who but a little while ago
+ had held himself as destitute of friends as he was of fortune. I was the
+ pampered hero of the hour, and even little Geneviève had a sunny smile and
+ a kind word for me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereafter my recovery progressed with great strides, and gradually, day
+ by day, I felt more like my old vigorous self. They were happy days, for
+ Mademoiselle was often at my side, and ever kind to me; so kind was she
+ that presently, as my strength grew, there fell a great cloud athwart my
+ happiness&mdash;the thought that soon I must leave Canaples never to
+ return there,&mdash;leave Mademoiselle's presence never to come into it
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was Monsieur de Montrésor's prisoner. I had learned that in common with
+ all others, save those at Canaples, he deemed me dead, and that, informed
+ of it by a message from St. Auban, he had returned to Paris on the day
+ following that of my journey to Reaux. Nevertheless, since I lived, he had
+ my parole, and it was my duty as soon as I had regained sufficient
+ strength, to journey to Paris and deliver myself into his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearer and nearer drew the dreaded hour in which I felt that I must leave
+ Canaples. On the last day of April I essayed a fencing bout with Andrea,
+ and so strong and supple did I prove myself that I was forced to realise
+ that the time was come. On the morrow I would go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I was on the point of returning indoors with the foils under my arm,
+ Andrea called me back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gaston, I have something of importance to say to you. Will you take a
+ turn with me down yonder by the river?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a serious, almost nervous look on his comely face, which
+ arrested my attention. I dropped the foils, and taking his arm I went with
+ him as he bade me. We seated ourselves on the grass by the edge of the
+ gurgling waters, and he began:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is now two months since we came to Blois: I, to pay my court to the
+ wealthy Mademoiselle de Canaples; you, to watch over and protect me&mdash;nay,
+ you need not interrupt me. Michelot has told me what St. Auban sought
+ here, and the true motives of your journey to St. Sulpice. Never shall I
+ be able to sufficiently prove my gratitude to you, my poor Gaston. But
+ tell me, dear friend, you who from the outset saw how matters stood, why
+ did you not inform St. Auban that he had no cause to hunt me down since I
+ intended not to come between him and Yvonne?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mon Dieu!&rdquo; I exclaimed, &ldquo;that little fair-haired coquette has&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gaston,&rdquo; he interrupted, &ldquo;you go too fast. I love Geneviève de Canaples.
+ I have loved her, I think, since the moment I beheld her in the inn at
+ Choisy, and, what is more, she loves me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So that&mdash;?&rdquo; I asked with an ill-repressed sneer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have plighted our troth, and with her father's sanction, or without
+ it, she will do me the honour to become my wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Admirable!&rdquo; I exclaimed. &ldquo;And my Lord Cardinal?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May hang himself on his stole for aught I care.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! Truly a dutiful expression for a nephew who has thwarted his uncle's
+ plans!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My uncle's plans are like himself, cold and selfish in their ambition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Andrea, Andrea! Whatever your uncle may be, to those of your blood, at
+ least, he was never selfish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not selfish!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Think you that he is enriching and contracting
+ great alliances for us because he loves us? No, no. Our uncle seeks to
+ gain our support and with it the support of those noble houses to which he
+ is allying us. The nobility opposes him, therefore he seeks to find
+ relatives among noblemen, so that he may weather the storm of which his
+ far-seeing eyes have already detected the first dim clouds. What to him
+ are my feelings, my inclinations, my affections? Things of no moment, to
+ be sacrificed so that I may serve him in the manner that will bring him
+ the most profit. Yet you call him not selfish! Were he not selfish, I
+ should go to him and say: 'I love Geneviève de Canaples. Create me Duke as
+ you would do, did I wed her sister, and the Chevalier de Canaples will not
+ withstand our union.' What think you would be his answer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have a shrewd idea what his answer would be,&rdquo; I replied slowly. &ldquo;Also I
+ have a shrewd idea of what he will say when he learns in what manner you
+ have defied his wishes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He can but order me away from Court, or, at most, banish me from France.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And then what will become of you&mdash;of you and your wife?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is to become of us?&rdquo; he cried in a tone that was almost that of
+ anger. &ldquo;Think you that I am a pauper dependent upon my uncle's bounty? I
+ have an estate near Palermo, which, for all that it does not yield riches,
+ is yet sufficient to enable us to live with dignity and comfort. I have
+ told Geneviève, and she is content.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I looked at his flushed face and laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well!&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;If you are resolved upon it, it is ended.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He appeared to meditate for a moment, then&mdash;&ldquo;We have decided to be
+ married by the Curé of St. Innocent on the day after to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Crédieu!&rdquo; I answered, with a whistle, &ldquo;you have wasted no time in
+ determining your plans. Does Yvonne know of it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have dared tell nobody,&rdquo; he replied; and a moment later he added
+ hesitatingly, &ldquo;You, I know, will not betray us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know me so little that you doubt me on that score? Have no fear,
+ Andrea, I shall not speak. Besides, to-morrow, or the next day at latest,
+ I leave Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do not mean that you are returning to the Lys de France!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. I am going farther than that. I am going to Paris.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Paris?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Paris, to deliver myself up to M. de Montrésor, who gave me leave to
+ go to Reaux some seven weeks ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it is madness, Gaston!&rdquo; he ejaculated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All virtue is madness in a world so sinful; nevertheless I go. In a
+ measure I am glad that things have fallen out with you as they have done,
+ for when the news goes abroad that you have married Geneviève de Canaples
+ and left the heiress free, your enemies will vanish, and you will have no
+ further need of me. New enemies you will have perchance, but in your
+ strife with them I could lend you no help, were I by.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat in silence casting pebbles into the stream, and watching the
+ ripples they made upon the face of the waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you told Mademoiselle?&rdquo; he asked at length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not yet. I shall tell her to-day. You also, Andrea, must take her into
+ your confidence touching your approaching marriage. That she will prove a
+ good friend to you I am assured.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what reason shall I give form my secrecy?&rdquo; he inquired, and inwardly
+ I smiled to see how the selfishness which love begets in us had caused him
+ already to forget my affairs, and how the thought of his own approaching
+ union effaced all thought of me and the doom to which I went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give no reason,&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;Let Genevieve tell her of what you
+ contemplate, and if a reason she must have, let Geneviève bid her come to
+ me. This much will I do for you in the matter; indeed, Andrea, it is the
+ last service I am like to render you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sh! Here comes the Chevalier. She shall be told to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI. THE WAY OF WOMAN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ For all that I realised that this love of mine for Yvonne was as a child
+ still-born&mdash;a thing that had no existence save in the heart that had
+ begotten it&mdash;I rejoiced meanly at the thought that she was not
+ destined to become Andrea's wife. For since I understood that this woman&mdash;who
+ to me was like no other of her sex&mdash;was not for so poor a thing as
+ Gaston de Luynes, like the dog in the fable I wished that no other might
+ possess her. Inevitable it seemed that sooner or later one must come who
+ would woo and win her. But ere that befell, my Lord Cardinal would have
+ meted out justice to me&mdash;the justice of the rope meseemed&mdash;and I
+ should not be by to gnash my teeth in jealousy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening, when the Chevalier de Canaples had gone to pay a visit to
+ his vineyard,&mdash;the thing that, next to himself, he loved most in this
+ world,&mdash;and whilst Geneviève and Andrea were vowing a deathless love
+ to each other in the rose garden, their favourite haunt when the Chevalier
+ was absent, I seized the opportunity for making my adieux to Yvonne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were leaning together upon the balustrade of the terrace, and our faces
+ were turned towards the river and the wooded shores beyond&mdash;a
+ landscape this that was as alive and beautiful now as it had been dead and
+ grey when first I came to Canaples two months ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarce were my first words spoken when she turned towards me, and
+ methought&mdash;but I was mad, I told myself&mdash;that there was a catch
+ in her voice as she exclaimed, &ldquo;You are leaving us, Monsieur?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-morrow morning I shall crave Monsieur your father's permission to quit
+ Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But why, Monsieur? Have we not made you happy here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So happy, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I answered with fervour, &ldquo;that at times it
+ passes my belief that I am indeed Gaston de Luynes. But go I must. My
+ honour demands of me this sacrifice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in answer to the look of astonishment that filled her wondrous eyes, I
+ told her what I had told Andrea touching my parole to Montrésor, and the
+ necessity of its redemption. As Andrea had done, she also dubbed it
+ madness, but her glance was, nevertheless, so full of admiration, that
+ methought to have earned it was worth the immolation of liberty&mdash;of
+ life perchance; who could say?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before I go, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I pursued, looking straight before me as I
+ spoke, and dimly conscious that her glance was bent upon my face&mdash;&ldquo;before
+ I go, I fain would thank you for all that you have done for me here. Your
+ care has saved my life, Mademoiselle; your kindness, methinks, has saved
+ my soul. For it seems to me that I am no longer the same man whom Michelot
+ fished out of the Loire that night two months ago. I would thank you,
+ Mademoiselle, for the happiness that has been mine during the past few
+ days&mdash;a happiness such as for years has not fallen to my lot. To
+ another and worthier man, the task of thanking you might be an easy one;
+ but to me, who know myself to be so far beneath you, the obligation is so
+ overwhelming that I know of no words to fitly express it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur, Monsieur, I beseech you! Already you have said overmuch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Mademoiselle; not half enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you forgotten, then, what you did for me? Our trivial service to you
+ is but unseemly recompense. What other man would have come to my rescue as
+ you came, with such odds against you&mdash;and forgetting the affronting
+ words wherewith that very day I had met your warning? Tell me, Monsieur,
+ who would have done that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, any man who deemed himself a gentleman, and who possessed such
+ knowledge as I had.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She laughed a laugh of unbelief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are mistaken, sir,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;The deed was worthy of one of
+ those preux chevaliers we read of, and I have never known but one man
+ capable of accomplishing it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those words and the tone wherein they were uttered set my brain on fire. I
+ turned towards her; our glances met, and her eyes&mdash;those eyes that
+ but a while ago had never looked on me without avowing the disdain wherein
+ she had held me&mdash;were now filled with a light of kindliness, of
+ sympathy, of tenderness that seemed more than I could endure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already my hand was thrust into the bosom of my doublet, and my fingers
+ were about to drag forth that little shred of green velvet that I had
+ found in the coppice on the day of her abduction, and that I had kept ever
+ since as one keeps the relic of a departed saint. Another moment and I
+ should have poured out the story of the mad, hopeless passion that filled
+ my heart to bursting, when of a sudden&mdash;&ldquo;Yvonne, Yvonne!&rdquo; came
+ Geneviève's fresh voice from the other end of the terrace. The spell of
+ that moment was broken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Methought Mademoiselle made a little gesture of impatience as she answered
+ her sister's call; then, with a word of apology, she left me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half dazed by the emotions that had made sport of me, I leaned over the
+ balustrade, and with my elbows on the stone and my chin on my palms, I
+ stared stupidly before me, thanking God for having sent Geneviève in time
+ to save me from again earning Mademoiselle's scorn. For as I grew sober I
+ did not doubt that with scorn she would have met the wild words that
+ already trembled on my lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I laughed harshly and aloud, such a laugh as those in Hell may vent.
+ &ldquo;Gaston, Gaston!&rdquo; I muttered, &ldquo;at thirty-two you are more a fool than ever
+ you were at twenty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told myself then that my fancy had vested her tone and look with a
+ kindliness far beyond that which they contained, and as I thought of how I
+ had deemed impatient the little gesture wherewith she had greeted
+ Geneviève's interruption I laughed again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the reverie into which, naturally enough, I lapsed, it was
+ Mademoiselle who aroused me. She stood beside me with an unrest of manner
+ so unusual in her, that straightway I guessed the substance of her talk
+ with Geneviève.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I said, without waiting for her to speak, &ldquo;you have
+ learned what is afoot?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;That they love each other is no news to me. That
+ they intend to wed does not surprise me. But that they should contemplate
+ a secret marriage passes my comprehension.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cleared my throat as men will when about to embark upon a perilous
+ subject with no starting-point determined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is time, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I began, &ldquo;that you should learn the true cause
+ of M. de Mancini's presence at Canaples. It will enlighten you touching
+ his motives for a secret wedding. Had things fallen out as was intended by
+ those who planned his visit&mdash;Monsieur your father and my Lord
+ Cardinal&mdash;it is improbable that you would ever have heard that which
+ it now becomes necessary that I should tell you. I trust, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I
+ continued, &ldquo;that you will hear me in a neutral spirit, without permitting
+ your personal feelings to enter into your consideration of that which I
+ shall unfold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So long a preface augurs anything but well,&rdquo; she interposed, looking
+ monstrous serious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not ill, at least, I hope. Hear me then. Your father and his Eminence are
+ friends; the one has a daughter who is said to be very wealthy and whom
+ he, with fond ambition, desires to see wedded to a man who can give her an
+ illustrious name; the other possesses a nephew whom he can ennoble by the
+ highest title that a man may bear who is not a prince of the blood,&mdash;and
+ borne indeed by few who are not,&mdash;and whom he desires to see contract
+ an alliance that will bring him enough of riches to enable him to bear his
+ title with becoming dignity.&rdquo; I glanced at Mademoiselle, whose cheeks were
+ growing an ominous red.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I continued, &ldquo;your father and Monseigneur de Mazarin
+ appear to have bared their heart's desire to each other, and M. de Mancini
+ was sent to Canaples to woo and win your father's elder daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A long pause followed, during which she stood with face aflame, averted
+ eyes, and heaving bosom, betraying the feelings that stormed within her at
+ the disclosure of the bargain whereof she had been a part. At length&mdash;&ldquo;Oh,
+ Monsieur!&rdquo; she exclaimed in a choking voice, and clenching her shapely
+ hands, &ldquo;to think&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beseech you not to think, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I interrupted calmly, for,
+ having taken the first plunge, I was now master of myself. &ldquo;The ironical
+ little god, whom the ancients painted with bandaged eyes, has led M. de
+ Mancini by the nose in this matter, and things have gone awry for the
+ plotters. There, Mademoiselle, you have the reason for a clandestine
+ union. Did Monsieur your father guess how Andrea's affections have&rdquo;&mdash;I
+ caught the word &ldquo;miscarried&rdquo; betimes, and substituted&mdash;&ldquo;gone against
+ his wishes, his opposition is not a thing to be doubted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you sure there is no mistake?&rdquo; she inquired after a pause. &ldquo;Is all
+ this really true, Monsieur?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is, indeed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how comes it that my father has seen naught of what has been so plain
+ to me&mdash;that M. de Mancini was ever at my sister's side?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your father, Mademoiselle, is much engrossed in his vineyard. Moreover,
+ when the Chevalier has been at hand he has been careful to show no greater
+ regard for the one than for the other of you. I instructed him in this
+ duplicity many weeks ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at me for a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Monsieur,&rdquo; she cried passionately, &ldquo;how deep is my humiliation! To
+ think that I was made a part of so vile a bargain! Oh, I am glad that M.
+ de Mancini has proved above the sordid task to which they set him&mdash;glad
+ that he will dupe the Cardinal and my father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So am not I, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I exclaimed. She vouchsafed me a stare of
+ ineffable surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Diable!&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;I am M. de Mancini's friend. It was to shield him
+ that I fought your brother; again, because of my attitude towards him was
+ it that I went perilously near assassination at Reaux. Enemies sprang up
+ about him when the Cardinal's matrimonial projects became known. Your
+ brother picked a quarrel with him, and when I had dealt with your brother,
+ St. Auban appeared, and after St. Auban there were others. When it is
+ known that he has played this trick upon 'Uncle Giulio' his enemies will
+ disappear; but, on the other hand, his prospects will all be blighted, and
+ for that I am sorry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So that was the motive of your duel with Eugène!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At last you learn it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; she added in a curious voice, &ldquo;you would have been better pleased
+ had M. de Mancini carried out his uncle's wishes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It matters little what I would think, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I answered
+ guardedly, for I could not read that curious tone of hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nevertheless, I am curious to hear your answer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What answer could I make? The truth&mdash;that for all my fine talk, I was
+ at heart and in a sense right glad that she was not to become Andrea's
+ wife&mdash;would have seemed ungallant. Moreover, I must have added the
+ explanation that I desired to see her no man's wife, so that I might not
+ seem to contradict myself. Therefore&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In truth, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I answered, lying glibly, &ldquo;it would have given
+ me more pleasure had Andrea chosen to obey his Eminence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her manner froze upon the instant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the consideration of your friend's advancement,&rdquo; she replied, half
+ contemptuously, &ldquo;you forget, M. de Luynes, to consider me. Am I, then, a
+ thing to be bartered into the hands of the first fortune-hunter who woos
+ me because he has been bidden so to do, and who is to marry me for
+ political purposes? Pshaw, M. de Luynes!&rdquo; she added, with a scornful
+ laugh, &ldquo;after all, I was a fool to expect aught else from&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She checked herself abruptly, and a sudden access of mercy left the
+ stinging &ldquo;you&rdquo; unuttered. I stood by, dumb and sheepish, not understanding
+ how the words that I had deemed gallant could have brought this tempest
+ down upon my head. Before I could say aught that might have righted
+ matters, or perchance made them worse&mdash;&ldquo;Since you leave Canaples
+ to-morrow,&rdquo; quoth she, &ldquo;I will say 'Adieu,' Monsieur, for it is unlikely
+ that we shall meet again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a slight inclination of her head, and withholding her hand
+ intentionally, she moved away, whilst I stood, as only a fool or a statue
+ would stand, and watched her go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once she paused, and, indeed, half turned, whereupon hope knocked at my
+ heart again; but before I had admitted it, she had resumed her walk
+ towards the house. Hungrily I followed her graceful, lissom figure with my
+ eyes until she had crossed the threshold. Then, with a dull ache in my
+ breast, I flung myself upon a stone seat, and, addressing myself to the
+ setting sun for want of a better audience, I roundly cursed her sex for
+ the knottiest puzzle that had ever plagued the mind of man in the
+ unravelling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII. FATHER AND SON
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gaston,&rdquo; quoth Andrea next morning, &ldquo;you will remain at Canaples until
+ to-morrow? You must, for to-morrow I am to be wed, and I would fain have
+ your good wishes ere you go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nice hands, mine, to seek a benediction at,&rdquo; I grumbled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you will remain? Come, Gaston, we have been good friends, you and I,
+ and who knows when next we shall meet? Believe me, I shall value your 'God
+ speed' above all others.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Likely enough, since it will be the only one you'll hear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But for all my sneers he was not to be put off. He talked and coaxed so
+ winningly that in the end&mdash;albeit I am a man not easily turned from
+ the course he has set himself&mdash;the affectionate pleading in his fresh
+ young voice and the affectionate look in his dark eyes won me to his way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forthwith I went in quest of the Chevalier, whom, at the indication of a
+ lackey, I discovered in the room it pleased him to call his study&mdash;that
+ same room into which we had been ushered on the day of our arrival at
+ Canaples. I told him that on the morrow I must set out for Paris, and
+ albeit he at first expressed a polite regret, yet when I had shown him how
+ my honour was involved in my speedy return thither, he did not urge me to
+ put off my departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It grieves me, sir, that you must go, and I deeply regret the motive that
+ is taking you. Yet I hope that his Eminence, in recognition of the
+ services you have rendered his nephew, will see fit to forget what cause
+ for resentment he may have against you, and render you your liberty. If
+ you will give me leave, Monsieur, I will write to his Eminence in this
+ strain, and you shall be the bearer of my letter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thanked him, with a smile of deprecation, as I thought of the true cause
+ of Mazarin's resentment, which was precisely that of the plea upon which
+ M. de Canaples sought to obtain for me my liberation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, Monsieur,&rdquo; he pursued nervously, &ldquo;touching Andrea and his visit
+ here, I would say a word to you who are his friend, and may haply know
+ something of his mind. It is over two months since he came here, and yet
+ the&mdash;er&mdash;affair which we had hoped to bring about seems no
+ nearer its conclusion than when first he came. Of late I have watched him
+ and I have watched Yvonne; they are certainly good friends, yet not even
+ the frail barrier of formality appears overcome betwixt them, and I am
+ beginning to fear that Andrea is not only lukewarm in this matter, but is
+ forgetful of his uncle's wishes and selfishly indifferent to Monseigneur's
+ projects and mine, which, as he well knows, are the reason of his sojourn
+ at my château. What think you of this, M. de Luynes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shot a furtive glance at me as he spoke, and with his long, lean
+ forefinger he combed his beard in a nervous fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I gave a short laugh to cover my embarrassment at the question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do I think, Monsieur?&rdquo; I echoed to gain time. Then, thinking that a
+ sententious answer would be the most fitting,&mdash;&ldquo;Ma foi! Love is as
+ the spark that lies latent in flint and steel: for days and weeks these
+ two may be as close together as you please, and naught will come of it;
+ but one fine day, a hand&mdash;the hand of chance&mdash;will strike the
+ one against the other, and lo!&mdash;the spark is born!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You speak in parables, Monsieur,&rdquo; was his caustic comment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is in parables that all religions are preached,&rdquo; I returned, &ldquo;and
+ love, methinks, is a great religion in this world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Love, sir, love!&rdquo; he cried petulantly. &ldquo;The word makes me sick! What has
+ love to do with this union? Love, sir, is a pretty theme for poets,
+ romancers, and fools. The imagination of such a sentiment&mdash;for it is
+ a sentiment that does not live save in the imagination&mdash;may serve to
+ draw peasants and other low­bred clods into wedlock. With such as we&mdash;with
+ gentlemen&mdash;it has naught to do. So let that be, Monsieur. Andrea de
+ Mancini came hither to wed my daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I am certain, Monsieur,&rdquo; I answered stoutly, &ldquo;that Andrea will wed
+ your daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You speak with confidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know Andrea well. Signs that may be hidden to you are clear to me, and
+ I have faith in my prophecy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at me, and fell a victim to my confidence of manner. The
+ petulancy died out of his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well! We will hope. My Lord Cardinal is to create him Duke, and he
+ will assume as title his wife's estate, becoming known to history as
+ Andrea de Mancini, Duke of Canaples. Thus shall a great house be founded
+ that will bear our name. You see the importance of it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Clearly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how reasonable is my anxiety?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Assuredly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you are in sympathy with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardieu! Why else did I go so near to killing your son?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True,&rdquo; he mused. Then suddenly he added, &ldquo;Apropos, have you heard that
+ Eugène has become one of the leaders of these frondeur madmen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! Then he is quite recovered?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unfortunately,&rdquo; he assented with a grimace, and thus our interview ended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That day wore slowly to its close. I wandered hither and thither in the
+ château and the grounds, hungering throughout the long hours for a word
+ with Mademoiselle&mdash;a glimpse of her, at least.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all day long she kept her chamber, the pretext being that she was
+ beset by a migraine. By accident I came upon her that evening, at last, in
+ the salon; yet my advent was the signal for her departure, and all the
+ words she had for me were:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still at Canaples, Monsieur? I thought you were to have left this
+ morning.&rdquo; She looked paler than her wont, and her eyes were somewhat red.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am remaining until to-morrow,&rdquo; said I awkwardly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vraiement!&rdquo; was all she answered, and she was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning the Chevalier and I breakfasted alone. Mademoiselle's
+ migraine was worse. Geneviève was nursing, so her maid brought word&mdash;whilst
+ Andrea had gone out an hour before and had not returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chevalier shot me an apologetic glance across the board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is a poor 'God speed' to you, M. de Luynes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I made light of it and turned the conversation into an indifferent
+ channel, wherein it abided until, filling himself a bumper of Anjou, the
+ Chevalier solemnly drank to my safe journey and good fortune in Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment Andrea entered by the door abutting on the terrace balcony.
+ He was flushed, and his eyes sparkled with a joyous fever. Profuse was he
+ in his apologies, which, howbeit, were passing vague in character, and
+ which he brought to a close by pledging me as the Chevalier had done
+ already.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we rose, Geneviève appeared with the news that Yvonne was somewhat
+ better, adding that she had come to take leave of me. Her composure
+ surprised me gladly, for albeit in her eyes there was also a telltale
+ light, the lids, demurely downcast as was her wont, amply screened it from
+ the vulgar gaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrea would tell his father-in-law of the marriage later in the day; and
+ for all I am not a chicken-hearted man, still I had no stomach to be at
+ hand when the storm broke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moment having come for my departure, and Michelot awaiting me already
+ with the horses in the courtyard, M. de Canaples left us to seek the
+ letter which I was to carry to his Eminence. So soon as the door had
+ closed upon him, Andrea came forward, leading his bride by the hand, and
+ asked me to wish them happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With all my heart,&rdquo; I answered; &ldquo;and if happiness be accorded you in a
+ measure with the fervency of my wishes then shall you, indeed, be happy.
+ Each of you I congratulate upon the companion in life you have chosen.
+ Cherish him, Mademoi&mdash;Madame, for he is loyal and true&mdash;and such
+ are rare in this world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is possible that I might have said more in this benign and fatherly
+ strain&mdash;for it seemed to me that this new role I had assumed suited
+ me wondrous well&mdash;but a shadow that drew our eyes towards the nearest
+ window interrupted me. And what we saw there drew a cry from Andrea, a
+ shudder from Geneviève, and from me a gasp that was half amazement, half
+ dismay. For, leaning upon the sill, surveying us with a sardonic, evil
+ grin, we beheld Eugène de Canaples, the man whom I had left with a
+ sword-thrust through his middle behind the Hôtel Vendôme two months ago.
+ Whence was he sprung, and why came he thus to his father's house?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He started as I faced him, for doubtless St. Auban had boasted to him that
+ he had killed me in a duel. For a moment he remained at the window, then
+ he disappeared, and we could hear the ring of his spurred heel as he
+ walked along the balcony towards the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And simultaneously came the quick, hurrying steps of the Chevalier de
+ Canaples, as he crossed the hall, returning with the letter he had gone to
+ fetch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geneviève shuddered again, and looked fearfully from one door to the
+ other; Andrea drew a sharp breath like a man in pain, whilst I rapped out
+ an oath to brace my nerves for the scene which we all three foresaw. Then
+ in silence we waited, some subtle instinct warning us of the disaster that
+ impended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The steps on the balcony halted, and a second later those in the hall; and
+ then, as though the thing had been rehearsed and timed so that the
+ spectators might derive the utmost effect from it, the doors opened
+ together, and on the opposing thresholds, with the width of the room
+ betwixt them, stood father and son confronted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. OF HOW I LEFT CANAPLES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Whilst a man might tell a dozen did those two remain motionless, the one
+ eyeing the other. But their bearing was as widely different as their
+ figures; Eugène's stalwart frame stood firm and erect, insolence in every
+ line of it, reflected perchance from the smile that lurked about the
+ corners of his thin­lipped mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hat, which he had not had the grace to doff, set jauntily upon his
+ straight black hair, the jerkin of leather which he wore, and the stout
+ sword which hung from the plainest of belts, all served to give him the
+ air of a ruffler, or tavern knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chevalier, on the other hand, stood as if turned to stone. From his
+ enervated fingers the letter fluttered to the ground, and on his pale,
+ thin face was to be read a displeasure mixed with fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, with an oath, the old man broke the silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What seek you at Canaples?&rdquo; he asked in a quivering voice, as he advanced
+ into the room. &ldquo;Are you so dead to shame that you dare present yourself
+ with such effrontery? Off with your hat, sir!&rdquo; he blazed, stamping his
+ foot, and going from pale to crimson. &ldquo;Off with your hat, or Mortdieu,
+ I'll have you flung out of doors by my grooms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This show of vehemence, as sudden as it was unexpected, drew from Eugène a
+ meek obedience that I had not looked for. Nevertheless, the young man's
+ lip curled as he uncovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How fatherly is your greeting!&rdquo; he sneered. The Chevalier's eyes flashed
+ a glance that lacked no venom at his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What manner of greeting did you look for?&rdquo; he returned hotly. &ldquo;Did you
+ expect me to set a ring upon your finger, and have the fattened calf
+ killed in honour of your return? Sangdieu, sir! Have you come hither to
+ show me how a father should welcome the profligate son who has dishonoured
+ his name? Why are you here, unbidden? Answer me, sir!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A deep flush overspread Eugène's cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had thought when I crossed the threshold that this was the Château de
+ Canaples, or else that my name was Canaples&mdash;I know not which.
+ Clearly I was mistaken, for here is a lady who has no word either of
+ greeting or intercession for me, and who, therefore, cannot be my sister,
+ and yonder a man whom I should never look to find in my father's house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I took a step forward, a hot answer on my lips, when from the doorway at
+ my back came Yvonne's sweet voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eugène! You here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As you see, Sister. Though had you delayed your coming 't is probable you
+ would no longer have found me, for your father welcomes me with oaths and
+ threatens me with his grooms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She cast a reproachful glance upon the Chevalier, 'neath which the anger
+ seemed to die out of him; then she went forward with hands outstretched
+ and a sad smile upon her lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yvonne!&rdquo; The Chevalier's voice rang out sharp and sudden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I forbid you to approach that man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment she appeared to hesitate; then, leisurely pursuing her way,
+ she set her hands upon her brother's shoulders and embraced him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chevalier swore through set teeth; Geneviève trembled, Andrea looked
+ askance, and I laughed softly at the Chevalier's discomfiture. Eugène
+ flung his hat and cloak into a corner and strode across the room to where
+ his father stood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, Monsieur, since I have travelled all the way from Paris to save
+ my house from a step that will bring it into the contempt of all France, I
+ shall not go until you have heard me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chevalier shrugged his shoulders and made as if to turn away. Yvonne's
+ greeting of her brother appeared to have quenched the spark of spirit that
+ for a moment had glimmered in the little man's breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur,&rdquo; cried Eugène, &ldquo;believe me that what I have to say is of the
+ utmost consequence, and say it I will&mdash;whether before these strangers
+ or in your private ear shall be as you elect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man glanced about him like one who seeks a way of escape. At last&mdash;&ldquo;If
+ say it you must,&rdquo; he growled, &ldquo;say it here and now. And when you have said
+ it, go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eugène scowled at me, and from me to Andrea. To pay him for that scowl, I
+ had it in my mind to stay; but, overcoming the clownish thought, I took
+ Andrea by the arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, Andrea,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;we will take a turn outside while these family
+ matters are in discussion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had a shrewd idea what was the substance of Eugène's mission to Canaples&mdash;to
+ expostulate with his father touching the proposed marriage of Yvonne to
+ the Cardinal's nephew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was I wrong, for when, some moments later, the Chevalier recalled us
+ from the terrace, where we were strolling&mdash;&ldquo;What think you he has
+ come hither to tell me?&rdquo; he inquired as we entered. He pointed to his son
+ as he spoke, and passion shook his slender frame as the breeze shakes a
+ leaf. Mademoiselle and Geneviève sat hand in hand&mdash;Yvonne deadly
+ pale, Geneviève weeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What think you he has the effrontery to say? Têtedieu! it seems that he
+ has profited little by the lesson you read him in the horse-market about
+ meddling in matters which concern him not. He has come hither to tell me
+ that he will not permit his sister to wed the Cardinal's nephew; that he
+ will not have the estates of Canaples pass into the hands of a foreign
+ upstart. He, forsooth&mdash;he! he! he!&rdquo; And at each utterance of the
+ pronoun he lunged with his forefinger in the direction of his son. &ldquo;This
+ he is not ashamed to utter before Yvonne herself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You compelled me to do so,&rdquo; cried Eugène angrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I?&rdquo; ejaculated the Chevalier. &ldquo;Did I compel you to come hither with your
+ 'I will' and 'I will not'? Who are you, that you should give laws at
+ Canaples? And he adds, sir,&rdquo; quoth the old knight excitedly, &ldquo;that sooner
+ than allow this marriage to take place he will kill M. de Mancini.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall be happy to afford him the opportunity!&rdquo; shouted Andrea, bounding
+ forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eugène looked up quickly and gave a short laugh. Thereupon followed a wild
+ hubbub; everyone rushed forward and everyone talked; even little Geneviève&mdash;louder
+ than all the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall not fight! You shall not fight!&rdquo; she cried, and her voice was
+ so laden with command that all others grew silent and all eyes were turned
+ upon her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What affair is this of yours, little one?&rdquo; quoth Eugène.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is this,&rdquo; she answered, panting, &ldquo;that you need fear no marriage
+ 'twixt my sister and Andrea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In her eagerness she had cast caution to the winds of heaven. Her father
+ and brother stared askance at her; I gave an inward groan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Andrea!&rdquo; echoed Eugène at last. &ldquo;What is this man to you that you speak
+ thus of him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl flung herself upon her father's breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father,&rdquo; she sobbed, &ldquo;dear father, forgive!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chevalier's brow grew dark; roughly he seized her by the arms and,
+ holding her at arm's length, scanned her face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What must I forgive?&rdquo; he inquired in a thick voice. &ldquo;What is M. de
+ Mancini to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some sinister note in her father's voice caused the girl to grow of a
+ sudden calm and to assume a rigidity that reminded me of her sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is my husband!&rdquo; she answered. And there was a note of pride&mdash;almost
+ of triumph&mdash;in her voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An awful silence followed the launching of that thunderbolt. Eugène stood
+ with open mouth, staring now at Geneviève, now at his father. Andrea set
+ his arm about his bride's waist, and her fair head was laid trustingly
+ upon his shoulder. The Chevalier's eyes rolled ominously. At length he
+ spoke in a dangerously calm voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How long is it&mdash;how long have you been wed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We were wed in Blois an hour ago,&rdquo; answered Geneviève.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something that was like a grunt escaped the Chevalier, then his eye
+ fastened upon me, and his anger boiled up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You knew of this?&rdquo; he asked, coming towards me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you lied to me yesterday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I drew myself up, stiff as a broomstick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not understand,&rdquo; I answered coldly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you not give me your assurance that M. de Mancini would marry
+ Yvonne?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not, Monsieur. I did but tell you that he would wed your daughter.
+ And, ma foi! your daughter he has wed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have fooled me, scélérat!&rdquo; he blazed out. &ldquo;You, who have been
+ sheltered by&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father!&rdquo; Yvonne interrupted, taking his arm. &ldquo;M. de Luynes has behaved no
+ worse than have I, or any one of us, in this matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; he cried, and pointed to Andrea. &ldquo;'T is you who have wrought this
+ infamy. Eugène,&rdquo; he exclaimed, turning of a sudden to his son, &ldquo;you have a
+ sword; wipe out this shame.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shame!&rdquo; echoed Geneviève. &ldquo;Oh, father, where is the shame? If it were no
+ shame for Andrea to marry Yvonne, surely&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Silence!&rdquo; he thundered. &ldquo;Eugène&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eugène answered him with a contemptuous laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are quick enough to call upon my sword, now that things have not
+ fallen out as you would have them. Where are your grooms now, Monsieur?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Insolent hound!&rdquo; cried his father indignantly. Then, letting fall his
+ arms with something that was near akin to a sob&mdash;&ldquo;Is there no one
+ left to do aught but mock me?&rdquo; he groaned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this weakness was no more than momentary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Out of my house, sir!&rdquo; he blazed, turning upon Andrea, and for a moment
+ methought he would have struck him. &ldquo;Out of my house&mdash;you and this
+ wife of yours!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father!&rdquo; sobbed Geneviève, with hands outstretched in entreaty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Out of my house,&rdquo; he repeated, &ldquo;and you also, M. de Luynes. Away with
+ you! Go with the master you have served so well.&rdquo; And, turning on his
+ heel, he strode towards the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father&mdash;dear father!&rdquo; cried Geneviève, following him: he slammed the
+ door in her face for answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a moan she sank down upon her knees, her frail body shaken by
+ convulsive sobs&mdash;Dieu! what a bridal morn was hers!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrea and Yvonne raised her and led her to a chair. Eugène watched them
+ with a cynical eye, then laughed brutally, and, gathering up his hat and
+ cloak, he moved towards the balcony door and vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is M. de Luynes still there?&rdquo; quoth Geneviève presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am here, Madame.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You had best set out, Monsieur,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We shall follow soon&mdash;very
+ soon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I took Andrea aside and asked him whither it was his intention to take his
+ wife. He replied that they would go to Chambord, where they would remain
+ for some weeks in the hope that the Chevalier might relent sufficiently to
+ forgive them. Thereafter it was his purpose to take his bride home to his
+ Sicilian demesne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our farewells were soon spoken; yet none the less warm, for all its
+ brevity, was my leave-taking of Andrea, and our wishes for each other's
+ happiness were as fervent as the human heart can shape. We little thought
+ that we were not destined to meet again for years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yvonne's adieu was cold and formal&mdash;so cold and formal that it seemed
+ to rob the sunshine of its glory for me as I stepped out into the open
+ air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After all, what mattered it? I was a fool to have entertained a single
+ tender thought concerning her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. OF MY RETURN TO PARIS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Scant cause is there for me to tarry over the details of my return to
+ Paris. A sad enough journey was it; as sad for my poor Michelot as for
+ myself, since he rode with one so dejected as I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Things had gone ill, and I feared that when the Cardinal heard the story
+ things would go worse, for Mazarin was never a tolerant man, nor one to be
+ led by the gospel of mercy and forgiveness. For myself I foresaw the rope&mdash;possibly
+ even the wheel; and a hundred times a day I dubbed myself a fool for
+ obeying the voice of honour with such punctiliousness when so grim a
+ reward awaited me. What mood was on me&mdash;me, Gaston de Luynes, whose
+ honour had been long since besmirched and tattered until no outward
+ semblance of honour was left?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But swift in the footsteps of that question would come the answer&mdash;Yvonne.
+ Ay, truly enough, it was because in my heart I had dared to hold a
+ sentiment of love for her, the purest&mdash;nay, the only pure&mdash;thing
+ my heart had held for many a year, that I would set nothing vile to keep
+ company with that sentiment; that until my sun should set&mdash;and
+ already it dropped swiftly towards life's horizon&mdash;my actions should
+ be the actions of such a man as might win Yvonne's affections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let that be. This idle restrospective mood can interest you but
+ little; nor can you profit from it, unless, indeed, it be by noting how
+ holy and cleansing to the heart of man is the love&mdash;albeit unrequited&mdash;that
+ he bears a good woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we drew near Meung&mdash;where we lay on that first night of our
+ journey&mdash;a light travelling chaise, going in the same direction,
+ passed us at a gallop. As it flashed by, I caught a glimpse of Eugène de
+ Canaples's swart face through the window. Whether the recognition was
+ mutual I cannot say&mdash;nor does it signify.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we reached the Hôtel de la Couronne, half an hour later, we saw that
+ same chaise disappearing round a corner of the street, whilst through the
+ porte-cochère the hostler was leading a pair of horses, foam-flecked and
+ steaming with sweat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whither went Master Canaples at such a rate, and in a haste that caused
+ him to travel day and night? To a goal he little looked for&mdash;or
+ rather, which, in the madness of his headlong rush, he could not see. So I
+ was to learn ere long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day I awoke betimes, and setting my window wide to let in the fresh,
+ clean-smelling air of that May morning I made shift to dress. Save for the
+ cackle of the poultry which had strayed into the courtyard, and the noisy
+ yawns and sleep-laden ejaculations of the stable-boy, who was drawing
+ water for the horses, all was still, for it had not yet gone five o'clock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But of a sudden a door opened somewhere, and a step rang out, accompanied
+ by the jangle of spurs, and with it came a sharp, unpleasant voice calling
+ for its owner's horse. There was a familiar sound in those shrill accents
+ that caused me to thrust my head through the casement. But I was quick to
+ withdraw it, as I recognised in the gaily dressed little fellow below my
+ old friend Malpertuis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I know not what impulse made me draw back so suddenly. The action was as
+ much the child of instinct as of the lately acquired habit of concealing
+ my face from the gaze of all who were likely to spread abroad the news
+ that I still lived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From behind my curtains I watched Malpertuis ride out of the yard, saying,
+ in answer to a parting question of the landlord, who had come upon the
+ scene, that he would breakfast at Beaugency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, as he rode down the street, he of a sudden raised his discordant
+ voice and sang to the accompaniment of his horse's hoofs. And the burden
+ of his song ran thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A frondeur wind
+ Got up to-day,
+ 'Gainst Mazarin
+ It blows, they say.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I listened in amazement to his raven's voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whither was he bound, I asked myself, and whence a haste that made him set
+ out fasting, with an anti-cardinalist ditty on his lips, and ride two
+ leagues to seek a breakfast in a village that did not hold an inn where a
+ dog might be housed in comfort?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like Eugène de Canaples, he also travelled towards a goal that he little
+ dreamt of. And so albeit the one went south and the other north, these two
+ men were, between them, drawing together the thread of this narrative of
+ mine, as anon you shall learn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We reached Paris at dusk three days later, and we went straight to my old
+ lodging in the Rue St. Antoine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Coupri started and gasped upon beholding me, and not until I had cursed
+ him for a fool in a voice that was passing human would he believe that I
+ was no ghost. He too had heard the rumour of my death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I dispatched Michelot to the Palais Royal, where&mdash;without permitting
+ his motive to transpire&mdash;he was to ascertain for me whether M. de
+ Montrésor was in Paris, whether he still dwelt at the Hôtel des Cloches,
+ and at what hour he could be found there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst he was away I went up to my room, and there I found a letter which
+ Coupri informed me had been left by a lackey a month ago&mdash;before the
+ report that I had been killed had reached Paris&mdash;and since lain
+ forgotten. It was a delicate note, to which still hung the ghost of a
+ perfume; there were no arms on the seal, but the writing I took to be that
+ of my aunt, the Duchesse de Chevreuse, and vaguely marvelling what motive
+ she could have had for communicating with me, I cut the silk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was, indeed, from the Duchesse, but it contained no more than a request
+ that I should visit her at her hôtel on the day following upon that on
+ which she had written, adding that she had pleasing news for me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thrust the note into my pocket with a sigh. Of what could it avail me
+ now to present myself at her hôtel? Her invitation was for a month ago.
+ Since then she would likely enough have heard the rumour that had been
+ current, and would have ceased to expect me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I caught myself wondering whether the news might have caused her a pang of
+ regret, and somehow methought this possible. For of all my relatives,
+ Madame de Chevreuse was the only one&mdash;and she was but my aunt by
+ marriage&mdash;who of late years had shown me any kindness, or even
+ recognition. I marvelled what her pleasing news could be, and I concluded
+ that probably she had heard of my difficulties, and wished once again to
+ help me out of them. Well, my purse was hollow, indeed, at the moment, but
+ I need not trouble her, since I was going somewhere where purses are not
+ needed&mdash;on a journey to which no expenses are attached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my heart, nevertheless, I blessed the gracious lady, who, for all the
+ lies that the world may have told of her, was the kindest woman I had
+ known, and the best&mdash;save one other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was still musing when Michelot returned with the information that M. de
+ Montrésor was to be found at the Hôtel des Cloches, whither he had gone to
+ sup a few minutes before. Straightway I set out, bidding him attend me,
+ and, muffled in my cloak, I proceeded at a brisk pace to the Rue des
+ Fosses St. Germain, where the lieutenant's auberge was situated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I left Michelot in the common-room, and, preceded by the plump little
+ woman who owned the house, I ascended to Montrésor's chamber. I found the
+ young soldier at table, and, fortunately, alone. He rose as I entered, and
+ as the hostess, retreating, closed the door, I doffed my hat, and letting
+ fall my cloak revealed myself. His lips parted, and I heard the hiss of an
+ indrawn breath as his astonished eyes fell upon my countenance. My laugh
+ dispelled his doubts that I might be other than flesh and blood&mdash;yet
+ not his doubts touching my identity. He caught up a taper and, coming
+ forward, he cast the light on my face for a moment, then setting the
+ candle back upon the table, he vented his surprise in an oath or two,
+ which was natural enough in one of his calling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is clear, Lieutenant,&rdquo; quoth I, as I detached my sword from the
+ baldrick, &ldquo;that you believed me dead. Fate willed, however, that I should
+ be restored to life, and so soon as I had recovered sufficient strength to
+ undertake the journey to Paris, I set out. I arrived an hour ago, and here
+ I am, to redeem my word of honour, and surrender the sword and liberty
+ which you but lent me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I placed my rapier on the table and waited for him to speak. Instead,
+ however, he continued to stare at me for some moments, and when at last he
+ did break the silence, it was to burst into a laugh that poured from his
+ throat in rich, mellow peals, as he lay back in his chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My wrath arose. Had I travelled from Blois, and done what I deemed the
+ most honourable deed of my life, to be laughed at for my pains by a
+ foppish young jackanapes of his Eminence's guards? Something of my
+ displeasure must he have seen reflected on my face, for of a sudden he
+ checked his mirth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgive me, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;Pardieu, 't is no matter for
+ laughter, and albeit I laughed with more zest than courtesy, I give you my
+ word that my admiration for you vastly exceeds my amusement. M. de
+ Luynes,&rdquo; he added, rising and holding out his hand to me, &ldquo;there are liars
+ in Paris who give you an evil name&mdash;men who laughed at me when they
+ heard that I had given you leave to go on parole to St. Sulpice des Reaux
+ that night, trusting to your word of honour that you would return if you
+ lived. His Eminence dubbed me a fool and went near to dismissing me from
+ his service, and yet I have now the proof that my confidence was not
+ misplaced, since even though you were believed to be dead, you did not
+ hesitate to bring me your sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur, spare me!&rdquo; I exclaimed, for in truth his compliments waxed as
+ irksome as had been his whilom merriment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He continued, however, his laudatory address, and when it was at last
+ ended, and he paused exhausted alike in breath and brain, it was to take
+ up my sword and return it to me with my parole, pronouncing me a free man,
+ and advising me to let men continue to think me dead, and to withdraw from
+ France. He cut short my half-protesting thanks, and calling the hostess
+ bade her set another cover, whilst me he invited to share his supper. And
+ as we ate he again urged upon me the advice that I should go abroad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For by Heaven,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;Mazarin has been as a raging beast since the
+ news was brought him yesterday of his nephew's marriage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How?&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;He has heard already?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has, indeed; and should he learn that your flesh still walks the
+ earth, methinks it would go worse with you than it went even with Eugène
+ de Canaples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In answer to the questions with which I excitedly plied him, I drew from
+ him the story of how Eugène had arrived the day before in Paris, and gone
+ straight to the Palais Royal. M. de Montrésor had been on guard in the
+ ante-chamber, and in virtue of an excitement noticeable in Canaples's
+ bearing, coupled with the ill-odour wherein already he was held by
+ Mazarin, the lieutenant's presence had been commanded in the Cardinal's
+ closet during the interview&mdash;for his Eminence was never like to
+ acquire fame for valour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his exultation at what had chanced, and at the manner in which
+ Mazarin's Château en Espagne had been dispelled, Canaples used little
+ caution, or even discretion, in what he said. In fact, from what Montrésor
+ told me, I gathered that the fool's eagerness to be the first to bear the
+ tidings to Mazarin sprang from a rash desire to gloat over the Cardinal's
+ discomfiture. He had told his story insolently&mdash;almost derisively&mdash;and
+ Mazarin's fury, driven beyond bounds already by what he had heard, became
+ a very tempest of passion 'neath the lash of Canaples's impertinences.
+ And, naturally enough, that tempest had burst upon the only head available&mdash;Eugène
+ de Canaples's&mdash;and the Cardinal had answered his jibes with interest
+ by calling upon Montrésor to arrest the fellow and bear him to the
+ Bastille.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the astonished and sobered Canaples had indignantly asked upon what
+ charge he was being robbed of his liberty, the Cardinal had laughed at
+ him, and answered with his never-failing axiom that &ldquo;He who sings, pays.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You sang lustily enough just now,&rdquo; his Eminence had added, &ldquo;and you shall
+ pay by lodging awhile in an oubliette of the Bastille, where you may lift
+ up your voice to sing the De profundis.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was my name not mentioned?&rdquo; I anxiously inquired when Montrésor had
+ finished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not once. You may depend that I should have remarked it. After I had
+ taken Canaples away, the Cardinal, I am told, sat down, and, still
+ trembling with rage, wrote a letter which he straightway dispatched to the
+ Chevalier Armand de Canaples, at Blois.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No doubt,&rdquo; I mused, &ldquo;he attributes much blame to me for what has come to
+ pass.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a doubt of it. This morning he said to me that it was a pity your
+ wings had not been clipped before you left Paris, and that his misplaced
+ clemency had helped to bring him great misfortunes. You see, therefore, M.
+ de Luynes, that your sojourn in France will be attended with great peril.
+ I advise you to try Spain; 't is a martial country where a man of the
+ sword may find honourable and even profitable employment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His counsel I deemed sound. But how follow it? Then of a sudden I
+ bethought me of Madame de Chevreuse's friendly letter. Doubtless she would
+ assist me once again, and in such an extremity as this. And with the
+ conception of the thought came the resolution to visit her on the morrow.
+ That formed, I gave myself up to the task of drinking M. de Montrésor
+ under the table with an abandon which had not been mine for months. In
+ each goblet that I drained, methought I saw Yvonne's sweet face floating
+ on the surface of the red Armagnac; it looked now sad, now reproachful,
+ still I drank on, and in each cup I pledged her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX. OF HOW THE CHEVALIER DE CANAPLES BECAME A FRONDEUR
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It wanted an hour or so to noon next day as I drove across the Pont Neuf
+ in a closed carriage, and was borne down the Rue St. Dominique to the
+ portals of that splendid palace, facing the Jacobins, which bears the
+ title of the &ldquo;Hôtel de Luynes,&rdquo; and over the portals of which is carved
+ the escutcheon of our house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michelot&mdash;in obedience to the orders I had given him&mdash;got down
+ only to be informed that Madame la Duchesse was in the country. The lackey
+ who was summoned did not know where the lady might be found, nor when she
+ might return to Paris. And so I was compelled to drive back almost
+ despairingly to the Rue St. Antoine, and there lie concealed, nursing my
+ impatience, until my aunt should return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Daily I sent Michelot to the Hôtel de Luynes to make the same inquiry, and
+ to return daily with the same dispiriting reply&mdash;that there was no
+ news of Madame la Duchesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this fashion some three weeks wore themselves out, during which period
+ I lay in my concealment, a prey to weariness unutterable. I might not
+ venture forth save at night, unless I wore a mask; and as masks were no
+ longer to be worn without attracting notice&mdash;as during the late
+ king's reign&mdash;I dared not indulge the practice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly my ennui was greatly relieved by the visits of Montrésor, which
+ grew very frequent, the lad appearing to have conceived a kindness for me;
+ and during those three weeks our fellowship at nights over a bottle or two
+ engendered naturally enough a friendship and an intimacy between us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had written to Andrea on the morrow of my return to Paris, to tell him
+ how kindly Montrésor had dealt with me, and some ten days later the
+ following letter was brought me by the lieutenant&mdash;to whom, for
+ safety, it had been forwarded:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;MY VERY DEAR GASTON:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have no words wherewith to express my joy at the good news you send me,
+ which terminates the anxiety that has been mine since you left us on the
+ disastrous morning of our nuptials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The uncertainty touching your fate, the fear that the worst might have
+ befallen you, and the realisation that I&mdash;for whom you have done so
+ much&mdash;might do naught for you in your hour of need, has been the one
+ cloud to mar the sunshine of my own bliss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That cloud your letter has dispelled, and the knowledge of your safety
+ renders my happiness complete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chevalier maintains his unforgiving mood, as no doubt doth also my
+ Lord Cardinal. But what to me are the frowns of either, so that my lady
+ smile? My little Geneviève is yet somewhat vexed in spirit at all this,
+ but I am teaching her to have faith in Time, the patron saint of all
+ lovers who follow not the course their parents set them. And so that time
+ may be allowed to intercede and appeal to the parent heart with the potent
+ prayer of a daughter's absence, I shall take my lady from Chambord some
+ three days hence. We shall travel by easy stages to Marseilles, and there
+ take ship for Palermo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so, dear, trusty friend, until we meet again, fare you well and may
+ God hold you safe from the wickedness of man, devil, and my Lord Cardinal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For all that you have done for me, no words of mine can thank you, but
+ should you determine to quit this France of yours, and journey to Palermo
+ after me, you shall never want a roof to shelter you or a board to sit at,
+ so long as roof and board are owned by him who signs himself, in love at
+ least, your brother&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;ANDREA DE MANCINI.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a sigh I set the letter down. A sigh of love and gratitude it was; a
+ sigh also of regret for the bright, happy boy who had been the source
+ alike of my recent joys and sorrows, and whom methought I was not likely
+ to see again for many a day, since the peaceful vegetation of his Sicilian
+ home held little attraction for me, a man of action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on the evening of the last Sunday in May, whilst the bell of the
+ Jesuits, close by, was tinkling out its summons to vespers, that Montrésor
+ burst suddenly into my room with the request that I should get my hat and
+ cloak and go with him to pay a visit. In reply to my questions&mdash;&ldquo;Monseigneur's
+ letter to Armand de Canaples,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;has borne fruit already. Come
+ with me and you shall learn how.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He led me past the Bastille and up the Rue des Tournelles to the door of
+ an unpretentious house, upon which he knocked. We were admitted by an old
+ woman to whom Montrésor appeared to be known, for, after exchanging a word
+ or two with her, he himself led the way upstairs and opened the door of a
+ room for me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the melancholy light of a single taper burning upon the table I beheld
+ a fair-sized room containing a curtained bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My companion took up the candle, and stepping to the bedside, he drew
+ apart the curtains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lying there I beheld a man whose countenance, despite its pallor and the
+ bloody bandages about his brow, I recognised for that of the little
+ spitfire Malpertuis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the light fell upon his face, the little fellow opened his eyes, and
+ upon beholding me at his side he made a sudden movement which wrung from
+ him a cry of pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lie still, Monsieur,&rdquo; said Montrésor quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But for all the lieutenant's remonstrances, he struggled up into a sitting
+ posture, requesting Montrésor to set the pillows at his back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank God you are here, M. de Luynes!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I learnt at Canaples
+ that you were not dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have been to Canaples?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was a guest of the Chevalier for twelve days. I arrived there on the
+ day after your departure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You!&rdquo; I ejaculated. &ldquo;Pray what took you to Canaples?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What took me there?&rdquo; he echoed, turning his feverish eyes upon me, almost
+ with fierceness. &ldquo;The same motive that led me to join hands with that
+ ruffian St. Auban, when he spoke of waging war against Mancini; the same
+ motive that led me to break with him when I saw through his plans, and
+ when the abduction of Mademoiselle was on foot; the same motive that made
+ me come to you and tell you of the proposed abduction so that you might
+ interfere if you had the power, or cause others to do so if you had not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I lay back in my chair and stared at him. Was this, then, another suitor
+ of Yvonne de Canaples, and were all men mad with love of her?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently he continued:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I heard that St. Auban was in Paris, having apparently abandoned all
+ hope in connection with Mademoiselle, I obtained a letter from M. de la
+ Rochefoucauld&mdash;who is an intimate friend of mine&mdash;and armed with
+ this I set out. As luck would have it I got embroiled in the streets of
+ Blois with a couple of cardinalist gentlemen, who chose to be offended by
+ lampoon of the Fronde that I was humming. I am not a patient man, and I am
+ even indiscreet in moments of choler. I ended by crying, 'Down with
+ Mazarin and all his creatures,' and I would of a certainty have had my
+ throat slit, had not a slight and elegant gentleman interposed, and,
+ exercising a wonderful influence over my assailants, extricated me from my
+ predicament. This gentleman was the Chevalier de Canaples. He was
+ strangely enough in a mood to be pleased by an anti-cardinalist ditty, for
+ his rage against Andrea de Mancini&mdash;which he took no pains to conceal&mdash;had
+ extended already to the Cardinal, and from morn till night he did little
+ else but revile the whole Italian brood&mdash;as he chose to dub the
+ Cardinal's family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I recognised the old knight's weak, vacillating character in this, a
+ creature of moods that, like the vane on a steeple, turns this way or
+ that, as the wind blows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I crave your patience, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;and beg of you to
+ hear my story so that you may determine whether you will save the Canaples
+ from the danger that threatens them. I only ask that you dispatch a
+ reliable messenger to Blois. But hear me out first. In virtue as much of
+ La Rochefoucauld's letters as of the sentiments which the Chevalier heard
+ me express, I became the honoured guest at his château. Three days after
+ my arrival I sustained a shock by the unexpected appearance at Canaples of
+ St. Auban. The Chevalier, however, refused him admittance, and, baffled,
+ the Marquis was forced to withdraw. But he went no farther than Blois,
+ where he hired himself a room at the Lys de France. The Chevalier hated
+ him as a mad dog hates water&mdash;almost as much as he hated you. He
+ spoke often of you, and always bitterly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before I knew what I had said&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Mademoiselle?&rdquo; I burst out. &ldquo;Did she ever mention my name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Malpertuis looked up quickly at the question, and a wan smile flickered
+ round his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Once she spoke of you to me&mdash;pityingly, as one might speak of a dead
+ man whose life had not been good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, yes,&rdquo; I broke in. &ldquo;It matters little. Your story, M. Malpertuis.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;After I had been at the château ten days, we learnt that Eugène de
+ Canaples had been sent to the Bastille. The news came in a letter penned
+ by his Eminence himself&mdash;a bitter, viperish letter, with a covert
+ threat in every line. The Chevalier's anger went white hot as he read the
+ disappointed Cardinal's epistle. His Eminence accused Eugène of being a
+ frondeur; M. de Canaples, whose politics had grown sadly rusted in the
+ country, asked me the meaning of the word. I explained to him the petty
+ squabbles between Court and Parliament, in consequence of the extortionate
+ imposts and of Mazarin's avariciousness. I avowed myself a partisan of the
+ Fronde, and within three days the Chevalier&mdash;who but a little time
+ before had sought an alliance with the Cardinal's family&mdash;had become
+ as rabid a frondeur as M. de Gondi, as fierce an anti­cardinalist as M. de
+ Beaufort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I humoured him in his new madness, with the result that ere long from
+ being a frondeur in heart, he thirsted to become a frondeur in deeds, and
+ he ended by begging me to bear a letter from him to the Coadjutor of
+ Paris, wherein he offered to place at M. de Gondi's disposal, towards the
+ expenses of the civil war which he believed to be imminent,&mdash;as,
+ indeed, it is,&mdash;the sum of sixty thousand livres.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now albeit I had gone to Canaples for purposes of my own, and not as an
+ agent of M. le Coadjuteur's, still for many reasons I saw fit to undertake
+ the Chevalier's commission. And so, bearing the letter in question, which
+ was hot and unguarded, and charged with endless treasonable matter, I set
+ out four days later for Paris, arriving here yesterday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I little knew that I had been followed by St. Auban. His suspicions must
+ have been awakened, I know not how, and clearly they were confirmed when I
+ stopped before the Coadjutor's house last night. I was about to mount the
+ steps, when of a sudden I was seized from behind by half a dozen hands and
+ dragged into a side street. I got free for a moment and attempted to
+ defend myself, but besides St. Auban there were two others. They broke my
+ sword and attempted to break my skull, in which they went perilously near
+ succeeding, as you see. Albeit half-swooning, I had yet sufficient
+ consciousness left to realise that my pockets were being emptied, and that
+ at last they had torn open my doublet and withdrawn the treasonable letter
+ from the breast of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was left bleeding in the kennel, and there I lay for nigh upon an hour
+ until a passer-by succoured me and carried out my request to be brought
+ hither and put to bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He ceased, and for some moments there was silence, broken only by the
+ wounded man's laboured breathing, which argued that his narrative had left
+ him fatigued. At last I sprang up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Chevalier de Canaples must be warned,&rdquo; I exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is an ugly business,&rdquo; muttered Montrésor. &ldquo;I'll wager a hundred that
+ Mazarin will hang the Chevalier if he catches him just now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He would not dare!&rdquo; cried Malpertuis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not dare?&rdquo; echoed the lieutenant. &ldquo;The man who imprisoned the Princes of
+ Condé and Conti, and the Duke of Beaufort, not dare hang a provincial
+ knight with never a friend at Court! Pah, Monsieur, you do not know
+ Cardinal Mazarin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I realised to the full how likely Montrésor's prophecy was to be
+ fulfilled, and before I left Malpertuis I assured him that he had not
+ poured his story into the ears of an indifferent listener, and that I
+ would straightway find means of communicating with Canaples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI. OF THE BARGAIN THAT ST. AUBAN DROVE WITH MY LORD CARDINAL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ From the wounded man's bedside I wended my steps back to the Rue St.
+ Antoine, resolved to start for Blois that very night; and beside me walked
+ Montrésor, with bent head, like a man deep in thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At my door I paused to take my leave of the lieutenant, for I was in haste
+ to have my preparations made, and to be gone. But Montrésor appeared not
+ minded to be dismissed thus easily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What plan have you formed?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The only plan there is to form&mdash;to set out for Canaples at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hum!&rdquo; he grunted, and again was silent. Then, suddenly throwing back his
+ head, &ldquo;Par la mort Dieu!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;I care not what comes of it; I'll
+ tell you what I know. Lead the way to your chamber, M. de Luynes, and
+ delay your departure until you have heard me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surprised as much by his words as by the tone in which he uttered them,
+ which was that of a man who is angry with himself, I passively did as I
+ was bidden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once within my little ante-chamber, he turned the key with his own hands,
+ and pointing to the door of my bedroom&mdash;&ldquo;In there, Monsieur,&rdquo; quoth
+ he, &ldquo;we shall be safe from listeners.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deeper grew my astonishment at all this mystery, as we passed into the
+ room beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, M. de Luynes,&rdquo; he cried, flinging down his hat, &ldquo;for no apparent
+ reason I am about to commit treason; I am about to betray the hand that
+ pays me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If no reason exists, why do so evil a deed?&rdquo; I inquired calmly. &ldquo;I have
+ learnt during our association to wish you well, Montrésor; if by telling
+ me that which your tongue burns to tell, you shall have cause for shame,
+ the door is yonder. Go before harm is done, and leave me alone to fight my
+ battle out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stood up, and for a moment he seemed to waver, then dismissing his
+ doubts with an abrupt gesture, he sat down again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no wrong in what I do. Right is with you, M. de Luynes, and if I
+ break faith with the might I serve, it is because that might is an unjust
+ one; I do but betray the false to the true, and there can be little shame
+ in such an act. Moreover, I have a reason&mdash;but let that be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was silent for a moment, then he resumed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most of that which you have learnt from Malpertuis to-night, I myself
+ could have told you. Yes; St. Auban has carried Canaples's letter to the
+ Cardinal already. I heard from his lips to-day&mdash;for I was present at
+ the interview&mdash;how the document had been wrested from Malpertuis. For
+ your sake, so that you might learn all he knew, I sought the fellow out,
+ and having found him in the Rue des Tournelles, I took you thither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a very fever of excitement I listened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To take up the thread of the story where Malpertuis left off, let me tell
+ you that St. Auban sought an audience with Mazarin this morning, and by
+ virtue of a note which he desired an usher to deliver to his Eminence, he
+ was admitted, the first of all the clients that for hours had thronged the
+ ante-room. As in the instance of the audience to Eugène de Canaples, so
+ upon this occasion did it chance that the Cardinal's fears touching St.
+ Auban's purpose had been roused, for he bade me stand behind the curtains
+ in his cabinet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Marquis spoke bluntly enough, and with rude candour he stated that
+ since Mazarin had failed to bring the Canaples estates into his family by
+ marriage, he came to set before his Eminence a proof so utter of
+ Canaples's treason that it would enable him to snatch the estates by
+ confiscation. The Cardinal may have been staggered by St. Auban's
+ bluntness, but his avaricious instincts led him to stifle his feelings and
+ bid the Marquis to set this proof before him. But St. Auban had a bargain
+ to drive&mdash;a preposterous one methought. He demanded that in return
+ for his delivering into the hands of Mazarin the person of Armand de
+ Canaples together with an incontestable proof that the Chevalier was in
+ league with the frondeurs, and had offered to place a large sum of money
+ at their disposal, he was to receive as recompense the demesne of Canaples
+ on the outskirts of Blois, together with one third of the confiscated
+ estates. At first Mazarin gasped at his audacity, then laughed at him,
+ whereupon St. Auban politely craved his Eminence's permission to withdraw.
+ This the Cardinal, however, refused him, and bidding him remain, he sought
+ to bargain with him. But the Marquis replied that he was unversed in the
+ ways of trade and barter, and that he had no mind to enter into them. From
+ bargaining the Cardinal passed on to threatening and from threatening to
+ whining, and so on until the end&mdash;St. Auban preserving a firm
+ demeanour&mdash;the comedy was played out and Mazarin fell in with his
+ proposal and his terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mille diables!&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;And has St. Auban set out?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He starts to-morrow, and I go with him. When finally the Cardinal had
+ consented, the Marquis demanded and obtained from him a promise in
+ writing, signed and sealed by Mazarin, that he should receive a third of
+ the Canaples estates and the demesne on the outskirts of Blois, in
+ exchange for the body of Armand de Canaples, dead or alive, and a proof of
+ treason sufficient to warrant his arrest and the confiscation of his
+ estates. Next, seeing in what regard the Seigneur is held by the people of
+ Blois, and fearing that his arrest might be opposed by many of his
+ adherents, the Marquis has demanded a troop of twenty men. This Mazarin
+ has also granted him, entrusting the command of the troop to me, under St.
+ Auban. Further, the Marquis has stipulated that the greatest secrecy is to
+ be observed, and has expressed his purpose of going upon this enterprise
+ disguised and masked, for&mdash;as he rightly opines&mdash;when months
+ hence he enters into possession of the demesne of Canaples in the
+ character of purchaser, did the Blaisois recognise in him the man who sold
+ the Chevalier, his life would stand in hourly peril.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I heard him through patiently enough; yet when he stopped, my pent-up
+ feelings burst all bonds, and I resolved there and then to go in quest of
+ that Judas, St. Auban, and make an end of his plotting, for all time. But
+ Montrésor restrained me, showing me how futile such a course must prove,
+ and how I risked losing all chance of aiding those at Canaples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was right. First I must warn the Chevalier&mdash;afterwards I would
+ deal with St. Auban.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Someone knocked at that moment, and with the entrance of Michelot, my talk
+ with Montrésor came perforce to an end. For Michelot brought me the news
+ that for days I had been awaiting; Madame de Chevreuse had returned to
+ Paris at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But for Montrésor's remonstrances it is likely that I should have set out
+ forthwith to wait upon her. I permitted myself, however, to be persuaded
+ that the lateness of the hour would render my visit unwelcome, and so I
+ determined in the end&mdash;albeit grudgingly&mdash;to put off my
+ departure for Blois until the morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Noon had but struck from Nôtre Dame, next day, as I mounted the steps of
+ the Hôtel de Luynes. My swagger, and that brave suit of pearl grey velvet
+ with its silver lace, bore me unchallenged past the gorgeous suisse, who
+ stood, majestic, in the doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, for the first mincing lackey I chanced upon, more was needed to gain
+ me an audience. And so, as I did not choose to speak my name, I drew a
+ ring from my finger and bade him bear it to the Duchesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He obeyed me in this, and presently returning, he bowed low and begged of
+ me to follow him, for, as I had thought, albeit Madame de Chevreuse might
+ not know to whom that ring belonged, yet the arms of Luynes carved upon
+ the stone had sufficed to ensure an interview.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was ushered into a pretty boudoir, hung in blue and gold, which
+ overlooked the garden, and wherein, reclining upon a couch, with a book of
+ Bois Robert's verses in her white and slender hand, I found my beautiful
+ aunt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of this famous lady, who was the cherished friend and more than sister of
+ Anne of Austria, much has been written; much that is good, and more&mdash;far
+ more&mdash;that is ill, for those who have a queen for friend shall never
+ lack for enemies. But those who have praised and those who have censured
+ have at least been at one touching her marvellous beauty. At the time
+ whereof I write it is not possible that she could be less than forty-six,
+ and yet her figure was slender and shapely and still endowed with the
+ grace of girlhood; her face delicate of tint, and little marked by time&mdash;or
+ even by the sufferings to which, in the late king's reign, Cardinal de
+ Richelieu had subjected her; her eyes were blue and peaceful as a summer
+ sky; her hair was the colour of ripe corn. He would be a hardy guesser who
+ set her age at so much as thirty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My appearance she greeted by letting fall her book, and lifting up her
+ hands&mdash;the loveliest in France&mdash;she uttered a little cry of
+ surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it really you, Gaston?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Albeit it was growing wearisome to be thus greeted by all to whom I showed
+ myself, yet I studied courtesy in my reply, and then, 'neath the suasion
+ of her kindliness, I related all that had befallen me since first I had
+ journeyed to Blois, in Andrea de Mancini's company, withholding, however,
+ all allusions to my feelings towards Yvonne. Why betray them when they
+ were doomed to be stifled in the breast that begat them? But Madame de
+ Chevreuse had not been born a woman and lived six and forty years to no
+ purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And this maid with as many suitors as Penelope, is she very beautiful?&rdquo;
+ she inquired slyly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;France does not hold her equal,&rdquo; I answered, falling like a simpleton
+ into the trap she had set me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This to me?&rdquo; quoth she archly. &ldquo;Fi donc, Gaston! Your evil ways have
+ taught you as little gallantry as dissimulation.&rdquo; And her merry ripple of
+ laughter showed me how in six words I had betrayed that which I had been
+ at such pains to hide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But before I could, by protestations, plunge deeper than I stood already,
+ the Duchesse turned the conversation adroitly to the matter of that letter
+ of hers, wherein she had bidden me wait upon her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A cousin of mine&mdash;one Marion de Luynes, who, like myself, had,
+ through the evil of his ways, become an outcast from his family&mdash;was
+ lately dead. Unlike me, however, he was no adventurous soldier of fortune,
+ but a man of peace, with an estate in Provence that had a rent-roll of
+ five thousand livres a year. On his death-bed he had cast about him for an
+ heir, unwilling that his estate should swell the fortunes of the family
+ that in life had disowned him. Into his ear some kindly angel had
+ whispered my name, and the memory that I shared with him the frowns of our
+ house, and that my plight must be passing pitiful, had set up a bond of
+ sympathy between us, which had led him to will his lands to me. Of Madame
+ de Chevreuse&mdash;who clearly was the patron saint of those of her first
+ husband's nephews who chanced to tread ungodly ways&mdash;my cousin Marion
+ had besought that she should see to the fulfilment of his last wishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My brain reeled beneath the first shock of that unlooked-for news. Already
+ I saw myself transformed from a needy adventurer into a gentleman of
+ fortune, and methought my road to Yvonne lay open, all obstacles removed.
+ But swiftly there followed the thought of my own position, and truly it
+ seemed that a cruel irony lay in the manner wherein things had fallen out,
+ since did I declare myself to be alive and claim the Provence estates, the
+ Cardinal's claws would be quick to seize me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus much I told Madame de Chevreuse, but her answer cheered me, and said
+ much for my late cousin's prudence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Marion was ever shrewd. Knowing that men who live by
+ the sword, as you have lived, are often wont to die by the sword,&mdash;and
+ that suddenly at times,&mdash;he has made provision that in the event of
+ your being dead his estates shall come to me, who have been the most
+ indulgent of his relatives. This, my dear Gaston, has already taken place,
+ for we believed you dead; and therein fortune has been kind to you, for
+ now, while receiving the revenues of your lands&mdash;which the world will
+ look upon as mine&mdash;I shall contrive that they reach you wherever you
+ may be, until such a time as you may elect to come to life again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now but for the respect in which I held her, I could have taken the pretty
+ Duchesse in my arms and kissed her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Restraining myself, however, I contented myself by kissing her hand, and
+ told her of the journey I was going, then craved another boon of her. No
+ matter what the issue of that journey, and whether I went alone or
+ accompanied, I was determined to quit France and repair to Spain. There I
+ would abide until the Parliament, the Court, or the knife of some chance
+ assassin, or even Nature herself should strip Mazarin of his power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, at the Court of Spain it was well known that my aunt's influence was
+ vast, and so, the boon I craved was that she should aid me to a position
+ in the Spanish service that would allow me during my exile to find
+ occupation and perchance renown. To this my aunt most graciously acceded,
+ and when at length I took my leave&mdash;with such gratitude in my heart
+ that what words I could think of seemed but clumsily to express it&mdash;I
+ bore in the breast of my doublet a letter to Don Juan de Cordova&mdash;a
+ noble of great prominence at the Spanish Court&mdash;and in the pocket of
+ my haut-de-chausses a rouleau of two hundred gold pistoles, as welcome as
+ they were heavy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII. OF MY SECOND JOURNEY TO CANAPLES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ An hour after I had quitted the Hôtel de Luynes, Michelot and I left Paris
+ by the barrier St. Michel and took the Orleans road. How different it
+ looked in the bright June sunshine, to the picture which it had presented
+ to our eyes on that February evening, four months ago, when last we had
+ set out upon that same journey!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not only in nature had a change been wrought, but in my very self. My
+ journey then had been aimless, and I had scarcely known whither I was
+ bound nor had I fostered any great concern thereon. Now I rode in hot
+ haste with a determined purpose, a man of altered fortunes and altered
+ character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Into Choisy we clattered at a brisk pace, but at the sight of the inn of
+ the Connétable such memories surged up that I was forced to draw rein and
+ call for a cup of Anjou, which I drank in the saddle. Thereafter we rode
+ without interruption through Longjumeau, Arpajon, and Etrechy, and so well
+ did we use our horses that as night fell we reached Étampes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From inquiries that Michelot had made on the road, we learned that no
+ troop such as that which rode with St. Auban had lately passed that way,
+ so that 't was clear we were in front of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But scarce had we finished supper in the little room which I had hired at
+ the Gros Paon, when, from below, a stamping of hoofs, the jangle of arms,
+ and the shouts of many men told me that we were overtaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clearly I did not burn with a desire to linger, but rather it seemed to me
+ that although night had closed in, black and moonless, we must set out
+ again, and push on to Monnerville, albeit our beasts were worn and the
+ distance a good three leagues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With due precaution we effected our departure, and thereafter had a spur
+ been needed to speed us on our way that spur we had in the knowledge that
+ St. Auban came close upon our heels. At Monnerville we slept, and next
+ morning we were early afoot; by four o'clock in the afternoon we had
+ reached Orleans, whence&mdash;with fresh horses&mdash;we pursued our
+ journey as far as Meung, where we lay that night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There we were joined by a sturdy rascal whom Michelot enlisted into my
+ service, seeing that not only did my means allow, but the enterprise upon
+ which I went might perchance demand another body servant. This recruit was
+ a swart, powerfully built man of about my own age; trusty, and a lover of
+ hard knocks, as Michelot&mdash;who had long counted him among his friends&mdash;assured
+ me. He owned the euphonious name of Abdon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I spent twenty pistoles in suitable raiment and a horse for him, and as we
+ left Meung next day the knave cut a brave enough figure that added not a
+ little to my importance to have at my heels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, however, so retarded our departure, that night had fallen by the
+ time we reached Blois. Still our journey had been a passing swift one. We
+ had left Paris on a Monday, the fourth of June&mdash;I have good cause to
+ remember, since on that day I entered both upon my thirty-second year and
+ my altered fortunes; on the evening of Wednesday we reached Blois, having
+ covered a distance of forty-three leagues in less than three days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bidding Michelot carry my valise to the hostelry of the Vigne d'Or, and
+ there await my coming, I called to Abdon to attend me, and rode on, jaded
+ and travel-stained though I was, to Canaples, realising fully that there
+ was no time to lose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Guilbert, who came in answer to my knock at the door of the château,
+ looked askance when he beheld me, and when I bade him carry my compliments
+ to the Chevalier, with the message that I desired immediate speech of him
+ on a matter of the gravest moment, he shook his grey head and protested
+ that it would be futile to obey me. Yet, in the end, when I had insisted,
+ he went upon my errand, but only to return with a disturbed countenance,
+ to tell me that the Chevalier refused to see me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I must speak to him, Guilbert,&rdquo; I exclaimed, setting foot upon the
+ top step. &ldquo;I have travelled expressly from Paris.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man stood firm and again shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beseech you not to insist, Monsieur. M. le Chevalier has sworn to
+ dismiss me if I permit you to set foot within the château.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mille diables! This is madness! I seek to serve him,&rdquo; I cried, my temper
+ rising fast. &ldquo;At least, Guilbert, will you tell Mademoiselle that I am
+ here, and that I&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I may carry no more messages for you, Monsieur,&rdquo; he broke in. &ldquo;Listen!
+ There is M. le Chevalier.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In reality I could hear the old knight's voice, loud and shrill with
+ anger, and a moment later Louis, his intendant, came across the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Guilbert,&rdquo; he commanded harshly, &ldquo;close the door. The night air is keen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My cheeks aflame with anger, I still made one last attempt to gain an
+ audience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master Louis,&rdquo; I exclaimed, &ldquo;will you do me the favour to tell M. de
+ Canaples&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are wasting time, Monsieur,&rdquo; he interrupted. &ldquo;M. de Canaples will not
+ see you. He bids you close the door, Guilbert.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardieu! he shall see me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The door, Guilbert!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I took a step forward, but before I could gain the threshold, the door was
+ slammed in my face, and as I stood there, quivering with anger and
+ disappointment, I heard the bolts being shot within.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I turned with an oath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, Abdon,&rdquo; I growled, as I climbed once more into the saddle, &ldquo;let us
+ leave the fool to the fate he has chosen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII. OF HOW ST. AUBAN CAME TO BLOIS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In silence we rode back to Blois. Not that I lacked matter for
+ conversation. Anger and chagrin at the thought that I had come upon this
+ journey to earn naught but an insult and to have a door slammed in my face
+ made my gorge rise until it went near to choking me. I burned to revile
+ Canaples aloud, but Abdon's was not the ear into which I might pour the
+ hot words that welled up to my lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet if silent, the curses that I heaped upon the Chevalier's crassness
+ were none the less fervent, and to myself I thought with grim relish of
+ how soon and how dearly he would pay for the affront he had put upon me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That satisfaction, however, endured not long; for presently I bethought me
+ of how heavily the punishment would fall upon Yvonne&mdash;and yet, of how
+ she would be left to the mercy of St. Auban, whose warrant from Mazarin
+ would invest with almost any and every power at Canaples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I ground my teeth at the sudden thought, and for a moment I was on the
+ point of going back and forcing my way into the château at the sword point
+ if necessary, to warn and save the Chevalier in spite of himself and
+ unthanked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not in such a fashion that I had thought to see my mission to
+ Canaples accomplished; I had dreamt of gratitude, and gratitude unbars the
+ door to much. Nevertheless, whether or not I earned it, I must return, and
+ succeed where for want of insistence I had failed awhile ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of a certainty I should have acted thus, but that at the very moment upon
+ which I formed the resolution Abdon drew my attention to a dark shadow by
+ the roadside not twenty paces in front of us. This proved to be the
+ motionless figure of a horseman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as I was assured of it, I reined in my horse, and taking a pistol
+ from the holster, I levelled it at the shadow, accompanying the act by a
+ sonorous&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who goes there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shadow stirred, and Michelot's voice answered me:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is I, Monsieur. They have arrived. I came to warn you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who has arrived?&rdquo; I shouted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The soldiers. They are lodged at the Lys de France.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An oath was the only comment I made as I turned the news over in my mind.
+ I must return to Canaples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then another thought occurred to me. The Chevalier was capable of going to
+ extremes to keep me from entering his house; he might for instance greet
+ me with a blunderbuss. It was not the fear of that that deterred me, but
+ the fear that did a charge of lead get mixed with my poor brains before I
+ had said what I went to say, matters would be no better, and there would
+ be one poor knave the less to adorn the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What shall we do, Michelot?&rdquo; I groaned, appealing in my despair to my
+ henchman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Might it not be well to seek speech with M. de Montrésor?&rdquo; quoth he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shrugged my shoulders. Nevertheless, after a moment's deliberation I
+ determined to make the attempt; if I succeeded something might come of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so I pushed on to Blois with my knaves close at my heels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up the Rue Vieille we proceeded with caution, for the hostelry of the
+ Vigne d'Or, where Michelot had hired me a room, fortunately overlooking
+ the street, fronted the Lys de France, where St. Auban and his men were
+ housed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I gained that room of mine without mishap, and my first action was to deal
+ summarily with a fat and well-roasted capon which the landlord set before
+ me&mdash;for an empty stomach is a poor comrade in a desperate situation.
+ That meal, washed down with the best part of a bottle of red Anjou, did
+ much to restore me alike in body and in mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From my open window I gazed across the street at the Lys de France. The
+ door of the common-room, opening upon the street, was set wide, and across
+ the threshold came a flood of light in which there flitted the black
+ figures of maybe a dozen amazed rustics, drawn thither for all the world
+ as bats are drawn to a glare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there they hovered with open mouths and stupid eyes, hearkening to the
+ din of voices that floated out on the tranquil air, the snatches of ribald
+ songs, the raucous bursts of laughter, the clink of glasses, the clank of
+ steel, the rattle of dice, and the strange soldier oaths that fell with
+ every throw, and which to them must have sounded almost as words of some
+ foreign tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst I stood by my window, the landlord entered my room, and coming up
+ to me&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank Heaven they are not housed at the Vigne d'Or,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It will
+ take Maître Bernard a week to rid his house of the stench of leather. They
+ are part of a stray company that is on its way to fight the Spaniards,&rdquo; he
+ informed me. &ldquo;But methinks they will be forced to spend two or three days
+ at Blois; their horses are sadly jaded and will need that rest before they
+ can take the road again, thanks to the pace at which their boy of an
+ officer must have led them. There is a gentleman with them who wears a
+ mask. 'T is whispered that he is a prince of the blood who has made a vow
+ not to uncover his face until this war be ended, in expiation of some sin
+ committed in mad Paris.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I heard him in silence, and when he had done I thanked him for his
+ information. So! This was the story that the crafty St. Auban had spread
+ abroad to lull suspicion touching the real nature of their presence until
+ their horses should be fit to undertake the return journey to Paris, or
+ until he should have secured the person of M. de Canaples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards eleven o'clock, as the lights in the hostelry opposite were
+ burning low, I descended, and made my way out into the now deserted
+ street. The troopers had apparently seen fit&mdash;or else been ordered&mdash;to
+ seek their beds, for the place had grown silent, and a servant was in the
+ act of making fast the door for the night. The porte-cochère was half
+ closed, and a man carrying a lantern was making fast the bolt, whistling
+ aimlessly to himself. Through the half of the door that was yet open, I
+ beheld a window from which the light fell upon a distant corner of the
+ courtyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I drew near the fellow with the lantern, in whom I recognised René, the
+ hostler, and as I approached he flashed the light upon my face; then with
+ a gasp&mdash;&ldquo;M. de Luynes,&rdquo; he exclaimed, remembering me from the time
+ when I had lodged at the Lys de France, three months ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sh!&rdquo; I whispered, pressing a louis d'or into his hand. &ldquo;Whose window is
+ that, René?&rdquo; And I pointed towards the light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;is the room of the lieutenant and the gentleman in
+ the mask.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must take a look at them, René, and whilst I am looking I shall search
+ my pocket for another louis. Now let me in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dare not, Monsieur. Maître Bernard may call me, and if the doors are
+ not closed&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dame!&rdquo; I broke in. &ldquo;I shall stay but a moment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you will have easily earned a louis d'or. If Bernard calls you&mdash;peste,
+ tell him that you have let fall something, and that you are seeking it.
+ There, let me pass.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I got past him at last, and made my way swiftly towards the other end of
+ the quadrangle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I approached, the sound of voices smote my ear, for the lighted window
+ stood open. I stopped within half a dozen paces of it, and climbed on to
+ the step of a coach that stood there. Thence I could look straight into
+ the room, whilst the darkness hid me from the eyes of those I watched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three men there were; Montrésor, the sergeant of his troop, and a tall man
+ dressed in black, and wearing a black silk mask. This I concluded to be
+ St. Auban, despite the profusion of fair locks that fell upon his
+ shoulders, concealing&mdash;I rightly guessed&mdash;his natural hair,
+ which was as black as my own. It was a cunning addition to his disguise,
+ and one well calculated to lead people on to the wrong scent hereafter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently, as I watched them, St. Auban spoke, and his voice was that of a
+ man whose gums are toothless, or else whose nether lip is drawn in over
+ his teeth whilst he speaks. Here again the dissimulation was as effective
+ as it was simple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So; that is concluded,&rdquo; were the words that reached me. &ldquo;To-morrow we
+ will install our men at the château, for while we remain here it is
+ preposterous to lodge them at an inn. On the following day I hope that we
+ may be able to set out again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If we could obtain fresh horses&mdash;&rdquo; began the sergeant, when he of
+ the mask interrupted him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sangdieu! Think you my purse is bottomless? We return as we came, with
+ the Cardinal's horses. What signify a day or two, after all? Come&mdash;call
+ the landlord to light me to my room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had heard enough. But more than that, whilst I listened, an idea had of
+ a sudden sprung up in my mind which did away with the necessity of gaining
+ speech with Montresor&mdash;a contingency, moreover, that now presented
+ insuperable difficulties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So I got down softly from my perch and made my way out of the yard, and,
+ after fulfilling my part of the bargain with René, across to the Vigne
+ d'Or and to my room, there to sit and mature the plan that of a sudden I
+ had conceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV. OF THE PASSING OF ST. AUBAN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Dame! What an ado there was next day in Blois, when the news came that the
+ troopers had installed themselves at the Château de Canaples and that the
+ Chevalier had been arrested for treason by order of the Lord Cardinal, and
+ that he would be taken to Paris, and&mdash;probably&mdash;the scaffold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Men gathered in little knots at street corners, and with sullen brows and
+ threatening gestures they talked of the affair; and the more they talked,
+ the more clouded grew their looks, and more than one anti-cardinalist
+ pasquinade was heard in Blois that day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Given a leader those men would have laid hands upon pikes and muskets, and
+ gone to the Chevalier's rescue. As I observed them, the thought did cross
+ my mind that I might contrive a pretty fight in the rose garden of
+ Canaples were I so inclined. And so inclined I should, indeed, have been
+ but for the plan that had come to me like an inspiration from above, and
+ which methought would prove safer in the end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To carry out this plan of mine, I quitted Blois at nightfall, with my two
+ knaves, having paid my reckoning at the Lys de France, and given out that
+ we were journeying to Tours. We followed the road that leads to Canaples,
+ until we reached the first trees bordering the park. There I dismounted,
+ and, leaving Abdon to guard the horses, I made my way on foot, accompanied
+ by Michelot, towards the garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We gained this, and were on the point of quitting the shadow of the trees,
+ when of a sudden, by the light of the crescent moon, I beheld a man
+ walking in one of the alleys, not a hundred paces from where we stood. I
+ had but time to seize Michelot by the collar of his pourpoint and draw him
+ towards me. But as he trod precipitately backwards a twig snapped 'neath
+ his foot with a report that in the surrounding stillness was like a pistol
+ shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I caught my breath as he who walked in the garden stood still, his face,
+ wrapped in the shadows of his hat, turned towards us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who goes there?&rdquo; he shouted. Then getting no reply he came resolutely
+ forward, whilst I drew a pistol wherewith to welcome him did he come too
+ near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On he came, and already I had brought my pistol to a level with his head,
+ when fortunately he repeated his question, &ldquo;Who goes there?&rdquo;&mdash;and
+ this time I recognised the voice of Montrésor, the very man I could then
+ most wish to meet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hist! Montrésor!&rdquo; I called softly. &ldquo;'T is I&mdash;Luynes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So!&rdquo; he exclaimed, coming close up to me. &ldquo;You have reached Canaples at
+ last!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At last?&rdquo; I echoed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whom have you there?&rdquo; he inquired abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only Michelot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bid him fall behind a little.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Michelot had complied with this request, &ldquo;You see, M. de Luynes,&rdquo;
+ quoth the officer, &ldquo;that you have arrived too late.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a certain coldness in his tone that made me seek by my reply to
+ sound him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, I trust not, my friend. With your assistance I hope to get M. de
+ Canaples from the clutches of St. Auban.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is impossible that I should help you,&rdquo; he replied with increasing
+ coldness. &ldquo;Already once for your sake have I broken faith to those who pay
+ me, by setting you in a position to forestall St. Auban and get M. de
+ Canaples away before his arrival. Unfortunately, you have dallied on the
+ road, M. de Luynes, and Canaples is already a prisoner&mdash;a doomed one,
+ I fear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that your last word, Montrésor?&rdquo; I inquired sadly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sorry,&rdquo; he answered in softened tones, &ldquo;but you must see that I
+ cannot do otherwise. I warned you; more you cannot expect of me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sighed, and stood musing for an instant. Then&mdash;&ldquo;You are right,
+ Montrésor. Nevertheless, I am still grateful to you for the warning you
+ gave me in Paris. God pity and help Canaples! Adieu, Montrésor. I do not
+ think that you will see me again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took my hand, but as he did so he pushed me back into the shadow from
+ which I had stepped to proffer it him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peste!&rdquo; he ejaculated. &ldquo;The moon was full upon your face, and did St.
+ Auban chance to look out, he must have seen you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I followed the indication of his thumb, and noted the lighted window to
+ which he pointed. A moment later he was gone, and as I joined Michelot, I
+ chuckled softly to myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For two hours and more I sat in the shrubbery, conversing in whispers with
+ Michelot, and watching the lights in the château die out one by one, until
+ St. Auban's window, which opened on to the terrace balcony, was the only
+ one that was not wrapt in darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I waited a little while longer, then rising I cautiously made a tour of
+ inspection. Peace reigned everywhere, and the only sign of life was the
+ sentry, who with musket on shoulder paced in front of the main entrance, a
+ silent testimony of St. Auban's mistrust of the Blaisois and of his fears
+ of a possible surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Satisfied that everyone slept I retraced my steps to the shrubbery where
+ Michelot awaited me, watching the square of light, and after exchanging
+ word with him, I again stepped forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I was half way across the intervening space of garden, treading with
+ infinite precaution, a dark shadow obscured the window, which a second
+ later was thrown open. Crouching hastily behind a boxwood hedge, I watched
+ St. Auban&mdash;for I guessed that he it was&mdash;as he leaned out and
+ gazed skywards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a little while he remained there, then he withdrew, leaving the
+ casement open, and presently I caught the grating of a chair on the
+ parquet floor within. If ever the gods favoured mortal, they favoured me
+ at that moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stealthily as a cat I sprang towards the terrace, the steps to which I
+ climbed on hands and knees. Stooping, I sped silently across it until I
+ had gained the flower-bed immediately below the window that had drawn me
+ to it. Crouching there&mdash;for did I stand upright my chin would be on a
+ level with the sill&mdash;I paused to listen for some moments. The only
+ sound I caught was a rustle, as of paper. Emboldened, I took a deep
+ breath, and standing up I gazed straight into the chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the light of four tapers in heavy silver sconces, I beheld St. Auban
+ seated at a table littered with parchments, over which he was intently
+ poring. His back was towards me, and his long black hair hung straight
+ upon his shoulders. On the table, amid the papers, lay his golden wig and
+ black mask, and on the floor in the centre of the room, his back and
+ breast of blackened steel and his sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It needed but little shrewdness to guess those parchments before him to be
+ legal documents touching the Canaples estates, and his occupation that of
+ casting up exactly what profit he would reap from his infamous work of
+ betrayal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So intent was the hound upon his calculations that my cautious movements
+ passed unheeded by him as I got astride of the window ledge. It was only
+ when I swung my right leg into the room that he turned his head, but
+ before his eyes reached me I was standing upright and motionless within
+ the chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have seen fear of many sorts writ large upon the faces of men of many
+ conditions&mdash;from the awe that blanches the cheek of the boy soldier
+ when first he hears the cannon thundering to the terror that glazes the
+ eye of the vanquished swordsman who at every moment expects the deadly
+ point in his heart. But never had I gazed upon a countenance filled with
+ such abject ghastly terror as that which came over St. Auban's when his
+ eyes met mine that night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sprang up with an inarticulate cry that sank into something that I can
+ but liken to the rattle which issues from the throat of expiring men. For
+ a second he stood where he had risen, then terror loosened his knees, and
+ he sank back into his chair. His mouth fell open, and the trembling lips
+ were drawn down at the corners like those of a sobbing child; his cheeks
+ turned whiter than the lawn collar at his throat, and his eyes, wide open
+ in a horrid stare, were fixed on mine and, powerless to avert them, he met
+ my gaze&mdash;cold, stern, and implacable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment we remained thus, and I marvelled greatly to see a man whose
+ heart, if full of evil, I had yet deemed stout enough, stricken by fear
+ into so parlous and pitiful a condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I had the explanation of it as he lifted his right hand and made the
+ sign of the cross, first upon himself, then in the air, whilst his lips
+ moved, and I guessed that to himself he was muttering some prayer of
+ exorcising purport. There was the solution of the terror&mdash;sweat that
+ stood out in beads upon his brow&mdash;he had deemed me a spectre; the
+ spectre of a man he believed to have foully done to death on a spot across
+ the Loire visible from the window at my back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last he sufficiently mastered himself to break the awful silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you want?&rdquo; he whispered; then, his voice gaining power as he used
+ it&mdash;&ldquo;Speak,&rdquo; he commanded. &ldquo;Man or devil, speak!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I laughed for answer, harshly, mockingly; for never had I known a fiercer,
+ crueller mood. At the sound of that laugh, satanical though may have been
+ its ring, he sprang up again, and unsheathing a dagger he took a step
+ towards me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shall see of what you are made,&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;If you blast me in the
+ act, I'll strike you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I laughed again, and raising my arm I gave him the nozzle of a pistol to
+ contemplate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stand where you are, St. Auban, or, by the God above us, I'll send your
+ ghost a-wandering,&rdquo; quoth I coolly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My voice, which I take it had nothing ghostly in it, and still more the
+ levelled pistol, which of all implements is the most unghostly, dispelled
+ his dread. The colour crept slowly back to his cheeks, and his mouth
+ closed with a snap of determination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it, indeed, you, master meddler?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Peste! I thought you dead
+ these three months.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you are overcome with joy to find that you were in error, eh,
+ Marquis? We Luynes die hard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems so, indeed,&rdquo; he answered with a cool effrontery past crediting
+ in one who but a moment ago had looked so pitiful. &ldquo;What do you seek at
+ Canaples?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Many things, Marquis. You among others.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have come to murder me,&rdquo; he cried, and again alarm overspread his
+ countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hoity, toity, Marquis! We do not all follow the same trade. Who talks of
+ murder? Faugh!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again he took a step towards me, but again the nozzle of my pistol drove
+ him back. To have pistoled him there and then as he deserved would have
+ brought the household about my ears, and that would have defeated my
+ object. To have fallen upon him and slain him with silent steel would have
+ equally embarrassed me, as you shall understand anon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You and I had a rendezvous at St. Sulpice des Reaux,&rdquo; I said calmly, &ldquo;to
+ which you came with a band of hired assassins. For this you deserve to be
+ shot like the dog you are. But I have it in my heart to be generous to
+ you,&rdquo; I added in a tone of irony. &ldquo;Come, take up your sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To what purpose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you question me? Take up your sword, man, and do my bidding; thus
+ shall you have a slender chance of life. Refuse and I pistol you without
+ compunction. So now put on that wig and mask.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he obeyed me in this&mdash;&ldquo;Now listen, St. Auban,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;You and
+ I are going together to that willow copse whither three months ago you
+ lured Yvonne de Canaples for the purpose of abducting her. On that spot
+ you and I shall presently face each other sword in hand, with none other
+ to witness our meeting save God, in whose hands the issue lies. That is
+ your chance; at the first sign that you meditate playing me any tricks,
+ that chance is lost to you.&rdquo; And I tapped my pistol significantly. &ldquo;Now
+ climb out through that window.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had done so, I bade him stand six paces away whilst I followed,
+ and to discourage any foolish indiscretion on his part I again showed him
+ my pistol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He answered me with an impatient gesture, and by the light that fell on
+ his face I saw him sneer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come on, you fool,&rdquo; he snarled, &ldquo;and have done threatening. I'll talk to
+ you in the copse. And tread softly lest you arouse the sentry on the other
+ side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rejoiced to see the man so wide awake in him, I followed him closely
+ across the terrace, and through the rose garden to the bank of the river.
+ This we followed until we came at last to the belt of willows, where,
+ having found a suitable patch of even and springy turf, I drew my sword
+ and invited him to make ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you not strip?&rdquo; he inquired sullenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not think so,&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;The night air is sharp. Nevertheless, do
+ you make ready as best you deem fit, and that speedily, Monsieur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With an exclamation of contempt, he divested himself of his wig, mask, and
+ doublet, then drawing his sword, he came forward, and announced himself at
+ my disposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As well you may conceive, we wasted no time in compliments, but
+ straightway went to work, and that with a zest that drew sparks from our
+ rapiers at the first contact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis attacked me furiously, and therein lay his only chance; for a
+ fierce, rude sword-play that is easily dealt with in broad daylight is
+ vastly discomposing in such pale moonshine as lighted us. I defended
+ myself warily, for of a sudden I had grown conscious of the danger that I
+ ran did he once by luck or strength get past my guard with that point of
+ his which in the spare light I could not follow closely enough to feel
+ secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Neath the fury of his onslaught I was compelled to break ground more than
+ once, and each time he was so swift to follow up his advantage that I had
+ ne'er a chance to retaliate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still fear or doubt of the issue I had none. I needed but to wait until
+ the Marquis's fury was spent by want of breath, to make an end of it. And
+ presently that which I waited for came about. His attack began to lag in
+ vigour, and the pressure of his blade to need less resistance, whilst his
+ breathing grew noisy as that of a broken-winded horse. Then with the rage
+ of a gambler who loses at every throw, he cursed and reviled me with every
+ thrust or lunge that I turned aside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My turn was come; yet I held back, and let him spend his strength to the
+ utmost drop, whilst with my elbow close against my side and by an easy
+ play of wrist, I diverted each murderous stroke of his point that came
+ again and again for my heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When at last he had wasted in blasphemies what little breath his wild
+ exertions had left him, I let him feel on his blade the twist that
+ heralded my first riposte. He caught the thrust, and retreated a step, his
+ blasphemous tongue silenced, and his livid face bathed in perspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cruelly I toyed with him then, and with every disengagement I made him
+ realise that he was mastered, and that if I withheld the coup de grâce it
+ was but to prolong his agony. And to add to the bitterness of that agony
+ of his, I derided him whilst I fenced; with a recitation of his many sins
+ I mocked him, showing him how ripe he was for hell, and asking him how it
+ felt to die unshriven with such a load upon his soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Goaded to rage by my bitter words, he grit his teeth, and gathered what
+ rags of strength were left him for a final effort, And before I knew what
+ he was about, he had dropped on to his left knee, and with his body thrown
+ forward and supported within a foot of the ground by his left arm, he
+ came, like a snake, under my guard with his point directed upwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So swift had been this movement and so unlooked-for, that had I not sprung
+ backwards in the very nick of time, this narrative of mine had ne'er been
+ written. With a jeering laugh I knocked aside his sword, but even as I
+ disengaged, to thrust at him, he knelt up and caught my blade in his left
+ hand, and for all that it ate its way through the flesh to the very bones
+ of his fingers, he clung to it with that fierce strength and blind courage
+ that is born of despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then raising himself on his knees again, he struck at me wildly. I swung
+ aside, and as his sword, missing its goal, shot past me, I caught his
+ wrist in a grip from which I contemptuously invited him to free himself.
+ With that began a fierce tugging and panting on both sides, which,
+ however, was of short duration, for presently, my blade, having severed
+ the last sinew of his fingers, was set free. Simultaneously I let go his
+ wrist, pushing his arm from me so violently that in his exhausted
+ condition it caused him to fall over on his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In an instant, however, he was up and at me again. Again our swords
+ clashed&mdash;but once only. It was time to finish. With a vigorous
+ disengagement I got past his feeble guard and sent my blade into him full
+ in the middle of his chest and out again at his back until a foot or so of
+ glittering steel protruded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A shudder ran through him, and his mouth worked oddly, whilst
+ spasmodically he still sought, without avail, to raise his sword; then as
+ I recovered my blade, a half-stifled cry broke from his lips, and throwing
+ up his arms, he staggered and fell in a heap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I turned him over to see if he were dead, his eyes met mine, and were
+ full of piteous entreaty; his lips moved, and presently I caught the
+ words:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sped, Luynes.&rdquo; Then struggling up, and in a louder voice: &ldquo;A
+ priest!&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;Get me a priest, Luynes. Jesu! Have mer&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A rush of blood choked him and cut short his utterance. He writhed and
+ twitched for a moment, then his chin sank forward and he fell back, death
+ starkening his limbs and glazing the eyes which stared hideously upwards
+ at the cold, pitiless moon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the passing of the Marquis César de St. Auban.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV. PLAY-ACTING
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ For a little while I stood gazing down at my work, my mind full of the
+ unsolvable mysteries of life and death; then I bethought me that time
+ stood not still for me, and that something yet remained to be accomplished
+ ere my evening's task were done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And forthwith I made shift to do a thing at the memory of which my blood
+ is chilled and my soul is filled with loathing even now&mdash;albeit the
+ gulf of many years separates me from that June night at Canaples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To pass succinctly o'er an episode on which I have scant heart to tarry,
+ suffice it you to know that using my sash as a rope I bound a heavy stone
+ to St. Auban's ankle; then lifting the body in my arms, I half dragged,
+ half bore it across the little stretch of intervening sward to the water's
+ edge, and flung it in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I write I have the hideous picture in my mind, and again I can see St.
+ Auban's ghastly face grinning up at me through the moonlit waters, until
+ at last it was mercifully swallowed up in their black depths, and naught
+ but a circling wavelet that spread swiftly across the stream was left to
+ tell of what had chanced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I dare not dwell upon the feelings that assailed me as I stooped to rinse
+ the blood from my hands, nor yet of the feverish haste wherewith I tore my
+ blood-stained doublet from my back, and hurled it wide into the stream.
+ For all my callousness I was sick and unmanned by that which had befallen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No time, however, did I waste in mawkish sentiment, but setting my teeth
+ hard, I turned away from the river, and back to the trampled ground of our
+ recent conflict. There, with no other witness save the moon, I clad myself
+ in the Marquis's doublet of black velvet; I set his mask of silk upon my
+ face, his golden wig upon my head, and over that his sable hat with its
+ drooping feather. Next I buckled on his sword belt, wherefrom hung his
+ rapier that I had sheathed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Blois that day I had taken the precaution&mdash;knowing the errand upon
+ which I came&mdash;to procure myself haut-de-chausses of black velvet, and
+ black leather boots with gilt spurs that closely resembled those which St.
+ Auban had worn in life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as I have already written, St. Auban and I were of much the same
+ build and stature, and so methought with confidence that he would have
+ shrewd eyes, indeed, who could infer from my appearance that I was other
+ than the same masked gentleman who had that very day ridden into Canaples
+ at the head of a troop of his Eminence's guards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I made my way swiftly back along the path that St. Auban and I had
+ together trodden but a little while ago, and past the château until I came
+ to the shrubbery where Michelot&mdash;faithful to the orders I had given
+ him&mdash;awaited my return. From his concealment he had seen me leave the
+ château with the Marquis, and as I suddenly loomed up before him now, he
+ took me for the man whose clothes I wore, and naturally enough assumed
+ that ill had befallen Gaston de Luynes. Of a certainty I had been
+ pistolled by him had I not spoken in time. I lingered but to give him
+ certain necessary orders; then, whilst he went off to join Abdon and see
+ to their fulfilment, I made my way stealthily, with eyes keeping watch
+ around me, across the terrace, and through the window into the room that
+ St. Auban had left to follow me to his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tapers still burned, and in all respects the chamber was as it had
+ been; the back and breast pieces still lay upon the floor, and on the
+ table the littered documents. The door I ascertained had been locked on
+ the inside, a precaution which St. Auban had no doubt taken so that none
+ might spy upon the work that busied him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I closed and made fast the window, then I bethought me that, being in
+ ignorance of the whereabouts of St. Auban's bed-chamber, I must perforce
+ spend the night as best I could within that very room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so I sat me down and pondered deeply o'er the work that was to come,
+ the part I was about to play, and the details of its playing. In this
+ manner did I while away perchance an hour; through the next one I must
+ have slept, for I awakened with a start to find three tapers spent and the
+ last one spluttering, and in the sky the streaks that heralded the summer
+ dawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again I fell to thinking; again I slept, and woke again to find the night
+ gone and the sunlight on my face. Someone knocked at the door, and that
+ knocking vibrated through my brain and set me wide-awake, indeed. It was
+ as the signal to uplift the curtain and let my play-acting commence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hastily I rose and shot a glance at the mirror to see that my wig hung
+ straight and that my mask was rightly adjusted. I started at my own
+ reflection, for methought that from the glass 't was St. Auban who looked
+ at me, as I had seen him look the night before when he had donned those
+ things at my command.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Holà there, within!&rdquo; came Montrésor's voice. &ldquo;Monsieur le Capitaine!&rdquo; A
+ fresh shower of blows descended on the oak panels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I yawned with prodigious sonority, and overturned a chair with my foot.
+ Then bracing myself for the ordeal, through which I looked to what scant
+ information I possessed and my own mother wit, to bear me successfully, I
+ strode across to admit my visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Muffling my voice, as I had heard St. Auban do at the inn, by drawing my
+ nether lip over my teeth&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardieu!&rdquo; quoth I, as I opened the door, &ldquo;it seems, Lieutenant, that I
+ must have fallen asleep over those musty documents.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I trembled as I watched him, waiting for his reply, and I thanked Heaven
+ that in the rôle I had assumed a mask was worn, not only because it hid my
+ features, but because it hid the emotions which these might have betrayed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was beginning to fear,&rdquo; he replied coldly, and without so much as
+ looking at me, &ldquo;that worse had befallen you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I breathed again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh, nothing,&rdquo; said he half contemptuously. &ldquo;Only methinks 't were well
+ whilst we remain at Canaples that you do not spend your nights in a room
+ within such easy access of the terrace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your advice no doubt is sound, but as I shall not spend another night at
+ Canaples, it comes too late.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean, Monsieur&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That we set out for Paris to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shrugged his shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, ça! I have just visited the stables, and there are not four horses
+ fit for the journey. So that unless you have in mind the purchase of fresh
+ animals&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pish! My purse is not bottomless,&rdquo; I broke in, repeating the very words
+ that I heard St. Auban utter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you said once before, Monsieur. Still, unless you are prepared to take
+ that course, the only alternative is to remain here until the horses are
+ sufficiently recovered. But perhaps you think of walking?&rdquo; he added with a
+ sniff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such is your opinion, your time being worthless and it being of little
+ moment where you spend it. I have conceived a plan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has it not occurred to you that the danger which threatens us and which
+ calls for the protection of a troop is only on this side of the Loire,
+ where the Blaisois might be minded to attempt a rescue of the Chevalier?
+ But over yonder, Chevalier, on the Chambord side, who cares a fig for the
+ Lord of Canaples or his fate? None; is it not so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made an assenting gesture, whereupon I continued:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This being so, I have bethought me that it will suffice if I take but
+ three or four men and the sergeant as an escort, and cross the river with
+ our prisoner after nightfall, travelling along the opposite shore until we
+ reach Orleans. What think you, Lieutenant?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shrugged his shoulders again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is you who command here,&rdquo; he answered with apathy, &ldquo;not I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nevertheless, do you not think the plan a safe one, as well as one that
+ will allay his Eminence's very natural impatience?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it is safe enough, I doubt not,&rdquo; he replied coldly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your enthusiasm determines me,&rdquo; quoth I, with an irony that made him
+ wince. &ldquo;And we will follow the plan, since you agree with me touching its
+ excellence. But keep the matter to yourself until an hour or so after
+ sunset.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bowed, so utterly my dupe that I could have laughed at him. Then&mdash;&ldquo;There
+ is a little matter that I would mention,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Mademoiselle de
+ Canaples has expressed a wish to accompany her father to Paris and has
+ asked me whether this will be permitted her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My heart leaped. Surely the gods fought on my side!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot permit it,&rdquo; I answered icily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur, you are pitiless,&rdquo; he protested in a tone of indignation for
+ which I would gladly have embraced him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I feigned to ponder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The matter needs consideration. Tell Mademoiselle that I will discuss it
+ with her at noon, if she will condescend to await me on the terrace; I
+ will then give her my definite reply. And now, Lieutenant, let us
+ breakfast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As completely as I had duped Montrésor did I presently dupe those of the
+ troopers with whom I came in contact, among others the sergeant&mdash;and
+ anon the Chevalier himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the brief interview that I had with him I discovered that whilst he
+ but vaguely suspected me to be St. Auban&mdash;and when I say &ldquo;he
+ suspected me&rdquo; I mean he suspected him whose place I had taken&mdash;he
+ was, nevertheless, aware of the profit which his captor, whoever he might
+ be, derived from this business. It soon grew clear to me from what he said
+ that St. Auban had mocked him with it whilst concealing his identity; that
+ he had told him how he had obtained from Malpertuis the treasonable
+ letter, and of the bargain which it had enabled him to strike with
+ Mazarin. I did not long remain in his company, and, deeming the time not
+ yet ripe for disclosures, I said little in answer to his lengthy tirades,
+ which had, I guessed, for scope to trap me into betraying the identity he
+ but suspected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It wanted a few minutes to noon as I left the room in which the old
+ nobleman was confined, and by the door of which a trooper was stationed,
+ musket on shoulder. With every pulse a-throbbing at the thought of my
+ approaching interview with Mademoiselle, I made my way below and out into
+ the bright sunshine, the soldiers I chanced to meet saluting me as I
+ passed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the terrace I found Mademoiselle already awaiting me. She was standing,
+ as often I had seen her stand, with her back turned towards me and her
+ elbows resting upon the balustrade. But as my step sounded behind her, she
+ turned, and stood gazing at me with a face so grief-stricken and pale that
+ I burned to unmask and set her torturing fears at rest. I doffed my hat
+ and greeted her with a silent bow, which she contemptuously disregarded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lieutenant tells me, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; said I in my counterfeited voice,
+ &ldquo;that it is your desire to bear Monsieur your father company upon this
+ journey of his to Paris.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With your permission, sir,&rdquo; she answered in a choking voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a matter for consideration, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I pursued. &ldquo;There are in
+ it many features that may have escaped you, and which I shall discuss with
+ you if you will honour me by stepping into the garden below.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why will not the terrace serve?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I may have that to say which I would not have overheard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She knit her brows and stared at me as though she would penetrate the
+ black cloth that hid my face. At last she shrugged her shoulders, and
+ letting her arms fall to her side in a gesture of helplessness and
+ resignation&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Soit; I will go with you,&rdquo; was all she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Side by side we went down the steps as a pair of lovers might have gone,
+ save that her face was white and drawn, and that her eyes looked straight
+ before her, and never once, until we reached the gravel path below, at her
+ companion. Side by side we walked along one of the rose-bordered alleys,
+ until at length I stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I said, speaking in the natural tones of that
+ good-for-naught Gaston de Luynes, &ldquo;I have already decided, and you have my
+ permission to accompany your father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the sound of my voice she started, and with her left hand clutching at
+ the region of her heart, she stood, her head thrust forward, and on her
+ face the look of one who is confronted with some awful doubt. That look
+ was brief, however, and swift to replace it was one of hideous revelation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In God's name, who are you?&rdquo; she cried in accents that bespoke internal
+ agony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Already you have guessed it, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; I answered, and I would have
+ added that which should have brought comfort to her distraught mind, when&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You!&rdquo; she gasped in a voice of profound horror. &ldquo;You! You, the Judas who
+ has sold my father to the Cardinal for a paltry share in our estates. And
+ I believed that mask of yours to hide the face of St. Auban!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her words froze me into a stony mass of insensibility. There was no logic
+ in my attitude; I see it now. Appearances were all against me, and her
+ belief no more than justified. I overlooked all this, and instead of
+ saving time by recounting how I came to be there and thus delivering her
+ from the anguish that was torturing her, I stood, dumb and cruel, cut to
+ the quick by her scorn and her suspicions that I was capable of such a
+ thing as she imputed, and listening to the dictates of an empty pride that
+ prompted me to make her pay full penalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, God pity me!&rdquo; she wailed. &ldquo;Have you naught to say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still I maintained my mad, resentful silence. And presently, as one who
+ muses&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You!&rdquo; she said again. &ldquo;You, whom I&mdash;&rdquo; She stopped short. &ldquo;Oh! The
+ shame of it!&rdquo; she moaned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reason at last came uppermost, and as in my mind I completed her broken
+ sentence, my heart gave a great throb and I was thawed to a gentler
+ purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mademoiselle!&rdquo; I exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even as I spoke, she turned, and sweeping aside her gown that it might
+ not touch me, she moved rapidly towards the steps we had just descended.
+ Full of remorse, I sprang after her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mademoiselle! Hear me,&rdquo; I cried, and put forth my hand to stay her.
+ Thereat she wheeled round and faced me, a blaze of fury in her grey eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dare not to touch me,&rdquo; she panted. &ldquo;You thief, you hound!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I recoiled, and, like one turned to stone, I stood and watched her mount
+ the steps, my feelings swaying violently between anger and sorrow. Then my
+ eye fell upon Montrésor standing on the topmost step, and on his face
+ there was a sneering, insolent smile which told me that he had heard the
+ epithets she had bestowed upon me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Albeit I sought that day another interview with Yvonne, I did not gain it,
+ and so I was forced to sun myself in solitude upon the terrace. But I
+ cherished for my consolation that broken sentence of hers, whereby I read
+ that the coldness which she had evinced for me before I left Canaples had
+ only been assumed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And presently as I recalled what talks we had had, and one in particular
+ from which it now appeared to me that her coldness had sprung, a light
+ seemed suddenly to break upon my mind, as perchance it hath long ago
+ broken upon the minds of those who may happen upon these pages, and whose
+ wits in matters amorous are of a keener temper than were mine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I who in all things had been arrogant, presumptuous, and self-satisfied,
+ had methought erred for once through over-humility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, indeed, even as I sat and pondered on that June day, it seemed to me
+ a thing incredible that she whom I accounted the most queenly and superb
+ of women should have deigned to grant a tender thought to one so mean, so
+ far beneath her as I had ever held myself to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI. REPARATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Things came to pass that night as I had planned, and the fates which of
+ late had smiled upon me were kind unto the end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after ten, and before the moon had risen, a silent procession wended
+ its way from the château to the river. First went Montrésor and two of his
+ men; next came the Chevalier with Mademoiselle, and on either side of them
+ a trooper; whilst I, in head-piece and back and breast of steel, went last
+ with Mathurin, the sergeant&mdash;who warmly praised the plan I had
+ devised for the conveyance of M. de Canaples to Paris without further loss
+ of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two boats which I had caused to be secretly procured were in readiness,
+ and by these a couple of soldiers awaited us, holding the bridles of eight
+ horses, one of which was equipped with a lady's saddle. Five of these
+ belonged&mdash;or had belonged&mdash;to the Chevalier, whilst the others
+ were three of those that had brought the troop from Paris, and which I, in
+ the teeth of all protestations, had adjudged sufficiently recovered for
+ the return journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The embarkation was safely effected, M. de Canaples and Mademoiselle in
+ one boat with Montrésor, Mathurin, and myself; the sergeant took the oars;
+ Montrésor and I kept watch over our prisoner. In the other boat came the
+ four troopers, who were to accompany us, and one other who was to take the
+ boats, and Montrésor in them, back to Canaples. For the lieutenant was
+ returning, so that he might, with the remainder of the troop, follow us to
+ Paris so soon as the condition of the horses would permit it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beasts we took with us were swimming the stream, guided and upheld by
+ the men in the other boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as the moon began to show her face our bow grated on the shore at the
+ very point where I had intended that we should land. I sprang out and
+ turned to assist Mademoiselle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, disdaining my proffered hand, she stepped ashore unaided. The
+ Chevalier came next, and after him Montrésor and Mathurin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Awhile we waited until the troopers brought their boat to land, then when
+ they had got the snorting animals safely ashore, I bade them look to the
+ prisoner, and requested Montrésor and Mathurin to step aside with me, as I
+ had something to communicate to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walking between the pair, I drew them some twenty paces away from the
+ group by the water, towards a certain thicket in which I had bidden
+ Michelot await me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It has occurred to me, Messieurs,&rdquo; I began, speaking slowly and
+ deliberately as we paced along,&mdash;&ldquo;it has occurred to me that despite
+ all the precautions taken to carry out my Lord Cardinal's wishes&mdash;a
+ work at least in which you, yourselves, have evinced a degree of zeal that
+ I cannot too highly commend to his Eminence&mdash;the possibility yet
+ remains of some mistake of trivial appearance, of some slight flaw that
+ might yet cause the miscarriage of those wishes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They turned towards me, and although I could not make out the expressions
+ of their faces, in the gloom, yet I doubted not but that they were puzzled
+ ones at that lengthy and apparently meaningless harangue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sergeant was the first to speak, albeit I am certain that he
+ understood the less.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I venture, M. le Capitaine, to think that your fears, though very
+ natural, are groundless.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say you so?&rdquo; quoth I, with a backward glance to assure myself that we
+ were screened by the trees from the eyes of those behind us. &ldquo;Say you so?
+ Well, well, mayhap you are right, though you speak of my fears being
+ groundless. I alluded to some possible mistake of yours&mdash;yours and M.
+ de Montrésor's&mdash;not of mine. And, by Heaven, a monstrous flaw there
+ is in this business, for if either of you so much as whisper I'll blow
+ your brains out!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And to emphasise these words, as sinister as they were unlooked-for, I
+ raised both hands suddenly from beneath my cloak, and clapped the cold
+ nose of a pistol to the head of each of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was obeyed as men are obeyed who thus uncompromisingly prove the force
+ of their commands. Seeing them resigned, I whistled softly, and in answer
+ there was a rustle from among the neighbouring trees, and presently two
+ shadows emerged from the thicket. In less time than it takes me to relate
+ it, Montrésor and his sergeant found themselves gagged, and each securely
+ bound to a tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, with Michelot and Abdon following a short distance behind me, I made
+ my way back to the troopers, and, feigning to stumble as I approached, I
+ hurtled so violently against two of them that I knocked the pair headlong
+ into the stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarce was it done, and almost before the remaining three had realised it,
+ there was a pistol at the head of each of them and sweet promises of an
+ eternal hereafter being whispered in their ears. They bore themselves with
+ charming discretion, and like lambs we led them each to a tree and dealt
+ with them as we had dealt with their officers, whilst the Chevalier and
+ his daughter watched us, bewildered and dumfounded at what they saw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the other two had crawled&mdash;all unconscious of the fates of
+ their comrades&mdash;out of the river, we served them also in a like
+ manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bidding Abdon and Michelot lead the horses, and still speaking in my
+ assumed voice, I desired Mademoiselle and the Chevalier&mdash;who had not
+ yet sufficiently recovered from his bewilderment to have found his tongue&mdash;to
+ follow me. I led the way up the gentle slope to the spot where our first
+ victims were pinioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Montrésor's comely young face looked monstrous wicked in the moonlight,
+ and his eyes rolled curiously as he beheld me. Stepping up to him I freed
+ him of his gag&mdash;an act which I had almost regretted a moment later,
+ for he cleared his throat with so lusty a torrent of profanity that
+ methought the heavens must have fallen on us. At last when he was done
+ with that&mdash;&ldquo;Before you leave me in this plight, M. de St. Auban,&rdquo;
+ quoth he, &ldquo;perchance you will satisfy me with an explanation of your
+ unfathomable deeds and of this violence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;St. Auban!&rdquo; exclaimed the Chevalier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;St. Auban!&rdquo; cried Yvonne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And albeit wonder rang in both their voices, yet their minds I knew went
+ different ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, not St. Auban,&rdquo; I answered with a laugh and putting aside all
+ counterfeit of speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par la mort Dieu! I know that voice,&rdquo; cried Montrésor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mayhap, indeed! And know you not this face?&rdquo; And as I spoke I whipped
+ away my wig and mask, and thrust my countenance close up to his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thunder of God!&rdquo; ejaculated the boy. Then&mdash;&ldquo;Pardieu,&rdquo; he added,
+ &ldquo;there is Michelot! How came I not to recognise him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since you would not assist me, Montrésor, you see I was forced to do
+ without you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But St. Auban?&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;Where is he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In heaven, I hope&mdash;but I doubt it sadly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have killed him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There and then, as briefly as I might, I told him, whilst the others stood
+ by to listen, how I had come upon the Marquis in the château the night
+ before and what had passed thereafter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; I said, as I cut his bonds, &ldquo;it grieves me to charge you with
+ an impolite errand to his Eminence, but&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll not return to him,&rdquo; he burst out. &ldquo;I dare not. Mon Dieu, you have
+ ruined me, Luynes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then come with me, and I'll build your fortunes anew and on a sounder
+ foundation. I have an influential letter in my pocket that should procure
+ us fortune in the service of the King of Spain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He needed little pressing to fall in with my invitation, so we set the
+ sergeant free, and him instead I charged with a message that must have
+ given Mazarin endless pleasure when it was delivered to him. But he had
+ the Canaples estates wherewith to console himself and his never-failing
+ maxim that &ldquo;chi canta, paga.&rdquo; Touching the Canaples estates, however, he
+ did not long enjoy them, for when he went into exile, two years later, the
+ Parliament returned them to their rightful owner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chevalier de Canaples approached me timidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;I have wronged you very deeply. And this generous
+ rescue of one who has so little merited your aid truly puts me to so much
+ shame that I know not what thanks to offer you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then offer none, Monsieur,&rdquo; I answered, taking his proffered hand.
+ &ldquo;Moreover, time presses and we have a possible pursuit to baffle. So to
+ horse, Monsieurs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I assisted Mademoiselle to mount, and she passively suffered me to do her
+ this office, having no word for me, and keeping her face averted from my
+ earnest gaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sighed as I turned to mount the horse Michelot held for me; but methinks
+ 't was more a sigh of satisfaction than of pain.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ . . . . . . . .
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ All that night we travelled and all next day until Tours was reached
+ towards evening. There we halted for a sorely needed rest and for fresh
+ horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three days later we arrived at Nantes, and a week from the night of the
+ Chevalier's rescue we took ship from that port to Santander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That same evening, as I leaned upon the taffrail watching the distant
+ coast line of my beloved France, whose soil meseemed I was not like to
+ tread again for years, Yvonne came softly up behind me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur,&rdquo; she said in a voice that trembled somewhat, &ldquo;I have, indeed,
+ misjudged you. The shame of it has made me hold aloof from you since we
+ left Blois. I cannot tell you, Monsieur, how deep that shame has been, or
+ with what sorrow I have been beset for the words I uttered at Canaples.
+ Had I but paused to think&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nay, Mademoiselle, 't was all my fault, I swear. I left you overlong
+ the dupe of appearances.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I should not have believed them so easily. Say that I am forgiven,
+ Monsieur,&rdquo; she pleaded; &ldquo;tell me what reparation I can make.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is one reparation that you can make if you are so minded,&rdquo; I
+ answered, &ldquo;but 'tis a life-long reparation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were bold words, indeed, but my voice played the coward and shook so
+ vilely that it bereft them of half their boldness. But, ah, Dieu, what
+ joy, what ecstasy was mine to see how they were read by her; to remark the
+ rich, warm blood dyeing her cheeks in a bewitching blush; to behold the
+ sparkle that brightened her matchless eyes as they met mine!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yvonne!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gaston!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was in my arms at last, and the work of reparation was begun whilst
+ together we gazed across the sun-gilt sea towards the fading shores of
+ France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you be curious to learn how, guided by the gentle hand of her who
+ plucked me from the vile ways that in my old life I had trodden, I have
+ since achieved greatness, honour, and renown, History will tell you.
+ </p>
+
+<div style='display:block;margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SUITORS OF YVONNE ***</div>
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diff --git a/old/3430.txt b/old/3430.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c13db8d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/3430.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,7665 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Suitors of Yvonne, by Raphael Sabatini
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Suitors of Yvonne
+
+Author: Raphael Sabatini
+
+Posting Date: February 25, 2009 [EBook #3430]
+Release Date: September, 2002
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SUITORS OF YVONNE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Stuart Middleton
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SUITORS OF YVONNE
+
+Being a Portion of the Memoirs of the Sieur Gaston de Luynes
+
+
+By Rafael Sabatini
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER
+
+ I. OF HOW A BOY DRANK TOO MUCH WINE, AND WHAT CAME OF IT
+
+ II. THE FRUIT OF INDISCRETION
+
+ III. THE FIGHT IN THE HORSE-MARKET
+
+ IV. FAIR RESCUERS
+
+ V. MAZARIN, THE MATCH-MAKER
+
+ VI. OF HOW ANDREA BECAME LOVE-SICK
+
+ VII. THE CHATEAU DR CANAPLES
+
+ VIII. THE FORESHADOW OF DISASTER
+
+ IX. OF HOW A WHIP PROVED A BETTER ARGUMENT THAN A TONGUE
+
+ X. THE CONSCIENCE OF MALPERTUIS
+
+ XI. OF A WOMAN'S OBSTINACY
+
+ XII. THE RESCUE
+
+ XIII. THE HAND OF YVONNE
+
+ XIV. OF WHAT BEFELL AT REAUX
+
+ XV. OF MY RESURRECTION
+
+ XVI. THE WAY OF WOMAN
+
+ XVII. FATHER AND SON
+
+ XVIII. OF HOW I LEFT CANAPLES
+
+ XIX. OF MY RETURN TO PARIS
+
+ XX. OF HOW THE CHEVALIER DE CANAPLES BECAME A FRONDEUR
+
+ XXI. OF THE BARGAIN THAT ST. AUBAN DROVE WITH MY LORD CARDINAL
+
+ XXII. OF MY SECOND JOURNEY TO CANAPLES
+
+ XXIII. OF HOW ST. AUBAN CAME TO BLOIS
+
+ XXIV. OF THE PASSING OF ST. AUBAN
+
+ XXV. PLAY-ACTING
+
+ XXVI. REPARATION
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. OF HOW A BOY DRANK TOO MUCH WINE, AND WHAT CAME OF IT
+
+
+Andrea de Mancini sprawled, ingloriously drunk, upon the floor. His legs
+were thrust under the table, and his head rested against the chair from
+which he had slipped; his long black hair was tossed and dishevelled;
+his handsome, boyish face flushed and garbed in the vacant expression of
+idiocy.
+
+"I beg a thousand pardons, M. de Luynes," quoth he in the thick,
+monotonous voice of a man whose brain but ill controls his tongue,--"I
+beg a thousand pardons for the unseemly poverty of our repast. 'T is
+no fault of mine. My Lord Cardinal keeps a most unworthy table for
+me. Faugh! Uncle Giulio is a Hebrew--if not by birth, by instinct. He
+carries his purse-strings in a knot which it would break his heart to
+unfasten. But there! some day my Lord Cardinal will go to heaven--to the
+lap of Abraham. I shall be rich then, vastly rich, and I shall bid
+you to a banquet worthy of your most noble blood. The Cardinal's
+health--perdition have him for the niggardliest rogue unhung!"
+
+I pushed back my chair and rose. The conversation was taking a turn that
+was too unhealthy to be pursued within the walls of the Palais Mazarin,
+where there existed, albeit the law books made no reference to it, the
+heinous crime of lese-Eminence--a crime for which more men had been
+broken than it pleases me to dwell on.
+
+"Your table, Master Andrea, needs no apology," I answered carelessly.
+"Your wine, for instance, is beyond praise."
+
+"Ah, yes! The wine! But, ciel! Monsieur," he ejaculated, for a moment
+opening wide his heavy eyelids, "do you believe 't was Mazarin provided
+it? Pooh! 'T was a present made me by M. de la Motte, who seeks my
+interest with my Lord Cardinal to obtain for him an appointment in
+his Eminence's household, and thus thinks to earn my good will. He's
+a pestilent creature, this la Motte," he added, with a hiccough,--"a
+pestilent creature; but, Sangdieu! his wine is good, and I'll speak to
+my uncle. Help me up, De Luynes. Help me up, I say; I would drink the
+health of this provider of wines."
+
+I hurried forward, but he had struggled up unaided, and stood swaying
+with one hand on the table and the other on the back of his chair. In
+vain did I remonstrate with him that already he had drunk overmuch.
+
+"'T is a lie!" he shouted. "May not a gentleman sit upon the floor from
+choice?"
+
+To emphasise his protestation he imprudently withdrew his hand from the
+chair and struck at the air with his open palm. That gesture cost him
+his balance. He staggered, toppled backward, and clutched madly at the
+tablecloth as he fell, dragging glasses, bottles, dishes, tapers, and a
+score of other things besides, with a deafening crash on to the floor.
+
+Then, as I stood aghast and alarmed, wondering who might have overheard
+the thunder of his fall, the fool sat up amidst the ruins, and filled
+the room with his shrieks of drunken laughter.
+
+"Silence, boy!" I thundered, springing towards him. "Silence! or we
+shall have the whole house about our ears."
+
+And truly were my fears well grounded, for, before I could assist him
+to rise, I heard the door behind me open. Apprehensively I turned, and
+sickened to see that that which I had dreaded most was come to pass. A
+tall, imposing figure in scarlet robes stood erect and scowling on the
+threshold, and behind him his valet, Bernouin, bearing a lighted taper.
+
+Mancini's laugh faded into a tremulous cackle, then died out, and with
+gaping mouth and glassy eyes he sat there staring at his uncle.
+
+Thus we stayed in silence while a man might count mayhap a dozen; then
+the Cardinal's voice rang harsh and full of anger.
+
+"'T is thus that you fulfil your trust, M. de Luynes!" he said.
+
+"Your Eminence--" I began, scarce knowing what I should say, when he cut
+me short.
+
+"I will deal with you presently and elsewhere." He stepped up to Andrea,
+and surveyed him for a moment in disgust. "Get up, sir!" he commanded.
+"Get up!"
+
+The lad sought to obey him with an alacrity that merited a kinder fate.
+Had he been in less haste perchance he had been more successful. As it
+was, he had got no farther than his knees when his right leg slid from
+under him, and he fell prone among the shattered tableware, mumbling
+curses and apologies in a breath.
+
+Mazarin stood gazing at him with an eye that was eloquent in scorn, then
+bending down he spoke quickly to him in Italian. What he said I know
+not, being ignorant of their mother tongue; but from the fierceness of
+his utterance I'll wager my soul 't was nothing sweet to listen to. When
+he had done with him, he turned to his valet.
+
+"Bernouin," said he, "summon M. de Mancini's servant and assist him to
+get my nephew to bed. M. de Luynes, be good enough to take Bernouin's
+taper and light me back to my apartments."
+
+Unsavoury as was the task, I had no choice but to obey, and to stalk on
+in front of him, candle in hand, like an acolyte at Notre Dame, and in
+my heart the profound conviction that I was about to have a bad quarter
+of an hour with his Eminence. Nor was I wrong; for no sooner had we
+reached his cabinet and the door had been closed than he turned upon me
+the full measure of his wrath.
+
+"You miserable fool!" he snarled. "Did you think to trifle with the
+trust which in a misguided moment I placed in you? Think you that, when
+a week ago I saved you from starvation to clothe and feed you and give
+you a lieutenancy in my guards, I should endure so foul an abuse as
+this? Think you that I entrusted M. de Mancini's training in arms to you
+so that you might lead him into the dissolute habits which have dragged
+you down to what you are--to what you were before I rescued you--to what
+you will be to-morrow when I shall have again abandoned you?"
+
+"Hear me, your Eminence!" I cried indignantly. "'T is no fault of mine.
+Some fool hath sent M. de Mancini a basket of wine and--"
+
+"And you showed him how to abuse it," he broke in harshly. "You have
+taught the boy to become a sot; in time, were he to remain under your
+guidance, I make no doubt but that he would become a gamester and a
+duellist as well. I was mad, perchance, to give him into your care; but
+I have the good fortune to be still in time, before the mischief has
+sunk farther, to withdraw him from it, and to cast you back into the
+kennel from which I picked you."
+
+"Your Eminence does not mean--"
+
+"As God lives I do!" he cried. "You shall quit the Palais Royal this
+very night, M. de Luynes, and if ever I find you unbidden within half a
+mile of it, I will do that which out of a misguided sense of compassion
+I do not do now--I will have you flung into an oubliette of the
+Bastille, where better men than you have rotted before to-day. Per Dio!
+do you think that I am to be fooled by such a thing as you?"
+
+"Does your Eminence dismiss me?" I cried aghast, and scarce crediting
+that such was indeed the extreme measure upon which he had determined.
+
+"Have I not been plain enough?" he answered with a snarl.
+
+I realised to the full my unenviable position, and with the realisation
+of it there overcame me the recklessness of him who has played his last
+stake at the tables and lost. That recklessness it was that caused me to
+shrug my shoulders with a laugh. I was a soldier of fortune--or should I
+say a soldier of misfortune?--as rich in vice as I was poor in virtue;
+a man who lived by the steel and parried the blows that came as best he
+might, or parried them not at all--but never quailed.
+
+"As your Eminence pleases," I answered coolly, "albeit methinks that for
+one who has shed his blood for France as freely as I have done, a little
+clemency were not unfitting."
+
+He raised his eyebrows, and his lips curled in a malicious sneer.
+
+"You come of a family, M. de Luynes," he said slowly, "that is famed for
+having shed the blood of others for France more freely than its own.
+You are, I believe, the nephew of Albert de Luynes. Do you forget the
+Marshal d'Ancre?"
+
+I felt the blood of anger hot in my face as I made haste to answer him:
+
+"There are many of us, Monseigneur, who have cause to blush for the
+families they spring from--more cause, mayhap, than hath Gaston de
+Luynes."
+
+In my words perchance there was no offensive meaning, but in my tone and
+in the look which I bent upon the Cardinal there was that which told him
+that I alluded to his own obscure and dubious origin. He grew livid, and
+for a moment methought he would have struck me: had he done so, then,
+indeed, the history of Europe would have been other than it is to-day!
+He restrained himself, however, and drawing himself to the full height
+of his majestic figure he extended his arm towards the door.
+
+"Go," he said, in a voice that passion rendered hoarse. "Go, Monsieur.
+Go quickly, while my clemency endures. Go before I summon the guard and
+deal with you as your temerity deserves."
+
+I bowed--not without a taint of mockery, for I cared little what might
+follow; then, with head erect and the firm tread of defiance, I stalked
+out of his apartment, along the corridor, down the great staircase,
+across the courtyard, past the guard,--which, ignorant of my disgrace,
+saluted me,--and out into the street.
+
+Then at last my head sank forward on my breast, and deep in thought I
+wended my way home, oblivious of all around me, even the chill bite of
+the February wind.
+
+In my mind I reviewed my wasted life, with the fleeting pleasures and
+the enduring sorrows that it had brought me--or that I had drawn from
+it. The Cardinal said no more than truth when he spoke of having saved
+me from starvation. A week ago that was indeed what he had done. He
+had taken pity on Gaston de Luynes, the nephew of that famous Albert de
+Luynes who had been Constable of France in the early days of the late
+king's reign; he had made me lieutenant of his guards and maitre d'armes
+to his nephews Andrea and Paolo de Mancini because he knew that a better
+blade than mine could not be found in France, and because he thought it
+well to have such swords as mine about him.
+
+A little week ago life had been replete with fresh promises, the gates
+of the road to fame (and perchance fortune) had been opened to me anew,
+and now--before I had fairly passed that gate I had been thrust rudely
+back, and it had been slammed in my face because it pleased a fool to
+become a sot whilst in my company.
+
+There is a subtle poetry in the contemplation of ruin. With ruin itself,
+howbeit, there comes a prosaic dispelling of all idle dreams--a hard, a
+grim, a vile reality.
+
+Ruin! 'T is an ugly word. A fitting one to carve upon the tombstone of a
+reckless, godless, dissolute life such as mine had been.
+
+Back, Gaston de Luynes! back, to the kennel whence the Cardinal's hand
+did for a moment pluck you; back, from the morning of hope to the night
+of despair; back, to choose between starvation and the earning of a
+pauper's fee as a master of fence!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. THE FRUIT OF INDISCRETION
+
+
+Despite the dejection to which I had become a prey, I slept no less
+soundly that night than was my wont, and indeed it was not until late
+next morning when someone knocked at my door that I awakened.
+
+I sat up in bed, and my first thought as I looked round the handsome
+room--which I had rented a week ago upon receiving the lieutenancy in
+the Cardinal's guards--was for the position that I had lost and of the
+need that there would be ere long to seek a lodging more humble and
+better suited to my straitened circumstances. It was not without regret
+that such a thought came to me, for my tastes had never been modest, and
+the house was a fine one, situated in the Rue St. Antoine at a hundred
+paces or so from the Jesuit convent.
+
+I had no time, however, to indulge the sorry mood that threatened to
+beset me, for the knocking at my chamber door continued, until at length
+I answered it with a command to enter.
+
+It was my servant Michelot, a grizzled veteran of huge frame and
+strength, who had fought beside me at Rocroi, and who had thereafter
+become so enamoured of my person--for some trivial service he swore I
+had rendered him--that he had attached himself to me and my luckless
+fortunes.
+
+He came to inform me that M. de Mancini was below and craved immediate
+speech with me. He had scarce done speaking, however, when Andrea
+himself, having doubtless grown tired of waiting, appeared in the
+doorway. He wore a sickly look, the result of his last night's debauch;
+but, more than that, there was stamped upon his face a look of latent
+passion which made me think at first that he was come to upbraid me.
+
+"Ah, still abed, Luynes?" was his greeting as he came forward.
+
+His cloak was wet and his boots splashed, which told me both that he had
+come afoot and that it rained.
+
+"There are no duties that bid me rise," I answered sourly.
+
+He frowned at that, then, divesting himself of his cloak, he gave it
+to Michelot, who, at a sign from me, withdrew. No sooner was the door
+closed than the boy's whole manner changed. The simmering passion of
+which I had detected signs welled up and seemed to choke him as he
+poured forth the story that he had come to tell.
+
+"I have been insulted," he gasped. "Grossly insulted by a vile creature
+of Monsieur d'Orleans's household. An hour ago in the ante-chamber at
+the Palais Royal I was spoken of in my hearing as the besotted nephew of
+the Italian adventurer."
+
+I sat up in bed tingling with excitement at the developments which
+already I saw arising from his last night's imprudence.
+
+"Calmly, Andrea," I begged of him, "tell me calmly."
+
+"Mortdieu! How can I be calm? Ough! The thought of it chokes me. I was
+a fool last night--a sot. For that, perchance, men have some right to
+censure me. But, Sangdieu! that a ruffler of the stamp of Eugene de
+Canaples should speak of it--should call me the nephew of an Italian
+adventurer, should draw down upon me the cynical smile of a crowd of
+courtly apes--pah! I am sick at the memory of it!"
+
+"Did you answer him?"
+
+"Pardieu! I should be worthy of the title he bestowed upon me had I not
+done so. Oh, I answered him--not in words. I threw my hat in his face."
+
+"That was a passing eloquent reply!"
+
+"So eloquent that it left him speechless with amazement. He thought to
+bully with impunity, and see me slink into hiding like a whipped dog,
+terrified by his blustering tongue and dangerous reputation. But there!"
+he broke off, "a meeting has been arranged for four o'clock at St.
+Germain."
+
+"A meeting!" I exclaimed.
+
+"What else? Do you think the affront left any alternative?"
+
+"But--"
+
+"Yes, yes, I know," he interrupted, tossing his head. "I am going to be
+killed. Verville has sworn that there shall be one less of the Italian
+brood. That is why I have come to you, Luynes--to ask you to be my
+second. I don't deserve it, perhaps. In my folly last night I did you
+an ill turn. I unwittingly caused you to be stripped of your commission.
+But if I were on my death-bed now, and begged a favour of you, you would
+not refuse it. And what difference is there 'twixt me and one who is on
+his death-bed? Am I not about to die?"
+
+"Peste! I hope not," I made answer with more lightness than I felt. "But
+I'll stand by you with all my heart, Andrea."
+
+"And you'll avenge me?" he cried savagely, his Southern blood a-boiling.
+"You'll not let him leave the ground alive?"
+
+"Not unless my opponent commits the indiscretion of killing me first.
+Who seconds M. de Canaples?"
+
+"The Marquis de St. Auban and M. de Montmedy."
+
+"And who is the third in our party?"
+
+"I have none. I thought that perhaps you had a friend."
+
+"I! A friend?" I laughed bitterly. "Pshaw, Andrea! beggars have no
+friends. But stay; find Stanislas de Gouville. There is no better
+blade in Paris. If he will join us in this frolic, and you can hold off
+Canaples until either St. Auban or Montmedy is disposed of, we may yet
+leave the three of them on the field of battle. Courage, Andrea! Dum
+spiramus, speramus."
+
+My words seemed to cheer him, and when presently he left me to seek out
+the redoubtable Gouville, the poor lad's face was brighter by far than
+when he had entered my room.
+
+Down in my heart, however, I was less hopeful than I had led him to
+believe, and as I dressed after he had gone, 't was not without some
+uneasiness that I turned the matter over in my mind. I had, during the
+short period of our association, grown fond of Andrea de Mancini. Indeed
+the wonted sweetness of the lad's temper, and the gentleness of his
+disposition, were such as to breed affection in all who came in contact
+with him. In a way, too, methought he had grown fond of me, and I had
+known so few friends in life,--truth to tell I fear me that I had few of
+the qualities that engender friendship,--that I was naturally prone to
+appreciate a gift that from its rareness became doubly valuable.
+
+Hence was it that I trembled for the boy. He had shown aptitude with the
+foils, and derived great profit from my tuition, yet he was too raw by
+far to be pitted against so cunning a swordsman as Canaples.
+
+I had but finished dressing when a coach rumbled down the street and
+halted by my door. Naturally I supposed that someone came to visit
+Coupri, the apothecary,--to whom belonged this house in which I had my
+lodging,--and did not give the matter a second thought until Michelot
+rushed in, with eyes wide open, to announce that his Eminence, Cardinal
+Mazarin, commanded my presence in the adjoining room.
+
+Amazed and deeply marvelling what so extraordinary a visit might
+portend, I hastened to wait upon his Eminence.
+
+I found him standing by the window, and received from him a greeting
+that was passing curt and cavalier.
+
+"Has M. de Mancini been here?" he inquired peremptorily, disregarding
+the chair I offered him.
+
+"He has but left me, Monseigneur."
+
+"Then you know, sir, of the harvest which he has already reaped from the
+indiscretion into which you led him last night?"
+
+"If Monseigneur alludes to the affront put upon M. de Mancini touching
+his last night's indiscretion, by a bully of the Court, I am informed of
+it."
+
+"Pish, Monsieur! I do not follow your fine distinctions--possibly this
+is due to my imperfect knowledge of the language of France, possibly to
+your own imperfect acquaintance with the language of truth."
+
+"Monseigneur!"
+
+"Faugh!" he cried, half scornfully, half peevishly. "I came not here to
+talk of you, but of my nephew. Why did he visit you?"
+
+"To do me the honour of asking me to second him at St. Germain this
+evening."
+
+"And so you think that this duel is to be fought?--that my nephew is to
+be murdered?"
+
+"We will endeavour to prevent his being--as your Eminence daintily puts
+it--murdered. But for the rest, the duel, methinks, cannot be avoided."
+
+"Cannot!" he blazed. "Do you say cannot, M. de Luynes? Mark me well,
+sir: I will use no dissimulation with you. My position in France is
+already a sufficiently difficult one. Already we are threatened with a
+second Fronde. It needs but such events as these to bring my family into
+prominence and make it the butt for the ridicule that malcontents but
+wait an opportunity to slur it with. This affair of Andrea's will lend
+itself to a score or so of lampoons and pasquinades, all of which
+will cast an injurious reflection upon my person and position. That,
+Monsieur, is, methinks, sufficient evil to suffer at your hands. The
+late Cardinal would have had you broken on the wheel for less. I have
+gone no farther than to dismiss you from my service--a clemency for
+which you should be grateful. But I shall not suffer that, in addition
+to the harm already done, Andrea shall be murdered by Canaples."
+
+"I shall do my best to render him assistance."
+
+"You still misapprehend me. This duel, sir, must not take place."
+
+I shrugged my shoulders.
+
+"How does your Eminence propose to frustrate it? Will you arrest
+Canaples?"
+
+"Upon what plea, Monsieur? Think you I am anxious to have the whole of
+Paris howling in my ears?"
+
+"Then possibly it is your good purpose to enforce the late king's edict
+against duelling, and send your guards to St. Germain to arrest the men
+before they engage?"
+
+"Benone!" he sneered. "And what will Paris say if I now enforce a law
+that for ten years has been disregarded? That I feared for my nephew's
+skin and took this means of saving him. A pretty story to have on
+Paris's lips, would it not be?"
+
+"Indeed, Monseigneur, you are right, but I doubt me the duel will needs
+be fought."
+
+"Have I not already said that it shall not be fought?"
+
+Again I shrugged my shoulders. Mazarin grew tiresome with his
+repetitions.
+
+"How can it be avoided, your Eminence?"
+
+"Ah, Monsieur, that is your affair."
+
+"My affair?"
+
+"Assuredly. 'T was through your evil agency he was dragged into this
+business, and through your agency he must be extricated from it."
+
+"Your Eminence jests!"
+
+"Undoubtedly,--'t is a jesting matter," he answered with terrible irony.
+"Oh, I jest! Per Dio! yes. But I'll carry my jest so far as to have you
+hanged if this duel be fought--aye, whether my nephew suffers hurt or
+not. Now, sir, you know what fate awaits you; fight it--turn it aside--I
+have shown you the way. The door, M. de Luynes."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. THE FIGHT IN THE HORSE-MARKET
+
+
+I let him go without a word. There was that in his voice, in his eye,
+and in the gesture wherewith he bade me hold the door for him, that
+cleared my mind of any doubts touching the irrevocable character of his
+determination. To plead was never an accomplishment of mine; to argue, I
+saw, would be to waste the Cardinal's time to no purpose.
+
+And so I let him go,--and my curse with him,--and from my window I
+watched his coach drive away in the drizzling rain, scattering the
+crowd of awe-stricken loiterers who had collected at the rumour of his
+presence.
+
+With a fervent prayer that his patron saint, the devil, might see fit
+to overset his coach and break his neck before he reached the Palace, I
+turned from the window, and called Michelot.
+
+He was quick to answer my summons, bringing me the frugal measure of
+bread and wine wherewith it was my custom to break my fast. Then,
+whilst I munched my crust, I strode to and fro in the little chamber
+and exercised my wits to their utmost for a solution to the puzzle his
+Eminence had set me.
+
+One solution there was, and an easy one--flight. But I had promised
+Andrea de Mancini that I would stand beside him at St. Germain; there
+was a slender chance of saving him if I went, whilst, if I stayed away,
+there would be nothing left for his Eminence to do but to offer up
+prayers for the rest of his nephew's soul.
+
+Another idea I had, but it was desperate--and yet, so persistently did
+my thoughts revert to it that in the end I determined to accept it.
+
+I drank a cup of Armagnac, cheered myself with an oath or two, and again
+I called Michelot. When he came, I asked him if he were acquainted
+with M. de Canaples, to which he replied that he was, having seen the
+gentleman in my company.
+
+"Then," I said, "you will repair to M. de Canaples's lodging in the Rue
+des Gesvres, and ascertain discreetly whether he be at home. If he is,
+you will watch the house until he comes forth, then follow him, and
+bring me word thereafter where he is to be found. Should he be already
+abroad before you reach the Rue des Gesvres, endeavour to ascertain
+whither he has gone, and return forthwith. But be discreet, Michelot.
+You understand?"
+
+He assured me that he did, and left me to nurse my unpleasant thoughts
+for half an hour, returning at the end of that time with the information
+that M. de Canaples was seated at dinner in the "Auberge du Soleil."
+
+Naught could have been more attuned to my purpose, and straightway
+I drew on my boots, girt on my sword, and taking my hat and cloak, I
+sallied out into the rain, and wended my way at a sharp pace towards the
+Rue St. Honore.
+
+One o'clock was striking as I crossed the threshold of the "Soleil" and
+flung my dripping cloak to the first servant I chanced upon.
+
+I glanced round the well-filled room, and at one of the tables I espied
+my quarry in company with St. Auban and Montmedy--the very gentlemen
+who were to fight beside him that evening--and one Vilmorin, as arrant a
+coxcomb and poltroon as could be found in France. With my beaver cocked
+at the back of my head, and a general bearing that for aggressiveness
+would be hard to surpass, I strode up to their table, and stood for a
+moment surveying them with an insolent stare that made them pause in
+their conversation. They raised their noble heads and bestowed upon me a
+look of haughty and disdainful wonder,--such a look as one might bestow
+upon a misbehaving lackey,--all save Vilmorin, who, with a coward's keen
+nose for danger, turned slightly pale and fidgeted in his chair. I was
+well known to all of them, but my attitude forbade all greeting.
+
+"Has M. de Luynes lost anything?" St. Auban inquired icily.
+
+"His wits, mayhap," quoth Canaples with a contemptuous shrug.
+
+He was a tall, powerfully built man, this Canaples, with a swart, cruel
+face that was nevertheless not ill-favoured, and a profusion of black
+hair.
+
+"There is a temerity in M. de Canaples's rejoinder that I had not looked
+for," I said banteringly.
+
+Canaples's brow was puckered in a frown.
+
+"Ha! And why not, Monsieur?"
+
+"Why not? Because it is not to be expected that one who fastens quarrels
+upon schoolboys would evince the courage to beard Gaston de Luynes."
+
+"Monsieur!" the four of them cried in chorus, so loudly that the hum
+of voices in the tavern became hushed, and all eyes were turned in our
+direction.
+
+"M. de Canaples," I said calmly, "permit me to say that I can find no
+more fitting expression for the contempt I hold you in than this."
+
+As I spoke I seized a corner of the tablecloth, and with a sudden tug I
+swept it, with all it held, on to the floor.
+
+Dame! what a scene there was! In an instant the four of them were on
+their feet,--as were half the occupants of the room, besides,--whilst
+poor Vilmorin, who stood trembling like a maid who for the first time
+hears words of love, raised his quavering voice to cry soothingly,
+"Messieurs, Messieurs!"
+
+Canaples was livid with passion, but otherwise the calmest in that room,
+saving perhaps myself. With a gesture he restrained Montmedy and St.
+Auban.
+
+"I shall be happy to give Master de Luynes all the proof of my courage
+that he may desire, and more, I warrant, than he will relish."
+
+"Bravely answered!" I cried, with an approving nod and a beaming smile.
+"Be good enough to lead the way to a convenient spot."
+
+"I have other business at the moment," he answered calmly. "Let us say
+to-morrow at--"
+
+"Faugh!" I broke in scornfully. "I knew it! Confess, Monsieur, that
+you dare not light me now lest you should be unable to keep your
+appointments for this evening."
+
+"Mille diables!" exclaimed St. Auban, "this insolence passes all
+bounds."
+
+"Each man in his turn if you please, gentlemen," I replied. "My present
+affair is with M. de Canaples."
+
+There was a hot answer burning on St. Auban's lips, but Canaples was
+beforehand with him.
+
+"Par la mort Dieu!" he cried; "you go too far, sir, with your 'dare' and
+'dare not.' Is a broken gamester, a penniless adventurer, to tell Eugene
+de Canaples what he dares? Come, sir; since you are eager for the taste
+of steel, follow me, and say your prayers as you go."
+
+With that we left the inn, amidst a prodigious hubbub, and made our way
+to the horse-market behind the Hotel Vendome. It was not to be expected,
+albeit the place we had chosen was usually deserted at such an hour,
+that after the fracas at the "Soleil" our meeting would go unattended.
+When we faced each other--Canaples and I--there were at least some
+twenty persons present, who came, despite the rain, to watch what they
+thought was like to prove a pretty fight. Men of position were they for
+the most part, gentlemen of the Court with here and there a soldier,
+and from the manner in which they eyed me methought they favoured me but
+little.
+
+Our preparations were brief. The absence of seconds disposed of all
+formalities, the rain made us impatient to be done, and in virtue of it
+Canaples pompously announced that he would not risk a cold by stripping.
+With interest did I grimly answer that he need fear no cold when I had
+done with him. Then casting aside my cloak, I drew, and, professing
+myself also disposed to retain my doublet, we forthwith engaged.
+
+He was no mean swordsman, this Canaples. Indeed, his reputation was
+already widespread, and in the first shock of our meeting blades I felt
+that rumour had been just for once. But I was strangely dispossessed
+of any doubts touching the outcome; this being due perchance to a vain
+confidence in my own skill, perchance to the spirit of contemptuous
+raillery wherewith I had from the outset treated the affair, and which
+had so taken root in my heart that even when we engaged I still, almost
+unwittingly, persisted in it.
+
+In my face and attitude there was the reflection of this bantering,
+flippant mood; it was to be read in the mocking disdain of my glance, in
+the scornful curl of my lip, and even in the turn of my wrist as I put
+aside my opponent's passes. All this, Canaples must have noted, and it
+was not without effect upon his nerves. Moreover, there is in steel a
+subtle magnetism which is the index of one's antagonist; and from the
+moment that our blades slithered one against the other I make no doubt
+but that Canaples grew aware of the confident, almost exultant mood in
+which I met him, and which told him that I was his master. Add to this
+the fact that whilst Canaples's nerves were unstrung by passion mine
+were held in check by a mind as calm and cool as though our swords were
+baited, and consider with what advantages I took my ground.
+
+He led the attack fiercely and furiously, as if I were a boy whose guard
+was to be borne down by sheer weight of blows. I contented myself with
+tapping his blade aside, and when at length, after essaying every
+trick in his catalogue, he fell back baffled, I laughed a low laugh of
+derision that drove him pale with fury.
+
+Again he came at me, almost before I was prepared for him, and his
+point, parried with a downward stroke and narrowly averted, scratched
+my thigh, but did more damage to my breeches than my skin, in exchange
+I touched him playfully on the shoulder, and the sting of it drove him
+back a second time. He was breathing hard by then, and would fain have
+paused awhile for breath, but I saw no reason to be merciful.
+
+"Now, sir," I cried, saluting him as though our combat were but on the
+point of starting--"to me! Guard yourself!"
+
+Again our swords clashed, and my blows now fell as swift on his blade
+as his had done awhile ago on mine. So hard did I press him that he was
+forced to give way before me. Back I drove him pace by pace, his
+wrist growing weaker at each parry, each parry growing wider, and the
+perspiration streaming down his ashen face. Panting he went, in that
+backward flight before my onslaught, defending himself as best he could,
+never thinking of a riposte--beaten already. Back, and yet back he went,
+until he reached the railings and could back no farther, and so
+broken was his spirit then that a groan escaped him. I answered with a
+laugh--my mood was lusty and cruel--and thrust at him. Then, eluding his
+guard, I thrust again, beneath it, and took him fairly in the middle of
+his doublet.
+
+He staggered, dropped his rapier, and caught at the railings, where for
+a moment he hung swaying and gasping. Then his head fell forward, his
+grip relaxed, and swooning he sank down into a heap.
+
+A dozen sprang to his aid, foremost amongst them being St. Auban and
+Montmedy, whilst I drew back, suddenly realising my own spent condition,
+to which the heat of the combat had hitherto rendered me insensible. I
+mastered myself as best I might, and, dissembling my hard breathing, I
+wiped my blade with a kerchief, an act which looked so calm and callous
+that it drew from the crowd--for a crowd it had become by then--an angry
+growl. 'T is thus with the vulgar; they are ever ready to sympathise
+with the vanquished without ever pausing to ask themselves if his
+chastisement may not be merited.
+
+In answer to the growl I tossed my head, and sheathing my sword I flung
+the bloodstained kerchief into their very midst. The audacity of the
+gesture left them breathless, and they growled no more, but stared.
+
+Then that outrageous fop, Vilmorin, who had been bending over Canaples,
+started up and coming towards me with a face that was whiter than that
+of the prostrate man, he proved himself so utterly bereft of wit by
+terror that for once he had the temerity to usurp the words and actions
+of a brave man.
+
+"You have murdered him!" he cried in a strident voice, and thrusting his
+clenched fist within an inch of my face. "Do you hear me, you knave? You
+have murdered him!"
+
+Now, as may be well conceived, I was in no mood to endure such words
+from any man, so was but natural that for answer I caught the dainty
+Vicomte a buffet that knocked him into the arms of the nearest
+bystander, and brought him to his senses.
+
+"Fool," I snarled at him, "must I make another example before you
+believe that Gaston de Luynes wears a sword?"
+
+"In the name of Heaven--" he began, putting forth his hands in a
+beseeching gesture; but what more he said was drowned by the roar of
+anger that burst from the onlookers, and it was like to have gone ill
+with me had not St. Auban come to my aid at that most critical juncture.
+
+"Messieurs!" he cried, thrusting himself before me, and raising his hand
+to crave silence, "hear me. I, a friend of M. de Canaples, tell you that
+you wrong M. de Luynes. 'T was a fair fight--how the quarrel arose is no
+concern of yours."
+
+Despite his words they still snarled and growled like the misbegotten
+curs they were. But St. Auban was famous for the regal supper parties he
+gave, to which all were eager to be bidden, and amidst that crowd, as I
+have said, there were a score or so of gentlemen of the Court, who--with
+scant regard for the right or wrong of the case and every regard to
+conciliate this giver of suppers--came to range themselves beside and
+around us, and thus protected me from the murderous designs of that
+rabble.
+
+Seeing how the gentlemen took my part, and deeming--in their blessed
+ignorance--that what gentlemen did must be perforce well done, they grew
+calm in the twinkling of an eye. Thereupon St. Auban, turning to me,
+counselled me in a whisper to be gone, whilst the tide of opinion flowed
+in my favour. Intent to act upon this good advice, I took a step towards
+the little knot that had collected round Canaples, and with natural
+curiosity inquired into the nature of his hurt.
+
+'T was Montmedy who answered me, scowling as he did so:
+
+"He may die of it, Monsieur. If he does not, his recovery will be at
+least slow and difficult."
+
+I had been wise had I held my peace and gone; but, like a fool, I must
+needs give utterance to what was in my mind.
+
+"Ah! At least there will be no duel at St. Germain this evening."
+
+Scarce had the words fallen from my lips when I saw in the faces of
+Montmedy and St. Auban and half a dozen others the evidence of their
+rashness.
+
+"So!" cried St. Auban in a voice that shook with rage. "That was your
+object, eh? That you had fallen low, Master de Luynes, I knew, but I
+dreamt not that in your fall you had come so low as this."
+
+"You dare?"
+
+"Pardieu! I dare more, Monsieur; I dare tell you--you, Gaston de Luynes,
+spy and bravo of the Cardinal--that your object shall be defeated.
+That, as God lives, this duel shall still be fought--by me instead of
+Canaples."
+
+"And I tell you, sir, that as God lives it shall not," I answered with a
+vehemence not a whit less than his own. "To you and to what other fools
+may think to follow in your footsteps, I say this: that not to-night
+nor to-morrow nor the next day shall that duel be fought. Cowards and
+poltroons you are, who seek to murder a beardless boy who has injured
+none of you! But, by my soul! every man who sends a challenge to that
+boy will I at once seek out and deal with as I have dealt with Eugene de
+Canaples. Let those who are eager to try another world make the attempt.
+Adieu, Messieurs!"
+
+And with a flourish of my sodden beaver, I turned and left them before
+they had recovered from the vehemence of my words.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. FAIR RESCUERS
+
+
+Like the calm of the heavens when pregnant with thunder was the calm of
+that crowd. And as brief it was; for scarce had I taken a dozen steps
+when my ears were assailed by a rumble of angry voices and a rush of
+feet. One glance over my shoulder, one second's hesitation whether I
+should stay and beard them, then the thought of Andrea de Mancini and of
+what would befall him did this canaille vent its wrath upon me decided
+my course and sent me hotfoot down the Rue Monarque. Howling and
+bellowing that rabble followed in my wake, stumbling over one another in
+their indecent haste to reach me.
+
+But I was fleet of foot, and behind me there was that that would lend
+wings to the most deliberate, so that when I turned into the open space
+before the Hotel Vendome I had set a good fifty yards betwixt myself and
+the foremost of my hunters.
+
+A coach was passing at that moment. I shouted, and the knave who drove
+glanced at me, then up the Rue Monarque at my pursuers, whereupon,
+shaking his head, he would have left me to my fate. But I was of another
+mind. I dashed towards the vehicle, and as it passed me I caught at
+the window, which luckily was open, and drawing up my legs I hung there
+despite the shower of mud which the revolving wheels deposited upon me.
+
+From the bowels of the coach I was greeted by a woman's scream; a pale
+face, and a profusion of fair hair flashed before my eyes.
+
+"Fear not, Madame," I shouted. "I am no assassin, but rather one
+who stands in imminent peril of assassination, and who craves your
+protection."
+
+More I would have said, but at that juncture the lash of the coachman's
+whip curled itself about my shoulders, and stung me vilely.
+
+"Get down, you rascal," he bellowed; "get down or I'll draw rein!"
+
+To obey him would have been madness. The crowd surged behind with hoots
+and yells, and had I let go I must perforce have fallen into their
+hands. So, instead of getting down as he inconsiderately counselled, I
+drew myself farther up by a mighty effort, and thrust half my body into
+the coach, whereupon the fair lady screamed again, and the whip caressed
+my legs. But within the coach sat another woman, dark of hair and
+exquisite of face, who eyed my advent with a disdainful glance. Her
+proud countenance bore the stamp of courage, and to her it was that I
+directed my appeal.
+
+"Madame, permit me, I pray, to seek shelter in your carriage, and suffer
+me to journey a little way with you. Quick, Madame! Your coachman is
+drawing rein, and I shall of a certainty be murdered under your very
+nose unless you bid him change his mind. To be murdered in itself is a
+trifling matter, I avow, but it is not nice to behold, and I would not,
+for all the world, offend your eyes with the spectacle of it."
+
+I had judged her rightly, and my tone of flippant recklessness won
+me her sympathy and aid. Quickly thrusting her head through the other
+window:
+
+"Drive on, Louis," she commanded. "Faster!" Then turning to me, "You may
+bring your legs into the coach if you choose, sir," she said.
+
+"Your words, Madame, are the sweetest music I have heard for months," I
+answered drily, as I obeyed her. Then leaning out of the carriage again
+I waved my hat gallantly to the mob which--now realising the futility of
+further pursuit--had suddenly come to a halt.
+
+"Au plaisir de vous revoir, Messieurs," I shouted. "Come to me one by
+one, and I'll keep the devil busy finding lodgings for you."
+
+They answered me with a yell, and I sat down content, and laughed.
+
+"You are not a coward, Monsieur," said the dark lady.
+
+"I have been accounted many unsavoury things, Madame, but my bitterest
+enemies never dubbed me that."
+
+"Why, then, did you run away?"
+
+"Why? Ma foi! because in the excessive humility of my soul I recognised
+myself unfit to die."
+
+She bit her lip and her tiny foot beat impatiently upon the floor.
+
+"You are trifling with me, Monsieur. Where do you wish to alight?"
+
+"Pray let that give you no concern; I can assure you that I am in no
+haste."
+
+"You become impertinent, sir," she cried angrily. "Answer me, where are
+you going?"
+
+"Where am I going? Oh, ah--to the Palais Royal."
+
+Her eyes opened very wide at that, and wandered over me with a look that
+was passing eloquent. Indeed, I was a sorry spectacle for any woman's
+eyes--particularly a pretty one's. Splashed from head to foot with mud,
+my doublet saturated and my beaver dripping, with the feather hanging
+limp and broken, whilst there was a rent in my breeches that had
+been made by Canaples's sword, I take it that I had not the air of a
+courtier, and that when I said that I went to the Palais Royal she might
+have justly held me to be the adventurous lover of some kitchen wench.
+But unto the Palais Royal go others besides courtiers and lovers--spies
+of the Cardinal, for instance, and in her sudden coldness and the next
+question that fell from her beauteous lips I read that she had guessed
+me one of these.
+
+"Why did the mob pursue you, Monsieur?"
+
+There was in her voice and gesture when she asked a question the
+imperiousness of one accustomed to command replies. This pretty
+queenliness it was that drove me to answer--as I had done before--in a
+bantering strain.
+
+"Why did the mob pursue me? Hum! Why does the mob pursue great men?
+Because it loves their company."
+
+Her matchless eyes flashed an angry glance, and the faint smile on my
+lips must have tried her temper sorely.
+
+"What did you do to deserve this affection?"
+
+"A mere nothing--I killed a man," I answered coolly. "Or, at least, I
+left him started on the road to--Paradise."
+
+The little flaxen-haired doll uttered a cry of horror, and covered her
+face with her small white hands. My inquisitor, however, sat rigid and
+unaffected. My answer had confirmed her suspicions.
+
+"Why did you kill him?"
+
+"Ma foi!" I replied, encouraging her thoughts, "because he sought to
+kill me."
+
+"Ah! And why did he seek to kill you?"
+
+"Because I disturbed him at dinner."
+
+"Have a care how you trifle, sir!" she retorted, her eyes kindling
+again.
+
+"Upon my honour, 't was no more than that. I pulled the cloth from
+the table whilst he ate. He was a quick-tempered gentleman, and my
+playfulness offended him. That is all."
+
+Doubt appeared in her eyes, and it may have entered her mind that
+perchance her judgment had been over-hasty.
+
+"Do you mean, sir, that you provoked a duel?"
+
+"Alas, Madame! It had become necessary. You see, M. de Canaples--"
+
+"Who?" Her voice rang sharp as the crack of a pistol.
+
+"Eh? M. de Canaples."
+
+"Was it he whom you killed?"
+
+From her tone, and the eager, strained expression of her face, it was
+not difficult to read that some mighty interest of hers was involved in
+my reply. It needed not the low moan that burst from her companion to
+tell me so.
+
+"As I have said, Madame, it is possible that he is not dead--nay, even
+that he will not die. For the rest, since you ask the question, my
+opponent was, indeed, M. de Canaples--Eugene de Canaples."
+
+Her face went deadly white, and she sank back in her seat as if every
+nerve in her body had of a sudden been bereft of power, whilst she of
+the fair hair burst into tears.
+
+A pretty position was this for me!--luckily it endured not. The girl
+roused herself from her momentary weakness, and, seizing the cord, she
+tugged it violently. The coach drew up.
+
+"Alight, sir," she hissed--"go! I wish to Heaven that I had left you to
+the vengeance of the people."
+
+Not so did I; nevertheless, as I alighted: "I am sorry, Madame, that you
+did not," I answered. "Adieu!"
+
+The coach moved away, and I was left standing at the corner of the Rue
+St. Honore and the Rue des Bons Enfants, in the sorriest frame of mind
+conceivable. The lady in the coach had saved my life, and for that I was
+more grateful perchance than my life was worth. Out of gratitude sprang
+a regret for the pain that I had undoubtedly caused her, and the sorrow
+which it might have been my fate to cast over her life.
+
+Still, regret, albeit an admirable sentiment, was one whose existence
+was usually brief in my bosom. Dame! Had I been a man of regrets I might
+have spent the remainder of my days weeping over my past life. But
+the gods, who had given me a character calculated to lead a man
+into misfortune, had given me a stout heart wherewith to fight that
+misfortune, and an armour of recklessness against which remorse,
+regrets, aye, and conscience itself, rained blows in vain.
+
+And so it befell that presently I laughed myself out of the puerile
+humour that was besetting me, and, finding myself chilled by inaction in
+my wet clothes, I set off for the Palais Royal at a pace that was first
+cousin to a run.
+
+Ten minutes later I stood in the presence of the most feared and hated
+man in France.
+
+"Cospetto!" cried Mazarin as I entered his cabinet. "Have you swum the
+Seine in your clothes?"
+
+"No, your Eminence, but I have been serving you in the rain for the past
+hour."
+
+He smiled that peculiar smile of his that rendered hateful his otherwise
+not ill-favoured countenance. It was a smile of the lips in which the
+eyes had no part.
+
+"Yes," he said slowly, "I have heard of your achievements."
+
+"You have heard?" I ejaculated, amazed by the powers which this man
+wielded.
+
+"Yes, I have heard. You are a brave man, M. de Luynes."
+
+"Pshaw, your Eminence!" I deprecated; "the poor are always brave. They
+have naught to lose but their life, and that is not so sweet to them
+that they lay much store by it. Howbeit, Monseigneur, your wishes have
+been carried out. There will be no duel at St. Germain this evening."
+
+"Will there not? Hum! I am not so confident. You are a brave man, M. de
+Luynes, but you lack that great auxiliary of valour--discretion. What
+need to fling into the teeth of those fine gentlemen the reason you had
+for spitting Canaples, eh? You have provoked a dozen enemies for Andrea
+where only one existed."
+
+"I will answer for all of them," I retorted boastfully.
+
+"Fine words, M. de Luynes; but to support them how many men will you
+have to kill? Pah! What if some fine morning there comes one who,
+despite your vaunted swordsmanship, proves your master? What will become
+of that fool, my nephew, eh?"
+
+And his uncanny smile again beamed on me. "Andrea is now packing his
+valise. In an hour he will have left Paris secretly. He goes--but what
+does it signify where he goes? He is compelled by your indiscretion
+to withdraw from Court. Had you kept a close tongue in your foolish
+head--but there! you did not, and so by a thoughtless word you undid all
+that you had done so well. You may go, M. de Luynes. I have no further
+need of you--and thank Heaven that you leave the Palais Royal free to go
+whither your fancy takes you, and not to journey to the Bastille or to
+Vincennes. I am merciful, M. de Luynes--as merciful as you are brave;
+more merciful than you are prudent. One word of warning, M. de Luynes:
+do not let me learn that you are in my nephew's company, if you would
+not make me regret my clemency and repair the error of it by having you
+hanged. And now, adieu!"
+
+I stood aghast. Was I indeed dismissed? Albeit naught had been said, I
+had not doubted, since my interview with him that morning, that did I
+succeed in saving Andrea my rank in his guards--and thereby a means of
+livelihood--would be restored to me. And now matters were no better than
+they had been before. He dismissed me with the assurance that he was
+merciful. As God lives, it would have been as merciful to have hanged
+me!
+
+He met my astonished look with an eye that seemed to ask me why I
+lingered. Then reading mayhap what was passing in my thoughts, he raised
+a little silver whistle to his lips and blew softly upon it.
+
+"Bernouin," said he to his valet, who entered in answer to the summons,
+"reconduct M. de Luynes."
+
+I remember drawing down upon my bedraggled person the curious gaze of
+the numerous clients who thronged the Cardinal's ante-chamber, as I
+followed Bernouin to the door which opened on to the corridor, and which
+he held for me. And thus, for the second time within twenty-four hours,
+did I leave the Palais Royal to wend my way home to the Rue St. Antoine
+with grim despondency in my heart.
+
+I found Michelot on the point of setting out in search of me, with a
+note which had been brought to my lodging half an hour ago, and which
+its bearer had said was urgent. I took the letter, and bidding Michelot
+prepare me fresh raiment that I might exchange for my wet clothes, I
+broke the seal and read:
+
+
+"A thousand thanks, dear friend, for the service you have rendered me
+and of which his Eminence, my uncle, has informed me. I fear that you
+have made many enemies for yourself through an action which will likely
+go unrewarded, and that Paris is therefore as little suited at present
+to your health as it is to mine. I am setting out for Blois on a mission
+of exceeding delicacy wherein your advice and guidance would be of
+infinite value to me. I shall remain at Choisy until to-morrow morning,
+and should there be no ties to hold you in Paris, and you be minded to
+bear me company, join me there at the Hotel du Connetable where I shall
+lie to-night. Your grateful and devoted
+
+"ANDRE."
+
+
+So! There was one at least who desired my company! I had not thought it.
+"If there be no ties to hold you in Paris," he wrote. Dame! A change
+of air would suit me vastly. I was resolved--a fig for the Cardinal's
+threat to hang me if I were found in his nephew's company!
+
+"My suit of buff, Michelot," I shouted, springing to my feet, "and my
+leather jerkin."
+
+He gazed at me in surprise.
+
+"Is Monsieur going a journey?"
+
+I answered him that I was, and as I spoke I began to divest myself of
+the clothes I wore. "Pack my suit of pearl grey in the valise, with what
+changes of linen I possess; then call Master Coupri that I may settle
+with him. It may be some time before we return."
+
+In less than half an hour I was ready for the journey, spurred
+and booted, with my rapier at my side, and in the pocket of my
+haut-de-chausses a purse containing some fifty pistoles--best part of
+which I had won from Vilmorin at lansquenet some nights before, and
+which moderate sum represented all the moneys that I possessed.
+
+Our horses were ready, my pistols holstered, and my valise strapped
+to Michelot's saddle. Despite the desperate outlook of my fortunes, of
+which I had made him fully cognisant, he insisted upon clinging to me,
+reminding me that at Rocroi I had saved his life and that he would leave
+me only when I bade him go.
+
+As four o'clock was striking at Notre Dame we crossed the Pont Neuf,
+and going by the Quai des Augustins and the Rue de la Harpe, we quitted
+Paris by the St. Michel Gate and took the road to Choisy. The rain
+had ceased, but the air was keen and cold, and the wind cut like a
+sword-edge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. MAZARIN, THE MATCH-MAKER
+
+
+Twixt Paris and Choisy there lies but a distance of some two leagues,
+which, given a fair horse, one may cover with ease in little more than
+half an hour. So that as the twilight was deepening into night we drew
+rein before the hostelry of the Connetable, in the only square the
+little township boasts, and from the landlord I had that obsequious
+reception which is ever accorded to him who travels with a body-servant.
+
+I found Andrea installed in a fair-sized and comfortable apartment, to
+the original decoration of which he added not a little by bestowing his
+boots in the centre of the floor, his hat, sword, and baldrick on the
+table, his cloak on one chair, and his doublet on another. He himself
+sat toasting his feet before the blazing logs, which cast a warm,
+reddish glow upon his sable hair and dainty shirt of cambric.
+
+He sprang up as I entered, and came towards me with a look of pleasure
+on his handsome, high-bred face, that did me good to see.
+
+"So, you have come, De Luynes," he cried, putting forth his hand. "I did
+not dare to hope that you would."
+
+"No," I answered. "Truly it was not to be expected that I could be
+easily lured from Paris just as my fortunes are nearing a high tide,
+and his Eminence proposing to make me a Marshal of France and create me
+Duke. As you say, you had scant grounds for hoping that my love for you
+would suffice to make me renounce all these fine things for the mere
+sake of accompanying you on your jaunt to Blois."
+
+He laughed, then fell to thanking me for having rid him of Canaples. I
+cut him short at last, and in answer to his questions told him what had
+passed 'twixt his Eminence and me that afternoon. Then as the waiter
+entered to spread our supper, the conversation assumed a less delicate
+character, until we were again alone with the table and its steaming
+viands between us.
+
+"You have not told me yet, Andrea, what takes you to Blois," quoth I
+then.
+
+"You shall learn. Little do you dream how closely interwoven are our
+morning adventures with this journey of mine. To begin with, I go to
+Blois to pay my devoirs to the lady whom his Eminence has selected for
+my future wife."
+
+"You were then right in describing this as a mission of great delicacy."
+
+"More than you think--I have never seen the lady."
+
+"Never seen her? And you go a-wooing a woman you have never seen?"
+
+"It is so. I have never seen her; but his Eminence has, and 't is he
+who arranges the affair. Ah, the Cardinal is the greatest match-maker in
+France! My cousin Anna Martinozzi is destined for the Prince de Conti,
+my sisters Olympia and Marianne he also hopes to marry to princes of the
+blood, whilst I dare wager that he has thoughts of seating either Maria
+or Hortensia upon the throne of France as the wife of Louis XIV., as
+soon as his Majesty shall have reached a marriageable age. You may
+laugh, De Luynes, nevertheless all this may come to pass, for my uncle
+has great ambitions for his family, and it is even possible that should
+that poor, wandering youth, Charles II. of England, ever return to the
+throne of his fathers he may also become my brother-in-law. I am likely
+to become well connected, De Luynes, so make a friend of me whilst I
+am humble. So much for Mazarin's nieces. His nephews are too young for
+alliances just yet, saving myself; and for me his Eminence has
+chosen one of the greatest heiresses in France--Yvonne St. Albaret de
+Canaples."
+
+"Whom?" I shouted.
+
+He smiled.
+
+"Curious, is it not? She is the sister of the man whom I quarrelled
+with this morning, and whom you fought with this afternoon. Now you will
+understand my uncle's reasons for so strenuously desiring to prevent the
+duel at St. Germain. It appears that the old Chevalier de Canaples is
+as eager as the Cardinal to see his daughter wed to me, for his Eminence
+has promised to create me Duke for a wedding gift. 'T will cost him
+little, and 't will please these Canaples mightily. Naturally, had
+Eugene de Canaples and I crossed swords, matters would have been
+rendered difficult."
+
+"When did you learn all this?" I inquired.
+
+"To-day, after the duel, and when it was known what St. Auban and
+Montmedy had threatened me with. My uncle thought it well that I should
+withdraw from Paris. He sent for me and told me what I have told you,
+adding that I had best seize the opportunity, whilst my presence at
+Court was undesirable, to repair to Blois and get my wooing done. I in
+part agreed with him. The lady is very rich, and I am told that she is
+beautiful. I shall see her, and if she pleases me, I'll woo her. If not,
+I'll return to Paris."
+
+"But her brother will oppose you."
+
+"Her brother? Pooh! If he doesn't die of the sword-thrust you gave him,
+which I am told is in the region of the lung and passing dangerous, he
+will at least be abed for a couple of months to come."
+
+"But I, mon cher Andre? What role do you reserve for me, that you have
+desired me to go with you?"
+
+"The role of Mentor if you will. Methought you would prove a merry
+comrade to help one o'er a tedious journey, and knowing that there was
+little to hold you to Paris, and probably sound reasons why you should
+desire to quit it, meseemed that perhaps you would consent to bear me
+company. Who knows, my knight errant, what adventures may await you and
+what fortunes? If the heiress displeases me, it may be that she will
+please you--or mayhap there is another heiress at Blois who will fall
+enamoured of those fierce moustachios."
+
+I laughed with him at the improbability of such things befalling. I
+carried in my bosom too large a heart, and one that was the property of
+every wench I met--for just so long as I chanced to be in her company.
+
+It was no more than in harmony with this habit of mine, that when, next
+morning in the common-room of the Connetable, I espied Jeanneton, the
+landlord's daughter, and remarked that she was winsome and shapely, with
+a complexion that would not have dishonoured a rose-petal, I permitted
+myself to pinch her dainty cheek. She slapped mine in return, and in
+this pleasant manner we became acquainted.
+
+"Sweet Jeanneton," quoth I with a laugh, "that was mightily ill-done! I
+did but pinch your cheek as one may pinch a sweet-smelling bud, so that
+the perfume of it may cling to one's fingers."
+
+"And I, sir," was the pert rejoinder, "did but slap yours as one may
+slap a misbehaving urchin's; so that he may learn better manners."
+
+Nevertheless she was pleased with my courtly speech, and perchance also
+with my moustachios, for a smile took the place of the frown wherewith
+she had at first confronted me. Now, if I had uttered glib pleasantries
+in answer to her frowns, how many more did not her smiles wring from me!
+I discoursed to her in the very courtliest fashion of cows and pullets
+and such other matters as interesting to her as they were mysterious
+to me. I questioned her in a breath touching her father's pigs and
+the swain she loved best in that little township, to all of which she
+answered me with a charming wit, which would greatly divert you did I
+but recall her words sufficiently to set them down. In five minutes
+we had become the best friends in the world, which was attested by the
+protecting arm that I slipped around her waist, as I asked her whether
+she loved that village swain of hers better than she loved me, and
+refused to believe her when she answered that she did.
+
+Outside two men were talking, one calling for a farrier, and when
+informed that the only one in the village was absent and not likely to
+return till noon, demanding relays of horses. The other--probably the
+hostler--answered him that the Connetable was not a post-house and
+that no horses were to be had there. Then a woman's voice, sweet yet
+commanding, rose above theirs.
+
+"Very well, Guilbert," it said. "We will await this farrier's return."
+
+"Let me go, Monsieur!" cried Jeanneton. "Some one comes."
+
+Now for myself I cared little who might come, but methought that it was
+likely to do poor Jeanneton's fair name no benefit, if the arm of
+Gaston de Luynes were seen about her waist. And so I obeyed her, but not
+quickly enough; for already a shadow lay athwart the threshold, and in
+the doorway stood a woman, whose eye took in the situation before we had
+altered it sufficiently to avert suspicion. To my amazement I beheld the
+lady of the coach--she who had saved me from the mob in Place Vendome,
+and touching whose identity I could have hazarded a shrewd guess.
+
+In her eyes also I saw the light of recognition which swiftly changed to
+one of scorn. Then they passed from me to the vanishing Jeanneton, and
+methought that she was about to call her back. She paused, however, and,
+turning to the lackey who followed at her heels.
+
+"Guilbert," she said, "be good enough to call the landlord, and bid him
+provide me with an apartment for the time that we may be forced to spend
+here."
+
+But at this juncture the host himself came hurrying forward with many
+bows and endless rubbing of hands, which argued untold deference. He
+regretted that the hostelry of the Connetable, being but a poor inn,
+seldom honoured as it was at that moment, possessed but one suite of
+private apartments, and that was now occupied by a most noble gentleman.
+The lady tapped her foot, and as at that moment her companion (who was
+none other than the fair-haired doll I had seen with her on the previous
+day) entered the room, she turned to speak with her, whilst I moved away
+towards the window.
+
+"Will this gentleman," she inquired, "lend me one of his rooms, think
+you?"
+
+"Helas, Mademoiselle, he has but two, a bedroom and an ante-chamber, and
+he is still abed."
+
+"Oh!" she cried in pretty anger, "this is insufferable! 'T is your
+fault, Guilbert, you fool. Am I, then, to spend the day here in the
+common-room?"
+
+"No, no, Mademoiselle," exclaimed the host in his most soothing accents.
+"Only for an hour, or less, perhaps, until this very noble lord is
+risen, when assuredly--for he is young and very gallant--he will resign
+one or both of his rooms to you."
+
+More was said between them, but my attention was suddenly drawn
+elsewhere. Michelot burst into the room, disaster written on his face.
+
+"Monsieur," he cried, in great alarm, "the Marquis de St. Auban
+is riding down the street with the Vicomte de Vilmorin and another
+gentleman."
+
+I rapped out an oath at the news; they had got scent of Andrea's
+whereabouts, and were after him like sleuth-hounds on a trail.
+
+"Remain here, Michelot," I answered in a low voice. "Tell them that
+M. de Mancini is not here, that the only occupant of the inn is your
+master, a gentleman from Normandy, or Picardy, or where you will.
+See that they do not guess our presence--the landlord fortunately is
+ignorant of M. de Mancini's name."
+
+There was a clatter of horses' hoofs without, and I was barely in time
+to escape by the door leading to the staircase, when St. Auban's heavy
+voice rang out, calling the landlord.
+
+"I am in search of a gentleman named Andrea de Mancini," he said. "I am
+told that he has journeyed hither, and that he is here at present. Am I
+rightly informed?"
+
+I determined to remain where I was, and hear that conversation to the
+end.
+
+"There is a gentleman here," answered the host, "but I am ignorant of
+his name. I will inquire."
+
+"You may spare yourself the trouble," Michelot interposed. "That is not
+the gentleman's name. I am his servant."
+
+There was a moment's pause, then came Vilmorin's shrill voice.
+
+"You lie, knave! M. de Mancini is here. You are M. de Luynes's lackey,
+and where the one is, there shall we find the other."
+
+"M. de Luynes?" came a voice unknown to me. "That is Mancini's
+sword-blade of a friend, is it not? Well, why does he hide himself?
+Where is he? Where is your master, rascal?"
+
+"I am here, Messieurs," I answered, throwing wide the door, and
+appearing, grim and arrogant, upon the threshold.
+
+Mort de ma vie! Had they beheld the Devil, St. Auban and Vilmorin could
+not have looked less pleased than they did when their eyes lighted upon
+me, standing there surveying them with a sardonic grin.
+
+St. Auban muttered an oath, Vilmorin stifled a cry, whilst he who had so
+loudly called to know where I hid myself--a frail little fellow, in the
+uniform of the gardes du corps--now stood silent and abashed.
+
+The two women, who had withdrawn into a dark and retired corner of the
+apartment, stood gazing with interest upon this pretty scene.
+
+"Well, gentlemen?" I asked in a tone of persiflage, as I took a step
+towards them. "Have you naught to say to me, now that I have answered
+your imperious summons? What! All dumb?"
+
+"Our affair is not with you," said St. Auban, curtly.
+
+"Pardon! Why, then, did you inquire where I was?"
+
+"Messieurs," exclaimed Vilmorin, whose face assumed the pallor usual to
+it in moments of peril, "meseems we have been misinformed, and that M.
+de Mancini is not here. Let us seek elsewhere."
+
+"Most excellent advice, gentlemen," I commented,--"seek elsewhere."
+
+"Monsieur," cried the little officer, turning purple, "it occurs to me
+that you are mocking us."
+
+"Mocking you! Mocking you? Mocking a gentleman who has been tied to so
+huge a sword as yours. Surely--surely, sir, you do not think--"
+
+"I'll not endure it," he broke in. "You shall answer to me for this."
+
+"Have a care, sir," I cried in alarm as he rushed forward. "Have a care,
+sir, lest you trip over your sword."
+
+He halted, drew himself up, and, with a magnificent gesture: "I am
+Armand de Malpertuis, lieutenant of his Majesty's guards," he announced,
+"and I shall be grateful if you will do me the honour of taking a turn
+with me, outside."
+
+"I am flattered beyond measure, M. Malappris--"
+
+"Mal-per-tuis," he corrected furiously.
+
+"Malpertuis," I echoed. "I am honoured beyond words, but I do not wish
+to take a turn."
+
+"Mille diables, sir! Don't you understand? We must fight."
+
+"Must we, indeed? Again I am honoured; but, Monsieur, I don't fight
+sparrows."
+
+"Gentlemen! Gentlemen!" cried St. Auban, thrusting himself between us.
+"Malpertuis, have the goodness to wait until one affair is concluded
+before you create a second one. Now, M. de Luynes, will you tell me
+whether M. de Mancini is here or not?"
+
+"What if he should be?"
+
+"You will be wise to withdraw--we shall be three to two."
+
+"Three to two! Surely, Marquis, your reckoning is at fault. You cannot
+count the Vicomte there as one; his knees are knocking together; at best
+he is but a woman in man's clothes. As for your other friend, unless his
+height misleads me, he is but a boy. Therefore, Monsieur, you see that
+the advantage is with us. We are two men opposed to a man, a woman, and
+a child, so that--"
+
+"In Heaven's name, sir," cried St. Auban, again interposing himself
+betwixt me and the bellicose Malpertuis, "will you cease this
+foolishness? A word with you in private, M. de Luynes."
+
+I permitted him to take me by the sleeve, and lead me aside, wondering
+the while what curb it was that he was setting upon his temper, and what
+wily motives he might have for adopting so conciliatory a tone.
+
+With many generations to come, the name of Cesar de St. Auban must
+perforce be familiar as that of one of the greatest roysterers and most
+courtly libertines of the early days of Louis XIV., as well as that of a
+rabid anti-cardinalist and frondeur, and one of the earliest of that new
+cabal of nobility known as the petits-maitres, whose leader the Prince
+de Conde was destined to become a few years later. He was a man of about
+my own age, that is to say, between thirty-two and thirty-three, and
+of my own frame, tall, spare, and active. On his florid, debonnair
+countenance was stamped his character of bon-viveur. In dress he
+was courtly in the extreme. His doublet and haut-de-chausses were of
+wine-coloured velvet, richly laced, and he still affected the hanging
+sleeves of a fast-disappearing fashion. Valuable lace filled the tops
+of his black boots, a valuable jewel glistened here and there upon
+his person, and one must needs have pronounced him a fop but for the
+strength and resoluteness of his bearing, and the long rapier that hung
+from his gold-embroidered baldrick. Such in brief is a portrait of
+the man who now confronted me, his fine blue eyes fixed upon my face,
+wherein methinks he read but little, search though he might.
+
+"M. de Luynes," he murmured at last, "you appear to find entertainment
+in making enemies, and you do it wantonly."
+
+"Have you brought me aside to instruct me in the art of making friends?"
+
+"Possibly, M. de Luynes; and without intending an offence, permit me to
+remark that you need them."
+
+"Mayhap. But I do not seek them."
+
+"I have it in my heart to wish that you did; for I, M. de Luynes, seek
+to make a friend of you. Nay, do not smile in that unbelieving fashion.
+I have long esteemed you for those very qualities of dauntlessness and
+defiance which have brought you so rich a crop of hatred. If you
+doubt my words, perhaps you will recall my attitude towards you in the
+horse-market yesterday, and let that speak. Without wishing to remind
+you of a service done, I may yet mention that I stood betwixt you and
+the mob that sought to avenge my friend Canaples. He was my friend; you
+stood there, as indeed you have always stood, in the attitude of a foe.
+You wounded Canaples, maltreated Vilmorin, defied me; and yet but for my
+intervention, mille diables sir, you had been torn to pieces."
+
+"All this I grant is very true, Monsieur," I made reply, with deep
+suspicion in my soul. "Yet, pardon me, if I confess that to me it proves
+no more than that you acted as a generous enemy. Pardon my bluntness
+also--but what profit do you look to make from gaining my friendship?"
+
+"You are frank, Monsieur," he said, colouring slightly, "I will be none
+the less so. I am a frondeur, an anti-cardinalist. In a word, I am
+a gentleman and a Frenchman. An interloping foreigner, miserly,
+mean-souled, and Jesuitical, springs up, wins himself into the graces
+of a foolish, impetuous, wilful queen, and climbs the ladder which she
+holds for him to the highest position in France. I allude to Mazarin;
+this Cardinal who is not a priest; this minister of France who is not a
+Frenchman; this belittler of nobles who is not a gentleman."
+
+"Mort Dieu, Monsieur--"
+
+"One moment, M. de Luynes. This adventurer, not content with the
+millions which his avaricious talons have dragged from the people for
+his own benefit, seeks, by means of illustrious alliances, to enrich a
+pack of beggarly nieces and nephews that he has rescued from the squalor
+of their Sicilian homes to bring hither. His nieces, the Mancinis and
+Martinozzis, he is marrying to Dukes and Princes. 'T is not nice to
+witness, but 't is the affair of the men who wed them. In seeking,
+however, to marry his nephew Andrea to one of the greatest heiresses in
+France, he goes too far. Yvonne de Canaples is for some noble countryman
+of her own--there are many suitors to her hand--and for no nephew of
+Giulio Mazarini. Her brother Eugene, himself, thinks thus, and therein,
+M. de Luynes, you have the real motive of the quarrel which he provoked
+with Andrea, and which, had you not interfered, could have had but one
+ending."
+
+"Why do you tell me all this, Monsieur?" I inquired coldly, betraying
+none of the amazement his last words gave birth to.
+
+"So that you may know the true position of affairs, and, knowing it, see
+the course which the name you bear must bid you follow. Because Canaples
+failed am I here to-day. I had not counted upon meeting you, but since
+I have met you, I have set the truth before you, confident that you
+will now withdraw from an affair to which no real interest can bind you,
+leaving matters to pursue their course."
+
+He eyed me, methought, almost anxiously from under his brows, as he
+awaited my reply. It was briefer than he looked for.
+
+"You have wasted time, Monsieur."
+
+"How? You persist?"
+
+"Yes. I persist. Yet for the Cardinal I care nothing. Mazarin has
+dismissed me from his service unjustly and unpaid. He has forbidden me
+his nephew's company. In fact, did he know of my presence here with M.
+de Mancini, he would probably carry out his threat to hang me."
+
+"Ciel!" cried St. Auban, "you are mad, if that be so. France is divided
+into two parties, cardinalists and anti-cardinalists. You, sir, without
+belonging to either, stand alone, an enemy to both. Your attitude is
+preposterous!"
+
+"Nay, sir, not alone. There is Andrea de Mancini. The boy is my only
+friend in a world of enemies. I am growing fond of him, Monsieur, and
+I will stand by him, while my arm can wield a sword, in all that may
+advance his fortunes and his happiness. That, Monsieur, is my last
+word."
+
+"Do not forget, M. de Luynes," he said--his suaveness all departed of
+a sudden, and his tone full of menace and acidity--"do not forget that
+when a wall may not be scaled it may be broken through."
+
+"Aye, Monsieur, but many of those who break through stand in danger
+of being crushed by the falling stones," I answered, entering into the
+spirit of his allegory.
+
+"There are many ways of striking," he said.
+
+"And many ways of being struck," I retorted with a sneer.
+
+Our words grew sinister, our eyes waxed fiery, and more might have
+followed had not the door leading to the staircase opened at that moment
+to admit Andrea himself. He came, elegant in dress and figure, with a
+smile upon his handsome young face, whose noble features gave the lie
+to St. Auban's assertion that he had been drawn from a squalid Sicilian
+home. Such faces are not bred in squalor.
+
+In utter ignorance of the cabal against him, he greeted St. Auban--who
+was well known to him--with a graceful bow, and also Vilmorin, who stood
+in the doorway with Malpertuis, and who at the sight of Mancini grew
+visibly ill at ease. In coming to Choisy, the Vicomte had clearly
+expected to do no more than second St. Auban in the duel which he
+thought to see forced upon Andrea. He now realised that if a fight there
+was, he might, by my presence, be forced into it. Malpertuis looked
+fierce and tugged at his moustachios, whilst his companions returned
+Andrea's salutation--St. Auban gravely, and Vilmorin hesitatingly.
+
+"Ha, Gaston," said the boy, advancing towards me, "our host tells me
+that two ladies who have been shipwrecked here wish to do me the honour
+of occupying my apartments for an hour or so. Ha, there they are," he
+added, as the two girls came suddenly forward. Then bowing--"Mesdames, I
+am enchanted to set the poor room at your disposal for as long as it may
+please you to honour it."
+
+As the ladies--of whose presence St. Auban had been unaware--appeared
+before us, I shot a glance at the Marquis, and, from the start he gave
+upon beholding them, I saw that things were as I had suspected.
+
+Before they could reply to Andrea, St. Auban suddenly advanced:
+
+"Mesdemoiselles," quoth he, "forgive me if in this miserable light I did
+not earlier discover your presence and offer you my services. I do so
+now, with the hope that you will honour me by making use of them."
+
+"Merci, M. de St. Auban," replied the dark-haired one--whom I guessed
+to be none other than Yvonne de Canaples herself--"but, since this
+gentleman so gallantly cedes his apartments to us, all our needs are
+satisfied. It would be churlish to refuse that which is so graciously
+proffered."
+
+Her tone was cold in the extreme, as also was the inclination of her
+head wherewith she favoured the Marquis. In arrant contrast were the
+pretty words of thanks she addressed to Andrea, who stood by, blushing
+like a girl, and a damnable scowl did this contrast draw from St. Auban,
+a scowl that lasted until, escorted by the landlord, the two ladies had
+withdrawn.
+
+There was an awkward pause when they were gone, and methought from the
+look on St. Auban's face that he was about to provoke a fight after all.
+Not so, however, for, after staring at us like a clown whilst one might
+tell a dozen, he turned and strode to the door, calling for his horse
+and those of his companions.
+
+"Au revoir, M. de Luynes," he said significantly as he got into the
+saddle.
+
+"Au revoir, M. de Luynes," said also Malpertuis, coming close up to me.
+"We shall meet again, believe me."
+
+"Pray God that we may not, if you would die in your bed," I answered
+mockingly. "Adieu!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. OF HOW ANDREA BECAME LOVE-SICK
+
+
+With what fictions I could call to mind I put off Andrea's questions
+touching the peculiar fashion of St. Auban's leave-taking. Tell him
+the truth and expose to him the situation whereof he was himself the
+unconscious centre I dared not, lest his high-spirited impetuosity
+should cause him to take into his own hands the reins of the affair, and
+thus drive himself into irreparable disaster.
+
+Andrea himself showed scant concern, however, and was luckily content
+with my hurriedly invented explanations; his thoughts had suddenly found
+occupation in another and a gentler theme than the ill-humour of men,
+and presently his tongue betrayed them when he drew the conversation to
+the ladies to whom he had resigned his apartments.
+
+"Pardieu! Gaston," he burst out, "she is a lovely maid--saw you ever a
+bonnier?"
+
+"Indeed she is very beautiful," I answered, laughing to myself at the
+thought of how little he dreamt that it was of Yvonne St. Albaret de
+Canaples that he spoke, and not minded for the while to enlighten him.
+
+"If she be as kind and gentle as she is beautiful, Gaston, well--Uncle
+Giulio's plans are likely to suffer shipwreck. I shall not leave
+Choisy until I have spoken to her; in fact, I shall not leave until she
+leaves."
+
+"Nevertheless, we shall still be able to set out, as we had projected,
+after dining, for in an hour, or two at most, they will proceed on their
+journey."
+
+He was silent for some moments, then:
+
+"To the devil with the Cardinal's plans!" quoth he, banging his fist on
+the table. "I shall not go to Blois."
+
+"Pooh! Why not?"
+
+"Why not?" He halted for a moment, then in a meandering tone--"You have
+read perchance in story-books," he said, "of love being born from the
+first meeting of two pairs of eyes, as a spark is born of flint and
+steel, and you may have laughed at the conceit, as I have laughed at
+it. But laugh no more, Gaston; for I who stand before you am one who has
+experienced this thing which poets tell of, and which hitherto I have
+held in ridicule. I will not go to Blois because--because--enfin,
+because I intend to go where she goes."
+
+"Then, mon cher, you will go to Blois. You will go to Blois, if not as
+a dutiful nephew, resigned to obey his reverend uncle's wishes, at least
+because fate forces you to follow a pair of eyes that have--hum, what
+was it you said they did?"
+
+"Do you say that she is going to Blois? How do you know?"
+
+"Eh? How do I know? Oh, I heard her servant speaking with the hostler."
+
+"So much the better, then; for thus if his Eminence gets news of my
+whereabouts, the news will not awaken his ever-ready suspicions. Ciel!
+How beautiful she is! Noted you her eyes, her skin, and what hair, mon
+Dieu! Like threads of gold!"
+
+"Like threads of gold?" I echoed. "You are dreaming, boy. Oh, St. Gris!
+I understand; you are speaking of the fair-haired chit that was with
+her."
+
+He eyed me in amazement.
+
+"'T is you whose thoughts are wandering to that lanky, nose-in-the-air
+Madame who accompanied her."
+
+I began a laugh that I broke off suddenly as I realised that it was not
+Yvonne after all who had imprisoned his wits. The Cardinal's plans were,
+indeed, likely to miscarry if he persisted thus.
+
+"But 't was the nose-in-the-air Madame, as you call her, with whom you
+spoke!"
+
+"Aye, but it was the golden-haired lady that held my gaze. Pshaw! Who
+would mention them in a breath?"
+
+"Who, indeed?" said I, but with a different meaning.
+
+Thereafter, seeing him listless, I suggested a turn in the village to
+stretch our limbs before dining. But he would have none of it, and when
+I pressed the point with sound reasoning touching the benefits which
+health may cull from exercise, he grew petulant as a wayward child.
+She might descend whilst he was absent. Indeed, she might require some
+slight service that lay, perchance, in his power to render her. What
+an opportunity would he not lose were he abroad? She might even depart
+before we returned; and than that no greater calamity could just
+then befall him. No, he would not stir a foot from the inn. A fig for
+exercise! to the devil with health! who sought an appetite? Not he. He
+wished for no appetite--could contrive no base and vulgar appetite for
+food, whilst his soul, he swore, was being consumed by the overwhelming,
+all-effacing appetite to behold her.
+
+Such meandering fools are most of us at nineteen, when the heart is
+young--a flawless mirror ready to hold the image of the first fair maid
+that looks into it through our eyes, and as ready--Heaven knows!--to
+relinquish it when the substance is withdrawn.
+
+But I, who was not nineteen, and the mirror of whose heart--to pursue my
+metaphor--was dulled, warped, and cracked with much ill-usage, grew sick
+of the boy's enthusiasm and the monotony of a conversation which I could
+divert into no other channel from that upon which it had been started
+by a little slip of a girl with hair of gold and sapphire eyes--I use
+Andrea's words. And so I rose, and bidding him take root in the tavern,
+if so it pleased his fancy, I left him there.
+
+Wrapped in my cloak, for the air was raw and damp, I strode aimlessly
+along, revolving in my mind what had befallen at the Connetable that
+morning, and speculating upon the issue that this quaint affair might
+have. In matters of love, or rather, of matrimony--which is not quite
+the same thing--opposition is common enough. But the opposers
+are usually members of either of the interested families. Now the
+families--that is to say, the heads of the families--being agreed and
+even anxious to bring about the union of Yvonne de Canaples and Andrea
+de Mancini, it was something new to have a cabal of persons who, from
+motives of principle--as St. Auban had it--should oppose the alliance so
+relentlessly as to even resort to violence if no other means occurred
+to them. It seemed vastly probable that Andrea would be disposed of by
+a knife in the back, and more than probable that a like fate would be
+reserved for me, since I had constituted myself his guardian angel. For
+my own part, however, I had a pronounced distaste to ending my days in
+so unostentatious a fashion. I had also a notion that I should prove an
+exceedingly difficult person to assassinate, and that those who sought
+to slip a knife into me would find my hide peculiarly tough, and my hand
+peculiarly ready to return the compliment.
+
+So deeply did I sink into ponderings of this character that it was not
+until two hours afterwards that I again found myself drawing near the
+Connetable.
+
+I reached the inn to find by the door a coach, and by that coach Andrea;
+he stood bareheaded, despite the cold, conversing, with all outward
+semblances of profound respect, with those within it.
+
+So engrossed was he and so ecstatic, that my approach was unheeded, and
+when presently I noted that the coach was Mademoiselle de Canaples's, I
+ceased to wonder at the boy's unconsciousness of what took place around
+him.
+
+Clearly the farrier had been found at last, and the horse shod afresh
+during my absence. Loath to interrupt so pretty a scene, I waited,
+aloof, until these adieux should be concluded, and whilst I waited
+there came to me from the carriage a sweet, musical voice that was not
+Yvonne's.
+
+"May we not learn at least, Monsieur, the name of the gentleman to whose
+courtesy we are indebted for having spent the past two hours without
+discomfort?"
+
+"My name, Mademoiselle, is Andrea de Mancini, that of the humblest
+of your servants, and one to whom your thanks are a more than lavish
+payment for the trivial service he may have been fortunate enough to
+render you."
+
+Dame! What glibness doth a tongue acquire at Court!
+
+"M. Andrea de Mancini?" came Yvonne's voice in answer. "Surely a
+relative of the Lord Cardinal?"
+
+"His nephew, Mademoiselle."
+
+"Ah! My father, sir, is a great admirer of your uncle."
+
+From the half-caressing tone, as much as from the very words she
+uttered, I inferred that she was in ignorance of the compact into which
+his Eminence had entered with her father--a bargain whereof she was
+herself a part.
+
+"I am rejoiced, indeed, Mademoiselle," replied Andrea with a bow, as
+though the compliment had been paid to him. "Am I indiscreet in asking
+the name of Monsieur your father?"
+
+"Indiscreet! Nay, Monsieur. You have a right to learn the name of
+those who are under an obligation to you. My father is the Chevalier de
+Canaples, of whom it is possible that you may have heard. I am Yvonne de
+Canaples, of whom it is unlikely that you should have heard, and this is
+my sister Genevieve, whom a like obscurity envelops."
+
+The boy's lips moved, but no sound came from them, whilst his cheeks
+went white and red by turns. His courtliness of a moment ago had
+vanished, and he stood sheepish and gauche as a clown. At length he
+so far mastered himself as to bow and make a sign to the coachman, who
+thereupon gathered up his reins.
+
+"You are going presumably to Blois?" he stammered with a nervous laugh,
+as if the journey were a humorous proceeding.
+
+"Yes, Monsieur," answered Genevieve, "we are going home."
+
+"Why, then, it is possible that we shall meet again. I, too, am
+travelling in that direction. A bientot, Mesdemoiselles!"
+
+The whip cracked, the coach began to move, and the creaking of its
+wheels drowned, so far as I was concerned, the female voices that
+answered his farewell. The coachman roused his horses into an amble; the
+amble became a trot, and the vehicle vanished round a corner. Some few
+idlers stopped to gaze stupidly after it, but not half so stupidly as
+did my poor Andrea, standing bareheaded where the coach had left him.
+
+I drew near, and laid my hand on his shoulder; at the touch he started
+like one awakened suddenly, and looked up.
+
+"Ah--you are returned, Gaston."
+
+"To find that you have made a discovery, and are overwhelmed by your
+error."
+
+"My error?"
+
+"Yes--that of falling in love with the wrong one. Helas, it is but one
+of those ironical jests wherewith Fate amuses herself at every step
+of our lives. Had you fallen in love with Yvonne--and it passes my
+understanding why you did not--everything would have gone smoothly with
+your wooing. Unfortunately, you have a preference for fair hair--"
+
+"Have done," he interrupted peevishly. "What does it signify? To the
+devil with Mazarin's plans!"
+
+"So you said this morning."
+
+"Yes, when I did not even dream her name was Canaples."
+
+"Nevertheless, she is the wrong Canaples."
+
+"For my uncle--but, mille diables! sir, 't is I who am to wed, and I
+shall wed as my heart bids me."
+
+"Hum! And Mazarin?"
+
+"Faugh!" he answered, with an expressive shrug.
+
+"Well, since you are resolved, let us dine."
+
+"I have no appetite."
+
+"Let us dine notwithstanding. Eat you must if you would live; and unless
+you live--think of it!--you'll never reach Blois."
+
+"Gaston, you are laughing at me! I do not wish to eat."
+
+I surveyed him gravely, with my arms akimbo.
+
+"Can love so expand the heart of man that it fills even his stomach?
+Well, well, if you will not eat, at least have the grace to bear me
+company at table. Come, Andrea," and I took his arm, "let us ascend to
+that chamber which she has but just quitted. Who can tell but that we
+shall find there some token of her recent presence? If nothing more, at
+least the air will be pervaded by the perfume she affected, and since
+you scorn the humble food of man, you can dine on that."
+
+He smiled despite himself as I drew him towards the staircase.
+
+"Scoffer!" quoth he. "Your callous soul knows naught of love."
+
+"Whereas you have had three hours' experience. Pardieu! You shall
+instruct me in the gentle art."
+
+Alas, for those perfumes upon which I had proposed that he should feast
+himself. If any the beautiful Genevieve had left behind her, they had
+been smothered in the vulgar yet appetising odour of the steaming ragout
+that occupied the table.
+
+I prevailed at length upon the love-lorn boy to take some food, but I
+could lead him to talk of naught save Genevieve de Canaples. Presently
+he took to chiding me for the deliberateness wherewith I ate, and
+betrayed thereby his impatience to be in the saddle and after her.
+I argued that whilst she saw him not she might think of him. But
+the argument, though sound, availed me little, and in the end I
+was forced--for all that I am a man accustomed to please myself--to
+hurriedly end my repast, and pronounce myself ready to start.
+
+As Andrea had with him some store of baggage--since his sojourn at Blois
+was likely to be of some duration--he travelled in a coach. Into this
+coach, then, we climbed--he and I. His valet, Silvio, occupied the seat
+beside the coachman, whilst my stalwart Michelot rode behind leading
+my horse by the bridle. In this fashion we set out, and ere long the
+silence of my thoughtful companion, the monotonous rumbling of the
+vehicle, and, most important of all factors, the good dinner that I had
+consumed, bred in me a torpor that soon became a sleep.
+
+From a dream that, bound hand and foot, I was being dragged by St. Auban
+and Malpertuis before the Cardinal, I awakened with a start to find
+that we were clattering already through the streets of Etrechy; so that
+whilst I had slept we had covered some six leagues. Twilight had already
+set in, and Andrea lay back idly in the carriage, holding a book which
+it was growing too dark to read, and between the leaves of which he had
+slipped his forefinger to mark the place where he had paused.
+
+His eyes met mine as I looked round, and he smiled. "I should not have
+thought, Gaston," he said, "that a man with so seared a conscience could
+have slept thus soundly."
+
+"I have not slept soundly," I grumbled, recalling my dream.
+
+"Pardieu! you have slept long, at least."
+
+"Out of self-protection; so that I might not hear the name of Genevieve
+de Canaples. 'T is a sweet name, but you render it monotonous."
+
+He laughed good-humouredly.
+
+"Have you never loved, Gaston?"
+
+"Often."
+
+"Ah--but I mean did you never conceive a great passion?"
+
+"Hundreds, boy."
+
+"But never such a one as mine!"
+
+"Assuredly not; for the world has never seen its fellow. Be good enough
+to pull the cord, you Cupid incarnate. I wish to alight."
+
+"You wish to alight! Why?"
+
+"Because I am sick of love. I am going to ride awhile with Michelot
+whilst you dream of her coral lips, her sapphire eyes, and what other
+gems constitute her wondrous personality."
+
+Two minutes later I was in the saddle riding with Michelot in the wake
+of the carriage. As I have already sought to indicate in these pages,
+Michelot was as much my friend as my servant. It was therefore no more
+than natural that I should communicate to him my fears touching what
+might come of the machinations of St. Auban, Vilmorin, and even,
+perchance, of that little firebrand, Malpertuis.
+
+Night fell while we talked, and at last the lights of Etampes, where we
+proposed to lie, peeped at us from a distance, and food and warmth.
+
+It was eight o'clock when we reached the town, and a few moments later
+we rattled into the courtyard of the Hotel de l'Epee.
+
+Andrea was out of temper to learn that Mesdemoiselles de Canaples had
+reached the place two hours earlier, taken fresh horses, and proceeded
+on their journey, intending to reach Monnerville that night. He was even
+mad enough to propose that we should follow their example, but my sober
+arguments prevailed, and at Etampes we stayed till morning.
+
+Andrea withdrew early. But I, having chanced upon a certain M. de la
+Vrilliere, a courtier of Vilmorin's stamp, with whom I had some slight
+acquaintance, and his purse being heavier than his wits, I spent a
+passing profitable evening in his company. This pretty gentleman hailed
+my advent with a delight that amazed me, and suggested that we should
+throw a main together to kill time. The dice were found, and so clumsily
+did he use them that in half an hour, playing for beggarly crowns, he
+had lost twenty pistoles. Next he lost his temper, and with an oath
+pitched the cubes into the fire, swearing that they were toys for
+children and that I must grant him his revanche with cards. The cards
+were furnished us, and with a fortune that varied little we played
+lansquenet until long past midnight. The fire died out in the grate, and
+the air grew chill, until at last, with a violent sneeze, La Vrilliere
+protested that he would play no more.
+
+Cursing himself for the unluckiest being alive, the fool bade me
+good-night, and left me seventy pistoles richer than when I had met him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. THE CHATEAU DE CANAPLES
+
+
+Despite the strenuous efforts which Andrea compelled us to put forth, we
+did not again come up with Mesdemoiselles de Canaples, who in truth must
+have travelled with greater speed than ladies are wont to.
+
+This circumstance bred much discomfort in Andrea's bosom; for in it he
+read that his Genevieve thought not of him as he of her, else, knowing
+that he followed the same road, she would have retarded their progress
+so that he might overtake them. Thus argued he when on the following
+night, which was that of Friday, we lay at Orleans. But when towards
+noon on Saturday our journey ended with our arrival at Blois, he went so
+far as to conclude that she had hastened on expressly to avoid him. Now,
+from what I had seen of Mademoiselle Yvonne, methought I might hazard
+a guess that she it was who commanded in these--and haply, too, in
+other--matters, and that the manner of their journey had been such as
+was best to her wishes.
+
+With such an argument did I strive to appease Andrea's doubts; but all
+in vain--which is indeed no matter for astonishment, for to reason with
+a man in love is to reason with one who knows no reason.
+
+After a brief halt at the Lys de France--at which hostelry I hired
+myself a room--we set out for the Chateau de Canaples, which is situated
+on the left bank of the Loire, at a distance of about half a league from
+Blois in the direction of Tours.
+
+We cut a brave enough figure as we rode down the Rue Vieille attended by
+our servants, and many a rustic Blaisois stopped to gape at us, to nudge
+his companion, and point us out, whispering the word "Paris."
+
+I had donned my grey velvet doublet--deeming the occasion worthy of
+it--whilst Andrea wore a handsome suit of black, with gold lace,
+which for elegance it would have been difficult to surpass. An air of
+pensiveness added interest to his handsome face and courtly figure, and
+methought that Genevieve must be hard to please if she fell not a victim
+to his wooing.
+
+We proceeded along the road bordering the Loire, a road of rare beauty
+at any other season of the year, but now bare of foliage, grey, bleak,
+and sullen as the clouds overhead, and as cold to the eye as was the
+sharp wind to the flesh. As we rode I fell to thinking of what my
+reception at the Chateau de Canaples was likely to be, and almost to
+regret that I had permitted Andrea to persuade me to accompany him. Long
+ago I had known the Chevalier de Canaples, and for all the disparity
+in our ages--for he counted twice my years--we had been friends and
+comrades. That, however, was ten years ago, in the old days when I owned
+something more than the name of Luynes. To-day I appeared before him as
+a ruined adventurer, a soldier of fortune, a ruffler, a duellist who had
+almost slain his son in a brawl, whose details might be known to him,
+but not its origin. Seeing me in the company of Andrea de Mancini he
+might--who could say?--even deem me one of those parasites who cling to
+young men of fortune so that they may live at their expense. That the
+daughter would have formed such a conceit of me I was assured; it but
+remained to see with what countenance the father would greet me.
+
+From such speculations I was at length aroused by our arrival at the
+gates of the Canaples park. Seeing them wide open, we rode between
+the two massive columns of granite (each surmounted by a couchant lion
+holding the escutcheon of the Canaples) and proceeded at an ambling pace
+up the avenue. Through the naked trees the chateau became discernible--a
+brave old castle that once had been the stronghold of a feudal race
+long dead. Grey it was, and attuned, that day, to the rest of the grey
+landscape. But at its base the ivy grew thick and green, and here and
+there long streaks of it crept up almost to the battlements, whilst
+in one place it had gone higher yet and clothed one of the quaint old
+turrets. A moat there had once been, but this was now filled up and
+arranged into little mounds that became flower-beds in summer.
+
+Resigning our horses to the keeping of our servants, we followed the
+grave maitre d'hotel who had received us. He led us across the spacious
+hall, which had all the appearance of an armoury, and up the regal
+staircase of polished oak on to a landing wide and lofty. Here, turning
+to the left, he opened a door and desired us to give ourselves the
+trouble of awaiting the Chevalier. We entered a handsome room, hung
+in costly Dutch tapestry, and richly furnished, yet with a sobriety of
+colour almost puritanical. The long windows overlooked a broad terrace,
+enclosed in a grey stone balustrade, from which some half-dozen steps
+led to a garden below. Beyond that ran the swift waters of the Loire,
+and beyond that again, in the distance, we beheld the famous Chateau de
+Chambord, built in the days of the first Francis.
+
+I had but remarked these details when the door again opened, to admit
+a short, slender man in whose black hair and beard the hand of time had
+scattered but little of that white dust that marks its passage. His face
+was pale, thin, and wrinkled, and his grey eyes had a nervous, restless
+look that dwelt not long on anything. He was dressed in black, with
+simple elegance, and his deep collar and ruffles were of the finest
+point.
+
+"Welcome to Canaples, M. de Mancini!" he exclaimed, as he hurried
+forward, with a smile so winning that his countenance appeared
+transfigured by it. "Welcome most cordially! We had not hoped that you
+would arrive so soon, but fortunately my daughters, to whom you appear
+to have been of service at Choisy, warned me that you were journeying
+hither. Your apartments, therefore, are prepared for you, and we hope
+that you will honour Canaples by long remaining its guest."
+
+Andrea thanked him becomingly.
+
+"In truth," he added, "my departure from Paris was somewhat sudden,
+but I have a letter here from Monseigneur my uncle, which explains the
+matter."
+
+"No explanation is needed, my dear Andrea," replied the old nobleman,
+abandoning the formalities that had marked his welcoming speech. "How
+left you my Lord Cardinal?" he asked, as he took the letter.
+
+"In excellent health, but somewhat harassed, I fear, by the affairs of
+State."
+
+"Ah, yes, yes. But stay. You are not alone." And Canaples's grey eyes
+shot an almost furtive glance of inquiry in my direction. A second
+glance followed the first and the Chevalier's brows were knit. Then he
+came a step nearer, scanning my face.
+
+"Surely, surely, Monsieur," he exclaimed before Andrea had time to
+answer him. "Were you not at Rocroi?"
+
+"Your memory flatters me, Monsieur," I replied with a laugh. "I was
+indeed at Rocroi--captain in the regiment of chevaux-legers whereof you
+were Mestre de Champ."
+
+"His name," said Andrea, "is Gaston de Luynes, my very dear friend,
+counsellor, and, I might almost say, protector."
+
+"Pardieu, yes! Gaston de Luynes!" he ejaculated, seizing my hand in an
+affectionate grip. "But how have you fared since Rocroi was fought? For
+a soldier of such promise, one might have predicted great things in ten
+years."
+
+"Helas, Monsieur! I was dismissed the service after Senlac."
+
+"Dismissed the service!"
+
+"Pah!" I laughed, not without bitterness, "'t is a long story and an
+ugly one, divided 'twixt the dice-box, the bottle, and the scabbard. Ten
+years ago I was a promising young captain, ardent and ambitious; to-day
+I am a broken ruffler, unrecognised by my family--a man without hope,
+without ambition, almost without honour."
+
+I know not what it was that impelled me to speak thus. Haply the wish
+that since he must soon learn to what depths Gaston de Luynes had sunk,
+he should at least learn it from my own lips at the outset.
+
+He shuddered at my concluding words, and had not Andrea at that moment
+put his arm affectionately upon my shoulder, and declared me the bravest
+fellow and truest friend in all the world, it is possible that the
+Chevalier de Canaples would have sought an excuse to be rid of me. Such
+men as he seek not the acquaintance of such men as I.
+
+To please Andrea was, however, of chief importance in his plans, and
+to that motive I owe it that he pressed me to remain a guest at the
+chateau. I declined the honour with the best grace I could command,
+determined that whilst Andrea remained at Canaples I would lodge at the
+Lys de France in Blois, independent and free to come or go as my fancy
+bade me. His invitation that I should at least dine at Canaples I
+accepted; but with the condition that he should repeat his invitation
+after he had heard something that I wished to tell him. He assented with
+a puzzled look, and when presently Andrea repaired to his apartments,
+and we were alone, I began.
+
+"You have doubtlessly received news, Monsieur, of a certain affair in
+which your son had recently the misfortune to be dangerously wounded?"
+
+We were standing by the great marble fireplace, and Canaples was resting
+one of his feet upon the huge brass andirons. He made a gesture of
+impatience as I spoke.
+
+"My son, sir, is a fool! A good-for-nothing fool! Oh, I have heard of
+this affair, a vulgar tavern brawl, the fifth in which his name has been
+involved and besmirched. I had news this morning by a courier dispatched
+me by my friend St. Simon, who imagines that I am deeply concerned in
+that young profligate. I learn that he is out of danger, and that in a
+month or so, he will be about again and ready to disgrace the name
+of Canaples afresh. But there, sir; I crave your pardon for the
+interruption."
+
+I bowed, and when in answer to my questions he told me that he was in
+ignorance of the details of the affair of which I spoke, I set about
+laying those details before him. Beginning with the original provocation
+in the Palais Royal and ending with the fight in the horse-market, I
+related the whole story to him, but in an impersonal manner, and keeping
+my own name out of my narrative. When I had done, Canaples muttered an
+oath of the days of the fourth Henry.
+
+"Ventre St. Gris! Does the dog carry his audacity so far as to dare come
+betwixt me and my wishes, and to strive against them? He sought to kill
+Mancini, eh? Would to Heaven he had died by the hand of this fellow who
+shielded the lad!"
+
+"Monsieur!" I cried, aghast at so unnatural an expression.
+
+"Pah!" he cried harshly. "He is my son in name alone, filial he never
+was."
+
+"Nevertheless, Monsieur, he is still your son, your heir."
+
+"My heir? And what, pray, does he inherit? A title--a barren, landless
+title! By his shameful conduct he alienated the affection of his uncle,
+and his uncle has disinherited him in favour of Yvonne. 'T is she who
+will be mistress of this chateau with its acres of land reaching from
+here to Blois, and three times as far on the other side. My brother,
+sir, was the rich Canaples, the owner of all this, and by his testament
+I am his heir during my lifetime, the estates going to Yvonne at my
+death. So that you see I have naught to leave; but if I had, not a
+denier should go to my worthless son!"
+
+He spread his thin hands before the blaze, and for a moment there was
+silence. Then I proceeded to tell him of the cabal which had been formed
+against Mancini, and of the part played by St. Auban. At the mention of
+that name he started as if I had stung him.
+
+"What!" he thundered. "Is that ruffian also in the affair? Sangdieu! His
+motives are not far to seek. He is a suitor--an unfavoured suitor--for
+the hand of Yvonne, that seemingly still hopes. But you have not told
+me, Monsieur, the name of this man who has stood betwixt Andrea and his
+assassins."
+
+"Can you not guess, Monsieur?" quoth I, looking him squarely in the
+face. "Did you not hear Andrea call me, even now, his protector."
+
+"You? And with what motive, pray?"
+
+"At first, as I have told you, because the Cardinal gave me no choice
+in the matter touching your son. Since then my motive has lain in my
+friendship for the boy. He has been kind and affectionate to one who
+has known little kindness or affection in life. I seek to repay him by
+advancing his interests and his happiness. That, Monsieur, is why I am
+here to-day--to shield him from St. Auban and his fellows should they
+appear again, as I believe they will."
+
+The old man stood up and eyed me for a moment as steadily as his
+vacillating glance would permit him, then he held out his hand.
+
+"I trust, Monsieur," he said, "that you will do me the honour to dine
+with us, and that whilst you are at Blois we shall see you at Canaples
+as often as it may please you to cross its threshold."
+
+I took his hand, but without enthusiasm, for I understood that his words
+sprang from no warmth of heart for me, but merely from the fact that he
+beheld in me a likely ally to his designs of raising his daughter to the
+rank of Duchess.
+
+Eugene de Canaples may have been a good-for-nothing knave; still,
+methought his character scarce justified the callous indifference
+manifested by this selfish, weak-minded old man towards his own son.
+
+There was a knock at the door, and a lackey--the same Guilbert whom
+I had seen at Choisy in Mademoiselle's company--appeared with the
+announcement that the Chevalier was served.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. THE FORESHADOW OF DISASTER
+
+
+In the spacious dining salon of the Chateau de Canaples I found the two
+daughters of my host awaiting us--those same two ladies of the coach
+in Place Vendome and of the hostelry at Choisy, the dark and stately
+icicle, Yvonne, and the fair, playful doll, Genevieve.
+
+I bowed my best bow as the Chevalier presented me, and from the corner
+of my eye, with inward malice, I watched them as I did so. Genevieve
+curtsied with a puzzled air and a sidelong glance at her sister. Yvonne
+accorded me the faintest, the coldest, inclination of her head, whilst
+her cheeks assumed a colour that was unwonted.
+
+"We have met before, I think, Monsieur," she said disdainfully.
+
+"True, Mademoiselle--once," I answered, thinking only of the coach.
+
+"Twice, Monsieur," she corrected, whereupon I recalled how she had
+surprised me with my arm about the waist of the inn-keeper's daughter,
+and had Heaven given me shame I might have blushed. But if sweet Yvonne
+thought to bring Gaston de Luynes to task for profiting by the good
+things which God's providence sent his way, she was led by vanity into a
+prodigious error.
+
+"Twice, indeed, Mademoiselle. But the service which you rendered me upon
+the first occasion was so present to my mind just now that it
+eclipsed the memory of our second meeting. I have ever since desired,
+Mademoiselle, that an opportunity might be mine wherein to thank you for
+the preservation of my life. I do so now, and at your service do I lay
+that life which you preserved, and which is therefore as much yours as
+mine."
+
+Strive as I might I could not rid my tone of an ironical inflection. I
+was goaded to it by her attitude, by the scornful turn of her lip and
+the disdainful glance of her grey eyes--she had her father's eyes,
+saving that her gaze was as steadfast as his was furtive.
+
+"What is this?" quoth Canaples. "You owe your life to my daughter? Pray
+tell me of it."
+
+"With all my heart," I made haste to answer before Mademoiselle could
+speak. "A week ago, I disagreed upon a question of great delicacy with a
+certain gentleman who shall be nameless. The obvious result attended
+our disagreement, and we fought 'neath the eyes of a vast company of
+spectators. Right was on my side, and the gentleman hurt himself upon
+my sword. Well, sir, the crowd snarled at me as though it were my fault
+that this had so befallen, and I flouted the crowd in answer. They were
+a hundred opposed to one, and so confident did this circumstance
+render them of their superiority, that for once those whelps displayed
+sufficient valour to attack me. I fled, and as a coach chanced to come
+that way, I clutched at the window and hung there. Within the coach
+there were two ladies, and one of them, taking compassion upon me,
+invited me to enter and thus rescued me. That lady, sir," I ended with a
+bow, "was Mademoiselle your daughter."
+
+In his eyes I read it that he had guessed the name of my nameless
+gentleman.
+
+The ladies were struck dumb by my apparent effrontery. Yvonne at last
+recovered sufficiently to ask if my presence at the chateau arose from
+my being attached to M. de Mancini. Now, "attached" is an unpleasant
+word. A courtier is attached to the King; a soldier to the army; there
+is humiliation in neither of these. But to a private gentleman, a man
+may be only attached as his secretary, his valet, or, possibly, as his
+bravo. Therein lay the sting of her carefully chosen word.
+
+"I am M. de Mancini's friend," I answered with simple dignity.
+
+For all reply she raised her eyebrows in token of surprise; Canaples
+looked askance; I bit my lip, and an awkward silence followed, which,
+luckily, was quickly ended by the appearance of Andrea.
+
+The ladies received him graciously, and a faint blush might, to
+searching eyes, have been perceived upon Genevieve's cheek.
+
+There came a delicate exchange of compliments, after which we got to
+table, and for my part I did ample justice to the viands.
+
+I sat beside Genevieve, and vis-a-vis with Andrea, who occupied the
+place of the honoured guest, at the host's right hand, with Yvonne
+beside him. Me it concerned little where I sat, since the repast was all
+that I could look for; not so the others. Andrea scowled at me because
+I was nearer to Genevieve than he, and Yvonne frowned at me for other
+reasons. By Genevieve I was utterly disregarded, and my endeavours to
+converse were sorely unsuccessful--for one may not converse alone.
+
+I clearly saw that Yvonne only awaited an opportunity to unmask me, and
+denounce me to her father as the man who had sought his son's life.
+
+This opportunity, however, came not until the moment of my departure
+from the chateau, that evening. I was crossing the hail with the
+Chevalier de Canaples, and we had stopped for a moment to admire a piece
+of old chain armour of the days of the Crusaders. Andrea and Genevieve
+had preceded us, and passed out through the open doorway, whilst Yvonne
+lingered upon the threshold looking back.
+
+"I trust, M. de Luynes," said Canaples, as we moved towards her, "that
+you will remember my invitation, and that whilst you remain at Biois
+we shall see you here as often as you may be pleased to come; indeed, I
+trust that you will be a daily visitor."
+
+Before I could utter a reply--"Father," exclaimed Mademoiselle, coming
+forward, "do you know to whom you are offering the hospitality of
+Canaples?"
+
+"Why that question, child? To M. de Luynes, M. de Mancini's friend."
+
+"And the would-be murderer of Eugene," she added fiercely.
+
+Canaples started.
+
+"Surely such affairs are not for women to meddle with," he cried.
+"Moreover, M. de Luynes has already given me all details of the affair."
+
+Her eyes grew very wide at that.
+
+"He has told you? Yet you invite him hither?" she exclaimed.
+
+"M. de Luynes has naught wherewith to reproach himself, nor have I.
+Those details which he has given me I may not impart to you; suffice it,
+however, that I am satisfied that his conduct could not have been other
+than it was, whereas that of my son reflects but little credit upon his
+name."
+
+She stamped her foot, and her eyes, blazing with anger, passed from one
+to the other of us.
+
+"And you--you believe this man's story?"
+
+"Yvonne!"
+
+"Possibly," I interposed, coolly, "Mademoiselle may have received some
+false account of it that justifies her evident unbelief in what I may
+have told you."
+
+It is not easy to give a lie unless you can prove it a lie. I made her
+realise this, and she bit her lip in vexation. Dame! What a pretty viper
+I thought her at that moment!
+
+"Let me add, Yvonne," said her father, "that M. de Luynes and I are
+old comrades in arms." Then turning to me--"My daughter, sir, is but
+a child, and therefore hasty to pass judgment upon matters beyond
+her understanding. Forget this foolish outburst, and remember only my
+assurance of an ever cordial welcome."
+
+"With all my heart," I answered, after a moment's deliberation, during
+which I had argued that for once I must stifle pride if I would serve
+Andrea.
+
+"Ough!" was all Mademoiselle's comment as she turned her back upon me.
+Nevertheless, I bowed and flourished my beaver to her retreating figure.
+
+Clearly Mademoiselle entertained for me exactly that degree of
+fondness which a pious hermit feels for the devil, and if I might
+draw conclusions from what evidences I had had of the strength of
+her character and the weakness of her father's, our sojourn at Blois
+promised to afford me little delectation. In fact, I foresaw many
+difficulties that might lead to disaster should our Paris friends appear
+upon the scene--a contingency this that seemed over-imminent.
+
+It was not my wont, howbeit, to brood over the evils that the future
+might hold, and to this I owe it that I slept soundly that night in my
+room at the Lys de France.
+
+It was a pleasant enough chamber on the first floor, overlooking the
+street, and having an alcove attached to it which served for Michelot.
+
+Next day I visited the Chateau de Canaples early in the afternoon. The
+weather was milder, and the glow of the sun heralded at last the near
+approach of spring and brightened wondrously a landscape that had
+yesterday worn so forbidding a look.
+
+This change it must have been that drew the ladies, and Andrea with
+them, to walk in the park, where I came upon them as I rode up. Their
+laughter rippled merrily and they appeared upon the best of terms until
+they espied me. My advent was like a cloud that foretells a storm, and
+drove Mesdemoiselles away, when they had accorded me a greeting that
+contained scant graciousness.
+
+All unruffled by this act, from which I gathered that Yvonne the strong
+had tutored Genevieve the frail concerning me, I consigned my horse to a
+groom of the chateau, and linked arms with Andrea.
+
+"Well, boy," quoth I, "what progress?"
+
+He smiled radiantly.
+
+"My hopes are all surpassed. It exceeds belief that so poor a thing as I
+should find favour in her eyes--what eyes, Gaston!" He broke off with a
+sigh of rapture.
+
+"Peste, you have lost no time. And so, already you know that you find
+favour, eh! How know you that?"
+
+"How? Need a man be told such things? There is an inexpressible--"
+
+"My good Andrea, seek not to express it, therefore," I interrupted
+hastily. "Let it suffice that the inexpressible exists, and makes you
+happy. His Eminence will doubtless share your joy! Have you written to
+him?"
+
+The mirth faded from the lad's face at the words, as the blossom fades
+'neath the blighting touch of frost. What he said was so undutiful
+from a nephew touching his uncle--particularly when that uncle is a
+prelate--that I refrain from penning it.
+
+We were joined just then by the Chevalier, and together we strolled
+round to the rose-garden--now, alas! naught but black and naked
+bushes--and down to the edge of the Loire, yellow and swollen by the
+recent rains.
+
+"How lovely must be this place in summer," I mused, looking across
+the water towards Chambord. "And, Dame," I cried, suddenly changing my
+meditations, "what an ideal fencing ground is this even turf!"
+
+"The swordsman's instinct," laughed Canaples.
+
+And with that our talk shifted to swords, swordsmen, and sword-play,
+until I suggested to Andrea that he should resume his practice,
+whereupon the Chevalier offered to set a room at our disposal.
+
+"Nay, if you will pardon me, Monsieur, 't is not a room we want," I
+answered. "A room is well enough at the outset, but it is the common
+error of fencing-masters to continue their tutoring on a wooden floor.
+It results from this that when the neophyte handles a real sword,
+and defends his life upon the turf, the ground has a new feeling; its
+elasticity or even its slipperiness discomposes him, and sets him at a
+disadvantage."
+
+He agreed with me, whilst Andrea expressed a wish to try the turf. Foils
+were brought, and we whiled away best part of an half-hour. In the end,
+the Chevalier, who had watched my play intently, offered to try a bout
+with me. And so amazed was he with the result, that he had not done
+talking of it when I left Canaples a few hours later--a homage this that
+earned me some more than ordinarily unfriendly glances from Yvonne.
+No doubt since the accomplishment was mine it became in her eyes
+characteristic of a bully and a ruffler.
+
+During the week that followed I visited the chateau with regularity, and
+with equal regularity did Andrea receive his fencing lessons. The object
+of his presence at Canaples, however, was being frustrated more and more
+each day, so far as the Cardinal and the Chevalier were concerned.
+
+He raved to me of Genevieve, the one perfect woman in all the world and
+brought into it by a kind Providence for his own particular delectation.
+In truth, love is like a rabid dog--whom it bites it renders mad; so
+open grew his wooing, and so ardent, that one evening I thought well to
+take him aside and caution him.
+
+"My dear Andrea," said I, "if you will love Genevieve, you will, and
+there's an end of it. But if you would not have the Chevalier pack you
+back to Paris and the anger of my Lord Cardinal, be circumspect, and at
+least when M. de Canaples is by divide your homage equally betwixt
+the two. 'T were well if you dissembled even a slight preference for
+Yvonne--she will not be misled by it, seeing how unmistakable at all
+other seasons must be your wooing of Genevieve."
+
+He was forced to avow the wisdom of my counsel, and to be guided by it.
+
+Nevertheless, I rode back to my hostelry in no pleasant frame of mind.
+It was more than likely that a short shrift and a length of hemp
+would be the acknowledgment I should anon receive from Mazarin for my
+participation in the miscarriage of his desires.
+
+I felt that disaster was on the wing. Call it a premonition; call it
+what you will. I know but this; that as I rode into the courtyard of
+the Lys de France, at dusk, the first man my eyes alighted on was the
+Marquis Cesar de St. Auban, and, in conversation with him, six of the
+most arrant-looking ruffians that ever came out of Paris.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. OF HOW A WHIP PROVED A BETTER ARGUMENT THAN A TONGUE
+
+
+"I crave Monsieur's pardon, but there is a gentleman below who desires
+to speak with you immediately."
+
+"How does this gentleman call himself, M. l'Hote?"
+
+"M. le Marquis de St. Auban," answered the landlord, still standing in
+the doorway.
+
+It wanted an hour or so to noon on the day following that of St. Auban's
+arrival at Blois, and I was on the point of setting out for the chateau
+on an errand of warning.
+
+It occurred to me to refuse to see the Marquis, but remembering betimes
+that from your enemy's speech you may sometimes learn where to look for
+his next attack, I thought better of it and bade my host admit him.
+
+I strode over to the fire, and stirring the burning logs, I put my back
+to the blaze, and waited.
+
+Steps sounded on the stairs; there was the shuffling of the landlord's
+slippered feet and the firm tread of my visitor, accompanied by
+the jingle of spurs and the clank of his scabbard as it struck the
+balustrade. Then my door was again opened, and St. Auban, as superbly
+dressed as ever, was admitted.
+
+We bowed formally, as men bow who are about to cross swords, and whilst
+I waited for him to speak, I noted that his face was pale and bore the
+impress of suppressed anger.
+
+"So, M. de Luynes, again we meet."
+
+"By your seeking, M. le Marquis."
+
+"You are not polite."
+
+"You are not opportune."
+
+He smiled dangerously.
+
+"I learn, Monsieur, that you are a daily visitor at the Chateau de
+Canaples."
+
+"Well, sir, what of it?"
+
+"This. I have been to Canaples this morning and, knowing that you will
+learn anon, from that old dotard, what passed between us, I prefer that
+you shall hear it first from me."
+
+I bowed to conceal a smile.
+
+"Thanks to you, M. de Luynes, I was ordered from the house. I--Cesar
+de St. Auban--have been ordered from the house of a provincial upstart!
+Thanks to the calumnies which you poured into his ears."
+
+"Calumnies! Was that the word?"
+
+"I choose the word that suits me best," he answered, and the rage that
+was in him at the affront he had suffered at the hands of the Chevalier
+de Canaples was fast rising to the surface. "I warned you at Choisy of
+what would befall. Your opposition and your alliance with M. de Mancini
+are futile. You think to have gained a victory by winning over to your
+side an old fool who will sacrifice his honour to see his daughter a
+duchess, but I tell you, sir--"
+
+"That you hope to see her a marchioness," I put in calmly. "You see, M.
+de St. Auban, I have learned something since I came to Blois."
+
+He grew livid with passion.
+
+"You shall learn more ere you quit it, you meddler! You shall be taught
+to keep that long nose of yours out of matters that concern you not."
+
+I laughed.
+
+"Loud threats!" I answered jeeringly.
+
+"Never fear," he cried, "there is more to follow. To your cost shall
+you learn it. By God, sir! do you think that I am to suffer a Sicilian
+adventurer and a broken tavern ruffler to interfere with my designs?"
+
+Still I kept my temper.
+
+"So!" I said in a bantering tone. "You confess that you have designs.
+Good! But what says the lady, eh? I am told that she is not yet
+outrageously enamoured of you, for all your beauty!"
+
+Beside himself with passion, his hand sought his sword. But the gesture
+was spasmodic.
+
+"Knave!" he snarled.
+
+"Knave to me? Have a care, St. Auban, or I'll find you a shroud for a
+wedding garment."
+
+"Knave!" he repeated with a snarl. "What price are you paid by that
+boy?"
+
+"Pardieu, St. Auban! You shall answer to me for this."
+
+"Answer for it? To you!" And he laughed harshly. "You are mad, my
+master. When did a St. Auban cross swords with a man of your stamp?"
+
+"M. le Marquis," I said, with a calmness that came of a stupendous
+effort, "at Choisy you sought my friendship with high-sounding talk of
+principles that opposed you to the proposed alliance, twixt the houses
+of Mancini and Canaples. Since then I have learned that your motives
+were purely personal. From my discovery I hold you to be a liar."
+
+"Monsieur!"
+
+"I have not yet done. You refuse to cross swords with me on the pretext
+that you do not fight men of my stamp. I am no saint, sir, I confess.
+But my sins cannot wash out my name--the name of a family accounted as
+good as that of St. Auban, and one from which a Constable of France
+has sprung, whereas yours has never yet bred aught but profligates and
+debauchees. You are little better than I am, Marquis; indeed, you do
+many things that I would not do, that I have never done. For instance,
+whilst refusing to cross blades with me, who am a soldier and a man
+of the sword, you seek to pick a fight with a beardless boy who hardly
+knows the use of a rapier, and who--wittingly at least--has done you no
+wrong. Now, my master, you may call me profligate, ruffler, gamester,
+duellist--what you will; but there are two viler things you cannot dub
+me, and which, methinks, I have proven you to be--liar and craven."
+
+And as I spoke the burning words, I stood close up to him and tapped his
+breast as if to drive the epithets into his very heart.
+
+Rage he felt, indeed, and his distorted countenance was a sight fearful
+to behold.
+
+"Now, my master," I added, setting my arms akimbo and laughing brutally
+in his face, "will you fight?"
+
+For a moment he wavered, and surely meseemed that I had drawn him. Then:
+
+"No," he cried passionately. "I will not do dishonour to my sword." And
+turning he made for the door, leaving me baffled.
+
+"Go, sir," I shouted, "but fame shall stalk fast behind you. Liar and
+craven will I dub you throughout the whole of France."
+
+He stopped 'neath the lintel, and faced me again.
+
+"Fool," he sneered. "You'll need dispatch to spread my fame so far. By
+this time to-morrow you'll be arrested. In three days you will be in the
+Bastille, and there shall you lie until you rot to carrion."
+
+"Loud threats again!" I laughed, hoping by the taunt to learn more.
+
+"Loud perchance, but not empty. Learn that the Cardinal has knowledge of
+your association with Mancini, and means to separate you. An officer
+of the guards is on his way to Blois. He is at Meung by now. He bears
+a warrant for your arrest and delivery to the governor of the Bastille.
+Thereafter, none may say what will betide." And with a coarse burst of
+laughter he left me, banging the door as he passed out.
+
+For a moment I stood there stricken by his parting words. He had sought
+to wound me, and in this he had succeeded. But at what cost to himself?
+In his blind rage, the fool had shown me that which he should have
+zealously concealed, and what to him was but a stinging threat was to me
+a timely warning. I saw the necessity for immediate action. Two things
+must I do; kill St. Auban first, then fly the Cardinal's warrant as
+best I could. I cast about me for means to carry out the first of these
+intentions. My eye fell upon my riding-whip, lying on a chair close to
+my hand, and the sight of it brought me the idea I sought. Seizing it, I
+bounded out of the room and down the stairs, three steps at a stride.
+
+Along the corridor I sped and into the common-room, which at the moment
+was tolerably full. As I entered by one door, the Marquis was within
+three paces of the other, leading to the courtyard.
+
+My whip in the air, I sprang after him; and he, hearing the rush of
+my onslaught, turned, then uttered a cry of pain as I brought the lash
+caressingly about his shoulders.
+
+"Now, master craven," I shouted, "will that change your mind?"
+
+With an almost inarticulate cry, he sought to draw there and then, but
+those about flung themselves upon us, and held us apart--I, passive
+and unresisting; the Marquis, bellowing, struggling, and foaming at the
+mouth.
+
+"To meet you now would be to murder you, Marquis," I said coolly. "Send
+your friends to me to appoint the time."
+
+"Soit!" he cried, his eyes blazing with a hate unspeakable. "At eight
+to-morrow morning I shall await you on the green behind the castle of
+Blois."
+
+"At eight o'clock I shall be there," I answered. "And now, gentlemen, if
+you will unhand me, I will return to my apartments."
+
+They let me go, but with many a growl and angry look, for in their eyes
+I was no more than a coarse aggressor, whilst their sympathy was all for
+St. Auban.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. THE CONSCIENCE OF MALPERTUIS
+
+
+And so back to my room I went, my task accomplished, and so pleased was
+I with what had passed that as I drew on my boots--preparing to set out
+to Canaples--I laughed softly to myself.
+
+St. Auban I would dispose of in the morning. As for the other members
+of the cabal, I deemed neither Vilmorin nor Malpertuis sufficiently
+formidable to inspire uneasiness. St. Auban gone, they too would vanish.
+There remained then Eugene de Canaples. Him, however, methought no great
+evil was to be feared from. In Paris he might be as loud-voiced as he
+pleased, but in his father's chateau--from what I had learned--'t was
+unlikely he would so much as show himself. Moreover, he was wounded, and
+before he had sufficiently recovered to offer interference it was
+more than probable that Andrea would have married one or the other of
+Mesdemoiselles de Canaples--though I had a shrewd suspicion that it
+would be the wrong one, and there again I feared trouble.
+
+As I stood up, booted and ready to descend, there came a gentle tap
+at my door, and, in answer to my "Enter," there stood before me a very
+dainty and foppish figure. I stared hard at the effeminate face and the
+long fair locks of my visitor, thinking that I had become the dupe of my
+eyes.
+
+"M. de Vilmorin!" I murmured in astonishment, as he came forward, having
+closed the door. "You here?"
+
+In answer, he bowed and greeted me with cold ceremoniousness.
+
+"I have been in Blois since yesterday, Monsieur."
+
+"In truth I might have guessed it, Vicomte. Your visit flatters me,
+for, of course, I take it, you are come to pay me your respects," I said
+ironically. "A glass of wine, Vicomte?"
+
+"A thousand thanks, Monsieur--no," he answered coldly in his mincing
+tones. "It is concerning your affair with M. le Marquis de St. Auban
+that I am come." And drawing forth a dainty kerchief, which filled the
+room with the scent of ambregris, he tapped his lips with it affectedly.
+
+"Do you come as friend or--in some other capacity?"
+
+"I come as mediator."
+
+"Mediator!" I echoed, and my brow grew dark. "Sdeath! Has St. Auban's
+courage lasted just so long as the sting of my whip?"
+
+He raised his eyebrows after a supercilious fashion that made me thirst
+to strike the chair from under him.
+
+"You misapprehend me; M. de St. Auban has no desire to avert the duel.
+On the contrary, he will not rest until the affront you have put upon
+him be washed out--"
+
+"It will be, I'll answer for it."
+
+"Your answer, sir, is characteristic of a fanfarron. He who promises
+most does not always fulfil most."
+
+I stared at him in amazement.
+
+"Shall I promise you something, Vicomte? Mortdieu! If you seek to pick a
+quarrel with me--"
+
+"God forbid!" he ejaculated, turning colour. And his suddenly awakened
+apprehensions swept aside the affectation that hitherto had marked his
+speech and manner.
+
+"Then, Monsieur, be brief and state the sum of this mediation."
+
+"It is this, Monsieur. In the heat of the moment, M. le Marquis gave
+you, in the hearing of half a score of people, an assignation for
+to-morrow morning. News of the affair will spread rapidly through Blois,
+and it is likely there will be no lack of spectators on the green to
+witness the encounter. Therefore, as my friend thinks this will be as
+unpalatable to you as it is to him, he has sent me to suggest a fresh
+rendezvous."
+
+"Pooh, sir," I answered lightly. "I care not, for myself, who comes.
+I am accustomed to a crowd. Still, since M. de St. Auban finds it
+discomposing, let us arrange otherwise."
+
+"There is yet another point. M. de St. Auban spoke to you, I believe, of
+an officer who is coming hither charged with your arrest. It is probable
+that he may reach Blois before morning, so that the Marquis thinks that
+to make certain you might consent to meet him to-night."
+
+"Ma foi. St. Auban is indeed in earnest then! Convey to him my
+expressions of admiration at this suddenly awakened courage. Be good
+enough, Vicomte, to name the rendezvous."
+
+"Do you know the chapel of St. Sulpice des Reaux?"
+
+"What! Beyond the Loire?"
+
+"Precisely, Monsieur. About a league from Chambord by the river side."
+
+"I can find the place."
+
+"Will you meet us there at nine o'clock to-night?"
+
+I looked askance at him.
+
+"But why cross the river? This side affords many likely spots!"
+
+"Very true, Monsieur. But the Marquis has business at Chambord
+this evening, after which there will be no reason--indeed, it will
+inconvenience him exceedingly--to return to Blois."
+
+"What!" I cried, more and more astonished. "St. Auban is leaving Blois?"
+
+"This evening, sir."
+
+"But, voyons, Vicomte, why make an assignation in such a place and at
+night, when at any hour of the day I can meet the Marquis on this side,
+without suffering the inconvenience of crossing the river?"
+
+"There will be a bright moon, well up by nine o'clock. Moreover,
+remember that you cannot, as you say, meet St. Auban on this side at any
+time he may appoint, since to-night or to-morrow the officer who is in
+search of you will arrive."
+
+I pondered for a moment. Then:
+
+"M. le Vicomte," I said, "in this matter of ground 't is I who have the
+first voice."
+
+"How so?"
+
+"Because the Marquis is the affronted one."
+
+"Therefore he has a right to choose."
+
+"A right, yes. But that is not enough. The necessity to fight is on his
+side. His honour is hurt, not mine; I have whipped him; I am content.
+Now let him come to me."
+
+"Assuredly you will not be so ungenerous."
+
+"I do not care about journeying to Reaux to afford him satisfaction."
+
+"Does Monsieur fear anything?"
+
+"Vicomte, you go too far!" I cried, my pride gaining the mastery. "Since
+it is asked of me,--I will go."
+
+"M. le Marquis will be grateful to you."
+
+"A fig for his gratitude," I answered, whereupon the Vicomte shrugged
+his narrow shoulders, and, his errand done, took his leave of me.
+
+When he was gone I called Michelot, to tell him of the journey I must go
+that night, so that he might hold himself in readiness.
+
+"Why--if Monsieur will pardon me," quoth he, "do you go to meet the
+Marquis de St. Auban at St. Sulpice des Reaux by night?"
+
+"Precisely what I asked Vilmorin. The Marquis desires it, and--what will
+you?--since I am going to kill the man, I can scarce do less than kill
+him on a spot of his own choosing."
+
+Michelot screwed up his face and scratched at his grey beard with his
+huge hand.
+
+"Does no suspicion of foul play cross your mind, Monsieur?" he inquired
+timidly.
+
+"Shame on you, Michelot," I returned with some heat. "You do not yet
+understand the ways of gentlemen. Think you that M. de St. Auban would
+stoop to such a deed as that? He would be shamed for ever! Pooh, I would
+as soon suspect my Lord Cardinal of stealing the chalices from Notre
+Dame. Go, see to my horse. I am riding to Canaples."
+
+As I rode out towards the chateau I fell to thinking, and my thoughts
+turning to Vilmorin, I marvelled at the part he was playing in this
+little comedy of a cabal against Andrea de Mancini. His tastes and
+instincts were of the boudoir, the ante-chamber, and the table. He wore
+a sword because it was so ordained by fashion, and because the hilt was
+convenient for the display of a jewel or two. Certainly 't was not for
+utility that it hung beside him, and no man had ever seen it drawn.
+Nature had made him the most pitiable coward begotten. Why then should
+he involve himself in an affair which promised bloodshed, and which must
+be attended by many a risk for him? There was in all this some mystery
+that I could not fathom.
+
+From the course into which they had slipped, my thoughts were diverted,
+when I was within half a mile of the chateau, by the sight of a horseman
+stationed, motionless, among the trees that bordered the road.
+It occurred to me that men take not such a position without
+purpose--usually an evil one. I slackened speed somewhat and rode on,
+watching him sharply. As I came up, he walked his horse forward to meet
+me, and I beheld a man in the uniform of the gardes du corps, in whom
+presently I recognised the little sparrow Malpertuis, with whom I had
+exchanged witticisms at Choisy. He was the one man wanting to complete
+the trinity that had come upon us at the inn of the Connetable.
+
+It flashed across my mind that he might be the officer charged with my
+arrest, and that he had arrived sooner than had been expected. If so,
+it was likely to go ill with him, for I was not minded to be taken until
+St. Auban's soul sped hellwards.
+
+He hailed me as I advanced, and indeed rode forward to meet me.
+
+"You are come at last, M. de Luynes," was his greeting. "I have waited
+for you this hour past."
+
+"How knew you I should ride this way?"
+
+"I learnt that you would visit Canaples before noon. Be good enough to
+quit the road, and pass under those trees with me. I have something to
+say to you, but it were not well that we should be seen together."
+
+"For the sake of your character or mine, M. Malappris?"
+
+"Malpertuis!" he snapped.
+
+"Malpertuis," I corrected. "You were saying that we should not be seen
+together."
+
+"St. Auban might hear of it."
+
+"Ah! And therefore?"
+
+"You shall learn." We were now under the trees, which albeit leafless
+yet screened us partly from the road. He drew rein, and I followed his
+example.
+
+"M. de Luynes," he began, "I am or was a member of the cabal formed
+against Mazarin's aims in the matter of the marriage of Mademoiselle
+de Canaples to his nephew. I joined hands with St. Auban, lured by his
+protestations that it is not meet that such an heiress as Yvonne de
+Canaples should be forced to marry a foreigner of no birth and less
+distinction, whilst France holds so many noble suitors to her hand. This
+motive, by which I know that even Eugene de Canaples was actuated, was,
+St. Auban gave me to understand, his only one for embarking upon this
+business, as it was also Vilmorin's. Now, M. de Luynes, I have to-day
+discovered that I had been duped by St. Auban and his dupe, Vilmorin.
+St. Auban lied to me; another motive brings him into the affair. He
+seeks himself, by any means that may present themselves, to marry
+Yvonne--and her estates; whilst the girl, I am told, loathes him beyond
+expression. Vilmorin again is actuated by no less a purpose. And so,
+what think you these two knaves--this master knave and his dupe--have
+determined? To carry off Mademoiselle by force!"
+
+"Sangdieu!" I burst out, and would have added more, but his gesture
+silenced me, and he continued:
+
+"Vilmorin believes that St. Auban is helping him in this, whereas St.
+Auban is but fooling him with ambiguous speeches until they have the
+lady safe. Then might will assert itself, and St. Auban need but show
+his fangs to drive the sneaking coward away from the prize he fondly
+dreams is to be his."
+
+"When do these gentlemen propose to carry out their plan? Have they
+determined that?" I inquired breathlessly.
+
+"Aye, they have. They hope to accomplish it this very day. Mademoiselle
+de Canaples has received a letter wherein she is asked to meet her
+anonymous writer in the coppice yonder, at the Angelus this evening, if
+she would learn news of great importance to her touching a conspiracy
+against her father."
+
+"Faugh!" I sneered. "'T is too poor a bait to lure her with."
+
+"Say you so? Believe me that unless she be dissuaded she will comply
+with the invitation, so cunningly was the letter couched. A closed
+carriage will be waiting at this very spot. Into this St. Auban,
+Vilmorin, and their bravos will thrust the girl, then away through Blois
+and beyond it, for a mile or so, in the direction of Meung, thereby
+misleading any chance pursuers. There they will quit the coach and take
+a boat that is to be in waiting for them and which will bear them back
+with the stream to Chambord. Thereafter, God pity the poor lady if they
+get thus far without mishap."
+
+"Mort de ma vie!" I cried, slapping my thigh, "I understand!" And to
+myself I thought of the assignation at St. Sulpice des Reaux, and the
+reason for this, as also St. Auban's resolution to so suddenly quit
+Blois, grew of a sudden clear to me. Also did I recall the riddle
+touching Vilmorin's conduct which a few moments ago I had puzzled over,
+and of which methought that I now held the solution.
+
+"What do you understand?" asked Malpertuis.
+
+"Something that was told me this morning," I made answer, then spoke of
+gratitude, wherein he cut me short.
+
+"I ask no thanks," he said curtly. "You owe me none. What I have done
+is not for love of you or Mancini--for I love neither of you. It is done
+because noblesse m'oblige. I told St. Auban that I would have no part in
+this outrage. But that is not enough; I owe it to my honour to attempt
+the frustration of so dastardly a plan. You, M. de Luynes, appear to
+be the most likely person to encompass this, in the interests of your
+friend Mancini; I leave the matter, therefore, in your hands. Good-day!"
+
+And with this abrupt leave-taking, the little fellow doffed his hat
+to me, and wheeling his horse he set spurs in its flanks, and was gone
+before a word of mine could have stayed him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. OF A WOMAN'S OBSTINACY
+
+
+"M. de Luynes is a wizard," quoth Andrea, laughing, in answer to
+something that had been said.
+
+It was afternoon. We had dined, and the bright sunshine and spring-like
+mildness of the weather had lured us out upon the terrace. Yvonne and
+Genevieve occupied the stone seat. Andrea had perched himself upon the
+granite balustrade, and facing them he sat, swinging his shapely legs
+to and fro as he chatted merrily, whilst on either side of him stood the
+Chevalier de Canaples and I.
+
+"If M. de Luynes be as great a wizard in other things as with the sword,
+then, pardieu, he is a fearful magician," said Canaples.
+
+I bowed, yet not so low but that I detected a sneer on Yvonne's lips.
+
+"So, pretty lady," said I to myself, "we shall see if presently your lip
+will curl when I show you something of my wizard's art."
+
+And presently my chance came. M. de Canaples found reason to leave us,
+and no sooner was he gone than Genevieve remembered that she had that
+day discovered a budding leaf upon one of the rose bushes in the garden
+below. Andrea naturally caused an argument by asserting that she was
+the victim of her fancy, as it was by far too early in the year. By
+that means these two found the plea they sought for quitting us, since
+neither could rest until the other was convinced.
+
+So down they went into that rose garden which methought was like to
+prove their fool's paradise, and Yvonne and I were left alone. Then she
+also rose, but as she was on the point of quitting me:
+
+"Mademoiselle," I ventured, "will you honour me by remaining for a
+moment? There is something that I would say to you."
+
+With raised eyebrows she gave me a glance mingled with that
+superciliousness which she was for ever bestowing upon me, and which,
+from the monotony of it alone, grew irksome.
+
+"What can you have to say to me, M. de Luynes?"
+
+"Will you not be seated? I shall not long detain you, nevertheless--"
+
+"If I stand, perchance you will be more brief. I am waiting, Monsieur."
+
+I shrugged my shoulders rudely. Why, indeed, be courteous where so
+little courtesy was met with?
+
+"A little while ago, Mademoiselle, when M. de Mancini dubbed me a wizard
+you were good enough to sneer. Now, a sneer, Mademoiselle, implies
+unbelief, and I would convince you that you were wrong to disbelieve."
+
+"If you have no other motive for detaining me, suffer me to depart," she
+interrupted with some warmth. "Whether you be a wizard or not is of no
+moment to me."
+
+"And yet I dare swear that you will be of a different mind within five
+minutes. A wizard is one who discloses things unknown to his fellow-men.
+I am about to convince you that I can do this, and by convincing you I
+am about to serve you."
+
+"I seek neither conviction nor service at your hands," she answered.
+
+"Your courtesy dumfounds me, Mademoiselle!"
+
+"No less than does your insolence dumfound me," she retorted, with
+crimson cheeks. "Do you forget, sir, that I know you for what you are--a
+gamester, a libertine, a duellist, the murderer of my brother?"
+
+"That your brother lives, Mademoiselle, is, methinks, sufficient proof
+that I have not murdered him."
+
+"You willed his death if you did not encompass it; so 't is all one.
+Do you not understand that it is because my father receives you here,
+thanks to M. de Mancini, your friend--a friendship easily understood
+from the advantages you must derive from it--that I consent to endure
+your presence and the insult of your glance? Is it not enough that
+I should do this, and have you not wit enough to discern it, without
+adding to my shame by your insolent call upon my courtesy?"
+
+Her words cut me as no words that I ever heard, and, more than her
+words, her tone of loathing and disgust unspeakable. For half that
+speech I should have killed a man--indeed, I had killed men for less
+than half. And yet, for all the passion that raged in my soul, I
+preserved upon my countenance a smiling mask. That smile exhausted her
+patience and increased her loathing, for with a contemptuous exclamation
+she turned away.
+
+"Tarry but a moment, Mademoiselle," I cried, with a sudden note of
+command. "Or, if you will go, go then; but take with you my assurance
+that before nightfall you will weep bitterly for it."
+
+My words arrested her. The mystery of them awakened her curiosity.
+
+"You speak in riddles, Monsieur."
+
+"Like a true wizard, Mademoiselle. You received a letter this morning in
+a handwriting unknown, and bearing no signature."
+
+She wheeled round and faced me again with a little gasp of astonishment.
+
+"How know you that? Ah! I understand; you wrote it!"
+
+"What shrewdness, Mademoiselle!" I laughed, ironically. "Come; think
+again. What need have I to bid you meet me in the coppice yonder? May I
+not speak freely with you here?"
+
+"You know the purport of that letter?"
+
+"I do, Mademoiselle, and I know more. I know that this hinted conspiracy
+against your father is a trumped-up lie to lure you to the coppice."
+
+"And for what purpose, pray?"
+
+"An evil one,--your abduction. Shall I tell you who penned that note,
+and who awaits you? The Marquis Cesar de St. Auban."
+
+She shuddered as I pronounced the name, then, looking me straight
+between the eyes--"How come you to know these things?" she inquired.
+
+"What does it signify, since I know them?"
+
+"This, Monsieur, that unless I learn how, I can attach no credit to your
+preposterous story."
+
+"Not credit it!" I cried. "Let me assure you that I have spoken the
+truth; let me swear it. Go to the coppice at the appointed time, and
+things will fall out as I have predicted."
+
+"Again, Monsieur, how know you this?" she persisted, as women will.
+
+"I may not tell you."
+
+We stood close together, and her clear grey eyes met mine, her lip
+curling in disdain.
+
+"You may not tell me? You need not. I can guess." And she tossed her
+shapely head and laughed. "Seek some likelier story, Monsieur. Had you
+not spoken of it, 't is likely I should have left the letter unheeded.
+But your disinterested warning has determined me to go to this
+rendezvous. Shall I tell you what I have guessed? That this conspiracy
+against my father, the details of which you would not have me learn,
+is some evil of your own devising. Ah! You change colour!" she cried,
+pointing to my face. Then with a laugh of disdain she left me before I
+had sufficiently recovered from my amazement to bid her stay.
+
+"Ciel!" I cried, as I watched the tall, lissom figure vanish through the
+portals of the chateau. "Did ever God create so crass and obstinate a
+thing as woman?"
+
+It occurred to me to tell Andrea, and bid him warn her. But then she
+would guess that I had prompted him. Naught remained but to lay the
+matter before the Chevalier de Canaples. Already I had informed him of
+my fracas with St. Auban, and of the duel that was to be fought that
+night, and he, in his turn, had given me the details of his stormy
+interview with the Marquis, which had culminated in St. Auban's
+dismissal from Canaples. I had not hitherto deemed it necessary to alarm
+him with the news imparted to me by Malpertuis, imagining that did I
+inform Mademoiselle that would suffice.
+
+Now, however, as I have said, no other course was left me but to tell
+him of it. Accordingly, I went within and inquired of Guilbert, whom I
+met in the hall, where I might find the Chevalier. He answered me that
+M. de Canaples was not in the chateau. It was believed that he had gone
+with M. Louis, the intendant of the estates, to visit the vineyards at
+Montcroix.
+
+The news made me choke with impatience. Already it was close upon five
+o'clock, and in another hour the sun would set and the Angelus would
+toll the knell of Mademoiselle's preposterous suspicions, unless in the
+meantime I had speech with Canaples, and led him to employ a father's
+authority to keep his daughter indoors.
+
+Fuming at the contretemps I called for my horse and set out at a brisk
+trot for Montcroix. But my ride was fruitless. The vineyard peasants had
+not seen the Chevalier for over a week.
+
+Now, 'twixt Montcroix and the chateau there lies a good league, and to
+make matters worse, as I galloped furiously back to Canaples, an evil
+chance led me to mistake the way and pursue a track that brought me out
+on the very banks of the river, with a strong belt of trees screening
+the chateau from sight, and defying me to repair my error by going
+straight ahead.
+
+I was forced to retrace my steps, and before I had regained the point
+where I had gone astray a precious quarter of an hour was wasted, and
+the sun already hung, a dull red globe, on the brink of the horizon.
+
+Clenching my teeth, I tore at my horse's flanks, and with a bloody heel
+I drove the maddened brute along at a pace that might have cost us both
+dearly. I dashed, at last, into the quadrangle, and, throwing the reins
+to a gaping groom, I sprang up the steps.
+
+"Has the Chevalier returned?" I gasped breathlessly.
+
+"Not yet, Monsieur," answered Guilbert with a tranquillity that made me
+desire to strangle him. "Is Mademoiselle in the chateau?" was my next
+question, mechanically asked.
+
+"I saw her on the terrace some moments ago. She has not since come
+within."
+
+Like one possessed I flew across the intervening room and out on to the
+terrace. Genevieve and Andrea were walking there, deep in conversation.
+At another time I might have cursed their lack of prudence. At the
+moment I did not so much as remark it.
+
+"Where is Mademoiselle de Canaples?" I burst out.
+
+They gazed at me, as much astounded by my question and the abruptness of
+it as by my apparent agitation.
+
+"Has anything happened?" inquired Genevieve, her blue eyes wide open.
+
+"Yes--no; naught has happened. Tell me where she is. I must speak to
+her."
+
+"She was here a while ago," said Andrea, "but she left us to stroll
+along the river bank."
+
+"How long is it since she left you?"
+
+"A quarter of an hour, perhaps."
+
+"Something has happened!" cried Genevieve, and added more, maybe, but I
+waited not to hear.
+
+Muttering curses as I ran--for 't was my way to curse where pious souls
+might pray--I sped back to the quadrangle and my horse.
+
+"Follow me," I shouted to the groom, "you and as many of your fellows
+as you can find. Follow me at once--at once, mark you--to the coppice
+by the river." And without waiting for his answer, I sent my horse
+thundering down the avenue. The sun was gone, leaving naught but a
+roseate streak to tell of its passage, and at that moment a distant bell
+tinkled forth the Angelus.
+
+With whip, spur, and imprecations I plied my steed, a prey to such
+excitement as I had never known until that moment--not even in the
+carnage of battle.
+
+I had no plan. My mind was a chaos of thought without a single
+clear idea to light it, and I never so much as bethought me that
+single-handled I was about to attempt to wrest Yvonne from the hands of
+perchance half a dozen men. To save time I did not far pursue the road,
+but, clearing a hedge, I galloped ventre-a-terre across the meadow
+towards the little coppice by the waterside. As I rode I saw no sign of
+any moving thing. No sound disturbed the evening stillness save the dull
+thump of my horse's hoofs upon the turf, and a great fear arose in my
+heart that I might come too late.
+
+At last I reached the belt of trees, and my fears grew into certainty.
+The place was deserted.
+
+Then a fresh hope sprang up. Perchance, thinking of my warning, she had
+seen the emptiness of her suspicions towards me, and had pursued that
+walk of hers in another direction.
+
+But when I had penetrated to the little open space within that cluster
+of naked trees, I had proof overwhelming that the worst had befallen.
+Not only on the moist ground was stamped the impress of struggling feet,
+but on a branch I found a strip of torn green velvet, and, remembering
+the dress she had worn that day, I understood to the full the
+significance of that rag, and, understanding it, I groaned aloud.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. THE RESCUE
+
+
+Some precious moments did I waste standing with that green rag betwixt
+my fingers, and I grew sick and numb in body and in mind. She was gone!
+Carried off by a man I had reason to believe she hated, and whom God
+send she might have no motive to hate more deeply hereafter!
+
+The ugly thought swelled until it blotted out all others, and in its
+train there came a fury upon me that drove me to do by instinct that
+which earlier I should have done by reason. I climbed back into the
+saddle, and away across the meadow I went, journeying at an angle with
+the road, my horse's head turned in the direction of Blois. That road at
+last was gained, and on I thundered at a stretched gallop, praying that
+my hard-used beast might last until the town was reached.
+
+Now, as I have already said, I am not a man who easily falls a prey
+to excitement. It may have beset me in the heat of battle, when the
+fearsome lust of blood and death makes of every man a raving maniac,
+thrilled with mad joy at every stab he deals, and laughing with fierce
+passion at every blow he takes, though in the taking of it his course
+be run. But, saving at such wild times, never until then could I recall
+having been so little master of myself. There was a fever in me; all
+hell was in my blood, and, stranger still, and hitherto unknown at any
+season, there was a sickly fear that mastered me, and drew out great
+beads of sweat upon my brow. Fear for myself I have never known, for at
+no time has life so pampered me that the thought of parting company
+with it concerned me greatly. Fear for another I had not known till
+then--saving perchance the uneasiness that at times I had felt touching
+Andrea--because never yet had I sufficiently cared.
+
+Thus far my thoughts took me, as I rode, and where I have halted did
+they halt, and stupidly I went over their ground again, like one who
+gropes for something in the dark,--because never yet had I sufficiently
+cared--I had never cared.
+
+And then, ah Dieu! As I turned the thought over I understood, and,
+understanding, I pursued the sentence where I had left off.
+
+But, caring at last, I was sick with fear of what might befall the one I
+cared for! There lay the reason of the frenzied excitement whereof I had
+become the slave. That it was that had brought the moisture to my brow
+and curses to my lips; that it was that had caused me instinctively to
+thrust the rag of green velvet within my doublet.
+
+Ciel! It was strange--aye, monstrous strange, and a right good jest for
+fate to laugh at--that I, Gaston de Luynes, vile ruffler and worthless
+spadassin, should have come to such a pass; I, whose forefinger had for
+the past ten years uptilted the chin of every tavern wench I had chanced
+upon; I, whose lips had never known the touch of other than the lips of
+these; I, who had thought my heart long dead to tenderness and devotion,
+or to any fondness save the animal one for my ignoble self. Yet there I
+rode as if the Devil had me for a quarry,--panting, sweating, cursing,
+and well-nigh sobbing with rage at a fear that I might come too
+late,--all because of a proud lady who knew me for what I was and held
+me in contempt because of her knowledge; all for a lady who had not
+the kindness for me that one might spare a dog--who looked on me as
+something not good to see.
+
+Since there was no one to whom I might tell my story that he might mock
+me, I mocked myself--with a laugh that startled passers-by and which,
+coupled with the crazy pace at which I dashed into Blois, caused them, I
+doubt not, to think me mad. Nor were they wrong, for mad indeed I deemed
+myself.
+
+That I trampled no one underfoot in my furious progress through the
+streets is a miracle that passes my understanding.
+
+In the courtyard of the Lys de France I drew rein at last with a tug
+that brought my shuddering brute on to his haunches and sent those who
+stood about flying into the shelter of the doorways.
+
+"Another horse!" I shouted as I sprang to the ground. "Another horse at
+once!"
+
+Then as I turned to inquire for Michelot, I espied him leaning stolidly
+against the porte-cochere.
+
+"How long have you been there, Michelot?" I asked.
+
+"Half an hour, mayhap."
+
+"Saw you a closed carriage pass?"
+
+"Ten minutes ago I saw one go by, followed by M. de St. Auban and a
+gentleman who greatly resembled M. de Vilmorin, besides an escort of
+four of the most villainous knaves--"
+
+"That is the one," I broke in. "Quick, Michelot! Arm yourself and get
+your horse; I have need of you. Come, knave, move yourself!"
+
+At the end of a few minutes we set out at a sharp trot, leaving the
+curious ones whom my loud-voiced commands had assembled, to speculate
+upon the meaning of so much bustle. Once clear of the township we gave
+the reins to our horses, and our trot became a gallop as we travelled
+along the road to Meung, with the Loire on our right. And as we went I
+briefly told Michelot what was afoot, interlarding my explanations with
+prayers that we might come upon the kidnappers before they crossed the
+river, and curses at the flying pace of our mounts, which to my anxious
+mind seemed slow.
+
+At about a mile from Blois the road runs over an undulation of the
+ground that is almost a hill. From the moment that I had left Canaples
+as the Angelus was ringing, until the moment when our panting horses
+gained the brow of that little eminence, only half an hour had sped.
+Still in that half-hour the tints had all but faded from the sky, and
+the twilight shadows grew thicker around us with every moment. Yet not
+so thick had they become but that I could see a coach at a standstill
+in the hollow, some three hundred yards beneath us, and, by it, half a
+dozen horses, of which four were riderless and held by the two men who
+were still mounted. Then, breathlessly scanning the field between the
+road and the river, I espied five persons, half way across, and at the
+same distance from the water that we were from the coach. Two men, whom
+I supposed to be St. Auban and Vilmorin, were forcing along a woman,
+whose struggles, feeble though they appeared--yet retarded their
+progress in some measure. Behind them walked two others, musket on
+shoulder.
+
+I pointed them out to Michelot with a soft cry of joy. We were in time!
+
+Following with my eyes the course they appeared to be pursuing I saw by
+the bank a boat, in which two men were waiting. Again I pointed, this
+time to the boat.
+
+"Over the hedge, Michelot!" I cried. "We must ride in a straight line
+for the water and so intercept them. Follow me."
+
+Over the hedge we went, and down the gentle slope at as round a pace
+as the soft ground would with safety allow. I had reckoned upon being
+opposed to six or even eight men, whereas there were but four, one of
+whom I knew was hardly to be reckoned. Doubtless St. Auban had imagined
+himself safe from pursuit when he left two of his bravos with the
+horses, probably to take them on to Meung, and there cross with them and
+rejoin him. Two more, I doubted not, were those seated at the oars.
+
+I laughed to myself as I took in all this, but, even as I laughed, those
+in the field stood still, and sent up a shout that told me we had been
+perceived.
+
+"On, Michelot, on!" I shouted, spurring my horse forward. Then, in
+answer to their master's call, the two ruffians who had been doing duty
+as grooms came pounding into the field.
+
+"Ride to meet them, Michelot!" I cried. Obediently he wheeled to the
+left, and I caught the swish of his sword as it left the scabbard.
+
+St. Auban was now hurrying towards the river with his party. Already
+they were but fifty yards from the boat, and a hundred still lay between
+him and me. Furiously I pressed onward, and presently but half the
+distance separated us, whilst they were still some thirty yards from
+their goal.
+
+Then his two bravos faced round to meet me, and one, standing some fifty
+paces in ad-vance of the other, levelled his musket and fired. But in
+his haste he aimed too high; the bullet carried away my hat, and before
+the smoke had cleared I was upon him. I had drawn a pistol from my
+holster, but it was not needed; my horse passed over him before he could
+save himself from my fearful charge.
+
+In the fast-fading light a second musket barrel shone, and I saw the
+second ruffian taking aim at me with not a dozen yards between us. With
+the old soldier's instinct I wrenched at the reins till I brought my
+horse on to his haunches. It was high time, for simultaneously with my
+action the fellow blazed at me, and the scream of pain that broke from
+my steed told me that the poor brute had taken the bullet. With a bound
+that carried me forward some six paces, the animal sank, quivering, to
+the ground. I disengaged my feet from the stirrups as he fell, but the
+shock of it sent me rolling on the ground, and the ruffian, seeing me
+fallen, sprang forward, swinging his musket up above his head. I dodged
+the murderous downward stroke, and as the stock buried itself close
+beside me in the soft earth I rose on one knee and with a grim laugh I
+raised my pistol. I brought the muzzle within a hand's breadth of his
+face, then fired and shot him through the head. Perchance you'll say it
+was a murderous, cruel stroke: mayhap it was, but at such seasons
+men stay not to unravel niceties, but strike ere they themselves be
+stricken.
+
+Leaping over the twitching corpse, I got out my sword and sprang after
+St. Auban, who, with Vilmorin and Yvonne, careless of what might betide
+his followers, was now within ten paces of the boat.
+
+Pistol shots cracked behind me, and I wondered how Michelot was faring,
+but dared not pause to look.
+
+The twain in the boat stood up, wielding their great oars, and methought
+them on the point of coming to their master's aid, in which case my
+battle had truly been a lost one. But that craven Vilmorin did me good
+service then, for with a cry of fear at my approach, he abandoned his
+hold of Yvonne, whose struggles were keeping both the men back; thus
+freed, he fled towards the boat, and jumping in, he shouted to the men
+in his shrill, quavering voice, to put off. Albeit they disobeyed him
+contemptuously and waited for the Marquis; still they did not leave the
+boat, fearing, no doubt, that if they did so the coward would put off
+alone.
+
+As for St. Auban, Vilmorin's flight left him unequal to the task of
+dragging the girl along. She dug her heels into the ground, and, tug as
+he might, for all that he set both hands to work, he could not move her.
+In this plight I came upon him, and challenged him to stand and face me.
+
+With a bunch of oaths he got out his sword, but in doing so he was
+forced to remove one of his hands from the girl's arm. Seizing the
+opportunity with a ready wit and courage seldom found in women of her
+quality, she twisted herself from the grip of his left hand, and came
+staggering towards me for protection, holding up her pinioned wrists.
+With my blade I severed the cord, whereupon she plucked the gag from
+her mouth, and sank against my side, her struggles having left her weak
+indeed.
+
+As I set my arm about her waist to support her, my heart seemed to swell
+within me, and strange melodies shaped themselves within my soul.
+
+St. Auban bore down upon me with a raucous oath, but the glittering
+point of my rapier danced before his eyes and drove him back again.
+
+"To me, Vilmorin, you cowardly cur!" he shouted. "To me, you dogs!"
+
+He let fly at them a volley of blood-curdling oaths, then, without
+waiting to see if they obeyed him, he came at me again, and our swords
+met.
+
+"Courage, Mademoiselle," I whispered, as a sigh that was almost a groan
+escaped her. "Have no fear."
+
+But that fight was not destined to be fought, for, as again we engaged,
+there came the fall of running feet behind me. It flashed across my
+mind that Michelot had been worsted, and that my back was about to be
+assailed. But in St. Auban's face I saw, as in a mirror, that he who
+came was Michelot.
+
+"Mort de Christ!" snarled the Marquis, springing back beyond my reach.
+"What can a man do with naught but fools and poltroons to serve
+him? Faugh! We will continue our sword-play at St. Sulpice des Reaux
+to-night. Au revoir, M. de Luynes!"
+
+Turning, he sheathed his sword, and, running down to the river, bounded
+into the boat, where I heard him reviling Vilmorin with every foul name
+he could call to mind.
+
+My blood was aflame, and I was not minded to wait for our meeting
+at Reaux. Consigning Mademoiselle to the care of Michelot, who stood
+panting and bleeding from a wound in his shoulder, I turned back to my
+dead horse, and plucking the remaining pistol from the holster I ran
+down to the very edge of the water. The boat was not ten yards from
+shore, and my action had been unheeded by St. Auban, who was standing in
+the stern.
+
+Kneeling I took careful aim at him, and as God lives, I would have saved
+much trouble that was to follow had I been allowed to fire. But at that
+moment a hand was laid upon my arm, and Yvonne's sweet voice murmured in
+my ear:
+
+"You have fought a brave and gallant fight, M. de Luynes, and you have
+done a deed of which the knights of old might have been proud. Do not
+mar it by an act of murder."
+
+"Murder, Mademoiselle!" I gasped, letting my hand fall. "Surely there is
+no murder in this!"
+
+"A suspicion of it, I think, and so brave a man should have clean
+hands."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. THE HAND OF YVONNE
+
+
+We did not long remain upon the field of battle. Indeed, if we lingered
+at all it was but so that Mademoiselle might bandage Michelot's wound.
+And whilst she did so, my stout henchman related to us how it had fared
+with him, and how, having taken the two ruffians separately, he had been
+wounded by the first, whom he repaid by splitting his skull, whereupon
+the second one had discharged his pistol without effect, then made
+off towards the road, whilst Michelot, remembering that I might need
+assistance, had let him go.
+
+"There, good Michelot," quoth Mademoiselle, completing her task, "I have
+done what little I can. And now, M. de Luynes, let us go."
+
+It was close upon seven o'clock, and night was at hand. Already the moon
+was showing her large, full face above the tree-tops by Chambord, and
+casting a silver streak athwart the stream. The plash of oars from the
+Marquis's boat was waxing indistinct despite the stillness, whilst by
+the eye the boat itself was no longer to be distinguished.
+
+As I turned, my glance fell upon the bravo whom I had shot. He lay
+stiff and stark upon his back, his sightless eyes wide open and staring
+heavenwards, his face all blood-smeared and ghastly to behold.
+
+Mademoiselle shuddered. "Let us go," she repeated in a faint whisper;
+her eye had also fallen on that thing, and her voice was full of awe.
+She laid her hand upon my sleeve and 'neath the suasion of her touch I
+moved away.
+
+To our surprise and joy we found St. Auban's coach where we had left it,
+with two saddled horses tethered close by. The others had doubtless been
+taken by the coachman and the bravo who had escaped Michelot, both of
+whom had fled. These animals we looked upon as the spoils of war, and
+accordingly when we set out in the coach,--Mademoiselle having desired
+me to ride beside her therein,--Michelot wielding the reins, it was with
+those two horses tethered behind.
+
+"Monsieur de Luynes," said my companion softly, "I fear that I have done
+you a great injustice. Indeed, I know not how to crave your forgiveness,
+how to thank you, or how to hide my shame at those words I spoke to you
+this afternoon at Canaples."
+
+"Not another word on that score, Mademoiselle!"
+
+And to myself I thought of what recompense already had been mine. To me
+it had been given to have her lean trustingly upon me, my arm about her
+waist, whilst, sword in hand, I had fought for her. Dieu! Was that not
+something to have lived for?--aye, and to have died for, methought.
+
+"I deserved, Monsieur," she continued presently, "that you should have
+left me to my fate for all the odious things I uttered when you warned
+me of my peril,--for the manner in which I have treated you since your
+coming to Blois."
+
+"You have but treated me, Mademoiselle, in the only manner in which you
+could treat one so far beneath you, one who is utterly unworthy that you
+should bestow a single regret upon him."
+
+"You are strangely humble to-night, Monsieur. It is unwonted in you, and
+for once you wrong yourself. You have not said that I am forgiven."
+
+"I have naught to forgive."
+
+"Helas! you have--indeed you have!"
+
+"Eh, bien!" quoth I, with a return of my old tone of banter, "I forgive
+then."
+
+Thereafter we travelled on in silence for some little while, my heart
+full of joy at being so near to her, and the friendliness which she
+evinced for me, and my mind casting o'er my joyous heart a cloud of some
+indefinable evil presage.
+
+"You are a brave man, M. de Luynes," she murmured presently, "and I have
+been taught that brave men are ever honourable and true."
+
+"Had they who taught you that known Gaston de Luynes, they would have
+told you instead that it is possible for a vile man to have the one
+redeeming virtue of courage, even as it is possible for a liar to have a
+countenance that is sweet and innocent."
+
+"There speaks that humble mood you are affecting, and which sits upon
+you as my father's clothes might do. Nay, Monsieur, I shall believe in
+my first teaching, and be deaf to yours."
+
+Again there was a spell of silence. At last--"I have been thinking,
+Monsieur," she said, "of that other occasion on which you rode with me.
+I remember that you said you had killed a man, and when I asked you why,
+you said that you had done it because he sought to kill you. Was that
+the truth?"
+
+"Assuredly, Mademoiselle. We fought a duel, and it is customary in a
+duel for each to seek to kill the other."
+
+"But why was this duel fought?" she cried, with some petulance.
+
+"I fear me, Mademoiselle, that I may not answer you," I said, recalling
+the exact motives, and thinking how futile appeared the quarrel which
+Eugene de Canaples had sought with Andrea when viewed in the light of
+what had since befallen.
+
+"Was the quarrel of your seeking?"
+
+"In a measure it was, Mademoiselle."
+
+"In a measure!" she echoed. Then persisting, as women will--"Will you
+not tell me what this measure was?"
+
+"Tenez, Mademoiselle," I answered in despair; "I will tell you just
+so much as I may. Your brother had occasion to be opposed to certain
+projects that were being formed in Paris by persons high in power
+around a beardless boy. Himself of too small importance to dare wage
+war against those powerful ones who would have crushed him, your brother
+sought to gain his ends by sending a challenge to this boy. The lad was
+high-spirited and consented to meet M. de Canaples, by whom he would
+assuredly have been murdered--'t is the only word, Mademoiselle--had I
+not intervened as I did."
+
+She was silent for a moment. Then--"I believe you, Monsieur," she said
+simply. "You fought, then, to shield another--but why?"
+
+"For three reasons, Mademoiselle. Firstly, those persons high in power
+chose to think it my fault that the quarrel had arisen, and threatened
+to hang me if the duel took place and the boy were harmed. Secondly,
+I myself felt a kindness for the boy. Thirdly, because, whatever sins
+Heaven may record against me, it has at least ever been my way to side
+against men who, confident of their superiority, seek, with the cowardly
+courage of the strong, to harm the weak. It is, Mademoiselle, the
+courage of the man who knows no fear when he strikes a woman, yet who
+will shake with a palsy when another man but threatens him."
+
+"Why did you not tell me all this before?" she whispered, after a pause.
+And methought I caught a quaver in her voice.
+
+I laughed for answer, and she read my laugh aright; presently she
+pursued her questions and asked me the name of the boy I had defended.
+But I evaded her, telling her that she must need no further details to
+believe me.
+
+"It is not that, Monsieur! I do believe you; I do indeed, but--"
+
+"Hark, Mademoiselle!" I cried suddenly, as the clatter of many hoofs
+sounded near at hand. "What is that?"
+
+A shout rang out at that moment. "Halt! Who goes there?"
+
+"Mon Dieu!" exclaimed Mademoiselle, drawing close up to me, and again
+the voice sounded, this time more sinister.
+
+"Halt, I say--in the King's name!"
+
+The coach came to a standstill, and through the window I beheld the
+shadowy forms of several mounted men, and the feeble glare of a lantern.
+
+"Who travels in the carriage, knave?" came the voice again.
+
+"Mademoiselle de Canaples," answered Michelot; then, like a fool, he
+must needs add: "Have a care whom you knave, my master, if you would
+grow old."
+
+"Pardieu! let us behold this Mademoiselle de Canaples who owns so
+fearful a warrior for a coachman."
+
+The door was flung rudely open, and the man bearing the lantern--whose
+rays shone upon a uniform of the Cardinal's guards--confronted us.
+
+With a chuckle he flashed the light in my face, then suddenly grew
+serious.
+
+"Peste! Is it indeed you, M. de Luynes?" quoth he; adding, with stern
+politeness, "It grieves me to disturb you, but I have a warrant for your
+arrest."
+
+He was fumbling in his doublet as he spoke, and during the time I had
+leisure to scan his countenance, recognising, to my surprise, a young
+lieutenant of the guards who had but recently served with me, and with
+whom I had been on terms almost of friendship. His words, "I have a
+warrant for your arrest," came like a bolt from the blue to enlighten
+me, and to remind me of what St. Auban had that morning told me, and
+which for the nonce I had all but forgotten.
+
+Upon hearing those same words, Yvonne, methought, grew pale, and her
+eyes were bent upon me with a look of surprise and pity.
+
+"Upon what charge am I arrested?" I enquired, with forced composure.
+
+"My warrant mentions none, M. de Luynes. It is here." And he thrust
+before me a paper, whose purport I could have read in its shape and
+seals. Idly my eye ran along the words:
+
+"By these presents I charge and empower my lieutenant, Jean de
+Montresor, to seize where'er he may be found, hold, and conduct to Paris
+the Sieur Gaston de Luynes--"
+
+And so further, until the Cardinal's signature ended the legal verbiage.
+
+"In the King's name, M. de Luynes," said Montresor, firmly yet
+deferentially, "your sword!"
+
+It would have been madness to do aught but comply with his request, and
+so I surrendered my rapier, which he in his turn delivered to one of his
+followers. Next I stepped down from the coach and turned to take leave
+of Mademoiselle, whereupon Montresor, thinking that peradventure
+matters were as they appeared to be between us, and, being a man of fine
+feelings, signed to his men to fall back, whilst he himself withdrew a
+few paces.
+
+"Adieu, Mademoiselle!" I said simply. "I shall carry with me for
+consolation the memory that I have been of service to you, and I shall
+ever--during the little time that may be left me--be grateful to Heaven
+for the opportunity that it has afforded me of causing you--perchance
+without sufficient reason--to think better of me. Adieu, Mademoiselle!
+God guard you!"
+
+It was too dark to see her face, but my heart bounded with joy to catch
+in her voice a quaver that argued, methought, regret for me.
+
+"What does it mean, M. de Luynes? Why are they taking you?"
+
+"Because I have displeased my Lord Cardinal, albeit, Mademoiselle, I
+swear to you that I have no cause for shame at the reasons for which I
+am being arrested."
+
+"My father is Monseigneur de Mazarin's friend," she cried. "He is also
+yours. He shall exert for you what influence he possesses."
+
+"'T were useless, Mademoiselle. Besides, what does it signify? Again,
+adieu!"
+
+She spoke no answering word, but silently held out her hand. Silently
+I took it in mine, and for a moment I hesitated, thinking of what I
+was--of what she was. At last, moved by some power that was greater than
+my will, I stooped and pressed those shapely fingers to my lips. Then
+I stepped suddenly back and closed the carriage door, oppressed by a
+feeling akin to that of having done an evil deed.
+
+"Have I your permission to say a word to my servant, M. le Lieutenant?"
+I inquired.
+
+He bowed assent, whereat, stepping close up to the horror-stricken
+Michelot--
+
+"Drive straight to the Chateau de Canaples," I said in a low voice.
+"Thereafter return to the Lys de France and there wait until you hear
+from me. Here, take my purse; there are some fifty pistoles in it."
+
+"Speak but the word, Monsieur," he growled, "and I'll pistol a couple of
+these dogs."
+
+"Pah! You grow childish," I laughed, "or can you not see that fellow's
+musket?"
+
+"Pardieu! I'll risk his aim! I never yet saw one of these curs shoot
+straight."
+
+"No, no, obey me, Michelot. Think of Mademoiselle. Go! Adieu! If we
+should not meet again, mon brave," I finished, as I seized his loyal
+hand, "what few things of mine are at the hostelry shall belong to you,
+as well as what may be left of this money. It is little enough payment,
+Michelot, for all your faithfulness--"
+
+"Monsieur, Monsieur!" he cried.
+
+"Diable!" I muttered, "we are becoming women! Be off, you knave! Adieu!"
+
+The peremptoriness of my tone ended our leave-taking and caused him
+to grip his reins and bring down his whip. The coach moved on. A white
+face, on which the moonlight fell, glanced at me from the window,
+then to my staring eyes naught was left but the back of the retreating
+vehicle, with one of the two saddle-horses that had been tethered to it
+still ambling in its wake.
+
+"M. de Montresor," I said, thrusting my bullet-pierced hat upon my head,
+"I am at your service."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. OF WHAT BEFELL AT REAUX. At my captor's bidding I mounted
+the horse which they had untethered from the carriage, and we started
+off along the road which the coach itself had disappeared upon a moment
+before. But we travelled at a gentle trot, which, after that evening's
+furious riding, was welcome to me.
+
+With bitterness I reflected as I rode that the very moment at which
+Mademoiselle de Canaples had brought herself to think better of me was
+like to prove the last we should spend together. Yet not
+altogether bitter was that reflection; for with it came also the
+consolation--whereof I had told her--that I had not been taken before
+she had had cause to change her mind concerning me.
+
+That she should care for me was too preposterous an idea to be
+nourished, and, indeed, it was better--much better--that M. de Montresor
+had come before I, grown sanguine as lovers will, had again earned her
+scorn by showing her what my heart contained. Much better was it that I
+should pass for ever out of her life--as, indeed, methought I was
+like to pass out of all life--whilst I could leave in her mind a kind
+remembrance and a grateful regret, free from the stain that a subsequent
+possible presumption of mine might have cast o'er it.
+
+Then my thoughts shifted to Andrea. St. Auban would hear of my removal,
+and I cared not to think of what profit he might derive from it. To
+Yvonne also his presence must hereafter be a menace, and in that wherein
+tonight he had failed, he might, again, succeed. It was at this juncture
+of my reverie that M. de Montresor's pleasant young voice aroused me.
+
+"You appear downcast, M. de Luynes."
+
+"I, downcast!" I echoed, throwing back my head and laughing. "Nay. I was
+but thinking.
+
+"Believe me, M. de Luynes," he said kindly, "when I tell you that
+it grieves me to be charged with this matter. I have done my best to
+capture you. That was my duty. But I should have rejoiced had I failed
+with the consciousness of having done all in my power."
+
+"Thanks, Montresor," I murmured, and silence followed.
+
+"I have been thinking, Monsieur," he went on presently, "that possibly
+the absence of your sword causes you discomfort."
+
+"Eh? Discomfort? It does, most damnably!"
+
+"Give me your parole d'honneur that you will attempt no escape, and not
+only shall your sword be returned to you, but you shall travel to Paris
+with all comfort and dignity."
+
+Now, so amazed was I that I paused to stare at the officer who was young
+enough to make such a proposal to a man of my reputation. He turned his
+face towards me, and in the moonlight I could make out his questioning
+glance.
+
+"Eh, bien, Monsieur?"
+
+"I am more than grateful to you, M. de Montresor," I replied, "and I
+freely give you my word of honour to seek no means of eluding you, nor
+to avail myself of any that may be presented to me."
+
+I said this loud enough for those behind to hear, so that no surprise
+was evinced when the lieutenant bade the man who bore my sword return it
+to me.
+
+If he who may chance to read these simple pages shall have gathered
+aught of my character from their perusal, he will marvel, perchance,
+that I should give the lieutenant my parole, instead rather of watching
+for an opportunity to--at least--attempt an escape. Preeminent in my
+thoughts, however, stood at that moment the necessity to remove St.
+Auban, and methought that by acting as I did I saw a way by which,
+haply, I might accomplish this. What might thereafter befall me seemed
+of little moment.
+
+"M. de Montresor," I said presently, "your kindness impels me to set a
+further tax upon your generosity."
+
+"That is, Monsieur?"
+
+"Bid your men fall back a little, and I will tell you."
+
+He made a sign to his troopers, and when the distance between us had
+been sufficiently widened, I began:
+
+"There is a man at present across the river, yonder, who has done me
+no little injury, and with whom I have a rendezvous at nine o'clock
+to-night at St. Sulpice des Reaux, where our swords are to determine the
+difference between us. I crave, Monsieur, your permission to keep that
+appointment."
+
+"Impossible!" he answered curtly.
+
+I took a deep breath like a man who is about to jump an obstacle in his
+path.
+
+"Why impossible, Monsieur?"
+
+"Because you are a prisoner, and therefore no longer under obligation to
+keep appointments."
+
+"How would you feel, Montresor, if, burning to be avenged upon a man
+who had done you irreparable wrong, you were arrested an hour before
+the time at which you were to meet this man, sword in hand, and your
+captor--whose leave you craved to keep the assignation--answered you
+with the word 'impossible'?"
+
+"Yes, yes, Monsieur," he replied impatiently. "But you forget my
+position. Let us suppose that I allow you to go to St. Sulpice des
+Reaux. What if you do not return?"
+
+"You mistrust me?" I exclaimed, my hopes melting.
+
+"You misapprehend me. I mean, what if you are killed?"
+
+"I do not think that I shall be."
+
+"Ah! But what if you are? What shall I say to my Lord Cardinal?"
+
+"Dame! That I am dead, and that he is saved the trouble of hanging me.
+The most he can want of me is my life. Let us suppose that you had
+come an hour later. You would have been forced to wait until after the
+encounter, and, did I fall, matters would be no different."
+
+The young man fell to thinking, but I, knowing that it is not well to
+let the young ponder overlong if you would bend them to your wishes,
+broke in upon his reflections--"See, Montresor, yonder are the lights of
+Blois; by eight o'clock we shall be in the town. Come; grant me leave to
+cross the Loire, and by ten o'clock, or half-past at the latest, I shall
+return to sup with you or I shall be dead. I swear it."
+
+"Were I in your position," he answered musingly, "I know how I would be
+treated, and, pardieu! come what may I shall deal with you accordingly.
+You may go to your assignation, M. de Luynes, and may God prosper you."
+
+And thus it came to pass that shortly after eight o'clock, albeit
+a prisoner, I rode into the courtyard of the Lys de France, and,
+alighting, I stepped across the threshold of the inn, and strode up to
+a table at which I had espied Michelot. He sat nursing a huge measure
+of wine, into the depths of which he was gazing pensively, with an
+expression so glum upon his weather-beaten countenance that it defies
+depicting. So deep was he in his meditations, that albeit I stood by the
+table surveying him for a full minute, he took no heed of me.
+
+"Allons, Michelot!" I said at length. "Wake up."
+
+He started up with a cry of amazement; surprise chased away the grief
+that had been on his face, and a moment later joy unfeigned, and good to
+see, took the place of surprise.
+
+"You have escaped, Monsieur!" he cried, and albeit caution made him
+utter the words beneath his breath, a shout seemed to lurk somewhere in
+the whisper.
+
+Pressing his hand I sat down and briefly told him how matters stood, and
+how I came to be for the moment free. And when I had done I bade him,
+since his wound had not proved serious, to get his hat and cloak and go
+with me to find a boat.
+
+He obeyed me, and a quarter of an hour after we had quitted the hostelry
+he was rowing me across the stream, whilst, wrapped in my cloak, I sat
+in the stern, thinking of Yvonne.
+
+"Monsieur," said Michelot, "observe how swift is the stream. If I were
+to let the boat drift we should be at Tours to-morrow, and from there it
+would be easy to defy pursuit. We have enough money to reach Spain. What
+say you, Monsieur?"
+
+"Say, you rascal? Why, bend your back to the work and set me ashore by
+St. Sulpice in a quarter of an hour, or I'll forget that you have been
+my friend. Would you see me dishonoured?"
+
+"Sooner than see you dead," he grumbled as he resumed his task.
+Thereafter, whilst he rowed, Michelot entertained me with some quaint
+ideas touching that which fine gentlemen call honour, and to what sorry
+passes it was wont to bring them, concluding by thanking God that he was
+no gentleman and had no honour to lead him into mischief.
+
+At last, however, our journey came to an end, and I sprang ashore some
+five hundred paces from the little chapel, and almost exactly opposite
+the Chateau de Canaples. I stood for a moment gazing across the water at
+the lighted windows of the chateau, wondering which of those eyes that
+looked out upon the night might be that of Yvonne's chamber.
+
+Then, bidding Michelot await me, or follow did I not return in half an
+hour, I turned and moved away towards the chapel.
+
+There is a clearing in front of the little white edifice--which rather
+than a temple is but a monument to the martyr who is said to have
+perished on that spot in the days before Clovis.
+
+As I advanced into the centre of this open patch of ground, and stood
+clear of the black silhouettes of the trees, cast about me by the moon,
+two men appeared to detach themselves from the side wall of the chapel,
+and advanced to meet me.
+
+Albeit they were wrapped in their cloaks--uptilted behind by their
+protruding scabbards--it was not difficult to tell the tall figure and
+stately bearing of St. Auban and the mincing gait of Vilmorin.
+
+I doffed my hat in a grave salutation, which was courteously returned.
+
+"I trust, Messieurs, that I have not kept you waiting?"
+
+"I was on the point of expressing that very hope, Monsieur," returned
+St. Auban. "We have but arrived. Do you come alone?"
+
+"As you perceive."
+
+"Hum! M. le Vicomte, then, will act for both of us."
+
+I bowed in token of my satisfaction, and without more ado cast aside my
+cloak, pleased to see that the affair was to be conducted with decency
+and politeness, as such matters should ever be conducted, albeit
+impoliteness may have marked their origin.
+
+The Marquis, having followed my example and divested himself of his
+cloak and hat, unsheathed his rapier and delivered it to Vilmorin, who
+came across with it to where I stood. When he was close to me I saw
+that he was deadly pale; his teeth chattered, and the hand that held the
+weapon shook as with a palsy.
+
+"Mu--Monsieur," he stammered, "will it please you to lend me your sword
+that I may mu-measure it?"
+
+"What formalities!" I exclaimed with an amused smile, as I complied with
+his request. "I am afraid you have caught a chill, Vicomte. The night
+air is little suited to health so delicate."
+
+He answered me with a baleful glance, as silently he took my sword and
+set it--point to hilt--with St. Auban's. He appeared to have found some
+slight difference in the length, for he took two steps away from me,
+holding the weapons well in the light, where for a moment he surveyed
+them attentively. His hands shook so that the blades clattered one
+against the other the while. But, of a sudden, taking both rapiers by
+the hilt, he struck the blades together with a ringing clash, then
+flung them both behind him as far as he could contrive, leaving me
+thunderstruck with amazement, and marvelling whether fear had robbed him
+of his wits.
+
+Not until I perceived that the trees around me appeared to spring into
+life did it occur to me that that clashing of blades was a signal, and
+that I was trapped. With the realisation of it I was upon Vilmorin in a
+bound, and with both hands I had caught the dog by the throat before he
+thought of flight. The violence of my onslaught bore him to the ground,
+and I, not to release my choking grip, went with him.
+
+For a moment we lay together where we had fallen, his slender body
+twisting and writhing under me, his swelling face upturned and his
+protruding, horror-stricken eyes gazing into mine that were fierce and
+pitiless. Voices rang above me; someone stooped and strove to pluck me
+from my victim; then below the left shoulder I felt a sting of pain,
+first cold then hot, and I knew that I had been stabbed.
+
+Again I felt the blade thrust in, lower down and driven deeper; then, as
+the knife was for the second time withdrawn, and my flesh sucked at the
+steel,--the pain of it sending a shudder through me,--the instinct of
+preservation overcame the sweet lust to strangle Vilmorin. I let him go
+and, staggering to my feet, I turned to face those murderers who struck
+a defenceless man behind.
+
+Swords gleamed around me: one, two, three, four, five, six, I counted,
+and stood weak and dazed from loss of blood, gazing stupidly at the
+white blades. Had I but had my sword I should have laid about me, and
+gone down beneath their blows as befits a soldier. But the absence of
+that trusty friend left me limp and helpless--cowed for the first time
+since I had borne arms.
+
+Of a sudden I became aware that St. Auban stood opposite to me, hand on
+hip, surveying me with a malicious leer. As our eyes met--"So, master
+meddler," quoth he mockingly, "you crow less lustily than is your wont."
+
+"Hound!" I gasped, choking with rage, "if you are a man, if there be a
+spark of pride or honour left in your lying, cowardly soul, order your
+assassins to give me my sword, and, wounded though I be, I'll fight with
+you this duel that you lured me here to fight."
+
+He laughed harshly.
+
+"I told you but this morning, Master de Luynes, that a St. Auban does
+not fight men of your stamp. You forced a rendezvous upon me; you shall
+reap the consequences."
+
+Despite the weakness arising from loss of blood, I sprang towards him,
+beside myself with fury. But ere I had covered half the distance
+that lay between us my arms were gripped from behind, and in my spent
+condition I was held there, powerless, at the Marquis's mercy. He came
+slowly forward until we were but some two feet apart. For a second he
+stood leering at me, then, raising his hand, he struck me--struck a man
+whose arms another held!--full upon the face. Passion for the moment
+lent me strength, and in that moment I had wrenched my right arm free
+and returned his blow with interest.
+
+With an oath he got out a dagger that hung from his baldrick.
+
+"Sang du Christ! Take that, you dog!" he snarled, burying the blade in
+my breast as he spoke.
+
+"My God! You are murdering me!" I gasped.
+
+"Have you discovered it? What penetration!" he retorted, and those about
+him laughed at his indecent jest!
+
+He made a sign, and the man who had held me withdrew his hands. I
+staggered forward, deprived of his support, then a crashing blow took me
+across the head.
+
+I swayed for an instant, and with arms upheld I clutched at the air,
+as if I sought, by hanging to it, to save myself from falling; then the
+moon appeared to go dark, a noise as of the sea beating upon its shore
+filled my ears, and I seemed to be falling--falling--falling.
+
+A voice that buzzed and vibrated oddly, growing more distant at each
+word, reached me as I sank.
+
+"Come," it said. "Fling that carrion into the river."
+
+Then nothingness engulfed me.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. OF MY RESURRECTION
+
+
+Even as the blow which had plunged me into senselessness had imparted to
+me the sinking sensation which I have feebly endeavoured to depict,
+so did the first dim ray of returning consciousness bring with it the
+feeling that I was again being buoyed upwards through the thick
+waters that had enveloped me, to their surface, where intelligence and
+wakefulness awaited.
+
+And as I felt myself borne up and up in that effortless ascension, my
+senses awake and my reason still half-dormant, an exquisite sense of
+languor pervaded my whole being. Presently meseemed that the surface
+was gained at last, and an instinct impelled me to open my eyes upon the
+light, of which, through closed lids, I had become conscious.
+
+I beheld a fair-sized room superbly furnished, and flooded with amber
+sunlight suggestive in itself of warmth and luxury, the vision of which
+heightened the delicious torpor that held me in thrall. The bed I
+lay upon was such, I told myself, as would not have disgraced a royal
+sleeper. It was upheld by great pillars of black oak, carved with a
+score of fantastic figures, and all around it, descending from the dome
+above, hung curtains of rich damask, drawn back at the side that looked
+upon the window. Near at hand stood a table laden with phials and such
+utensils as one sees by the bedside of the wealthy sick. All this I
+beheld in a languid, unreasoning fashion through my half-open lids, and
+albeit the luxury of the room and the fine linen of my bed told me that
+this was neither my Paris lodging in the Rue St. Antoine, nor yet my
+chamber at the hostelry of the Lys de France, still I taxed not my brain
+with any questions touching my whereabouts.
+
+I closed my eyes, and I must have slept again: when next I opened them
+a burly figure stood in the deep bay of the latticed window, looking out
+through the leaded panes.
+
+I recognised the stalwart frame of Michelot, and at last I asked myself
+where I might be. It did not seem to occur to me that I had but to call
+him to receive an answer to that question. Instead, I closed my
+eyes again, and essayed to think. But just then there came a gentle
+scratching at the door, and I could hear Michelot tiptoeing across
+the room; next he and the one he had admitted tiptoed back towards my
+bedside, and as they came I caught a whisper in a voice that seemed to
+drag me to full consciousness.
+
+"How fares the poor invalid this morning?"
+
+"The fever is gone, Mademoiselle, and he may wake at any moment; indeed,
+it is strange that he should sleep so long."
+
+"He will be the better for it when he does awaken. I will remain here
+while you rest, Michelot. My poor fellow, you are almost as worn with
+your vigils as he is with the fever."
+
+"Pooh! I am strong enough, Mademoiselle," he answered. "I will get a
+mouthful of food and return, for I would be by when he wakes."
+
+Then their voices sank so low that as they withdrew I caught not what
+was said. The door closed softly and for a space there was silence,
+broken at last by a sigh above my head. With an answering sigh I
+opened wide my eyes and feasted them upon the lovely face of Yvonne de
+Canaples, as she bent over me with a look of tenderness and pity that at
+once recalled to me our parting when I was arrested.
+
+But suddenly meeting the stare of my gaze, she drew back with a
+half-stifled cry, whose meaning my dull wits sought not to interpret,
+but methought I caught from her lips the words, "Thank God!"
+
+"Where am I, Mademoiselle?" I inquired, and the faintness of my voice
+amazed me.
+
+"You know me!" she exclaimed, as though the thing were a miracle. Then
+coming forward again, and setting her cool, sweet hand upon my forehead,
+
+"Hush," she murmured in the accents one might use to soothe a child.
+"You are at Canaples, among friends. Now sleep."
+
+"At Canaples!" I echoed. "How came I here? I am a prisoner, am I not?"
+
+"A prisoner!" she exclaimed. "No, no, you are not a prisoner. You are
+among friends."
+
+"Did I then but dream that Montresor arrested me yesterday on the road
+to Meung? Ah! I recollect! M. de Montresor gave me leave on parole to go
+to Reaux."
+
+Then, like an avalanche, remembrance swept down upon me, and my memory
+drew a vivid picture of the happenings at St. Sulpice.
+
+"My God!" I cried. "Am I not dead, then?" And I sought to struggle up
+into a sitting posture, but that gentle hand upon my forehead restrained
+and robbed me of all will that was not hers.
+
+"Hush, Monsieur!" she said softly. "Lie still. By a miracle and the
+faithfulness of Michelot you live. Be thankful, be content, and sleep."
+
+"But my wounds, Mademoiselle?" I inquired feebly.
+
+"They are healed."
+
+"Healed?" quoth I, and in my amazement my voice sounded louder than it
+had yet done since my awakening. "Healed! Three such wounds as I took
+last night, to say naught of a broken head, healed?"
+
+"'T was not last night, Monsieur."
+
+"Not last night? Was it not last night that I went to Reaux?"
+
+"It is nearly a month since that took place," she answered with a smile.
+"For nearly a month have you lain unconscious upon that bed, with the
+angel of Death at your pillow. You have fought and won a silent battle.
+Now sleep, Monsieur, and ask no more questions until next you awaken,
+when Michelot shall tell you all that took place."
+
+She held a glass to my lips from which I drank gratefully, then, with
+the submissiveness of a babe, I obeyed her and slept.
+
+As she had promised, it was Michelot who greeted me when next I opened
+my eyes, on the following day. There were tears in his eyes--eyes that
+had looked grim and unmoved upon the horrors of the battlefield.
+
+From him I learned how, after they had flung me into the river, deeming
+me dead already, St. Auban and his men had made off. The swift stream
+swirled me along towards the spot where, in the boat, Michelot awaited
+my return all unconscious of what was taking place. He had heard the
+splash, and had suddenly stood up, on the point of going ashore, when
+my body rose within a few feet of him. He spoke of the agony of mind
+wherewith he had suddenly stretched forth and clutched me by my doublet,
+fearing that I was indeed dead. He had lifted me into the boat to find
+that my heart still beat and that the blood flowed from my wounds. These
+he had there and then bound up in the only rude fashion he was master
+of, and forthwith, thinking of Andrea and the Chevalier de Canaples,
+who were my friends, and of Mademoiselle, who was my debtor, also seeing
+that the chateau was the nearest place, he had rowed straight across to
+Canaples, and there I had lain during the four weeks that had elapsed,
+nursed by Mademoiselle, Andrea, and himself, and thus won back to life.
+
+Ah, Dieu! How good it was to know that someone there was still who cared
+for worthless Gaston de Luynes a little--enough to watch beside him and
+withhold his soul from the grim claws of Death.
+
+"What of M. de St. Auban?" I inquired presently.
+
+"He has not been seen since that night. Probably he feared that did he
+come to Blois, the Chevalier would find means of punishing him for the
+attempted abduction of Mademoiselle."
+
+"Ah, then Andrea is safe?"
+
+As if in answer to my question, the lad entered at that moment, and upon
+seeing me sitting up, talking to Michelot, he uttered an exclamation of
+joy, and hurried forward to my bedside.
+
+"Gaston, dear friend!" he cried, as he took my hand--and a thin,
+withered hand it was.
+
+We talked long together,--we three,--and anon we were joined by the
+Chevalier de Canaples, who offered me also, in his hesitating manner,
+his felicitations. And with me they lingered until Yvonne came to drive
+them with protestations from my bedside.
+
+Such, in brief, was the manner of my resurrection. For a week or so I
+still kept my chamber; then one day towards the middle of April, the
+weather being warm and the sun bright, Michelot assisted me to don my
+clothes, which hung strangely empty upon my gaunt, emaciated frame, and,
+leaning heavily upon my faithful henchman, I made my way below.
+
+In the salon I found the Chevalier de Canaples with Mesdemoiselles and
+Andrea awaiting me, and the kindness wherewith they overwhelmed me, as
+I sat propped up with pillows, was such that I asked myself again and
+again if, indeed, I was that same Gaston de Luynes who but a little
+while ago had held himself as destitute of friends as he was of fortune.
+I was the pampered hero of the hour, and even little Genevieve had a
+sunny smile and a kind word for me.
+
+Thereafter my recovery progressed with great strides, and gradually, day
+by day, I felt more like my old vigorous self. They were happy days, for
+Mademoiselle was often at my side, and ever kind to me; so kind was she
+that presently, as my strength grew, there fell a great cloud athwart my
+happiness--the thought that soon I must leave Canaples never to return
+there,--leave Mademoiselle's presence never to come into it again.
+
+I was Monsieur de Montresor's prisoner. I had learned that in common
+with all others, save those at Canaples, he deemed me dead, and that,
+informed of it by a message from St. Auban, he had returned to Paris
+on the day following that of my journey to Reaux. Nevertheless, since
+I lived, he had my parole, and it was my duty as soon as I had regained
+sufficient strength, to journey to Paris and deliver myself into his
+hands.
+
+Nearer and nearer drew the dreaded hour in which I felt that I must
+leave Canaples. On the last day of April I essayed a fencing bout with
+Andrea, and so strong and supple did I prove myself that I was forced to
+realise that the time was come. On the morrow I would go.
+
+As I was on the point of returning indoors with the foils under my arm,
+Andrea called me back.
+
+"Gaston, I have something of importance to say to you. Will you take a
+turn with me down yonder by the river?"
+
+There was a serious, almost nervous look on his comely face, which
+arrested my attention. I dropped the foils, and taking his arm I went
+with him as he bade me. We seated ourselves on the grass by the edge of
+the gurgling waters, and he began:
+
+"It is now two months since we came to Blois: I, to pay my court to
+the wealthy Mademoiselle de Canaples; you, to watch over and protect
+me--nay, you need not interrupt me. Michelot has told me what St. Auban
+sought here, and the true motives of your journey to St. Sulpice. Never
+shall I be able to sufficiently prove my gratitude to you, my poor
+Gaston. But tell me, dear friend, you who from the outset saw how
+matters stood, why did you not inform St. Auban that he had no cause to
+hunt me down since I intended not to come between him and Yvonne?"
+
+"Mon Dieu!" I exclaimed, "that little fair-haired coquette has--"
+
+"Gaston," he interrupted, "you go too fast. I love Genevieve de
+Canaples. I have loved her, I think, since the moment I beheld her in
+the inn at Choisy, and, what is more, she loves me."
+
+"So that--?" I asked with an ill-repressed sneer.
+
+"We have plighted our troth, and with her father's sanction, or without
+it, she will do me the honour to become my wife."
+
+"Admirable!" I exclaimed. "And my Lord Cardinal?"
+
+"May hang himself on his stole for aught I care."
+
+"Ah! Truly a dutiful expression for a nephew who has thwarted his
+uncle's plans!"
+
+"My uncle's plans are like himself, cold and selfish in their ambition."
+
+"Andrea, Andrea! Whatever your uncle may be, to those of your blood, at
+least, he was never selfish."
+
+"Not selfish!" he cried. "Think you that he is enriching and contracting
+great alliances for us because he loves us? No, no. Our uncle seeks to
+gain our support and with it the support of those noble houses to which
+he is allying us. The nobility opposes him, therefore he seeks to find
+relatives among noblemen, so that he may weather the storm of which his
+far-seeing eyes have already detected the first dim clouds. What to him
+are my feelings, my inclinations, my affections? Things of no moment, to
+be sacrificed so that I may serve him in the manner that will bring him
+the most profit. Yet you call him not selfish! Were he not selfish, I
+should go to him and say: 'I love Genevieve de Canaples. Create me Duke
+as you would do, did I wed her sister, and the Chevalier de Canaples
+will not withstand our union.' What think you would be his answer?"
+
+"I have a shrewd idea what his answer would be," I replied slowly. "Also
+I have a shrewd idea of what he will say when he learns in what manner
+you have defied his wishes."
+
+"He can but order me away from Court, or, at most, banish me from
+France."
+
+"And then what will become of you--of you and your wife?"
+
+"What is to become of us?" he cried in a tone that was almost that of
+anger. "Think you that I am a pauper dependent upon my uncle's bounty?
+I have an estate near Palermo, which, for all that it does not yield
+riches, is yet sufficient to enable us to live with dignity and comfort.
+I have told Genevieve, and she is content."
+
+I looked at his flushed face and laughed.
+
+"Well, well!" said I. "If you are resolved upon it, it is ended."
+
+He appeared to meditate for a moment, then--"We have decided to be
+married by the Cure of St. Innocent on the day after to-morrow."
+
+"Credieu!" I answered, with a whistle, "you have wasted no time in
+determining your plans. Does Yvonne know of it?"
+
+"We have dared tell nobody," he replied; and a moment later he added
+hesitatingly, "You, I know, will not betray us."
+
+"Do you know me so little that you doubt me on that score? Have no
+fear, Andrea, I shall not speak. Besides, to-morrow, or the next day at
+latest, I leave Canaples."
+
+"You do not mean that you are returning to the Lys de France!"
+
+"No. I am going farther than that. I am going to Paris."
+
+"To Paris?"
+
+"To Paris, to deliver myself up to M. de Montresor, who gave me leave to
+go to Reaux some seven weeks ago."
+
+"But it is madness, Gaston!" he ejaculated.
+
+"All virtue is madness in a world so sinful; nevertheless I go. In a
+measure I am glad that things have fallen out with you as they have
+done, for when the news goes abroad that you have married Genevieve de
+Canaples and left the heiress free, your enemies will vanish, and you
+will have no further need of me. New enemies you will have perchance,
+but in your strife with them I could lend you no help, were I by."
+
+He sat in silence casting pebbles into the stream, and watching the
+ripples they made upon the face of the waters.
+
+"Have you told Mademoiselle?" he asked at length.
+
+"Not yet. I shall tell her to-day. You also, Andrea, must take her into
+your confidence touching your approaching marriage. That she will prove
+a good friend to you I am assured."
+
+"But what reason shall I give form my secrecy?" he inquired, and
+inwardly I smiled to see how the selfishness which love begets in us had
+caused him already to forget my affairs, and how the thought of his
+own approaching union effaced all thought of me and the doom to which I
+went.
+
+"Give no reason," I answered. "Let Genevieve tell her of what you
+contemplate, and if a reason she must have, let Genevieve bid her come
+to me. This much will I do for you in the matter; indeed, Andrea, it is
+the last service I am like to render you."
+
+"Sh! Here comes the Chevalier. She shall be told to-day."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. THE WAY OF WOMAN
+
+
+For all that I realised that this love of mine for Yvonne was as a child
+still-born--a thing that had no existence save in the heart that had
+begotten it--I rejoiced meanly at the thought that she was not destined
+to become Andrea's wife. For since I understood that this woman--who to
+me was like no other of her sex--was not for so poor a thing as Gaston
+de Luynes, like the dog in the fable I wished that no other might
+possess her. Inevitable it seemed that sooner or later one must come who
+would woo and win her. But ere that befell, my Lord Cardinal would have
+meted out justice to me--the justice of the rope meseemed--and I should
+not be by to gnash my teeth in jealousy.
+
+That evening, when the Chevalier de Canaples had gone to pay a visit to
+his vineyard,--the thing that, next to himself, he loved most in this
+world,--and whilst Genevieve and Andrea were vowing a deathless love to
+each other in the rose garden, their favourite haunt when the Chevalier
+was absent, I seized the opportunity for making my adieux to Yvonne.
+
+We were leaning together upon the balustrade of the terrace, and our
+faces were turned towards the river and the wooded shores beyond--a
+landscape this that was as alive and beautiful now as it had been dead
+and grey when first I came to Canaples two months ago.
+
+Scarce were my first words spoken when she turned towards me, and
+methought--but I was mad, I told myself--that there was a catch in her
+voice as she exclaimed, "You are leaving us, Monsieur?"
+
+"To-morrow morning I shall crave Monsieur your father's permission to
+quit Canaples."
+
+"But why, Monsieur? Have we not made you happy here?"
+
+"So happy, Mademoiselle," I answered with fervour, "that at times it
+passes my belief that I am indeed Gaston de Luynes. But go I must. My
+honour demands of me this sacrifice."
+
+And in answer to the look of astonishment that filled her wondrous eyes,
+I told her what I had told Andrea touching my parole to Montresor, and
+the necessity of its redemption. As Andrea had done, she also dubbed it
+madness, but her glance was, nevertheless, so full of admiration, that
+methought to have earned it was worth the immolation of liberty--of life
+perchance; who could say?
+
+"Before I go, Mademoiselle," I pursued, looking straight before me as
+I spoke, and dimly conscious that her glance was bent upon my
+face--"before I go, I fain would thank you for all that you have done
+for me here. Your care has saved my life, Mademoiselle; your kindness,
+methinks, has saved my soul. For it seems to me that I am no longer the
+same man whom Michelot fished out of the Loire that night two months
+ago. I would thank you, Mademoiselle, for the happiness that has been
+mine during the past few days--a happiness such as for years has not
+fallen to my lot. To another and worthier man, the task of thanking you
+might be an easy one; but to me, who know myself to be so far beneath
+you, the obligation is so overwhelming that I know of no words to fitly
+express it."
+
+"Monsieur, Monsieur, I beseech you! Already you have said overmuch."
+
+"Nay, Mademoiselle; not half enough."
+
+"Have you forgotten, then, what you did for me? Our trivial service to
+you is but unseemly recompense. What other man would have come to my
+rescue as you came, with such odds against you--and forgetting the
+affronting words wherewith that very day I had met your warning? Tell
+me, Monsieur, who would have done that?"
+
+"Why, any man who deemed himself a gentleman, and who possessed such
+knowledge as I had."
+
+She laughed a laugh of unbelief.
+
+"You are mistaken, sir," she answered. "The deed was worthy of one of
+those preux chevaliers we read of, and I have never known but one man
+capable of accomplishing it."
+
+Those words and the tone wherein they were uttered set my brain on fire.
+I turned towards her; our glances met, and her eyes--those eyes that but
+a while ago had never looked on me without avowing the disdain wherein
+she had held me--were now filled with a light of kindliness, of
+sympathy, of tenderness that seemed more than I could endure.
+
+Already my hand was thrust into the bosom of my doublet, and my fingers
+were about to drag forth that little shred of green velvet that I had
+found in the coppice on the day of her abduction, and that I had kept
+ever since as one keeps the relic of a departed saint. Another moment
+and I should have poured out the story of the mad, hopeless passion that
+filled my heart to bursting, when of a sudden--"Yvonne, Yvonne!" came
+Genevieve's fresh voice from the other end of the terrace. The spell of
+that moment was broken.
+
+Methought Mademoiselle made a little gesture of impatience as she
+answered her sister's call; then, with a word of apology, she left me.
+
+Half dazed by the emotions that had made sport of me, I leaned over the
+balustrade, and with my elbows on the stone and my chin on my palms,
+I stared stupidly before me, thanking God for having sent Genevieve in
+time to save me from again earning Mademoiselle's scorn. For as I grew
+sober I did not doubt that with scorn she would have met the wild words
+that already trembled on my lips.
+
+I laughed harshly and aloud, such a laugh as those in Hell may vent.
+"Gaston, Gaston!" I muttered, "at thirty-two you are more a fool than
+ever you were at twenty."
+
+I told myself then that my fancy had vested her tone and look with a
+kindliness far beyond that which they contained, and as I thought of
+how I had deemed impatient the little gesture wherewith she had greeted
+Genevieve's interruption I laughed again.
+
+From the reverie into which, naturally enough, I lapsed, it was
+Mademoiselle who aroused me. She stood beside me with an unrest of
+manner so unusual in her, that straightway I guessed the substance of
+her talk with Genevieve.
+
+"So, Mademoiselle," I said, without waiting for her to speak, "you have
+learned what is afoot?"
+
+"I have," she answered. "That they love each other is no news to me.
+That they intend to wed does not surprise me. But that they should
+contemplate a secret marriage passes my comprehension."
+
+I cleared my throat as men will when about to embark upon a perilous
+subject with no starting-point determined.
+
+"It is time, Mademoiselle," I began, "that you should learn the true
+cause of M. de Mancini's presence at Canaples. It will enlighten you
+touching his motives for a secret wedding. Had things fallen out as was
+intended by those who planned his visit--Monsieur your father and my
+Lord Cardinal--it is improbable that you would ever have heard that
+which it now becomes necessary that I should tell you. I trust,
+Mademoiselle," I continued, "that you will hear me in a neutral
+spirit, without permitting your personal feelings to enter into your
+consideration of that which I shall unfold."
+
+"So long a preface augurs anything but well," she interposed, looking
+monstrous serious.
+
+"Not ill, at least, I hope. Hear me then. Your father and his Eminence
+are friends; the one has a daughter who is said to be very wealthy and
+whom he, with fond ambition, desires to see wedded to a man who can
+give her an illustrious name; the other possesses a nephew whom he can
+ennoble by the highest title that a man may bear who is not a prince of
+the blood,--and borne indeed by few who are not,--and whom he desires to
+see contract an alliance that will bring him enough of riches to enable
+him to bear his title with becoming dignity." I glanced at Mademoiselle,
+whose cheeks were growing an ominous red.
+
+"Well, Mademoiselle," I continued, "your father and Monseigneur de
+Mazarin appear to have bared their heart's desire to each other, and
+M. de Mancini was sent to Canaples to woo and win your father's elder
+daughter."
+
+A long pause followed, during which she stood with face aflame, averted
+eyes, and heaving bosom, betraying the feelings that stormed within
+her at the disclosure of the bargain whereof she had been a part. At
+length--"Oh, Monsieur!" she exclaimed in a choking voice, and clenching
+her shapely hands, "to think--"
+
+"I beseech you not to think, Mademoiselle," I interrupted calmly, for,
+having taken the first plunge, I was now master of myself. "The ironical
+little god, whom the ancients painted with bandaged eyes, has led M. de
+Mancini by the nose in this matter, and things have gone awry for the
+plotters. There, Mademoiselle, you have the reason for a clandestine
+union. Did Monsieur your father guess how Andrea's affections have"--I
+caught the word "miscarried" betimes, and substituted--"gone against his
+wishes, his opposition is not a thing to be doubted."
+
+"Are you sure there is no mistake?" she inquired after a pause. "Is all
+this really true, Monsieur?"
+
+"It is, indeed."
+
+"But how comes it that my father has seen naught of what has been so
+plain to me--that M. de Mancini was ever at my sister's side?"
+
+"Your father, Mademoiselle, is much engrossed in his vineyard. Moreover,
+when the Chevalier has been at hand he has been careful to show no
+greater regard for the one than for the other of you. I instructed him
+in this duplicity many weeks ago."
+
+She looked at me for a moment.
+
+"Oh, Monsieur," she cried passionately, "how deep is my humiliation! To
+think that I was made a part of so vile a bargain! Oh, I am glad that M.
+de Mancini has proved above the sordid task to which they set him--glad
+that he will dupe the Cardinal and my father."
+
+"So am not I, Mademoiselle," I exclaimed. She vouchsafed me a stare of
+ineffable surprise.
+
+"How?
+
+"Diable!" I answered. "I am M. de Mancini's friend. It was to shield him
+that I fought your brother; again, because of my attitude towards him
+was it that I went perilously near assassination at Reaux. Enemies
+sprang up about him when the Cardinal's matrimonial projects became
+known. Your brother picked a quarrel with him, and when I had dealt with
+your brother, St. Auban appeared, and after St. Auban there were others.
+When it is known that he has played this trick upon 'Uncle Giulio' his
+enemies will disappear; but, on the other hand, his prospects will all
+be blighted, and for that I am sorry."
+
+"So that was the motive of your duel with Eugene!"
+
+"At last you learn it."
+
+"And," she added in a curious voice, "you would have been better pleased
+had M. de Mancini carried out his uncle's wishes?"
+
+"It matters little what I would think, Mademoiselle," I answered
+guardedly, for I could not read that curious tone of hers.
+
+"Nevertheless, I am curious to hear your answer."
+
+What answer could I make? The truth--that for all my fine talk, I was
+at heart and in a sense right glad that she was not to become Andrea's
+wife--would have seemed ungallant. Moreover, I must have added the
+explanation that I desired to see her no man's wife, so that I might not
+seem to contradict myself. Therefore--
+
+"In truth, Mademoiselle," I answered, lying glibly, "it would have given
+me more pleasure had Andrea chosen to obey his Eminence."
+
+Her manner froze upon the instant.
+
+"In the consideration of your friend's advancement," she replied, half
+contemptuously, "you forget, M. de Luynes, to consider me. Am I, then, a
+thing to be bartered into the hands of the first fortune-hunter who
+woos me because he has been bidden so to do, and who is to marry me for
+political purposes? Pshaw, M. de Luynes!" she added, with a scornful
+laugh, "after all, I was a fool to expect aught else from--"
+
+She checked herself abruptly, and a sudden access of mercy left
+the stinging "you" unuttered. I stood by, dumb and sheepish, not
+understanding how the words that I had deemed gallant could have brought
+this tempest down upon my head. Before I could say aught that might have
+righted matters, or perchance made them worse--"Since you leave Canaples
+to-morrow," quoth she, "I will say 'Adieu,' Monsieur, for it is unlikely
+that we shall meet again."
+
+With a slight inclination of her head, and withholding her hand
+intentionally, she moved away, whilst I stood, as only a fool or a
+statue would stand, and watched her go.
+
+Once she paused, and, indeed, half turned, whereupon hope knocked at
+my heart again; but before I had admitted it, she had resumed her walk
+towards the house. Hungrily I followed her graceful, lissom figure with
+my eyes until she had crossed the threshold. Then, with a dull ache in
+my breast, I flung myself upon a stone seat, and, addressing myself to
+the setting sun for want of a better audience, I roundly cursed her sex
+for the knottiest puzzle that had ever plagued the mind of man in the
+unravelling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. FATHER AND SON
+
+
+"Gaston," quoth Andrea next morning, "you will remain at Canaples until
+to-morrow? You must, for to-morrow I am to be wed, and I would fain have
+your good wishes ere you go."
+
+"Nice hands, mine, to seek a benediction at," I grumbled.
+
+"But you will remain? Come, Gaston, we have been good friends, you and
+I, and who knows when next we shall meet? Believe me, I shall value your
+'God speed' above all others."
+
+"Likely enough, since it will be the only one you'll hear."
+
+But for all my sneers he was not to be put off. He talked and coaxed so
+winningly that in the end--albeit I am a man not easily turned from the
+course he has set himself--the affectionate pleading in his fresh young
+voice and the affectionate look in his dark eyes won me to his way.
+
+Forthwith I went in quest of the Chevalier, whom, at the indication of a
+lackey, I discovered in the room it pleased him to call his study--that
+same room into which we had been ushered on the day of our arrival at
+Canaples. I told him that on the morrow I must set out for Paris, and
+albeit he at first expressed a polite regret, yet when I had shown him
+how my honour was involved in my speedy return thither, he did not urge
+me to put off my departure.
+
+"It grieves me, sir, that you must go, and I deeply regret the motive
+that is taking you. Yet I hope that his Eminence, in recognition of the
+services you have rendered his nephew, will see fit to forget what cause
+for resentment he may have against you, and render you your liberty. If
+you will give me leave, Monsieur, I will write to his Eminence in this
+strain, and you shall be the bearer of my letter."
+
+I thanked him, with a smile of deprecation, as I thought of the true
+cause of Mazarin's resentment, which was precisely that of the plea upon
+which M. de Canaples sought to obtain for me my liberation.
+
+"And now, Monsieur," he pursued nervously, "touching Andrea and his
+visit here, I would say a word to you who are his friend, and may haply
+know something of his mind. It is over two months since he came here,
+and yet the--er--affair which we had hoped to bring about seems no
+nearer its conclusion than when first he came. Of late I have watched
+him and I have watched Yvonne; they are certainly good friends, yet not
+even the frail barrier of formality appears overcome betwixt them, and
+I am beginning to fear that Andrea is not only lukewarm in this matter,
+but is forgetful of his uncle's wishes and selfishly indifferent to
+Monseigneur's projects and mine, which, as he well knows, are the reason
+of his sojourn at my chateau. What think you of this, M. de Luynes?"
+
+He shot a furtive glance at me as he spoke, and with his long, lean
+forefinger he combed his beard in a nervous fashion.
+
+I gave a short laugh to cover my embarrassment at the question.
+
+"What do I think, Monsieur?" I echoed to gain time. Then, thinking that
+a sententious answer would be the most fitting,--"Ma foi! Love is as the
+spark that lies latent in flint and steel: for days and weeks these two
+may be as close together as you please, and naught will come of it; but
+one fine day, a hand--the hand of chance--will strike the one against
+the other, and lo!--the spark is born!"
+
+"You speak in parables, Monsieur," was his caustic comment.
+
+"'T is in parables that all religions are preached," I returned, "and
+love, methinks, is a great religion in this world."
+
+"Love, sir, love!" he cried petulantly. "The word makes me sick! What
+has love to do with this union? Love, sir, is a pretty theme for poets,
+romancers, and fools. The imagination of such a sentiment--for it is a
+sentiment that does not live save in the imagination--may serve to draw
+peasants and other low-bred clods into wedlock. With such as we--with
+gentlemen--it has naught to do. So let that be, Monsieur. Andrea de
+Mancini came hither to wed my daughter."
+
+"And I am certain, Monsieur," I answered stoutly, "that Andrea will wed
+your daughter."
+
+"You speak with confidence."
+
+"I know Andrea well. Signs that may be hidden to you are clear to me,
+and I have faith in my prophecy."
+
+He looked at me, and fell a victim to my confidence of manner. The
+petulancy died out of his face.
+
+"Well, well! We will hope. My Lord Cardinal is to create him Duke, and
+he will assume as title his wife's estate, becoming known to history as
+Andrea de Mancini, Duke of Canaples. Thus shall a great house be founded
+that will bear our name. You see the importance of it?"
+
+"Clearly."
+
+"And how reasonable is my anxiety?"
+
+"Assuredly."
+
+"And you are in sympathy with me?"
+
+"Pardieu! Why else did I go so near to killing your son?"
+
+"True," he mused. Then suddenly he added, "Apropos, have you heard that
+Eugene has become one of the leaders of these frondeur madmen?"
+
+"Ah! Then he is quite recovered?"
+
+"Unfortunately," he assented with a grimace, and thus our interview
+ended.
+
+That day wore slowly to its close. I wandered hither and thither in the
+chateau and the grounds, hungering throughout the long hours for a word
+with Mademoiselle--a glimpse of her, at least.
+
+But all day long she kept her chamber, the pretext being that she was
+beset by a migraine. By accident I came upon her that evening, at last,
+in the salon; yet my advent was the signal for her departure, and all
+the words she had for me were:
+
+"Still at Canaples, Monsieur? I thought you were to have left this
+morning." She looked paler than her wont, and her eyes were somewhat
+red.
+
+"I am remaining until to-morrow," said I awkwardly.
+
+"Vraiement!" was all she answered, and she was gone.
+
+Next morning the Chevalier and I breakfasted alone. Mademoiselle's
+migraine was worse. Genevieve was nursing, so her maid brought
+word--whilst Andrea had gone out an hour before and had not returned.
+
+The Chevalier shot me an apologetic glance across the board.
+
+"'T is a poor 'God speed' to you, M. de Luynes."
+
+I made light of it and turned the conversation into an indifferent
+channel, wherein it abided until, filling himself a bumper of Anjou, the
+Chevalier solemnly drank to my safe journey and good fortune in Paris.
+
+At that moment Andrea entered by the door abutting on the terrace
+balcony. He was flushed, and his eyes sparkled with a joyous fever.
+Profuse was he in his apologies, which, howbeit, were passing vague
+in character, and which he brought to a close by pledging me as the
+Chevalier had done already.
+
+As we rose, Genevieve appeared with the news that Yvonne was somewhat
+better, adding that she had come to take leave of me. Her composure
+surprised me gladly, for albeit in her eyes there was also a telltale
+light, the lids, demurely downcast as was her wont, amply screened it
+from the vulgar gaze.
+
+Andrea would tell his father-in-law of the marriage later in the day;
+and for all I am not a chicken-hearted man, still I had no stomach to be
+at hand when the storm broke.
+
+The moment having come for my departure, and Michelot awaiting me
+already with the horses in the courtyard, M. de Canaples left us to seek
+the letter which I was to carry to his Eminence. So soon as the door had
+closed upon him, Andrea came forward, leading his bride by the hand, and
+asked me to wish them happiness.
+
+"With all my heart," I answered; "and if happiness be accorded you in a
+measure with the fervency of my wishes then shall you, indeed, be happy.
+Each of you I congratulate upon the companion in life you have chosen.
+Cherish him, Mademoi--Madame, for he is loyal and true--and such are
+rare in this world."
+
+It is possible that I might have said more in this benign and fatherly
+strain--for it seemed to me that this new role I had assumed suited
+me wondrous well--but a shadow that drew our eyes towards the nearest
+window interrupted me. And what we saw there drew a cry from Andrea, a
+shudder from Genevieve, and from me a gasp that was half amazement, half
+dismay. For, leaning upon the sill, surveying us with a sardonic, evil
+grin, we beheld Eugene de Canaples, the man whom I had left with a
+sword-thrust through his middle behind the Hotel Vendome two months ago.
+Whence was he sprung, and why came he thus to his father's house?
+
+He started as I faced him, for doubtless St. Auban had boasted to him
+that he had killed me in a duel. For a moment he remained at the window,
+then he disappeared, and we could hear the ring of his spurred heel as
+he walked along the balcony towards the door.
+
+And simultaneously came the quick, hurrying steps of the Chevalier de
+Canaples, as he crossed the hall, returning with the letter he had gone
+to fetch.
+
+Genevieve shuddered again, and looked fearfully from one door to the
+other; Andrea drew a sharp breath like a man in pain, whilst I rapped
+out an oath to brace my nerves for the scene which we all three foresaw.
+Then in silence we waited, some subtle instinct warning us of the
+disaster that impended.
+
+The steps on the balcony halted, and a second later those in the hall;
+and then, as though the thing had been rehearsed and timed so that the
+spectators might derive the utmost effect from it, the doors opened
+together, and on the opposing thresholds, with the width of the room
+betwixt them, stood father and son confronted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. OF HOW I LEFT CANAPLES
+
+
+Whilst a man might tell a dozen did those two remain motionless, the
+one eyeing the other. But their bearing was as widely different as their
+figures; Eugene's stalwart frame stood firm and erect, insolence in
+every line of it, reflected perchance from the smile that lurked about
+the corners of his thin-lipped mouth.
+
+The hat, which he had not had the grace to doff, set jauntily upon his
+straight black hair, the jerkin of leather which he wore, and the stout
+sword which hung from the plainest of belts, all served to give him the
+air of a ruffler, or tavern knight.
+
+The Chevalier, on the other hand, stood as if turned to stone. From his
+enervated fingers the letter fluttered to the ground, and on his pale,
+thin face was to be read a displeasure mixed with fear.
+
+At length, with an oath, the old man broke the silence.
+
+"What seek you at Canaples?" he asked in a quivering voice, as he
+advanced into the room. "Are you so dead to shame that you dare present
+yourself with such effrontery? Off with your hat, sir!" he blazed,
+stamping his foot, and going from pale to crimson. "Off with your hat,
+or Mortdieu, I'll have you flung out of doors by my grooms."
+
+This show of vehemence, as sudden as it was unexpected, drew from Eugene
+a meek obedience that I had not looked for. Nevertheless, the young
+man's lip curled as he uncovered.
+
+"How fatherly is your greeting!" he sneered. The Chevalier's eyes
+flashed a glance that lacked no venom at his son.
+
+"What manner of greeting did you look for?" he returned hotly. "Did you
+expect me to set a ring upon your finger, and have the fattened calf
+killed in honour of your return? Sangdieu, sir! Have you come hither
+to show me how a father should welcome the profligate son who has
+dishonoured his name? Why are you here, unbidden? Answer me, sir!"
+
+A deep flush overspread Eugene's cheeks.
+
+"I had thought when I crossed the threshold that this was the Chateau de
+Canaples, or else that my name was Canaples--I know not which. Clearly
+I was mistaken, for here is a lady who has no word either of greeting or
+intercession for me, and who, therefore, cannot be my sister, and yonder
+a man whom I should never look to find in my father's house."
+
+I took a step forward, a hot answer on my lips, when from the doorway at
+my back came Yvonne's sweet voice.
+
+"Eugene! You here?"
+
+"As you see, Sister. Though had you delayed your coming 't is probable
+you would no longer have found me, for your father welcomes me with
+oaths and threatens me with his grooms."
+
+She cast a reproachful glance upon the Chevalier, 'neath which the anger
+seemed to die out of him; then she went forward with hands outstretched
+and a sad smile upon her lips.
+
+"Yvonne!" The Chevalier's voice rang out sharp and sudden.
+
+She stopped.
+
+"I forbid you to approach that man!"
+
+For a moment she appeared to hesitate; then, leisurely pursuing her way,
+she set her hands upon her brother's shoulders and embraced him.
+
+The Chevalier swore through set teeth; Genevieve trembled, Andrea looked
+askance, and I laughed softly at the Chevalier's discomfiture. Eugene
+flung his hat and cloak into a corner and strode across the room to
+where his father stood.
+
+"And now, Monsieur, since I have travelled all the way from Paris to
+save my house from a step that will bring it into the contempt of all
+France, I shall not go until you have heard me."
+
+The Chevalier shrugged his shoulders and made as if to turn away.
+Yvonne's greeting of her brother appeared to have quenched the spark of
+spirit that for a moment had glimmered in the little man's breast.
+
+"Monsieur," cried Eugene, "believe me that what I have to say is of the
+utmost consequence, and say it I will--whether before these strangers or
+in your private ear shall be as you elect."
+
+The old man glanced about him like one who seeks a way of escape. At
+last--"If say it you must," he growled, "say it here and now. And when
+you have said it, go."
+
+Eugene scowled at me, and from me to Andrea. To pay him for that scowl,
+I had it in my mind to stay; but, overcoming the clownish thought, I
+took Andrea by the arm.
+
+"Come, Andrea," I said, "we will take a turn outside while these family
+matters are in discussion."
+
+I had a shrewd idea what was the substance of Eugene's mission to
+Canaples--to expostulate with his father touching the proposed marriage
+of Yvonne to the Cardinal's nephew.
+
+Nor was I wrong, for when, some moments later, the Chevalier recalled us
+from the terrace, where we were strolling--"What think you he has come
+hither to tell me?" he inquired as we entered. He pointed to his son
+as he spoke, and passion shook his slender frame as the breeze shakes a
+leaf. Mademoiselle and Genevieve sat hand in hand--Yvonne deadly pale,
+Genevieve weeping.
+
+"What think you he has the effrontery to say? Tetedieu! it seems that he
+has profited little by the lesson you read him in the horse-market about
+meddling in matters which concern him not. He has come hither to tell me
+that he will not permit his sister to wed the Cardinal's nephew; that he
+will not have the estates of Canaples pass into the hands of a foreign
+upstart. He, forsooth--he! he! he!" And at each utterance of the pronoun
+he lunged with his forefinger in the direction of his son. "This he is
+not ashamed to utter before Yvonne herself!"
+
+"You compelled me to do so," cried Eugene angrily.
+
+"I?" ejaculated the Chevalier. "Did I compel you to come hither with
+your 'I will' and 'I will not'? Who are you, that you should give laws
+at Canaples? And he adds, sir," quoth the old knight excitedly, "that
+sooner than allow this marriage to take place he will kill M. de
+Mancini."
+
+"I shall be happy to afford him the opportunity!" shouted Andrea,
+bounding forward.
+
+Eugene looked up quickly and gave a short laugh. Thereupon followed a
+wild hubbub; everyone rushed forward and everyone talked; even little
+Genevieve--louder than all the rest.
+
+"You shall not fight! You shall not fight!" she cried, and her voice
+was so laden with command that all others grew silent and all eyes were
+turned upon her.
+
+"What affair is this of yours, little one?" quoth Eugene.
+
+"'T is this," she answered, panting, "that you need fear no marriage
+'twixt my sister and Andrea."
+
+In her eagerness she had cast caution to the winds of heaven. Her father
+and brother stared askance at her; I gave an inward groan.
+
+"Andrea!" echoed Eugene at last. "What is this man to you that you speak
+thus of him?"
+
+The girl flung herself upon her father's breast.
+
+"Father," she sobbed, "dear father, forgive!"
+
+The Chevalier's brow grew dark; roughly he seized her by the arms and,
+holding her at arm's length, scanned her face.
+
+"What must I forgive?" he inquired in a thick voice. "What is M. de
+Mancini to you?"
+
+Some sinister note in her father's voice caused the girl to grow of a
+sudden calm and to assume a rigidity that reminded me of her sister.
+
+"He is my husband!" she answered. And there was a note of pride--almost
+of triumph--in her voice.
+
+An awful silence followed the launching of that thunderbolt. Eugene
+stood with open mouth, staring now at Genevieve, now at his father.
+Andrea set his arm about his bride's waist, and her fair head was laid
+trustingly upon his shoulder. The Chevalier's eyes rolled ominously. At
+length he spoke in a dangerously calm voice.
+
+"How long is it--how long have you been wed?"
+
+"We were wed in Blois an hour ago," answered Genevieve.
+
+Something that was like a grunt escaped the Chevalier, then his eye
+fastened upon me, and his anger boiled up.
+
+"You knew of this?" he asked, coming towards me.
+
+"I knew of it."
+
+"Then you lied to me yesterday."
+
+I drew myself up, stiff as a broomstick.
+
+"I do not understand," I answered coldly.
+
+"Did you not give me your assurance that M. de Mancini would marry
+Yvonne?"
+
+"I did not, Monsieur. I did but tell you that he would wed your
+daughter. And, ma foi! your daughter he has wed."
+
+"You have fooled me, scelerat!" he blazed out. "You, who have been
+sheltered by--"
+
+"Father!" Yvonne interrupted, taking his arm. "M. de Luynes has behaved
+no worse than have I, or any one of us, in this matter."
+
+"No!" he cried, and pointed to Andrea. "'T is you who have wrought this
+infamy. Eugene," he exclaimed, turning of a sudden to his son, "you have
+a sword; wipe out this shame."
+
+"Shame!" echoed Genevieve. "Oh, father, where is the shame? If it were
+no shame for Andrea to marry Yvonne, surely--"
+
+"Silence!" he thundered. "Eugene--"
+
+But Eugene answered him with a contemptuous laugh.
+
+"You are quick enough to call upon my sword, now that things have not
+fallen out as you would have them. Where are your grooms now, Monsieur?"
+
+"Insolent hound!" cried his father indignantly. Then, letting fall his
+arms with something that was near akin to a sob--"Is there no one left
+to do aught but mock me?" he groaned.
+
+But this weakness was no more than momentary.
+
+"Out of my house, sir!" he blazed, turning upon Andrea, and for a moment
+methought he would have struck him. "Out of my house--you and this wife
+of yours!"
+
+"Father!" sobbed Genevieve, with hands outstretched in entreaty.
+
+"Out of my house," he repeated, "and you also, M. de Luynes. Away with
+you! Go with the master you have served so well." And, turning on his
+heel, he strode towards the door.
+
+"Father--dear father!" cried Genevieve, following him: he slammed the
+door in her face for answer.
+
+With a moan she sank down upon her knees, her frail body shaken by
+convulsive sobs--Dieu! what a bridal morn was hers!
+
+Andrea and Yvonne raised her and led her to a chair. Eugene watched them
+with a cynical eye, then laughed brutally, and, gathering up his hat and
+cloak, he moved towards the balcony door and vanished.
+
+"Is M. de Luynes still there?" quoth Genevieve presently.
+
+"I am here, Madame."
+
+"You had best set out, Monsieur," she said. "We shall follow soon--very
+soon."
+
+I took Andrea aside and asked him whither it was his intention to take
+his wife. He replied that they would go to Chambord, where they would
+remain for some weeks in the hope that the Chevalier might relent
+sufficiently to forgive them. Thereafter it was his purpose to take his
+bride home to his Sicilian demesne.
+
+Our farewells were soon spoken; yet none the less warm, for all its
+brevity, was my leave-taking of Andrea, and our wishes for each other's
+happiness were as fervent as the human heart can shape. We little
+thought that we were not destined to meet again for years.
+
+Yvonne's adieu was cold and formal--so cold and formal that it seemed to
+rob the sunshine of its glory for me as I stepped out into the open air.
+
+After all, what mattered it? I was a fool to have entertained a single
+tender thought concerning her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. OF MY RETURN TO PARIS
+
+
+Scant cause is there for me to tarry over the details of my return to
+Paris. A sad enough journey was it; as sad for my poor Michelot as for
+myself, since he rode with one so dejected as I.
+
+Things had gone ill, and I feared that when the Cardinal heard the story
+things would go worse, for Mazarin was never a tolerant man, nor one to
+be led by the gospel of mercy and forgiveness. For myself I foresaw the
+rope--possibly even the wheel; and a hundred times a day I dubbed myself
+a fool for obeying the voice of honour with such punctiliousness when
+so grim a reward awaited me. What mood was on me--me, Gaston de Luynes,
+whose honour had been long since besmirched and tattered until no
+outward semblance of honour was left?
+
+But swift in the footsteps of that question would come the
+answer--Yvonne. Ay, truly enough, it was because in my heart I had
+dared to hold a sentiment of love for her, the purest--nay, the only
+pure--thing my heart had held for many a year, that I would set nothing
+vile to keep company with that sentiment; that until my sun should
+set--and already it dropped swiftly towards life's horizon--my actions
+should be the actions of such a man as might win Yvonne's affections.
+
+But let that be. This idle restrospective mood can interest you but
+little; nor can you profit from it, unless, indeed, it be by noting
+how holy and cleansing to the heart of man is the love--albeit
+unrequited--that he bears a good woman.
+
+As we drew near Meung--where we lay on that first night of our
+journey--a light travelling chaise, going in the same direction, passed
+us at a gallop. As it flashed by, I caught a glimpse of Eugene de
+Canaples's swart face through the window. Whether the recognition was
+mutual I cannot say--nor does it signify.
+
+When we reached the Hotel de la Couronne, half an hour later, we saw
+that same chaise disappearing round a corner of the street, whilst
+through the porte-cochere the hostler was leading a pair of horses,
+foam-flecked and steaming with sweat.
+
+Whither went Master Canaples at such a rate, and in a haste that caused
+him to travel day and night? To a goal he little looked for--or rather,
+which, in the madness of his headlong rush, he could not see. So I was
+to learn ere long.
+
+Next day I awoke betimes, and setting my window wide to let in the
+fresh, clean-smelling air of that May morning I made shift to dress.
+Save for the cackle of the poultry which had strayed into the courtyard,
+and the noisy yawns and sleep-laden ejaculations of the stable-boy, who
+was drawing water for the horses, all was still, for it had not yet gone
+five o'clock.
+
+But of a sudden a door opened somewhere, and a step rang out,
+accompanied by the jangle of spurs, and with it came a sharp, unpleasant
+voice calling for its owner's horse. There was a familiar sound in those
+shrill accents that caused me to thrust my head through the casement.
+But I was quick to withdraw it, as I recognised in the gaily dressed
+little fellow below my old friend Malpertuis.
+
+I know not what impulse made me draw back so suddenly. The action was as
+much the child of instinct as of the lately acquired habit of concealing
+my face from the gaze of all who were likely to spread abroad the news
+that I still lived.
+
+From behind my curtains I watched Malpertuis ride out of the yard,
+saying, in answer to a parting question of the landlord, who had come
+upon the scene, that he would breakfast at Beaugency.
+
+Then, as he rode down the street, he of a sudden raised his discordant
+voice and sang to the accompaniment of his horse's hoofs. And the burden
+of his song ran thus:
+
+ A frondeur wind
+ Got up to-day,
+ 'Gainst Mazarin
+ It blows, they say.
+
+I listened in amazement to his raven's voice.
+
+Whither was he bound, I asked myself, and whence a haste that made him
+set out fasting, with an anti-cardinalist ditty on his lips, and ride
+two leagues to seek a breakfast in a village that did not hold an inn
+where a dog might be housed in comfort?
+
+Like Eugene de Canaples, he also travelled towards a goal that he little
+dreamt of. And so albeit the one went south and the other north,
+these two men were, between them, drawing together the thread of this
+narrative of mine, as anon you shall learn.
+
+We reached Paris at dusk three days later, and we went straight to my
+old lodging in the Rue St. Antoine.
+
+Coupri started and gasped upon beholding me, and not until I had cursed
+him for a fool in a voice that was passing human would he believe that I
+was no ghost. He too had heard the rumour of my death.
+
+I dispatched Michelot to the Palais Royal, where--without permitting his
+motive to transpire--he was to ascertain for me whether M. de Montresor
+was in Paris, whether he still dwelt at the Hotel des Cloches, and at
+what hour he could be found there.
+
+Whilst he was away I went up to my room, and there I found a letter
+which Coupri informed me had been left by a lackey a month ago--before
+the report that I had been killed had reached Paris--and since lain
+forgotten. It was a delicate note, to which still hung the ghost of a
+perfume; there were no arms on the seal, but the writing I took to be
+that of my aunt, the Duchesse de Chevreuse, and vaguely marvelling what
+motive she could have had for communicating with me, I cut the silk.
+
+It was, indeed, from the Duchesse, but it contained no more than a
+request that I should visit her at her hotel on the day following upon
+that on which she had written, adding that she had pleasing news for me.
+
+I thrust the note into my pocket with a sigh. Of what could it avail me
+now to present myself at her hotel? Her invitation was for a month ago.
+Since then she would likely enough have heard the rumour that had been
+current, and would have ceased to expect me.
+
+I caught myself wondering whether the news might have caused her a pang
+of regret, and somehow methought this possible. For of all my relatives,
+Madame de Chevreuse was the only one--and she was but my aunt by
+marriage--who of late years had shown me any kindness, or even
+recognition. I marvelled what her pleasing news could be, and I
+concluded that probably she had heard of my difficulties, and wished
+once again to help me out of them. Well, my purse was hollow, indeed,
+at the moment, but I need not trouble her, since I was going somewhere
+where purses are not needed--on a journey to which no expenses are
+attached.
+
+In my heart, nevertheless, I blessed the gracious lady, who, for all the
+lies that the world may have told of her, was the kindest woman I had
+known, and the best--save one other.
+
+I was still musing when Michelot returned with the information that M.
+de Montresor was to be found at the Hotel des Cloches, whither he had
+gone to sup a few minutes before. Straightway I set out, bidding him
+attend me, and, muffled in my cloak, I proceeded at a brisk pace to the
+Rue des Fosses St. Germain, where the lieutenant's auberge was situated.
+
+I left Michelot in the common-room, and, preceded by the plump little
+woman who owned the house, I ascended to Montresor's chamber. I found
+the young soldier at table, and, fortunately, alone. He rose as I
+entered, and as the hostess, retreating, closed the door, I doffed my
+hat, and letting fall my cloak revealed myself. His lips parted, and I
+heard the hiss of an indrawn breath as his astonished eyes fell upon my
+countenance. My laugh dispelled his doubts that I might be other than
+flesh and blood--yet not his doubts touching my identity. He caught up
+a taper and, coming forward, he cast the light on my face for a moment,
+then setting the candle back upon the table, he vented his surprise in
+an oath or two, which was natural enough in one of his calling.
+
+"'T is clear, Lieutenant," quoth I, as I detached my sword from the
+baldrick, "that you believed me dead. Fate willed, however, that I
+should be restored to life, and so soon as I had recovered sufficient
+strength to undertake the journey to Paris, I set out. I arrived an hour
+ago, and here I am, to redeem my word of honour, and surrender the sword
+and liberty which you but lent me."
+
+I placed my rapier on the table and waited for him to speak. Instead,
+however, he continued to stare at me for some moments, and when at last
+he did break the silence, it was to burst into a laugh that poured from
+his throat in rich, mellow peals, as he lay back in his chair.
+
+My wrath arose. Had I travelled from Blois, and done what I deemed the
+most honourable deed of my life, to be laughed at for my pains by a
+foppish young jackanapes of his Eminence's guards? Something of my
+displeasure must he have seen reflected on my face, for of a sudden he
+checked his mirth.
+
+"Forgive me, M. de Luynes," he gasped. "Pardieu, 't is no matter for
+laughter, and albeit I laughed with more zest than courtesy, I give you
+my word that my admiration for you vastly exceeds my amusement. M. de
+Luynes," he added, rising and holding out his hand to me, "there are
+liars in Paris who give you an evil name--men who laughed at me when
+they heard that I had given you leave to go on parole to St. Sulpice des
+Reaux that night, trusting to your word of honour that you would return
+if you lived. His Eminence dubbed me a fool and went near to dismissing
+me from his service, and yet I have now the proof that my confidence was
+not misplaced, since even though you were believed to be dead, you did
+not hesitate to bring me your sword."
+
+"Monsieur, spare me!" I exclaimed, for in truth his compliments waxed as
+irksome as had been his whilom merriment.
+
+He continued, however, his laudatory address, and when it was at last
+ended, and he paused exhausted alike in breath and brain, it was to take
+up my sword and return it to me with my parole, pronouncing me a free
+man, and advising me to let men continue to think me dead, and to
+withdraw from France. He cut short my half-protesting thanks, and
+calling the hostess bade her set another cover, whilst me he invited to
+share his supper. And as we ate he again urged upon me the advice that I
+should go abroad.
+
+"For by Heaven," he added, "Mazarin has been as a raging beast since the
+news was brought him yesterday of his nephew's marriage."
+
+"How?" I cried. "He has heard already?"
+
+"He has, indeed; and should he learn that your flesh still walks the
+earth, methinks it would go worse with you than it went even with Eugene
+de Canaples."
+
+In answer to the questions with which I excitedly plied him, I drew from
+him the story of how Eugene had arrived the day before in Paris, and
+gone straight to the Palais Royal. M. de Montresor had been on guard
+in the ante-chamber, and in virtue of an excitement noticeable in
+Canaples's bearing, coupled with the ill-odour wherein already he was
+held by Mazarin, the lieutenant's presence had been commanded in the
+Cardinal's closet during the interview--for his Eminence was never like
+to acquire fame for valour.
+
+In his exultation at what had chanced, and at the manner in which
+Mazarin's Chateau en Espagne had been dispelled, Canaples used little
+caution, or even discretion, in what he said. In fact, from what
+Montresor told me, I gathered that the fool's eagerness to be the first
+to bear the tidings to Mazarin sprang from a rash desire to gloat over
+the Cardinal's discomfiture. He had told his story insolently--almost
+derisively--and Mazarin's fury, driven beyond bounds already by what
+he had heard, became a very tempest of passion 'neath the lash of
+Canaples's impertinences. And, naturally enough, that tempest had burst
+upon the only head available--Eugene de Canaples's--and the Cardinal had
+answered his jibes with interest by calling upon Montresor to arrest the
+fellow and bear him to the Bastille.
+
+When the astonished and sobered Canaples had indignantly asked upon what
+charge he was being robbed of his liberty, the Cardinal had laughed
+at him, and answered with his never-failing axiom that "He who sings,
+pays."
+
+"You sang lustily enough just now," his Eminence had added, "and you
+shall pay by lodging awhile in an oubliette of the Bastille, where you
+may lift up your voice to sing the De profundis."
+
+"Was my name not mentioned?" I anxiously inquired when Montresor had
+finished.
+
+"Not once. You may depend that I should have remarked it. After I had
+taken Canaples away, the Cardinal, I am told, sat down, and, still
+trembling with rage, wrote a letter which he straightway dispatched to
+the Chevalier Armand de Canaples, at Blois.
+
+"No doubt," I mused, "he attributes much blame to me for what has come
+to pass."
+
+"Not a doubt of it. This morning he said to me that it was a pity your
+wings had not been clipped before you left Paris, and that his misplaced
+clemency had helped to bring him great misfortunes. You see, therefore,
+M. de Luynes, that your sojourn in France will be attended with great
+peril. I advise you to try Spain; 't is a martial country where a man of
+the sword may find honourable and even profitable employment."
+
+His counsel I deemed sound. But how follow it? Then of a sudden I
+bethought me of Madame de Chevreuse's friendly letter. Doubtless she
+would assist me once again, and in such an extremity as this. And with
+the conception of the thought came the resolution to visit her on the
+morrow. That formed, I gave myself up to the task of drinking M. de
+Montresor under the table with an abandon which had not been mine for
+months. In each goblet that I drained, methought I saw Yvonne's sweet
+face floating on the surface of the red Armagnac; it looked now sad, now
+reproachful, still I drank on, and in each cup I pledged her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. OF HOW THE CHEVALIER DE CANAPLES BECAME A FRONDEUR
+
+
+It wanted an hour or so to noon next day as I drove across the Pont Neuf
+in a closed carriage, and was borne down the Rue St. Dominique to the
+portals of that splendid palace, facing the Jacobins, which bears the
+title of the "Hotel de Luynes," and over the portals of which is carved
+the escutcheon of our house.
+
+Michelot--in obedience to the orders I had given him--got down only to
+be informed that Madame la Duchesse was in the country. The lackey who
+was summoned did not know where the lady might be found, nor when she
+might return to Paris. And so I was compelled to drive back almost
+despairingly to the Rue St. Antoine, and there lie concealed, nursing my
+impatience, until my aunt should return.
+
+Daily I sent Michelot to the Hotel de Luynes to make the same inquiry,
+and to return daily with the same dispiriting reply--that there was no
+news of Madame la Duchesse.
+
+In this fashion some three weeks wore themselves out, during which
+period I lay in my concealment, a prey to weariness unutterable. I might
+not venture forth save at night, unless I wore a mask; and as masks
+were no longer to be worn without attracting notice--as during the late
+king's reign--I dared not indulge the practice.
+
+Certainly my ennui was greatly relieved by the visits of Montresor,
+which grew very frequent, the lad appearing to have conceived a kindness
+for me; and during those three weeks our fellowship at nights over a
+bottle or two engendered naturally enough a friendship and an intimacy
+between us.
+
+I had written to Andrea on the morrow of my return to Paris, to tell
+him how kindly Montresor had dealt with me, and some ten days later the
+following letter was brought me by the lieutenant--to whom, for safety,
+it had been forwarded:
+
+
+"MY VERY DEAR GASTON:
+
+I have no words wherewith to express my joy at the good news you send
+me, which terminates the anxiety that has been mine since you left us on
+the disastrous morning of our nuptials.
+
+The uncertainty touching your fate, the fear that the worst might have
+befallen you, and the realisation that I--for whom you have done so
+much--might do naught for you in your hour of need, has been the one
+cloud to mar the sunshine of my own bliss.
+
+That cloud your letter has dispelled, and the knowledge of your safety
+renders my happiness complete.
+
+The Chevalier maintains his unforgiving mood, as no doubt doth also my
+Lord Cardinal. But what to me are the frowns of either, so that my lady
+smile? My little Genevieve is yet somewhat vexed in spirit at all this,
+but I am teaching her to have faith in Time, the patron saint of all
+lovers who follow not the course their parents set them. And so that
+time may be allowed to intercede and appeal to the parent heart with
+the potent prayer of a daughter's absence, I shall take my lady from
+Chambord some three days hence. We shall travel by easy stages to
+Marseilles, and there take ship for Palermo.
+
+And so, dear, trusty friend, until we meet again, fare you well and
+may God hold you safe from the wickedness of man, devil, and my Lord
+Cardinal.
+
+For all that you have done for me, no words of mine can thank you,
+but should you determine to quit this France of yours, and journey to
+Palermo after me, you shall never want a roof to shelter you or a board
+to sit at, so long as roof and board are owned by him who signs himself,
+in love at least, your brother--
+
+"ANDREA DE MANCINI."
+
+
+With a sigh I set the letter down. A sigh of love and gratitude it was;
+a sigh also of regret for the bright, happy boy who had been the source
+alike of my recent joys and sorrows, and whom methought I was not
+likely to see again for many a day, since the peaceful vegetation of his
+Sicilian home held little attraction for me, a man of action.
+
+It was on the evening of the last Sunday in May, whilst the bell of
+the Jesuits, close by, was tinkling out its summons to vespers, that
+Montresor burst suddenly into my room with the request that I should
+get my hat and cloak and go with him to pay a visit. In reply to my
+questions--"Monseigneur's letter to Armand de Canaples," he said, "has
+borne fruit already. Come with me and you shall learn how."
+
+He led me past the Bastille and up the Rue des Tournelles to the door
+of an unpretentious house, upon which he knocked. We were admitted by an
+old woman to whom Montresor appeared to be known, for, after exchanging
+a word or two with her, he himself led the way upstairs and opened the
+door of a room for me.
+
+By the melancholy light of a single taper burning upon the table I
+beheld a fair-sized room containing a curtained bed.
+
+My companion took up the candle, and stepping to the bedside, he drew
+apart the curtains.
+
+Lying there I beheld a man whose countenance, despite its pallor and
+the bloody bandages about his brow, I recognised for that of the little
+spitfire Malpertuis.
+
+As the light fell upon his face, the little fellow opened his eyes, and
+upon beholding me at his side he made a sudden movement which wrung from
+him a cry of pain.
+
+"Lie still, Monsieur," said Montresor quietly.
+
+But for all the lieutenant's remonstrances, he struggled up into a
+sitting posture, requesting Montresor to set the pillows at his back.
+
+"Thank God you are here, M. de Luynes!" he said. "I learnt at Canaples
+that you were not dead."
+
+"You have been to Canaples?"
+
+"I was a guest of the Chevalier for twelve days. I arrived there on the
+day after your departure."
+
+"You!" I ejaculated. "Pray what took you to Canaples?"
+
+"What took me there?" he echoed, turning his feverish eyes upon me,
+almost with fierceness. "The same motive that led me to join hands with
+that ruffian St. Auban, when he spoke of waging war against Mancini; the
+same motive that led me to break with him when I saw through his plans,
+and when the abduction of Mademoiselle was on foot; the same motive that
+made me come to you and tell you of the proposed abduction so that you
+might interfere if you had the power, or cause others to do so if you
+had not."
+
+I lay back in my chair and stared at him. Was this, then, another suitor
+of Yvonne de Canaples, and were all men mad with love of her?
+
+Presently he continued:
+
+"When I heard that St. Auban was in Paris, having apparently abandoned
+all hope in connection with Mademoiselle, I obtained a letter from M. de
+la Rochefoucauld--who is an intimate friend of mine--and armed with this
+I set out. As luck would have it I got embroiled in the streets of Blois
+with a couple of cardinalist gentlemen, who chose to be offended by
+lampoon of the Fronde that I was humming. I am not a patient man, and I
+am even indiscreet in moments of choler. I ended by crying, 'Down with
+Mazarin and all his creatures,' and I would of a certainty have had my
+throat slit, had not a slight and elegant gentleman interposed, and,
+exercising a wonderful influence over my assailants, extricated me from
+my predicament. This gentleman was the Chevalier de Canaples. He was
+strangely enough in a mood to be pleased by an anti-cardinalist ditty,
+for his rage against Andrea de Mancini--which he took no pains to
+conceal--had extended already to the Cardinal, and from morn till night
+he did little else but revile the whole Italian brood--as he chose to
+dub the Cardinal's family."
+
+I recognised the old knight's weak, vacillating character in this, a
+creature of moods that, like the vane on a steeple, turns this way or
+that, as the wind blows.
+
+"I crave your patience, M. de Luynes," he continued, "and beg of you
+to hear my story so that you may determine whether you will save the
+Canaples from the danger that threatens them. I only ask that you
+dispatch a reliable messenger to Blois. But hear me out first. In virtue
+as much of La Rochefoucauld's letters as of the sentiments which the
+Chevalier heard me express, I became the honoured guest at his chateau.
+Three days after my arrival I sustained a shock by the unexpected
+appearance at Canaples of St. Auban. The Chevalier, however, refused
+him admittance, and, baffled, the Marquis was forced to withdraw. But he
+went no farther than Blois, where he hired himself a room at the Lys de
+France. The Chevalier hated him as a mad dog hates water--almost as much
+as he hated you. He spoke often of you, and always bitterly."
+
+Before I knew what I had said--
+
+"And Mademoiselle?" I burst out. "Did she ever mention my name?"
+
+Malpertuis looked up quickly at the question, and a wan smile flickered
+round his lips.
+
+"Once she spoke of you to me--pityingly, as one might speak of a dead
+man whose life had not been good."
+
+"Yes, yes," I broke in. "It matters little. Your story, M. Malpertuis."
+
+"After I had been at the chateau ten days, we learnt that Eugene de
+Canaples had been sent to the Bastille. The news came in a letter penned
+by his Eminence himself--a bitter, viperish letter, with a covert threat
+in every line. The Chevalier's anger went white hot as he read the
+disappointed Cardinal's epistle. His Eminence accused Eugene of being a
+frondeur; M. de Canaples, whose politics had grown sadly rusted in the
+country, asked me the meaning of the word. I explained to him the
+petty squabbles between Court and Parliament, in consequence of the
+extortionate imposts and of Mazarin's avariciousness. I avowed myself a
+partisan of the Fronde, and within three days the Chevalier--who but
+a little time before had sought an alliance with the Cardinal's
+family--had become as rabid a frondeur as M. de Gondi, as fierce an
+anti-cardinalist as M. de Beaufort.
+
+"I humoured him in his new madness, with the result that ere long from
+being a frondeur in heart, he thirsted to become a frondeur in deeds,
+and he ended by begging me to bear a letter from him to the Coadjutor
+of Paris, wherein he offered to place at M. de Gondi's disposal, towards
+the expenses of the civil war which he believed to be imminent,--as,
+indeed, it is,--the sum of sixty thousand livres.
+
+"Now albeit I had gone to Canaples for purposes of my own, and not as
+an agent of M. le Coadjuteur's, still for many reasons I saw fit to
+undertake the Chevalier's commission. And so, bearing the letter
+in question, which was hot and unguarded, and charged with endless
+treasonable matter, I set out four days later for Paris, arriving here
+yesterday.
+
+"I little knew that I had been followed by St. Auban. His suspicions
+must have been awakened, I know not how, and clearly they were confirmed
+when I stopped before the Coadjutor's house last night. I was about to
+mount the steps, when of a sudden I was seized from behind by half a
+dozen hands and dragged into a side street. I got free for a moment and
+attempted to defend myself, but besides St. Auban there were two others.
+They broke my sword and attempted to break my skull, in which they went
+perilously near succeeding, as you see. Albeit half-swooning, I had
+yet sufficient consciousness left to realise that my pockets were being
+emptied, and that at last they had torn open my doublet and withdrawn
+the treasonable letter from the breast of it.
+
+"I was left bleeding in the kennel, and there I lay for nigh upon an
+hour until a passer-by succoured me and carried out my request to be
+brought hither and put to bed."
+
+He ceased, and for some moments there was silence, broken only by the
+wounded man's laboured breathing, which argued that his narrative had
+left him fatigued. At last I sprang up.
+
+"The Chevalier de Canaples must be warned," I exclaimed.
+
+"'T is an ugly business," muttered Montresor. "I'll wager a hundred that
+Mazarin will hang the Chevalier if he catches him just now."
+
+"He would not dare!" cried Malpertuis.
+
+"Not dare?" echoed the lieutenant. "The man who imprisoned the Princes
+of Conde and Conti, and the Duke of Beaufort, not dare hang a provincial
+knight with never a friend at Court! Pah, Monsieur, you do not know
+Cardinal Mazarin."
+
+I realised to the full how likely Montresor's prophecy was to be
+fulfilled, and before I left Malpertuis I assured him that he had not
+poured his story into the ears of an indifferent listener, and that I
+would straightway find means of communicating with Canaples.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. OF THE BARGAIN THAT ST. AUBAN DROVE WITH MY LORD CARDINAL
+
+
+From the wounded man's bedside I wended my steps back to the Rue St.
+Antoine, resolved to start for Blois that very night; and beside me
+walked Montresor, with bent head, like a man deep in thought.
+
+At my door I paused to take my leave of the lieutenant, for I was
+in haste to have my preparations made, and to be gone. But Montresor
+appeared not minded to be dismissed thus easily.
+
+"What plan have you formed?" he asked.
+
+"The only plan there is to form--to set out for Canaples at once."
+
+"Hum!" he grunted, and again was silent. Then, suddenly throwing back
+his head, "Par la mort Dieu!" he cried, "I care not what comes of it;
+I'll tell you what I know. Lead the way to your chamber, M. de Luynes,
+and delay your departure until you have heard me."
+
+Surprised as much by his words as by the tone in which he uttered them,
+which was that of a man who is angry with himself, I passively did as I
+was bidden.
+
+Once within my little ante-chamber, he turned the key with his own
+hands, and pointing to the door of my bedroom--"In there, Monsieur,"
+quoth he, "we shall be safe from listeners."
+
+Deeper grew my astonishment at all this mystery, as we passed into the
+room beyond.
+
+"Now, M. de Luynes," he cried, flinging down his hat, "for no apparent
+reason I am about to commit treason; I am about to betray the hand that
+pays me."
+
+"If no reason exists, why do so evil a deed?" I inquired calmly. "I have
+learnt during our association to wish you well, Montresor; if by telling
+me that which your tongue burns to tell, you shall have cause for shame,
+the door is yonder. Go before harm is done, and leave me alone to fight
+my battle out."
+
+He stood up, and for a moment he seemed to waver, then dismissing his
+doubts with an abrupt gesture, he sat down again.
+
+"There is no wrong in what I do. Right is with you, M. de Luynes, and
+if I break faith with the might I serve, it is because that might is
+an unjust one; I do but betray the false to the true, and there can be
+little shame in such an act. Moreover, I have a reason--but let that
+be."
+
+He was silent for a moment, then he resumed:
+
+"Most of that which you have learnt from Malpertuis to-night, I myself
+could have told you. Yes; St. Auban has carried Canaples's letter to the
+Cardinal already. I heard from his lips to-day--for I was present at the
+interview--how the document had been wrested from Malpertuis. For your
+sake, so that you might learn all he knew, I sought the fellow out, and
+having found him in the Rue des Tournelles, I took you thither."
+
+In a very fever of excitement I listened.
+
+"To take up the thread of the story where Malpertuis left off, let me
+tell you that St. Auban sought an audience with Mazarin this morning,
+and by virtue of a note which he desired an usher to deliver to his
+Eminence, he was admitted, the first of all the clients that for hours
+had thronged the ante-room. As in the instance of the audience to Eugene
+de Canaples, so upon this occasion did it chance that the Cardinal's
+fears touching St. Auban's purpose had been roused, for he bade me stand
+behind the curtains in his cabinet.
+
+"The Marquis spoke bluntly enough, and with rude candour he stated that
+since Mazarin had failed to bring the Canaples estates into his family
+by marriage, he came to set before his Eminence a proof so utter of
+Canaples's treason that it would enable him to snatch the estates
+by confiscation. The Cardinal may have been staggered by St. Auban's
+bluntness, but his avaricious instincts led him to stifle his feelings
+and bid the Marquis to set this proof before him. But St. Auban had
+a bargain to drive--a preposterous one methought. He demanded that in
+return for his delivering into the hands of Mazarin the person of Armand
+de Canaples together with an incontestable proof that the Chevalier was
+in league with the frondeurs, and had offered to place a large sum of
+money at their disposal, he was to receive as recompense the demesne
+of Canaples on the outskirts of Blois, together with one third of the
+confiscated estates. At first Mazarin gasped at his audacity, then
+laughed at him, whereupon St. Auban politely craved his Eminence's
+permission to withdraw. This the Cardinal, however, refused him, and
+bidding him remain, he sought to bargain with him. But the Marquis
+replied that he was unversed in the ways of trade and barter, and that
+he had no mind to enter into them. From bargaining the Cardinal passed
+on to threatening and from threatening to whining, and so on until the
+end--St. Auban preserving a firm demeanour--the comedy was played out
+and Mazarin fell in with his proposal and his terms.
+
+"Mille diables!" I cried. "And has St. Auban set out?"
+
+"He starts to-morrow, and I go with him. When finally the Cardinal
+had consented, the Marquis demanded and obtained from him a promise in
+writing, signed and sealed by Mazarin, that he should receive a third
+of the Canaples estates and the demesne on the outskirts of Blois, in
+exchange for the body of Armand de Canaples, dead or alive, and a proof
+of treason sufficient to warrant his arrest and the confiscation of his
+estates. Next, seeing in what regard the Seigneur is held by the people
+of Blois, and fearing that his arrest might be opposed by many of his
+adherents, the Marquis has demanded a troop of twenty men. This Mazarin
+has also granted him, entrusting the command of the troop to me, under
+St. Auban. Further, the Marquis has stipulated that the greatest secrecy
+is to be observed, and has expressed his purpose of going upon this
+enterprise disguised and masked, for--as he rightly opines--when months
+hence he enters into possession of the demesne of Canaples in the
+character of purchaser, did the Blaisois recognise in him the man who
+sold the Chevalier, his life would stand in hourly peril."
+
+I heard him through patiently enough; yet when he stopped, my pent-up
+feelings burst all bonds, and I resolved there and then to go in quest
+of that Judas, St. Auban, and make an end of his plotting, for all time.
+But Montresor restrained me, showing me how futile such a course must
+prove, and how I risked losing all chance of aiding those at Canaples.
+
+He was right. First I must warn the Chevalier--afterwards I would deal
+with St. Auban.
+
+Someone knocked at that moment, and with the entrance of Michelot, my
+talk with Montresor came perforce to an end. For Michelot brought me the
+news that for days I had been awaiting; Madame de Chevreuse had returned
+to Paris at last.
+
+But for Montresor's remonstrances it is likely that I should have set
+out forthwith to wait upon her. I permitted myself, however, to be
+persuaded that the lateness of the hour would render my visit unwelcome,
+and so I determined in the end--albeit grudgingly--to put off my
+departure for Blois until the morrow.
+
+Noon had but struck from Notre Dame, next day, as I mounted the steps
+of the Hotel de Luynes. My swagger, and that brave suit of pearl grey
+velvet with its silver lace, bore me unchallenged past the gorgeous
+suisse, who stood, majestic, in the doorway.
+
+But, for the first mincing lackey I chanced upon, more was needed to
+gain me an audience. And so, as I did not choose to speak my name, I
+drew a ring from my finger and bade him bear it to the Duchesse.
+
+He obeyed me in this, and presently returning, he bowed low and begged
+of me to follow him, for, as I had thought, albeit Madame de Chevreuse
+might not know to whom that ring belonged, yet the arms of Luynes carved
+upon the stone had sufficed to ensure an interview.
+
+I was ushered into a pretty boudoir, hung in blue and gold, which
+overlooked the garden, and wherein, reclining upon a couch, with a
+book of Bois Robert's verses in her white and slender hand, I found my
+beautiful aunt.
+
+Of this famous lady, who was the cherished friend and more than sister
+of Anne of Austria, much has been written; much that is good, and
+more--far more--that is ill, for those who have a queen for friend shall
+never lack for enemies. But those who have praised and those who have
+censured have at least been at one touching her marvellous beauty. At
+the time whereof I write it is not possible that she could be less than
+forty-six, and yet her figure was slender and shapely and still endowed
+with the grace of girlhood; her face delicate of tint, and little marked
+by time--or even by the sufferings to which, in the late king's reign,
+Cardinal de Richelieu had subjected her; her eyes were blue and peaceful
+as a summer sky; her hair was the colour of ripe corn. He would be a
+hardy guesser who set her age at so much as thirty.
+
+My appearance she greeted by letting fall her book, and lifting up her
+hands--the loveliest in France--she uttered a little cry of surprise.
+
+"Is it really you, Gaston?" she asked.
+
+Albeit it was growing wearisome to be thus greeted by all to whom I
+showed myself, yet I studied courtesy in my reply, and then, 'neath
+the suasion of her kindliness, I related all that had befallen me
+since first I had journeyed to Blois, in Andrea de Mancini's company,
+withholding, however, all allusions to my feelings towards Yvonne. Why
+betray them when they were doomed to be stifled in the breast that begat
+them? But Madame de Chevreuse had not been born a woman and lived six
+and forty years to no purpose.
+
+"And this maid with as many suitors as Penelope, is she very beautiful?"
+she inquired slyly.
+
+"France does not hold her equal," I answered, falling like a simpleton
+into the trap she had set me.
+
+"This to me?" quoth she archly. "Fi donc, Gaston! Your evil ways have
+taught you as little gallantry as dissimulation." And her merry ripple
+of laughter showed me how in six words I had betrayed that which I had
+been at such pains to hide.
+
+But before I could, by protestations, plunge deeper than I stood
+already, the Duchesse turned the conversation adroitly to the matter of
+that letter of hers, wherein she had bidden me wait upon her.
+
+A cousin of mine--one Marion de Luynes, who, like myself, had, through
+the evil of his ways, become an outcast from his family--was lately
+dead. Unlike me, however, he was no adventurous soldier of fortune, but
+a man of peace, with an estate in Provence that had a rent-roll of five
+thousand livres a year. On his death-bed he had cast about him for an
+heir, unwilling that his estate should swell the fortunes of the family
+that in life had disowned him. Into his ear some kindly angel had
+whispered my name, and the memory that I shared with him the frowns of
+our house, and that my plight must be passing pitiful, had set up a bond
+of sympathy between us, which had led him to will his lands to me. Of
+Madame de Chevreuse--who clearly was the patron saint of those of her
+first husband's nephews who chanced to tread ungodly ways--my cousin
+Marion had besought that she should see to the fulfilment of his last
+wishes.
+
+My brain reeled beneath the first shock of that unlooked-for news.
+Already I saw myself transformed from a needy adventurer into a
+gentleman of fortune, and methought my road to Yvonne lay open, all
+obstacles removed. But swiftly there followed the thought of my own
+position, and truly it seemed that a cruel irony lay in the manner
+wherein things had fallen out, since did I declare myself to be alive
+and claim the Provence estates, the Cardinal's claws would be quick to
+seize me.
+
+Thus much I told Madame de Chevreuse, but her answer cheered me, and
+said much for my late cousin's prudence.
+
+"Nay," she cried. "Marion was ever shrewd. Knowing that men who live by
+the sword, as you have lived, are often wont to die by the sword,--and
+that suddenly at times,--he has made provision that in the event of
+your being dead his estates shall come to me, who have been the most
+indulgent of his relatives. This, my dear Gaston, has already taken
+place, for we believed you dead; and therein fortune has been kind to
+you, for now, while receiving the revenues of your lands--which the
+world will look upon as mine--I shall contrive that they reach you
+wherever you may be, until such a time as you may elect to come to life
+again."
+
+Now but for the respect in which I held her, I could have taken the
+pretty Duchesse in my arms and kissed her.
+
+Restraining myself, however, I contented myself by kissing her hand, and
+told her of the journey I was going, then craved another boon of her.
+No matter what the issue of that journey, and whether I went alone or
+accompanied, I was determined to quit France and repair to Spain. There
+I would abide until the Parliament, the Court, or the knife of some
+chance assassin, or even Nature herself should strip Mazarin of his
+power.
+
+Now, at the Court of Spain it was well known that my aunt's influence
+was vast, and so, the boon I craved was that she should aid me to a
+position in the Spanish service that would allow me during my exile to
+find occupation and perchance renown. To this my aunt most graciously
+acceded, and when at length I took my leave--with such gratitude in my
+heart that what words I could think of seemed but clumsily to express
+it--I bore in the breast of my doublet a letter to Don Juan de
+Cordova--a noble of great prominence at the Spanish Court--and in the
+pocket of my haut-de-chausses a rouleau of two hundred gold pistoles, as
+welcome as they were heavy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. OF MY SECOND JOURNEY TO CANAPLES
+
+
+An hour after I had quitted the Hotel de Luynes, Michelot and I left
+Paris by the barrier St. Michel and took the Orleans road. How different
+it looked in the bright June sunshine, to the picture which it had
+presented to our eyes on that February evening, four months ago, when
+last we had set out upon that same journey!
+
+Not only in nature had a change been wrought, but in my very self. My
+journey then had been aimless, and I had scarcely known whither I was
+bound nor had I fostered any great concern thereon. Now I rode in hot
+haste with a determined purpose, a man of altered fortunes and altered
+character.
+
+Into Choisy we clattered at a brisk pace, but at the sight of the inn
+of the Connetable such memories surged up that I was forced to draw rein
+and call for a cup of Anjou, which I drank in the saddle. Thereafter we
+rode without interruption through Longjumeau, Arpajon, and Etrechy, and
+so well did we use our horses that as night fell we reached Etampes.
+
+From inquiries that Michelot had made on the road, we learned that no
+troop such as that which rode with St. Auban had lately passed that way,
+so that 't was clear we were in front of them.
+
+But scarce had we finished supper in the little room which I had hired
+at the Gros Paon, when, from below, a stamping of hoofs, the jangle of
+arms, and the shouts of many men told me that we were overtaken.
+
+Clearly I did not burn with a desire to linger, but rather it seemed to
+me that although night had closed in, black and moonless, we must set
+out again, and push on to Monnerville, albeit our beasts were worn and
+the distance a good three leagues.
+
+With due precaution we effected our departure, and thereafter had a spur
+been needed to speed us on our way that spur we had in the knowledge
+that St. Auban came close upon our heels. At Monnerville we slept, and
+next morning we were early afoot; by four o'clock in the afternoon we
+had reached Orleans, whence--with fresh horses--we pursued our journey
+as far as Meung, where we lay that night.
+
+There we were joined by a sturdy rascal whom Michelot enlisted into my
+service, seeing that not only did my means allow, but the enterprise
+upon which I went might perchance demand another body servant. This
+recruit was a swart, powerfully built man of about my own age; trusty,
+and a lover of hard knocks, as Michelot--who had long counted him among
+his friends--assured me. He owned the euphonious name of Abdon.
+
+I spent twenty pistoles in suitable raiment and a horse for him, and as
+we left Meung next day the knave cut a brave enough figure that added
+not a little to my importance to have at my heels.
+
+This, however, so retarded our departure, that night had fallen by the
+time we reached Blois. Still our journey had been a passing swift one.
+We had left Paris on a Monday, the fourth of June--I have good cause to
+remember, since on that day I entered both upon my thirty-second year
+and my altered fortunes; on the evening of Wednesday we reached Blois,
+having covered a distance of forty-three leagues in less than three
+days.
+
+Bidding Michelot carry my valise to the hostelry of the Vigne d'Or,
+and there await my coming, I called to Abdon to attend me, and rode on,
+jaded and travel-stained though I was, to Canaples, realising fully that
+there was no time to lose.
+
+Old Guilbert, who came in answer to my knock at the door of the
+chateau, looked askance when he beheld me, and when I bade him carry my
+compliments to the Chevalier, with the message that I desired immediate
+speech of him on a matter of the gravest moment, he shook his grey head
+and protested that it would be futile to obey me. Yet, in the end,
+when I had insisted, he went upon my errand, but only to return with a
+disturbed countenance, to tell me that the Chevalier refused to see me.
+
+"But I must speak to him, Guilbert," I exclaimed, setting foot upon the
+top step. "I have travelled expressly from Paris."
+
+The man stood firm and again shook his head.
+
+"I beseech you not to insist, Monsieur. M. le Chevalier has sworn to
+dismiss me if I permit you to set foot within the chateau."
+
+"Mille diables! This is madness! I seek to serve him," I cried, my
+temper rising fast. "At least, Guilbert, will you tell Mademoiselle that
+I am here, and that I--"
+
+"I may carry no more messages for you, Monsieur," he broke in. "Listen!
+There is M. le Chevalier."
+
+In reality I could hear the old knight's voice, loud and shrill with
+anger, and a moment later Louis, his intendant, came across the hall.
+
+"Guilbert," he commanded harshly, "close the door. The night air is
+keen."
+
+My cheeks aflame with anger, I still made one last attempt to gain an
+audience.
+
+"Master Louis," I exclaimed, "will you do me the favour to tell M. de
+Canaples--"
+
+"You are wasting time, Monsieur," he interrupted. "M. de Canaples will
+not see you. He bids you close the door, Guilbert."
+
+"Pardieu! he shall see me!"
+
+"The door, Guilbert!"
+
+I took a step forward, but before I could gain the threshold, the door
+was slammed in my face, and as I stood there, quivering with anger and
+disappointment, I heard the bolts being shot within.
+
+I turned with an oath.
+
+"Come, Abdon," I growled, as I climbed once more into the saddle, "let
+us leave the fool to the fate he has chosen."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. OF HOW ST. AUBAN CAME TO BLOIS
+
+
+In silence we rode back to Blois. Not that I lacked matter for
+conversation. Anger and chagrin at the thought that I had come upon this
+journey to earn naught but an insult and to have a door slammed in my
+face made my gorge rise until it went near to choking me. I burned to
+revile Canaples aloud, but Abdon's was not the ear into which I might
+pour the hot words that welled up to my lips.
+
+Yet if silent, the curses that I heaped upon the Chevalier's crassness
+were none the less fervent, and to myself I thought with grim relish of
+how soon and how dearly he would pay for the affront he had put upon me.
+
+That satisfaction, however, endured not long; for presently I bethought
+me of how heavily the punishment would fall upon Yvonne--and yet, of how
+she would be left to the mercy of St. Auban, whose warrant from Mazarin
+would invest with almost any and every power at Canaples.
+
+I ground my teeth at the sudden thought, and for a moment I was on the
+point of going back and forcing my way into the chateau at the sword
+point if necessary, to warn and save the Chevalier in spite of himself
+and unthanked.
+
+It was not in such a fashion that I had thought to see my mission to
+Canaples accomplished; I had dreamt of gratitude, and gratitude unbars
+the door to much. Nevertheless, whether or not I earned it, I must
+return, and succeed where for want of insistence I had failed awhile
+ago.
+
+Of a certainty I should have acted thus, but that at the very moment
+upon which I formed the resolution Abdon drew my attention to a dark
+shadow by the roadside not twenty paces in front of us. This proved to
+be the motionless figure of a horseman.
+
+As soon as I was assured of it, I reined in my horse, and taking a
+pistol from the holster, I levelled it at the shadow, accompanying the
+act by a sonorous--
+
+"Who goes there?"
+
+The shadow stirred, and Michelot's voice answered me:
+
+"'T is I, Monsieur. They have arrived. I came to warn you."
+
+"Who has arrived?" I shouted.
+
+"The soldiers. They are lodged at the Lys de France."
+
+An oath was the only comment I made as I turned the news over in my
+mind. I must return to Canaples.
+
+Then another thought occurred to me. The Chevalier was capable of going
+to extremes to keep me from entering his house; he might for instance
+greet me with a blunderbuss. It was not the fear of that that deterred
+me, but the fear that did a charge of lead get mixed with my poor brains
+before I had said what I went to say, matters would be no better, and
+there would be one poor knave the less to adorn the world.
+
+"What shall we do, Michelot?" I groaned, appealing in my despair to my
+henchman.
+
+"Might it not be well to seek speech with M. de Montresor?" quoth he.
+
+I shrugged my shoulders. Nevertheless, after a moment's deliberation I
+determined to make the attempt; if I succeeded something might come of
+it.
+
+And so I pushed on to Blois with my knaves close at my heels.
+
+Up the Rue Vieille we proceeded with caution, for the hostelry of the
+Vigne d'Or, where Michelot had hired me a room, fortunately overlooking
+the street, fronted the Lys de France, where St. Auban and his men were
+housed.
+
+I gained that room of mine without mishap, and my first action was to
+deal summarily with a fat and well-roasted capon which the landlord
+set before me--for an empty stomach is a poor comrade in a desperate
+situation. That meal, washed down with the best part of a bottle of red
+Anjou, did much to restore me alike in body and in mind.
+
+From my open window I gazed across the street at the Lys de France.
+The door of the common-room, opening upon the street, was set wide, and
+across the threshold came a flood of light in which there flitted the
+black figures of maybe a dozen amazed rustics, drawn thither for all the
+world as bats are drawn to a glare.
+
+And there they hovered with open mouths and stupid eyes, hearkening to
+the din of voices that floated out on the tranquil air, the snatches of
+ribald songs, the raucous bursts of laughter, the clink of glasses, the
+clank of steel, the rattle of dice, and the strange soldier oaths that
+fell with every throw, and which to them must have sounded almost as
+words of some foreign tongue.
+
+Whilst I stood by my window, the landlord entered my room, and coming up
+to me--
+
+"Thank Heaven they are not housed at the Vigne d'Or," he said. "It will
+take Maitre Bernard a week to rid his house of the stench of leather.
+They are part of a stray company that is on its way to fight the
+Spaniards," he informed me. "But methinks they will be forced to spend
+two or three days at Blois; their horses are sadly jaded and will need
+that rest before they can take the road again, thanks to the pace at
+which their boy of an officer must have led them. There is a gentleman
+with them who wears a mask. 'T is whispered that he is a prince of
+the blood who has made a vow not to uncover his face until this war be
+ended, in expiation of some sin committed in mad Paris."
+
+I heard him in silence, and when he had done I thanked him for his
+information. So! This was the story that the crafty St. Auban had spread
+abroad to lull suspicion touching the real nature of their presence
+until their horses should be fit to undertake the return journey to
+Paris, or until he should have secured the person of M. de Canaples.
+
+Towards eleven o'clock, as the lights in the hostelry opposite were
+burning low, I descended, and made my way out into the now deserted
+street. The troopers had apparently seen fit--or else been ordered--to
+seek their beds, for the place had grown silent, and a servant was in
+the act of making fast the door for the night. The porte-cochere was
+half closed, and a man carrying a lantern was making fast the bolt,
+whistling aimlessly to himself. Through the half of the door that was
+yet open, I beheld a window from which the light fell upon a distant
+corner of the courtyard.
+
+I drew near the fellow with the lantern, in whom I recognised Rene, the
+hostler, and as I approached he flashed the light upon my face; then
+with a gasp--"M. de Luynes," he exclaimed, remembering me from the time
+when I had lodged at the Lys de France, three months ago.
+
+"Sh!" I whispered, pressing a louis d'or into his hand. "Whose window is
+that, Rene?" And I pointed towards the light.
+
+"That," he replied, "is the room of the lieutenant and the gentleman in
+the mask."
+
+"I must take a look at them, Rene, and whilst I am looking I shall
+search my pocket for another louis. Now let me in."
+
+"I dare not, Monsieur. Maitre Bernard may call me, and if the doors are
+not closed--"
+
+"Dame!" I broke in. "I shall stay but a moment."
+
+"But--"
+
+"And you will have easily earned a louis d'or. If Bernard calls
+you--peste, tell him that you have let fall something, and that you are
+seeking it. There, let me pass."
+
+I got past him at last, and made my way swiftly towards the other end of
+the quadrangle.
+
+As I approached, the sound of voices smote my ear, for the lighted
+window stood open. I stopped within half a dozen paces of it, and
+climbed on to the step of a coach that stood there. Thence I could look
+straight into the room, whilst the darkness hid me from the eyes of
+those I watched.
+
+Three men there were; Montresor, the sergeant of his troop, and a tall
+man dressed in black, and wearing a black silk mask. This I concluded
+to be St. Auban, despite the profusion of fair locks that fell upon his
+shoulders, concealing--I rightly guessed--his natural hair, which was as
+black as my own. It was a cunning addition to his disguise, and one well
+calculated to lead people on to the wrong scent hereafter.
+
+Presently, as I watched them, St. Auban spoke, and his voice was that
+of a man whose gums are toothless, or else whose nether lip is drawn
+in over his teeth whilst he speaks. Here again the dissimulation was as
+effective as it was simple.
+
+"So; that is concluded," were the words that reached me. "To-morrow
+we will install our men at the chateau, for while we remain here it is
+preposterous to lodge them at an inn. On the following day I hope that
+we may be able to set out again."
+
+"If we could obtain fresh horses--" began the sergeant, when he of the
+mask interrupted him.
+
+"Sangdieu! Think you my purse is bottomless? We return as we came, with
+the Cardinal's horses. What signify a day or two, after all? Come--call
+the landlord to light me to my room."
+
+I had heard enough. But more than that, whilst I listened, an idea had
+of a sudden sprung up in my mind which did away with the necessity
+of gaining speech with Montresor--a contingency, moreover, that now
+presented insuperable difficulties.
+
+So I got down softly from my perch and made my way out of the yard, and,
+after fulfilling my part of the bargain with Rene, across to the Vigne
+d'Or and to my room, there to sit and mature the plan that of a sudden I
+had conceived.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. OF THE PASSING OF ST. AUBAN
+
+
+Dame! What an ado there was next day in Blois, when the news came that
+the troopers had installed themselves at the Chateau de Canaples and
+that the Chevalier had been arrested for treason by order of the Lord
+Cardinal, and that he would be taken to Paris, and--probably--the
+scaffold.
+
+Men gathered in little knots at street corners, and with sullen brows
+and threatening gestures they talked of the affair; and the more
+they talked, the more clouded grew their looks, and more than one
+anti-cardinalist pasquinade was heard in Blois that day.
+
+Given a leader those men would have laid hands upon pikes and muskets,
+and gone to the Chevalier's rescue. As I observed them, the thought did
+cross my mind that I might contrive a pretty fight in the rose garden of
+Canaples were I so inclined. And so inclined I should, indeed, have been
+but for the plan that had come to me like an inspiration from above, and
+which methought would prove safer in the end.
+
+To carry out this plan of mine, I quitted Blois at nightfall, with my
+two knaves, having paid my reckoning at the Lys de France, and given
+out that we were journeying to Tours. We followed the road that leads to
+Canaples, until we reached the first trees bordering the park. There
+I dismounted, and, leaving Abdon to guard the horses, I made my way on
+foot, accompanied by Michelot, towards the garden.
+
+We gained this, and were on the point of quitting the shadow of the
+trees, when of a sudden, by the light of the crescent moon, I beheld
+a man walking in one of the alleys, not a hundred paces from where we
+stood. I had but time to seize Michelot by the collar of his pourpoint
+and draw him towards me. But as he trod precipitately backwards a twig
+snapped 'neath his foot with a report that in the surrounding stillness
+was like a pistol shot.
+
+I caught my breath as he who walked in the garden stood still, his face,
+wrapped in the shadows of his hat, turned towards us.
+
+"Who goes there?" he shouted. Then getting no reply he came resolutely
+forward, whilst I drew a pistol wherewith to welcome him did he come too
+near.
+
+On he came, and already I had brought my pistol to a level with his
+head, when fortunately he repeated his question, "Who goes there?"--and
+this time I recognised the voice of Montresor, the very man I could then
+most wish to meet.
+
+"Hist! Montresor!" I called softly. "'T is I--Luynes."
+
+"So!" he exclaimed, coming close up to me. "You have reached Canaples at
+last!"
+
+"At last?" I echoed.
+
+"Whom have you there?" he inquired abruptly.
+
+"Only Michelot."
+
+"Bid him fall behind a little."
+
+When Michelot had complied with this request, "You see, M. de Luynes,"
+quoth the officer, "that you have arrived too late."
+
+There was a certain coldness in his tone that made me seek by my reply
+to sound him.
+
+"Indeed, I trust not, my friend. With your assistance I hope to get M.
+de Canaples from the clutches of St. Auban."
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"It is impossible that I should help you," he replied with increasing
+coldness. "Already once for your sake have I broken faith to those who
+pay me, by setting you in a position to forestall St. Auban and get M.
+de Canaples away before his arrival. Unfortunately, you have dallied
+on the road, M. de Luynes, and Canaples is already a prisoner--a doomed
+one, I fear."
+
+"Is that your last word, Montresor?" I inquired sadly.
+
+"I am sorry," he answered in softened tones, "but you must see that I
+cannot do otherwise. I warned you; more you cannot expect of me."
+
+I sighed, and stood musing for an instant. Then--"You are right,
+Montresor. Nevertheless, I am still grateful to you for the warning you
+gave me in Paris. God pity and help Canaples! Adieu, Montresor. I do not
+think that you will see me again."
+
+He took my hand, but as he did so he pushed me back into the shadow from
+which I had stepped to proffer it him.
+
+"Peste!" he ejaculated. "The moon was full upon your face, and did St.
+Auban chance to look out, he must have seen you."
+
+I followed the indication of his thumb, and noted the lighted window to
+which he pointed. A moment later he was gone, and as I joined Michelot,
+I chuckled softly to myself.
+
+For two hours and more I sat in the shrubbery, conversing in whispers
+with Michelot, and watching the lights in the chateau die out one by
+one, until St. Auban's window, which opened on to the terrace balcony,
+was the only one that was not wrapt in darkness.
+
+I waited a little while longer, then rising I cautiously made a tour of
+inspection. Peace reigned everywhere, and the only sign of life was the
+sentry, who with musket on shoulder paced in front of the main entrance,
+a silent testimony of St. Auban's mistrust of the Blaisois and of his
+fears of a possible surprise.
+
+Satisfied that everyone slept I retraced my steps to the shrubbery where
+Michelot awaited me, watching the square of light, and after exchanging
+word with him, I again stepped forth.
+
+When I was half way across the intervening space of garden, treading
+with infinite precaution, a dark shadow obscured the window, which a
+second later was thrown open. Crouching hastily behind a boxwood hedge,
+I watched St. Auban--for I guessed that he it was--as he leaned out and
+gazed skywards.
+
+For a little while he remained there, then he withdrew, leaving the
+casement open, and presently I caught the grating of a chair on the
+parquet floor within. If ever the gods favoured mortal, they favoured me
+at that moment.
+
+Stealthily as a cat I sprang towards the terrace, the steps to which I
+climbed on hands and knees. Stooping, I sped silently across it until I
+had gained the flower-bed immediately below the window that had drawn
+me to it. Crouching there--for did I stand upright my chin would be on a
+level with the sill--I paused to listen for some moments. The only sound
+I caught was a rustle, as of paper. Emboldened, I took a deep breath,
+and standing up I gazed straight into the chamber.
+
+By the light of four tapers in heavy silver sconces, I beheld St. Auban
+seated at a table littered with parchments, over which he was intently
+poring. His back was towards me, and his long black hair hung straight
+upon his shoulders. On the table, amid the papers, lay his golden wig
+and black mask, and on the floor in the centre of the room, his back and
+breast of blackened steel and his sword.
+
+It needed but little shrewdness to guess those parchments before him
+to be legal documents touching the Canaples estates, and his occupation
+that of casting up exactly what profit he would reap from his infamous
+work of betrayal.
+
+So intent was the hound upon his calculations that my cautious movements
+passed unheeded by him as I got astride of the window ledge. It was only
+when I swung my right leg into the room that he turned his head, but
+before his eyes reached me I was standing upright and motionless within
+the chamber.
+
+I have seen fear of many sorts writ large upon the faces of men of many
+conditions--from the awe that blanches the cheek of the boy soldier when
+first he hears the cannon thundering to the terror that glazes the eye
+of the vanquished swordsman who at every moment expects the deadly point
+in his heart. But never had I gazed upon a countenance filled with such
+abject ghastly terror as that which came over St. Auban's when his eyes
+met mine that night.
+
+He sprang up with an inarticulate cry that sank into something that I
+can but liken to the rattle which issues from the throat of expiring
+men. For a second he stood where he had risen, then terror loosened his
+knees, and he sank back into his chair. His mouth fell open, and the
+trembling lips were drawn down at the corners like those of a sobbing
+child; his cheeks turned whiter than the lawn collar at his throat, and
+his eyes, wide open in a horrid stare, were fixed on mine and, powerless
+to avert them, he met my gaze--cold, stern, and implacable.
+
+For a moment we remained thus, and I marvelled greatly to see a man
+whose heart, if full of evil, I had yet deemed stout enough, stricken by
+fear into so parlous and pitiful a condition.
+
+Then I had the explanation of it as he lifted his right hand and made
+the sign of the cross, first upon himself, then in the air, whilst his
+lips moved, and I guessed that to himself he was muttering some prayer
+of exorcising purport. There was the solution of the terror--sweat
+that stood out in beads upon his brow--he had deemed me a spectre; the
+spectre of a man he believed to have foully done to death on a spot
+across the Loire visible from the window at my back.
+
+At last he sufficiently mastered himself to break the awful silence.
+
+"What do you want?" he whispered; then, his voice gaining power as he
+used it--"Speak," he commanded. "Man or devil, speak!"
+
+I laughed for answer, harshly, mockingly; for never had I known a
+fiercer, crueller mood. At the sound of that laugh, satanical though may
+have been its ring, he sprang up again, and unsheathing a dagger he took
+a step towards me.
+
+"We shall see of what you are made," he cried. "If you blast me in the
+act, I'll strike you!"
+
+I laughed again, and raising my arm I gave him the nozzle of a pistol to
+contemplate.
+
+"Stand where you are, St. Auban, or, by the God above us, I'll send your
+ghost a-wandering," quoth I coolly.
+
+My voice, which I take it had nothing ghostly in it, and still more
+the levelled pistol, which of all implements is the most unghostly,
+dispelled his dread. The colour crept slowly back to his cheeks, and his
+mouth closed with a snap of determination.
+
+"Is it, indeed, you, master meddler?" he said. "Peste! I thought you
+dead these three months."
+
+"And you are overcome with joy to find that you were in error, eh,
+Marquis? We Luynes die hard."
+
+"It seems so, indeed," he answered with a cool effrontery past crediting
+in one who but a moment ago had looked so pitiful. "What do you seek at
+Canaples?"
+
+"Many things, Marquis. You among others."
+
+"You have come to murder me," he cried, and again alarm overspread his
+countenance.
+
+"Hoity, toity, Marquis! We do not all follow the same trade. Who talks
+of murder? Faugh!"
+
+Again he took a step towards me, but again the nozzle of my pistol drove
+him back. To have pistoled him there and then as he deserved would have
+brought the household about my ears, and that would have defeated my
+object. To have fallen upon him and slain him with silent steel would
+have equally embarrassed me, as you shall understand anon.
+
+"You and I had a rendezvous at St. Sulpice des Reaux," I said calmly,
+"to which you came with a band of hired assassins. For this you deserve
+to be shot like the dog you are. But I have it in my heart to be
+generous to you," I added in a tone of irony. "Come, take up your
+sword."
+
+"To what purpose?"
+
+"Do you question me? Take up your sword, man, and do my bidding; thus
+shall you have a slender chance of life. Refuse and I pistol you without
+compunction. So now put on that wig and mask."
+
+When he obeyed me in this--"Now listen, St. Auban," I said. "You and
+I are going together to that willow copse whither three months ago you
+lured Yvonne de Canaples for the purpose of abducting her. On that spot
+you and I shall presently face each other sword in hand, with none other
+to witness our meeting save God, in whose hands the issue lies. That is
+your chance; at the first sign that you meditate playing me any tricks,
+that chance is lost to you." And I tapped my pistol significantly. "Now
+climb out through that window."
+
+When he had done so, I bade him stand six paces away whilst I followed,
+and to discourage any foolish indiscretion on his part I again showed
+him my pistol.
+
+He answered me with an impatient gesture, and by the light that fell on
+his face I saw him sneer.
+
+"Come on, you fool," he snarled, "and have done threatening. I'll talk
+to you in the copse. And tread softly lest you arouse the sentry on the
+other side."
+
+Rejoiced to see the man so wide awake in him, I followed him closely
+across the terrace, and through the rose garden to the bank of the
+river. This we followed until we came at last to the belt of willows,
+where, having found a suitable patch of even and springy turf, I drew my
+sword and invited him to make ready.
+
+"Will you not strip?" he inquired sullenly.
+
+"I do not think so," I answered. "The night air is sharp. Nevertheless,
+do you make ready as best you deem fit, and that speedily, Monsieur."
+
+With an exclamation of contempt, he divested himself of his wig, mask,
+and doublet, then drawing his sword, he came forward, and announced
+himself at my disposal.
+
+As well you may conceive, we wasted no time in compliments, but
+straightway went to work, and that with a zest that drew sparks from our
+rapiers at the first contact.
+
+The Marquis attacked me furiously, and therein lay his only chance; for
+a fierce, rude sword-play that is easily dealt with in broad daylight
+is vastly discomposing in such pale moonshine as lighted us. I defended
+myself warily, for of a sudden I had grown conscious of the danger that
+I ran did he once by luck or strength get past my guard with that point
+of his which in the spare light I could not follow closely enough to
+feel secure.
+
+'Neath the fury of his onslaught I was compelled to break ground more
+than once, and each time he was so swift to follow up his advantage that
+I had ne'er a chance to retaliate.
+
+Still fear or doubt of the issue I had none. I needed but to wait until
+the Marquis's fury was spent by want of breath, to make an end of it.
+And presently that which I waited for came about. His attack began to
+lag in vigour, and the pressure of his blade to need less resistance,
+whilst his breathing grew noisy as that of a broken-winded horse. Then
+with the rage of a gambler who loses at every throw, he cursed and
+reviled me with every thrust or lunge that I turned aside.
+
+My turn was come; yet I held back, and let him spend his strength to the
+utmost drop, whilst with my elbow close against my side and by an easy
+play of wrist, I diverted each murderous stroke of his point that came
+again and again for my heart.
+
+When at last he had wasted in blasphemies what little breath his wild
+exertions had left him, I let him feel on his blade the twist that
+heralded my first riposte. He caught the thrust, and retreated a
+step, his blasphemous tongue silenced, and his livid face bathed in
+perspiration.
+
+Cruelly I toyed with him then, and with every disengagement I made him
+realise that he was mastered, and that if I withheld the coup de grace
+it was but to prolong his agony. And to add to the bitterness of that
+agony of his, I derided him whilst I fenced; with a recitation of his
+many sins I mocked him, showing him how ripe he was for hell, and asking
+him how it felt to die unshriven with such a load upon his soul.
+
+Goaded to rage by my bitter words, he grit his teeth, and gathered what
+rags of strength were left him for a final effort, And before I knew
+what he was about, he had dropped on to his left knee, and with his body
+thrown forward and supported within a foot of the ground by his left
+arm, he came, like a snake, under my guard with his point directed
+upwards.
+
+So swift had been this movement and so unlooked-for, that had I not
+sprung backwards in the very nick of time, this narrative of mine had
+ne'er been written. With a jeering laugh I knocked aside his sword, but
+even as I disengaged, to thrust at him, he knelt up and caught my blade
+in his left hand, and for all that it ate its way through the flesh to
+the very bones of his fingers, he clung to it with that fierce strength
+and blind courage that is born of despair.
+
+Then raising himself on his knees again, he struck at me wildly. I swung
+aside, and as his sword, missing its goal, shot past me, I caught his
+wrist in a grip from which I contemptuously invited him to free himself.
+With that began a fierce tugging and panting on both sides, which,
+however, was of short duration, for presently, my blade, having severed
+the last sinew of his fingers, was set free. Simultaneously I let go
+his wrist, pushing his arm from me so violently that in his exhausted
+condition it caused him to fall over on his side.
+
+In an instant, however, he was up and at me again. Again our swords
+clashed--but once only. It was time to finish. With a vigorous
+disengagement I got past his feeble guard and sent my blade into him
+full in the middle of his chest and out again at his back until a foot
+or so of glittering steel protruded.
+
+A shudder ran through him, and his mouth worked oddly, whilst
+spasmodically he still sought, without avail, to raise his sword; then
+as I recovered my blade, a half-stifled cry broke from his lips, and
+throwing up his arms, he staggered and fell in a heap.
+
+As I turned him over to see if he were dead, his eyes met mine, and were
+full of piteous entreaty; his lips moved, and presently I caught the
+words:
+
+"I am sped, Luynes." Then struggling up, and in a louder voice: "A
+priest!" he gasped. "Get me a priest, Luynes. Jesu! Have mer--"
+
+A rush of blood choked him and cut short his utterance. He writhed and
+twitched for a moment, then his chin sank forward and he fell back,
+death starkening his limbs and glazing the eyes which stared hideously
+upwards at the cold, pitiless moon.
+
+Such was the passing of the Marquis Cesar de St. Auban.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. PLAY-ACTING
+
+
+For a little while I stood gazing down at my work, my mind full of the
+unsolvable mysteries of life and death; then I bethought me that
+time stood not still for me, and that something yet remained to be
+accomplished ere my evening's task were done.
+
+And forthwith I made shift to do a thing at the memory of which my blood
+is chilled and my soul is filled with loathing even now--albeit the gulf
+of many years separates me from that June night at Canaples.
+
+To pass succinctly o'er an episode on which I have scant heart to tarry,
+suffice it you to know that using my sash as a rope I bound a heavy
+stone to St. Auban's ankle; then lifting the body in my arms, I half
+dragged, half bore it across the little stretch of intervening sward to
+the water's edge, and flung it in.
+
+As I write I have the hideous picture in my mind, and again I can see
+St. Auban's ghastly face grinning up at me through the moonlit waters,
+until at last it was mercifully swallowed up in their black depths, and
+naught but a circling wavelet that spread swiftly across the stream was
+left to tell of what had chanced.
+
+I dare not dwell upon the feelings that assailed me as I stooped to
+rinse the blood from my hands, nor yet of the feverish haste wherewith I
+tore my blood-stained doublet from my back, and hurled it wide into the
+stream. For all my callousness I was sick and unmanned by that which had
+befallen.
+
+No time, however, did I waste in mawkish sentiment, but setting my teeth
+hard, I turned away from the river, and back to the trampled ground of
+our recent conflict. There, with no other witness save the moon, I clad
+myself in the Marquis's doublet of black velvet; I set his mask of silk
+upon my face, his golden wig upon my head, and over that his sable hat
+with its drooping feather. Next I buckled on his sword belt, wherefrom
+hung his rapier that I had sheathed.
+
+In Blois that day I had taken the precaution--knowing the errand upon
+which I came--to procure myself haut-de-chausses of black velvet, and
+black leather boots with gilt spurs that closely resembled those which
+St. Auban had worn in life.
+
+Now, as I have already written, St. Auban and I were of much the same
+build and stature, and so methought with confidence that he would have
+shrewd eyes, indeed, who could infer from my appearance that I was
+other than the same masked gentleman who had that very day ridden into
+Canaples at the head of a troop of his Eminence's guards.
+
+I made my way swiftly back along the path that St. Auban and I had
+together trodden but a little while ago, and past the chateau until I
+came to the shrubbery where Michelot--faithful to the orders I had given
+him--awaited my return. From his concealment he had seen me leave the
+chateau with the Marquis, and as I suddenly loomed up before him now, he
+took me for the man whose clothes I wore, and naturally enough assumed
+that ill had befallen Gaston de Luynes. Of a certainty I had been
+pistolled by him had I not spoken in time. I lingered but to give him
+certain necessary orders; then, whilst he went off to join Abdon and see
+to their fulfilment, I made my way stealthily, with eyes keeping watch
+around me, across the terrace, and through the window into the room that
+St. Auban had left to follow me to his death.
+
+The tapers still burned, and in all respects the chamber was as it had
+been; the back and breast pieces still lay upon the floor, and on the
+table the littered documents. The door I ascertained had been locked on
+the inside, a precaution which St. Auban had no doubt taken so that none
+might spy upon the work that busied him.
+
+I closed and made fast the window, then I bethought me that, being in
+ignorance of the whereabouts of St. Auban's bed-chamber, I must perforce
+spend the night as best I could within that very room.
+
+And so I sat me down and pondered deeply o'er the work that was to come,
+the part I was about to play, and the details of its playing. In this
+manner did I while away perchance an hour; through the next one I must
+have slept, for I awakened with a start to find three tapers spent and
+the last one spluttering, and in the sky the streaks that heralded the
+summer dawn.
+
+Again I fell to thinking; again I slept, and woke again to find the
+night gone and the sunlight on my face. Someone knocked at the door, and
+that knocking vibrated through my brain and set me wide-awake, indeed.
+It was as the signal to uplift the curtain and let my play-acting
+commence.
+
+Hastily I rose and shot a glance at the mirror to see that my wig hung
+straight and that my mask was rightly adjusted. I started at my own
+reflection, for methought that from the glass 't was St. Auban who
+looked at me, as I had seen him look the night before when he had donned
+those things at my command.
+
+"Hola there, within!" came Montresor's voice. "Monsieur le Capitaine!" A
+fresh shower of blows descended on the oak panels.
+
+I yawned with prodigious sonority, and overturned a chair with my foot.
+Then bracing myself for the ordeal, through which I looked to what scant
+information I possessed and my own mother wit, to bear me successfully,
+I strode across to admit my visitor.
+
+Muffling my voice, as I had heard St. Auban do at the inn, by drawing my
+nether lip over my teeth--
+
+"Pardieu!" quoth I, as I opened the door, "it seems, Lieutenant, that I
+must have fallen asleep over those musty documents."
+
+I trembled as I watched him, waiting for his reply, and I thanked Heaven
+that in the role I had assumed a mask was worn, not only because it
+hid my features, but because it hid the emotions which these might have
+betrayed.
+
+"I was beginning to fear," he replied coldly, and without so much as
+looking at me, "that worse had befallen you."
+
+I breathed again.
+
+"You mean--?"
+
+"Pooh, nothing," said he half contemptuously. "Only methinks 't were
+well whilst we remain at Canaples that you do not spend your nights in a
+room within such easy access of the terrace."
+
+"Your advice no doubt is sound, but as I shall not spend another night
+at Canaples, it comes too late."
+
+"You mean, Monsieur--?"
+
+"That we set out for Paris to-day."
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Oh, ca! I have just visited the stables, and there are not four horses
+fit for the journey. So that unless you have in mind the purchase of
+fresh animals--"
+
+"Pish! My purse is not bottomless," I broke in, repeating the very words
+that I heard St. Auban utter.
+
+"So you said once before, Monsieur. Still, unless you are prepared
+to take that course, the only alternative is to remain here until the
+horses are sufficiently recovered. But perhaps you think of walking?" he
+added with a sniff.
+
+"Such is your opinion, your time being worthless and it being of little
+moment where you spend it. I have conceived a plan."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"Has it not occurred to you that the danger which threatens us and which
+calls for the protection of a troop is only on this side of the Loire,
+where the Blaisois might be minded to attempt a rescue of the Chevalier?
+But over yonder, Chevalier, on the Chambord side, who cares a fig for
+the Lord of Canaples or his fate? None; is it not so?"
+
+He made an assenting gesture, whereupon I continued:
+
+"This being so, I have bethought me that it will suffice if I take but
+three or four men and the sergeant as an escort, and cross the river
+with our prisoner after nightfall, travelling along the opposite shore
+until we reach Orleans. What think you, Lieutenant?"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders again.
+
+"'T is you who command here," he answered with apathy, "not I."
+
+"Nevertheless, do you not think the plan a safe one, as well as one that
+will allay his Eminence's very natural impatience?"
+
+"Oh, it is safe enough, I doubt not," he replied coldly.
+
+"Your enthusiasm determines me," quoth I, with an irony that made him
+wince. "And we will follow the plan, since you agree with me touching
+its excellence. But keep the matter to yourself until an hour or so
+after sunset."
+
+He bowed, so utterly my dupe that I could have laughed at him.
+Then--"There is a little matter that I would mention," he said.
+"Mademoiselle de Canaples has expressed a wish to accompany her father
+to Paris and has asked me whether this will be permitted her."
+
+My heart leaped. Surely the gods fought on my side!
+
+"I cannot permit it," I answered icily.
+
+"Monsieur, you are pitiless," he protested in a tone of indignation for
+which I would gladly have embraced him.
+
+I feigned to ponder.
+
+"The matter needs consideration. Tell Mademoiselle that I will discuss
+it with her at noon, if she will condescend to await me on the terrace;
+I will then give her my definite reply. And now, Lieutenant, let us
+breakfast."
+
+As completely as I had duped Montresor did I presently dupe those of
+the troopers with whom I came in contact, among others the sergeant--and
+anon the Chevalier himself.
+
+From the brief interview that I had with him I discovered that whilst he
+but vaguely suspected me to be St. Auban--and when I say "he
+suspected me" I mean he suspected him whose place I had taken--he was,
+nevertheless, aware of the profit which his captor, whoever he might be,
+derived from this business. It soon grew clear to me from what he said
+that St. Auban had mocked him with it whilst concealing his identity;
+that he had told him how he had obtained from Malpertuis the treasonable
+letter, and of the bargain which it had enabled him to strike with
+Mazarin. I did not long remain in his company, and, deeming the time
+not yet ripe for disclosures, I said little in answer to his lengthy
+tirades, which had, I guessed, for scope to trap me into betraying the
+identity he but suspected.
+
+It wanted a few minutes to noon as I left the room in which the old
+nobleman was confined, and by the door of which a trooper was stationed,
+musket on shoulder. With every pulse a-throbbing at the thought of my
+approaching interview with Mademoiselle, I made my way below and out
+into the bright sunshine, the soldiers I chanced to meet saluting me as
+I passed them.
+
+On the terrace I found Mademoiselle already awaiting me. She was
+standing, as often I had seen her stand, with her back turned towards
+me and her elbows resting upon the balustrade. But as my step
+sounded behind her, she turned, and stood gazing at me with a face so
+grief-stricken and pale that I burned to unmask and set her torturing
+fears at rest. I doffed my hat and greeted her with a silent bow, which
+she contemptuously disregarded.
+
+"My lieutenant tells me, Mademoiselle," said I in my counterfeited
+voice, "that it is your desire to bear Monsieur your father company upon
+this journey of his to Paris."
+
+"With your permission, sir," she answered in a choking voice.
+
+"It is a matter for consideration, Mademoiselle," I pursued. "There are
+in it many features that may have escaped you, and which I shall discuss
+with you if you will honour me by stepping into the garden below."
+
+"Why will not the terrace serve?"
+
+"Because I may have that to say which I would not have overheard."
+
+She knit her brows and stared at me as though she would penetrate the
+black cloth that hid my face. At last she shrugged her shoulders, and
+letting her arms fall to her side in a gesture of helplessness and
+resignation--
+
+"Soit; I will go with you," was all she said.
+
+Side by side we went down the steps as a pair of lovers might have
+gone, save that her face was white and drawn, and that her eyes looked
+straight before her, and never once, until we reached the gravel
+path below, at her companion. Side by side we walked along one of the
+rose-bordered alleys, until at length I stopped.
+
+"Mademoiselle," I said, speaking in the natural tones of that
+good-for-naught Gaston de Luynes, "I have already decided, and you have
+my permission to accompany your father."
+
+At the sound of my voice she started, and with her left hand clutching
+at the region of her heart, she stood, her head thrust forward, and on
+her face the look of one who is confronted with some awful doubt. That
+look was brief, however, and swift to replace it was one of hideous
+revelation.
+
+"In God's name, who are you?" she cried in accents that bespoke internal
+agony.
+
+"Already you have guessed it, Mademoiselle," I answered, and I would
+have added that which should have brought comfort to her distraught
+mind, when--
+
+"You!" she gasped in a voice of profound horror. "You! You, the Judas
+who has sold my father to the Cardinal for a paltry share in our
+estates. And I believed that mask of yours to hide the face of St.
+Auban!"
+
+Her words froze me into a stony mass of insensibility. There was no
+logic in my attitude; I see it now. Appearances were all against me, and
+her belief no more than justified. I overlooked all this, and instead of
+saving time by recounting how I came to be there and thus delivering her
+from the anguish that was torturing her, I stood, dumb and cruel, cut to
+the quick by her scorn and her suspicions that I was capable of such a
+thing as she imputed, and listening to the dictates of an empty pride
+that prompted me to make her pay full penalty.
+
+"Oh, God pity me!" she wailed. "Have you naught to say?"
+
+Still I maintained my mad, resentful silence. And presently, as one who
+muses--
+
+"You!" she said again. "You, whom I--" She stopped short. "Oh! The shame
+of it!" she moaned.
+
+Reason at last came uppermost, and as in my mind I completed her broken
+sentence, my heart gave a great throb and I was thawed to a gentler
+purpose.
+
+"Mademoiselle!" I exclaimed.
+
+But even as I spoke, she turned, and sweeping aside her gown that it
+might not touch me, she moved rapidly towards the steps we had just
+descended. Full of remorse, I sprang after her.
+
+"Mademoiselle! Hear me," I cried, and put forth my hand to stay her.
+Thereat she wheeled round and faced me, a blaze of fury in her grey
+eyes.
+
+"Dare not to touch me," she panted. "You thief, you hound!"
+
+I recoiled, and, like one turned to stone, I stood and watched her mount
+the steps, my feelings swaying violently between anger and sorrow. Then
+my eye fell upon Montresor standing on the topmost step, and on his face
+there was a sneering, insolent smile which told me that he had heard the
+epithets she had bestowed upon me.
+
+Albeit I sought that day another interview with Yvonne, I did not gain
+it, and so I was forced to sun myself in solitude upon the terrace. But
+I cherished for my consolation that broken sentence of hers, whereby
+I read that the coldness which she had evinced for me before I left
+Canaples had only been assumed.
+
+And presently as I recalled what talks we had had, and one in particular
+from which it now appeared to me that her coldness had sprung, a light
+seemed suddenly to break upon my mind, as perchance it hath long ago
+broken upon the minds of those who may happen upon these pages, and
+whose wits in matters amorous are of a keener temper than were mine.
+
+I who in all things had been arrogant, presumptuous, and self-satisfied,
+had methought erred for once through over-humility.
+
+And, indeed, even as I sat and pondered on that June day, it seemed to
+me a thing incredible that she whom I accounted the most queenly and
+superb of women should have deigned to grant a tender thought to one so
+mean, so far beneath her as I had ever held myself to be.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI. REPARATION
+
+
+Things came to pass that night as I had planned, and the fates which of
+late had smiled upon me were kind unto the end.
+
+Soon after ten, and before the moon had risen, a silent procession
+wended its way from the chateau to the river. First went Montresor and
+two of his men; next came the Chevalier with Mademoiselle, and on either
+side of them a trooper; whilst I, in head-piece and back and breast of
+steel, went last with Mathurin, the sergeant--who warmly praised the
+plan I had devised for the conveyance of M. de Canaples to Paris without
+further loss of time.
+
+Two boats which I had caused to be secretly procured were in readiness,
+and by these a couple of soldiers awaited us, holding the bridles of
+eight horses, one of which was equipped with a lady's saddle. Five of
+these belonged--or had belonged--to the Chevalier, whilst the others
+were three of those that had brought the troop from Paris, and which I,
+in the teeth of all protestations, had adjudged sufficiently recovered
+for the return journey.
+
+The embarkation was safely effected, M. de Canaples and Mademoiselle
+in one boat with Montresor, Mathurin, and myself; the sergeant took the
+oars; Montresor and I kept watch over our prisoner. In the other boat
+came the four troopers, who were to accompany us, and one other who
+was to take the boats, and Montresor in them, back to Canaples. For the
+lieutenant was returning, so that he might, with the remainder of the
+troop, follow us to Paris so soon as the condition of the horses would
+permit it.
+
+The beasts we took with us were swimming the stream, guided and upheld
+by the men in the other boat.
+
+Just as the moon began to show her face our bow grated on the shore at
+the very point where I had intended that we should land. I sprang out
+and turned to assist Mademoiselle.
+
+But, disdaining my proffered hand, she stepped ashore unaided. The
+Chevalier came next, and after him Montresor and Mathurin.
+
+Awhile we waited until the troopers brought their boat to land, then
+when they had got the snorting animals safely ashore, I bade them look
+to the prisoner, and requested Montresor and Mathurin to step aside with
+me, as I had something to communicate to them.
+
+Walking between the pair, I drew them some twenty paces away from the
+group by the water, towards a certain thicket in which I had bidden
+Michelot await me.
+
+"It has occurred to me, Messieurs," I began, speaking slowly and
+deliberately as we paced along,--"it has occurred to me that despite all
+the precautions taken to carry out my Lord Cardinal's wishes--a work
+at least in which you, yourselves, have evinced a degree of zeal that I
+cannot too highly commend to his Eminence--the possibility yet remains
+of some mistake of trivial appearance, of some slight flaw that might
+yet cause the miscarriage of those wishes."
+
+They turned towards me, and although I could not make out the
+expressions of their faces, in the gloom, yet I doubted not but that
+they were puzzled ones at that lengthy and apparently meaningless
+harangue.
+
+The sergeant was the first to speak, albeit I am certain that he
+understood the less.
+
+"I venture, M. le Capitaine, to think that your fears, though very
+natural, are groundless."
+
+"Say you so?" quoth I, with a backward glance to assure myself that we
+were screened by the trees from the eyes of those behind us. "Say you
+so? Well, well, mayhap you are right, though you speak of my fears being
+groundless. I alluded to some possible mistake of yours--yours and M. de
+Montresor's--not of mine. And, by Heaven, a monstrous flaw there is in
+this business, for if either of you so much as whisper I'll blow your
+brains out!"
+
+And to emphasise these words, as sinister as they were unlooked-for, I
+raised both hands suddenly from beneath my cloak, and clapped the cold
+nose of a pistol to the head of each of them.
+
+I was obeyed as men are obeyed who thus uncompromisingly prove the
+force of their commands. Seeing them resigned, I whistled softly, and
+in answer there was a rustle from among the neighbouring trees, and
+presently two shadows emerged from the thicket. In less time than it
+takes me to relate it, Montresor and his sergeant found themselves
+gagged, and each securely bound to a tree.
+
+Then, with Michelot and Abdon following a short distance behind me,
+I made my way back to the troopers, and, feigning to stumble as I
+approached, I hurtled so violently against two of them that I knocked
+the pair headlong into the stream.
+
+Scarce was it done, and almost before the remaining three had realised
+it, there was a pistol at the head of each of them and sweet promises of
+an eternal hereafter being whispered in their ears. They bore themselves
+with charming discretion, and like lambs we led them each to a tree
+and dealt with them as we had dealt with their officers, whilst the
+Chevalier and his daughter watched us, bewildered and dumfounded at what
+they saw.
+
+As soon as the other two had crawled--all unconscious of the fates of
+their comrades--out of the river, we served them also in a like manner.
+
+Bidding Abdon and Michelot lead the horses, and still speaking in my
+assumed voice, I desired Mademoiselle and the Chevalier--who had not
+yet sufficiently recovered from his bewilderment to have found his
+tongue--to follow me. I led the way up the gentle slope to the spot
+where our first victims were pinioned.
+
+Montresor's comely young face looked monstrous wicked in the moonlight,
+and his eyes rolled curiously as he beheld me. Stepping up to him I
+freed him of his gag--an act which I had almost regretted a moment
+later, for he cleared his throat with so lusty a torrent of profanity
+that methought the heavens must have fallen on us. At last when he was
+done with that--"Before you leave me in this plight, M. de St. Auban,"
+quoth he, "perchance you will satisfy me with an explanation of your
+unfathomable deeds and of this violence."
+
+"St. Auban!" exclaimed the Chevalier.
+
+"St. Auban!" cried Yvonne.
+
+And albeit wonder rang in both their voices, yet their minds I knew went
+different ways.
+
+"No, not St. Auban," I answered with a laugh and putting aside all
+counterfeit of speech.
+
+"Par la mort Dieu! I know that voice," cried Montresor.
+
+"Mayhap, indeed! And know you not this face?" And as I spoke I whipped
+away my wig and mask, and thrust my countenance close up to his.
+
+"Thunder of God!" ejaculated the boy. Then--"Pardieu," he added, "there
+is Michelot! How came I not to recognise him?"
+
+"Since you would not assist me, Montresor, you see I was forced to do
+without you."
+
+"But St. Auban?" he gasped. "Where is he?"
+
+"In heaven, I hope--but I doubt it sadly."
+
+"You have killed him?"
+
+There and then, as briefly as I might, I told him, whilst the others
+stood by to listen, how I had come upon the Marquis in the chateau the
+night before and what had passed thereafter.
+
+"And now," I said, as I cut his bonds, "it grieves me to charge you with
+an impolite errand to his Eminence, but--"
+
+"I'll not return to him," he burst out. "I dare not. Mon Dieu, you have
+ruined me, Luynes!"
+
+"Then come with me, and I'll build your fortunes anew and on a sounder
+foundation. I have an influential letter in my pocket that should
+procure us fortune in the service of the King of Spain."
+
+He needed little pressing to fall in with my invitation, so we set the
+sergeant free, and him instead I charged with a message that must have
+given Mazarin endless pleasure when it was delivered to him. But he had
+the Canaples estates wherewith to console himself and his never-failing
+maxim that "chi canta, paga." Touching the Canaples estates, however, he
+did not long enjoy them, for when he went into exile, two years later,
+the Parliament returned them to their rightful owner.
+
+The Chevalier de Canaples approached me timidly.
+
+"Monsieur," quoth he, "I have wronged you very deeply. And this generous
+rescue of one who has so little merited your aid truly puts me to so
+much shame that I know not what thanks to offer you."
+
+"Then offer none, Monsieur," I answered, taking his proffered hand.
+"Moreover, time presses and we have a possible pursuit to baffle. So to
+horse, Monsieurs."
+
+I assisted Mademoiselle to mount, and she passively suffered me to do
+her this office, having no word for me, and keeping her face averted
+from my earnest gaze.
+
+I sighed as I turned to mount the horse Michelot held for me; but
+methinks 't was more a sigh of satisfaction than of pain.
+
+ . . . . . . . .
+
+All that night we travelled and all next day until Tours was reached
+towards evening. There we halted for a sorely needed rest and for fresh
+horses.
+
+Three days later we arrived at Nantes, and a week from the night of the
+Chevalier's rescue we took ship from that port to Santander.
+
+That same evening, as I leaned upon the taffrail watching the distant
+coast line of my beloved France, whose soil meseemed I was not like to
+tread again for years, Yvonne came softly up behind me.
+
+"Monsieur," she said in a voice that trembled somewhat, "I have, indeed,
+misjudged you. The shame of it has made me hold aloof from you since we
+left Blois. I cannot tell you, Monsieur, how deep that shame has
+been, or with what sorrow I have been beset for the words I uttered at
+Canaples. Had I but paused to think--"
+
+"Nay, nay, Mademoiselle, 't was all my fault, I swear. I left you
+overlong the dupe of appearances."
+
+"But I should not have believed them so easily. Say that I am forgiven,
+Monsieur," she pleaded; "tell me what reparation I can make."
+
+"There is one reparation that you can make if you are so minded," I
+answered, "but 'tis a life-long reparation."
+
+They were bold words, indeed, but my voice played the coward and shook
+so vilely that it bereft them of half their boldness. But, ah, Dieu,
+what joy, what ecstasy was mine to see how they were read by her; to
+remark the rich, warm blood dyeing her cheeks in a bewitching blush; to
+behold the sparkle that brightened her matchless eyes as they met mine!
+
+"Yvonne!"
+
+"Gaston!"
+
+She was in my arms at last, and the work of reparation was begun whilst
+together we gazed across the sun-gilt sea towards the fading shores of
+France.
+
+If you be curious to learn how, guided by the gentle hand of her who
+plucked me from the vile ways that in my old life I had trodden, I have
+since achieved greatness, honour, and renown, History will tell you.
+
+
+
+
+
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+Project Gutenberg Etext The Suitors of Yvonne, by Rafael Sabatini
+#14 in our series by Raphael Sabatini
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+Title: The Suitors of Yvonne
+
+Author: Raphael Sabatini
+
+Release Date: September, 2002 [Etext #3430]
+[Yes, we are about one year ahead of schedule]
+[Date first posted:] 04/20/01
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+Edition:
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+Language: English
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+Project Gutenberg Etext The Suitors of Yvonne, by Rafael Sabatini
+******This file should be named styvn10.txt or styvn10.zip*******
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+
+The Suitors of Yvonne
+Being a Portion of the Memoirs of the Sieur Gaston de Luynes
+
+by Rafael Sabatini
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+
+CHAPTER
+
+ I. OF HOW A BOY DRANK TOO MUCH WINE, AND WHAT CAME OF IT
+
+ II. THE FRUIT OF INDISCRETION
+
+ III. THE FIGHT IN THE HORSE-MARKET
+
+ IV. FAIR RESCUERS
+
+ V. MAZARIN, THE MATCH-MAKER
+
+ VI. OF HOW ANDREA BECAME LOVE­SICK
+
+ VII. THE CHÂTEAU DR CANAPLES
+
+ VIII. THE FORESHADOW OF DISASTER
+
+ IX. OF HOW A WHIP PROVED A BETTER ARGUMENT THAN A TONGUE
+
+ X. THE CONSCIENCE OF MALPERTUIS
+
+ XI. OF A WOMAN'S OBSTINACY
+
+ XII. THE RESCUE
+
+ XIII. THE HAND OF YVONNE
+
+ XIV. OF WHAT BEFELL AT REAUX
+
+ XV. OF MY RESURRECTION
+
+ XVI. THE WAY OF WOMAN
+
+ XVII. FATHER AND SON
+
+XVIII. OF HOW I LEFT CANAPLES
+
+ XIX. OF MY RETURN TO PARIS
+
+ XX. OF HOW THE CHEVALIER DE CANAPLES BECAME A FRONDEUR
+
+ XXI. OF THE BARGAIN THAT ST. AUBAN DROVE WITH MY LORD CARDINAL
+
+ XXII. OF MY SECOND JOURNEY TO CANAPLES
+
+XXIII. OF HOW ST. AUBAN CAME TO BLOIS
+
+ XXIV. OF THE PASSING OF ST. AUBAN
+
+ XXV. PLAY-ACTING
+
+ XXVI. REPARATION
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+OF HOW A BOY DRANK TOO MUCH WINE, AND WHAT CAME OF IT
+
+
+Andrea de Mancini sprawled, ingloriously drunk, upon the floor. His legs
+were thrust under the table, and his head rested against the chair from
+which he had slipped; his long black hair was tossed and dishevelled; his
+handsome, boyish face flushed and garbed in the vacant expression of
+idiocy.
+
+"I beg a thousand pardons, M. de Luynes," quoth he in the thick, monotonous
+voice of a man whose brain but ill controls his tongue,--"I beg a thousand
+pardons for the unseemly poverty of our repast. 'T is no fault of mine.
+My Lord Cardinal keeps a most unworthy table for me. Faugh! Uncle Giulio
+is a Hebrew--if not by birth, by instinct. He carries his purse-strings in
+a knot which it would break his heart to unfasten. But there! some day my
+Lord Cardinal will go to heaven--to the lap of Abraham. I shall be rich
+then, vastly rich, and I shall bid you to a banquet worthy of your most
+noble blood. The Cardinal's health--perdition have him for the
+niggardliest rogue unhung!"
+
+I pushed back my chair and rose. The conversation was taking a turn that
+was too unhealthy to be pursued within the walls of the Palais Mazarin,
+where there existed, albeit the law books made no reference to it, the
+heinous crime of lèse-Eminence--a crime for which more men had been broken
+than it pleases me to dwell on.
+
+"Your table, Master Andrea, needs no apology," I answered carelessly.
+"Your wine, for instance, is beyond praise."
+
+"Ah, yes! The wine! But, ciel! Monsieur," he ejaculated, for a moment
+opening wide his heavy eyelids, "do you believe 't was Mazarin provided it?
+Pooh! 'T was a present made me by M. de la Motte, who seeks my interest
+with my Lord Cardinal to obtain for him an appointment in his Eminence's
+household, and thus thinks to earn my good will. He's a pestilent
+creature, this la Motte," he added, with a hiccough,--"a pestilent
+creature; but, Sangdieu! his wine is good, and I'll speak to my uncle.
+Help me up, De Luynes. Help me up, I say; I would drink the health of this
+provider of wines."
+
+I hurried forward, but he had struggled up unaided, and stood swaying with
+one hand on the table and the other on the back of his chair. In vain did
+I remonstrate with him that already he had drunk overmuch.
+
+"'T is a lie!" he shouted. "May not a gentleman sit upon the floor from
+choice?"
+
+To emphasise his protestation he imprudently withdrew his hand from the
+chair and struck at the air with his open palm. That gesture cost him his
+balance. He staggered, toppled backward, and clutched madly at the
+tablecloth as he fell, dragging glasses, bottles, dishes, tapers, and a
+score of other things besides, with a deafening crash on to the floor.
+
+Then, as I stood aghast and alarmed, wondering who might have overheard the
+thunder of his fall, the fool sat up amidst the ruins, and filled the room
+with his shrieks of drunken laughter.
+
+"Silence, boy!" I thundered, springing towards him. "Silence! or we shall
+have the whole house about our ears."
+
+And truly were my fears well grounded, for, before I could assist him to
+rise, I heard the door behind me open. Apprehensively I turned, and
+sickened to see that that which I had dreaded most was come to pass. A
+tall, imposing figure in scarlet robes stood erect and scowling on the
+threshold, and behind him his valet, Bernouin, bearing a lighted taper.
+
+Mancini's laugh faded into a tremulous cackle, then died out, and with
+gaping mouth and glassy eyes he sat there staring at his uncle.
+
+Thus we stayed in silence while a man might count mayhap a dozen; then the
+Cardinal's voice rang harsh and full of anger.
+
+"'T is thus that you fulfil your trust, M. de Luynes!" he said.
+
+"Your Eminence--" I began, scarce knowing what I should say, when he cut me
+short.
+
+"I will deal with you presently and elsewhere." He stepped up to Andrea,
+and surveyed him for a moment in disgust. "Get up, sir!" he commanded.
+"Get up!"
+
+The lad sought to obey him with an alacrity that merited a kinder fate.
+Had he been in less haste perchance he had been more successful. As it
+was, he had got no farther than his knees when his right leg slid from
+under him, and he fell prone among the shattered tableware, mumbling curses
+and apologies in a breath.
+
+Mazarin stood gazing at him with an eye that was eloquent in scorn, then
+bending down he spoke quickly to him in Italian. What he said I know not,
+being ignorant of their mother tongue; but from the fierceness of his
+utterance I'll wager my soul 't was nothing sweet to listen to. When he
+had done with him, he turned to his valet.
+
+"Bernouin," said he, "summon M. de Mancini's servant and assist him to get
+my nephew to bed. M. de Luynes, be good enough to take Bernouin's taper
+and light me back to my apartments."
+
+Unsavoury as was the task, I had no choice but to obey, and to stalk on in
+front of him, candle in hand, like an acolyte at Notre Dame, and in my
+heart the profound conviction that I was about to have a bad quarter of an
+hour with his Eminence. Nor was I wrong; for no sooner had we reached his
+cabinet and the door had been closed than he turned upon me the full
+measure of his wrath.
+
+"You miserable fool!" he snarled. "Did you think to trifle with the trust
+which in a misguided moment I placed in you? Think you that, when a week
+ago I saved you from starvation to clothe and feed you and give you a
+lieutenancy in my guards, I should endure so foul an abuse as this? Think
+you that I entrusted M. de Mancini's training in arms to you so that you
+might lead him into the dissolute habits which have dragged you down to
+what you are--to what you were before I rescued you--to what you will be
+to-morrow when I shall have again abandoned you?"
+
+"Hear me, your Eminence!" I cried indignantly. "'T is no fault of mine.
+Some fool hath sent M. de Mancini a basket of wine and--"
+
+"And you showed him how to abuse it," he broke in harshly. "You have
+taught the boy to become a sot; in time, were he to remain under your
+guidance, I make no doubt but that he would become a gamester and a
+duellist as well. I was mad, perchance, to give him into your care; but I
+have the good fortune to be still in time, before the mischief has sunk
+farther, to withdraw him from it, and to cast you back into the kennel from
+which I picked you."
+
+"Your Eminence does not mean--"
+
+"As God lives I do!" he cried. "You shall quit the Palais Royal this very
+night, M. de Luynes, and if ever I find you unbidden within half a mile of
+it, I will do that which out of a misguided sense of compassion I do not do
+now--I will have you flung into an oubliette of the Bastille, where better
+men than you have rotted before to-day. Per Dio! do you think that I am to
+be fooled by such a thing as you?"
+
+"Does your Eminence dismiss me?" I cried aghast, and scarce crediting that
+such was indeed the extreme measure upon which he had determined.
+
+"Have I not been plain enough?" he answered with a snarl.
+
+I realised to the full my unenviable position, and with the realisation of
+it there overcame me the recklessness of him who has played his last stake
+at the tables and lost. That recklessness it was that caused me to shrug
+my shoulders with a laugh. I was a soldier of fortune--or should I say a
+soldier of misfortune?--as rich in vice as I was poor in virtue; a man who
+lived by the steel and parried the blows that came as best he might, or
+parried them not at all--but never quailed.
+
+"As your Eminence pleases," I answered coolly, "albeit methinks that for
+one who has shed his blood for France as freely as I have done, a little
+clemency were not unfitting."
+
+He raised his eyebrows, and his lips curled in a malicious sneer.
+
+"You come of a family, M. de Luynes," he said slowly, "that is famed for
+having shed the blood of others for France more freely than its own. You
+are, I believe, the nephew of Albert de Luynes. Do you forget the Marshal
+d'Ancre?"
+
+I felt the blood of anger hot in my face as I made haste to answer him:
+
+"There are many of us, Monseigneur, who have cause to blush for the
+families they spring from--more cause, mayhap, than hath Gaston de Luynes."
+
+In my words perchance there was no offensive meaning, but in my tone and in
+the look which I bent upon the Cardinal there was that which told him that
+I alluded to his own obscure and dubious origin. He grew livid, and for a
+moment methought he would have struck me: had he done so, then, indeed, the
+history of Europe would have been other than it is to-day! He restrained
+himself, however, and drawing himself to the full height of his majestic
+figure he extended his arm towards the door.
+
+"Go," he said, in a voice that passion rendered hoarse. "Go, Monsieur. Go
+quickly, while my clemency endures. Go before I summon the guard and deal
+with you as your temerity deserves."
+
+I bowed--not without a taint of mockery, for I cared little what might
+follow; then, with head erect and the firm tread of defiance, I stalked out
+of his apartment, along the corridor, down the great staircase, across the
+courtyard, past the guard,--which, ignorant of my disgrace, saluted me,--
+and out into the street.
+
+Then at last my head sank forward on my breast, and deep in thought I
+wended my way home, oblivious of all around me, even the chill bite of the
+February wind.
+
+In my mind I reviewed my wasted life, with the fleeting pleasures and the
+enduring sorrows that it had brought me--or that I had drawn from it. The
+Cardinal said no more than truth when he spoke of having saved me from
+starvation. A week ago that was indeed what he had done. He had taken
+pity on Gaston de Luynes, the nephew of that famous Albert de Luynes who
+had been Constable of France in the early days of the late king's reign; he
+had made me lieutenant of his guards and maître d'armes to his nephews
+Andrea and Paolo de Mancini because he knew that a better blade than mine
+could not be found in France, and because he thought it well to have such
+swords as mine about him.
+
+A little week ago life had been replete with fresh promises, the gates of
+the road to fame (and perchance fortune) had been opened to me anew, and
+now--before I had fairly passed that gate I had been thrust rudely back,
+and it had been slammed in my face because it pleased a fool to become a
+sot whilst in my company.
+
+There is a subtle poetry in the contemplation of ruin. With ruin itself,
+howbeit, there comes a prosaic dispelling of all idle dreams--a hard, a
+grim, a vile reality.
+
+Ruin! 'T is an ugly word. A fitting one to carve upon the tombstone of a
+reckless, godless, dissolute life such as mine had been.
+
+Back, Gaston de Luynes! back, to the kennel whence the Cardinal's hand did
+for a moment pluck you; back, from the morning of hope to the night of
+despair; back, to choose between starvation and the earning of a pauper's
+fee as a master of fence!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE FRUIT OF INDISCRETION
+
+
+Despite the dejection to which I had become a prey, I slept no less soundly
+that night than was my wont, and indeed it was not until late next morning
+when someone knocked at my door that I awakened.
+
+I sat up in bed, and my first thought as I looked round the handsome room--
+which I had rented a week ago upon receiving the lieutenancy in the
+Cardinal's guards--was for the position that I had lost and of the need
+that there would be ere long to seek a lodging more humble and better
+suited to my straitened circumstances. It was not without regret that such
+a thought came to me, for my tastes had never been modest, and the house
+was a fine one, situated in the Rue St. Antoine at a hundred paces or so
+from the Jesuit convent.
+
+I had no time, however, to indulge the sorry mood that threatened to beset
+me, for the knocking at my chamber door continued, until at length I
+answered it with a command to enter.
+
+It was my servant Michelot, a grizzled veteran of huge frame and strength,
+who had fought beside me at Rocroi, and who had thereafter become so
+enamoured of my person--for some trivial service he swore I had rendered
+him--that he had attached himself to me and my luckless fortunes.
+
+He came to inform me that M. de Mancini was below and craved immediate
+speech with me. He had scarce done speaking, however, when Andrea himself,
+having doubtless grown tired of waiting, appeared in the doorway. He wore
+a sickly look, the result of his last night's debauch; but, more than that,
+there was stamped upon his face a look of latent passion which made me
+think at first that he was come to upbraid me.
+
+"Ah, still abed, Luynes?" was his greeting as he came forward.
+
+His cloak was wet and his boots splashed, which told me both that he had
+come afoot and that it rained.
+
+"There are no duties that bid me rise," I answered sourly.
+
+He frowned at that, then, divesting himself of his cloak, he gave it to
+Michelot, who, at a sign from me, withdrew. No sooner was the door closed
+than the boy's whole manner changed. The simmering passion of which I had
+detected signs welled up and seemed to choke him as he poured forth the
+story that he had come to tell.
+
+"I have been insulted," he gasped. "Grossly insulted by a vile creature of
+Monsieur d'Orleans's household. An hour ago in the ante-chamber at the
+Palais Royal I was spoken of in my hearing as the besotted nephew of the
+Italian adventurer."
+
+I sat up in bed tingling with excitement at the developments which already
+I saw arising from his last night's imprudence.
+
+"Calmly, Andrea," I begged of him, "tell me calmly."
+
+"Mortdieu! How can I be calm? Ough! The thought of it chokes me. I was
+a fool last night--a sot. For that, perchance, men have some right to
+censure me. But, Sangdieu! that a ruffler of the stamp of Eugène de
+Canaples should speak of it--should call me the nephew of an Italian
+adventurer, should draw down upon me the cynical smile of a crowd of
+courtly apes--pah! I am sick at the memory of it!"
+
+"Did you answer him?"
+
+"Pardieu! I should be worthy of the title he bestowed upon me had I not
+done so. Oh, I answered him--not in words. I threw my hat in his face."
+
+"That was a passing eloquent reply!"
+
+"So eloquent that it left him speechless with amazement. He thought to
+bully with impunity, and see me slink into hiding like a whipped dog,
+terrified by his blustering tongue and dangerous reputation. But there!"
+he broke off, "a meeting has been arranged for four o'clock at St.
+Germain."
+
+"A meeting!" I exclaimed.
+
+"What else? Do you think the affront left any alternative?"
+
+"But--"
+
+"Yes, yes, I know," he interrupted, tossing his head. "I am going to be
+killed. Verville has sworn that there shall be one less of the Italian
+brood. That is why I have come to you, Luynes--to ask you to be my second.
+I don't deserve it, perhaps. In my folly last night I did you an ill turn.
+I unwittingly caused you to be stripped of your commission. But if I were
+on my death-bed now, and begged a favour of you, you would not refuse it.
+And what difference is there 'twixt me and one who is on his death-bed? Am
+I not about to die?"
+
+"Peste! I hope not," I made answer with more lightness than I felt. "But
+I'll stand by you with all my heart, Andrea."
+
+"And you'll avenge me?" he cried savagely, his Southern blood a-boiling.
+"You'll not let him leave the ground alive?"
+
+"Not unless my opponent commits the indiscretion of killing me first. Who
+seconds M. de Canaples?"
+
+"The Marquis de St. Auban and M. de Montmédy."
+
+"And who is the third in our party?"
+
+"I have none. I thought that perhaps you had a friend."
+
+"I! A friend?" I laughed bitterly. "Pshaw, Andrea! beggars have no
+friends. But stay; find Stanislas de Gouville. There is no better blade
+in Paris. If he will join us in this frolic, and you can hold off Canaples
+until either St. Auban or Montmédy is disposed of, we may yet leave the
+three of them on the field of battle. Courage, Andrea! Dum spiramus,
+speramus."
+
+My words seemed to cheer him, and when presently he left me to seek out the
+redoubtable Gouville, the poor lad's face was brighter by far than when he
+had entered my room.
+
+Down in my heart, however, I was less hopeful than I had led him to
+believe, and as I dressed after he had gone, 't was not without some
+uneasiness that I turned the matter over in my mind. I had, during the
+short period of our association, grown fond of Andrea de Mancini. Indeed
+the wonted sweetness of the lad's temper, and the gentleness of his
+disposition, were such as to breed affection in all who came in contact
+with him. In a way, too, methought he had grown fond of me, and I had
+known so few friends in life,--truth to tell I fear me that I had few of
+the qualities that engender friendship,--that I was naturally prone to
+appreciate a gift that from its rareness became doubly valuable.
+
+Hence was it that I trembled for the boy. He had shown aptitude with the
+foils, and derived great profit from my tuition, yet he was too raw by far
+to be pitted against so cunning a swordsman as Canaples.
+
+I had but finished dressing when a coach rumbled down the street and halted
+by my door. Naturally I supposed that someone came to visit Coupri, the
+apothecary,--to whom belonged this house in which I had my lodging,--and
+did not give the matter a second thought until Michelot rushed in, with
+eyes wide open, to announce that his Eminence, Cardinal Mazarin, commanded
+my presence in the adjoining room.
+
+Amazed and deeply marvelling what so extraordinary a visit might portend, I
+hastened to wait upon his Eminence.
+
+I found him standing by the window, and received from him a greeting that
+was passing curt and cavalier.
+
+"Has M. de Mancini been here?" he inquired peremptorily, disregarding the
+chair I offered him.
+
+"He has but left me, Monseigneur."
+
+"Then you know, sir, of the harvest which he has already reaped from the
+indiscretion into which you led him last night?"
+
+"If Monseigneur alludes to the affront put upon M. de Mancini touching his
+last night's indiscretion, by a bully of the Court, I am informed of it."
+
+"Pish, Monsieur! I do not follow your fine distinctions--possibly this is
+due to my imperfect knowledge of the language of France, possibly to your
+own imperfect acquaintance with the language of truth."
+
+"Monseigneur!"
+
+"Faugh!" he cried, half scornfully, half peevishly. "I came not here to
+talk of you, but of my nephew. Why did he visit you?"
+
+"To do me the honour of asking me to second him at St. Germain this
+evening."
+
+"And so you think that this duel is to be fought?--that my nephew is to be
+murdered?"
+
+"We will endeavour to prevent his being--as your Eminence daintily puts
+it--murdered. But for the rest, the duel, methinks, cannot be avoided."
+
+"Cannot!" he blazed. "Do you say cannot, M. de Luynes? Mark me well, sir:
+I will use no dissimulation with you. My position in France is already a
+sufficiently difficult one. Already we are threatened with a second
+Fronde. It needs but such events as these to bring my family into
+prominence and make it the butt for the ridicule that malcontents but wait
+an opportunity to slur it with. This affair of Andrea's will lend itself
+to a score or so of lampoons and pasquinades, all of which will cast an
+injurious reflection upon my person and position. That, Monsieur, is,
+methinks, sufficient evil to suffer at your hands. The late Cardinal would
+have had you broken on the wheel for less. I have gone no farther than to
+dismiss you from my service--a clemency for which you should be grateful.
+But I shall not suffer that, in addition to the harm already done, Andrea
+shall be murdered by Canaples."
+
+"I shall do my best to render him assistance."
+
+"You still misapprehend me. This duel, sir, must not take place."
+
+I shrugged my shoulders.
+
+"How does your Eminence propose to frustrate it? Will you arrest
+Canaples?"
+
+"Upon what plea, Monsieur? Think you I am anxious to have the whole of
+Paris howling in my ears?"
+
+"Then possibly it is your good purpose to enforce the late king's edict
+against duelling, and send your guards to St. Germain to arrest the men
+before they engage?"
+
+"Benone!" he sneered. "And what will Paris say if I now enforce a law that
+for ten years has been disregarded? That I feared for my nephew's skin and
+took this means of saving him. A pretty story to have on Paris's lips,
+would it not be?"
+
+"Indeed, Monseigneur, you are right, but I doubt me the duel will needs be
+fought."
+
+"Have I not already said that it shall not be fought?"
+
+Again I shrugged my shoulders. Mazarin grew tiresome with his repetitions.
+
+"How can it be avoided, your Eminence?"
+
+"Ah, Monsieur, that is your affair."
+
+"My affair?"
+
+"Assuredly. 'T was through your evil agency he was dragged into this
+business, and through your agency he must be extricated from it."
+
+"Your Eminence jests!"
+
+"Undoubtedly,--'t is a jesting matter," he answered with terrible irony.
+"Oh, I jest! Per Dio! yes. But I'll carry my jest so far as to have you
+hanged if this duel be fought--aye, whether my nephew suffers hurt or not.
+Now, sir, you know what fate awaits you; fight it--turn it aside--I have
+shown you the way. The door, M. de Luynes."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE FIGHT IN THE HORSE-MARKET
+
+
+I let him go without a word. There was that in his voice, in his eye, and
+in the gesture wherewith he bade me hold the door for him, that cleared my
+mind of any doubts touching the irrevocable character of his determination.
+To plead was never an accomplishment of mine; to argue, I saw, would be to
+waste the Cardinal's time to no purpose.
+
+And so I let him go,--and my curse with him,--and from my window I watched
+his coach drive away in the drizzling rain, scattering the crowd of awe-
+stricken loiterers who had collected at the rumour of his presence.
+
+With a fervent prayer that his patron saint, the devil, might see fit to
+overset his coach and break his neck before he reached the Palace, I turned
+from the window, and called Michelot.
+
+He was quick to answer my summons, bringing me the frugal measure of bread
+and wine wherewith it was my custom to break my fast. Then, whilst I
+munched my crust, I strode to and fro in the little chamber and exercised
+my wits to their utmost for a solution to the puzzle his Eminence had set
+me.
+
+One solution there was, and an easy one--flight. But I had promised Andrea
+de Mancini that I would stand beside him at St. Germain; there was a
+slender chance of saving him if I went, whilst, if I stayed away, there
+would be nothing left for his Eminence to do but to offer up prayers for
+the rest of his nephew's soul.
+
+Another idea I had, but it was desperate--and yet, so persistently did my
+thoughts revert to it that in the end I determined to accept it.
+
+I drank a cup of Armagnac, cheered myself with an oath or two, and again I
+called Michelot. When he came, I asked him if he were acquainted with M.
+de Canaples, to which he replied that he was, having seen the gentleman in
+my company.
+
+"Then," I said, "you will repair to M. de Canaples's lodging in the Rue des
+Gesvres, and ascertain discreetly whether he be at home. If he is, you
+will watch the house until he comes forth, then follow him, and bring me
+word thereafter where he is to be found. Should he be already abroad
+before you reach the Rue des Gesvres, endeavour to ascertain whither he has
+gone, and return forthwith. But be discreet, Michelot. You understand?"
+
+He assured me that he did, and left me to nurse my unpleasant thoughts for
+half an hour, returning at the end of that time with the information that
+M. de Canaples was seated at dinner in the "Auberge du Soleil."
+
+Naught could have been more attuned to my purpose, and straightway I drew
+on my boots, girt on my sword, and taking my hat and cloak, I sallied out
+into the rain, and wended my way at a sharp pace towards the Rue St.
+Honoré.
+
+One o'clock was striking as I crossed the threshold of the "Soleil" and
+flung my dripping cloak to the first servant I chanced upon.
+
+I glanced round the well-filled room, and at one of the tables I espied my
+quarry in company with St. Auban and Montmédy--the very gentlemen who were
+to fight beside him that evening--and one Vilmorin, as arrant a coxcomb and
+poltroon as could be found in France. With my beaver cocked at the back of
+my head, and a general bearing that for aggressiveness would be hard to
+surpass, I strode up to their table, and stood for a moment surveying them
+with an insolent stare that made them pause in their conversation. They
+raised their noble heads and bestowed upon me a look of haughty and
+disdainful wonder,--such a look as one might bestow upon a misbehaving
+lackey,--all save Vilmorin, who, with a coward's keen nose for danger,
+turned slightly pale and fidgeted in his chair. I was well known to all of
+them, but my attitude forbade all greeting.
+
+"Has M. de Luynes lost anything?" St. Auban inquired icily.
+
+"His wits, mayhap," quoth Canaples with a contemptuous shrug.
+
+He was a tall, powerfully built man, this Canaples, with a swart, cruel
+face that was nevertheless not ill-favoured, and a profusion of black hair.
+
+"There is a temerity in M. de Canaples's rejoinder that I had not looked
+for," I said banteringly.
+
+Canaples's brow was puckered in a frown.
+
+"Ha! And why not, Monsieur?"
+
+"Why not? Because it is not to be expected that one who fastens quarrels
+upon schoolboys would evince the courage to beard Gaston de Luynes."
+
+"Monsieur!" the four of them cried in chorus, so loudly that the hum of
+voices in the tavern became hushed, and all eyes were turned in our
+direction.
+
+"M. de Canaples," I said calmly, "permit me to say that I can find no more
+fitting expression for the contempt I hold you in than this."
+
+As I spoke I seized a corner of the tablecloth, and with a sudden tug I
+swept it, with all it held, on to the floor.
+
+Dame! what a scene there was! In an instant the four of them were on their
+feet,--as were half the occupants of the room, besides,--whilst poor
+Vilmorin, who stood trembling like a maid who for the first time hears
+words of love, raised his quavering voice to cry soothingly, "Messieurs,
+Messieurs!"
+
+Canaples was livid with passion, but otherwise the calmest in that room,
+saving perhaps myself. With a gesture he restrained Montmédy and St.
+Auban.
+
+"I shall be happy to give Master de Luynes all the proof of my courage that
+he may desire, and more, I warrant, than he will relish."
+
+"Bravely answered!" I cried, with an approving nod and a beaming smile.
+"Be good enough to lead the way to a convenient spot."
+
+"I have other business at the moment," he answered calmly. "Let us say to-
+morrow at--"
+
+"Faugh!" I broke in scornfully. "I knew it! Confess, Monsieur, that you
+dare not light me now lest you should be unable to keep your appointments
+for this evening."
+
+"Mille diables!" exclaimed St. Auban, "this insolence passes all bounds."
+
+"Each man in his turn if you please, gentlemen," I replied. "My present
+affair is with M. de Canaples."
+
+There was a hot answer burning on St. Auban's lips, but Canaples was
+beforehand with him.
+
+"Par la mort Dieu!" he cried; "you go too far, sir, with your 'dare' and
+'dare not.' Is a broken gamester, a penniless adventurer, to tell Eugène
+de Canaples what he dares? Come, sir; since you are eager for the taste of
+steel, follow me, and say your prayers as you go."
+
+With that we left the inn, amidst a prodigious hubbub, and made our way to
+the horse-market behind the Hôtel Vendôme. It was not to be expected,
+albeit the place we had chosen was usually deserted at such an hour, that
+after the fracas at the "Soleil" our meeting would go unattended. When we
+faced each other--Canaples and I--there were at least some twenty persons
+present, who came, despite the rain, to watch what they thought was like to
+prove a pretty fight. Men of position were they for the most part,
+gentlemen of the Court with here and there a soldier, and from the manner
+in which they eyed me methought they favoured me but little.
+
+Our preparations were brief. The absence of seconds disposed of all
+formalities, the rain made us impatient to be done, and in virtue of it
+Canaples pompously announced that he would not risk a cold by stripping.
+With interest did I grimly answer that he need fear no cold when I had done
+with him. Then casting aside my cloak, I drew, and, professing myself also
+disposed to retain my doublet, we forthwith engaged.
+
+He was no mean swordsman, this Canaples. Indeed, his reputation was
+already widespread, and in the first shock of our meeting blades I felt
+that rumour had been just for once. But I was strangely dispossessed of
+any doubts touching the outcome; this being due perchance to a vain
+confidence in my own skill, perchance to the spirit of contemptuous
+raillery wherewith I had from the outset treated the affair, and which had
+so taken root in my heart that even when we engaged I still, almost
+unwittingly, persisted in it.
+
+In my face and attitude there was the reflection of this bantering,
+flippant mood; it was to be read in the mocking disdain of my glance, in
+the scornful curl of my lip, and even in the turn of my wrist as I put
+aside my opponent's passes. All this, Canaples must have noted, and it was
+not without effect upon his nerves. Moreover, there is in steel a subtle
+magnetism which is the index of one's antagonist; and from the moment that
+our blades slithered one against the other I make no doubt but that
+Canaples grew aware of the confident, almost exultant mood in which I met
+him, and which told him that I was his master. Add to this the fact that
+whilst Canaples's nerves were unstrung by passion mine were held in check
+by a mind as calm and cool as though our swords were baited, and consider
+with what advantages I took my ground.
+
+He led the attack fiercely and furiously, as if I were a boy whose guard
+was to be borne down by sheer weight of blows. I contented myself with
+tapping his blade aside, and when at length, after essaying every trick in
+his catalogue, he fell back baffled, I laughed a low laugh of derision that
+drove him pale with fury.
+
+Again he came at me, almost before I was prepared for him, and his point,
+parried with a downward stroke and narrowly averted, scratched my thigh,
+but did more damage to my breeches than my skin. in exchange I touched him
+playfully on the shoulder, and the sting of it drove him back a second
+time. He was breathing hard by then, and would fain have paused awhile for
+breath, but I saw no reason to be merciful.
+
+"Now, sir," I cried, saluting him as though our combat were but on the
+point of starting--"to me! Guard yourself!"
+
+Again our swords clashed, and my blows now fell as swift on his blade as
+his had done awhile ago on mine. So hard did I press him that he was
+forced to give way before me. Back I drove him pace by pace, his wrist
+growing weaker at each parry, each parry growing wider, and the
+perspiration streaming down his ashen face. Panting he went, in that
+backward flight before my onslaught, defending himself as best he could,
+never thinking of a riposte--beaten already. Back, and yet back he went,
+until he reached the railings and could back no farther, and so broken was
+his spirit then that a groan escaped him. I answered with a laugh--my mood
+was lusty and cruel--and thrust at him. Then, eluding his guard, I thrust
+again, beneath it, and took him fairly in the middle of his doublet.
+
+He staggered, dropped his rapier, and caught at the railings, where for a
+moment he hung swaying and gasping. Then his head fell forward, his grip
+relaxed, and swooning he sank down into a heap.
+
+A dozen sprang to his aid, foremost amongst them being St. Auban and
+Montmédy, whilst I drew back, suddenly realising my own spent condition, to
+which the heat of the combat had hitherto rendered me insensible. I
+mastered myself as best I might, and, dissembling my hard breathing, I
+wiped my blade with a kerchief, an act which looked so calm and callous
+that it drew from the crowd--for a crowd it had become by then--an angry
+growl. 'T is thus with the vulgar; they are ever ready to sympathise with
+the vanquished without ever pausing to ask themselves if his chastisement
+may not be merited.
+
+In answer to the growl I tossed my head, and sheathing my sword I flung the
+bloodstained kerchief into their very midst. The audacity of the gesture
+left them breathless, and they growled no more, but stared.
+
+Then that outrageous fop, Vilmorin, who had been bending over Canaples,
+started up and coming towards me with a face that was whiter than that of
+the prostrate man, he proved himself so utterly bereft of wit by terror
+that for once he had the temerity to usurp the words and actions of a brave
+man.
+
+"You have murdered him!" he cried in a strident voice, and thrusting his
+clenched fist within an inch of my face. "Do you hear me, you knave? You
+have murdered him!"
+
+Now, as may be well conceived, I was in no mood to endure such words from
+any man, so was but natural that for answer I caught the dainty Vicomte a
+buffet that knocked him into the arms of the nearest bystander, and brought
+him to his senses.
+
+"Fool," I snarled at him, "must I make another example before you believe
+that Gaston de Luynes wears a sword?"
+
+"In the name of Heaven--" he began, putting forth his hands in a beseeching
+gesture; but what more he said was drowned by the roar of anger that burst
+from the onlookers, and it was like to have gone ill with me had not St.
+Auban come to my aid at that most critical juncture.
+
+"Messieurs!" he cried, thrusting himself before me, and raising his hand to
+crave silence, "hear me. I, a friend of M. de Canaples, tell you that you
+wrong M. de Luynes. 'T was a fair fight--how the quarrel arose is no
+concern of yours."
+
+Despite his words they still snarled and growled like the misbegotten curs
+they were. But St. Auban was famous for the regal supper parties he gave,
+to which all were eager to be bidden, and amidst that crowd, as I have
+said, there were a score or so of gentlemen of the Court, who--with scant
+regard for the right or wrong of the case and every regard to conciliate
+this giver of suppers--came to range themselves beside and around us, and
+thus protected me from the murderous designs of that rabble.
+
+Seeing how the gentlemen took my part, and deeming--in their blessed
+ignorance--that what gentlemen did must be perforce well done, they grew
+calm in the twinkling of an eye. Thereupon St. Auban, turning to me,
+counselled me in a whisper to be gone, whilst the tide of opinion flowed in
+my favour. Intent to act upon this good advice, I took a step towards the
+little knot that had collected round Canaples, and with natural curiosity
+inquired into the nature of his hurt.
+
+'T was Montmédy who answered me, scowling as he did so:
+
+"He may die of it, Monsieur. If he does not, his recovery will be at least
+slow and difficult."
+
+I had been wise had I held my peace and gone; but, like a fool, I must
+needs give utterance to what was in my mind.
+
+"Ah! At least there will be no duel at St. Germain this evening."
+
+Scarce had the words fallen from my lips when I saw in the faces of
+Montmédy and St. Auban and half a dozen others the evidence of their
+rashness.
+
+"So!" cried St. Auban in a voice that shook with rage. "That was your
+object, eh? That you had fallen low, Master de Luynes, I knew, but I
+dreamt not that in your fall you had come so low as this."
+
+"You dare?"
+
+"Pardieu! I dare more, Monsieur; I dare tell you--you, Gaston de Luynes,
+spy and bravo of the Cardinal--that your object shall be defeated. That,
+as God lives, this duel shall still be fought--by me instead of Canaples."
+
+"And I tell you, sir, that as God lives it shall not," I answered with a
+vehemence not a whit less than his own. "To you and to what other fools
+may think to follow in your footsteps, I say this: that not to-night nor
+to-morrow nor the next day shall that duel be fought. Cowards and
+poltroons you are, who seek to murder a beardless boy who has injured none
+of you! But, by my soul! every man who sends a challenge to that boy will
+I at once seek out and deal with as I have dealt with Eugène de Canaples.
+Let those who are eager to try another world make the attempt. Adieu,
+Messieurs!"
+
+And with a flourish of my sodden beaver, I turned and left them before they
+had recovered from the vehemence of my words.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+FAIR RESCUERS
+
+
+Like the calm of the heavens when pregnant with thunder was the calm of
+that crowd. And as brief it was; for scarce had I taken a dozen steps when
+my ears were assailed by a rumble of angry voices and a rush of feet. One
+glance over my shoulder, one second's hesitation whether I should stay and
+beard them, then the thought of Andrea de Mancini and of what would befall
+him did this canaille vent its wrath upon me decided my course and sent me
+hotfoot down the Rue Monarque. Howling and bellowing that rabble followed
+in my wake, stumbling over one another in their indecent haste to reach me.
+
+But I was fleet of foot, and behind me there was that that would lend wings
+to the most deliberate, so that when I turned into the open space before
+the Hôtel Vendôme I had set a good fifty yards betwixt myself and the
+foremost of my hunters.
+
+A coach was passing at that moment. I shouted, and the knave who drove
+glanced at me, then up the Rue Monarque at my pursuers, whereupon, shaking
+his head, he would have left me to my fate. But I was of another mind. I
+dashed towards the vehicle, and as it passed me I caught at the window,
+which luckily was open, and drawing up my legs I hung there despite the
+shower of mud which the revolving wheels deposited upon me.
+
+From the bowels of the coach I was greeted by a woman's scream; a pale
+face, and a profusion of fair hair flashed before my eyes.
+
+"Fear not, Madame," I shouted. "I am no assassin, but rather one who
+stands in imminent peril of assassination, and who craves your protection."
+
+More I would have said, but at that juncture the lash of the coachman's
+whip curled itself about my shoulders, and stung me vilely.
+
+"Get down, you rascal," he bellowed; "get down or I'll draw rein!"
+
+To obey him would have been madness. The crowd surged behind with hoots
+and yells, and had I let go I must perforce have fallen into their hands.
+So, instead of getting down as he inconsiderately counselled, I drew myself
+farther up by a mighty effort, and thrust half my body into the coach,
+whereupon the fair lady screamed again, and the whip caressed my legs. But
+within the coach sat another woman, dark of hair and exquisite of face, who
+eyed my advent with a disdainful glance. Her proud countenance bore the
+stamp of courage, and to her it was that I directed my appeal.
+
+"Madame, permit me, I pray, to seek shelter in your carriage, and suffer me
+to journey a little way with you. Quick, Madame! Your coachman is drawing
+rein, and I shall of a certainty be murdered under your very nose unless
+you bid him change his mind. To be murdered in itself is a trifling
+matter, I avow, but it is not nice to behold, and I would not, for all the
+world, offend your eyes with the spectacle of it."
+
+I had judged her rightly, and my tone of flippant recklessness won me her
+sympathy and aid. Quickly thrusting her head through the other window:
+
+"Drive on, Louis," she commanded. "Faster!" Then turning to me, "You may
+bring your legs into the coach if you choose, sir," she said.
+
+"Your words, Madame, are the sweetest music I have heard for months," I
+answered drily, as I obeyed her. Then leaning out of the carriage again I
+waved my hat gallantly to the mob which--now realising the futility of
+further pursuit--had suddenly come to a halt.
+
+"Au plaisir de vous revoir, Messieurs," I shouted. "Come to me one by one,
+and I'll keep the devil busy finding lodgings for you."
+
+They answered me with a yell, and I sat down content, and laughed.
+
+"You are not a coward, Monsieur," said the dark lady.
+
+"I have been accounted many unsavoury things, Madame, but my bitterest
+enemies never dubbed me that."
+
+"Why, then, did you run away?"
+
+"Why? Ma foi! because in the excessive humility of my soul I recognised
+myself unfit to die."
+
+She bit her lip and her tiny foot beat impatiently upon the floor.
+
+"You are trifling with me, Monsieur. Where do you wish to alight?"
+
+"Pray let that give you no concern; I can assure you that I am in no
+haste."
+
+"You become impertinent, sir," she cried angrily. "Answer me, where are
+you going?"
+
+"Where am I going? Oh, ah--to the Palais Royal."
+
+Her eyes opened very wide at that, and wandered over me with a look that
+was passing eloquent. Indeed, I was a sorry spectacle for any woman's
+eyes--particularly a pretty one's. Splashed from head to foot with mud, my
+doublet saturated and my beaver dripping, with the feather hanging limp and
+broken, whilst there was a rent in my breeches that had been made by
+Canaples's sword, I take it that I had not the air of a courtier, and that
+when I said that I went to the Palais Royal she might have justly held me
+to be the adventurous lover of some kitchen wench. But unto the Palais
+Royal go others besides courtiers and lovers--spies of the Cardinal, for
+instance, and in her sudden coldness and the next question that fell from
+her beauteous lips I read that she had guessed me one of these.
+
+"Why did the mob pursue you, Monsieur?"
+
+There was in her voice and gesture when she asked a question the
+imperiousness of one accustomed to command replies. This pretty
+queenliness it was that drove me to answer--as I had done before--in a
+bantering strain.
+
+"Why did the mob pursue me? Hum! Why does the mob pursue great men?
+Because it loves their company."
+
+Her matchless eyes flashed an angry glance, and the faint smile on my lips
+must have tried her temper sorely.
+
+"What did you do to deserve this affection?"
+
+"A mere nothing--I killed a man," I answered coolly. "Or, at least, I left
+him started on the road to--Paradise."
+
+The little flaxen-haired doll uttered a cry of horror, and covered her face
+with her small white hands. My inquisitor, however, sat rigid and
+unaffected. My answer had confirmed her suspicions.
+
+"Why did you kill him?"
+
+"Ma foi!" I replied, encouraging her thoughts, "because he sought to kill
+me."
+
+"Ah! And why did he seek to kill you?"
+
+"Because I disturbed him at dinner."
+
+"Have a care how you trifle, sir!" she retorted, her eyes kindling again.
+
+"Upon my honour, 't was no more than that. I pulled the cloth from the
+table whilst he ate. He was a quick-tempered gentleman, and my playfulness
+offended him. That is all."
+
+Doubt appeared in her eyes, and it may have entered her mind that perchance
+her judgment had been over-hasty.
+
+"Do you mean, sir, that you provoked a duel?"
+
+"Alas, Madame! It had become necessary. You see, M. de Canaples--"
+
+"Who?" Her voice rang sharp as the crack of a pistol.
+
+"Eh? M. de Canaples."
+
+"Was it he whom you killed?"
+
+From her tone, and the eager, strained expression of her face, it was not
+difficult to read that some mighty interest of hers was involved in my
+reply. It needed not the low moan that burst from her companion to tell me
+so.
+
+"As I have said, Madame, it is possible that he is not dead--nay, even that
+he will not die. For the rest, since you ask the question, my opponent
+was, indeed, M. de Canaples--Eugène de Canaples."
+
+Her face went deadly white, and she sank back in her seat as if every nerve
+in her body had of a sudden been bereft of power, whilst she of the fair
+hair burst into tears.
+
+A pretty position was this for me!--luckily it endured not. The girl
+roused herself from her momentary weakness, and, seizing the cord, she
+tugged it violently. The coach drew up.
+
+"Alight, sir," she hissed--"go! I wish to Heaven that I had left you to
+the vengeance of the people."
+
+Not so did I; nevertheless, as I alighted: "I am sorry, Madame, that you
+did not," I answered. "Adieu!"
+
+The coach moved away, and I was left standing at the corner of the Rue St.
+Honoré and the Rue des Bons Enfants, in the sorriest frame of mind
+conceivable. The lady in the coach had saved my life, and for that I was
+more grateful perchance than my life was worth. Out of gratitude sprang a
+regret for the pain that I had undoubtedly caused her, and the sorrow which
+it might have been my fate to cast over her life.
+
+Still, regret, albeit an admirable sentiment, was one whose existence was
+usually brief in my bosom. Dame! Had I been a man of regrets I might have
+spent the remainder of my days weeping over my past life. But the gods,
+who had given me a character calculated to lead a man into misfortune, had
+given me a stout heart wherewith to fight that misfortune, and an armour of
+recklessness against which remorse, regrets, aye, and conscience itself,
+rained blows in vain.
+
+And so it befell that presently I laughed myself out of the puerile humour
+that was besetting me, and, finding myself chilled by inaction in my wet
+clothes, I set off for the Palais Royal at a pace that was first cousin to
+a run.
+
+Ten minutes later I stood in the presence of the most feared and hated man
+in France.
+
+"Cospetto!" cried Mazarin as I entered his cabinet. "Have you swum the
+Seine in your clothes?"
+
+"No, your Eminence, but I have been serving you in the rain for the past
+hour."
+
+He smiled that peculiar smile of his that rendered hateful his otherwise
+not ill-favoured countenance. It was a smile of the lips in which the eyes
+had no part.
+
+"Yes," he said slowly, "I have heard of your achievements."
+
+"You have heard?" I ejaculated, amazed by the powers which this man
+wielded.
+
+"Yes, I have heard. You are a brave man, M. de Luynes."
+
+"Pshaw, your Eminence!" I deprecated; "the poor are always brave. They
+have naught to lose but their life, and that is not so sweet to them that
+they lay much store by it. Howbeit, Monseigneur, your wishes have been
+carried out. There will be no duel at St. Germain this evening."
+
+"Will there not? Hum! I am not so confident. You are a brave man, M. de
+Luynes, but you lack that great auxiliary of valour--discretion. What need
+to fling into the teeth of those fine gentlemen the reason you had for
+spitting Canaples, eh? You have provoked a dozen enemies for Andrea where
+only one existed."
+
+"I will answer for all of them," I retorted boastfully.
+
+"Fine words, M. de Luynes; but to support them how many men will you have
+to kill? Pah! What if some fine morning there comes one who, despite your
+vaunted swordsmanship, proves your master? What will become of that fool,
+my nephew, eh?"
+
+And his uncanny smile again beamed on me. "Andrea is now packing his
+valise. In an hour he will have left Paris secretly. He goes--but what
+does it signify where he goes? He is compelled by your indiscretion to
+withdraw from Court. Had you kept a close tongue in your foolish head--but
+there! you did not, and so by a thoughtless word you undid all that you had
+done so well. You may go, M. de Luynes. I have no further need of you--
+and thank Heaven that you leave the Palais Royal free to go whither your
+fancy takes you, and not to journey to the Bastille or to Vincennes. I am
+merciful, M. de Luynes--as merciful as you are brave; more merciful than
+you are prudent. One word of warning, M. de Luynes: do not let me learn
+that you are in my nephew's company, if you would not make me regret my
+clemency and repair the error of it by having you hanged. And now, adieu!"
+
+I stood aghast. Was I indeed dismissed? Albeit naught had been said, I
+had not doubted, since my interview with him that morning, that did I
+succeed in saving Andrea my rank in his guards--and thereby a means of
+livelihood--would be restored to me. And now matters were no better than
+they had been before. He dismissed me with the assurance that he was
+merciful. As God lives, it would have been as merciful to have hanged me!
+
+He met my astonished look with an eye that seemed to ask me why I lingered.
+Then reading mayhap what was passing in my thoughts, he raised a little
+silver whistle to his lips and blew softly upon it.
+
+"Bernouin," said he to his valet, who entered in answer to the summons,
+"reconduct M. de Luynes."
+
+I remember drawing down upon my bedraggled person the curious gaze of the
+numerous clients who thronged the Cardinal's ante-chamber, as I followed
+Bernouin to the door which opened on to the corridor, and which he held for
+me. And thus, for the second time within twenty-four hours, did I leave
+the Palais Royal to wend my way home to the Rue St. Antoine with grim
+despondency in my heart.
+
+I found Michelot on the point of setting out in search of me, with a note
+which had been brought to my lodging half an hour ago, and which its bearer
+had said was urgent. I took the letter, and bidding Michelot prepare me
+fresh raiment that I might exchange for my wet clothes, I broke the seal
+and read:
+
+
+"A thousand thanks, dear friend, for the service you have rendered me and
+of which his Eminence, my uncle, has informed me. I fear that you have
+made many enemies for yourself through an action which will likely go
+unrewarded, and that Paris is therefore as little suited at present to your
+health as it is to mine. I am setting out for Blois on a mission of
+exceeding delicacy wherein your advice and guidance would be of infinite
+value to me. I shall remain at Choisy until to-morrow morning, and should
+there be no ties to hold you in Paris, and you be minded to bear me
+company, join me there at the Hôtel du Connétable where I shall lie
+to-night. Your grateful and devoted
+
+ANDRE."
+
+
+So! There was one at least who desired my company! I had not thought it.
+"If there be no ties to hold you in Paris," he wrote. Dame! A change of
+air would suit me vastly. I was resolved--a fig for the Cardinal's threat
+to hang me if I were found in his nephew's company!
+
+"My suit of buff, Michelot," I shouted, springing to my feet, "and my
+leather jerkin."
+
+He gazed at me in surprise.
+
+"Is Monsieur going a journey?"
+
+I answered him that I was, and as I spoke I began to divest myself of the
+clothes I wore. "Pack my suit of pearl grey in the valise, with what
+changes of linen I possess; then call Master Coupri that I may settle with
+him. It may be some time before we return."
+
+In less than half an hour I was ready for the journey, spurred and booted,
+with my rapier at my side, and in the pocket of my haut-de­chausses a purse
+containing some fifty pistoles--best part of which I had won from Vilmorin
+at lansquenet some nights before, and which moderate sum represented all
+the moneys that I possessed.
+
+Our horses were ready, my pistols holstered, and my valise strapped to
+Michelot's saddle. Despite the desperate outlook of my fortunes, of which
+I had made him fully cognisant, he insisted upon clinging to me, reminding
+me that at Rocroi I had saved his life and that he would leave me only when
+I bade him go.
+
+As four o'clock was striking at Nôtre Dame we crossed the Pont Neuf, and
+going by the Quai des Augustins and the Rue de la Harpe, we quitted Paris
+by the St. Michel Gate and took the road to Choisy. The rain had ceased,
+but the air was keen and cold, and the wind cut like a sword-edge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+MAZARIN, THE MATCH-MAKER
+
+
+Twixt Paris and Choisy there lies but a distance of some two leagues,
+which, given a fair horse, one may cover with ease in little more than half
+an hour. So that as the twilight was deepening into night we drew rein
+before the hostelry of the Connétable, in the only square the little
+township boasts, and from the landlord I had that obsequious reception
+which is ever accorded to him who travels with a body-servant.
+
+I found Andrea installed in a fair-sized and comfortable apartment, to the
+original decoration of which he added not a little by bestowing his boots
+in the centre of the floor, his hat, sword, and baldrick on the table, his
+cloak on one chair, and his doublet on another. He himself sat toasting
+his feet before the blazing logs, which cast a warm, reddish glow upon his
+sable hair and dainty shirt of cambric.
+
+He sprang up as I entered, and came towards me with a look of pleasure on
+his handsome, high-bred face, that did me good to see.
+
+"So, you have come, De Luynes," he cried, putting forth his hand. "I did
+not dare to hope that you would."
+
+"No," I answered. "Truly it was not to be expected that I could be easily
+lured from Paris just as my fortunes are nearing a high tide, and his
+Eminence proposing to make me a Marshal of France and create me Duke. As
+you say, you had scant grounds for hoping that my love for you would
+suffice to make me renounce all these fine things for the mere sake of
+accompanying you on your jaunt to Blois."
+
+He laughed, then fell to thanking me for having rid him of Canaples. I cut
+him short at last, and in answer to his questions told him what had passed
+'twixt his Eminence and me that afternoon. Then as the waiter entered to
+spread our supper, the conversation assumed a less delicate character,
+until we were again alone with the table and its steaming viands between
+us.
+
+"You have not told me yet, Andrea, what takes you to Blois," quoth I then.
+
+"You shall learn. Little do you dream how closely interwoven are our
+morning adventures with this journey of mine. To begin with, I go to Blois
+to pay my dévoirs to the lady whom his Eminence has selected for my future
+wife."
+
+"You were then right in describing this as a mission of great delicacy."
+
+"More than you think--I have never seen the lady."
+
+"Never seen her? And you go a-wooing a woman you have never seen?"
+
+"It is so. I have never seen her; but his Eminence has, and 't is he who
+arranges the affair. Ah, the Cardinal is the greatest match­maker in
+France! My cousin Anna Martinozzi is destined for the Prince de Conti, my
+sisters Olympia and Marianne he also hopes to marry to princes of the
+blood, whilst I dare wager that he has thoughts of seating either Maria or
+Hortensia upon the throne of France as the wife of Louis XIV., as soon as
+his Majesty shall have reached a marriageable age. You may laugh, De
+Luynes, nevertheless all this may come to pass, for my uncle has great
+ambitions for his family, and it is even possible that should that poor,
+wandering youth, Charles II. of England, ever return to the throne of his
+fathers he may also become my brother-in-law. I am likely to become well
+connected, De Luynes, so make a friend of me whilst I am humble. So much
+for Mazarin's nieces. His nephews are too young for alliances just yet,
+saving myself; and for me his Eminence has chosen one of the greatest
+heiresses in France--Yvonne St. Albaret de Canaples."
+
+"Whom?" I shouted.
+
+He smiled.
+
+"Curious, is it not? She is the sister of the man whom I quarrelled with
+this morning, and whom you fought with this afternoon. Now you will
+understand my uncle's reasons for so strenuously desiring to prevent the
+duel at St. Germain. It appears that the old Chevalier de Canaples is as
+eager as the Cardinal to see his daughter wed to me, for his Eminence has
+promised to create me Duke for a wedding gift. 'T will cost him little,
+and 't will please these Canaples mightily. Naturally, had Eugène de
+Canaples and I crossed swords, matters would have been rendered difficult."
+
+"When did you learn all this?" I inquired.
+
+"To-day, after the duel, and when it was known what St. Auban and Montmédy
+had threatened me with. My uncle thought it well that I should withdraw
+from Paris. He sent for me and told me what I have told you, adding that I
+had best seize the opportunity, whilst my presence at Court was
+undesirable, to repair to Blois and get my wooing done. I in part agreed
+with him. The lady is very rich, and I am told that she is beautiful. I
+shall see her, and if she pleases me, I'll woo her. If not, I'll return to
+Paris."
+
+"But her brother will oppose you."
+
+"Her brother? Pooh! If he doesn't die of the sword-thrust you gave him,
+which I am told is in the region of the lung and passing dangerous, he will
+at least be abed for a couple of months to come."
+
+"But I, mon cher André? What rôle do you reserve for me, that you have
+desired me to go with you?"
+
+"The rôle of Mentor if you will. Methought you would prove a merry comrade
+to help one o'er a tedious journey, and knowing that there was little to
+hold you to Paris, and probably sound reasons why you should desire to quit
+it, meseemed that perhaps you would consent to bear me company. Who knows,
+my knight errant, what adventures may await you and what fortunes? If the
+heiress displeases me, it may be that she will please you--or mayhap there
+is another heiress at Blois who will fall enamoured of those fierce
+moustachios."
+
+I laughed with him at the improbability of such things befalling. I
+carried in my bosom too large a heart, and one that was the property of
+every wench I met--for just so long as I chanced to be in her company.
+
+It was no more than in harmony with this habit of mine, that when, next
+morning in the common-room of the Connétable, I espied Jeanneton, the
+landlord's daughter, and remarked that she was winsome and shapely, with a
+complexion that would not have dishonoured a rose-petal, I permitted myself
+to pinch her dainty cheek. She slapped mine in return, and in this
+pleasant manner we became acquainted.
+
+"Sweet Jeanneton," quoth I with a laugh, "that was mightily ill-done! I
+did but pinch your cheek as one may pinch a sweet-smelling bud, so that the
+perfume of it may cling to one's fingers."
+
+"And I, sir," was the pert rejoinder, "did but slap yours as one may slap a
+misbehaving urchin's; so that he may learn better manners."
+
+Nevertheless she was pleased with my courtly speech, and perchance also
+with my moustachios, for a smile took the place of the frown wherewith she
+had at first confronted me. Now, if I had uttered glib pleasantries in
+answer to her frowns, how many more did not her smiles wring from me! I
+discoursed to her in the very courtliest fashion of cows and pullets and
+such other matters as interesting to her as they were mysterious to me. I
+questioned her in a breath touching her father's pigs and the swain she
+loved best in that little township, to all of which she answered me with a
+charming wit, which would greatly divert you did I but recall her words
+sufficiently to set them down. In five minutes we had become the best
+friends in the world, which was attested by the protecting arm that I
+slipped around her waist, as I asked her whether she loved that village
+swain of hers better than she loved me, and refused to believe her when she
+answered that she did.
+
+Outside two men were talking, one calling for a farrier, and when informed
+that the only one in the village was absent and not likely to return till
+noon, demanding relays of horses. The other--probably the hostler--
+answered him that the Connétable was not a post-house and that no horses
+were to be had there. Then a woman's voice, sweet yet commanding, rose
+above theirs.
+
+"Very well, Guilbert," it said. "We will await this farrier's return."
+
+"Let me go, Monsieur!" cried Jeanneton. "Some one comes."
+
+Now for myself I cared little who might come, but methought that it was
+likely to do poor Jeanneton's fair name no benefit, if the arm of Gaston de
+Luynes were seen about her waist. And so I obeyed her, but not quickly
+enough; for already a shadow lay athwart the threshold, and in the doorway
+stood a woman, whose eye took in the situation before we had altered it
+sufficiently to avert suspicion. To my amazement I beheld the lady of the
+coach--she who had saved me from the mob in Place Vendôme, and touching
+whose identity I could have hazarded a shrewd guess.
+
+In her eyes also I saw the light of recognition which swiftly changed to
+one of scorn. Then they passed from me to the vanishing Jeanneton, and
+methought that she was about to call her back. She paused, however, and,
+turning to the lackey who followed at her heels.
+
+"Guilbert," she said, "be good enough to call the landlord, and bid him
+provide me with an apartment for the time that we may be forced to spend
+here."
+
+But at this juncture the host himself came hurrying forward with many bows
+and endless rubbing of hands, which argued untold deference. He regretted
+that the hostelry of the Connétable, being but a poor inn, seldom honoured
+as it was at that moment, possessed but one suite of private apartments,
+and that was now occupied by a most noble gentleman. The lady tapped her
+foot, and as at that moment her companion (who was none other than the
+fair-haired doll I had seen with her on the previous day) entered the room,
+she turned to speak with her, whilst I moved away towards the window.
+
+"Will this gentleman," she inquired, "lend me one of his rooms, think you?"
+
+"Hélas, Mademoiselle, he has but two, a bedroom and an ante-chamber, and he
+is still abed."
+
+"Oh!" she cried in pretty anger, "this is insufferable! 'T is your fault,
+Guilbert, you fool. Am I, then, to spend the day here in the common-room?"
+
+"No, no, Mademoiselle," exclaimed the host in his most soothing accents.
+"Only for an hour, or less, perhaps, until this very noble lord is risen,
+when assuredly--for he is young and very gallant--he will resign one or
+both of his rooms to you."
+
+More was said between them, but my attention was suddenly drawn elsewhere.
+Michelot burst into the room, disaster written on his face.
+
+"Monsieur," he cried, in great alarm, "the Marquis de St. Auban is riding
+down the street with the Vicomte de Vilmorin and another gentleman."
+
+I rapped out an oath at the news; they had got scent of Andrea's
+whereabouts, and were after him like sleuth-hounds on a trail.
+
+"Remain here, Michelot," I answered in a low voice. "Tell them that M. de
+Mancini is not here, that the only occupant of the inn is your master, a
+gentleman from Normandy, or Picardy, or where you will. See that they do
+not guess our presence--the landlord fortunately is ignorant of M. de
+Mancini's name."
+
+There was a clatter of horses' hoofs without, and I was barely in time to
+escape by the door leading to the staircase, when St. Auban's heavy voice
+rang out, calling the landlord.
+
+"I am in search of a gentleman named Andrea de Mancini," he said. "I am
+told that he has journeyed hither, and that he is here at present. Am I
+rightly informed?"
+
+I determined to remain where I was, and hear that conversation to the end.
+
+"There is a gentleman here," answered the host, "but I am ignorant of his
+name. I will inquire."
+
+"You may spare yourself the trouble," Michelot interposed. "That is not
+the gentleman's name. I am his servant."
+
+There was a moment's pause, then came Vilmorin's shrill voice.
+
+"You lie, knave! M. de Mancini is here. You are M. de Luynes's lackey,
+and where the one is, there shall we find the other."
+
+"M. de Luynes?" came a voice unknown to me. "That is Mancini's sword-blade
+of a friend, is it not? Well, why does he hide himself? Where is he?
+Where is your master, rascal?"
+
+"I am here, Messieurs," I answered, throwing wide the door, and appearing,
+grim and arrogant, upon the threshold.
+
+Mort de ma vie! Had they beheld the Devil, St. Auban and Vilmorin could
+not have looked less pleased than they did when their eyes lighted upon me,
+standing there surveying them with a sardonic grin.
+
+St. Auban muttered an oath, Vilmorin stifled a cry, whilst he who had so
+loudly called to know where I hid myself--a frail little fellow, in the
+uniform of the gardes du corps--now stood silent and abashed.
+
+The two women, who had withdrawn into a dark and retired corner of the
+apartment, stood gazing with interest upon this pretty scene.
+
+"Well, gentlemen?" I asked in a tone of persiflage, as I took a step
+towards them. "Have you naught to say to me, now that I have answered your
+imperious summons? What! All dumb?"
+
+"Our affair is not with you," said St. Auban, curtly.
+
+"Pardon! Why, then, did you inquire where I was?"
+
+"Messieurs," exclaimed Vilmorin, whose face assumed the pallor usual to it
+in moments of peril, "meseems we have been misinformed, and that M. de
+Mancini is not here. Let us seek elsewhere."
+
+"Most excellent advice, gentlemen," I commented,--"seek elsewhere."
+
+"Monsieur," cried the little officer, turning purple, "it occurs to me that
+you are mocking us."
+
+"Mocking you! Mocking you? Mocking a gentleman who has been tied to so
+huge a sword as yours. Surely--surely, sir, you do not think--"
+
+"I'll not endure it," he broke in. "You shall answer to me for this."
+
+"Have a care, sir," I cried in alarm as he rushed forward. "Have a care,
+sir, lest you trip over your sword."
+
+He halted, drew himself up, and, with a magnificent gesture: "I am Armand
+de Malpertuis, lieutenant of his Majesty's guards," he announced, "and I
+shall be grateful if you will do me the honour of taking a turn with me,
+outside."
+
+"I am flattered beyond measure, M. Malappris--"
+
+"Mal-per-tuis," he corrected furiously.
+
+"Malpertuis," I echoed. "I am honoured beyond words, but I do not wish to
+take a turn."
+
+"Mille diables, sir! Don't you understand? We must fight."
+
+"Must we, indeed? Again I am honoured; but, Monsieur, I don't fight
+sparrows."
+
+"Gentlemen! Gentlemen!" cried St. Auban, thrusting himself between us.
+"Malpertuis, have the goodness to wait until one affair is concluded before
+you create a second one. Now, M. de Luynes, will you tell me whether M. de
+Mancini is here or not?"
+
+"What if he should be?"
+
+"You will be wise to withdraw--we shall be three to two."
+
+"Three to two! Surely, Marquis, your reckoning is at fault. You cannot
+count the Vicomte there as one; his knees are knocking together; at best he
+is but a woman in man's clothes. As for your other friend, unless his
+height misleads me, he is but a boy. Therefore, Monsieur, you see that the
+advantage is with us. We are two men opposed to a man, a woman, and a
+child, so that--"
+
+"In Heaven's name, sir," cried St. Auban, again interposing himself betwixt
+me and the bellicose Malpertuis, "will you cease this foolishness? A word
+with you in private, M. de Luynes."
+
+I permitted him to take me by the sleeve, and lead me aside, wondering the
+while what curb it was that he was setting upon his temper, and what wily
+motives he might have for adopting so conciliatory a tone.
+
+With many generations to come, the name of César de St. Auban must perforce
+be familiar as that of one of the greatest roysterers and most courtly
+libertines of the early days of Louis XIV., as well as that of a rabid
+anti-cardinalist and frondeur, and one of the earliest of that new cabal of
+nobility known as the petits-maîtres, whose leader the Prince de Condé was
+destined to become a few years later. He was a man of about my own age,
+that is to say, between thirty-two and thirty-three, and of my own frame,
+tall, spare, and active. On his florid, débonnair countenance was stamped
+his character of bon-viveur. In dress he was courtly in the extreme. His
+doublet and haut-de-chausses were of wine-coloured velvet, richly laced,
+and he still affected the hanging sleeves of a fast-disappearing fashion.
+Valuable lace filled the tops of his black boots, a valuable jewel
+glistened here and there upon his person, and one must needs have
+pronounced him a fop but for the strength and resoluteness of his bearing,
+and the long rapier that hung from his gold-embroidered baldrick. Such in
+brief is a portrait of the man who now confronted me, his fine blue eyes
+fixed upon my face, wherein methinks he read but little, search though he
+might.
+
+"M. de Luynes," he murmured at last, "you appear to find entertainment in
+making enemies, and you do it wantonly."
+
+"Have you brought me aside to instruct me in the art of making friends?"
+
+"Possibly, M. de Luynes; and without intending an offence, permit me to
+remark that you need them."
+
+"Mayhap. But I do not seek them."
+
+"I have it in my heart to wish that you did; for I, M. de Luynes, seek to
+make a friend of you. Nay, do not smile in that unbelieving fashion. I
+have long esteemed you for those very qualities of dauntlessness and
+defiance which have brought you so rich a crop of hatred. If you doubt my
+words, perhaps you will recall my attitude towards you in the horse-market
+yesterday, and let that speak. Without wishing to remind you of a service
+done, I may yet mention that I stood betwixt you and the mob that sought to
+avenge my friend Canaples. He was my friend; you stood there, as indeed
+you have always stood, in the attitude of a foe. You wounded Canaples,
+maltreated Vilmorin, defied me; and yet but for my intervention, mille
+diables sir, you had been torn to pieces."
+
+"All this I grant is very true, Monsieur," I made reply, with deep
+suspicion in my soul. "Yet, pardon me, if I confess that to me it proves
+no more than that you acted as a generous enemy. Pardon my bluntness also-
+-but what profit do you look to make from gaining my friendship?"
+
+"You are frank, Monsieur," he said, colouring slightly, "I will be none the
+less so. I am a frondeur, an anti-cardinalist. In a word, I am a
+gentleman and a Frenchman. An interloping foreigner, miserly, mean-souled,
+and Jesuitical, springs up, wins himself into the graces of a foolish,
+impetuous, wilful queen, and climbs the ladder which she holds for him to
+the highest position in France. I allude to Mazarin; this Cardinal who is
+not a priest; this minister of France who is not a Frenchman; this
+belittler of nobles who is not a gentleman."
+
+"Mort Dieu, Monsieur--"
+
+"One moment, M. de Luynes. This adventurer, not content with the millions
+which his avaricious talons have dragged from the people for his own
+benefit, seeks, by means of illustrious alliances, to enrich a pack of
+beggarly nieces and nephews that he has rescued from the squalor of their
+Sicilian homes to bring hither. His nieces, the Mancinis and Martinozzis,
+he is marrying to Dukes and Princes. 'T is not nice to witness, but 't is
+the affair of the men who wed them. In seeking, however, to marry his
+nephew Andrea to one of the greatest heiresses in France, he goes too far.
+Yvonne de Canaples is for some noble countryman of her own--there are many
+suitors to her hand--and for no nephew of Giulio Mazarini. Her brother
+Eugène, himself, thinks thus, and therein, M. de Luynes, you have the real
+motive of the quarrel which he provoked with Andrea, and which, had you not
+interfered, could have had but one ending."
+
+"Why do you tell me all this, Monsieur?" I inquired coldly, betraying none
+of the amazement his last words gave birth to.
+
+"So that you may know the true position of affairs, and, knowing it, see
+the course which the name you bear must bid you follow. Because Canaples
+failed am I here to-day. I had not counted upon meeting you, but since I
+have met you, I have set the truth before you, confident that you will now
+withdraw from an affair to which no real interest can bind you, leaving
+matters to pursue their course."
+
+He eyed me, methought, almost anxiously from under his brows, as he awaited
+my reply. It was briefer than he looked for.
+
+"You have wasted time, Monsieur."
+
+"How? You persist?"
+
+"Yes. I persist. Yet for the Cardinal I care nothing. Mazarin has
+dismissed me from his service unjustly and unpaid. He has forbidden me his
+nephew's company. In fact, did he know of my presence here with M. de
+Mancini, he would probably carry out his threat to hang me."
+
+"Ciel!" cried St. Auban, "you are mad, if that be so. France is divided
+into two parties, cardinalists and anti-cardinalists. You, sir, without
+belonging to either, stand alone, an enemy to both. Your attitude is
+preposterous!"
+
+"Nay, sir, not alone. There is Andrea de Mancini. The boy is my only
+friend in a world of enemies. I am growing fond of him, Monsieur, and I
+will stand by him, while my arm can wield a sword, in all that may advance
+his fortunes and his happiness. That, Monsieur, is my last word."
+
+"Do not forget, M. de Luynes," he said--his suaveness all departed of a
+sudden, and his tone full of menace and acidity--"do not forget that when a
+wall may not be scaled it may be broken through."
+
+"Aye, Monsieur, but many of those who break through stand in danger of
+being crushed by the falling stones," I answered, entering into the spirit
+of his allegory.
+
+"There are many ways of striking," he said.
+
+"And many ways of being struck," I retorted with a sneer.
+
+Our words grew sinister, our eyes waxed fiery, and more might have followed
+had not the door leading to the staircase opened at that moment to admit
+Andrea himself. He came, elegant in dress and figure, with a smile upon
+his handsome young face, whose noble features gave the lie to St. Auban's
+assertion that he had been drawn from a squalid Sicilian home. Such faces
+are not bred in squalor.
+
+In utter ignorance of the cabal against him, he greeted St. Auban--who was
+well known to him--with a graceful bow, and also Vilmorin, who stood in the
+doorway with Malpertuis, and who at the sight of Mancini grew visibly ill
+at ease. In coming to Choisy, the Vicomte had clearly expected to do no
+more than second St. Auban in the duel which he thought to see forced upon
+Andrea. He now realised that if a fight there was, he might, by my
+presence, be forced into it. Malpertuis looked fierce and tugged at his
+moustachios, whilst his companions returned Andrea's salutation--St. Auban
+gravely, and Vilmorin hesitatingly.
+
+"Ha, Gaston," said the boy, advancing towards me, "our host tells me that
+two ladies who have been shipwrecked here wish to do me the honour of
+occupying my apartments for an hour or so. Ha, there they are," he added,
+as the two girls came suddenly forward. Then bowing--"Mesdames, I am
+enchanted to set the poor room at your disposal for as long as it may
+please you to honour it."
+
+As the ladies--of whose presence St. Auban had been unaware--appeared
+before us, I shot a glance at the Marquis, and, from the start he gave upon
+beholding them, I saw that things were as I had suspected.
+
+Before they could reply to Andrea, St. Auban suddenly advanced:
+
+"Mesdemoiselles," quoth he, "forgive me if in this miserable light I did
+not earlier discover your presence and offer you my services. I do so now,
+with the hope that you will honour me by making use of them."
+
+"Merci, M. de St. Auban," replied the dark-haired one--whom I guessed to be
+none other than Yvonne de Canaples herself--"but, since this gentleman so
+gallantly cedes his apartments to us, all our needs are satisfied. It
+would be churlish to refuse that which is so graciously proffered."
+
+Her tone was cold in the extreme, as also was the inclination of her head
+wherewith she favoured the Marquis. In arrant contrast were the pretty
+words of thanks she addressed to Andrea, who stood by, blushing like a
+girl, and a damnable scowl did this contrast draw from St. Auban, a scowl
+that lasted until, escorted by the landlord, the two ladies had withdrawn.
+
+There was an awkward pause when they were gone, and methought from the look
+on St. Auban's face that he was about to provoke a fight after all. Not
+so, however, for, after staring at us like a clown whilst one might tell a
+dozen, he turned and strode to the door, calling for his horse and those of
+his companions.
+
+"Au révoir, M. de Luynes," he said significantly as he got into the saddle.
+
+"Au révoir, M. de Luynes," said also Malpertuis, coming close up to me.
+"We shall meet again, believe me."
+
+"Pray God that we may not, if you would die in your bed," I answered
+mockingly. "Adieu!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+OF HOW ANDREA BECAME LOVE-SICK
+
+
+With what fictions I could call to mind I put off Andrea's questions
+touching the peculiar fashion of St. Auban's leave-taking. Tell him the
+truth and expose to him the situation whereof he was himself the
+unconscious centre I dared not, lest his high-spirited impetuosity should
+cause him to take into his own hands the reins of the affair, and thus
+drive himself into irreparable disaster.
+
+Andrea himself showed scant concern, however, and was luckily content with
+my hurriedly invented explanations; his thoughts had suddenly found
+occupation in another and a gentler theme than the ill-humour of men, and
+presently his tongue betrayed them when he drew the conversation to the
+ladies to whom he had resigned his apartments.
+
+"Pardieu! Gaston," he burst out, "she is a lovely maid--saw you ever a
+bonnier?"
+
+"Indeed she is very beautiful," I answered, laughing to myself at the
+thought of how little he dreamt that it was of Yvonne St. Albaret de
+Canaples that he spoke, and not minded for the while to enlighten him.
+
+"If she be as kind and gentle as she is beautiful, Gaston, well--Uncle
+Giulio's plans are likely to suffer shipwreck. I shall not leave Choisy
+until I have spoken to her; in fact, I shall not leave until she leaves."
+
+"Nevertheless, we shall still be able to set out, as we had projected,
+after dining, for in an hour, or two at most, they will proceed on their
+journey."
+
+He was silent for some moments, then:
+
+"To the devil with the Cardinal's plans!" quoth he, banging his fist on the
+table. "I shall not go to Blois."
+
+"Pooh! Why not?"
+
+"Why not?" He halted for a moment, then in a meandering tone--"You have
+read perchance in story-books," he said, "of love being born from the first
+meeting of two pairs of eyes, as a spark is born of flint and steel, and
+you may have laughed at the conceit, as I have laughed at it. But laugh no
+more, Gaston; for I who stand before you am one who has experienced this
+thing which poets tell of, and which hitherto I have held in ridicule. I
+will not go to Blois because--because--enfin, because I intend to go where
+she goes."
+
+"Then, mon cher, you will go to Blois. You will go to Blois, if not as a
+dutiful nephew, resigned to obey his reverend uncle's wishes, at least
+because fate forces you to follow a pair of eyes that have--hum, what was
+it you said they did?"
+
+"Do you say that she is going to Blois? How do you know?"
+
+"Eh? How do I know? Oh, I heard her servant speaking with the hostler."
+
+"So much the better, then; for thus if his Eminence gets news of my
+whereabouts, the news will not awaken his ever-ready suspicions. Ciel! How
+beautiful she is! Noted you her eyes, her skin, and what hair, mon Dieu!
+Like threads of gold!"
+
+"Like threads of gold?" I echoed. "You are dreaming, boy. Oh, St. Gris! I
+understand; you are speaking of the fair-haired chit that was with her."
+
+He eyed me in amazement.
+
+"'T is you whose thoughts are wandering to that lanky, nose-in-the-air
+Madame who accompanied her."
+
+I began a laugh that I broke off suddenly as I realised that it was not
+Yvonne after all who had imprisoned his wits. The Cardinal's plans were,
+indeed, likely to miscarry if he persisted thus.
+
+"But 't was the nose-in-the-air Madame, as you call her, with whom you
+spoke!"
+
+"Aye, but it was the golden-haired lady that held my gaze. Pshaw! Who
+would mention them in a breath?"
+
+"Who, indeed?" said I, but with a different meaning.
+
+Thereafter, seeing him listless, I suggested a turn in the village to
+stretch our limbs before dining. But he would have none of it, and when I
+pressed the point with sound reasoning touching the benefits which health
+may cull from exercise, he grew petulant as a wayward child. She might
+descend whilst he was absent. Indeed, she might require some slight
+service that lay, perchance, in his power to render her. What an
+opportunity would he not lose were he abroad? She might even depart before
+we returned; and than that no greater calamity could just then befall him.
+No, he would not stir a foot from the inn. A fig for exercise! to the
+devil with health! who sought an appetite? Not he. He wished for no
+appetite--could contrive no base and vulgar appetite for food, whilst his
+soul, he swore, was being consumed by the overwhelming, all-effacing
+appetite to behold her.
+
+Such meandering fools are most of us at nineteen, when the heart is young--
+a flawless mirror ready to hold the image of the first fair maid that looks
+into it through our eyes, and as ready--Heaven knows!--to relinquish it
+when the substance is withdrawn.
+
+But I, who was not nineteen, and the mirror of whose heart--to pursue my
+metaphor--was dulled, warped, and cracked with much ill­usage, grew sick of
+the boy's enthusiasm and the monotony of a conversation which I could
+divert into no other channel from that upon which it had been started by a
+little slip of a girl with hair of gold and sapphire eyes--I use Andrea's
+words. And so I rose, and bidding him take root in the tavern, if so it
+pleased his fancy, I left him there.
+
+Wrapped in my cloak, for the air was raw and damp, I strode aimlessly
+along, revolving in my mind what had befallen at the Connétable that
+morning, and speculating upon the issue that this quaint affair might have.
+In matters of love, or rather, of matrimony--which is not quite the same
+thing--opposition is common enough. But the opposers are usually members
+of either of the interested families. Now the families--that is to say,
+the heads of the families--being agreed and even anxious to bring about the
+union of Yvonne de Canaples and Andrea de Mancini, it was something new to
+have a cabal of persons who, from motives of principle--as St. Auban had
+it--should oppose the alliance so relentlessly as to even resort to
+violence if no other means occurred to them. It seemed vastly probable
+that Andrea would be disposed of by a knife in the back, and more than
+probable that a like fate would be reserved for me, since I had constituted
+myself his guardian angel. For my own part, however, I had a pronounced
+distaste to ending my days in so unostentatious a fashion. I had also a
+notion that I should prove an exceedingly difficult person to assassinate,
+and that those who sought to slip a knife into me would find my hide
+peculiarly tough, and my hand peculiarly ready to return the compliment.
+
+So deeply did I sink into ponderings of this character that it was not
+until two hours afterwards that I again found myself drawing near the
+Connétable.
+
+I reached the inn to find by the door a coach, and by that coach Andrea; he
+stood bareheaded, despite the cold, conversing, with all outward semblances
+of profound respect, with those within it.
+
+So engrossed was he and so ecstatic, that my approach was unheeded, and
+when presently I noted that the coach was Mademoiselle de Canaples's, I
+ceased to wonder at the boy's unconsciousness of what took place around
+him.
+
+Clearly the farrier had been found at last, and the horse shod afresh
+during my absence. Loath to interrupt so pretty a scene, I waited, aloof,
+until these adieux should be concluded, and whilst I waited there came to
+me from the carriage a sweet, musical voice that was not Yvonne's.
+
+"May we not learn at least, Monsieur, the name of the gentleman to whose
+courtesy we are indebted for having spent the past two hours without
+discomfort?"
+
+"My name, Mademoiselle, is Andrea de Mancini, that of the humblest of your
+servants, and one to whom your thanks are a more than lavish payment for
+the trivial service he may have been fortunate enough to render you."
+
+Dame! What glibness doth a tongue acquire at Court!
+
+"M. Andrea de Mancini?" came Yvonne's voice in answer. "Surely a relative
+of the Lord Cardinal?"
+
+"His nephew, Mademoiselle."
+
+"Ah! My father, sir, is a great admirer of your uncle."
+
+From the half-caressing tone, as much as from the very words she uttered, I
+inferred that she was in ignorance of the compact into which his Eminence
+had entered with her father--a bargain whereof she was herself a part.
+
+"I am rejoiced, indeed, Mademoiselle," replied Andrea with a bow, as though
+the compliment had been paid to him. "Am I indiscreet in asking the name
+of Monsieur your father?"
+
+"Indiscreet! Nay, Monsieur. You have a right to learn the name of those
+who are under an obligation to you. My father is the Chevalier de
+Canaples, of whom it is possible that you may have heard. I am Yvonne de
+Canaples, of whom it is unlikely that you should have heard, and this is my
+sister Geneviève, whom a like obscurity envelops."
+
+The boy's lips moved, but no sound came from them, whilst his cheeks went
+white and red by turns. His courtliness of a moment ago had vanished, and
+he stood sheepish and gauche as a clown. At length he so far mastered
+himself as to bow and make a sign to the coachman, who thereupon gathered
+up his reins.
+
+"You are going presumably to Blois?" he stammered with a nervous laugh, as
+if the journey were a humorous proceeding.
+
+"Yes, Monsieur," answered Geneviève, "we are going home."
+
+"Why, then, it is possible that we shall meet again. I, too, am travelling
+in that direction. A bientôt, Mesdemoiselles!"
+
+The whip cracked, the coach began to move, and the creaking of its wheels
+drowned, so far as I was concerned, the female voices that answered his
+farewell. The coachman roused his horses into an amble; the amble became a
+trot, and the vehicle vanished round a corner. Some few idlers stopped to
+gaze stupidly after it, but not half so stupidly as did my poor Andrea,
+standing bareheaded where the coach had left him.
+
+I drew near, and laid my hand on his shoulder; at the touch he started like
+one awakened suddenly, and looked up.
+
+"Ah--you are returned, Gaston."
+
+"To find that you have made a discovery, and are overwhelmed by your
+error."
+
+"My error?"
+
+"Yes--that of falling in love with the wrong one. Hélas, it is but one of
+those ironical jests wherewith Fate amuses herself at every step of our
+lives. Had you fallen in love with Yvonne--and it passes my understanding
+why you did not--everything would have gone smoothly with your wooing.
+Unfortunately, you have a preference for fair hair--"
+
+"Have done," he interrupted peevishly. "What does it signify? To the
+devil with Mazarin's plans!"
+
+"So you said this morning."
+
+"Yes, when I did not even dream her name was Canaples."
+
+"Nevertheless, she is the wrong Canaples."
+
+"For my uncle--but, mille diables! sir, 't is I who am to wed, and I shall
+wed as my heart bids me."
+
+"Hum! And Mazarin?"
+
+"Faugh!" he answered, with an expressive shrug.
+
+"Well, since you are resolved, let us dine."
+
+"I have no appetite."
+
+"Let us dine notwithstanding. Eat you must if you would live; and unless
+you live--think of it!--you'll never reach Blois."
+
+"Gaston, you are laughing at me! I do not wish to eat."
+
+I surveyed him gravely, with my arms akimbo.
+
+"Can love so expand the heart of man that it fills even his stomach? Well,
+well, if you will not eat, at least have the grace to bear me company at
+table. Come, Andrea," and I took his arm, "let us ascend to that chamber
+which she has but just quitted. Who can tell but that we shall find there
+some token of her recent presence? If nothing more, at least the air will
+be pervaded by the perfume she affected, and since you scorn the humble
+food of man, you can dine on that."
+
+He smiled despite himself as I drew him towards the staircase.
+
+"Scoffer!" quoth he. "Your callous soul knows naught of love."
+
+"Whereas you have had three hours' experience. Pardieu! You shall
+instruct me in the gentle art."
+
+Alas, for those perfumes upon which I had proposed that he should feast
+himself. If any the beautiful Geneviève had left behind her, they had been
+smothered in the vulgar yet appetising odour of the steaming ragoût that
+occupied the table.
+
+I prevailed at length upon the love-lorn boy to take some food, but I could
+lead him to talk of naught save Geneviève de Canaples. Presently he took
+to chiding me for the deliberateness wherewith I ate, and betrayed thereby
+his impatience to be in the saddle and after her. I argued that whilst she
+saw him not she might think of him. But the argument, though sound,
+availed me little, and in the end I was forced--for all that I am a man
+accustomed to please myself--to hurriedly end my repast, and pronounce
+myself ready to start.
+
+As Andrea had with him some store of baggage--since his sojourn at Blois
+was likely to be of some duration--he travelled in a coach. Into this
+coach, then, we climbed--he and I. His valet, Silvio, occupied the seat
+beside the coachman, whilst my stalwart Michelot rode behind leading my
+horse by the bridle. In this fashion we set out, and ere long the silence
+of my thoughtful companion, the monotonous rumbling of the vehicle, and,
+most important of all factors, the good dinner that I had consumed, bred in
+me a torpor that soon became a sleep.
+
+From a dream that, bound hand and foot, I was being dragged by St. Auban
+and Malpertuis before the Cardinal, I awakened with a start to find that we
+were clattering already through the streets of Etrechy; so that whilst I
+had slept we had covered some six leagues. Twilight had already set in,
+and Andrea lay back idly in the carriage, holding a book which it was
+growing too dark to read, and between the leaves of which he had slipped
+his forefinger to mark the place where he had paused.
+
+His eyes met mine as I looked round, and he smiled. "I should not have
+thought, Gaston," he said, "that a man with so seared a conscience could
+have slept thus soundly."
+
+"I have not slept soundly," I grumbled, recalling my dream.
+
+"Pardieu! you have slept long, at least."
+
+"Out of self-protection; so that I might not hear the name of Geneviève de
+Canaples. 'T is a sweet name, but you render it monotonous."
+
+He laughed good-humouredly.
+
+"Have you never loved, Gaston?"
+
+"Often."
+
+"Ah--but I mean did you never conceive a great passion?"
+
+"Hundreds, boy."
+
+"But never such a one as mine!"
+
+"Assuredly not; for the world has never seen its fellow. Be good enough to
+pull the cord, you Cupid incarnate. I wish to alight."
+
+"You wish to alight! Why?"
+
+"Because I am sick of love. I am going to ride awhile with Michelot whilst
+you dream of her coral lips, her sapphire eyes, and what other gems
+constitute her wondrous personality."
+
+Two minutes later I was in the saddle riding with Michelot in the wake of
+the carriage. As I have already sought to indicate in these pages,
+Michelot was as much my friend as my servant. It was therefore no more
+than natural that I should communicate to him my fears touching what might
+come of the machinations of St. Auban, Vilmorin, and even, perchance, of
+that little firebrand, Malpertuis.
+
+Night fell while we talked, and at last the lights of Étampes, where we
+proposed to lie, peeped at us from a distance, and food and warmth.
+
+It was eight o'clock when we reached the town, and a few moments later we
+rattled into the courtyard of the Hôtel de l'Épée.
+
+Andrea was out of temper to learn that Mesdemoiselles de Canaples had
+reached the place two hours earlier, taken fresh horses, and proceeded on
+their journey, intending to reach Monnerville that night. He was even mad
+enough to propose that we should follow their example, but my sober
+arguments prevailed, and at Étampes we stayed till morning.
+
+Andrea withdrew early. But I, having chanced upon a certain M. de la
+Vrillière, a courtier of Vilmorin's stamp, with whom I had some slight
+acquaintance, and his purse being heavier than his wits, I spent a passing
+profitable evening in his company. This pretty gentleman hailed my advent
+with a delight that amazed me, and suggested that we should throw a main
+together to kill time. The dice were found, and so clumsily did he use
+them that in half an hour, playing for beggarly crowns, he had lost twenty
+pistoles. Next he lost his temper, and with an oath pitched the cubes into
+the fire, swearing that they were toys for children and that I must grant
+him his révanche with cards. The cards were furnished us, and with a
+fortune that varied little we played lansquenet until long past midnight.
+The fire died out in the grate, and the air grew chill, until at last, with
+a violent sneeze, La Vrillière protested that he would play no more.
+
+Cursing himself for the unluckiest being alive, the fool bade me good-
+night, and left me seventy pistoles richer than when I had met him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE CHÂTEAU DE CANAPLES
+
+
+Despite the strenuous efforts which Andrea compelled us to put forth, we
+did not again come up with Mesdemoiselles de Canaples, who in truth must
+have travelled with greater speed than ladies are wont to.
+
+This circumstance bred much discomfort in Andrea's bosom; for in it he read
+that his Geneviève thought not of him as he of her, else, knowing that he
+followed the same road, she would have retarded their progress so that he
+might overtake them. Thus argued he when on the following night, which was
+that of Friday, we lay at Orleans. But when towards noon on Saturday our
+journey ended with our arrival at Blois, he went so far as to conclude that
+she had hastened on expressly to avoid him. Now, from what I had seen of
+Mademoiselle Yvonne, methought I might hazard a guess that she it was who
+commanded in these--and haply, too, in other--matters, and that the manner
+of their journey had been such as was best to her wishes.
+
+With such an argument did I strive to appease Andrea's doubts; but all in
+vain--which is indeed no matter for astonishment, for to reason with a man
+in love is to reason with one who knows no reason.
+
+After a brief halt at the Lys de France--at which hostelry I hired myself a
+room--we set out for the Château de Canaples, which is situated on the left
+bank of the Loire, at a distance of about half a league from Blois in the
+direction of Tours.
+
+We cut a brave enough figure as we rode down the Rue Vieille attended by
+our servants, and many a rustic Blaisois stopped to gape at us, to nudge
+his companion, and point us out, whispering the word "Paris."
+
+I had donned my grey velvet doublet--deeming the occasion worthy of it--
+whilst Andrea wore a handsome suit of black, with gold lace, which for
+elegance it would have been difficult to surpass. An air of pensiveness
+added interest to his handsome face and courtly figure, and methought that
+Geneviève must be hard to please if she fell not a victim to his wooing.
+
+We proceeded along the road bordering the Loire, a road of rare beauty at
+any other season of the year, but now bare of foliage, grey, bleak, and
+sullen as the clouds overhead, and as cold to the eye as was the sharp wind
+to the flesh. As we rode I fell to thinking of what my reception at the
+Château de Canaples was likely to be, and almost to regret that I had
+permitted Andrea to persuade me to accompany him. Long ago I had known the
+Chevalier de Canaples, and for all the disparity in our ages--for he
+counted twice my years--we had been friends and comrades. That, however,
+was ten years ago, in the old days when I owned something more than the
+name of Luynes. To-day I appeared before him as a ruined adventurer, a
+soldier of fortune, a ruffler, a duellist who had almost slain his son in a
+brawl, whose details might be known to him, but not its origin. Seeing me
+in the company of Andrea de Mancini he might--who could say?--even deem me
+one of those parasites who cling to young men of fortune so that they may
+live at their expense. That the daughter would have formed such a conceit
+of me I was assured; it but remained to see with what countenance the
+father would greet me.
+
+From such speculations I was at length aroused by our arrival at the gates
+of the Canaples park. Seeing them wide open, we rode between the two
+massive columns of granite (each surmounted by a couchant lion holding the
+escutcheon of the Canaples) and proceeded at an ambling pace up the avenue.
+Through the naked trees the château became discernible--a brave old castle
+that once had been the stronghold of a feudal race long dead. Grey it was,
+and attuned, that day, to the rest of the grey landscape. But at its base
+the ivy grew thick and green, and here and there long streaks of it crept
+up almost to the battlements, whilst in one place it had gone higher yet
+and clothed one of the quaint old turrets. A moat there had once been, but
+this was now filled up and arranged into little mounds that became flower-
+beds in summer.
+
+Resigning our horses to the keeping of our servants, we followed the grave
+maître d'hôtel who had received us. He led us across the spacious hall,
+which had all the appearance of an armoury, and up the regal staircase of
+polished oak on to a landing wide and lofty. Here, turning to the left, he
+opened a door and desired us to give ourselves the trouble of awaiting the
+Chevalier. We entered a handsome room, hung in costly Dutch tapestry, and
+richly furnished, yet with a sobriety of colour almost puritanical. The
+long windows overlooked a broad terrace, enclosed in a grey stone
+balustrade, from which some half-dozen steps led to a garden below. Beyond
+that ran the swift waters of the Loire, and beyond that again, in the
+distance, we beheld the famous Château de Chambord, built in the days of
+the first Francis.
+
+I had but remarked these details when the door again opened, to admit a
+short, slender man in whose black hair and beard the hand of time had
+scattered but little of that white dust that marks its passage. His face
+was pale, thin, and wrinkled, and his grey eyes had a nervous, restless
+look that dwelt not long on anything. He was dressed in black, with simple
+elegance, and his deep collar and ruffles were of the finest point.
+
+"Welcome to Canaples, M. de Mancini!" he exclaimed, as he hurried forward,
+with a smile so winning that his countenance appeared transfigured by it.
+"Welcome most cordially! We had not hoped that you would arrive so soon,
+but fortunately my daughters, to whom you appear to have been of service at
+Choisy, warned me that you were journeying hither. Your apartments,
+therefore, are prepared for you, and we hope that you will honour Canaples
+by long remaining its guest."
+
+Andrea thanked him becomingly.
+
+"In truth," he added, "my departure from Paris was somewhat sudden, but I
+have a letter here from Monseigneur my uncle, which explains the matter."
+
+"No explanation is needed, my dear Andrea," replied the old nobleman,
+abandoning the formalities that had marked his welcoming speech. "How left
+you my Lord Cardinal?" he asked, as he took the letter.
+
+"In excellent health, but somewhat harassed, I fear, by the affairs of
+State."
+
+"Ah, yes, yes. But stay. You are not alone." And Canaples's grey eyes
+shot an almost furtive glance of inquiry in my direction. A second glance
+followed the first and the Chevalier's brows were knit. Then he came a
+step nearer, scanning my face.
+
+"Surely, surely, Monsieur," he exclaimed before Andrea had time to answer
+him. "Were you not at Rocroi?"
+
+"Your memory flatters me, Monsieur," I replied with a laugh. "I was indeed
+at Rocroi--captain in the regiment of chévaux-légers whereof you were
+Mestre de Champ."
+
+"His name," said Andrea, "is Gaston de Luynes, my very dear friend,
+counsellor, and, I might almost say, protector."
+
+"Pardieu, yes! Gaston de Luynes!" he ejaculated, seizing my hand in an
+affectionate grip. "But how have you fared since Rocroi was fought? For a
+soldier of such promise, one might have predicted great things in ten
+years."
+
+"Hélas, Monsieur! I was dismissed the service after Senlac."
+
+"Dismissed the service!"
+
+"Pah!" I laughed, not without bitterness, 't is a long story and an ugly
+one, divided 'twixt the dice-box, the bottle, and the scabbard. Ten years
+ago I was a promising young captain, ardent and ambitious; to-day I am a
+broken ruffler, unrecognised by my family--a man without hope, without
+ambition, almost without honour."
+
+I know not what it was that impelled me to speak thus. Haply the wish that
+since he must soon learn to what depths Gaston de Luynes had sunk, he
+should at least learn it from my own lips at the outset.
+
+He shuddered at my concluding words, and had not Andrea at that moment put
+his arm affectionately upon my shoulder, and declared me the bravest fellow
+and truest friend in all the world, it is possible that the Chevalier de
+Canaples would have sought an excuse to be rid of me. Such men as he seek
+not the acquaintance of such men as I.
+
+To please Andrea was, however, of chief importance in his plans, and to
+that motive I owe it that he pressed me to remain a guest at the château.
+I declined the honour with the best grace I could command, determined that
+whilst Andrea remained at Canaples I would lodge at the Lys de France in
+Blois, independent and free to come or go as my fancy bade me. His
+invitation that I should at least dine at Canaples I accepted; but with the
+condition that he should repeat his invitation after he had heard something
+that I wished to tell him. He assented with a puzzled look, and when
+presently Andrea repaired to his apartments, and we were alone, I began.
+
+"You have doubtlessly received news, Monsieur, of a certain affair in which
+your son had recently the misfortune to be dangerously wounded?"
+
+We were standing by the great marble fireplace, and Canaples was resting
+one of his feet upon the huge brass andirons. He made a gesture of
+impatience as I spoke.
+
+"My son, sir, is a fool! A good-for-nothing fool! Oh, I have heard of
+this affair, a vulgar tavern brawl, the fifth in which his name has been
+involved and besmirched. I had news this morning by a courier dispatched
+me by my friend St. Simon, who imagines that I am deeply concerned in that
+young profligate. I learn that he is out of danger, and that in a month or
+so, he will be about again and ready to disgrace the name of Canaples
+afresh. But there, sir; I crave your pardon for the interruption."
+
+I bowed, and when in answer to my questions he told me that he was in
+ignorance of the details of the affair of which I spoke, I set about laying
+those details before him. Beginning with the original provocation in the
+Palais Royal and ending with the fight in the horse-market, I related the
+whole story to him, but in an impersonal manner, and keeping my own name
+out of my narrative. When I had done, Canaples muttered an oath of the
+days of the fourth Henry.
+
+"Ventre St. Gris! Does the dog carry his audacity so far as to dare come
+betwixt me and my wishes, and to strive against them? He sought to kill
+Mancini, eh? Would to Heaven he had died by the hand of this fellow who
+shielded the lad!"
+
+"Monsieur!" I cried, aghast at so unnatural an expression.
+
+"Pah!" he cried harshly. "He is my son in name alone, filial he never
+was."
+
+"Nevertheless, Monsieur, he is still your son, your heir."
+
+"My heir? And what, pray, does he inherit? A title--a barren, landless
+title! By his shameful conduct he alienated the affection of his uncle,
+and his uncle has disinherited him in favour of Yvonne. 'T is she who will
+be mistress of this château with its acres of land reaching from here to
+Blois, and three times as far on the other side. My brother, sir, was the
+rich Canaples, the owner of all this, and by his testament I am his heir
+during my lifetime, the estates going to Yvonne at my death. So that you
+see I have naught to leave; but if I had, not a dénier should go to my
+worthless son!"
+
+He spread his thin hands before the blaze, and for a moment there was
+silence. Then I proceeded to tell him of the cabal which had been formed
+against Mancini, and of the part played by St. Auban. At the mention of
+that name he started as if I had stung him.
+
+"What!" he thundered. "Is that ruffian also in the affair? Sangdieu! His
+motives are not far to seek. He is a suitor--an unfavoured suitor--for the
+hand of Yvonne, that seemingly still hopes. But you have not told me,
+Monsieur, the name of this man who has stood betwixt Andrea and his
+assassins."
+
+"Can you not guess, Monsieur?" quoth I, looking him squarely in the face.
+"Did you not hear Andrea call me, even now, his protector."
+
+"You? And with what motive, pray?"
+
+"At first, as I have told you, because the Cardinal gave me no choice in
+the matter touching your son. Since then my motive has lain in my
+friendship for the boy. He has been kind and affectionate to one who has
+known little kindness or affection in life. I seek to repay him by
+advancing his interests and his happiness. That, Monsieur, is why I am
+here to-day--to shield him from St. Auban and his fellows should they
+appear again, as I believe they will."
+
+The old man stood up and eyed me for a moment as steadily as his
+vacillating glance would permit him, then he held out his hand.
+
+"I trust, Monsieur," he said, "that you will do me the honour to dine with
+us, and that whilst you are at Blois we shall see you at Canaples as often
+as it may please you to cross its threshold."
+
+I took his hand, but without enthusiasm, for I understood that his words
+sprang from no warmth of heart for me, but merely from the fact that he
+beheld in me a likely ally to his designs of raising his daughter to the
+rank of Duchess.
+
+Eugène de Canaples may have been a good-for-nothing knave; still, methought
+his character scarce justified the callous indifference manifested by this
+selfish, weak-minded old man towards his own son.
+
+There was a knock at the door, and a lackey--the same Guilbert whom I had
+seen at Choisy in Mademoiselle's company--appeared with the announcement
+that the Chevalier was served.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE FORESHADOW OF DISASTER
+
+
+In the spacious dining salon of the Château de Canaples I found the two
+daughters of my host awaiting us--those same two ladies of the coach in
+Place Vendôme and of the hostelry at Choisy, the dark and stately icicle,
+Yvonne, and the fair, playful doll, Geneviève.
+
+I bowed my best bow as the Chevalier presented me, and from the corner of
+my eye, with inward malice, I watched them as I did so. Geneviève curtsied
+with a puzzled air and a sidelong glance at her sister. Yvonne accorded me
+the faintest, the coldest, inclination of her head, whilst her cheeks
+assumed a colour that was unwonted.
+
+"We have met before, I think, Monsieur," she said disdainfully.
+
+"True, Mademoiselle--once," I answered, thinking only of the coach.
+
+"Twice, Monsieur," she corrected, whereupon I recalled how she had
+surprised me with my arm about the waist of the inn-keeper's daughter, and
+had Heaven given me shame I might have blushed. But if sweet Yvonne
+thought to bring Gaston de Luynes to task for profiting by the good things
+which God's providence sent his way, she was led by vanity into a
+prodigious error.
+
+"Twice, indeed, Mademoiselle. But the service which you rendered me upon
+the first occasion was so present to my mind just now that it eclipsed the
+memory of our second meeting. I have ever since desired, Mademoiselle,
+that an opportunity might be mine wherein to thank you for the preservation
+of my life. I do so now, and at your service do I lay that life which you
+preserved, and which is therefore as much yours as mine."
+
+Strive as I might I could not rid my tone of an ironical inflection. I was
+goaded to it by her attitude, by the scornful turn of her lip and the
+disdainful glance of her grey eyes--she had her father's eyes, saving that
+her gaze was as steadfast as his was furtive.
+
+"What is this?" quoth Canaples. "You owe your life to my daughter? Pray
+tell me of it."
+
+"With all my heart," I made haste to answer before Mademoiselle could
+speak. "A week ago, I disagreed upon a question of great delicacy with a
+certain gentleman who shall be nameless. The obvious result attended our
+disagreement, and we fought 'neath the eyes of a vast company of
+spectators. Right was on my side, and the gentleman hurt himself upon my
+sword. Well, sir, the crowd snarled at me as though it were my fault that
+this had so befallen, and I flouted the crowd in answer. They were a
+hundred opposed to one, and so confident did this circumstance render them
+of their superiority, that for once those whelps displayed sufficient
+valour to attack me. I fled, and as a coach chanced to come that way, I
+clutched at the window and hung there. Within the coach there were two
+ladies, and one of them, taking compassion upon me, invited me to enter and
+thus rescued me. That lady, sir," I ended with a bow, "was Mademoiselle
+your daughter."
+
+In his eyes I read it that he had guessed the name of my nameless
+gentleman.
+
+The ladies were struck dumb by my apparent effrontery. Yvonne at last
+recovered sufficiently to ask if my presence at the château arose from my
+being attached to M. de Mancini. Now, "attached" is an unpleasant word. A
+courtier is attached to the King; a soldier to the army; there is
+humiliation in neither of these. But to a private gentleman, a man may be
+only attached as his secretary, his valet, or, possibly, as his bravo.
+Therein lay the sting of her carefully chosen word.
+
+"I am M. de Mancini's friend," I answered with simple dignity.
+
+For all reply she raised her eyebrows in token of surprise; Canaples looked
+askance; I bit my lip, and an awkward silence followed, which, luckily, was
+quickly ended by the appearance of Andrea.
+
+The ladies received him graciously, and a faint blush might, to searching
+eyes, have been perceived upon Geneviève's cheek.
+
+There came a delicate exchange of compliments, after which we got to table,
+and for my part I did ample justice to the viands.
+
+I sat beside Geneviève, and vis-à-vis with Andrea, who occupied the place
+of the honoured guest, at the host's right hand, with Yvonne beside him.
+Me it concerned little where I sat, since the repast was all that I could
+look for; not so the others. Andrea scowled at me because I was nearer to
+Geneviève than he, and Yvonne frowned at me for other reasons. By
+Geneviève I was utterly disregarded, and my endeavours to converse were
+sorely unsuccessful--for one may not converse alone.
+
+I clearly saw that Yvonne only awaited an opportunity to unmask me, and
+denounce me to her father as the man who had sought his son's life.
+
+This opportunity, however, came not until the moment of my departure from
+the château, that evening. I was crossing the hail with the Chevalier de
+Canaples, and we had stopped for a moment to admire a piece of old chain
+armour of the days of the Crusaders. Andrea and Geneviève had preceded us,
+and passed out through the open doorway, whilst Yvonne lingered upon the
+threshold looking back.
+
+"I trust, M. de Luynes," said Canaples, as we moved towards her, "that you
+will remember my invitation, and that whilst you remain at Biois we shall
+see you here as often as you may be pleased to come; indeed, I trust that
+you will be a daily visitor."
+
+Before I could utter a reply--"Father," exclaimed Mademoiselle, coming
+forward, "do you know to whom you are offering the hospitality of
+Canaples?"
+
+"Why that question, child? To M. de Luynes, M. de Mancini's friend."
+
+"And the would-be murderer of Eugène," she added fiercely.
+
+Canaples started.
+
+"Surely such affairs are not for women to meddle with," he cried.
+"Moreover, M. de Luynes has already given me all details of the affair."
+
+Her eyes grew very wide at that.
+
+"He has told you? Yet you invite him hither?" she exclaimed.
+
+"M. de Luynes has naught wherewith to reproach himself, nor have I. Those
+details which he has given me I may not impart to you; suffice it, however,
+that I am satisfied that his conduct could not have been other than it was,
+whereas that of my son reflects but little credit upon his name."
+
+She stamped her foot, and her eyes, blazing with anger, passed from one to
+the other of us.
+
+"And you--you believe this man's story?"
+
+"Yvonne!"
+
+"Possibly," I interposed, coolly, "Mademoiselle may have received some
+false account of it that justifies her evident unbelief in what I may have
+told you."
+
+It is not easy to give a lie unless you can prove it a lie. I made her
+realise this, and she bit her lip in vexation. Dame! What a pretty viper
+I thought her at that moment!
+
+"Let me add, Yvonne," said her father, "that M. de Luynes and I are old
+comrades in arms." Then turning to me--"My daughter, sir, is but a child,
+and therefore hasty to pass judgment upon matters beyond her understanding.
+Forget this foolish outburst, and remember only my assurance of an ever
+cordial welcome."
+
+"With all my heart," I answered, after a moment's deliberation, during
+which I had argued that for once I must stifle pride if I would serve
+Andrea.
+
+"Ough!" was all Mademoiselle's comment as she turned her back upon me.
+Nevertheless, I bowed and flourished my beaver to her retreating figure.
+
+Clearly Mademoiselle entertained for me exactly that degree of fondness
+which a pious hermit feels for the devil, and if I might draw conclusions
+from what evidences I had had of the strength of her character and the
+weakness of her father's, our sojourn at Blois promised to afford me little
+delectation. In fact, I foresaw many difficulties that might lead to
+disaster should our Paris friends appear upon the scene--a contingency this
+that seemed over-imminent.
+
+It was not my wont, howbeit, to brood over the evils that the future might
+hold, and to this I owe it that I slept soundly that night in my room at
+the Lys de France.
+
+It was a pleasant enough chamber on the first floor, overlooking the
+street, and having an alcove attached to it which served for Michelot.
+
+Next day I visited the Château de Canaples early in the afternoon. The
+weather was milder, and the glow of the sun heralded at last the near
+approach of spring and brightened wondrously a landscape that had yesterday
+worn so forbidding a look.
+
+This change it must have been that drew the ladies, and Andrea with them,
+to walk in the park, where I came upon them as I rode up. Their laughter
+rippled merrily and they appeared upon the best of terms until they espied
+me. My advent was like a cloud that foretells a storm, and drove
+Mesdemoiselles away, when they had accorded me a greeting that contained
+scant graciousness.
+
+All unruffled by this act, from which I gathered that Yvonne the strong had
+tutored Geneviève the frail concerning me, I consigned my horse to a groom
+of the château, and linked arms with Andrea.
+
+"Well, boy," quoth I, "what progress?"
+
+He smiled radiantly.
+
+"My hopes are all surpassed. It exceeds belief that so poor a thing as I
+should find favour in her eyes--what eyes, Gaston!" He broke off with a
+sigh of rapture.
+
+"Peste, you have lost no time. And so, already you know that you find
+favour, eh! How know you that?"
+
+"How? Need a man be told such things? There is an inexpressible--"
+
+"My good Andrea, seek not to express it, therefore," I interrupted hastily.
+"Let it suffice that the inexpressible exists, and makes you happy. His
+Eminence will doubtless share your joy! Have you written to him?"
+
+The mirth faded from the lad's face at the words, as the blossom fades
+'neath the blighting touch of frost. What he said was so undutiful from a
+nephew touching his uncle--particularly when that uncle is a prelate--that
+I refrain from penning it.
+
+We were joined just then by the Chevalier, and together we strolled round
+to the rose-garden--now, alas! naught but black and naked bushes--and down
+to the edge of the Loire, yellow and swollen by the recent rains.
+
+"How lovely must be this place in summer," I mused, looking across the
+water towards Chambord. "And, Dame," I cried, suddenly changing my
+meditations, "what an ideal fencing ground is this even turf!"
+
+"The swordsman's instinct," laughed Canaples.
+
+And with that our talk shifted to swords, swordsmen, and sword-play, until
+I suggested to Andrea that he should resume his practice, whereupon the
+Chevalier offered to set a room at our disposal.
+
+"Nay, if you will pardon me, Monsieur, 't is not a room we want," I
+answered. "A room is well enough at the outset, but it is the common error
+of fencing-masters to continue their tutoring on a wooden floor. It
+results from this that when the neophyte handles a real sword, and defends
+his life upon the turf, the ground has a new feeling; its elasticity or
+even its slipperiness discomposes him, and sets him at a disadvantage."
+
+He agreed with me, whilst Andrea expressed a wish to try the turf. Foils
+were brought, and we whiled away best part of an half-hour. In the end,
+the Chevalier, who had watched my play intently, offered to try a bout with
+me. And so amazed was he with the result, that he had not done talking of
+it when I left Canaples a few hours later--a homage this that earned me
+some more than ordinarily unfriendly glances from Yvonne. No doubt since
+the accomplishment was mine it became in her eyes characteristic of a bully
+and a ruffler.
+
+During the week that followed I visited the château with regularity, and
+with equal regularity did Andrea receive his fencing lessons. The object
+of his presence at Canaples, however, was being frustrated more and more
+each day, so far as the Cardinal and the Chevalier were concerned.
+
+He raved to me of Geneviève, the one perfect woman in all the world and
+brought into it by a kind Providence for his own particular delectation.
+In truth, love is like a rabid dog--whom it bites it renders mad; so open
+grew his wooing, and so ardent, that one evening I thought well to take him
+aside and caution him.
+
+"My dear Andrea," said I, "if you will love Geneviève, you will, and
+there's an end of it. But if you would not have the Chevalier pack you
+back to Paris and the anger of my Lord Cardinal, be circumspect, and at
+least when M. de Canaples is by divide your homage equally betwixt the two.
+'T were well if you dissembled even a slight preference for Yvonne--she
+will not be misled by it, seeing how unmistakable at all other seasons must
+be your wooing of Geneviève."
+
+He was forced to avow the wisdom of my counsel, and to be guided by it.
+
+Nevertheless, I rode back to my hostelry in no pleasant frame of mind. It
+was more than likely that a short shrift and a length of hemp would be the
+acknowledgment I should anon receive from Mazarin for my participation in
+the miscarriage of his desires.
+
+I felt that disaster was on the wing. Call it a premonition; call it what
+you will. I know but this; that as I rode into the courtyard of the Lys de
+France, at dusk, the first man my eyes alighted on was the Marquis César de
+St. Auban, and, in conversation with him, six of the most arrant-looking
+ruffians that ever came out of Paris.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+OF HOW A WHIP PROVED A BETTER ARGUMENT THAN A TONGUE
+
+
+"I crave Monsieur's pardon, but there is a gentleman below who desires to
+speak with you immediately."
+
+"How does this gentleman call himself, M. l'Hote?"
+
+"M. le Marquis de St. Auban," answered the landlord, still standing in the
+doorway.
+
+It wanted an hour or so to noon on the day following that of St. Auban's
+arrival at Blois, and I was on the point of setting out for the château on
+an errand of warning.
+
+It occurred to me to refuse to see the Marquis, but remembering betimes
+that from your enemy's speech you may sometimes learn where to look for his
+next attack, I thought better of it and bade my host admit him.
+
+I strode over to the fire, and stirring the burning logs, I put my back to
+the blaze, and waited.
+
+Steps sounded on the stairs; there was the shuffling of the landlord's
+slippered feet and the firm tread of my visitor, accompanied by the jingle
+of spurs and the clank of his scabbard as it struck the balustrade. Then
+my door was again opened, and St. Auban, as superbly dressed as ever, was
+admitted.
+
+We bowed formally, as men bow who are about to cross swords, and whilst I
+waited for him to speak, I noted that his face was pale and bore the
+impress of suppressed anger.
+
+"So, M. de Luynes, again we meet."
+
+"By your seeking, M. le Marquis."
+
+"You are not polite."
+
+"You are not opportune."
+
+He smiled dangerously.
+
+"I learn, Monsieur, that you are a daily visitor at the Château de
+Canaples."
+
+"Well, sir, what of it?"
+
+"This. I have been to Canaples this morning and, knowing that you will
+learn anon, from that old dotard, what passed between us, I prefer that you
+shall hear it first from me."
+
+I bowed to conceal a smile.
+
+"Thanks to you, M. de Luynes, I was ordered from the house. I--César de
+St. Auban--have been ordered from the house of a provincial upstart!
+Thanks to the calumnies which you poured into his ears."
+
+"Calumnies! Was that the word?"
+
+"I choose the word that suits me best," he answered, and the rage that was
+in him at the affront he had suffered at the hands of the Chevalier de
+Canaples was fast rising to the surface. "I warned you at Choisy of what
+would befall. Your opposition and your alliance with M. de Mancini are
+futile. You think to have gained a victory by winning over to your side an
+old fool who will sacrifice his honour to see his daughter a duchess, but I
+tell you, sir--"
+
+"That you hope to see her a marchioness," I put in calmly. "You see, M. de
+St. Auban, I have learned something since I came to Blois."
+
+He grew livid with passion.
+
+"You shall learn more ere you quit it, you meddler! You shall be taught to
+keep that long nose of yours out of matters that concern you not."
+
+I laughed.
+
+"Loud threats!" I answered jeeringly.
+
+"Never fear," he cried, "there is more to follow. To your cost shall you
+learn it. By God, sir! do you think that I am to suffer a Sicilian
+adventurer and a broken tavern ruffler to interfere with my designs?"
+
+Still I kept my temper.
+
+"So!" I said in a bantering tone. "You confess that you have designs.
+Good! But what says the lady, eh? I am told that she is not yet
+outrageously enamoured of you, for all your beauty!"
+
+Beside himself with passion, his hand sought his sword. But the gesture
+was spasmodic.
+
+"Knave!" he snarled.
+
+"Knave to me? Have a care, St. Auban, or I'll find you a shroud for a
+wedding garment."
+
+"Knave!" he repeated with a snarl. "What price are you paid by that boy?"
+
+"Pardieu, St. Auban! You shall answer to me for this."
+
+"Answer for it? To you!" And he laughed harshly. "You are mad, my
+master. When did a St. Auban cross swords with a man of your stamp?"
+
+"M. le Marquis," I said, with a calmness that came of a stupendous effort,
+"at Choisy you sought my friendship with high-sounding talk of principles
+that opposed you to the proposed alliance, twixt the houses of Mancini and
+Canaples. Since then I have learned that your motives were purely
+personal. From my discovery I hold you to be a liar."
+
+"Monsieur!"
+
+"I have not yet done. You refuse to cross swords with me on the pretext
+that you do not fight men of my stamp. I am no saint, sir, I confess. But
+my sins cannot wash out my name--the name of a family accounted as good as
+that of St. Auban, and one from which a Constable of France has sprung,
+whereas yours has never yet bred aught but profligates and debauchees. You
+are little better than I am, Marquis; indeed, you do many things that I
+would not do, that I have never done. For instance, whilst refusing to
+cross blades with me, who am a soldier and a man of the sword, you seek to
+pick a fight with a beardless boy who hardly knows the use of a rapier, and
+who--wittingly at least--has done you no wrong. Now, my master, you may
+call me profligate, ruffler, gamester, duellist--what you will; but there
+are two viler things you cannot dub me, and which, methinks, I have proven
+you to be--liar and craven."
+
+And as I spoke the burning words, I stood close up to him and tapped his
+breast as if to drive the epithets into his very heart.
+
+Rage he felt, indeed, and his distorted countenance was a sight fearful to
+behold.
+
+"Now, my master," I added, setting my arms akimbo and laughing brutally in
+his face, "will you fight?"
+
+For a moment he wavered, and surely meseemed that I had drawn him. Then:
+
+"No," he cried passionately. "I will not do dishonour to my sword." And
+turning he made for the door, leaving me baffled.
+
+"Go, sir," I shouted, "but fame shall stalk fast behind you. Liar and
+craven will I dub you throughout the whole of France."
+
+He stopped 'neath the lintel, and faced me again.
+
+"Fool," he sneered. "You'll need dispatch to spread my fame so far. By
+this time to-morrow you'll be arrested. In three days you will be in the
+Bastille, and there shall you lie until you rot to carrion."
+
+"Loud threats again!" I laughed, hoping by the taunt to learn more.
+
+"Loud perchance, but not empty. Learn that the Cardinal has knowledge of
+your association with Mancini, and means to separate you. An officer of
+the guards is on his way to Blois. He is at Meung by now. He bears a
+warrant for your arrest and delivery to the governor of the Bastille.
+Thereafter, none may say what will betide." And with a coarse burst of
+laughter he left me, banging the door as he passed out.
+
+For a moment I stood there stricken by his parting words. He had sought to
+wound me, and in this he had succeeded. But at what cost to himself? In
+his blind rage, the fool had shown me that which he should have zealously
+concealed, and what to him was but a stinging threat was to me a timely
+warning. I saw the necessity for immediate action. Two things must I do;
+kill St. Auban first, then fly the Cardinal's warrant as best I could. I
+cast about me for means to carry out the first of these intentions. My eye
+fell upon my riding-whip, lying on a chair close to my hand, and the sight
+of it brought me the idea I sought. Seizing it, I bounded out of the room
+and down the stairs, three steps at a stride.
+
+Along the corridor I sped and into the common-room, which at the moment was
+tolerably full. As I entered by one door, the Marquis was within three
+paces of the other, leading to the courtyard.
+
+My whip in the air, I sprang after him; and he, hearing the rush of my
+onslaught, turned, then uttered a cry of pain as I brought the lash
+caressingly about his shoulders.
+
+"Now, master craven," I shouted, "will that change your mind?"
+
+With an almost inarticulate cry, he sought to draw there and then, but
+those about flung themselves upon us, and held us apart--I, passive and
+unresisting; the Marquis, bellowing, struggling, and foaming at the mouth.
+
+"To meet you now would be to murder you, Marquis," I said coolly. "Send
+your friends to me to appoint the time."
+
+"Soit!" he cried, his eyes blazing with a hate unspeakable. "At eight to-
+morrow morning I shall await you on the green behind the castle of Blois."
+
+"At eight o'clock I shall be there," I answered. "And now, gentlemen, if
+you will unhand me, I will return to my apartments."
+
+They let me go, but with many a growl and angry look, for in their eyes I
+was no more than a coarse aggressor, whilst their sympathy was all for St.
+Auban.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE CONSCIENCE OF MALPERTUIS
+
+
+And so back to my room I went, my task accomplished, and so pleased was I
+with what had passed that as I drew on my boots--preparing to set out to
+Canaples--I laughed softly to myself.
+
+St. Auban I would dispose of in the morning. As for the other members of
+the cabal, I deemed neither Vilmorin nor Malpertuis sufficiently formidable
+to inspire uneasiness. St. Auban gone, they too would vanish. There
+remained then Eugène de Canaples. Him, however, methought no great evil
+was to be feared from. In Paris he might be as loud-voiced as he pleased,
+but in his father's château--from what I had learned--'t was unlikely he
+would so much as show himself. Moreover, he was wounded, and before he had
+sufficiently recovered to offer interference it was more than probable that
+Andrea would have married one or the other of Mesdemoiselles de Canaples--
+though I had a shrewd suspicion that it would be the wrong one, and there
+again I feared trouble.
+
+As I stood up, booted and ready to descend, there came a gentle tap at my
+door, and, in answer to my "Enter," there stood before me a very dainty and
+foppish figure. I stared hard at the effeminate face and the long fair
+locks of my visitor, thinking that I had become the dupe of my eyes.
+
+"M. de Vilmorin!" I murmured in astonishment, as he came forward, having
+closed the door. "You here?"
+
+In answer, he bowed and greeted me with cold ceremoniousness.
+
+"I have been in Blois since yesterday, Monsieur."
+
+"In truth I might have guessed it, Vicomte. Your visit flatters me, for,
+of course, I take it, you are come to pay me your respects," I said
+ironically. "A glass of wine, Vicomte?"
+
+"A thousand thanks, Monsieur--no," he answered coldly in his mincing tones.
+"It is concerning your affair with M. le Marquis de St. Auban that I am
+come." And drawing forth a dainty kerchief, which filled the room with the
+scent of ambregris, he tapped his lips with it affectedly.
+
+"Do you come as friend or--in some other capacity?"
+
+"I come as mediator."
+
+"Mediator!" I echoed, and my brow grew dark. "Sdeath! Has St. Auban's
+courage lasted just so long as the sting of my whip?"
+
+He raised his eyebrows after a supercilious fashion that made me thirst to
+strike the chair from under him.
+
+"You misapprehend me; M. de St. Auban has no desire to avert the duel. On
+the contrary, he will not rest until the affront you have put upon him be
+washed out--"
+
+"It will be, I'll answer for it."
+
+"Your answer, sir, is characteristic of a fanfarron. He who promises most
+does not always fulfil most."
+
+I stared at him in amazement.
+
+"Shall I promise you something, Vicomte? Mortdieu! If you seek to pick a
+quarrel with me--"
+
+"God forbid!" he ejaculated, turning colour. And his suddenly awakened
+apprehensions swept aside the affectation that hitherto had marked his
+speech and manner.
+
+"Then, Monsieur, be brief and state the sum of this mediation."
+
+"It is this, Monsieur. In the heat of the moment, M. le Marquis gave you,
+in the hearing of half a score of people, an assignation for to-morrow
+morning. News of the affair will spread rapidly through Blois, and it is
+likely there will be no lack of spectators on the green to witness the
+encounter. Therefore, as my friend thinks this will be as unpalatable to
+you as it is to him, he has sent me to suggest a fresh rendezvous."
+
+"Pooh, sir," I answered lightly. "I care not, for myself, who comes. I am
+accustomed to a crowd. Still, since M. de St. Auban finds it discomposing,
+let us arrange otherwise."
+
+"There is yet another point. M. de St. Auban spoke to you, I believe, of
+an officer who is coming hither charged with your arrest. It is probable
+that he may reach Blois before morning, so that the Marquis thinks that to
+make certain you might consent to meet him to-night."
+
+"Ma foi. St. Auban is indeed in earnest then! Convey to him my
+expressions of admiration at this suddenly awakened courage. Be good
+enough, Vicomte, to name the rendezvous."
+
+"Do you know the chapel of St. Sulpice des Reaux?"
+
+"What! Beyond the Loire?"
+
+"Precisely, Monsieur. About a league from Chambord by the river side."
+
+"I can find the place."
+
+"Will you meet us there at nine o'clock to­night?"
+
+I looked askance at him.
+
+"But why cross the river? This side affords many likely spots!"
+
+"Very true, Monsieur. But the Marquis has business at Chambord this
+evening, after which there will be no reason--indeed, it will inconvenience
+him exceedingly--to return to Blois."
+
+"What!" I cried, more and more astonished. "St. Auban is leaving Blois?"
+
+"This evening, sir."
+
+"But, voyons, Vicomte, why make an assignation in such a place and at
+night, when at any hour of the day I can meet the Marquis on this side,
+without suffering the inconvenience of crossing the river?"
+
+"There will be a bright moon, well up by nine o'clock. Moreover, remember
+that you cannot, as you say, meet St. Auban on this side at any time he may
+appoint, since to-night or to-morrow the officer who is in search of you
+will arrive."
+
+I pondered for a moment. Then:
+
+"M. le Vicomte," I said, "in this matter of ground 't is I who have the
+first voice."
+
+"How so?"
+
+"Because the Marquis is the affronted one."
+
+"Therefore he has a right to choose."
+
+"A right, yes. But that is not enough. The necessity to fight is on his
+side. His honour is hurt, not mine; I have whipped him; I am content. Now
+let him come to me."
+
+"Assuredly you will not be so ungenerous."
+
+"I do not care about journeying to Reaux to afford him satisfaction."
+
+"Does Monsieur fear anything?"
+
+"Vicomte, you go too far!" I cried, my pride gaining the mastery. "Since
+it is asked of me,--I will go."
+
+"M. le Marquis will be grateful to you."
+
+"A fig for his gratitude," I answered, whereupon the Vicomte shrugged his
+narrow shoulders, and, his errand done, took his leave of me.
+
+When he was gone I called Michelot, to tell him of the journey I must go
+that night, so that he might hold himself in readiness.
+
+"Why--if Monsieur will pardon me," quoth he, "do you go to meet the Marquis
+de St. Auban at St. Sulpice des Reaux by night?"
+
+"Precisely what I asked Vilmorin. The Marquis desires it, and--what will
+you?--since I am going to kill the man, I can scarce do less than kill him
+on a spot of his own choosing."
+
+Michelot screwed up his face and scratched at his grey beard with his huge
+hand.
+
+"Does no suspicion of foul play cross your mind, Monsieur?" he inquired
+timidly.
+
+"Shame on you, Michelot," I returned with some heat. "You do not yet
+understand the ways of gentlemen. Think you that M. de St. Auban would
+stoop to such a deed as that? He would be shamed for ever! Pooh, I would
+as soon suspect my Lord Cardinal of stealing the chalices from Nôtre Dame.
+Go, see to my horse. I am riding to Canaples."
+
+As I rode out towards the château I fell to thinking, and my thoughts
+turning to Vilmorin, I marvelled at the part he was playing in this little
+comedy of a cabal against Andrea de Mancini. His tastes and instincts were
+of the boudoir, the ante-chamber, and the table. He wore a sword because
+it was so ordained by fashion, and because the hilt was convenient for the
+display of a jewel or two. Certainly 't was not for utility that it hung
+beside him, and no man had ever seen it drawn. Nature had made him the
+most pitiable coward begotten. Why then should he involve himself in an
+affair which promised bloodshed, and which must be attended by many a risk
+for him? There was in all this some mystery that I could not fathom.
+
+From the course into which they had slipped, my thoughts were diverted,
+when I was within half a mile of the château, by the sight of a horseman
+stationed, motionless, among the trees that bordered the road. It occurred
+to me that men take not such a position without purpose--usually an evil
+one. I slackened speed somewhat and rode on, watching him sharply. As I
+came up, he walked his horse forward to meet me, and I beheld a man in the
+uniform of the gardes du corps, in whom presently I recognised the little
+sparrow Malpertuis, with whom I had exchanged witticisms at Choisy. He was
+the one man wanting to complete the trinity that had come upon us at the
+inn of the Connétable.
+
+It flashed across my mind that he might be the officer charged with my
+arrest, and that he had arrived sooner than had been expected. If so, it
+was likely to go ill with him, for I was not minded to be taken until St.
+Auban's soul sped hellwards.
+
+He hailed me as I advanced, and indeed rode forward to meet me.
+
+"You are come at last, M. de Luynes," was his greeting. "I have waited for
+you this hour past."
+
+"How knew you I should ride this way?"
+
+"I learnt that you would visit Canaples before noon. Be good enough to
+quit the road, and pass under those trees with me. I have something to say
+to you, but it were not well that we should be seen together."
+
+"For the sake of your character or mine, M. Malappris?"
+
+"Malpertuis!" he snapped.
+
+"Malpertuis," I corrected. "You were saying that we should not be seen
+together."
+
+"St. Auban might hear of it."
+
+"Ah! And therefore?"
+
+"You shall learn." We were now under the trees, which albeit leafless yet
+screened us partly from the road. He drew rein, and I followed his
+example.
+
+"M. de Luynes," he began, "I am or was a member of the cabal formed against
+Mazarin's aims in the matter of the marriage of Mademoiselle de Canaples to
+his nephew. I joined hands with St. Auban, lured by his protestations that
+it is not meet that such an heiress as Yvonne de Canaples should be forced
+to marry a foreigner of no birth and less distinction, whilst France holds
+so many noble suitors to her hand. This motive, by which I know that even
+Eugène de Canaples was actuated, was, St. Auban gave me to understand, his
+only one for embarking upon this business, as it was also Vilmorin's. Now,
+M. de Luynes, I have to­day discovered that I had been duped by St. Auban
+and his dupe, Vilmorin. St. Auban lied to me; another motive brings him
+into the affair. He seeks himself, by any means that may present
+themselves, to marry Yvonne--and her estates; whilst the girl, I am told,
+loathes him beyond expression. Vilmorin again is actuated by no less a
+purpose. And so, what think you these two knaves--this master knave and
+his dupe--have determined? To carry off Mademoiselle by force!"
+
+"Sangdieu!" I burst out, and would have added more, but his gesture
+silenced me, and he continued:
+
+"Vilmorin believes that St. Auban is helping him in this, whereas St. Auban
+is but fooling him with ambiguous speeches until they have the lady safe.
+Then might will assert itself, and St. Auban need but show his fangs to
+drive the sneaking coward away from the prize he fondly dreams is to be
+his."
+
+"When do these gentlemen propose to carry out their plan? Have they
+determined that?" I inquired breathlessly.
+
+"Aye, they have. They hope to accomplish it this very day. Mademoiselle
+de Canaples has received a letter wherein she is asked to meet her
+anonymous writer in the coppice yonder, at the Angelus this evening, if she
+would learn news of great importance to her touching a conspiracy against
+her father."
+
+"Faugh!" I sneered. "'T is too poor a bait to lure her with."
+
+"Say you so? Believe me that unless she be dissuaded she will comply with
+the invitation, so cunningly was the letter couched. A closed carriage
+will be waiting at this very spot. Into this St. Auban, Vilmorin, and
+their bravos will thrust the girl, then away through Blois and beyond it,
+for a mile or so, in the direction of Meung, thereby misleading any chance
+pursuers. There they will quit the coach and take a boat that is to be in
+waiting for them and which will bear them back with the stream to Chambord.
+Thereafter, God pity the poor lady if they get thus far without mishap."
+
+"Mort de ma vie!" I cried, slapping my thigh, "I understand!" And to
+myself I thought of the assignation at St. Sulpice des Reaux, and the
+reason for this, as also St. Auban's resolution to so suddenly quit Blois,
+grew of a sudden clear to me. Also did I recall the riddle touching
+Vilmorin's conduct which a few moments ago I had puzzled over, and of which
+methought that I now held the solution.
+
+"What do you understand?" asked Malpertuis.
+
+"Something that was told me this morning," I made answer, then spoke of
+gratitude, wherein he cut me short.
+
+"I ask no thanks," he said curtly. "You owe me none. What I have done is
+not for love of you or Mancini--for I love neither of you. It is done
+because noblesse m'oblige. I told St. Auban that I would have no part in
+this outrage. But that is not enough; I owe it to my honour to attempt the
+frustration of so dastardly a plan. You, M. de Luynes, appear to be the
+most likely person to encompass this, in the interests of your friend
+Mancini; I leave the matter, therefore, in your hands. Good­day!"
+
+And with this abrupt leave-taking, the little fellow doffed his hat to me,
+and wheeling his horse he set spurs in its flanks, and was gone before a
+word of mine could have stayed him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+OF A WOMAN'S OBSTINACY
+
+
+"M. de Luynes is a wizard," quoth Andrea, laughing, in answer to something
+that had been said.
+
+It was afternoon. We had dined, and the bright sunshine and spring-like
+mildness of the weather had lured us out upon the terrace. Yvonne and
+Geneviève occupied the stone seat. Andrea had perched himself upon the
+granite balustrade, and facing them he sat, swinging his shapely legs to
+and fro as he chatted merrily, whilst on either side of him stood the
+Chevalier de Canaples and I.
+
+"If M. de Luynes be as great a wizard in other things as with the sword,
+then, pardieu, he is a fearful magician," said Canaples.
+
+I bowed, yet not so low but that I detected a sneer on Yvonne's lips.
+
+"So, pretty lady," said I to myself, "we shall see if presently your lip
+will curl when I show you something of my wizard's art."
+
+And presently my chance came. M. de Canaples found reason to leave us, and
+no sooner was he gone than Geneviève remembered that she had that day
+discovered a budding leaf upon one of the rose bushes in the garden below.
+Andrea naturally caused an argument by asserting that she was the victim of
+her fancy, as it was by far too early in the year. By that means these two
+found the plea they sought for quitting us, since neither could rest until
+the other was convinced.
+
+So down they went into that rose garden which methought was like to prove
+their fool's paradise, and Yvonne and I were left alone. Then she also
+rose, but as she was on the point of quitting me:
+
+"Mademoiselle," I ventured, "will you honour me by remaining for a moment?
+There is something that I would say to you."
+
+With raised eyebrows she gave me a glance mingled with that
+superciliousness which she was for ever bestowing upon me, and which, from
+the monotony of it alone, grew irksome.
+
+"What can you have to say to me, M. de Luynes?"
+
+"Will you not be seated? I shall not long detain you, nevertheless--"
+
+"If I stand, perchance you will be more brief. I am waiting, Monsieur."
+
+I shrugged my shoulders rudely. Why, indeed, be courteous where so little
+courtesy was met with?
+
+"A little while ago, Mademoiselle, when M. de Mancini dubbed me a wizard
+you were good enough to sneer. Now, a sneer, Mademoiselle, implies
+unbelief, and I would convince you that you were wrong to disbelieve."
+
+"If you have no other motive for detaining me, suffer me to depart," she
+interrupted with some warmth. "Whether you be a wizard or not is of no
+moment to me."
+
+"And yet I dare swear that you will be of a different mind within five
+minutes. A wizard is one who discloses things unknown to his fellow-men.
+I am about to convince you that I can do this, and by convincing you I am
+about to serve you."
+
+"I seek neither conviction nor service at your hands," she answered.
+
+"Your courtesy dumfounds me, Mademoiselle!"
+
+"No less than does your insolence dumfound me," she retorted, with crimson
+cheeks. "Do you forget, sir, that I know you for what you are--a gamester,
+a libertine, a duellist, the murderer of my brother?"
+
+"That your brother lives, Mademoiselle, is, methinks, sufficient proof that
+I have not murdered him."
+
+"You willed his death if you did not encompass it; so 't is all one. Do
+you not understand that it is because my father receives you here, thanks
+to M. de Mancini, your friend--a friendship easily understood from the
+advantages you must derive from it--that I consent to endure your presence
+and the insult of your glance? Is it not enough that I should do this, and
+have you not wit enough to discern it, without adding to my shame by your
+insolent call upon my courtesy?"
+
+Her words cut me as no words that I ever heard, and, more than her words,
+her tone of loathing and disgust unspeakable. For half that speech I
+should have killed a man--indeed, I had killed men for less than half. And
+yet, for all the passion that raged in my soul, I preserved upon my
+countenance a smiling mask. That smile exhausted her patience and
+increased her loathing, for with a contemptuous exclamation she turned
+away.
+
+"Tarry but a moment, Mademoiselle," I cried, with a sudden note of command.
+"Or, if you will go, go then; but take with you my assurance that before
+nightfall you will weep bitterly for it."
+
+My words arrested her. The mystery of them awakened her curiosity.
+
+"You speak in riddles, Monsieur."
+
+"Like a true wizard, Mademoiselle. You received a letter this morning in a
+handwriting unknown, and bearing no signature."
+
+She wheeled round and faced me again with a little gasp of astonishment.
+
+"How know you that? Ah! I understand; you wrote it!"
+
+"What shrewdness, Mademoiselle!" I laughed, ironically. "Come; think
+again. What need have I to bid you meet me in the coppice yonder? May I
+not speak freely with you here?"
+
+"You know the purport of that letter?"
+
+"I do, Mademoiselle, and I know more. I know that this hinted conspiracy
+against your father is a trumped-up lie to lure you to the coppice."
+
+"And for what purpose, pray?"
+
+"An evil one,--your abduction. Shall I tell you who penned that note, and
+who awaits you? The Marquis César de St. Auban."
+
+She shuddered as I pronounced the name, then, looking me straight between
+the eyes--"How come you to know these things?" she inquired.
+
+"What does it signify, since I know them?"
+
+"This, Monsieur, that unless I learn how, I can attach no credit to your
+preposterous story."
+
+"Not credit it!" I cried. "Let me assure you that I have spoken the truth;
+let me swear it. Go to the coppice at the appointed time, and things will
+fall out as I have predicted."
+
+"Again, Monsieur, how know you this?" she persisted, as women will.
+
+"I may not tell you."
+
+We stood close together, and her clear grey eyes met mine, her lip curling
+in disdain.
+
+"You may not tell me? You need not. I can guess." And she tossed her
+shapely head and laughed. "Seek some likelier story, Monsieur. Had you
+not spoken of it, 't is likely I should have left the letter unheeded. But
+your disinterested warning has determined me to go to this rendezvous.
+Shall I tell you what I have guessed? That this conspiracy against my
+father, the details of which you would not have me learn, is some evil of
+your own devising. Ah! You change colour!" she cried, pointing to my
+face. Then with a laugh of disdain she left me before I had sufficiently
+recovered from my amazement to bid her stay.
+
+"Ciel!" I cried, as I watched the tall, lissom figure vanish through the
+portals of the château. "Did ever God create so crass and obstinate a
+thing as woman?"
+
+It occurred to me to tell Andrea, and bid him warn her. But then she would
+guess that I had prompted him. Naught remained but to lay the matter
+before the Chevalier de Canaples. Already I had informed him of my fracas
+with St. Auban, and of the duel that was to be fought that night, and he,
+in his turn, had given me the details of his stormy interview with the
+Marquis, which had culminated in St. Auban's dismissal from Canaples. I
+had not hitherto deemed it necessary to alarm him with the news imparted to
+me by Malpertuis, imagining that did I inform Mademoiselle that would
+suffice.
+
+Now, however, as I have said, no other course was left me but to tell him
+of it. Accordingly, I went within and inquired of Guilbert, whom I met in
+the hall, where I might find the Chevalier. He answered me that M. de
+Canaples was not in the château. It was believed that he had gone with M.
+Louis, the intendant of the estates, to visit the vineyards at Montcroix.
+
+The news made me choke with impatience. Already it was close upon five
+o'clock, and in another hour the sun would set and the Angelus would toll
+the knell of Mademoiselle's preposterous suspicions, unless in the meantime
+I had speech with Canaples, and led him to employ a father's authority to
+keep his daughter indoors.
+
+Fuming at the contretemps I called for my horse and set out at a brisk trot
+for Montcroix. But my ride was fruitless. The vineyard peasants had not
+seen the Chevalier for over a week.
+
+Now, 'twixt Montcroix and the château there lies a good league, and to make
+matters worse, as I galloped furiously back to Canaples, an evil chance led
+me to mistake the way and pursue a track that brought me out on the very
+banks of the river, with a strong belt of trees screening the château from
+sight, and defying me to repair my error by going straight ahead.
+
+I was forced to retrace my steps, and before I had regained the point where
+I had gone astray a precious quarter of an hour was wasted, and the sun
+already hung, a dull red globe, on the brink of the horizon.
+
+Clenching my teeth, I tore at my horse's flanks, and with a bloody heel I
+drove the maddened brute along at a pace that might have cost us both
+dearly. I dashed, at last, into the quadrangle, and, throwing the reins to
+a gaping groom, I sprang up the steps.
+
+"Has the Chevalier returned?" I gasped breathlessly.
+
+"Not yet, Monsieur," answered Guilbert with a tranquillity that made me
+desire to strangle him. "Is Mademoiselle in the château?" was my next
+question, mechanically asked.
+
+"I saw her on the terrace some moments ago. She has not since come
+within."
+
+Like one possessed I flew across the intervening room and out on to the
+terrace. Geneviève and Andrea were walking there, deep in conversation.
+At another time I might have cursed their lack of prudence. At the moment
+I did not so much as remark it.
+
+"Where is Mademoiselle de Canaples?" I burst out.
+
+They gazed at me, as much astounded by my question and the abruptness of it
+as by my apparent agitation.
+
+Has anything happened?" inquired Geneviève, her blue eyes wide open.
+
+"Yes--no; naught has happened. Tell me where she is. I must speak to
+her."
+
+"She was here a while ago," said Andrea, "but she left us to stroll along
+the river bank."
+
+"How long is it since she left you?"
+
+"A quarter of an hour, perhaps."
+
+"Something has happened!" cried Geneviève, and added more, maybe, but I
+waited not to hear.
+
+Muttering curses as I ran--for 't was my way to curse where pious souls
+might pray--I sped back to the quadrangle and my horse.
+
+"Follow me," I shouted to the groom, "you and as many of your fellows as
+you can find. Follow me at once--at once, mark you--to the coppice by the
+river." And without waiting for his answer, I sent my horse thundering
+down the avenue. The sun was gone, leaving naught but a roseate streak to
+tell of its passage, and at that moment a distant bell tinkled forth the
+Angelus.
+
+With whip, spur, and imprecations I plied my steed, a prey to such
+excitement as I had never known until that moment--not even in the carnage
+of battle.
+
+I had no plan. My mind was a chaos of thought without a single clear idea
+to light it, and I never so much as bethought me that single-handled I was
+about to attempt to wrest Yvonne from the hands of perchance half a dozen
+men. To save time I did not far pursue the road, but, clearing a hedge, I
+galloped ventre-à-terre across the meadow towards the little coppice by the
+waterside. As I rode I saw no sign of any moving thing. No sound
+disturbed the evening stillness save the dull thump of my horse's hoofs
+upon the turf, and a great fear arose in my heart that I might come too
+late.
+
+At last I reached the belt of trees, and my fears grew into certainty. The
+place was deserted.
+
+Then a fresh hope sprang up. Perchance, thinking of my warning, she had
+seen the emptiness of her suspicions towards me, and had pursued that walk
+of hers in another direction.
+
+But when I had penetrated to the little open space within that cluster of
+naked trees, I had proof overwhelming that the worst had befallen. Not
+only on the moist ground was stamped the impress of struggling feet, but on
+a branch I found a strip of torn green velvet, and, remembering the dress
+she had worn that day, I understood to the full the significance of that
+rag, and, understanding it, I groaned aloud.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE RESCUE
+
+
+Some precious moments did I waste standing with that green rag betwixt my
+fingers, and I grew sick and numb in body and in mind. She was gone!
+Carried off by a man I had reason to believe she hated, and whom God send
+she might have no motive to hate more deeply hereafter!
+
+The ugly thought swelled until it blotted out all others, and in its train
+there came a fury upon me that drove me to do by instinct that which
+earlier I should have done by reason. I climbed back into the saddle, and
+away across the meadow I went, journeying at an angle with the road, my
+horse's head turned in the direction of Blois. That road at last was
+gained, and on I thundered at a stretched gallop, praying that my hard-used
+beast might last until the town was reached.
+
+Now, as I have already said, I am not a man who easily falls a prey to
+excitement. It may have beset me in the heat of battle, when the fearsome
+lust of blood and death makes of every man a raving maniac, thrilled with
+mad joy at every stab he deals, and laughing with fierce passion at every
+blow he takes, though in the taking of it his course be run. But, saving
+at such wild times, never until then could I recall having been so little
+master of myself. There was a fever in me; all hell was in my blood, and,
+stranger still, and hitherto unknown at any season, there was a sickly fear
+that mastered me, and drew out great beads of sweat upon my brow. Fear for
+myself I have never known, for at no time has life so pampered me that the
+thought of parting company with it concerned me greatly. Fear for another
+I had not known till then--saving perchance the uneasiness that at times I
+had felt touching Andrea--because never yet had I sufficiefltly cared.
+
+Thus far my thoughts took me, as I rode, and where I have halted did they
+halt, and stupidly I went over their ground again, like one who gropes for
+something in the dark,--because never yet had I sufficiently cared--I had
+never cared.
+
+And then, ah Dieu! As I turned the thought over I understood, and,
+understanding, I pursued the sentence where I had left off.
+
+But, caring at last, I was sick with fear of what might befall the one I
+cared for! There lay the reason of the frenzied excitement whereof I had
+become the slave. That it was that had brought the moisture to my brow and
+curses to my lips; that it was that had caused me instinctively to thrust
+the rag of green velvet within my doublet.
+
+Ciel! It was strange--aye, monstrous strange, and a right good jest for
+fate to laugh at--that I, Gaston de Luynes, vile ruffler and worthless
+spadassin, should have come to such a pass; I, whose forefinger had for the
+past ten years uptilted the chin of every tavern wench I had chanced upon;
+I, whose lips had never known the touch of other than the lips of these; I,
+who had thought my heart long dead to tenderness and devotion, or to any
+fondness save the animal one for my ignoble self. Yet there I rode as if
+the Devil had me for a quarry,--panting, sweating, cursing, and well-nigh
+sobbing with rage at a fear that I might come too late,--all because of a
+proud lady who knew me for what I was and held me in contempt because of
+her knowledge; all for a lady who had not the kindness for me that one
+might spare a dog--who looked on me as something not good to see.
+
+Since there was no one to whom I might tell my story that he might mock me,
+I mocked myself--with a laugh that startled passers-by and which, coupled
+with the crazy pace at which I dashed into Blois, caused them, I doubt not,
+to think me mad. Nor were they wrong, for mad indeed I deemed myself.
+
+That I trampled no one underfoot in my furious progress through the streets
+is a miracle that passes my understanding.
+
+In the courtyard of the Lys de France I drew rein at last with a tug that
+brought my shuddering brute on to his haunches and sent those who stood
+about flying into the shelter of the doorways.
+
+"Another horse!" I shouted as I sprang to the ground. "Another horse at
+once!"
+
+Then as I turned to inquire for Michelot, I espied him leaning stolidly
+against the porte­cochère.
+
+"How long have you been there, Michelot?" I asked.
+
+"Half an hour, mayhap."
+
+"Saw you a closed carriage pass?"
+
+"Ten minutes ago I saw one go by, followed by M. de St. Auban and a
+gentleman who greatly resembled M. de Vilmorin, besides an escort of four
+of the most villainous knaves--"
+
+"That is the one," I broke in. "Quick, Michelot! Arm yourself and get
+your horse; I have need of you. Come, knave, move yourself!"
+
+At the end of a few minutes we set out at a sharp trot, leaving the curious
+ones whom my loud-voiced commands had assembled, to speculate upon the
+meaning of so much bustle. Once clear of the township we gave the reins to
+our horses, and our trot became a gallop as we travelled along the road to
+Meung, with the Loire on our right. And as we went I briefly told Michelot
+what was afoot, interlarding my explanations with prayers that we might
+come upon the kidnappers before they crossed the river, and curses at the
+flying pace of our mounts, which to my anxious mind seemed slow.
+
+At about a mile from Blois the road runs over an undulation of the ground
+that is almost a hill. From the moment that I had left Canaples as the
+Angelus was ringing, until the moment when our panting horses gained the
+brow of that little eminence, only half an hour had sped. Still in that
+half-hour the tints had all but faded from the sky, and the twilight
+shadows grew thicker around us with every moment. Yet not so thick had
+they become but that I could see a coach at a standstill in the hollow,
+some three hundred yards beneath us, and, by it, half a dozen horses, of
+which four were riderless and held by the two men who were still mounted.
+Then, breathlessly scanning the field between the road and the river, I
+espied five persons, half way across, and at the same distance from the
+water that we were from the coach. Two men, whom I supposed to be St.
+Auban and Vilmorin, were forcing along a woman, whose struggles, feeble
+though they appeared--yet retarded their progress in some measure. Behind
+them walked two others, musket on shoulder.
+
+I pointed them out to Michelot with a soft cry of joy. We were in time!
+
+Following with my eyes the course they appeared to be pursuing I saw by the
+bank a boat, in which two men were waiting. Again I pointed, this time to
+the boat.
+
+"Over the hedge, Michelot!" I cried. "We must ride in a straight line for
+the water and so intercept them. Follow me."
+
+Over the hedge we went, and down the gentle slope at as round a pace as the
+soft ground would with safety allow. I had reckoned upon being opposed to
+six or even eight men, whereas there were but four, one of whom I knew was
+hardly to be reckoned. Doubtless St. Auban had imagined himself safe from
+pursuit when he left two of his bravos with the horses, probably to take
+them on to Meung, and there cross with them and rejoin him. Two more, I
+doubted not, were those seated at the oars.
+
+I laughed to myself as I took in all this, but, even as I laughed, those in
+the field stood still, and sent up a shout that told me we had been
+perceived.
+
+"On, Michelot, on!" I shouted, spurring my horse forward. Then, in answer
+to their master's call, the two ruffians who had been doing duty as grooms
+came pounding into the field.
+
+"Ride to meet them, Michelot!" I cried. Obediently he wheeled to the left,
+and I caught the swish of his sword as it left the scabbard.
+
+St. Auban was now hurrying towards the river with his party. Already they
+were but fifty yards from the boat, and a hundred still lay between him and
+me. Furiously I pressed onward, and presently but half the distance
+separated us, whilst they were still some thirty yards from their goal.
+
+Then his two bravos faced round to meet me, and one, standing some fifty
+paces in ad­vance of the other, levelled his musket and fired. But in his
+haste he aimed too high; the bullet carried away my hat, and before the
+smoke had cleared I was upon him. I had drawn a pistol from my holster,
+but it was not needed; my horse passed over him before he could save
+himself from my fearful charge.
+
+In the fast-fading light a second musket barrel shone, and I saw the second
+ruffian taking aim at me with not a dozen yards between us. With the old
+soldier's instinct I wrenched at the reins till I brought my horse on to
+his haunches. It was high time, for simultaneously with my action the
+fellow blazed at me, and the scream of pain that broke from my steed told
+me that the poor brute had taken the bullet. With a bound that carried me
+forward some six paces, the animal sank, quivering, to the ground. I
+disengaged my feet from the stirrups as he fell, but the shock of it sent
+me rolling on the ground, and the ruffian, seeing me fallen, sprang
+forward, swinging his musket up above his head. I dodged the murderous
+downward stroke, and as the stock buried itself close beside me in the soft
+earth I rose on one knee and with a grim laugh I raised my pistol. I
+brought the muzzle within a hand's breadth of his face, then fired and shot
+him through the head. Perchance you'll say it was a murderous, cruel
+stroke: mayhap it was, but at such seasons men stay not to unravel
+niceties, but strike ere they themselves be stricken.
+
+Leaping over the twitching corpse, I got out my sword and sprang after St.
+Auban, who, with Vilmorin and Yvonne, careless of what might betide his
+followers, was now within ten paces of the boat.
+
+Pistol shots cracked behind me, and I wondered how Michelot was faring, but
+dared not pause to look.
+
+The twain in the boat stood up, wielding their great oars, and methought
+them on the point of coming to their master's aid, in which case my battle
+had truly been a lost one. But that craven Vilmorin did me good service
+then, for with a cry of fear at my approach, he abandoned his hold of
+Yvonne, whose struggles were keeping both the men back; thus freed, he fled
+towards the boat, and jumping in, he shouted to the men in his shrill,
+quavering voice, to put off. Albeit they disobeyed him contemptuously and
+waited for the Marquis; still they did not leave the boat, fearing, no
+doubt, that if they did so the coward would put off alone.
+
+As for St. Auban, Vilmorin's flight left him unequal to the task of
+dragging the girl along. She dug her heels into the ground, and, tug as he
+might, for all that he set both hands to work, he could not move her. In
+this plight I came upon him, and challenged him to stand and face me.
+
+With a bunch of oaths he got out his sword, but in doing so he was forced
+to remove one of his hands from the girl's arm. Seizing the opportunity
+with a ready wit and courage seldom found in women of her quality, she
+twisted herself from the grip of his left hand, and came staggering towards
+me for protection, holding up her pinioned wrists. With my blade I severed
+the cord, whereupon she plucked the gag from her mouth, and sank against my
+side, her struggles having left her weak indeed.
+
+As I set my arm about her waist to support her, my heart seemed to swell
+within me, and strange melodies shaped themselves within my soul.
+
+St. Auban bore down upon me with a raucous oath, but the glittering point
+of my rapier danced before his eyes and drove him back again.
+
+"To me, Vilmorin, you cowardly cur!" he shouted. "To me, you dogs!"
+
+He let fly at them a volley of blood-curdling oaths, then, without waiting
+to see if they obeyed him, he came at me again, and our swords met.
+
+"Courage, Mademoiselle," I whispered, as a sigh that was almost a groan
+escaped her. "Have no fear."
+
+But that fight was not destined to be fought, for, as again we engaged,
+there came the fall of running feet behind me. It flashed across my mind
+that Michelot had been worsted, and that my back was about to be assailed.
+But in St. Auban's face I saw, as in a mirror, that he who came was
+Michelot.
+
+"Mort de Christ!" snarled the Marquis, springing back beyond my reach.
+"What can a man do with naught but fools and poltroons to serve him?
+Faugh! We will continue our sword-play at St. Sulpice des Reaux to-night.
+Au revoir, M. de Luynes!"
+
+Turning, he sheathed his sword, and, running down to the river, bounded
+into the boat, where I heard him reviling Vilmorin with every foul name he
+could call to mind.
+
+My blood was aflame, and I was not minded to wait for our meeting at Reaux.
+Consigning Mademoiselle to the care of Michelot, who stood panting and
+bleeding from a wound in his shoulder, I turned back to my dead horse, and
+plucking the remaining pistol from the holster I ran down to the very edge
+of the water. The boat was not ten yards from shore, and my action had
+been unheeded by St. Auban, who was standing in the stern.
+
+Kneeling I took careful aim at him, and as God lives, I would have saved
+much trouble that was to follow had I been allowed to fire. But at that
+moment a hand was laid upon my arm, and Yvonne's sweet voice murmured in my
+ear:
+
+"You have fought a brave and gallant fight, M. de Luynes, and you have done
+a deed of which the knights of old might have been proud. Do not mar it by
+an act of murder."
+
+"Murder, Mademoiselle!" I gasped, letting my hand fall. "Surely there is
+no murder in this!"
+
+"A suspicion of it, I think, and so brave a man should have clean hands."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE HAND OF YVONNE
+
+
+We did not long remain upon the field of battle. Indeed, if we lingered at
+all it was but so that Mademoiselle might bandage Michelot's wound. And
+whilst she did so, my stout henchman related to us how it had fared with
+him, and how, having taken the two ruffians separately, he had been wounded
+by the first, whom he repaid by splitting his skull, whereupon the second
+one had discharged his pistol without effect, then made off towards the
+road, whilst Michelot, remembering that I might need assistance, had let
+him go.
+
+"There, good Michelot," quoth Mademoiselle, completing her task, "I have
+done what little I can. And now, M. de Luynes, let us go."
+
+It was close upon seven o'clock, and night was at hand. Already the moon
+was showing her large, full face above the tree-tops by Chambord, and
+casting a silver streak athwart the stream. The plash of oars from the
+Marquis's boat was waxing indistinct despite the stillness, whilst by the
+eye the boat itself was no longer to be distinguished.
+
+As I turned, my glance fell upon the bravo whom I had shot. He lay stiff
+and stark upon his back, his sightless eyes wide open and staring
+heavenwards, his face all blood-smeared and ghastly to behold.
+
+Mademoiselle shuddered. "Let us go," she repeated in a faint whisper; her
+eye had also fallen on that thing, and her voice was full of awe. She laid
+her hand upon my sleeve and 'neath the suasion of her touch I moved away.
+
+To our surprise and joy we found St. Auban's coach where we had left it,
+with two saddled horses tethered close by. The others had doubtless been
+taken by the coachman and the bravo who had escaped Michelot, both of whom
+had fled. These animals we looked upon as the spoils of war, and
+accordingly when we set out in the coach,--Mademoiselle having desired me
+to ride beside her therein,--Michelot wielding the reins, it was with those
+two horses tethered behind.
+
+"Monsieur de Luynes," said my companion softly, "I fear that I have done
+you a great injustice. Indeed, I know not how to crave your forgiveness,
+how to thank you, or how to hide my shame at those words I spoke to you
+this afternoon at Canaples."
+
+"Not another word on that score, Mademoiselle!"
+
+And to myself I thought of what recompense already had been mine. To me it
+had been given to have her lean trustingly upon me, my arm about her waist,
+whilst, sword in hand, I had fought for her. Dieu! Was that not something
+to have lived for?--aye, and to have died for, methought.
+
+"I deserved, Monsieur," she continued presently, "that you should have left
+me to my fate for all the odious things I uttered when you warned me of my
+peril,--for the manner in which I have treated you since your coming to
+Blois."
+
+"You have but treated me, Mademoiselle, in the only manner in which you
+could treat one so far beneath you, one who is utterly unworthy that you
+should bestow a single regret upon him."
+
+"You are strangely humble to-night, Monsieur. It is unwonted in you, and
+for once you wrong yourself. You have not said that I am forgiven."
+
+"I have naught to forgive."
+
+"Hélas! you have--indeed you have!"
+
+"Eh, bien!" quoth I, with a return of my old tone of banter, "I forgive
+then."
+
+Thereafter we travelled on in silence for some little while, my heart full
+of joy at being so near to her, and the friendliness which she evinced for
+me, and my mind casting o'er my joyous heart a cloud of some indefinable
+evil presage.
+
+"You are a brave man, M. de Luynes," she murmured presently, "and I have
+been taught that brave men are ever honourable and true."
+
+"Had they who taught you that known Gaston de Luynes, they would have told
+you instead that it is possible for a vile man to have the one redeeming
+virtue of courage, even as it is possible for a liar to have a countenance
+that is sweet and innocent."
+
+"There speaks that humble mood you are affecting, and which sits upon you
+as my father's clothes might do. Nay, Monsieur, I shall believe in my
+first teaching, and be deaf to yours."
+
+Again there was a spell of silence. At last--"I have been thinking,
+Monsieur," she said, "of that other occasion on which you rode with me. I
+remember that you said you had killed a man, and when I asked you why, you
+said that you had done it because he sought to kill you. Was that the
+truth?"
+
+"Assuredly, Mademoiselle. We fought a duel, and it is customary in a duel
+for each to seek to kill the other."
+
+"But why was this duel fought?" she cried, with some petulance.
+
+"I fear me, Mademoiselle, that I may not answer you," I said, recalling the
+exact motives, and thinking how futile appeared the quarrel which Eugène de
+Canaples had sought with Andrea when viewed in the light of what had since
+befallen.
+
+"Was the quarrel of your seeking?"
+
+"In a measure it was, Mademoiselle."
+
+"In a measure!" she echoed. Then persisting, as women will--"Will you not
+tell me what this measure was?"
+
+"Tenez, Mademoiselle," I answered in despair; "I will tell you just so much
+as I may. Your brother had occasion to be opposed to certain projects that
+were being formed in Paris by persons high in power around a beardless boy.
+Himself of too small importance to dare wage war against those powerful
+ones who would have crushed him, your brother sought to gain his ends by
+sending a challenge to this boy. The lad was high-spirited and consented
+to meet M. de Canaples, by whom he would assuredly have been murdered--'t
+is the only word, Mademoiselle--had I not intervened as I did."
+
+She was silent for a moment. Then--"I believe you, Monsieur," she said
+simply. "You fought, then, to shield another--but why?"
+
+"For three reasons, Mademoiselle. Firstly, those persons high in power
+chose to think it my fault that the quarrel had arisen, and threatened to
+hang me if the duel took place and the boy were harmed. Secondly, I myself
+felt a kindness for the boy. Thirdly, because, whatever sins Heaven may
+record against me, it has at least ever been my way to side against men
+who, confident of their superiority, seek, with the cowardly courage of the
+strong, to harm the weak. It is, Mademoiselle, the courage of the man who
+knows no fear when he strikes a woman, yet who will shake with a palsy when
+another man but threatens him."
+
+"Why did you not tell me all this before?" she whispered, after a pause.
+And methought I caught a quaver in her voice.
+
+I laughed for answer, and she read my laugh aright; presently she pursued
+her questions and asked me the name of the boy I had defended. But I
+evaded her, telling her that she must need no further details to believe
+me.
+
+"It is not that, Monsieur! I do believe you; I do indeed, but--"
+
+"Hark, Mademoiselle!" I cried suddenly, as the clatter of many hoofs
+sounded near at hand. "What is that?"
+
+A shout rang out at that moment. "Halt! Who goes there?"
+
+"Mon Dieu!" exclaimed Mademoiselle, drawing close up to me, and again the
+voice sounded, this time more sinister.
+
+"Halt, I say--in the King's name!"
+
+The coach came to a standstill, and through the window I beheld the shadowy
+forms of several mounted men, and the feeble glare of a lantern.
+
+"Who travels in the carriage, knave?" came the voice again.
+
+"Mademoiselle de Canaples," answered Michelot; then, like a fool, he must
+needs add: "Have a care whom you knave, my master, if you would grow old."
+
+"Pardieu! let us behold this Mademoiselle de Canaples who owns so fearful a
+warrior for a coachman."
+
+The door was flung rudely open, and the man bearing the lantern--whose rays
+shone upon a uniform of the Cardinal's guards--confronted us.
+
+With a chuckle he flashed the light in my face, then suddenly grew serious.
+
+"Peste! Is it indeed you, M. de Luynes?" quoth he; adding, with stern
+politeness, "It grieves me to disturb you, but I have a warrant for your
+arrest."
+
+He was fumbling in his doublet as he spoke, and during the time I had
+leisure to scan his countenance, recognising, to my surprise, a young
+lieutenant of the guards who had but recently served with me, and with whom
+I had been on terms almost of friendship. His words, "I have a warrant for
+your arrest," came like a bolt from the blue to enlighten me, and to remind
+me of what St. Auban had that morning told me, and which for the nonce I
+had all but forgotten.
+
+Upon hearing those same words, Yvonne, methought, grew pale, and her eyes
+were bent upon me with a look of surprise and pity.
+
+"Upon what charge am I arrested?" I enquired, with forced composure.
+
+"My warrant mentions none, M. de Luynes. It is here." And he thrust
+before me a paper, whose purport I could have read in its shape and seals.
+Idly my eye ran along the words:
+
+"By these presents I charge and empower my lieutenant, Jean de Montrésor,
+to seize where'er he may be found, hold, and conduct to Paris the Sieur
+Gaston de Luynes--"
+
+And so further, until the Cardinal's signature ended the legal verbiage.
+
+"In the King's name, M. de Luynes," said Montrésor, firmly yet
+deferentially, "your sword!"
+
+It would have been madness to do aught but comply with his request, and so
+I surrendered my rapier, which he in his turn delivered to one of his
+followers. Next I stepped down from the coach and turned to take leave of
+Mademoiselle, whereupon Montrésor, thinking that peradventure matters were
+as they appeared to be between us, and, being a man of fine feelings,
+signed to his men to fall back, whilst he himself withdrew a few paces.
+
+"Adieu, Mademoiselle!" I said simply. "I shall carry with me for
+consolation the memory that I have been of service to you, and I shall
+ever--during the little time that may be left me--be grateful to Heaven for
+the opportunity that it has afforded me of causing you--perchance without
+sufficient reason--to think better of me. Adieu, Mademoiselle! God guard
+you!"
+
+It was too dark to see her face, but my heart bounded with joy to catch in
+her voice a quaver that argued, methought, regret for me.
+
+"What does it mean, M. de Luynes? Why are they taking you?"
+
+"Because I have displeased my Lord Cardinal, albeit, Mademoiselle, I swear
+to you that I have no cause for shame at the reasons for which I am being
+arrested."
+
+"My father is Monseigneur de Mazarin's friend," she cried. "He is also
+yours. He shall exert for you what influence he possesses."
+
+"'T were useless, Mademoiselle. Besides, what does it signify? Again,
+adieu!"
+
+She spoke no answering word, but silently held out her hand. Silently I
+took it in mine, and for a moment I hesitated, thinking of what I was--of
+what she was. At last, moved by some power that was greater than my will,
+I stooped and pressed those shapely fingers to my lips. Then I stepped
+suddenly back and closed the carriage door, oppressed by a feeling akin to
+that of having done an evil deed.
+
+"Have I your permission to say a word to my servant, M. le Lieutenant?" I
+inquired.
+
+He bowed assent, whereat, stepping close up to the horror-stricken
+Michelot--
+
+"Drive straight to the Château de Canaples," I said in a low voice.
+"Thereafter return to the Lys de France and there wait until you hear from
+me. Here, take my purse; there are some fifty pistoles in it."
+
+"Speak but the word, Monsieur," he growled, "and I'll pistol a couple of
+these dogs."
+
+"Pah! You grow childish," I laughed, "or can you not see that fellow's
+musket?"
+
+"Pardieu! I'll risk his aim! I never yet saw one of these curs shoot
+straight."
+
+"No, no, obey me, Michelot. Think of Mademoiselle. Go! Adieu! If we
+should not meet again, mon brave," I finished, as I seized his loyal hand,
+"what few things of mine are at the hostelry shall belong to you, as well
+as what may be left of this money. It is little enough payment, Michelot,
+for all your faithfulness--"
+
+"Monsieur, Monsieur!" he cried.
+
+"Diable!" I muttered, "we are becoming women! Be off, you knave! Adieu!"
+
+The peremptoriness of my tone ended our leave-taking and caused him to grip
+his reins and bring down his whip. The coach moved on. A white face, on
+which the moonlight fell, glanced at me from the window, then to my staring
+eyes naught was left but the back of the retreating vehicle, with one of
+the two saddle-horses that had been tethered to it still ambling in its
+wake.
+
+"M. de Montrésor," I said, thrusting my bullet-pierced hat upon my head, "I
+am at your service."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+OF WHAT BEFELL AT REAUX
+
+
+At my captor's bidding I mounted the horse which they had untethered from
+the carriage, and we started off along the road which the coach itself had
+disappeared upon a moment before. But we travelled at a gentle trot,
+which, after that evening's furious riding, was welcome to me.
+
+With bitterness I reflected as I rode that the very moment at which
+Mademoiselle de Canaples had brought herself to think better of me was like
+to prove the last we should spend together. Yet not altogether bitter was
+that reflection; for with it came also the consolation--whereof I had told
+her--that I had not been taken before she had had cause to change her mind
+concerning me.
+
+That she should care for me was too preposterous an idea to be nourished,
+and, indeed, it was better--much better--that M. de Montrésor had come
+before I, grown sanguine as lovers will, had again earned her scorn by
+showing her what my heart contained. Much better was it that I should pass
+for ever out of her life--as, indeed, methought I was like to pass out of
+all life--whilst I could leave in her mind a kind remembrance and a
+grateful regret, free from the stain that a subsequent possible presumption
+of mine might have cast o'er it.
+
+Then my thoughts shifted to Andrea. St. Auban would hear of my removal,
+and I cared not to think of what profit he might derive from it. To Yvonne
+also his presence must hereafter be a menace, and in that wherein tonight
+he had failed, he might, again, succeed. It was at this juncture of my
+reverie that M. de Montrésor's pleasant young voice aroused me.
+
+"You appear downcast, M. de Luynes."
+
+"I, downcast!" I echoed, throwing back my head and laughing. "Nay. I was
+but thinking.
+
+"Believe me, M. de Luynes," he said kindly, "when I tell you that it
+grieves me to be charged with this matter. I have done my best to capture
+you. That was my duty. But I should have rejoiced had I failed with the
+consciousness of having done all in my power."
+
+"Thanks, Montrésor," I murmured, and silence followed.
+
+"I have been thinking, Monsieur," he went on presently, "that possibly the
+absence of your sword causes you discomfort."
+
+"Eh? Discomfort? It does, most damnably!"
+
+"Give me your parole d'honneur that you will attempt no escape, and not
+only shall your sword be returned to you, but you shall travel to Paris
+with all comfort and dignity."
+
+Now, so amazed was I that I paused to stare at the officer who was young
+enough to make such a proposal to a man of my reputation. He turned his
+face towards me, and in the moonlight I could make out his questioning
+glance.
+
+"Eh, bien, Monsieur?"
+
+"I am more than grateful to you, M. de Montrésor," I replied, "and I freely
+give you my word of honour to seek no means of eluding you, nor to avail
+myself of any that may be presented to me."
+
+I said this loud enough for those behind to hear, so that no surprise was
+evinced when the lieutenant bade the man who bore my sword return it to me.
+
+If he who may chance to read these simple pages shall have gathered aught
+of my character from their perusal, he will marvel, perchance, that I
+should give the lieutenant my parole, instead rather of watching for an
+opportunity to--at least--attempt an escape. Preeminent in my thoughts,
+however, stood at that moment the necessity to remove St. Auban, and
+methought that by acting as I did I saw a way by which, haply, I might
+accomplish this. What might thereafter befall me seemed of little moment.
+
+"M. de Montrésor," I said presently, "your kindness impels me to set a
+further tax upon your generosity."
+
+"That is, Monsieur?"
+
+"Bid your men fall back a little, and I will tell you."
+
+He made a sign to his troopers, and when the distance between us had been
+sufficiently widened, I began:
+
+"There is a man at present across the river, yonder, who has done me no
+little injury, and with whom I have a rendezvous at nine o'clock to-night
+at St. Sulpice des Reaux, where our swords are to determine the difference
+between us. I crave, Monsieur, your permission to keep that appointment."
+
+"Impossible!" he answered curtly.
+
+I took a deep breath like a man who is about to jump an obstacle in his
+path.
+
+"Why impossible, Monsieur?"
+
+"Because you are a prisoner, and therefore no longer under obligation to
+keep appointments."
+
+"How would you feel, Montrésor, if, burning to be avenged upon a man who
+had done you irreparable wrong, you were arrested an hour before the time
+at which you were to meet this man, sword in hand, and your captor--whose
+leave you craved to keep the assignation--answered you with the word
+'impossible'?"
+
+"Yes, yes, Monsieur," he replied impatiently. "But you forget my position.
+Let us suppose that I allow you to go to St. Sulpice des Reaux. What if
+you do not return?"
+
+"You mistrust me?" I exclaimed, my hopes melting.
+
+"You misapprehend me. I mean, what if you are killed?"
+
+"I do not think that I shall be."
+
+"Ah! But what if you are? What shall I say to my Lord Cardinal?"
+
+"Dame! That I am dead, and that he is saved the trouble of hanging me.
+The most he can want of me is my life. Let us suppose that you had come an
+hour later. You would have been forced to wait until after the encounter,
+and, did I fall, matters would be no different."
+
+The young man fell to thinking, but I, knowing that it is not well to let
+the young ponder overlong if you would bend them to your wishes, broke in
+upon his reflections--"See, Montrésor, yonder are the lights of Blois; by
+eight o'clock we shall be in the town. Come; grant me leave to cross the
+Loire, and by ten o'clock, or half-past at the latest, I shall return to
+sup with you or I shall be dead. I swear it."
+
+"Were I in your position," he answered musingly, "I know how I would be
+treated, and, pardieu! come what may I shall deal with you accordingly.
+You may go to your assignation, M. de Luynes, and may God prosper you."
+
+And thus it came to pass that shortly after eight o'clock, albeit a
+prisoner, I rode into the courtyard of the Lys de France, and, alighting, I
+stepped across the threshold of the inn, and strode up to a table at which
+I had espied Michelot. He sat nursing a huge measure of wine, into the
+depths of which he was gazing pensively, with an expression so glum upon
+his weather-beaten countenance that it defies depicting. So deep was he in
+his meditations, that albeit I stood by the table surveying him for a full
+minute, he took no heed of me.
+
+"Allons, Michelot!" I said at length. "Wake up."
+
+He started up with a cry of amazement; surprise chased away the grief that
+had been on his face, and a moment later joy unfeigned, and good to see,
+took the place of surprise.
+
+"You have escaped, Monsieur!" he cried, and albeit caution made him utter
+the words beneath his breath, a shout seemed to lurk somewhere in the
+whisper.
+
+Pressing his hand I sat down and briefly told him how matters stood, and
+how I came to be for the moment free. And when I had done I bade him,
+since his wound had not proved serious, to get his hat and cloak and go
+with me to find a boat.
+
+He obeyed me, and a quarter of an hour after we had quitted the hostelry he
+was rowing me across the stream, whilst, wrapped in my cloak, I sat in the
+stern, thinking of Yvonne.
+
+"Monsieur," said Michelot, "observe how swift is the stream. If I were to
+let the boat drift we should be at Tours to-morrow, and from there it would
+be easy to defy pursuit. We have enough money to reach Spain. What say
+you, Monsieur?"
+
+"Say, you rascal? Why, bend your back to the work and set me ashore by St.
+Sulpice in a quarter of an hour, or I'll forget that you have been my
+friend. Would you see me dishonoured?"
+
+"Sooner than see you dead," he grumbled as he resumed his task.
+Thereafter, whilst he rowed, Michelot entertained me with some quaint ideas
+touching that which fine gentlemen call honour, and to what sorry passes it
+was wont to bring them, concluding by thanking God that he was no gentleman
+and had no honour to lead him into mischief.
+
+At last, however, our journey came to an end, and I sprang ashore some five
+hundred paces from the little chapel, and almost exactly opposite the
+Château de Canaples. I stood for a moment gazing across the water at the
+lighted windows of the château, wondering which of those eyes that looked
+out upon the night might be that of Yvonne's chamber.
+
+Then, bidding Michelot await me, or follow did I not return in half an
+hour, I turned and moved away towards the chapel.
+
+There is a clearing in front of the little white edifice--which rather than
+a temple is but a monument to the martyr who is said to have perished on
+that spot in the days before Clovis.
+
+As I advanced into the centre of this open patch of ground, and stood clear
+of the black silhouettes of the trees, cast about me by the moon, two men
+appeared to detach themselves from the side wall of the chapel, and
+advanced to meet me.
+
+Albeit they were wrapped in their cloaks--uptilted behind by their
+protruding scabbards--it was not difficult to tell the tall figure and
+stately bearing of St. Auban and the mincing gait of Vilmorin.
+
+I doffed my hat in a grave salutation, which was courteously returned.
+
+"I trust, Messieurs, that I have not kept you waiting?"
+
+"I was on the point of expressing that very hope, Monsieur," returned St.
+Auban. "We have but arrived. Do you come alone?"
+
+"As you perceive."
+
+"Hum! M. le Vicomte, then, will act for both of us."
+
+I bowed in token of my satisfaction, and without more ado cast aside my
+cloak, pleased to see that the affair was to be conducted with decency and
+politeness, as such matters should ever be conducted, albeit impoliteness
+may have marked their origin.
+
+The Marquis, having followed my example and divested himself of his cloak
+and hat, unsheathed his rapier and delivered it to Vilmorin, who came
+across with it to where I stood. When he was close to me I saw that he was
+deadly pale; his teeth chattered, and the hand that held the weapon shook
+as with a palsy.
+
+"Mu--Monsieur," he stammered, "will it please you to lend me your sword
+that I may mu-measure it?"
+
+"What formalities!" I exclaimed with an amused smile, as I complied with
+his request. "I am afraid you have caught a chill, Vicomte. The night air
+is little suited to health so delicate."
+
+He answered me with a baleful glance, as silently he took my sword and set
+it--point to hilt--with St. Auban's. He appeared to have found some slight
+difference in the length, for he took two steps away from me, holding the
+weapons well in the light, where for a moment he surveyed them attentively.
+His hands shook so that the blades clattered one against the other the
+while. But, of a sudden, taking both rapiers by the hilt, he struck the
+blades together with a ringing clash, then flung them both behind him as
+far as he could contrive, leaving me thunderstruck with amazement, and
+marvelling whether fear had robbed him of his wits.
+
+Not until I perceived that the trees around me appeared to spring into life
+did it occur to me that that clashing of blades was a signal, and that I
+was trapped. With the realisation of it I was upon Vilmorin in a bound,
+and with both hands I had caught the dog by the throat before he thought of
+flight. The violence of my onslaught bore him to the ground, and I, not to
+release my choking grip, went with him.
+
+For a moment we lay together where we had fallen, his slender body twisting
+and writhing under me, his swelling face upturned and his protruding,
+horror-stricken eyes gazing into mine that were fierce and pitiless.
+Voices rang above me; someone stooped and strove to pluck me from my
+victim; then below the left shoulder I felt a sting of pain, first cold
+then hot, and I knew that I had been stabbed.
+
+Again I felt the blade thrust in, lower down and driven deeper; then, as
+the knife was for the second time withdrawn, and my flesh sucked at the
+steel,--the pain of it sending a shudder through me,--the instinct of
+preservation overcame the sweet lust to strangle Vilmorin. I let him go
+and, staggering to my feet, I turned to face those murderers who struck a
+defenceless man behind.
+
+Swords gleamed around me: one, two, three, four, five, six, I counted, and
+stood weak and dazed from loss of blood, gazing stupidly at the white
+blades. Had I but had my sword I should have laid about me, and gone down
+beneath their blows as befits a soldier. But the absence of that trusty
+friend left me limp and helpless--cowed for the first time since I had
+borne arms.
+
+Of a sudden I became aware that St. Auban stood opposite to me, hand on
+hip, surveying me with a malicious leer. As our eyes met--"So, master
+meddler," quoth he mockingly, "you crow less lustily than is your wont."
+
+"Hound!" I gasped, choking with rage, "if you are a man, if there be a
+spark of pride or honour left in your lying, cowardly soul, order your
+assassins to give me my sword, and, wounded though I be, I'll fight with
+you this duel that you lured me here to fight."
+
+He laughed harshly.
+
+"I told you but this morning, Master de Luynes, that a St. Auban does not
+fight men of your stamp. You forced a rendezvous upon me; you shall reap
+the consequences."
+
+Despite the weakness arising from loss of blood, I sprang towards him,
+beside myself with fury. But ere I had covered half the distance that lay
+between us my arms were gripped from behind, and in my spent condition I
+was held there, powerless, at the Marquis's mercy. He came slowly forward
+until we were but some two feet apart. For a second he stood leering at
+me, then, raising his hand, he struck me--struck a man whose arms another
+held!--full upon the face. Passion for the moment lent me strength, and in
+that moment I had wrenched my right arm free and returned his blow with
+interest.
+
+With an oath he got out a dagger that hung from his baldrick.
+
+"Sang du Christ! Take that, you dog!" he snarled, burying the blade in my
+breast as he spoke.
+
+"My God! You are murdering me!" I gasped.
+
+"Have you discovered it? What penetration!" he retorted, and those about
+him laughed at his indecent jest!
+
+He made a sign, and the man who had held me withdrew his hands. I
+staggered forward, deprived of his support, then a crashing blow took me
+across the head.
+
+I swayed for an instant, and with arms upheld I clutched at the air, as if
+I sought, by hanging to it, to save myself from falling; then the moon
+appeared to go dark, a noise as of the sea beating upon its shore filled my
+ears, and I seemed to be falling--falling--falling.
+
+A voice that buzzed and vibrated oddly, growing more distant at each word,
+reached me as I sank.
+
+"Come," it said. "Fling that carrion into the river."
+
+Then nothingness engulfed me.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+OF MY RESURRECTION
+
+
+Even as the blow which had plunged me into senselessness had imparted to me
+the sinking sensation which I have feebly endeavoured to depict, so did the
+first dim ray of returning consciousness bring with it the feeling that I
+was again being buoyed upwards through the thick waters that had enveloped
+me, to their surface, where intelligence and wakefulness awaited.
+
+And as I felt myself borne up and up in that effortless ascension, my
+senses awake and my reason still half-dormant, an exquisite sense of
+languor pervaded my whole being. Presently meseemed that the surface was
+gained at last, and an instinct impelled me to open my eyes upon the light,
+of which, through closed lids, I had become conscious.
+
+I beheld a fair-sized room superbly furnished, and flooded with amber
+sunlight suggestive in itself of warmth and luxury, the vision of which
+heightened the delicious torpor that held me in thrall. The bed I lay upon
+was such, I told myself, as would not have disgraced a royal sleeper. It
+was upheld by great pillars of black oak, carved with a score of fantastic
+figures, and all around it, descending from the dome above, hung curtains
+of rich damask, drawn back at the side that looked upon the window. Near
+at hand stood a table laden with phials and such utensils as one sees by
+the bedside of the wealthy sick. All this I beheld in a languid,
+unreasoning fashion through my half-open lids, and albeit the luxury of the
+room and the fine linen of my bed told me that this was neither my Paris
+lodging in the Rue St. Antoine, nor yet my chamber at the hostelry of the
+Lys de France, still I taxed not my brain with any questions touching my
+whereabouts.
+
+I closed my eyes, and I must have slept again: when next I opened them a
+burly figure stood in the deep bay of the latticed window, looking out
+through the leaded panes.
+
+I recognised the stalwart frame of Michelot, and at last I asked myself
+where I might be. It did not seem to occur to me that I had but to call
+him to receive an answer to that question. Instead, I closed my eyes
+again, and essayed to think. But just then there came a gentle scratching
+at the door, and I could hear Michelot tiptoeing across the room; next he
+and the one he had admitted tiptoed back towards my bedside, and as they
+came I caught a whisper in a voice that seemed to drag me to full
+consciousness.
+
+"How fares the poor invalid this morning?"
+
+"The fever is gone, Mademoiselle, and he may wake at any moment; indeed, it
+is strange that he should sleep so long."
+
+"He will be the better for it when he does awaken. I will remain here
+while you rest, Michelot. My poor fellow, you are almost as worn with your
+vigils as he is with the fever."
+
+"Pooh! I am strong enough, Mademoiselle," he answered. "I will get a
+mouthful of food and return, for I would be by when he wakes."
+
+Then their voices sank so low that as they withdrew I caught not what was
+said. The door closed softly and for a space there was silence, broken at
+last by a sigh above my head. With an answering sigh I opened wide my eyes
+and feasted them upon the lovely face of Yvonne de Canaples, as she bent
+over me with a look of tenderness and pity that at once recalled to me our
+parting when I was arrested.
+
+But suddenly meeting the stare of my gaze, she drew back with a half-
+stifled cry, whose meaning my dull wits sought not to interpret, but
+methought I caught from her lips the words, "Thank God!"
+
+"Where am I, Mademoiselle?" I inquired, and the faintness of my voice
+amazed me.
+
+"You know me!" she exclaimed, as though the thing were a miracle. Then
+coming forward again, and setting her cool, sweet hand upon my forehead,
+
+"Hush," she murmured in the accents one might use to soothe a child. "You
+are at Canaples, among friends. Now sleep."
+
+"At Canaples!" I echoed. "How came I here? I am a prisoner, am I not?"
+
+"A prisoner!" she exclaimed. "No, no, you are not a prisoner. You are
+among friends."
+
+"Did I then but dream that Montrésor arrested me yesterday on the road to
+Meung? Ah! I recollect! M. de Montrésor gave me leave on parole to go to
+Reaux."
+
+Then, like an avalanche, remembrance swept down upon me, and my memory drew
+a vivid picture of the happenings at St. Sulpice.
+
+"My God!" I cried. "Am I not dead, then?" And I sought to struggle up
+into a sitting posture, but that gentle hand upon my forehead restrained
+and robbed me of all will that was not hers.
+
+"Hush, Monsieur!" she said softly. "Lie still. By a miracle and the
+faithfulness of Michelot you live. Be thankful, be content, and sleep."
+
+"But my wounds, Mademoiselle?" I inquired feebly.
+
+"They are healed."
+
+"Healed?" quoth I, and in my amazement my voice sounded louder than it had
+yet done since my awakening. "Healed! Three such wounds as I took last
+night, to say naught of a broken head, healed?"
+
+"'T was not last night, Monsieur."
+
+"Not last night? Was it not last night that I went to Reaux?"
+
+"It is nearly a month since that took place," she answered with a smile.
+"For nearly a month have you lain unconscious upon that bed, with the angel
+of Death at your pillow. You have fought and won a silent battle. Now
+sleep, Monsieur, and ask no more questions until next you awaken, when
+Michelot shall tell you all that took place."
+
+She held a glass to my lips from which I drank gratefully, then, with the
+submissiveness of a babe, I obeyed her and slept.
+
+As she had promised, it was Michelot who greeted me when next I opened my
+eyes, on the following day. There were tears in his eyes--eyes that had
+looked grim and unmoved upon the horrors of the battlefield.
+
+From him I learned how, after they had flung me into the river, deeming me
+dead already, St. Auban and his men had made off. The swift stream swirled
+me along towards the spot where, in the boat, Michelot awaited my return
+all unconscious of what was taking place. He had heard the splash, and had
+suddenly stood up, on the point of going ashore, when my body rose within a
+few feet of him. He spoke of the agony of mind wherewith he had suddenly
+stretched forth and clutched me by my doublet, fearing that I was indeed
+dead. He had lifted me into the boat to find that my heart still beat and
+that the blood flowed from my wounds. These he had there and then bound up
+in the only rude fashion he was master of, and forthwith, thinking of
+Andrea and the Chevalier de Canaples, who were my friends, and of
+Mademoiselle, who was my debtor, also seeing that the château was the
+nearest place, he had rowed straight across to Canaples, and there I had
+lain during the four weeks that had elapsed, nursed by Mademoiselle,
+Andrea, and himself, and thus won back to life.
+
+Ah, Dieu! How good it was to know that someone there was still who cared
+for worthless Gaston de Luynes a little--enough to watch beside him and
+withhold his soul from the grim claws of Death.
+
+"What of M. de St. Auban?" I inquired presently.
+
+"He has not been seen since that night. Probably he feared that did he
+come to Blois, the Chevalier would find means of punishing him for the
+attempted abduction of Mademoiselle."
+
+"Ah, then Andrea is safe?"
+
+As if in answer to my question, the lad entered at that moment, and upon
+seeing me sitting up, talking to Michelot, he uttered an exclamation of
+joy, and hurried forward to my bedside.
+
+"Gaston, dear friend!" he cried, as he took my hand--and a thin, withered
+hand it was.
+
+We talked long together,--we three,--and anon we were joined by the
+Chevalier de Canaples, who offered me also, in his hesitating manner, his
+felicitations. And with me they lingered until Yvonne came to drive them
+with protestations from my bedside.
+
+Such, in brief, was the manner of my resurrection. For a week or so I
+still kept my chamber; then one day towards the middle of April, the
+weather being warm and the sun bright, Michelot assisted me to don my
+clothes, which hung strangely empty upon my gaunt, emaciated frame, and,
+leaning heavily upon my faithful henchman, I made my way below.
+
+In the salon I found the Chevalier de Canaples with Mesdemoiselles and
+Andrea awaiting me, and the kindness wherewith they overwhelmed me, as I
+sat propped up with pillows, was such that I asked myself again and again
+if, indeed, I was that same Gaston de Luynes who but a little while ago had
+held himself as destitute of friends as he was of fortune. I was the
+pampered hero of the hour, and even little Geneviève had a sunny smile and
+a kind word for me.
+
+Thereafter my recovery progressed with great strides, and gradually, day by
+day, I felt more like my old vigorous self. They were happy days, for
+Mademoiselle was often at my side, and ever kind to me; so kind was she
+that presently, as my strength grew, there fell a great cloud athwart my
+happiness--the thought that soon I must leave Canaples never to return
+there,--leave Mademoiselle's presence never to come into it again.
+
+I was Monsieur de Montrésor's prisoner. I had learned that in common with
+all others, save those at Canaples, he deemed me dead, and that, informed
+of it by a message from St. Auban, he had returned to Paris on the day
+following that of my journey to Reaux. Nevertheless, since I lived, he had
+my parole, and it was my duty as soon as I had regained sufficient
+strength, to journey to Paris and deliver myself into his hands.
+
+Nearer and nearer drew the dreaded hour in which I felt that I must leave
+Canaples. On the last day of April I essayed a fencing bout with Andrea,
+and so strong and supple did I prove myself that I was forced to realise
+that the time was come. On the morrow I would go.
+
+As I was on the point of returning indoors with the foils under my arm,
+Andrea called me back.
+
+"Gaston, I have something of importance to say to you. Will you take a
+turn with me down yonder by the river?"
+
+There was a serious, almost nervous look on his comely face, which arrested
+my attention. I dropped the foils, and taking his arm I went with him as
+he bade me. We seated ourselves on the grass by the edge of the gurgling
+waters, and he began:
+
+"It is now two months since we came to Blois: I, to pay my court to the
+wealthy Mademoiselle de Canaples; you, to watch over and protect me--nay,
+you need not interrupt me. Michelot has told me what St. Auban sought
+here, and the true motives of your journey to St. Sulpice. Never shall I
+be able to sufficiently prove my gratitude to you, my poor Gaston. But
+tell me, dear friend, you who from the outset saw how matters stood, why
+did you not inform St. Auban that he had no cause to hunt me down since I
+intended not to come between him and Yvonne?"
+
+"Mon Dieu!" I exclaimed, "that little fair-haired coquette has--"
+
+"Gaston," he interrupted, "you go too fast. I love Geneviève de Canaples.
+I have loved her, I think, since the moment I beheld her in the inn at
+Choisy, and, what is more, she loves me."
+
+"So that--?" I asked with an ill-repressed sneer.
+
+"We have plighted our troth, and with her father's sanction, or without it,
+she will do me the honour to become my wife."
+
+"Admirable!" I exclaimed. "And my Lord Cardinal?"
+
+"May hang himself on his stole for aught I care."
+
+"Ah! Truly a dutiful expression for a nephew who has thwarted his uncle's
+plans!"
+
+"My uncle's plans are like himself, cold and selfish in their ambition."
+
+"Andrea, Andrea! Whatever your uncle may be, to those of your blood, at
+least, he was never selfish."
+
+"Not selfish!" he cried. "Think you that he is enriching and contracting
+great alliances for us because he loves us? No, no. Our uncle seeks to
+gain our support and with it the support of those noble houses to which he
+is allying us. The nobility opposes him, therefore he seeks to find
+relatives among noblemen, so that he may weather the storm of which his
+far-seeing eyes have already detected the first dim clouds. What to him
+are my feelings, my inclinations, my affections? Things of no moment, to
+be sacrificed so that I may serve him in the manner that will bring him the
+most profit. Yet you call him not selfish! Were he not selfish, I should
+go to him and say: 'I love Geneviève de Canaples. Create me Duke as you
+would do, did I wed her sister, and the Chevalier de Canaples will not
+withstand our union.' What think you would be his answer?"
+
+"I have a shrewd idea what his answer would be," I replied slowly. "Also I
+have a shrewd idea of what he will say when he learns in what manner you
+have defied his wishes."
+
+"He can but order me away from Court, or, at most, banish me from France."
+
+"And then what will become of you--of you and your wife?"
+
+"What is to become of us?" he cried in a tone that was almost that of
+anger. "Think you that I am a pauper dependent upon my uncle's bounty? I
+have an estate near Palermo, which, for all that it does not yield riches,
+is yet sufficient to enable us to live with dignity and comfort. I have
+told Geneviève, and she is content."
+
+I looked at his flushed face and laughed.
+
+"Well, well!" said I. "If you are resolved upon it, it is ended."
+
+He appeared to meditate for a moment, then--"We have decided to be married
+by the Curé of St. Innocent on the day after to-morrow."
+
+"Crédieu!" I answered, with a whistle, "you have wasted no time in
+determining your plans. Does Yvonne know of it?"
+
+"We have dared tell nobody," he replied; and a moment later he added
+hesitatingly, "You, I know, will not betray us."
+
+"Do you know me so little that you doubt me on that score? Have no fear,
+Andrea, I shall not speak. Besides, to-morrow, or the next day at latest,
+I leave Canaples."
+
+"You do not mean that you are returning to the Lys de France!"
+
+"No. I am going farther than that. I am going to Paris."
+
+"To Paris?"
+
+"To Paris, to deliver myself up to M. de Montrésor, who gave me leave to go
+to Reaux some seven weeks ago."
+
+"But it is madness, Gaston!" he ejaculated.
+
+"All virtue is madness in a world so sinful; nevertheless I go. In a
+measure I am glad that things have fallen out with you as they have done,
+for when the news goes abroad that you have married Geneviève de Canaples
+and left the heiress free, your enemies will vanish, and you will have no
+further need of me. New enemies you will have perchance, but in your
+strife with them I could lend you no help, were I by."
+
+He sat in silence casting pebbles into the stream, and watching the ripples
+they made upon the face of the waters.
+
+"Have you told Mademoiselle?" he asked at length.
+
+"Not yet. I shall tell her to-day. You also, Andrea, must take her into
+your confidence touching your approaching marriage. That she will prove a
+good friend to you I am assured."
+
+"But what reason shall I give form my secrecy?" he inquired, and inwardly I
+smiled to see how the selfishness which love begets in us had caused him
+already to forget my affairs, and how the thought of his own approaching
+union effaced all thought of me and the doom to which I went.
+
+"Give no reason," I answered. "Let Genevieve tell her of what you
+contemplate, and if a reason she must have, let Geneviève bid her come to
+me. This much will I do for you in the matter; indeed, Andrea, it is the
+last service I am like to render you."
+
+"Sh! Here comes the Chevalier. She shall be told to-day."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE WAY OF WOMAN
+
+
+For all that I realised that this love of mine for Yvonne was as a child
+still-born--a thing that had no existence save in the heart that had
+begotten it--I rejoiced meanly at the thought that she was not destined to
+become Andrea's wife. For since I understood that this woman--who to me
+was like no other of her sex--was not for so poor a thing as Gaston de
+Luynes, like the dog in the fable I wished that no other might possess her.
+Inevitable it seemed that sooner or later one must come who would woo and
+win her. But ere that befell, my Lord Cardinal would have meted out
+justice to me--the justice of the rope meseemed--and I should not be by to
+gnash my teeth in jealousy.
+
+That evening, when the Chevalier de Canaples had gone to pay a visit to his
+vineyard,--the thing that, next to himself, he loved most in this world,--
+and whilst Geneviève and Andrea were vowing a deathless love to each other
+in the rose garden, their favourite haunt when the Chevalier was absent, I
+seized the opportunity for making my adieux to Yvonne.
+
+We were leaning together upon the balustrade of the terrace, and our faces
+were turned towards the river and the wooded shores beyond--a landscape
+this that was as alive and beautiful now as it had been dead and grey when
+first I came to Canaples two months ago.
+
+Scarce were my first words spoken when she turned towards me, and
+methought--but I was mad, I told myself--that there was a catch in her
+voice as she exclaimed, "You are leaving us, Monsieur?"
+
+"To-morrow morning I shall crave Monsieur your father's permission to quit
+Canaples."
+
+"But why, Monsieur? Have we not made you happy here?"
+
+"So happy, Mademoiselle," I answered with fervour, "that at times it passes
+my belief that I am indeed Gaston de Luynes. But go I must. My honour
+demands of me this sacrifice."
+
+And in answer to the look of astonishment that filled her wondrous eyes, I
+told her what I had told Andrea touching my parole to Montrésor, and the
+necessity of its redemption. As Andrea had done, she also dubbed it
+madness, but her glance was, nevertheless, so full of admiration, that
+methought to have earned it was worth the immolation of liberty--of life
+perchance; who could say?
+
+"Before I go, Mademoiselle," I pursued, looking straight before me as I
+spoke, and dimly conscious that her glance was bent upon my face--"before I
+go, I fain would thank you for all that you have done for me here. Your
+care has saved my life, Mademoiselle; your kindness, methinks, has saved my
+soul. For it seems to me that I am no longer the same man whom Michelot
+fished out of the Loire that night two months ago. I would thank you,
+Mademoiselle, for the happiness that has been mine during the past few
+days--a happiness such as for years has not fallen to my lot. To another
+and worthier man, the task of thanking you might be an easy one; but to me,
+who know myself to be so far beneath you, the obligation is so overwhelming
+that I know of no words to fitly express it."
+
+"Monsieur, Monsieur, I beseech you! Already you have said overmuch."
+
+"Nay, Mademoiselle; not half enough."
+
+"Have you forgotten, then, what you did for me? Our trivial service to you
+is but unseemly recompense. What other man would have come to my rescue as
+you came, with such odds against you--and forgetting the affronting words
+wherewith that very day I had met your warning? Tell me, Monsieur, who
+would have done that?"
+
+"Why, any man who deemed himself a gentleman, and who possessed such
+knowledge as I had."
+
+She laughed a laugh of unbelief.
+
+"You are mistaken, sir," she answered. "The deed was worthy of one of
+those preux chevaliers we read of, and I have never known but one man
+capable of accomplishing it."
+
+Those words and the tone wherein they were uttered set my brain on fire. I
+turned towards her; our glances met, and her eyes--those eyes that but a
+while ago had never looked on me without avowing the disdain wherein she
+had held me--were now filled with a light of kindliness, of sympathy, of
+tenderness that seemed more than I could endure.
+
+Already my hand was thrust into the bosom of my doublet, and my fingers
+were about to drag forth that little shred of green velvet that I had found
+in the coppice on the day of her abduction, and that I had kept ever since
+as one keeps the relic of a departed saint. Another moment and I should
+have poured out the story of the mad, hopeless passion that filled my heart
+to bursting, when of a sudden--"Yvonne, Yvonne!" came Geneviève's fresh
+voice from the other end of the terrace. The spell of that moment was
+broken.
+
+Methought Mademoiselle made a little gesture of impatience as she answered
+her sister's call; then, with a word of apology, she left me.
+
+Half dazed by the emotions that had made sport of me, I leaned over the
+balustrade, and with my elbows on the stone and my chin on my palms, I
+stared stupidly before me, thanking God for having sent Geneviève in time
+to save me from again earning Mademoiselle's scorn. For as I grew sober I
+did not doubt that with scorn she would have met the wild words that
+already trembled on my lips.
+
+I laughed harshly and aloud, such a laugh as those in Hell may vent.
+"Gaston, Gaston!" I muttered, "at thirty-two you are more a fool than ever
+you were at twenty."
+
+I told myself then that my fancy had vested her tone and look with a
+kindliness far beyond that which they contained, and as I thought of how I
+had deemed impatient the little gesture wherewith she had greeted
+Geneviève's interruption I laughed again.
+
+From the reverie into which, naturally enough, I lapsed, it was
+Mademoiselle who aroused me. She stood beside me with an unrest of manner
+so unusual in her, that straightway I guessed the substance of her talk
+with Geneviève.
+
+"So, Mademoiselle," I said, without waiting for her to speak, "you have
+learned what is afoot?"
+
+"I have," she answered. "That they love each other is no news to me. That
+they intend to wed does not surprise me. But that they should contemplate
+a secret marriage passes my comprehension."
+
+I cleared my throat as men will when about to embark upon a perilous
+subject with no starting-point determined.
+
+"It is time, Mademoiselle," I began, "that you should learn the true cause
+of M. de Mancini's presence at Canaples. It will enlighten you touching
+his motives for a secret wedding. Had things fallen out as was intended by
+those who planned his visit--Monsieur your father and my Lord Cardinal--it
+is improbable that you would ever have heard that which it now becomes
+necessary that I should tell you. I trust, Mademoiselle," I continued,
+"that you will hear me in a neutral spirit, without permitting your
+personal feelings to enter into your consideration of that which I shall
+unfold."
+
+"So long a preface augurs anything but well," she interposed, looking
+monstrous serious.
+
+"Not ill, at least, I hope. Hear me then. Your father and his Eminence
+are friends; the one has a daughter who is said to be very wealthy and whom
+he, with fond ambition, desires to see wedded to a man who can give her an
+illustrious name; the other possesses a nephew whom he can ennoble by the
+highest title that a man may bear who is not a prince of the blood,--and
+borne indeed by few who are not,--and whom he desires to see contract an
+alliance that will bring him enough of riches to enable him to bear his
+title with becoming dignity." I glanced at Mademoiselle, whose cheeks were
+growing an ominous red.
+
+"Well, Mademoiselle," I continued, "your father and Monseigneur de Mazarin
+appear to have bared their heart's desire to each other, and M. de Mancini
+was sent to Canaples to woo and win your father's elder daughter."
+
+A long pause followed, during which she stood with face aflame, averted
+eyes, and heaving bosom, betraying the feelings that stormed within her at
+the disclosure of the bargain whereof she had been a part. At length--"Oh,
+Monsieur!" she exclaimed in a choking voice, and clenching her shapely
+hands, "to think--"
+
+"I beseech you not to think, Mademoiselle," I interrupted calmly, for,
+having taken the first plunge, I was now master of myself. "The ironical
+little god, whom the ancients painted with bandaged eyes, has led M. de
+Mancini by the nose in this matter, and things have gone awry for the
+plotters. There, Mademoiselle, you have the reason for a clandestine
+union. Did Monsieur your father guess how Andrea's affections have"--I
+caught the word "miscarried" betimes, and substituted--"gone against his
+wishes, his opposition is not a thing to be doubted."
+
+"Are you sure there is no mistake?" she inquired after a pause. "Is all
+this really true, Monsieur?"
+
+"It is, indeed."
+
+"But how comes it that my father has seen naught of what has been so plain
+to me--that M. de Mancini was ever at my sister's side?"
+
+"Your father, Mademoiselle, is much engrossed in his vineyard. Moreover,
+when the Chevalier has been at hand he has been careful to show no greater
+regard for the one than for the other of you. I instructed him in this
+duplicity many weeks ago."
+
+She looked at me for a moment.
+
+"Oh, Monsieur," she cried passionately, "how deep is my humiliation! To
+think that I was made a part of so vile a bargain! Oh, I am glad that M.
+de Mancini has proved above the sordid task to which they set him--glad
+that he will dupe the Cardinal and my father."
+
+"So am not I, Mademoiselle," I exclaimed. She vouchsafed me a stare of
+ineffable surprise.
+
+"How?
+
+"Diable!" I answered. "I am M. de Mancini's friend. It was to shield him
+that I fought your brother; again, because of my attitude towards him was
+it that I went perilously near assassination at Reaux. Enemies sprang up
+about him when the Cardinal's matrimonial projects became known. Your
+brother picked a quarrel with him, and when I had dealt with your brother,
+St. Auban appeared, and after St. Auban there were others. When it is
+known that he has played this trick upon 'Uncle Giulio' his enemies will
+disappear; but, on the other hand, his prospects will all be blighted, and
+for that I am sorry."
+
+"So that was the motive of your duel with Eugène!"
+
+"At last you learn it."
+
+"And," she added in a curious voice, "you would have been better pleased
+had M. de Mancini carried out his uncle's wishes?"
+
+"It matters little what I would think, Mademoiselle," I answered guardedly,
+for I could not read that curious tone of hers.
+
+"Nevertheless, I am curious to hear your answer."
+
+What answer could I make? The truth--that for all my fine talk, I was at
+heart and in a sense right glad that she was not to become Andrea's wife--
+would have seemed ungallant. Moreover, I must have added the explanation
+that I desired to see her no man's wife, so that I might not seem to
+contradict myself. Therefore--
+
+"In truth, Mademoiselle," I answered, lying glibly, "it would have given me
+more pleasure had Andrea chosen to obey his Eminence."
+
+Her manner froze upon the instant.
+
+"In the consideration of your friend's advancement," she replied, half
+contemptuously, "you forget, M. de Luynes, to consider me. Am I, then, a
+thing to be bartered into the hands of the first fortune-hunter who woos me
+because he has been bidden so to do, and who is to marry me for political
+purposes? Pshaw, M. de Luynes!" she added, with a scornful laugh, "after
+all, I was a fool to expect aught else from--"
+
+She checked herself abruptly, and a sudden access of mercy left the
+stinging "you" unuttered. I stood by, dumb and sheepish, not understanding
+how the words that I had deemed gallant could have brought this tempest
+down upon my head. Before I could say aught that might have righted
+matters, or perchance made them worse--"Since you leave Canaples to-
+morrow," quoth she, "I will say 'Adieu,' Monsieur, for it is unlikely that
+we shall meet again."
+
+With a slight inclination of her head, and withholding her hand
+intentionally, she moved away, whilst I stood, as only a fool or a statue
+would stand, and watched her go.
+
+Once she paused, and, indeed, half turned, whereupon hope knocked at my
+heart again; but before I had admitted it, she had resumed her walk towards
+the house. Hungrily I followed her graceful, lissom figure with my eyes
+until she had crossed the threshold. Then, with a dull ache in my breast,
+I flung myself upon a stone seat, and, addressing myself to the setting sun
+for want of a better audience, I roundly cursed her sex for the knottiest
+puzzle that had ever plagued the mind of man in the unravelling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+FATHER AND SON
+
+
+"Gaston," quoth Andrea next morning, "you will remain at Canaples until to-
+morrow? You must, for to-morrow I am to be wed, and I would fain have your
+good wishes ere you go."
+
+"Nice hands, mine, to seek a benediction at," I grumbled.
+
+"But you will remain? Come, Gaston, we have been good friends, you and I,
+and who knows when next we shall meet? Believe me, I shall value your 'God
+speed' above all others."
+
+"Likely enough, since it will be the only one you'll hear."
+
+But for all my sneers he was not to be put off. He talked and coaxed so
+winningly that in the end--albeit I am a man not easily turned from the
+course he has set himself--the affectionate pleading in his fresh young
+voice and the affectionate look in his dark eyes won me to his way.
+
+Forthwith I went in quest of the Chevalier, whom, at the indication of a
+lackey, I discovered in the room it pleased him to call his study--that
+same room into which we had been ushered on the day of our arrival at
+Canaples. I told him that on the morrow I must set out for Paris, and
+albeit he at first expressed a polite regret, yet when I had shown him how
+my honour was involved in my speedy return thither, he did not urge me to
+put off my departure.
+
+"It grieves me, sir, that you must go, and I deeply regret the motive that
+is taking you. Yet I hope that his Eminence, in recognition of the
+services you have rendered his nephew, will see fit to forget what cause
+for resentment he may have against you, and render you your liberty. If
+you will give me leave, Monsieur, I will write to his Eminence in this
+strain, and you shall be the bearer of my letter."
+
+I thanked him, with a smile of deprecation, as I thought of the true cause
+of Mazarin's resentment, which was precisely that of the plea upon which M.
+de Canaples sought to obtain for me my liberation.
+
+"And now, Monsieur," he pursued nervously, "touching Andrea and his visit
+here, I would say a word to you who are his friend, and may haply know
+something of his mind. It is over two months since he came here, and yet
+the--er--affair which we had hoped to bring about seems no nearer its
+conclusion than when first he came. Of late I have watched him and I have
+watched Yvonne; they are certainly good friends, yet not even the frail
+barrier of formality appears overcome betwixt them, and I am beginning to
+fear that Andrea is not only lukewarm in this matter, but is forgetful of
+his uncle's wishes and selfishly indifferent to Monseigneur's projects and
+mine, which, as he well knows, are the reason of his sojourn at my château.
+What think you of this, M. de Luynes?"
+
+He shot a furtive glance at me as he spoke, and with his long, lean
+forefinger he combed his beard in a nervous fashion.
+
+I gave a short laugh to cover my embarrassment at the question.
+
+"What do I think, Monsieur?" I echoed to gain time. Then, thinking that a
+sententious answer would be the most fitting,--"Ma foi! Love is as the
+spark that lies latent in flint and steel: for days and weeks these two may
+be as close together as you please, and naught will come of it; but one
+fine day, a hand--the hand of chance--will strike the one against the
+other, and lo!--the spark is born!"
+
+"You speak in parables, Monsieur," was his caustic comment.
+
+"'T is in parables that all religions are preached," I returned, "and love,
+methinks, is a great religion in this world."
+
+"Love, sir, love!" he cried petulantly. "The word makes me sick! What has
+love to do with this union? Love, sir, is a pretty theme for poets,
+romancers, and fools. The imagination of such a sentiment--for it is a
+sentiment that does not live save in the imagination--may serve to draw
+peasants and other low­bred clods into wedlock. With such as we--with
+gentlemen--it has naught to do. So let that be, Monsieur. Andrea de
+Mancini came hither to wed my daughter."
+
+"And I am certain, Monsieur," I answered stoutly, "that Andrea will wed
+your daughter."
+
+"You speak with confidence."
+
+"I know Andrea well. Signs that may be hidden to you are clear to me, and
+I have faith in my prophecy."
+
+He looked at me, and fell a victim to my confidence of manner. The
+petulancy died out of his face.
+
+"Well, well! We will hope. My Lord Cardinal is to create him Duke, and he
+will assume as title his wife's estate, becoming known to history as Andrea
+de Mancini, Duke of Canaples. Thus shall a great house be founded that
+will bear our name. You see the importance of it?"
+
+"Clearly."
+
+"And how reasonable is my anxiety?"
+
+"Assuredly."
+
+"And you are in sympathy with me?"
+
+"Pardieu! Why else did I go so near to killing your son?"
+
+"True," he mused. Then suddenly he added, "Apropos, have you heard that
+Eugène has become one of the leaders of these frondeur madmen?"
+
+"Ah! Then he is quite recovered?"
+
+"Unfortunately," he assented with a grimace, and thus our interview ended.
+
+That day wore slowly to its close. I wandered hither and thither in the
+château and the grounds, hungering throughout the long hours for a word
+with Mademoiselle--a glimpse of her, at least.
+
+But all day long she kept her chamber, the pretext being that she was beset
+by a migraine. By accident I came upon her that evening, at last, in the
+salon; yet my advent was the signal for her departure, and all the words
+she had for me were:
+
+"Still at Canaples, Monsieur? I thought you were to have left this
+morning." She looked paler than her wont, and her eyes were somewhat red.
+
+"I am remaining until to-morrow," said I awkwardly.
+
+"Vraiement!" was all she answered, and she was gone.
+
+Next morning the Chevalier and I breakfasted alone. Mademoiselle's
+migraine was worse. Geneviève was nursing, so her maid brought word--
+whilst Andrea had gone out an hour before and had not returned.
+
+The Chevalier shot me an apologetic glance across the board.
+
+"'T is a poor 'God speed' to you, M. de Luynes."
+
+I made light of it and turned the conversation into an indifferent channel,
+wherein it abided until, filling himself a bumper of Anjou, the Chevalier
+solemnly drank to my safe journey and good fortune in Paris.
+
+At that moment Andrea entered by the door abutting on the terrace balcony.
+He was flushed, and his eyes sparkled with a joyous fever. Profuse was he
+in his apologies, which, howbeit, were passing vague in character, and
+which he brought to a close by pledging me as the Chevalier had done
+already.
+
+As we rose, Geneviève appeared with the news that Yvonne was somewhat
+better, adding that she had come to take leave of me. Her composure
+surprised me gladly, for albeit in her eyes there was also a telltale
+light, the lids, demurely downcast as was her wont, amply screened it from
+the vulgar gaze.
+
+Andrea would tell his father-in-law of the marriage later in the day; and
+for all I am not a chicken-hearted man, still I had no stomach to be at
+hand when the storm broke.
+
+The moment having come for my departure, and Michelot awaiting me already
+with the horses in the courtyard, M. de Canaples left us to seek the letter
+which I was to carry to his Eminence. So soon as the door had closed upon
+him, Andrea came forward, leading his bride by the hand, and asked me to
+wish them happiness.
+
+"With all my heart," I answered; "and if happiness be accorded you in a
+measure with the fervency of my wishes then shall you, indeed, be happy.
+Each of you I congratulate upon the companion in life you have chosen.
+Cherish him, Mademoi--Madame, for he is loyal and true--and such are rare
+in this world."
+
+It is possible that I might have said more in this benign and fatherly
+strain--for it seemed to me that this new role I had assumed suited me
+wondrous well--but a shadow that drew our eyes towards the nearest window
+interrupted me. And what we saw there drew a cry from Andrea, a shudder
+from Geneviève, and from me a gasp that was half amazement, half dismay.
+For, leaning upon the sill, surveying us with a sardonic, evil grin, we
+beheld Eugène de Canaples, the man whom I had left with a sword-thrust
+through his middle behind the Hôtel Vendôme two months ago. Whence was he
+sprung, and why came he thus to his father's house?
+
+He started as I faced him, for doubtless St. Auban had boasted to him that
+he had killed me in a duel. For a moment he remained at the window, then
+he disappeared, and we could hear the ring of his spurred heel as he walked
+along the balcony towards the door.
+
+And simultaneously came the quick, hurrying steps of the Chevalier de
+Canaples, as he crossed the hall, returning with the letter he had gone to
+fetch.
+
+Geneviève shuddered again, and looked fearfully from one door to the other;
+Andrea drew a sharp breath like a man in pain, whilst I rapped out an oath
+to brace my nerves for the scene which we all three foresaw. Then in
+silence we waited, some subtle instinct warning us of the disaster that
+impended.
+
+The steps on the balcony halted, and a second later those in the hall; and
+then, as though the thing had been rehearsed and timed so that the
+spectators might derive the utmost effect from it, the doors opened
+together, and on the opposing thresholds, with the width of the room
+betwixt them, stood father and son confronted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+OF HOW I LEFT CANAPLES
+
+
+Whilst a man might tell a dozen did those two remain motionless, the one
+eyeing the other. But their bearing was as widely different as their
+figures; Eugène's stalwart frame stood firm and erect, insolence in every
+line of it, reflected perchance from the smile that lurked about the
+corners of his thin­lipped mouth.
+
+The hat, which he had not had the grace to doff, set jauntily upon his
+straight black hair, the jerkin of leather which he wore, and the stout
+sword which hung from the plainest of belts, all served to give him the air
+of a ruffler, or tavern knight.
+
+The Chevalier, on the other hand, stood as if turned to stone. From his
+enervated fingers the letter fluttered to the ground, and on his pale, thin
+face was to be read a displeasure mixed with fear.
+
+At length, with an oath, the old man broke the silence.
+
+"What seek you at Canaples?" he asked in a quivering voice, as he advanced
+into the room. "Are you so dead to shame that you dare present yourself
+with such effrontery? Off with your hat, sir!" he blazed, stamping his
+foot, and going from pale to crimson. "Off with your hat, or Mortdieu,
+I'll have you flung out of doors by my grooms."
+
+This show of vehemence, as sudden as it was unexpected, drew from Eugène a
+meek obedience that I had not looked for. Nevertheless, the young man's
+lip curled as he uncovered.
+
+"How fatherly is your greeting!" he sneered. The Chevalier's eyes flashed
+a glance that lacked no venom at his son.
+
+"What manner of greeting did you look for?" he returned hotly. "Did you
+expect me to set a ring upon your finger, and have the fattened calf killed
+in honour of your return? Sangdieu, sir! Have you come hither to show me
+how a father should welcome the profligate son who has dishonoured his
+name? Why are you here, unbidden? Answer me, sir!"
+
+A deep flush overspread Eugène's cheeks.
+
+"I had thought when I crossed the threshold that this was the Château de
+Canaples, or else that my name was Canaples--I know not which. Clearly I
+was mistaken, for here is a lady who has no word either of greeting or
+intercession for me, and who, therefore, cannot be my sister, and yonder a
+man whom I should never look to find in my father's house."
+
+I took a step forward, a hot answer on my lips, when from the doorway at my
+back came Yvonne's sweet voice.
+
+"Eugène! You here?"
+
+"As you see, Sister. Though had you delayed your coming 't is probable you
+would no longer have found me, for your father welcomes me with oaths and
+threatens me with his grooms."
+
+She cast a reproachful glance upon the Chevalier, 'neath which the anger
+seemed to die out of him; then she went forward with hands outstretched and
+a sad smile upon her lips.
+
+"Yvonne!" The Chevalier's voice rang out sharp and sudden.
+
+She stopped.
+
+"I forbid you to approach that man!"
+
+For a moment she appeared to hesitate; then, leisurely pursuing her way,
+she set her hands upon her brother's shoulders and embraced him.
+
+The Chevalier swore through set teeth; Geneviève trembled, Andrea looked
+askance, and I laughed softly at the Chevalier's discomfiture. Eugène
+flung his hat and cloak into a corner and strode across the room to where
+his father stood.
+
+"And now, Monsieur, since I have travelled all the way from Paris to save
+my house from a step that will bring it into the contempt of all France, I
+shall not go until you have heard me."
+
+The Chevalier shrugged his shoulders and made as if to turn away. Yvonne's
+greeting of her brother appeared to have quenched the spark of spirit that
+for a moment had glimmered in the little man's breast.
+
+"Monsieur," cried Eugène, "believe me that what I have to say is of the
+utmost consequence, and say it I will--whether before these strangers or in
+your private ear shall be as you elect."
+
+The old man glanced about him like one who seeks a way of escape. At
+last--"If say it you must," he growled, "say it here and now. And when you
+have said it, go."
+
+Eugène scowled at me, and from me to Andrea. To pay him for that scowl, I
+had it in my mind to stay; but, overcoming the clownish thought, I took
+Andrea by the arm.
+
+"Come, Andrea," I said, "we will take a turn outside while these family
+matters are in discussion."
+
+I had a shrewd idea what was the substance of Eugène's mission to
+Canaples--to expostulate with his father touching the proposed marriage of
+Yvonne to the Cardinal's nephew.
+
+Nor was I wrong, for when, some moments later, the Chevalier recalled us
+from the terrace, where we were strolling--"What think you he has come
+hither to tell me?" he inquired as we entered. He pointed to his son as he
+spoke, and passion shook his slender frame as the breeze shakes a leaf.
+Mademoiselle and Geneviève sat hand in hand--Yvonne deadly pale, Geneviève
+weeping.
+
+"What think you he has the effrontery to say? Têtedieu! it seems that he
+has profited little by the lesson you read him in the horse-market about
+meddling in matters which concern him not. He has come hither to tell me
+that he will not permit his sister to wed the Cardinal's nephew; that he
+will not have the estates of Canaples pass into the hands of a foreign
+upstart. He, forsooth--he! he! he!" And at each utterance of the pronoun
+he lunged with his forefinger in the direction of his son. "This he is not
+ashamed to utter before Yvonne herself!"
+
+"You compelled me to do so," cried Eugène angrily.
+
+"I?" ejaculated the Chevalier. "Did I compel you to come hither with your
+'I will' and 'I will not'? Who are you, that you should give laws at
+Canaples? And he adds, sir," quoth the old knight excitedly, "that sooner
+than allow this marriage to take place he will kill M. de Mancini."
+
+"I shall be happy to afford him the opportunity!" shouted Andrea, bounding
+forward.
+
+Eugène looked up quickly and gave a short laugh. Thereupon followed a wild
+hubbub; everyone rushed forward and everyone talked; even little Geneviève
+--louder than all the rest.
+
+"You shall not fight! You shall not fight!" she cried, and her voice was
+so laden with command that all others grew silent and all eyes were turned
+upon her.
+
+"What affair is this of yours, little one?" quoth Eugène.
+
+"'T is this," she answered, panting, "that you need fear no marriage 'twixt
+my sister and Andrea."
+
+In her eagerness she had cast caution to the winds of heaven. Her father
+and brother stared askance at her; I gave an inward groan.
+
+"Andrea!" echoed Eugène at last. "What is this man to you that you speak
+thus of him?"
+
+The girl flung herself upon her father's breast.
+
+"Father," she sobbed, "dear father, forgive!"
+
+The Chevalier's brow grew dark; roughly he seized her by the arms and,
+holding her at arm's length, scanned her face.
+
+"What must I forgive?" he inquired in a thick voice. "What is M. de
+Mancini to you?"
+
+Some sinister note in her father's voice caused the girl to grow of a
+sudden calm and to assume a rigidity that reminded me of her sister.
+
+"He is my husband!" she answered. And there was a note of pride--almost of
+triumph--in her voice.
+
+An awful silence followed the launching of that thunderbolt. Eugène stood
+with open mouth, staring now at Geneviève, now at his father. Andrea set
+his arm about his bride's waist, and her fair head was laid trustingly upon
+his shoulder. The Chevalier's eyes rolled ominously. At length he spoke
+in a dangerously calm voice.
+
+"How long is it--how long have you been wed?"
+
+"We were wed in Blois an hour ago," answered Geneviève.
+
+Something that was like a grunt escaped the Chevalier, then his eye
+fastened upon me, and his anger boiled up.
+
+"You knew of this?" he asked, coming towards me.
+
+"I knew of it."
+
+"Then you lied to me yesterday."
+
+I drew myself up, stiff as a broomstick.
+
+"I do not understand," I answered coldly.
+
+"Did you not give me your assurance that M. de Mancini would marry Yvonne?"
+
+"I did not, Monsieur. I did but tell you that he would wed your daughter.
+And, ma foi! your daughter he has wed."
+
+"You have fooled me, scélérat!" he blazed out. "You, who have been
+sheltered by--"
+
+"Father!" Yvonne interrupted, taking his arm. "M. de Luynes has behaved no
+worse than have I, or any one of us, in this matter."
+
+"No!" he cried, and pointed to Andrea. "'T is you who have wrought this
+infamy. Eugène," he exclaimed, turning of a sudden to his son, "you have a
+sword; wipe out this shame."
+
+"Shame!" echoed Geneviève. "Oh, father, where is the shame? If it were no
+shame for Andrea to marry Yvonne, surely--"
+
+"Silence!" he thundered. "Eugène--"
+
+But Eugène answered him with a contemptuous laugh.
+
+"You are quick enough to call upon my sword, now that things have not
+fallen out as you would have them. Where are your grooms now, Monsieur?"
+
+"Insolent hound!" cried his father indignantly. Then, letting fall his
+arms with something that was near akin to a sob--"Is there no one left to
+do aught but mock me?" he groaned.
+
+But this weakness was no more than momentary.
+
+"Out of my house, sir!" he blazed, turning upon Andrea, and for a moment
+methought he would have struck him. "Out of my house--you and this wife of
+yours!"
+
+"Father!" sobbed Geneviève, with hands outstretched in entreaty.
+
+"Out of my house," he repeated, "and you also, M. de Luynes. Away with
+you! Go with the master you have served so well." And, turning on his
+heel, he strode towards the door.
+
+"Father--dear father!" cried Geneviève, following him: he slammed the door
+in her face for answer.
+
+With a moan she sank down upon her knees, her frail body shaken by
+convulsive sobs--Dieu! what a bridal morn was hers!
+
+Andrea and Yvonne raised her and led her to a chair. Eugène watched them
+with a cynical eye, then laughed brutally, and, gathering up his hat and
+cloak, he moved towards the balcony door and vanished.
+
+"Is M. de Luynes still there?" quoth Geneviève presently.
+
+"I am here, Madame."
+
+"You had best set out, Monsieur," she said. "We shall follow soon--very
+soon."
+
+I took Andrea aside and asked him whither it was his intention to take his
+wife. He replied that they would go to Chambord, where they would remain
+for some weeks in the hope that the Chevalier might relent sufficiently to
+forgive them. Thereafter it was his purpose to take his bride home to his
+Sicilian demesne.
+
+Our farewells were soon spoken; yet none the less warm, for all its
+brevity, was my leave-taking of Andrea, and our wishes for each other's
+happiness were as fervent as the human heart can shape. We little thought
+that we were not destined to meet again for years.
+
+Yvonne's adieu was cold and formal--so cold and formal that it seemed to
+rob the sunshine of its glory for me as I stepped out into the open air.
+
+After all, what mattered it? I was a fool to have entertained a single
+tender thought concerning her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+OF MY RETURN TO PARIS
+
+
+Scant cause is there for me to tarry over the details of my return to
+Paris. A sad enough journey was it; as sad for my poor Michelot as for
+myself, since he rode with one so dejected as I.
+
+Things had gone ill, and I feared that when the Cardinal heard the story
+things would go worse, for Mazarin was never a tolerant man, nor one to be
+led by the gospel of mercy and forgiveness. For myself I foresaw the rope
+--possibly even the wheel; and a hundred times a day I dubbed myself a fool
+for obeying the voice of honour with such punctiliousness when so grim a
+reward awaited me. What mood was on me--me, Gaston de Luynes, whose honour
+had been long since besmirched and tattered until no outward semblance of
+honour was left?
+
+But swift in the footsteps of that question would come the answer--Yvonne.
+Ay, truly enough, it was because in my heart I had dared to hold a
+sentiment of love for her, the purest--nay, the only pure--thing my heart
+had held for many a year, that I would set nothing vile to keep company
+with that sentiment; that until my sun should set--and already it dropped
+swiftly towards life's horizon--my actions should be the actions of such a
+man as might win Yvonne's affections.
+
+But let that be. This idle restrospective mood can interest you but
+little; nor can you profit from it, unless, indeed, it be by noting how
+holy and cleansing to the heart of man is the love--albeit unrequited--that
+he bears a good woman.
+
+As we drew near Meung--where we lay on that first night of our journey--a
+light travelling chaise, going in the same direction, passed us at a
+gallop. As it flashed by, I caught a glimpse of Eugène de Canaples's swart
+face through the window. Whether the recognition was mutual I cannot say--
+nor does it signify.
+
+When we reached the Hôtel de la Couronne, half an hour later, we saw that
+same chaise disappearing round a corner of the street, whilst through the
+porte-cochère the hostler was leading a pair of horses, foam-flecked and
+steaming with sweat.
+
+Whither went Master Canaples at such a rate, and in a haste that caused him
+to travel day and night? To a goal he little looked for--or rather, which,
+in the madness of his headlong rush, he could not see. So I was to learn
+ere long.
+
+Next day I awoke betimes, and setting my window wide to let in the fresh,
+clean-smelling air of that May morning I made shift to dress. Save for the
+cackle of the poultry which had strayed into the courtyard, and the noisy
+yawns and sleep-laden ejaculations of the stable-boy, who was drawing water
+for the horses, all was still, for it had not yet gone five o'clock.
+
+But of a sudden a door opened somewhere, and a step rang out, accompanied
+by the jangle of spurs, and with it came a sharp, unpleasant voice calling
+for its owner's horse. There was a familiar sound in those shrill accents
+that caused me to thrust my head through the casement. But I was quick to
+withdraw it, as I recognised in the gaily dressed little fellow below my
+old friend Malpertuis.
+
+I know not what impulse made me draw back so suddenly. The action was as
+much the child of instinct as of the lately acquired habit of concealing my
+face from the gaze of all who were likely to spread abroad the news that I
+still lived.
+
+From behind my curtains I watched Malpertuis ride out of the yard, saying,
+in answer to a parting question of the landlord, who had come upon the
+scene, that he would breakfast at Beaugency.
+
+Then, as he rode down the street, he of a sudden raised his discordant
+voice and sang to the accompaniment of his horse's hoofs. And the burden
+of his song ran thus:
+
+ A frondeur wind
+ Got up to-day,
+ 'Gainst Mazarin
+ It blows, they say.
+
+I listened in amazement to his raven's voice.
+
+Whither was he bound, I asked myself, and whence a haste that made him set
+out fasting, with an anti-cardinalist ditty on his lips, and ride two
+leagues to seek a breakfast in a village that did not hold an inn where a
+dog might be housed in comfort?
+
+Like Eugène de Canaples, he also travelled towards a goal that he little
+dreamt of. And so albeit the one went south and the other north, these two
+men were, between them, drawing together the thread of this narrative of
+mine, as anon you shall learn.
+
+We reached Paris at dusk three days later, and we went straight to my old
+lodging in the Rue St. Antoine.
+
+Coupri started and gasped upon beholding me, and not until I had cursed him
+for a fool in a voice that was passing human would he believe that I was no
+ghost. He too had heard the rumour of my death.
+
+I dispatched Michelot to the Palais Royal, where--without permitting his
+motive to transpire--he was to ascertain for me whether M. de Montrésor was
+in Paris, whether he still dwelt at the Hôtel des Cloches, and at what hour
+he could be found there.
+
+Whilst he was away I went up to my room, and there I found a letter which
+Coupri informed me had been left by a lackey a month ago--before the report
+that I had been killed had reached Paris--and since lain forgotten. It was
+a delicate note, to which still hung the ghost of a perfume; there were no
+arms on the seal, but the writing I took to be that of my aunt, the
+Duchesse de Chevreuse, and vaguely marvelling what motive she could have
+had for communicating with me, I cut the silk.
+
+It was, indeed, from the Duchesse, but it contained no more than a request
+that I should visit her at her hôtel on the day following upon that on
+which she had written, adding that she had pleasing news for me.
+
+I thrust the note into my pocket with a sigh. Of what could it avail me
+now to present myself at her hôtel? Her invitation was for a month ago.
+Since then she would likely enough have heard the rumour that had been
+current, and would have ceased to expect me.
+
+I caught myself wondering whether the news might have caused her a pang of
+regret, and somehow methought this possible. For of all my relatives,
+Madame de Chevreuse was the only one--and she was but my aunt by marriage--
+who of late years had shown me any kindness, or even recognition. I
+marvelled what her pleasing news could be, and I concluded that probably
+she had heard of my difficulties, and wished once again to help me out of
+them. Well, my purse was hollow, indeed, at the moment, but I need not
+trouble her, since I was going somewhere where purses are not needed--on a
+journey to which no expenses are attached.
+
+In my heart, nevertheless, I blessed the gracious lady, who, for all the
+lies that the world may have told of her, was the kindest woman I had
+known, and the best--save one other.
+
+I was still musing when Michelot returned with the information that M. de
+Montrésor was to be found at the Hôtel des Cloches, whither he had gone to
+sup a few minutes before. Straightway I set out, bidding him attend me,
+and, muffled in my cloak, I proceeded at a brisk pace to the Rue des Fosses
+St. Germain, where the lieutenant's auberge was situated.
+
+I left Michelot in the common-room, and, preceded by the plump little woman
+who owned the house, I ascended to Montrésor's chamber. I found the young
+soldier at table, and, fortunately, alone. He rose as I entered, and as
+the hostess, retreating, closed the door, I doffed my hat, and letting fall
+my cloak revealed myself. His lips parted, and I heard the hiss of an
+indrawn breath as his astonished eyes fell upon my countenance. My laugh
+dispelled his doubts that I might be other than flesh and blood--yet not
+his doubts touching my identity. He caught up a taper and, coming forward,
+he cast the light on my face for a moment, then setting the candle back
+upon the table, he vented his surprise in an oath or two, which was natural
+enough in one of his calling.
+
+"'T is clear, Lieutenant," quoth I, as I detached my sword from the
+baldrick, "that you believed me dead. Fate willed, however, that I should
+be restored to life, and so soon as I had recovered sufficient strength to
+undertake the journey to Paris, I set out. I arrived an hour ago, and here
+I am, to redeem my word of honour, and surrender the sword and liberty
+which you but lent me."
+
+I placed my rapier on the table and waited for him to speak. Instead,
+however, he continued to stare at me for some moments, and when at last he
+did break the silence, it was to burst into a laugh that poured from his
+throat in rich, mellow peals, as he lay back in his chair.
+
+My wrath arose. Had I travelled from Blois, and done what I deemed the
+most honourable deed of my life, to be laughed at for my pains by a foppish
+young jackanapes of his Eminence's guards? Something of my displeasure
+must he have seen reflected on my face, for of a sudden he checked his
+mirth.
+
+"Forgive me, M. de Luynes," he gasped. "Pardieu, 't is no matter for
+laughter, and albeit I laughed with more zest than courtesy, I give you my
+word that my admiration for you vastly exceeds my amusement. M. de
+Luynes," he added, rising and holding out his hand to me, "there are liars
+in Paris who give you an evil name--men who laughed at me when they heard
+that I had given you leave to go on parole to St. Sulpice des Reaux that
+night, trusting to your word of honour that you would return if you lived.
+His Eminence dubbed me a fool and went near to dismissing me from his
+service, and yet I have now the proof that my confidence was not misplaced,
+since even though you were believed to be dead, you did not hesitate to
+bring me your sword."
+
+"Monsieur, spare me!" I exclaimed, for in truth his compliments waxed as
+irksome as had been his whilom merriment.
+
+He continued, however, his laudatory address, and when it was at last
+ended, and he paused exhausted alike in breath and brain, it was to take up
+my sword and return it to me with my parole, pronouncing me a free man, and
+advising me to let men continue to think me dead, and to withdraw from
+France. He cut short my half-protesting thanks, and calling the hostess
+bade her set another cover, whilst me he invited to share his supper. And
+as we ate he again urged upon me the advice that I should go abroad.
+
+"For by Heaven," he added, "Mazarin has been as a raging beast since the
+news was brought him yesterday of his nephew's marriage."
+
+"How?" I cried. "He has heard already?"
+
+"He has, indeed; and should he learn that your flesh still walks the earth,
+methinks it would go worse with you than it went even with Eugène de
+Canaples."
+
+In answer to the questions with which I excitedly plied him, I drew from
+him the story of how Eugène had arrived the day before in Paris, and gone
+straight to the Palais Royal. M. de Montrésor had been on guard in the
+ante-chamber, and in virtue of an excitement noticeable in Canaples's
+bearing, coupled with the ill-odour wherein already he was held by Mazarin,
+the lieutenant's presence had been commanded in the Cardinal's closet
+during the interview--for his Eminence was never like to acquire fame for
+valour.
+
+In his exultation at what had chanced, and at the manner in which Mazarin's
+Château en Espagne had been dispelled, Canaples used little caution, or
+even discretion, in what he said. In fact, from what Montrésor told me, I
+gathered that the fool's eagerness to be the first to bear the tidings to
+Mazarin sprang from a rash desire to gloat over the Cardinal's
+discomfiture. He had told his story insolently--almost derisively--and
+Mazarin's fury, driven beyond bounds already by what he had heard, became a
+very tempest of passion 'neath the lash of Canaples's impertinences. And,
+naturally enough, that tempest had burst upon the only head available--
+Eugène de Canaples's--and the Cardinal had answered his jibes with interest
+by calling upon Montrésor to arrest the fellow and bear him to the
+Bastille.
+
+When the astonished and sobered Canaples had indignantly asked upon what
+charge he was being robbed of his liberty, the Cardinal had laughed at him,
+and answered with his never-failing axiom that "He who sings, pays."
+
+"You sang lustily enough just now," his Eminence had added, "and you shall
+pay by lodging awhile in an oubliette of the Bastille, where you may lift
+up your voice to sing the De profundis."
+
+"Was my name not mentioned?" I anxiously inquired when Montrésor had
+finished.
+
+"Not once. You may depend that I should have remarked it. After I had
+taken Canaples away, the Cardinal, I am told, sat down, and, still
+trembling with rage, wrote a letter which he straightway dispatched to the
+Chevalier Armand de Canaples, at Blois.
+
+"No doubt," I mused, "he attributes much blame to me for what has come to
+pass."
+
+"Not a doubt of it. This morning he said to me that it was a pity your
+wings had not been clipped before you left Paris, and that his misplaced
+clemency had helped to bring him great misfortunes. You see, therefore, M.
+de Luynes, that your sojourn in France will be attended with great peril.
+I advise you to try Spain; 't is a martial country where a man of the sword
+may find honourable and even profitable employment."
+
+His counsel I deemed sound. But how follow it? Then of a sudden I
+bethought me of Madame de Chevreuse's friendly letter. Doubtless she would
+assist me once again, and in such an extremity as this. And with the
+conception of the thought came the resolution to visit her on the morrow.
+That formed, I gave myself up to the task of drinking M. de Montrésor under
+the table with an abandon which had not been mine for months. In each
+goblet that I drained, methought I saw Yvonne's sweet face floating on the
+surface of the red Armagnac; it looked now sad, now reproachful, still I
+drank on, and in each cup I pledged her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+OF HOW THE CHEVALIER DE CANAPLES BECAME A FRONDEUR
+
+
+It wanted an hour or so to noon next day as I drove across the Pont Neuf in
+a closed carriage, and was borne down the Rue St. Dominique to the portals
+of that splendid palace, facing the Jacobins, which bears the title of the
+"Hôtel de Luynes," and over the portals of which is carved the escutcheon
+of our house.
+
+Michelot--in obedience to the orders I had given him--got down only to be
+informed that Madame la Duchesse was in the country. The lackey who was
+summoned did not know where the lady might be found, nor when she might
+return to Paris. And so I was compelled to drive back almost despairingly
+to the Rue St. Antoine, and there lie concealed, nursing my impatience,
+until my aunt should return.
+
+Daily I sent Michelot to the Hôtel de Luynes to make the same inquiry, and
+to return daily with the same dispiriting reply--that there was no news of
+Madame la Duchesse.
+
+In this fashion some three weeks wore themselves out, during which period I
+lay in my concealment, a prey to weariness unutterable. I might not
+venture forth save at night, unless I wore a mask; and as masks were no
+longer to be worn without attracting notice--as during the late king's
+reign--I dared not indulge the practice.
+
+Certainly my ennui was greatly relieved by the visits of Montrésor, which
+grew very frequent, the lad appearing to have conceived a kindness for me;
+and during those three weeks our fellowship at nights over a bottle or two
+engendered naturally enough a friendship and an intimacy between us.
+
+I had written to Andrea on the morrow of my return to Paris, to tell him
+how kindly Montrésor had dealt with me, and some ten days later the
+following letter was brought me by the lieutenant--to whom, for safety, it
+had been forwarded:
+
+
+"MY VERY DEAR GASTON:
+
+I have no words wherewith to express my joy at the good news you send me,
+which terminates the anxiety that has been mine since you left us on the
+disastrous morning of our nuptials.
+
+The uncertainty touching your fate, the fear that the worst might have
+befallen you, and the realisation that I--for whom you have done so much--
+might do naught for you in your hour of need, has been the one cloud to mar
+the sunshine of my own bliss.
+
+That cloud your letter has dispelled, and the knowledge of your safety
+renders my happiness complete.
+
+The Chevalier maintains his unforgiving mood, as no doubt doth also my Lord
+Cardinal. But what to me are the frowns of either, so that my lady smile?
+My little Geneviève is yet somewhat vexed in spirit at all this, but I am
+teaching her to have faith in Time, the patron saint of all lovers who
+follow not the course their parents set them. And so that time may be
+allowed to intercede and appeal to the parent heart with the potent prayer
+of a daughter's absence, I shall take my lady from Chambord some three days
+hence. We shall travel by easy stages to Marseilles, and there take ship
+for Palermo.
+
+And so, dear, trusty friend, until we meet again, fare you well and may God
+hold you safe from the wickedness of man, devil, and my Lord Cardinal.
+
+For all that you have done for me, no words of mine can thank you, but
+should you determine to quit this France of yours, and journey to Palermo
+after me, you shall never want a roof to shelter you or a board to sit at,
+so long as roof and board are owned by him who signs himself, in love at
+least, your brother--
+
+ANDREA DE MANCINI."
+
+
+With a sigh I set the letter down. A sigh of love and gratitude it was; a
+sigh also of regret for the bright, happy boy who had been the source alike
+of my recent joys and sorrows, and whom methought I was not likely to see
+again for many a day, since the peaceful vegetation of his Sicilian home
+held little attraction for me, a man of action.
+
+It was on the evening of the last Sunday in May, whilst the bell of the
+Jesuits, close by, was tinkling out its summons to vespers, that Montrésor
+burst suddenly into my room with the request that I should get my hat and
+cloak and go with him to pay a visit. In reply to my questions--
+"Monseigneur's letter to Armand de Canaples," he said, "has borne fruit
+already. Come with me and you shall learn how."
+
+He led me past the Bastille and up the Rue des Tournelles to the door of an
+unpretentious house, upon which he knocked. We were admitted by an old
+woman to whom Montrésor appeared to be known, for, after exchanging a word
+or two with her, he himself led the way upstairs and opened the door of a
+room for me.
+
+By the melancholy light of a single taper burning upon the table I beheld a
+fair-sized room containing a curtained bed.
+
+My companion took up the candle, and stepping to the bedside, he drew apart
+the curtains.
+
+Lying there I beheld a man whose countenance, despite its pallor and the
+bloody bandages about his brow, I recognised for that of the little
+spitfire Malpertuis.
+
+As the light fell upon his face, the little fellow opened his eyes, and
+upon beholding me at his side he made a sudden movement which wrung from
+him a cry of pain.
+
+"Lie still, Monsieur," said Montrésor quietly.
+
+But for all the lieutenant's remonstrances, he struggled up into a sitting
+posture, requesting Montrésor to set the pillows at his back.
+
+"Thank God you are here, M. de Luynes!" he said. "I learnt at Canaples
+that you were not dead."
+
+"You have been to Canaples?"
+
+"I was a guest of the Chevalier for twelve days. I arrived there on the
+day after your departure."
+
+"You!" I ejaculated. "Pray what took you to Canaples?"
+
+"What took me there?" he echoed, turning his feverish eyes upon me, almost
+with fierceness. "The same motive that led me to join hands with that
+ruffian St. Auban, when he spoke of waging war against Mancini; the same
+motive that led me to break with him when I saw through his plans, and when
+the abduction of Mademoiselle was on foot; the same motive that made me
+come to you and tell you of the proposed abduction so that you might
+interfere if you had the power, or cause others to do so if you had not."
+
+I lay back in my chair and stared at him. Was this, then, another suitor
+of Yvonne de Canaples, and were all men mad with love of her?
+
+Presently he continued:
+
+"When I heard that St. Auban was in Paris, having apparently abandoned all
+hope in connection with Mademoiselle, I obtained a letter from M. de la
+Rochefoucauld--who is an intimate friend of mine--and armed with this I set
+out. As luck would have it I got embroiled in the streets of Blois with a
+couple of cardinalist gentlemen, who chose to be offended by lampoon of the
+Fronde that I was humming. I am not a patient man, and I am even
+indiscreet in moments of choler. I ended by crying, "Down with Mazarin and
+all his creatures," and I would of a certainty have had my throat slit, had
+not a slight and elegant gentleman interposed, and, exercising a wonderful
+influence over my assailants, extricated me from my predicament. This
+gentleman was the Chevalier de Canaples. He was strangely enough in a mood
+to be pleased by an anti-cardinalist ditty, for his rage against Andrea de
+Mancini--which he took no pains to conceal--had extended already to the
+Cardinal, and from morn till night he did little else but revile the whole
+Italian brood--as he chose to dub the Cardinal's family."
+
+I recognised the old knight's weak, vacillating character in this, a
+creature of moods that, like the vane on a steeple, turns this way or that,
+as the wind blows.
+
+"I crave your patience, M. de Luynes," he continued, "and beg of you to
+hear my story so that you may determine whether you will save the Canaples
+from the danger that threatens them. I only ask that you dispatch a
+reliable messenger to Blois. But hear me out first. In virtue as much of
+La Rochefoucauld's letters as of the sentiments which the Chevalier heard
+me express, I became the honoured guest at his château. Three days after
+my arrival I sustained a shock by the unexpected appearance at Canaples of
+St. Auban. The Chevalier, however, refused him admittance, and, baffled,
+the Marquis was forced to withdraw. But he went no farther than Blois,
+where he hired himself a room at the Lys de France. The Chevalier hated
+him as a mad dog hates water--almost as much as he hated you. He spoke
+often of you, and always bitterly."
+
+Before I knew what I had said--
+
+"And Mademoiselle?" I burst out. "Did she ever mention my name?"
+
+Malpertuis looked up quickly at the question, and a wan smile flickered
+round his lips.
+
+"Once she spoke of you to me--pityingly, as one might speak of a dead man
+whose life had not been good."
+
+"Yes, yes," I broke in. "It matters little. Your story, M. Malpertuis."
+
+"After I had been at the château ten days, we learnt that Eugène de
+Canaples had been sent to the Bastille. The news came in a letter penned
+by his Eminence himself--a bitter, viperish letter, with a covert threat in
+every line. The Chevalier's anger went white hot as he read the
+disappointed Cardinal's epistle. His Eminence accused Eugène of being a
+frondeur; M. de Canaples, whose politics had grown sadly rusted in the
+country, asked me the meaning of the word. I explained to him the petty
+squabbles between Court and Parliament, in consequence of the extortionate
+imposts and of Mazarin's avariciousness. I avowed myself a partisan of the
+Fronde, and within three days the Chevalier--who but a little time before
+had sought an alliance with the Cardinal's family--had become as rabid a
+frondeur as M. de Gondi, as fierce an anti­cardinalist as M. de Beaufort.
+
+"I humoured him in his new madness, with the result that ere long from
+being a frondeur in heart, he thirsted to become a frondeur in deeds, and
+he ended by begging me to bear a letter from him to the Coadjutor of Paris,
+wherein he offered to place at M. de Gondi's disposal, towards the expenses
+of the civil war which he believed to be imminent,--as, indeed, it is,--the
+sum of sixty thousand livres.
+
+"Now albeit I had gone to Canaples for purposes of my own, and not as an
+agent of M. le Coadjuteur's, still for many reasons I saw fit to undertake
+the Chevalier's commission. And so, bearing the letter in question, which
+was hot and unguarded, and charged with endless treasonable matter, I set
+out four days later for Paris, arriving here yesterday.
+
+"I little knew that I had been followed by St. Auban. His suspicions must
+have been awakened, I know not how, and clearly they were confirmed when I
+stopped before the Coadjutor's house last night. I was about to mount the
+steps, when of a sudden I was seized from behind by half a dozen hands and
+dragged into a side street. I got free for a moment and attempted to
+defend myself, but besides St. Auban there were two others. They broke my
+sword and attempted to break my skull, in which they went perilously near
+succeeding, as you see. Albeit half-swooning, I had yet sufficient
+consciousness left to realise that my pockets were being emptied, and that
+at last they had torn open my doublet and withdrawn the treasonable letter
+from the breast of it.
+
+"I was left bleeding in the kennel, and there I lay for nigh upon an hour
+until a passer-by succoured me and carried out my request to be brought
+hither and put to bed."
+
+He ceased, and for some moments there was silence, broken only by the
+wounded man's laboured breathing, which argued that his narrative had left
+him fatigued. At last I sprang up.
+
+"The Chevalier de Canaples must be warned," I exclaimed.
+
+"'T is an ugly business," muttered Montrésor. "I'll wager a hundred that
+Mazarin will hang the Chevalier if he catches him just now."
+
+"He would not dare!" cried Malpertuis.
+
+"Not dare?" echoed the lieutenant. "The man who imprisoned the Princes of
+Condé and Conti, and the Duke of Beaufort, not dare hang a provincial
+knight with never a friend at Court! Pah, Monsieur, you do not know
+Cardinal Mazarin."
+
+I realised to the full how likely Montrésor's prophecy was to be fulfilled,
+and before I left Malpertuis I assured him that he had not poured his story
+into the ears of an indifferent listener, and that I would straightway find
+means of communicating with Canaples.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+OF THE BARGAIN THAT ST. AUBAN DROVE WITH MY LORD CARDINAL
+
+
+From the wounded man's bedside I wended my steps back to the Rue St.
+Antoine, resolved to start for Blois that very night; and beside me walked
+Montrésor, with bent head, like a man deep in thought.
+
+At my door I paused to take my leave of the lieutenant, for I was in haste
+to have my preparations made, and to be gone. But Montrésor appeared not
+minded to be dismissed thus easily.
+
+"What plan have you formed?" he asked.
+
+"The only plan there is to form--to set out for Canaples at once."
+
+"Hum!" he grunted, and again was silent. Then, suddenly throwing back his
+head, "Par la mort Dieu!" he cried, "I care not what comes of it; I'll tell
+you what I know. Lead the way to your chamber, M. de Luynes, and delay
+your departure until you have heard me."
+
+Surprised as much by his words as by the tone in which he uttered them,
+which was that of a man who is angry with himself, I passively did as I was
+bidden.
+
+Once within my little ante-chamber, he turned the key with his own hands,
+and pointing to the door of my bedroom--"In there, Monsieur," quoth he, "we
+shall be safe from listeners."
+
+Deeper grew my astonishment at all this mystery, as we passed into the room
+beyond.
+
+"Now, M. de Luynes," he cried, flinging down his hat, "for no apparent
+reason I am about to commit treason; I am about to betray the hand that
+pays me."
+
+"If no reason exists, why do so evil a deed?" I inquired calmly. "I have
+learnt during our association to wish you well, Montrésor; if by telling me
+that which your tongue burns to tell, you shall have cause for shame, the
+door is yonder. Go before harm is done, and leave me alone to fight my
+battle out."
+
+He stood up, and for a moment he seemed to waver, then dismissing his
+doubts with an abrupt gesture, he sat down again.
+
+"There is no wrong in what I do. Right is with you, M. de Luynes, and if I
+break faith with the might I serve, it is because that might is an unjust
+one; I do but betray the false to the true, and there can be little shame
+in such an act. Moreover, I have a reason--but let that be."
+
+He was silent for a moment, then he resumed:
+
+"Most of that which you have learnt from Malpertuis to-night, I myself
+could have told you. Yes; St. Auban has carried Canaples's letter to the
+Cardinal already. I heard from his lips to-day--for I was present at the
+interview--how the document had been wrested from Malpertuis. For your
+sake, so that you might learn all he knew, I sought the fellow out, and
+having found him in the Rue des Tournelles, I took you thither."
+
+In a very fever of excitement I listened.
+
+"To take up the thread of the story where Malpertuis left off, let me tell
+you that St. Auban sought an audience with Mazarin this morning, and by
+virtue of a note which he desired an usher to deliver to his Eminence, he
+was admitted, the first of all the clients that for hours had thronged the
+ante-room. As in the instance of the audience to Eugène de Canaples, so
+upon this occasion did it chance that the Cardinal's fears touching St.
+Auban's purpose had been roused, for he bade me stand behind the curtains
+in his cabinet.
+
+"The Marquis spoke bluntly enough, and with rude candour he stated that
+since Mazarin had failed to bring the Canaples estates into his family by
+marriage, he came to set before his Eminence a proof so utter of Canaples's
+treason that it would enable him to snatch the estates by confiscation.
+The Cardinal may have been staggered by St. Auban's bluntness, but his
+avaricious instincts led him to stifle his feelings and bid the Marquis to
+set this proof before him. But St. Auban had a bargain to drive--a
+preposterous one methought. He demanded that in return for his delivering
+into the hands of Mazarin the person of Armand de Canaples together with an
+incontestable proof that the Chevalier was in league with the frondeurs,
+and had offered to place a large sum of money at their disposal, he was to
+receive as recompense the demesne of Canaples on the outskirts of Blois,
+together with one third of the confiscated estates. At first Mazarin
+gasped at his audacity, then laughed at him, whereupon St. Auban politely
+craved his Eminence's permission to withdraw. This the Cardinal, however,
+refused him, and bidding him remain, he sought to bargain with him. But
+the Marquis replied that he was unversed in the ways of trade and barter,
+and that he had no mind to enter into them. From bargaining the Cardinal
+passed on to threatening and from threatening to whining, and so on until
+the end--St. Auban preserving a firm demeanour--the comedy was played out
+and Mazarin fell in with his proposal and his terms.
+
+"Mille diables!" I cried. "And has St. Auban set out?"
+
+"He starts to-morrow, and I go with him. When finally the Cardinal had
+consented, the Marquis demanded and obtained from him a promise in writing,
+signed and sealed by Mazarin, that he should receive a third of the
+Canaples estates and the demesne on the outskirts of Blois, in exchange for
+the body of Armand de Canaples, dead or alive, and a proof of treason
+sufficient to warrant his arrest and the confiscation of his estates.
+Next, seeing in what regard the Seigneur is held by the people of Blois,
+and fearing that his arrest might be opposed by many of his adherents, the
+Marquis has demanded a troop of twenty men. This Mazarin has also granted
+him, entrusting the command of the troop to me, under St. Auban. Further,
+the Marquis has stipulated that the greatest secrecy is to be observed, and
+has expressed his purpose of going upon this enterprise disguised and
+masked, for--as he rightly opines--when months hence he enters into
+possession of the demesne of Canaples in the character of purchaser, did
+the Blaisois recognise in him the man who sold the Chevalier, his life
+would stand in hourly peril."
+
+I heard him through patiently enough; yet when he stopped, my pent-up
+feelings burst all bonds, and I resolved there and then to go in quest of
+that Judas, St. Auban, and make an end of his plotting, for all time. But
+Montrésor restrained me, showing me how futile such a course must prove,
+and how I risked losing all chance of aiding those at Canaples.
+
+He was right. First I must warn the Chevalier--afterwards I would deal
+with St. Auban.
+
+Someone knocked at that moment, and with the entrance of Michelot, my talk
+with Montrésor came perforce to an end. For Michelot brought me the news
+that for days I had been awaiting; Madame de Chevreuse had returned to
+Paris at last.
+
+But for Montrésor's remonstrances it is likely that I should have set out
+forthwith to wait upon her. I permitted myself, however, to be persuaded
+that the lateness of the hour would render my visit unwelcome, and so I
+determined in the end--albeit grudgingly--to put off my departure for Blois
+until the morrow.
+
+Noon had but struck from Nôtre Dame, next day, as I mounted the steps of
+the Hôtel de Luynes. My swagger, and that brave suit of pearl grey velvet
+with its silver lace, bore me unchallenged past the gorgeous suisse, who
+stood, majestic, in the doorway.
+
+But, for the first mincing lackey I chanced upon, more was needed to gain
+me an audience. And so, as I did not choose to speak my name, I drew a
+ring from my finger and bade him bear it to the Duchesse.
+
+He obeyed me in this, and presently returning, he bowed low and begged of
+me to follow him, for, as I had thought, albeit Madame de Chevreuse might
+not know to whom that ring belonged, yet the arms of Luynes carved upon the
+stone had sufficed to ensure an interview.
+
+I was ushered into a pretty boudoir, hung in blue and gold, which
+overlooked the garden, and wherein, reclining upon a couch, with a book of
+Bois Robert's verses in her white and slender hand, I found my beautiful
+aunt.
+
+Of this famous lady, who was the cherished friend and more than sister of
+Anne of Austria, much has been written; much that is good, and more--far
+more--that is ill, for those who have a queen for friend shall never lack
+for enemies. But those who have praised and those who have censured have
+at least been at one touching her marvellous beauty. At the time whereof I
+write it is not possible that she could be less than forty-six, and yet her
+figure was slender and shapely and still endowed with the grace of
+girlhood; her face delicate of tint, and little marked by time--or even by
+the sufferings to which, in the late king's reign, Cardinal de Richelieu
+had subjected her; her eyes were blue and peaceful as a summer sky; her
+hair was the colour of ripe corn. He would be a hardy guesser who set her
+age at so much as thirty.
+
+My appearance she greeted by letting fall her book, and lifting up her
+hands--the loveliest in France--she uttered a little cry of surprise.
+
+"Is it really you, Gaston?" she asked.
+
+Albeit it was growing wearisome to be thus greeted by all to whom I showed
+myself, yet I studied courtesy in my reply, and then, 'neath the suasion of
+her kindliness, I related all that had befallen me since first I had
+journeyed to Blois, in Andrea de Mancini's company, withholding, however,
+all allusions to my feelings towards Yvonne. Why betray them when they
+were doomed to be stifled in the breast that begat them? But Madame de
+Chevreuse had not been born a woman and lived six and forty years to no
+purpose.
+
+"And this maid with as many suitors as Penelope, is she very beautiful?"
+she inquired slyly.
+
+"France does not hold her equal," I answered, falling like a simpleton into
+the trap she had set me.
+
+"This to me?" quoth she archly. "Fi donc, Gaston! Your evil ways have
+taught you as little gallantry as dissimulation." And her merry ripple of
+laughter showed me how in six words I had betrayed that which I had been at
+such pains to hide.
+
+But before I could, by protestations, plunge deeper than I stood already,
+the Duchesse turned the conversation adroitly to the matter of that letter
+of hers, wherein she had bidden me wait upon her.
+
+A cousin of mine--one Marion de Luynes, who, like myself, had, through the
+evil of his ways, become an outcast from his family--was lately dead.
+Unlike me, however, he was no adventurous soldier of fortune, but a man of
+peace, with an estate in Provence that had a rent-roll of five thousand
+livres a year. On his death-bed he had cast about him for an heir,
+unwilling that his estate should swell the fortunes of the family that in
+life had disowned him. Into his ear some kindly angel had whispered my
+name, and the memory that I shared with him the frowns of our house, and
+that my plight must be passing pitiful, had set up a bond of sympathy
+between us, which had led him to will his lands to me. Of Madame de
+Chevreuse--who clearly was the patron saint of those of her first husband's
+nephews who chanced to tread ungodly ways--my cousin Marion had besought
+that she should see to the fulfilment of his last wishes.
+
+My brain reeled beneath the first shock of that unlooked-for news. Already
+I saw myself transformed from a needy adventurer into a gentleman of
+fortune, and methought my road to Yvonne lay open, all obstacles removed.
+But swiftly there followed the thought of my own position, and truly it
+seemed that a cruel irony lay in the manner wherein things had fallen out,
+since did I declare myself to be alive and claim the Provence estates, the
+Cardinal's claws would be quick to seize me.
+
+Thus much I told Madame de Chevreuse, but her answer cheered me, and said
+much for my late cousin's prudence.
+
+"Nay," she cried. "Marion was ever shrewd. Knowing that men who live by
+the sword, as you have lived, are often wont to die by the sword,--and that
+suddenly at times,--he has made provision that in the event of your being
+dead his estates shall come to me, who have been the most indulgent of his
+relatives. This, my dear Gaston, has already taken place, for we believed
+you dead; and therein fortune has been kind to you, for now, while
+receiving the revenues of your lands--which the world will look upon as
+mine--I shall contrive that they reach you wherever you may be, until such
+a time as you may elect to come to life again."
+
+Now but for the respect in which I held her, I could have taken the pretty
+Duchesse in my arms and kissed her.
+
+Restraining myself, however, I contented myself by kissing her hand, and
+told her of the journey I was going, then craved another boon of her. No
+matter what the issue of that journey, and whether I went alone or
+accompanied, I was determined to quit France and repair to Spain. There I
+would abide until the Parliament, the Court, or the knife of some chance
+assassin, or even Nature herself should strip Mazarin of his power.
+
+Now, at the Court of Spain it was well known that my aunt's influence was
+vast, and so, the boon I craved was that she should aid me to a position in
+the Spanish service that would allow me during my exile to find occupation
+and perchance renown. To this my aunt most graciously acceded, and when at
+length I took my leave--with such gratitude in my heart that what words I
+could think of seemed but clumsily to express it--I bore in the breast of
+my doublet a letter to Don Juan de Cordova--a noble of great prominence at
+the Spanish Court--and in the pocket of my haut-de-chausses a rouleau of
+two hundred gold pistoles, as welcome as they were heavy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+OF MY SECOND JOURNEY TO CANAPLES
+
+
+An hour after I had quitted the Hôtel de Luynes, Michelot and I left Paris
+by the barrier St. Michel and took the Orleans road. How different it
+looked in the bright June sunshine, to the picture which it had presented
+to our eyes on that February evening, four months ago, when last we had set
+out upon that same journey!
+
+Not only in nature had a change been wrought, but in my very self. My
+journey then had been aimless, and I had scarcely known whither I was bound
+nor had I fostered any great concern thereon. Now I rode in hot haste with
+a determined purpose, a man of altered fortunes and altered character.
+
+Into Choisy we clattered at a brisk pace, but at the sight of the inn of
+the Connétable such memories surged up that I was forced to draw rein and
+call for a cup of Anjou, which I drank in the saddle. Thereafter we rode
+without interruption through Longjumeau, Arpajon, and Etrechy, and so well
+did we use our horses that as night fell we reached Étampes.
+
+From inquiries that Michelot had made on the road, we learned that no troop
+such as that which rode with St. Auban had lately passed that way, so that
+'t was clear we were in front of them.
+
+But scarce had we finished supper in the little room which I had hired at
+the Gros Paon, when, from below, a stamping of hoofs, the jangle of arms,
+and the shouts of many men told me that we were overtaken.
+
+Clearly I did not burn with a desire to linger, but rather it seemed to me
+that although night had closed in, black and moonless, we must set out
+again, and push on to Monnerville, albeit our beasts were worn and the
+distance a good three leagues.
+
+With due precaution we effected our departure, and thereafter had a spur
+been needed to speed us on our way that spur we had in the knowledge that
+St. Auban came close upon our heels. At Monnerville we slept, and next
+morning we were early afoot; by four o'clock in the afternoon we had
+reached Orleans, whence--with fresh horses--we pursued our journey as far
+as Meung, where we lay that night.
+
+There we were joined by a sturdy rascal whom Michelot enlisted into my
+service, seeing that not only did my means allow, but the enterprise upon
+which I went might perchance demand another body servant. This recruit was
+a swart, powerfully built man of about my own age; trusty, and a lover of
+hard knocks, as Michelot--who had long counted him among his friends--
+assured me. He owned the euphonious name of Abdon.
+
+I spent twenty pistoles in suitable raiment and a horse for him, and as we
+left Meung next day the knave cut a brave enough figure that added not a
+little to my importance to have at my heels.
+
+This, however, so retarded our departure, that night had fallen by the time
+we reached Blois. Still our journey had been a passing swift one. We had
+left Paris on a Monday, the fourth of June--I have good cause to remember,
+since on that day I entered both upon my thirty-second year and my altered
+fortunes; on the evening of Wednesday we reached Blois, having covered a
+distance of forty-three leagues in less than three days.
+
+Bidding Michelot carry my valise to the hostelry of the Vigne d'Or, and
+there await my coming, I called to Abdon to attend me, and rode on, jaded
+and travel-stained though I was, to Canaples, realising fully that there
+was no time to lose.
+
+Old Guilbert, who came in answer to my knock at the door of the château,
+looked askance when he beheld me, and when I bade him carry my compliments
+to the Chevalier, with the message that I desired immediate speech of him
+on a matter of the gravest moment, he shook his grey head and protested
+that it would be futile to obey me. Yet, in the end, when I had insisted,
+he went upon my errand, but only to return with a disturbed countenance, to
+tell me that the Chevalier refused to see me.
+
+"But I must speak to him, Guilbert," I exclaimed, setting foot upon the top
+step. "I have travelled expressly from Paris."
+
+The man stood firm and again shook his head.
+
+"I beseech you not to insist, Monsieur. M. le Chevalier has sworn to
+dismiss me if I permit you to set foot within the château."
+
+"Mille diables! This is madness! I seek to serve him," I cried, my temper
+rising fast. "At least, Guilbert, will you tell Mademoiselle that I am
+here, and that I--"
+
+"I may carry no more messages for you, Monsieur," he broke in. "Listen!
+There is M. le Chevalier."
+
+In reality I could hear the old knight's voice, loud and shrill with anger,
+and a moment later Louis, his intendant, came across the hall.
+
+"Guilbert," he commanded harshly, "close the door. The night air is keen."
+
+My cheeks aflame with anger, I still made one last attempt to gain an
+audience.
+
+"Master Louis," I exclaimed, "will you do me the favour to tell M. de
+Canaples--"
+
+"You are wasting time, Monsieur," he interrupted. "M. de Canaples will not
+see you. He bids you close the door, Guilbert."
+
+"Pardieu! he shall see me!"
+
+"The door, Guilbert!"
+
+I took a step forward, but before I could gain the threshold, the door was
+slammed in my face, and as I stood there, quivering with anger and
+disappointment, I heard the bolts being shot within.
+
+I turned with an oath.
+
+"Come, Abdon," I growled, as I climbed once more into the saddle, "let us
+leave the fool to the fate he has chosen."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+OF HOW ST. AUBAN CAME TO BLOIS
+
+
+In silence we rode back to Blois. Not that I lacked matter for
+conversation. Anger and chagrin at the thought that I had come upon this
+journey to earn naught but an insult and to have a door slammed in my face
+made my gorge rise until it went near to choking me. I burned to revile
+Canaples aloud, but Abdon's was not the ear into which I might pour the hot
+words that welled up to my lips.
+
+Yet if silent, the curses that I heaped upon the Chevalier's crassness were
+none the less fervent, and to myself I thought with grim relish of how soon
+and how dearly he would pay for the affront he had put upon me.
+
+That satisfaction, however, endured not long; for presently I bethought me
+of how heavily the punishment would fall upon Yvonne--and yet, of how she
+would be left to the mercy of St. Auban, whose warrant from Mazarin would
+invest with almost any and every power at Canaples.
+
+I ground my teeth at the sudden thought, and for a moment I was on the
+point of going back and forcing my way into the château at the sword point
+if necessary, to warn and save the Chevalier in spite of himself and
+unthanked.
+
+It was not in such a fashion that I had thought to see my mission to
+Canaples accomplished; I had dreamt of gratitude, and gratitude unbars the
+door to much. Nevertheless, whether or not I earned it, I must return, and
+succeed where for want of insistence I had failed awhile ago.
+
+Of a certainty I should have acted thus, but that at the very moment upon
+which I formed the resolution Abdon drew my attention to a dark shadow by
+the roadside not twenty paces in front of us. This proved to be the
+motionless figure of a horseman.
+
+As soon as I was assured of it, I reined in my horse, and taking a pistol
+from the holster, I levelled it at the shadow, accompanying the act by a
+sonorous--
+
+"Who goes there?"
+
+The shadow stirred, and Michelot's voice answered me:
+
+'T is I, Monsieur. They have arrived. I came to warn you."
+
+"Who has arrived?" I shouted.
+
+"The soldiers. They are lodged at the Lys de France."
+
+An oath was the only comment I made as I turned the news over in my mind.
+I must return to Canaples.
+
+Then another thought occurred to me. The Chevalier was capable of going to
+extremes to keep me from entering his house; he might for instance greet me
+with a blunderbuss. It was not the fear of that that deterred me, but the
+fear that did a charge of lead get mixed with my poor brains before I had
+said what I went to say, matters would be no better, and there would be one
+poor knave the less to adorn the world.
+
+"What shall we do, Michelot?" I groaned, appealing in my despair to my
+henchman.
+
+"Might it not be well to seek speech with M. de Montrésor?" quoth he.
+
+I shrugged my shoulders. Nevertheless, after a moment's deliberation I
+determined to make the attempt; if I succeeded something might come of it.
+
+And so I pushed on to Blois with my knaves close at my heels.
+
+Up the Rue Vieille we proceeded with caution, for the hostelry of the Vigne
+d'Or, where Michelot had hired me a room, fortunately overlooking the
+street, fronted the Lys de France, where St. Auban and his men were housed.
+
+I gained that room of mine without mishap, and my first action was to deal
+summarily with a fat and well-roasted capon which the landlord set before
+me--for an empty stomach is a poor comrade in a desperate situation. That
+meal, washed down with the best part of a bottle of red Anjou, did much to
+restore me alike in body and in mind.
+
+From my open window I gazed across the street at the Lys de France. The
+door of the common-room, opening upon the street, was set wide, and across
+the threshold came a flood of light in which there flitted the black
+figures of maybe a dozen amazed rustics, drawn thither for all the world as
+bats are drawn to a glare.
+
+And there they hovered with open mouths and stupid eyes, hearkening to the
+din of voices that floated out on the tranquil air, the snatches of ribald
+songs, the raucous bursts of laughter, the clink of glasses, the clank of
+steel, the rattle of dice, and the strange soldier oaths that fell with
+every throw, and which to them must have sounded almost as words of some
+foreign tongue.
+
+Whilst I stood by my window, the landlord entered my room, and coming up to
+me--
+
+"Thank Heaven they are not housed at the Vigne d'Or," he said. "It will
+take Maître Bernard a week to rid his house of the stench of leather. They
+are part of a stray company that is on its way to fight the Spaniards," he
+informed me. "But methinks they will be forced to spend two or three days
+at Blois; their horses are sadly jaded and will need that rest before they
+can take the road again, thanks to the pace at which their boy of an
+officer must have led them. There is a gentleman with them who wears a
+mask. 'T is whispered that he is a prince of the blood who has made a vow
+not to uncover his face until this war be ended, in expiation of some sin
+committed in mad Paris."
+
+I heard him in silence, and when he had done I thanked him for his
+information. So! This was the story that the crafty St. Auban had spread
+abroad to lull suspicion touching the real nature of their presence until
+their horses should be fit to undertake the return journey to Paris, or
+until he should have secured the person of M. de Canaples.
+
+Towards eleven o'clock, as the lights in the hostelry opposite were burning
+low, I descended, and made my way out into the now deserted street. The
+troopers had apparently seen fit--or else been ordered--to seek their beds,
+for the place had grown silent, and a servant was in the act of making fast
+the door for the night. The porte-cochère was half closed, and a man
+carrying a lantern was making fast the bolt, whistling aimlessly to
+himself. Through the half of the door that was yet open, I beheld a window
+from which the light fell upon a distant corner of the courtyard.
+
+I drew near the fellow with the lantern, in whom I recognised René, the
+hostler, and as I approached he flashed the light upon my face; then with a
+gasp--"M. de Luynes," he exclaimed, remembering me from the time when I had
+lodged at the Lys de France, three months ago.
+
+"Sh!" I whispered, pressing a louis d'or into his hand. "Whose window is
+that, René?" And I pointed towards the light.
+
+"That," he replied, "is the room of the lieutenant and the gentleman in the
+mask."
+
+"I must take a look at them, René, and whilst I am looking I shall search
+my pocket for another louis. Now let me in."
+
+"I dare not, Monsieur. Maître Bernard may call me, and if the doors are
+not closed--"
+
+"Dame!" I broke in. "I shall stay but a moment."
+
+"But--"
+
+"And you will have easily earned a louis d'or. If Bernard calls you--
+peste, tell him that you have let fall something, and that you are seeking
+it. There, let me pass."
+
+1 got past him at last, and made my way swiftly towards the other end of
+the quadrangle.
+
+As I approached, the sound of voices smote my ear, for the lighted window
+stood open. I stopped within half a dozen paces of it, and climbed on to
+the step of a coach that stood there. Thence I could look straight into
+the room, whilst the darkness hid me from the eyes of those I watched.
+
+Three men there were; Montrésor, the sergeant of his troop, and a tall man
+dressed in black, and wearing a black silk mask. This I concluded to be
+St. Auban, despite the profusion of fair locks that fell upon his
+shoulders, concealing--I rightly guessed--his natural hair, which was as
+black as my own. It was a cunning addition to his disguise, and one well
+calculated to lead people on to the wrong scent hereafter.
+
+Presently, as I watched them, St. Auban spoke, and his voice was that of a
+man whose gums are toothless, or else whose nether lip is drawn in over his
+teeth whilst he speaks. Here again the dissimulation was as effective as
+it was simple.
+
+"So; that is concluded," were the words that reached me. "To-morrow we
+will install our men at the château, for while we remain here it is
+preposterous to lodge them at an inn. On the following day I hope that we
+may be able to set out again."
+
+"If we could obtain fresh horses--" began the sergeant, when he of the mask
+interrupted him.
+
+"Sangdieu! Think you my purse is bottomless? We return as we came, with
+the Cardinal's horses. What signify a day or two, after all? Come--call
+the landlord to light me to my room."
+
+I had heard enough. But more than that, whilst I listened, an idea had of
+a sudden sprung up in my mind which did away with the necessity of gaining
+speech with Montresor--a contingency, moreover, that now presented
+insuperable difficulties.
+
+So I got down softly from my perch and made my way out of the yard, and,
+after fulfilling my part of the bargain with René, across to the Vigne d'Or
+and to my room, there to sit and mature the plan that of a sudden I had
+conceived.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+OF THE PASSING OF ST. AUBAN
+
+
+Dame! What an ado there was next day in Blois, when the news came that the
+troopers had installed themselves at the Château de Canaples and that the
+Chevalier had been arrested for treason by order of the Lord Cardinal, and
+that he would be taken to Paris, and--probably--the scaffold.
+
+Men gathered in little knots at street corners, and with sullen brows and
+threatening gestures they talked of the affair; and the more they talked,
+the more clouded grew their looks, and more than one anti-cardinalist
+pasquinade was heard in Blois that day.
+
+Given a leader those men would have laid hands upon pikes and muskets, and
+gone to the Chevalier's rescue. As I observed them, the thought did cross
+my mind that I might contrive a pretty fight in the rose garden of Canaples
+were I so inclined. And so inclined I should, indeed, have been but for
+the plan that had come to me like an inspiration from above, and which
+methought would prove safer in the end.
+
+To carry out this plan of mine, I quitted Blois at nightfall, with my two
+knaves, having paid my reckoning at the Lys de France, and given out that
+we were journeying to Tours. We followed the road that leads to Canaples,
+until we reached the first trees bordering the park. There I dismounted,
+and, leaving Abdon to guard the horses, I made my way on foot, accompanied
+by Michelot, towards the garden.
+
+We gained this, and were on the point of quitting the shadow of the trees,
+when of a sudden, by the light of the crescent moon, I beheld a man walking
+in one of the alleys, not a hundred paces from where we stood. I had but
+time to seize Michelot by the collar of his pourpoint and draw him towards
+me. But as he trod precipitately backwards a twig snapped 'neath his foot
+with a report that in the surrounding stillness was like a pistol shot.
+
+I caught my breath as he who walked in the garden stood still, his face,
+wrapped in the shadows of his hat, turned towards us.
+
+"Who goes there?" he shouted. Then getting no reply he came resolutely
+forward, whilst I drew a pistol wherewith to welcome him did he come too
+near.
+
+On he came, and already I had brought my pistol to a level with his head,
+when fortunately he repeated his question, "Who goes there?"--and this time
+I recognised the voice of Montrésor, the very man I could then most wish to
+meet.
+
+"Hist! Montrésor!" I called softly. "'T is I--Luynes."
+
+"So!" he exclaimed, coming close up to me. "You have reached Canaples at
+last!"
+
+"At last?" I echoed.
+
+"Whom have you there?" he inquired abruptly.
+
+"Only Michelot."
+
+"Bid him fall behind a little."
+
+When Michelot had complied with this request, "You see, M. de Luynes,"
+quoth the officer, "that you have arrived too late."
+
+There was a certain coldness in his tone that made me seek by my reply to
+sound him.
+
+"Indeed, I trust not, my friend. With your assistance I hope to get M. de
+Canaples from the clutches of St. Auban."
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"It is impossible that I should help you," he replied with increasing
+coldness. "Already once for your sake have I broken faith to those who pay
+me, by setting you in a position to forestall St. Auban and get M. de
+Canaples away before his arrival. Unfortunately, you have dallied on the
+road, M. de Luynes, and Canaples is already a prisoner--a doomed one, I
+fear."
+
+"Is that your last word, Montrésor?" I inquired sadly.
+
+"I am sorry," he answered in softened tones, "but you must see that I
+cannot do otherwise. I warned you; more you cannot expect of me."
+
+I sighed, and stood musing for an instant. Then--"You are right,
+Montrésor. Nevertheless, I am still grateful to you for the warning you
+gave me in Paris. God pity and help Canaples! Adieu, Montrésor. I do not
+think that you will see me again."
+
+He took my hand, but as he did so he pushed me back into the shadow from
+which I had stepped to proffer it him.
+
+"Peste!" he ejaculated. "The moon was full upon your face, and did St.
+Auban chance to look out, he must have seen you."
+
+I followed the indication of his thumb, and noted the lighted window to
+which he pointed. A moment later he was gone, and as I joined Michelot, I
+chuckled softly to myself.
+
+For two hours and more I sat in the shrubbery, conversing in whispers with
+Michelot, and watching the lights in the château die out one by one, until
+St. Auban's window, which opened on to the terrace balcony, was the only
+one that was not wrapt in darkness.
+
+I waited a little while longer, then rising I cautiously made a tour of
+inspection. Peace reigned everywhere, and the only sign of life was the
+sentry, who with musket on shoulder paced in front of the main entrance, a
+silent testimony of St. Auban's mistrust of the Blaisois and of his fears
+of a possible surprise.
+
+Satisfied that everyone slept I retraced my steps to the shrubbery where
+Michelot awaited me, watching the square of light, and after exchanging
+word with him, I again stepped forth.
+
+When I was half way across the intervening space of garden, treading with
+infinite precaution, a dark shadow obscured the window, which a second
+later was thrown open. Crouching hastily behind a boxwood hedge, I watched
+St. Auban--for I guessed that he it was--as he leaned out and gazed
+skywards.
+
+For a little while he remained there, then he withdrew, leaving the
+casement open, and presently I caught the grating of a chair on the parquet
+floor within. If ever the gods favoured mortal, they favoured me at that
+moment.
+
+Stealthily as a cat I sprang towards the terrace, the steps to which I
+climbed on hands and knees. Stooping, I sped silently across it until I
+had gained the flower-bed immediately below the window that had drawn me to
+it. Crouching there--for did I stand upright my chin would be on a level
+with the sill--I paused to listen for some moments. The only sound I
+caught was a rustle, as of paper. Emboldened, I took a deep breath, and
+standing up I gazed straight into the chamber.
+
+By the light of four tapers in heavy silver sconces, I beheld St. Auban
+seated at a table littered with parchments, over which he was intently
+poring. His back was towards me, and his long black hair hung straight
+upon his shoulders. On the table, amid the papers, lay his golden wig and
+black mask, and on the floor in the centre of the room, his back and breast
+of blackened steel and his sword.
+
+It needed but little shrewdness to guess those parchments before him to be
+legal documents touching the Canaples estates, and his occupation that of
+casting up exactly what profit he would reap from his infamous work of
+betrayal.
+
+So intent was the hound upon his calculations that my cautious movements
+passed unheeded by him as I got astride of the window ledge. It was only
+when I swung my right leg into the room that he turned his head, but before
+his eyes reached me I was standing upright and motionless within the
+chamber.
+
+I have seen fear of many sorts writ large upon the faces of men of many
+conditions--from the awe that blanches the cheek of the boy soldier when
+first he hears the cannon thundering to the terror that glazes the eye of
+the vanquished swordsman who at every moment expects the deadly point in
+his heart. But never had I gazed upon a countenance filled with such
+abject ghastly terror as that which came over St. Auban's when his eyes met
+mine that night.
+
+He sprang up with an inarticulate cry that sank into something that I can
+but liken to the rattle which issues from the throat of expiring men. For
+a second he stood where he had risen, then terror loosened his knees, and
+he sank back into his chair. His mouth fell open, and the trembling lips
+were drawn down at the corners like those of a sobbing child; his cheeks
+turned whiter than the lawn collar at his throat, and his eyes, wide open
+in a horrid stare, were fixed on mine and, powerless to avert them, he met
+my gaze--cold, stern, and implacable.
+
+For a moment we remained thus, and I marvelled greatly to see a man whose
+heart, if full of evil, I had yet deemed stout enough, stricken by fear
+into so parlous and pitiful a condition.
+
+Then I had the explanation of it as he lifted his right hand and made the
+sign of the cross, first upon himself, then in the air, whilst his lips
+moved, and I guessed that to himself he was muttering some prayer of
+exorcising purport. There was the solution of the terror--sweat that stood
+out in beads upon his brow--he had deemed me a spectre; the spectre of a
+man he believed to have foully done to death on a spot across the Loire
+visible from the window at my back.
+
+At last he sufficiently mastered himself to break the awful silence.
+
+"What do you want?" he whispered; then, his voice gaining power as he used
+it-- "Speak," he commanded. "Man or devil, speak!"
+
+I laughed for answer, harshly, mockingly; for never had I known a fiercer,
+crueller mood. At the sound of that laugh, satanical though may have been
+its ring, he sprang up again, and unsheathing a dagger he took a step
+towards me.
+
+"We shall see of what you are made," he cried. "If you blast me in the
+act, I'll strike you!"
+
+I laughed again, and raising my arm I gave him the nozzle of a pistol to
+contemplate.
+
+"Stand where you are, St. Auban, or, by the God above us, I'll send your
+ghost a-wandering," quoth I coolly.
+
+My voice, which I take it had nothing ghostly in it, and still more the
+levelled pistol, which of all implements is the most unghostly, dispelled
+his dread. The colour crept slowly back to his cheeks, and his mouth
+closed with a snap of determination.
+
+"Is it, indeed, you, master meddler?" he said. "Peste! I thought you dead
+these three months."
+
+"And you are overcome with joy to find that you were in error, eh, Marquis?
+We Luynes die hard."
+
+"It seems so, indeed," he answered with a cool effrontery past crediting in
+one who but a moment ago had looked so pitiful. "What do you seek at
+Canaples?"
+
+"Many things, Marquis. You among others."
+
+"You have come to murder me," he cried, and again alarm overspread his
+countenance.
+
+"Hoity, toity, Marquis! We do not all follow the same trade. Who talks of
+murder? Faugh!"
+
+Again he took a step towards me, but again the nozzle of my pistol drove
+him back. To have pistoled him there and then as he deserved would have
+brought the household about my ears, and that would have defeated my
+object. To have fallen upon him and slain him with silent steel would have
+equally embarrassed me, as you shall understand anon.
+
+"You and I had a rendezvous at St. Sulpice des Reaux," I said calmly, "to
+which you came with a band of hired assassins. For this you deserve to be
+shot like the dog you are. But I have it in my heart to be generous to
+you," I added in a tone of irony. "Come, take up your sword."
+
+"To what purpose?"
+
+"Do you question me? Take up your sword, man, and do my bidding; thus
+shall you have a slender chance of life. Refuse and I pistol you without
+compunction. So now put on that wig and mask."
+
+When he obeyed me in this--"Now listen, St. Auban," I said. "You and I are
+going together to that willow copse whither three months ago you lured
+Yvonne de Canaples for the purpose of abducting her. On that spot you and
+I shall presently face each other sword in hand, with none other to witness
+our meeting save God, in whose hands the issue lies. That is your chance;
+at the first sign that you meditate playing me any tricks, that chance is
+lost to you." And I tapped my pistol significantly. "Now climb out
+through that window."
+
+When he had done so, I bade him stand six paces away whilst I followed, and
+to discourage any foolish indiscretion on his part I again showed him my
+pistol.
+
+He answered me with an impatient gesture, and by the light that fell on his
+face I saw him sneer.
+
+"Come on, you fool," he snarled, "and have done threatening. I'll talk to
+you in the copse. And tread softly lest you arouse the sentry on the other
+side."
+
+Rejoiced to see the man so wide awake in him, I followed him closely across
+the terrace, and through the rose garden to the bank of the river. This we
+followed until we came at last to the belt of willows, where, having found
+a suitable patch of even and springy turf, I drew my sword and invited him
+to make ready.
+
+"Will you not strip?" he inquired sullenly.
+
+"I do not think so," I answered. "The night air is sharp. Nevertheless,
+do you make ready as best you deem fit, and that speedily, Monsieur."
+
+With an exclamation of contempt, he divested himself of his wig, mask, and
+doublet, then drawing his sword, he came forward, and announced himself at
+my disposal.
+
+As well you may conceive, we wasted no time in compliments, but straightway
+went to work, and that with a zest that drew sparks from our rapiers at the
+first contact.
+
+The Marquis attacked me furiously, and therein lay his only chance; for a
+fierce, rude sword-play that is easily dealt with in broad daylight is
+vastly discomposing in such pale moonshine as lighted us. I defended
+myself warily, for of a sudden I had grown conscious of the danger that I
+ran did he once by luck or strength get past my guard with that point of
+his which in the spare light I could not follow closely enough to feel
+secure.
+
+'Neath the fury of his onslaught I was compelled to break ground more than
+once, and each time he was so swift to follow up his advantage that I had
+ne'er a chance to retaliate.
+
+Still fear or doubt of the issue I had none. I needed but to wait until
+the Marquis's fury was spent by want of breath, to make an end of it. And
+presently that which I waited for came about. His attack began to lag in
+vigour, and the pressure of his blade to need less resistance, whilst his
+breathing grew noisy as that of a broken-winded horse. Then with the rage
+of a gambler who loses at every throw, he cursed and reviled me with every
+thrust or lunge that I turned aside.
+
+My turn was come; yet I held back, and let him spend his strength to the
+utmost drop, whilst with my elbow close against my side and by an easy play
+of wrist, I diverted each murderous stroke of his point that came again and
+again for my heart.
+
+When at last he had wasted in blasphemies what little breath his wild
+exertions had left him, I let him feel on his blade the twist that heralded
+my first riposte. He caught the thrust, and retreated a step, his
+blasphemous tongue silenced, and his livid face bathed in perspiration.
+
+Cruelly I toyed with him then, and with every disengagement I made him
+realise that he was mastered, and that if I withheld the coup de grâce it
+was but to prolong his agony. And to add to the bitterness of that agony
+of his, I derided him whilst I fenced; with a recitation of his many sins I
+mocked him, showing him how ripe he was for hell, and asking him how it
+felt to die unshriven with such a load upon his soul.
+
+Goaded to rage by my bitter words, he grit his teeth, and gathered what
+rags of strength were left him for a final effort, And before I knew what
+he was about, he had dropped on to his left knee, and with his body thrown
+forward and supported within a foot of the ground by his left arm, he came,
+like a snake, under my guard with his point directed upwards.
+
+So swift had been this movement and so unlooked-for, that had I not sprung
+backwards in the very nick of time, this narrative of mine had ne'er been
+written. With a jeering laugh I knocked aside his sword, but even as I
+disengaged, to thrust at him, he knelt up and caught my blade in his left
+hand, and for all that it ate its way through the flesh to the very bones
+of his fingers, he clung to it with that fierce strength and blind courage
+that is born of despair.
+
+Then raising himself on his knees again, he struck at me wildly. I swung
+aside, and as his sword, missing its goal, shot past me, I caught his wrist
+in a grip from which I contemptuously invited him to free himself. With
+that began a fierce tugging and panting on both sides, which, however, was
+of short duration, for presently, my blade, having severed the last sinew
+of his fingers, was set free. Simultaneously I let go his wrist, pushing
+his arm from me so violently that in his exhausted condition it caused him
+to fall over on his side.
+
+In an instant, however, he was up and at me again. Again our swords
+clashed--but once only. It was time to finish. With a vigorous
+disengagement I got past his feeble guard and sent my blade into him full
+in the middle of his chest and out again at his back until a foot or so of
+glittering steel protruded.
+
+A shudder ran through him, and his mouth worked oddly, whilst spasmodically
+he still sought, without avail, to raise his sword; then as I recovered my
+blade, a half-stifled cry broke from his lips, and throwing up his arms, he
+staggered and fell in a heap.
+
+As I turned him over to see if he were dead, his eyes met mine, and were
+full of piteous entreaty; his lips moved, and presently I caught the words:
+
+"I am sped, Luynes." Then struggling up, and in a louder voice: "A
+priest!" he gasped. "Get me a priest, Luynes. Jesu! Have mer--"
+
+A rush of blood choked him and cut short his utterance. He writhed and
+twitched for a moment, then his chin sank forward and he fell back, death
+starkening his limbs and glazing the eyes which stared hideously upwards at
+the cold, pitiless moon.
+
+Such was the passing of the Marquis César de St. Auban.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+PLAY-ACTING
+
+
+For a little while I stood gazing down at my work, my mind full of the
+unsolvable mysteries of life and death; then I bethought me that time stood
+not still for me, and that something yet remained to be accomplished ere my
+evening's task were done.
+
+And forthwith I made shift to do a thing at the memory of which my blood is
+chilled and my soul is filled with loathing even now--albeit the gulf of
+many years separates me from that June night at Canaples.
+
+To pass succinctly o'er an episode on which I have scant heart to tarry,
+suffice it you to know that using my sash as a rope I bound a heavy stone
+to St. Auban's ankle; then lifting the body in my arms, I half dragged,
+half bore it across the little stretch of intervening sward to the water's
+edge, and flung it in.
+
+As I write I have the hideous picture in my mind, and again I can see St.
+Auban's ghastly face grinning up at me through the moonlit waters, until at
+last it was mercifully swallowed up in their black depths, and naught but a
+circling wavelet that spread swiftly across the stream was left to tell of
+what had chanced.
+
+I dare not dwell upon the feelings that assailed me as I stooped to rinse
+the blood from my hands, nor yet of the feverish haste wherewith I tore my
+blood-stained doublet from my back, and hurled it wide into the stream.
+For all my callousness I was sick and unmanned by that which had befallen.
+
+No time, however, did I waste in mawkish sentiment, but setting my teeth
+hard, I turned away from the river, and back to the trampled ground of our
+recent conflict. There, with no other witness save the moon, I clad myself
+in the Marquis's doublet of black velvet; I set his mask of silk upon my
+face, his golden wig upon my head, and over that his sable hat with its
+drooping feather. Next I buckled on his sword belt, wherefrom hung his
+rapier that I had sheathed.
+
+In Blois that day I had taken the precaution--knowing the errand upon which
+I came--to procure myself haut-de-chausses of black velvet, and black
+leather boots with gilt spurs that closely resembled those which St. Auban
+had worn in life.
+
+Now, as I have already written, St. Auban and I were of much the same build
+and stature, and so methought with confidence that he would have shrewd
+eyes, indeed, who could infer from my appearance that I was other than the
+same masked gentleman who had that very day ridden into Canaples at the
+head of a troop of his Eminence's guards.
+
+I made my way swiftly back along the path that St. Auban and I had together
+trodden but a little while ago, and past the château until I came to the
+shrubbery where Michelot--faithful to the orders I had given him--awaited
+my return. From his concealment he had seen me leave the château with the
+Marquis, and as I suddenly loomed up before him now, he took me for the man
+whose clothes I wore, and naturally enough assumed that ill had befallen
+Gaston de Luynes. Of a certainty I had been pistolled by him had I not
+spoken in time. I lingered but to give him certain necessary orders; then,
+whilst he went off to join Abdon and see to their fulfilment, I made my way
+stealthily, with eyes keeping watch around me, across the terrace, and
+through the window into the room that St. Auban had left to follow me to
+his death.
+
+The tapers still burned, and in all respects the chamber was as it had
+been; the back and breast pieces still lay upon the floor, and on the table
+the littered documents. The door I ascertained had been locked on the
+inside, a precaution which St. Auban had no doubt taken so that none might
+spy upon the work that busied him.
+
+I closed and made fast the window, then I bethought me that, being in
+ignorance of the whereabouts of St. Auban's bed-chamber, I must perforce
+spend the night as best I could within that very room.
+
+And so I sat me down and pondered deeply o'er the work that was to come,
+the part I was about to play, and the details of its playing. In this
+manner did I while away perchance an hour; through the next one I must have
+slept, for I awakened with a start to find three tapers spent and the last
+one spluttering, and in the sky the streaks that heralded the summer dawn.
+
+Again I fell to thinking; again I slept, and woke again to find the night
+gone and the sunlight on my face. Someone knocked at the door, and that
+knocking vibrated through my brain and set me wide-awake, indeed. It was
+as the signal to uplift the curtain and let my play-acting commence.
+
+Hastily I rose and shot a glance at the mirror to see that my wig hung
+straight and that my mask was rightly adjusted. I started at my own
+reflection, for methought that from the glass 't was St. Auban who looked
+at me, as I had seen him look the night before when he had donned those
+things at my command.
+
+"Holà there, within!" came Montrésor's voice. "Monsieur le Capitaine!" A
+fresh shower of blows descended on the oak panels.
+
+I yawned with prodigious sonority, and overturned a chair with my foot.
+Then bracing myself for the ordeal, through which I looked to what scant
+information I possessed and my own mother wit, to bear me successfully, I
+strode across to admit my visitor.
+
+Muffling my voice, as I had heard St. Auban do at the inn, by drawing my
+nether lip over my teeth--
+
+"Pardieu!" quoth I, as I opened the door, "it seems, Lieutenant, that I
+must have fallen asleep over those musty documents."
+
+I trembled as I watched him, waiting for his reply, and I thanked Heaven
+that in the rôle I had assumed a mask was worn, not only because it hid my
+features, but because it hid the emotions which these might have betrayed.
+
+"I was beginning to fear," he replied coldly, and without so much as
+looking at me, "that worse had befallen you."
+
+I breathed again.
+
+"You mean--?"
+
+"Pooh, nothing," said he half contemptuously. "Only methinks 't were well
+whilst we remain at Canaples that you do not spend your nights in a room
+within such easy access of the terrace."
+
+"Your advice no doubt is sound, but as I shall not spend another night at
+Canaples, it comes too late."
+
+"You mean, Monsieur--?"
+
+"That we set out for Paris to-day."
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Oh, ça! I have just visited the stables, and there are not four horses
+fit for the journey. So that unless you have in mind the purchase of fresh
+animals--"
+
+"Pish! My purse is not bottomless," I broke in, repeating the very words
+that I heard St. Auban utter.
+
+"So you said once before, Monsieur. Still, unless you are prepared to take
+that course, the only alternative is to remain here until the horses are
+sufficiently recovered. But perhaps you think of walking?" he added with a
+sniff.
+
+"Such is your opinion, your time being worthless and it being of little
+moment where you spend it. I have conceived a plan."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"Has it not occurred to you that the danger which threatens us and which
+calls for the protection of a troop is only on this side of the Loire,
+where the Blaisois might be minded to attempt a rescue of the Chevalier?
+But over yonder, Chevalier, on the Chambord side, who cares a fig for the
+Lord of Canaples or his fate? None; is it not so?"
+
+He made an assenting gesture, whereupon I continued:
+
+"This being so, I have bethought me that it will suffice if I take but
+three or four men and the sergeant as an escort, and cross the river with
+our prisoner after nightfall, travelling along the opposite shore until we
+reach Orleans. What think you, Lieutenant?"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders again.
+
+"'T is you who command here," he answered with apathy, "not I."
+
+"Nevertheless, do you not think the plan a safe one, as well as one that
+will allay his Eminence's very natural impatience?"
+
+"Oh, it is safe enough, I doubt not," he replied coldly.
+
+"Your enthusiasm determines me," quoth I, with an irony that made him
+wince. "And we will follow the plan, since you agree with me touching its
+excellence. But keep the matter to yourself until an hour or so after
+sunset."
+
+He bowed, so utterly my dupe that I could have laughed at him. Then--
+"There is a little matter that I would mention," he said. "Mademoiselle de
+Canaples has expressed a wish to accompany her father to Paris and has
+asked me whether this will be permitted her."
+
+My heart leaped. Surely the gods fought on my side!
+
+"I cannot permit it," I answered icily.
+
+"Monsieur, you are pitiless," he protested in a tone of indignation for
+which I would gladly have embraced him.
+
+I feigned to ponder.
+
+"The matter needs consideration. Tell Mademoiselle that I will discuss it
+with her at noon, if she will condescend to await me on the terrace; I will
+then give her my definite reply. And now, Lieutenant, let us breakfast."
+
+As completely as I had duped Montrésor did I presently dupe those of the
+troopers with whom I came in contact, among others the sergeant--and anon
+the Chevalier himself.
+
+From the brief interview that I had with him I discovered that whilst he
+but vaguely suspected me to be St. Auban--and when I say "he suspected me"
+I mean he suspected him whose place I had taken--he was, nevertheless,
+aware of the profit which his captor, whoever he might be, derived from
+this business. It soon grew clear to me from what he said that St. Auban
+had mocked him with it whilst concealing his identity; that he had told him
+how he had obtained from Malpertuis the treasonable letter, and of the
+bargain which it had enabled him to strike with Mazarin. I did not long
+remain in his company, and, deeming the time not yet ripe for disclosures,
+I said little in answer to his lengthy tirades, which had, I guessed, for
+scope to trap me into betraying the identity he but suspected.
+
+It wanted a few minutes to noon as I left the room in which the old
+nobleman was confined, and by the door of which a trooper was stationed,
+musket on shoulder. With every pulse a-throbbing at the thought of my
+approaching interview with Mademoiselle, I made my way below and out into
+the bright sunshine, the soldiers I chanced to meet saluting me as I passed
+them.
+
+On the terrace I found Mademoiselle already awaiting me. She was standing,
+as often I had seen her stand, with her back turned towards me and her
+elbows resting upon the balustrade. But as my step sounded behind her, she
+turned, and stood gazing at me with a face so grief-stricken and pale that
+I burned to unmask and set her torturing fears at rest. I doffed my hat
+and greeted her with a silent bow, which she contemptuously disregarded.
+
+"My lieutenant tells me, Mademoiselle," said I in my counterfeited voice,
+"that it is your desire to bear Monsieur your father company upon this
+journey of his to Paris."
+
+"With your permission, sir," she answered in a choking voice.
+
+"It is a matter for consideration, Mademoiselle," I pursued. "There are in
+it many features that may have escaped you, and which I shall discuss with
+you if you will honour me by stepping into the garden below."
+
+"Why will not the terrace serve?"
+
+"Because I may have that to say which I would not have overheard."
+
+She knit her brows and stared at me as though she would penetrate the black
+cloth that hid my face. At last she shrugged her shoulders, and letting
+her arms fall to her side in a gesture of helplessness and resignation--
+
+"Soit; I will go with you," was all she said.
+
+Side by side we went down the steps as a pair of lovers might have gone,
+save that her face was white and drawn, and that her eyes looked straight
+before her, and never once, until we reached the gravel path below, at her
+companion. Side by side we walked along one of the rose-bordered alleys,
+until at length I stopped.
+
+"Mademoiselle," I said, speaking in the natural tones of that good-for-
+naught Gaston de Luynes, "I have already decided, and you have my
+permission to accompany your father."
+
+At the sound of my voice she started, and with her left hand clutching at
+the region of her heart, she stood, her head thrust forward, and on her
+face the look of one who is confronted with some awful doubt. That look
+was brief, however, and swift to replace it was one of hideous revelation.
+
+"In God's name, who are you?" she cried in accents that bespoke internal
+agony.
+
+"Already you have guessed it, Mademoiselle," I answered, and I would have
+added that which should have brought comfort to her distraught mind, when--
+
+"You!" she gasped in a voice of profound horror. "You! You, the Judas who
+has sold my father to the Cardinal for a paltry share in our estates. And
+I believed that mask of yours to hide the face of St. Auban!"
+
+Her words froze me into a stony mass of insensibility. There was no logic
+in my attitude; I see it now. Appearances were all against me, and her
+belief no more than justified. I overlooked all this, and instead of
+saving time by recounting how I came to be there and thus delivering her
+from the anguish that was torturing her, I stood, dumb and cruel, cut to
+the quick by her scorn and her suspicions that I was capable of such a
+thing as she imputed, and listening to the dictates of an empty pride that
+prompted me to make her pay full penalty.
+
+"Oh, God pity me!" she wailed. "Have you naught to say?"
+
+Still I maintained my mad, resentful silence. And presently, as one who
+muses--
+
+"You!" she said again. "You, whom I--" She stopped short. "Oh! The
+shame of it!" she moaned.
+
+Reason at last came uppermost, and as in my mind I completed her broken
+sentence, my heart gave a great throb and I was thawed to a gentler
+purpose.
+
+"Mademoiselle!" I exclaimed.
+
+But even as I spoke, she turned, and sweeping aside her gown that it might
+not touch me, she moved rapidly towards the steps we had just descended.
+Full of remorse, I sprang after her.
+
+"Mademoiselle! Hear me," I cried, and put forth my hand to stay her.
+Thereat she wheeled round and faced me, a blaze of fury in her grey eyes.
+
+"Dare not to touch me," she panted. "You thief, you hound!"
+
+I recoiled, and, like one turned to stone, I stood and watched her mount
+the steps, my feelings swaying violently between anger and sorrow. Then my
+eye fell upon Montrésor standing on the topmost step, and on his face there
+was a sneering, insolent smile which told me that he had heard the epithets
+she had bestowed upon me.
+
+Albeit I sought that day another interview with Yvonne, I did not gain it,
+and so I was forced to sun myself in solitude upon the terrace. But I
+cherished for my consolation that broken sentence of hers, whereby I read
+that the coldness which she had evinced for me before I left Canaples had
+only been assumed.
+
+And presently as I recalled what talks we had had, and one in particular
+from which it now appeared to me that her coldness had sprung, a light
+seemed suddenly to break upon my mind, as perchance it hath long ago broken
+upon the minds of those who may happen upon these pages, and whose wits in
+matters amorous are of a keener temper than were mine.
+
+I who in all things had been arrogant, presumptuous, and self-satisfied,
+had methought erred for once through over-humility.
+
+And, indeed, even as I sat and pondered on that June day, it seemed to me a
+thing incredible that she whom I accounted the most queenly and superb of
+women should have deigned to grant a tender thought to one so mean, so far
+beneath her as I had ever held myself to be.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+REPARATION
+
+
+Things came to pass that night as I had planned, and the fates which of
+late had smiled upon me were kind unto the end.
+
+Soon after ten, and before the moon had risen, a silent procession wended
+its way from the château to the river. First went Montrésor and two of his
+men; next came the Chevalier with Mademoiselle, and on either side of them
+a trooper; whilst I, in head-piece and back and breast of steel, went last
+with Mathurin, the sergeant--who warmly praised the plan I had devised for
+the conveyance of M. de Canaples to Paris without further loss of time.
+
+Two boats which I had caused to be secretly procured were in readiness, and
+by these a couple of soldiers awaited us, holding the bridles of eight
+horses, one of which was equipped with a lady's saddle. Five of these
+belonged--or had belonged--to the Chevalier, whilst the others were three
+of those that had brought the troop from Paris, and which I, in the teeth
+of all protestations, had adjudged sufficiently recovered for the return
+journey.
+
+The embarkation was safely effected, M. de Canaples and Mademoiselle in one
+boat with Montrésor, Mathurin, and myself; the sergeant took the oars;
+Montrésor and I kept watch over our prisoner. In the other boat came the
+four troopers, who were to accompany us, and one other who was to take the
+boats, and Montrésor in them, back to Canaples. For the lieutenant was
+returning, so that he might, with the remainder of the troop, follow us to
+Paris so soon as the condition of the horses would permit it.
+
+The beasts we took with us were swimming the stream, guided and upheld by
+the men in the other boat.
+
+Just as the moon began to show her face our bow grated on the shore at the
+very point where I had intended that we should land. I sprang out and
+turned to assist Mademoiselle.
+
+But, disdaining my proffered hand, she stepped ashore unaided. The
+Chevalier came next, and after him Montrésor and Mathurin.
+
+Awhile we waited until the troopers brought their boat to land, then when
+they had got the snorting animals safely ashore, I bade them look to the
+prisoner, and requested Montrésor and Mathurin to step aside with me, as I
+had something to communicate to them.
+
+Walking between the pair, I drew them some twenty paces away from the group
+by the water, towards a certain thicket in which I had bidden Michelot
+await me.
+
+"It has occurred to me, Messieurs," I began, speaking slowly and
+deliberately as we paced along,--"it has occurred to me that despite all
+the precautions taken to carry out my Lord Cardinal's wishes--a work at
+least in which you, yourselves, have evinced a degree of zeal that I cannot
+too highly commend to his Eminence--the possibility yet remains of some
+mistake of trivial appearance, of some slight flaw that might yet cause the
+miscarriage of those wishes."
+
+They turned towards me, and although I could not make out the expressions
+of their faces, in the gloom, yet I doubted not but that they were puzzled
+ones at that lengthy and apparently meaningless harangue.
+
+The sergeant was the first to speak, albeit I am certain that he understood
+the less.
+
+"I venture, M. le Capitaine, to think that your fears, though very natural,
+are groundless."
+
+"Say you so?" quoth I, with a backward glance to assure myself that we were
+screened by the trees from the eyes of those behind us. "Say you so?
+Well, well, mayhap you are right, though you speak of my fears being
+groundless. I alluded to some possible mistake of yours--yours and M. de
+Montrésor's--not of mine. And, by Heaven, a monstrous flaw there is in
+this business, for if either of you so much as whisper I'll blow your
+brains out!"
+
+And to emphasise these words, as sinister as they were unlooked-for, I
+raised both hands suddenly from beneath my cloak, and clapped the cold nose
+of a pistol to the head of each of them.
+
+I was obeyed as men are obeyed who thus uncompromisingly prove the force of
+their commands. Seeing them resigned, I whistled softly, and in answer
+there was a rustle from among the neighbouring trees, and presently two
+shadows emerged from the thicket. In less time than it takes me to relate
+it, Montrésor and his sergeant found themselves gagged, and each securely
+bound to a tree.
+
+Then, with Michelot and Abdon following a short distance behind me, I made
+my way back to the troopers, and, feigning to stumble as I approached, I
+hurtled so violently against two of them that I knocked the pair headlong
+into the stream.
+
+Scarce was it done, and almost before the remaining three had realised it,
+there was a pistol at the head of each of them and sweet promises of an
+eternal hereafter being whispered in their ears. They bore themselves with
+charming discretion, and like lambs we led them each to a tree and dealt
+with them as we had dealt with their officers, whilst the Chevalier and his
+daughter watched us, bewildered and dumfounded at what they saw.
+
+As soon as the other two had crawled--all unconscious of the fates of their
+comrades--out of the river, we served them also in a like manner.
+
+Bidding Abdon and Michelot lead the horses, and still speaking in my
+assumed voice, I desired Mademoiselle and the Chevalier--who had not yet
+sufficiently recovered from his bewilderment to have found his tongue--to
+follow me. I led the way up the gentle slope to the spot where our first
+victims were pinioned.
+
+Montrésor's comely young face looked monstrous wicked in the moonlight, and
+his eyes rolled curiously as he beheld me. Stepping up to him I freed him
+of his gag--an act which I had almost regretted a moment later, for he
+cleared his throat with so lusty a torrent of profanity that methought the
+heavens must have fallen on us. At last when he was done with that--
+"Before you leave me in this plight, M. de St. Auban," quoth he, "perchance
+you will satisfy me with an explanation of your unfathomable deeds and of
+this violence."
+
+"St. Auban!" exclaimed the Chevalier.
+
+"St. Auban!" cried Yvonne.
+
+And albeit wonder rang in both their voices, yet their minds I knew went
+different ways.
+
+"No, not St. Auban," I answered with a laugh and putting aside all
+counterfeit of speech.
+
+"Par la mort Dieu! I know that voice," cried Montrésor.
+
+"Mayhap, indeed! And know you not this face?" And as I spoke I whipped
+away my wig and mask, and thrust my countenance close up to his.
+
+"Thunder of God!" ejaculated the boy. Then--"Pardieu," he added, "there is
+Michelot! How came I not to recognise him?"
+
+"Since you would not assist me, Montrésor, you see I was forced to do
+without you."
+
+"But St. Auban?" he gasped. "Where is he?"
+
+"In heaven, I hope--but I doubt it sadly."
+
+"You have killed him?"
+
+There and then, as briefly as I might, I told him, whilst the others stood
+by to listen, how I had come upon the Marquis in the château the night
+before and what had passed thereafter.
+
+"And now," I said, as I cut his bonds, "it grieves me to charge you with an
+impolite errand to his Eminence, but--"
+
+"I'll not return to him," he burst out. "I dare not. Mon Dieu, you have
+ruined me, Luynes!"
+
+"Then come with me, and I'll build your fortunes anew and on a sounder
+foundation. I have an influential letter in my pocket that should procure
+us fortune in the service of the King of Spain."
+
+He needed little pressing to fall in with my invitation, so we set the
+sergeant free, and him instead I charged with a message that must have
+given Mazarin endless pleasure when it was delivered to him. But he had
+the Canaples estates wherewith to console himself and his never-failing
+maxim that "chi canta, paga." Touching the Canaples estates, however, he
+did not long enjoy them, for when he went into exile, two years later, the
+Parliament returned them to their rightful owner.
+
+The Chevalier de Canaples approached me timidly.
+
+"Monsieur," quoth he, "I have wronged you very deeply. And this generous
+rescue of one who has so little merited your aid truly puts me to so much
+shame that I know not what thanks to offer you."
+
+"Then offer none, Monsieur," I answered, taking his proffered hand.
+"Moreover, time presses and we have a possible pursuit to baffle. So to
+horse, Monsieurs."
+
+I assisted Mademoiselle to mount, and she passively suffered me to do her
+this office, having no word for me, and keeping her face averted from my
+earnest gaze.
+
+I sighed as I turned to mount the horse Michelot held for me; but methinks
+'t was more a sigh of satisfaction than of pain.
+
+ . . . . . . . .
+
+All that night we travelled and all next day until Tours was reached
+towards evening. There we halted for a sorely needed rest and for fresh
+horses.
+
+Three days later we arrived at Nantes, and a week from the night of the
+Chevalier's rescue we took ship from that port to Santander.
+
+That same evening, as I leaned upon the taffrail watching the distant coast
+line of my beloved France, whose soil meseemed I was not like to tread
+again for years, Yvonne came softly up behind me.
+
+"Monsieur," she said in a voice that trembled somewhat, "I have, indeed,
+misjudged you. The shame of it has made me hold aloof from you since we
+left Blois. I cannot tell you, Monsieur, how deep that shame has been, or
+with what sorrow I have been beset for the words I uttered at Canaples.
+Had I but paused to think--"
+
+"Nay, nay, Mademoiselle, 't was all my fault, I swear. I left you overlong
+the dupe of appearances."
+
+"But I should not have believed them so easily. Say that I am forgiven,
+Monsieur," she pleaded; "tell me what reparation I can make."
+
+"There is one reparation that you can make if you are so minded," I
+answered, "but 'tis a life-long reparation."
+
+They were bold words, indeed, but my voice played the coward and shook so
+vilely that it bereft them of half their boldness. But, ah, Dieu, what
+joy, what ecstasy was mine to see how they were read by her; to remark the
+rich, warm blood dyeing her cheeks in a bewitching blush; to behold the
+sparkle that brightened her matchless eyes as they met mine!
+
+"Yvonne!"
+
+"Gaston!"
+
+She was in my arms at last, and the work of reparation was begun whilst
+together we gazed across the sun-gilt sea towards the fading shores of
+France.
+
+If you be curious to learn how, guided by the gentle hand of her who
+plucked me from the vile ways that in my old life I had trodden, I have
+since achieved greatness, honour, and renown, History will tell you.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext The Suitors of Yvonne, by Rafael Sabatini
+
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