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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65619 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65619)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Cerise, by G. J. (George John)
-Whyte-Melville, Illustrated by G. P. Jacomb-Hood
-
-
-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
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Cerise
- A Tale of the Last Century
-
-
-Author: G. J. (George John) Whyte-Melville
-
-
-
-Release Date: June 15, 2021 [eBook #65619]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CERISE***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
-Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 65619-h.htm or 65619-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/65619/65619-h/65619-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/65619/65619-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/cu31924013570126
-
-
-
-
-
-CERISE
-
-
-[Illustration: “CARESSING HER HORSE WITH ONE HAND.”
-
-(_Page 35._)]
-
-
-CERISE
-
-A Tale of the Last Century
-
-by
-
-G. J. WHYTE-MELVILLE
-
-Author of “Market Harborough,” “Katerfelto,”
-“Satanella,” etc., etc.
-
-Illustrated by G. P. Jacomb-Hood
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London
-Ward, Lock & Co., Limited
-New York and Melbourne.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
-
- I. The Daisy-Chain 9
-
- II. The Montmirails 17
-
- III. Monsieur l’Abbé 25
-
- IV. Tantara! 34
-
- V. The Usher of the Black Rod 44
-
- VI. A Jesuit’s Task 51
-
- VII. St. Mark’s Balsam 59
-
- VIII. The Grey Musketeers 68
-
- IX. Eugène Beaudésir 76
-
- X. The Boudoir of Madame 86
-
- XI. What the Serpent Said 94
-
- XII. Out-manœuvred 105
-
- XIII. The Mother of Satan 113
-
- XIV. The Débonnaire 122
-
- XV. The Masked Ball 132
-
- XVI. Raising the Devil 144
-
- XVII. A Quiet Supper 151
-
- XVIII. Baiting the Trap 160
-
- XIX. Mater Pulchrâ, Filia Pulchrior 167
-
- XX. A General Rendezvous 177
-
- XXI. The Fox and Fiddle 185
-
- XXII. Three Strands of a Yarn 193
-
- XXIII. The Parlour-Lodger 202
-
- XXIV. A Volunteer 210
-
- XXV. Three Pressed Men 218
-
- XXVI. “Yo-heave-yo!” 227
-
- XXVII. ‘The Bashful Maid’ 235
-
- XXVIII. Dirty Weather 244
-
- XXIX. Port Welcome 250
-
- XXX. Montmirail West 259
-
- XXXI. Black, but Comely 272
-
- XXXII. A Wise Child 277
-
- XXXIII. Jack Aground 286
-
- XXXIV. Jack Afloat 294
-
- XXXV. Besieged 301
-
- XXXVI. At Bay 309
-
- XXXVII. Just in Time 317
-
- XXXVIII. Mère avant tout 326
-
- XXXIX. All Adrift 335
-
- XL. Homeward Bound 341
-
- XLI. Lady Hamilton 351
-
- XLII. The Desire of the Moth 360
-
- XLIII. For the Star 370
-
- XLIV. “Box it About” 379
-
- XLV. The Little Rift 389
-
- XLVI. The Music Mute 399
-
- XLVII. The “Hamilton Arms” 408
-
- XLVIII. Pressure 419
-
- XLIX. Poor Emerald 429
-
- L. Captain Bold 441
-
- LI. Sir Marmaduke 448
-
- LII. The Bowl on the Bias 458
-
- LIII. Fair Fighting 466
-
- LIV. Friends in Need 475
-
- LV. Forewarned 486
-
- LVI. Forearmed 494
-
- LVII. An Addled Egg 503
-
- LVIII. Horns and Hoofs 511
-
- LIX. A Substitute 518
-
- LX. Solace 529
-
-
-
-
-CERISE
-
-_A TALE OF THE LAST CENTURY_
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE DAISY-CHAIN
-
-
-In the gardens of Versailles, as everywhere else within the freezing
-influence of the _Grand Monarque_, nature herself seemed to accept the
-situation, and succumbed inevitably under the chain of order and courtly
-etiquette. The grass grew, indeed, and the Great Waters played, but
-the former was rigorously limited to certain mathematical patches, and
-permitted only to obtain an established length, while the latter threw
-their diamond showers against the sky with the regular and oppressive
-monotony of clockwork. The avenues stretched away straight and stiff like
-rows of lately-built houses; the shrubs stood hard and defiant as the
-white statues with which they alternated, and the very sunshine off the
-blinding gravel glared and scorched as if its duty were but to mark a
-march of dazzling hours on square stone dials for the kings of France.
-
-Down in Touraine the woods were sleeping, hushed, and peaceful in the
-glowing summer’s day, sighing, as it were, and stirring in their repose,
-while the breeze crept through their shadows, and quivered in their
-outskirts, ere it passed on to cool the peasant’s brow, toiling contented
-in his clearing, with blue home-spun garb, white teeth, and honest
-sunburnt face.
-
-Far off in Normandy, sleek of skin and rich of colour, cows were
-ruminating knee-deep in pasturage; hedges were loaded with wild flowers,
-thickets dark with rank luxuriance of growth, while fresh streams, over
-which the blue kingfisher flitted like a dragon-fly, rippled merrily down
-towards the sea. Through teeming orchards, between waving cornfields,
-past convent-walls grown over with woodbine and lilac and laburnum, under
-stately churches, rearing Gothic spires, delicate as needlework, to
-heaven, and bringing with them a cool current of air, a sense of freedom
-and refreshment as they hurried past. Nay, even where the ripening sun
-beat fiercely on the vineyards, terraced tier upon tier, to concentrate
-his rays—where Macon and Côte-d’Or were already tinged with the first
-faint blush of their coming vintage, even amidst the grape-rows so
-orderly planted and so carefully trained, buxom peasant-girls could
-gather posies of wild flowers for their raven hair, to make their black
-eyes sparkle with merrier glances, and their dusky cheeks mantle in rich
-carnation, type of southern blood dancing through their veins.
-
-But Versailles was not France, and at Versailles nothing seemed free but
-the birds and the children.
-
-One of the alleys, commanded from the king’s private apartments, was
-thickly crowded with loungers. Courtiers in silk stockings, laced coats,
-and embroidered waistcoats reaching to their thighs, wearing diamond
-hilts on their rapiers, and diamond buckles in their shoes, could not
-move a step without apology for catching in the spreading skirts of
-magnificent ladies—magnificent, be it understood, in gorgeousness of
-apparel rather than in beauty of face or symmetry of figure. The former,
-indeed, whatever might be its natural advantages, was usually coated with
-paint and spotted with patches, while the latter was so disguised by
-voluminous robes, looped-up skirts, falling laces, and such outworks and
-appendages, not to mention a superstructure of hair, ribbon, and other
-materials, towering so high above the head as to place a short woman’s
-face somewhere about the middle of her whole altitude, that it must have
-been difficult even for the maid who dressed her to identify, in one of
-these imposing triumphs of art, the slender and insignificant little
-framework upon which the whole fabric had been raised. Devotion in woman
-is never more sublime than when sustaining the torture of dress.
-
-It was all artificial together. Not a word was spoken but might have
-been overheard with entire satisfaction by the unseen sovereign who
-set the whole pageant in motion. Not a gesture but was restrained by
-the consciousness of supervision. Not a sentiment broached but had for
-its object the greater glorification of a little old man, feeble and
-worn-out, eating iced fruit and sweetmeats in a closet opening from a
-formal, heavily-furnished, over-gilded saloon, that commanded the broad
-gravel-walk on which the courtiers passed to and fro in a shifting,
-sparkling throng. If a compliment was paid by grinning gallant to
-simpering dame, it was offered and accepted with a sidelong glance from
-each towards the palace windows. If a countess whispered scandal to a
-duchess behind her fan, the grateful dish was sauced and flavoured for
-the master’s palate, to whom it would be offered by the listener on the
-first opportunity. Marshals of a hundred fights tapped their jewelled
-snuff-boxes to inhale a pinch of the King’s Mixture. Blooming beauties,
-whose every breath was fragrance, steeped their gossamer handkerchiefs in
-no other perfume than an extract from orange-flowers, called _Bouquet du
-Roi_.
-
-For Louis the Fourteenth, if he might believe his household, Time was to
-stand still, and the Seasons brought no change. “I am the same age as
-everybody else,” said a courtier of seventy to his Majesty at sixty-five.
-“The rain of Marly does not wet one,” urged another, as an excuse for not
-covering his head in a shower while walking with the king. By such gross
-flattery was that sovereign to be duped, who believed himself a match for
-the whole of Europe in perceptive wisdom and diplomatic _finesse_.
-
-But though powdered heads were bowing, and laced hats waving, and
-brocades ruffling in the great walk, swallows skimmed and darted through
-the shades of a green alley behind the nearest fountain, and a little
-girl was sitting on the grass, making daisy-chains as busily as if there
-were no other interest, no other occupation at Court or in the world.
-
-Her flapping hat was thrown aside, and her head bent studiously over her
-work, so that the brown curls, silken and rich and thick, as a girl’s
-curls should be, hid all of her face but a little soft white brow.
-Her dimpled arms and hands moved nimbly about her task, and a pair of
-sturdy, well-turned legs were stuck out straight before her, as if
-she had established herself in her present position with a resolution
-not to stir till she had completed the long snowy chain that festooned
-already for several yards across the turf. She had just glanced in
-extreme content at its progress without raising her head, when a spaniel
-scoured by, followed at speed by a young gentleman in a page’s dress,
-who, skimming the level with his toe, in all the impetuous haste of
-boyhood, caught the great work round his ankles, and tore it into a dozen
-fragments as he passed.
-
-The little girl looked up in consternation, having duly arranged her face
-for a howl; but she controlled her feelings, partly in surprise, partly
-in bashfulness, partly perhaps in gratification at the very obvious
-approval with which the aggressor regarded that face, while, stopping
-short, he begged “Mademoiselle’s pardon” with all the grand manner of the
-Court grafted on the natural politeness of France.
-
-It was indeed a very pretty, and, more, a very lovable little face,
-with its large innocent blue eyes, its delicate peach-like cheeks, and
-a pair of curling ruddy lips, that, combined with her own infantine
-pronunciation of her baptismal name Thérèse, had already obtained for the
-child the familiar appellation of “Cerise.”
-
-“Pardon, mademoiselle!” repeated the page, colouring boy-like to his
-temples—“Pardon! I was running so fast; I was in such a hurry—I am so
-awkward. I will pick you a hatful more daisies—and—and I can get you a
-large slice of cake this evening when the king goes out of the little
-supper-room to the music-hall.”
-
-“Mademoiselle” thus adjured, rose to her full stature of some forty
-inches, and spreading her short stiff skirt around her with great care,
-replied by a stately reverence that would have done credit to an empress.
-Notwithstanding her dignity, however, she cast a wistful look at the
-broken daisy-chain, while her little red lips quivered as if a burst of
-tears was not far off.
-
-The boy was down on his knees in an instant, gathering handfuls of
-the simple flowers, and flinging them impetuously into his hat. It
-was obvious that this young gentleman possessed already considerable
-energy of character, and judging from the flash of his bold dark eyes,
-a determined will of his own. His figure, though as yet unformed, was
-lithe, erect, and active, while his noble bearing denoted self-reliance
-beyond his years, and a reckless, confident disposition, such as a true
-pedagogue would have longed and failed to check with the high hand of
-coercion. In a few minutes he had collected daisies enough to fill his
-laced hat to the rims, and flinging himself on the turf, began stringing
-them together with his strong, well-shaped, sunburnt fingers. The little
-girl, much consoled, had reseated herself as before. It was delightful to
-see the chain thus lengthening by fathoms at a time, and this new friend
-seemed to enter heart and soul into the important work. Active sympathy
-soon finds its way to a child’s heart; she nestled up to his side, and
-shaking her curls back, looked confidingly in his face.
-
-“I like you,” said the little woman, honestly, and without reserve. “You
-are good—you are polite—you make daisy-chains as well as mamma. My name’s
-Cerise. What’s _your_ name?”
-
-The page smiled, and with the smile his whole countenance grew handsome.
-In repose, his face was simply that of a well-looking youth enough,
-with a bold, saucy expression and hardy sunburned features; but when he
-smiled, a physiognomist watching the change would have pronounced, “That
-boy _must_ be like his mother, and his mother _must_ have been beautiful!”
-
-“Cerise,” repeated the lad. “What a pretty name! Mine is not a pretty
-name. Boys don’t have pretty names. My name’s George—George Hamilton.
-You mustn’t call me Hamilton. I am never called anything but George at
-Court. I’m not big enough to be a soldier yet, but I am page to _Louis le
-Grand_!”
-
-The child opened her eyes very wide, and stared over her new friend’s
-head at a gentleman who was listening attentively to their conversation,
-with his hat in his hand, and an expression of considerable amusement
-pervading his old, worn, melancholy face.
-
-This gentleman had stolen round the corner of the alley, treading softly
-on the turf, and might have been watching the children for some minutes
-unperceived. He was a small, shrunken, but well-made person, with a
-symmetrical leg and foot, the arched instep of the latter increased
-by the high heels of his diamond-buckled shoes. His dress in those
-days of splendour was plain almost to affectation; it consisted of a
-full-skirted, light-brown coat, ornamented only with a few gold buttons;
-breeches of the same colour, and a red satin waistcoat embroidered
-at the edges, the whole suit relieved by the _cordon bleu_ which was
-worn outside. The hat he dangled in his pale, thin, unringed hand was
-trimmed with Spanish point, and had a plume of white feathers. His face
-was long, and bore a solemn, saddened expression, the more remarkable
-for the rapidity with which, as at present, it succeeded a transient
-gleam of mirth. Notwithstanding all its advantages of dress and manner,
-notwithstanding jewelled buckles, and point lace, and full flowing
-periwig, the figure now standing over the two children, in sad contrast
-to their rich flow of youth and health, was that of a worn-out, decrepid
-old man, fast approaching, though not yet actually touching, the brink of
-his grave.
-
-The smile, however, came over his wrinkled face once more as the child
-looked shyly up, gathering her daisy-chain distrustfully into her lap.
-Then he stooped to stroke her brown curls with his white wasted hand.
-
-“Your name is Thérèse,” said he gravely. “Mamma calls you Cerise, because
-you are such a round, ruddy little thing. Mamma is waiting in the
-painted saloon for the king’s dinner. You may look at him eating it, if
-your _bonne_ takes you home past the square table in the middle window
-opposite the Great Fountain. She is to come for you in a quarter of an
-hour. You see I know all about it, little one.”
-
-Cerise stared in utter consternation, but at the first sound of that
-voice the boy had started to his feet, blushing furiously, and catching
-up his hat, to upset an avalanche of daisies in the action, stood
-swinging it in his hand, bolt upright like a soldier who springs to
-“attention” under the eye of his officer. The old gentleman’s face
-had resumed its sad expression, but he drew up his feeble figure with
-dignity, and motioned the lad, who already nearly equalled him in height,
-a little further back. George obeyed instinctively, and Cerise, still
-sitting on the grass, with the daisy-chain in her lap, looked from one to
-the other in a state of utter bewilderment.
-
-“Don’t be frightened, little one,” continued the old gentleman,
-caressingly. “Come and play in these gardens whenever you like. Tell Le
-Notre to give you prettier flowers than these to make chains of, and when
-you get older, try to leave off turning the heads of my pages with your
-brown curls and cherry lips. As for you, sir,” he added, facing round
-upon George, “I have seldom seen any of you so innocently employed. Take
-care of this pretty little girl till her _bonne_ comes to fetch her, and
-show them both the place from whence they can see the king at dinner. How
-does the king dine to-day, sir? and when?” he concluded, in a sharper and
-sterner tone. George was equal to the occasion.
-
-“There is no council to-day, sire,” he answered, without hesitation. “His
-Majesty has ordered ‘The Little Service’[1] this morning, and will dine
-in seventeen minutes exactly, for I hear the Grey Musketeers already
-relieving guard in the Front Court.”
-
-“Go, sir,” exclaimed the old gentleman, in great good-humour. “You have
-learnt your duty better than I expected. I think I may trust you with the
-care of this pretty child. Few pages know anything of etiquette or the
-necessary routine of a Court. I am satisfied with you. Do you understand?”
-
-The boy’s cheeks flushed once more, as he bowed low and stood silent,
-whilst the old gentleman passed on. The latter, however, had not gone
-half-a-dozen paces ere he turned back, and again addressed the younger of
-the children.
-
-“Do not forget, little one, to ask Le Notre for any flowers you want,
-and—and—if you think of it, tell mamma you met the honest _bourgeois_
-who owns these gardens, and that he knew you, and knew your name, and
-knew how old you were, and, I dare say, little one, you are surprised the
-_bourgeois_ should know so much!”
-
-That Cerise was surprised admitted of small doubt. She had scarcely found
-her voice ere the old gentleman turned out of the alley and disappeared.
-Then she looked at her companion, whose cheeks were still glowing with
-excitement, and presently burst into a peal of childish laughter.
-
-“What a funny old man!” cried Cerise, clapping her hands; “and I am to
-have as many flowers as I like—what a funny old man!”
-
-“Hush, mademoiselle,” answered the boy, gravely, as though his own
-dignity had received a hurt, “you must not speak like that. It is very
-rude. It is very wrong. If a man were to say such things it should cost
-him his life.”
-
-Cerise opened her blue eyes wider than ever.
-
-“Wrong!” she repeated, “rude! what have I done? who is it, then?”
-
-“It is the King!” answered the boy, proudly. “It is _Louis le Grand_!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE MONTMIRAILS
-
-
-Ladies first. Let us identify the pretty little girl in the gardens of
-Versailles, who answered to the name of Cerise, before we account for the
-presence of George Hamilton the page.
-
-It is a thing well understood—it is an arrangement universally conceded
-in France—that marriages should be contracted on principles of practical
-utility, rather than on the vague assumption of a romantic and unsuitable
-preference. It was therefore with tranquil acquiescence, and feelings
-perfectly under control, that Thérèse de la Fierté, daughter of a line of
-dukes, found herself taken out of a convent and wedded to a chivalrous
-veteran, who could scarcely stand long enough at the altar, upon his
-well-shaped but infirm old legs, to make the necessary responses for
-the conversion of the beautiful _brunette_ over against him into Madame
-la Marquise de Montmirail. The bridegroom was indeed infinitely more
-agitated than the bride. He had conducted several campaigns; he was a
-Marshal of France; he had even been married before, to a remarkably
-plain person, who adored him; he had undergone the necessary course of
-gallantry inflicted on men of his station at the Court and in the society
-to which he belonged; nevertheless, as he said to himself, he felt like
-a recruit in his first “affair” when he encountered the plunging fire of
-those black eyes, raking him front, and flanks, and centre, from under
-the bridal wreath and its drooping white lace veil.
-
-Thérèse had indeed, in right of her mother, large black eyes as well as
-large West Indian possessions; and her light-haired rivals were good
-enough to attribute the rich radiance of her beauty to a stain of negro
-blood somewhere far back in that mother’s race.
-
-Nevertheless, the old Marquis de Montmirail was really over head and ears
-in love with his brilliant bride. That he should have indulged her in
-every whim and every folly was but reasonably to be expected, but that
-_she_ should always have shown for _him_ the warm affection of a wife,
-tempered by the deference and respect of a daughter, is only another
-instance, added to the long score on record of woman’s sympathy and right
-feeling when treated with gentleness and consideration.
-
-Not even at Court did Madame de Montmirail give a single opportunity
-to the thousand tongues of scandal during her husband’s lifetime; she
-was indeed notorious for sustaining the elaborate homage and tedious
-admiration of majesty itself, without betraying, by the flutter of
-an eyelash, that ambition was roused or vanity gratified during the
-ordeal. It seemed that she cared but for three people in the world. The
-chivalrous old wreck who had married her, and who was soon compelled to
-move about in a wheeled chair; the lovely little daughter born of their
-union, who inherited much of her mother’s effective beauty with the
-traditional grace and delicate complexion of the handsome Montmirails, a
-combination that had helped to distinguish her by the appropriate name
-of Cerise, and the young Abbé Malletort, a distant cousin of her own,
-as remarkable for shrewd intellect and utter want of sentiment as for
-symmetry of figure and signal ugliness of face. The _Grand Monarque_
-was not famous for consideration towards the nobles of his household.
-Long after the Marquis de Montmirail had commenced taking exercise on
-his own account in a chair, the king commanded his attendance at a
-shooting-party, kept him standing for three-quarters of an hour on damp
-grass, under heavy rain, and dismissed him with a pompous compliment, and
-an attack of gout driven upwards into the region of the stomach. The old
-courtier knew he had got his death-blow. The old soldier faced it like an
-officer of France. He sent for Madame la Marquise, and complimented her
-on her _coiffure_ before proceeding to business. He apologised for the
-pains that took off his attention at intervals, and bowed her out of the
-room, more than once, when the paroxysms became unbearable. The Marquise
-never went further than the door, where she fell on her knees in the
-passage and wept. He explained clearly enough how he had bequeathed to
-her all that was left of his dilapidated estates. Then he sent his duty
-to the king, observing that “He had served his Majesty under fire often,
-but never under water till now. He feared it was the last occasion of
-presenting his homage to his sovereign.” And so, asking for Cerise, who
-was brought in by her weeping mother, died brave and tranquil, with his
-arm round his child and a gold snuff-box in his hand.
-
-Ladies cannot be expected to sorrow as inconsolably for a mate of seventy
-as for one of seven-and-twenty, but the Marquise de Montmirail grieved
-very honestly, nevertheless, and mourned during the prescribed period,
-with perhaps even more circumspection than had she lost a lover as well
-as, or instead of, a husband. Wagers were laid at Court that she would
-marry again within a year; yet the year passed by and Madame had not
-so much as seen anybody but her child and its _bonne_. Even Malletort
-was excluded from her society, and that versatile ecclesiastic, though
-pluming himself on his knowledge of human nature, including its most
-inexplicable half, was obliged to confess he was at a loss!
-
-“_Peste!_” he would observe, taking a pinch of snuff, and flicking the
-particles delicately off his ruffles, “was not the sphinx a woman? At
-least down to the waist. So, I perceive, is the Marquise. What would you
-have? There is a clue to every labyrinth, but it is not always worth
-while to puzzle it out!”
-
-After a time, when the established period for seclusion had expired, the
-widow, more beautiful than ever, made her appearance once more at Court.
-That she loved admiration there could not now be the slightest doubt, and
-the self-denial became at length apparent with which she had declined
-it during her husband’s lifetime, that she might not wring his kind old
-heart. So, in all societies—at balls, at promenades, at concerts—at
-solemn attendances on the king, at tedious receptions of princes
-and princesses, dukes and duchesses, sons and daughters of majesty,
-legitimate or otherwise—she accepted homage with avidity, and returned
-compliment for compliment, and gallantry for gallantry, with a coquetry
-perfectly irresistible. But this was all: the first step was fatal taken
-by an admirer across that scarce perceptible boundary which divides the
-gold and silver grounds, the gaudy flower-beds of flattery from the
-sweet wild violet banks of love. The first tremble of interest in his
-voice, the first quiver of diffidence in his glance, was the signal for
-dismissal.
-
-Madame de Montmirail knew neither pity nor remorse. She had the softest
-eyes, the smoothest skin, the sweetest voice in the bounds of France, but
-her heart was declared by all to be harder than the very diamonds that
-became her so well. Nor, though she seldom missed a chance of securing
-smiles and compliments, did she seem inclined to afford opportunity
-for advances of a more positive kind. Cerise was usually in her arms,
-or on her lap; and suitors of every time must have been constrained to
-admit that there is no _duenna_ like a daughter. Besides, the child’s
-beauty was of a nature so different from her mother’s, that the most
-accomplished coxcomb found it difficult to word his admiration of
-mademoiselle so as to infer a yet stronger approval of madame herself.
-The slightest blunder, too, was as surely made public as it was quickly
-detected. The Marquise never denied herself or her friends an opportunity
-for a laugh, and her sarcasm was appropriate as pitiless; so to become
-a declared admirer of Madame de Montmirail required a good deal of that
-courage which is best conveyed by the word _sang-froid_.
-
-And even for those reckless spirits, who neither feared the mother’s wit
-nor respected the daughter’s presence, there was yet another difficulty
-to encounter in the person of the child’s _bonne_, a middle-aged
-quadroon to whom Cerise was ardently attached, and who never left her
-mistress’s side when not employed in dressing or undressing her charge.
-This faithful retainer, originally a slave on the La-Fierté estates,
-had passed—with lands, goods, and chattels—into the possession of the
-Marquise after the death of her mother, the duchess, who was said to
-have a black drop of blood in her veins, and immediately transferred her
-fidelity and affections to her present owner. She was a large, strong
-woman, with the remains of great beauty. Her age might be anything under
-fifty; and she was known at Court as “The Mother of Satan,” a title she
-accepted with considerable gratification, and much preferred to the
-sweeter-sounding name of Célandine, by which she was called on the West
-Indian estate and in the family of her proprietors.
-
-Notwithstanding her good looks, there was something about Célandine that
-made her an object of dread to her fellow-servants, whether slaves or
-free. The woman’s manner was scowling and suspicious, she suffered from
-long fits of despondency; she muttered and gesticulated to herself; she
-walked about during the night, when the rest of the household were in
-bed. Altogether she gave occasion, by her behaviour, to those detractors
-who affirmed that, whether his _mother_ or not, there was no doubt she
-was a faithful worshipper of Satan.
-
-In the island whence she came, and among the kindred people who had
-brought with them from Africa their native barbarism and superstitions,
-the dark rites of Obi were still sedulously cultivated, as the magic
-power of its votaries was implicitly believed. The three-fourths of white
-blood in the veins of Célandine had not prevented her, so they said,
-from becoming a priestess of that foul order; and the price paid for her
-impious exaltation was differently estimated, according to the colour of
-those who discussed the revolting and mysterious question, even amongst
-the French domestics of Madame de Montmirail, and in so practical an age
-as the beginning of the eighteenth century. The quadroon, finding herself
-shunned by her equals, was drawn all the closer to her mistress and her
-little charge.
-
-Such was the woman who pushed her way undaunted through the crowd of
-courtiers now thronging the Grand Alley at Versailles, eliciting no
-small share of attention by the gorgeousness of her costume; the scarlet
-shawl she had bound like a turban round her head, the profusion of gold
-ornaments that serpentined about her neck and arms, together with the
-glaring pattern of white and orange conspicuous on her dress, till she
-reached the secluded corner where Cerise was sitting with her broken
-daisy-chain and her attendant page, as she had been left by the king.
-
-The quadroon’s whole countenance brightened into beauty when she
-approached her darling, and the child bounding up to meet her, ran into
-her arms with a cry of delight that showed their attachment was mutual.
-George, extremely proud of his commission, volunteered to guide them to
-the spot whence, as directed, they could witness the progress of the
-king’s dinner, and the strangely-matched trio proceeded through the now
-decreasing crowd, to all appearance perfectly satisfied with each other.
-
-They had already taken up their position opposite the window which his
-Majesty had indicated, and were in full enjoyment of the thrilling
-spectacle he had promised them, namely, a little old man in a wig, served
-by half-a-dozen servants at once, and eating to repletion, when Cerise,
-who clung to Célandine’s hand, hid her face in the _bonne’s_ gown, to
-avoid the gaze of two gentlemen who were staring at her with every mark
-of approval. “What is it, my cherished one?” said the quadroon, in tender
-accents. “Who dares frighten my darling?” But the fierce voice changed
-into coaxing tones when the _bonne_ recognised a familiar face in one of
-her charge’s unwelcome admirers.
-
-“Why, it’s _Monsieur l’Abbé_! Surely you know _Monsieur l’Abbé_! Come,
-be a good child, then; make _Monsieur l’Abbé_ a reverence, and wish him
-good-day!”
-
-But Cerise persistently declined any friendly overtures whatever to
-_Monsieur l’Abbé_; hanging her head and turning her toes in most
-restively; so the three passed on to witness the process of eating as
-performed by _Louis le Grand_; and _Monsieur l’Abbé_, crumpling his
-extremely plain features into a sneer, observed his companion, “It is
-droll enough, Florian, children never take to me, though I make my way as
-well as another with grown-up people. They seem to mistrust me from the
-first. Can it be because I am so very ugly?”
-
-The other smiled deprecatingly. “Good looks,” said he, “have nothing to
-do with it. Children are like their elders—they hate intellect because
-they fear it. Oh, Malletort! had I the beauty of Absalom, I would give
-it all willingly to possess your opportunities and your powers of using
-them!”
-
-“Thank you,” replied Malletort, looking gratified in spite of himself
-at the compliment, but perhaps envying in his secret heart the outward
-advantages which his friend seemed so little to appreciate.
-
-Florian de St. Croix, just on the verge of manhood, was as handsome
-a youth as might be met with amongst the thousand candidates for the
-priesthood, of whom he was one of the most sanguine and enthusiastic.
-Not even the extreme plainness of his dress, appropriate to the sacred
-calling he was about to enter—not even his close-cut hair and pallid hue,
-result of deep thought and severe application—could diminish the beauty
-of his flashing eyes, his clear-cut features, and high, intellectual
-forehead, that denoted ideality and self-sacrifice as surely as the sweet
-womanly mouth betrayed infirmity of purpose and fatal subservience to the
-affections. His frame, though slender, was extremely wiry and muscular;
-cast, too, in the mould of an Apollo. No wonder there was a shadow of
-something like jealousy on his companion’s shrewd, ugly face, while he
-regarded one so superior in external advantages to himself.
-
-The Abbé Malletort was singular in this respect. He possessed the rare
-faculty of appreciating events and individuals at their real value. He
-boasted that he had no prejudices, and especially prided himself on the
-accuracy with which he predicted the actions of his fellow-creatures by
-the judgment he had formed of their characters. He made no allowance for
-failure, as he gave no credit to success. Men, with him, were capable
-or useless only as they conquered or yielded in the great struggle of
-life. Systems proved good or bad simply according to their results. The
-Abbé professed to have no partialities, no feelings, no veneration, and
-no affections. He had entered the Church as a mere matter of calculation
-and convenience. Its prizes, like those of the army, were open to
-intellect and courage. If the priest’s outward conduct demanded more of
-moderation and self-restraint, on the other hand the fasts and vigils of
-Rome were less easily enforced than the half-rations of a march or the
-night-watches of an outpost.
-
-Moreover, the tonsure in those days might be clipped (not close enough
-to draw attention) from a skull that roofed the teeming brain of a
-politician; and, indeed, the Church of Rome not only permitted but
-encouraged the assumption of secular power by her votaries, so that
-the most important and lucrative posts of the empire were as open
-to Abbé and Cardinal as to a Colonel of the Body-guard or a Marshal
-of France; while the soldier’s training fitted him far less than the
-priest’s to countermine the subtleties of diplomacy or unravel the
-intricacies of finance. There remained, then, but the vow of celibacy to
-swallow, and, in truth, the vow of celibacy suited Malletort admirably
-well. Notwithstanding his ugly face, he was an especial favourite with
-women, on whom his ready wit, his polished manners, and, above all,
-his imperturbable coolness, made a pleasing impression. They liked him
-none the less that his reputed hardness of heart and injustice towards
-themselves were proverbial. While, as for his plain features, why, to
-quote the words of Ninon de l’Enclos, who ought to have been a good judge
-in such matters, “A man’s want of beauty is of small account if he be not
-deficient in other amiable qualities, for there is no conquest without
-the affections, and what mole can be so blind as a woman in love?”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-MONSIEUR L’ABBÉ
-
-
-The crowd had passed on to witness the king’s dinner, now in full
-progress, and the two soberly-clad friends found themselves the only
-occupants of the gardens. Side by side they took their seats on a bench
-under a row of lime-trees, and continued the conversation which had
-originated in little Cerise and her childish beauty.
-
-“It is a face as God made it,” said Florian, his boyish features lighting
-up with enthusiasm. “Children are surely nearer Heaven than ourselves.
-What a pity to think that they should grow into the painted, patched,
-powdered hypocrites, of whom so many have passed by us even now.”
-
-“Beautifully dressed, however,” answered his worldly senior, placidly
-indifferent, as usual, to all that did not concern his own immediate
-comfort. “If there were no women, Florian, there would be no children,
-I conclude. Both seem necessary evils. You, I observe, prefer the
-lesser. As for being near Heaven, that, I imagine, is a mere question
-of altitude. The musketeer over there is at least a couple of inches
-nearer it than either of us. What matter? It will make little difference
-eventually to any one of the three.”
-
-Florian looked as if he did not understand. Indeed, the Abbé’s manner
-preserved a puzzling uncertainty between jest and earnest. He took a
-pinch of snuff, too, with the air of a man who had thoroughly exhausted
-the question. But his companion, still harping on the beauty of the
-child, continued their conversation.
-
-“Is she not a cousin of yours, this little angel? I know you are akin to
-that beautiful Marquise, her mother. Oh, Malletort, what advantages you
-possess, and how unconscious you seem of them!”
-
-“Advantages!” repeated the Abbé, musing. “Well, perhaps you are right.
-Handsome women are the court-cards of the game, if a man knows how
-to play them. It is a grand game, too, and the stakes are well worth
-winning. Yet I sometimes think if I had foreseen in time how entirely you
-must devote body and soul to play it, I might never have sat down at all.
-I could almost envy a boy, like that merry page who passed us with my
-baby-cousin—a boy, whose only thought or care is to spend the time gaily
-now, and wear a sword as soon as his beard is grown hereafter.”
-
-“The boy will carry a sword fairly enough,” answered Florian; “for he
-looks like a little adventurer already. Who is he? I have remarked him
-amongst the others for a certain bold bearing, that experience and sorrow
-alone will, I fear, be able to tame.”
-
-“It will take a good deal of both to tame any of that family,” answered
-Malletort; “and this young game-chick will no doubt prove himself of
-the same feather as the rest of the brood when his spurs are grown.
-He’s a Hamilton, Florian; a Hamilton from the other side of the water,
-with a cross of the wildest blood in France or Europe in his veins. You
-believe the old monkish chronicles—I don’t. They will tell you that boy’s
-direct ancestor went up the breach at Acre in front of Cœur de Lion—an
-Englishman of the true pig-headed type, who had sense enough, however, to
-hate his vassal ever after for being a bigger fool than himself. On the
-mother’s side he comes of a race that can boast all its sons brave, and
-its daughters—well, its daughters—very much the same as other people’s
-daughters. The result of so much fighting and gasconading being, simply,
-that the elder branch of the family is sadly impoverished, while the
-younger is irretrievably ruined.”
-
-“And this lad?” asked Florian, interested in the boy, perhaps because the
-page’s character was in some respects so completely the reverse of his
-own.
-
-“Is of the younger branch,” continued Malletort, “and given over body
-and soul to the cause of this miserable family, whose head died, not
-half-a-dozen years ago, under the shadow of our grand and gracious
-monarch, a victim to prejudice and indigestion. Well, these younger
-Hamiltons have always made it their boast that they grudged neither blood
-nor treasure for the Stuarts; and the Stuarts, I need hardly tell you,
-Florian, for you read your breviary, requited them as men must expect to
-be requited who put their trust in princes—particularly of that dynasty.
-The elder branch wisely took the oaths of allegiance, for the ingratitude
-of a reigning house is less hopeless than that of a dethroned family. I
-believe any one of them would be glad to accept office under the gracious
-and extremely ungraceful lady who fills the British throne, established,
-as I understand she is, on so broad a basis, there is but little room
-for a consort. They are scarce likely to obtain their wish. The younger
-branch would scout the idea, enveloped, one and all, in an atmosphere of
-prejudice truly insular, which ignorant people call loyalty. This boy’s
-great-grandfather died in a battle fought by Charles I., at a place with
-an unpronounceable name, in the province of ‘Yorkshires.’ His grandfather
-was shot by a platoon of musketeers in his own courtyard, under an order
-signed by the judicious Cromwell; and his father was drowned here, in the
-channel, carrying despatches for his king, as he persisted in calling
-him, under the respectable disguise of a smuggler. I believe this boy
-was with him at the time. I know when first he came to Court, people
-pretended that although so young he was an accomplished sailor; and I
-remember his hands were hard and dirty, and he always seemed to smell of
-tar. I will own that now, _for_ a page, he is clean, polished, and well
-dressed.”
-
-Florian’s dark eyes kindled.
-
-“You interest me,” said he; “I love to hear of loyalty. It is the
-reflection of religion upon earth.”
-
-“Precisely,” replied the other. “A shadow of the unsubstantial. Well,
-all his line are loyal enough, and I doubt not the boy has been brought
-up to believe that in the world there are men, women, and Stuarts. The
-fact of his being page here, I confess, puzzles me. Lord Stair protested
-against it, I know, but the king would not listen, and used his own wise
-discretion, consenting, however, that the lad should drop his family name
-and be called simply—George. So George fulfils the destiny of a page,
-whatever that may be—as gaudy, as troublesome, and to all appearance as
-useless an item in creation as the dragon-fly.”
-
-“And has the child no relations?” asked Florian; “no friends, nobody to
-whom he belongs? What a position; what a fate; what a cruel isolation!”
-
-“He is indeed in that enviable situation which I cannot agree with you in
-thinking merits one grain of pity. You and I, Florian, with our education
-and in our career, should, of all people, best appreciate the advantages
-of perfect freedom from those trammels which old women of both sexes call
-the domestic affections.”
-
-“So young, so hopeful, so spirited,” continued Florian, speaking rather
-to himself than his informant, “and to have no mother!”
-
-“But he _had_ a mother, I tell you,” replied Malletort, “only she died of
-a broken heart, as women always do when a little energy is required to
-repair their broken fortunes. _Our_ mother, my son,” he proceeded, still
-in the same half-mocking, half-impressive tone, “_our_ mother is the
-Church. She provides for us carefully during life, and when we die in her
-embrace, at least affords us decent burial and prayers for our welfare
-hereafter. I tell you, Florian, she is the most thoughtful as she is the
-most indulgent of mothers. She offers us opportunity for distinction, or
-allows us shelter and repose according as our ambition soars to heaven,
-or limits itself, as I confess mine does, to the affairs of earth. Who
-shall be found exalted above their kind in the next world? (I speak as
-I am taught)—Priests. Who fill the high places in this? (I speak as I
-learn)—Priests. The king’s wisest councillors, his ablest financiers,
-are men of the sober garment and the shaven crown; nay, judging from the
-simplicity of his habits, and the austerity of his demeanour, I cannot
-but think that the bravest marshal in our armies is only a priest in
-disguise.”
-
-“There are but two careers worthy of a life-sacrifice,” observed Florian,
-his countenance glowing with enthusiasm, “and glory is the aim of each.
-But who would compare the soldier of France with the soldier of Rome?—the
-banner of the Bourbon with the cross of Calvary? How much less noble is
-it to serve earth than heaven?”
-
-Malletort looked in his young friend’s face as if he thought such
-exalted sentiments could not possibly be real, and shrewdly suspected
-him of covert sarcasm or jest; but Florian’s open brow admitted of no
-misconstruction, and the elder man’s features gradually relaxed into the
-quiet expression of amusement, not devoid of pity, with which a professor
-in the swimmer’s art, for instance, watches the floundering struggles of
-a neophyte.
-
-“You are right,” said he, calmly and after a pause; “ours is incomparably
-the better profession of the two, and the safer. We risk less, no doubt,
-and gain more. Persecution, in civilised countries at least, is happily
-all the other way. It is extremely profitable to be saints, and there
-is no call for us to become martyrs. I think, Florian, we have every
-reason to be satisfied with our bargain. Why, the very ties we sever, the
-earthly affections we resign, are, to my mind, but so many more enforced
-advantages, for which we cannot be too thankful.”
-
-“There would be no merit were there no effort,” answered the other. “No
-self-denial were there nothing to give up; but with us it is different. I
-am proud to think we _do_ resign, and cheerfully, all that gives warmth
-and colouring to the hard outlines of an earthly life. Is it nothing
-to forego the triumphs of the camp, the bright pageantry, the graceful
-luxuries of the Court? Is it nothing to place yourself at once above and
-outside the pale of those sympathies which form the very existence of
-your fellow-men? More than all, is it nothing, Malletort,”—the young man
-hesitated, blushed, and cast his eyes down—“is it nothing to trample out
-of your heart, passions, affections—call them what you will—that seem the
-very mainspring of your being? Is it nothing to deny yourself at once and
-for ever the solace of woman’s companionship and the rapture of woman’s
-love?”
-
-“You declaim well,” replied Malletort, not affecting to conceal that he
-was amused, “and your arguments would have even more weight were it not
-that you are so palpably in earnest. This of itself infers error. You
-will observe, my dear Florian, as a general rule, that the reasoner’s
-convictions are strong in direct proportion to the weakness of his
-arguments. But let us go a little deeper into this question of celibacy.
-Let us strip it of its conventional treatment, its supposed injustice,
-its apparent romance. To what does it amount? That a priest must not
-marry—good. I repeat, so much the better for the priest. What is marriage
-in the abstract?—The union of persons for the continuation of the species
-in separate and distinct races. What is it in the ideal?—The union of
-souls by an unphilosophical and impossible fusion of identity, which
-happily the personality of every human being forbids to exist. What is
-it in reality?—A fetter of oppressive weight and inconvenient fabric,
-only rendered supportable from the deadening influence of habit, combined
-with its general adoption by mankind. Look around you into families and
-observe for yourself how it works. The woman has discovered all her
-husband’s evil qualities, of which she does not fail to remind him; and
-were she a reflective being, which admits of argument, would wonder
-hourly how she could ever have endured such a mass of imperfections.
-The man bows his head and shrugs his shoulders in callous indifference,
-scorning to analyse the disagreeable question, but clear only of one
-thing—that if he were free, no consideration would induce him to place
-his neck again beneath the same yoke. Another—perhaps! The same—never!
-Both have discovered a dissimilarity in tastes, habits, and opinions, so
-remarkable that it seems scarcely possible that it should be fortuitous.
-To neither does it occur that each was once the very reflection of the
-other, in thought, word, and deed; and that a blessing pronounced by a
-priest—a few years, nay a few months, of unrestricted companionship—have
-wrought the miraculous change. Sometimes there are quarrels, scenes,
-tears, reproaches, recriminations. More often, coldness, self-restraint,
-inward scorn, and the forbearance of a repressed disgust. Then is the
-separation most complete of all. Their bodies preserve to each other the
-outward forms of an armed and enforced neutrality, but their souls are so
-far asunder that perhaps, of all in the universe, this pair alone could,
-under no circumstances, come together again.”
-
-“Sacrilege!” broke in Florian, indignantly. “What you say is sacrilege
-against our very nature! You speak of marriage as if it _must_ be the
-grave of Love. But at least Love has lived. At least the angel has
-descended and been seen of men, even though he touched the mountain only
-to spring upward on his flight again towards the skies. He who has really
-loved, happily or unhappily, married or alone, is for that love ever
-after a wiser, a nobler, and a better man.”
-
-“Not if he should happen to love a Frenchwoman,” observed the other,
-taking a pinch of snuff. “Thus much I will not scruple to say for my
-countrywomen: their coquetries are enough to drive an honest man mad.
-With regard to less civilised nations (mind, I speak not from personal
-experience so much as observation of my kind), I admit that for a time,
-at least, the delusion may possess a charm, though the loss must in all
-cases far exceed the gain. Set your affections on a German, for instance,
-and observe carefully, for the experiment is curious, if a dinner with
-the idol does not so disgust you that not a remnant of worship is left
-to be swept away by supper-time. A Pole is simply a beautiful barbarian,
-with more clothing but less manner than an Indian squaw. An Italian
-deafens you with her shrill voice, pokes your eye out with her fingers,
-and betrays your inmost secrets to her director, if indeed she does not
-prefer him to you in every respect. An Englishwoman, handsome, blonde,
-silent, and retiring, keeps you months in uncertainty while you woo, and
-when won, believes she has a right to possess you body and soul, and
-becomes, from a sheer sentiment of appropriation, the most exacting of
-wives and the most disobliging of mistresses. To make love to a Spaniard
-is a delicate phrase for paying court to a tigress. Beautiful, fierce,
-impulsive—with one leap she is in your arms—and then for a word, a
-look, she will stab you, herself, a rival, perhaps all three, without
-hesitation or remorse. Caramba! she considers it a compliment no doubt!
-Yet I tell you, Florian, were I willing to submit to such weaknesses, I
-had rather love any one of these, or all of them at once for that matter,
-than attach myself to a Frenchwoman.”
-
-Florian opened his dark eyes wide. This was new ground to the young
-student. These were questions more interesting than the principles of
-Aristotle or the experiences of the Saints. He was penetrated, too, with
-that strange admiration which the young entertain for familiarity with
-evil in their elders. The other scanned him with half-pitying interest;
-broke a branch from the fragrant lime-tree under which they sat, and
-proceeded to elucidate his theory.
-
-“With all other women,” said Malletort, “you have indeed a thousand
-rivals to out-do; still you know their numbers and can calculate their
-resources; but with the Frenchwoman, in addition to these, you have
-yet another, who changes and multiplies himself day by day—who assumes
-a thousand Protean forms, and against whom you cannot employ the most
-efficient weapons—such as vanity, gaiety, and love of dissipation, by
-which the others are to be subdued. This enemy is dress—King Chiffon is
-the absolute monarch of these realms. Your mistress is gay when you are
-sad, sarcastic when you are plaintive, reserved when you are adventurous.
-All this is a matter of course; but as Monsieur Vauban told the king the
-other day in these gardens, ‘no fortress is stronger than its weakest
-place,’ and every citadel may be carried by a _coup de main_, or reduced
-by the slower process of blockade. But here you have a stronghold within
-a stronghold; a reserve that can neither be tampered with in secret nor
-attacked openly; in brief a rival who owns this incalculable advantage,
-that in all situations and under all circumstances he occupies the first
-place in your mistress’s thoughts. Bah!” concluded the Abbé, throwing
-from him the branch which he had stripped of leaves and blossoms, with
-a gesture that seemed thus to dismiss the subject once for all; “put a
-Frenchwoman into what position you will, her sympathies indeed may be
-with her lover, but her first consideration is for her dress!”
-
-As the Abbé spoke he observed a group of four persons passing the
-front of the palace, under the windows of the king’s dining-saloon. It
-consisted of little Cerise, her mother, Célandine, and the page. They
-were laughing and chatting gaily, George apparently taking his leave of
-the other three. Florian observed a shadow cross the Abbé’s face, that
-disappeared, however, from those obedient features quickly as it came;
-and at the same moment the Marquise passed her hand caressingly over the
-boy’s dark curls, while he bent low before her, and seemed to do homage
-to her beauty in the act of bidding her a courteous farewell.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-TANTARA!
-
-
-Year by year a certain stag had been growing fatter and fatter in the
-deep glades and quiet woodlands that surrounded Fontainebleau. He was but
-a pricket when Cerise made her daisy-chain in the gardens of Versailles,
-but each succeeding summer he had rubbed the velvet off another point
-on his antlers, and in all the king’s chase was no finer head than he
-carried the day he was to die. Brow, bay, and tray, twelve in all, with
-three in a cup at the summits, had been the result of some half-score
-years passed in the security and shelter of a royal forest; nor was
-the lapse of time which had thus brought head and haunch to perfection
-without its effect upon those for whose pastime the noble beast must fall.
-
-Imagine, then, a glowing afternoon, the second week in August. Not a
-cloud in the sky, a sun almost tropical in its power, but a pure clear
-air that fanned the brow wherever the forest opened into glades, and
-filled the broad nostrils of a dozen large, deep-chested, rich-coloured
-stag-hounds, snuffing and questing busily down a track of arid grass that
-seemed to have checked their steady, well-considered unrelenting chase,
-and brought their wondrous instinct to a fault. One rider alone watched
-their efforts with a preoccupied air, yet with the ready glance of an
-old sportsman. He had apparently reached his point of observation before
-the hounds themselves, and far in advance of the rest of the chase. His
-close-fitting blue riding-coat, trimmed with gold-lace and turned back
-with scarlet facings, called a “_just au corps_,” denoted that he was
-a courtier; but the keen eye, the erect figure, the stateliness, even
-stiffness of his bearing, smacked of the old soldier, more, the old
-soldier of France, perhaps the most professional veteran in the world.
-
-He was not so engrossed with his own thoughts, however, but that his eye
-gleamed with pleasure when a tan-coloured sage, intent on business, threw
-a square sagacious head into the air, proclaiming in full deep notes
-his discovery of the line, and solemn conviction that he was right. The
-horseman swore a good round garrison oath, and cheered the hound lustily.
-A cry of tuneful tongues pealed out to swell the harmony. A burst of
-music from a distant glade announced that the stag had passed yet farther
-on. A couple of royal foresters, in blue and red, arrived on foot,
-breathless, with fresh hounds struggling in the leash; and a lady on a
-Spanish barb, attended by a plainly-dressed ecclesiastic, came cantering
-down the glade to rein up at the veteran’s side, with a smile of greeting
-on her face.
-
-“Well met, _Monsieur le Prince_, once more,” said she, flashing a look
-from her dark eyes, under which, old as he was, he lowered his own.
-“Always the same—always successful. In the Court—in the camp—in the
-ball-room—in the field—if you seek the Prince-Marshal, look in the most
-forward post, and you will find him.”
-
-She owed him some reparation for having driven him from her side in a fit
-of ill-humour half an hour before, and this was her way of making amends.
-
-“I have won posts in my time, madame,” said the old soldier, an
-expression of displeasure settling once more on his high worn features,
-“and held them, too, without dishonour. It is perhaps no disgrace to be
-worsted by a woman, but it is humiliating and unpleasant all the same.”
-
-“Dishonour and disgrace are words that can never be coupled with the name
-of Chateau-Guerrand,” returned the lady, smiling sweetly in his face, a
-process that appeared to mollify him considerably. Then she completed his
-subjection by caressing her horse with one hand, while she reined him in
-so sharply with the other, that he rose on his hind-legs as if to rear
-straight on end.
-
-“You are a hard mistress, madame,” said the gentleman, looking at the
-beautiful barb chafing and curveting to its bit.
-
-“It is only to show I _am_ mistress,” she answered in a low voice, that
-seemed to finish the business, for turning to her attendant cavalier,
-who had remained discreetly in the background, she signed to him that he
-might come up and break the _tête-à-tête_, while she added gaily—
-
-“I am as fond of hunting as you are, prince. Hark! The stag is still
-forward. Our poor horses are dying with impatience. Let us gallop on
-together.”
-
-The Marquise de Montmirail had considerably altered in character since
-she tended the infirmities of her poor old husband, or sat in widow’s
-garments with her pretty child on her knee. A few years at the Court of
-France had brought to the surface all the evil of her character, and
-seemed to have stifled in her everything that was good. She had lost
-the advantage of her daughter’s companionship, for Cerise (and in this
-perhaps the Marquise was right) had been removed to a distance from the
-Court and capital, to bloom into womanhood in the healthier atmosphere of
-a provincial convent. She missed her darling sadly, no doubt, and for the
-first year or two contented herself with the gaieties and distractions
-common to her companions. She encouraged no lover, properly so called,
-and had seldom fewer than three admirers at a time. Nor had the king of
-late taken special notice of her; so she was only hated by the other
-Court ladies with the due hatred to which she was entitled from her
-wealth, beauty, and attractions.
-
-After a while, however, she put in for universal dominion, and then of
-course the outcry raised against her was loud and long sustained. She
-heeded it little; nay, she seemed to like it, and bandied sarcasms with
-her own sex as joyously, to all appearance, as she exchanged compliments
-with the other.
-
-She never faltered. She never committed herself. She stood on the brink,
-and never turned giddy nor lost her presence of mind. What she required,
-it seemed, what she could not live without, was influence, more or less,
-but the stronger the better, over every male creature that crossed her
-path. When this was gained, she had done with them unless they were
-celebrities, or sufficiently frivolous to be as variable as herself. In
-either of such cases she took considerable pains to secure the empire she
-had won. What she liked best was to elicit an offer of marriage. She was
-supposed to have refused more men, and of more different ranks, than any
-woman in France. For bachelor or widower who came within the sphere of
-her influence there was no escape. Sooner or later he must blunder into
-the net, and the longer he fought the more complete and humiliating was
-his eventual defeat. “Nothing,” said the Abbé Malletort, “nothing but the
-certainty of the king’s unacknowledged marriage to Madame de Maintenon
-prevented his cousin from obtaining and refusing an offer of the crown of
-France.”
-
-She was beautiful, too, no doubt, which made it so much worse—beautiful
-both with the beauty of the intellect and the senses. Not strictly by
-any rules of art, but from grace of outline, richness of colouring, and
-glowing radiance of health. She had all the ways, too, of acknowledged
-beauty; and even people who did not care for her were obliged to admit
-she possessed that strange, indefinite, inexplicable charm which every
-man finds in the woman he loves.
-
-The poor Prince-Marshal, Hector de Chateau-Guerrand, had undergone the
-baptism of fire at sixteen, had fought his duels, drank his Burgundy,
-and lost an estate at lansquenet in a night before he was twenty. Since
-then he had commanded the Musketeers of the Guard—divisions of the great
-king’s troops—more than once a French army in the field. It was hard to
-be a woman’s puppet at sixty—with wrinkles and rheumatism, and failing
-health, with every pleasure palling, and every pain enhanced. Well, as he
-said himself, “_le cœur ne vieillit jamais_!” There is no fool like an
-old one. The Prince-Marshal, for that was the title by which he was best
-known, had never been ardently attached to anybody but himself till now.
-We need not envy him his condition.
-
-“Let us gallop on together,” said the Marquise; but ere they could
-put their horses in motion a yeoman-pricker, armed to the teeth, rode
-rapidly by, and they waited until his Majesty should have passed. Their
-patience was not tried for long. While a fresh burst of horns announced
-another view of the quarry further on, the king’s little calèche turned
-the corner of the alley at speed, and was pulled up with considerable
-dexterity, that its occupant might listen for a moment to determine on
-his future course. Louis sat by himself in a light, narrow carriage,
-constructed to hold but one person. He was drawn by four cream-coloured
-horses, small, well-bred, and active. A child of some ten years of age
-acted postilion to the leaders, but the king’s own hand drove the pair
-at wheel, and guided them with all the skill and address of his early
-manhood.
-
-Nevertheless, he looked very old and feeble when he returned the
-obeisance of the Prince-Marshal and his fair companion. Always
-punctiliously polite, Louis lifted his hat to salute the Marquise, but
-his chin soon sank back on his chest, and the momentary gleam died out in
-his dull and weary eyes.
-
-It was obvious his health was failing day by day; he was now nearly
-seventy-seven years of age, and the end could not be far off. As he
-passed on, an armed escort followed at a few paces distance. It was
-headed by a young officer of the Grey Musketeers, who saluted the
-Prince-Marshal with considerable deference, and catching the eye of the
-Marquise, half halted his horse; and then, as if thinking better of it,
-urged him on again, the colour rising visibly in his brown handsome face.
-
-The phenomenon of a musketeer blushing was not likely to be lost on so
-keen an observer as Madame de Montmirail, particularly when the musketeer
-was young, handsome, and an excellent horseman.
-
-“Who is that on guard?” said she, carelessly of course, because she
-really wanted to know. “A captain of the Grey Musketeers evidently. And
-yet I do not remember to have seen his face at Court before.”
-
-Now it was not to be expected that a Marshal of France should show
-interest, at a moment’s notice, in so inferior an official as a mere
-captain of musketeers, more particularly when riding with a “ladye-love”
-nearly thirty years younger than himself, and of an age far more
-suitable to the good-looking gentleman about whom she made inquiries.
-Nevertheless, the Prince had no objection to enter on any subject
-redounding to his own glorification, particularly in war, and it so
-happened that the officer in question had served as his aide-de-camp in
-an affair that won him a Marshal’s baton; so he reduced his horse’s pace
-forthwith, and plunged into the tempting subject.
-
-“A fine young man, madame,” said the Prince-Marshal, like a generous old
-soldier as he was, “and a promising officer as ever I had the training
-of. He was with me while a mere cadet in that business when I effected my
-junction with Vendôme at Villa-Viciosa, and I sent him with despatches
-from Brighuega right through Staremberg’s uhlans, who ought to have cut
-him into mince-meat. Even Vendôme thanked him in person, and told me
-himself I must apply for the brave child’s promotion.”
-
-Like other ladies, the Marquise suffered her attention to wander
-considerably from these campaigning reminiscences. She roused herself,
-however, enough to answer, not very pertinently—
-
-“What an odious man the Duke is, and how hideous. Generally drunk,
-besides, and always disagreeable!”
-
-The Prince-Marshal looked a little put out, but he did not for this allow
-himself to be diverted from his subject.
-
-“A very _fortunate_ soldier, madame,” he replied, pompously; “perhaps
-more fortunate than really deserving. Nevertheless, in war as in love,
-merit is of less importance than success. His Majesty thought well to
-place the Duke over the head of officers whose experience was greater,
-and their services more distinguished. It is not for me to offer an
-opinion. I serve France, madame, and _you_,” he added, with a smile, not
-too unguarded, because some of his teeth were gone, “I am proud to offer
-my homage to both.”
-
-The Marquise moved her horse impatiently. The subject did not seem to
-amuse her, but the Prince-Marshal had got on a favourite theme, and was
-not going to abandon it without a struggle.
-
-“I do not think, madame,” he proceeded, laying his hand confidentially
-on the barb’s crest—“I do not think I have ever explained to you in
-detail the strategical reasons of my forced march on Villa-Viciosa in
-order to co-operate with Vendôme. I have been blamed in military circles
-for evacuating Brighuega after taking it, and abandoning the position
-I held at the bridge the day before the action, which I had caused to
-be strengthened during the night. Now there is much to be urged on both
-sides regarding this movement, and I will endeavour to make clear to you
-the arguments for and against the tactics I thought it my duty to adopt.
-In the first place, you must bear in mind that the enemy’s change of
-front on the previous morning, which was unexpected by us, and for which
-Staremberg had six cogent reasons, being as follows―”
-
-The Marquise looked round to her other cavalier in despair; but no
-assistance was to be expected from the cynical Abbé—for it was Malletort
-in attendance, as usual, on his cousin.
-
-The Prince-Marshal was, doubtless, about to recount the dispositions and
-manœuvres of three armies seriatim, with his own advice and opinions
-thereon, when relief came to his listener from a quarter in which she
-least expected it.
-
-She was preparing herself to endure for the hundredth time the oft-told
-tale, when her horse started, snorted, trembled violently, and attempted
-to wheel round. In another instant an animal half as big as itself leaped
-leisurely into the glade, and went lurching down the dry sunny vista as
-if in utter disregard and contempt of its pursuers.
-
-The stag had been turned back at several points by the horns of the
-foresters, who thus melodiously greeted every appearance of their quarry.
-He was beginning to think some distant refuge would be safer and more
-agreeable; also his instinct told him that the scent would improve while
-he grew warmer, and that his noisy pursuers would track him more and more
-unerringly as the sun went down.
-
-Already he felt the inconvenience of those fat haunches and that
-broad russet back he carried so magnificently; already he heard the
-deep-mouthed chorus chiming nearer and nearer, full, musical, and
-measured, like a death-bell.
-
-“_En avant!_” exclaimed Madame de Montmirail, as the stag, swerving
-from a stray hound, stretched into an honest, undisguised gallop down
-the glade, followed by the straggler at its utmost speed, labouring,
-over-paced, distressed, but rolling on, mute, resolute, and faithful to
-the line. The love of rapid motion, inseparable from health, energy, and
-high spirits, was strong in the Marquise. Her barb, in virtue of his
-blood, possessed pace and endurance; his mistress called on him to prove
-both, while she sped along on the line of chase, accompanied by several
-of the hounds, as they straggled up in twos and threes, and followed by
-most of the equestrians.
-
-Thus they reached the verge of the forest, and here stood the king’s
-calèche drawn up, his Majesty signing to them feebly yet earnestly that
-the stag was away over the plain.
-
-Great was now the confusion at so exciting and so unexpected an event.
-The foresters, with but little breath to spare, managed to raise a final
-flourish on their horns. The yeoman-prickers spurred their horses with
-a vigour more energetic than judicious; the hounds, collecting as it
-seemed from every quarter of the forest, were already stringing, one
-after another, over the dusty plain. The king, too feeble to continue
-the chase, yet anxious to know its result, whispered a few words to his
-officer of the guard, and the Musketeer, starting like an arrow from
-a bow, sped away after the hounds with some half-dozen of the keenest
-equestrians, amongst whom were the Marquise and the Prince-Marshal.
-Many of the courtiers, including the Abbé, seemed to think it disloyal
-thus to turn their backs on his Majesty, and gathered into a cluster
-to watch with interjections of interest and delight the pageant of
-the fast-receding chase. The far horizon was bounded by another range
-of woods, and that shelter the stag seemed resolved to reach. The
-intervening ground was a vast undulating plain, crossed apparently by
-no obstacles to hounds or horsemen, and varied only by a few lines of
-poplars and a _paved_ high-road to the nearest market-town.
-
-The stag then made direct for this road, but long ere he could reach
-it, the chase had become so severe that many of the hounds dropped
-off one by one; and of the horses, only those ridden by the Marquise,
-the Prince-Marshal, and the Grey Musketeer, were able to keep up the
-appearance of a gallop.
-
-Presently these successful riders drew near enough to distinguish clearly
-the object of their pursuit. The Musketeer was in advance of the others,
-who galloped on abreast, every nerve at its highest strain, and too
-preoccupied to speak a syllable.
-
-Suddenly a dip in the ground hid the stag from sight; then he appeared
-again on the opposite rise, looking darker, larger, and fresher than
-before.
-
-The Musketeer turned round and pointed towards the hollow in front. In a
-few more strides his followers perceived a fringe of alders serpentining
-between the two declivities. Madame de Montmirail’s dark eyes flashed,
-and she urged her barb to yet greater exertions.
-
-The Musketeer sat back in his saddle, and seemed to collect his horse’s
-energies for an effort. There was an increase of speed, a spring, a
-stagger, and he was over the rivulet that stole deep and cool and shining
-between the alders.
-
-The Marquise followed his horse’s footmarks to an inch, and though the
-barb threw his head up wildly, and galloped furiously at it, he too
-cleared the chasm and reached the other side in safety.
-
-The Prince-Marshal’s old blood was warmed up now, and he flew along,
-feeling as he used in the days of the duels, and the Burgundy, and the
-lansquenet. He shouted and spurred his steed, urging it with hand and
-voice and leg, but the highly-broken and well-trained animal felt its
-powers failing, and persistently declined to attempt the feat it had seen
-the others accomplish; so the Prince-Marshal was forced to discontinue
-the chase and remain on the safe side of the rubicon, whence he turned
-his horse unwillingly homewards, heated, angry, and swearing many strange
-oaths in different languages.
-
-Meanwhile the other two galloped on, the Marquise, though she spared no
-effort, finding herself unable to overtake the captain of Grey Musketeers.
-
-All at once he stopped short at a clump of willows, through which the
-chase had disappeared, and jumping off his horse, left the panting beast
-to its own devices. When she reached the trees, and looked down into the
-hollow below, she perceived the stag up to its chest in a bright, shallow
-pool, at bay, and surrounded by the eager though exhausted hounds.
-
-The Musketeer had drawn his _couteau de chasse_, and was already
-knee-deep in the water, but hearing her approach, turned back, and,
-taking his hat off, with a low obeisance, offered her the handle of his
-weapon.
-
-It was the customary form when a lady happened to be present on such an
-occasion, though, as now, the compliment was almost always declined.
-
-He had scarcely gone in and given the _coup de grace_, which he did
-like an accomplished sportsman, before some of the yeomen-prickers and
-other attendants came up, so that the disembowelling and other obsequies
-were performed with proper ceremony. Long, however, ere these had been
-concluded the Marquise was riding her tired horse slowly homeward through
-the still, sweet autumn evening, not the least disturbed that she had
-lost the Abbé and the rest of her escort, but ruminating, pleasantly and
-languidly, as her blood cooled down, on the excitement of the chase and
-the events of the day.
-
-She watched the sunset reddening and fading on the distant woods; the
-haze of twilight gradually softening, and blurring and veiling the
-surrounding landscape; the curved edge of the young moon peering over
-the trees, and the evening-star hanging, like a golden lamp, against the
-purple curtain of the sky.
-
-With head bent down, loose reins, and tired hands resting on her lap,
-Madame de Montmirail pondered on many matters as the night began to fall.
-
-She wondered at the Abbé’s want of enterprise, at the Prince-Marshal’s
-activity—if the first could have yet reached home, and whether the
-second, with his rheumatism, was not likely to spend a night in the woods.
-
-She wondered at the provoking cynicism of the one and the extraordinary
-depressive powers possessed by the other; more than all, how she could
-for so long have supported the attentions of both.
-
-She wondered what would have happened if the barb had fallen short at his
-leap; whether the Musketeer would have stopped in his headlong course
-to pity and tend her, and rest her head upon his knee, inclining to the
-belief that he would have been very glad to have the opportunity.
-
-Then she wondered what it was about this man’s face that haunted her
-memory, and where she could have seen those bold keen eyes before.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE USHER OF THE BLACK ROD
-
-
-For the courtiers of _Louis le Grand_ there was no such thing as hunger
-or thirst, want of appetite, heat, cold, lassitude, depression, or
-fatigue. If he chose they should accompany him on long journeys, in
-crowded carriages, over bad roads, they were expected, nevertheless, to
-appear fresh, well-dressed, exuberant in spirits, inclined to eat or
-content to starve, unconscious of sun and wind; above all, ready to agree
-with his Majesty upon every subject at a moment’s notice. Ladies enjoyed
-in this respect no advantage over gentlemen. Though a fair amazon had
-been hunting the stag all day, she would be required to appear just the
-same in grand Court toilet at night; to take her place at lansquenet; to
-be present at the royal concerts, twenty fiddles playing a heavy opera
-of Cavalli right through; or, perhaps, only to assist in lining the
-great gallery, which the king traversed on his way to supper. Everything
-must yield to the lightest whim of royalty, and no more characteristic
-reply was ever made to the arbitrary descendant of St. Louis than that
-of the eccentric Cardinal Bonzi, to whom the king complained one day at
-dinner that he had no teeth. “Teeth, sire!” replied the astute churchman,
-showing, while he spoke, a strong, even well-polished row of his own.
-“Why, who _has_ any teeth?”
-
-His Majesty, however, like mortals of inferior rank, did not touch on the
-accomplishment of his seventy-seventh year without sustaining many of the
-complaints and inconveniences of old age. For some time past not only
-had his teeth failed, but his digestion, despite of the regimen of iced
-fruits and sweetmeats, on which he was put by his physician Fagon, became
-unequal to its task. Everybody but himself and his doctor perceived the
-rapidity with which a change was approaching. In vain they swaddled him
-up in feather-pillows at night, to draw the gout from him through the
-pores of his skin; in vain they administered sage, veronica, cassia,
-and Jesuit-bark between meals, while they limited his potations to a
-little weak Burgundy and water, thereby affording some amusement to those
-present from the wry faces made by foreign lords and grandees who were
-curious to taste the king’s beverage. In vain they made him begin dinner
-with mulberries, and melons, and rotten figs, and strong soups, and
-salads. There is but one remedy for old age, and it is only to be found
-in the pharmacopœia, at the last chapter of the book. To that remedy the
-king was fast approaching—and yet hunting, fiddling, dining, promenades,
-concerts, and the whole round of empty Court gaiety went on all the same.
-
-The Marquise de Montmirail returned to her apartments at the palace with
-but little time to spare. It wanted but one hour from the king’s supper,
-and she must attend with the other ladies of the Court, punctual as
-clockwork, directly the folding-doors opened into the gallery, and his
-Majesty, in an enormous wig, should totter in at one end to totter out
-again at the other. Nevertheless, a good deal of decoration can be done
-in sixty minutes, when a lady, young and beautiful, is assisted by an
-attendant whose taste becomes chastened and her activity quickened by
-the superintendence of four distinct toilets every day. So the Marquise
-and Célandine between them had put the finishing touches to their great
-work within the appointed time. The former was going through a gratifying
-revision of the whole at her looking-glass, and the latter was applying
-to her mistress’s handkerchief that perfume of orange-flowers which alone
-his Majesty could endure, when a loud knocking at the outer door of the
-apartment suspended the operations of each, bringing an additional colour
-to the Marquise’s cheek, and a cloud of displeasure on the quadroon’s
-brow.
-
-“See what it is Célandine,” said the former, calmly, wondering in her
-heart, though it seemed absurd, whether this disturbance could relate in
-any manner to the previous events of the day.
-
-“It is the Abbé, I’ll be bound,” muttered Célandine, proceeding to do as
-she was bid; adding, sulkily, though below her breath, “He might knock
-there till his knuckles were sore if I was mistress instead of maid!”
-
-It was the Abbé, sure enough, in plain attire, as became his profession;
-but with an expression of hope and elation on his brow which even his
-perfect self-command seemed unable to conceal.
-
-“Pardon, madame!” said he, standing, hat in hand, on the threshold;
-“I was in attendance to conduct you to the gallery, as usual, when
-the intelligence that reached me, and, indeed, the confusion I myself
-witnessed, induced me to take the liberty of waiting on you at once.”
-
-“No great liberty,” answered the Marquise, smiling, “seeing that I
-must have encountered you, at any rate, within three paces of my door.
-But what is this alarming news, my cousin, that agitates even your
-imperturbable front? Nothing wrong with the barb, I hope!”
-
-“Not so bad as that, madame,” replied the Abbé, who was rapidly
-recovering his calmness. “It is only a matter affecting his Majesty. I
-have just learned the king is taken seriously ill. Fagon crossed the
-courtyard five minutes ago. Worse than that, Père Tellier has been sent
-for.”
-
-“Père Tellier!” repeated the Marquise. “The king’s confessor! Then the
-attack is dangerous?”
-
-“There is no doubt that his Majesty’s state is precarious in the
-extreme,” answered the Abbé, seriously. “It is a severe and exhausting
-malady from which he suffers, and at his time of life we may anticipate
-the gravest results. Madame, I must be in Paris by break of day
-to-morrow, to wait on the Duke of Orleans.”
-
-She looked at him with a half-contemptuous indulgence, and laughed.
-
-“So soon?” said she. “Nay, then, I am satisfied you think the worst.
-My cousin, you are wise in your generation, no doubt; and it would
-be a sudden blow, indeed, that should fall and find you unprepared.
-Nevertheless, is not this haste indecent? Worse; is it not ill-judged?
-The king has a wonderful constitution; Fagon is a cautious physician.
-His Majesty may recover in spite of the doctor.”
-
-“And sin again in spite of his confessor,” added the Abbé. “Nevertheless,
-I think both have foreseen a crisis for some time past. Fagon has called
-in Marechal to help him; and Père Tellier has been asking for every
-vacant benefice during the last three weeks.”
-
-“It was very polite of you, my cousin,” observed the Marquise, after a
-pause, “to come and tell me at once; though the only immediate result of
-all this confusion to _me_ is, that I suppose I may undress and go to
-bed. I have had a fatiguing day.”
-
-“Pardon again,” answered the Abbé. “I fear you must attend as usual in
-the gallery; and, indeed, it would be a thousand pities that such a
-toilette should be wasted, for you look beautiful, and are charmingly
-dressed. You know, besides, that only the king’s own order can rescind
-the daily regulations for the Court.”
-
-“We had better proceed, then,” said Madame de Montmirail. “Célandine has
-revised me thoroughly, and the sooner I go the sooner I shall get it
-over. Believe me, it would require some excitement stronger than common
-to keep me awake to-night.”
-
-“One instant, madame,” replied the Abbé. “I will not detain you longer;
-but at a crisis like the present what I have to say merits your most
-earnest attention. In the first place, will you permit Célandine to
-examine if the outer door be shut?”
-
-The scowl on the quadroon’s brow grew deeper, while, in obedience to a
-sign from her mistress, she retired into the outer chamber. The Marquise
-seated herself on a couch near the toilet-table, spreading her skirts out
-carefully, lest their freshness might sustain damage in that position,
-and prepared to receive her cousin’s confidences, as he stood near, cool,
-polished, smiling, but obviously repressing, with an effort, the strong
-agitation under which he laboured.
-
-While she sat in that graceful attitude, her head turned up towards his
-face, one beautifully moulded arm and hand resting in her lap, the other
-yet ungloved holding a closed fan against her lips, it may have occurred
-to the Abbé that so many charms of person and manner might be applied
-to a worthier purpose than the furtherance of Court intrigues or the
-advancement of any one man’s ambition. It may even have occurred to him,
-though doubtless if it did so the thought had to be stifled as it rose,
-that it would be no unpleasant task, however difficult, to woo and win
-and wear such beauty for himself and his own happiness; and that to be
-his cousin’s favoured lover was a more enviable position than could
-be afforded by comptroller’s wand, or cardinal’s cap, or minister’s
-portfolio. For a moment his rugged features softened like a clearing
-landscape under a gleam of sun, while he looked on her and basked, as it
-were, in the radiance of her beauty, ere he turned back to the chill,
-shadowy labyrinth of deceit in which he spent his life.
-
-Madame de Montmirail’s exterior was of that sparkling kind which, like
-the diamond, is enhanced by the richness of its setting. In full Court
-toilette as he saw her now, few women would have cared to enter the lists
-as her rivals. The dress she wore was of pale yellow satin, displaying,
-indeed, with considerable liberality, her graceful neck and shoulders,
-glowing in the warm tints of a brunette. It fitted close to her
-well-turned bust, spreading into an enormous volume of skirts below the
-waist, overlaid by a delicate fabric of black lace, and looped up here
-and there in strings of pearls. Her waving hair, black and glossy, was
-turned back from a low, broad forehead, and gathered behind her ears into
-a shining mass, from which a ringlet or two escaped, smooth and elastic,
-to coil, snake-like, on her bosom. One row of large pearls encircled her
-neck, and one bracelet of diamonds and emeralds clung to her ungloved
-arm. Other ornaments she had none, though an open dressing-case on the
-toilet-table flashed and glittered like a jeweller’s shop.
-
-And now I have only made an inventory of her dress after all. How can I
-hope to convey an idea of her face? How is it possible to describe that
-which constitutes a woman’s loveliness? that subtle influence which,
-though it generally accompanies harmony of colouring and symmetry of
-feature, is by no means the result of these advantages; nay, often
-exists without them, and seems in all cases independent of their aid. I
-will only say of her charms, that Madame de Montmirail was already past
-thirty, and nine men out of every ten in the circle of her acquaintance
-were more or less in love with her.
-
-She had a beautiful foot, besides. It was peeping out now from beneath
-her dress. The Abbé’s eyes unconsciously fixed themselves on the small
-white satin shoe, as he proceeded with his confidences.
-
-“It is good to be prepared, my cousin,” said he, in a low, hurried voice,
-very different from his usual easy, careless tone. “Everything will now
-be changed, if, as I expect, the indisposition of to-night is but the
-beginning of the end. You know my situation; you know my hopes; you know
-the difficulties I have had to contend with. The king’s suspicions, the
-courtiers’ jealousy, the imprudence of my patron himself; and you know,
-too, that through good and evil I have always stood firm by the Duke of
-Orleans. It is evident that in a few days he will be the most powerful
-man in France.”
-
-“Afterwards?” asked the Marquise, apparently unmoved by the contingency.
-
-“Afterwards!” repeated Malletort, almost with indignation. “Do you not
-see the career that opens itself before us all? Who is best acquainted
-with the Duke’s early history?—Abbé Malletort. Who is the Duke bound to
-serve before the whole world? Not from gratitude—bah! that is a thing of
-course—but from motives of the clearest self-interest?—Abbé Malletort. In
-brief, in whom does he confide?—In Abbé Malletort. And to whom does the
-Abbé lay bare his hopes, his aspirations, his ambition?—To whom but to
-his sweet cousin, Madame de Montmirail?”
-
-“And what would you have me do?” asked the Marquise, yawning, while she
-carelessly fastened the bracelet on her arm.
-
-“I would have you guard your lips with a clasp of iron,” answered the
-Abbé. “I would have you keep watch to-night and to-morrow, and every
-day till the end comes—on your words, your looks, your gestures—the
-very trimmings and colour of the dresses you wear. Be polite to all;
-but familiar, cordial, even communicative with none. In brief, have no
-friends, no enemies, no dislikes, no predilections, till the old state of
-affairs is ended and the new begun.”
-
-“I think you can trust me,” answered the Marquise. “My feelings are
-little likely to betray me into indiscretion; and though I have plenty of
-lovers at Court, I do not imagine I have many friends.”
-
-She spoke wearily, and finished with something like a sigh.
-
-The Abbé’s eyes sparkled. “I _know_ I can!” said he. “My cousin has none
-of the weaknesses of her sex, and all its beauty for her own share.” Then
-he opened the door and spoke loud enough for Célandine to hear. “We must
-have mademoiselle back from her pension. She is old enough now to take
-her place as an ornament to society and the Court.”
-
-Malletort understood true economy, and he knew that this bribe, while it
-cost him nothing, would purchase favour with the quadroon, whose dislike
-he had observed and resolved to efface.
-
-Madame de Montmirail bowed and took his arm. It was now high time they
-were both in attendance on his Majesty, should the concert fixed for that
-night be permitted to take place.
-
-As they walked through the corridor, however, a great confusion was heard
-in the gallery they were about to enter. There was a scuffling of feet,
-a murmur of agitated voices suppressed to whispers, and the smothered
-sobs of women, denoting some sad catastrophe. When the door opened, the
-musicians crowded hurriedly out, carrying with them their instruments,
-and tumultuously impeding the progress of a spare grave man in a priest’s
-dress, who pushed his way through, with every appearance of anxiety and
-dismay.
-
-It was Père Tellier, the king’s confessor, summoned in mortal haste to
-the bedside of his dying master.
-
-The Marquise and the Abbé had that day looked their last upon the face of
-_Louis le Grand_. Already, through pale attendants and anxious courtiers,
-through valets and chamberlains and musketeers of the guard, might be
-seen approaching the real Usher of the Black Rod.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-A JESUIT’S TASK
-
-
-Of all armies on earth, there is none with a discipline so perfect as
-exists in the ranks of the Jesuits. No similar brotherhood embraces
-so extensive a scheme; no society spreads its ramifications so wide
-and deep. The soldier who enlists under that black banner abandons
-at once and for ever his own affections, his own opinions, his own
-responsibilities; nay, his very identity becomes fused in the general
-organisation of his order. Florian de St. Croix, with his warm,
-impulsive disposition, his tendency to self-sacrifice, and his romantic
-temperament, had better have hanged round his neck any other millstone
-than this.
-
-As he walked rapidly down a long perspective of paved road, between
-two lofty rows of poplars, his head bent low, his hands clenched, his
-lips muttering, and his swift unequal strides denoting both impetuosity
-and agitation, he seemed strangely and sadly altered from the bright
-enthusiastic youth who sat with Abbé Malletort under the limes at
-Versailles.
-
-His very name had been put off, with every other association that could
-connect the past life of the layman with the future labours of the
-priest. He was known as Brother Ambrose now in the muster-rolls of the
-order; though, out of it, he was still addressed as Florian by his former
-friends. It was supposed, perhaps, in the wisdom of his superiors, that
-the devoted knight could fight best under a plain shield on which no
-achievements might ever be emblazoned, but which, in theory at least, was
-to be preserved pure and stainless, until he was carried home on it from
-his last field.
-
-For Florian, indeed, the battle had already commenced. He was fighting
-it now, fiercely, under that smiling summer sky, between those fragrant
-meadows, fringed with flowering hedges, amongst the clustering orchards
-and smiling farms, the green nooks, the gleaming waters, and the free,
-fresh range of wooded hill and dale in pleasant Normandy. Little thought
-the buxom peasant-woman, with her clean white cap, long earrings, and
-handsome weather-beaten face, as she crossed herself in passing, and
-humbly received the muttered benediction—how much of war was in his
-breast who proffered peace to her and hers; or the prosperous farmer
-riding by on his stamping grey stallion, with tail tied up, broad,
-well-fed back, huge brass-bound saddle, and red-fronted bridle—how
-enviable was his own contented ignorance compared with the learning
-and imagination and aspirations running riot in the brain of that wan
-hurrying priest. The fat curé, thinking of his dinner, his duties, and
-the stone-fruit ripening on his wall, greeted him with professional
-friendliness, tempered by profound respect; for in his person he beheld
-the principle of self-devotion which constitutes the advance, the
-vanguard, the very forlorn hope of an army in which he felt himself a
-mere suttler or camp-follower at the best; but his sleep that afternoon
-over a bottle of light wine in his leafy arbour would have been none the
-sounder could he have known the horror of doubt and darkness that weighed
-like lead on his brother’s spirit—the fears, the self-reproaches, the
-anxieties that tore at his brother’s heart.
-
-Yet the same sun was shining on them all; the same glorious landscape
-of wood and water, waving corn and laughing upland—gold, and silver,
-and blue, and green, and purple—spread out for their enjoyment; the
-same wild-flowers blooming, the same wild-birds carolling, to delight
-their senses; the same heaven looking down in tender pity on the wilful
-blindness and reckless self-torture of mankind.
-
-Florian had entered the order, believing that in so doing he adopted
-the noblest career of chivalry below, to end in the proudest triumph of
-victory above. Like the crusaders of the Middle Ages, he turned to his
-profession, and beheld in it a means of ambition, excitement, influence
-over his fellow-men, purchased—not at the sacrifice—but in the salvation
-of his soul. Like them, he was to have the best of it both for earth
-and heaven; like them, he was to submit to labour, privation, all the
-harassing exigencies of warfare; but, like them, he was upheld by the
-consciousness of power which springs from discipline and cohesion, by
-an unselfish sentiment of professional pride, not more peculiar to the
-soldier than the priest.
-
-He took the vows of obedience—the blind, unreasoning, unhesitating
-obedience exacted by the order—with a thrill of exultation. As a Jesuit,
-he must henceforth know neither friendship nor affection; neither
-sentiment, passion, nor self-regard. His brain must be always clear, his
-eye keen, his hand ready; but brain must think, eye see, and hand strike
-only in conformity with the will of a superior. He was to preserve every
-faculty of nature except volition. He was to become a galvanised corpse
-rather than a living man.
-
-And now these hideous vows, this impossible obedience, must be put to the
-test. Like the demoniacs of old, he writhed in torture as he walked. It
-seemed that the evil spirit rent and tore the man because it could not
-come out of him.
-
-He was hurrying on foot to the convent of our Lady of Succour. He knew
-every stone in that paved road as he knew the fingers on his own hand.
-His superior had lately installed him confessor to the establishment;
-_him_, young, handsome, impressionable, with his dark eyes and his loving
-smile. There was another confessor, too, a stout old man, with a rosy
-face and a kind heart, altogether, as it would seem, a far more judicious
-appointment; but Florian’s duties brought him little in contact with the
-nuns and lay amongst the young ladies, several of whom were daughters of
-noble families, receiving their education in a pension attached to the
-convent.
-
-Of these, Brother Ambrose had been specially enjoined to turn his
-attention to Mademoiselle de Montmirail; to obtain all the influence in
-his power over the frank, innocent mind of that engaging girl; to win her
-affections as much as possible from earthly vanities, to which, as she
-was on the verge of womanhood, it is probable she was not disinclined;
-and to lead her gradually into a train of thought that might at last
-bring her home to the bosom of the Church as a nun. That Church would
-at the same time protect her from temptation, by relieving her of the
-earthly dross with which she would be encumbered, and which would pass
-into its holy keeping the day the heiress should assume the black veil.
-
-Besides the reversion of her mother’s wealth, she would inherit
-considerable property of her own when she came of age. Had it been
-otherwise, it is possible the same interest might not have been shown
-for the insurance of her salvation, and Brother Ambrose might have been
-making fires of camel’s dung in Tartary, or bearing witness by martyrdom
-in Morocco, instead of hurrying through the shade of those quivering
-poplars in homely, happy Normandy.
-
-But as he approached the convent of our Lady of Succour, Brother
-Ambrose—or Florian, as we shall call him for the present—reduced his walk
-to a much slower step, and became conscious of a hot feeling about his
-eyes, a cold moisture in the palms of his hands, that had no connection
-with theology, polemics, or the usual duties of a priest. There are
-proverbs used in the world, such as “Tit-for-tat;” “The biter bit;” “Go
-for wool, and come back shorn,” which are applicable to ecclesiastics as
-to laymen. It is no safer to play with edged tools in a convent than in
-a ball-room, and it is a matter of the merest hazard who shall get the
-best of an encounter in which the talents and education of a clever but
-susceptible man are pitted against the bright looks and fresh roses of
-girlhood at eighteen.
-
-Florian had been enjoined to use every effort for the subjugation of
-Mademoiselle de Montmirail. He was to be restricted by no considerations
-such as hamper the proceedings of ordinary minds, for was not this one
-of the fundamental principles of his order—“It is lawful to do evil
-that good may come”? He had not, indeed, swallowed this maxim without
-considerable repulsion, so utterly at variance, as it seemed, not only
-with reason, but with that instinctive sentiment of right which is often
-a surer guide than even reason itself; but he had been convinced against
-his will by those under whose feet he had chosen to place his neck, and
-had at last brought his opinions, if not his feelings, to the necessary
-state of control. A few interviews with Mademoiselle de Montmirail in the
-cool dark convent parlour—a few calm, still evenings in the quiet convent
-garden, under the shade of the trellised beeches, amidst the fragrance
-of the flower-beds and the heavy perfume of the syringa, waiting for the
-rustle of that white dress along the gravel-walk—a few questions and
-misgivings from the penitent—a few phrases of advice or encouragement
-from the priest—and Florian found himself wildly, hopelessly, wickedly
-in love with the girl whom it was his duty, his sacred duty on which
-his soul’s salvation depended, to persuade, or lure, or force into a
-cloister. These things come by degrees. No man can complain that timely
-warning is not given him; yet the steps are so gradual, so easy, so
-imperceptible, by which he descends into the pleasant flood, that it is
-only when his footing is lost he becomes really aware of danger, or knows
-he is sentenced, and must swim about in it till he drowns.
-
-Florian’s task was to obtain influence over the girl. Thus he salved
-his conscience till it was too late, and thus excused himself for the
-eagerness with which he caught every glance of her eye and drank in
-every tone of her voice. It was only when his own looks fell before
-hers, when he trembled and turned pale at the sound of her step—when her
-image—serene, and fair, and gracious—rose between him and the Cross at
-which he knelt, that he knew his peril, his weakness and his sin.
-
-But it was too late then; though he wrestled with the phantom, it
-overcame him time by time. Prostrate, bleeding, vanquished, he would
-confess with something of the bitterness of spirit and plaintive proud
-self-sacrifice of a lost angel, that he had given his soul to Cerise and
-did not grudge her the gift.
-
-Not even though she refused to love him in return. Perhaps, after all,
-this was the poisoned edge of the weapon—the bitter drop in the cup; and
-yet had it been otherwise, it may be the young Jesuit could have found
-strength to conquer his infatuation, self-sacrifice, to give up freely
-that which was freely his own.
-
-It was not so, however. The very innocence that guarded the girl, while
-it lured him irresistibly to destruction, was the most insurmountable
-barrier in his path; and so he hovered on, hoping that which he dared
-not realise—wishing for all he felt he would yet be unwilling to accept;
-striving for a prize unspeakably precious, though, perhaps I should say,
-_because_ impossible of attainment, and which, even if he could win it,
-he might not wear it so much as an hour. No wonder his heart beat and his
-breath came quick, while he passed with stealthy gait into the convent
-garden, a pitfall for the feet that walked in innocence—a black sheep in
-a stainless flock—a leper where all the rest were clean.
-
-But Cerise, radiant in her white dress, crossed the sunny lawn and came
-down the accustomed path with more than their usual light shining in her
-blue eyes, with a fresher colour than common on her soft young cheeks.
-To him she had never looked so beautiful, so womanly, so attractive. The
-struggle had been very fierce during his solitary walk; the defeat was
-flagrant in proportion. He ought to have known a bitter disappointment
-must be in store to balance the moment of rapture in which he became
-conscious of her approach. Some emanation seemed to glorify the air all
-around her, and to warn him of her presence long before she came. To the
-lady-superior of the convent, to her elders and instructors, Mademoiselle
-de Montmirail was nothing more than a well-grown damsel, with good eyes
-and hair, neither more nor less frivolous and troublesome than her
-fellows, with much room for improvement in the matters of education,
-music, manners, and deportment; but to the young Jesuit she was simply—an
-angel.
-
-Cerise held both hands out to her director, with a greeting so frank
-and cordial that it should have undeceived him on the spot. The
-lady-superior, from her shaded windows, might or might not be a witness
-to their interview, and there is no retreat perhaps of so much seclusion,
-yet so little privacy, as a convent garden; but Cerise did not care
-though nuns and lay-sisters and all overlooked her every gesture and
-overheard every word she spoke.
-
-“I am so pleased!” she burst out, clapping her hands, as soon as he
-released them. “Wish me joy, good father! I have such happy news! My dear
-kind mamma! And she writes to me herself! I knew the silk that fastened
-it even before I saw her hand on the cover. Such good news! Oh, I am so
-pleased! so pleased!”
-
-She would have danced for pure joy had she not remembered she was nearly
-eighteen. Also perhaps—for a girl’s heart is very pitiful—she may have
-had some faint shadowy conception that the news so delightful to herself
-would be less welcome to her companion.
-
-He was looking at her with the admiration in his heart shining out of his
-deep dark eyes.
-
-“You have not told me what your good news is, my daughter,” he observed,
-in a tone that made her glance into and away from his face, but that
-sobered the effervescence of her gaiety like a charm.
-
-“It is a long letter from mamma!” she said, “and a whole month before I
-expected one. Judge if that is not charming. But, better still, I am to
-go back to her very soon. I am to live with her at the Hôtel Montmirail.
-She is fitting up my apartment already. I am to quit the convent when my
-quarter is out!”
-
-He knew it was coming. There is always consciousness of a blow for a
-moment before it falls.
-
-“Then you have but a few more days to remain in Normandy,” replied the
-young priest; and again the change in his voice arrested her attention.
-“My daughter, will you not regret the happy hours you have spent here,
-the quiet, the repose of the convent, and—and—the loving friends you
-leave behind?”
-
-He glanced round while he spoke, and thought how different the white
-walls, the drooping branches, the lawn, the flower-beds, and the walk
-beneath the beeches would look when she was gone.
-
-“Of course I shall never cease to love all those I have known here,” she
-answered; and her eye met his own fearlessly, while there was no tinge
-of sorrow such as he would have liked to detect in her voice. “But I am
-going home, do you see! home to my dear mamma; and I shall be in Paris,
-and assist at operas, and balls, and fêtes. My father! I fear, I shall
-like it—oh! so much!”
-
-There remained little time for further explanations. The refectory
-bell was ringing, and Cerise must hurry in and present herself for her
-ration of fruit and chocolate; to which refreshment, indeed, she seemed
-more than usually inclined. Neither her surprise nor her feelings had
-taken away her appetite, and she received her director’s benediction
-with a humility respectful, edifying, and filial, as if he had been her
-grandfather.
-
-“I shall perhaps not visit you at the convent again, my daughter,” he
-had said, revolving in his own mind a thousand schemes, a thousand
-impossibilities, tinged alike with fierce, bitter disappointment; and to
-this she had made answer meekly—
-
-“But you will think of me very often, my father; and, oh, remember me, I
-entreat of you, in your prayers!”
-
-Then Florian knew that the edifice he had taken such pains to rear was
-crumbling away before his eyes, because, in his anxiety to build it for
-his own habitation, he had laid its foundations in the sand.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-ST. MARK’S BALSAM
-
-
-The death of the great king, and the first transactions of the Regency,
-left little leisure to Abbé Malletort for the thousand occupations of
-his every-day life. With the busy churchman, to stagnate was a cessation
-of existence. As some men study bodily health and vigour, carefully
-attending to the development of their frames by constant and unremitting
-exercise, so did the Abbé preserve his intellect in the highest possible
-training by its varied use, and seemed to grudge the loss of every
-hour in which he either omitted to learn something new or lay a fresh
-stepping-stone for the employment of knowledge previously acquired. Like
-Juvenal’s Greek, he studied all the sciences in turn, but his labour was
-never without an object, nor had he the slightest scruples in applying
-its results to his own advantage. Malletort was qualified to deal
-with the most consummate knave, but he might have been unconsciously
-out-manœuvred by a really honest man, simply from his own habitual
-disregard of the maxim, as true in ethics as in mathematics, which
-teaches that the shortest way from any one given point to another is a
-straight line.
-
-The Abbé had therefore many irons in his fire, careful, however, so to
-hold them that he should preserve his own fingers from being burnt;
-and amongst others, he often applied his spare hours to the study of
-chemistry.
-
-Now in the time of which I am speaking the tree of knowledge had not been
-entirely denuded of its parasite credulity. Science and superstition
-were not yet finally divorced, and the philosopher’s stone was still
-eagerly sought by many an enthusiast who liked to regenerate the world
-in a process of which the making a colossal fortune for himself should
-be the first step. Not that the Abbé quite believed in the possibility
-of creating gold, but that, true to his character, he was prepared to be
-satisfied with any glittering substitute which the world could be induced
-to accept in its stead. So he too had his little laboratory, his little
-forge, his little crucibles, and vials, and acids, and essences, all
-the rudiments of science, and some faint foreshadowings of her noblest
-discoveries.
-
-If a man goes into his garden, and seeks eagerly on hands and knees,
-we will suppose, for a four-leaved shamrock, I am not prepared to say
-that he will succeed in finding that rare and abnormal plant; but in
-his search after it, and the close attention thereby entailed, he will
-doubtless observe many beauties of vegetation, many curious arrangements
-of nature that have hitherto escaped his notice; and though he fails to
-discover the four-leaved shamrock, he makes acquaintance with a hundred
-no less interesting specimens, and returns home a wiser naturalist than
-he went out. So was it with the adepts, as they called themselves, who
-sought diligently after the philosopher’s stone. They read, they thought,
-they fused, they dissolved, they mingled; they analysed fluids, they
-separated gases; they ascertained the combinations of which one substance
-was formed, and the ingredients into which another could be resolved.
-They missed the object of their search, no doubt, but they lost neither
-for themselves nor their successors all the result of their labours;
-for while the precious elixir itself escaped them, they captured almost
-everything else that was worth learning for the application of chemistry
-to the humbler purposes of every-day life. Unfortunately, too, in
-tampering with so many volatile essences, they became familiar with the
-subtler kinds of poison. A skilful adept of that school knew how to rid a
-patron of his enemies in twenty-four hours without fail, and to use the
-while no more overt weapon than the grasp of a gloved hand, a pinch of
-scented snuff, or the poisoned fragrance of a posy of flowers.
-
-Such men drove a thriving trade in Paris during the Regency, and our
-Abbé, himself no mean proficient in the craft, was in the habit of
-spending many an hour in the laboratory of one who could boast he was a
-match for the most skilful of the brotherhood.
-
-It was for this purpose that Malletort crossed the Seine, and penetrated
-into one of the loftiest, gloomiest, and narrowest streets of Old
-Paris—how different from Imperial Paris of to-day!—to thread its
-windings, with his accustomed placid face and jaunty step, ere he stopped
-at the door of the tallest, most dilapidated, and dirtiest building in
-the row.
-
-The Abbé’s face was, if possible, more self-satisfied, his step even
-lighter than usual. He was in high favour with the Regent, and the
-Regent, at least among the lower classes, was still the most popular man
-in France. They were aware of his vices, indeed, but passed them over
-in a spirit of liberality, bordering on want of principle, with which
-the French, in this respect so unlike ourselves, permit their leading
-men a latitude of private conduct proportioned to their public utility.
-Had the Abbé doubted his patron’s popularity, he need only have listened
-to an impudent little urchin, who ran almost between his legs, shouting
-at the top of his voice a favourite street song of the day called “The
-Débonnaire.”
-
- “’Tis a very fine place to be monarch of France,
- Most Christian king, and St. Louis’s son,
- When he takes up his fiddle the others must dance,
- And they durstn’t sit down till the music’s done.
- But I’d rather be Regent—eh! wouldn’t you, Pierre?
- Such a Regent as ours, so débonnaire.
- Tra-la-la—tra-la-la—such a mien, such an air!
- Oh, yes! our Regent is débonnaire.
-
- “A monarch of France, when they bring him to dine,
- They must hand him a cloth, and a golden bowl;
- But the Regent can call for a flagon of wine,
- And need never sit down till he’s emptied the whole.
- He wouldn’t give much for your dry-lipped fare,
- This Regent of ours, so débonnaire.
- Tra-la-la—tra-la-la—how he’ll stagger and swear,
- Oh, yes! our Regent is débonnaire.
-
- “A monarch of France has a mate on the throne,
- And his likings and loves must be under the rose;
- But the Regent takes all the sweet flowers for his own,
- And he pulls them by handfuls wherever he goes.
- Of the bright and the fair, the rich and the rare,
- Our Regent, you see, is so débonnaire.
- Tra-la-la—tra-la-la—he puts in for his share,
- Oh, yes! our Regent is débonnaire.
-
- “A monarch of France has his peers in a row,
- And they bring him his boots with the morning light;
- But our Regent is never caught bare-footed so,
- For his roués and he, they sit booted all night!
- And they drink and they swear, and they blink and they stare—
- And never a monarch of France can compare,
- Neither Louis the Fat, nor yet Philip the Fair,
- With this Regent of ours, so débonnaire.
- Tra-la-la—tra-la-la—let us drink to him, Pierre!
- Oh, yes! our Regent is débonnaire.”
-
-“Tra-la-la, tra-la-la, he is débonnaire!” hummed the Abbé, as he mounted
-the wooden staircase, and stopped at the first door on the landing.
-“Monsieur le Duc is welcome to make all the music for our puppet dance so
-long as he leaves it to Monsieur l’Abbé to pull the strings.”
-
-Two gaudily dressed footmen answered Malletort’s summons and admitted
-him obsequiously, as being a well-known friend of their master’s,
-before he had time to ask if Signor Bartoletti was within. The Abbé had
-visited here too often to be surprised at the luxuries of the apartment
-into which he was ushered, so little in character with the dirt and
-dilapidation that prevailed outside; but Signor Bartoletti, alleging
-in excuse the requirements of his southern blood, indulged in every
-extravagance to which his means would stretch, was consequently always
-in difficulties, and therefore ready to assist in any scheme, however
-nefarious, provided he was well paid.
-
-The Signor’s tastes were obviously florid. Witness the theatrical
-appearance of his lackeys, the bright colour of his furniture, the gaudy
-ornaments on his chimneypiece, the glaring pictures on his walls; nay,
-the very style and chasing of a massive flagon of red wine standing on
-the table by a filagree basket of fruit for his refection.
-
-The man himself, too, was palpably over-dressed, wearing a sword here
-in the retirement of his chamber, yet wearing it as one whose hand
-was little familiar with its guard. Every resource of lace, velvet,
-satin, and embroidery had been employed in vain to give him an outward
-semblance of distinction, but there was an expression of intellect and
-energy in his dark beetle-browed face, with its restless black eyes,
-that, in spite of low stature and ungainly make, redeemed him from the
-imputation of utter vulgarity.
-
-His hands, too (and there is a good deal of character in the hand), were
-strong, nervous, and exceedingly well-shaped, though sadly stained and
-scorched by the acids he made use of in the prosecution of his art.
-
-A less keen observer than the Abbé might not have remarked beneath the
-signor’s cordial greeting symptoms of anxiety, and even apprehension,
-blended with something of the passive defiance which seems to say, “I am
-in a corner. I have no escape. I don’t like it; but I must make the best
-of it.”
-
-A less keen observer, too, might not have detected a ring of bravado
-in the tone with which he accosted his visitor as a disciple and
-fellow-labourer in the cause of science.
-
-“Welcome, monsieur,” said he—“welcome to the teacher who needs the
-assistance of his pupil every step he travels on the radiant path. Have
-you made discoveries, Monsieur l’Abbé? Fill your glass, and impart them.
-Have you encountered difficulties?—Fill your glass, and conquer them.
-Have you seen the true light glimmering far, far off across the black
-waters?—Fill your glass, I say, and let us drink success to our voyage
-ere we embark once more in search of the Great Secret.”
-
-“Faith, I believe we’re nearer it than you think for, Bartoletti,”
-answered Malletort, smiling coldly; “though I doubt if you could look
-to the right point of the compass for it with all your geography. What
-do you think of the Scotchman’s banking scheme, my gold-seeking friend?
-Is not Monsieur Las[2] a better alchemist than either of us? Has he not
-discovered the Great Arcanum? And without fire or bellows, crucible,
-alembic, or retort? Why, the best of us have used up every metal that the
-earth produces without arriving—though I grant you we have come very near
-it—yet without arriving at perfection; and here’s an Englishman only asks
-for a ton or so of paper, a Government stamp, and—presto!—with a stroke
-of the pen he turns it all to gold.”
-
-“Have you, too, bought Mississippi Stock?” asked the Signor, eagerly.
-“Then the scheme is prospering; the shares will rise once more. It is
-good to hold on!”
-
-“Not quite such a fool!” answered the Abbé; and Bartoletti’s swarthy face
-fell several inches, for he had a high opinion of his visitor’s financial
-perceptions.
-
-“And yet the Rue Quincampoix was so thronged yesterday, I was compelled
-to leave my coach, and bid my lackeys force a passage for me through the
-crowd,” urged the Signor. “Madame was there, and the Duc du Maine, and
-more peers of France than you would see at the council. There _must_ be
-life in it! All the world cannot be dupes. And yet the shares have fallen
-even since this morning.”
-
-“All the world are not likely to be on the winning side,” replied the
-Abbé, quietly, “or who would be left to pay the stakes? From whom do
-you suppose Monsieur Las makes his profits? You know he has bought the
-Hôtel Mazarin. You know he has bought Count de Tessé’s house, furniture,
-pictures, plate, and all, even to the English carriage-horses that his
-coachman does not know how to drive. Where do you suppose the money comes
-from? When a society of people are engaged in eating one another, it
-seems to me that the emptiest stomach has the best chance.”
-
-His listener looked thoughtfully on his scorched, scarred fingers. It
-might be that he reflected in how many ways he had burnt them.
-
-“What do you advise me to do?” he asked, after a pause, during which he
-had filled and emptied a goblet of the red wine that stood at his elbow.
-
-“Realise,” was the answer. “Realise, and without delay. The game is like
-tennis, and must be played with the same precision. If your ball be not
-taken at the first rebound, its force is so deadened that your utmost
-skill falls short of cutting it over the net.”
-
-The Abbé’s metaphor, drawn from that fashionable pastime which had been
-a favourite amusement of the late king, was not without its effect on
-his listener. Like a skilful practitioner, he suffered his advice to
-sink into the adept’s mind before he took advantage of its effects. In
-other sciences besides chemistry and cookery, it is well to let your
-ingredients simmer undisturbed in the crucible till they are thoroughly
-fused and amalgamated.
-
-He wanted the Signor malleable, and nothing, he knew by experience,
-rendered Bartoletti so obliging as a conviction that he lacked means to
-provide for his self-indulgence. Like the general public, he had been
-tempted by the great Mississippi scheme, and had invested in its shares
-the small amount of ready money at his command. It was gradually dawning
-on him that his speculations would entail considerable loss—that loss
-he felt, and showed he felt, must be made good. This was the Abbé’s
-opportunity. He could offer his own price now for the co-operation of his
-friend.
-
-“We are wasting time sadly,” said the visitor, after a pause. “Let us go
-to our studies at once,” and he led the way to an inner apartment, as
-though he had been host and teacher rather than visitor and disciple.
-
-The Signor followed, obedient though unwilling, like a well-trained dog
-bid to heel by its master.
-
-Malletort turned his cuffs back, seized a small pair of bellows, and
-blew a heap of powdered coal, mingled with other substances, into a deep
-violet glow.
-
-“By the by,” he asked as if suddenly recollecting something of no
-importance, “have you ever had any dealings with negroes? Do you know
-anything of the superstitions of Obi?”
-
-“I know something of every superstition in the world,” answered the
-other, “Christian as well as pagan, or how could I afford to drink such
-wine as you tasted in the next room?”
-
-He laughed while he spoke, heartily enough, and so did Malletort, only
-the mirth of the latter was assumed. He believed in very little, this
-Abbé, very little indeed, either for good or evil; but he would have
-liked, if he could, to believe in the philosopher’s stone.
-
-“I have made acquaintance with an Obi-woman lately,” pursued he; “she may
-be useful to us both. I will bring her to see you in a day or two, if you
-will refresh your mind in the meantime with what you can remember of
-their mysteries, so as to meet her on equal terms.”
-
-Bartoletti looked much relieved, and indeed gratified, when informed
-that this Obi-woman, instead of being a hideous old negress, was a
-fine-looking quadroon.
-
-“Is that all you wanted?” said he, quite briskly; but his countenance
-fell once more on perceiving that the Abbé made no preparations for
-departure.
-
-“Not quite,” replied the latter. “I am hardly perfect yet in the nature
-of those essences we studied at my last lesson. Let us go over their
-powers and properties again.”
-
-The Signor turned a shade paler, but taking down some phials, and two or
-three papers of powders from a shelf, he did as he was bid, and proceeded
-systematically enough to explain their contents, gaining confidence, and
-even growing enthusiastic in his subject as he went on.
-
-At the third packet the Abbé stopped him.
-
-“It is harmless, you say, as a perfume when sprinkled in the form of a
-powder?”
-
-The Signor nodded.
-
-“But a deadly poison, mixed with three drops of St. Mark’s balsam?”
-
-“Right!” assented the Italian.
-
-“And combined with any vegetable substance, its very odour would be
-dangerous and even fatal to animal life?”
-
-“You are an apt pupil,” said the other, not without approval, though he
-turned paler still. “It took me seven weeks’ close study, and a hundred
-experiments, to find that out.”
-
-“You worked with the glass mask on, of course,” continued the Abbé; “what
-would have been the effect had you inhaled the odour?”
-
-“I should have come out in red spots at the first inspiration, turned
-black at the second, and at the third Monsieur l’Abbé should have been
-lost to the world, to science, and to you,” was the conclusive reply.
-
-“I am not quite satisfied yet,” said Malletort. “I will take a packet
-home with me for further examination, if you please, and ten drops of St.
-Mark’s balsam as well.”
-
-“It is worth a thousand francs a drop,” observed the adept, producing at
-the same time a tiny sealed phial from a drawer under his hand.
-
-“Of course you name your own price,” replied Malletort, snatching up his
-purchase with impatience, and leaving in its place a purse through which
-the gold shone temptingly, and which clanked down on the table as if the
-weight of its lining was satisfactory enough.
-
-The two men seemed to understand each other, for almost before the
-Signor’s grasp was on the purse his visitor had left the house; but
-Bartoletti, locking up the drawer, returned to his gaudy sitting-room,
-with a twitching lip and a cold sweat bursting from his brow.
-
-Till the adept had summoned his theatrical footman, and ordered another
-flagon of the red wine, he gasped and panted like a man awaking from
-a nightmare; nor did he recover his equanimity till the flagon was
-three-parts emptied.
-
-By that time, however, he was scarce in a condition to pursue his
-researches after the philosopher’s stone.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-THE GREY MUSKETEERS
-
-
-A bugler, thirteen years of age, and about three feet high, a veritable
-“Child of the Regiment,” was blowing “The Assembly” for the Grey
-Musketeers with a vigour that made itself heard through the adjoining
-Faubourg.
-
-The miniature soldier, who had already smelt powder, strutted and swelled
-like a bantam-cock. His plumage, too, was nearly as gorgeous, and he
-seemed more than satisfied with himself and his advantages. In no other
-country, perhaps, could a combination so ridiculous, yet so admirable,
-have been found as in this union of innocence and precocity; this
-simplicity of the child, underlying the bearing of a giant, the courage
-of a hero, and the coquetry of a girl.
-
-Ten minutes precisely were allowed by the regulations of the late king
-between the mustering call and the “fall-in,” or final summons for the
-men to take their places in the ranks.
-
-The Musketeers lounged and straggled over their parade-ground,
-laughing, chatting, bantering each other; fastening here a buckle,
-there a shoulder-strap; humming snatches of bivouac songs, fixing
-flints, adjusting belts, and pulling their long moustaches, as they
-conversed, disrespectfully enough it must be admitted, in hoarse, short
-murmurs of Vendôme, Villeroy, Staremberg, Prince Eugène, Malbrook, the
-great military authorities of the day, and how old Turenne would have
-_arranged_ them one and all.
-
-The Grey Musketeers were so called from their uniform, which, except for
-its sober hue, shone as splendid as was compatible with the possibility
-of manœuvring. The men were all veterans; that is to say, had fought
-through one or more campaigns, so that many a young, delicate face in
-the ranks was seamed and scarred by the shot and shell of the enemy. The
-majority, however, were grim, and grey, and bronzed; men who could eat
-ammunition-bread and suttlers’ beef without fear of colic; who could
-sleep round a bivouac fire, and rise refreshed and ready to be killed;
-who had looked death in the face and laughed at him in a score of fields.
-
-A large proportion were of noble birth, and all were at home in the
-drawing-room, the refinements and delicate airs of which it was their
-affectation to carry with them under fire. They could be rough and
-outspoken enough, jesting with each other over the wine-cup, or arguing
-as now while waiting for parade; but put them before an enemy, the nearer
-the better, and they became lambs—ladies—perfect dancing-masters in the
-postures and graces they assumed. If the baggage was not too far in the
-rear, they dressed and scented themselves for a battle as for a ball.
-They flourished lace handkerchiefs, wore white gloves, and took snuff
-from gold boxes in the act of advancing to charge a column or to storm a
-battery. Marlborough’s grenadiers had many a tussle with them, and loved
-them dearly. “Close in, Jack,” these honest fellows would say to each
-other, when they saw the laced hats, with their jaunty grey cockades,
-advancing through the smoke. “There’ll be wigs on the green now—here’s
-_the Dandies_ a-coming!”
-
-And in good truth, ere _the Dandies_ and they parted, many a comely head
-was down to rise no more.
-
-There were several companies of these picked troops, distinguished by
-the different colours of their uniforms. It was their pride to vie with
-each other in daring, as in extravagance and dissipation. If a post were
-unusually formidable, a battery in a peculiarly strong position, one or
-other of these companies, black, red, or grey, would entreat permission
-to storm it. The Grey Musketeers had of late esteemed themselves very
-fortunate in opportunities for leaving half their number dead on the
-field.
-
-They were commanded by the young officer whose acquaintance Madame de
-Montmirail made during the stag-hunt at Fontainebleau. Captain George,
-as he was called, had obtained this enviable post, no less by skill and
-conspicuous bravery, than by great good luck, and perhaps, though last
-not least, by an affection of coolness and danger, so exaggerated as to
-be sublime while it was ridiculous.
-
-The little bugler was waiting for him now. When the ten minutes should
-have elapsed, and the silver lace on the Captain’s uniform come gleaming
-round the corner, he was prepared to blow his heroic soul into the
-mouthpiece of his instrument.
-
-Meanwhile he stood aloof from his comrades. He looked so much taller thus
-than when oppressed by comparison with those full-grown warriors.
-
-The men were grouped about in knots, talking idly enough on indifferent
-subjects. Presently the majority gathered round a fresh arrival—a tall,
-forbidding-looking soldier, with iron-grey moustaches that nearly reached
-his elbows—who seemed to have some important news to communicate. As the
-circle of his listeners increased, there was obviously a growing interest
-and excitement in his intelligence.
-
-“Who is it?” panted one, hurrying up.
-
-“Killed?” asked another, tightening his sword-belt and twisting his
-moustaches fiercely to his eyes.
-
-“It’s a credit to the bourgeois!” “It’s a disgrace to the corps!”
-exclaimed a couple in a breath; while, “Tell us all about it,
-Bras-de-Fer!” from half-a-dozen eager voices at once, served to hush the
-noisy assemblage into comparative silence.
-
-Bras-de-Fer was nothing loth. A pompous old soldier, more of a martinet
-and less of a dandy perhaps than most of his audience, he loved, above
-all things, to hear himself speak. He was a notorious duellist, moreover,
-and a formidable swordsman, whence the nickname by which he was known
-among his comrades. He entered on his recital with all the zest of a
-professor.
-
-“I was sitting,” said he, with an air of grave superiority, “immediately
-in front of the coffee-house, Louis-Quatorze, a little after
-watch-setting. I was improving my knowledge of my profession by studying
-the combinations in a game of dominoes. By myself, Adolphe? Yes—right
-hand against left. Yet not altogether by myself, for I had a bottle of
-great Bordeaux wine—there is nothing to laugh at, gentlemen—on the table
-in my front. Flanconnade had just entered, and called for a measure
-of lemonade, when a street-boy began singing a foolish song about the
-Regent, with a jingle of ‘Tra-la-la,’ ‘Débonnaire,’ and some rubbish
-of that kind. Now this poor Flanconnade, you remember, comrades, never
-was a great admirer of the Regent. He used to say we Musketeers of the
-Guard owed allegiance, first to the young king, then to the Duc du Maine,
-lastly to the Marshal de Villeroy, and that we should take our orders
-only from those three.
-
-“So we do! So we should!” interrupted a dozen voices. But Bras-de-Fer,
-raising a brown, sinewy hand, imposed silence by the gesture, and
-continued.
-
-“Flanconnade, therefore, was displeased at the air of gasconnade with
-which the urchin sang his song. ‘What! thou, too, art a little breechless
-roué of the Regent!’ said he, turning round from his drink, and applying
-a kick that sent the boy howling across the street. There was an outcry
-directly amongst the cuckold citizens in the coffee-house; half of them,
-I have no doubt, were grocers and haberdashers in the Regent’s employ.
-‘Shame! shame!’ they exclaimed. ‘Down with the bully!’ ‘Long live the
-Grey Musketeers!’ I was up, and had put on my hat, you may well believe,
-gentlemen, at the first alarm; but with their expression of good-will
-to the corps, I sat down again and uncovered. It was simply a personal
-matter for Flanconnade, and I knew no man better able to extricate
-himself from such an affair. So, leaving the dominoes, I filled my glass
-and waited for the result. Our friend looked about him from one to the
-other, like a man who seeks an antagonist, but the bourgeoisie avoided
-his glances, all but one young man, wrapped in a cloak, who had seemed at
-first to take little part in the disturbance. Flanconnade, seeing this,
-stared him full in the face, and observed, ‘Monsieur made a remark? Did I
-understand clearly what it was?’
-
-“‘I said _shame_!’ replied the other, boldly. ‘And I repeat, monsieur is
-in the wrong.’
-
-“By this time the bystanders had gathered round, and I heard whispers
-of—‘Mind what you do; it’s a Grey Musketeer; fighting is his trade;’
-and such friendly warnings; while old Bouchon rushed in with his face
-as white as his apron, and taking the youth by the arm, exclaimed in
-trembling accents, ‘Do you know what you’re about, in Heaven’s name? It’s
-Flanconnade, I tell you. It’s the fencing-master to the company!’
-
-“Our poor friend appeared so pleased with this homage that I almost
-thought he would be pacified; but you remember his maxim—‘Put yourself
-in the right first, and then keep your arm bent and your point low.’ He
-acted on it now.
-
-“‘Monsieur is prepared for results?’ he asked, quietly; and raising the
-tumbler in his hand, dashed its contents into his antagonist’s face.”
-
-There was a murmur of applause amongst the Musketeers, for whom such
-an argument combined all the elements of reasoning, and Bras-de-Fer
-proceeded.
-
-“I rose now, for I saw the affair would march rapidly. ‘It is good
-lemonade,’ said the young man, licking his lips, while he wiped the
-liquor from his face. ‘Monsieur has given me a lesson in politeness. He
-will permit me in return to demand five minutes’ attention while I teach
-him to dance.’
-
-“The youth’s coolness, I could not but admit, was that of a well-bred
-man, and surprised me the more because, when he opened his cloak to get
-at his handkerchief, I perceived he wore no weapon, and was dressed in
-plain dark garments like a scholar or a priest.
-
-“Flanconnade winked at me. There was plenty of moonlight in the garden
-behind the coffee-house, but there were two difficulties—the youth had no
-second and no sword.
-
-“By great good fortune, at this moment in stepped young Chateau-Guerrand
-of the Duc du Maine’s dragoons, with his arm still in a sling, from the
-wound he received at Brighuega, when serving on his uncle’s staff. He had
-been supping with the Prince-Marshal, and of course was in full-dress,
-with a rapier at his belt. He accepted the duty willingly, and lent our
-youth the weapon he could not use. We measured their swords. They were
-right to a hair’s-breadth, but that the guard of Chateau-Guerrand’s hilt
-was open; and as he and I could not possibly exchange a pass or two for
-love, we set ourselves to watch the affair with interest, fearing only
-that Flanconnade’s skill would finish it almost ere it had well commenced.
-
-“The moon was high, and there was a beautiful fighting-light in the
-garden. At twenty paces I could see the faces of the guests and servants
-quite distinctly, as they crowded the back door and windows of the house.
-
-“We placed the adversaries at open distance on the level. They saluted
-and put themselves on guard.
-
-“The moment I saw the young man’s hand up, I knew there would be a fight
-for it. I observed that his slight frame was exceedingly muscular, and
-though he looked very pale, almost white in the moonlight, his eyes
-glittered and his face lost all its gravity when the blades touched. I
-was sure the rogue loved the steel-clink in his heart.
-
-“Moreover, he must have been _there_ before. He neglected no precaution.
-He seemed to know the whole game. He bound his handkerchief round his
-fingers, to make up for Chateau-Guerrand’s open sword-hilt, and feeling
-some inequality of ground beneath his feet, he drew his adversary inch by
-inch, till he got him exactly level with his point.
-
-“Flanconnade’s face showed me that he was aware of his antagonist’s
-force. After two passes, he tried his own peculiar plunging thrust in
-tierce (I never was quick enough for it myself, and always broke ground
-when I saw it coming), but this youth parried it in carte. In carte! by
-heavens! and Flanconnade was too good a fencer to dare try it again.”
-
-“In carte!” repeated the listeners, with varied accents of interest and
-admiration. “It’s incredible!” “It’s beautiful!” “That is _real_ fencing,
-and no sabre-play!” “Go on! Flanconnade had met with his match!”
-
-“More than his match,” resumed Bras-de-Fer. “In a dozen passes he was
-out of breath, and this youth had never moved a foot after his first
-traverse. I tell you his defence was beautiful; so close you could hardly
-see his wrist move, and he never straightened his arm but twice. The
-first time Flanconnade leaped out of distance, for it was impossible
-to parry the thrust; although, as far as I could see, he made a simple
-disengagement and came in outside. But the next time he drew our comrade
-six inches nearer, and I knew by his face he was as certain as I was
-that he had got him at last.
-
-“Bah! One—Two! That single disengagement—a lunge home; and I saw six
-inches of Chateau-Guerrand’s sword through our poor comrade’s back ere
-he went down. The youth wiped it carefully before he returned it, with
-a profusion of thanks, and found time, while Bouchon and his people
-gathered round the fallen man, to express his regrets with a perfect
-politeness to myself.
-
-“‘Monsieur,’ said he, ‘I am distressed to think your friend will not
-profit by the lesson he has had the kindness to accept. I am much afraid
-he will never dance again.’”
-
-“And where was the thrust?” asked Adolphe, a promising young fencer, who
-had been listening to the recital of the duel, open-mouthed.
-
-“Through the upper lung,” answered Bras-de-Fer.
-
-“In five minutes Flanconnade was as dead as Louis Quatorze! Here comes
-the Captain, gentlemen. It is time to fall in.”
-
-While he finished speaking, the little bugler blew an astonishing volume
-of sound through his instrument. The Musketeers fell into their places.
-The line was dressed with military accuracy. The standard of France was
-displayed; the ranks were opened, and Captain George walked through them,
-scanning each individual of that formidable band with a keen, rapid
-glance that would have detected a speck on steel, a button awry, a weapon
-improperly handled, as surely as such breach of discipline could have
-been summarily visited with a sharp and galling reprimand. Nevertheless,
-these men were his own associates and equals; many of them his chosen
-friends. Hardly one but had interchanged with him acts of courtesy and
-kindness at the bivouac or on the march. Some had risked life for him;
-others he had rescued from death in the field. In half an hour all would
-be on a footing of perfect equality once more, but now Captain George was
-here to command and the rest to obey.
-
-Such was the discipline of the Grey Musketeers—a discipline they were
-never tired of extolling, and believed to be unequalled in the whole of
-the armies of Europe.
-
-There was little room for fault-finding in the order or accoutrements
-of such troops, and in a short space of time—easily calculated by
-the bystanders outside, from the arrival of sundry riding-horses and
-carriages of these gentlemen privates to throng the street—their
-inspection was over—their ranks were closed. The duties for the day,
-comprising an especial guard for the young king’s person were told
-off—Bras-de-Fer reported the death of the fencing-master—the commandant
-observed they must appoint another immediately—the parade was dismissed,
-and Captain George was at liberty to return to his quarters.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-EUGÈNE BEAUDÉSIR
-
-
-It was no wonder the Marquise de Montmirail, amid the hurry and
-excitement of a stag-hunt, failed to recognise the merry page who used to
-play with her child in that stalwart musketeer whom she pressed her eager
-barb so hard to overtake. The George Hamilton of royal ante-chambers and
-palace stairs, with eyes full of mirth and pockets full of bon-bons,
-laughing, skipping, agile, and mischievous as a monkey, had grown into a
-strong, fine-looking man, a distinguished soldier, well known in the army
-and at Court as Captain George of the Grey Musketeers. He had dropped
-the surname of Hamilton altogether now, and nothing remained to him of
-his nationality and family characteristics but a certain depth of chest
-and squareness of shoulder, accompanied by the bold keen glance that had
-shone even in the boy’s eyes, and was not quenched in the man’s, denoting
-a defiant and reckless disposition which, for a woman like the Marquise,
-possessed some indescribable charm.
-
-As he flung his sword on a couch, and sat down to breakfast in his
-luxurious quarters—booted, belted, and with his hat on—the man seemed
-thoroughly in character with the accessories by which he was surrounded.
-He was the soldier all over—but the soldier adventurer—the soldier of
-fortune, rather than the soldier of _routine_. The room in which he sat
-was luxurious indeed and highly ornamented, but the luxuries were those
-of the senses rather than the intellect; the ornaments consisted chiefly
-of arms and such implements of warfare. Blades of the finest temper,
-pistols of exquisite workmanship, saddles with velvet housings, and
-bridle-bits embossed with gold—decked the wall which in more peaceful
-apartments would have been adorned by pictures, vases, or other works
-of art. One or two military maps, and a model of some fortified place
-in Flanders, denoted a tendency to the theoretical as well as practical
-branches of his profession; and a second regimental suit of grey velvet,
-almost covered with silver lace, hanging on a chair, showed that its
-gaudier exigences, so important in the Musketeers, were not forgotten.
-There were also two or three somewhat incongruous articles littered about
-amongst the paraphernalia of the soldier—such as a chart of the Caribbean
-Sea, another of the Channel, with its various soundings pricked off in
-red ink, a long nautical telescope, and a model of a brigantine more than
-half rigged. Captain George was possessed of certain seafaring tastes
-and habits picked up in early life, and to which he still clung with as
-much of sentiment as was compatible with his character. He was not an
-impressionable person, this musketeer; but if a foreign shoot could once
-be grafted on his affections, it took root and became gradually a part
-of the actual tree itself: then it could neither be torn out nor pruned
-away. Youthful associations, with such a disposition, attained a power
-hardly credible to those who only knew the external strength and hardness
-of the man.
-
-Captain George’s predilections, however, seemed to be at present
-completely engrossed by his breakfast. Venison steaks and a liberal
-flagon of Medoc stood before him; he applied himself to each with a
-vigorous industry that denoted good teeth, good will, and good digestion.
-He was so intent on business that a knock at his door was twice repeated
-ere he answered it, and then the “Come in!” sounded hardly intelligible,
-hampered as were the syllables by the process of mastication.
-
-At the summons, however, Bras-de-Fer entered, and stood opposite his
-captain. The latter nodded, pointed to a seat, pushed a plate and
-wine-cup across the table, and continued his repast.
-
-Bras-de-Fer had already breakfasted once; nevertheless he sat down and
-made almost as good play as his entertainer for about ten minutes, when
-they stopped simultaneously. Then Captain George threw himself back
-in his chair, loosened his belt, undid the two lower buttons of his
-heavily-laced grey _just au corps_, and passing the Medoc, now at low
-ebb, to his comrade, asked abruptly—
-
-“Have you found him?”
-
-“And brought him with me, my captain,” answered Bras-de-Fer. “He is at
-this moment waiting outside. ’Tis a queer lad, certainly. He was reading
-a Latin book when I came upon him. He would have no breakfast, nor even
-taste a pot of wine with me as we walked along. Bah! The young ones are
-not what they used to be in my time.”
-
-“I shouldn’t mind a few recruits of your sort still,” answered his
-captain, good-humouredly. “That thick head of yours is pretty strong,
-both inside and out; nevertheless, we must take them as we find them,
-and I should not like to miss a blade that could out-manœuvre poor
-Flanconnade. If he joins, I would give him the appointment. What think
-you, Bras-de-Fer? Would he like to be one of us? What did he say?”
-
-“Say!” repeated the veteran, “I couldn’t understand half he said—I can’t
-make him out, my captain. I tell you that I, Bras-de-Fer of the Grey
-Musketeers, am unable to fathom this smooth-faced stripling. Eyes like
-a girl’s, yet quick and true as a hawk’s; white, delicate hands, but a
-wrist of steel, that seems to move by machinery. Such science, too! and
-such style! Who taught him? Then he rambles so in his talk, and wept when
-I told him our fencing-master never spoke after that disengagement. Only
-a simple disengagement, my captain; he makes no secret of it. I asked
-him myself. And he wouldn’t taste wine—not a mouthful—not a drop—though
-I offered to treat him!” And Bras-de-Fer shook his head solemnly, with
-something of a monkey’s expression who has got a nut too hard to crack.
-
-Captain George cut short his friend’s reflections by calling for a
-servant.
-
-“There is a gentleman outside,” said he, when the lackey appeared. “Ask
-his pardon for keeping him waiting, and beg him to step in.”
-
-The well-drilled lackey, all politeness, threw the door open for the
-visitor, who entered with a diffident bow and a timid, hesitating step.
-Bras-de-Fer could not help remarking how much less assured was his manner
-now than when he crossed swords last night with the best fencer in the
-company.
-
-The Musketeers both rose at his entrance, and all three continued
-standing during the interview.
-
-Captain George scanned the new-comer from head to foot, and from foot to
-head, as a sergeant inspects a recruit. Its subject blushed painfully
-during the examination. Then the officer inquired, abruptly—
-
-“You wish to join the Musketeers? As a cadet, of course?”
-
-Something stern in the tone recalled the youth’s firmness, and he
-answered, boldly enough—
-
-“Under certain circumstances—yes.”
-
-“Your name?”
-
-“Eugène Beaudésir.”
-
-“Your age?”
-
-“More than twenty-five.”
-
-The Musketeers exchanged looks. He did not appear nearly so much. Captain
-George continued—
-
-“Your certificates of baptism and gentle birth?”
-
-Again the young man changed colour. He hesitated—he looked down—he seemed
-ill at ease.
-
-“You need not produce these if other particulars are satisfactory,”
-observed the Captain, with a certain rough sympathy which won him a
-gratitude he little suspected; far more, indeed, than it deserved.
-
-“Reach me that muster-roll, Bras-de-Fer,” continued the officer. “We can
-put his name down, at least for the present, as a cadet. The rest will
-come in time. But look you, young sir,” he added, turning sharply round
-on the recruit, “before going through any more formalities, I have still
-a few questions to ask. Answer them frankly, or decline to answer at all.”
-
-The visitor bowed and stole another look in his questioner’s face. Frank,
-romantic, impressionable, he had become strangely prepossessed with this
-manly, soldier-like captain of musketeers—younger in years than himself,
-yet so many more steps up the social ladder, he thought, than he could
-now ever hope to reach.
-
-“I will answer,” he said, with a hesitation and simplicity almost boyish,
-yet engaging in its helplessness—“if you will promise not to use my
-answers to my injury, and to take me all the same.”
-
-Captain George smiled good-humouredly.
-
-“Once on the roll of the King’s Musketeers,” he replied, “you are
-amenable to none but his Majesty and your own officers. As we say
-ourselves, you need fear neither duke nor devil.”
-
-The other looked somewhat relieved, and glancing at Bras-de-Fer, observed
-timidly—
-
-“I had a misfortune last night. It was a broil I could not avoid without
-great dishonour. I killed my adversary, I fear—and—and—he belongs to your
-company.”
-
-“So it is reported to me,” answered the Captain, coolly; “and if you are
-capable, it may perhaps be your good fortune to find yourself promoted at
-last into his place.”
-
-Beaudésir looked as if he scarcely understood, and Bras-de-Fer gladly
-seized the opportunity to explain.
-
-“You do not know us yet, young man. In a short time you will be better
-acquainted with the constitution and discipline of the Grey Musketeers.
-It is our study, you will find, to become the best fencers in the French
-army. To this end we appoint our fencing-master by competition, and he is
-always liable to be superseded in favour of a successful adversary. It
-cost Flanconnade twenty-three duels to obtain his grade, and in his last
-affair—(pardon—I should say his _last but one_) he killed his man. You,
-monsieur, have disposed of Flanconnade scientifically, I must admit, and
-our captain here is likely enough to promote you to the vacant post.”
-
-“Horror!” exclaimed Beaudésir, shuddering. “Like the priests of Aricia!”
-
-It was now Bras-de-Fer’s turn to be puzzled, but he rose to the occasion.
-Quaffing the remains of the Medoc, he nodded approvingly, and repeated—
-
-“Like the priests of Aricia. The same system precisely as established by
-His Holiness the Pope. It works remarkably well in the Grey Musketeers.”
-
-Beaudésir looked at the Captain, and said in a low, agitated voice—
-
-“I am most anxious to serve under you. I can be faithful, attentive—above
-all, obedient. I have no friends, no resources, nothing to care for. I
-only wish for an honest livelihood and an honourable death.”
-
-“We can find you both, I doubt not,” answered George, carelessly opening
-once more the muster-roll of the company. “I have your name down and your
-age; no further particulars. Where were you educated?”
-
-“In a school of silence, vigilance, self-restraint, and implicit
-obedience,” answered the recruit.
-
-“Good,” observed his captain; “but we must put down a name.”
-
-“At Avranches, in Normandy,” said the other, after a moment’s hesitation.
-
-George closed the roll. “Enough for the present,” said he; “and now tell
-me, monsieur, as between friends, where did you learn to fence with so
-much address?”
-
-“Wherever I could find a foil with a button on,” was the reply. “I never
-had a naked sword in my hand till last night.”
-
-Something in the ready simplicity of such an answer pleased the captain
-of musketeers, while it interested him still more in his recruit.
-
-“You must be careful of your parries amongst your new comrades,” said he;
-“at least till you have measured the force of each. I warn you fairly,
-one-half the company will want to try your mettle, and the other half to
-learn your secret, even at the cost of an awkward thrust or two. In the
-meantime, let us see what you can do. There are a brace of foils in the
-cupboard there. Bras-de-Fer, will you give him a benefit?”
-
-But Bras-de-Fer shook his head. What he had seen the night before had
-inspired him with an extraordinary respect for the youth’s prowess,
-and being justly vain of his own skill, he was averse to expose his
-inferiority in the science of defence before his captain. He excused
-himself, therefore, on the ground of rheumatism which had settled in an
-old wound.
-
-Captain George did not press the veteran, but opening the cupboard,
-pulled out the foils, presented one to his visitor, and put himself in
-position with the other.
-
-Beaudésir performed an elaborate salute with such grace and precision as
-showed him a perfect master of his weapon. He then threw his foil in the
-air, caught it by the blade, and returned it courteously to the captain.
-
-But George was not yet satisfied. “One assault at least,” said he,
-stamping his right foot. “I want to see if I cannot find a parry for this
-famous thrust of yours.”
-
-The other smiled quietly and took his ground. Though within a few inches
-of the chamber-door, he seemed to require no more room for his close and
-quiet evolutions.
-
-Ere they had exchanged two passes, the captain came over his adversary’s
-point with a rapid flanking movement, like the stroke of a riding-whip,
-and lending all the strength of his iron wrist to the jerk, broke the
-opposing foil short off within six inches of the guard. It was the only
-resource by which he could escape a palpable hit.
-
-“Enough!” he exclaimed, laughing. “There are no more foils in the
-cupboard, and I honestly confess I should not wish to renew the contest
-with the real bloodsuckers. You may be perfectly tranquil as regards your
-comrades, my friend. I do not know a musketeer in the whole guard that
-would care to take a lesson from you with the buttons off. What say you,
-Bras-de-Fer? Come, gentlemen, there is no time to be lost. The Marshal
-de Villeroy will not yet have left his quarters. Do you, old comrade,
-take him the fresh appointment for his signature. He never requires to
-see our recruits till they can wait on him in uniform; and you, young
-man, come with me to the _Rue des Quatres Fripons_, where I will myself
-order your accoutrements, and see you measured for a _just au corps_.
-Recollect, sir, next to their discipline on parade, I am most particular
-about the clothes of those I have the honour to command. Slovenliness in
-a musketeer is a contradiction as impossible as poltroonery; and it is
-a tradition in our corps that we never insulted Malbrook’s grenadiers
-by appearing before them in anything but full-dress; or by opening
-fire until we were close enough for them to mark the embroidery on our
-waistcoats. I congratulate you, my young friend: you are now a soldier in
-the pick of that army which is itself the pick of all the armies in the
-world!”
-
-With such encouraging conversation Captain George led his lately-enlisted
-recruit through a variety of winding streets, thronged at that busy hour
-with streams of passengers. These, however, for the most part, made way,
-with many marks of respect, for the officer of Musketeers; the women
-especially, looking back with unfeigned admiration and interest at the
-pair, according as they inclined to the stately symmetry of the one or
-the graceful and almost feminine beauty of the other. Perhaps, could they
-have known that the pale, dark-eyed youth following timidly half a pace
-behind his leader had only last night killed the deadliest fencer in
-Paris, they would have wasted no glances even on such a fair specimen of
-manhood as Captain George, but devoured his comrade with their bold black
-eyes, in a thrill of mingled horror, interest, and admiration, peculiar
-to their sex.
-
-To reach the _Rue des Quatres Fripons_, it was necessary to pass a
-barrier, lately placed by Marshal de Villeroy’s directions, to check
-the tide of traffic on occasion of the young King’s transit through his
-future capital. This barrier was guarded by a post of Grey Musketeers,
-and at the moment Captain George approached it, one of his handsomest
-young officers was performing a series of bows by the door of a
-ponderous, heavily-gilt family coach, and explaining with considerable
-volubility his own desolation at the orders which compelled him to
-forbid the advance of this unwieldy vehicle. Six heavy coach-horses, two
-postilions, a coachman, four footmen, and two outriders, armed to the
-teeth—all jammed together in a narrow street, with a crowd of bystanders
-increasing every minute, served to create a sufficient complication,
-and a very pretty young lady inside, accompanied by one attendant, was
-already in tears. The attendant, a dark woman with a scarlet turban,
-scolded and cursed in excellent French, whilst one of the leaders took
-immediate advantage of the halt to rear on end and seize his comrade by
-the crest with a savage and discordant scream.
-
-In such a turmoil it took George a few moments to recognise Madame de
-Montmirail’s liveries, which he knew perfectly well. To his companion,
-of course, fresh from Avranches, in Normandy, all liveries in Paris must
-have been equally strange. Nevertheless he followed close behind his
-leader, who pushed authoritatively through the crowd, and demanded what
-was the matter. The officer of Musketeers, seeing his own captain, fell
-back from the carriage-door, and Cerise, with her eyes full of tears,
-found a face she had never forgotten staring in at the window scarcely
-six inches from her own.
-
-They recognised each other in an instant. For the first sentence it
-was even “George!” and “Cerise!” Though, of course, it cooled down to
-“Monsieur” and “Mademoiselle” as they talked on. She was very little
-altered, he thought, only taller and much more beautiful; while for her,
-it was the same brave brown face and kind eyes that she had known by
-heart since she was a child, only braver, browner, kinder, nobler, just
-as she had expected. It was wonderful she could see it so distinctly,
-with her looks cast down on the pretty gloved hands in her lap.
-
-The affair did not take long. “You can pass them by my orders, Adolphe,”
-said his captain; and ere the savage stallion had time for a second
-attack, the huge vehicle rolled through and lumbered on, leaving handsome
-Adolphe ejaculating protestations and excuses, believing implicitly that
-he had won the beautiful mademoiselle’s affections at first sight during
-the process.
-
-Except by this voluble young gentleman, very little had been said. People
-_do_ say very little when they mean a great deal. It seemed to George,
-mademoiselle had offered no more pertinent remark than that “She had made
-a long journey, and was going to the Hôtel Montmirail _to stop_.” Whilst
-Cerise—well, I have no doubt Cerise could have repeated every word of
-their conversation, yet she did nothing of the kind neither to Célandine
-then, nor to mamma afterwards; though by the time she reached home her
-eyes were quite dry, and no wonder, considering the fire in her cheeks.
-
-Altogether, the interview was certainly provocative of silence. Neither
-Captain George nor Beaudésir uttered a syllable during the remainder of
-their walk. Only on the threshold of the tailor’s shop in the _Rue des
-Quatres Fripons_ the latter awoke from a deep fit of musing, and asked,
-very respectfully—
-
-“My captain, do you think I should have got the best of it this morning
-if we had taken the buttons off the foils?”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE BOUDOIR OF MADAME
-
-
-There was plenty of room in the Hôtel Montmirail when it was opened
-at night for Madame’s distinguished receptions. Its screen of lights
-in front, its long rows of windows, shedding lustrous radiance on
-the ground and second floors, caused it to resemble, from outside,
-the enchanted palace of the White Cat, in that well-known fairy tale
-which has delighted childhood for so many generations. Within, room
-after room stretched away in long perspective, one after another, more
-polished, more decorated, more shining, each than its predecessor. The
-waiting-room, the gallery, the reception-room, the dining-hall, the
-two withdrawing-rooms, all with floors inlaid by the most elaborate
-and slippery of wood-work, all heavy with crimson velvet and massive
-gilding in the worst possible taste, all adorned by mythological
-pictures, bright of colour, cold of tone, and scant of drapery, led the
-oppressed and dazzled visitor to Madame’s bed-chamber, thrown open like
-every other apartment on the floor for _his_ or _her_ admiration. Here
-the eye reposed at last, on flowers, satin, ivory, mirrors, crystal,
-china—everything most suggestive of the presence of beauty, its influence
-and the atmosphere that seems to surround it in its home. The bed,
-indeed, with lofty canopy, surmounted by ciphers and coronets, was almost
-solemn in its magnificence; but the bath of Madame, her wardrobe, above
-all, her toilet-table, modified with their graceful, glittering elegance
-the oppressive grandeur of this important article in a sleeping-apartment.
-
-At each of the four corners strips of looking-glass reached from ceiling
-to floor, while opposite the bed the first object on which Madame’s
-eyes rested in waking was a picture that conveyed much delicate and
-appropriate flattery to herself.
-
-It represented the Judgment of Paris. That dangerous shepherd of Mount
-Ida was depicted in appropriate costume of brown skin, laughing eyes, a
-crook, and a pair of sandals, with a golden apple in his hand. Juno stood
-on one side—Minerva on the other. The ox-eyed goddess, with her rich
-colouring and radiant form, affording a glowing type of those attractions
-which are dependent on the senses alone; while Minerva’s deep grey eyes,
-serene, majestic air, and noble, thoughtful brow, seemed to promise
-a triumph, glorious in proportion to the wisdom and intellect to be
-overcome.
-
-Paris stood between them, somewhat in front of the immortal rivals,
-his right arm skilfully foreshortened, and offering the apple—to whom?
-To neither of these, but to the Marquise, as she got out of bed every
-morning; thereby inferring that _she_ was the Olympian Venus, the Queen
-of Love and Beauty both for gods and men!
-
-Malletort, in his many visits to the Hôtel Montmirail, never passed this
-picture without a characteristic grin of intense amusement and delight.
-
-Traversing the bed-chamber, one arrived at last in a small apartment
-which concluded the series, and from which there appeared no further
-egress, though, in truth, a door, concealed in the panelling, opened on
-a narrow staircase which descended to the garden. This room was more
-plainly furnished than the others, but an air of comfort pervaded it that
-denoted the owner’s favourite retreat. Its tables were littered, its
-furniture was worn. The pens and portfolio were disordered; a woman’s
-glove lay near the inkstand; some half-finished embroidery occupied the
-sofa; and a sheet of blotted music had fallen on the floor. There was no
-kind of mirror in any part of the apartment. It was an affectation of
-the Marquise, pardonable enough in a handsome woman, to protest that she
-hated the reflection of her own features; and this little chamber was her
-favourite retreat—her inner citadel, her sanctuary of seclusion—or, as
-the servants called it, the Boudoir of Madame.
-
-It was undoubtedly the quietest room in the house, the farthest removed
-from the noise of the courtyard, the domestics, even their guests.
-Profound silence would have reigned in it now, but for the ring of a
-hooked hard beak drawn sharply at intervals across a row of gilt wires,
-and a ghastly muttering, like that of a demoniac, between whisper and
-croak, for the encouragement of somebody or something named “Pierrot.”
-
-It was Madame’s West Indian parrot, beguiling his solitude by the
-conscientious study of his part. Presently the bird gave a long shrill
-whistle, for he heard a well-known step on the garden stair, and his
-mistress’s voice singing—
-
- “Non, je te dis
- Ma sœur, c’est lui,
- C’est mon Henri,
- A l’habit gris
- Des Mousquetaires, des Mousquetaires,
- Des Mousquetaires
- Du roi Louis.
-
- “Amant gentil
- Qui chante, qui rit,
- Joli, poli,
- Fidèle? Mais, Oui
- Comme Mousquetaire, comme Mousquetaire,
- Comme Mousquetaire,
- Du roi Louis.”
-
-At which conclusive point in its argument Pierrot interrupted the ballad
-with a deafening shriek, and Madame, sliding the panel back, passed into
-the apartment.
-
-She was dressed in a simple morning toilet of white, with scarlet
-breast-knots, and a ribbon of the same colour gathering the shining
-masses of her black hair. It suited her well. Even Pierrot, gazing at her
-with head on one side, and upturned eye, seemed to be of this opinion,
-though bigger and better talkers by rote had probably long ago informed
-her of the fact. She had a large _bouquet_ of flowers, fresh gathered,
-in her hand, and she gave the bird a caressing word or two as she moved
-through her boudoir, disposing of them here and there to the best
-advantage; then she selected a few of the rarest, and put them carefully
-in water, telling the parrot “these are for Cerise, Pierrot,” and
-endeavouring to make it repeat her daughter’s name. Of course, without
-success; though on other occasions this refractory pupil would shriek
-these well-known syllables, time after time, till the very cook, far off
-in the basement, was goaded to swear hideously, wishing in good Gascon he
-had the accursed fowl picked and trussed and garnished with olives in the
-stew-pan.
-
-Cerise had been brought back from her pension in Normandy, as we have
-seen, partly by Malletort’s advice, partly because her mother longed
-to have the girl by her side once more. They had been inseparable
-formerly, and it is possible she was conscious, without confessing it,
-that her whole character deteriorated during her daughter’s absence.
-So the heavy family coach, postilions, outriders, footmen, and all,
-rolled into the courtyard of the Hôtel Montmirail, after a slight delay,
-as we have seen, at one of the barriers, and deposited its freight to
-the great jubilation of the whole household. These were never tired of
-praising mademoiselle’s beauty, mademoiselle’s grace—her refinement,
-her manners, her acquirements, her goodness of heart, were on every
-lip. But though she said less about it than the domestics, nobody in
-her establishment was so alive to the merits of Cerise as her mother.
-In good truth, the Marquise loved her daughter very dearly. She never
-thought she could love anything half so much, except—except perhaps, the
-germ of a new idea that had lately been forming itself in her heart,
-and of which the vague shadowy uncertainty, the shame, the excuses,
-the unwillingness with which she acknowledged it, constituted no small
-portion of the charm. Is it possible that Love is painted blind because,
-if people could see before them, they would never be induced to move
-a step along the pleasant path?—the pleasant path that leads through
-cool shades and clustering roses, down the steep bank where the nettles
-grow, through briar and bramble, to end at last in a treacherous morass,
-whence extrication is generally difficult, sometimes impossible, and
-always unpleasant. Nevertheless, to get Cerise back from her pension,
-to find that she had grown into a woman, yet without losing the child’s
-blue eyes, fond and frank and innocent as ever—to watch her matured
-intellect, to feel that the plaything was a companion now, though playful
-and light-hearted still—lastly, to discover that she was a beauty, but
-a beauty who could never become a rival, because in quite a different
-style from her mother—all this was very delightful, and the Marquise,
-seldom low-spirited at any time, had become perfectly sparkling since her
-daughter came home.
-
-So she carolled about the boudoir like a girl, coaxing Pierrot, arranging
-the flowers, and warning Célandine, between the notes of her foolish
-love-song, not to let mademoiselle’s chocolate get cold. Mademoiselle,
-you see, was tired and not yet down; indeed, to tell the truth, not yet
-up, but pressing a soft flushed cheek against her laced pillow, having
-just awoke from a dream, in which she was back at the convent in Normandy
-once more, sauntering down the beech-walk with her director, who somehow,
-instead of a priest’s habit, wore the uniform of the Grey Musketeers,
-an irregularity that roused the wrath of the Lady Superior and made her
-speak out freely; whereat the Musketeer took his pupil’s part, looking
-down on her with a brave brown face and kind eyes, while he clasped her
-hand in fond assurance of his aid. Waking thus, she tried hard to get
-back to sleep, in hopes of dreaming it all over again.
-
-The mother, meanwhile, having disposed her chamber to her liking, sank
-into the recesses of a deep arm-chair, and began to speculate on her
-daughter’s future. It is not to be supposed that such an important
-consideration as the child’s marriage now occupied her attention for
-the first time. Indeed her habits, her education, the opinions of that
-society in which she lived, even her own past, with its vicissitudes and
-experiences, seemed to urge on her the necessity of taking some step
-towards an early settlement in life for her attractive girl. Cerise was
-beautiful, no doubt, thought the Marquise; not indeed in her mother’s
-wicked, provoking style, of which that mother well knew the power, but
-with the innocent beauty of an angel. At such a Court, it was good she
-should be provided as soon as possible with a legitimate protector. Of
-suitors there would be no lack, for two strains of the best blood in
-France united in the person of this fair damsel, whose wealth, besides,
-would make her a desirable acquisition to the noblest gentleman in the
-realm. Then she reviewed in turn all the eligible matches she could think
-of in the large circle of her acquaintance; scanning them mentally, one
-after another, with the proverbial fastidiousness that, looking for a
-perfectly straight stick, traverses the wood from end to end in vain.
-The first man was too young, the second too old, a third too clever, a
-fourth too stupid. Count Point d’Appui had been hawked at by all the
-beauties in Paris, and owned half Picardy; but she was afraid of him.
-No, she could not trust him with her Cerise. He was worn out, debauched,
-one of the roués, and worse than the Regent! Then there was the Marquis
-de la Force Manquée, he would have been the very thing, but he had
-sustained a paralytic stroke. Ah! she knew it. The family might hush it
-up, talk of a fall in hunting, a shock to the system, a cold bath after
-exercise, but Fagon had told her what it was. The late king’s physician
-should understand such matters, and she was not to be deceived! To be
-sure, there was still the Duc de Beaublafard left—noble rank, tolerable
-possessions, easy temper, and a taste for the fine arts. She wavered a
-long time, but decided against him at last. “It is a pity!” said the
-Marquise, in a half-whisper, shaking her head, and gazing thoughtfully
-at Pierrot; “a thousand pities! but I dare not risk it. He is too
-good-looking—even for a lover—decidedly for a husband!”
-
-It was strange that, with her knowledge of human nature, her experience,
-by observation at least, of human passions, she should so little have
-considered that person’s inclinations who ought to have been first
-consulted in such a matter. She never seemed to contemplate for an
-instant that Cerise herself might shrink from the character of the Count,
-appeal against becoming sick-nurse to the Marquis, or incline to the
-excessive and objectionable beauty of the Duke. It seemed natural the
-girl should accept her mother’s choice just as that mother had herself
-accepted, without even seeing, the chivalrous old Montmirail whom she had
-so cherished and respected, whose snuff-box stood there under glass on
-her writing-table, and for whom, though he had been dead more years than
-she liked to count, she sometimes felt as if she could weep even now.
-
-Such a train of reflection gradually brought the Marquise to her own
-position in life, and a calculation of the advantages and disadvantages
-attendant on marriage as regarded herself. She could not but know she
-was in the full meridian of her beauty. Her summer, so to speak, was
-still in its July; the fruit bright, glowing, and mature; not a leaf yet
-changed in colour with forewarning of decay. She might take her choice
-of a dozen noble names whenever she would, and she felt her heart beat
-while she wondered why this consideration should of late have been so
-often present to her mind. It could only arise from an anxiety to settle
-Cerise, she argued with herself; there _could_ be no other reason.
-Impossible! absurd! No—no—a thousand times—No!
-
-She went carefully back over her past life, analysing, with no foolish,
-romantic, tendencies, but in a keen, impartial spirit, the whole history
-of her feelings. She acknowledged, with a certain hard triumph, that in
-her young days she had never loved. Likings, flirtations, passing fancies
-she had indulged in by hundreds, a dozen at a time, but to true feminine
-affection her nearest approach had been that sentiment of regard which
-she entertained for her husband. She did not stop to ask herself if this
-was love, as women understand the word.
-
-And was she to be always invulnerable? Was she indeed incapable of that
-abstraction, that self-devotion which made the happiness and the misery
-of nearly all her sex? She _did_ ask herself this question, but she did
-_not_ answer it; though Pierrot, still watching her out of one eye, must
-have seen her blush.
-
-Certainly, none of her declared suitors had hitherto inspired it. Least
-of all, he to whom the world had lately given her as his affianced wife.
-Brave he was, no doubt, chivalrous in thought and action; stupid enough
-besides; yes, quite stupid enough for a husband! generous too, and
-considerate—but oh! not like the kind, unselfish, indulgent old heart she
-mourned for in widow’s weeds all those years ago. She could almost have
-cried again now, and yet she laughed when she thought of the united ages
-of her late husband and her present adorer. Was it her destiny, then,
-thus ever to captivate the affections of old men? and were their wrongs
-to be avenged at last by her own infatuation for a lover many years
-younger than herself? Again the burning blushes rose to her brow, and
-though Pierrot was the only witness present, she buried her face in her
-hands.
-
-Lifting her eyes once more, they rested on a picture that held the place
-of honour in her boudoir. It was a coloured drawing of considerable
-spirit, and had been given her by no less a favourite than the
-Prince-Marshal himself, for whose glorification it had been executed by a
-rising artist.
-
-It represented a battle-field, of which the Prince de Chateau-Guerrand
-constituted the principal object; and that officer was portrayed with
-considerable fidelity, advancing to the succour of the Count de Guiches,
-who at the head of the Guards was covering Villeroy’s retreat before
-Marlborough at Ramillies. Two or three broad, honest faces of the
-English grenadiers came well out from the smoke and confusion in the
-background, ingeniously increased by a fall of rafters and conflagration
-of an imaginary farm-house; but the Count de Guiches himself occupied no
-prominent place in the composition, dancing about on a little grey horse
-in one corner, as if studious not to interfere with the dominant figure,
-who was, indeed, the artist’s patron, and who presided over the whole
-in a full-bottomed wig, with a conceited smile on his face and a laced
-hat in his hand. There lay, also, a dead Musketeer in the foreground,
-admirably contrived to impart reality to the scene of conflict; and
-it was on this figure that the eyes of the Marquise fixed themselves,
-devouring it with a passionate gaze, in which admiration, longing,
-self-scorn, and self-reproach, seemed all combined.
-
-For a full minute the wild, pitiful expression never left her face, and
-during that minute she tore her handkerchief to the coronet near its hem.
-Then she rose and paced the room for a couple of turns, restless as a
-leopard; but ere she had made a third, footsteps were heard approaching
-through the bed-chamber. The door opened, and one of her servants
-announced “Monsieur l’Abbé Malletort!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-WHAT THE SERPENT SAID
-
-
-HE came in smiling, of course. When was the Abbé to be caught without
-his self-possessed smile, his easy manner, and his carefully-arranged
-dress? On the present occasion he carried with him some rare flowers as
-well. The Marquise sprang at them almost before he had time to offer his
-elaborate homage, while he bent over her extended hand. He snatched the
-nosegay away, however, with great quickness, and held it behind his back.
-
-“Pardon, madame,” said he, “this is forbidden fruit. As such I bring it
-into the garden of Paradise; where my cousin dwells there is Eden, and
-the resemblance is the more striking that neither here are found mirrors
-to offend me with the reflection of my own ugly face. Consequently, my
-attention is concentrated on yourself. I look at you, Marquise, as Adam
-looked at Eve. Bah! that father of horticulture was but a husband. I
-should rather say, as the subtle creature who relieved their domestic
-_tête-à-tête_ looked at the lady presiding over that charming scene.
-I look at you, I say, with delight and admiration, for I find you
-beautiful!”
-
-“And is it to tell me this important news that you are abroad so early?”
-asked the Marquise, laughing gaily, while she pointed to the easy-chair
-she had just left. “Sit down, Monsieur l’Abbé, and try to talk sense for
-five minutes. You can be rational; none more so, when you choose. I want
-your opinion—nay, I even think I want your advice. Mind, I don’t promise
-to take it, that of course! Don’t look so interested. It’s not about
-myself. It’s about Cerise.”
-
-“How can I look anything else?” asked the Abbé, whose face, to do
-him justice, never betrayed his thoughts or feelings. “Madame, or
-Mademoiselle, both are near and dear to me—too much so for my own repose.”
-
-He sighed, and laid his white hand on his breast. She was so accustomed
-to his manner that she never troubled herself whether he was in jest
-or earnest. Moreover, she was at present engrossed with her daughter’s
-future, and proceeded thoughtfully.
-
-“Cerise is a woman now, my cousin. Her girlhood is past, and she has
-arrived at an age when every woman should think of establishing herself
-in life. Pardon! that bouquet is in your way; put it down yonder in the
-window-sill.”
-
-The Abbé rose and placed the flowers in the open window, whence a light
-air from without wafted their sweet and heavy perfume into the apartment.
-
-When he reseated himself the Marquise had relapsed into silence. She was
-thinking deeply, with her eyes fixed on the dead musketeer in the picture.
-
-The Abbé spoke first. He began in a low tone of emotion, that, if
-fictitious, was admirably assumed.
-
-“It is not for _me_, perhaps, madame, to give an opinion on such matters
-as concern the affections. For _me_, the churchman, the celibate, the man
-of the world, whose whole utility to those he loves depends on subjection
-of his love at any cost—at any sacrifice; who must trample his feelings
-under foot, lest they rise and vanquish him, putting him to torture,
-punishment, and shame. My cousin, have not I seemed to you a man of
-marble rather than a creature of flesh and blood?”
-
-The Marquise opened her black eyes wide. He had succeeded at least in
-rousing her attention, and continued in the same low, hurried voice.
-
-“Can you not make allowance for a position so constrained and unnatural
-as mine? Can you not comprehend a devotion that exists out of, and apart
-from self? Is not the hideous Satyr peering from behind his tree at the
-nymph whose beauty awes him from approach, an object more touching, more
-to be respected than vain Narcissus languishing, after all, but for the
-mere reflection of himself? Is not that a true and faithful worship which
-seeks only the elevation of its idol, though its own crushed body may be
-exacted to raise the pedestal, if but by half a foot? Do you believe—I
-ask you, my cousin, in the utmost truth and sincerity—do you believe
-there breathes a man on earth so completely consecrated to your interests
-as myself?”
-
-“You have always been a kind counsellor—and—and—an affectionate
-kinsman,” answered the Marquise, a little confused; adding, with an air
-of frankness that became her well—“Come! Abbé, you are a good friend,
-neither more nor less, staunch, honest, constant. You always have been,
-you always will be. Is it not so?”
-
-His self-command was perfect. His face betrayed neither disappointment,
-vexation, nor wounded pride. His voice retained just so much of tremor as
-was compatible with the warm regard of friendship, yet not too little to
-convey the deeper interest of love. He did not approach his cousin by an
-inch. He sat back in the arm-chair, outwardly composed and tranquil, yet
-he made it appear that he was pleading a subject of vital importance both
-to her welfare and his own.
-
-“Pass over _me_, madame!” he exclaimed, throwing both his white hands
-up with a conclusive gesture. “Walk over _my_ body without scruple if
-it will keep you dry-shod. Why am I here; nay, why do I exist at all
-but to serve you—and yours? Nevertheless it is not now a question of
-the daughter’s destiny—that will arrive in course of time—it is of the
-mother I would speak. For the mother I would plead, even against myself.
-What temptation is there in the world like ambition? What has earth to
-offer compared to its promises? The draught of love may be, nay, I feel
-too keenly _must_ be, very sweet, but what bitter drops are mingled in
-the cup! Surely I know it; but what matters its taste to me? the Abbé!
-the priest! Marquise, you have a future before you the proudest woman in
-Europe might envy. That fair hand might hold a sceptre, that sweet brow
-be encircled by a crown. Bah! they are but baubles, of course,” continued
-the Abbé, relapsing without a moment’s warning into his usual tone; “the
-one would make your arm ache and the other your head; nevertheless, my
-cousin, you could endure these inconveniences without complaint, perhaps
-even with patience and resignation to your fate?”
-
-The Marquise, it must be confessed, was relieved at his change of tone.
-Her feelings had been stimulated, her sympathies enlisted, and now her
-curiosity was aroused. This last quality is seldom weak in her sex, and
-the Abbé, though it is needless to inquire where or how he learned the
-trade, was far too experienced a practitioner to neglect so powerful an
-engine as that desire for knowledge which made shipwreck of Eve and is
-the bane of all her daughters. Madame de Montmirail was proud—most women
-are. She loved power—most women do. If a thought flashed through her mind
-that the advancement of her own position might benefit those in whom she
-felt interest, what was this but a noble instinct, unselfish as are all
-the instincts of womanhood?
-
-“You speak in parables, my good Abbé,” said she, with a laugh that
-betrayed some anxiety to know more. “You talk of crowns and sceptres as
-familiarly as I do of fans and bracelets. You must expound to me what you
-mean, for I am one of those who find out a riddle admirably when they
-have been told the answer.”
-
-“I will instruct you, then,” was his reply, “in the form of a parable.
-Listen and learn. A certain Sultan had a collection of jewels, and he
-changed them from time to time—because he could not find a gem that
-sparkled with equal brilliance by day and by night. So he consulted every
-jeweller in his dominions, and squandered great sums of money, both in
-barter and in a search for what he required. Nay, he would trample under
-foot and defile the treasures he possessed, passionate, languishing,
-wretched, for want of that he possessed not. So his affairs went to ruin,
-and his whole country was in want and misery.
-
-“Now, a Dervish praying at sunset by a fountain, saw a beautiful bird fly
-down to the water to drink. Between its eyes grew a jewel that flamed
-and glittered like the noonday sun on the Sultan’s drawn scimitar. And
-the Dervish bethought him, this jewel would be a rare addition to the
-collection of his lord; so he rolled his prayer-carpet into a pillow, and
-went to sleep by the side of the fountain, under a tree.
-
-“At midnight the Dervish woke up to pray, and on the branch above his
-head he saw something flash and sparkle like the sun on the Sultan’s
-scimitar at noonday. So he said, ‘This is the gem for which my lord
-pineth. Lo! I will take the bird captive, and bring it with me to the
-feet of my lord.’
-
-“Then the Dervish took the bird craftily with his hand, and though the
-fowl was beautiful, and the gem was precious, he kept neither of them for
-himself, but brought them both for his lord, to be the delight of the
-Sultan and the salvation of the land.”
-
-“And suppose the poor bird would rather have had her liberty,” replied
-the Marquise. “It seems to me that in their dealings with men the birds
-get the worst of it from first to last.”
-
-“This bird was wise in her generation, as the goose that saved Rome,”
-answered the Abbé; “but the bird I have in my thoughts wants only
-opportunity to soar her pitch, like the falcon, Queen of Earth and Air.
-Seriously, madame—look at the condition of _our_ Sultan. I speak not of
-the young king, a weak and rickety boy, with all respect be it said, ill
-in bed at this very moment, perhaps never to leave his chamber alive. I
-mean the Regent, my kind patron, your devoted admirer—the true ruler of
-France. And look at the jewels in his casket. Do you think there is one
-that he prizes at the value of a worn-out glove?”
-
-The subject possessed a certain degree of interest, trenching though it
-was upon very delicate ground.
-
-“He has plenty to choose from, at any rate,” observed the Marquise; “and
-I must say I cannot compliment him on the taste he has displayed in these
-valuables,” she added, with a mischievous laugh.
-
-“He would throw them all willingly into the Seine to-morrow,” continued
-Malletort, “might he but possess the gem he covets, and set it in the
-Crown-royal of France. Yes, madame, the Crown-royal, I repeat it. Where
-are the obstacles? Louis XV. may not, will not, nay, perhaps, _shall_
-not live to be a man. Madame d’Orleans inherits the feeble constitution,
-without the beauty of her mother, Madame de Montespan. Fagon himself will
-tell you her life is not worth nine months’ purchase, and since she has
-quarrelled with her daughter she has less interest with the Regent than
-one of the pages. Her party is no longer in power, the Comte de Toulouse
-is in disgrace, the Duc du Maine is in disgrace. Illegitimacy is at a
-discount, though, _parbleu_, it has no want of propagators in our day. To
-speak frankly, my cousin, a clever woman who could influence the Regent
-might sway the destinies of the whole nation in six weeks,—might be Queen
-of France in six months from this time.”
-
-The Marquise listened, as Eve may have listened to the serpent when
-he pressed her to taste the apple. For different palates, the fruit,
-tempting, because forbidden, assumes different forms. Sometimes it
-represents power, sometimes pique, sometimes lucre, and sometimes love.
-According to their various natures, the tempted nibble at it with their
-pretty teeth, suck it eagerly with clinging lips, or swallow it whole,
-like a bolus, at a gulp. The Marquise was only nibbling, but her cheek
-glowed, her eyes shone, and she whispered below her breath, “The Queen of
-France;” as if there was music in the very syllables.
-
-The Abbé paused to let the charm work, ere he resumed, in his
-half-jesting way—
-
-“The Queen, madame! Despite the injustice on our Salic law, you may say
-_the King_! Such a woman, and I know well of whom I speak, would little
-by little obtain all the real power of the crown. She might sway the
-council—she might rule the parliament—she might control the finances.
-In and out of the palace she would become the dispenser of rank, the
-fountain of honour. Nay,” he added, with a laugh, “she might usurp the
-last privileges of royalty, and command the very Musketeers of the Guard
-themselves!”
-
-Did he know that he had touched a string to vibrate through his
-listener’s whole being? She rose and walked to the window, where the
-flowers were, while at the same moment he prepared to recall her
-hastily. It was needless, for she started, turning very pale, and came
-quietly back to her seat. The Abbé’s quick ear detected the tramp of
-a boot crunching the gravel walk outside, but it was impossible to
-gather from his countenance whether he suspected the passer-by to be
-of more importance than one of the gardeners. The Marquise, however,
-had caught a glimpse of a figure she was beginning to know by heart too
-well. Captain George had of late, indeed ever since Cerise came home,
-contracted a habit of traversing the gardens of the Hôtel Montmirail to
-visit a post of his musketeers in the neighbourhood. These guards were
-permitted to enter everywhere, and Madame de Montmirail was the last
-person to interfere, in this instance, with their privileges. So little
-annoyance, indeed, did she seem to experience from the intrusion, that
-the windows of her boudoir were generally wide open at this hour of the
-day. Though to visit this post might be a necessary military precaution,
-it was obviously a duty requiring promptitude less than consideration.
-Captain George usually walked slowly through the garden, and returned
-in a very short time at the same deliberate pace. The Marquise knew
-perfectly well that it took him exactly ten minutes by the clock in
-her boudoir. When she sat down again, Malletort, without noticing her
-movement or her confusion, proceeded in a sincere and affectionate tone—
-
-“I need not explain more clearly, madame; I need not urge my motives nor
-dwell upon my own self-sacrifice. It is sufficient for the Abbé to see
-his peerless cousin set out on her journey to fame, and to feel that he
-has indicated the shortest path. There are obstacles, no doubt; but for
-what purpose do obstacles exist save to be surmounted or swept away? Let
-us take them as they come. I can count them all on the fingers of my
-hand.” The Abbé began systematically at his thumb. “The young King and
-Madame d’Orleans are already disposed of, or, at worst, soon will be, in
-the common course of events. Remain—the _roués_—Madame de Sabran, and
-Madame Parabére. Of these, I can manage the first without assistance.
-I have influence with the whole gang. Some may be persuaded, others
-intimidated, all can be bribed. I anticipate no opposition worth speaking
-of from the male element, fond of pleasure, fond of wine, and embarrassed
-as they are good for nothing. With the last two it is different. Madame
-de Sabran is witty, handsome, and well-bred; but she spares no person,
-however exalted, in her sarcasm, and the Regent fears her tongue while he
-is oppressed with her society. One or two more of her cutting sayings,
-and she will sever the cord, already frayed very thin, by which she
-holds on to fortune. Then she becomes but yesterday’s _bouquet_, and
-we need trouble ourselves no more with _her_! Exit Madame de Sabran.
-Enter—whom shall we name, my beautiful cousin? Whoever it is will have
-it in her power to become Queen of France. Now there is only Madame de
-Parabére left; but alas! she is the most dangerous and the most powerful
-of all. It is against _her_ that I must ask you, madame, to lend me your
-assistance.”
-
-“Mine!” repeated the Marquise, half surprised and half unwilling, though
-with no especial liking for the lady in question. “Mine! what can I do?”
-
-“Much,” replied Malletort, earnestly. “Indeed, everything! Yet, it is
-very little I will ask you to undertake, though it must eventually lead
-to the greatest results. Listen. The Regent, while he has confessed to
-me over and over again that he grows weary of Madame de Parabére, is
-yet fascinated by her beauty—the beauty, after all, of a baby-face with
-a skin like cream. Such beauty as even the devil must have possessed
-when he was young. She has neither wit, nor grace, nor intellect, nor
-form, nor even features. But she has her _skin_, and that I must admit
-is wonderfully clear and soft. This attraction possesses some incredible
-fascination for the Duke. If she went out in the sun to-morrow and came
-home tanned, _adieu_ to her power for ever! I cannot make her go out in
-the sun, but I think if you will help me I can arrange that she shall
-become tanned—aye, worse than tanned, speckled all over like a toad.
-Do you remember once when they praised your beauty at the late King’s
-dinner, she said, ‘Yes, you were very well for a mulatto?’”
-
-“I have not forgotten it!” replied the Marquise, and her flashing eye
-showed that neither had she forgiven the offence.
-
-“That little compliment alone would make me her enemy,” continued the
-Abbé, “if I allowed myself such luxuries as likes and dislikes; but she
-is in our way, and that is a far better reason for putting her aside.
-Now my beautiful cousin has admired those flowers in the window more
-than once. She thinks they are an offering from her faithful kinsman.
-It is not so. I have procured them with no small trouble for Madame de
-Parabére!”
-
-“Then why bring them here?” asked the Marquise, with a spice of
-pardonable pique in her tone.
-
-“Because, if I sent them to her with the compliments of Monsieur l’Abbé
-Malletort, the Swiss would probably not take them in; because if I
-offered them to her myself, I, the cynic, the unimpressionable, the man
-of marble, who has eyes but for his kinswoman, she would suspect a trick,
-or perhaps some covert insult or irony that would cause her to refuse the
-gift point-blank. No, my plan is better laid. You go to the masked ball
-at the opera to-night. She will be there on the Regent’s arm. Jealous,
-suspicious, domineering, she will never leave him. There is not another
-petal of stephanotis to be procured for love or money within thirty
-leagues of Paris; I have assured myself of this. They are her favourite
-flowers. You will appear at the ball with your _bouquet_; but for the
-love of heaven, my cousin,” and the Abbé’s countenance was really in
-earnest while he thus adjured her, “do not, even with a mask on, put it
-within six inches of your face!”
-
-“It is poisoned!” exclaimed the Marquise, walking, nevertheless, to the
-open window where the flowers stood. “Poisoned! I will have nothing to do
-with it. If we were men, I would force her to cross swords with me on the
-turf down there. But poison! No, my cousin. I tell you no. Never!”
-
-“Poison is entirely a relative term,” observed the Abbé, philosophically.
-“All drugs in excess become poisons. These pretty flowers are not
-poisoned so much as medicated. There is no danger to life in smelling
-them—none. But their effect on the skin is curious, really interesting
-from a scientific point of view. A few hours after inspiration, even
-of one leaf, the complexion loses its freshness, fades, comes out in
-spots—turns brown.”
-
-The Marquise listened attentively.
-
-“Brown! Deep brown! Browner than any mulatto!”
-
-The Marquise wavered.
-
-“It really would not be a bad joke, and I think she deserves it for what
-she said of you.”
-
-The Marquise consented.
-
-“I will take them to the ball,” said she, “and if Madame de Parabére asks
-for them, why, in common politeness, she must have them. But mask or no
-mask, I will take care to let her know who I _am_!”
-
-“Better not,” said the more cautious Abbé, and would have explained why,
-but the Marquise paid no attention to what he said. She seemed uneasy,
-and moved behind the window-curtain with a nervous gesture and a rising
-colour in her cheek. “Another complication,” muttered her companion,
-catching once more the measured boot-tramp on the gravel-walk. “So be it!
-The more cards dealt, the better chance for the player who can peep at
-his adversary’s hand!”
-
-Looking into the garden, he perceived the Musketeer’s tall figure
-moving leisurely along the walk. His pace became slower and slower,
-and the Marquise, behind the curtain, blushed deeper and deeper as he
-came directly below the window, peering up at the house with an air of
-caution, not lost on Malletort’s observation.
-
-“I will force one of them to play a court card,” thought the Abbé, and
-muttering something about “stifling heat,” pushed the window noisily, as
-far open as it would go.
-
-The Musketeer looked quickly up, and at the same moment something white
-and buoyant fluttered lightly to the ground at his very feet.
-
-The Marquise was trembling and blushing behind her window-curtain.
-
-The ruffles at Malletort’s wrist had brushed a cluster of blossoms from
-the stephanotis, and it fell within six inches of Captain George’s boot.
-
-He picked it up with a murmur of delight. In another moment he would have
-pressed it to his lips, but the Marquise could keep silence no longer.
-Shrouding herself in the window-curtain, she exclaimed in a hoarse
-whisper, “Hold! Monsieur, in Heaven’s name! It is poisoned!”
-
-He cast a rapid penetrating glance, up, down, all round. His monitress
-was invisible, and the Abbé had shrunk back into the room. Then he
-examined the blossoms minutely, though at arm’s-length, holding them
-in his gloved hand, and so twirling them carelessly about, as if to
-avoid observation, went on a few paces, ere he threw them on the walk
-and crushed them to pieces beneath his heel. For two minutes Madame
-Montmirail had been hot and cold by turns, giddy, choking—the Abbé, the
-room, the gardens, swimming before her eyes—now she drew a long breath of
-relief and turned to her cousin.
-
-“By my faith, Monsieur l’Abbé,” said she, “that soldier down there is a
-true gentleman!”
-
-And Malletort took his leave, reflecting that in research after general
-information, his last hour’s work had been by no means thrown away.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-OUT-MANŒUVRED
-
-
-Captain George was not the only soldier of France whom a visit to the
-Hôtel Montmirail affected that morning with the slighter and premonitory
-symptoms of fever, such as dry mouth, irregular pulse, and a tendency to
-flush without physical exertion. While the Musketeer was visiting his
-outposts in anything but a warlike frame of mind, his former general
-was working his temper up to a state of nervous irritation more trying
-than usual to the valets and other domestics of his household. The
-Prince-Marshal busied himself to-day with preparations for his grand
-attack, and, contrary to the whole practice of his lifetime, in the event
-of failure, had made no disposition for retreat.
-
-He felt, indeed, a good deal more agitated now than when he led a
-forlorn-hope of Black Musketeers at twenty, an exploit from which he
-came off with three flesh wounds and a broken collar-bone, owing to the
-usual mistake of too short a scaling-ladder; but he consoled himself by
-reflecting how this very agitation denoted that the fountain of youth was
-not yet dried up in his heart.
-
-He rose early, though he could not decently present himself at the Hôtel
-Montmirail for hours to come. He stormed and swore because his chocolate
-was not ready, though he hardly tasted it when it was served, and indeed
-broke his fast on yolk of egg and pounded sugar, mixed up with a small
-glass of brandy.
-
-This stimulating refreshment enabled him to encounter the fatigue of
-dressing, and very careful the veteran was to marshal his staunch old
-forces in their most imposing array.
-
-The few teeth he could boast were polished up white and glistening. Their
-ranks indeed had been sadly thinned, but, like the last survivors of a
-beleaguered garrison, though shattered and disordered, they mustered
-bravely to the front. His wrinkled cheeks and pointed chin were shaved
-trim and smooth, while the moustaches on his upper lip, though nearly
-white, were carefully clipped and arranged in the prevailing fashion.
-More than once during the progress of the toilet, before a mirror
-which, he cursed repeatedly for a dull and unbecoming glass, his heart
-misgave him, and he treated his valets to a few camp compliments current
-amongst the old _die-hards_ of Turenne; but when at last his cravat was
-fastened—his frills adjusted, his _just au corps_ fitted on, his delicate
-ruffles pulled over his wasted hands, with their swollen knuckles and
-magnificent rings, his diamond-hilted rapier hung exactly at his hip, and
-his laced hat, cocked jauntily _à la Mousquetaire_, he took one approving
-survey in the mirror, unbecoming as it was, and marched forth confident
-and resolved to conquer.
-
-His carriage was waiting for him at the porter’s lodge of his hotel. A
-nobleman of those days seldom walked afoot in the streets, and it took
-four horses at least, one coachman, one postilion, and two or three
-footmen in laced coats, to convey a single biped the distance of a couple
-of hundred metres.
-
-As the door of his heraldry-covered coach closed on him with a bang,
-quoth Auguste, who had dressed him, to Etienne, who had handed the
-clothes and shared impartially in his master’s maledictions—
-
-“Come, that’s not so bad, Etienne! Hein? What would you have at
-sixty-three? And without _me_, Bones of St. Martin! what is he? A monkey,
-a skeleton, a heap of rugs and refuse! Ah! What it is! the toilet!—when a
-man is really master of his work.”
-
-The Prince-Marshal, you see, like other heroes, was none to his _valet
-de chambre_; but Auguste, a true artist, having neglected none of the
-_minutiæ_, on which success depended, looked to general results, and
-exulted in the masterpiece that he felt was a creation of his own genius.
-
-Now it fell out that the Prince de Chateau-Guerrand, hereditary Grand
-Chasseur to the King, Master of the Horse to the Dauphin, State Exon to
-the sons and daughters of France, Marshal of its armies, and chevalier of
-half-a-dozen orders in his own and other countries, with no decoration on
-earth left to wish for but the Golden Fleece of Spain, which he coveted
-greedily in consequence, and prized above them all, arrived at the Hôtel
-Montmirail almost in the moment when Abbé Malletort quitted it at the
-front entrance, and Captain George of the Grey Musketeers left it by the
-garden door.
-
-Though the Prince’s chance of victory must have been doubtful at any
-time, I do not think he could have chosen a more unfavourable moment to
-deploy into line, as it were, and offer battle in the open field. His
-fair enemy had already been skirmishing with one foe, and caught sight of
-another, whom she would willingly have engaged. Her trumpets had sounded
-the _Alerte_, her colours were displayed, her artillery was in advance,
-guns unlimbered, matches lighted, front cleared, all her forces ready
-and quivering for action—woe to the veteran when he should leave his
-entrenchments, and sally forth to hazard all his past successes on the
-rash issue of one stand-up fight!
-
-His instincts told him he was wrong, even while he followed the
-obsequious lackey, in the Montmirail livery, through the glittering suite
-of rooms that led him to his fate. Followed, with cold hands and shaking
-knees, he who had led stormers and commanded armies! Even to himself
-there was a something of ridicule in the position; and he smiled, as a
-man smiles who is going to the dentist, while he whispered—“Courage, my
-child! It is but a quarter of an hour, after all! and yet—I wish I had
-put that other glass of brandy into my _Lait de Poule_!”
-
-The Marquise received him more graciously than usual, and this, too, had
-he known it, was an omen of ill-success. But it is strange how little
-experience teaches in the campaigns of Cupid, how completely his guerilla
-style of warfare foils all regular strategy and established system of
-tactics. I believe any school-girl in her teens to be a match for the
-most insidious adversary of the opposite sex; and I think that the older
-the male serpent, and the oftener he has cast his skin, the more easily
-does his subtlety succumb to the voice of the innocent and unconscious
-charmer. What chance then had an honest, conceited, thick-headed old
-soldier, with nothing of the snake about him but his glistening outside,
-and labouring under the further disadvantage of being furiously in
-earnest, against such a proficient as the Marquise—a coquette of a dozen
-years’ standing, rejoicing in battle, accustomed to triumph, witty,
-scornful, pitiless, and to-day, for the first time, doubtful of her
-prowess, and dissatisfied with herself?
-
-She had never looked better in her life; the flushed cheeks, the
-brilliant eyes, the simple white dress, with its scarlet breast-knots,
-these combined to constitute a very seductive whole, and one that, had
-there been a mirror in which she could see it reflected, might have
-gone far to strengthen the Abbé’s arguments, and to convince her that
-his schemes, aspiring though they seemed, were founded on a knowledge
-of human nature, experience, and common sense. Neither, I imagine, does
-a woman ever believe in her heart that any destiny can be quite beyond
-her reach. Though fortune may offer man something more than his share
-of goods and tangible possessions on this material earth, nature has
-conferred on woman the illimitable inheritance of the possible; and no
-beggar maiden is so lowly but that she may dream of King Cophetua and his
-crown-matrimonial laid at her shoeless feet.
-
-To see the chance, vague, yet by no means unreasonable, of becoming Queen
-of France looming in the future—to entertain a preference, vague, yet by
-no means doubtful, for a handsome captain of Grey Musketeers—and to be
-made honourable love to at a little past thirty by a man and a marshal
-a little past sixty—was not all this enough to impart a yet deeper
-lustre to the glowing cheeks and the bright eyes, to bid the scarlet
-breast-knots heave and quiver over that warm, wilful, and impassioned
-heart?
-
-It was not a fair fight; far from it. It was Goliath against David, and
-David, moreover, with neither stone nor sling, nor ruddy countenance, nor
-the mettle of untried courage, nor youthful confidence in his cause.
-
-He came up boldly, however, when he confronted his enemy, and kissed her
-hand with a ponderous compliment to her good looks, which she cut short
-rudely enough.
-
-Then he took his hat from the floor, and began to smooth its lace
-against his heavy coat-cuff. She knew it was coming, and though it made
-her nervous, she rather liked it, notwithstanding.
-
-“Madame!” said the Prince-Marshal, and then he stopped, for his voice
-sounded so strange he thought he had better begin again.
-
-“Madame, I have for a long period had the honour and advantage of your
-friendship. Nay, I hope that I have, in all that time, done nothing to
-forfeit your good opinion?”
-
-She laughed a little unmeaning laugh, and of course avoided a direct
-answer to the question.
-
-“I always stand up for my friends,” said he, “and yourself, monsieur,
-amongst the number. It is no light task, I can assure you!”
-
-The veteran had opened fire now, and gained confidence every moment. The
-first step, the first plunge, the first sentence. It is all the same.
-Fairly in deep water, a brave man finds his courage come back even faster
-than it failed him.
-
-“Madame,” he resumed, laying his hat on the floor again, and sitting bolt
-upright, while his voice, though hoarser than usual, grew very stern,
-“madame, I am in earnest. Seriously in earnest at present. Listen. I have
-something of importance to say to you!”
-
-In spite of herself she was a little cowed. “One moment, Prince!” she
-exclaimed, rising to shut the door and window of her boudoir, as if
-against listeners. It was a simple feminine manœuvre to gain time; but,
-looking into the garden, she spied a remnant of the Stephanotis left
-where George had trodden it, and when she sat down again she was as brave
-as a lioness once more. Her change of position rather disordered her
-suitor’s line of battle, and as she had skilfully increased the distance
-between them, his tactics were still further impeded. In his love affairs
-the Prince-Marshal’s system had always been to come as soon as possible
-to close quarters; but it was so long since he had made a regular formal
-proposal of marriage, that he could not for the life of him remember
-the precise attitude in which he had advanced. Some vague recollection
-he entertained, strengthened by what he had seen on the stage, of going
-down on his knees, but the floor was very slippery, and he was not
-quite confident about getting up again. It would be ridiculous, he felt,
-to urge his suit on all-fours, and he knew the Marquise well enough,
-besides, to be quite sure her paroxysms of laughter in such a difficulty
-would render her incapable of returning an intelligible answer.
-Altogether, he decided on sitting still, and though it was obviously a
-disadvantage, doing his love-making at arm’s length.
-
-“Madame!” he repeated for the fourth time, “I am a soldier; I am a man of
-few words; I am, I hope, a gentleman, but I am no longer young. I do not
-dissemble this; I am even past my prime. Frankly, madame, I am getting an
-old man.”
-
-It was incontestable. She smothered a smile as she mentally conceded the
-position, but in reply she had nothing to say, and she said it.
-
-The Prince-Marshal, expecting the disclaimer that perhaps politeness
-demanded, seemed here a little bothered. He had no doubt gone through
-many rehearsals of the imaginary scene, and it confused him to lose his
-anticipated cue. Seeking inspiration once more, then, from his hat, he
-proceeded rather inconsequently. “Therefore it is that I feel emboldened
-in the present instance to lay before you, madame, the thoughts, the
-intentions, the wishes, in brief—the anticipations that I had formed of
-my own future, and to ask your opinion, and, indeed, your advice, or
-perhaps, I should say, your approval of my plans.”
-
-What a quick ear she had! Far off, upstairs, she heard the door of
-her daughter’s bedroom shut, and she knew that Cerise, after stopping
-at every flower-stand in the gallery, would as usual come straight to
-her mamma’s boudoir. Such a diversion would be invaluable, as it must
-for the present prevent any decided result from her interview with the
-Prince-Marshal. She had resolved not to accept him for a husband, we
-know, and sooner or later, she must come to a definite understanding with
-her faithful old suitor; but she seemed in this instance strangely given
-to procrastination, and inclined from time to time to put off the evil
-day.
-
-Why she did not prefer to have done with it once for all, why she could
-not wait calmly for his proposal and refuse him with a polite reverence,
-as she had refused a score of others, it is not for me to explain.
-Perhaps she would not willingly abdicate a sovereignty that became year
-by year more precious and more precarious. Perhaps she loved a captive,
-as a cat loves a mouse, allowing it so much liberty as shall keep it
-just within reach of the cruel velvet paw. Perhaps she shrunk from any
-decided step that would force her own heart to confess it was interested
-elsewhere. A woman’s motives may be countless as the waves on the shore,
-her intention fathomless as mid-ocean by the deep-sea lead.
-
-Hearing the march of her auxiliaries, she made light of an engagement at
-closer quarters now. Looking affectionately in the Prince-Marshal’s face,
-she drew her chair a little nearer, and observed in a low voice—
-
-“I am pretty sure to approve of any plan, my Prince, that conduces to
-your comfort—to your welfare, nay”—for she heard the rustle of her
-daughter’s dress, and the lock of the door move—“to your happiness!”
-
-The tone and accompanying glance were irresistible. Any male creature
-must have fallen a victim on the spot. The Prince-Marshal, sitting
-opposite the door, dropped his hat, sprang from his chair a yard at a
-bound, made a pounce at the white hand of the Marquise, and before he
-could grasp it, stopped midway as if turned to stone, his mouth open,
-his frame rigid, his very moustaches stiffening, and his eyes staring
-blankly at the figure of Cerise in the doorway, who, although a good deal
-discomposed, for she thought to find mamma alone, rose, or rather _sank_,
-to the occasion, and bestowed on him the lowest, the most voluminous,
-and the longest reverence that was ever practised for months together
-at their _pension_ by the best brought-up young ladies in France. The
-Prince-Marshal was too good a soldier to neglect such an opportunity for
-retreat, and retired in good order, flattering himself that though he had
-suffered severely, it might still be considered a drawn battle with the
-Marquise.
-
-When he had made his bow with a profusion of compliments to the fresh and
-beautiful Mademoiselle, whom he wished at a worse place than back in her
-convent, mother and daughter sat down to spend the morning together.
-
-Contrary to custom, the pair were silent and preoccupied; each, while
-she tried to seem at ease, immersed in her own thoughts, and yet, though
-engrossed with the same subject or meditation, it was strange that
-neither of them mentioned it to the other.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-THE MOTHER OF SATAN
-
-
-Malletort, leaving his cousin’s house by its principal egress, did
-not enter his coach at once, but whispering certain directions to the
-servants, proceeded leisurely down a narrow lane or alley, leading, after
-a variety of windings, into one of the great thoroughfares of Paris.
-The street was well adapted for such an interview, either of love or
-business, as it was desirable to keep secret, consisting, on one side,
-only of the backs of the houses, in which the windows were built up, and
-on the other, of the high dead wall that bounded the extensive premises
-of the Hôtel Montmirail. Casting a hasty glance before and behind, to
-make sure he was not watched, the Abbé, when he reached the narrowest
-part of the narrow passage—for it was hardly more—halted, smiled, and
-observed to himself: “A man’s character must be either very spotless
-or very good for nothing if he can thus afford to set the decencies of
-life at defiance. A churchman with an assignation! and at noon in this
-quarter of Paris! My friend, it is rather a strong measure, no doubt! And
-suppose, nevertheless, she should fail to appear? It would be the worse
-for her, that’s all! Ah! the sweet sultana! There she is!”
-
-While he spoke, a woman, wrapped in a large shawl, with another folded
-round her head, came swiftly down the alley, and stopped within two
-paces of him. It was the Quadroon, agitated, hurried, a good deal out of
-breath, and, perhaps, also a little out of temper.
-
-“It’s no use, Monsieur l’Abbé!” were the first words she gasped. “I
-cannot, and I dare not, and I _will_ not. Besides, I have no time, I
-must be back directly. There’s Mademoiselle, most likely, wanting me this
-minute. The idea of such a thing! It’s out of the question altogether!”
-
-Malletort laughed good-humouredly. He could afford to be good-humoured,
-for the woman was in his power.
-
-“And the alternative?” said he. “Not that I want to _drive_ you, my Queen
-of Sheba, but still, a bargain is a bargain. Do you think Mademoiselle
-would engross your time much longer if the Marquise knew all I know, and,
-indeed, all that it is my duty to tell her?”
-
-Célandine clasped her hands imploringly, and dropped at once into
-complete submission.
-
-“I will go with you, Monsieur l’Abbé,” said she, humbly. “But you will
-not forget your promise. If you were to betray me I should die.”
-
-“And I, too,” thought Malletort, who knew the nature with which he had to
-deal, and treated it as a keeper treats the tigress in her cage. “It is
-no question of betrayal,” he said, aloud. “Follow me. When we reach the
-carriage, step in. My people know where to drive.”
-
-He walked on very fast, and she followed him; her black eyes glancing
-fierce misgivings, like those of a wild animal that suspects a snare.
-
-Two or three more windings with which he seemed thoroughly familiar, a
-glance around that showed not a passenger visible, nor indeed a living
-soul, save a poor old rag-picker raking a heap of refuse with her hook,
-and the Quadroon suddenly emerged in mid-stream, so to speak, surrounded
-by the life and bustle of one of the main streets in Paris. At a few
-paces distant stood a plain, well-appointed coach, and the Abbé, pointing
-to its door, which a servant was holding open, Célandine found herself,
-ere she could look round, rumbling, she knew not where, over the noisy
-pavement, completely in that man’s power, for whom, perhaps, of all men
-in the world, she entertained the strongest feelings of terror, stronger
-even than her aversion.
-
-She did not take long, however, to recover herself. The strain of savage
-blood to which she owed those fierce black eyes and jetty locks gave
-her also, with considerable physical courage, the insensibility of rude
-natures to what we may term _moral_ fear. She might shudder at a drawn
-knife if she were herself unarmed, or cower before a whip if her hands
-were tied and her back bared; but to future evil, to danger, neither
-visible nor tangible, she was callous as a child.
-
-They had not travelled half a mile ere she showed her delight in every
-feature of her expressive face at the rapid motion and the gay scenes
-through which she was driven. In a few minutes she smiled pleasantly, and
-asked their destination as gaily as if they had been going to a ball.
-
-Malletort thought it a good opportunity for a few impressive words.
-
-“Célandine,” said he, gravely, “every one of us has a treasure somewhere
-hidden up in the heart. What is it that you love better than everything
-else in the world?”
-
-The dark face, tanned by many a year of sun, yet comely still, saddened
-and softened while he spoke, the black eyes grew deeper and deeper as
-they seemed to look dreamily into the past. After a pause she drew a
-sorrowful sigh, and answered, “Mademoiselle!”
-
-“Good,” replied the Abbé. “You are bound on an errand now for which
-Mademoiselle will be grateful to you till her dying day.”
-
-She looked curiously in his face. “Cerise is dear to me as my own,” said
-she. “How can I do more for her to-day than yesterday, and to-morrow, and
-every day of my life?”
-
-He answered by another question.
-
-“Would you like to see your darling a Princess of France?”
-
-The Quadroon’s eyes glistened and filled with tears.
-
-“I would lay down my life for the child,” was all she said in reply.
-
-But he had got her malleable now, and he knew it. Those tear-drops showed
-him she was at the exact temperature for fusion. A little less, she would
-have remained too cold and hard. A little more, and over-excitement would
-have produced irritation, anger, defiance: then the whole process must
-have been begun again. It was a good time to secure her confederacy, and
-let her see a vague shadowy outline of his plans.
-
-In a few short sentences, but glowing and eloquent, because of the
-tropical nature to which they were addressed, Malletort sketched out
-the noble destiny he had in view for her mistress, and the consequent
-elevation of Cerise to the rank of royalty. He impressed on his listener
-the necessity of implicit, unquestioning obedience to his commands. Above
-all, of unbroken silence and unvaried caution till their point was gained.
-
-“As in your own beautiful island,” said the Abbé, soaring for the
-occasion to the metaphorical; “if you would pass by night through its
-luxuriant jungles, you must keep the star that guides you steadily
-in view, nor lose sight of it for an instant; so in the path I shall
-indicate, never forget, however distant and impracticable it may seem,
-the object to which our efforts are directed. In either case, if your
-attention wanders for a moment, in that moment your feet stray from the
-path; you stumble amongst the tangled creepers—you pierce yourself with
-the cruel cactus—you tread on some venomous reptile that turns and stings
-you to the bone; nay, you may topple headlong down a precipice into the
-deep, dark, silent waters of the lagoon. Once there, I tell you fairly,
-you might wait for a long while before the Marquise, or Mademoiselle, or
-myself would wet a finger to pull you out!”
-
-Thus urging on his listener the importance of her task, now in plain
-direct terms, now in the figurative language of parables, their drive
-seemed to have lasted but a few minutes, when it was brought to an abrupt
-termination by the stoppage of the coach before Signor Bartoletti’s
-residence.
-
-It appeared that the visitors were expected, for a couple of his
-heavily-decorated footmen waited on the stairs, and Célandine, following
-the Abbé with wondering eyes and faltering steps, found herself received
-with as much pomp and ceremony as if she had been a Princess of the Blood.
-
-They were ushered into the room that communicated with his laboratory.
-It was empty, but wine and fruit stood on the table. Malletort pressed
-the Quadroon to taste the former in vain. Then he passed without ceremony
-into the adjoining apartment, assuring her of his speedy return.
-
-Left to herself, Célandine drank greedily from the water-jug ere she
-crossed the floor on tiptoe, stealthy as a wild cat, and pressing her
-ear to the door, applied all her faculties intently to the one act of
-listening.
-
-She heard the Abbé’s greeting distinctly enough, and the sentence
-immediately following, spoken laughingly, as usual.
-
-“The parts are cast,” said he, “and the stage prepared. It remains but to
-dress the principal actress and make her perfect in her cue.”
-
-“Have you brought her?” answered an eager voice, hurried, agitated, and
-scarcely above a whisper.
-
-Indistinct as were the syllables, their effect on the Quadroon was like
-magic. She started, she passed her hand wildly across her face; her
-very lips turned white, and she trembled in every limb. Her attitude
-was no longer the simple act of listening. In concentrated eagerness it
-resembled the crouch of a leopard before its spring.
-
-The door opened, and she sprang in good earnest. As Bartoletti crossed
-the threshold she flew at him, and with one pounce had him fast by the
-throat.
-
-“Where is he?” she screamed, with foaming lips and flashing eyes. “Where
-is he? What have you done with him? I will kill you if you do not tell
-me. Man! Beast! Monster! Where have you hid my child?”
-
-It took all the Abbé’s strength, combined with the Italian’s own efforts,
-to untwine those nervous fingers. At last he shook himself free, to
-stand gasping, panting, wiping his face, exhausted, terror-stricken, and
-unmanned.
-
-When her physical powers yielded, her nervous system gave way as well.
-Sinking into a chair, she sobbed and wept hysterically, rocking herself
-to and fro, murmuring—
-
-“My baby! My fair-faced baby! My own! My only child!”
-
-Bartoletti had by this time found his voice, though still husky and
-unstrung.
-
-“Célandine!” he exclaimed, and the tone denoted fear, anxiety, surprise,
-even disgust, yet a something of tenderness and interest ran through it
-all.
-
-Malletort lifted his eyebrows, shrugged his shoulders, and had recourse
-to his snuff-box. A few words had settled his business with the Adept,
-and his fine perceptions told him that in a scene like the present,
-however it originated, the interference of a third person would do more
-harm than good. Had he permitted himself such weaknesses, he felt he
-could have been astonished; but the Abbé had long established as an
-axiom, that, “he might be disgusted, but could never be surprised.” He
-had skill to distinguish, moreover, the nice point at which a delicate
-piece of workmanship may be quite spoiled by one additional touch, and
-knew the exact moment when it is advisable to leave both well and ill
-alone; so he pocketed his snuff-box, and made a bow to the agitated pair.
-
-“An unexpected recognition,” said he, politely, “and agitating, I
-perceive, to both. My introduction is then unnecessary. Pardon! You will
-permit me to wish you good-day, and leave you to arrange matters between
-yourselves!”
-
-Insensibly Bartoletti opened the door for his guest. Insensibly he
-returned the parting salutation, and insensibly, like a sleep-walker, he
-sat down opposite and gazed blankly in the Quadroon’s face.
-
-She at least was awake, and on the alert. The storm of her emotion had
-subsided. She summoned all her energies for the object she had in view.
-
-“Stefano!” she said, in a kindly conciliating tone, “forgive my violence.
-You and I have been friends for years. You know my quick temper of old. I
-can trust you. You can never be indifferent to my welfare.”
-
-He was sufficiently reassured by this time to fill a large goblet of
-wine, which he half emptied at a gulp. His cheek regained its swarthy
-bloom, and his little black eye glistened fondly, while he answered—
-
-“Never indifferent, Célandine! Never false! Never changed in all these
-years!”
-
-She was, as we know, one-fourth a negress, and past middle age—of an
-exterior so wild and weird, that the courtiers called her, as we also
-know, “The Mother of Satan.” He was turned fifty, self-indulgent,
-dishonest, with oily skin and beady eyes; short, swarthy, thick-set, and
-altogether not unlike a mole! Yet was there a spark of true love for his
-visitor lurking somewhere not entirely smothered amongst all the mass of
-impurities with which the man’s heart was filled.
-
-She was too much a woman to be quite unconscious of her power. She spoke
-in soft and coaxing accents now, while she replied—
-
-“I know it, Stefano. I believe it. I have also a good memory, and am
-not likely to forget. And, Stefano, you have a kind heart—you will not
-keep me longer in suspense about the child. He is here? In this house?
-In the next room? Oh! let me see him! Let me only see him, and I will do
-anything you ask!”
-
-She had slid from her chair, and knelt before him, holding the Adept’s
-scarred, burned fingers to her lips.
-
-His face betrayed the pain he suffered in inflicting pain on her. “What
-can I tell you?” he answered. “It is cruel to deceive you. It is cruel to
-speak the truth. I have never seen the boy since he left me. Do you think
-I would have kept him from you? How can I find him? How can I bring him
-back? You talk as if I was King of France!”
-
-A horrible fear came across her. She rose to her feet, and shook both
-fists in his face.
-
-“Man!” she exclaimed, “do not tell me he is dead! You shall answer for
-it, if heaven or hell have any power on earth!”
-
-There were tears in his little beady eyes, unaccustomed tears, that
-vouched for his truth, even to _her_, while he replied—
-
-“You are unjust, Célandine; and you would see your injustice if you did
-but think for a moment. What had I to gain by taking care of the boy?
-What had I to gain by ridding myself of him? Had I been to blame, do you
-suppose I should have sent you the earliest information of his flight?
-Have I not felt your sorrows keenly as if they were my own? Do I not feel
-for you now? Listen. I am the same Stefano Bartoletti who told you the
-secret of his life, the desire of his heart, by the side of that sweet
-serene lagoon, in the beautiful island which probably neither of us may
-ever see again. I have learned many strange lessons—I have witnessed
-many strange scenes since then. Many years have passed over my head, and
-wisdom has not despised me as the least apt among her pupils. Statesmen,
-nobles, princes themselves have been glad to visit me in person, and reap
-the fruit of my studies and my experience. But I tell you, Célandine,”
-and here the little man smote his breast, and for the moment looked every
-inch a champion, “I am the same Stefano Bartoletti. I swear to you that
-if you will but join me heart and hand in this, the last and greatest of
-my schemes, I will never rest till I have found the boy, and brought him
-back into his mother’s arms!”
-
-She gave a wild, fierce cry of joy, and was hugging the brown hand to her
-bosom once more.
-
-“Money,” observed the Signor, walking thoughtfully up and down the room
-as soon as she had sufficiently composed herself to listen, “money, you
-perceive, is the one thing we require. Money alone can overcome this,
-like all other difficulties on earth. Money in sufficient quantity would
-make me independent, contented, perhaps happy.” Here he stole a tender
-look in the Quadroon’s face. “Money would enable me to quit these cold,
-dull regions; this constrained, confined, unnatural life. Money would
-restore _me_ my liberty, and _you_ your child. Célandine, will you help
-me to get it?”
-
-He had touched the right chord. There was eager hope and wild
-unscrupulous energy in her face while she answered—
-
-“I will! I swear it! Heart and hand I go in with you for this object, and
-neither fire nor water, nor steel nor poison shall turn me now. You know
-me, Stefano. I will shrink from nothing. But it is—it is not a question
-of blood?”
-
-“No, no!” he replied, laughing. “You, too, are unchanged, Célandine.
-Always in extremes. Make yourself easy on that score. It is but a trick
-of your former trade. None but yourself can do it half so well. I will
-explain it all in five minutes when I have finished this cup of wine.
-But, Célandine,” and here her old admirer drew closer and whispered in
-her ear.
-
-“I cannot tell,” she laughed. “It is impossible to give an answer yet.”
-
-“And the price?” continued he, earnestly. “Surely it must have fallen
-now, though the Marquise is hard to deal with on such matters.”
-
-The Quadroon shook her head archly, indeed, coquettishly for her years
-and replied—
-
-“Certainly not less than a couple of thousand francs?”
-
-“But suppose she knew everything!” urged the lover.
-
-“Then I think she would be so angry, she would have me flogged and give
-me away for nothing!”
-
-He shook his head, pondering deeply. The flogging was indeed a serious
-consideration. But then, what a reduction it would make in the price!
-
-There was grave matter, he thought, for reflection in the whole business,
-and his manner was more sedate than usual, while he instructed Célandine
-in a certain part that the Abbé and he had agreed she should perform.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-THE DÉBONNAIRE
-
-
-“It is good to be superior to mortal weakness,” said Malletort to himself
-as he re-entered his coach and drove from Bartoletti’s door. “In the
-human subject I cannot but observe how few emotions are conducive to
-happiness. That which touches the heart seems always prejudicial to the
-stomach. How ridiculous, how derogatory, and how uncomfortable to turn
-red and pale, to burst into tears, to spring at people’s throats, nay,
-even to feel the pulse beat, the head swim, the voice fail at a word, a
-look, a presence! What, then, constitutes the true well-being of man,
-the _summum bonum_, the vantage point, the grand _desideratum_ to which
-all philosophy is directed? Self-command! But self-command leads to the
-command of others—to success, to victory, to power! and power, with none
-to share it, none to benefit by it, is it worth the labour of attainment?
-Can it be that its eminence is but like the crest of a mountain, from
-which the more extended the horizon the flatter and the more monotonous
-appears the view. It may, but what matter? Let me only get to the summit,
-and I can always come down again at my leisure. _Basta!_ here we are. Now
-to gain a foothold on the slippery path that leads to the very top!”
-
-The Abbé’s carriage was brought to a halt while he spoke by a post of
-Grey Musketeers stationed in front of the Palais-Royal. The churchman’s
-plain and quiet equipage had no right of entrance, and he alighted to
-pass through the narrow ingress left unguarded for foot-passengers. Hence
-he crossed a paved court, turned short into a wing of the building with
-which he seemed well acquainted, and stopped at the foot of a narrow
-staircase, guarded by one solitary sentry of the corps.
-
-It was our acquaintance, Bras-de-Fer, beguiling the tedium of his watch
-by a mental review of his own adventures in love and war.
-
-The Abbé knew everybody, and the grim Musketeer saluted his holy friend
-cordially enough, excusing himself, while he balanced his heavy weapon
-across his breast, that his orders forbade him to allow any one to pass.
-
-“Lay down your arms, my son,” said the churchman, good-humouredly. “How
-your wrists must ache by supper-time! I have but three words to say to
-your captain, and if you will bend your tall head lower by a few inches I
-can give you the countersign.”
-
-With that he whispered it in his ear, and Bras-de-Fer, again excusing
-himself, bade him pass on, regaining an attitude of extreme stiffness
-and martial severity, as if to make amends for past civility somewhat at
-variance with established discipline.
-
-A green-baize door at the head of the staircase swung open to the Abbé’s
-push, admitting him to an ante-room, of which Captain George was the only
-occupant. He, too, seemed weary of his watch, which was tedious from
-its dull unvarying routine—void of excitement, yet entailing grave and
-oppressive responsibilities. His greeting to Malletort, however, was more
-cordial, so thought that keen observer, than is afforded by a man who
-merely wearies of his own society; and the Abbé was right in his general
-impression, only wrong in detail.
-
-Captain George was indeed favourably affected to everybody connected,
-however distantly, with the house of Montmirail. So far the Abbé judged
-correctly enough, but he missed the true cause by a hair’s-breadth, and
-attributed to the magic of black eyes an effect exclusively owing to blue.
-
-There was little leisure, however, for exchange of compliments, and the
-Musketeer’s solitude was to be relieved but for a few precious moments at
-a time.
-
-“His Highness has already twice asked for you,” said he, in the tone of
-an injured man. “You had better go in at once.” So Malletort, leaving
-the ill-used warrior to his own companionship, passed on to an inner
-apartment, taking with him a stool in his hand, as was the custom, in
-case the interview should be protracted, and the Regent require him to
-sit down.
-
-The room he entered was small, gloomy, panelled with a dark-coloured
-wood, octagonal in shape, relieved by very little furniture, and having
-another door, opposite that which admitted the visitor, concealed by
-heavy velvet curtains. At the solitary table, and on the single chair the
-apartment contained, a man was seated, writing busily, with his back to
-the Abbé. A general air of litter pervaded the place, and although the
-table was heaped with papers, several more were scattered in disorder
-over the floor.
-
-The writer continued his occupation for several minutes, as if
-unconscious of the Abbé’s presence. Suddenly he gave a sigh of relief,
-pushed his chair back from the table, and looked up joyously, like a
-schoolboy interrupted in his task.
-
-“You are welcome, monsieur, you are welcome,” said he, rising and
-pacing to and fro with short, quick steps, while Malletort performed a
-series of courtly and elaborate bows. “I am about wearied of figures,
-and I have been saying to myself, with every passing step for the
-last half-hour, ‘Ah! here comes my little Abbé, who confines himself
-exclusively to facts—my material and deep-thinking churchman, the best
-judge in Christendom of wine, pictures, carriages, cutlets, ankles,
-eyelashes, probabilities, dress, devilry, and deeds of darkness. Here are
-calculations of Las, to show us all how we need only be able to write our
-names, and so acquire boundless wealth; but the miserable Scotchman knows
-no more than the dead how to spend his millions. Would you believe it, my
-dear fellow, Vaudeville dined with him last night, and they served olives
-with the stewed ortolans? Olives, I tell you, with ortolans! The man must
-be a hog!” And the Regent wrinkled up his forehead while he spoke in a
-favourite grimace, that he flattered himself resembled the portraits of
-Henri Quatre.
-
-He bore, indeed, a kind of spurious resemblance to that great king and
-gallant soldier, but the resemblance of the brach to the deer-hound, the
-palfrey to the war-horse, the hawk to the eagle. He made the most of it,
-however, such as it was; brushed his dark hair into a cluster on the top
-of his head, contracted the point of his nose, elongated his chin, and
-elevated his eyebrows, till he almost fancied himself the first Bourbon
-who sat on the throne of France. Nay, he even went so far as to wear his
-stockings and the knees of his breeches extremely tight, while the latter
-were gathered and puckered loosely about the waist, to approach as nearly
-as possible the costume in which the hero was usually portrayed.
-
-In all the worst points of his paragon’s character he copied him to the
-life, only exaggerating to habitual vice the love of pleasure that was
-Henry’s principal weakness. As the Duke’s face was broad, high-coloured,
-good-humoured, nay, notwithstanding the marks it bore of his excesses,
-tolerably well-favoured, while his figure, though scarcely tall enough
-for dignity, was robust and in fair proportion, the imitation seemed,
-perhaps, not entirely unfaithful to its original. Both possessed in a
-high degree the charm of an exquisite manner; but while the King of
-Navarre combined with a monarch’s condescension the frank and simple
-bearing of a soldier, the Duke of Orleans was especially distinguished
-for the suavity and external ease that mark the address of an
-accomplished gentleman.
-
-This prince possessed, no doubt, the germ of many good qualities, but
-how could the most promising seed bear fruit when it was choked up and
-overgrown by such rank weeds as gluttony, drunkenness, and sensuality?
-vices which seem to sap the energy of the mind as surely, if not so
-rapidly, as they destroy the vigour of the body.
-
-Yet the Regent was gifted with a certain persuasive eloquence, a
-certain facility of speech and gesture, invaluable to those who have
-the conduct of public affairs. He possessed a faithful memory, ready
-wit, imperturbable good-humour, and quickness of perception in seizing
-the salient points of a subject, which made him appear, at least, a
-capable politician, if not a deep and far-seeing statesman. Neither was
-he wanting in that firmness which was so much required by the state
-of parties at the time when he assumed the Regency, and this was the
-more remarkable, that his nervous system could not but have been much
-deteriorated and deranged by the frequency and extravagance of his
-debauches. Meantime, we have left the Abbé bowing and the Duke grimacing
-at the bare idea of brown game and olives in the same stew-pan, a subject
-that occupied his attention for several minutes. Rousing himself after
-a while, he began, as usual, to detail the proceedings of the morning’s
-council to Malletort, who had grown by degrees, from a mere comrade
-of his pleasures, into the confidential and principal adviser of his
-schemes. It promised to be a long report, and he motioned the Abbé,
-who had fortunately prepared himself with a stool, to sit down. There
-were many complaints to make—many knots to unfasten—many interests to
-reconcile, but the Abbé listened patiently, and suggested remedies for
-each in turn.
-
-The parliament had been refractory. Nothing could bring them to
-subjection but a Bed of Justice, or full assemblage of peers and
-representatives in presence of the young king.
-
-The Keeper of the Seals was unreasonable. He must be forced into
-collision with the parliament, whom he had always held in antagonism, and
-they might be left to punish each other.
-
-The Duc du Maine and Marshal de Villeroy, constant thorns in the Regent’s
-side, had applied for more powers, more pomp, and, worse still, more
-money, on the score of the young king. His Majesty must be set against
-his governors, and it could best be done by making a festival for him
-to which these would not trust his person, and from which an enforced
-restriction would cause the royal pupil to feel himself shamefully
-aggrieved. In short, conflicting interests were to be reconciled, if
-their disunion seemed to threaten the Government; political parties to be
-dissolved by a judicious apple of discord thrown in their midst at the
-Abbé’s instigation; and a general balance of power to be established, in
-which the Regent could always preponderate by lending his own weight to
-the scale. Altogether a dozen difficulties of statecraft were disposed
-of in as many minutes, and the Duke, rising from the table, pressed his
-hand familiarly on the confidant’s shoulder, to keep him in his seat, and
-exclaimed, gaily—
-
-“They may well call me the ‘Débonnaire,’ little Abbé. Hein! There have
-been but two Bourbons yet who ever _understood_ France. One was a king,
-and the other—well, the other is only a regent. No matter. Cric! Crac!
-Two snaps of the fingers, and everything fits into its place like a game
-at dominoes. But, little Abbé,” added the exulting politician, while
-his brow clouded and he forgot to look like Henri Quatre, “to govern
-the nation signifies but ruling _men_. Such matters arrange themselves.
-The state machine can go without a push. But I have worse complications
-than these. Counsel me, my dear Abbé. There is discord dire this morning
-throughout the women. I tell you the whole heap are at daggers drawn with
-one another, and my life is hardly safe amongst them all.”
-
-Malletort smiled and shook his head. The difficulty was natural enough,
-but the remedy required consideration. So he opened his snuff-box.
-
-“There is a tribe of Arabs,” he replied, “Highness, far up in the desert,
-of whom I have heard that their religion permits each man to marry two
-wives, but with the stipulation, at first sight reasonable enough, that
-he should live with them both in one tent. The practice of bigamy, I
-understand, has in that tribe so fallen into disuse as to be completely
-unknown.”
-
-The Regent laughed loudly. “I believe it,” said he, “I believe it
-implicitly. Powers of strife! and parts of speech. A man should be blind
-and deaf also to endure the Parabére and the Sabran in neighbouring
-_faubourgs_, not to speak of the same tent! Ah! these Orientals
-understand domestic government thoroughly. The harem is a place for
-repose, and a noisy woman soon quits it, I believe, by the river-gate. We
-too have the Seine, but alas! where is the sack? I tell you, Malletort, I
-am tired of them both. I am tired of them all. Madame la Duchesse may be
-cold, pompous, stiff, contradictory, and, oh! as wearisome as a funeral!
-but at least she remains half the day in her own apartments, and can
-command herself sufficiently to behave with decency when she leaves them.”
-
-“Madame la Duchesse,”replied the Abbé, bowing reverentially, “is an
-exemplary and adorable princess. She has but one fault, perhaps I should
-say less her fault than her misfortune—she is your Highness’s wife.”
-
-The Débonnaire laughed again, loud and long. “Well said, little Abbé!”
-he exclaimed. “_My_ fault, _her_ misfortune. Nevertheless the crime is
-unpardonable—so no more of _her_. How shall I reconcile Madame de Sabran
-and Madame de Parabére? I tell you, they sup with us this very night.
-You make one, Abbé, of course!” Malletort bowed lower than ever. “But
-think of these two at enmity across my narrow table! Why the Centaurs
-and Lapithæ would be a love-feast compared to it. Like my ancestor of
-Navarre, Monsieur l’Abbé, I fear neither man nor devil, but there are
-some women, I honestly confess, whose anger I dare not encounter, and
-that is the truth!”
-
-“I know nothing of women and their ways,” answered Malletort, humbly.
-“It is a science my profession and my inclinations forbid me alike
-to understand, but I imagine that in gallantry as in chemistry,
-counteracting influences are most effectual when of a cognate nature to
-the evil. _Similia similibus curantur_; and your Highness can have no
-difficulty, surely, in applying a thousand smiling soft-spoken antidotes
-to two scowling women.”
-
-The Regent shook his head gravely. It was a subject of which he had
-diligently studied both theory and practice, yet found he knew little
-more about it than when he began.
-
-“They are all so different,” he complained, peevishly, “and yet all so
-alike in their utter insensibility to reason, their perverted wilfulness
-in looking on impossibilities as accomplished facts. There is Madame de
-Sabran wants me to make her a duchess of France! ‘How can I make you
-a duchess of France, madame?’ said I. ‘Would you have your “mastiff,”
-as you call him, created a duke for _your_ services?’ ‘He would make
-a better than so and so, and so and so,’ she answered, as coolly as
-possible, naming half-a-dozen, who it must be confessed are not one bit
-more respectable! That is another thing about the woman, she always
-contrives to have a distorted shadow of reason, like a stick in the
-water, on her side. It was only the other day I made him one of my
-chamberlains, and now she declares he ought to be given a step of rank to
-uphold the dignity of the office. How can you reason with such a woman as
-that?”
-
-“Waste of time, Highness!” answered Malletort, composedly. “They are born
-not to be instructed, but admired!”
-
-“I used to admire her more than I do now,” observed the Regent,
-thoughtfully. “Still the woman is amusing and witty; there is no denying
-it. Besides, she speaks her mind freely, and however violent the passions
-she puts herself in, they are over in five minutes. But what am I to
-do with the other? I give you the honour of a Bourbon, my friend, she
-has not uttered a syllable beyond ‘Yes, monsieur,’ ‘No, monsieur,’
-since yesterday afternoon, when she dropped at once from the height of
-good-humour into a fit of impenetrable sulks.”
-
-“Without the slightest cause, of course!” observed the Abbé.
-
-“Without the slightest cause,” repeated the Prince, “at least that I
-could discover. There was indeed a slight difficulty about some flowers.
-I had promised her a bouquet of stephanotis for the masked ball to-night.
-It is rare—its smell is to me overpowering, but it is her favourite
-perfume. Well, my people scoured the country for half-a-dozen leagues
-round Paris, and none was to be procured. With you or me, Abbé, the
-conclusion would seem natural enough, that if the stephanotis has not yet
-bloomed, the stephanotis cannot yet be in flower. But to a woman—bah—such
-an argument is no reason at all! It is quite possible she may even refuse
-to accompany me to the ball to-night!”
-
-Malletort did not think so, and his hopes, just now so buoyant, lost
-nothing by a suggestion which only betrayed his patron’s ignorance of the
-female mind.
-
-“Ah, Highness,” he exclaimed, throwing a gleam of sympathy into his
-eyes, which contrasted much with their usual expression, “how completely
-is your condescension misjudged! how utterly your kind heart thrown
-away! You say truly, women are so different. These think of their own
-aggrandisement even while they bask in your affection. Others here
-at Court would throw themselves body and soul at your feet were you
-to-morrow changed into a simple page from Duke of Orleans and Master of
-France!”
-
-“How?” exclaimed the Regent, unable to conceal that his vanity was
-gratified. “Do you speak from your own knowledge? Are you laughing at me?
-How can you possibly have found this out?”
-
-“It is indeed a matter quite beyond my province,” answered the Abbé; “but
-circumstances have thrown me so frequently into the society of one of the
-ladies in question, that I must indeed have been blind not to perceive
-the truth. Excuse me, Highness, I had rather not pursue the subject any
-farther.”
-
-But the Regent was not so to be put off. With all his shrewdness, he had
-considerable personal vanity, and but for his debaucheries, might perhaps
-have shown some sensibility of heart. In his mind he ran over the leading
-beauties of the Court, and as he had been little scrupulous in paying
-them attention, one and all, the riddle was perhaps the less difficult to
-solve. His eye sparkled, and he clapped his hands like a schoolboy, while
-he shouted out—
-
-“I have it! I have it! Little Abbé, you have let the cat out of the bag.
-Now I know why the proudest names in France have been offered her in
-vain. Now I understand her defiance, her coldness, her unapproachable
-dignity. Do you know, my friend, what you tell me is a veritable romance,
-and, in return, I assure you I have never been insensible to the charms
-of Madame de Montmirail!”
-
-“You are speaking of my kinswoman, Monsieur le Duc,” replied the Abbé,
-haughtily; “and a member of the proudest house in the kingdom. Your
-Highness will be good enough to reflect that I mentioned no names, and
-I have been too faithful a servant, I think, to deserve a gratuitous
-insult.”
-
-“Pardon, my dear Abbé!” exclaimed the Regent, with an affectation of deep
-concern, though accepting Malletort’s protest, no doubt, at its real
-value. “None can respect the house of Montmirail more than I do. None
-can value the friendship of Abbé Malletort so much; but these women and
-their whims turn my poor head. What did you advise about the Parabére? I
-forget.”
-
-“Dismiss her!” answered the churchman, shortly. “It will be one
-embarrassment the less in your Highness’s career.”
-
-“But she is so beautiful,” whimpered the Regent. “There is not such
-another complexion in France. If I were to leave her, do you not think
-half my nobility would be mad to pay their court to her? She is so white,
-you see—so exceedingly white and soft. Such a skin, my dear Abbé. Such a
-skin!”
-
-“Skin her then!” replied Malletort, “and make a covering of her
-integument for your arm-chair. It is the best advice I can offer your
-Highness, and what I should do myself in your case.”
-
-Then they both laughed at the brutal jest. The one because he was in high
-good-humour with the prospect of his hinted conquest; the other because
-he had not forgotten the bouquet, of which a few inhalations could turn
-the whole face black; and because, reflecting on the rapid progress of
-his schemes, he thought it only fair that those should laugh who win.
-
-But in order thoroughly to act his part out, he returned to business
-before he took his leave. “Those _Lettres de Cachet_!” he exclaimed, as
-if he had just recollected them. “Did your Highness express your views on
-the subject to your council?”
-
-“I did indeed,” answered the Regent, significantly; “and the good old
-custom is revived by an edict. But though he who seeks finds, I think he
-is more sure to find who _hides_, and I will take care no man in France
-shall use them but myself.”
-
-Then Malletort bowed himself out, well satisfied, and found Captain
-George in the ante-room, putting on his belts to receive the Black
-Musketeers, whose band could be heard playing and their arms clashing as
-they marched into the court to relieve guard.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-THE MASKED BALL
-
-
-That night much noise and confusion reigned outside the Grand Opera
-House. Torches flared, linkmen shouted, horses plunged, backed, and
-clattered; oaths flew here and there, whips were plied, carriage-wheels
-grated, coachmen swore, and, at short intervals, tall figures of the
-Black Musketeers were called in to keep order, a duty they fulfilled in
-a summary manner, with little forbearance to the public, dealing kicks,
-cuffs, and such remonstrances freely around, and clearing a space,
-wherever space was required, by dropping the butts of their heavy weapons
-on the feet of the recoiling crowd. With such powerful assistance, coach
-after coach deposited its load at the grand entrance, around which were
-congregated valets and lackeys wearing the liveries of the noblest
-families in France.
-
-Beautiful and gorgeous were the dresses thus emerging for an instant
-under the red glare of torchlight, to disappear through the folding-doors
-within. Shimmering the satin, and sparkling with jewels, the loveliest
-women of the capital passed in review for three paces before the
-populace, little loth, perhaps, to submit their toilets to the scientific
-criticism of a Parisian crowd, a criticism that reached, however, no
-higher than the chin, for every one of those fair French faces was hidden
-in a black mask. Their gallants, on the contrary, came unprovided with
-these defences, and the male bird, indeed, though without question the
-uglier animal, was on the present occasion equal in brilliancy of plumage
-to his mate.
-
-It is, however, with the interior that we have to do; behind the
-folding-doors that swallowed up these radiant visions in succession so
-greedily. That interior was flooded in a warm yellow light. A hundred
-glittering lustres shone and twinkled at narrow intervals, to stud the
-curves of white and gold and crimson that belted the ample circle of the
-building, while high in the centre of its dome an enormous chandelier
-flashed and gleamed and dazzled, like some gigantic diamond shivered
-into a thousand prismatic fragments. From roof to flooring fresh bright
-colours bloomed in the boxes, as bloom the posies on a flower-stall;
-while pit, stage, and orchestra, boarded to a level, had become a
-shifting sea of brilliant hues, whirling, coiling, undulating, ebbing,
-flowing, surging into a foam of light and snowy plumes, bearing in turn
-each colour of the rainbow to its surface—flashing and glistening through
-all its waters with a blaze of gems and gold.
-
-Captain George was wading about in it, more preoccupied and less inclined
-to take advantage of its gaieties than a musketeer usually found himself
-in such a scene of revelry. His distinguished air and manly bearing drew
-on him, indeed, gibes and taunts, half-raillery, half-compliment, from
-many a rosy mouth smiling under its black mask; but to these he answered
-not a word.
-
-He was unlike himself to-night—dull, abstracted, and out of spirits. Even
-Bras-de-Fer, he felt, would have composed and propounded his heaviest
-retorts in less time than it took his captain to understand any one of
-the jests levelled at a taciturnity so out of place. He was in no mood
-for banter, nor intrigue, nor amusement—not even for supper. He wanted to
-see Cerise; he confessed it to himself without reserve, yet he neither
-expected nor wished to find her in such a scene as this.
-
-An attachment between two young persons, if of a nature to arrive at
-maturity, seems to gain growth and vigour in an inverse proportion to the
-amount of care bestowed on its cultivation. The plant is by no means an
-exotic, scarce even a garden-flower. Nay, I think a chance seedling of
-this tribe comes to fuller perfection than either graft or cutting. It
-is good for it also to be crushed, mangled, mown over, or trodden down.
-Storms and snows and bitter frosts bring it rapidly into flower, and it
-is astonishing, though a tropical blaze could not satisfy its wants, how
-little sunshine is required to keep it alive.
-
-Captain George’s meetings with Cerise were indeed as numerous as five
-or six in the week; but they took place at an interval of twenty feet,
-and consisted of low bows and eager glances from a gentleman on a gravel
-walk, returned by the formal reverence and deep blush of a young lady in
-a window-seat. On the principle that half a loaf is better than no bread,
-I presume crumbs are acceptable when crusts are not to be obtained. So
-the Musketeer had felt ill at ease all day, and was now in the most
-unsuitable frame of mind possible for a masquerade, because the girl
-had been absent from her window when he passed, which was indeed his
-own fault, since, in his impatience, he had crossed the gardens of the
-Hôtel Montmirail a quarter of an hour before his usual time, and had thus
-perhaps inflicted as much disappointment as he sustained.
-
-Now people in the irritable frame of mind caused by a little anxiety,
-a little disappointment, and a good deal of uncertainty, seldom betake
-themselves to solitude, which is indeed rather the resort of real
-happiness or the refuge of utter despair. The simply discontented are
-more prone to rush into a crowd, and Captain George had no idea of
-abstaining from the Great Masked Ball at the Opera House, but rather made
-his appearance somewhat earlier than his wont at this festivity, though
-when there, he roamed about in a desultory and dissatisfied manner, first
-dreading, then faintly hoping, and lastly ardently desiring to meet
-Mademoiselle de Montmirail amongst that brilliant, shifting, bantering,
-and mysterious throng. Disguised indeed! He would know her, he felt sure,
-by her pretty feet alone, if she were masked down to her very ankles.
-
-He was not so well versed in feminine arts but that he had yet to learn
-how a lady who really wished to remain unknown at these gatherings would
-alter her voice, her gestures, her figure, her gait—nay, the very shape
-of her hands and feet, to deceive those on whom she wished to practise.
-
-The majority, on the contrary, were most unwilling thus to sink their
-identity, and only wore masks, I imagine, to hide the absence of blushes
-at such direct compliments as were sure to be addressed to them, also as
-an excuse for considerable freedom of speech in return.
-
-The orchestra was pealing out a magnificent “Minuet de la Cour,” and
-that stately measure, performed by a few couples of the handsomest
-gallants and ladies of the Court, was eliciting the applause of a large
-and critical circle, amongst whom Captain George made one, when a voice
-thrilled in his ear, the tone of which brought the blood to his cheek,
-while a masked figure beside him passed her hand lightly through his
-arm. A tremendous flourish of brass instruments rendered the moment
-well-chosen for secret communication; but the mask had apparently nothing
-more confidential to say than this—
-
-“_Qui cherche trouve!_ You seek something, fair Musketeer. If you are in
-earnest, you shall find what you require!”
-
-The voice reminded him almost painfully of Cerise, yet was it deeper and
-fuller than the girl’s in tone. He scanned the figure at his side with
-a quick penetrating glance; but she was so shrouded in a black satin
-cloak reaching to the flounces of her ball-dress, that he gathered but
-little from her inspection. He noted, however, a leaf of the stephanotis,
-peeping from under the folds that concealed her bouquet, and recollecting
-the events of the morning, made a shrewd guess at his companion.
-
-Perhaps she would have thought him very stupid had it been otherwise.
-All this elaborate artifice of disguise may have been for her own
-deception, not his. She might talk to him more freely under protest, as
-it were, that he had no right to know her; and she was, moreover, so well
-enveloped and altered, that she could scarcely be identified by passing
-acquaintances, or, indeed, by any one with whom she refused to converse.
-
-“I seek only amusement,” answered the Musketeer, with the natural
-instinct of mankind to disavow sentiment. “I have not yet found much, I
-confess, though Point d’Appui’s airs and graces in the dance there would
-afford it to any one who had not seen them as often as I have.”
-
-She laughed scornfully, leaning on his arm. “And they call that thing
-_a Man_!” said she, with an accent on the substantive extremely
-uncomplimentary to Count Point d’Appui, who was indeed a handsome,
-conceited, pleasant, young good-for-nothing enough; “and these are the
-objects women break their hearts about—dress for them, dance for them,
-die for them; nay, even come to masked balls, disfigured and disguised
-for their unworthy sakes. What fools you must think us, Captain George;
-and what fools we are!”
-
-“You know me, madame,” exclaimed the Musketeer, affecting surprise,
-rather as entering into the spirit of the scene than with any deeper
-motive. “You must know, then, that I am amongst the most devoted and
-respectful admirers of your sex.”
-
-She laughed again the low soft laugh that was one of her greatest charms,
-and lost, moreover, none of its attraction from her disguise.
-
-“Know you!” she repeated, still leaning on his arm perhaps a little
-heavier than before. “What lady in Paris does not know you as the citadel
-to resist all her efforts of attack?—as the Orson, the woman-hater,
-the man of marble, who has no vanity, no feelings, no heart?—the only
-creature left in this uninteresting town worth conquering? And all those
-who have tried it, no small number, vow that victory is impossible.”
-
-“It shows how little they comprehend me,” he replied, in a tone of jest,
-and still pretending not to recognise his companion, who held her head
-down and took refuge studiously beneath her mask. “If you, madame, would
-condescend to become better acquainted with me, you would soon learn the
-falsehood of these ladies’ reports to my discredit!”
-
-“Discredit!” she echoed, and to his surprise, nay, to his dismay, a tear
-fell on the gloved hand within his arm. What could he do but dry it with
-a kiss? “Discredit!” she said again, in a tone of increasing emotion.
-“How little you must understand us if you can make use of such a term!
-Who would care to possess that which half the town has worn and thrown
-away? What is the value of a heart that has been cut into little scraps
-and shreds, and left in portions at different friends’ houses like gifts
-on New-year’s-day? No, monsieur, if I must give all I am worth for a
-diamond, let it be such a diamond as the Regent’s—large, clear, and
-entire—not a collection of fragments only held together by their golden
-setting, like a necklace of Madame de Sabran or Madame de Parabére.”
-
-Captain George did not quite follow out the metaphor, his attention being
-at this moment somewhat distracted by a figure that reminded him of
-Cerise, yet that he felt was as unlike Cerise as possible. The Musketeer
-was also a very moderate proficient in the lighter accomplishments of
-gallantry, being of a self-contained though energetic nature, that was
-disposed to do its work thoroughly or not at all. He was one of those
-men, of whom there are more in the world than ladies suppose, whose
-respect for the sex restrains them from taking that initiative which
-they forget the latter are especially privileged to decline. Unless,
-therefore, a woman throws herself at their heads, they make no advances
-at all, and then these wretches are just the sort of characters with
-which such a course, repugnant to their instinctive sense of fitness, is
-least likely to succeed, after all. They are consequently very difficult
-birds to tame, and either escape altogether, or are lured into the cage,
-accidentally as it were, by a pretty face, a shy manner, and some rare
-combination of circumstances which nobody on earth could have foreseen.
-When a lady has fairly started, however, and got warmed to her subject, I
-imagine little is to be gained by interrupting her, and that no efforts
-of eloquence find so much favour as the forbearance of a good listener.
-
-The Marquise thought she had turned her last phrase very prettily,
-and applied the image of the necklace with considerable art, so she
-continued, without waiting for an answer, “You do not know me, Captain
-George, though I know _you_. Also, I mention no names, therefore I break
-no confidences. Do you remember the day the late king was taken ill, and
-brought home, never to recover?”
-
-His English blood stirred at the recollection of that gallant stag-hunt,
-and his eye brightened. She observed it, and not sharing the insular
-passion for an _innocent_ pursuit, drew her conclusions accordingly.
-
-“I have not forgotten it,” he replied, calmly, “nor the beautiful
-Marquise and her barb!”
-
-She trembled with pleasure, but commanded her voice, and repeated
-indifferently, “Ah! the beautiful Marquise! I fancy she nearly rode the
-poor barb to death that day. What will a woman not do when her heart is
-interested? Well, monsieur, have you ever spoken since to the beautiful
-Marquise, as you call her, doubtless in ridicule?”
-
-He began to think he _had_ been somewhat remiss, and that to prosecute
-his intimacy with the mother would have been the easiest way of obtaining
-access to the daughter. He was not given to self-examination, and did not
-perceive that his very love for Cerise had prevented him yet entering the
-house. “Do you know the Marquise de Montmirail?” was all he could find at
-the moment to say.
-
-“A little!” answered the mask, nodding her head. “But I have an intimate
-friend who is very intimate with her indeed. You think women cannot be
-friends, monsieur; you think they have no hearts; you little know the
-lady of whom we speak. You see her as the world does, and you judge
-her accordingly. How blind men are! If your eyes are not dazzled by
-self-conceit, they are bandaged by an impenetrable and cold egotism. A
-thing must touch your very noses, close like that,” and she thrust her
-pretty hand up within an inch of his face, “or you will not believe in
-its existence. Nevertheless, I could sometimes find it in my heart to
-envy you your callousness, your stupidity, your indifference, and to wish
-that I had been born a man.”
-
-I think at the moment he almost wished it too, for although the voice was
-very fascinating, and the situation not without its charm, she encumbered
-him sadly in his search for the young lady whom yet he did not the least
-expect to find.
-
-The Marquise, however, was quite satisfied with her position, and
-disposed to improve the occasion.
-
-“A woman can have no _friends_,” she proceeded, speaking in a low tone
-that the music rendered inaudible to all but her companion. “How I wish
-she could! I know the sort of one I should choose—brave, steadfast,
-constant, self-controlled; a gallant soldier, a loyal gentleman; above
-all, a man uninfluenced by every eye that flashes, every lip that smiles.
-And yet—and yet,” she added, while her soft voice sank to a whisper as
-the music rose and swelled, “such an one would soon cease to be a friend.
-Because—because―”
-
-“Because why?” he asked, bending tenderly over her, for it was not in
-man’s nature to remain uninfluenced by such words now spoken.
-
-The dark eyes flashed through their mask, and the hand that rested on his
-arm clenched tight while she replied—
-
-“Because I should love him foolishly, madly, if he cared for me; and if
-not—I should hate him so fiercely that―”
-
-“You come with me from here!” said a loud good-humoured voice at this
-interesting juncture, while a man’s hand was laid familiarly on the
-Musketeer’s shoulder. “In a quarter of an hour my coach will be waiting
-at the stage entrance. Not one of my _roués_ dare face it! I want a
-fellow like you, who fears neither man nor devil!”
-
-Captain George bowed low, with the mask, still leaning on his arm
-curtsied to the ground.
-
-“Highness,” said he, “I shall have the honour! It is a mere duty to
-serve under his orders but it becomes _a pleasure_ when Monsieur le Duc
-commands in person.”
-
-“And to supper afterwards, of course,” added very graciously a lady who
-was hanging on the Regent’s arm, and who carried her mask in her hand.
-“Captain George is always welcome, as he knows, and we shall not be more
-than a half-a-dozen at the outside.”
-
-Again the Musketeer bowed low, and the Marquise, scanning the last
-speaker intently, could not but acknowledge that to-night Madame de
-Parabére looked more than usually beautiful. The _brunette_, too,
-probably overrated the charms of the _blonde_, the exceeding delicacy of
-complexion, the softness of skin, and the innocent baby face which so
-fascinated the Regent. Also she thought she detected on that baby face a
-decided preference for the Musketeer, and Madame de Montmirail was not
-a woman to entertain the strongest passions of her sex and leave out
-jealousy.
-
-Had it not been for these suspicions, the bouquet of stephanotis might
-have remained all night innocuous beneath her cloak, to be consumed in
-the stove that warmed her chocolate when she got home. But the Marquise
-allowed no one to cross her designs with impunity, and watching her new
-enemy narrowly, began to handle her weapons and prepare for action.
-
-The Regent had been traversing the throng of revellers with Madame de
-Parabére on his arm; the latter, proud of her disgrace, and exulting
-in her infamous position as his acknowledged mistress, had bared her
-face, in order to receive the full tribute of admiration which her
-beauty really deserved. Now, while the Duke stood still for a moment,
-and exchanged a few jesting compliments and well-bred sarcasms with
-the passing maskers, an encounter in which he acquitted himself with
-considerable tact and ingenuity, his companion, dearly loving mischief,
-turned all her batteries on Captain George.
-
-The Marquise was, therefore, left planted as one too many; a situation to
-which she, the spoiled child of society, was so unaccustomed, that she
-could have cried with vexation, but for the revenge now literally within
-her grasp.
-
-So she peered, and watched, and waited, like a Grey Musketeer skirmishing.
-
-Madame de Parabére, observing the Regent’s attention engaged elsewhere,
-whispered something to George, looking insolently the while at his
-companion, and laughed.
-
-Then the Marquise primed her weapon, as it were, and shook the powder
-well up in the pan. A leaf of the rare bouquet peeped from under its
-covering.
-
-Madame de Parabére, flirting and ogling outrageously, as was her
-custom, whispered again in Captain George’s ear, with a little affected
-laugh. It seemed to the eager watcher that her lips shaped the hated
-syllables—“Mulatto.”
-
-It was time to take aim now, sure and deadly, preparatory to giving fire.
-A cluster of stephanotis showed out like ivory against the smooth black
-satin.
-
-Madame de Parabére clapped her hands, and exclaimed with a child’s glee,
-“But madame, what a bouquet! Madame is indeed fortunate! Such flowers are
-not to be procured within leagues of Paris. How exquisite! How ravishing!
-Madame is so good. Madame will permit me to have one little breath of
-their fragrance. Only one!”
-
-The Marquise hesitated. An instinct of womanly forbearance prompted mercy
-even to another woman. Vindictive as she felt, and with her finger on the
-trigger, she would yet spare her, she thought; but the insolent creature
-should know her enemy, and should be taught that even the Regent’s
-favourite could not command such bouquets as the acknowledged beauty of
-the Court.
-
-“They were sent me as a gift, madame,” she observed, haughtily, and
-withholding the flowers. “I value them because ours are not yet blown at
-the Hôtel Montmirail.”
-
-“Pardon, madame!” retorted the other, unable, now that she knew her, to
-forego this opening for a thrust. “Tropical, of course! From an admirer,
-madame? or perhaps a kinsman? Very dark, no doubt, and with close curled
-hair. I offer you my compliments from the bottom of my heart!”
-
-No quarter now. She had rushed upon her fate, and must be shot down
-without the least compunction. “If madame will deign to accept my
-bouquet,” said the Marquise, “she will do me the highest honour.” And she
-displayed the whole of it, a wonder of nature, brought to perfection by
-art.
-
-Madame de Parabére, giddy, thoughtless, fond of flowers, stretched her
-hand out eagerly, and Captain George, whose attention the Regent’s
-conversation had diverted from this passage of arms between the ladies,
-turned round while she was in the act of putting them enthusiastically to
-her face.
-
-He saw the situation at a glance, and his promptitude served him as usual.
-
-“I must be ready for your Highness!” he exclaimed hurriedly, addressing
-the Regent, but with his eye fixed on the treacherous flowers. “Madame,
-I have the honour of wishing you a good-night!” he added in the same
-breath; while with an energetic flourish of his cocked hat he knocked
-them clean out of the lady’s hands to a few paces’ distance on the floor,
-letting the hat follow; and as he recovered the latter, crushing the
-bouquet to pieces, as if inadvertently, beneath his foot. It was the
-second time he had practised this manœuvre within twelve hours, and he
-was perfect in his lesson.
-
-Rising with an affectation of great confusion, he made his excuses to
-Madame de Parabére, contriving, amongst a torrent of phrases, to convey,
-unobserved, the single word “Beware!” And she understood him, contenting
-herself with a glance of intense gratitude, and an inward vow she would
-never rest till she had found opportunity to repay both friend and foe.
-
-The Regent laughed heartily at the joke. “You must have supped already,
-my friend,” said he, “and not spared the wineflask. So much the better;
-you are all the fitter for your night’s work. Come! let us be moving. It
-is time we were off!”
-
-Madame de Montmirail stood a while, stupefied, paralysed, as it were,
-at the failure of an attack thus foiled by the last person in whom she
-expected to find an opponent. The first instant she could have hated him
-with all the fierceness of baffled rage. The next, she felt she had never
-loved him half so well as now. He had thwarted her; he had tamed her; he
-had saved her from crime, from ruin, from _herself_! All in one glance of
-the keen eye, one turn of the ready hand. She acknowledged him for her
-master, and to her such a sentiment was as fascinating as it was new. She
-would have liked to burst out crying, and kneel at his feet, imploring to
-be forgiven, had time and place permitted so romantic an exhibition. At
-least, she could not let him go without another word, and Captain George,
-following the Regent through the crowd towards the door, felt a hand laid
-timidly on his arm, heard a broken voice whispering softly in his ear.
-
-She trembled all over. Her very lips shook while she murmured, “Forgive
-me, monsieur! I must explain all. I _must_ see you again. Where do you go
-to-night?”
-
-“To sup with his Highness,” answered the Musketeer, keeping the Duke’s
-figure in sight as it threaded the jostling, shifting throng of noisy
-revellers.
-
-“But that is not till midnight,” she urged. “He said something about
-duty. You are brave! You are rash! For heaven’s sake, promise you will
-not rush into needless danger!”
-
-He laughed good-humouredly, and reassured her at once. “Danger! madame!
-Nothing of the kind. I can trust you not to gossip. It is a mere frolic.
-We are going a league or two out of Paris, _to raise the devil_!” And
-observing the Duke turning back for him, he escaped from her and was lost
-in the crowd.
-
-She looked longingly after him, and sighed. “To raise the devil!” she
-repeated, pressing both hands on her heart. “And not the only one
-to-night. Alas! you have raised one here that none but yourself can lay!”
-
-Then the Marquise, still retaining her disguise, passed hastily through
-the ball, till she reached the street, and gaining her carriage, was
-driven straight home to the Hôtel Montmirail, weeping, softly and
-patiently, behind her mask.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-RAISING THE DEVIL
-
-
-The Black Musketeers on duty cleared a lane for the Regent at the door,
-and the lower orders, with whom, despite his bad character, a certain
-joviality of manner made him no small favourite, cheered vociferously as
-he passed. “The Débonnaire goes home early,” said one. “He has a child in
-the pot for supper,” shouted another. “I wish his Highness would ask me
-to eat with him!” exclaimed a third. “Or drink with him!” added a fourth.
-While a little hunchback, hideous and distorted, observed, in a dry,
-shrill voice, that made itself heard above all the clamour, “His Highness
-has a _rendezvous_, I tell you! Lads, where are your manners? Débonnaire!
-send me the bones to pick when you’ve done with them!”
-
-A peal of laughter and a volley of cheers followed his state-coach
-as it rolled off at a slow, lumbering trot, with which a man on foot
-could easily keep up. Captain George had been directed to do so, and
-accompanied it to the entrance of a gloomy narrow street, where the tall
-cloaked figure of Bras-de-Fer was waiting, according to orders. Here
-it stopped, the Regent alighted rapidly, and signing to his coachman
-to drive on, dived into a gulf of darkness, closely attended by the
-Musketeer and his comrade.
-
-A few paces brought them to an open _calèche_, drawn by a pair of English
-horses, driven from the saddle, and containing one solitary occupant,
-also enveloped in a cloak, who leaped out when he heard footsteps, and
-uncovered while he assisted the Regent to his place. He then seated
-himself opposite; Bras-de-Fer followed, his example; Captain George,
-at a signal from the Duke, placed himself by his Highness; and in a few
-minutes the whole party were across the Seine, beyond the barrier, which
-had been thrown back, and clattering along a paved road at a gallop
-through the open country.
-
-The moon came out as they cleared Paris, and each man looked in the
-other’s face to read, according to their respective temperaments, signs
-of amusement, self-confidence, anxiety, or alarm. The Duke, though
-nervous, seemed strung to a certain pitch of resolution. Bras-de-Fer
-swelled with pride at the royal confidence thus reposed in him;
-and Captain George smiled quietly to mark the trepidation of their
-fourth companion, none other than Signor Stefano Bartoletti—chemist,
-philosopher, astrologer, professor of medicine, mathematics, and
-magic—black or white as required.
-
-It is strange how the most effective impostors become so saturated, as
-it were, with their profession, that they cannot resist the influence of
-a vague enthusiasm which breeds artificial belief, fascinating, though
-transparently absurd, in the tricks they themselves practise. Perhaps
-there is something of the true artist in every man who succeeds, whatever
-be the nature of his enterprise; and the true artist can never place
-himself entirely apart from, or outside of, his art. Signor Bartoletti,
-who had engaged to raise the enemy of mankind for the Regent’s
-gratification, was unquestionably the most nervous of the whole party
-lest they should be taken at their word.
-
-Captain George, to begin with, anticipated nothing but a trick, and took
-the matter, therefore, as coolly as he did everything else unconnected
-with Cerise de Montmirail. Bras-de-Fer, on the contrary, was persuaded he
-should be called on to confront the arch-fiend in person; but believing
-himself a good Catholic, while he knew he was an excellent swordsman,
-his courage rose, and he smiled grimly in his moustache at the thought
-of so distinguished an adversary. Even the devil, he argued, could not
-be much worse than Marlborough’s Grenadiers, and he had faced them many
-a time without getting the worst of the encounter. He even calculated
-whether he might not bring into play, with considerable effect, the
-thrust lately introduced into the corps by Beaudésir, but postponed
-further consideration of the point till he should know what kind of
-weapons were to be used in the field. The Regent, excited, credulous,
-impressible, loving the marvellous, and inclined to believe anything that
-was _not_ in the Bible, found his spirits rise with the anticipation of a
-new distraction; and being in that exalted state which those experience
-at rare intervals whose orgies are alternated with strong intellectual
-labour, found himself actually dreading a disappointment in the vision he
-anticipated.
-
-Bartoletti felt how uncomfortably it would turn out, if, after all the
-pains of Malletort and himself to instruct the actress in her part, after
-all their care in scenery, decorations, and rehearsal, the original
-should take it into his head to assist at the performance in person!
-
-Ere they were a league out of Paris his teeth began to chatter, though
-his breath smelt strong of the last suck of brandy that had comforted him
-before they started.
-
-The English horses drew them swift as the wind. It seemed but a short
-half-hour ere they stopped at a gate opening into a wood, shadowy,
-dark, and dreadful, after the dusty road and level meadows glistening
-silver-white in the moonlight. The two Musketeers, accustomed to look
-about them, perceived at their feet a track of wheels, which had
-obviously preceded their carriage. Bras-de-Fer felt a little disappointed.
-
-“_L’affaire commence!_” whispered the Regent, loosening his sword, as
-he prepared to follow Bartoletti through the wood. “Keep close to me,
-gentlemen, and look that we be not taken in rear!”
-
-The path was narrow, winding, and exceedingly dark; but after a furlong
-or two the party emerged on an open space, and found their progress
-stopped by a level wall of rock, hewn perfectly smooth, and several
-yards in height. Bathed in a strong moonlight, every particle on its
-gritty surface glistened like crystal, and its crest of stunted trees and
-thick-growing shrubs cut clear and black against the cloudless sky.
-
-Here the adept halted and looked round. “Highness,” he whispered, “we
-have reached our journey’s end; have you courage to enter the cave?”
-
-The Duke’s face was pale, but he glanced at his two Musketeers, and
-answered, “After you, monsieur!”
-
-Then the four, in Indian file, turned through an opening, or rather a
-mere hole in the rock, to follow a low, narrow passage, in which, ere
-they had advanced three paces, the darkness became impenetrable. They
-groped their way in silence, each listening to the hard breathing of his
-predecessor. Bras-de-Fer, who was last, fervently hoping their ghostly
-enemy might not attack them until, as he would have expressed it, they
-could “deploy into line.”
-
-The corridor, however, as we may call it, grew wider and loftier at
-every step. Presently they marched upright, and two abreast. There was
-a constant drip from the damp stone that encircled them, and the hard
-smooth surface on which they trod felt cool and refreshing to their feet.
-
-Bras-de-Fer could not restrain a sneeze. It resounded above their heads,
-and died away farther and fainter in a hundred whispering echoes.
-
-Bartoletti started violently, and the Duke’s hand went to his sword. Then
-the magician halted, pulled a vial from his breast, and dipping a match
-in it, produced a strong rose-coloured flame, from which he lit the small
-lamp that hung at his belt.
-
-Whilst the match flared and shone, they saw plainly for several yards
-in every direction. They were in a low vaulted cavern, hewn, to all
-appearance, by no mortal hands, out of the rock. They stood on a
-slightly-elevated platform, and at their feet lay a glistening sheet of
-black that could only be water. It was, however, a hasty examination, for
-the match soon spent itself, and Bartoletti’s lamp gave but light enough,
-as Bras-de-Fer observed, “to show how dark it was.”
-
-“Are we on the banks of the Seine or the Styx?” asked the Regent,
-jestingly, yet with a slight tremor in his voice.
-
-“Man knoweth not whither this dark stream may lead,” replied Bartoletti,
-solemnly, lighting at the same time a spare wick of his lamp, to embark
-it on a morsel of wood which he pushed into the current.
-
-For several minutes, as it seemed to their watching eyes, the light
-floated farther and farther, till swallowed up by degrees in the black
-distance.
-
-All were now somewhat impressed with the gloom and mysterious silence of
-the place. Bartoletti took courage, and informed the Regent he was about
-to begin.
-
-“Not till you have drawn a pentacle!” objected the Duke, apprehensively.
-“Such a precaution should on no account be neglected.”
-
-“It is unnecessary, Highness,” answered the other. “Against the
-lesser fiends, indeed, it forms an impregnable defence; but he who is
-approaching now, the very Prince of Darkness himself, cares no more for a
-pentacle than you do!”
-
-The Regent would not be satisfied, however, till, under Malletort’s
-superintendence, he had drawn with the point of his sword a circle and
-triangle in magic union on the bare rock. Then he ensconced himself
-carefully within his lines, and bade the magician “go on.”
-
-After a considerable display of mummery, and the repetition of many
-sentences, which, as they were couched in Latin, Bartoletti felt would be
-liable to little criticism from his listeners, he produced a small bundle
-of shavings from under his cloak, and piling these on the water’s edge,
-poured over the heap certain essences, ere he set the whole on fire. The
-cavern now became filled with a thick cloud of smoke, fragrant in smell,
-and though stupefying to the senses, not suffocating the lungs. Reflected
-in the black water beneath, as the flames waved and leaped and flickered,
-the unsteady light produced an effect of vast and shadowy distance on the
-dim recesses of the cavern, and prepared the minds of the spectators for
-some vague, uncertain, yet awful result.
-
-Plunging it once more into his bundle, Bartoletti spread his hand over
-the embers. A blue lurid glare, that turned all their faces ashen white,
-now replaced the shifting wavering light of the flames.
-
-“It is the death-fire!” whispered the Italian; and touching the Duke’s
-shoulder, he pointed to the roof of the cavern.
-
-A gigantic arm and hand, with forefinger pointed downwards, were shadowed
-distinctly on its ribbed and slimy surface.
-
-The Duke trembled, and sweat stood on his brow; Bartoletti, too,
-shivered, though with less reason. Captain George nodded approvingly, and
-Bras-de-Fer pulled the buckle of his sword-belt to the front.
-
-“You may ask three questions,” whispered the shaking Italian. “Not
-another syllable, if you would leave the cave alive!”
-
-The Duke cleared his throat to speak, and his voice came dry and husky,
-while he formed the words with effort, like a man using a foreign tongue.
-
-“I adjure you, tell me truly, who is my chief enemy?”
-
-Not one of them drew breath whilst they waited for the answer; and the
-questioner himself looked down to see that his feet were scrupulously
-within the pentacle.
-
-It came sad, solemn, and as if from a distance, chanted in a full,
-mournful and melodious tone:—
-
- “The foes a prince behoves to dread, that turn and tear their lord,
- Are those that haunt about his bed, and blush beside his board.”
-
-Then the Regent, gaining courage, asked in a firmer voice, “Who is my
-best friend?”
-
-The reply was more distinct, and its clear emphasis seemed to vouch for
-the speaker’s truth, Father of Lies though he might be called:—
-
- “One friend is thine, whose silent kiss clings subtle, sure, and fast;
- When all shall fail, yet shall not this, the swiftest, though the last.”
-
-Thus encouraged, the royal questioner gathered heart with every fresh
-answer, and it was in his customary unrestrained tone that he propounded
-his last inquiry, “Shall I live to wear the crown of France?”
-
-This time, however, the phantom arm waved backwards and forwards,
-clenching its gigantic hand, while the demon’s voice seemed again to rise
-from distant and mysterious depths, as it replied:—
-
- “When woman’s love can trust thy vows, when woman’s guileless glance
- Can thrill thy breast, bind on thy brows the diadem of France!
- Enough! For more I dare not tell. Glad life, and lusty reign!
- Predestined Prince, and fare thee well!—till we shall meet again!”
-
-In five minutes all were once more in the open air. The Regent, grave
-and preoccupied, spoke not a word while they passed swiftly through the
-wood to gain their carriage; but Bras-de-Fer whispered in his comrade’s
-ear, “It seems the devil is like the rest, and had rather not come to
-close quarters with the Grey Musketeers.” To which professional remark
-Captain George replied, thoughtfully—
-
-“He is an adversary for whom I would choose a weapon that kept me as far
-off him as possible!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-A QUIET SUPPER
-
-
-In less than an hour, how changed the scene for two of the actors in that
-mysterious drama—of which Bartoletti was chief manager and Malletort sat
-in the prompter’s box! The Captain of Musketeers had been invited to sup
-with the Regent, and found in his prince’s private apartments a little
-party collected, whose mirth and high spirits were well calculated to
-drive away any remains of superstitious gloom left by the incantations of
-the cavern and their result.
-
-The select suppers of the Duke of Orleans were conducted with an absence
-of ceremony or restraint that indeed degenerated on occasion into the
-grossest license; but even under the Regency men did not necessarily
-conclude every night in the week with an orgy, and the mirth of the
-_roués_ themselves was not always degraded into drunkenness, nor their
-wit pushed to profanity and shameless indecency of speech.
-
-Captain George found himself seated at a round table in an oval room,
-of which the only other occupants, besides his royal host, were Madame
-de Parabére, Madame de Sabran, Malletort, and Count Point d’Appui. The
-latter, be it observed, excelled (for no one was admitted to these
-reunions who had not some marked speciality) in the grace with which he
-danced a minuet and the gravity with which he propounded the emptiest and
-silliest remarks. Some of the courtiers affected to think this simplicity
-only masked an intriguing disposition, and that Point d’Appui was, after
-all “not quite such a fool as he looked.” A charitable suggestion,
-endorsed by Madame de Sabran, with the observation, “The saints forbid he
-should be!”
-
-Altogether it was generally admitted that the Count’s strong point must
-be sought rather in his heels than his head. He sat directly opposite
-the Musketeer, and next to Abbé Malletort, who was between him and
-Madame de Sabran. The latter was thus placed opposite the Regent, at
-whose right hand Madame de Parabére had taken up her usual post. Captain
-George found himself accordingly with a lady on either side, and as he
-was distinguished, manly, quiet in manner, and above all, supposed to be
-impenetrable of heart, he became an object of interest to both.
-
-These hated each other, of course, but in a treacherous, well-bred
-manner, and not so rancorously as to spoil their appreciation of an
-excellent repast, served in pleasant company, under all the most
-promising conditions for success. They were therefore, outwardly,
-wondrous affectionate, and under protest as it were, with the buttons on
-their foils, could be good companions enough.
-
-The Duke prided himself on his suppers. Working at state affairs during
-the day, and with a digestion considerably impaired by habitual excess,
-dinner was a mere matter of form, often restricted indeed to a morsel of
-bread and a cup of chocolate, served in the cabinet where he wrote. But
-when the hours of business were past, and his system, too much gorged
-over-night, had recovered from the fumes of wine and the torpor of
-repletion, it was his delight to rush once more into those excesses of
-appetite which unfitted his mornings for exertion, which robbed him of
-half his existence while he lived, and killed him in the prime of manhood
-at last.
-
-But he understood well how the sacrifice should be offered. The
-supper-room, we have said, was oval, panelled in a light cheerful wood,
-highly-varnished, and decorated only by short pithy sentences, inlaid
-in gaudy colours, of which the purport was to crop the flower while it
-bloomed, to empty the cup while it sparkled, practically, to eat the
-cutlet while it was hot, and consume as eagerly as possible the good
-things provided for the senses. No pictures, no vases, no works of art
-were suffered upon the walls to distract the attention of the guests from
-their main object. The intellect, as seated at the farthest distance
-from the stomach, might indeed be gently stimulated with wit, but the
-imagination, the feelings, above all, the emotions that affect the
-heart, were on no account to be disturbed during the ecstacies of the
-palate or the pleasing languor and subsequent comfort of digestion. Not a
-lackey nor servant of any kind entered the room. When one course had been
-consumed, deliberately, methodically, and with much practical comment on
-its merits, the table sank slowly through the floor, to be replaced by
-another, bearing fresh dishes, fresh flowers, fresh napkins, everything
-fresh prepared, to the very bills of fare, beautifully emblazoned, that
-lay beside the cover of each guest. A strong light from above was shaded
-to throw its rays directly on the board; but as plenty of this enlivener
-is conducive to festivity, numerous lamps with bright reflectors flashed
-at short distances from the walls. No pealing band deafened the ears
-of the sitters, or drowned their conversation in its overpowering
-strains; only ever and anon a faint long-drawn note, like the tone of a
-far-distant organ, rose and fell and wavered, ere it died sweetly and
-calmly away.
-
-On these occasions, Point d’Appui never failed to pause, even with a
-tempting morsel on his fork, and intimate to his neighbours that “he was
-passionately given to music, and it reminded him of heaven!”
-
-The Regent seemed much impressed with the visit he had made to the cavern
-before supper, and it was not till he had emptied several goblets of
-champagne that he regained his usual spirits. With the influence of wine,
-however, his nerves recovered their tone, his eye brightened, his hand
-steadied, and he joined in conversation as heretofore.
-
-By this time a favourite dish had made its appearance, which went by the
-name of the _pâté d’Orleans_. It consisted of the wings of pheasants
-and other white game, boned, stuffed, and so manipulated as to resemble
-the limbs of children; a similarity that gave rise to the most hideous
-rumours amongst the lower classes. Many a worthy gossip in Paris believed
-firmly that two or three infants were consumed nightly at the Regent’s
-table, and none seemed to relish the report more than himself. He ate
-vigorously of the _pâté_, emptied another goblet, and began to talk.
-Madame de Parabére watched him closely. Something was going on she had
-not fathomed, but she resolved to be at the bottom of it.
-
-“Abbé!” shouted the Duke, “what are you about? Do you think I would
-suffer little heathens on my table, that you baptize them with water?
-They are the best of Christians, I tell you, my friend, and should be
-well soused, like all good Christians, in wine.” Malletort, who had been
-pouring stealthily out of a carafe at his elbow, accepted his host’s
-challenge, and filled up from a flask.
-
-“To your health, Highness! and confusion to your enemies—White and Red,”
-said he, pointing to two measures of those Burgundies that happened to
-stand before the ladies.
-
-The Duke started. Malletort’s observation, simple as it seemed, brought
-the diabolical prophecy to his mind, and again he sought courage from his
-glass.
-
-“Do you mean that for _us_, monsieur?” asked Madame de Sabran; “since his
-Highness loves the Burgundy too well to count it a foe, though it has put
-him on his back, I doubt not, often enough.
-
-“Nay, madame,” answered the Abbé, bowing politely; “such as you can never
-be foes, since you are born to be conquerors. If it did come to a fight,
-I presume you would grant no quarter.”
-
-“None,” said she, laughing. “Church and laymen, we should put you all to
-the sword.”
-
-“But the Church are non-combatants,” interposed Count Point d’Appui, with
-perfect sincerity. “You would be excommunicated by our Father the Pope.
-It is a different species, madame, altogether—a separate race.”
-
-“Not a bit of it!” answered the lady. “Men to the tips of their fingers,
-every one of them! Are you not, Abbé? No! When all is said and done,
-there are but two distinct creations, and I never can believe they have a
-common origin. Men and women I put in the one, princes and lackeys in the
-other. What say _you_, madame?”
-
-But Madame de Parabére said nothing. She sat in silence, pouting, because
-it suited the shape of her mouth, and listening, for other reasons of her
-own.
-
-The Regent, who had now drunk wine enough to be both easily offended and
-appeased, felt that the shaft aimed at him was not entirely undeserved.
-So he asked, in anger, “How mean you, madame? I see not the drift of your
-jest. In what are princes and lackeys so alike, and so different from the
-rest of mankind?”
-
-“Other bipeds” answered the lady, bitterly, “lie from habit, with
-intention, or on occasion; but this variety never speaks the truth at
-all, even by accident.”
-
-The Duke’s face turned purple. Captain George, hoping to divert an
-explosion, and feeling that he had been invited rather as a compliment
-than for the sake of his society, rose and took his leave, on the score
-of military duty; receiving, as he went out, a glance from Madame de
-Parabére’s beautiful eyes, that assured him of her gratitude, her
-interest, and her good-will.
-
-His departure changed the subject of conversation. In two minutes the
-Regent forgot he had been offended, and Madame de Sabran was busied in
-the unworthy task of mystifying Count Point d’Appui, an employment which
-her rival contemplated with a drowsy, languid air, as if she could hardly
-keep herself awake.
-
-The Abbé had watched her for some time with increasing interest and
-considerable misgivings; the poison, he thought, should long ere this
-have taken effect, and he expected every moment to observe a disturbance
-of the placid features, a discolouration of the beautiful skin. Before
-supper was over, he concluded that, as far as the flowers were concerned,
-his plot had failed; but Malletort did not now need to learn the archer’s
-want of another arrow in the quiver, a spare string for the bow: it
-behoved him only to make the more use of such implements as he had kept
-in reserve.
-
-All his energy and all his cunning had been brought into play during the
-night. Without his assistance, he felt sure the mummery of the cavern
-must have failed, for he could trust neither the shaking nerves of the
-Italian nor the superstitious self-deception of the quadroon. It was no
-easy task to return to Paris so swiftly as to change his dress, show
-himself at a reception in the Faubourg St. Germain, and thence proceed
-leisurely to sup with the Regent. Well-bred horses, however, and a
-well-broke valet, had accomplished this part of the undertaking, with a
-few seconds to spare. It now remained to play the last and most difficult
-strokes of the game. He felt equal to the occasion.
-
-Moving round the table with his glass, in unceremonious fashion, he
-took advantage of George’s departure to place himself between Madame de
-Parabére and her host, whispering in that lady’s ear, “I have a favour
-to ask of the Regent, in which you, too, are interested!” She made room
-for him carelessly, listlessly, and her face looked so innocent and
-unsuspicious as to delude even his acuteness into the belief that the
-few faculties she could command were engrossed by Point d’Appui and his
-tormentor.
-
-These were in full swing at a game called, in England, Flirtation. It
-is an elastic process, embracing an extensive area in the field of
-gallantry, and so far resembling the tournaments of the Middle Ages, that
-while its encounters are presumed to be waged with weapons of courtesy,
-blunted for bloodless use, such fictitious conflicts very frequently
-bring on the real combat _à l’outrance_ with sharp weapons, and then, as
-in other death-struggles, _væ victis_! If girth breaks, or foot slips,
-the fallen fighter must expect no mercy.
-
-Pitted against Point d’Appui, Madame de Sabran might be likened to an
-accomplished swordsman practising cut and thrust on a wooden trunk. But
-the block was good-natured and good-looking. When such is the case, I
-have observed that a witty woman takes no small delight in the exercise
-of her talent. There is a generosity about the sex not sufficiently
-appreciated, and if a man will only keep quiet, silent, receptive, and
-immoveable, it will pour its treasures at his feet in a stream of lavish
-and inexhaustible profusion.
-
-Point d’Appui contented himself with looking very handsome and drinking
-a great deal of Burgundy. His neighbour hacked and hewed him without
-intermission, and Madame de Parabére’s attention seemed entirely
-engrossed by the pair.
-
-Malletort, in possession of the Regent’s ear, proceeded diligently with
-the edifice for which he had so artfully laid the foundations.
-
-“I must ask permission to take my leave early to-night, Highness,”
-observed the churchman. “Like our friend the Musketeer, who has served
-his purpose, by the way, as I learn, so may I be rubbed out of the
-calculation; and I must drink no more of this excellent Burgundy, for I
-have promised to present myself in a lady’s drawing-room, late as it is,
-before I go to bed.”
-
-Though somewhat confused by wine, the Regent understood his confidant’s
-meaning perfectly well, and his eye kindled as he gathered its purport.
-“I will accompany you, little Abbé,” he whispered with a hiccough, and a
-furtive glance at the ladies, lest they should overhear.
-
-“Too late, my Prince,” answered the other, “and useless besides, even for
-you, since I have not yet obtained permission. Oh! trust me. The fortress
-is well guarded, and has scarce ever been summoned; much less has it
-offered a parley.”
-
-The Duke looked disappointed, but emptied another bumper. He was rapidly
-arriving at the state Malletort desired, when a well-turned compliment
-would have induced him to sign away the crown of France.
-
-“To-morrow then,” he grunted, with his hands on the Abbé’s shoulder. “The
-great Henry used to say—what used he to say? Something about waiting; you
-remember, Abbé. _Basta!_ Reach me the Burgundy.”
-
-“To-morrow, Highness,” answered Malletort, more and more respectfully, as
-his patron became less able to enforce respect. “At the hour agreed on, I
-will be at your orders with everything requisite. There is but one more
-detail, and though indispensable, I fear to press it with your Highness
-now, for it trenches on business, and your brain, like mine, must be
-somewhat heated with the Burgundy.”
-
-Probably no other consideration on earth would have induced the Duke to
-look at a paper after supper, but this remark about the Burgundy touched
-him nearly.
-
-He took pride in his convivial powers, and remembering that Henri Quatre
-was said to have drunk a glass of red wine before his infant lips had
-tasted mother’s milk, always vowed that he inherited from that ancestor
-a constitution with which the juice of the grape assimilated itself
-harmlessly as food.
-
-“Burgundy, little Abbé!” he repeated, staring vacantly at Malletort, who
-had produced a small packet and an ink-horn from his pockets. “Burgundy,
-Beaune, brandy—these do but serve to _clear_ the brains of a Bourbon!
-Give me the paper!”
-
-“It is only your signature, Highness,” said Malletort, sitting completely
-round, so as to interpose his person between Madame de Parabére and the
-sheet under his hand. “I can fill it up afterwards, to save you further
-trouble.”
-
-But a drunkard’s cunning is the last faculty that forsakes him. Though
-the paper danced and wavered beneath his gaze, he detected at once that
-it was a _Lettre de cachet_, formidable, henceforth, from the edict
-issued that day in Council.
-
-Without troubling himself to inquire how the document came into
-Malletort’s possession, who had indeed free access to his _bureau_, he
-wagged his head gravely, exclaiming, with the good-humoured persistency
-of inebriety—
-
-“No! no! little Abbé. A thousand times no! I fill in the names myself.
-Oh! I am Regent of France. I know what I am doing. Here, give me the pen.”
-
-He scrawled his signature on the page, and waited for Malletort to speak.
-
-The latter glanced furtively round—Madame de Sabran was laughing, the
-Count listening, Madame de Parabére yawning. No one seemed to pay
-attention. Nevertheless he was still cautious. Mentioning no names,
-he looked expressively at the Musketeer’s vacant place, while he
-whispered—“We have done with him. He has fulfilled his task. Let him be
-well taken care of. He deserves it, and it is indispensable.”
-
-“What is indispensable, must be!” answered the Duke carelessly, and
-filled in the name of the victim on the blank space left for it.
-
-Then he sprinkled some blue sand from the Abbé’s portable writing-case
-over the characters; and because they did not dry fast enough, turned the
-sheet face downwards on the white table-cloth, and passed his wrist once
-or twice across the back.
-
-When he lifted it, the ink had marked the damask, which was of the finest
-texture and rarest pattern in Europe.
-
-Malletort never neglected a precaution. Reaching his hand to a flask
-of white Hermitage, and exclaiming, “We chemists are never without
-resource,” he was about to pour from it on the table, when a soft voice
-murmured languidly, “Give me a few drops, monsieur, I am thirsty,” and
-Madame de Parabére, half turning round, held her glass out to be helped.
-
-He was forced to comply, but in another second had flooded the ink-marks
-with Hermitage, and blurred the stains on the cloth into one faded
-shapeless blot.
-
-Madame de Parabére’s face remained immoveable, and her fine eyes looked
-sleepy as ever, yet in that second she had read a capital _G_, with a
-small _r_, reversed, and had drawn her own conclusions.
-
-There is but one sentiment in a woman’s mind stronger than gratitude—its
-name is Love. Nevertheless, her love for the Regent was not so
-overpowering as to shake her determination that she would save the
-Captain of Musketeers at any sacrifice.
-
-Meanwhile, the object of her solicitude returned to his quarters by way
-of the Hôtel Montmirail, coasting the dead wall surrounding that mansion
-very slowly, and absorbed in his own reflections. To reach it he diverged
-considerably from his direct road, although the guard posted in its
-vicinity consisted that night of Black Musketeers, who were not to be
-relieved till the next afternoon by their comrades of the Grey Company.
-To prove their vigilance seemed, however, the aim of Captain George’s
-walk, for after a brief reconnoitre, he retired quietly to rest about the
-time that his royal host, with the assistance of two valets, staggered
-from banqueting-room to bed-chamber.
-
-And no wonder, for notwithstanding a liberal consumption of champagne,
-the flasks of red and white Burgundy stood empty on the supper-table.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-BAITING THE TRAP
-
-
-In transactions with womankind, the sharpest of men are apt to overlook
-in their calculations the paramount influence of dress.
-
-Malletort had long ago expressed an opinion on the despotism of King
-Chiffon, but he little expected to be thwarted by that monarch in
-dealing with one of his most devoted subjects. When Captain George
-knocked the poisoned bouquet out of Madame de Parabére’s hand, with
-a happy awkwardness seldom displayed in ball-rooms, a cluster of its
-blossoms caught in the flounces of her dress. Despite languor of manner
-and immobility of feature, this lady possessed coolness, resolution,
-and resource in emergency. She concealed the stray cluster in her
-handkerchief, said nothing about it, took it home, put it under glass,
-and then locked it carefully away in a cabinet. After she had heard mass
-next morning, she walked quietly off to Bartoletti’s house, attended
-by two armed domestics and accompanied by her maid, as if going to buy
-cosmetics, and produced the blossoms for that unwilling chemist to
-analyse. The Signor, to tell the truth, was always averse to tampering
-with poisons, although in the way of business it was difficult to keep
-clear of them. As, on the present occasion, he felt nothing was to be
-gained by falsehood, as Madame de Parabére was a dangerous enemy to
-provoke, and above all, as she paid him liberally, he produced his tests
-without delay, and informed her she had narrowly escaped loss of beauty,
-if not of life, by the inhalation of a subtle and effectual poison.
-
-The Signor argued in this way. He compromised nobody, neither was it any
-business of his that certain ingredients, sold to a brother student in
-separate quantities, had been scientifically mingled and sprinkled over
-these treacherous exotics. With the sums he had lately received from
-the Abbé on different accounts—with the liberal reward now brought him
-by Madame de Parabére—with the proceeds from his shares in Mississippi
-stock, of a feverish rise in which he had, by his friend’s advice,
-taken immediate advantage—with the sale of his wine, pictures, plate,
-and furniture—lastly, with the firm determination to abscond promptly,
-leaving his debts unpaid, he should find himself master of so much wealth
-as would enable him to purchase the freedom of Célandine (at a damaged
-valuation), to marry her, and settle down somewhere, perhaps under the
-glowing sky of the tropics, in luxury and scientific indolence for the
-rest of his life.
-
-Sensualist and impostor though he was, the man had yet some glimmering of
-a better and nobler existence than his necessities had hitherto permitted
-him to lead. He saw himself basking in the sun, sleeping in the shade,
-eating luxuriantly, drinking of the best, lying soft, yet devoting his
-leisure to the interests of science, and, when it did not interfere with
-his gratifications, giving those who needed help the benefit of his
-medical experience and advice. There are few but can be pitiful while
-they want occupation, and generous while it costs them nothing but a word.
-
-When Bartoletti attended his visitor to the door, he felt it would be
-neither wise nor prudent to remain longer in Paris.
-
-Madame de Parabére did not act without reflection. She possessed in his
-own handwriting, with his own signature attached, the chemist’s analysis
-of the noxious essences that had been offered her in a nosegay; and
-although Bartoletti extorted the price of a necklace for it, she felt the
-document was cheap at the money. Instinct told her that in the Marquise
-de Montmirail she had found a rival; but reason assured her also that
-with such proofs as she now possessed she could ruin any rival in the
-Regent’s good graces as soon as he had slept off the effects of last
-night’s wine. Though his whole afternoon, as often happened, might be
-engaged, she must meet her royal admirer that evening at the opera. He
-should then be put in possession of the facts, and woe to the traitress
-when he knew the truth!
-
-“We shall see, madame!” said the lady, between her small white teeth,
-under the sweet, calm face, and crossing herself as she passed a crucifix
-in the street. “We shall see! A _lettre de cachet_ is a very compromising
-_billet-doux_, but it may be sent to a lady quite as appropriately as a
-gentleman. That reminds me! Business first—pleasure afterwards; gratitude
-to-day—vengeance to-night. I will preserve that brave Musketeer, if it
-costs me my rank and my reputation. Oh! if men were all prompt, generous,
-honourable, like him, how differently we poor women should behave; I
-wonder if we should be much better or much worse?”
-
-The maid walking at her side thought she was repeating an “Ave,” and
-appreciating the temptations of her mistress, greatly admired so edifying
-a display of piety under difficulties.
-
-Madame de Parabére was perfectly right in believing she would have no
-opportunity for conversation with the Regent till they met at the opera.
-The whole of that prince’s morning was employed in struggling with the
-drowsy fiend who on a sensualist’s couch represents sleep, and is such a
-hideous mockery of its original. At these hours the tendency to apoplexy,
-which the Duke strengthened and pampered by indulgence, displayed itself
-in alarming colours, and none of his attendants could have been surprised
-when, a few years later, the destroyer swooped down and carried off his
-prey at a stroke. It took him many an hour of heavy, unhealthy, and
-disturbed slumber to regain sufficient clearness of mind for the duties
-of the day, but once in exercise, his intellect, which was doubtless
-above mediocrity, soon reasserted itself, and the Prince, shaved, bathed,
-dressed, and seated over a pile of papers in his cabinet, seemed quite
-capable of grasping the political helm, and guiding with a steady hand
-the destinies of France. But it was only by a strong mental effort he
-thus overcame the effects of his pernicious habits; such an effort as,
-when often repeated, saps the vital energies beyond the power of nature
-to restore them, and the wasting effects of which are best conveyed by
-the familiar expression—“burning the candle at both ends.”
-
-When business was concluded, and the Regent, leaving his cabinet, entered
-the adjoining dressing-room to prepare for amusement, he was generally
-much fatigued, but in excellent spirits. A thorough Bourbon, he could
-work if it was necessary, but his native element was play. When he shut
-up his portfolio the virtual King of France felt like a boy out of school.
-
-It was in such a mood the Abbé Malletort found him the afternoon
-succeeding his necromantic visit to the cavern. The valets were
-dismissed, the wardrobe stood open, various suits of clothes hung on
-chairs or lay scattered about the floor, yet it seemed the visitor was
-expected; for no sooner did he enter than the door was locked, and
-his Highness, taking him by the shoulders, accosted him with a rough,
-good-humoured welcome.
-
-“True to time,” said he, in a boisterous yet somewhat nervous tone. “True
-and punctual as a tailor, a confessor, and a creditor should be!—since
-for me, little Abbé, you combine these several characters in one! A
-tailor, for you must dress me; a confessor, for you know most of my sins
-already, and I have no desire to conceal from you the remainder; and a
-creditor, because I owe you a heavy debt of gratitude which you need not
-fear I shall forget to pay!”
-
-“Tailor and confessor as much as your Highness pleases,” answered the
-Abbé, “but creditor, no! I had rather possess the free assurance of the
-Regent’s good-will than his name to a blank assignment on the Bank of
-France! It is my pride and my pleasure to be at your service, and only
-when the Duke shall propose a scheme to his own manifest disadvantage
-will the Abbé find courage to expostulate or refuse.”
-
-“I can trust you, I believe,” answered the Regent, “none the less, my
-friend, that your interests and mine are identical. If d’Orleans were at
-Dourlens, and Du Maine at the Tuileries, it is just possible Malletort
-might find himself at Vincennes. What say you, my adventurous Abbé? Such
-an _alerte_ would call every man to his post! No; where I gain an inch
-I pull you up a metre; but in return, if I make a false step in the
-_entresol_, you tumble down two pair of stairs and break your neck in
-the street! Yes—I think I can trust you.”
-
-Malletort laughed pleasantly. “Your Highness’s ethics are like my own,”
-said he. “There is no tie so close as self-interest, and it is certainly
-none the looser when accompanied by inclination. I trust the events of
-to-night will render it yet more binding on us both.”
-
-“Have you prepared everything?” asked the Regent, with anxiety. “The
-slightest omission might be not only inconvenient, but dangerous.”
-
-“I have but a short note to write,” answered the Abbé, “and I can
-accomplish that while your Highness finishes dressing. It must be sealed
-with the arms of the royal Body-guard, and you may believe I have no such
-uncanonical trinkets in my possession.”
-
-The Duke looked in a drawer and shook his head. Then he called a valet,
-who appeared from the adjoining chamber.
-
-“Go to the officer of the guard,” said he, “and ask him for the
-regimental seal. Say it is for _me_.”
-
-The man returned almost immediately, indeed before the Abbé had finished
-a note on which he was engaged, writing it slowly and with great care.
-
-“Who is on guard?” he asked, carelessly, while the servant set the
-massive seal on the table.
-
-“Monsieur George,” was the answer, “Captain of the Company of Grey
-Musketeers.”
-
-The Abbé did not look up, but continued assiduously bent over his task,
-smiling the while as at some remarkable and whimsical coincidence.
-
-When he had folded his letter carefully, and secured it with the military
-seal, he begged his Highness, in a tone of great simplicity, to lend him
-an orderly.
-
-“As many as you please,” answered the Regent; “but may I ask the nature
-of a missive that requires so warlike a messenger?”
-
-“It is a challenge,” answered the Abbé, and they both laughed heartily;
-nor was their mirth diminished when the required orderly, standing gaunt
-and rigid in the doorway, turned out to be the oldest, the fiercest, and
-the ugliest veteran in the whole Body-guard.
-
-The sun was now declining, and it would soon be dusk. Malletort urged on
-the Regent to lose no time in preparing for his enterprise.
-
-“And the opera?” observed the latter, suddenly recollecting his
-appointment with Madame de Parabére at that entertainment.
-
-“Must be given up for to-night,” answered Malletort. “There is no time
-for your Highness to show yourself in public, and return here for a
-change of dress. Moreover, your disguise cannot be properly accomplished
-in a hurry, and to be late by five minutes would render all our plans
-useless. You have promised to trust everything to me, and if your
-Highness will be guided by my directions, I can insure you an undoubted
-success. Give me your attention, I entreat, monsieur, whilst once more I
-recapitulate my plan.”
-
-“You dismiss, now, on the instant, all your valets, except Robecque, on
-whom we can depend. With his assistance and mine, you disguise yourself
-as an officer of Musketeers—Grey, of course, since that company furnishes
-the guard of to-night. Your Highness can thus pass through their posts,
-without remark, on giving the countersign supplied this morning by
-yourself. An escort will be provided from the barracks, at the last
-moment, by Marshal de Villeroy’s orders, without consulting the officer
-of the guard. This arrangement is indispensable in case of accidents.
-Every contingency has been anticipated, yet swords might be drawn, and
-though your Highness loves the clash of steel, the most valuable life in
-France must not be risked even for such a prize. Ah! you may trust us men
-of peace to take precautions; and, in _our_ profession, when we act with
-the strong hand, we think we cannot make the hand _too_ strong.
-
-“Nevertheless, I anticipate no difficulties whatever. Your Highness, as
-a gallant Musketeer, will enter the garden of the Hesperides without
-opposition. There is no dragon that I know of, though people sometimes
-pay your humble servant the compliment of believing him to hold that
-post; and once within, it wants but a bold hand to pluck the fruit from
-the bough. Win it then, my Prince, and wear it happily. Nay, forget
-not hereafter, that many a man less favoured would have bartered life
-willingly but to lie prostrate under the tree and look his last on the
-tempting beauty of the golden apple he might never hope to reach.”
-
-There was something unusual in the Abbé’s tone, and the Duke, glancing in
-his face, thought he had turned very pale; but in another moment he was
-smiling pleasantly at his own awkwardness, while he assisted the Regent
-into the uniform, and fitted on the accoutrements of a Musketeer.
-
-It took some little time, and cost many remonstrances from Robecque,
-who was not gifted with a military eye, to complete the transformation.
-Nevertheless, by dint of persuasion and perseverance, the moustaches were
-at length blacked and twisted, the belts adjusted, the boots wrinkled,
-and the hat cocked with that mixture of ease, fierceness, good-humour
-and assumption, which was indispensable to a proper conception of the
-character—a true rendering of the part.
-
-It was somewhat against the grain to resign for a while the attitudes and
-gestures of Henri Quatre, but even such a sacrifice was little regretted
-when the Duke scanned himself from top to toe in a long mirror, with a
-smile of undisguised satisfaction at the result of his toilet.
-
-“’Tis the garrison type to the life!” said he, exultingly. “Guard-room,
-parade, and bivouac combined. Abbé! Abbé! what a flower of Musketeers she
-spoiled when blind Fortune made me Regent of France!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-MATRE PULCHRÂ, FILIA PULCHRIOR
-
-
-Since Horace wrote that musical ode in which he expresses a poet’s
-admiration pretty equally divided between mother and daughter, how many
-similes have been exhausted, how many images distorted to convey the
-touching and suggestive resemblance by which nature reproduces in the
-bud a beauty that has bloomed to maturity in the flower! Amongst all the
-peculiarities of race, family likeness is the commonest, the most prized,
-and the least understood. Perhaps, because the individuality of women
-is more easily affected by extraneous influences, it seems usually less
-impressed upon the sons than the daughters of a House. Then a girl often
-marries so young, that she has scarcely done with her girl’s graces,
-certainly lost none of her woman’s charms, ere she finds a copy at her
-side as tall as herself; a very counterpart in figure, voice, eyes,
-hair, complexion; all the externals in which she takes most pride; whose
-similarity and companionship are a source of continual happiness, alloyed
-only by the dread of a contingency that shall make herself a grandmother!
-
-As they sat in the boudoir of the Hôtel Montmirail, enjoying the cool
-evening breeze at an open window, the Marquise and her daughter might
-have been likened to a goddess and a nymph, a rose and a rosebud—what
-shall I say?—a cat and her kitten, or a cow and her calf! But although
-in voice, manner, gestures, and general effect, this similarity was
-so remarkable, a closer inspection might have found many points of
-difference; and the girl seemed, indeed, an ideal sketch rather than
-a finished portrait of the woman, bearing to her mother the vague,
-spiritualised resemblance that memory bears to presence—your dreams to
-your waking thoughts.
-
-Cerise was altogether fairer in complexion and fainter in colouring,
-slenderer, and perhaps a little taller, with more of soul in her blue
-eyes but less of intellect, and a pure, serene face that a poet would
-have fallen down and worshipped, but from which a painter would have
-turned to study the richer tones of the Marquise.
-
-Some women seem to me like statues, and some like pictures. The latter
-fascinate you at once, compelling your admiration even on the first
-glance, while you pass by the former with a mere cold and critical
-approval. But every man who cares for art must have experienced how the
-influence of the model or the marble grows on him day by day. How, time
-after time, fresh beauties seem to spring beneath his gaze as if his very
-worship called them into life, and how, when he has got the masterpiece
-by heart, and sees every curve of the outline, every turn of the chisel
-in his dreams, he no longer wonders that it was not a painter, but a
-sculptor, who languished to death in hopeless adoration of his handiwork.
-These statue-women move, in no majestic march, over the necks of captive
-thousands to the strains of all kinds of music, but stand in their leafy,
-shadowy nooks apart, teaching a man to love them by degrees, and he never
-forgets the lesson, nor would he if he could.
-
-It is scarcely necessary to say that the Marquise loved her daughter
-very dearly. For years, the child had occupied the first place in her
-warm impassioned heart. To send Cerise away was the first lesson in
-self-sacrifice the proud and prosperous lady had ever been forced to
-learn, and many a tear it used to cost her, when her ball-dress had been
-folded up and Célandine dismissed for the night. Nor, indeed, was the
-Quadroon’s pillow quite dry when first she lost her nursling; and long
-after Cerise slept calmly and peacefully between those quiet convent
-walls, far off in Normandy, the two women would lie broad awake, calling
-to remembrance the blue eyes and the brown curls and the pretty ways of
-their darling, till their very hearts ached with longing to look on her
-once more. Now, since mademoiselle had returned, the Marquise thought
-she loved her better than ever, and perhaps all the feelings and impulses
-of a heart not too well disciplined had of late been called into stronger
-play.
-
-[Illustration: “I LIKE GOING OUT SO MUCH, MAMMA.”
-
-(_Page 169._)]
-
-Madame de Montmirail threw herself back in her chair with an exclamation
-of pleasure, for the cool, soft breeze lifted the hair from her temples,
-and stirred the delicate lace edging on her bosom. “It is delightful, my
-child!” she said, “after the heat of to-day, which was suffocating. And
-we have nothing for to-night, I thank the saints with my whole heart!
-Absolutely nothing! Neither ball, nor concert, nor opera (for I could
-not sit out another of Cavalli’s), nor even a horrid reception at the
-Luxembourg. This is what I call veritable repose.”
-
-Like all people with a tinge of southern blood, the Marquise cried out at
-the slightest increase of temperature. Like all fashionable ladies, she
-professed to consider those gaieties without which she could not live,
-duty, but martyrdom.
-
-Mademoiselle, however, loved a ball dearly, and was not ashamed to
-say so. She entered such gatherings, indeed, with something of the
-nervousness felt by a recruit in his first engagement. The prospect of
-triumph was enhanced by the chance of danger; but the sense of personal
-apprehension forcibly overcome, which is, perhaps, the true definition
-of courage, added elasticity to her spirits, keenness to her intellect,
-and even charms to her person. Beauty, moving gracefully amongst admiring
-glances, under a warm light in a cloud of muslin, carries, perhaps, as
-high a heart beneath her bodice as beats behind the steel cuirass of
-Valour, riding his mailed war-horse in triumph through the shock of
-opposing squadrons.
-
-“And I like going out so much, mamma,” said the girl, sitting on a
-footstool by her chair, and leaning both elbows on her mother’s lap.
-“With you I mean; that must, of course, be understood. Alone in a
-ball-room without the petticoats of Madame la Marquise, behind which to
-run when the wolf comes, I should be so frightened, I do believe I should
-begin to cry! Seriously, mamma, I should not like it at all. Tell me,
-dear mother, how did you manage at first, when you entered a society by
-yourself?”
-
-“I was never afraid of the wolf,” answered the Marquise, laughing, “and
-lucky for me I was not, since the late king could not endure shy people,
-and if you showed the slightest symptoms of awkwardness or want of tact
-you were simply not asked again. But you are joking, my darling; you
-who need fear no criticism, with your youth, your freshness, the best
-dressmaker in Paris, and all that brown hair which Célandine talks of
-till the tears stand in her eyes.”
-
-“I hate my hair!” interrupted Cerise. “I think it’s hideous! I wish
-it was black, like yours. A horrid man the other night at ‘Madame’s’
-took me for an Englishwoman! He did, mamma! A Prince somebody, all over
-decorations. I could have run a pin into the wretch with pleasure. One of
-the things I like going out for is to watch my beautiful mamma, and the
-way to flatter me is to start back and hold up both hands, exclaiming,
-‘Ah! mademoiselle, none but the blind could take you for anything but the
-daughter of Madame la Marquise!’ The Prince-Marshal does it every time we
-meet. Dear old man! that is why I am so fond of him.”
-
-The young lady illustrated this frank confession by an absurd little
-pantomime that mimicked her veteran admirer to the life, causing her
-mother to laugh heartily.
-
-“I did not know he was such a favourite,” said the Marquise. “You are in
-luck, my daughter. I expect him to pay us a visit this very evening.”
-
-Cerise made a comical little face of disgust.
-
-“I shall go to bed before he catches me, then,” she answered; “not that
-he is in the least out of favour; on the contrary, I love him dearly; but
-when he has been here five minutes I yawn, in ten I shut my eyes, and
-long before he gets to that bridge which Monsieur de Vendôme ought, or
-ought not, to have blown up—there—it’s no use! The thing is stronger than
-I am, and I go fast asleep.”
-
-“And so my little rake is disappointed,” said the elder lady, taking her
-child’s pretty head caressingly between her hands. “She would like to
-have a ball, or a reception, or something that would make an excuse for
-a sumptuous toilet, and she finds it very wearisome to sit at home, even
-for one night, and take care of her old mother!”
-
-“Very!” repeated the girl playfully, while her tone made so ungracious
-an avowal equivalent to the fondest expression of attachment. “My
-old mother is so cross and so tiresome and so very _very_ old. Now,
-listen, mamma. Shall I have a dress exactly like yours for the ball
-at the Tuileries? The young king is to dance. I know it, for my dear
-Prince-Marshal told me so while I was still awake. I have never seen a
-king, only a regent, and I _do_ think Monsieur d’Orleans so ugly. Don’t
-tell him, mamma, but our writing-master at the convent was the image
-of him, and had the same wrinkles in his forehead. He used to wipe our
-pens in his wig, and we called him ‘Pouf-Pouf!’ I was the worst writer
-amongst all the girls, and the best arithmetician. ‘Pouf-Pouf’ said
-I had a geometrical head! Well, mamma, you must order me a dress the
-exact pattern of yours; the same flounces, the same trimmings, the same
-ribbons, and I will present myself before the Prince-Marshal the instant
-he arrives in the ball-room, to receive his accustomed compliment.
-Perhaps on that occasion he will take me for _you_! Would it not be
-charming? My whole ambition just now is to be exactly like my mother in
-every respect!”
-
-As she finished, her eyes insensibly wandered to the picture of the
-Prince de Chateau-Guerrand, which adorned the boudoir, but falling short
-of its principal figure, rested on the dead musketeer in the foreground.
-The Marquise also happened to be looking at the same object, so that
-neither observed how the other’s gaze was employed, nor guessed that
-besides figure, manner, features, voice, and gestures, there was yet a
-stronger point in which they bore too close and fatal a resemblance.
-Deep in the heart of each lurked the cherished image of a certain Grey
-Musketeer. The girl draping her idol, as it were, even to herself,
-not daring so much as to lift a corner of its veil; yet rejoicing
-unconsciously in its presence, and trusting with a vague but implicit
-faith to its protection. The woman alternately prostrating herself at
-its pedestal, and spurning it beneath her feet, striving, yielding,
-hesitating, struggling, losing ground inch by inch, and forced against
-her judgment, against her will, to love him with a fierce, eager, anxious
-love, embittered by some of the keenest elements of hate.
-
-These two hearts were formed in the same mould, were of the same blood,
-were knit together by the fondest and closest of ties, and one must
-necessarily be torn and bruised and pierced by the happiness of the other.
-
-It was so far fortunate that neither of them knew the very precarious
-position in which Captain George found himself placed. Under such a
-ruler as the Débonnaire, it was no jesting matter for any man that
-his name should be written in full on a _lettre de cachet_, formally
-signed, sealed, and in possession of an ambitious intriguer, who, having
-no feelings of personal enmity to the victim, would none the less use
-his power without scruple or remorse. A woman was, of course, at the
-bottom of the scrape in which Captain George found himself; but it was
-also to a woman that he was indebted for timely warning of his danger.
-Madame de Parabére had not only intimated to him that he must make his
-escape without delay, but had even offered to sell her jewels that he
-might be furnished with the means of flight. Such marks of gratitude
-and generosity were none the less touching that the sacrifice proved
-unnecessary. A Musketeer was seldom overburdened with ready money, but
-our Captain of the Grey Company not only bore a Scottish surname, he had
-also a cross of Scottish blood in his veins. The first helped him to
-get money, the second enabled him to keep it. Monsieur Las, or Law, as
-he should properly have been called, like his countrymen, “kept a warm
-side,” as he expressed it, towards any one claiming a connection, however
-remote, with his native land, and had given Captain George so many
-useful hints regarding the purchase and sale of Mississippi stock, that
-the latter, who was by no means deficient in acuteness, found himself
-possessed of a good round sum, in lawful notes of the realm, at the
-moment when such a store was absolutely necessary to his safety.
-
-He laid his plans accordingly with habitual promptitude and caution. He
-knew enough of these matters to think it improbable he would be publicly
-arrested while on guard, for in such cases profound secrecy was usually
-observed, as increasing the suddenness and mystery of the blow. He had,
-therefore, several hours to make his preparations, and the messenger whom
-he at once despatched to prepare relays of horses for him the whole way
-to the coast was several leagues on his road long before the sun went
-down. A valise, well packed, containing a change of raiment, rested on
-the loins of his best horse, ready saddled, with pistols in holsters
-and bridle hanging on the stall-post, to be put on directly he was fed.
-Soon after dark, this trusty animal was to be led to a particular spot,
-not far from the Hôtel Montmirail, and there walked gently to and fro in
-waiting for his master. By daybreak next morning, the Musketeer hoped to
-be half-way across Picardy.
-
-Having made his dispositions for retreat like a true soldier, he divested
-his mind of further anxiety as to his own personal safety, and turned all
-his attention to a subject that was now seldom absent from his thoughts.
-It weighed on his heart like lead, to reflect how soon he must be parted
-from Cerise, how remote was the chance of their ever meeting again. In
-his life of action and adventure he had indeed learned to believe that
-for a brave man nothing was impossible, but he could not conceal from
-himself that it might be years before he could return to France, and his
-ignorance in what manner he could have offended the Regent only made his
-course the more difficult, his future the more gloomy and uncertain. On
-one matter he was decided. If it cost him liberty or life he would see
-the girl he loved once more, assure her of his unalterable affection, and
-so satisfy the great desire that had grown lately into a necessity of his
-very being.
-
-So it fell out that he was thinking of Cerise, while Cerise, with her
-eyes on the Musketeer in the picture, was thinking of him; the Marquise
-believing the while that her child’s whole heart was fixed on her
-ball-dress for the coming gaieties at the Tuileries. With the mother’s
-thoughts we will not interfere, inasmuch as, whatever their nature, the
-fixed expression of her countenance denoted that she was keeping them
-down with a strong hand.
-
-The two had been silent longer than either of them would have allowed,
-when Célandine entered with a note—observing, as she presented it to her
-mistress, “Mademoiselle is pale; mademoiselle looks fatigued; madame
-takes her too much into society for one so young; she had better go to
-bed at once, a long sleep will bring back the colour to her cheeks.”
-
-The Marquise laughed at her old servant’s carefulness. “You would like to
-put her to bed as you used when she was a baby. Who brought this?” she
-added, with a start, as, turning the note in her hand, she observed the
-royal arms of the Body-guard emblazoned on its seal; bending her head
-over it the while to conceal the crimson that rose to her very temples.
-
-What a wild gush of happiness filled her heart while she read on—her
-warm wilful heart, that sent tears of sheer pleasure to her eyes so that
-she could scarcely decipher the words, and that beat so loud, she hardly
-heard Célandine’s disapproving accents in reply.
-
-“The fiercest soldier, and the ugliest I have yet set eyes on. Nine feet
-high at least, and the rudest manners I ever encountered, even in a
-Musketeer!”
-
-Cerise was no longer to be pitied for want of colour, but Célandine,
-though she observed the change, took no notice of it, only urging on her
-young lady the propriety of going immediately to bed.
-
-Meanwhile, the Marquise read her note again. It was not (what letter ever
-was?) so enchanting on the second perusal as the first.
-
-It ran thus:—
-
- “MADAME,
-
- “I am distressed beyond measure to trouble a lady with a
- question of military discipline. I cannot sufficiently regret
- that my duty compels me to post a sentry in the grounds of the
- Hôtel Montmirail. In order that this inconvenient arrangement
- may interfere as little as possible with the privacy of Madame,
- I urgently request, as the greatest favour, that she will
- indicate by her commands the exact spot on which she will
- permit one of my Musketeers to be stationed, and I will be at
- Madame’s orders at the usual time of going my rounds to-night.
- I have the honour to remain, with assurances of the most
- distinguished consideration, the humblest of Madame’s humble
- servants.
-
- (Signed) “GEORGE,
- “Captain, Grey Musketeers of the King.”
-
-
-It was a polite document enough, and obviously the merest affair of
-military arrangement, yet the Marquise, after a third perusal, kept it
-crumpled up in her hand, and when she thought herself unobserved, hid it
-away, probably for security, in the bosom of her dress.
-
-“There is no answer, Célandine,” said she, with well-acted calmness,
-belied by the fixed crimson spot in each cheek. “My darling,” she added
-caressingly, to her daughter, “your old _bonne_ is quite right. The
-sooner you are in bed the better. Good-night, my child. I shall come and
-see you as usual after you are asleep. Ah! Cerise, how I used to miss
-that nightly visit when you were at the convent. You slept better without
-it than your mother did, I am sure!”
-
-Then, after her daughter left the room, she moved the lamp far back into
-a recess, and sat down at the open window, pressing both hands against
-her bosom, as though to restrain the beating of her heart.
-
-How her mind projected itself into the future! What wild inconceivable,
-impracticable projects she formed, destroyed, and reconstructed once
-more! She overleaped probability, possibility, the usages of life, the
-very lapse of time. At a bound she was walking with him through her woods
-in Touraine, his own, his very own. They had given up Paris, the Court,
-ambition, society, everything in the world for each other, and they were
-so happy! so happy! Cerise, herself, and _him_. Ah! she felt now the
-capabilities she had for goodness. She knew what she could be with a man
-like that—a man whom she could respect as well as love. She almost felt
-the pressure of his arm, while his kind, brave face looked down into her
-own, under just such a moon as that rising even now through the trees
-above the guard-house. Then she came back to her boudoir in the Hôtel
-Montmirail, and the consciousness, the triumphant consciousness that,
-come what might, she must at least see him and hear his voice within an
-hour; but recalling the masked ball at the Opera House the night before,
-she trembled and turned pale, thinking she would never dare to look him
-in the face again.
-
-There was yet another subject of anxiety. The Prince-Marshal was to come,
-as he often did of an evening, and pass half-an-hour over a cup of coffee
-before he retired to rest. It made her angry to think of her old admirer,
-as if she did indeed already belong to some one else. How long that some
-one seemed in coming, and yet she had sat there, hot and cold by turns,
-for but five minutes, unless her clock had stopped.
-
-Suddenly, with a great start, she sprang from her chair, and listened,
-upright, with parted lips and hair put back. No! her ear was not
-deceived! It had caught the clink of spurs, and a faint measured
-footfall, outside in the distant street.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-A GENERAL RENDEZVOUS
-
-
-Meanwhile Cerise, not the least sleepy, though sent prematurely to bed,
-dismissed her attendant protesting vehemently, and sat herself down also
-at an open window, to breathe the night air, look at the moon, and dream,
-wide-awake, on such subjects as arise most readily in young ladies’ minds
-when they find themselves alone with their own thoughts in the summer
-evening. However exalted these may have been, they can scarcely have
-soared to the actual romance of which she was an unconscious heroine,
-or foreseen the drama of action and sentiment she was about to witness
-in person. Little did she imagine, while she leaned a sweet face, pale
-and serene in the moonlight, on an arm half hidden in the wealth of her
-unbound hair, that two men were watching every movement who could have
-kissed the very ground she trod on; for one of whom she was the type of
-all that seemed best and loveliest in woman, teaching him to look from
-earth to heaven; for the other, an angel of light, pure and holy in
-herself, yet luring him irresistibly down the path to hell.
-
-The latter had been hidden since dusk, that he might but see her shadow
-cross the windows of the gallery, one by one, when she sought her
-chamber; the other was visiting his guard two hours earlier than usual,
-with a silent caution that seemed mistrustful of their vigilance, in
-order that he might offer her the heart of an honest man, ere he fled for
-his life to take refuge in another land.
-
-Captain George, entering the garden through a private door, could see
-plainly enough the figure of Mademoiselle de Montmirail brought into
-relief by the lamp-light in her room. She must have heard his step in the
-street, he thought, for she had risen and was looking earnestly out into
-the darkness; but from some cause or another, at the instant the door in
-the garden wall closed behind him, she shrank back and disappeared.
-
-His heart beat high. Could she have expected him? Could she know
-intuitively why he was there to-night? Was it possible she would run
-down and grant him a meeting in the garden? The thought was rapture! Yet
-perhaps with all its intoxication, he scarcely loved her so dearly as
-he had done a moment before, as he did a moment after, when he actually
-distinguished a white dress flitting along the terrace at the farthest
-corner of the building.
-
-Then indeed he forgot duty, danger, exile, uncertainty, the future,
-the past, everything but the intense happiness of that moment. He was
-conscious of the massive trees, the deep shadows, the black clusters of
-shrubs, the dusky outlines of the huge indistinct building traversed
-here and there by a broad shimmer of light, the stars above his head,
-the crescent moon, the faint whisper of leaves, the drowsy perfume of
-flowers, but only because of _her_ presence who turned the whole to a
-glimpse of fairyland. He stole towards the terrace, treading softly,
-keeping carefully in the shadow of the trees. So intent was he, and so
-cautious, that he never observed Cerise return to her post of observation.
-
-She had resumed it, however, at the very moment when the Musketeer,
-having advanced some ten paces with the crouching stealthy gait of a Red
-Indian drawing on his game, stopped short—like the savage when he has
-gone a step too far—rigid, motionless, scarcely breathing, every faculty
-called up to _watch_.
-
-The attention of Mademoiselle de Montmirail was aroused at the same
-moment by the same cause.
-
-It is scarcely necessary to observe that the Duke of Orleans, Regent of
-France, was no less ambitious of distinction in the fields of love than
-of war. That in the one, though falling far short of his heroic ancestor,
-whom he so wished to resemble, his prowess was not below the average,
-scandal itself must admit; but that, if experience ought to count for
-anything, his encounters in the other should have made him the most
-successful campaigner of his time, history cannot conscientiously deny.
-
-Like all such freebooters, however, he met with many a bitter reverse,
-many a signal defeat never mentioned in despatches. His rebuffs, we
-may be sure, were written on water, though his triumphs were carved in
-stone; and it was for those on whom he could make least impression that
-he cherished the greatest interest. The way to captivate the Regent
-was not so much to _profess_, as to _entertain_ a thorough contempt
-for his character, an utter disregard of his position. The noble mind,
-the stout heart, the strong will, the sagacious, deep-thinking, yet
-open disposition, true type of manhood, is to be won by love; but the
-sensualist, the coward, the false, the wicked, and the weak, are all
-best tamed by scorn. With a new face, the Regent was captivated, as a
-matter of course, for an hour or two; seldom during a whole day; though
-on occasion, if the face were very beautiful, and strictly guarded, he
-besieged its owner for a week; but Madame de Montmirail was the only
-long-established beauty of the Court who had seriously captivated his
-fancy, and, indeed, what little was left of his miserable self-indulgent
-heart. This triumph she owed to her perfect unconsciousness of it, and
-complete disregard for her admirer, therefore it became more firmly
-established day by day; and when Malletort, who thoroughly comprehended
-the nature he wished to rule, hinted that his kinswoman was not
-insensible to the Prince’s merits, he did but blow into flame a fire that
-had been smouldering longer than even he was aware.
-
-Now the Abbé had sufficient confidence in her powers and her attractions
-to be sure that if Madame de Montmirail once obtained an acknowledged and
-ostensible influence over the Regent she would become the virtual ruler
-of France; and the Abbé, in his own way, loved his cousin better than
-anything but the excitement of ambition and the possession of political
-power. He believed that her disgrace would be of infinite advantage to
-herself as well as to him, and thought he could see her way clearly, with
-his own assistance, to an eventual throne. He was a man without religion,
-without principle, without honour, without even the common sympathies
-of humanity. It is difficult in our days to conceive such a character,
-though they were common enough in France during the last century; but
-in his views for his cousin, evil as they were, he seemed at least
-honest—more, self-sacrificing, since she was the only creature on earth
-for whom he cared.
-
-With his knowledge of her disposition, he did not conceal from himself
-that great difficulties attended his task. However lightly the cynical
-Abbé might esteem a woman’s virtue, his experience taught him not to
-underrate the obstinacy of a woman’s pride. That his cousin, in common
-with her family, possessed an abundance of the latter quality, he was
-well aware, and he played his game accordingly. It was his design to
-compromise her by a _coup-de-main_, after he had sapped her defences
-to the utmost by the arguments of ambition and self-interest. Like
-all worldly men in their dealings with women, he undervalued both her
-strength and her weakness—her aversion to the Regent, and her fancy for
-the Musketeer; this even while he made use of the latter to overcome
-the former sentiment. If she could be induced by any means, however
-fraudulent, to grant the Prince an interview at night in her own gardens,
-he argued, that first step would have been taken, which it is always so
-difficult to retract; and to bring this about, he had forged Captain
-George’s signature to the polite note which had proved so effectual in
-luring the Marquise down the terrace steps, and across the velvet lawn,
-under the irresistible temptation of a meeting by moonlight with the
-man she loved. As a measure of mere politeness, connected with certain
-military precautions, of course!
-
-But under such circumstances it would appear that _one_ Musketeer ought
-to be company enough for _one_ lady at a time. Cerise, viewing the
-performances from her window above, might have come to the conclusion,
-had she not been too anxious, agitated, terrified, to retain full
-possession of her faculties, that the arrival of a few more of these
-guardsmen on such a scene, at such a crisis, was conducive rather to
-tumult and bloodshed than appropriate conversation.
-
-Captain George, stopping short in his eager though stealthy advance
-towards the white figure flitting noiselessly across the lawn, first
-thought he was dreaming; next, that he beheld a spectral or illusive
-image of himself, denoting near approach of death; lastly, that the
-discipline of the corps had become relaxed to a degree which his military
-indignation resolved should be severely visited within an hour, though he
-abandoned his command the next.
-
-A Grey Musketeer, hatted, cloaked, booted precisely like himself, was
-advancing from the direction of the guard-house towards the white figure,
-that now stopped short as if expecting him. While yet a few feet apart,
-both stood still, and Captain George, in dark shadow at ten paces’
-distance, not only recognised the Marquise by her voice, but saw her face
-distinctly, as she turned it towards the moonlight, framed in its masses
-of black hair.
-
-His heart beat calmly now, and he was the cool resolute man of action
-once more.
-
-She was the first to speak, and though they trembled a little, very soft
-and musical fell her tones on the listener’s ear.
-
-“I received monsieur’s note. It was most kind and considerate on his
-part. I have been expecting him for this hour past.”
-
-The cloaked figure uncovered. George, watching Madame de Montmirail,
-observed her start and raise her head defiantly.
-
-“Madame will forgive the intrusion then,” said her companion, “since
-it is not unexpected. She will consider also the temptation, and the
-discretion of her visitor.”
-
-There was no mistaking the tones of the Regent, good-humoured, easy, and,
-though a little husky, pleasant as if mellowed by Bourdeaux. She drew
-back hastily, but the speaker at the same time possessed himself of her
-hand, almost by force, and, drawing her towards him, whispered in her ear.
-
-The Marquise broke from him furiously. Her eyes glittered like steel, and
-she stamped upon the turf, while she exclaimed—
-
-“What have I ever done that your Highness should offer me this insult?
-And here, in the midst of my own people! The Montmirails have been always
-loyal,” she added, in a tone of bitter scorn, “and know how to spare a
-Bourbon! Quit the garden instantly by that door, and your Highness shall
-suffer no further humiliation for an act that is at once a folly and an
-impertinence.”
-
-She extended her white hand with the gesture of one who orders a
-disobedient hound to kennel, and Captain George, in his hiding-place,
-felt the blood mounting to his brain. But the Regent was not so easily
-discouraged. Clasping both her hands in his own, he knelt at her feet,
-and while cloak and hat fell off, proceeded to pour out a stream
-of professions, promises, and protestations, with a good-humoured
-carelessness that was in itself an outrage.
-
-Nevertheless, though she struggled fiercely to get free, cool,
-courageous, and self-possessed, she made no outcry; but in her efforts a
-bracelet flew from her arm, and the skirt of her muslin dress was torn to
-its hem.
-
-Captain George could stand it no longer. In two strides he was upon him,
-hovering over the aggressor with his drawn sword.
-
-Then the Regent’s nerve failed. Shaken, excited, irritated, he suspected
-a plot; he shrank from assassination; he imagined himself surrounded.
-
-“Help! help!” he shouted loudly, staggering to his feet, and looking
-wildly about him. “To me! my Musketeers, to me! Down with them! fire on
-them all! The traitors! the assassins!”
-
-Lights twinkled in the hotel, and servants came rushing out in great
-alarm, but long ere they could reach the scene of action, half-a-dozen
-Musketeers had arrived, with Bras-de-Fer at their head.
-
-“Why, ’tis the Captain!” exclaimed the latter, stopping short with his
-point lowered, in sheer bewilderment—a lack of promptitude that probably
-saved his officer’s life.
-
-“Arrest him, I tell you, idiots!” shrieked the Regent, with a horrible
-oath, trembling and glaring about him for a fresh enemy.
-
-The Marquise had plenty of courage. Still she was but a woman, and not
-actually hemmed in a corner; so, when the Musketeers ran in with levelled
-weapons, she turned and fled; only as far as the terrace steps, however,
-where she took up her post and watched the sequel with a wild fixed face,
-white and stony as the balustrades themselves.
-
-The servants hovered round, chattering, flinching, and doing nothing.
-
-Half-a-dozen blades flashed in Captain George’s eyes; as many points
-were levelled at his heart. His own men had been bid to take him, and
-they must obey. He knew well they were some of the best swordsmen in the
-French army; but his good horse should by this time be waiting in the
-street beyond, and if he could fight his way to the garden-gate there was
-yet a chance left.
-
-Even in this extremity he was conscious that the light still streamed
-from Cerise’s window. Catching a couple of thrusts in his cloak, and
-engaged with a third adversary, he was aware of Bras-de-Fer’s tall figure
-advancing upon him. For an instant his heart sank, and he felt he was
-over-matched.
-
-But an unexpected auxiliary, who seemed to have risen out of the very
-ground, stood at his side. With a thrill of triumph he recognised
-Beaudésir’s voice in his ear.
-
-“Courage, my captain!” said the professional coolly, as if giving a
-lesson. “Carte and counter-carte—carte and counter-carte! Keep the wrist
-going like a windmill, and we shall fight through them all.”
-
-He was yet speaking when Bras-de-Fer went down with an ugly thrust
-through the lower ribs, exclaiming as he lost his footing—
-
-“_Peste!_ Had I known _you_ were in it, I’d have parried _your_ blade
-with a pistol-shot!”
-
-A few flashing passes, a clink of rapiers, an oath or two, a shriek
-from upstairs, shouts, groans, a scuffling of feet, and George was safe
-through the garden-door and out in the street. He looked for Beaudésir:
-the youth had disappeared. He looked for his horse; the good beast was
-walking quietly off in the custody of two Musketeers. A patrole of the
-same corps were entering the street from the other end. It seemed hard to
-be taken here after all.
-
-But, once more to-night, Captain George found a friend where he least
-expected one. A coach was drawn up within six paces. A lackey, with
-a lighted torch in one hand, held the door open with the other. Old
-Chateau-Guerrand caught him by the arm.
-
-“You are a brave lad,” said he, “and, Regent or _roué_, I am not going
-to turn my back on my aide-de-camp! I watched you from the roof of my
-coach over the wall. By the cross of St. Louis, I never saw so good a
-fight, and I have had fifty years of it, my boy. Here! take my carriage.
-They dare not stop _that_ at their barriers. Those English horses can go
-like the wind: bid them carry you where you will.”
-
-George pressed his hand and whispered in his ear.
-
-“Relays!” exclaimed the Prince-Marshal. “Then you are safe. Shut him in!
-And you, coachman, be off! Drive as if you had the devil or old Turenne
-in your rear!”
-
-It was about this moment that Célandine, rushing into her young lady’s
-room to comfort her, in the alarm, found Cerise extended, motionless and
-unconscious, on the floor.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-THE FOX AND FIDDLE
-
-
-Three dirty children with blue eyes, fair locks, and round, chubby
-faces, deepened by a warm peach-like tint beneath the skin, such as are
-to be seen in plenty along our southern seaboard, were busily engaged
-building a grotto of shells opposite their home, at the exact spot where
-its construction was most in the way of pedestrians passing through
-the narrow ill-paved street. Their shrill cries and blooming looks
-denoted the salubrious influence of sea air, while their nationality was
-sufficiently attested by the vigour with which the eldest, a young lady
-less than ten years of age, called out “Frenchie! Frenchie! Froggie!
-Froggie!” after a foreign-looking man with a pale face and dark eyes,
-who stepped over the low half-door that restrained her infant brothers
-and sisters from rolling out into the gutter, as if he was habitually
-a resident in the house. He appeared, indeed, a favourite with the
-children, for while they recalled him to assist their labours, which he
-did with a good-nature and address peculiarly winning to architects of
-that age, they chanted in his praise, and obviously with the intention
-of doing him high honour, a ditty of no particular tune, detailing the
-matrimonial adventures of an amphibious animal, supposed in the last
-century to bear close affinity to all Frenchmen, as related with a
-remarkable chorus by one Anthony Rowley; and the obliging foreigner,
-suspecting neither sarcasm nor insult, but only suffering torture from an
-utter absence of tune, hummed lustily in accompaniment.
-
-Over the heads of these urchins hung their paternal sign-board, creaking
-and swinging in the breeze now freshening with an incoming tide. Its
-representation of a fox playing the fiddle was familiar to seafaring men
-as indicating a favourite house of call for the consumption of beer,
-tobacco, and that seductive compound known to several generations by the
-popular name of punch.
-
-The cheerful fire, the red curtains, the sanded floor, the wooden chairs,
-and liberal measures of their jovial haunt, had been present to the
-mind’s eye of many an honest tar clinging wet and cold to a slippery
-yard, reefing topsails in a nor’-wester, or eating maggoty biscuit and
-sipping six-water grog, on half rations, homeward bound with a headwind,
-but probably none of them had ever speculated on the origin of the sign
-they knew so well and thought of so often. Why a fox and fiddle should
-be found together in a seaport town, what a fox had to do with a fiddle,
-or, however appropriate to their ideas of jollity the instrument might
-appear, wherefore its player should be represented as the cunning animal
-whom destiny had already condemned to be hunted by English country
-gentlemen, was a speculation on which they had no wish to embark. Neither
-have I. It is enough to know that the Fox and Fiddle sold loaded beer,
-strong tobacco, and scalding punch, to an extent not even limited by the
-consumer’s purse; for when Jack had spent all his _rhino_, the landlord’s
-liberality enabled him to run up a score, hereafter to be liquidated from
-the wages of a future voyage. The infatuated debtor, paying something
-like two hundred _per cent._ on every mouthful for this accommodation,
-by a farther arrangement, that he should engage with any skipper of
-the landlord’s providing, literally sold himself, body and soul, for a
-nipperkin of rum and half-a-pound of tobacco.
-
-Nevertheless, several score of the boldest hearts and readiest hands in
-England were to be bought at this low price, and Butter-faced Bob, as
-his rough-spoken customers called the owner of the Fox and Fiddle, would
-furnish as many of them at a reasonable tariff, merchant and man-of-war’s
-men, as the captain wanted or the owners could afford to buy. It was no
-wonder his children had strong lungs, and round, well-fed cheeks.
-
-“That’s a good chap!” observed a deep hoarse voice, which made the
-youngest grotto-builder start and shrink behind its sister, while a broad
-elderly figure rolled and lurched after the obliging foreigner into the
-house. It would have been as impossible to mistake the new-comer for
-a landsman as Butter-faced Bob himself for anything but a publican.
-His gait on the pavement was that of one who had so thoroughly got his
-_sea-legs_ that he was, to the last degree, incommoded by the uneven
-though stable surface of the shore; and while he trod the passage, as
-being planked, with more confidence, he nevertheless ran his hand, like a
-blind man, along tables and other articles of furniture while he passed
-them, seeming, in every gesture, to be more ready with his arms than his
-legs.
-
-Broad-faced, broad-shouldered, broad-handed, he looked a powerful, and at
-the same time a strong-constitutioned man, but grizzled hair and shaggy
-eyebrows denoted he was past his prime; while a reddened neck and tanned
-face, with innumerable little wrinkles round the eyes, suggested constant
-watchfulness and exposure in hard weather afloat, no less than swollen
-features and marked lines told of deep drinking and riotous living ashore.
-
-The seamen of that period, though possessing an undoubted claim to
-the title, were far more than to-day a class distinct and apart from
-their fellow-countrymen. The standing army, an institution of which our
-parliaments had for generations shown themselves so jealous, could boast,
-indeed, a consolidation and discipline under Marlborough which made them,
-as the Musketeers of the French king allowed, second to no troops in
-Europe. But their triumphs, their organisation, even their existence,
-was comparatively of recent date. The navy, on the other hand, had been
-a recognised and constitutional force for more than a century, and had
-enjoyed, from the dispersion of the Spanish Armada downwards, a series of
-successes almost uninterrupted. It is true that the cannonade of a Dutch
-fleet had been heard in the Thames, but few of the lowest seamen were so
-ignorant as to attribute this national disgrace to want of courage in
-their officers or incapacity in themselves.
-
-Their leaders, indeed, were usually more remarkable for valour than
-discretion, nor was this surprising under the system by which captains
-were appointed to their ships.
-
-A regiment and a three-decker were considered by the Government
-equivalent and convertible commands. The cavalry officer of to-day might
-find himself directing the manœuvres of a fleet to-morrow. The relics of
-so untoward an arrangement may be detected in certain technical phrases
-not yet out of use. The word “squadron” is even now applied alike to a
-handful of horse and a powerful fleet, numbering perhaps a dozen sail of
-the line. Raleigh, himself, began his fighting career as a soldier, and
-Rupert finished his as a sailor.
-
-With such want of seamanship, therefore, amongst its commanders, our
-navy must have possessed in its construction some great preponderating
-influence to account for its efficiency. This compensating power was to
-be found in its masters, its petty-officers, and its seamen.
-
-The last were thoroughly impregnated with the briny element on which they
-passed their lives. They boasted themselves a race apart. “Land-lubber”
-was for them a term conveying the utmost amount of derision and contempt.
-To be an “old salt” was the ideal perfection at which alone it was worth
-while for humanity to aim. The seaman, exulting in his profession, was
-never more a seaman than when rolling about on shore, swearing strange
-oaths, using nautical phrases, consuming vast quantities of beer and
-tobacco, above all, flinging his money here and there with a profuse and
-injudicious liberality especially distinctive of his kind.
-
-The popularity of such characters amongst the lower classes may be
-readily imagined; for, with the uneducated and unreflecting, a reckless
-bearing very generally passes for courage; a tendency to dissipation
-for manliness; and a boastful expenditure for true generosity of heart.
-Perhaps, to the erroneous impressions thus disseminated amongst the
-young, should be attributed the inclination shown towards a service of
-which the duties entailed continual danger, excessive hardship, and daily
-privation. Certainly at a period when the worst provision was made, both
-physical and moral, for the welfare of men before the mast, there never
-seems to have been found a difficulty in keeping up the full complement
-of the British navy.
-
-They were, indeed, a race apart, not only in their manners, their
-habits, their quaint expressions, their simple modes of thought, but in
-their superstitions and even their religious belief. They cultivated a
-rough, honest kind of piety, well illustrated in later years by Dibdin,
-himself a landsman, when he sang of
-
- “The sweet little cherub that sits up aloft
- To take care of the life of poor Jack.”
-
-But it was overloaded and interspersed with a thousand strange fancies
-not more incongruous than unreasonable and far-fetched.
-
-No power would induce them to clear out of port, or, indeed, commence
-any important undertaking on a Friday. Mother Carey’s chickens were
-implicitly believed to be messengers sent express from another world
-to warn the mariner of impending storm, and bid him shorten sail ere
-it began to blow. Carlmilhan, the famous pirate, who, rather than be
-taken alive, had in default of gunpowder scuttled his own ship and gone
-down with it, all standing, was still to be heard giving notice in deep
-unearthly tones from under her very keel when the ship approached shoal
-water, shifting sands, or treacherous coral reefs in the glittering seas
-beneath the tropics. That phantom Dutchman, who had been provoked by
-baffling winds about the Cape to speak “unadvisedly with his lips,” was
-still to be seen in those tempestuous latitudes careering through the
-storm-drift under a press of sail, when the best craft that swam hardly
-dared show a stitch of canvas. The speaking-trumpet was still to be
-heard from her deck, shouting her captain’s despairing request to take
-his letters home, and the magic ship still disappeared at half-a-cable’s
-length and melted into air, while the wind blew fiercer and the sea rose
-higher, and sheets of rain came flashing down from the black squall
-lowering overhead.
-
-Nor was it only in the wonders of this world that the tar professed his
-unaccountable belief. His credulity ran riot in regions beyond the grave,
-or, to use his own words, after he had “gone to Davy Jones.” A mystical
-spot which he called Fiddler’s Green was for him both the Tartarus and
-Elysium of the ancients—a land flowing, not indeed with milk and honey,
-but with rum and limejuice; a land of perpetual music, mirth, dancing,
-drinking, and tobacco; a land in which his weary soul was to find an
-intervening spell of enjoyment and repose, ere she put out again for her
-final voyage into eternity.
-
-In the meantime, the new arrival at the Fox and Fiddle, seating himself
-at a small table in the public room, or tap as it would now be called,
-ordered a quart of ale and half-a-pint of rum. These fluids he mingled
-with great care, and sipped his beverage in a succession of liberal
-mouthfuls, dwelling on each with an approving smack as a man drinks a
-good bottle of claret. Butter-faced Bob, who waited on him, remarked that
-he pulled out but one gold piece in payment, and knowing the ways of his
-patrons, concluded it was his last, or he would have selected it from a
-handful. The landlord remembered he had a customer in the parlour who
-wanted just such articles as this burly broad-shouldered seaman, with
-pockets at low water.
-
-The man did not, however, count his change when it was brought him, but
-shovelled it into his seal-skin tobacco pouch, a coin or two short,
-without looking at it. He then filled carefully, drank, and pondered with
-an air of grave and imposing reflection. Long before his measure was
-finished a second guest entered the tap-room, whose manners, gait, and
-gestures were an exact counterpart of the first. He was taller, however,
-and thinner, altogether less robust and prosperous-looking, showing a
-sallow face and withered skin, that denoted he had spent much of his life
-in hot climates. Though he looked younger than the other, his bearing was
-more staid and solemn, nor did he at once vociferate for something to
-drink. Beer seemed his weakness less than ’baccy, for he placed a small
-copper coin on a box ingeniously constructed so that, opening only by
-such means, it produced exactly the money’s worth of the fragrant weed,
-and loading a pipe with a much-tattooed hand, proceeded to puff volumes
-of smoke through the apartment.
-
-Butter-faced Bob, entering, cheerfully proffered all kinds of liquids as
-a matter of course, but was received with surly negatives, and retired to
-speculate on the extreme of wealth or poverty denoted by this abstinence.
-A man, he thought, to be proof against such temptations must be either so
-rich, and consequently so full of liquor that he was unable to drink any
-more, or so poor that he couldn’t afford to be thirsty.
-
-So the last comer smoked in silence at a little table of his own, which
-he had drawn into a corner, and his predecessor drank at _his_ table,
-looking wiser and wiser, while each glanced furtively at the other
-without opening his lips. Presently the eyes of the elder man twinkled:
-he had got an idea—nay, he actually launched it. Filling his glass, and
-politely handing it to the smoker, but reserving the jug to drink from
-himself, he proposed the following comprehensive toast—
-
- “All ships at sea!”
-
-They both drank it gravely and without farther comment. It was a social
-challenge, and felt to be such; the smoker pondered, put out the glass
-he had drained to be refilled, and holding it on a level with his eyes,
-enunciated solemnly—
-
- “All ships in port!”
-
-When equal justice had been done to this kindred sentiment, and the
-navies of the world were thus exhausted, they came to a dead-lock and
-relapsed into silence once more.
-
-This calm might have remained unbroken for a considerable time but for
-the entrance of a third seaman, much younger than either of the former,
-whose appearance in the passage had been received by a round of applause
-from the children, a hearty greeting from the landlady—though that portly
-woman, with her handsome face, would not have left her arm-chair to
-welcome an admiral—and a “good-morrow,” louder, but not more sincere,
-from Bob himself. It appeared that this guest was well known and also
-trusted at the Fox and Fiddle, for, entering the public room with a
-sea-bow and a scrape of his foot on its sanded floor, he called lustily
-for a quart of strong ale and a pipe, while he produced an empty purse,
-and shook it in the landlord’s face with a laugh of derision that would
-have become the wealthiest nobleman in Great Britain.
-
-“Ay, lad,” said Bob, shaking his head, but setting before his customer
-the beer and tobacco as desired. “’Tis well enough to begin a fresh score
-when the old one’s wiped out; but I saw that purse, with my own eyes,
-half full of broad pieces at the ebb. See now; you’ve gone and cleared it
-out—not a blessed groat left—and it’s scarce high-water yet!”
-
-“What o’ that, old shiney?” laughed the other. “Isn’t there plenty more
-to be yarned when them’s all gone? Slack water be hanged! I tell you I’ll
-have a doubloon for every one of these here rain-drops afore a month’s
-out. I know where they grows, old man; I know where they grows. My
-sarvice to ye, mates! Here’s ‘Outward bound and an even keel!’”
-
-While he spoke he whirled the rain-drops off his shining hat upon the
-floor, and nodding to the others, took a long pull at his ale, which
-nearly emptied the jug; then he filled a pipe, winked at the retiring
-landlord, and smoked in silence. The others scanned him attentively. He
-was an active, well-built young fellow of two or three-and-twenty, with
-foretopman written on every feature of his reckless, saucy, good-looking
-face—in every gesture of his wiry, loose, athletic limbs. He was very
-good-looking; his eyes sparkled with fun and his teeth were as white as a
-lady’s; his hair too might have been the envy of many a woman, clustering
-as it did in a profusion of curls over a pair of real gold earrings—a
-fashion now beginning to find considerable favour amongst the rising
-generation of seamen, though regarded with horror by their seniors as a
-new and monstrous affectation, proving, if indeed proof were needed for
-so self-evident a fact, that, as in all previous and subsequent ages,
-“the service was going to the devil.”
-
-Even his joviality, however, seemed damped by the taciturnity of his
-comrades. He too smoked in silence and gave himself up to meditation. The
-rain pattered outside, and gusts of wind dashed it fitfully against the
-window-pane. The tide moaned sullenly, and a house-dog, chained in the
-back-yard, lifted up his voice to howl in unison. The three seamen smoked
-and drank and brooded, each occasionally removing his pipe from his mouth
-as if about to break the silence, on which the others looked in his face
-expectant, and for a time this was the whole extent of the conversation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-THREE STRANDS OF A YARN
-
-
-As in a council of war, the youngest spoke first. “Mates!” said he,
-“here be three of us, all run for the same port, and never a one sported
-bunting. I ain’t a chap, I ain’t, as must be brought to afore he’ll show
-his number. When I drinks with a man I likes to fit his name on him
-ship-shape, so here’s my sarvice to you messmates both! They calls me
-Slap-Jack. That’s about what they calls _me_ both ashore and afloat.”
-
-It was absolutely necessary after such an exordium that more liquor
-should be brought in, and a generous contention immediately arose between
-the three occupants of the tap-room as to who should pay for it; at
-once producing increased familiarity, besides a display of liberality
-on the part of the eldest and first comer, who was indeed the only one
-possessing ready money. Butter-faced Bob being summoned, the jugs were
-replenished and Slap-Jack continued his remarks.
-
-“I’ve been cruising about ashore,” said he, between the whiffs of his
-pipe, “and very bad weather I made on it standing out over them Downs,
-as they calls ’em, in these here latitudes. Downs, says I, the Downs is
-mostly smooth water and safe anchorage; but these here Ups and Downs
-is a long leg and a short one, a head wind and an ebb tide all the
-voyage through. I made my port, though, d’ye mind me, my sons, at last,
-and—and—well, we’ve all had our sweethearts in our day, so we’ll drink
-her health by your leave. Here’s to Alice, mates! and next round it shall
-be _your_ call, and thank ye hearty.”
-
-So gallant a toast could not but be graciously accepted. The second
-comer, however, shook his head while he did it justice, and drank, so
-to speak, under protest, thereby in no measure abating the narrator’s
-enthusiasm.
-
-“She’s a trim-built craft is my Alice,” continued the other reflectively.
-“On a wind or off a wind, going large or close hauled, moored in dock or
-standing out in blue water, there’s not many of ’em can show alongside
-of she. And she’s weatherly besides, uncommon weatherly she is. When I
-bids her good-bye at last, and gives her a bit of a squeeze, just for a
-reminder like, she wipes her eyes, and she smiles up in my face, and,
-‘God bless you, Jack!’ says she; ‘you won’t forget me,’ says she; ‘an’
-you’ll think of me sometimes, when it’s your watch on deck; and as for
-me, Jack, I’ll think of you every hour of the day and night till you
-comes back again; it won’t be so very long first.’ She’s heart of oak,
-is that lass, mates, and I wouldn’t be here now but that I’m about high
-and dry, and that made me feel a bit lubberly, d’ye see, till I got under
-weigh for the homeward trip; an’ you’ll never guess what it was as raised
-my spirits, beating to windward across them Downs, with a dry mouth and
-my heart shrunk up to the size of a pea.”
-
-“A stiff glass of grog nor’-nor’-west?” suggested the oldest sailor, with
-a grunt. “Another craft on the same lines, with new sails bent and a lick
-of fresh paint on,” snarled the second, whose opinion of the fair sex,
-derived chiefly from seaport towns, was none of the highest.
-
-“Neither one nor t’other,” replied Slap-Jack, triumphantly. “Scalding
-punch wouldn’t have warmed my heart up just then, and I wasn’t a-goin’
-to clear out from Alice like that, and give chase to a fresh sail just
-because she cut a feather across my fore-foot. It was neither more nor
-less than a chap swinging in chains; a chap as had been swinging to
-all appearance so long he must have got used to it, though I doubt he
-was very wet up there in nothing but his bones. He might have been a
-good-looking blade enough when he began, but I can’t say much for his
-figure-head when I passed under it for luck. It wanted painting, mates,
-let alone varnish, and he grinned awful in the teeth of the wind. So I
-strikes my topmast as I forges ahead, and I makes him a low bow, and,
-says I, ‘Thank ye kindly, mate,’ says I, ‘for putting it in my mind,’
-says I; ‘you’ve been “on the account,” in all likelihood, and that’s
-where I’ll go myself next trip, see if I won’t;’ and I ask your pardon,
-by sons, for you’re both older men than me by a good spell, if that isn’t
-the trade for a lad as looks to a short voyage and good wages, every man
-for himself, grab what you see, an’ keep all you can?”
-
-Thus appealed to, the elder seaman felt bound to give an opinion; so he
-cleared his throat and asked huskily—
-
-“Have you _tried_ it, mate? You seems like a lad as has dipped both hands
-in the tar-bucket, though you be but young and sarcy. Look ye, now, you
-hoisted signals first, an’ I ain’t a-going to show a false ensign, I
-ain’t. You may call me Bottle-Jack; you won’t be the first by a many, and
-I ain’t ashamed o’ my name.”
-
-The next in seniority then removed the pipe from his lips, and smiting
-the table with a heavy fist, observed, sententiously—
-
-“And me, Smoke-Jack, young man. It’s a rum name, ain’t it, for as smart a
-foretopman as ever lay out upon a yard? but I’ve yarned it, that’s what I
-sticks to. I’ve yarned it. Here’s your health, lad; I wish ye well.”
-
-The three having thus gone through all the forms necessary to induce a
-long and staunch friendship amongst men of their class, Slap-Jack made a
-clean breast of it, as if he had known his companions for years.
-
-“I _have_ tried it, mates,” said he; “and a queer game it is; but I
-don’t care how soon I try it again. I suppose I must have been born a
-landsman somehow, d’ye see? though I can’t make much of that when I
-come to think it over. It don’t seem nat’ral like, but I suppose it was
-so. Well, I remember as I runned away from a old bloke wot wanted to
-make me a sawbones—a sawbones! and I took and shipped myself, like a
-young bear, aboard of the ‘Sea Swallow,’ cabin-boy to Captain Delaval.
-None o’ your merchantmen was the ‘Sea Swallow,’ nor yet a man-o’-war,
-though she carried a royal ensign at the gaff, and six brass carronades
-on the main-deck. She was a waspish craft as ever you’d wish to see,
-an’ dipped her nose in it as though she loved the taste of blue water,
-the jade!—wet, but weatherly, an’ such a picture as you never set eyes
-on, close-hauled within five points of the wind. First they gammoned
-me as she was a slaver, and then a sugar-merchant’s pleasure-boat, and
-sometimes they said she was a privateer, with letters of marque from the
-king; but I didn’t want to know much about that; King George or King
-Louis, it made no odds, bless ye; I warn’t a goin’ to turn sawbones, an’
-Captain Delaval was _my_ master, that was enough for me! Such a master
-he was, too! No seaman—not he. His hands were as white as a lady’s,
-an’ I doubt if he knew truck from taffrail; but with old Blowhard, the
-master, to sail her, and do what the skipper called swabbing and dirty
-work, there wasn’t a king’s officer as ever I’ve heard of could touch
-him. Such a man to fight his ship was Captain Delaval. I’ve seen him run
-her in under a Spanish battery, with a table set on deck and a awning
-spread, and him sitting with a glass of wine in his hand, and give his
-orders as cool and comfortable as you and me is now. ‘Easy, Blowhard!’
-he’d sing out, when old ‘Blow’ was sweating, and cursing, and stamping
-about to get the duty done. ‘Don’t ye speak so sharp to the men,’ says
-he; ‘spoils their ear for music,’ says he. ‘We’ll be out o’ this again
-afore the breeze falls, and we’ll turn the fiddles up and have a dance in
-the cool of the evening.’ Then he’d smile at me, and say, ‘Slap-Jack, you
-little blackguard, run below for another pineapple; not so rotten-ripe
-as the last;’ and by the time I was on deck again, he’d be wiping his
-sword carefully, and drawing on his gloves—that man couldn’t so much as
-whistle a hornpipe without his gloves; and let who would be _second_ on
-board the prize, be she bark, schooner, brig, galleon, or square-rigged
-ship, Captain Delaval he would be _first_. Look ye here, mates: I made
-two voyages with Captain Delaval, and when I stepped on the quay at
-Bristol off the second—there! I was worth a hundred doubloons, all in
-gold, besides as much silk as would have lined the foresail, and a
-pair of diamond earrings that I lost the first night I slept ashore. I
-thought, then, as perhaps I wasn’t to see my dandy skipper again, but I
-was wrong. I’ve never been in London town but once, an’ I don’t care if I
-never goes no more. First man I runs against in Thames Street is Captain
-Delaval, ridin’ in a cart with his hands tied; and old Blowhard beside
-him, smelling at a nosegay as big as the binnacle. I don’t think as old
-‘Blow’ knowed me again, not in long togs; but the skipper he smiles, and
-shows his beautiful white teeth as he was never tired of swabbing and
-holystoning, and ‘There’s Slap-Jack!’ says he; ‘Good-bye, Slap-Jack;
-I’ll be first man over the gunwale in this here scrimmage, too,’ says
-he, ‘for they’ll hang me first, and then Blowhard, when he’s done with
-his nosegay.’ I wish I could find such another skipper now; what say ye,
-mates?”
-
-Smoke-Jack, who was sitting next him, did not immediately reply. He was
-obviously of a logical and argumentative turn of mind, with a cavilling
-disposition, somewhat inclined to speculative philosophy; such a
-character, in short, as naval officers protest against under the title of
-a lawyer. He turned the matter over deliberately ere he replied, with a
-voluminous puff of smoke between each sentence—
-
-“Some likes a barky, and some wouldn’t touch a rope in any craft but a
-schooner; and there’s others, again, swears a king’s cutter will show her
-heels to the liveliest of ’em, with a stiffish breeze and a bobble of
-sea on. I ain’t a-goin’ to dispute it. Square-rigged, or fore-and-aft,
-if so be she’s well-found and answers her helm, I ain’t a-goin’ to say
-but what she’ll make good weather of it the whole voyage through. Men
-thinks different, young chap; that’s where it is. Now you asks me _my_
-opinion, and I’ll give it you, free. I’m a old man-of-war’s man, I am.
-I’ve eat the king’s biscuit and drank the king’s allowance ever since I
-were able to eat and drink at all. Now I’ll tell you, young man, a-cause
-you’ve asked me, free. The king’s sarvice is a good sarvice; I ain’t
-a-goin’ to say as it isn’t, but for two things: there’s too much of one,
-and too little of the other. The fuss is the work, and the second is the
-pay. If they’d halve the duty, and double the allowance, and send all
-the officers before the mast, I ain’t goin’ to dispute but the king’s
-sarvice would be more to my fancy than I’ve ever found it yet. You see
-the difference atwixt one of our lads when he gits ashore and the Dutch!
-I won’t say as the Dutchman is the better seaman, far from it; though
-as long as he’s got a plank as’ll catch a nail, an’ a rag as’ll hold
-a breeze, he’ll weather it _somehow_; nor I won’t say but what Mynheer
-is as ugly a customer as a king’s ship can get alongside of, yard-arm
-to yard-arm, and let the best man win! But you see him ashore! Spree,
-young man? Why, a Dutchman _never_ has his spree out! You take and hail
-a man before the mast, able seaman or what not, when he’s paid off
-of a cruise—and mind ye, he doesn’t engage for a long spell, doesn’t
-Mynheer—and he’ll tow you into dry dock, and set you down to your grub,
-and blow you out with _schnaps_ as if he was a admiral. Such a berth as
-he keeps ashore! Pots and pans as bright as the Eddystone; deck scoured
-and holystoned, till you’d like to eat your rations off of it. Why, Black
-Sam, him as was boatswain’s mate on board of the ‘Mary Rose,’ sitting
-with me in the tap of the Golden Lion, at Amsterdam, he gets uneasy,
-and he looks here and there an’ everywhere, first at the white floor,
-then at the bright stove, turning his quid about and about, till at last
-he ups and spits right in the landlord’s face. There _was_ a breeze
-then! I’m not a-goin’ to deny it, but Sam he asks pardon quite gentle
-and humble-like, ‘for what could I do?’ says he; ‘it was the only dirty
-place I could find in the house,’ says he. Young chap, I’m not a-goin’
-to say as you should take and ship yourself on board a Dutchman; ’cause
-why—maybe if he struck his colours and you was found atween decks, you’d
-swing at the yard-arm, but if you be thinking of the king’s sarvice, and
-you asks my advice, says I, think about it a little longer, says I. Young
-chap, I gives you _my_ opinion, free. What say you, messmate? Bear a hand
-and lower away, for I’ve been payin’ of it out till my mouth’s dry.”
-
-Bottle-Jack, who did not give his mouth a chance of becoming dry, took a
-long pull at the beer before he answered; but as his style was somewhat
-involved, and obscured besides by the free use of professional metaphors,
-applied in a sense none but himself could thoroughly appreciate, I will
-not venture to detail in his own words the copious and illustrative
-exposition on which he embarked.
-
-It was obvious, however, that Bottle-Jack’s inclinations were adverse to
-the regular service, and although he would have scouted such a notion,
-and probably made himself extremely disagreeable to the man who broached
-it, there was no question the old sailor had been a pirate, and deserved
-hanging as richly as any ghastly skeleton now bleaching in its chains
-and waving to the gusts of a sou’-wester on the exposed sky-line of
-the Downs. By his own account he had sailed with the notorious Captain
-Kidd, in the ‘Adventure’ galley, originally fitted out by merchants and
-traders of London as a scourge for those sea-robbers who infested the
-Indian Ocean, and whose enormities made honest men shudder at their bare
-recital. The ‘Adventure,’ manned by some of the most audacious spirits
-to be procured from the banks of the Thames and the Hudson, seemed, like
-her stout commander, especially qualified for such a purpose. She carried
-heavy guns, was well found in every respect, and possessed the reputation
-of a fast sailer and capital sea boat. Kidd himself was an experienced
-officer, and had served with distinction. He was intimately acquainted
-with the eastern seas, and seemed in all respects adapted for an
-expedition in which coolness, daring, and unswerving honesty of purpose
-were indispensable qualifications.
-
-Accordingly, Captain Kidd sailed for the Indian coast, and Bottle-Jack,
-by his own account, was boatswain’s mate on board the ‘Adventure.’
-
-There is an old proverb, recommending the selection of a “thief to
-catch a thief,” which in this instance received a new and singular
-interpretation. Kidd was probably a thief, or at least a pirate, at
-heart. No sooner had he reached his destination off the coast of Malabar,
-than he threw off his sheep’s clothing, and appeared at once the
-master-wolf in the predatory pack he was sent to destroy. Probably the
-temptation proved too much for him. With his seamanship, his weight of
-metal, and his crew, he could outsail, out-manœuvre, and outfight friends
-and foes alike. It soon occurred to him that the former were easy and
-lucrative prizes, the latter, bad to capture, and often not worth the
-trouble when subdued. It was quicker work to gain possession at first
-hand of silk and spices, cinnamon and sandal-wood, gold, silver, rum,
-coffee, and tobacco, than to wait till the plunder had been actually
-seized by another, and then, after fighting hard to retake it, obtain
-but a jackal’s share from the Home Government. In a short space of
-time there was but one pirate dreaded from the Cape of Good Hope to the
-Straits of Malacca, and his name was Kidd.
-
-From Surat down to the mouth of the Tap-tee, Captain Kidd ruled like a
-petty sovereign; Bottle-Jack, if he was to be believed, like a grand
-vizier. Not only did they take tax and toll from every craft that swam,
-but they robbed, murdered, and lorded it as unmercifully on dry land.
-Native merchants, even men of rank and position, were put to torture,
-for purposes of extortion, by day; peasants burned alive in their huts
-to illuminate a seaman’s frolic by night. Her crew behaved like devils
-broke loose ashore, and the ‘Adventure,’ notwithstanding a certain
-discipline exacted by her commander, was, doubtless, a hell afloat.
-Money, however, came in rapidly. Kidd, with all his crimes, possessed the
-elements of success in method, organisation, and power of command. His
-sailors forgot the horrors they had inflicted and their own degradation
-when they counted the pile of doubloons that constituted their share of
-plunder. Amongst the swarm of rovers who then swept the seas, Captain
-Kidd was considered the most successful, and even in a certain sense,
-notwithstanding his enormities, the most _respectable_ of all.
-
-Bottle-Jack did not appear to think the relation of his adventures in
-any way derogatory to his own credit. He concluded with the following
-peroration, establishing his position in the confident tone of a man who
-is himself convinced of its justice:—
-
-“Wot I says, is this here. The sea was made for them as sails upon it,
-and you ain’t a-goin’ to tell me as it can be portioned out into gardens
-an’ orchards, and tobacco plantations, like the dirt we calls land. Werry
-well, if the sea be free, them as sails upon it can make free with wot
-it offers them. If in case now, as I’m look-out man, we’ll say, in the
-maintop, and I makes a galleon of her, for instance, deep in the water
-under easy sail, you’re not to tell me as because she shows Spanish
-colours I’m not to take what I want out of her. Stow that, mates, for
-it’s clean nonsense! The way old Kidd acted was this here—First, he
-got her weather-gage; then he brought her to with a gun, civil and
-reasonable; arter that, whether she showed fight, or whether she showed
-friendly, he boarded her, and when he’d taken all he wanted, captain,
-crew, and passengers just walked the plank, easy and quiet, and no words
-about it.”
-
-“And the craft?” asked Slap-Jack, breathless with interest in the old
-pirate’s reminiscences.
-
-“Scuttled her!” answered the other, conclusively. “Talking’s dry work.
-Let’s have some more beer.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-THE PARLOUR-LODGER
-
-
-There was a tolerably snug parlour under the roof of the Fox and Fiddle,
-notwithstanding that its dimensions were small, its floor uneven, and its
-ceiling so low that a solitary inmate could not but feel enlivened by
-the company of the landlord’s family, who inhabited the rooms overhead.
-This apartment, which was usually occupied by some skipper from beyond
-seas, put forward certain claims to magnificence as well as comfort;
-and although the vaguest attempts at cleanliness seemed to have been
-suppressed, there was no little pretension apparent in the furniture, the
-chimney ornaments, and the “History of the Prodigal Son” on the walls.
-China shepherdesses stood on the mantelpiece, surmounted by the backbone
-of a shark. Two gilt chairs, with frayed velvet cushions, supported an
-unframed representation of a three-decker, with every available sail set,
-and British colours flying at the main, stemming a grass-green sea, under
-a sky of intense blue. A contracted square of real Turkey carpet covered
-a few feet in the middle, and the rest of the floor, ornamented at
-regular intervals by spittoons, stood inch-deep in dust. The hearth could
-not have been swept for days, nor the smouldering fire raked out for
-hours; but on a mahogany sideboard, that had obviously sustained at least
-one sea-voyage, stood a dozen different drinking-measures, surrounding a
-punch-bowl capacious enough to have baptized a full-grown pirate.
-
-The occupant of this chamber was sitting at the table engrossed by a task
-that seemed to tax all his energies and employ his whole attention. He
-was apparently no adept at accounts, and every time he added a column
-afresh, and found its result differed from his previous calculation, he
-swore a French oath in a whisper and began again. It was nearly dusk
-before the landlord came in with the candles, when his guest looked up,
-as if much relieved at a temporary interruption of work.
-
-Butter-faced Bob was a plausible fellow enough, well fitted for the
-situation he filled, crimp, publican, free-trader, and, on occasion,
-receiver of stolen goods. From the seaman in the tap, to the skipper in
-the parlour, he prided himself on his facility in making conversation to
-his customers, saying the right thing to each; or, as he expressed it,
-“oiling the gear so as the crank should work easy.”
-
-Setting down the candles, therefore, he proceeded to lubrication without
-delay.
-
-“Sorry shall we be to lose ye, Captain! and indeed it will drive me out
-of the public line at last, to see the way as the best o’ friends must
-part. My dame, she says to me, it was but this blessed day as I set down
-to my nooning, says she, Bob, says she, whatever we shall do when the
-Captain’s gone foreign, says she, I, for one, can’t tell no more than the
-dead. You step round to the quay, says she, when you’ve a-taken a drink,
-and see if ‘The Bashful Maid’ ha’n’t histed her blue-Peter at the fore,
-and the Captain he’ll make a fair wind o’ this here sou’-wester, see if
-he won’t, and maybe weigh at the ebb; an’ it’ll break my heart, let alone
-the chil’en’s, to wish him a good voyage, it will. She’s about ready for
-sea, Captain, _now_; I see them gettin’ the fresh water aboard myself.”
-
-The Captain, as his host called him, smiled good-humouredly.
-
-“Your dame will have many a better lodger than I have been, Bob,” said
-he, fixing his bold eyes on the landlord, which the latter, who never
-seemed comfortable under an honest man’s gaze, avoided by peering into
-every corner of the room; “one that will stay longer with you, and
-entertain more friends than I have done. What of that? The heaviest purse
-makes the best lodger, and the highest score, the merriest landlord, at
-every hostelry in Europe. Well, I shall be ready for sea now, when I’ve
-got my complement; but I’m not going to cruise in the”—here the speaker
-stopped short and corrected himself—“not going to cruise _anywhere_,
-short-handed.”
-
-Bob’s eyes glistened, and he stole a look in the Captain’s face.
-
-“How many would you be wanting?” said he, cautiously, “and where would
-they have to serve? First-class men is very bad to get hereaway, just
-now.”
-
-“If I had a gunner, a boatswain’s-mate, and a good captain of the
-foretop, I’d weigh next tide, and chance it,” replied the other,
-cheerfully, but his chin fell while his eye rested on the pile of
-accounts, and he wondered how he could ever comb them into shape for
-inspection.
-
-Bob thought of the seamen still drinking in his tap-room, and the
-obviously low state of their finances. It would work he decided, but it
-must be done under three influences, viz., beer, secrecy, and caution.
-
-“Captain,” said he, shutting the door carefully, “I’d rather do you
-a turn than any lodger I’ve had yet. If I can help you to a hand or
-two, I’m the man as’ll do it. You’ll be willing to pay the expenses, I
-suppose?”
-
-The Captain did not appear totally inexperienced in such matters, for,
-on asking the amount and receiving for answer a sum that would have
-purchased all the stock of liquors in the house over and over again, he
-showed neither indignation nor surprise, but observed quietly—
-
-“Able seamen, of course?”
-
-“Of course!” repeated Bob. “Honour, you know, Captain, honour!” If he had
-added “among thieves,” he would none the less clearly have expressed the
-situation. Reflecting for a moment, he approached his guest and whispered
-in his ear, “For the account?”
-
-“Ask me no questions,” answered the Captain, significantly. “You know as
-well as I do that your price covers everything. Is it a bargain?”
-
-“That would make a difference, you see, Captain,” urged Bob, determined
-to get all he could. “It’s not what it used to be, and the Government
-is uncommon hard upon a look-out man now, if he makes a mistake in the
-colours of a prize. In King James’s time, I’ve seen the gentlemen-rovers
-drinking at this very table with the mayor and the magistrates, ay, and
-sending up their compliments and what not, maybe, to the Lord-Lieutenant
-himself. Why, that very mug as you see there was given me by poor
-Captain Delaval; quite the gentleman he was! An’ he made no secret
-where he took it from, nor how they cut the Portuguese chap’s throat
-as was drinking from it in the after-cabin. And now, it’s as likely as
-not the Whigs would hang a man in chains for such a thing. I tell you,
-Captain, the hands don’t fancy it. They can’t cruise a mile along-shore
-without running foul of a gibbet with a pi—I mean, with a skeleton on
-it, rattling and grinning as if he was alive. It makes a difference,
-Captain—it makes a difference!”
-
-“Take it or leave it,” replied the other, looking like a man who had made
-his highest bid, which no consideration would induce him to increase by a
-shilling.
-
-Bob evidently thought so. “A bargain be it,” said he, with a villainous
-smile on his shining face, and muttering something about his wish to
-oblige a customer and the high respect he entertained for his guest’s
-character, in all its relations, public, private, and nautical, he
-shambled out of the room, leaving the latter to tackle once more with his
-accounts.
-
-A shade of melancholy crossed the Captain’s brow, deeper and darker than
-was to be attributed to the unwelcome nature of his employment or the
-sombre surroundings of his position. The light of two tallow-candles,
-by which he worked was not indeed enlivening, bringing into indistinct
-relief the unsightly furniture and the gloomy pictures on the walls.
-The yard-dog, too, behind the house, had not entirely discontinued his
-lamentations, and the dip and wash of a retiring tide upon the shingle
-no farther off than the end of the street was like the voice from some
-unearthly mourner in its solemn and continuous wail. It told of lonely
-nights far out on the wild dark sea; of long shifting miles of surf
-thundering in pitiless succession on the ocean shore; of mighty cliffs
-and slabs of dripping rock, flinging back their defiance to the gale in
-the spray of countless hungry, leaping waves, that toss and madden round
-their prey ere she breaks up and goes to pieces in the storm. More than
-all, it told of desolation, and doubt, and danger, and death, and the
-uncertainty beyond.
-
-But to him, sitting there between the candles, his head bent over his
-work, it seemed the voice of a counsellor and a friend. Each wave that,
-fuller than ordinary, circled up with a fiercer lash, to ebb with a
-louder, angrier, and more protracted hiss, seemed to brighten the man’s
-face, and he listened like a prisoner who knows the step that leads him
-out to life, and liberty, and love. At such times he would glance round
-the room, congratulating himself that his charts, his instruments, his
-telescope, were all safe on board, and perhaps, would rise, take a turn
-or two, and open the window-shutter for a consoling look at a certain
-bright speck in the surrounding darkness, which might be either in earth,
-or sea, or air, and was indeed the anchor-light in the foretop of his
-ship. Then he would return, refreshed and comforted, to his accounts.
-
-He was beginning to hope he had really got the better of these, and had
-so far succeeded that two consecutive columns permitted themselves to be
-added up with an appearance of probability, when an unusually long-drawn
-howl from the house-dog, following the squeak of a fiddle, distracted him
-from his occupation, and provoked him to swear once more in a foreign
-tongue.
-
-It was difficult to make calculations, involving a thousand
-probabilities, with that miserable dog howling at regular intervals.
-It was impossible to speculate calmly on the value of his cargo, the
-quantity of his powder, and the chances of peace and war. While he sat
-there he knew well enough that his letters of marque would bear him out
-in pouncing on any unfortunate merchantman he could come across under
-Spanish colours, but there had been whispers of peace in London, and the
-weekly news-letter (substitute for our daily paper), read aloud that
-afternoon in the coffee-house round the corner, indorsed the probability
-of these rumours. By the time he reached his cruising-ground, the treaty
-might have been signed which would change a privateer into a pirate, and
-the exploit that would earn a man his knighthood this week might swing
-him at his own yard-arm the next. In those times, however, considerable
-latitude, if not allowed, was at least claimed by these kindred
-professions, and the calculator in the parlour of the Fox and Fiddle
-seemed unlikely to be over-scrupulous in the means by which he hoped to
-attain his end.
-
-He had resolved on earning, or winning, or taking, such a sum of money
-as would render him independent of fortune for life. He had an object in
-this which he deemed worthy of any sacrifice he could offer. Therefore he
-had fitted out and freighted his brigantine partly at his own expense,
-partly at that of certain confiding merchants in Leadenhall Street, so as
-to combine the certain gains of a peaceful trader with the more hazardous
-venture of a licensed sea-robber who takes by the strong hand. If the
-license should expire before his rapacity was satisfied, he would affect
-ignorance while he could, and when that was no longer practicable, throw
-off all disguise and hoist the black flag openly at the main.
-
-To this end he had armed his brigantine with the heaviest guns she could
-carry; had taken in store of provisions, water, spare tackle, gunpowder,
-pistols, cutlasses, and musquetoons; had manned her with the best seamen
-and wildest spirits he could lay hands on. These items had run up a
-considerable bill. He was now preparing a detailed statement of the cost,
-for the information of his friends in Leadenhall Street.
-
-And all this time, had he only known it, fortune was preparing for him,
-without effort on his part, the independence he would risk life and
-character to gain. That very sou’-wester wailing up the narrow street was
-rattling the windows of a castle on a hill hundreds of miles away, and
-disturbing the last moments of a dying man in his lordly bed-chamber; was
-driving before it, over a bleak, barren moor, pelting storms of rain to
-drench the cloaked and booted heir, riding post to reach that death-bed;
-sowing in a weak constitution the seeds of an illness that would allow
-him but a brief enjoyment of his inheritance; and the next in succession,
-the far-off cousin, was making up his accounts in the humble parlour of a
-seaport pot-house, because he was to sail for the Spanish main with the
-next tide.
-
-“One, two, tree!”—thump—“one, two, tree!”—thump—“_Balancez! Chassez. Un,
-deux, trois!_” Thump after thump, louder and heavier than before. The
-rafters shook, the ceiling quivered. The Captain rose, irritated and
-indignant, to call fiercely for the landlord.
-
-Butter-faced Bob, anticipating a storm, wisely turned a deaf ear,
-ensconcing himself in the back kitchen, whence he refused to emerge.
-
-The Captain shouted again, and receiving no answer walked into the
-passage.
-
-“Stow that noise!” he hallooed from the foot of the half-dozen wooden
-steps that led to the upper floor. “Who is to get any business done with
-a row like that going on aloft, as if the devil was dead and the ship
-gone overboard?” The Captain’s voice was powerful and his language plain,
-but the only reply he received was a squeak from the fiddle, a wail from
-the dog, and a “One, two, tree”—thump—louder than ever.
-
-His patience began to fail.
-
-“Zounds! man,” he broke out; “will you leave off that cursed noise, or
-must I come up and _make_ you?”
-
-Then the fiddle stopped, the dog was silent, and children’s voices were
-heard laughing heartily.
-
-The last sound would have appeased the Captain had his wrath been ever so
-high, but a strange, puzzled expression overspread his features while he
-received the following answer in an accent that denoted the speaker was
-no Englishman.
-
-“You are a rude, gross man. I sall continue my instructions to my
-respectable young friends in the dance wizout your permission.
-_Monsieur_, you are insolent. _Tiens!_”
-
-The last word carried with it such an amount of anger, defiance, and
-contempt as can only be conveyed in that monosyllable by a Frenchman. The
-Captain’s frown changed to a broad smile, but he affected wrath none the
-less, while he exclaimed in a coarse, sailor-like voice—
-
-“Insolent! you dancing dog of a Mounseer! Insolent! I’ll teach _you_
-manners afore I’ve done with you. If you don’t drop it _now_, this
-instant, I’ll come aloft in a pig’s whisper, and pull you down by the
-ears!”
-
-“Ears! _Les oreilles!_” repeated the voice above stairs, in a tone
-of repressed passion, that seemed to afford his antagonist intense
-amusement. “_Soyez tranquil, mes enfants._ My children, do not derange
-yourselves. Sir, you have insulted me; you have insulted my society. You
-shall answer me. _Monsieur! vous allez me rendre raison!_”
-
-Thus speaking, the dancing-master, for such was the foreign gentleman
-whose professional avocations the parlour-lodger had interrupted, made
-his appearance at the head of the stairs, with a small fiddle under
-his arm and a sheathed rapier in his hand; the passage below was quite
-dark, but the light from an open door behind him brought his figure into
-relief, whilst the skipper, on the contrary, remained unseen in the
-gloom. Notwithstanding that the one was in a towering passion, the other
-shook with suppressed laughter.
-
-“Come on,” he shouted roughly, though he could scarce command his voice,
-adding in a more natural tone, and with a perfect French accent—“_On
-prétend, dans les Mousquetaires du Roi, que Monsieur est de la première
-force pour l’epée!_”
-
-The effect was instantaneous. With one spring the dancing-master was upon
-him, kissing both his cheeks, hugging him in his arms, and repeating,
-with eyes full of tears—
-
-“Captain George! Captain George! My comrade, my captain, my officer; and
-I thought I was without a friend in this miserable country; without a
-friend and without a _sou_! Now I have found the one, I don’t care about
-the other. Oh, what happiness! What fortune! What luck!”
-
-The former Captain of Musketeers seemed equally pleased, if in a less
-demonstrative manner, at this unexpected meeting, though he had been
-better prepared for so strange a termination of their dispute by his
-recognition of the other’s voice before he caught sight of his figure.
-Now he pulled him into the parlour, sent for Butter-faced Bob to fill the
-capacious punch-bowl, pressed him into a chair with both hands on his
-shoulders, and looked gravely into his face, saying—
-
-“Eugène, I owe you my life, and I am a man who never left a debt unpaid.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-A VOLUNTEER
-
-
-Beaudésir, by the wretched light of two tallow-candles, looked paler,
-thinner, more dejected, than even that pale, thin, anxious recruit who
-had joined the Grey Musketeers with so formidable a character as a
-master of defence some months before. No wonder. He was an enthusiast at
-heart, and an enthusiast can seldom withstand the pressure of continuous
-adversity. A temporary gleam of sunshine, indeed, warms him up to the
-highest pitch of energy, daring, and intellectual resource; nay, he will
-battle nobly against the fiercest storm so long as the winds blow, the
-thunder peals overhead, and less exalted spirits fly cowering to the
-nearest shelter; but it is in a bitter, bleak, protracted frost that he
-droops and fades away. Give him excitement, even the excitement of pain,
-and he becomes a hero. Put him to mere drudgery, though it be the honest
-drudgery of duty, and he almost ceases to be a man.
-
-There is, nevertheless, something essentially elastic in the French
-character, which even in such a disposition as Beaudésir’s preserved
-him from giving way to utter despair. Though he might well be excused
-for repining, when thus compelled to gain his bread by teaching the
-landlord’s children to dance at a low pot-house, yet this young man’s
-natural temperament enabled him to take interest even in so unworthy an
-occupation, and he was jealous enough of their progress to resent that
-rude interruption he experienced from the parlour with a flash of the old
-spirit cherished in the King’s Musketeers.
-
-Still he looked pale and wan, nor was it till George had forced on him a
-beaker of steaming punch that his eye recovered its brightness and the
-blood mantled once more in his clear sallow cheek.
-
-“And you escaped them?” said the Captain, reverting to the fatal night
-of their affray in the Montmirail gardens. “Escaped them without a
-scratch! Well, it was ten to one against you, and I cursed the Duke with
-all my heart as I galloped on towards the coast when I thought of your
-predicament. Guard-room, court-martial, confession, and a firing party
-was the best I could wish you; for on the reverse of the card I pictured
-a _lettre de cachet_, and imprisonment for life in Vincennes or the
-Bastile! But how did you get away? and above all, how did you elude the
-search afterwards?”
-
-Eugène wet his lips with the hot punch, which he seemed to relish less
-than his more robust comrade, and looked distrustfully about him while he
-replied—
-
-“I had little difficulty in extricating myself from the gardens, my
-Captain, for when I had disposed of Bras-de-Fer, there was no _real_
-swordsman left. The Musketeers fight well, no doubt; but they are yet
-far from true perfection in the art, and their practice is more like our
-fishermen’s cudgel-play than scientific fencing. I wounded two of them
-slightly, made a spring at the wall, and was in the street at the moment
-you entered the Prince-Marshal’s carriage. My difficulty then was, where
-to conceal myself. I do not know Paris thoroughly, to begin with, and I
-confess I shuddered at the idea of skulking for weeks in some squalid
-haunt of vice and misery. I think I had rather have been taken and shot
-down at once.”
-
-“You would not have been safe even in dens like those,” interrupted
-the other. “Our Débonnaire is not so refined in his orgies but that I
-believe every garret in the Faubourgs is frequented by himself and his
-_roués_. Bah! when we drew pay from Louis le Grand at least we served a
-_gentleman_. The Jesuits would have been your best chance. Why did you
-not take refuge with _them_?”
-
-Eugène shuddered, and the pale face turned paler still, but he did not
-answer the question.
-
-“When we used to hunt the hare in Normandy,” he resumed, “I have
-observed that, if hard pressed, she would return to her form, and often
-thus made her escape, whereas the wolf and the stag, flying straight
-away, were generally run down. Like the hare, then, I doubled back and
-lay hid in the very house where I habitually lodged. It was the first
-place they searched, but they never came near it again; and the second
-day an old comrade found me out, took me to his own home, and furnished
-me with a disguise.”
-
-“An old comrade!” repeated the Captain. “_Bravo!_ Ah! we had always
-plenty of _esprit de corps_ in the Musketeers. It was Adolphe, I’ll wager
-a crown, or the young Count de Guiches, or Bellegarde!”
-
-“None of these, my Captain,” explained Eugène. “It was no Musketeer;
-Black, Red, or Grey. When I said comrade, I meant an old college friend.
-It was an Abbé. I know not why I should keep it secret. Abbé Malletort.”
-
-The Captain pondered. “Abbé Malletort!” said he. “That is more than
-strange. The Regent’s confidant; his chief adviser, men said; his
-principal favourite! He must have had some reason—some deep-laid scheme
-of double treachery. I know the man. A smooth-spoken churchman; a
-pleasant fellow to drink with, and a good judge of drill. But if it was
-his interest to betray the poor thing, I wouldn’t trust him with the life
-of a dog!”
-
-“You little know him,” urged the other, eagerly. “Generous, kind, and
-secret—had it not been for his advice and his exertions I should never
-have got away alive. He kept me a fortnight in his apartment, till the
-heat of the pursuit was over and Paris had ceased to talk of our affray,
-which everybody believed an organised conspiracy of the Huguenots—of the
-Jansenists—of the young King’s party—of the British Government. What
-shall I say?—of the Great Mogul. I did not dare show myself, of course.
-I could only hear the news from my friend, and I saw him but seldom. I
-was forced to leave Paris at last without knowing how far the disturbance
-affected the ladies in whose grounds it took place. I tried hard to find
-out, but it was impossible.”
-
-The Captain glanced sharply in his face, and took a strong gulp at the
-punch. Eugène continued:—
-
-“I got through the barrier with an Italian company of jugglers, disguised
-as a Pantaleone. It was not too amusing to be obliged to perform antics
-for the amusement of the Guard, fortunately they were of the Prince de
-Condé’s regiment, which had just marched into Paris. But the mountebanks
-were good people, kindly, and perfectly trustworthy. They were polite
-enough to say that I might make an excellent livelihood if I would but
-take in earnest to the business. I left them at Rouen, and from that
-place reached the seaboard on foot. My object was to take refuge in
-England. Here alone I felt I should be safe for a time, and when the
-storm should blow over I hoped to return again. I little knew what a
-climate it is! what a country! what people! They are somewhat better
-when you are used to them, and I own I accustom myself more easily
-than I could have believed to their beef, their beer, their barbarous
-language, and their utter want of politeness. But they have been kind to
-me, these rough islanders. It was an English fishing-boat that landed
-me from Havre, and the fisherman made me stay a week in his house for
-nothing because he discovered accidentally that I had exhausted my purse
-to pay for my passage. Since then, my Captain, I have supported myself
-by teaching these awkward English to dance. It is a noble exercise after
-all, were they not so stiff, so ungraceful! And yet my pupils make
-progress! These children above stairs have already begun the minuet.
-Egotist that I am! Tell me, my Captain, how you too come to find yourself
-in this miserable town, without gardens, without barriers, without
-barracks, without _Hôtel de Ville_, without a church, even without an
-opera!”
-
-The Captain smiled. “You have a good right to ask,” said he, “since, but
-for you, I should not have been here at this moment. When I drew on the
-Regent that night, as I would have drawn on the young King himself had
-I seen him guilty of such an outrage, I was, as you know, surrounded
-and attacked by an escort of my own men. I tell you, Beaudésir, I never
-expected to leave the gardens alive, and I do not believe there is
-another fencer in France who could have helped me out of so awkward a
-scrape. I was sorry to see our old Bras-de-Fer go down, I admit; but
-what would you have? When it’s give and take, thrust and parry, ten
-against two, one cannot stand on these little delicacies of feeling. As I
-vanished through the garden-gate I looked for you everywhere, but there
-was no time to lose, and I thought we could escape more easily separate
-than in company. I knew you were neither down nor taken, because there
-was no shout of triumph from the men to announce the fact. The Prince du
-Chateau-Guerrand, my old general, was standing at the door of his coach
-when I gained the street. How he came there I am at a loss to guess, for
-you may believe I asked no questions; but that you and he should have
-dropped from the clouds at the Hôtel Montmirail, in the moment of my
-need, is one of those happy strokes of accident by which battles are won,
-and which we call fortune of war. I thought him a martinet when I was on
-his staff, with his everlasting parades, and reports, and correspondence,
-to say nothing of his interminable stories about Turenne, but I always
-knew his heart was in the right place. ‘Jump in!’ said he, catching me by
-the arm. ‘Drive those English horses to death, and take the coach where
-you will!’ In five minutes we were out of Paris, and half a league off on
-our way to the coast.
-
-“I hope the English horses may have survived the journey, but they
-brought me to my first relay as fast as ever I went in the saddle, and I
-knew that with half an hour’s start of everything I was safe. Who was to
-question a Captain of King’s Musketeers riding post for England on the
-Regent’s business? The relays were even so good that I had time to stop
-and breakfast comfortably, at leisure, and to feed my horse, half-way
-through the longest stage.
-
-“I had little delay when I reached the Channel. The wind was easterly,
-and before my horse had done shaking himself on the quay, an honest
-fellow had put his two sons, a spare oar, and a keg of brandy, on board a
-shallop about as weatherly as an egg-shell, hoisted a sail the size of a
-pocket-handkerchief, and stood out manfully with a following wind and an
-ebb tide. I know the Channel well, and I was as sure as he must have been
-that the wind would change when the tide turned, and we should be beating
-about, perhaps in a stiffish breeze, all night. It was not for me to
-baulk him, however, and I only stipulated for a loaf or two of bread and
-a beaker of water in the bows. I tell you before they led my horse to the
-stable, we were a cable’s length off shore.
-
-“A fair wind, Eugène, does not always make a short voyage. At sundown
-it fell to a dead calm. The lads and the old man, and I, who speak to
-you, took our turns, and pulled like galley-slaves at the oars. With the
-moon-rise, a light breeze came up from the south-west, and it freshened
-by degrees till at midnight it was blowing half a gale. The egg-shell
-behaved nobly, and swam like a duck, but it took all the old man’s time
-to steer her, and the sons said as many _Aves_ before dawn as would have
-lasted a whole convent for a month.
-
-“At one time I feared we must put her head about, and run for it, on the
-chance of making Ambleteuse, or even Calais, but the old fellow who owned
-her had a conscience, and to give him his due he was a first-rate sailor.
-The wind moderated at sunrise, drawing round by the south, and at noon we
-had made Beachy Head, when it fell a dead calm, with a ground swell that
-was no child’s play when we laid out on our oars. By dint of hard pulling
-we ran her ashore on the English coast about sundown, and my friend put
-off again with his two sons, none the worse for the voyage, and all the
-better for some twenty gold pieces with which I paid my passage. He
-deserved it, for he earned it fairly. She was but an egg-shell, as I said
-before, but she swam like a duck; it’s only fair to allow that.”
-
-“And now, my Captain,” asked Beaudésir, looking round the
-strangely-furnished apartment, “you are living here? you are settled? you
-are a householder? Are you reconciled to spend your life in this dirty
-little town, ill-paved, ill-lighted, smelling of salt water and tar,
-where it always rains, and they bring you nothing to drink but black beer
-and hot punch?”
-
-Captain George laughed heartily. “Not such a bad thing that hot punch,”
-said he, “when you can get neither Chambertin, Burgundy, nor Bourdeaux.
-But I understand you nevertheless, comrade. It is not likely that a man
-who has served Louis le Grand in the Musketeers would be content to
-vegetate here like a wisp of seaweed left at high-water mark. It was
-lucky I met you to-night. In twenty-four hours, at most, I hope to be off
-the Needles if the wind holds.”
-
-Beaudésir looked interrogatively at the pile of accounts on the table.
-
-“You have turned trader, my Captain?” said he. “You will make a fortune
-in two voyages. At College they pretended I had some skill in reading
-characters. You have luck written on your forehead. I wish I was going
-with you, were it only as a clerk.”
-
-Captain George pondered for a while before he answered, nay, he filled
-and emptied his glass, took two or three turns in the narrow apartment,
-which admitted indeed but of what sailors called “a fisherman’s walk—two
-steps and overboard,” and finally, pulling back the shutter, pointed to
-the light in the foretop of his brigantine.
-
-“You won’t catch me afloat again,” said he, “in a craft like a
-walnut-shell, with a scrap of paper for a sail. No, no. There she rides,
-my lad, the lady that would take me round the world, and never wet a
-stitch on my back from head to heel. Why, close-hauled, in a stiff
-breeze, there’s not a King’s cutter in the Channel can hold her own with
-her; and off a wind, she’d have the whole fleet hull-down in six hours,
-making such good weather of it, too, all the while! I wish you could see
-her by daylight, with her straight run, and her raking masts, and bran
-new spars, and a fresh lick of paint I gave her in dock before we came
-round. She looks as trim as a pincushion, and as saucy as a dancing-girl.
-She carries a few popguns too, in case of accidents; and when she shows
-her teeth, she means to bite, you may take your oath! I’ll tell you what,
-Eugène, you must come on board to-morrow before I weigh. I should like to
-show you over ‘The Bashful Maid’ myself, and I hope to get my anchor up
-and shake out my foretopsail with the afternoon tide.”
-
-Landsman, Frenchman, though he was, Beaudésir’s eyes kindled, and he
-caught his friend’s enthusiasm like wildfire.
-
-“I would give my right arm to be going with you,” said he. “Excitement,
-adventure, storms, seamanship, and all the wonders of the tropics!
-While for me, muddy beer, gloomy fogs, dirty streets, and clumsy English
-children learning to dance! Well! every man to his trade. Here’s a good
-voyage to you and my best wishes!”
-
-Again he wet his lips with the punch, now grown cold and sticky in his
-glass. Captain George was so preoccupied, he forgot to acknowledge the
-courtesy.
-
-“Can you keep accounts?” he asked abruptly, pointing to the papers on the
-table.
-
-“Any schoolboy might keep such as these,” answered Eugène, running
-his eye over one of the columns, and adding, as he examined it,
-“Nevertheless, my Captain, here is an error that will falsify the whole
-sum.”
-
-He pointed to a mistake in the numerals that had repeatedly escaped
-the other’s observation, and from which much of his labour had arisen.
-In a few minutes, he had gone through, and corrected as many pages of
-calculation. The figures came right now, as if by magic. Captain George
-had found what he wanted.
-
-“Where did you learn all this?” he inquired in astonishment.
-
-“At Avranches, in Normandy,” was the answer.
-
-“Where they taught you to fence?”
-
-“Precisely; and to shoot with musquetoon or pistol. I can pick the ace of
-diamonds off a card at fifteen paces with either weapon.”
-
-He spoke modestly, as he always did of his proficiency in such feats of
-skill. They came so easily to him.
-
-“Will you sail with me?” asked George frankly. “You can help me with my
-papers, and earn your share of the plun―I should say of the profits. No,
-my friend! you shall not leap blindfold. Listen. I have letters of marque
-in my cabin, and I mean them to hold good whether peace be proclaimed or
-not. It may be, we shall fight with a rope round our necks. The gains are
-heavy, but the risk is great.”
-
-“I never count risk!” was the reply.
-
-“Then finish the punch!” said Captain George; and thus the bargain was
-ratified, which added yet one more to the _rôle_ of characters Beaudésir
-was destined to enact on the stage of life.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-THREE PRESSED MEN
-
-
-While the occupants of the parlour were sipping punch those of
-the tap-room had gone systematically through the different stages
-of inebriety—the friendly, the argumentative, the captious,
-the communicative, the sentimental, the quarrelsome, the
-maudlin-affectionate, and the extremely drunk. By nightfall, neither
-Smoke-Jack, Bottle-Jack, nor Slap-Jack could handle a clay-pipe without
-breaking it, nor fix their eyes steadily on the candle for five
-consecutive moments. Notwithstanding, however, the many conflicting
-opinions that had been broached during their sitting, there were certain
-points on which they agreed enthusiastically—that they were the three
-finest fellows under the sun, that there was no calling like seamanship,
-no element like salt water, and no craft in which any one of them had yet
-sailed so lively in a sea-way as this, which seemed now to roll and pitch
-and stagger beneath their besotted senses. With a confirmed impression,
-varied only by each man’s own experience, that they were weathering a
-gale under considerable difficulties, in a low latitude, and that it was
-their watch on deck, though they kept it somewhat unaccountably below,
-all three had gone through the abortive ceremony they called “pricking
-for the softest plank,” had pulled their rough sea-coats over their
-heads, and lain down on the floor among the spittoons, to sleep out the
-dreamless sleep of intoxication.
-
-Long before midnight, Butter-faced Bob, looking in, well satisfied,
-beheld his customers of the afternoon now transformed into actual goods
-and chattels, bales of bone and sinew and courage, that he could
-sell, literally by weight, at an enormous price, and for ready money.
-While he turned the light of his candle from one sleeper to another,
-he was running over a mental sum comprising all the elementary rules
-of arithmetic. He added the several prices of the recumbent articles
-in guineas. He subtracted the few shillings’-worth of liquor they
-had consumed. He multiplied by five the hush-money he expected, over
-and above, from the purchaser, and finally, he divided the total, in
-anticipation, between himself, his wife, the tax-gatherer, and the most
-pressing of his creditors.
-
-When he had finished these calculations, he returned to the parlour,
-where Captain George sat brooding over the remains of his punch, the late
-enlisted recruit having retired to pack up his fiddle and the very small
-stock of clothes he possessed.
-
-Their bargain was soon concluded, although there was some little
-difficulty about delivering the goods. Notwithstanding, perhaps in
-consequence of, the many cases of oppression that had stained the last
-half of the preceding century, a strong reaction had set in against
-anything in the shape of “kidnapping”; and a press-gang, even for a
-king’s ship, was not likely to meet with toleration in the streets of a
-seaport town. Moreover, suspicions had already been aroused as to the
-character of ‘The Bashful Maid.’ A stricter discipline seemed to be
-observed on board that wicked-looking craft than was customary even in
-the regular service, and this unusual rigour was accounted for by the
-lawless conduct of her “liberty-men” when they _did_ come ashore. Nobody
-knew better than her Captain that, under the present aspect of political
-affairs in London, it would be wise to avoid notice by the authorities.
-The only thing he dreaded on earth and sea was a vision, by which he was
-haunted daily, till he could get all his stores shipped. It represented
-a sloop-of-war detached from the neighbouring squadron in the Downs,
-coming round the Point, dropping her anchor in the harbour, and sending a
-lieutenant and boat’s crew on board to overhaul his papers, and, maybe,
-summarily prevent his beautiful craft from standing out to sea.
-
-Neither was Butter-faced Bob rash or indiscreet where his own interests
-were affected. Using a metaphor he had picked up from his customers, it
-was his boast that he could “keep a bright look-out, and steer small”
-with the best of them; and he now impressed on Captain George, with
-great earnestness, the necessity of secrecy and caution in getting the
-three fresh hands down to the quay and tumbling them up the side of the
-brigantine.
-
-Had the Captain known their inclinations, he might have made his own
-bargain, and saved three-fourths of the expense, but his landlord took
-care that in such cases the principals should never come together,
-telling the officers they could make what terms they chose when the men
-found themselves fairly trapped and powerless in blue water, while he
-kept the latter in a state of continuous inebriety so long as they dwelt
-in his house, which rendered them utterly reckless of everything but
-liquor and tobacco.
-
-His shining face wore the well-satisfied expression of a man who has
-performed a good action, while he motioned with his thumb to the
-adjoining tap-room.
-
-“I’ve a cart ready in the back yard,” said he, “and a few empty casks to
-tumble in along with our chaps. It will only look like the fresh water
-going aboard, so as you may weigh with the morning tide. Will they send a
-boat off if you show a light?”
-
-Captain George nodded. The boatswain whom he had left in charge, and on
-whom he could rely, had directions for a certain code of signals, amongst
-which, the waving of a lantern thrice from the end of the quay was to be
-answered by a boat ashore.
-
-“We’d best get them in at once, then,” said Bob, only anxious now to be
-rid of his guests. “I’ll go and put the horse to, and perhaps you and me
-and the French gentleman, as he seems a friend of yours, can manage it
-between us.”
-
-Accordingly, Bob betook himself to the back yard and the stable, while
-Beaudésir was summoned to assist the process of embarkation. In ten
-minutes all was prepared, and it was only necessary to lift the three
-drunken tars into the carriage provided for them.
-
-With the two elder and heavier men there was no difficulty. They grunted,
-indeed, impatiently, though without opening their eyes, and seemed to
-sleep as soundly, while being dragged along a dusty passage and hoisted
-into a narrow cart amongst empty water-casks, as if they took their rest
-habitually under such disadvantages; but Slap-Jack’s younger constitution
-had not been so completely overcome, and it was necessary to soothe him
-by a fiction which has possessed in all times an indescribable charm for
-the seafaring imagination.
-
-Bob whispered impressively in his ear that he had been sent for, thus
-in the dead of night, by the Admiral’s daughter, who had conceived for
-him a fatal and consuming passion, having seen him in his “long togs” in
-the street. Muttering inarticulately about “Alice,” Slap-Jack at once
-abandoned himself to the illusion, and dropped off to sleep again, with
-delightful anticipations of the romantic fate in store for him.
-
-As the wheels rumbled over the rough streets, through the rainy gusts
-and the dark night, followed by Captain George and Beaudésir, the latter
-could not but compare the vehicle to a dead-cart, carrying away its
-burden through some city stricken with the plague. This pleasing fancy he
-communicated to his comrade, who made the following inconsequent reply—
-
-“I only hope the harbour-watch may be as drunk as they are. It’s our best
-chance to get them aboard without a row. There’s her light Eugène. If the
-sky would lift a little, you might make out her spars, the beauty! but
-I’m almost afraid now you’ll have to wait for dawn.”
-
-The harbour-watch was drunk, or at least fast asleep in the sentry-box on
-wheels that afforded him shelter, and the sky did _not_ lift in the least
-degree; so very soon after the waving of the lantern a boat from ‘The
-Bashful Maid’ touched the stone steps of the quay, having been cunningly
-impelled thither by a screw-driving process, worked with one oar at the
-stern, and which made far less noise than the more powerful practice of
-pulling her with even strokes.
-
-Two swarthy ill-looking fellows sat in the boat, and a scowl passed over
-their features when they saw their Captain’s attitude of precaution,
-with one hand on the pistol he wore at his belt. Perhaps they were
-disappointed not to be able to elude his vigilance, and have one more
-run on shore before they sailed. It was no use trying to “gammon the
-skipper,” though. They had discovered that already, and they lent their
-aid with a will, when they found it must be so, to place their future
-comrades in the same predicament as themselves.
-
-The whole affair was managed so quietly that, even had the harbour-guard,
-a brandy-faced veteran of sixty, remained wide-awake and perfectly sober,
-he might have been excused for its escaping his vigilance. Bob himself,
-standing with his empty cart on the quay, could hardly hear the dip of
-the oars as his late guests were pulled cautiously away. He did not
-indeed remain there very long to listen. He had done with them one and
-all—for was not the score paid? and it behoved him to return home and
-prepare for fresh arrivals. He turned, therefore, with a well-satisfied
-glance towards the light in the foretop of the brigantine, and wished
-‘The Bashful Maid’ a good voyage, while at the same moment Beaudésir
-stumbled awkwardly up her side. To the latter this was, indeed, a new and
-startling phase of life, but it was full of excitement, and consequently
-very much to his taste. Captain George, taking him below, and pointing
-out a couch in his cabin on which to pass the rest of the night, though
-he had seen a good deal of worse material for a privateer’s-man, or
-even a pirate, than this pale gentle young adventurer, late of the Grey
-Musketeers.
-
-Covered by a boat-cloak, and accommodated with two or three cushions,
-Eugène’s bed was quite as comfortable as that which he occupied at the
-Fox and Fiddle. It was long past sunrise when he awoke, and realising
-his position he ran on deck with a landsman’s usual conviction that
-he was already miles out at sea. It was startling, and a little
-disappointing, to observe the quay, the straggling buildings of the town,
-the lighthouse, and other well-known objects within musket-shot, and to
-find that the brigantine, in spite of her lively motions, still rode at
-anchor, not half a cable’s length from a huge, smooth, red buoy, which
-was dancing and dipping in the morning sun as if it were alive. There was
-a fresh breeze off shore, and a curl on the green sparkling water that,
-far away down Channel, beyond the point, swelled into a thousand varying
-lines of white, while a schooner in the offing might be observed standing
-out to sea with a double reef in her topsails. One of the crew, sluicing
-the deck with a bucket of water, that eddied round Eugène’s feet, pointed
-her out to his mate with an oath, and the mate, a tall strong negro,
-grinning hideously, replied “Iss! very well!”
-
-‘The Bashful Maid’ herself, rising buoyantly to each succeeding wave, ere
-with a dip and toss of her bows she sent the heavy spray-drops splashing
-over her like a seabird, seemed chafing with eagerness to be off. There
-was but little of the bustle and confusion on board usually produced by
-clearing out of port. The deck, though wet and slippery, was as clean as
-a dinner-plate, the yards were squared, the ropes coiled, new sails had
-been bent, and the last cask of fresh water was swinging over the hold:
-trim and taut, every spar and every sheet seemed to express “Outward
-bound,” not to mention a blue-Peter flying at the fore.
-
-All this Eugène observing, began to suffer from an uncomfortable
-sensation in the pit of his stomach, which parched his mouth, depressed
-his spirits, and destroyed his appetite. He was not, however, so much
-affected by it but that he could take note of his fellow-voyagers, an
-occupation sufficiently interesting when he reflected on the probable
-result of their preparations. In his experience of life he had never
-yet seen such an assemblage. The crew had indeed been got together with
-considerable care, but with utter disregard to nationality or uniformity
-of any kind. The majority were Englishmen, but there were also Swedes,
-Dutch, French, Portuguese, a negro, and even a Spaniard on board. The
-brigantine was strongly manned for her size, and the hands, with scarcely
-an exception, were stout daring fellows, capable of any exploit and a
-good many enormities, but such as a bold commander, cool, judicious, and
-determined, might bring into a very efficient state of discipline. Eugène
-could not but remark, however, that on the face of each was expressed
-impatience of delay, and an ardent desire to be in blue water. The
-liberty to go on shore had been stopped, and indeed the pockets of these
-gentlemen-adventurers, as the humblest of them called themselves, were
-completely cleaned out. Obviously, therefore, it would be well to lose no
-time in refilling them.
-
-Leaning over the side, lazily watching the lap and wash of the leaping
-water, Eugène was rapidly losing himself in his own thoughts, when,
-rousing up, he felt the Captain’s hand on his shoulder, and heard the
-Captain’s voice whisper in his ear:—
-
-“Come below with me; I shall want your assistance by-and-by, and you have
-had no breakfast yet.”
-
-His qualms took flight at the prospect of fresh excitement, though the
-offer of breakfast was received with little enthusiasm, and he followed
-the Captain into his comfortable and well-furnished cabin. Here he
-learned that, while he was sleeping, George had hailed a fishing-boat
-returning warily into harbour, and, under pretence of buying fresh fish,
-boarded her with a bottle or two of spirits and a roll of tobacco. In ten
-minutes he extracted all the fisherman had to tell, and discovered that a
-large King’s ship was cruising in the offing, watching, as his informant
-opined, the very port in which they lay. Under these circumstances,
-Captain George considered it would be prudent to wait till midnight, when
-they might run out of the harbour, with wind and tide in their favour,
-and so showing the man-of-war a clean pair of heels, be hull-down and out
-of sight before sunrise.
-
-“There’s nothing that swims can touch her in squally weather like this,”
-continued the Captain, “if she can get an hour’s start; and I wouldn’t
-mind running under his very boltsprit, in the dark, if this wind holds.
-My chief difficulty is about the men. There will be black looks, and
-something very like mutiny, if I keep them twelve more hours in sight of
-the beer-shops without liberty for shore. Those drunken rascals too, that
-we hove aboard last night, will have come to themselves by that time,
-and we shall perhaps have some trouble in persuading them they are here
-of their own free will. You must help me, Eugène, all day. Between us we
-must watch the crew like a cat watches a mouse. Once we’re in blue water,
-you’ll have nothing to do but sit in my cabin and amuse yourself.”
-
-The skipper understood the nature of those with whom he had to deal.
-When the men saw no disposition to get the anchor up, when noon passed
-and they went to dinner as usual with the brigantine’s head pointing
-steadily to windward, when another tide ebbed and flowed, but failed to
-waft them away from the temptations of port, they began to growl freely,
-without however proceeding to any overt acts of insubordination, and
-towards evening they became pacified with the anticipation of weighing
-anchor before the following day. The hours passed wearily to all on
-board, excepting perhaps the three Jacks, who, waking simultaneously at
-sunrise, turned round, perfectly satisfied, to go to sleep again, and so
-recovered complete possession of their faculties towards the dusk of the
-evening.
-
-They had been stowed away on some spare bunting outside the door of the
-Captain’s cabin. Their conversation, therefore, though carried on in a
-low tone, was distinctly audible both to him and Beaudésir, as they sat
-waiting for midnight and the turn of the tide.
-
-After a few expressions of astonishment, and vague inquiries how they
-got there, each sailor seemed to realise his position pretty clearly
-and without much dissatisfaction. Bottle-Jack shrewdly suspected he was
-once more at the old trade. Smoke-Jack was comforted by the prospect
-of refilling his empty pockets, and Slap-Jack, whilst vowing eternal
-fidelity to Alice, seemed impressed with the flattering notion that
-somehow his own attractions and the good taste of the Admiral’s daughter
-were at the bottom of it all.
-
-The craft, they agreed, was a likely one, the fittings ship-shape
-Bristol-fashion, the cruise promised to be prosperous; but such an
-unheard-of solecism as to weigh without one more drinking bout in honour
-of the expedition, was not to be thought of; therefore Bottle-Jack opined
-it was indispensable they should immediately go ashore.
-
-The others agreed without scruple. One difficulty alone presented itself:
-the quay stood a good quarter of a mile off, and even in harbour it was
-rather a stormy night for a swim. As Slap-Jack observed, “it couldn’t be
-done comfortable without a plank of some kind; but most like, if they
-waited till dark, they might make free with the skipper’s dingy hanging
-over the starn!”
-
-“’Tis but totting up another figure or two on the score with old
-Shiney-face,” argued Smoke-Jack, who, considering his profession,
-was of a frugal turn of mind, and who little knew how completely the
-purchase-money of his own body and bones had wiped off the chalk behind
-the door. “Such a voyage as we’re a-goin’ to make will square longer
-accounts than ours, though I am uncommon dry, considerin’. Just one more
-spree on the quiet, you know, my sons, and back to duty again as steady
-as a sou’-wester. There’s no fear they’ll weigh without us, a-course?”
-
-“A-course not,” grunted old Bottle-Jack, who could scarce have been
-half sober yet, to hazard such a suggestion. “The skipper is quite the
-gentleman, no doubt, and most like when he misses us he’ll send the
-ship’s pinnace ashore with his compliments.”
-
-“Pinnace be blowed!” retorted Slap-Jack; “anyway you may be sure he won’t
-sail without the dingy;” and in this more reasonable conclusion the
-others could not but acquiesce.
-
-With a smile on his face, the Captain listened to the further development
-of their plan. One by one they would creep aft without their shoes,
-unobserved by the anchor-watch, now sure to be on the forecastle (none
-of the Jacks had a clear idea of the craft in which they were plotting);
-if any one could put his hand on a bit of grease it would be useful to
-make the tackle work noiselessly. When they reached the stern, Slap-Jack
-should seat himself in the dingy, as being the lightest weight; the
-others would lower away, and as soon as she touched water, shin down
-after him, and shove off. There was no time to lose, best set about it at
-once.
-
-Captain George whispered in his companion’s ear, “Take my hat and cloak,
-and go forward to the hold with a lantern in your hand. Make plenty of
-noise as you pass those lubbers, but do not let them see your face.”
-
-Eugène obeyed, and Captain George, blowing out the lights, set himself to
-watch at the stern windows.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-“YO-HEAVE-YO!”
-
-
-It was pitch dark in the cabin, but although under a cloudy sky there
-was light enough to discern objects on deck or alongside. As Smoke-Jack
-observed, stealing aft with bare feet, and in a louder whisper than was
-prudent, “A good pair of eyes might see as far as a man could heave a
-bull by the tail.” George had determined to give the crew a lesson, once
-for all, in the matter of discipline, and felt well pleased to make
-example of the new-comers, who must be supposed as yet ignorant of his
-system.
-
-So he sat in the dark, pistol in hand, at the stern window, which was
-open, and watched like the hunter for his prey.
-
-He heard the three Jacks creeping along the deck overhead, he heard low
-whispers and a smothered laugh, followed by a few brief expostulations
-as to priority of disembarkation, the language far less polite than the
-intention; lastly, he heard the tackle by which his boat was made fast
-running gently over its blocks.
-
-Then he cocked his pistol without noise, and laughed to himself.
-
-Gradually the cabin window was obscured. A dark object passed smoothly
-down, and revealed in its progress a human figure indistinctly visible
-above its black horizontal mass, which was indeed the slow-descending
-boat, containing no less a personage than the adventurous Slap-Jack; also
-two lines of tackle were dimly visible supporting that boat’s head. A
-turn of the body, as he covered them steadily with his pistol, enabled
-the Captain to bring these two lines into one.
-
-Hand and eye were equally true. He was sure of his mark before he pulled
-the trigger. With a flash that lighted up the cabin, and an explosion
-that filled it with smoke, the bullet cut clean through the “falls,”
-or ropes, supporting the boat’s head, bringing her perpendicularly on
-end, and shooting every article she contained—planks, bottom-boards,
-stretchers, oars, boat-hook, an empty hen-coop, and the astonished
-occupant—plump into seven fathom of water.
-
-Nor was the consternation created by this alarming capsize confined to
-the unfortunate Slap-Jack. His comrades, lowering away industriously from
-the taffrail, started back in the utmost bewilderment, the anchor-watch
-rushed aft, persuaded a mutiny had broken out, and in grievous indecision
-whether to take the skipper’s part or assist in cutting his throat. The
-crew tumbled up the hatchway, and blundered about the deck, asking each
-other absurd questions, and offering wild suggestions, if anything were
-really amiss, as to breaking open the spirit-room. Nay, the harbour-guard
-himself awoke from his nap, emerged from his sentry-box, took a turn on
-the quay, hailing loudly, and receiving no answer, was satisfied he had
-been dreaming, so swore and turned in again.
-
-Captain George reloaded his pistol, and sang out lustily, “Man overboard!
-Show a light on the deck there, and heave a rope over the side. Bear a
-hand to haul him in, the lubber! I don’t much think he’ll want to try
-that game in a hurry again!”
-
-Meanwhile, hapless Slap-Jack was incapacitated for the present from that,
-or indeed any other game involving physical effort. A plank, falling with
-him out of the boat, had struck him on the head and stunned him; seventy
-fathom of water would have floated him no better than seven, and with the
-first plunge he went down like a stone. Captain George had intended to
-give him a fright and a ducking; but now, while he stretched his body out
-of the cabin window, peering over the gloomy water and listening eagerly
-for the snort and gasp of a swimmer who never came up, he wished with all
-his heart that his hand had been less steady on the pistol.
-
-Fortunately, however, Beaudésir, after he had fulfilled the Captain’s
-orders by personating him at the hold, remained studiously on watch. It
-was a peculiarity of this man that his faculties seemed always on the
-stretch, as is often to be observed with those over whom some constant
-dread impends, or who suffer from the tortures of remorse. At the moment
-he heard the shot, he sprang to the side, threw off hat and cloak, as if
-anticipating danger, and kept his eyes eagerly fixed on the water, ready,
-if need be, for a pounce. The tide was still flowing, the brigantine’s
-head lay to seaward, where all was dark, and fortunately the little light
-on the ruffled surface was towards the shore. Slap-Jack’s inanimate form
-was carried inwards by the flood, and crossed the moorings of that huge
-red buoy which Eugène remembered gazing on listlessly in the morning.
-Either the contact with its rope woke an instinctive consciousness in the
-drowning man, or some swirl of the water below brought his body to the
-surface, but for a few seconds Slap-Jack’s form became dimly visible,
-heaving like a wisp of seaweed on a wave. In those few seconds Eugène
-dashed overboard, cleaving the water to reach him with the long springing
-strokes of a powerful swimmer.
-
-A drowning man is not to be saved but at the imminent risk of his life
-who goes in for the rescue, and this gallant feat indeed can only be
-accomplished by a thorough proficient in the art; so on the present
-occasion it was well that Beaudésir felt as much at home in the water as
-on dry land.
-
-How the crew cheered the Frenchman while he was hauled on board with his
-dripping burden; how the two Jacks who had remained in the brigantine,
-and were now thoroughly sobered, vowed eternal gratitude to the landsman
-who had dived for their messmate; how the harbour-guard was once more
-disturbed by the cheering, and cheered lustily in reply; how Captain
-George clapped his comrade on the shoulder while he took him below to
-change his wet garments, and vowed he was fit to be King of France,
-adding, with a meaning smile, “If ever I go to school again, I’ll ask
-them to give me a berth at Avranches in Normandy!”—all this it is
-unnecessary to relate; but if the Captain gained the respect of the crew
-by the promptitude with which he resented an attempt at insubordination,
-the gallant self-devotion of his friend, clerk, supercargo,
-cabin-passenger, or whatever he was, won their affection and good-will
-for the rest of the voyage.
-
-This was especially apparent about sunrise, when Captain George beat to
-quarters and paraded his whole crew on deck, preparatory to weighing
-anchor and standing out down Channel with a fair wind and a following
-tide. He calculated that the King’s ship, even if on watch, must be
-still some distance from land, and he had such implicit confidence in
-the sailing qualities of his brigantine that if he could only get a fair
-start he feared a chase from no craft that swam.
-
-Owing to his early education and the experiences of his boyhood,
-notwithstanding his late career in the service of King Louis, he was a
-seaman at heart. In nothing more so than a tendency to idealise the craft
-he commanded as if it were a living creature, endowed with feelings and
-even reason. For him ‘The Bashful Maid,’ with her exquisite trim, her
-raking masts, her graceful spars, her long fluttering pennon, and her
-elaborately-carved figure-head, representing a brazen-faced beauty baring
-her breast boastfully to the breeze, was less a triumph of design and
-carpentering, of beams, and blocks, and yarn, and varnish, and tar, than
-a metaphorical mistress, to be cajoled, commanded, humoured, trusted,
-above all, admired. He spoke of her as possessing affections, caprices,
-impulses, and self-will. When she answered her helm steadily, and made
-good weather of it, in a stiff breeze and a heavy sea, she was “behaving
-admirably”—“she liked the job”—“a man had only to trust her, and give her
-a new coat of paint now and then, she’d never fail him—not she!” While,
-on the other hand, she might dive and plunge, and dip her boltsprit in
-the brine, shipping seas that swept her decks fore and aft, and she was
-“only a trifle saucy, the beauty! Carried a weather-helm like the rest of
-her sex, and must be humoured a bit, till she came round!”
-
-As was the skipper, so were the crew. All these different natures, men
-of various nations, dispositions, and characters, were equally childlike
-in their infatuation about ‘The Bashful Maid.’ The densest of them had
-imagination enough to invest her with a thousand romantic qualities; even
-the negro would have furiously resented a word in her disparagement—nay,
-the three newly-shipped Jacks themselves, men of weighty authority
-in such matters, caught the infection, and were ready to swear by the
-brigantine, while it was yet so dark they could scarcely see whether she
-was a three-masted merchantman or a King’s cutter.
-
-But when the breeze freshened towards sunrise, and the tide was once
-more on the turn, the regard thus freely accorded to their ship was
-largely shared by their new shipmate. Beaudésir, passing forward in the
-grey light of morning, truth to tell moved only by the restlessness of
-a man not yet accustomed to perpetual motion, accompanied by the odours
-of bilge-water and tar, was greeted with admiring glances and kind
-words from all alike. Dutchman, Swede, Spaniard, vied with each other
-in expressions of good-will. Slap-Jack was still below, swaddled in
-blankets, but his two comrades had tumbled up with the first streaks of
-dawn, and were loud in their praises, Bottle-Jack vowing Captain Kidd
-would have made him first-lieutenant on the spot for such a feat, and
-Smoke-Jack, with more sincerity than politeness, declaring “he couldn’t
-have believed it of a Frenchman!” Nay, the very negro, showing all his
-teeth as if he longed to eat him, embarked on an elaborate oration in
-his honour, couched partly in his native language as spoken on the
-Gold Coast, partly in a dialect he believed to be English, obscured by
-metaphor, though sublime doubtless in conception, and prematurely cut
-short by the shrill whistle of the boatswain, warning all hands without
-delay to their quarters.
-
-It was an enlivening sight, possessing considerable attractions for
-such a temperament as Beaudésir’s. The clear gap of morning low down on
-the horizon was widening and spreading every moment over the sky; the
-breeze, cold and bracing, not yet tempered by the coming sun, freshened
-sensibly off shore, driving out to sea a grand procession of dark rolling
-clouds, moving steadily and continuously westward before the day. The
-lighthouse off the harbour showed like a column of chalk against the dull
-background of this embankment, vanishing so imperceptibly into light;
-while to landward, far beyond the low level line of coast, a faint quiver
-of purple already mingled with the dim grey outline of the smooth and
-swelling downs.
-
-In harbour, human life had not yet woke up, but the white sea-birds
-were soaring and dipping, and wheeling joyously on the wing. The breeze
-whistled through the tackle, the waves leaped and lashed merrily against
-her sides, and the crew of the brigantine took their places, clean, well
-dressed, brown-faced, and bare-footed, on her deck. While the boatswain,
-who from sheer habit cast an eye continually aloft, observed her truck
-catch the first gleams of the morning sun, Captain George, carefully
-attired, issued from his cabin with a telescope under his arm, and made
-his first and last oration to the crew.
-
-“My lads!” said he, “I’ve beat to quarters, this fine morning, before
-I get my anchor up, because I want to say a few words to you, and the
-sooner we understand each other the better! You’ve heard I’m a soldier.
-So I am! That’s right enough; but, mark, you! I dipped my hand in the
-tar-bucket before I was old enough to carry a sword; so don’t you ever
-think to come over me with skulking, for I’ve seen that game played out
-before. Mind you, I don’t believe I’ve got a skulker on board; if I have,
-let him step forward and show himself. Over the side he goes, and I sail
-without him! Now, my lads, I know _my_ duty and I know _yours_. I’ll
-take care both are done. I’ll have no grumbling and no quarrelling. If
-any man has a complaint to make, let him come to me, and out with it.
-A quarrelsome chap with his messmates is generally a shy cock when you
-put him down to fight. I’ll have man-of-war’s discipline aboard. You all
-know what that is, and those that don’t like it must lump it. Last night
-there were three of you tried to take French leave and to steal my boat;
-I stopped that game with a little friend I keep in my belt. Look ye, my
-sons, next bout I’ll cover the _man_ instead of the tackle! I know who
-they are, well enough, but I mean to forget as soon as ever the anchor’s
-up. I’ll have a clean bill of health to take out into blue water. Now,
-my lads, attend to me! We’ve a long cruise before us, but we’ve a craft
-well-provisioned, well-found, and, I heartily believe, well-manned.
-Whatever prizes we take, whatever profit we make on the cargo, from
-skipper to ship’s boy, every one shall have his share according to the
-articles hung up in my cabin. We _may_ have to fight, and we may _not_;
-it’s the last job you’re likely to shirk; but mind this—_one_ skipper’s
-enough for _one_ ship. I’ll have no _lawyer_ sail with _me_, and no
-opinions ‘whether or no’ before the mast. If you think of disobeying
-orders, just remember it’s a short walk from my berth to the powder-room,
-and the clink of a flint will square all accounts between captain and
-crew. If I’m not to be skipper, nobody else shall, and what I say I mean.
-Lastly, no man is to get drunk except in port. And now, my lads, here’s a
-fair wind, and a following tide! Before we get the fiddle up for a ‘Stamp
-and go, cheerily ho!’ we’ll give three cheers for ‘The Bashful Maid,’ and
-then shake out every rag of canvas and make a good run while the breeze
-holds!”
-
-The men cheered with a will. The Captain’s notions of sea-oratory were
-founded on a knowledge of his audience, and answered his purpose better
-than the most finished style of rhetoric. As the shouting died out, a
-strong voice was heard, demanding “one cheer more for the skipper.” It
-was given enthusiastically—Slap-Jack, who had sneaked on deck with his
-head bandaged, having taken this sailor-like method of showing he bore no
-malice for a ducking, and was indeed only desirous that his late prank
-should be overlooked. Nevertheless, in the hurry and confusion of getting
-the anchor up, he contrived to place himself at Beaudésir’s side and to
-grasp him cordially by the hand.
-
-“You _be_ a good chap,” said this honest seaman, with a touch of feeling
-that he hid under an affectation of exceeding roughness; “as good a chap
-as ever broke a biscuit! Look ye, mate; my name’s Slap-Jack; so long as I
-can show my number, when anything’s up, you sings out ‘Slap-Jack!’ and if
-I don’t answer ‘Slap-Jack _it is_!’ why―”
-
-The imprecation with which this peculiar acknowledgment concluded did
-not render it one whit more intelligible to Beaudésir, who gathered
-enough, however, from the speaker’s vehemence to feel that he had made at
-least one stanch friend among the crew. By the time he had realised this
-consoling fact, the brigantine’s head, released from the restraint of
-her cable, swung round to leeward, her strong new sails filled steadily
-with the breeze, and while the ripple gurgled louder and louder round
-her bows, already tossing and plunging through the increasing swell,
-the quay, the lighthouse, the long low spit of land, the town, the
-downs themselves seemed to glide quietly away; and Beaudésir, despite
-the beauty of the scene and the excitement of his position, became
-uncomfortably conscious of a strange desire to retire into a corner, lay
-himself down at full length, and die, if need be, unobserved.
-
-A waft of savoury odours from the cook’s galley, where the men’s
-breakfasts were prepared, did nothing towards allaying this untimely
-despondency, and after a short struggle he yielded, as people always do
-yield in such cases, and staggering into the cabin, pillowed his head on
-a couch, and gave himself over to despair.
-
-Ere he raised it again ‘The Bashful Maid,’ making an excellent run down
-Channel in a south-westerly course, was already a dozen leagues out at
-sea.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-‘THE BASHFUL MAID’
-
-
-If Captain George kept a log, as is probable, or Eugène Beaudésir
-a diary, as is possible, I have no intention of copying it. In the
-history of individuals, as of nations, the exception is Stir, the rule
-Stagnation. There are long links in the Silver Cord, smooth, polished,
-uniform, one exactly like the other, ere its sameness is varied by the
-carving of a boss or the flash of a gem. It is only here and there that
-life-like figures and spirit-stirring scenes start from the dead surface
-of the Golden Bowl. Perhaps, when both are broken, neither brilliancy nor
-workmanship, but sterling worth of metal, shall constitute the true value
-of each.
-
-‘The Bashful Maid’ found her share of favouring winds and baffling
-breezes; trim and weatherly, she made the best of them all. Her crew,
-as they gained confidence in their skipper and became well acquainted
-amongst themselves, worked her to perfection. In squally weather, she
-had the great advantage of being over-manned, and could therefore carry
-the broadest surface of canvas it was possible to show. After a few
-stormy nights all shook into their places, and every man found himself
-told off to the duty he was best able to perform. The late Captain of
-Musketeers had the knack of selecting men, and of making them obey him.
-His last-joined hands were perhaps the best of his whole ship’s company.
-Bottle-Jack became boatswain’s mate, Smoke-Jack gunner, and Slap-jack
-captain of the foretop. These three were still fast friends and sworn
-adherents of Beaudésir. The latter, though he had no ostensible rank or
-office, seemed, next to the skipper himself, the most influential and
-the most useful person on board. He soon picked up enough knowledge of
-navigation to bring his mathematical acquirements into play. He kept the
-accounts of stores and cargo. He possessed a slight knowledge of medicine
-and surgery. He played the violin with a taste and feeling that enchanted
-the Spaniard, his only rival in this accomplishment, and caused many a
-stout heart to thrill with unaccustomed thoughts of green nooks and leafy
-copses, of laughing children and cottage-gardens, and summer evenings at
-home; lastly, the three Jacks, his fast friends, found him an apt pupil
-in lessons relating to sheets and tacks, blocks and braces, yards and
-spars, in fine, all the practical mysteries of seamanship.
-
-During stirring times, such as the first half of the eighteenth century,
-a brigantine like ‘The Bashful Maid,’ well-armed, well-manned, commanded
-by a young adventurous captain having letters of marque in his cabin,
-and no certain knowledge that peace had yet been proclaimed with Spain,
-was not likely long to preserve her sails unbleached by use nor the
-paint and varnish undimmed on her hull. Not many months elapsed ere she
-was very different in appearance from the yacht-like craft that ran
-past the Needles, carrying Eugène Beaudésir prone and helpless as a
-log in her after-cabin. He could scarcely believe himself the same man
-when, bronzed, robust, and vigorous, feeling every inch a sailor, he
-paced her deck under the glowing stars and the mellow moonlight of the
-tropics. Gales had been weathered since then, shots fired, prizes taken,
-and that career of adventure embarked on which possesses so strange
-a fascination for the majority of mankind, partly, I think, from its
-permanent uncertainty, partly from its pandering to their self-esteem. A
-few more swoops, another prize or two taken, pillaged, but suffered to
-proceed if not worth towing into port, and the cruise would have been
-so successful, that already the men were calculating their share of
-profit and talking as if their eventual return to Britain was no longer
-a wild impossibility. Everything, too, had as yet been done according to
-fair usage of war. No piracy, no cruelty, nothing that could justify a
-British three-decker in capturing the brigantine, to impress her crew
-and hang her captain at his own yard-arm. Eugène’s counsels had so far
-prevailed with George that he had resolved on confining himself to the
-legitimate profits of a privateer, and not overstepping the narrow line
-of demarcation that distinguished him from a pirate.
-
-While, however, some of her crew had been killed and some wounded,
-‘The Bashful Maid’ herself had by no means emerged scatheless from her
-encounters. Eugène was foolish enough to experience a thrill of pride
-while he marked the grim holes, planked and caulked, in her sides;
-the workmanlike splicing of such yards and spars as had not suffered
-too severely for repair, and the carefully-mended foresail, now white
-and weather-bleached, save where the breadths of darker, newer canvas
-betrayed it had been riddled by round-shot.
-
-But soon his impressionable temperament, catching the influence of the
-hour, threw off its warlike thoughts and abandoned itself to those
-gentler associations that could hardly fail to be in the ascendant.
-
-The night was such as is only to be seen in the tropics. Above, like
-golden lamps, the stars were flaming rather than twinkling in the sky;
-while low down on the horizon a broad moon, rising from the sea, spread a
-lustrous path along the gently-heaving waves to the very ship’s side; a
-path on which myriads of glittering fairies seem to dance and revel, and
-disappear in changing sparkles of light.
-
-Through all this blaze of beauty, the brigantine glided smoothly and
-steadily on her course. For several days and nights not a sail had been
-altered, not a rope shifted, before that soft and balmy breeze. The men
-had nothing to do but tell each other interminable yarns and smoke. It
-was the fair side of the medal, the bloom on the fruit, the smooth of the
-profession, this enchanted voyage over an enchanted sea.
-
-Eugène revelled in its charm, but with his enjoyment was mingled that
-quiet melancholy so intimately associated with all beauty in those
-hearts (and how many of them are there!) which treasure up an impossible
-longing, a dream that can never come to pass. It is a morbid sentiment,
-no doubt, which can thus extract from the loveliest scenes of nature,
-and even from the brightest triumphs of art, a strange wild ecstasy of
-pain, possessing a fascination of its own; but it is a sentiment to which
-the most generous and the most noble minds are peculiarly susceptible; a
-sentiment that in itself denotes excessive capability, for the happiness
-denied or withheld. Were it better for them to be of duller spirit and
-coarser fibre, callous to the spur, unequal to the effort? Who knows? I
-think Beaudésir would not willingly have parted with the sensibility from
-which he experienced so much pain, from the memories on which, at moments
-like these, under a moonlit sky, he brooded and dwelt so fondly, yet so
-despondently, to have obtained in exchange the inexhaustible good-humour
-of Slap-Jack or the imperturbable self-command of Captain George.
-
-Immersed in his own thoughts, he did not observe the latter leave his
-cabin, walk from sheer habit to the binnacle in order to satisfy himself
-the brigantine was lying her course, and glance over the side to measure
-her speed through the water, and he started when the Captain placed his
-hand familiarly on his shoulder, and jeered him good-humouredly for his
-preoccupation. These men, whose acquaintance had commenced with important
-benefits conferred and received on both sides, were now thrown together
-by circumstances which brought out the finer qualities of both. They had
-learned thoroughly to depend on each other, and had become fast friends.
-Perhaps their strongest link was the dissimilarity of their characters.
-To Beaudésir’s romantic and impressionable temperament there had been,
-from the first, something very imposing in the vigorous and manly nature
-of Captain George, and the influence of the latter became stronger day by
-day, when he proved himself as calm, courageous, and capable on the deck
-of a privateer as he had appeared in his quarters at Paris, commanding a
-company of the Royal Guards.
-
-For George, again, with his frank, soldier-like manner and somewhat
-abrupt address, which seemed impatient of anything like delicacy or
-over-refinement, there was, nevertheless, an unspeakable charm in his
-friend’s half-languid, half-fiery, and wholly romantic disposition,
-redeemed by a courage no danger could shake, and an address with his
-weapons few men could withstand. The Captain was not demonstrative, far
-from it, and would have been ashamed to confess how much he valued the
-society of that pale, studious, effeminate youth, in looks, in manner,
-in simplicity of thought so much younger than his actual years; who was
-so often lost in vague day-dreams, and loved to follow up such wild and
-speculative trains of thought; but who could point the brigantine’s
-bow-chasers more accurately than the gunner himself; who had learned how
-to hand, reef, and steer before he had been six weeks on board.
-
-Their alliance was the natural consequence of companionship between two
-natures of the same material, so to speak, but of different fabric. Their
-respective intellects represented the masculine and feminine types. Each
-supplying that which the other wanted, they amalgamated accordingly.
-Beaudésir looked up to the Musketeer as his ideal of perfection in
-manhood; Captain George loved Eugène as a brother, and trusted him
-without reserve.
-
-It was pleasant after the turmoil and excitement of the last few weeks
-to walk the deck in that balmy region under a serene and moonlit
-sky, letting their thoughts wander freely to scenes so different
-on far-distant shores, while they talked of France, and Paris, and
-Versailles, and a thousand topics all connected with dry land. But
-Eugène, though he listened with interest, and never seemed tired of
-confidences relating to his companion’s own family and previous life,
-frankly and freely imparted, refrained from such confessions in return,
-and George was still as ignorant of his friend’s antecedents as on that
-memorable day when the pale, dark youth accompanied Bras-de-Fer to their
-Captain’s quarters, to be entered on the roll of the Grey Musketeers,
-after running poor Flanconnade through the body. That they had once
-belonged to this famous _corps d’élite_ neither of them seemed likely
-to forget. Its merits and its services formed the one staple subject
-of discourse when all else failed. As in his quarters at Paris he had
-kept the model of a similar brigantine for his own private solace, so
-now, in the cabin of ‘The Bashful Maid,’ the skipper treasured up with
-the greatest care, in a stout sea-chest, a handsome full-dress uniform,
-covered with velvet and embroidery, flaunting with grey ribbons, and
-having a coating of thin paper over its silver lace.
-
-There was one topic of conversation, however, on which these young men
-had never yet embarked, and this is the more surprising, considering
-their age and the habits of those warriors amongst whom they were so
-proud to have been numbered. This forbidden subject was the charm of the
-other sex, and it was perhaps because each felt himself so constituted
-as to be keenly alive to its power that neither ventured an allusion
-to the great influence by which, during the first half of life, men’s
-fortunes, characters, happiness, and eventual destiny, are more or less
-affected. It required a fair breeze, a summer sea, and a moonlight
-night in the tropics to elicit their opinions on such matters, and the
-manly, rough-spoken skipper was the first to broach a theme that had
-been already well-nigh exhausted by the watch on deck—gathered on the
-forecastle in tranquil enjoyment of a cool, serene air and a welcome
-interval of repose.
-
-Old Turenne’s system of tactics had been declared exploded; the Duke of
-Marlborough’s character criticised; Cavalli’s last opera canvassed and
-condemned. Captain George took two turns of the deck in silence, stopped
-short at the taffrail, and looked thoughtfully over the stern—
-
-“What is to be the end of it?” he asked abruptly. “More fighting, of
-course! More prizes, more doubloons, and then? After all, I believe there
-are things to make a man’s life happier than even such a brigantine as
-this.”
-
-“There is heaven on earth, and there is heaven above,” answered the
-other, in his dreamy, half-earnest, half-speculative way; “and some men,
-not always the hardest-hearted nor the most vicious, are to be shut out
-of both. Calvin is a disheartening casuist, but I believe Calvin is
-right!”
-
-“Steady there!” replied George. “Nothing shall make me believe but
-that a brave man can sail what course he will, provided his charts are
-trustworthy and he steers by them. Nothing is _impossible_, Eugène. If I
-had thought that I should have lost heart long ago.”
-
-“And then?” asked Beaudésir, sadly.
-
-“And then,” repeated the Captain, with a shudder, “I might have become a
-brute rather than a man. Do you remember the British schooner we retook
-from those Portuguese rovers, and the _mustee_,[3] who commanded them? I
-tell you I _hate_ to think it possible, and yet I believe a man utterly
-without hope might come to be such a wretch as that!”
-
-“_You_ never would,” said Beaudésir, “and _I_ never should; I _know_ it.
-Even hope may be dispensed with if memory remains. My pity is for those
-who have neither.”
-
-“I could not live without hope,” resumed the Captain, cheerily. “I own I
-do hope most sincerely, at some future time, for a calmer and happier lot
-than this; a lot that would also make the happiness of another; and that
-other so gentle, so trusting, and so true!”
-
-Eugène looked in his face surprised. Then he smiled brightly, and laid
-his hand on his friend’s shoulder.
-
-“It will come!” he exclaimed; “never doubt it for a moment. It will come!
-do you remember what I said to you of my skill in fortune-telling? I
-repeat, success is written in your face. What you really wish and strive
-to attain is as sure to arrive at last as a fair wind in the trades or a
-flood-tide at full moon.”
-
-“I hope so,” returned the Captain; “I believe it. I suppose I am as bold
-as my neighbours, and luckily it never comes across me when there’s
-anything to do; but sometimes my heart fails when I think, if I _should_
-go down and lose my number, how she’ll sit and wonder, poor thing, why I
-never come back!”
-
-“Courage, my Captain!” said Eugène, cheerily, affecting the tone and
-manner of their old corps. “Courage. _En arant! à la Mousquetaire!_ You
-will lose nothing, not even the cargo; we shall return with both pockets
-full of money. You will buy a _château_. There will be a fête at your
-wedding: I shall bring there my violin, and, believe me, I shall rejoice
-in your happiness as if it were my own.”
-
-“She is so young, so beautiful, so gentle,” continued the Captain; “I
-could not bear that her life should be darkened, whatever comes of me.
-If, at last, the great happiness _does_ arrive, Eugène, I shall not
-forget my friend. _Château_ or cottage, you will be welcome with your
-violin. You would admire her as I do; we both think alike on so many
-subjects. So young, so fresh, so beautiful! I wish you could see her. I
-am not sure but that you _have_ seen her. Do you remember the day―?”
-
-What further confidences the skipper was about to impart were here cut
-short by a round of applause from the forecastle, apparently arising
-from some proposal much approved by the whole assemblage. The Captain,
-with his friend, paused to listen. It was a request that Bottle-Jack
-would sing, and seemed not unfavourably received by that veteran. After
-many excuses, and much of a mock modesty to be observed under similar
-conditions in the most refined societies, he took his quid from his
-cheek, and cleared his voice with great pomp ere he embarked on a ditty
-of which the subject conveyed a delicate compliment to the proclivities
-of his friend Smoke-Jack, who had originated the call, and which he sang
-in that flat, monotonous, and dispiriting key, only to be accomplished,
-I firmly believe, by an able seaman in the daily exercise of his
-profession. He designated it “The Real Trinidado,” and it ran as follows:—
-
- “Oh! when I was a lad,
- Says my crusty old dad,
- Says he,—‘Jack! you must stick to the spade, oh!”
- But he grudged me my prog,
- And he grudged me my grog,
- And my pipe of the real Trinidado.
-
- “Says my Syousan to me,—
- ‘Jack, if you goes to sea,
- I’ll be left but a desolate maid, oh!’
- Then I answers her—‘Sue!
- Can’t I come back to you
- When I’m done with the old Trinidado?”
-
- “So to sea we clears out,
- And the ship’s head, no doubt,
- Sou’-west and by sou’ it was laid, oh!
- For the isles of the sun,
- Where there’s fiddlers and fun,
- And no end of the real Trinidado.
-
- “Says our skipper, says he,
- ‘Be she close-hauled or free,
- She’d behave herself in a tornado!’
- So he handles the ship
- With a canful of flip,
- And a pipe of the real Trinidado.
-
- “She’s a weatherly craft,
- Werry wet, fore-and-aft,
- And she rolls like a liquorish jade, oh!
- But she steers werry kind,
- On a course to her mind,
- When she’s bound for the isle Trinidado.
-
- “Soon a sail we espies,
- Says the skipper—‘My eyes!
- That’s the stuff for us lads of the trade, oh!
- Bales of silk in his hold,
- Casks of rum—maybe gold—
- Not forgetting the real Trinidado!’
-
- “Then it’s ‘Stand by! My sons!
- Steady! Run out your guns—
- We’ve the Don’s weather-gage. Who’s afraid, oh!’
- So we takes him aback,
- He is ours in a crack,
- And we scuttles him off Trinidado!
-
- “Now, here’s to the crew!
- And the skipper! and Sue!
- And here’s ‘Luck to the boys of the blade, oh!
- May they ne’er want a glass,
- A fair wind, a fair lass!
- Nor a pipe of the real Trinidado!’”
-
-The applause elicited by this effort was loud and long. Ere it subsided,
-George looked more than once anxiously to windward. Then he went to his
-cabin and consulted the barometer, after which he reappeared on deck and
-whispered in Eugène’s ear—
-
-“I am going to caulk it for an hour or two. Hold on, unless there’s any
-change in the weather, and be sure you come below and rouse me out at
-eight bells.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-DIRTY WEATHER
-
-
-At eight bells the Captain came on deck again, glancing once more
-somewhat anxiously astern. Not a cloud was to be seen in the moonlit sky,
-and the breeze that had blown so steadily, though so softly, for weeks,
-was sinking gradually, dying out, as it were, in a succession of gentle,
-peaceful sighs. Eugène, with the weather-wisdom of a man who had been but
-a few months at sea, rather inclined to think they might be becalmed.
-The crew did not trouble themselves about the matter. Every rag the
-brigantine could show was already set, and if a sail flapped idly against
-the mast, it soon drew again as before, to propel them smoothly on their
-course.
-
-Moreover, a topic had been lately broached on the forecastle, of
-engrossing interest to every man before the mast. It affected no less
-delicate a subject than the beauty of ‘The Bashful Maid’ herself, as
-typified by her figure-head. This work of art had unfortunately suffered
-a slight defacement in one of their late exploits, nearly the whole of
-its nose having been carried away by an untoward musket-shot. Such a
-loss had been replaced forthwith by the ship’s carpenter, who supplied
-his idol with a far straighter, severer, and more classical feature
-than was ever yet beheld on the human countenance. Its proportions were
-proclaimed perfect by the whole crew; but though the artist’s execution
-was universally approved, his florid style of colouring originated many
-conflicting opinions and much loud discussion on the first principles of
-imitative art. The carpenter was a man of decided ideas, and made large
-use of a certain red paint nearly approaching vermilion in his flesh
-tints. ‘The Bashful Maid’s’ nose, therefore, bloomed with a hue as rosy
-as her cheeks, and these, until toned down by wind and weather, had been
-an honest scarlet. None of the critics ventured to dispute the position
-that the carpenter’s theory was sound. Slap-Jack, indeed, with a lively
-recollection of her wan face when he took leave of his Alice, suggested
-that for his part he liked them “a little less gaudy about the gills”;
-but this heresy was ignominiously coughed down at once. It was merely a
-question as to whether the paint was, or was not, laid on a trifle too
-thick, and each man argued according to his own experience of the real
-human subject.
-
-All the older hands (particularly Bottle-Jack, who protested vehemently
-that the figure-head of ‘The Bashful Maid,’ so far from being a
-representation of feminine beauty, was in fact an elevated ideal of that
-seductive quality, a very model to be imitated, though hardly possible
-to be approached) were in favour of red noses, as adding warmth and
-expression to the female face. Their wives, their sweethearts, their
-sisters, their mothers, their grandmothers, all had red noses, and were
-careful to keep up the colouring by the use of comforting stimulants.
-
-“What,” said the principal speaker, “was the pints of a figur’-head, as
-laid down in the song? and no man on this deck was a-goin’ to set up his
-opinion again _that_, he should think! Wasn’t ’em this here?—
-
- ‘Eyes as black as sloes,
- Cheeks like any rose.’
-
-And if the song was played out further, which it might or it might _not_,
-d’ye see, wouldn’t the poet have naturally added—
-
- ‘With a corresponding nose?’”
-
-It was a telling argument, and although two or three of the foretopmen,
-smart young fellows, whose sweethearts had not yet taken to drinking,
-seemed disinclined to side with Slap-Jack, it insured a triumphant
-majority, which ought to have set the question at rest, even without the
-conclusive opinion delivered by the negro.
-
-“Snowball,” said Bottle-Jack, “you’ve not told us _your_ taste. Now
-you’re impartial, you are, a-cause you can’t belong to either side. What
-say ye, man? Red or white? Sing out and hoist your ensign!”
-
-The black nodded, grinned, and voted—
-
-“Iss! berry well,” said he; “I like ’em white berry well; like ’em red
-berry better!”
-
-At this interesting juncture the men were a good deal surprised by an
-order from the Captain to “turn all hands up and shorten sail.” They
-rose from the deck, wondering and grumbling. Two or three, who had been
-sleeping below, came tumbling up with astonished faces and less willing
-steps than usual. All seemed more or less discontented, and muttered to
-each other that “the skipper must be mad to shorten sail at midnight with
-a bright moon, and in a light breeze, falling every moment to a calm!”
-
-They went about the job somewhat unwillingly, and indeed were so much
-less ready than usual as to draw a good deal of animadversion from the
-deck. Something in this style—
-
-“Now, my lads, bear a hand, and look smart. Foretop there! What are you
-about with that foretopsail? Lower away on your after-haulyards! Easy!
-Hoist on those forehaulyards, ye lubbers! Away with it, men! Altogether,
-and _with a will_! Why, you are going to sleep over it! I’d have done it
-smarter with the crew of a collier!”
-
-To all such remonstrances, it is needless to say, the well-disciplined
-Slap-Jack made no reply; only once, finding a moment to look to windward
-from his elevated position as captain of the foretop, and observing a
-white mist-like scud low down on the horizon, he whispered quietly to his
-mate, then busied himself with a reef-knot—
-
-“Blowed if he bain’t right, arter all, Jem! We’ll be under courses afore
-the sun’s up. If we don’t strike topmasts, they’ll be struck for us, I
-shouldn’t wonder. I see _him_ once afore,” explained Slap-Jack, jerking
-his head in the direction of the coming squall; “and he’s a snorter,
-mate, that’s about wot _he_ is!”
-
-The Captain’s precautions were not taken too soon. The topsails were
-hardly close reefed, all the canvas not absolutely required to steer
-the brigantine had been hardly taken in, ere the sky was darkened as if
-the moon had been suddenly snuffed out, and the squall was upon them.
-‘The Bashful Maid’ lay over, gunwale under, driving fiercely through
-the seething water, which had not yet risen to the heavy sea that was
-too surely coming. She plunged, she dived, she strained, she quivered
-like some living thing striving earnestly and patiently for its life.
-The rain hissed down in sheets, the lightning lit up the slippery deck,
-the dripping pale-faced men, the bending spars, the straining tackle,
-and the few feet of canvas that must be carried at any price. In the
-quick-succeeding flashes every man on board could see that the others
-did their duty. From the Captain, holding on by one hand, composed and
-cheerful, with his speaking-trumpet in the other, to the ship’s boy,
-with his little bare feet and curling yellow hair, there was not a
-skulker amongst them! They remembered it long afterwards with honest
-pride, and ‘The Bashful Maid’ behaved beautifully! Yes, in defiance of
-the tempestuous squall, blowing as it seemed from all points of the
-compass at once; in defiance of crackling lightning, and thunder crashing
-overhead ere it rolled away all round the horizon, reverberating over
-the ocean for miles; in defiance of black darkness and lurid gleams, and
-drenching rain, and the cruel raging sea rising every moment and running
-like a mill-race, Captain and crew were alike confident they would
-weather it. And they did.
-
-But it was a sadly worn, and strained, and shattered craft that lay upon
-the fast subsiding water, some six hours after the squall, under the
-glowing sun of a morning in the tropics; a sun that glinted on the sea
-till its heaving surface looked all one sheet of burnished gold; a sun
-that was truly comforting to the drenched and wearied crew, although
-its glare exposed pitilessly the whole amount of damage the brigantine
-had sustained. That poor ‘Bashful Maid’ was as different now from the
-trim yacht-like craft that sailed past the Needles, gaudy with paint
-and gleaming with varnish, as is the dead seabird, lying helpless and
-draggled on the wave, from the same creature soaring white and beautiful,
-in all its pride of power and plumage, against the summer sky.
-
-There was but one opinion, however, amongst the crew as to the merits of
-the craft, and the way she had been handled. Not one of them, and it was
-a great acknowledgment for sailors to make, who never think their present
-berth the best—not one of them had ever before sailed in any description
-of vessel which answered her helm so readily or could lay her head so
-near the wind’s eye—not one of them had ever seen a furious tropical
-squall weathered so scientifically and so successfully, nor could call to
-mind a captain who seemed so completely master of his trade. The three
-Jacks compared notes on the subject before turning in about sunrise, when
-the worst was indeed over, but the situation, to a landsman at least,
-would have yet appeared sufficiently precarious: The brigantine was still
-driving before a heavy sea, showing just so much canvas as should save
-her from being becalmed in its trough, overtaken and buried under the
-pursuing enemy. The gale was still blowing with a fury that offered the
-best chance of its force soon becoming exhausted, and two men were at the
-helm under the immediate supervision of the skipper himself.
-
-Nevertheless, the three stout tars betook themselves to their berth
-without the slightest anxiety, well aware that each would be sleeping
-like a child almost before he could clamber into his hammock.
-
-But while he took off and wrung his dripping sea-coat, Bottle-Jack
-observed sententiously to his mates—
-
-“Captain Kidd could fight a ship, my sons, and Captain Kidd could sail
-a ship. Now if you asks my opinion, it’s this here—In such a squall as
-we’ve a-weathered, or pretty nigh a-weathered, Captain Kidd, he’d a-run
-afore it at once, an’ he’d a bin in it now. This here young skipper, he
-laid to, so long as she _could_ lay to, an’ he never run till he couldn’t
-fight no more. That’s why he’ll be out on it afore the middle watch.
-Belay now, I’m a-goin’ to caulk it for a spell.”
-
-Neither Smoke-Jack nor Slap-Jack were in a humour for discussion, and
-each cheerfully conceded the Captain’s judicious seamanship. The former
-expressing his opinion that nothing in the King’s navy could touch
-the brigantine, and the latter, recurring to his previous experience,
-rejoicing that he no longer sailed under the gallant but unseamanlike
-Captain Delaval.
-
-The honest fellows, thoroughly wearied, were soon in the land of
-dreams. Haunted no more by visions of dancing spars, wet slippery ropes,
-yards dripping in the waves, and flapping sails struggling wildly for
-the freedom that must be their own destruction, and the whole ship’s
-company’s doom. No, their thoughts were of warm sanded parlours, cheerful
-coal-fires, endless pipes of tobacco, messmates singing, women dancing,
-the unrestrained festivities and flowing ale-jugs of the Fox and Fiddle.
-Perhaps, to the imagination of the youngest, a fair pale face, loving and
-tearful, stood out from all these jovial surroundings, and Slap-Jack felt
-a purer and a better man while, though but in imagination, he clasped his
-true and tender Alice to his heart once more.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
-PORT WELCOME
-
-
-It was a refreshing sight to behold Slap-Jack, “rigged,” as he was
-pleased to term it, “to the nines,” in the extreme of sea-dandyism,
-enacting the favourite part of a “liberty-man” ashore.
-
-Nothing had been left undone for the brilliancy of his exterior that
-could be achieved by scrubbing, white linen, and robust health. The smart
-young captain of the foretop seemed to glow and sparkle in the vertical
-sun, as he stood on the quay of Port Welcome, and cast a final glance of
-professional approval on the yards he had lately squared to a nicety and
-the trim of such gear and tackle aloft as seemed his own especial pride
-and care.
-
-‘The Bashful Maid,’ after all the buffetings she had sustained,
-particularly from the late squall, having made her port in one of the
-smallest and most beautiful of the West India islands, now lay at anchor,
-fair and motionless, like a living thing sleeping on the glistening sea.
-It yet wanted some hours of noon, nevertheless the sun had attained a
-power that seemed to bake the very stones on the quay, and warmed the
-clear limpid water fathom deep. Even Slap-Jack protested against the
-heat, as he lounged and rolled into the town, to find it swarming with
-negroes of both sexes, sparingly clothed, but with such garments as they
-did wear glowing in the gaudiest colours, and carrying on their hard,
-woolly heads baskets containing eggs, kids, poultry, fruit, vegetables,
-and every kind of market produce in the island. That island was indeed
-one of those jewels of the Caribbean Sea to which no description can do
-justice.
-
-For the men left on board ‘The Bashful Maid,’ now heaving drowsily
-at her anchor, it realised, with its vivid and varied hues, its
-fantastic outlines, its massive brakes, its feathery palms, its
-luxuriant redundancy of vegetation, trailing and drooping to the
-sparkling water’s-edge, a sailor’s idea of Paradise; while for the
-three Jacks rolling into the little town of Port Welcome, with its
-white houses, straggling streets, frequent drinking-shops, and swarming
-population—black, white, and coloured, it represented the desirable haven
-of Fiddler’s Green, where they felt, no doubt, they had arrived before
-their time. Slap-Jack made a remark to that effect, which was cordially
-endorsed by his comrades as they turned into the main thoroughfare of the
-town, and agreed that, in order to enjoy their holiday to the utmost, it
-was essential to commence with something to drink all round.
-
-Now, ‘The Bashful Maid’ having been already a few days in port, had in
-that time disposed of a considerable portion of her cargo, and such an
-event as the arrival of a saucy brigantine, combining the attractions of
-a man-of-war with the advantages of a free-trader, not being an every-day
-occurrence among the population of Port Welcome, much stir, excitement,
-and increase of business was the result. The French storekeepers bid
-eagerly for wares of European manufacture, the French planters sent their
-slaves down in dozens to purchase luxuries only attainable from beyond
-sea, while the negroes, grinning from ear to ear, jostled and scolded
-each other in their desire to barter yams, plantains, fruit, poultry, and
-even, on occasion, pieces of actual money, for scarfs, gloves, perfumes,
-and ornaments—the tawdrier the better, which they thought might add to
-the gloss of their black skins, and set off their quaint, honest, ugly,
-black faces to advantage.
-
-Here and there, too, a Carib, one of the aboriginal lords of the island,
-distinguished by his bronze colour, his grave demeanour—so unlike the
-African, and his disfigured nose, artificially flattened from infancy,
-would stalk solemnly away, rich in the possession of a few glass beads
-or a bit of tinsel, for which he had bartered all his worldly wealth,
-and which, like more civilised people, he valued, not at its intrinsic
-worth, but at its cost price. The three Jacks observed the novelties
-which surrounded them from different points of view according to
-their different characters, yet with a cool imperturbable demeanour
-essentially professional. To men of their calling, nothing ever appears
-extraordinary. They see so many strange sights in different countries,
-and have so little time to become acquainted with the wonders they
-behold, that they soon acquire a profound and philosophical indifference
-to everything beyond their ordinary range of experience, persuaded
-that the astonishment of to-day is pretty sure to be exceeded by the
-astonishment of to-morrow. Neither can they easily discover anything
-perfectly and entirely new, having usually witnessed something of the
-same kind before, or heard it circumstantially described at considerable
-length by a messmate; so that a seaman is but little impressed with the
-sight of a foreign town, of which, indeed, he acquires in an hour or two
-a knowledge not much more superficial than he has of his native village.
-
-Bottle-Jack was in the habit of giving his opinion, as he expressed it,
-“free.” That it was complimentary to Port Welcome, his comrades gathered
-from the following sentiment:—
-
-“I’m a gettin’ strained and weatherworn,” observed the old seaman,
-impressively, “and uncommon dry besides. Tell ye what it is, mates—one
-more cruise, and blowed if I won’t just drop my anchor here, and ride out
-the rest of my time all snug at my moorings.”
-
-Smoke-Jack turned his quid with an expression of intense disgust.
-
-“And get spliced to a nigger, old man!” said he, argumentatively. “Never
-go for to say it! I’m not a-goin’ to dispute as this here’s a tidy bit of
-a island enough, and safe anchorage. Likewise, as I’ve been told by them
-as tried it, plenty to drink, and good. Nor I won’t say but what a craft
-might put in here for a spell to refit, do a bit of caulking, and what
-not. But for dry-dock, mate, never go for to say it. Why you couldn’t get
-anything like a decent missis, man, hereaway; an’ think o’ the price o’
-beer!”
-
-“Regardin’ a missis,” returned the other, reflectively, “’tain’t the
-craft wot crowds the most canvas as makes the best weather, mate, and at
-my years a man looks less to raking masts an’ a gay figur’-head than to
-good tonnage and wholesome breadth of beam. Now, look ye here, mates—wot
-say ye to this here craft?—her with the red ensign at the main, as is
-layin’ to, like, with her fore-sheet to windward and her helm one turn
-down?”
-
-While he spoke, he pointed to our old acquaintance, Célandine, who was
-cheapening fancy articles at a store that spread its goods out under an
-awning far into the middle of the modest street. The Quadroon was, as
-usual, gorgeously dressed, wearing the scarlet turban that covered her
-still black hair majestically, as a queen carries her diadem. Like the
-coloured race in general, she seemed to have renewed her youth under
-a tropical sun, and at a short distance, particularly in the eyes of
-Bottle-Jack, appeared a fine-looking woman, with pretensions to the
-remains of beauty still.
-
-The three seamen, of course, ranged up alongside for careful criticism,
-but Célandine’s attention was by no means to be distracted from the
-delightful business of shopping she had on hand. Shawls, scarfs, fans,
-gloves, tawdry jewels, and perfumery, lay heaped in dazzling profusion
-on a shelf before her, and the African blood danced in her veins with
-childish glee at the tempting sight. The storekeeper, a French Creole,
-with sharp features, sallow complexion, and restless, down-looking black
-eyes, taking advantage of her eagerness, asked three times its value
-for every article he pointed out; but Célandine, though profuse, was
-not inexperienced, and dearly loved, moreover, the feminine amusement
-of driving a bargain. Much expostulation therefore, contradiction,
-wrangling, and confusion of tongues was the result.
-
-The encounter seemed at the warmest, and the French Creole,
-notwithstanding his villainous countenance and unscrupulous assertions,
-was decidedly getting the worst of it, when Slap-Jack’s quick eye
-detected amongst the wares exposed for sale certain silks and other
-stuffs which had formed part of ‘The Bashful Maid’s’ cargo, and had,
-indeed, been wrested by the strong hand from a Portuguese trader, after
-a brisk chase and a running fight, which cost the brigantine a portion
-of her boltsprit and two of her smartest hands. The chest containing
-these articles had been started in unloading, so that its contents had
-sustained much damage from sea-water. It was a breadth of stained satin
-out of this very consignment that the Creole storekeeper now endeavoured
-to persuade Célandine she would do well to purchase at an exorbitant
-valuation.
-
-Slap-Jack, like many of his calling, had picked up a smattering of
-negro-French, and could understand the subject of dispute sufficiently
-to interfere, a course from which he was not to be dissuaded by his less
-impressionable companions.
-
-“Let her be!” growled Smoke-Jack. “Wot call have _you_ now to come
-athwart-hawse of that there jabbering mounseer, as a man might say,
-dredging in his own fishing-ground? It’s no use hailing her, I tell ye,
-mate, I knows the trim on ’em; maybe she’ll lay her foresail aback, and
-stand off-and-on till sundown, then just when a man least expects it,
-she’ll up stick, shake out every rag of canvas, and run for port. Bless
-ye, young _and_ old, fair _and_ foul, black, white, _and_ coloured,
-nigger, quadroon, _and_ mustee—I knows ’em all, and not one on ’em but
-carries a weather-helm in a fresh breeze, and steers wild and wilful in a
-sea-way.”
-
-But Slap-Jack was not to be diverted from his purpose. With considerable
-impudence, and an impressive sea-bow, he walked up to Célandine under
-the eyes of his admiring shipmates, and, mustering the best negro-French
-at his command, warned her in somewhat incomprehensible jargon of the
-imposition intended to be practised. Now it happened that Port Welcome,
-and the island in which it was situated, had been occupied in its
-varying fortunes by French, Spaniards, and English so equally, that
-these languages, much corrupted by negro pronunciation, were spoken
-indiscriminately, and often altogether. It was a great relief, therefore,
-to Slap-Jack that Célandine thanked him politely for his interposition in
-his native tongue, and when she looked into the young foretopman’s comely
-brown face, she found herself so fascinated with something she detected
-there as to continue the conversation in tolerably correct English, for
-the purpose of improving their acquaintance. The seaman congratulated
-himself on having made so happy a discovery, while his friends looked
-on in mute admiration of the celerity with which he had completed his
-conquest.
-
-“He’s a smart chap, mate,” enunciated Bottle-Jack, with a glance of
-intense approval at the two figures receding up the sunny street, as
-Célandine marched their companion off, avowedly for the purpose of
-refreshing him with cooling drinks in return for his good-nature—“a smart
-young chap, and can hold his own with the best of ’em as ever hoisted a
-petticoat, silk or dowlas. See now, that’s the way to do it in these here
-latitudes! First he hails ’em, speaking up like a man, then he ranges
-alongside, and gets the grapplers out, and so tows his prize into port
-in a pig’s whisper. He’s a smart young chap, I tell ye, and a match for
-the sauciest craft as ever sailed under false colours, and hoisted a red
-pennant at the main.”
-
-But Smoke-Jack shook his head, and led his shipmate, nothing loth, into
-a tempting store-house, redolent with the fragrance of limes, tobacco,
-decaying melons, and Jamaica rum. He said nothing, however, until he
-had quenched his thirst; then after a vigorous pull at a tall beaker,
-filled with a fragrant compound in which neither ice nor alcohol had been
-forgotten, observed, as if the subject still occupied his thoughts—
-
-“I knows the trim on ’em, I tell ye; I knows the trim on ’em. As I says
-to the young chap now, I never found one yet as would steer kind in a
-sea-way.”
-
-Meanwhile, Célandine, moved by an impulse for which she could not
-account, or perhaps dreading to analyse a sentiment that might after
-all be founded on a fallacy, led the young seaman into a cool, quiet
-room in a wooden house, on the shady side of the street, of which
-the apparent mistress was a large bustling negress, with a numerous
-family of jet-black children, swarming and crawling about the floor
-like garden-snails after a shower. This proprietress seemed to hold
-the Quadroon in considerable awe, and was delighted to bring the best
-her house afforded for the entertainment of such visitors. Slap-jack,
-accommodated with a deep measure of iced rum-and-water, lit his pipe,
-played with the children, stared at his black hostess in unmitigated
-astonishment, and prepared himself to answer the questions it was obvious
-the Quadroon was burning to put.
-
-Célandine hovered restlessly about the room, fixing her bright black
-eyes upon the seaman with an eager, inquiring glance, that she withdrew
-hastily when she thought herself observed, and thereby driving into
-a state of abject terror the large sable hostess, whose pity for the
-victim, as she believed him, at last overcame her fear of the Quadroon,
-and impelled her to whisper in Slap-Jack’s ear—
-
-“Obi-woman! _bruxa_,[4] buckra-massa, _bruxa_!
-_Mefiez-vous!—Ojo-malo._[5] No drinkee for drunkee! Look out! _Gare!_” A
-warning utterly incomprehensible to its object, who winked at her calmly
-over his tumbler, while he drank with exceeding relish the friendly
-mother’s health, and that of her thriving black progeny.
-
-There is nothing like a woman’s tact to wind the secrets out of a man’s
-bosom, gradually, insensibly, and by much the same smooth, delicate
-process as the spinning of flax off a distaff. With a few observations
-rather than questions, a few allusions artfully put, Célandine drew from
-Slap-Jack an account of his early years, and an explanation, offered with
-a certain pride, of the manner in which he became a seaman. When he told
-her how he had made his escape while a mere child from his protector,
-whom he described as “the chap wot wanted to bind him ’prentice to a
-sawbones,” he was startled to see the Quadroon’s shining black eyes full
-of tears. He consoled her in his own rough, good-humoured way.
-
-“What odds did it make after all,” argued Slap-Jack, helping himself
-liberally to the rum-and-water, “when I was out of my bed by sunrise and
-down to the waterside to get aboard-ship in the British Channel, hours
-afore he was up, and so Westward-ho! and away? Don’t ye take on about it.
-A sailor I _would_ be, and a sailor I _am_. You ask the skipper if I’m
-not. He knows my rating I should think, and whether I’m worth _my_ salt
-or no. Don’t ye take on so, mother, I say!”
-
-But the Quadroon was weeping without concealment now.
-
-“Call me that again!” she exclaimed, sobbing convulsively. “Call me that
-again! I have not been called mother for so long. Hush!” she added,
-starting up, and laying her hand forcibly on his lips. “Not another
-word. Fool! Idiot that I am! Not another word. She can hear us. She can
-understand;” and Célandine darted a furious glance at the busy negress,
-which caused that poor woman to shake like a jelly down to her misshapen
-black heels.
-
-Slap-Jack felt considerably puzzled. His private opinion, as he
-afterwards confided to his messmates, was, that the old lady not being
-drunk, must be mad—a cheerful view, which was indeed confirmed by what
-occurred immediately afterwards.
-
-In struggling to keep her hand upon his mouth, she had turned back the
-deep, open collar of his blue shirt till his brawny neck was exposed
-nearly to the shoulder. Espying on that neck a certain white mark,
-contrasting with the ruddy weather-browned skin, she gave a half-stifled
-shriek, like that with which a dumb animal expresses its rapture of
-recognition; and taking the man’s head in her arms, pressed it to her
-bosom, rocking herself to and fro, while she wept and murmured over him
-with an inexplicable tenderness, by which he was at once astonished and
-alarmed.
-
-For a few moments, and while the negress’s back was turned, she held him
-tight, but released him when the other re-entered the room, exacting from
-him a solemn promise that he would meet her again at an indicated place,
-and adding that she would then confide to him matters in which, like
-herself, he was deeply interested, but which must be kept religiously
-secret so long as he remained in the island.
-
-Slap-jack, after he had finished his rum-and-water, rejoined his
-comrades, a more thoughtful man than he had left them. To their jests and
-inquiries he returned vague and inconclusive answers, causing Bottle-Jack
-to stare at him in solemn wonder, and affording Smoke-Jack another
-illustration of his theory as to the wilfulness of feminine steerage in a
-sea-way.
-
-Célandine, on the contrary, walked through the town with the jaunty step
-and bright vigilant eye of one who has discovered some treasure that
-must be guarded with a care proportioned to its value. She bought no
-more trinkets from the storekeepers now, she loitered no more to gossip
-with sallow white, or shining negro, or dandy coloured man. At intervals
-her brow indeed clouded over, and the scowl of which it was so capable
-deepened ominously, while she clenched her hands and set her teeth; but
-the frown soon cleared away, and she smiled bright and comely once more.
-
-She had found her boy at last. Her first-born, the image of her first
-love. Her heart warmed to him from the very moment he came near her at
-the store. She was sure of it long before she recognised the mark on his
-neck—the same white mark she had kissed a thousand times, when he danced
-and crowed on her knees. It was joy, it was triumph. But she must be very
-silent, very cautious. If it was hard that a mother might not openly
-claim her son, it would be harder still that such acknowledgment should
-rivet on him the yoke of a slavery to which he was born by that mother,
-herself a slave.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-MONTMIRAIL WEST
-
-
-At a distance of less than a league from Port Welcome stood the large
-and flourishing plantation of _Cash-a-crou_, known to the European
-population, and, indeed, to many of the negroes, by the more civilised
-appellation of Montmirail West. It was the richest and most important
-establishment on the island, covering a large extent of cultivation,
-reclaimed at no small cost of labour from the bush, and worked by a
-numerous gang of slaves. Not a negro was purchased for these grounds till
-he had undergone a close inspection by the shrewd and pitiless overseer,
-who never missed a good investment, be it Coromantee, Guinea-man, or
-Congo, and never bought a hand, of however plausible an appearance, in
-whom his quick eye could detect a flaw; consequently, no such cheerful
-faces, fresh lips, sound teeth, strong necks, open chests, sinewy arms,
-dry, large hands, flat stomachs, powerful loins, round thighs, muscular
-calves, lean ankles, high feet, and similar physical points of servile
-symmetry, were to be found in any other gang as in that which worked the
-wide clearings on the _Cash-a-crou_ estate, which, for convenience, we
-will call by its more civilised name. It was said, however, that in the
-purchase of female negroes this overseer was not so particular; that
-a saucy eye, a nimble tongue, and such an amount of good looks as is
-compatible with African colouring and features, found more favour in his
-judgment than size, strength, substance, vigorous health, or the prolific
-qualities so desirable in these investments. The overseer, indeed, was a
-married man, living, it was thought, in wholesome dread of his Quadroon
-wife, and so completely did he identify himself with the new character
-he had assumed, that even Célandine could hardly believe her present
-husband was the same Stefano Bartoletti who had wooed her unsuccessfully
-in her girlhood, had met her again under such strange circumstances in
-France, eventually to follow her fortunes, and those of her mistress,
-the Marquise, and obtain from the latter the supervision of her negroes
-on the estate she had inherited by her mother’s will, which she chose to
-call Montmirail West.
-
-Bartoletti had intended to settle down for the rest of his life in a
-state of dignified indolence with Célandine. He had even offered to
-purchase the Quadroon’s freedom, which was generously given to her by
-the Marquise with that view; but he had accustomed himself through the
-whole of his early life to the engrossing occupation of money-making,
-and like many others he found it impossible to leave off. He and his
-wife now devoted themselves entirely to the acquisition of wealth; she
-with the object of discovering her long-lost son, he, partly from inborn
-covetousness, and yet more from force of habit. Quick, shrewd, and indeed
-enterprising, where there was no personal risk, he had been but a short
-time in the service of the Marquise ere he became an excellent overseer,
-by no means neglecting her interests, while he was scrupulously attentive
-to his own. The large dealings in human merchandise which now occupied
-his attention afforded scope for his peculiar qualities, and Signor
-Bartoletti found few competitors in the slave-market who, in caution,
-cupidity, and knowledge of business, could pretend to be his equals.
-Moreover, he dearly loved the constant speculation, amounting to actual
-gambling, inseparable from such transactions, nor was he averse, besides,
-to that pleasing sensation of superiority experienced by all but the
-noblest natures from absolute authority, however unjustifiable, over
-their fellow-creatures.
-
-The Signor was a great man in the plantation, a great man in Port
-Welcome, a great man on the deck of a trader just arrived with her
-swarthy cargo from the Bight of Benin or the Gold Coast; but his
-proportions seemed to shrink and his step to falter when he crossed the
-threshold of his own home. The older negroes, who knew he had married
-an Obi-woman, and respected him for his daring, were persuaded that
-he had been quelled and brought into subjection through some charm put
-upon him by Célandine. To the same magical influence they attributed the
-Quadroon’s favour with her mistress, and this superstitious dread had
-indeed been of service to both; for a strong feeling of dissatisfaction
-was gaining ground rapidly amongst the blacks, and then, as now,
-notwithstanding all that has been said and written in their favour, they
-were less easily ruled by love than fear.
-
-It is not that they are naturally savage, inhuman, brutal. Centuries of
-Christianity and cultivation might probably have done for the black man
-what they have done for the white; but those centuries have been denied
-him; and if he is to be taken at once from a state of utter ignorance and
-degradation to be placed on a footing of social equality with those who
-have hitherto been his masters—a race that has passed gradually through
-the successive stages he is expected to compass in one stride—surely it
-must be necessary to restrain him from the excesses peculiar to the lusty
-adolescence of nations, as of individuals, by some stronger repressive
-influence than need be applied to the staid and sober demeanour of a
-people arrived long ago at maturity, if not already past their prime.
-
-Signor Bartoletti did not trouble himself with such speculations.
-Intimidation he found answered his purpose tolerably, corporal punishment
-extremely well.
-
-Passing from the supervision of some five-score hoes, picking their
-labour out with great deliberation amongst the clefts and ridges of a
-half-cleared mountain, clothed to its summit in a tangle of luxuriant
-beauty, he threaded a line of wattled mud cottages, cool with thick
-heavy thatch, dazzling in whitewash, and interspersed with fragrant
-almond-trees, breaking the scorching sunlight into a thousand shimmering
-rays, as they rustled and quivered to the whisper of the land-breeze, not
-yet exhausted by the heat.
-
-At the door of one of these huts he spied a comely negro girl, whose
-duties should have kept her in the kitchen of the great house. He also
-observed that she concealed something bulky under her snowy apron, and
-looked stealthily about as if afraid of being seen.
-
-He had a step noiseless and sure as a cat; she never heard him coming,
-but started with a loud scream when she felt his hand on her shoulder,
-and incontinently began to cry.
-
-“What have you got there, Fleurette?” asked the overseer, sternly. “Bring
-it out at once, and show it up!”
-
-“Nothing, Massa,” answered Fleurette, of course, though she was sobbing
-all the time. “It only Aunt Rosalie’s piccaninny, I take him in please,
-just now, to his mammy, out of the wind.”
-
-There was but such a light breath of air as kept the temperature below
-actual suffocation.
-
-“Wind! nonsense!” exclaimed Bartoletti, perspiring and exasperated. “Aunt
-Rosalie’s child was in the baby-yard half an hour ago; here, let me look
-at him!” and the overseer snatched up Fleurette’s apron to discover a
-pair of plump black hands, clasped over a well-fattened turkey, cleaned,
-plucked, and ready for the pot.
-
-The girl laughed through her tears. “You funny man, Signor!” said she,
-archly, yet with a gleam of alarm in her wild black eyes; “you no believe
-only when you see. Piccaninny gone in wash-tub long since; Fleurette
-talkee trash, trash; dis lilly turkey fed on plantation at Maria
-Gralante; good father give um to Fleurette a-cause dis nigger say ‘Ave’
-right through, and spit so at Mumbo-Jumbo.”
-
-This story was less credible than the last, inasmuch as the adjoining
-plantation of Maria Galante, cultivated by a few Jesuit priests, although
-in a thriving condition, and capable of producing the finest poultry
-reared, was more than an hour’s walk from where they stood, and it
-was impossible that Fleurette could have been absent so long from her
-duties at that period of the day. So Bartoletti, placing his hand in his
-waistcoat, pulled out a certain roll, which the slaves called his “black
-book,” and inserted Fleurette’s name therein for corporal punishment to
-the amount of stripes awarded for the crime of theft.
-
-It was a common action enough; scarce a day passed, scarce even an
-hour, without the production of this black book by the overseer, and a
-torrent of entreaties, couched in the mingled jargon of French, Spanish,
-and British, I have endeavoured to render through the conventional
-negro-English, which, indeed, formed its basis, from the unfortunate
-culprit whose name was thus inscribed; but on this occasion Fleurette
-seemed to entertain a morbid terror of the ordeal quite out of proportion
-to its frequency, and, indeed, its severity—for though sufficiently
-brutal, the lash was not dangerous to life or limb. She screamed, she
-wept, she prayed, she caught the overseer by his knees and clasped them
-to her bosom, entreating him, with a frantic earnestness that became
-almost sublime, to spare her this degradation! to forgive her only this
-once! to bid her work night and day till crop-time, and then to send her
-into the field-gang for the hardest labour they could devise—nay, to sell
-her to the first trader that touched at Port Welcome, never to look on
-her home at _Cash-a-crou_ again—anything, anything, rather than tie her
-to a stake and flog her like a disobedient hound!
-
-But Bartoletti was far too practised an overseer to be in the slightest
-degree moved by such entreaties. Replacing the black book in his
-waistcoat, he walked coolly away, without deigning to look back at his
-despairing suppliant, writhing under such a mixture of grief and shame
-as soon maddened into rage. Perhaps, had he done so, he would have been
-frightened into mercy, for a bolder man than the Italian might have been
-cowed by the glare of that girl’s eyes, when she drew up her slender
-figure, and clenching her hands till the nails pierced them, spat after
-him with an intensity of hatred that wanted only opportunity to slake its
-fierce desire in blood.
-
-The Signor, however, wiping his brow, unconscious, passed quietly on, to
-report his morning’s work to the Marquise, and obtain her sanction for
-Fleurette’s punishment, because the mistress never permitted any slave on
-her estate to be chastised but by her own express command.
-
-Long years ago, when his heart was fresh and high, the Italian had spent
-a few months in this very island, a period to which he still looked back
-as to the one bright ray that gilded his dreary, wandering, selfish life.
-It was here he met Célandine while both were young, and wooed her with
-little encouragement indeed, for she confessed honestly enough that he
-was too late, yet not entirely without hope. And now in gleams between
-the cane-pieces he could catch a glimpse of that silver-spread lagoon
-by which they had walked more than once in the glowing evenings, till
-darkness, closing without warning like a curtain, found them together
-still.
-
-He had conceived for himself then an ideal of Paradise, which had never
-in after years faded completely away. To win the Quadroon for his own—to
-make himself a peaceful home in easy circumstances, somewhere amidst
-this tangled wilderness of beauty from which Port Welcome peeped out on
-the Caribbean Sea—to sit in his own porch and watch the tropical sunset
-dying off through its blended hues of gold, and crimson, and orange, into
-the pale, serene depths of opal, lost ere he could look again, amongst
-the gathering shades of night—such were his dreams, and at last he had
-realised them to the letter; but he never watched the sunset now, nor
-walked by the cool glistening lagoon with the woman whom in his own
-selfish way he had loved for half a lifetime. She was his wife, you see,
-and a very imperious wife she proved. When he had leisure to speculate
-on such matters, which was seldom, he could not but allow that he was
-disappointed; that the ideal was a fallacy, the romance a fiction, the
-investment a failure; practically, the home was dull, the lagoon damp,
-and the sunset moonshine!
-
-Therefore, as he walked on, though the material Paradise was there, as
-it had always been, he never wasted a look or thought on its glowing
-beauties, intent only on the dust that covered his shoes, the thirst
-that fired his throat, and the perspiration that streamed from his brow.
-Yet palm, cocoa, orange, and lime-tree were waving overhead; while the
-wild vine, pink, purple, and delicate creamy-white, winding here about
-his path, ran fifty feet aloft round some bare stem to which it clung in
-a succession of convolvulus-like blossoms from the same plant he trod
-beneath his very feet. Birds of gaudy feather—purple, green, and flaming
-scarlet, flashed from tree to tree with harsh, discordant cries, and a
-_Louis d’or_ flitted round him in its bright, golden plumage, looking, as
-its name implies, like a guinea upon wings.
-
-The grass-grown road he followed was indeed an avenue to the great house,
-and as he neared his destination he passed another glimpse of tropical
-scenery without a glance. It was the same view that delighted the eyes of
-the Marquise daily from her sitting-room, and that Cerise would look at
-in quiet enjoyment for hours.
-
-A slope of vivid green, dotted with almond-trees, stretched away from
-the long, low, white building to a broad, clear river, shining between
-the plantains and bananas that clothed its banks; beyond these, cattle
-pasture and cane-pieces shot upward in variegated stripes through the
-tangled jungle of the steep ascent, while at short intervals hog-plum, or
-other tall trees of the forest, reared their heads against the cloudless
-sky, to break the dark thick mass that clothed the mountain to its very
-summit—save where some open, natural savannah, with its crop of tall,
-rank, feathering grass, relieved the eye from the vivid colouring and
-gaudy exuberance of beauty in which nature dresses these West Indian
-islands.
-
-Bartoletti knew well that he should find the Marquise in her
-sitting-room, for the sun was still high and the heat intense; none
-therefore but slaves, slave-drivers, or overseers would be abroad for
-hours. The Signor had however been reduced to such proper subjection by
-Célandine that he never ventured to approach the Marquise without making
-a previous report to his wife, and as the Quadroon had not yet returned
-from the visit to Port Welcome, in which she made acquaintance with
-Slap-Jack, some considerable delay took place before the enormity of
-Fleurette’s peculations could be communicated to her mistress.
-
-Mother and daughter were inseparable here, in the glowing tropical heat,
-as under the cool breezes and smiling skies of their own beautiful
-France, a land to which they constantly reverted with a longing that
-seemed only to grow more and more intense as every hour of their
-unwelcome banishment dragged by.
-
-They were sitting in a large low room, with the smallest possible amount
-of furniture and the greatest attainable of air. To insure a thorough
-draught, the apartment occupied the whole breadth of the house, and the
-windows, scarcely closed from year’s-end to year’s-end, were placed
-opposite each other, so that there was free ingress on all sides for
-the breeze that, notwithstanding the burning heat of the climate, blows
-pretty regularly in these islands from morning till night and from night
-till morning. It wafted through the whole apartment the fragrance of a
-large granadilla, cut in half for the purpose, that stood surrounded
-by a few shaddocks, limes, and pomegranates, heaped together like a
-_cornucopia_ on a small table in the corner; it fluttered the leaves of
-a book that lay on Mademoiselle de Montmirail’s knee, who was pretending
-to read, with her eyes resting wearily on a streak of blue sea, far off
-between the mountains; and it lifted the dark hair from the temples of
-the Marquise, fanning with grateful breath, yet scarce cooling, the rich
-crimson of her cheek.
-
-The resemblance between these two grew closer day by day. While the
-mother remained stationary at that point of womanly beauty to which the
-daughter was approaching, figure and face, in each, became more and more
-alike; and though the type of the elder was still the richer and more
-glowing, of the younger, the more delicate and classical, Cerise seemed
-unaccountably to have gained some of that spirit and vitality which the
-Marquise seemed as unaccountably to have lost.
-
-Also on the countenance of each might be traced the same expression—the
-longing, wistful look of those who live in some world of their own, out
-of and far beyond the present, saddened in the woman’s face with memory
-as it was brightened in the girl’s by hope.
-
-“It is suffocating!” exclaimed the former, rising restlessly from her
-seat, and pushing the hair off her temples with a gesture of impatience.
-“Cerise, my darling, are you made of stone that you do not cry out at
-this insupportable heat? It irritates me to see you sit reading there
-as calmly as if you could feel the wind blowing off the heights of
-Montmartre in January. It seems as if the sun would never go down in this
-oven that they call an island.”
-
-Cerise shut her book and collected her scattered ideas with an obvious
-effort. “I read, mamma,” she answered smiling, “because it is less
-fatiguing than to think, but I obtain as little result from the one
-process as the other. Do you know, I begin to believe the stories we used
-to hear in Paris about the West Indies, and I am persuaded that we shall
-not only be shrivelled up to mummies in a few more weeks, but that our
-tongues will be so dry and cracked as to be incapable of expressing our
-thoughts, even if our poor addled brains could form them. Look at Pierrot
-even, who is a native; he has not said a syllable since breakfast.”
-
-Pierrot, however, like the historical parrot of all ages, though silent
-on the present occasion, doubtless _thought_ the more, for the attitude
-in which he held his head on one side, peering at his young mistress with
-shrewd unwinking eye, implied perceptions more than human, nay, even
-diabolical in their malignant sagacity.
-
-“What can I do?” said the Marquise, vehemently, pacing the long room with
-quick steps ill suited to the temperature and the occasion. “While the
-Regent lives I can never return to Paris. For myself, I sometimes fancy I
-could risk it; but when I think of you, Cerise—I dare not—I _dare_ not;
-that’s the truth. An insult, an injury, he might forgive, or at least
-forget; but a scene in which he enacted the part of the _Pantaleone_,
-whom everybody kicks and cuffs; in which he was discovered as a coxcomb,
-an intruder, and a _polisson_, and through the whole of which he is
-conscious, moreover, that he was intensely ridiculous—I protest to you I
-cannot conceive any outrage so horrible as to satisfy his revenge. No, my
-child, for generations my family have served the Bourbons, and we should
-know what they are: with all their good qualities there are certain
-offences they can never forgive, and this Regent is the worst of the
-line.”
-
-“Then, mamma,” observed Cerise cheerfully, though she smothered a sigh,
-“we must have patience and live where we are. It might be worse,” she
-added, pointing to the streak of deep-blue sea that belted the horizon.
-“This is a wider view and a fairer than the dead wall of Vincennes or the
-gratings of the Bastile, and some day, perhaps, some of our friends from
-France may drop in quite unexpectedly to offer their homage to Madame la
-Marquise. How the dear old Prince-Marshal would gasp in this climate, and
-how dreadfully he would swear at the lizards, centipedes, galley-wasps,
-red ants, and cockroaches! He who, brave as he is, never dared face
-a spider or an earwig! Mamma, I think if I could see his face over a
-borer-worm, I should have one more good laugh, even in such a heat as
-this.”
-
-“You might laugh, my dear,” answered her mother, “but I think I should
-be more inclined to cry—yes, to cry for sheer joy at seeing him again. I
-grant you he was a little ridiculous; but what courage! what sincerity!
-what a true gentleman! I hear that he too is out of favour at the Palais
-Royal, and has returned to his estates at Chateau-Guerrand. His coach was
-seen near the Hôtel Montmirail the night of Monsieur le Duc’s creditable
-_escapade_, and that is crime enough, I conclude, to balance a dozen
-battles and forty years of loyal service to the throne. No, Cerise, I
-tell you while the monster lives we must remain exiled in this purgatory
-of fire. But my friends keep me well informed of passing events. I
-hear his health is failing. They tell me his face is purple now in the
-mornings when he comes to Council, and he drinks harder than ever with
-his _roués_ at night. Of course, my child, it would be wicked to wish for
-the death of a fellow-creature, but while there is a Regent in France you
-and I must be content with the lizards and the cockroaches for society,
-and for amusement, the supervision of these miserable, brutalised negro
-slaves.”
-
-“Poor things!” said the younger lady, tenderly. “I am sure they have
-kind hearts under their black skins. I cannot but think that if they
-were taught and encouraged, and treated less like beasts of burden, they
-would show as much intelligence as our own peasants at La Fierté or the
-_real_ Montmirail. Why, Fleurette brought me a bouquet of jessamines and
-tuberoses yesterday, with a compliment to the paleness of my complexion
-that could not have been outdone by Count Point-d’Appui himself. Oh!
-mamma, I wish you would let me establish _my_ civil code for the
-municipal government of the blacks.”
-
-“You had better let it alone, my child,” answered the Marquise, gravely.
-“Wiser brains than yours have puzzled over the problem, and failed to
-solve it. I have obtained all the information in my power from those
-whose experience is reliable, and considered it for myself besides,
-till my head ached. It seems to me that young colonists, and all who
-know nothing about negroes, are for encouragement and indulgence; old
-planters, and those who are well acquainted with their nature, for
-severity and repression. I would not be cruel; far from it; but as
-for treating them like white people, Cerise, in my opinion all such
-liberality is sheer nonsense. Jaques and Pierre, at home, are ill-fed,
-ill-clothed (I wish it were not so), up early, down late, and working
-often without intermission from sunrise till sunset; nevertheless, Jaques
-or Pierre will doff his red cap, tuck up his blouse, and run a league
-bareheaded, after a hard day’s work, if you or I lift up a finger; and
-why?—because we are La Fiertés or Montmirails. But Hippolyte or Achille,
-fat, strong, lazy, well-fed, grumbles if he is bid to carry a message to
-the boiling-house after his eight hours’ labour, and only obeys because
-he knows that Bartoletti can order him a hundred lashes by my authority
-at his discretion.”
-
-“I do not like the Italian, mamma! I am sure that man is not to be
-trusted,” observed Cerise, inconsequently, being a young lady. “What
-could make my dear old _bonne_ marry him, I have never been able to
-discover. He is an alchemist, you know, and a conjuror, and worse. I
-shudder to think of the stories they told about him at home, and I
-believe he bewitched her!”
-
-Here Mademoiselle de Montmirail crossed herself devoutly, and her mother
-laughed.
-
-“He is a very good overseer,” said she, “and as for his necromancy, even
-if he learned it from the Prince of Darkness, which you seem to believe,
-I fancy Célandine would prove a match for his master. Between them, the
-Signor, as he calls himself, and his wife, manage my people wonderfully
-well, and this is no easy matter at present, for I am sorry to say they
-show a good deal of insubordination and ill-will. There is a spirit of
-disaffection amongst them,” added the Marquise, setting her red lips
-firmly together, “that must be kept down with the strong hand. I do not
-mind your going about amongst the house negroes, Cerise, or noticing
-the little children, though taking anything black on your lap is, in my
-opinion, an injudicious piece of condescension; but I would not have you
-be seen near the field-gang at present, men or women, and above all,
-never trust them. Not one is to be depended on except Célandine, for I
-believe they hate her as much as her husband, and fear her a great deal
-more.”
-
-The Marquise had indeed cause for uneasiness as to the condition of
-her plantation, although she had never before hinted so much to her
-daughter, and indeed, like the generality of people who live on the
-crust of a volcano, she forced herself to ignore the danger of which she
-was yet uncomfortably conscious. For some time, perhaps ever since the
-arrival of the Italian overseer, there had been symptoms of discontent
-and disaffection among the slaves. The work indeed went on as usual,
-for Bartoletti was unsparing of the lash, but scarce a week passed
-without a runaway betaking himself to the bush, and vague threats,
-forerunners of some serious outbreak, had been heard from the idlest and
-most mutinous of the gang when under punishment. It would not have been
-well in such difficulties to relax the bonds of discipline, yet it was
-scarcely wise to draw them tighter than before. The Marquise, however,
-came of a race that had never yet learned to yield, and to which, for
-generations, the assertion of his rights by an inferior had seemed an
-intolerable presumption that must be resisted to the death. As her
-slaves, therefore, grew more defiant she became more severe, and of late
-the slightest offences had been visited with the utmost rigour, and under
-no circumstances passed over without punishment. It was an unfortunate
-time therefore that poor Fleurette had chosen to be detected in the
-abstraction of a turkey ready plucked for cooking, and she could not have
-fallen into worse hands than those of the pitiless Italian overseer.
-
-The Marquise had scarce concluded her warning, ere Bartoletti entered the
-sitting-room with his daily report. His manner was extremely obsequious
-to Madame de Montmirail, and polite beyond expression to Mademoiselle.
-The former scarcely noticed his demeanour at any time; the latter
-observed him narrowly, with the air of a child who watches a toad or any
-such object for which it feels an unaccountable dislike.
-
-Cerise usually left the room soon after the Signor entered it, but
-something in her mother’s face on the present occasion, as she ran her
-eye over the black book, induced her to remain.
-
-The Marquise read the punishment list twice; frowned, hesitated, and
-looked discomposed.
-
-“It is her first offence?” said she, inquiringly. “And the girl is
-generally active and well-behaved enough.”
-
-“Pardon, Madame la Marquise,” answered Bartoletti. “Madame forgave
-her only last week when she lost half-a-dozen of Mademoiselle’s
-handkerchiefs, that she had taken to wash; or _said_ she lost them,” he
-added pointedly.
-
-“Oh, mamma!” interposed Cerise, but the Marquise checked her with a sign,
-and Bartoletti proceeded.
-
-“One of her brothers is at the head of a gang of _Maroons_,[6] who infest
-the very mountains above our cane-pieces, and another ran away to join
-him last week. They say at the Plantation we _dare_ not punish any of the
-family, and I am pledged to make an example of the first that comes into
-my hands.”
-
-“Very well,” said the Marquise, decidedly, returning his black book to
-her overseer, and observing to Cerise, who was by this time in tears, “A
-case, my dear, that it would be most injudicious to pardon. After all,
-the pain is not much, and the disgrace, you know, to these sort of people
-is nothing!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI
-
-BLACK, BUT COMELY
-
-
-Transplanted, like some delicate flower from her native soil, to this
-glowing West Indian Island, Mademoiselle de Montmirail had lost but
-little of the freshness that bloomed in the Norman convent, and had
-gained a more decided colouring and a deeper expression, which added
-the one womanly grace hitherto wanting in her beauty. Even the negroes,
-chattering to one another as they hoed between the cane-rows, grinned
-out their approval of her beauty, and Hippolyte, a gigantic and hideous
-Coromantee, imported from Africa, had been good enough to express his
-opinion that she only wanted a little more colour, as he called it,
-meaning a shade of yellow in her skin, to be handsome enough for his
-wife; whereat his audience shouted and showed their white teeth, wagging
-their woolly heads applauding, while the savage shook his great black
-shoulders, and looked as if he thought more unlikely events might come to
-pass.
-
-Had it not been for these very slaves, who gave their opinions so freely
-on her personal appearance, Cerise would have been tolerably happy. She
-was, indeed, far from the scenes that were most endeared to her by memory
-and association. She was very uncertain when or how she should return to
-France, and until she returned, there was apparently no hope, however
-remote, that she could realise a certain dream which now constituted
-the charm of her whole life. Still the dream had been dreamed, vague,
-romantic, wild, and visionary; yet the girl dwelt upon it day by day,
-with a tenderness and a constancy the deeper and the more enduring that
-they seemed so hopeless and so thrown away.
-
-I would not have it supposed, however, that Mademoiselle de Montmirail
-was a foolish love-sick maiden, who allowed her fancies to become the
-daily business of her life. On the contrary, she went through her duties
-scrupulously, making for herself occupation where she did not find it,
-helping her mother, working, reading, playing, improving her mind, and
-doing all she could for the negroes on the estate, but tinging everything
-unconsciously, whether of joy or sorrow, trouble or pleasure, with the
-rosy light of a love she had conceived without reason, cherished without
-reflection, and now brooded over without hope, in the depths of her own
-heart.
-
-But although the welfare of the slaves afforded her continual occupation,
-and probably prevented her becoming utterly wearied and overpowered by
-the sameness of her daily life, their wilfulness, their obstinacy, their
-petulant opposition to every experiment she was disposed to try for their
-moral and physical benefit, occasioned her many an hour of vexation and
-depression. Above all, the frequency of corporal punishment, a necessity
-of which she was dimly conscious, but would by no means permit herself to
-acknowledge, cut her to the heart. Silently and earnestly she would think
-over the problem, to leave it unsolved at last, because she could not but
-admit that the dictates of her feelings were opposed to the conclusions
-of her reason. Then she would wish she had absolute power on the
-plantation, would form vague schemes for the enlightenment of their own
-people and the enfranchisement of every negro as he landed, till, having
-once entered on the region of romance, she would pursue her journey to
-its usual termination, and see herself making the happiness of every one
-about her, none the less earnestly that the desire of her own heart was
-granted, her schemes, her labours, all her thoughts and feelings shared
-by the Grey Musketeer, whom yet it seemed so improbable she was ever to
-see again.
-
-It wanted an hour of sunset. The evening breeze had set in with a
-refreshing breath that fluttered the skirt of her white muslin dress and
-the pink ribbons on her wide straw hat, as Mademoiselle de Montmirail
-strolled towards the negro-houses, carrying a _tisane_ she had herself
-prepared for Aunt Rosalie’s sick child. The slaves were already down
-from the cane-pieces, laughing, jesting, singing, carrying their tools
-over their shoulders and their baskets or calabashes on their heads. A
-fat little negro of some eight years old, who reminded Cerise of certain
-bronze casts that held wax-lights in the Hôtel Montmirail, and who was
-indeed little less sparingly clad than those works of art, came running
-by, his saucy features shining with a merry excitement, in such haste
-that he could only pull himself up to make her a droll little reverence
-when he was almost under her feet. She recognised him as an elder brother
-of the very infant she was about to visit, and asked if baby was any
-better, but the child seemed so intent on some proceeding of his own that
-she could not extort an answer.
-
-“What is it, Hercule?” said she, laying her white hand on the little
-knotted woolly head. “Where are you off to in such a hurry? Is it a dance
-at the negro-houses, or a merry-making in the Square?”
-
-The Square was a clear space, outside the huts of the field negroes,
-devoted to occasions of unusual display, and Hercule’s thoughts were as
-obviously turned in that direction as his corpulent little person.
-
-“Better bobbery nor dance,” answered the imp, looking up earnestly in her
-face. “M’amselle Fleurette tied safe to howling-tree! Massa Hippolyte,
-him tall black nigger, floggee criss-cross. So! Make dis good little
-nigger laugh, why for, I go see!” and away scampered Hercule as fast as
-his short legs would carry him, followed by Cerise, who felt her cheek
-paling and her blood tingling to her fingers’-ends.
-
-But Aunt Rosalie’s baby never got the _tisane_, for Mademoiselle de
-Montmirail spilt it all as she hurried on.
-
-Coming beyond the rows of negro-houses, she found a large assemblage of
-slaves, both men and women, ranged in a circle, many of the latter being
-seated on the ground, with their children crawling about their feet,
-while the fathers looked over the heads of their families, grinning in
-curiosity and delight.
-
-[Illustration: “CERISE BURST THROUGH LIKE A FLASH.”
-
-(_Page 275._)]
-
-They were all eager to enjoy one of those spectacles to which the
-Square, as they chose to call it, was especially devoted.
-
-In the centre of this open space, with the saffron light of a setting
-sun full upon her closed eyes and contracted features, cowered poor
-Fleurette, naked to the waist, secured hand and foot to a strong upright
-post which prevented her from falling, with her wrists tied together and
-drawn to a level somewhat higher than her head, so that she was unable
-even to contract her shoulders for protection from the lash. Though her
-shapely dark form and bosom were thus exposed, she seemed to feel less
-shame than fear; but the reason was now obvious why she had shrunk with
-such unusual terror from her odious and degrading punishment.
-
-Looking on with callous indifference, and holding his black book in his
-hand, stood Bartoletti, austerely satisfied with this public recognition
-of his authority, but little interested in the result, save as it
-affected the length of time, more or less, during which the victim would
-be incapacitated from service.
-
-Behind the girl, and careful to remain at such a distance as allowed room
-for the sweep of his right arm, was stationed the most hideous figure in
-the scene: a tall powerful Coromantee negro, African-born, with all his
-savage propensities intensified by food, servitude, and the love of rum.
-He brandished a long-lashed, knotted whip in his broad hand, and eyeing
-the pliant shrinking figure before him, grinned like a demon in sheer
-desire of blood.
-
-He was to take his cue from the overseer. At the moment Cerise rounded
-the last of the negro-houses and came into full view of this revolting
-spectacle, Bartoletti’s harsh Italian voice grated on the silence—“One!”
-
-Hippolyte, such was the Coromantee’s inappropriate name, drew himself
-back, raised his brawny arm, and the lash fell with a dull jerk, deadened
-by the flesh into which it cut.
-
-There was a faint moan, and the poor back quivered in helpless agony.
-
-Cerise, in her white dress, burst through the sable circle like a flash.
-
-“Two!” grated that harsh voice, and again the cruel lash came down, but
-it was dripping now with blood, and a long wailing shriek arose that
-would not be suppressed.
-
-“_Halte là!_” exclaimed Mademoiselle de Montmirail, standing in the
-midst, pale, trembling, dilated, and with fire flashing from her blue
-eyes. “Take that girl down! this instant! I command it! Let me see who
-will dare to disobey!”
-
-Even Hippolyte shrunk back, like some grotesque fiend rebuked. Bartoletti
-strove to expostulate, but somehow he was awed by the beauty of that holy
-wrath, so young, so fair, so terrible, and he dared not lift his eyes to
-meet those scorching looks. He cowered, he trembled, he signed to two
-negro women to obey Mademoiselle, and then slunk doggedly away.
-
-Cerise passed her arm caressingly round Fleurette’s neck, she wiped the
-poor torn shoulders with her own laced handkerchief, she rested the dark
-woolly head on her bosom, and lifting the slave’s face to her own, kissed
-her, once, twice, tenderly and pitifully on the lips.
-
-Then Fleurette’s tears gushed out: she sank to her young mistress’s
-knees, she grovelled at her very feet, she kissed them, she hugged them,
-she pressed them to her eyes and mouth; she vowed, she sobbed, she
-protested, and, at least while her passion of gratitude and affection
-lasted, she spoke no more than the truth when she declared that she asked
-no better than to consecrate every drop of blood in her body, her life,
-her heart, her soul, to the service of Mademoiselle de Montmirail.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII
-
-A WISE CHILD
-
-
-‘The Bashful Maid’ was still lying peacefully at anchor in the harbour of
-Port Welcome, yards squared, sails furled, decks polished to a dazzling
-white, every article of gear and tackle denoting profound repose, even
-the very pennon from her truck drooping motionless in the heat. Captain
-George spent much of his time below, making up his accounts, with the
-invaluable assistance of Beaudésir, who, having landed soon after their
-arrival, remained an hour or two in the town, and returned to the
-brigantine, expressing no desire for further communication with the shore.
-
-George himself postponed his visit to the island until he had completed
-the task on which he was engaged. In the meantime he gave plenty of
-liberty to the crew, an indulgence of which none availed themselves more
-freely than Slap-Jack and his two friends.
-
-These last indeed seldom stirred beyond the town. Here they found all
-they wanted in the shape of luxury or amusement: strong tobacco, new rum,
-an occasional scrape of a fiddle with a thrumming accompaniment on the
-banjo, nothing to do, plenty to drink, and a large room to smoke in.
-
-But the foretopman was not so easily satisfied. Much to the disgust of
-his comrades, he seemed to weary of their society, to have lost his
-relish for fiery drinks and sea stories; nay, to have acquired diverse
-tastes and habits foreign to his nature and derogatory to his profession.
-
-“Gone cruisin’ thereaway,” observed Bottle-Jack, vaguely waving his pipe
-in the direction of the mountains. “Never taken no soundings, nor kept
-no dead reckoning, nor signalled for a pilot, but just up foresail,
-drive-ahead, stem on, happy-go-lucky, an’ who cares!” While Smoke-Jack,
-puffing out solemn clouds of fragrant Trinidado, enunciated sententiously
-that he “Warn’t a-goin’ to dispute but what every craft should hoist
-her own ensign, an’ lay her own course; but when he see a able seaman
-clearing out from such a berth as this here, leaving the stiffest of grog
-and the strongest of ‘bacca’ a-cause of a old yaller woman with a red
-burgee; why, _he_ knowed the trim on ’em, that was _where_ it was. See if
-it wasn’t. Here’s my service to you, mate—All ships at sea!”
-
-Long ere the two stanch friends, however, had arrived at this
-intelligible conclusion, the object of their anxiety was half-way up the
-mountain, in fulfilment of the promise he had made Célandine to meet her
-at an appointed place.
-
-In justice to Slap-Jack, it is but fair to admit that his sentiments in
-regard to the Quadroon were those of keen curiosity mingled with pity for
-the obvious agitation under which she seemed to labour in his presence.
-Fair Alice herself, far off in her humble home among the downs, need
-not have grudged the elder woman an hour of her young seaman’s society,
-although every minute of it seemed so strangely prized by this wild,
-energetic, and mysterious person, with her swarthy face, her scarlet
-head-dress, and her flashing eyes, gleaming with the fierce anxious
-tenderness of a leopardess separated from her whelps.
-
-Slap-Jack’s sea legs had hardly time to become fatigued, ere at a turn
-in the mountain-path he found Célandine waiting for him, and somewhat to
-his disgust, peering about in every direction, as if loth to be observed;
-a clandestine interpretation of their harmless meeting which roused the
-young seaman’s ire, and against which he would have vehemently protested,
-had she not placed her hand over his mouth and implored him urgently,
-though in a whisper, to keep silence. Then she bade him follow, still
-below her breath, and so preceded him up the steep ascent with cautious,
-stealthy steps, but at a pace that made the foretopman’s unaccustomed
-knees shake and his breath come quick.
-
-The sun was hot, the mountain high, the path overgrown with cactus and
-other prickly plants, tangled with creepers and not devoid of snakes.
-Monkeys chattered, parrots screamed, glittering insects quivered like
-tinsel in the sun, or darted like flashes of coloured light across the
-forest-shade. Vistas of beauty, such as he had never dreamed of, opened
-out on either side, and looking back more than once to take breath while
-he ascended, the deep blue sea lay spread out beneath him, rising broader
-and broader to meet the blue transparent sky.
-
-But Slap-Jack, truth to tell, was sadly indifferent to it all. Uneasiness
-of the legs sadly counteracted pleasure of the eye. It was with
-considerable gratification that he observed his leader diverge from the
-upward path, and rounding the shoulder of the hill, take a direction
-somewhat on the downward slope. Then he wiped his brows, with a sigh of
-relief, and asked audibly enough for something to drink.
-
-She seemed less afraid of observation now, although she did not comply
-with his request, but pointed downward to a dark hollow, from which
-ascended a thin, white, spiral line of smoke, the only sign denoting
-human habitation in the midst of this luxuriant wilderness of tropical
-growth and fragrance. Then, parting the branches with both hands, she
-dived into the thicket, to stop at the door of a hut, so artfully
-concealed amongst the dense luxuriant foliage that a man might have
-passed within five yards and never known it was there but for the smoke.
-
-Célandine closed the door cautiously behind her visitor, handed him a
-calabash of water, into which she poured some rum from a goodly stone
-jar—holding at least a gallon—watched him eagerly while he drank, and
-when he set the measure down, flung both arms round his neck, and kissing
-him all over the eyes and face, murmured in fondest accents—
-
-“Do you not know why I have brought you here? Do you not know who and
-what you are?”
-
-“I could have told you half an hour back,” answered Slap-Jack, with a
-puzzled air, “but so many queer starts happen hereaway, mother, that I’m
-blessed if I can tell you now.”
-
-Tears shone in the fierce black eyes that never left his face, but
-seemed to feast on its comeliness with the desire of a famished appetite
-for food.
-
-“Call me mother again!” exclaimed the Quadroon. “You called me mother
-down yonder at the store, and my heart leaped to hear the word. Sit ye
-down, my darling, there in the light, where I can see your innocent face.
-How like you are to your father, my boy. You’ve got his own bold eyes,
-and broad shoulders, and large, strong hands. I could not be deceived. I
-knew you from the first. Tell me true; you guessed who I was. You would
-never have gone up to a stranger as you did to me!”
-
-Slap-Jack looked completely mystified. Wisely reflecting, however,
-that if a woman be left uninterrupted she will never “belay,” as he
-subsequently observed, “till she has payed-out the whole of her yarn,” he
-took another pull at the rum-and-water, and held his peace.
-
-“Look about you, boy,” continued Célandine, “and mark the wild,
-mysterious retreat I have made myself, on your account alone. No other
-white man has ever entered the Obi-woman’s hut. Not a negro in the island
-but shakes with fear when he approaches that low doorway; not one but
-leaves a gift behind when he departs. And now, chance has done for the
-Obi-woman that which all her perseverance and all her cunning has failed
-to effect. Influence I have always had amongst the blacks, for I am of
-their kindred, and they believe that I possess supernatural powers. You
-need not smile, boy. I can sometimes foretell the future so far as it
-affects others, though blindly ignorant where it regards myself; just
-as a man reads his neighbour’s face clearly, though he cannot see his
-own. All my influence I have devoted to the one great object of making
-money. For that, I left my sunny home to live years in the bleak, cold
-plains of France; for that, I sold myself in my old age to one whom I
-could not care for, even in my youth; for that I have been tampering of
-late with the most desperate and dangerous characters in the island; and
-money I only valued because, without it, I feared I could never find my
-boy. Listen, my darling, and learn how a mother’s love outlives the fancy
-of youth, the devotion of womanhood, and the covetousness of old age.
-Look at me now, child. It is not so long since men have told me—even in
-France, where they profess to understand such matters—that I retained my
-attractions still. You may believe that thirty years ago the Quadroon of
-Cash-a-crou, as they called her, had suitors, lovers, and admirers by
-the score. Somehow, I laughed at them all. It seemed to me that a man’s
-affection for a girl only lasted while she despised him, and I resolved
-that no weakness of my own should ever bring me down a single step from
-the vantage-ground I held. Planters, overseers, councillors, judges, all
-were at my feet; not a white man in the island but would have given three
-months’ pay for a smile from the yellow girl at Cash-a-crou; and the
-yellow girl—slave though she was—carried her head high above them all.
-
-“Well, one bright morning, a week before crop-time, a fine large ship,
-twice the size of that brigantine in the harbour, came and dropped her
-anchor off the town. The same night her sailors gave a dance at one of
-the negro-houses in Port Welcome. I never hear a banjo in the still,
-calm evenings but it thrills to my very marrow still, though it will
-be five-and-twenty long years, when the canes are cut, since I went
-into that dancing-room a haughty, wilful beauty, and came out a humble,
-love-stricken maid. Turn a bit more to the light, my boy, that I may look
-into your blue eyes; they shine like his, when he came across the floor
-and asked me to dance. I’ve heard the Frenchwoman say that it takes a
-long time for a man to win his way into a girl’s heart. Theirs is a cold
-country, and they have no African blood in their veins. All I know is,
-that your father had not spoken half-a-dozen words ere I felt for him
-as I never felt for any creature on earth before. I’d have jumped off
-the Sulphur Mountain, and never thought twice about it, if he had asked
-me. When we walked home together in the moonlight—for he begged hard to
-see me safe to my own door, and you may think I wasn’t very difficult to
-persuade—I told him honestly that I had never loved any man but him, and
-never would love another, come what might. He looked down into my eyes
-for a moment astonished, just as you look now, and then he smiled—no face
-ever I saw had such a smile as your father’s—and wound his great strong
-arm round my waist, and pressed me to his heart. I was happy then. If
-I might live over just one minute of my life again, it should be that
-first minute when I felt I belonged no more to myself, but to him.
-
-“So we were married by an old Spanish priest in the little white chapel
-between the lighthouse and the town—yes, married right enough, my boy,
-never doubt it, though I was but a slave.
-
-“I do not know how a great lady like our Marquise feels who can give
-herself and all her possessions, proudly and in public, to the man she
-loves, but she ought to be very happy. I was very happy, though I might
-only meet your father by stealth, and with the fear of a punishment I
-shuddered to think of before my eyes. I thought of it very often, too,
-yet not without pride and pleasure, to risk it all for his sake. What
-I dreaded far worse than punishment—worse than death, was the day his
-ship would sail, and though she lay weeks and months refitting in the
-harbour, that day arrived too soon. Never tell me people die of grief, my
-boy, since I came off the hill alive when I had seen the last of those
-white sails. I could have cursed the ship for taking him away, and yet I
-blessed her for his sake.
-
-“There was consolation for me too. I had his solemn promise to come back
-again, and I’ll never believe but he would have kept it had he been
-alive. Nothing shall persuade me that my brave, blue-eyed Englishman has
-not been sleeping many a year, rolled in his hammock, under the deep,
-dark sea. It was well the conviction came on me by degrees that I was
-never to see him again. I should have gone mad if I had known it that
-last night when he bade me keep my heart up, and trust him to the end.
-After a while I fretted less, for my time was near, and my beautiful boy
-was born. Such an angel never lay on a mother’s knees. My son, my son,
-you have the same eyes, and the same sweet smile still. I knew you that
-day in the street, long before I turned your collar down, and saw the
-little white mark like an anchor on your neck. How proud I was of you,
-and how I longed to show my sturdy, blue-eyed boy, who began to speak at
-eleven months, to every mother in the island, but I dared not—I dared
-not, for your sake more than for my own. I was cunning then—ay, cunning,
-and brave, and enduring as a panther. They never found me out—they never
-so much as suspected me. I had money, plenty of it, and influence too,
-with one man at least, who would have put his hand in the fire, coward as
-I think he is, if I had only made him a sign. With his help, I concealed
-the existence of my boy from every creature on the plantation—black or
-white. In his house I used to come and nurse you, dear, and play with you
-by the hour together. That man is my husband now, and I think he deserves
-a better fate.
-
-“At last he was forced to leave the island, and then came another
-parting, worse than the first. It was only for myself I grieved when I
-lost your father, but when I was forced to trust my beautiful boy to the
-care of another, to cross the sea, to sleep in strange beds, to be washed
-and dressed by other hands, perhaps to meet with hard words and angry
-looks, or worse still, to clasp his pretty arms about a nurse’s neck, and
-to forget the mother that bore him, I thought my heart would break. My
-boy, there is no such thing—I tell you again, these are fables—grief does
-not kill.
-
-“For a long time I heard regularly of your welfare, and paid liberally
-for the good news. I was sure the man to whom I had entrusted you looked
-upon me as his future wife, and though I hated him for the thought, I—who
-loved that bold, strong, outspoken sailor—I permitted it, I encouraged
-it, for I believed it would make him kinder to my boy. When you were a
-little older, I meant to buy my own freedom, and take you with me to live
-in Europe—wherever you could be safe.
-
-“At last a ship sailed into Port Welcome, and brought no letter for me,
-no news of my child. Another, and yet another, till months of longing,
-sickening anxiety had grown to years, and I was nearly mad with fear and
-pain. The father I had long despaired of, but I thought I was never to be
-used so hardly as to lose the child.
-
-“I tell you again, my boy, grief does not kill. I lived on, but I was
-a different creature now. My youth was gone, my beauty became terrible
-rather than attractive. I possessed certain powers that rendered me an
-object of dread more than love, and here, in this very hut, I devoted
-myself to the practice of Obi, and the study of that magic which has
-made the name of Célandine a word of fear to every negro in the island.
-
-“One only aim, one only hope, kept me from going mad. Money I was
-resolved to possess, the more the better, for by the help of money alone,
-I thought, could I ever gain tidings of my boy. The slaves paid well in
-produce for the amulets and charms I sold them. That produce I converted
-into coin, but it came in too slow. In Europe I might calculate on better
-opportunities for gain, and to Europe I took the first opportunity of
-sailing, that I might join the mistress I had never seen, as attendant
-on her and her child. In their service I have remained to this day. The
-mother I have always respected for her indomitable courage; the daughter
-I loved from the first for her blue eyes, that reminded me of my boy.
-
-“And now look at me once more, my child—my darling. I have found you when
-I had almost left off hoping; I have got you when I never expected to see
-you again; and I am rewarded at last!”
-
-Slap-Jack, whose sentiments of filial affection came out the mellower
-for rum-and-water, accepted the Quadroon’s endearments with sufficient
-affability, and being naturally a good-hearted, easy-going fellow, gladly
-enacted the part of dutiful son to a mother who had suffered such long
-anxiety on his account.
-
-“A-course,” said he, returning her embrace, “now you’ve got a son, you
-ain’t a-goin’ to keep him in this here round-house, laid up in lavender
-like, as precious as a Blue Mountain monkey pickled in rum. We’ll just
-wait here a bit, you and me, safe and snug, while the land-breeze holds,
-and then drop easily down into the town, rouse out my shipmates, able
-seamen every man of them, and go in for a regular spree. ’Tain’t every
-day as a chap finds his mother, you know, and such a start as this here
-didn’t ought to be passed over without a bobbery.”
-
-She listened to him delighted. His queer phrases were sweet in her ears;
-to her they were no vulgar sea-slang, but the echo of a love-music that
-had charmed her heart, and drowned her senses half a lifetime ago; that
-rang with something of the old thrilling vibration still; but the wild
-look of terror that had scared him more than once gleamed again in her
-eyes, and she laid her hand on his shoulder as if to keep him down by
-force, while she whispered—“My child, not so! How rash, how reckless!
-Just like your father; but he, at least, had not your fate to fear. Do
-you not see your danger? Can you not guess why I concealed your birth,
-hid you up in your babyhood, and smuggled you out of the island as soon
-as you could run? Born of a slave, on a slave estate, do you not know, my
-boy, that you, too, are a slave?”
-
-“Gammon! mother,” exclaimed Slap-Jack, nothing daunted. “What
-_me_?—captain of the foretop on board ‘The Bashful Maid,’—six guns on the
-main-deck, besides carronades—master and owner, Captain George! and talk
-to me as if I was one of them darkies what does mule’s work with monkey’s
-allowance! Who’s to come and take me, I should like to know? Let ’em
-heave ahead an’ do it, that’s all—a score at a spell if they can muster
-’em. I’ll show ’em pretty quick what sort of a slave they can make out of
-an able seaman!”
-
-“Hush, hush!” she exclaimed, listening earnestly, and with an expression
-of intense fear contracting her worn features; “I can hear them
-coming—negroes by the footfall, and a dozen at least. They will be at
-the door in five minutes. They have turned by the old hog-plum now. As
-you love your life, my boy; nay, as you love your mother, who has pined
-and longed for you all these years, let me hide you away in there. You
-will be safe. Trust me, you will be safe enough; they will never think of
-looking for you there!”
-
-So speaking, and notwithstanding much good-humoured expostulation and
-resistance from Slap-Jack, who, treating the whole affair as a jest, was
-yet inclined to fight it out all the same, Célandine succeeded in pushing
-her son into an inner division of the hut, containing only a bed-place,
-shut off by a strong wooden door. This she closed hurriedly, at the very
-moment a dozen pattering footsteps halted outside, and a rough negro
-voice, in accents more imperative than respectful, demanded instant
-admission.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII
-
-JACK AGROUND
-
-
-Opening the door with a yawn, and stretching her arms like one lately
-roused from sleep, the Quadroon found herself face to face with the
-Coromantee, backed by nearly a score of negroes, the idlest and most
-dissolute slaves on the estate. All seemed more or less intoxicated,
-and Célandine, who knew the African character thoroughly, by no means
-liked their looks. She was aware that much disaffection existed in the
-plantation, and the absence of this disorderly gang from their work at
-so early an hour in the afternoon argued something like open revolt.
-It would have been madness, however, to show fear, and the Obi-woman
-possessed, moreover, a larger share of physical courage than is usual
-with her sex; assuming, therefore, an air of extreme dignity, she
-stationed herself in the doorway and demanded sternly what they wanted.
-
-Hippolyte, who seemed to be leader of the party, doffed his cabbage-tree
-hat with ironical politeness, and pointing over his shoulder at two
-grinning negroes laden with plantains and other garden produce, came to
-business at once.
-
-“We buy,—you sell, Missee Célandine. Same as storekeeper down Port
-Welcome. Fust ask gentlemen step in, sit down, take something to drink.”
-
-There was that in his manner which made her afraid to refuse, and
-inviting the whole party to enter, she accommodated them with difficulty
-in the hut. Reviewing her assembled guests, the Quadroon’s heart sank
-within her; but she was conscious of possessing cunning and courage, so
-summoned both to her aid.
-
-A negro, under excitement, from whatever cause, is a formidable-looking
-companion. Those animal points of head and countenance, by which he is
-distinguished from the white man, then assume an unseemly prominence. The
-lips thicken, the temples swell, the eyes roll, the brow seems to recede,
-and the whole face alters for the worse, like that of a vicious horse,
-when he lays his ears back, prepared to kick.
-
-Célandine’s visitors displayed all these alarming signs, and several
-other disagreeable peculiarities, the result of partial intoxication.
-Some of them carried axes, she observed, and all had knives. Their attire
-too, though of the gaudiest colours, was extremely scanty, ragged, and
-unwashed. They jested with one another freely enough, as they sat huddled
-together on the floor of the hut, but showed little of the childish
-good-humour common among prosperous and well-ordered slaves; while she
-augured the worst from the absence of that politeness which, to do him
-justice, is a prominent characteristic of the negro. Nevertheless, she
-dissembled her misgivings, affected an air of dignified welcome, handed
-round the calabash, with its accompanying stone bottle, to all in turn,
-and felt but little reassured to find that the rum was nearly exhausted
-when it had completed the circle.
-
-“Thirteen gentlemen, Missee Célandine,” observed the Coromantee, tossing
-off his measure of raw spirits with exceeding relish; “thirteen charms,
-best Obi-woman can furnish for the price, ’gainst evil eye, snake-bite,
-jumbo-stroke, fire, water, and cold steel, all ’counted for, honourable,
-in dem plantain baskets. Hi! you lazy nigger, pay out. Say, again,
-missee, what day this of the month?”
-
-Célandine affected to consider.
-
-“The thirteenth,” she answered gravely; “the most unlucky day in the
-whole year.”
-
-Hippolyte’s black face fell. “Golly?” said he. “Unlucky! for why? for
-what? Dis nigger laugh at luck,” he added, brightening up and turning
-what liquor was left in the stone bottle down his own throat. “Lookee
-here, missee; you Obi-woman, right enough; you nigger too, yaller all
-same as black: you go pray Jumbo for luck. All paid for in dat basket.
-Pray Jumbo no rain to-night, put um fire out. Our work, make bobbery;
-your work, stay up mountain where spirit can hear, and pray Jumbo till
-monkeys wake.”
-
-A suspicion that had already dawned on the Quadroon’s mind was now
-growing horribly distinct. It was obvious some important movement must
-be intended by the gang that filled her hut, and there was every fear a
-general rising might take place of all the slaves on the plantation, if
-indeed the insurrection spread no further than the Montmirail estate. She
-knew, none better, the nature of the half-reclaimed savage. She thought
-of her courageous, high-souled mistress, of her delicate, beautiful
-nursling, and shivered while she pictured them in the power of this huge
-black monster who sat grinning at her over the empty calabash. She even
-forgot for the moment her own long-lost son, hidden up within six feet of
-her, and the double danger he would run in the event of detection. She
-could only turn her mind in one direction, and that was, where Madame
-and Mademoiselle were sitting, placid and unconscious, in the rich white
-dresses her own fingers had helped to make.
-
-Their possible fate was too horrible to contemplate. She forced it from
-her thoughts, and with all her power of self-concentration, addressed
-herself to the means of saving them at any cost. In such an emergency
-as the present, surrounded, and perhaps suspected, by the mutineers,
-dissimulation seemed her only weapon left, and to dissimulation she
-betook herself without delay.
-
-“Hippolyte,” said she, “you are a good soldier. You command all these
-black fellows; I can see it in your walk. I always said you had the air
-of an officer of France.”
-
-The Coromantee seemed not insensible to flattery. He grinned, wagged his
-head, rolled his eyes, and was obviously well pleased.
-
-“Dese niggers make me deir colonel,” said he, springing from the floor
-to an attitude of military attention. “Hab words of command like buckra
-musketeer. _Par file à droite—Marche! Volte-face!_ Run for your lives!”
-
-“I knew it,” she replied, “and you ought to have learned already to trust
-your comrades. Are we not in the same ranks? You say yourself, yellow and
-black are all one. You and I are near akin; your people are the people
-of my mother’s mother; whom you trust, I trust; whom you hate, I hate,
-but far more bitterly, because my injuries are older and deeper than
-yours.”
-
-He opened his eyes wondering, but the rum had taken effect, and nothing,
-not even the Quadroon’s disloyalty to her mistress, seemed improbable
-now. An Obi-woman too, if really in earnest, he considered a valuable
-auxiliary; so signed his approval by another grin and a grunt of
-acquiescence.
-
-“I live but for one object now,” continued Célandine, in a tone of
-repressed fury that did credit to her power of acting. “I have been
-waiting all my life for my revenge, and it seems to have come at last.
-The Marquise should have given me my freedom long ago if she wished me
-to forgive. Ay, they may call me _Mustee_, but I am black, black as
-yourself, my brave Hippolyte, at heart. She struck me once,—I tell you,
-struck me with her riding-whip, far away yonder in France, and I will
-have her blood.”
-
-It is needless to observe this imputed violence was a fabrication for the
-especial benefit of Hippolyte, and the energy with which he pronounced
-the ejaculation, “Golly!” denoted that he placed implicit reliance on its
-truth.
-
-“You are brave,” continued Célandine; “you are strong; you are the fine
-tall negro whom we call the Pride of the Plantation. You do not know what
-it is to hate like a poor weak woman. I would have no scruple, no mercy;
-I would spare none, neither Madame nor Mademoiselle.”
-
-“Ma’amselle come into woods with me,” interrupted Hippolyte, with a
-horrible leer. “Good enough wife for Pride of Plantation. Lilly-face look
-best by um side of black man. Ma’amselle guess me come for marry her.
-When floggee Fleurette, look at me so, afore all de niggers, sweet as
-molasses!”
-
-Again Célandine shivered. The wretch’s vanity would have been ludicrous,
-had he not been so formidable from his recklessness, and the authority he
-seemed to hold over his comrades. She prepared to learn the worst.
-
-“They will both be in our power to-night, I suppose,” said she,
-repressing with a strong effort her disgust and fierce desire to snatch
-his long knife and stab him where he stood. “Tell me your plan of attack,
-my brave colonel, and trust me to help you to the utmost.”
-
-The Coromantee looked about him suspiciously, rolling his eyes in
-obvious perplexity. The superstition inherent in his nature made him
-desirous of obtaining her assistance, while the Quadroon’s antecedents,
-and particularly her marriage with the overseer, seemed to infer that
-she would prove less zealous than she affected to be in the cause of
-insurrection. He made up his mind therefore to bind her by an oath, which
-he himself dictated, and made her swear by the mysterious power she
-served, and from which she derived her influence, to be true, silent,
-and merciless, till the great event had been accomplished, all the
-whites in authority massacred, and the whole estate in the power of the
-slaves. Every penalty, both horrible and ludicrous, that the grotesque
-imagination of a savage could devise, was called down upon her head
-in the event of treachery; and Célandine, who was a sufficiently good
-Catholic at heart, swallowed all these imprecations imperturbably enough,
-pledging herself, without the slightest hesitation, to the conspiracy.
-
-Then Hippolyte was satisfied and unfolded his plans, while the others
-gathered round with fearful interest, wagging their heads, rolling their
-eyes, grinning, stamping, and ejaculating deep gutturals of applause.
-
-His scheme was feasible enough; nor to one who knew no scruples of
-gratitude, no instincts of compassion, did it present any important
-obstacles. He was at the head of an organised body, comprising nearly all
-the male slaves on the plantation; a body prepared to rise at a moment’s
-notice, if only assured of success. The dozen negroes who accompanied him
-had constituted themselves his guards, and were pledged to strike the
-first blow, at his command. They were strong, able-bodied, sensual, idle,
-dissolute, unscrupulous, and well enough fitted for their enterprise,
-but that they were arrant cowards, one and all. As, however, little
-resistance could be anticipated, this poltroonery was the more to be
-dreaded by their victims, that in the hour of triumph it would surely
-turn to cruelty and excess.
-
-Hippolyte, who was not deficient in energy, had also been in
-communication with the disaffected slaves on the adjoining estates; these
-too were sworn to rise at a given signal, and the Coromantee, feeling
-that his own enterprise could scarcely fail, entertained a fervent hope
-that in a few hours the whole of the little island, from sea to sea,
-would be in possession of the negroes, and he himself chosen as their
-chief. The sack and burning of Port Welcome, the massacre of the planters
-and abduction of their families, were exciting little incidents of the
-future, on which he could hardly trust himself to dwell; but the first
-step in the great enterprise was to be taken at Montmirail West, and to
-its details Célandine now listened with a horror that, while it curdled
-her blood, she was forced to veil under a pretence of zeal and enthusiasm
-in the cause.
-
-Her only hope was in the brigantine. Her early associations had taught
-her to place implicit reliance on a boat’s crew of English sailors,
-and if she could but delay the attack until she had communicated with
-the privateer, Mademoiselle, for it was of Mademoiselle she chiefly
-thought, might be rescued even yet. If she could but speak to her son,
-lying within three feet of her! If she could but make him understand
-the emergency! How she trusted he overheard their conversation! How she
-prayed he might not have been asleep the whole time!
-
-Hippolyte’s plan of attack was simple enough. It would be dark in
-a couple of hours. Long before then, he and his little band meant
-to advance as far as the skirts of the bush, from whence they could
-reconnoitre the house. Doors and windows would all be open. There was
-but one white man in the place, and he unarmed. Nothing could be easier
-than to overpower the overseer, and perhaps, for Célandine’s sake,
-his life might be spared. Then, it was the Coromantee’s intention to
-secure the Marquise and her daughter, which he opined might be done with
-little risk, and at the expense of a shriek or two; to collect in the
-store-room any of the domestic slaves, male or female, who showed signs
-of resistance, and there lock them up; to break open the cellar, serve
-out a plentiful allowance of wine to his guards, and then, setting fire
-to the house, carry the Marquise and her daughter into the mountains.
-The former, to be kept as a hostage, slain, or otherwise disposed of,
-according to circumstances; the latter, as the African expressed it
-with hideous glee, “for make lilly-face chief wife to dis here handsome
-nigger!”
-
-Célandine affected to accept his views with great enthusiasm, but
-objected to the time appointed.
-
-“The moon,” said she gravely, “is yet in her first quarter. Her spirit
-is gone a journey to the mountains of Africa to bless the bones of our
-forefathers. It will be back to-morrow. Jumbo has not been sufficiently
-propitiated. Let us sacrifice to him for one night more with jar and
-calabash. I will send down for rum to the stores. Brave colonel, you
-and your guards shall bivouac here outside her hut, while the Obi-woman
-remains within to spend the night in singing and making charms. Jumbo
-will thus be pleased, and to-morrow the whole island may be ours without
-opposition.”
-
-But Hippolyte was not to be deceived so easily. His plans admitted of
-no delay, and the flames ascending from the roof of Montmirail West,
-that same night, were to be the signal for a general rising from sea to
-sea. His short period of influence had already taught him that such a
-blow as he meditated, to be effectual, must be struck at once. Moreover,
-the quality of cunning in the savage seems strong in proportion to his
-degradation; the Coromantee was a very fox for vigilance and suspicion,
-nor did he fail to attribute Célandine’s desire for procrastination to
-its true motive.
-
-“To-night, Obi-woman!” said he resolutely. “To-night, or no night at
-all. Dis nigger no leave yaller woman here, fear of accidents. Perhaps
-to-morrow free blacks kill you same as white. You come with us down
-mountain-side into clearing. We keep you safe. You make prayer and sing
-whole time.”
-
-With a mischievous leer at a couple of his stalwart followers, he pointed
-to the Quadroon. They sprang from the ground and secured her, one on each
-side. The unfortunate Obi-woman strove hard to disarm suspicion by an
-affectation of ready compliance, but it was obvious they mistrusted her
-fidelity and had no intention of letting her out of their sight. It was
-with difficulty that she obtained a few moments’ respite, on the plea
-that night was about to fall, for the purpose of winding her shawl more
-carefully round her head, and in that brief space she endeavoured to warn
-her son of the coming outbreak, with a maddening doubt the while that
-he might not understand their purport, even if he could hear her words.
-Turning towards the door, behind which he was concealed, under pretence
-of arranging her head-gear at a bit of broken looking-glass against the
-panel, she sang, with as marked an emphasis as she dared, a scrap of some
-doggrel sea-ditty, which she had picked up from her first love in the old
-happy days, long ago:—
-
- “The boatswain looked upon the land,
- And shrill his whistle blew,
- The oars were out, the boat was manned,
- Says he, ‘My gallant crew,
-
- “‘Our captain in a dungeon lies,
- The sharks have got him flat,
- But if we fire the town, my boys,
- We’ll have him out of that!
-
- “‘We’ll stop their jaw, we’ll spike their guns!
- We’ll larn ’em what they’re at—
- You bend your backs, and pull, my sons,
- We’ll have him out of that!’”
-
-This she sang twice, and then professed her readiness to accompany
-Hippolyte and his band down the mountain, delaying their departure,
-however, by all the means she could think of, including profuse offers
-of hospitality, which had but little effect, possibly because the guests
-were personally satisfied that there was nothing left to drink.
-
-Nay, even on the very threshold of the hut she turned back once more,
-affecting to have forgotten the most important of the amulets she
-carried about her person, and, crossing the floor with a step that must
-have awakened the soundest sleeper, repeated, in clear loud tones, the
-boatswain’s injunction to his men—
-
- “You bend your backs, and pull, my sons,
- We’ll have him out of that!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV
-
-JACK AFLOAT
-
-
-But Slap-Jack was not asleep; far from it. His narrow hiding-place
-offered but little temptation to repose, and almost the first sentence
-uttered by Hippolyte aroused the suspicions of a man accustomed to
-anticipate, without fearing, danger, or, as he expressed it, “to look out
-for squalls.”
-
-He listened therefore intently the whole time, and although the
-Coromantee’s jargon was often unintelligible, managed to gather quite
-enough of its meaning to assure him that some gross outrage was in
-preparation, of which a white lady and her daughter were to be the
-victims. Now it is not only on the boards of a seaport theatre that the
-British sailor vindicates his character for generous courage on behalf
-of the conventional “female in distress.” The stage is, after all, a
-representation, however extravagant, of real life, and the caricature
-must not be exaggerated out of all likeness to its original. Coarse
-in his language, rough in his bearing, reckless and riotous from the
-very nature of his calling, there is yet in the thorough-going English
-seaman a leavening of tenderness, simplicity, and self-sacrifice, which,
-combined with his dauntless bravery, affords no ignoble type of manhood.
-He is a child in his fancies, his credulity, his affections; a lion in
-his defiance of peril and his sovereign contempt for pain.
-
-With regard to women, whatever may be his practice, his creed is pure,
-exalted, and utterly opposed to his own experience; while his instincts
-prompt him on all occasions, and against any odds, to take part with the
-weaker side. Compared with the landsman, he is always a little behind
-the times in worldly knowledge, possessing the faults and virtues of
-an earlier age. With both of these in some excess, his chivalry is
-unimpeachable, and a sense of honour that would not disgrace the noblest
-chapters of knighthood is to be found nerving the blue-streaked arms and
-swelling the brawny chests that man the forecastle.
-
-Slap-Jack knew enough of his late-discovered mother’s position to be
-familiar with the name of the Marquise and the situation of Montmirail
-West. As he was the only seaman belonging to ‘The Bashful Maid’ who
-had been tempted beyond the precincts of the port, this knowledge was
-shared by none of his shipmates. Captain George himself, postponing his
-shore-going from hour to hour, while he had work in hand, little dreamed
-he was within two leagues of Cerise. Beaudésir had never repeated his
-visit to the town; and every other man in the brigantine was too much
-occupied by duty or pleasure—meaning anchor-watch on board, alternated by
-rum and fiddlers ashore—to think of extending his cruise a yard further
-inland than the nearest drinking-house.
-
-On Slap-Jack, therefore, devolved the task of rescuing the Marquise and
-her daughter from the grasp of “that big black swab,” as the foretopman
-mentally denominated him, whom he longed ardently to “pitch into” on the
-spot. He understood the position. His mother’s sea-song was addressed to
-no inattentive nor unwilling ears. He saw the difficulties and, indeed,
-the dangers of his undertaking; but the latter he despised, while the
-former he resolved to overcome; and he never lay out upon a yard to reef
-topsails in the fiercest squall with a clearer brain or a stouter heart
-than he now summoned to his aid on behalf of the ladies whom his mother
-loved so well.
-
-Creeping from his hiding-place, he listened anxiously to the retreating
-footfall of the blacks, and even waited several minutes after it had
-died away to assure himself the coast was clear. Discovery would have
-been fatal; for armed though he was with a cutlass and pistols, thirteen
-to one, as he sagely reflected, was long odds; and “if I should be
-scuttled,” thought he, “before I can make signals, why, what’s to become
-of the whole convoy?” Therefore he was very cautious and reflective.
-He pondered, he calculated, he reckoned his time, he enumerated his
-obstacles, he laid out his plans before he proceeded to action. His only
-chance was to reach the brigantine without delay, and report the whole
-matter to the skipper forthwith, who he was convinced would at once
-furnish a boat’s crew to defend the ladies, and probably put himself at
-their head.
-
-Emerging from the hut, he observed to his consternation that it was
-already dusk. There is but a short twilight in these low latitudes, where
-the evening hour—sweetest of the whole twenty-four—is gone almost as soon
-as it arrives—
-
- “The sun’s rim dips,
- The stars rush out,
- At one stride comes the dark.”
-
-And that dark, in the jungle of a West Indian island, is black as
-midnight.
-
-It was well for Slap-Jack that a seaman’s instinct had prompted him to
-take his bearings before he came up the mountain. These, from time to
-time, he corrected during his ascent, at the many places where he paused
-for breath. He knew, therefore, the exact direction of the town and
-harbour. Steering by the stars, he was under no apprehension of losing
-his way, and could make for the brigantine where she lay. Tightening his
-belt, then, he commenced the descent at a run, resolving to keep the path
-as long as he could see it, and when it was lost in the bush at last, to
-plunge boldly through till he reached the shore.
-
-The misadventure he foresaw soon came to pass. A path which he could
-hardly have followed by daylight, without Célandine to pilot him, soon
-disappeared from beneath his feet in the deepening gloom. He had not left
-the hut many minutes ere he was struggling, breast-high, amongst the
-wild vines and other creepers that twined and festooned in a tangle of
-vegetable network from tree to tree.
-
-The scene was novel and picturesque, yet I am afraid he cursed and
-swore a good deal, less impressed with its beauty than alive to its
-inconveniences. Overhead, indeed, he caught a glimpse of the stars, by
-which he guided his course through the interlacing boughs of the tall
-forest trees, and underfoot, the steady lamp of the glow-worm, and the
-sparks of a thousand wheeling fire-flies shed a light about his path; but
-these advantages only served to point out the dangers and difficulties
-of his progress. With their dubious help, every creeper thicker than
-ordinary assumed the appearance of some glistening snake, swinging from
-the branch in a grim repose that it was death to disturb; every rotten
-stump leaning forward in its decay, draped with its garment of trailing
-parasites, took the form of a watchful savage, poising his gigantic form
-in act to strike; while a wild boar, disturbed from his lair between the
-roots of an enormous gum-tree, to shamble off at a jog-trot, grumbling,
-in search of thicker covert, with burning eye, gnashing tusks, and most
-discordant grunt, swelled to the size of a rhinoceros. Slap-Jack’s
-instincts prompted him to salute the monster with a shot from one of
-the pistols that hung at his belt, but reflecting on the necessity
-of caution, he refrained with difficulty, consoling himself by the
-anticipation of several days’ leave ashore, and a regular shooting party
-with his mates, in consideration of his services to-night.
-
-Thus he struggled on, breathless, exhausted, indefatigable—now losing
-himself altogether, till a more open space in the branches, through which
-he could see the stars, assured him that he was in a right direction—now
-obtaining a glimpse of some cane-piece, or other clearing, white in
-the tender light of the young moon, which had already risen, and thus
-satisfying himself that he was gradually emerging from the bush, and
-consequently nearing the shore—now tripping over a fallen tree—now held
-fast in a knot of creepers—now pierced to the bone by a prickly cactus,
-torn, bleeding, tired, sore, and drenched with perspiration, but never
-losing heart for a moment, nor deviating, notwithstanding his enforced
-windings, one cable’s length from the direct way.
-
-Thus at last he emerged on a clearing already trenched and hoed for
-the reception of sugar-canes, and, to his infinite joy, beheld his own
-shadow, black and distinct, in the trembling moonlight. The bush was now
-behind him, the slope of the hill in his favour, and he could run down,
-uninterrupted, towards the pale sea lying spread out like a sheet of
-silver at his feet. He crossed a road here that he knew must lead him
-into the town, but it would have taken him somewhat out of his course for
-the brigantine, and he had resolved to lose no time, even for the chance
-of obtaining a boat.
-
-He made, therefore, direct for the shore, and in a few minutes he was
-standing on a strip of sand, with the retiring tide plashing gratefully
-on his ear, while his eyes were fixed on the tapering spars of ‘The
-Bashful Maid,’ and the light glimmering in her foretop.
-
-He stepped back a few paces to lay his arms and some of his garments
-behind a rock, a little above high-water mark. There was small chance he
-would ever find them again, but he belonged to a profession of which the
-science is essentially precautionary, and the habit of foresight was a
-second nature to Slap-Jack. In a few more seconds he was up to his knees,
-his middle, his breast-bone, in the cooling waters, till a receding wave
-lifted him off his feet, and he struck out boldly for the brigantine.
-
-How delightful to his heated skin was the contact of the pure, fresh,
-buoyant element! Notwithstanding his fatigue, his hurry, his anxiety, he
-could have shouted aloud in joy and triumph, as he felt himself wafted
-on those long, regular, and powerful strokes nearer and nearer to his
-object. It was the exultation of human strength and skill and daring,
-dominant over nature, unassisted by mechanical art.
-
-Yet was there one frightful drawback, a contingency which had been
-present to his mind from the very beginning, even while he was beating
-laboriously through the jungle, but which he had never permitted himself
-to realise, and on which it would now be maddening to dwell: Port Welcome
-was infested with sharks! He forced himself to ignore the danger, and
-swam gallantly on, till the wash and ripple of the tide upon the shore
-was far behind him, and he heard only his own deep measured breathing,
-and the monotonous plash of those springing, regulated strokes that
-drove him steadily out to sea. He was already tired, and had turned on
-his back more than once for relief, ere the hull of the brigantine rose
-black and steep out of the water half a cable’s length ahead. He counted
-that after fifty more strokes he would summon breath to hail the watch on
-deck. He had scarce completed them ere a chill went curdling through his
-veins from head to heel, and if ever Slap-Jack lost heart it was then.
-The water surged beneath him, and lifted his whole body, like a wave,
-though the surrounding surface was smooth as a mill-pond. One desperate
-kick, that shot him two fathoms at a stroke, and his passing foot grazed
-some slimy, scaly substance, while from the corner of his eye he caught
-a glimpse the moment after of the back-fin of a shark. Then he hailed in
-good earnest, swimming his wickedest the while, and ere the voracious
-sea-scourge, or its consort, could turn over for a leisurely snap at him,
-Slap-Jack was safe in the bight of a rope, and the anchor-watch, not a
-little astonished, were hauling their exhausted shipmate over the side.
-
-“Come on board, sir!” exclaimed the new arrival, scrambling breathless
-to his feet, after tumbling head-foremost over the gunwale, and pulling
-with ludicrous courtesy at his wet hair. “Come on board, sir. Hands
-wanted immediate. Ax your honour’s pardon. So blown I can hardly speak.
-First-class row among the niggers. Bobbery all over the island. Devil to
-pay, and no pitch hot!”
-
-Captain George was on deck, which perhaps accounted for the rapidity
-of the foretopman’s rescue, and although justly affronted by so
-unceremonious a return on the part of a liberty-man who had out-stayed
-his leave, he saw at a glance that some great emergency was imminent, and
-prepared to meet it with habitual coolness.
-
-“Silence, you fool!” said he, pointing to a negro amongst the crew. “Lend
-him a jacket, some of you. Come below at once to my cabin, and make your
-report. You can be punished afterwards.”
-
-Slap-Jack followed his commander nothing loth. The after-punishment,
-as being postponed for twenty-four hours at least, was a matter of no
-moment, but a visit to the Captain’s cabin entailed, according to the
-_etiquette_ of the service, a measure of grog, mixed on certain liberal
-principles, that from time immemorial have regulated the strength of that
-complimentary refreshment.
-
-In all such interviews it is customary for the skipper to produce his
-spirit-case, a tumbler, and a jug of water. The visitor helps himself
-from the former, and esteems it only good breeding that he should charge
-his glass to the depth of three fingers with alcohol, filling it up with
-the weaker fluid. When the thickness of a seaman’s fingers is considered,
-and the breadth to which he can spread them out on such occasions, it
-is easy to conceive how little space is left near the rim of the vessel
-for that insipid element, every additional drop of which is considered
-by competent judges to spoil the beverage. Slap-Jack mixed as liberally
-as another. Ere his draught, however, was half-finished, or his report
-nearly concluded, the Captain had turned the hands up, and ordered a boat
-to be manned forthwith, leaving Beaudésir to command in his absence; but
-true to his usual system, informing no one, not even the latter, of his
-intentions, or his destination.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV
-
-BESIEGED
-
-
-In the meantime poor Célandine found herself hurried down the mountain
-by Hippolyte and his band, in a state of anxiety and alarm that would
-have paralysed the energies of most women, but that roused all the savage
-qualities dormant in the character of the Quadroon. Not a word of her
-captors, not a look escaped her; and she soon discovered, greatly to her
-dismay, that she was regarded less as an auxiliary than a hostage. She
-was placed in the centre of the band, unbound indeed, and apparently at
-liberty; but no sooner did she betray, by the slightest independence of
-movement, that she considered herself a free agent, than four stalwart
-blacks closed in on her with brutal glee, attempting no concealment of a
-determination to retain her in their power till they had completed their
-merciless design.
-
-“Once gone,” said Hippolyte, politely affecting great reverence for the
-Obi-woman’s supernatural powers, “never catchee no more!—Jumbo fly away
-with yaller woman, same as black. Dis nigger no ’fraid of Jumbo, so
-long as Missee Célandine at um back. Soon dark now. March on, you black
-villains, and keep your ranks, same as buckra musketeer!”
-
-With such exhortations to discipline, and an occasional compliment to his
-own military talents, Hippolyte beguiled their journey down the mountain.
-It seemed to Célandine that far too short a space of time had elapsed ere
-they reached the skirts of the forest, and even in the deepening twilight
-could perceive clearly enough the long low building of _Cash-a-crou_, now
-called Montmirail West.
-
-The lamps were already lit in the sitting-room on the ground floor. From
-where she stood, in the midst of the band, outwardly stern and collected,
-quivering with rage and fear within, the Quadroon could distinguish the
-figures of Madame la Marquise and her daughter, moving here and there
-in the apartment, or leaning out at window for a breath of the cool,
-refreshing evening air.
-
-Their commander kept his men under covert of the woods, waiting till it
-should be quite dark. There was little to fear from a garrison consisting
-of but two ladies, backed by Fleurette and Bartoletti, for the other
-domestic slaves were either involved in the conspiracy or had been
-inveigled out of the way by its chief promoters; yet notwithstanding the
-weakness of the besieged, some dread of their ascendancy made the negroes
-loth to encounter by daylight even such weak champions of the white race
-as two helpless women and a cowardly Italian overseer.
-
-Nevertheless, every moment gained was worth a purse of gold. Célandine,
-affecting to identify herself with the conspirators, urged on them the
-prudence of delay. Hippolyte, somewhat deceived by her enthusiasm,
-offered an additional reason for postponing the attack, in the brilliancy
-of a conflagration under a night sky. He intended, he said, to begin by
-setting fire to the house—there could then be no resistance from within.
-There would be plenty of time, he opined, for drink and plunder before
-the flames gained a complete ascendancy, and he seemed to cherish some
-vague half-formed notion that it would be a fine thing to appear before
-Cerise in the character of a hero, who should rescue her from a frightful
-death.
-
-A happy thought struck the Quadroon.
-
-“It was lucky you brought me with you,” said she earnestly. “Brave as you
-are, I fancy you would have been scared had you acted on your own plan.
-You talk of firing _Cash-a-crou_, as you would of roasting a turtle in
-its shell. Do you know that madame keeps a dozen barrels of gunpowder
-stowed away about the house—nobody knows where but herself. You would
-have looked a little foolish, I think, my brave colonel, to find your
-long body blown clean over the Sulphur Mountain into the sea on the
-other side of the island. You and your guard here are as handsome a set
-of blacks as a yellow woman need wish to look on. Not a morsel would have
-been left of any one of you the size of my hand!”
-
-“Golly!” exclaimed Hippolyte in consternation. “Missee Célandine, you
-go free for tanks, when this job clean done. Hi! you black fellows,
-keep under shadow of gum-tree dere—change um plan now,” he added,
-thoughtfully; and without taking his keen eyes off Célandine, walked from
-one to the other of his band, whispering fresh instructions to each.
-
-The Quadroon counted the time by the beating of her heart. “Now,” she
-thought, “my boy must have gained the edge of the forest—ten minutes more
-to cross the new cane-pieces—another ten to reach the shore. He can swim
-of course—his father swam like a pilot-fish. In forty minutes he might
-be on board. Five to man a boat—and ten more to pull her in against the
-ebb. Then they have fully a league to march, and sailors are such bad
-walkers.” At this stage of her reflections something went through her
-heart like a knife. She thought of the grim ground-sharks, heaving and
-gaping in the warm translucent depths of the harbour at Port Welcome.
-
-But meanwhile Hippolyte had gathered confidence from the bearing of his
-comrades. Their numbers and fierceness inspired him with courage, and he
-resolved to enter the house at the head of his chosen body-guard, whilst
-he surrounded it with a score of additional mutineers who had joined him
-according to previous agreement at the head of the forest. These, too,
-had brought with them a fresh supply of rum, and Célandine observed with
-horror its stimulating effects on the evil propensities of the band.
-
-While he made his further dispositions, she found herself left for a
-few seconds comparatively unwatched, and at once stole into the open
-moonlight, where her white dress could be discerned plainly from the
-house. She knew her husband would be smoking his evening tobacco,
-according to custom, in the verandah. At little more than a hundred paces
-he could hardly fail to see her; and in an instant she had unbound the
-red turban and waved it round her head, in the desperate hope that he
-might accept that warning for a danger signal. The quick-witted Italian
-seemed to comprehend at once that something was wrong. He imitated her
-gesture, retired into the house, and the next minute his figure was seen
-in the sitting-room with the Marquise and her daughter. By this time
-Hippolyte had returned to her side, and she could only watch in agony
-for the result. Completely surrounded by the intoxicated and infuriated
-negroes, there seemed to be no escape for the besieged, while the looks
-and gestures of their leader, closely copied by his chosen band, denoted
-how little of courtesy or common humanity was to be expected from the
-Coromantee, excited to madness by all the worst passions of his savage
-nature bursting from the enforced restraints that had so long kept them
-down.
-
-A bolder spirit than the Signor’s might have been excused for betraying
-considerable apprehension in such a crisis, and in good truth Bartoletti
-was fairly frightened out of his wits. In common with the rest of the
-whites on the island, he had long suspected a conspiracy amongst the
-negroes, and feared that such an insurrection would take place; but no
-great social misfortune is ever really believed in till it comes, and he
-had neither taken measures for its prevention, nor thoroughly realised
-the magnitude of the evil. Now that he felt it was upon him he knew not
-where to turn for aid. There was no time to make phrases or to stand on
-ceremony. He rushed into the sitting-room with a blanched cheek and a
-wild eye, that caused each of the ladies to drop her work on her lap, and
-gaze at him in consternation.
-
-“Madame!” he exclaimed, and his jaw shook so that he could hardly form
-the syllables, “we must leave the house at once—we must save ourselves.
-There is an _émeute_, a revolt, a rebellion among the slaves. I know
-them—the monsters! They will not be appeased till they have drunk our
-blood. Oh! why did I ever come to this accursed country?”
-
-Cerise turned as white as a sheet—her blue eyes were fixed, her lips
-apart. Even the Marquise grew pale, though her colour came back, and she
-held her head the more erect a moment afterwards. “Sit down,” she said,
-imperiously, yet kindly enough. “Take breath, my good man, and take
-courage also. Tell me exactly what you have seen;” and added, turning to
-Cerise, “don’t be frightened, child—these overseers are sad alarmists. I
-daresay it is only what the negroes call a ‘bobbery,’ after all!”
-
-Then Bartoletti explained that he had seen his wife waving a red shawl
-from the edge of the jungle; that this was a preconcerted signal by which
-they had agreed to warn each other of imminent danger; that it was never
-to be used except on great emergencies; and that he was quite sure it was
-intended to convey to him that she was in the power of the slaves, and
-that the rising they had so often talked about had taken place at last.
-
-The Marquise thought for a moment. She seemed to have no fear now that
-she realised her danger. Only once, when her eye rested on her daughter,
-she shuddered visibly. Otherwise, her bearing was less that of a tender
-woman in peril of her life, than of some wise commander, foiled and beset
-by the enemy, yet not altogether without hope of securing his retreat.
-
-So might have looked one of her warlike ancestors when the besiegers set
-fire to his castle by the Garonne, and he resolved to betake himself,
-with his stout veterans, to the square stone keep where the well was
-dug—a maiden fortress, that had never yet succumbed to famine nor been
-forced by escalade.
-
-“Is there any one in the house whom we can trust?” said the Marquise; and
-even while she spoke a comely black girl came crawling to her feet, and
-seized her hand to cover it with tears and kisses.
-
-“Iss, missis!” exclaimed Fleurette, for Fleurette it was, who had indeed
-been listening at the door for the last five minutes. “You trust _me_!
-Life for life! Blood for blood! No fear Jumbo, so lilly ma’amselle go out
-safe. Trust Fleurette, missis. Trust Fleurette, ma’amselle. Fleurette die
-at um house-door, so! better than ugly black floggee-man come in.” The
-Marquise listened calmly.
-
-“Attend to me, Fleurette,” said she, with an authoritative gesture. “Go
-at once through the kitchen into the dark path that leads to the old
-summer-house. See if the road to Port Welcome is clear. There is no
-bush on that side within five hundred paces, and if they mean to stop
-us, they must post a guard between the house and the gum-trees. Do not
-show yourself, girl, but if they take you, say Célandine sent you down
-to the negro-houses for eggs. Quick, and come back here like lightning.
-Bartoletti—have you any firearms? Do not be afraid, my darling,” she
-repeated, turning to her daughter, “I know these wretched people well.
-You need but show a bold front, and they would turn away from a lady’s
-fan if you only shook it hard at them.”
-
-“I am not afraid, mamma,” answered Cerise, valiantly, though her face
-was very pale, and her knees shook. “I—I don’t _like_ it, of course, but
-I can do anything you tell me. Oh, mamma! do you—do you think they will
-kill us?” she added, with rather a sudden breakdown of the courage she
-tried so gallantly to rally.
-
-“Kill us, mademoiselle!” exclaimed the overseer, quaking in every limb.
-“Oh, no! never! They cannot be so bad as that. We will temporise, we will
-supplicate, we will make terms with them; we will offer freedom, and rum,
-and plunder; we will go on our knees to their chief, and entreat his
-mercy!”
-
-The girl looked at him contemptuously. Strange to say, her courage rose
-as his fell, and she seemed to gather strength and energy from the abject
-selfishness of his despair. The Marquise did not heed him, for she heard
-Fleurette’s footsteps returning, and was herself busied with an oblong
-wooden case, brass-bound, and carefully locked up, that she lifted from
-the recess of a cupboard in the room.
-
-Fleurette’s black feet could carry her swiftly and lightly as a bird.
-She had followed her instructions implicitly, had crept noiselessly
-through the kitchen, and advanced unseen to the old summer-house. Peering
-from that concealment on the moonlit surface of the lawn, she was
-horrorstruck to observe nearly a score of slaves intently watching the
-house. She hurried back panting to her mistress’s presence, and made her
-discouraging report.
-
-Madame de Montmirail was very grave now. The affair had become more than
-serious. It was, in truth, desperate. Once again, as she looked at her
-daughter, came that strange quiver over her features, that shudder of
-repressed horror rather than pain. It was succeeded, as before, by a
-moment of deep reflection, and then her eye kindled, her lips tightened,
-and all her soft voluptuous beauty hardened into the obstinate courage of
-despair.
-
-Cerise sank on her knees to pray, and rose with a pale, serene, undaunted
-face. Hers was the passive endurance of the martyr. Her mother’s the
-tameless valour of the champion, inherited through a long line of the
-turbulent La Fiertés, not one of whom had ever blenched from death nor
-yielded an inch before the face of man.
-
-“Bartoletti!” said the Marquise. “Bar the doors and windows; they can be
-forced with half-a-dozen strokes, but in war every minute is of value.
-Hold this rabble in parley as long as you can. I dare not trust you with
-my pistols, for a weak heart makes a shaking hand, and I think fighting
-seems less your trade than mine. When you can delay them no longer,
-arrange your own terms with the villains. It is possible they may spare
-you for your wife’s sake. Quick, man! I hear them coming now. Cerise, our
-bedroom has a strong oaken door, and they cannot reach the window without
-a ladder, which leaves us but one enemy to deal with at a time. Courage,
-my darling! Kiss me! Again, again! my own! And now. A woman dies but
-once! Here goes for France, and the lilies on the White Flag!”
-
-Thus encouraging her child, the Marquise led the way to the bed-chamber
-they jointly occupied, a plainly-furnished room, of which the only
-ornament was the Prince-Marshal’s portrait, already mentioned as
-having occupied the place of honour in Madame’s _boudoir_ at the Hôtel
-Montmirail. Both women glanced at it as they entered the apartment. Then
-the Marquise, laying down the oblong box she carried, carefully shaded
-the night-lamp that burned by her bedside, and peered stealthily from the
-window to reconnoitre.
-
-“Four, six, ten,” said she, calmly, “besides their leader, a tall, big
-negro, very like Hippolyte. It _is_ Hippolyte. _You_ at least, my friend,
-will not leave this house alive! I can hardly miss so fair a mark as
-those broad black shoulders. This of course is the _corps d’élite_. Those
-at the back of the house I do not regard so much. The kitchen door is
-strong, and they will do nothing if their champions are repulsed. Courage
-again, my child! All is not lost yet. Open that box and help me to load
-my pistols. Strange, that I should have practised with them for years,
-only to beat Madame de Sabran, and now to-night we must both trust our
-safety to a true eye and a steady hand!”
-
-Pale, tearless, and collected, Cerise obeyed. Her mother, drawing the
-weapons from their case, wiped them with her delicate handkerchief, and
-proceeded to charge them carefully, and with a preoccupied air, like a
-mother preparing medicine for a child. Holding the ramrod between her
-beautiful white teeth, while her delicate and jewelled fingers shook the
-powder into the pan, she explained to Cerise the whole mystery of loading
-and priming the deadly weapons. She would thus, as she observed, always
-have one barrel in reserve. The younger woman listened attentively. Her
-lip was steady, though her hand shook, and now that the worst was come
-she showed that peculiar quality of race which is superior to the common
-fighting courage possessed indiscriminately by all classes—the passive
-concentrated firmness, which can take every advantage so long as a chance
-is left, and die without a word at last, when hope gives place to the
-resignation of despair.
-
-She even pointed out to her mother, that by half closing the shutter, the
-Marquise, herself unseen, could command the approach to the front door.
-Then taking a crucifix from her bosom, she pressed it to her lips, and
-said, “I am ready now, mamma. I am calm. I can do anything you tell me.
-Kiss me once more, dear, as you used when I was a child. And if we _must_
-die, it will not seem so hard to die together.”
-
-The Marquise answered by a long clinging embrace, and then the two women
-sat them down in the gloomy shadows of their chamber, haggard, tearless,
-silent, watching for the near approach of a merciless enemy armed with
-horrors worse than death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI
-
-AT BAY
-
-
-In obedience to his mistress, Bartoletti had endeavoured to secure the
-few weak fastenings of the house, but his hands shook so, that without
-Fleurette’s aid not a bolt would have been pushed nor a key turned.
-The black girl, however, seconded his efforts with skill and coolness,
-so that Hippolyte’s summons to surrender was addressed to locked doors
-and closed windows. The Coromantee was now so inflamed with rum as to
-be capable of any outrage, and since neither his band nor himself were
-possessed of firearms, nothing but Célandine’s happy suggestion about the
-concealed powder restrained him from ordering a few faggots to be cut,
-and the building set in a blaze. Advancing with an air of dignity, that
-would at any other time have been ludicrous, and which he would certainly
-have abandoned had he known that the Marquise covered his body with her
-pistol the while, he thumped the door angrily, and demanded to know why
-“dis here gentleman comin’ to pay compliment to buckra miss,” was not
-immediately admitted; but receiving no answer, proceeded at once to
-batter the panels with an iron crowbar, undeterred by the expostulations
-of Fleurette, who protested vehemently, first, that her mistress was
-engaged with a large party of French officers; secondly, that she lay
-sick in bed, on no account to be disturbed; and lastly, that neither she
-nor ma’amselle were in the house at all.
-
-The Coromantee of course knew better. Shouting a horrible oath, and a
-yet more hideous threat, he applied his burly shoulders to the entrance,
-and the whole wood-work giving way with a crash, precipitated himself
-into the passage, followed by the rest of the band, to be confronted by
-Fleurette alone, Bartoletti having fled ignominiously to the kitchen.
-
-“I could have hit him through the neck,” observed the Marquise,
-withdrawing from her post behind the shutter, “but I was too directly
-above him to make sure, and every charge is so valuable I would not waste
-one on a mere wound. My darling, I still hope that two or three deadly
-shots may intimidate them, and we shall escape after all.”
-
-Cerise answered nothing, though her lips moved. The two ladies listened,
-with every faculty sharpened, every nerve strung to the utmost.
-
-A scream from Fleurette thrilled through them like a blow. Hippolyte,
-though willing enough to dally with the comely black girl for a minute or
-two, lost patience with her pertinacity in clinging about him to delay
-his entrance, and struck her brutally to the ground. Turning fiercely on
-him where she lay, she made her sharp teeth meet in the fleshy part of
-his leg, an injury the savage returned with a kick, that after the first
-shriek it elicited left poor Fleurette stunned and moaning in the corner
-of the passage, to be crushed and trampled by the blacks, who now poured
-in behind their leader, elated with the success of this, their first step
-in open rebellion.
-
-Presently, loud shouts, or rather howls of triumph, announced that the
-overseer’s place of concealment was discovered. Bartoletti, pale or
-rather yellow, limp, stammering, and beside himself with terror, was
-dragged out of the house and consigned to sundry ferocious-looking
-negroes, who proceeded to amuse themselves by alternately kicking,
-cuffing, and threatening him with instantaneous death.
-
-The Marquise listened eagerly; horror, pity, and disgust succeeding each
-other on her haughty, resolute face. Once, something like contempt swept
-over it, while she caught the tone of Bartoletti’s abject entreaties for
-mercy. He only asked for life—bare life, nothing more; they might make a
-slave of him then and there. He was their property, he and his wife, and
-all that he had, to do what they liked with. Only let him live, he said,
-and he would join them heart and hand; show them where the rum was kept,
-the money, the jewels; nay, help them cheerfully to cut every white
-throat on the island. The man was convulsed with terror, and the negroes
-danced round like fiends, mocking, jeering, flouting him, exulting in the
-spectacle of a _buckra_ overseer brought so low.
-
-“There is something in _race_ after all,” observed the Marquise, as if
-discussing an abstract proposition. “I suppose it is only the _canaille_
-that can thus degrade themselves from mere dread of death. Though our
-families have not always _lived_ very decently, I am glad to think that
-there was never yet a Montmirail or La Fierté who did not know how _to
-die_. My child, it is the pure old blood that carries us through such
-moments as these; neither of us are likely to disgrace it now.”
-
-Again her daughter’s lips moved, although no sound escaped them. Cerise
-was prepared to die, but she could not bring herself to reason on the
-advantages of noble birth at such a moment, like the Marquise; and
-indeed the girl’s weaker frame and softer heart quailed in terror at the
-prospect of the ordeal they had to go through.
-
-From their chamber of refuge the two ladies could hear the insulting
-jests and ribald gibberish of the slaves, now bursting into the
-sitting-room, breaking the furniture, shivering the mirrors, and wantonly
-destroying all the delicate articles of use and ornament, of which they
-could neither understand the purpose nor appreciate the value. Presently
-a discordant scream from Pierrot announced that the parrot had protested
-against the intrusion of these riotous visitors, while a shout of pain,
-followed by loud bursts of laughter, proclaimed the manner in which he
-had resented the familiarity of one more daring than the rest. Taking the
-bird roughly off its perch, a stout young negro named Achille had been
-bitten to the bone, and the cross-cut wound inflicted by the parrot’s
-beak so roused his savage nature, that twisting its neck round with a
-vindictive howl, he slew poor Pierrot on the spot.
-
-The Marquise in her chamber above could hear the brutal acclamations
-that greeted this exploit, and distinguished the smothered thump of her
-favourite’s feathered body as it was dashed into a corner of the room.
-
-Then her lips set tight, her brows knit, and the white hand clenched
-itself round her pistol, firm, rigid, and pitiless as marble.
-
-Heavy footsteps were now heard hurrying on the stairs, and whispered
-voices urging contrary directions, but all with the same purport.
-There seemed to be no thought of compassion, no talk of mercy. Even
-while hearing their victims, Hippolyte and Achille, who was his second
-in command, scrupled not to discuss the fate of the ladies when they
-should have gained possession of their persons—a fate which turned the
-daughter’s blood to ice, the mother’s to fire. It was no time now to
-think of compromise or capitulation, or aught but selling life at the
-dearest, and gaining every moment possible by the sacrifice of an enemy.
-
-Even in the last extremity, however, the genius of system, so remarkable
-in all French minds, did not desert the Marquise. She counted the charges
-in her pistol-case, and calculated the resources of her foes with a cool,
-methodical appreciation of the chances for and against her, totally
-unaffected by the enormous disproportion of the odds. She was good, she
-argued, for a dozen shots in all. She would allow for two misses; sagely
-reflecting that in a chance medley like the present she could hardly
-preserve a steadiness of hand and eye that had heretofore so discomfited
-Madame de Sabran in the shooting galleries of Marly and Versailles.
-Eight shots would then be left, exclusive of two that she determined at
-all risks to reserve for the last. The dead bodies of eight negroes she
-considered, slain by the hand of one white woman, ought to put the whole
-black population of the island to the rout; but supposing that the rum
-they had drunk should have rendered them so reckless as to disregard even
-such a warning, and that, with her defences broke down, she found herself
-and daughter at their mercy, then—and while the Marquise reasoned thus,
-the blood mounted to her eyes, and a hand of ice seemed to close round
-her heart—the two reserve shots should be directed with unerring hand,
-the one into her daughter’s bosom, the other through her own.
-
-And Cerise, now that the crisis had arrived at last, in so far as
-they were to be substantiated by the enforced composure of a passive
-endurance, fully vindicated her claims to noble blood. She muttered
-many a prayer indeed, that arose straight from her heart, but her eyes
-were fixed on her mother the while, and she had disposed the ammunition
-on a chair beside her in such a manner as to reload for the Marquise
-with rapidity and precision. “We are like a front and rear rank of the
-Grey Musketeers,” said the latter, with a wild attempt at hilarity, in
-which a strong hysterical tendency, born of over-wrought feelings, was
-with difficulty kept down. “The affair will soon commence now, and, my
-child, if worst comes to worst, remember there is no surrender. I hear
-them advancing to the assault. Courage! my darling. Steady! and _Vive la
-France_!”
-
-The words were still upon her lips, when a swarm of negroes, crowding
-and shouldering up the narrow passage, halted at her door. Hippolyte
-commenced his summons to the besieged by a smashing blow with the
-crowbar, that splintered one of the panels and set the whole wood-work
-quivering to its hinges. Then he applied his thick lips to the keyhole,
-and shouted in brutal glee—
-
-“Time to wake up now, missee! You play ’possum no longer, else cut down
-gum-tree at one stroke. Wot you say to dis nigger for buckra bridegroom?
-Time to come out now and dance jigs at um wedding.”
-
-There was not a quiver in her voice while the Marquise answered in cold
-imperious tones—
-
-“You are running up a heavy reckoning for this night’s work. I know your
-ringleaders, and refuse to treat with them. Nevertheless, I am not a
-severe mistress. If the rest of the negroes will go quietly home, and
-resume their duties with to-morrow’s sunrise, I will not be hard upon
-_them_. You know me, and can trust my word.”
-
-Cheers of derision answered this haughty appeal, and loud suggestions for
-every kind of cruelty and insult, to be inflicted on the two ladies, were
-heard bandied about amongst the slaves. Hippolyte replied fiercely—
-
-“Give in at once! Open this minute, or neither of you shall leave the
-house alive! For the Marquise—Achille! I give her to you! For lilly
-ma’amselle—I marry her this very night. See! before the moon goes down!”
-
-Cerise raised her head in scornful defiance. Her face was livid, but it
-was stamped with the same expression as her mother’s now. There could be
-no question both were prepared to die game to the last.
-
-The blows of Hippolyte’s crowbar resounded against the strong oaken
-panels of the door, but the massive wood-work, though it shook and
-groaned, resisted stoutly for a time. It was well for the inmates that
-Célandine’s imaginative powers had suggested the concealed gunpowder. Had
-it not been for their fears of an explosion the negroes would ere this
-have set fire to the building, when no amount of resistance could have
-longer delayed the fate of the two ladies. Bartoletti, intimidated by the
-threats of his captors, and preoccupied only with the preservation of his
-own life, had shown the insurgents where the rum was kept, and many of
-these were rapidly passing from the reckless to the stupefied stage of
-intoxication. The Italian, who was not deficient in cunning, encouraged
-their potations with all his might. He thus hoped to elude them before
-morning, and leaving his employers to their fate, reach Port Welcome
-in safety; where he doubted not he should be met by Célandine, whose
-influence as an Obi-woman, he rightly conjectured, would be sufficient
-to insure her safety. A coward rarely meets with the fate he deserves,
-and Bartoletti did indeed make his eventual escape in the manner he had
-proposed.
-
-Plying his crowbar with vigorous strokes, Hippolyte succeeded at length
-in breaking through one of the door panels, a measure to be succeeded
-by the insertion of hand and arm for withdrawal of the bolts fastened
-on the inside. The Coromantee possessed, however, a considerable share
-of cunning mixed with the fierce cruelty of a savage. When he had torn
-away enough wood-work to make a considerable aperture, he turned to his
-lieutenant and desired him to introduce his body and unbar the door from
-within. It is difficult to say what he feared, since even had he been
-aware that his mistress possessed firearms, he could not have conceived
-the possibility of her using them so recklessly in a house that he had
-reason to believe was stored with powder. It was probably some latent
-dread of the white race that prompted his command to his subordinate.
-“You peep in, you black nigger. Ladies all in full dress now. Bow-’ticks
-rosined and fiddlers dry. Open um door, and ask polite company to walk
-in.”
-
-Thus adjured, Achille thrust his woolly head and half his shining black
-body through the aperture. Madame de Montmirail, standing before her
-daughter, was not five paces off. She raised her white arm slowly, and
-covered him with steady aim. Ere his large thick hand had closed round
-the bolt for which it groped, there was a flash, a loud report, a cloud
-of smoke curling round the toilet accessories of a lady’s bed-chamber,
-and Achille, shot through the brain, fell back stone dead into the
-passage.
-
-“A little lighter charge of powder, my dear,” said the Marquise, giving
-the smoking weapon to her daughter to be reloaded, while she poised
-its fellow carefully in her hand. “I sighted him _very_ fine, and was
-a trifle over my mark even then. These pistols always throw high at so
-short a distance.”
-
-Then she placed herself in readiness for another enemy, and during a
-short space waited in vain.
-
-The report of her pistol had been followed by a general scramble of the
-negroes, who tumbled precipitately downstairs, and in some cases even out
-of the house, under the impression that every succeeding moment might
-find them all blown into the air. But the very cause of the besiegers’
-panic proved, when their alarm subsided, of the utmost detriment to the
-garrison. Hippolyte, finding himself still in possession of his limbs and
-faculties, on the same side of the Sulphur Mountain as before, argued,
-reasonably enough, that the concealed powder was a delusion, and with
-considerable promptitude at once set fire to the lower part of the house;
-after which, once more mustering his followers, and encouraging them
-by his example, he ascended the staircase, and betaking himself to the
-crowbar with a will, soon battered in the weak defence that alone stood
-between the ladies and their savage enemies.
-
-Cerise had loaded her mother’s pistol to perfection; that mother, roused
-out of all thought of self by her child’s danger, was even now reckoning
-the last frail chance by which her daughter might escape. During the
-short respite afforded by the panic of the negroes, they had dragged
-with desperate strength a heavy chest of drawers, and placed it across
-the doorway. Even when the latter was forced, this slight breast-work
-afforded an additional impediment to the assailants.
-
-“You must drop from the window, my child,” whispered the Marquise, when
-the shattered door fell in at length across this last obstruction,
-revealing a hideous confusion of black forms, and rolling eyes, and
-grinning fiendish faces. “It is not a dozen feet, but mind you turn round
-so as to light on your hands and knees. Célandine _must_ be outside.
-If you can reach her you are safe. Adieu, darling! I can keep the two
-foremost from following you, still!”
-
-The Marquise grasped a pistol in each hand, but she bent her brow—the
-haughty white brow that had never been carried more proudly than
-now—towards her child, and the girl’s pale lips clung to it lovingly,
-while she vowed that neither life nor death should part her from her
-mother.
-
-“It is all over, dear,” she said, calmly. “We can but die together as we
-have lived.”
-
-Their case was indeed desperate. The room was already darkening with
-smoke, and the wood-work on the floor below crackling in the flames that
-began to light up the lawn outside, and tip with saffron the sleeping
-woods beyond. The door was broken in; the chest of drawers gave way with
-a loud crash, and brandishing his crowbar, Hippolyte leaped into the
-apartment like a fiend, but stood for an instant aghast, rigid, like that
-fiend turned to bronze, because the white lady, shielding her daughter
-with her body, neither quailed nor flinched. Her eye was bright, her
-colour raised, her lips set, her hand steady, her whole attitude resolute
-and defiant. All this he took in at a glance, and the Coromantee felt
-his craven heart shrink up to nothing in his breast, thus covered by the
-deadly pistol of the Marquise.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII
-
-JUST IN TIME
-
-
-Moments are precious at such a time. The negro, goaded by shame, rage,
-and alcohol, had drawn his breath for a spring, when a loud cheer was
-heard outside, followed by two or three dropping shots, and the ring of a
-hearty English voice exclaiming—
-
-“Hold on, mates! Don’t ye shoot wild a-cause of the ladies. It’s yard-arm
-to yard-arm, this spell, and we’ll give these here black devils a taste
-of the naked steel!”
-
-In another moment Slap-Jack was in the passage, leaving a couple of
-wounded ruffians on the stairs to be finished by his comrades, and
-cutting another down across the very door-sill of the Marquise’s
-bed-chamber. Ere he could enter it, however, his captain had dashed
-past him, leaping like a panther over the dead negroes under foot, and
-flashing his glittering rapier in the astonished eyes of the Coromantee,
-who turned round bewildered from his prey to fight with the mad energy of
-despair.
-
-In vain. Of what avail was the massive iron crowbar, wielded even by the
-strength of a Hercules, against the deadliest blade but one in the Great
-Monarch’s body-guard?
-
-A couple of dazzling passes, that seemed to go over, under, all round the
-clumsier weapon—a stamp—a muttered oath, shut in by clenched, determined
-teeth, and the elastic steel shot through Hippolyte’s very heart, and out
-on the other side.
-
-Spurning the huge black body with his foot, Captain George withdrew his
-sword, wiped it grimly on the dead man’s woolly head, and, uncovering,
-turned to the ladies with a polite apology for thus intruding under the
-pressure of so disagreeable a necessity.
-
-He had scarcely framed a sentence ere he became deadly pale, and began to
-stammer, as if he, too, was under the influence of some engrossing and
-incontrollable emotion.
-
-The two women had shrunk into the farthest corner of the room. With the
-prospect of a rescue, Madame de Montmirail’s nerves, strung to their
-utmost tension, had completely given way. In a state of mental and bodily
-prostration, she had laid her head in the lap of Cerise, whose courage,
-being of a more passive nature, did not now fail her so entirely.
-
-The girl, indeed, pushing her hair back from her temples, looked wildly
-in George’s face for an instant, like one who wakes from a dream; but
-the next, her whole countenance lit up with delight, and holding out
-both hands to him, she exclaimed, in accents of irrepressible tenderness
-and self-abandonment, “_C’est toi!_” then the pale face flushed crimson,
-and the loving eyes drooped beneath his own. To him she had always been
-beautiful—most beautiful, perhaps, in his dreams—but never in dreams nor
-in waking reality so beautiful as now.
-
-He gazed on her entranced, motionless, forgetful of everything in the
-world but that one loved being restored, as it seemed, by a miracle,
-at the very time when she had been most lost to him. His stout heart,
-thrilling to its core from her glance, quailed to think of what must have
-befallen had he arrived a minute too late, and a prayer went up from it
-of hearty humble thanksgiving that he was in time. He saw nothing but
-that drooping form in its delicate white dress, with its gentle feminine
-gestures and rich dishevelled hair; heard nothing but the accents of that
-well-remembered voice vibrating with the love that he felt was deep and
-tender as his own. He was unconscious of the cheers of his victorious
-boat’s crew, of the groans and shrieks uttered by wounded or routed
-negroes, of the dead beneath his feet, the blazing rafters overhead,
-the showers of sparks and rolling clouds of smoke that already filled
-the house; unconscious even of Madame de Montmirail’s recovery from her
-stupor, as she too recognised him, and raising herself with an effort
-from her daughter’s embrace, muttered in deep passionate tones, “C’est
-lui!”
-
-But it was no time for the exchanges of ceremonious politeness, or the
-indulgence of softer emotions. The house was fairly on fire, the negroes
-were up in arms all over the island. A boat’s crew, however sturdy, is
-but a handful of men, and courage becomes foolhardy when it opposes
-itself voluntarily at odds of one against a score. Slap-Jack was the
-first to speak. “Askin’ _your_ pardon, ladies,” said he, with seamanlike
-deference to the sex; “the sooner we can clear out of this here the
-better. If you’ll have the kindness to point out your sea-chests, and
-possibles, and such like, Bottle-Jack here, he’ll be answerable for their
-safety, and me an’ my mates we’ll run you both down to the beach and have
-you aboard in a pig’s whisper. The island’s getting hot, miss,” he added
-confidentially to Cerise, who did not the least understand him. “In these
-low latitudes, a house afire and a hundred of blacks means a bobbery,
-just as sure as at home four old women and a goose makes a market!”
-
-“He is right,” observed the Captain, who had now recovered his presence
-of mind. “From what I saw as I came along, I fear there is a general
-rising of the slaves through the whole island. My brigantine, I need not
-say, is at the disposal of madame and mademoiselle (Cerise thanked him
-with a look), and I believe that for a time at least it will be the only
-safe place of refuge.”
-
-Thus speaking, he offered his hand to conduct the Marquise from the
-apartment, with as much courtliness and ceremony as though they had been
-about to dance a minuet at Versailles, under the critical eye of the late
-king. Hers trembled violently as she yielded it. That hand, so steady but
-a few minutes ago, while levelling its deadly weapon against the leader
-of a hundred enemies, now shook as if palsied. How little men understand
-women. He attributed her discomposure entirely to fright.
-
-There is a second nature, an acquired instinct in the habits of
-good-breeding, irrepressible even by the gravest emergency. Captain
-George, conducting Madame de Montmirail down her own blazing staircase,
-behaved with as ceremonious a politeness as if they had been descending
-in accordance with etiquette to a formal dinner-party. Cerise, following
-close, hung no doubt on every word that came from his lips, but it must
-be confessed the conversation was somewhat frivolous for so important a
-juncture.
-
-“I little thought,” said the Captain, performing another courtly bow,
-“that it was Madame la Marquise whom I should have the honour of
-escorting to-night out of this unpleasant little _fracas_. Had I known
-madame was on the island, she will believe that I should have come ashore
-and paid my respects to her much sooner.”
-
-“You could not have arrived at a more opportune moment, monsieur,”
-answered the lady, whose strong physical energy and habitual presence
-of mind were now rapidly reasserting themselves. “You have always been
-welcome to my receptions; never more so than to-night. You found it a
-little hot, I fear, and a good deal crowded. The latter disadvantage
-I was remedying, to the best of my abilities, when you announced
-yourself. The society, too, was hardly so polite as I could have wished.
-Oh, monsieur!” she added, in a changed and trembling voice, suddenly
-discarding the tone of banter she had assumed, “where should we have been
-now, and what must have become of us, but for you? _You_, to whom we had
-rather owe our lives than to any man in the world!”
-
-He was thinking of Cerise. He accepted the kind words gratefully,
-happily; but, like all generous minds, he made light of the service he
-had rendered.
-
-“You are too good to say so, madame,” was his answer. “It seemed to me
-you were making a gallant defence enough when I came in. One man had
-already fallen before your aim, and I would not have given much for the
-life of that ugly giant whom I took the liberty of running through the
-body without asking permission, although he is probably, like myself, a
-slave of your own.”
-
-The Marquise laughed. “Confess, monsieur,” said she, “that I have a
-steady hand on the pistol. Do you know, I never shot at anything but a
-playing-card till to-night. It is horrible to kill a man, too. It makes
-me shudder when I think of it. And yet, at the moment, I had no pity,
-no scruples—I can even imagine that I experienced something of the wild
-excitement which makes a soldier’s trade so fascinating. I hope it is
-not so; I trust I may not be so cruel—so unwomanly. But you talk of
-slaves. Are we not yours? Yours by every right of conquest; to serve and
-tend you, and follow you all over the world. Ah! it would be a happy lot
-for her who knew its value!”
-
-The last sentence she spoke in a low whisper and an altered tone, as if
-to herself. It either escaped him or he affected not to hear.
-
-By this time they were out of the house, and standing on the lawn to
-windward of the flames, which leaped and flickered from every quarter
-of the building; nor, in escaping from the conflagration, had they by
-any means yet placed themselves in safety. Captain George and the three
-trusty Jacks, with half-a-dozen more stout seamen, constituting a boat’s
-crew, had indeed rescued the ladies, for the moment, from a hideous
-alternative; but it was more than doubtful, if even protected by so brave
-an escort, they could reach the shore unmolested. Bands of negroes,
-ready to commit every enormity, were ere now patrolling all parts of
-the island. It was too probable that the few white inhabitants had been
-already massacred, or, if still alive, would have enough to do to make
-terms for themselves with the infuriated slaves.
-
-A slender garrison occupied a solitary fort on the other side of the
-mountains, but so small a force might easily be overmastered, and even
-if they had started on the march it was impossible they could arrive for
-several hours in the vicinity of Port Welcome. By that time the town
-might well be burned to the ground, and George, who was accustomed to
-reason with rapidity on the chances and combinations of warfare, thought
-it by no means unlikely that the ruddy glare, fleeting and wavering on
-the night-sky over the blazing roof of Montmirail West, might be accepted
-as a signal for immediate action by the whole of the insurgents.
-
-Hippolyte had laid his plans with considerable forethought, the result,
-perhaps, of many a crafty war-path—many a savage foray in his own wild
-home. He had so disposed the negroes under his immediate orders, that
-Madame de Montmirail’s house was completely surrounded in every direction
-by which escape seemed possible. The different egresses leading to the
-huts, the mills, the cane-pieces, were all occupied, and a strong force
-was posted on the high road to Port Welcome, chiefly with a view to
-prevent the arrival of assistance from that quarter. One only path was
-left unguarded; it was narrow, tangled, difficult to find, and wound up
-through the jungle, across the wildest part of the mountain.
-
-By this route he had probably intended to carry off Mademoiselle de
-Montmirail to some secure fastness of his own. Not satisfied with the
-personal arrangements he had made for burning the house and capturing
-the inmates, he had also warned his confederates, men equally fierce and
-turbulent, if of less intelligence than his own, that they should hold
-themselves in readiness to take up arms the instant they beheld a glare
-upon the sky above _Cash-a-crou_; that each should then despatch a chosen
-band of twenty stout negroes to himself for orders; and that the rest of
-their forces should at once commence the work of devastation on their own
-account, burning, plundering, rioting, and cutting all white throats,
-without distinction of age or sex.
-
-That this wholesale butchery failed in its details was owing to no fault
-of conception, no scruples of humanity on the part of its organiser. The
-execution fell short of the original design simply because confided to
-several different heads, acted on by various interests, and all more or
-less bemused with rum. The ringleader had every reason to believe that
-if his directions were carried out he would find himself, ere sunrise,
-at the head of a general and successful revolt—a black emperor, perhaps,
-with a black population offering him a crown.
-
-But this delusion had been dispelled by one thrust of Captain George’s
-rapier, and the Coromantee’s dark body lay charring amongst the glowing
-timbers of Madame de Montmirail’s bed-chamber.
-
-The dispositions that he had made, however, accounted for the large
-force of negroes now converging on the burning house. Their shouts
-might be heard echoing through the woods in all directions. When George
-had collected his men, surrounded the two ladies by a trusty escort of
-blue-jackets, and withdrawn his little company, consisting but of a
-dozen persons, under cover of the trees, he held a council of war as to
-the best means of securing a rapid retreat. Truth to tell, the skipper
-would willingly have given the whole worth of her cargo to be once more
-on her deck, or even under the guns of ‘The Bashful Maid.’
-
-Slap-Jack gave his opinion unasked.
-
-“Up foresail,” said he, with a characteristic impetuosity: “run out the
-guns—double-shotted and depressed; sport every rag of bunting; close in
-round the convoy; get plenty of way on, and run clean through, exchanging
-broadsides as we go ahead!”
-
-But Smoke-Jack treated the suggestion with contempt.
-
-“That’s wot I call rough-and-tumble fighting, your honour,” he grumbled,
-with a sheepish glance at the ladies; for with all his boasted knowledge
-of their sex, he was unaccustomed to such specimens as these, and
-discomfited, as he admitted to himself, by the “trim on ’em.” “Them’s
-not games as is fitted for such a company as this here, if I may make
-so bold. No, no, your honour, it’s good advice to keep to windward of
-a nigger, and it’s my opinion as we should weather them on this here
-tack; get down to the beach with a long leg and a short one—half-a-mile
-and more below the town—fire three shots, as agreed on, for the boat,
-and so pull the ladies aboard on the quiet. After that, we might come
-ashore again, d’ye see, and have it out comfortable. What say _you_,
-Bottle-Jack?”
-
-That worthy turned his quid, and looked preternaturally wise; the more
-so that the question was somewhat unexpected. He was all for keeping the
-ladies safe, he decided, now they had got them. Captain Kidd always did
-so, he remembered, and Captain Kidd could sail a ship and fight a ship,
-&c.; but Bottle-Jack was more incoherent than usual—utterly adrift under
-the novelty of his situation, and gasping like a gudgeon at the Marquise
-and her daughter, whose beauty seemed literally to take away his breath.
-
-George soon made up his mind.
-
-“Is there any way to the beach,” said he, addressing himself rather to
-Cerise than her mother, “without touching the road to Port Welcome? It
-seemed to me, as we marched up, that the high road made a considerable
-bend. If we could take the string instead of the bow we might save a good
-deal of time, and perhaps escape observation altogether.”
-
-The Marquise and her daughter looked at each other helplessly. Had they
-been Englishwomen, indeed, even in that hot climate, they would probably
-have known every by-road and mountain path within three leagues of their
-home; but the ladies of France, though they dance exquisitely, are not
-strong walkers, and neither of these, during the months they had spent at
-_Cash-a-crou_, had yet acquired such a knowledge of the locality as might
-now have proved the salvation of the whole party.
-
-In this extremity a groan was heard to proceed out of the darkness at a
-few paces’ distance. Slap-Jack, guided by the sound, and parting some
-shrubs that concealed her, discovered poor Fleurette, more dead than
-alive, bruised, exhausted, terrified, scarcely able to stand, and shot
-through the ankle by a chance bullet from the blue-jackets, yet conscious
-enough still to drag herself to the feet of Cerise and cover them with
-kisses, forgetting everything else in her joy to find her young mistress
-still alive.
-
-“You would serve me, Fleurette, I know,” said Mademoiselle de Montmirail,
-in a cautious whisper; for, to her excited imagination, every shrub that
-glistened in the moonlight held a savage. “I can trust you; I feel it.
-Tell me, is there no way to the sea but through our enemies? Must we
-witness more cruelties—more bloodshed? Oh! have we not had fighting and
-horrors enough?”
-
-The black girl twined herself upwards, like a creeper, till her head
-was laid against the other’s bosom; then she wept in silence for a few
-seconds ere she could command her voice to reply.
-
-“Trust me, lilly ma’amselle,” said she, in a tone of intense feeling that
-vouched for her truth. “Trust poor Fleurette, give last drop of blood
-to help young missee safe. Go to Jumbo for lilly ma’amselle now. Show
-um path safe across Sulphur Mountain down to sea-shore. Fleurette walk
-pretty well tank you, now, if only buckra blue-jacket offer um hand. Not
-so, sar! Impudent tief!” she added, indignantly, as Slap-Jack, thoroughly
-equal to the occasion, at once put his arm round her waist. “Keep your
-distance, sar! You only poor foretopman. Dis good daddy help me along
-fust.”
-
-Thus speaking, she clung stoutly to Bottle-Jack, and proceeded to guide
-the party up the mountain along a path that she assured them was known
-but to few of the negroes themselves, and avoided even by these, as being
-the resort of Jumbo and several other evil spirits much dreaded by the
-slaves. Of such supernatural terrors, she was good enough to inform them,
-they need have no fear, for that Jumbo and his satellites were fully
-occupied to-night in assisting the “bobbery” taking place all over the
-island; and that even were they at leisure they would never approach
-a party in the centre of which was walking such an angel of light as
-Ma’amselle Cerise.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII
-
-MÈRE AVANT TOUT
-
-
-The path was steep and narrow, leading them, moreover, through the
-most tangled and inaccessible parts of the jungle. Their progress was
-necessarily tardy and laborious. Fleurette took the lead, supported by
-Bottle-Jack, whose sea-legs seemed to carry him uphill with difficulty,
-and who stopped to take breath more than once. The black girl’s wound was
-painful enough, but she possessed that savage spirit of endurance which
-successfully resists mere bodily suffering, and walked with an active
-and elastic, though limping step. Blood, however, was still oozing from
-her wound, and a sense of faintness, resisted by sheer force of will,
-threatened at every moment to overpower her. She might just reach the
-crest of the hill, she thought, and then it would be all over with poor
-Fleurette; but the rest would need no guide after that point was gained,
-and the faithful girl struggled on.
-
-Next came Smoke-Jack, in attendance on the ladies, much exhilarated by
-the dignity of his position, yet ludicrously on his good behaviour, and
-afraid of committing himself, on the score of manners, by word or deed.
-The Marquise and her daughter walked hand in hand, wasting few words,
-and busied each with her own thoughts. They seemed to have exchanged
-characters with the events of the last few hours. Cerise, ever since her
-rescue, had displayed an amount of energy and resolution scarcely to
-be expected from her usual demeanour, making light of present fatigue
-and coming peril in a true military spirit of gaiety and good-humour;
-while her mother, on the contrary, betrayed in every word and gesture
-the languor of subdued emotion, and a certain softened, saddened
-preoccupation of manner, seldom to be remarked in the self-possessed and
-brilliant Marquise.
-
-Captain George, with Slap-Jack and the rest of the blue-jackets, brought
-up the rear. His fighting experience warned him that in no previous
-campaign had he ever found himself in so critical a position as at
-present. He was completely surrounded by the enemy. His own force, though
-well-armed and full of confidence, was ridiculously weak in numbers.
-He was encumbered with baggage (not to speak it disrespectfully) that
-must be protected at any sacrifice, and he had to make a forced march,
-through ground of which he was ignorant, dependent on the guidance of a
-half-savage girl, who might after all turn out to be a traitress.
-
-Under so many disadvantages, the former captain of musketeers showed that
-he had not forgotten his early training. All eyes and ears, he seemed to
-be everywhere at once, anticipating emergencies, multiplying precautions,
-yet finding a moment every now and then for a word of politeness and
-encouragement to the ladies, to regret the roughness of the path, to
-excuse the prospective discomforts of the brigantine, or to assure
-them of their speedy arrival in a place of safety. On these occasions
-he invariably directed his speech to the Marquise and his looks to her
-daughter.
-
-Presently, as they continued to wind up the hill, the ascent grew more
-precipitous. At length, having crossed the bed of a rivulet that they
-could hear tumbling into a cascade many hundred feet below, they reached
-a pass on the mountain side where the path became level, but seemed so
-narrow as to preclude farther progress. It turned at a sharp angle round
-the bare face of a cliff, which rose on one side sheer and perpendicular
-several fathoms above their heads, and on the other shelved as abruptly
-into a dark abyss, the depth of which, not even one of the seamen,
-accustomed as they were to giddy heights, dared measure with his eye.
-Fleurette alone, standing on the brink, peered into it without wavering,
-and pointing downwards, looked back on the little party with triumph.
-
-“See down there,” said she, in a voice that grew fainter with every
-syllable. “No road round up above; no road round down below. Once past
-here all safe, same as in bed at home. Come by, you! take hands one by
-one—so—small piece more—find white lagoon. All done then. Good-night!”
-
-Holding each other by the hand, the whole party, to use Slap-Jack’s
-expression, “rounded the point” in safety. They now found themselves in
-an open and nearly flat space, encircled but unshadowed by the jungle.
-Below them, over a level of black tree tops, the friendly sea was shining
-in the moonlight; and nearer yet, a gleam through the dark mass of forest
-denoted that white lagoon of which Fleurette had spoken.
-
-On any other night it would have been a peaceful and a lovely sight;
-but now a flickering glare on the sky showed them where the roof-tree
-of Montmirail West was burning into ashes, and the yells of the rioters
-could be heard, plainer and plainer, as they scoured the mountain in
-pursuit of the fugitives, encouraging each other in their search.
-
-Some of these shouts sounded so near in the clear still night, that
-Captain George was of opinion their track had been already discovered
-and followed up. If this were indeed the case, no stand could be made so
-effectually as at the defile they had lately threaded, and he determined
-to defend it to the last. For this purpose he halted his party and gave
-them their directions.
-
-“Slap-Jack,” said he, “I’ve got a bit of soldier’s work for you to do.
-It’s play to a sailor, but you attend to my orders all the same. If these
-black devils overhaul us, they can only round that corner one at a time.
-I’ll leave you with a couple of your own foretopmen here to stop _that_
-game. But we soldiers never want to fight without a support. Smoke-Jack
-and the rest of the boat’s crew will remain at your back. What say ye, my
-lads? It will be something queer if you can’t hold a hundred darkies and
-more in such a post as this, say, for three-quarters of an hour. I don’t
-ask ye for a minute longer; but mind ye, I expect _that_, if not a man of
-you ever comes on board again. When you’ve killed all the niggers, make
-sail straight away to the beach, fire three shots, and I’ll send a boat
-off. You won’t want to break your leave after to-night’s work. At all
-events, I wouldn’t advise you to try, and I shall get the anchor up soon
-after sunrise. Bottle-Jack comes with me, in case the ladies should want
-more assistance, and this dark girl—what d’ye call her?—Fleurette, to
-show us the way. God bless ye, my lads! Keep steady, level low, and don’t
-pull till you see the whites of their eyes!”
-
-Bottle-Jack, slewing his body about with more than customary oscillation,
-declared his willingness to accompany the Captain, but pointing to
-Fleurette, expressed a fear that “this here gal had got a megrim or
-something, and wanted caulkin’ very bad, if not refittin’ altogether in
-dry dock.”
-
-The moon shed a strong light upon the little party, and it was obvious
-that Fleurette, who had now sunk to the ground, with her head supported
-by Bottle-Jack as tenderly and carefully as if the honest tar had been an
-experienced nurse of her own sex, was seriously, if not mortally wounded,
-and certainly unable to proceed. The Marquise and her daughter were at
-her side in an instant, but she took no heed of the former, fixing her
-filmy eyes on Cerise, and pressing her young mistress’s hand to her heart.
-
-“You kiss me once again,” said she, faintly, and with a sad smile on her
-swarthy face, now turning to that wan leaden hue which makes a pale negro
-so ghastly an object. “Once again, so sweet! ma’amselle, same as before.
-You go straight on to white lagoon—see! Find canoe tied up. Stop here
-berry well, missee—Fleurette camp out all night. No fear Jumbo now. Sleep
-on long after monkeys wake! Good-night!”
-
-It was with difficulty that Cerise could be prevailed on to leave the
-faithful girl who had sacrificed herself so willingly, and whom, indeed,
-she could hardly expect to see again; but the emergency admitted of no
-delay, even on the score of gratitude and womanly compassion. George
-hurried the ladies forward in the direction of the lagoon, leaving
-Fleurette, now prostrate and unconscious, to the care of Slap-Jack, who
-pitied her from the depths of his honest heart.
-
-“It’s a bad job,” said he, taking off his jacket and folding it into a
-pillow for the poor girl’s head, with as much tender care as if she
-had been his own Alice, of whom, indeed, he was thinking at the moment.
-“A real bad job, if ever there was one. Such a heart of oak as this
-here; an’ a likely lass too, though as black as a nor’-easter. Well,
-_somebody_’ll have to pay for this night’s work, that’s sartin. Ay!
-yell away, you black beggars. We’ll give you something to sing out for
-presently—an’ you shall have it hot and heavy when you _do_ get it, as
-sure as my name’s Slap-Jack!”
-
-Captain George, in the meantime, led the two ladies swiftly down the
-open space before them, in the direction of the lagoon, which was now in
-sight. They had but to thread one more belt of lofty forest-trees, from
-which the wild vines hung in a profusion of graceful festoons, and they
-were on the brink of the cool, peaceful water, spread like a sheet of
-silver at their feet.
-
-“Five minutes more,” said he, “and we are safe. Once across, and if that
-girl speaks truth, less than a quarter of a league will bring us to the
-beach. All seems quiet, too, on this side, and there is little chance of
-our being intercepted from the town. The boat will be in waiting within a
-cable’s length off shore, and my signal will bring her in at once. Then I
-shall hope to conduct you safe on board, but both madame and mademoiselle
-must excuse a sailor’s rough accommodation and a sailor’s unceremonious
-welcome.”
-
-The Marquise did not immediately answer. She was looking far ahead into
-the distance, as though she heard not, or at least heeded not, and yet
-every tone of his voice was music to her ears, every syllable he spoke
-curdled like some sweet and subtle poison in her blood. Notwithstanding
-the severe fatigue and fierce excitement of the night, she walked
-with head erect, and proud imperious step, like a queen amongst her
-courtiers, or an enchantress in the circle she has drawn. There was a
-wild brilliancy in her eyes, there was a fixed red spot on either cheek;
-but for all her assumption of pride, for all her courage and all her
-self-command, her hand trembled, her breath came quick, and the Marquise
-knew that she had never yet felt so thoroughly a weak and dependent woman
-as now, when she turned at last to thank her preserver for his noble
-efforts, and dared not even raise her eyes to meet his own.
-
-“You have saved us, monsieur,” was all she could stammer out, “and how
-can we show our gratitude enough? We shall never forget the moment of
-supreme danger, nor the brave man who came between those ruffians and
-their prey. Shall we, Cerise?”
-
-But Cerise made no answer, though she managed to convey her thanks in
-some hidden manner that afforded Captain George a satisfaction quite out
-of proportion to their value.
-
-They had now reached the edge of the lagoon, to find, as Fleurette had
-indicated, a shallow rickety canoe, moored to a post half-buried in the
-water, worm-eaten, rotten, and crumbling to decay. The bark itself was
-in little better preservation, and on a near inspection they discovered,
-much to their discomfiture, that it would hold at best but one passenger
-at a time. It had evidently not been used for a considerable period, and
-after months of exposure and ill-usage, without repair, was indeed, as
-a means of crossing the lagoon, little better than so much brown paper.
-George’s heart sank while he inspected it. There was no paddle, and
-although such a want might easily be remedied with a knife and the branch
-of a tree, every moment of delay seemed so dangerous, that the Captain
-made up his mind to use another mode of propulsion, and cross over at
-once.
-
-“Madame,” said he to the Marquise, “our only safety is on the other
-side of this lagoon. Fifty strokes of a strong swimmer would take him
-there. No paddle has been left in that rickety little craft, nor dare I
-waste the few minutes it would take to fashion one. Moreover, neither
-mademoiselle nor yourself could use it, and you need only look at your
-shallop to be sure that it would never carry two. This, then, is what I
-propose. I will place one of you in the canoe, and swim across, pushing
-it before me. Bottle-Jack will remain here to guard the other. For that
-purpose I will leave him my pistols in addition to his own. When my first
-trip is safely accomplished, I will return with the canoe and repeat the
-experiment. The whole can be done in a short quarter of an hour. Excuse
-me, madame, but for this work I must divest myself of coat, cravat, and
-waistcoat.”
-
-Thus speaking, Captain George disencumbered himself rapidly of these
-garments, and assisted by Bottle-Jack, tilted the light vessel on its
-side, to get rid of its superfluous weight of water. Then standing
-waist-deep in the lagoon, he prepared it for the reception of its
-freight; no easy matter with a craft of this description, little more
-roomy and substantial than a cockle-shell, without the advantage of being
-water-tight. Spreading his laced coat along the bottom of the canoe, he
-steadied it carefully against the bank, and signed to the ladies that all
-was now in readiness for embarkation.
-
-They exchanged wistful looks. Neither seemed disposed to grasp at her
-own safety and leave the other in danger. Bottle-Jack, leaning over the
-canoe, continued bailing the water out with his hand. Notwithstanding
-the Captain’s precautions it leaked fast, and seemed even now little
-calculated to land a passenger dry on the farther shore.
-
-“Mamma, I _will_ not leave you,” said Cerise, “you shall go first
-with George. With monsieur, I mean.” She corrected herself, blushing
-violently. “Monsieur can then return for me, and I shall be quite safe
-with this good old man, who is, you perceive, armed to the teeth, and as
-brave as a lion besides.”
-
-“That is why I do not fear to remain,” returned the Marquise. “Child,
-I could not bear to see this sheet of water between us, and you on the
-dangerous side. We can neither fly nor swim, alas! though the latter art
-we _might_ have learned long ago. Cerise, I _insist_ on your crossing
-first. It may be the last command I shall ever lay upon you.”
-
-But Cerise was still obstinate, and the canoe meanwhile filled fast,
-in spite of Bottle-Jack’s exertions. That worthy, whose very nose was
-growing pale, though not with fear, took no heed of their dilemma, but
-continued his task with a mechanical, half-stupefied persistency, like
-a man under the influence of opium. The quick eye of the Marquise had
-detected this peculiarity of manner, and it made her the more determined
-not to leave her daughter under the old seaman’s charge. Their dispute
-might have been protracted till even Captain George’s courtesy would
-have given way; but a loud yell from the defile they had lately quitted,
-followed by a couple of shots and a round of British cheers, warned them
-all that not a moment was to be lost, for that their retreat was even now
-dependent on the handful of brave men left behind to guard the pass.
-
-“My daughter shall go first, monsieur? Is it not so?” exclaimed the
-Marquise, with an eagerness of eye and excitement of manner she had not
-betrayed in all the previous horrors of the night.
-
-“It is better,” answered George. “Mademoiselle is perhaps somewhat the
-lightest.” And although he strove to make his voice utterly unmoved and
-indifferent, there was in its tone a something of intense relief, of
-deep, heartfelt joy, that told its own tale.
-
-The Marquise knew it all at last. She saw the past now, not piece by
-piece, in broken detail as it had gone by, but all at once, as the
-mariner, sailing out of a fogbank, beholds the sunny sky, and the blue
-sea, and the purple outlines of the shore. It came upon her as a shot
-goes through a wild deer. The creature turns sick and faint, and knowing
-all is over, yet would fain ignore its hurt and keep its place, erect,
-stately, and uncomplaining, amongst the herd; not the less surely has it
-got its death-wound.
-
-How carefully he placed Cerise in the frail bark of which she was to
-be the sole occupant. How tenderly he drew the laced coat between the
-skirt of her delicate white dress and the flimsy shattered wood-work,
-worn, splintered, and dripping wet even now. Notwithstanding the haste
-required, notwithstanding that every moment was of such importance in
-this life and death voyage, how he seemed to linger over the preparations
-that brought him into contact with his precious freight. At last they
-were ready. A farewell embrace between mother and daughter; a husky
-cheer delivered in a whisper from Bottle-Jack; a hurried thanksgiving
-for perils left behind; an anxious glance at the opposite shore, and the
-canoe floated off with its burden, guided by George, who in a few yards
-was out of his depth and swimming onward in long measured strokes that
-pushed it steadily before him.
-
-The Marquise, watching their progress with eager restless glance, that
-betrayed strong passions and feelings kept down by a stronger will,
-observed that when within a pistol-shot of the opposite shore the bark
-was propelled swiftly through the water, as if the swimmer exerted
-himself to the utmost—so much so as to drive it violently against the
-bank. George’s voice, while his dripping figure emerged into sight,
-warned her that all was well; but straining her eyes in the uncertain
-light, the Marquise, though she discerned her daughter’s white dress
-plainly enough, could see nothing of the boat. Again George shouted, but
-she failed to make out the purport of what he said; though a gleam of
-intelligence on the old seaman’s face made her turn to Bottle-Jack. “What
-is it?” she asked anxiously. “Why does he not come back to us with the
-canoe?”
-
-“The canoe will make no more voyages, my lady,” answered the old
-man, with a grim leer that had in it less of mirth than pain. “She’s
-foundered, that’s wot she’s been an’ done. They’ll send back for us,
-never fear; so you an’ me will keep watch and watch till they come; an’
-if you please, my lady, askin’ your pardon, I’ll keep _my_ watch first.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIX
-
-ALL ADRIFT
-
-
-The Marquise scarcely heard him. She was intent on those two figures
-scrambling up the opposite shore, and fast disappearing into the darkness
-beyond. It seemed that the darkness was closing in around herself, never
-again to be dispelled. When those were gone what was there left on earth
-for _her_? She had lost Cerise, she told herself, the treasure she had
-guarded so carefully; the darling for whom she would have sacrificed her
-life a thousand times, as the events of the last few hours proved; the
-one aim and object of her whole existence, without which she was alone
-in the world. And now this man had come and taken her child away, and it
-would never be the same thing again. Cerise loved him, she was sure of
-that. Ah! they could not deceive _her_; and he loved Cerise. She knew it
-by his voice in those few words when he suggested that the girl should
-cross the water first. The Marquise twined her fingers together, as if
-she were in pain.
-
-They must be safe now. Walking side by side on the peaceful beach,
-waiting for the boat that should bear them away, would they forget all
-about her in the selfishness of their new-found happiness, and leave her
-to perish here? She wished they would. She wished the rioters, coming
-on in overwhelming numbers, might force the pass and drive these honest
-blue-jackets in before them to make a last desperate stand at the water’s
-edge. She could welcome death then, offering herself willingly to ensure
-the safety of those two.
-
-And what was this man to her that she should give him up her daughter,
-that she should be ready to give up her life rather than endanger his
-happiness? She winced, she quivered with pain and shame because of the
-feelings her own question called up. What was he to her? The noblest,
-the dearest, the bravest, the best-beloved; the realisation of her
-girl’s dreams, of her woman’s passions, the type of all that she had
-ever honoured and admired and longed for to make her happiness complete!
-She remembered so well the boy’s gentle brow, the frank kind eyes
-that smiled and danced with delight to be noticed by her, a young and
-beautiful widow, flattered and coveted of all the Great King’s Court. She
-recalled, as if it were but yesterday, the stag-hunt at Fontainebleau;
-the manly figure and the daring horsemanship of the Grey Musketeer; her
-own mad joy in that wild gallop, and the strange keen zest life seemed
-to have acquired when she rode home through those sleeping woods, under
-the dusky purple of that soft autumnal night. How she used to watch
-for him afterwards, amidst all the turmoil of feasts and pleasures
-that constituted the routine of the new Court. How well she knew his
-place of ceremony, his turn of duty, and loved the very sentries at the
-palace-gate for his sake. Often had she longed to hint by a look, a
-gesture, the flirt of a fan, the dropping of a flower, that he had not
-far to seek for one who would care for him as he deserved; but even the
-Marquise shrank, and feared, and hesitated, woman-like, where she really
-loved. Then came that ever-memorable night at the Masked Ball, when
-she cried out aloud, in her longing and her loneliness, and never knew
-afterwards whether she was glad or sorry for what she had done.
-
-It was soon to be over then, for ere a few more days had elapsed the
-Regent ventured on his shameless outrage at the Hôtel Montmirail, and lo!
-in the height of her indignation and her need, who should drop down, as
-it seemed, from the skies, to be her champion, but the man of all others
-whom most she could have loved and trusted in the world!
-
-Since then, had she not thought of him by day and dreamt of him by night,
-dwelling on his image with a fond persistency none the less cherished
-because sad and desponding—content, if better might not be, to worship it
-in secret to the last, though she might never look on its original again?
-
-The real and the ideal had so acted on each other, that while he seemed
-to her the perfection of all manhood should be, that very type was
-unconsciously but a faithful copy of himself. In short, she loved him;
-and when such a man is loved by such a woman it is usually but little
-conducive to his happiness, and thoroughly destructive of her own.
-
-If I have mistaken the originator of so beautiful and touching an
-illustration, I humbly beg his pardon, but I think it is Alphonse Karr
-who teaches, in his remarks on the great idolatry of all times and
-nations, that it is well to sow plenty of flowers in that prolific
-soil which is fertilised by the heart’s sunshine and watered by its
-tears—plenty of flowers, the brighter, the sweeter, the more fragile,
-perhaps, the better. Winter may cut them down indeed to the cold earth,
-yet spring-time brings another crop as fair, as fresh, as fragile, and as
-easily replaced as those that bloomed before. But it is unwise to plant
-a tree; _because, if that tree be once torn up by the roots, the flowers
-will never grow over the barren place again_!
-
-The Marquise had not indeed planted the tree, but she had allowed it
-unwittingly to grow. Perhaps she would never have confessed its existence
-to herself had it not thus been forcibly torn away by roots that had
-for years twined deeper and deeper among all its gentlest and all its
-strongest feelings, till they had become as the very fibres of her heart.
-
-It is needless to say that the Marquise was a woman elevated both by
-disposition and education above the meaner and pettier weaknesses of her
-sex. If she was masculine in her physical courage and moral recklessness
-of consequences, she was masculine also in a certain generosity of
-spirit and noble disdain for anything like malice or foul-play. Jealousy
-with her—and, like all strong natures, she could feel jealousy very
-keenly—would never be visited on the object that had caused it. She would
-hate and punish herself under the torture; she might even be goaded to
-hate and punish the man at whose hands she was suffering; but she would
-never have injured the woman whom she preferred, and, indeed, supported
-by a scornful pride, would have taken a strange morbid pleasure in
-enhancing her own pain by ministering to that woman’s happiness.
-
-Therefore she was saved a keen pang now. A pang that might have rendered
-her agony too terrible to endure. She had not concealed from herself
-to-night that the thrill of delight she experienced from the arrival
-of succour was due rather to the person who brought it than to the
-assistance itself; but almost ere she had time to realise its charm the
-illusion had been dispelled, and she felt that, dream as it all was, she
-had been wakened ere she had time to dream it out.
-
-And now it seemed to her that nothing would be so good as the excitement
-of another skirmish, another struggle, and a sudden death, with the
-cheers of these brave Englishmen ringing in her ears. A death that Cerise
-would never forget had been encountered for her safety, that _he_ would
-sometimes remember, and remembering, accord a smile and a sigh to the
-beauty he had neglected, and the devotion he had never known till too
-late.
-
-Engrossed with such thoughts, the Marquise was less alive than usual
-to surrounding impressions. Presently a deep groan, forced from her
-companion by combined pain and weakness, against which the sufferer could
-no longer hold out, roused her to a sense of her situation, which was
-indeed sufficiently precarious to have warranted much anxiety and alarm.
-
-Hastening to his side, she was shocked to perceive that Bottle-Jack had
-sunk to the ground, and was now endeavouring ineffectually to support
-himself on his knees in an attitude of vigilance and defence. The
-Captain’s pistols lay beside him, and he carried his own in each hand,
-but his glazing eye and fading colour showed that the weapons could be
-but of little service, and the time seemed fast approaching when the old
-sailor should be relieved from his duty by an order against which there
-was no appeal.
-
-The Marquise had scarcely listened to the words while he spoke them, but
-they came back now, and she understood what he meant when he told her
-that, if she pleased, “he would keep _his_ watch first.”
-
-She looked around and shuddered. It was, indeed, a cheerless position
-enough. The moon was sinking, and that darkest hour of the night
-approached which is followed by dawn, just as sorrow is succeeded by
-consolation, and death by immortality. The breeze struck damp and chill
-on her unprotected neck and bosom, for there had been no time to think
-of cloaks or shawls when she escaped, nor was the air sufficiently cold
-before midnight to remind her of such precautions. The surrounding jungle
-stirred and sighed faintly, yet sadly, in the night air. The waters of
-the deep lagoon, now darkening with a darkening sky, lapped drearily
-against their bank. Other noises were there none, for the rioters seemed
-to have turned back from the resistance offered by Slap-Jack with his
-comrades, and to have abandoned for the present their search in that
-direction. The seamen who guarded the defile were peering stealthily into
-the gloom, not a man relaxing in his vigilance, not a man stirring on his
-post. The only sounds that broke her solitude were the restless movements
-of Bottle-Jack, and the groans that would not be suppressed. It was no
-wonder the Marquise shuddered.
-
-She stooped over the old seaman and took his coarse, heavy hand in hers.
-Even at such an extremity, Bottle-Jack seemed conscious of the contrast,
-and touched it delicately, like some precious and fragile piece of
-porcelain. “I fear you are hurt,” said she, in his own language, which
-she spoke with the measured accent of her countrywomen. “Tell me what it
-is; I am not a bad doctor myself.”
-
-Bottle-Jack tried to laugh. “It’s a flea-bite, my lady,” said he, setting
-his teeth to conceal the pain he suffered. “’Tis but a poke in the side
-after all, though them black beggars does grind their spear-heads to an
-edge like a razor. It’s betwixt wind and water, d’ye see, marm, if I may
-be so bold, and past caulking, in my opinion. I’m a-fillin’ fast, that’s
-where it is, askin’ your pardon again for naming it to a lady like you.”
-
-She partly understood him, and for the first time to-night the tears came
-into her eyes. They did her good. They seemed to clear her faculties
-and cool her brain. She examined the old man’s hurt, after no small
-resistance on his part, and found a deep wound between his ribs, which
-even her experience warned her must be mortal. She stanched it as well
-as she could, tearing up the lace and other trimmings of her dress to
-form a temporary bandage. Then she bent down to the lagoon to dip her
-coroneted handkerchief in water and lay it across his brow, while she
-supported his sinking frame upon her knees. He looked in her face with
-a puzzled, wandering gaze, like a man in a dream. The vision seemed
-so unreal, so impossible, so unlike anything he had ever seen before,
-Bottle-Jack began to think he had reached Fiddler’s Green at last.
-
-The minutes dragged slowly on. The sky became darker, the breeze colder,
-and the strangely matched pair continued in the same position on the
-brink of the white lagoon, the Marquise dipping her handkerchief at short
-intervals, and moistening the sailor’s mouth. It was all she could do for
-him, and like a faithful old dog, wounded to the death, he could only
-thank her with his eyes. More than once she thought he was gone, but as
-moment after moment crept by, so sad, so slow, she knew he was still
-alive.
-
-Would it never be day? She could scarcely see him now, though his heavy
-head rested on her knees, though her hand with the moistened handkerchief
-was laid on his very lips. At last the breeze freshened, sighing audibly
-through the tree-tops, which were soon dimly seen swaying to and fro
-against a pale streak of sky on the horizon. Bottle-Jack started and sat
-up.
-
-“Stand by!” he exclaimed, looking wildly round. “You in the fore-chains!
-Keep you axe ready to cut away when she rounds to. Easy, lads! She’ll
-weather it now, and I’ll go below and turn in.”
-
-Then he laid his head once more on Madame de Montmirail’s knees, like a
-child who turns round to go to sleep.
-
-The grey streak had grown to a wide rent of pale green, now broadening
-and brightening into day. Ere the sky flecked with crimson, or the
-distant tree-tops tinged with golden fire, the life of the whole jungle
-was astir, waking the discords of innumerable menageries. Cockatoos
-whistled, monkeys chattered, parrots screamed, mockingbirds reproduced
-these and a thousand other sounds a thousandfold. All nature seemed
-renewed, exulting in the freshened energies of another day, but still the
-Marquise sat by the lagoon, pale, exhausted, worn out, motionless, with
-the dead seaman’s head in her lap.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XL
-
-HOMEWARD BOUND
-
-
-“But, madame, I am as anxious as you can be! Independent of my own
-feelings—and judge if they be not strong—the brigantine should not lie
-here another hour. After last night’s work, it will not be long before
-a Spanish man-of-war shows herself in the offing, and I have no desire
-that our papers should be overhauled, now when my cruise is so nearly
-finished. I tell you, my dearest wish is to have it settled, and weigh
-with the next tide.”
-
-Captain George spoke from his heart, yet the Marquise seemed scarcely
-satisfied. Her movements were abrupt and restless, her eyes glittered,
-and a fire as of fever burned in her cheeks, somewhat wasted with all her
-late excitement and suspense. For the first time, too, he detected silver
-lines about the temples, under those heavy black locks that had always
-seemed to him only less beautiful than her child’s.
-
-“Not a moment must be lost,” said she, “not a moment—not a moment,” and
-repeating her words, walked across the deck to gaze wistfully over the
-side on Port Welcome, with its white houses glistening in the morning
-sun. They were safe on board ‘The Bashful Maid,’ glad to escape with life
-from the successful revolt that had burned Montmirail West to the ground,
-and destroyed most of the white people’s property on the island. Partly
-owing to its distance from the original scene of outbreak, partly from
-its lying under the very guns of the brigantine, of which the tonnage and
-weight of metal had been greatly exaggerated by the negroes, Port Welcome
-was yet standing, but its black population were keeping high holiday,
-apparently masters of the situation, and its white residents crept about
-in fear and trembling, not knowing how much longer they might be allowed
-to call their very lives their own. It had been a memorable night, a
-night of murder and rapine, and horror and dismay. Few escaped so well as
-Madame de Montmirail and her daughter. None indeed had the advantage of
-such a rescue. The negroes who tracked them into the bush, and who had
-delayed their departure to appropriate such plunder as they could snatch
-from the burning house, or to drink from its cellars success to the
-revolt, only reached that defile through which the fugitives were guided
-by Fleurette after these had passed by. The disappointed pursuers were
-there received by a couple of shots from Slap-Jack and his shipmates,
-which drove them back in disorder, yelling, boasting, vowing vengeance,
-but without any thought of again placing themselves in danger of lead
-or steel. In the death of Hippolyte, the revolt had lost its chief, and
-became from that moment virtually a failure. The Coromantee was the only
-negro concerned really capable of directing such a movement; and when
-his leadership was disposed of by a rapid thrust from Captain George’s
-rapier, the whole scheme was destined to fall to pieces of itself, after
-the reaction which always follows such disorders had taken place, and the
-habits of every-day life began to reassert themselves. In the meantime,
-the blacks had more congenial amusements in store than voluntary
-collision with an English boat’s crew, and soon desisted from a search
-through the jungle, apparently as troublesome and hazardous as a hunt for
-a hornet’s nest.
-
-By sunrise, therefore, Slap-Jack was able to draw off his party from
-their post, and fall back to where the Marquise sat watching by the dead
-seaman, on the brink of the lagoon. Nor was Bottle-Jack the only victim
-of their escape, for poor Fleurette had already paid the price of her
-fidelity with her life.
-
-A strong reinforcement from ‘The Bashful Maid,’ led by her Captain in
-person, who had returned at once, after placing Cerise in safety, enabled
-Madame de Montmirail and her defenders to take the high road to Port
-Welcome in defiance of all opposition. They therefore rounded the lagoon
-at once, and proceeding by an easier route than that which her daughter
-followed, reached the quay at their leisure, thence to embark on board
-the brigantine unmolested by the crowds of rioters with whom the town was
-filled.
-
-Therefore it was that Madame de Montmirail now found herself on the deck
-of ‘The Bashful Maid,’ urging with a strange persistency, unusual and
-even unbecoming in a mother, Captain George’s immediate marriage to her
-child, who was quietly sleeping off the night’s fatigues below.
-
-“There is the chapel, madame,” said George, pointing to the little white
-edifice that stood between the lighthouse and the town, distinguished
-by a cross that surmounted its glistening roof, “and here is the bride,
-safe, happy, and I hope sound asleep beneath the very spot where we are
-standing. I know not why there should be an hour’s delay, if indeed
-the priest have not taken flight. There must have been a prospect of
-martyrdom last night, which he would scarce wish to inspect too closely.
-Ah! madame, I may seem cold and undemonstrative, but if you could look
-into my heart you would see how happy I am!”
-
-His voice and manner carried with them a conviction not to be disputed.
-It probed the Marquise to the quick, and true to her character, she
-pressed the instrument deeper and deeper into the wound.
-
-“You love her then, monsieur?” she said, speaking very clearly and
-distinctly through her set teeth. “You love her as a woman must be loved
-if she would be happy—unreservedly, with your whole heart?”
-
-“I love her so well,” he answered, “that I only ask to pass my life in
-contributing to her happiness. Mine has been a rude wild career, in
-many scenes and many countries. I have lived _in_ society and _out of_
-society, afloat and ashore, at bivouac fires and Court receptions, yet I
-have always carried the portrait of that one gentle loving face printed
-on my heart.”
-
-“I compliment you on your constancy,” she answered, rather bitterly.
-“Such gallants have been very rare of late both at the old and new
-Courts. You must have seen other women too, as amiable, as beautiful,
-who could have loved you perhaps as well.”
-
-Something like a sigh escaped her with the concluding sentence, but there
-is no egotist like a happy lover, and he was too preoccupied with his own
-thoughts to perceive it. Smiling in his companion’s face, with the old
-honest expression that reminded her of what he had been as a boy, he took
-her hand and kissed it affectionately.
-
-“Madame,” said he, “shall I make you a frank avowal? Ever since I was a
-wild page at Versailles, and you were so kind to me, I have believed in
-Madame de Montmirail as my ideal of all that woman should be, and perhaps
-might never have loved Cerise so well had she not resembled her mother.”
-
-The Marquise was not without plenty of self-command, but she wanted it
-all now. Under pretence of adjusting her glove, she snatched away the
-hand he held, that he might not feel it tremble, and forced herself to
-laugh while she replied lightly—
-
-“You are complimentary, monsieur, but your compliments are somewhat out
-of date. An _old_ woman, you know, does not like to be reminded of her
-age, and you were, yes, I honestly confess you were, a dear, mischievous,
-good-looking, good-for-nothing boy in that far-off time so long ago. But
-all this is nothing to the purpose. Let us send ashore at once to the
-priest. The ceremony may take place at noon, and I can give the young
-couple my blessing before wishing them good-bye.”
-
-“How, madame?” replied he, astonished. “You will surely accompany us?
-You will return with us to Europe? You will never trust yourself amongst
-these savages again, after once escaping out of their hands?”
-
-“I shall be safe enough when the garrison has crossed the mountain,”
-she answered, “and that must be in a few hours, for they are probably
-even now on the march. Till then I will take refuge with the Jesuits on
-their plantation at Maria-Galante. I do not think all my people can have
-rebelled. Some of them will escort me faithfully as far as that. No,
-monsieur, the La Fiertés have never been accustomed to abandon a post
-of danger, and I shall not leave the island until this rising has been
-completely put down.”
-
-She spoke carelessly, almost contemptuously, but she scarcely knew what
-she said. Her actual thoughts, had she allowed herself to utter them,
-would have thus framed themselves: “Can there be anything so blind, so
-heartless, so self-engrossed—shall I say it?—so entirely and hopelessly
-_stupid_ as a man?”
-
-It was not for George to dispute her wishes. Though little given to
-illusions, he could scarcely believe that he was not dreaming now, so
-strange did it seem to have achieved in the last twelve hours that
-which had hitherto formed the one engrossing object of his life,
-prized, coveted, dwelt on the more that it looked almost impossible of
-fulfilment. There was but one drawback to his joy, one difficulty left,
-perplexing indeed, although simple, and doubly annoying because others of
-apparently far greater moment had been surmounted. There was no priest to
-be found in Port Welcome! The good old Portuguese Curé who took spiritual
-charge of the white inhabitants, and such negroes as could be induced
-to pay attention to his ministering, had been nearly frightened out of
-his wits by the outbreak. This quiet meek old man, who, since he left
-his college forty years before, had never known an excitement or anxiety
-greater than a visit from his bishop or a blight in his plantain-ground,
-now found himself surrounded by swarms of drunken and infuriated slaves,
-yelling for his life. It was owing to the presence of mind shown by an
-old coloured woman who lived with him as housekeeper, and to no energy
-or activity of his own, that he made his escape. She smuggled him out
-of the town through a by-street, and when he had once got his mule into
-an amble he never drew rein till he reached the Jesuits’ establishment
-at Maria-Galante, where he found a qualified welcome and a precarious
-refuge. From this shelter, defenceless and uncertain as it was, nothing
-would induce him to depart till the colours of a Spanish three-decker
-were flying in the harbour, and ere such an arrival could restore
-confidence to the colony it would behove ‘The Bashful Maid’ to spread her
-wings and flee away.
-
-Captain George was at his wits’ end. In such a dilemma he bethought him
-of consulting his second in command. For this purpose he went below to
-seek Beaudésir, and found him keeping guard at the cabin door within
-which Mademoiselle de Montmirail was reposing, a post he had held without
-stirring since she came on board before dawn, and was confided by the
-Captain to his care. He had not spoken to her, he had not even seen her
-face; but from that moment he had exchanged no words with his comrades,
-standing as pale, as silent, and almost as motionless as a statue. He
-started violently when the Captain spoke, and collected his faculties
-with an obvious effort. George could not but observe his preoccupation.
-
-“I am in a difficulty,” said the latter, “as I have already told you more
-than once. Try and comprehend me. I do not often ask for advice, but I
-want yours now.”
-
-“You shall have it at any cost,” replied the other. “Do not I owe
-everything in the world to you?”
-
-“Listen,” continued George. “The young lady whom my honest fellows
-rescued last night, and whom I brought on board, is—is—Mademoiselle de
-Montmirail herself.”
-
-“I know—I know,” answered Beaudésir, impatiently. “At least, I mean you
-mentioned it before.”
-
-“Very likely,” returned the Captain, “though I do not remember it. Well,
-it so happens, you see, that this is the same young lady—the person—the
-individual—in short, I have saved the woman of all others who is most
-precious to me in the world.”
-
-“Of course—of course,” repeated Beaudésir, impatiently, “she cannot go
-back—she _shall_ not go back amongst those wretches. She must stay on
-board. You must take her to Europe. There should be no delay. You must be
-married—now—immediately—within two hours—before we get the anchor up.”
-
-He seemed strangely eager, restless, excited. Without actually
-acknowledging it, George felt instinctively that something in his
-friend’s manner reminded him of the Marquise.
-
-“There is a grave difficulty,” said the Captain. “Where can we find a
-priest? That fat little Portuguese who looked like a guinea-pig is sure
-to have run away, if the negroes have not cut his throat.”
-
-The other reflected, his pale face turning paler every moment. Then he
-spoke, in a low determined voice—
-
-“My Captain, there is a Society of Jesuits on the island: I know it for
-certain; do not ask me why. I have never failed you, have I? Trust me yet
-this once. Order a boat to be manned; I will go ashore instantly; follow
-in an hour’s time with a strong guard; bring your bride with you; I will
-undertake that everything shall be ready at the chapel, and a priest in
-waiting to perform the ceremony.”
-
-George looked him straight in the face. “You are a true friend,” said he,
-and gave him his hand. The other bent over it as if he would have put
-it to his lips, and when he raised his head again his eyes were full of
-tears. He turned away hastily, sprang on deck, and in five minutes the
-boat was lowered and Beaudésir over the side.
-
-George tapped humbly at the cabin door, and a gentle face, pale but
-lovely, peeped out to greet him. After his whisper the face was anything
-but pale, and although the little monosyllable “No” was repeated again
-and again in that pleading, yielding tone which robs the negative of all
-its harshness, the boon he begged must have been already nearly accorded
-if there be any truth in the old Scottish proverb which affirms that
-“Nineteen nay-says make half a grant.”
-
-In less than two hours the bridal procession was formed upon the quay,
-guarded by some score of stalwart, weather-beaten tars, and presenting
-an exceedingly formidable front to the crowds of grinning negroes who
-were idling in the sun, talking over the events of the past night, and
-congratulating themselves that no such infliction as field-work was ever
-to be heard of in the island again.
-
-It was a strange and picturesque wedding, romantic enough in appearance
-and reality to have satisfied the wildest imagination. Smoke-Jack
-and certain athletic able seamen marched in front; Slap-Jack and his
-foretopmen brought up the rear. In the centre walked the Marquise and
-her daughter, accompanied by the bridegroom. Four deep on each side
-were the special attendants of the bride, reckless in gait, free in
-manner, bronzed, bearded, broad-shouldered, and armed to the teeth, yet
-cherishing perhaps as deep a devotion for her whom they attended to the
-altar as could have been entertained by the fairest bevy of bridesmaids
-that ever belonged to her own sex.
-
-Cerise was very grave and very silent; happy indeed beyond expression,
-yet a little frightened at the extent as at the suddenness of her own
-happiness.
-
-It seemed so strange to be besieged, rescued, carried off by a lover,
-and married to him, all within twenty-four hours. The Marquise, on the
-contrary, was gay, talkative, brilliant, full of life and spirits; more
-beautiful too than usual, in the bright light of that noonday sun.
-Slap-Jack, who considered himself no mean judge of such matters, was much
-distracted by the conflict in his own mind as to whether, under similar
-circumstances, he would have chosen the mother or the child.
-
-Taking little notice of the crowd who followed at a respectful distance,
-having received from the free-handed sailors several very intelligible
-hints not to come too near, the bridal procession moved steadily through
-the outskirts of the town and ascended the hill on which the chapel stood.
-
-Halting at its door, the crew formed a strong guard to prevent
-interruption, and the principal performers, accompanied only by
-Smoke-Jack, Slap-Jack, and the Marquise, entered the building. There were
-flowers on the altar, with wax tapers already lighted, and everything
-seemed prepared for the ceremony. A priest, standing with his back
-to them, was apparently engaged in putting a finishing touch to the
-decorations when they advanced. Cerise, bewildered, frightened, agitated,
-clung to her mother’s arm. “Courage, my child,” said the Marquise, “it
-will soon be over, and you need never do this again!”
-
-There was something in the voice so hard, so measured, so different from
-its usual tone, that the girl glanced anxiously in her face. It betrayed
-no symptoms of emotion, not even the little flutter of maternal pride
-and anxiety natural to the occasion. It was flushed, imperious, defiant,
-and strangely beautiful. Slap-Jack entertained no longer the slightest
-doubt of its superiority to any face he had ever seen. And yet no
-knightly visor, or Eastern _yashmak_ ever concealed its real wearer more
-effectually than that lovely mask which she forced to do her bidding,
-though every muscle beneath was quivering in pain the while.
-
-Nor was the Marquise the only person under this consecrated roof who
-curbed unruly feelings with a strong and merciless hand. That priest,
-with his back to the little congregation, adjusting with trembling
-gestures the sacred symbols of his faith, had fought during the last hour
-or two such a battle as a man can only fight once in a lifetime; a battle
-that, if lost, yields him a prey to evil without hope of rescue; if won,
-leaves him faint, exhausted, bleeding, a maimed and shattered champion
-for the rest of his earthly life. Since sunrise he had wrestled fiercely
-with sin and self. They had helped each other lustily to pull him down,
-but he had prevailed at last. Though one insuperable barrier already
-existed between himself and the woman he loved so madly at the cost of
-his very soul, it was hard to rear another equally insurmountable, with
-his own hand; but it would insure her happiness—he resolved to do it, and
-therefore he was here.
-
-So when Cerise and her lover advanced to the altar, and the Jesuit
-priest, whom they had imagined to be a stranger from Maria-Galante,
-turned round to confront them, in spite of his contracted features, in
-spite of the wan, death-like hue of his face, they recognised him at
-once, and exclaimed simultaneously, in accents of intense surprise,
-“Brother Ambrose!” and “Beaudésir!”
-
-The sailors, too much taken aback to speak, gasped at each other in
-mute astonishment, nor did Slap-Jack, who had constituted himself in a
-manner director of the proceedings, recover his presence of mind till the
-conclusion of the ceremony.
-
-If a corpse could be galvanised and set up in priest’s robes to bless
-a loving couple whom Heaven has joined together, its benediction could
-scarcely be more passionless and mechanical than was that which Florian
-de St. Croix—the Brother Ambrose who had been the bride’s confessor, the
-Beaudésir who had been the bridegroom’s lieutenant—now pronounced over
-George Hamilton and Cerise de Montmirail. Not an eyelash quivered, not a
-muscle trembled, not a tone of emotion could be detected in his voice.
-Still young, still enthusiastic, still, though it was wild and warped and
-wilful, possessing a human heart, he believed honestly that he then bade
-farewell at once and for ever to earth and earthly things.
-
-When they left the chapel, he was gone; gone back, so said some negroes
-lounging in the neighbourhood, to the other Jesuits at Maria-Galante.
-They believed him to be a priest of that order, resident at their
-plantation, who had simply come across the island, and returned in the
-regular performance of his duty. They cheered him when he emerged from
-a side door and departed swiftly through their ranks. They cheered the
-bridal party a few minutes later, leaving the chapel to re-embark.
-They even cheered the Marquise, when, after bidding them farewell,
-she separated from the others, and sought a house in the town, where
-Célandine had already collected several faithful slaves who could be
-trusted to defend her, and in the cellars of which refuge the Italian
-overseer was even then concealed. They cheered Slap-Jack more than any
-one, turning round to curse them, not without blows, for crowding in too
-close. Lighthearted and impressionable, they were delighted with the
-glitter, the bustle, the parade of the whole business, and thought it
-little inferior to the “bobbery” of the preceding night.
-
-So Cerise and her husband embarked on board the brigantine without delay.
-In less than an hour the anchor was up, and with a following tide and a
-wind off shore, ‘The Bashful Maid’ stood out to sea, carrying at least
-two happy hearts along with her, whatever she may have left behind.
-
-Before sunset she was hull-down on the horizon, but long after white
-sails vanished their last gleam seemed yet to linger on the eyes of two
-sad, wistful watchers, for whom, henceforth, it was to be a gloomier
-world.
-
-They knew not each other’s faces, they never guessed each other’s
-feelings, nor imagined how close a link between the two existed in that
-sunny speck, fading to leeward on the deep blue sea.
-
-None the less longingly did they gaze eastward; none the less keenly
-did the Marquise de Montmirail and Florian de St. Croix feel that their
-loves, their hopes, their better selves-all that brightened the future,
-that enhanced the past, that made life endurable—was gone from them in
-the Homeward Bound.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLI
-
-LADY HAMILTON
-
-
-The daisies we string in chains before ten, we tread under foot without
-compunction after twenty. Cerise, pacing a noble terrace rolled and
-levelled beneath the windows of her husband’s home, gave no thought to
-the humble petals bending to her light footfall, and rising again when it
-passed on; gave no thought to the flaring hollyhocks, the crimson roses,
-all the bright array of autumn’s gaudier flowers flaunting about her in
-the imposing splendour of maturity; gave no thought even to the fair
-expanse of moor and meadow, dale and dingle, copse and corn-field, wood,
-wold, and water, on which her eyes were bent.
-
-She might have travelled many a mile, too, even through beautiful
-England, without beholding such a scene. Overhead, the sky, clear and
-pure in the late summer, or the early autumn, seemed but of a deeper
-blue, because flecked here and there with wind-swept streaks of misty
-white. Around her glowed, in Nature’s gaudiest patch-work, all the
-garden beauty that had survived July. On a lower level by a few inches
-lay a smooth, trim bowling-green, dotted with its unfinished game; and
-downward still, foot by foot, like a wide green staircase, row after
-row of terraces were banked, and squared, and spread between their
-close-cut black yew hedges, till they descended to the ivy-grown wall
-that divided pleasure-ground from park. Here, slopes of tufted grass,
-swelling into bolder outlines as they receded, rolled, like the volume of
-a freshening sea, into knolls, and dips, and ridges, feathered in waving
-fern—dotted with goodly oaks—traversed by deep, narrow glades, in which
-the deer were feeding—shy, wild, and undisturbed. Beyond this, again, the
-variegated plain, rich in orchards, hedgerows, and enclosures studded
-with shocks of corn, seamed too by the silver of more than one glistening
-stream, was girdled by a belt of purple moorland; while, in the far
-distance, the horizon was shut in by a long low range of hills, lost in a
-grey-blue vapour, where they melted into sky.
-
-Behind her stood the grim and weatherworn mansion, with its thick stone
-walls, dented, battered, and defaced, as if it had defied a thousand
-tempests and more than one siege, which, indeed, was the fact. Every old
-woman in the country-side could tell how the square grey keep, at the end
-of the south wing, had resisted the Douglas, and there was no mistaking
-Cromwell’s handwriting on more than one rent in the comparatively modern
-portions of the building. Hamilton Hill, though it had never been
-called a fort, a castle, or even a hall, was known far and wide for a
-stronghold, that, well supplied and garrisoned, might keep fifty miles of
-the surrounding district in check; and the husband of Cerise was now lord
-of Hamilton Hill.
-
-No longer the soldier adventurer, the leader of Grey Musketeers, compound
-of courtier and bravo—no longer the doubtful skipper of a suspicious
-craft, half-trader, half-pirate—Sir George Hamilton, with position,
-property, tenants, and influence, found himself a very different person
-from the Captain George who used to relieve guard at the Palais Royal,
-and lay ‘The Bashful Maid’ broadside on to a Spanish galleon deep in the
-water, with her colours down and her foresail aback, a rich prize and an
-easy prey. Ere the brigantine had dropped her anchor in the first English
-port she made, George received intelligence of his far-off kinsman’s
-death, and his own succession to a noble inheritance. It came at an
-opportune moment, and he was disposed to make the most of it. Therefore
-it was that Cerise (now Lady Hamilton) looked from the lofty terrace
-over many a mile of fair English scenery, much of which belonged, like
-herself, to the man she loved.
-
-They were fairly settled now, and had taken their established place—no
-lowly station—amongst their neighbours. Precedence had not, indeed, been
-yielded them without a struggle; for in the last as in the present
-century, detraction claimed a fair fling at all new-comers, and not what
-they were, but _who_ they were, was the important question amongst a
-provincial aristocracy, who made up by minute inquiry for the limited
-sphere of their research. At first people whispered that the husband
-was an adventurer and the wife an actress. Well, if not an actress, at
-least a dancing-girl, whom he had picked up in Spain, in Paris, in the
-West Indies, at Tangiers, Tripoli, or Japan! Lady Hamilton’s beauty, her
-refined manners, her exquisite dresses, warranted the meanest opinion
-of her in the minds of her own sex; and although, when they could no
-longer conceal from themselves that she was a Montmirail of the real
-Montmirails, they were obliged to own she had at least the advantage of
-a high birth, I doubt if they loved her any better than before. They
-pitied Sir George, they said, one and all—“He, if you like, was charming.
-He had been page to the great King; he had been adored by the ladies of
-the French Court; he had killed a Prince of the Blood in a duel; he had
-sacked a convent of Spanish nuns, and wore the rosary of the Lady Abbess
-under his waistcoat; he had been dreadfully wicked, but he was so polite!
-he had the _bel air_; he had the _tourneur Louis Quatorze_; he had the
-manners of the princes, and the electors, and the archdukes now passing
-away. Such men would be _impossible_ soon; and to think he could have
-been entrapped by that tawdry Frenchified Miss, with her airs and graces,
-her fans and furbelows, and yards of the best Mechlin lace on the dress
-she went gardening in! It was nothing to _them_, of course, that the
-man should have committed such an absurdity; but, in common humanity,
-they could not help being sorry for it, and, unless they were very much
-deceived, so was he!”
-
-With the squires, again, and county grandees of the male sex, including
-two or three baronets, a knight of the shire, and the lord-lieutenant
-himself, it was quite different. These honest gentlemen, whether fresh
-or fasting in the morning, or bemused with claret towards the afternoon,
-prostrated themselves before Cerise, and did homage to her charms.
-Her blue eyes, her rosy lips, the way her gloves fitted, the slender
-proportions of her feet, the influence of her soft, sweet manner,
-resulting from a kindly, innocent heart—above all, the foreign accent,
-which added yet another grace, childish, mirth-inspiring, and bewitching,
-to everything she said—caused men of all ages and opinions to place their
-necks voluntarily beneath the yoke. They swore by her; they toasted her;
-they broke glasses innumerable in her honour; they vowed, with repeated
-imprecations, nothing had ever been seen like her before; and they held
-out to her husband the right hand of fellowship, as much for her sake as
-for his own.
-
-Sir George’s popularity increased on acquaintance. A man who could fly
-a hawk with science—who could kill his game on the wing—who could ride
-any horse perfectly straight over any part of their country—who seemed
-to care very little for politics, except in so far as that the rights of
-_venerie_ should be protected—who was reputed a consummate swordsman,
-and seen, on occasion, to empty his bottle of claret with exceeding
-good-will—was not likely to remain long in the background amongst the
-hardy northern gentlemen with whom his lot was cast. Very soon Sir George
-Hamilton’s society was sought as eagerly by both sexes, as his wife’s
-beauty was admired by the one and envied—shall I say denied?—by the other.
-
-Notwithstanding female criticism, which female instinct may possibly rate
-at its true value, Cerise found herself very happy. Certainly, the life
-she led was very different from that to which she had been accustomed in
-her youth. An English lady of the last century devoted much of her time
-to duties that are now generally performed by a housekeeper, and Cerise
-had resolved to become a thorough English lady simply, I imagine, because
-she thought it would please George. So she rose early, inspected the
-dairies, betrayed contemptible ignorance in the manufacture of butter and
-cream, reviewed vast stores of linen, put her white arms through a coarse
-canvas apron, and splashed little dabs of jam upon her delicate nose,
-with the conviction that she was a perfectly competent and efficient
-housewife. Such occupations, if more healthy, were certainly less
-exciting than the ever-recurring gaieties of the family hotel in Paris,
-less agreeable than the luxurious tropical indolence of Montmirail West.
-
-There were servants, plenty of them, at Hamilton Hill, who would
-literally have shed their blood in defence of their mistress, but they
-showed neither the blind obedience of the negro nor the shrewd readiness
-of the Parisian domestic. On the contrary, they seemed persuaded
-that length of service entitled them to be obstinate, perverse, and
-utterly negligent of orders. There were two or three seniors of whom
-Lady Hamilton positively stood in awe, and an old grey-headed butler,
-perfectly useless from gout and obesity, would expostulate angrily with
-his mistress for walking bareheaded on the terrace in an east wind. That
-same east wind, too, was another trial to Cerise. It gave her cold, it
-made her shiver, and she was almost afraid it sometimes made her cross.
-There were drawbacks, you see, even to a love-match, a fortune, and
-Hamilton Hill!
-
-Yet she was very happy. She continually repeated to herself how happy
-she was. To be sure, she missed her mother’s society, missed it far
-more than she expected when at first she acquired the freedom of the
-Matron’s Guild. Perhaps, too, she may have missed the incense of flattery
-so delicately offered at the receptions of the Marquise; nay, even the
-ponderous and well-turned compliments of the Prince-Marshal, who, to
-do him justice, treated her with a chivalrous affection, compounded of
-romantic devotion to her mother, and paternal regard for herself. But I
-am sure she would never have allowed that a drop could be wanting in the
-full cup of her happiness, for was not George the whole world to her, and
-had she not got him here all to herself?
-
-She walked thoughtfully on the terrace, surrounded by the glorious
-beauty of earth and sky, looking, and seeing not. Perhaps she was
-back in Touraine amongst the vineyards, perhaps she was in the shady
-convent-garden, cooling her temples in the pure fresh breeze that
-whispered to the beeches how it had gathered perfumes from the orchards
-and the hedgerows and the scented meadows of pleasant Normandy. Perhaps
-she was rustling through a minuet in the same set with a daughter of
-France, or fanning mamma in the hot West Indian evening, or straining her
-eyes to windward from the deck of ‘The Bashful Maid,’ with George’s arm
-round her waist, and his telescope pointing to the distant sail, that
-seemed plain to every eye on board but hers. At any rate, she appeared
-to be leagues off in mind, though her dainty feet, with slow, measured
-steps, were pacing to and fro on the terrace at Hamilton Hill. All at
-once her colour came, her eyes sparkled, she brightened up like one who
-wakes from sleep, for her heart still leaped to the trample of boot and
-jingle of spur, as it had leaped in the days gone by, when a certain
-Musketeer would visit his guard at unseasonable hours, that he might have
-an excuse for passing under her window.
-
-She ran across the terrace to meet him, with a little exclamation of
-delight. “How long you have been, George!” she said, smiling up in his
-face; “_why_ did you not ride faster? It is so dull here without _you_.”
-
-She had him by the arm, and clasped her pretty white hands across his
-sleeve, leaning her weight on his wrist. He looked affectionately down in
-the fair young face, but he had come at a gallop for five or six miles
-across the moor, as the state of his boots no less than his flushed face
-indicated, and he did not feel inclined to admit he had been dilatory, so
-his answer was less that of the lover than the husband.
-
-“Dull, Cerise! I am sorry you find this place so dull, seeing that you
-and I must spend the greater part of our lives here. I thought you liked
-England, and a country life!”
-
-Why is a man flattered by those exactions in a mistress that gall him so
-in a wife? Perhaps it is because a generous nature concedes willingly
-the favour, but is stern to resist the claim. When his mistress says
-she cannot do without him, all the protective instincts, so strong in
-masculine affection rise in her behalf, but the same sentiment expressed
-by one who assumes a right to his time and attention, rather awakes a
-sense of apprehension, and a spirit of revolt. Where woman only sees
-the single instance, man establishes the broad principle. If he yields
-on this occasion, he fears his time will never again be his own, and
-such misgivings show no little ignorance of the nature with which he
-has to deal, a nature to be guided rather than taught, persuaded rather
-than convinced, sometimes advised, but never confuted, and on which
-close reasoning is but labour thrown away. I think that woman wise who
-is careful never to weary her husband. The little god thrives well on
-smiles, and is seldom stronger than when in tears. While he frowns and
-sets his teeth, he is capable of a lion’s efforts and a mule’s endurance,
-but when he begins to yawn, he is but like other children, and soon falls
-fast asleep.
-
-Cerise hated George to speak to her in that grave tone. It grated on
-the poor girl’s nerves, and frightened her besides, which was indeed
-unreasonable, for he had never said a harsh word to her in his life. She
-looked timidly in his face, and answered meekly enough—
-
-“Every place is dull to me, George, without you. I wish I could be
-always with you—to help you with the tenants, to dine with you at the
-court-house, to sit behind you on Emerald when you go for a gallop across
-the moor. Why could I not ride with you this morning?”
-
-He laughed good-humouredly, and stroked the hands clasped on his wrist.
-
-“It would have been the very thing, Cerise!” said he. “I think I see
-you assisting at a cock-fight, placing the fowls, picking them up, and
-counting them out! I think I can see Sir Marmaduke’s face when you walked
-into the pit. I think I can hear the charitable remarks of all our county
-ladies, who are not disposed to let you off more easily, my dear, because
-you are so much better-looking and better dressed than anything they ever
-saw north of the Trent. Yes, my darling, come to the next cock-fight by
-all means. _Il ne manquerait que ça!_”
-
-The little French sentence was music to her ears. It was the language
-in which he had wooed her; and though she spoke _his_ language now
-assiduously, and spoke it well, the other was her mother-tongue. She
-laughed, too.
-
-“Perhaps I shall take you at your word,” said she, “though it is a cruel,
-horrid, wicked amusement. Did you win, George?”
-
-“Fifty gold pieces!” was his answer; “and the same on a return match next
-week, which I am equally sure of. They will get you two new dresses from
-Paris.”
-
-“I want no dresses from Paris,” said she, drawing him towards the
-bowling-green. “I want you to help me in my garden. Come and look at my
-Provence roses.”
-
-But Sir George had no time to spare even for so tempting a pursuit. A
-fresh horse was even now waiting to carry him ten miles off to a training
-of the militia, in which constitutional force, as became his station, he
-took a proper interest. He was the country gentleman now from head to
-heel, and frequented all gatherings and demonstrations in which country
-gentlemen take delight. Of these, a cock-fight was not the most refined,
-but it was the fashion of his time and class, so we must not judge him
-more severely than did Cerise, who, truth to tell, thought he could not
-possibly do wrong, and would have given him absolution for a worse crime,
-in consideration of his accompanying her to the garden to look at her
-Provence roses.
-
-“To-morrow,” said he; husbandlike, missing the chance of a compliment
-about the roses, which a lover would not have let slip; the latter,
-indeed, if obliged to depart, would probably have ridden away with one
-of the flowers in his bosom. “To-morrow, Cerise. I have a press of
-business to-day, but will get back in time for dinner.” And touching her
-forehead lightly with his lips, Sir George was gone before she could stop
-him, and in another minute his horse’s hoofs were clattering out of the
-stable-yard.
-
-From the terrace where she stood, Cerise watched his receding figure
-as he galloped merrily down the park, knee-deep in fern, threading the
-old oaks, and sending the deer scampering on all sides across the open;
-watched him with a cloud upon her young face, and a quiver about her
-mouth, that was near akin to tears; watched long after he was out of
-sight, and then turned wearily away with a languid step and a deep-drawn
-sigh.
-
-She was but going through the ordeal that sooner or later must be endured
-by every young wife who dearly loves her husband. She was but learning
-the unavoidable lesson that marriage is not courtship, that reality
-is not illusion, that the consistent tenderness of a husband, if more
-practical, is less flattering than the romantic adoration of a lover. She
-was beginning to shape into suspicion certain vague misgivings which had
-lately haunted her, that although George was all the world to _her_, she
-was only part of the world to George! It is from the sweetest dreams
-that we are most unwilling to awake, and therefore it is no wonder that
-Lady Hamilton’s preoccupation prevented her observing a strange horseman
-riding up the avenue, slowly and laboriously, as though after a long
-journey, of which the final destination seemed to be Hamilton Hill.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLII
-
-THE DESIRE OF THE MOTH
-
-
-In the year 1540, five Spaniards and a Savoyard, styling themselves
-“Clerks of the Company of Jesus,” left Paris under the leadership of the
-famous Ignatius Loyola, to found an establishment at Rome.
-
-Here Pope Paul III. presented them with a church, and in return these
-half-dozen of energetic priests gave in an unqualified adhesion to the
-Sovereign Pontiff. Their avowed intention in thus forming themselves into
-a separate and independent body (except in so far as they owed allegiance
-to its supreme head), was the propagation of the Roman Catholic faith,
-the conversion of heathens, the suppression of heresy, and the education
-of the young. For these purposes a system was at once organised which
-should combine the widest sphere of action with the closest surveillance
-over its agents, the broadest views with the most minute attention to
-details, an absolute unquestioned authority with a stanch and implicit
-obedience. To attain universal rule (possibly for a good motive, but
-at any sacrifice to attain it) over the opinions of humanity, however
-different in age, sex, character, and nationalities, was the object
-proposed; and almost the first maxim laid down, and never departed from
-in the Order, established that all means were justifiable to such an
-end. It was obvious that to win universal dominion over the moral as
-over the physical world, every effort must not only be vigorous, but
-combined and simultaneous, such waste of power must never be contemplated
-as the possibility of two forces acting in opposite directions, and
-therefore a code of discipline must be established, minute, stringent,
-and comprehensive, like that of an army before an enemy, but with this
-difference, that its penalties must never be modified by circumstances,
-nor its bonds relaxed by conquest or defeat. In the Order of Jesus must
-be no speaking, no questioning, no individuality, and—no forgiveness!
-
-Their constitution was as follows: A “General,” as he was styled,
-resided in perpetuity at Rome, and from that central spot sent forth
-his directions over the whole civilised world, enjoying absolute
-authority and exacting unqualified obedience. Even to the supreme head,
-however, was attached an officer entitled his “Admonisher.” It was his
-duty to observe the conduct of his chief, and report on it to the five
-“Assistants,” who constituted that chief’s council. These, again, were
-instructed to watch each other carefully, and thus, not even at the very
-head and fountain of supreme authority, could any single individual
-consider himself a free agent, even in the most trifling matters of
-dress, deportment, or daily conversation.
-
-In every country where the Jesuits obtained a footing (and while there
-are few in which they have not been notoriously powerful, even in those
-which betray no traces of their presence, who shall say that their
-influence has not been at work below the surface?) a “Provincial,” as he
-was called, assumed the direction of affairs within a certain district,
-and on his administration every one of his subordinates, temporal and
-spiritual, was instructed to report. There were three degrees in the
-Order, according to the experience and utility of its votaries—these
-were “Professors,” “Coadjutors,” both priests and laymen, for their
-ramifications extended from the highest to the lowest, through all
-classes of society, and “Novices.”
-
-To enter the Order, many severe examinations had to be passed, and while
-it numbered among its votaries men of superlative abilities in a thousand
-different callings, every member was employed according to his capacity
-of useful service.
-
-With such an organisation it may be imagined that the society has been
-a powerful engine for good and for evil. It has planted Christianity
-in the most remote corners of the earth, and has sent missionaries of
-skill, eloquence, piety, and dauntless courage, amongst savages who
-otherwise might never have heard the faintest echo of the Glad Tidings,
-in which all men claim interest alike; but, on the other hand, it has
-done incalculable mischief in the households of Christian Europe, has
-wormed itself into the confidence of women, has destroyed the concord of
-families, has afforded the assailants of religion innumerable weapons of
-offence, and in its dealings with those whom it was especially bound to
-succour and protect, has brought on them desolation rather than comfort,
-remorse where there should be hope, and war instead of peace.
-
-It is necessary to remember the effect of a constant and reciprocal
-supervision, not only on the outward actions and conduct, but on the very
-thoughts and characters of men unavoidably fettered by its influence, to
-understand the position of two priests walking side by side along one of
-the narrow level banks that intersect the marshy country lying near the
-town of St. Omer.
-
-These old friends, if, indeed, under such conditions as theirs men can
-ever be termed friends, had not met since they sat together, many years
-before, beneath the limes at Versailles, when the younger had not yet
-taken orders, and the elder, although he accepted the title of Abbé,
-neither led the life of an ecclesiastic, nor admitted openly that he was
-in any way amenable to the discipline observed by the Jesuits. Now, both
-were ostensibly votaries of the Order. Its impress might be seen in their
-measured steps, their thoughtful faces, and their downward looks, taking
-no heed of the peaceful scene around: the level marshes, the ripening
-orchards, the lazy cattle knee-deep in rich wet herbage, the peasant’s
-punt pushed drowsily and sluggishly along the glistening ditches that
-divided his fields, the mellow warmth of the autumnal sun, and the swarms
-of insects wheeling in his slanting, reddening rays.
-
-They saw, or at least they heeded, none of this—deep in conversation,
-their subject seemed of engrossing interest; yet each looked only by
-stealth in the other’s face, withdrawing his glance and bending it on the
-path at his feet the instant it met his friend’s.
-
-At times neither spoke for several paces, and it was during such periods
-of silence that the expression of habitual mistrust and constraint
-became painfully apparent. In the elder man it was softened and smoothed
-over, partly by effort, partly by the acquired polish of society, but
-the younger seemed to chafe with repressed ardour, like a rash horse,
-impatient but generous, fretting under the unaccustomed curb.
-
-After a longer pause than usual, this one spoke with more energy than he
-had yet displayed.
-
-“I only wish to do _right_. What is it to me, Malletort, that the
-world should misjudge me, or that I should sink in the esteem of those
-whose good opinion I value? I only wish to do right, I say, always in
-compliance with the orders of my superiors.”
-
-The other smiled. “In the first place,” said he, “you must not call me
-Malletort, at least not within so short a distance of those college
-chimneys; but we will let that pass; for though a novice, still you are
-worthy of speedy promotion, and it is only for ‘novices’ in the first
-period of probation that our rules are so exacting. You wish to do right.
-So be it. You have done very wrong hitherto, or you might have been a
-‘provincial’ by this time. Well, my son, confession is the first step to
-amendment, and then―”
-
-He paused, and bit his lip. It was difficult to keep down the old
-sarcastic smile, but he did it, and looked gravely in the other’s face.
-
-“Penance!” replied the younger. “I know it too well. Ah! _mea culpa! mea
-culpa!_ I have been a great sinner. I have repented in sackcloth and
-ashes. I have confessed freely. I wish, yes, I repeat I _wish_ to atone
-humbly, and yet, oh! for mercy’s sake, tell me, is there no way but this?”
-
-His agony of mind was too apparent on his face. Even Malletort felt a
-momentary compunction when he remembered the hopeful enthusiastic youth
-who had sat with him under the limes at Versailles all those years ago;
-when he remembered the desperate career on which he had embarked, his
-insubordination, his apostasy, and those paroxysms of remorse that drove
-him back into the bosom of the church. Could this depressed and miserable
-penitent be the once bright and happy Florian de St. Croix? and had he
-been brought to this pass simply because he possessed such inconvenient
-superfluities as a heart and a conscience? Malletort, I say, felt a
-twinge of compunction, but of pity very little, of indecision, not one
-bit.
-
-“Would you go to a doctor,” said he, gravely, “and teach him how to cure
-you of a deadly malady? Would you choose your own medicine, my son, and
-refuse the only healing draught prescribed, because it was bitter to
-the taste? There is but one way of retracing your steps. You must go
-back along the very path that led you into evil. That the effort will be
-trying, I admit. All uphill work is trying to the utmost, but how else
-can men attain the summit? That the task is painful I allow, but were
-it pleasant, where would be the penance? Besides, you know our rules,
-my son, the time is not far off when I shall be permitted to say, my
-brother. We have got you. Will you dare to hesitate ere you obey?”
-
-An expression of intense fear came over Florian’s face, but it seemed
-less the physical fear of danger from without than an absorbing dread of
-the moral enemy within.
-
-“I _must_ obey,” he answered in a low voice, shuddering while he spoke.
-“I _must_ obey, I know, readily, willingly. Alas! Malletort, there is
-my unforgiven sin, my mortal peril. _Too_ willingly do I undertake the
-task. It is my dearest wish to find myself addressed to it—that is why I
-entreat not to be sent—that is why I implore them to spare me. It is my
-soul that is in danger. Heart, hope, happiness, home, liberty, identity,
-are all gone from me, and now I shall lose my soul.”
-
-“Your soul!” repeated the other, again repressing a sneer. “Do not
-distress yourself, my son, about your soul. It is in very safe keeping,
-and your superiors are, doubtless, the best judges of its value and
-eventual destination. In the meantime, do not give way to a far-fetched
-casuistry, or a morbid delicacy of sentiment. If your heart is in your
-task, and you go to it willingly, it will be the more easily and the more
-effectually accomplished. Congratulate yourself, therefore, that your
-penance is not distasteful as well as dangerous, a torture of bodily
-weakness, rather than a trial of spiritual strength. Remember, there is
-no sin of action where there is none of intention. There can be none of
-intention where a deed is done simply in compliance with the superior’s
-will. If that deed be pleasurable, it is but so much gained on the
-chances of the service. Enjoy it as you would enjoy the sun’s rays if
-you were standing sentry on a winter’s day at the Louvre. It is not for
-_you_, a simple soldier of the Order, to speculate on your own merits
-or your own failures, those above you will take care that neither are
-overlooked. Eat your rations and be thankful. Your duty, first and last,
-is but to obey!”
-
-It will be seen by these phrases, so carefully worded according to the
-rules of the Order, yet bearing the while a covert sarcasm for his own
-private gratification, that the real character of Malletort was but
-little changed, since he intrigued at the council table or drank at the
-suppers of the Regent.
-
-He was a Jesuit priest now in garb and outward semblance; he was still
-the clever, unscrupulous, unbelieving, pleasure-loving Abbé at the core.
-So necessary had he become to the Regent as the confidant of his secret
-schemes, whether their object were the acquisition of a province or the
-dismissal of a mistress, that he would have found little difficulty in
-making his peace with his Prince, even after the untoward failure of
-the Montmirail Gardens, had he chosen to do so. The Regent, maddened
-with disappointment, and especially sore because of the ridicule created
-by the whole business, turned at first fiercely enough on his trusty
-adviser, but found, to his surprise, that the Abbé was beforehand with
-him. The latter assumed an air of high-minded indignation, talked of
-the honour of an ancient house, of the respect due, at least in outward
-courtesy, to a kinswoman of his own, hinted at his fidelity and his
-services, protested against the ingratitude with which they had been
-requited, and ended by tendering his resignation, with a request for
-leave to absent himself from Paris. The result, as usual with the Duke
-of Orleans, was a compromise. His outraged servant should quit him for a
-time, but would remain at least faithful in heart to the master who now
-entreated his pardon. In a few weeks the matter, he thought, would be
-forgotten, and for those few weeks he must manage his own affairs without
-the Abbé’s assistance.
-
-Malletort had several good reasons for thus detaching himself from
-the Court. The first, and most important, was the state of the Duke’s
-health. The Abbé had not failed to mark the evil effects produced even
-by so slight an excitement as the affair at the Hôtel Montmirail. He
-perceived the Regent’s tendency to apoplexy growing stronger day by day;
-he observed that the slightest emotion now caused him to flush a dark red
-even in the morning, and he knew that at supper his fulness of habit was
-so obvious as to alarm the very _roués_, lest every draught should be his
-last. If sudden death were to carry off the Regent, Malletort felt all
-his labour would have been thrown away, and he must begin at the lowest
-round of the ladder again.
-
-His connection with the Jesuits, for he had long ago enlisted himself
-as a secret member of that powerful Order, was now of service to him.
-They had influence with the advisers of the young king, they were ardent
-promoters of the claims to the British crown, laid by that James Stuart,
-whom history has called the Old Pretender. It was quite possible that
-under a new state of things they might hold some of the richest rewards
-in France and England to bestow on their adherents. Above all, the very
-keystone of their system, the power that set all their machinery in
-motion, was a spirit of busy and unremitting intrigue. Abbé Malletort
-never breathed so freely as in an atmosphere of plots and counterplots.
-With all the energy of his nature, he devoted himself to the interests
-of the Order, keeping up his connection with the Court, chiefly on its
-behalf. He was as ready now to betray the Regent to his new allies, as
-he had been a few months before to sacrifice honour and probity for the
-acquisition of that prince’s good-will.
-
-There are few men, however, who can thoroughly divest themselves of
-all personal feelings in pursuit of their own interest. Even Malletort
-possessed the weaknesses of pride, pique, and certain injudicious
-partialities which he could not quite overcome. He hated his late patron
-for many reasons of his own, for none more than that his persecution had
-compelled Madame de Montmirail and her daughter to leave France and seek
-a refuge beyond the sea. If he cared for anything on earth, besides his
-own aggrandisement, it was his kinswoman; and when he thought of the
-Marquise, a smile would overspread his features that denoted anything
-but Christian charity or good-will to her royal admirer.
-
-He spent much of his time at St. Omer now, where several provincials
-and other influential members of the Order were assembled, organising a
-movement in favour of the so-called James III.; these were in constant
-correspondence with the English Jacobites, and according to their
-established principle, were enlisting every auxiliary, legitimate or
-otherwise, for the furtherance of their schemes. They possessed lists
-of surprising accuracy, in which were noted down the names, resources,
-habits, and political tendencies of many private gentlemen in remote
-countries, who little dreamed they were of such importance.
-
-An honest squire, whose ideas scarcely soared beyond his harriers, his
-claret, and his fat cattle, would have been surprised to learn that his
-character, his income, his pursuits, his domestic affections, and his
-habitual vices were daily canvassed by a society of priests, numbering
-amongst them the keenest intellects in Europe, who had travelled many
-hundred leagues expressly to meet in a quiet town in Artoise, of which he
-had never heard the name, and give their opinions on himself. Perhaps his
-insular love of isolation would have been disgusted, and he might have
-been less ready to peril life and fortune, had he known the truth.
-
-But every landholder of importance was the object of considerable
-discussion. It was Abbé Malletort’s familiarity with previous
-occurrences, and the characters of all concerned, that led him now to put
-the pressure on the renegade who had lost his rank with his desertion,
-and returned in the lowest grade as a novice, to make his peace with the
-Order.
-
-“My friend,” resumed the Abbé, after another long silence, during which
-the sun had reached the horizon, and was now shedding a broad red glare
-on his companion’s face, giving him an excuse to shade it with his hand;
-“your penance has been well begun, and needs but this one culminating
-effort to be fully accomplished. I have been at Rome very lately, and the
-General himself spoke approvingly of your repentance and your return.
-The provincial at Maria-Galante had reported favourably on your conduct
-during the disturbances in the island, and your unfeigned penitence, when
-you gave yourself up as a deserter from the Order. We have no secrets,
-you know, amongst ourselves; or rather, I should say nothing is so secret
-but that it has its witnesses. Here, at Paris, in Rome, will be known all
-that you do in England; more, all that you leave undone. I need scarcely
-charge you to be diligent, trustworthy, secret; but I must warn you not
-to be over-scrupulous. Remember, the intention justifies the deed. It is
-not only expedient, but meritorious to do evil that good may come.”
-
-They were now approaching the town, and the sentry was being relieved at
-its fortified gate. The clash of arms, the measured tramp, the martial
-bearing of the soldiers, called up in Florian’s mind such associations
-as for the moment drowned the sentiments of religious penitence and
-self-accusation that had lately taken possession of his heart. He longed
-to throw off the priest’s robe, the grave deportment, the hateful
-trammels of an enforced and professional hypocrisy, and to feel a man
-once more—a man, adventurous, free, desperate, relying for very life on
-the plank beneath his foot or the steel in his hand, but at least able to
-carry his head high amongst his fellows, and to know that were it but for
-five minutes, the future was his own. It was sin even to dream of such
-things.
-
-“_Mea culpa, mea culpa!_” he muttered in a desponding tone, and beat his
-breast, and bent his eyes once more upon the ground.
-
-“When am I to go?” said he meekly, reverting to their previous
-conversation, and abandoning, as though after deep reflection, the
-unwillingness he had shown from the first.
-
-“This evening, after vespers,” answered the Abbé, with a scarce
-perceptible inflection of contempt in his voice that denoted he had
-read him through like a book. “You will attend as usual. Everything is
-prepared, even to a garb less grave than that you wear, and a good horse
-(ah! you cannot help smiling now) will be waiting for you at the little
-gate. You ought to be half way to Calais before the moon is up.”
-
-His face brightened now, though he strove hard to conceal his
-satisfaction. Here was change, freedom, excitement, liberty, at least
-for a time, and an adventurous journey, to terminate in _her_ presence,
-who was still to his eyes the ideal of womankind. All, too, in the
-fulfilment of a penance, the execution of a duty. His heart leaped
-beneath his cassock, and warned him of the danger he incurred. Danger,
-indeed! It did but add to the intoxication of the draught. With
-difficulty he restrained the bounding impatience of his step, and kept
-his face averted from his friend.
-
-The precaution was useless. Malletort knew his thoughts as well as if he
-had been his penitent in the confessional, and laughed within himself.
-The tool at least was sharp and ready, quivering, highly-tempered, and
-flexible; it needed but a steady hand to drive it home.
-
-“You will come to the provincial for final instructions half an hour
-before you mount,” said he gravely, and added, without altering his tone
-or moving a muscle of his countenance, “Your especial duty is to gain
-over Sir George. For this object it is essential to obtain the good-will
-of Lady Hamilton.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIII
-
-FOR THE STAR
-
-
-He ought to have known, he _did_ know, his danger. If he was not sure
-of it during his ride to the coast, while he crossed the Channel, and
-felt the wild spray dash against his face like the greeting of an old
-friend, nor in the long journey that took him northward through many
-a smiling valley and breezy upland of that country which he had once
-thought so gloomy and desolate, which seemed so fair and sunny now,
-because it was _hers_, he ought to have realised it when he rode under
-the old oaks at Hamilton Hill, and dreaded, even more than he longed, to
-see her white dress glancing among their stems. Above all, he ought to
-have been warned, when, entering the house, though Lady Hamilton herself
-did not appear, he felt surrounded by her presence, and experienced
-that sensation of repose which, after all his tumult of anxiety and
-uncertainty, pervades a man’s whole being in the home of the woman he
-loves. There were her gardening gloves, and plain straw hat, perhaps yet
-warm from her touch, lying near the door. There were flowers that surely
-must have been gathered by her hands but a few hours ago, on the table
-where he laid his pistols and riding-wand. There was her work set aside
-on a chair, her shawl thrown over its back, the footstool she had used
-pushed half across the floor, and an Iceland hawk, with hood, bell, and
-jesses, moving restlessly on the perch, doubtless in expectation of its
-mistress’s return.
-
-He tried hard to deceive himself, and he succeeded. He felt that in all
-his lawless infatuation for this pure, spotless woman, he had never loved
-her so well as now—now, that she was his friend’s wife! But he argued, he
-pleaded, he convinced himself in his madness, that such a love as his,
-even a husband must approve. It was an affection, he repeated, or rather
-a worship, completely spiritualised and self-sacrificing, to outlast the
-material trammels of this life, and follow her, still faithful, still
-changeless, into eternity. So true, so holy, however hopeless, however
-foolish, could such a love as this, deprived of all earthly leaven, be
-criminal, even in _him_, the priest, for _her_, the wedded wife? No, no,
-he told himself, a thousand times, no! And all the while the man within
-the man, who sits, and mocks, and judges, and condemns us all, said Yes—a
-thousand times—Yes!
-
-There is but one end to such debate, when the idol is under the same roof
-with the worshipper. He put the question from him for the present, and
-only resolved that, at least, he might love all belonging to her, for
-her sake. All, even to the very flowers she gathered and the floor she
-trod. He took up the work she had set aside, and pressed it passionately
-to his lips, his heart, his eyes. The door opened, and he dropped it,
-scared, startled, guilty, like a man detected in a crime. It was a
-disappointment, yet he felt it a relief, to find that the intruder was
-not Cerise. He had scarcely yet learned to call her Lady Hamilton.
-There was no disappointment, however, in the new-comer’s face, as he
-stood for a moment with the door in his hand, looking at Florian with
-a quaint comical smile, in which respect for Sir George’s guest was
-strangely mingled with a sailor’s hearty welcome to his shipmate. The
-latter sentiment soon predominated, and Slap-Jack, hurrying forward with
-a scrape of his foot and a profusion of sea-bows, seized the visitor by
-both hands, called him “my hearty!” several times over; and, finally,
-relapsing with considerable effort into the staid and confidential
-servant of the family, offered him, in his master’s absence, liquid
-refreshment on the spot.
-
-“It’s a fair wind, whichever way it blowed, as brought _you_ here,”
-exclaimed the late foretopman, when the energy of his greeting had
-somewhat subsided; “and so the skipper, I mean Sir George, will swear,
-when he knows his first lieutenant’s turned up in this here anchorage,
-and my lady too, askin’ your reverence’s pardon once more, being that I’m
-not quite so sure as I ought to be of your honour’s rating.”
-
-Slap-Jack was becoming a little confused, remembering the part played by
-Beaudésir on the last occasion of their meeting.
-
-“Sir George does not expect me,” answered Florian, returning the seaman’s
-greeting with cordial warmth; “but unless he is very much altered, I
-think his welcome will be no less hearty than your own.”
-
-“That I’ll swear it will—that I’ll swear he doesn’t,” protested
-Slap-Jack, taking upon himself the character of confidential domestic
-more and more. “Sir George never ordered so much as a third place to be
-laid at dinner; but we’ll make that all ship-shape with a round turn
-in no time; an’ if you don’t drink ‘Sweethearts and Wives’ to-day in a
-flagon of the best, why, say I’m a Dutchman! When I see them towing your
-nag into harbour, and our old purser’s steward, butler, as we calls him
-ashore, he hails me and sings out as there’s a visitor between decks, I
-knowed as something out of the common was aboard. I can’t tell you for
-why; but I knowed it as sure as the compass. I haven’t been pleased since
-I was paid off. If it wasn’t that my lady’s in the room above this, and
-it’s not discipline to disturb her, blowed if I wouldn’t give three such
-cheers as should shake the acorns down at the far end of the west avenue.
-But I’ll do it to-night after quarters, see if I won’t, Lieutenant
-Bo―askin’ your pardon, your honour’s reverence.”
-
-Thus conversing, and occupying himself the whole time with the guest’s
-comforts, for Slap-Jack, sailor-like, had not forgotten to be two-handed,
-he showed Florian into a handsome bed-chamber, and unpacked with ready
-skill the traveller’s valise, taken off his horse’s croup, that contained
-the modest wardrobe, which in those days of equestrian journeys was
-considered sufficient for a gentleman’s requirements. He then assured him
-that Sir George’s arrival could not be long delayed, as dinner would be
-served in half an hour, and the waiting-woman had already gone upstairs
-to dress her ladyship; also, that there was a sirloin of beef on the spit
-and ale in the cellar brewed thirty-five years ago next October; with
-which pertinent information he left the visitor to his toilet and his
-reflections.
-
-The former was soon concluded; the latter lasted him through his
-labours, and accompanied him downstairs to the great hall, where
-Slap-Jack had told him he would find dinner prepared. His host and
-hostess were already there. Of Lady Hamilton’s greeting he was
-unconscious, for his head swam, and he dared not lift his eyes to her
-face; but Sir George’s welcome was hearty, even boisterous. Florian could
-not help thinking that, had he been in the hospitable baronet’s place, he
-would have been less delighted with the arrival of a visitor.
-
-Whatever people’s feelings may be, however, they go to dinner all the
-same. Slap-Jack, an old grey-headed butler, and two or three livery
-servants stood in attendance. The dishes were uncovered, and Florian
-found himself seated at a round table in the centre of the fine old
-hall like a man in a dream, confused indeed and vaguely bewildered, yet
-conscious of no surprise at the novelty of his situation, and taking in
-all its accessories with a glance. He was aware of the stag’s skeleton
-frontlet, crowned by its gigantic antlers, beetling, bleached, and grim,
-over the door; of the oak panelling and stained glass, the high carved
-chimneypiece, with its grotesque supporters, the vast logs smouldering
-in embers on the hearth, the dressed deer-skins, that served for rug or
-carpet wherever a covering seemed needed on the polished floor; nay, even
-of a full-length picture by Vandyck, representing the celebrated Count
-Anthony Hamilton, looking his very politest, in a complete suit of plate
-armour, with a yard or two of cambric round his neck, and an enormous wig
-piling its hyacinthine curls above his forehead, to descend in coarse
-cascades of hair below his waist.
-
-All this had Florian taken note of before he could conscientiously
-declare that he had looked his hostess in the face.
-
-It made him start to hear the sweet voice once more, frank, cordial, and
-caressing as of old. One of the many charms which Cerise exercised over
-her fellow-creatures was the gentle, kindly tone in which she spoke to
-all.
-
-“You have just come from France, you say, Father Ambrose. Pardon,
-Monsieur de St. Croix. How am I to address you? From our dear France,
-George. Only think. He has scarcely left it a week.”
-
-“Where they did not give you such ale as that, I’ll be bound,” answered
-Sir George, motioning Slap-Jack to fill for the guest, a hospitable rite
-performed by the old privateer’s-man with extreme good-will, and a solemn
-wink of approval, as he placed the beaker at his hand. “What! You have
-not learned to drink our _vin ordinaire_ yet? And now, I remember, you
-were always averse to heavy potations. Here, fill him a bumper of claret,
-some of you! Taste that, my friend. I don’t think we ever drank better
-in the ‘Musketeers.’ Welcome to Hamilton Hill, old comrade. My lady
-will drink to your health too, before she hears the latest Paris news.
-She has not forgotten her country; and as for me, why, you know our old
-principle, _Mousquetaire avant tout!_”
-
-Sir George emptied his glass, and Cerise, bowing courteously, touched
-hers with her lips. Florian found himself at once, so to speak “_enfant
-de la maison_,” and recovered his presence of mind accordingly.
-
-He addressed himself, however, chiefly to his host. “You forget,”
-said he, “that I have been living in the seclusion of a cloister.
-Though I have carried a sword and kept my watch under your command,
-and spent almost the happiest days of my life in your company, I was
-a priest before I was a Musketeer, and a priest I must always remain.
-Nevertheless, even at St. Omer, we are not utterly severed from the world
-and its vanities; and though we do not participate in them, we hear them
-freely canvassed. The first news, of course, for madame (pardon! I must
-learn to call you by your English name—for Lady Hamilton), regards the
-despotism of King Chiffon. The farthingale is worn more oval; diamond
-buckles are gone out; it is bad taste just now to carry a fan anywhere
-except to church.”
-
-In spite of his agitation he adopted a light tone of jest befitting
-the subject—for was he not a Jesuit?—and stole a look at Cerise while
-he spoke. Many a time had he dreamt of a lovely girl blooming into
-womanhood, in the Convent of our Lady of Succour. Ever since the tumult
-of her hasty wedding, after the escape from _Cash-a-crou_, he had been
-haunted by a pale, sweet, agitated face, on which he had invoked a
-blessing at the altar from the depths of his tortured heart; but what
-did he think of her now? She had reached that queenly standard to which
-women only attain after marriage; and while she had lost none of her
-early charms, her frankness, her simplicity, her radiant smile, her deep
-truthful eyes, she had added to them that gentle dignity, that calm,
-assured repose of manner, which completes the graces of mature womanhood,
-and adorns the wedded wife as fitly as her purple robe becomes a queen.
-
-She could look him in the face quietly and steadily enough; but while
-his very heart thrilled at her voice, his eyes fell, as though dazzled,
-beneath her beauty.
-
-“You forget, monsieur,” said she, with an affectionate glance at her
-husband, “I am an Englishwoman now; and we have deeper interests here
-even than the change of fashions and the revolutions in the kingdom of
-dress. Besides, mamma keeps me informed on all such subjects, as well as
-those of more importance; but she is in Touraine now, and I am quite in
-the dark as regards everything at Paris; above all, the political state
-of the Court. You see we are no longer Musketeers.”
-
-She smiled playfully at George, in allusion to the sentiment he had
-lately broached, and looked, Florian thought, lovelier than ever.
-
-The excitement of conversation had brought a colour to her cheek. Now,
-when she ceased, it faded away, leaving her perhaps none the less
-beautiful, that she was a little pale and seemed tired. He observed
-the change of course. Not an inflection of her voice, not a quiver of
-an eyelash, not one of those silken hairs out of place on her soft
-forehead, could have escaped his notice. “Was she unhappy?” he thought;
-“was she, too, dissatisfied with her lot? Had she failed to reach that
-resting-place of the heart which is sought for eagerly by so many, and
-found but by so few?” It pained him; yes, he was glad to feel that it
-pained him to think this possible. Yet would he have been better pleased
-to learn that her languor of manner, her pale weariness of brow, were
-only the effects of her morning’s disappointment, when she waited in vain
-for the company of her husband?
-
-But such an under-current of reflection in no way affected the tide of
-his conversation; nor had he forgotten the primary cause of his journey,
-the especial object for which he was now sitting at Sir George Hamilton’s
-table.
-
-“I cannot pretend,” said he, “to be so well informed on political matters
-as Madame la Marquise. I can only tell you the news of all the world—the
-gossip that people talk in the streets. The Regent is unpopular, and
-grows more so day by day. His excesses have at last disgusted the good
-_bourgeoisie_ of the capital; and these honest citizens, who think only
-of selling spices over a counter, will, as you know, endure a good deal
-before they venture to complain of a prince who throws money about with
-both hands. As the young King grows older, they are more encouraged to
-cry out; and in Paris, as in Persia, they tell me, it is now the fashion
-to worship the rising sun. Of course France will follow suit; but we are
-quiet people at St. Omer; and I do not think our peasantry in Artois
-have yet realised the death of Louis Quatorze. When Jean Baptiste is
-thoroughly satisfied on that point, he will, of course, throw up his red
-cap, and shout, “Vive Louis Quinze!” Till then the Regency assumes all
-the indistinct terrors of the Unknown. Seriously, I believe the Duke’s
-day is over, and that the way to Court favour lies through Villeroy’s
-orderly-room into the apartment of the young King!”
-
-“And the Musketeers?” asked Sir George, eagerly. “That must be all in
-their favour. They have stood so firm by the Marshal and the _real_
-throne, their privileges will now surely be respected and increased.”
-
-“On the contrary,” replied Florian, “the Musketeers are in disgrace.
-The grey company was actually warned to leave Paris for Marly, although
-neither the King nor the Regent were to be there in person. At the last
-moment the order was revoked, or there must have been a mutiny. As
-it was, they refused to parade on the Duke’s birthday, and were only
-brought to reason by Bras-de-Fer, who made them a speech as long as that
-interminable sword he wears at his belt.”
-
-“Which was not long enough to reach my ribs, however,” interrupted Sir
-George, heartily, “with the Cadet Eugène Beaudésir at my side to parry
-it. Oh! that such a fencer should be thrown away on the Church! Well,
-fill your glass, Sir Priest, and never blush about it. Cerise here knows
-the whole story, and has only failed to thank you because she has not yet
-had the opportunity.”
-
-“But I do now,” interposed Lady Hamilton, bending on him her blue eyes
-with the pure tenderness of an angel. “I thank you for it with my whole
-heart.”
-
-He felt at that moment how less than trifling had been his service
-compared with his reward. In his exaltation he would have laid his life
-down willingly for them both.
-
-“That was a mere chance,” said he, making light of his exploit with a
-forced laugh. “The whole affair was but the roughest cudgel-play from
-beginning to end. I, at least, have no cause to regret it, speaking in
-my secular capacity, for it led to an agreeable cruise and a sight of
-the most beautiful island in the world, where, I hope, I was fortunate
-enough to be of some service to Sir George in a manner more befitting my
-calling.”
-
-Again he forced himself to smile, addressing his speech to Lady Hamilton,
-without looking at her.
-
-“And what of the new Court?” asked Cerise, observing his confusion with
-some astonishment, and kindly endeavouring to cover it. “Will the young
-King fulfil all the promise of his boyhood? They used to say he would
-grow up the image of Louis le Grand.”
-
-“The new Court,” answered Florian, lightly, “like all other new Courts,
-is the exact reverse of the old. To be in favour with the Regent is to be
-an eyesore to the King; to have served Louis le Grand faithfully, is to
-be wearisome, _rococo_, and behind the times; while, if a courtier wishes
-to bid for favour with the Duke, he must forswear the rest of the Royal
-family—go about drunk by daylight, and set at open defiance, not only the
-sacred moralities of life, but all the common decencies of society.”
-
-“The scum, then, comes well to the surface,” observed Sir George,
-laughing. “It seems that in the respectable Paris of to-day there is a
-better chance than ever for a reprobate!”
-
-“There is a way to fortune for honest men,” answered the Jesuit, “that
-may be trodden now with every appearance of safety, and without the loss
-of self-esteem. It leads, in my opinion, directly to success, and keeps
-the straight, unswerving path of honour all the time. ‘The Bashful
-Maid,’ Sir George, used to lay her course faithfully by the compass,
-and I have often thought what a good example that inanimate figure-head
-showed to those who controlled her movements. But I must ask Lady
-Hamilton’s pardon,” he added, with mock gravity, “for thus mentioning her
-most formidable rival in her presence. If you can call to mind, madame,
-her resolute front, her coal-black hair, her glaring eyes, her complexion
-of rich vermilion, mantling even to the tip of her nose, and the devotion
-paid to her charms by captain as well as crew, you must despair of
-equalling her in Sir George’s eyes, and can never know a moment’s peace
-again.”
-
-Slap-Jack, clearing the table with much ceremony, could scarcely refrain
-from giving audible expression to his delight.
-
-Lady Hamilton laughed.
-
-“As you have chosen such a subject of conversation,” said she, “it is
-time for me to retire. After you have done justice to the charms of ‘The
-Bashful Maid,’ whom, when she was not too lively, I admired as much as
-any one, and have exhausted your Musketeer’s reminiscences, you will find
-_me_, and, what is more to the purpose, a dish of hot coffee, in the
-little room at the end of the gallery. Till then, _Sans adieu_!” And her
-ladyship walked out, laying her hand on Sir George’s shoulder to prevent
-his rising while she passed, with an affectionate gesture that was in
-itself a caress.
-
-The Jesuit gazed after her as she disappeared, and, resuming his place at
-the table, felt that whatever difficulties he had already experienced,
-the worst part of his task was now to come.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIV
-
-“BOX IT ABOUT”
-
-
-When the door had closed on his wife, Sir George settled himself
-comfortably in his chair, filled a bumper from the claret jug, and,
-passing it to Florian, proposed the accustomed toast, drank at many
-hundred tables in merry England about the same hour.
-
-“Church and King!” said the baronet, and quaffed off a goodly draught, as
-if he relished the liquor no less than the pledge.
-
-It gave the Jesuit an opening, and, like a skilful fencer, he availed
-himself of it at once.
-
-“The _true_ Church,” said he, wetting his lips with wine, “and the _true_
-King.”
-
-Sir George laughed, and looked round the hall.
-
-“Ashore,” he observed, “I respect every man’s opinions, though nobody has
-a right to think differently from the skipper afloat; but let me tell
-you, my friend, such sentiments as your qualification implies had better
-be kept to yourself. They might shorten your visit to Hamilton, and even
-cause your journey to end at Traitor’s Gate in the Tower of London.”
-
-He spoke in his usual reckless, good-humoured tone. Despite the warning,
-Florian perceived that the subject was neither dreaded nor discouraged
-by his host. He proceeded, therefore, to feel his ground cautiously, but
-with confidence.
-
-“Your English Government,” said he, “is doubtless on the watch, and with
-good reason. In the Trades, I remember, we used to say that ‘The Bashful
-Maid’ might be left to steer herself but when we got among the squalls
-of the Caribbean Sea, we kept a pretty sharp look-out, as you know, to
-shorten sail at a moment’s warning. Your ship up there in London is not
-making very good weather of it even now, and the breeze is only springing
-up to-day that will freshen to a gale to-morrow. At least, so we think
-over the water. Perhaps we are misinformed.”
-
-Sir George raised his eyebrows, and pondered. He had guessed as much
-for some time. Though with so many new interests, he had busied himself
-of late but little with politics, yet it was not in his nature to be
-entirely unobservant of public affairs. He had seen plenty of clouds
-on the horizon, and knew they portended storms; but the old habits of
-military caution had not deserted him, and he answered, carelessly—
-
-“That depends on what you think, you know. These Jesuits—pardon me,
-comrade, I cannot help addressing you as a Musketeer—these Jesuits
-sometimes know a great deal more than their prayers, but rather than
-prove mistaken, they will themselves create the complications they claim
-to have discovered. Frankly, you may speak out here. Our oak panels have
-no ears, and my servants are most of them deaf, and all faithful. What
-is the last infallible scheme at St. Omer? How many priests are stirring
-hard at the broth? How many marshals of France are longing to scald their
-mouths? Who is blowing the fire up, to keep it all hot and insure the
-caldron’s bubbling over at the right moment?”
-
-Florian laughed. “Greater names than you think for,” he replied; “fewer
-priests, more marshals. Peers of France to light the fire, and a prince
-of the blood to take the cover off. Oh! trust me this is no _soupe
-maigre_. The stock is rich, the liquid savoury, and many a tempting
-morsel lies floating here and there for those who are not afraid of a
-dash with the flesh-hook, and will take their chance of burnt fingers in
-the process.”
-
-“That is all very well for people who are hungry,” answered Sir George;
-“but when a man has dined, you can no longer tempt with a _ragoût_. The
-desire of a full man is to sit still and digest his food.”
-
-“Ambition has never dined,” argued the other; “ambition is always hungry
-and has the digestion of an ostrich. Like that insatiable bird, it can
-swallow an earl’s patent, parchment, ribbons, seals, and all, thankfully
-and at a gulp!”
-
-The baronet considered, took a draught of claret, and spoke out.
-
-“Earls’ patents don’t go begging about in a Jesuit’s pocket without
-reason; nor are they given to the first comer who asks, only because he
-can swallow them. Tell me honestly what you mean Eugène—Florian. How am
-I to call you? With _me_, you are as safe as in the confessional at St.
-Omer. But speak no more in parables. Riddles are my aversion. A hidden
-meaning is as irritating as an ugly woman in a mask, and I never in my
-life could fence for ten minutes with an equal adversary, but I longed to
-take the buttons off the foils!”
-
-Thus adjured, Florian proceeded to unfold the object of his mission.
-
-“You were surprised, perhaps,” said he, “to learn from Slap-Jack, who no
-doubt thought me a ghost till I spoke first, that your old comrade would
-be sitting with his legs at the same table as yourself this afternoon.
-You were gratified, I am sure, but you must have been puzzled. Now, Sir
-George, if you believe that my only reason for crossing the Channel, and
-riding post a couple of hundred miles, was that I might empty a stoup of
-this excellent claret in your company, you are mistaken.” He stopped,
-blushed violently, somewhat to his host’s astonishment, and hid his
-confusion by replenishing his glass.
-
-“I had another object of far more importance both to yourself and to your
-country. Besides this, I am but fulfilling the orders of my superiors.
-They employed me—Heaven knows why they employed me!” he broke out
-vehemently, “except that they thought you the dearest friend I had on
-earth. And so you _are_! and so you _shall_ be! Listen, Sir George. The
-last person I spoke with before leaving France, had dined with Villeroy,
-previous to setting out for St. Omer. The young King had just seen the
-Marshal, the latter was charged with his Majesty’s congratulations to the
-King of England (the real King of England) on his infant’s recovery. The
-boy who had been ailing is still in arms, and his Majesty asked if the
-young Prince Charles could speak yet? ‘When he does,’ said Villeroy,
-who has been a courtier for forty years, ‘the first sentence he ought to
-say is ‘God bless the King of France.’ ‘Not so,’ answered his Majesty,
-laughing, ‘let him learn the Jacobite countersign, “Box it about, it
-will come to my father!” If they only “box it about” enough,’ he added,
-‘that child in arms should be as sure of the British crown as I am of the
-French!’ This is almost a declaration in form. It is considered so in
-Paris. The King’s sentiments can no longer be called doubtful, and with
-the strong party that I have every reason to believe exists in England
-disaffected to your present Government, surely the time for action has
-arrived. They thought so at St. Omer, in a conclave to which I am a mere
-mouthpiece. I should think so myself, might a humble novice presume
-to offer an opinion; and when the movement takes place, if Sir George
-Hamilton is found where his blood, his antecedents, his high spirit and
-adventurous character are likely to lead him, I have authority to declare
-that he will be Sir George Hamilton no longer. The earl’s patent is
-already made out, which any moment he pleases may be swallowed at a gulp,
-for digestion at his leisure. I have said my say; I have made a clean
-breast of it; send for Slap-Jack and your venerable butler; put me in
-irons; hand me over to your municipal authorities, if you have any, and
-let them drag me to prison; but give me another glass of that excellent
-claret first, for my throat is dry with so much talking!”
-
-Sir George laughed and complied.
-
-“You are a plausible advocate, Florian,” he observed, after a moment’s
-thought, “and your powers of argument are little inferior to your skill
-in fence. But this is a lee-shore, my good friend, to which you are
-driving, a lee-shore with bad anchorage, shoal water, and thick weather
-all round. I like to keep the lead going on such a course, and only to
-carry sail enough for steerage-way. As far as I am concerned, I should
-wish to see them ‘box it about’ a little longer, before I made up my mind
-how the game would go!”
-
-“That is not like _you_!” exclaimed the Jesuit hotly. “The Hamiltons have
-never yet waited to draw till they knew which was the winning side.”
-
-“No man shall say that of me,” answered the other, in a stern, almost an
-angry tone, and for a space, the two old comrades sat sipping their wine
-in silence.
-
-Sir George had spoken the truth when he said that a full man is willing
-to sit still—at least as far as his own inclinations were concerned. He
-had nothing to gain by a change, and everything to lose, should that
-change leave him on the beaten side. Moreover, he relished the advantages
-of his present position far more than had he been born with the silver
-spoon in his mouth. Then, perhaps, he would have depreciated the luxury
-of plate and believed that the pewter he had not tried might be equally
-agreeable. People who have never been really hungry hardly understand the
-merits of a good dinner. You must sleep on the bare ground for a week
-or two before you know the value of sheets and blankets and a warm soft
-bed. Sir George had got into safe anchorage now, and it required a strong
-temptation to lure him out to sea again. True, the man’s habits were
-those of an adventurer. He had led a life of action from the day he first
-accompanied his father across the Channel in an open boat, at six years
-old, till he found himself a prosperous, wealthy, disengaged country
-gentleman at Hamilton Hill. He might grow tired of that respectable
-position—it was very likely he would—but not yet. The novelty was still
-pleasant; the ease, the leisure, the security, the freedom from anxiety,
-were delightful to a man who had never before been “off duty,” so to
-speak, in his life. Then he enjoyed above all things the field sports
-of the wild country in which he lived. His hawks were the best within
-a hundred miles. His hounds, hardy, rough, steady, and untiring, would
-follow a lean travelling fox from dawn to dark of the short November day,
-and make as good an account of him at last as of a fat wide-antlered stag
-under the blazing sun of August. He had some interest, some excitement
-for every season as it passed. If all his broad acres were not fertile
-in corn, he owned wide meres covered with wild-fowl, streams in which
-trout and grayling leaped in the soft May mornings, like rain-drops in
-a shower, where the otter lurked and vanished, where the noble salmon
-himself came arrowing up triumphant from the sea. Woods, too, in which
-the stately red deer found a shelter, and swelling hills of purple
-heather, where the moorcock pruned his wing, and the curlew’s plaintive
-wail died off in the surrounding wilderness.
-
-All this afforded pleasant pastime, none the less pleasant that his
-limbs were strong, his health robust, and the happy, hungry sportsman
-could return at sundown to a comfortable house, an excellent table, and
-a cellar good enough for the Pope. Such material comforts are not to be
-despised—least of all by men who have known the want of them. Ask any old
-campaigner whether he does not appreciate warmth, food, and shelter; even
-idleness, so long as the effects of previous fatigue remain. These things
-may pall after a time, but until they _do_ so pall they are delightful,
-and not to be relinquished but for weighty motives, nor even then without
-regret.
-
-Sir George, too, in taking a wife, had “given pledges to fortune,”
-as Lord Bacon hath it. He loved Cerise very dearly, and although an
-elevating affection for a worldly object will never make a man a coward,
-it tones down all the wild recklessness of his nature, and bids the
-boldest hesitate ere he risks his earthly treasure even at the call of
-ambition. It is the sore heart that seeks an anodyne in the excitement of
-danger and the confusion of tumultuous change.
-
-Moreover, men’s habits of thought are acted on far more easily than they
-will admit, by the opinions of those amongst whom they live.
-
-Sir George’s friends and neighbours, the honest country gentlemen with
-whom he cheered his hounds or killed his game abroad, and drank his
-claret at home, were enthusiastic Jacobites in theory, but loyal and
-quiet subjects of King George in practice. They inherited, indeed, much
-of the high feeling, and many of the chivalrous predilections that
-had instigated their grandfathers and great-grandfathers to strike
-desperately for King Charles at Marston Moor and Naseby Field, but they
-inherited also the sound sense that was often found lurking under the
-Cavalier’s love-locks, the dogged patriotism, and strong affection for
-their church, which filled those hearts that beat so stoutly behind laced
-shirts and buff coats when opposed to Cromwell and his Ironsides.
-
-With the earlier loyalists, to uphold the Stuart was to fight for
-principle, property, personal freedom, and liberty of conscience, but to
-support his grandson now was a different matter altogether. His cause
-had but one argument in its favour, and that was the magic of a name. To
-take up arms on his behalf was to lose lands, position, possibly life, if
-defeated, of which catastrophe there seemed every reasonable prospect;
-while, in the event of victory, there was too much ground to suppose that
-the reward of these efforts would be to see the Church of England, the
-very institution for which they had been taught by their fathers to shed
-their blood, oppressed, persecuted, and driven from her altars by the
-Church of Rome.
-
-As in a long and variable struggle between two wrestlers, each of the
-great contending parties might now be said to stand upon the adversary’s
-ground, their tactics completely altered, their positions exactly
-reversed.
-
-It was only in the free intercourse of conviviality, with feelings roused
-by song, or brains heated by claret, that the bulk of these Northern
-country gentlemen ever thought of alluding to the absent family in terms
-of affection and regret. They were for the most part easy in their
-circumstances and happy in their daily course of life; their heads were
-safe, their rents rising, and they were satisfied to leave well alone.
-
-George had that day met some dozen of his new companions, neighbouring
-gentlemen with whom he was now on friendly and familiar terms, at a
-cock-fight; this little assemblage represented fairly enough the tone of
-feeling that prevailed through the whole district, these jovial squires
-might be taken as fair representatives of their order in half a dozen
-counties north of the Trent. As he passed them mentally in review, one
-by one, he could not think of a single individual likely to listen
-favourably to such proposals as Florian seemed empowered to make, at
-least at an earlier hour than three in the afternoon.
-
-When dinner was pretty well advanced, many men, in those days, were
-wont to display an enthusiastic readiness for any wild scheme broached,
-irrespective of their inability to comprehend its bearings, and their
-impatience of its details; but when morning brought headache and
-reflection, such over-hasty partisans were, of all others, the least
-disposed to encounter the risk, the expense, and especially the trouble,
-entailed by another Jacobite rising in favour of the Stuarts. Sir George
-could think of none who, in sober earnest, would subscribe a shilling to
-the cause, or bring a single mounted soldier into the field.
-
-There was also one more reason, touching his self-interest very closely,
-which rendered Sir George Hamilton essentially an upholder of the
-existing state of things. He had broad acres, indeed, but the men with
-broad acres have never in the history of our country been averse to
-meddling with public affairs—they have those acres to look to in every
-event. If worst comes to worst, sequestration only lasts while the enemy
-remains in power, and landed property, though it may elude its owner for
-a while, does not vanish entirely off the face of the earth. But Sir
-George had made considerable gains during his seafaring career, with
-the assistance of ‘The Bashful Maid,’ and these he had invested in a
-flourishing concern, which, under the respectable title of the Bank of
-England, has gone on increasing in prosperity to the present day. The
-Bank of England had lent large sums of money to the Government, and as
-a revolution would have forced it to stop payment, Sir George, even if
-he had chosen to accept his earl’s patent, must have literally bought it
-with all the hard cash he possessed in the world.
-
-Such a consideration alone would have weighed but little, for he was
-neither a timid man nor a covetous; but when, with his habitual quickness
-of thought, he reviewed the whole position, scanning all its difficulties
-at a glance, he made up his mind that unless his old lieutenant had
-some more dazzling bait to offer than an earl’s coronet, he would not
-entertain his proposals seriously for a moment.
-
-“And what have _you_ to gain?” he asked, good-humouredly, after a short
-silence, during which each had been busy with his own meditations. “What
-do they offer the zealous Jesuit priest in consideration of his services,
-supposing those services are successful? What will they give you? The
-command of the Body-Guard in London, or the fleet at Sheerness? Will they
-make you a councillor, a colonel, or a commodore? Lord Mayor of London,
-or Archbishop of Canterbury? On my honour, Florian, I believe you are
-capable of filling any one of these posts with infinite credit. Something
-has been promised you, surely, were it only a pair of scarlet hose and a
-cardinal’s hat.”
-
-“_Nothing_! as I am a gentleman and a priest!” answered Florian, eagerly.
-“My advocacy is but for your own sake! For the aggrandisement of yourself
-and those who love you! For the interests of loyalty and the true
-religion!”
-
-“You were always an enthusiast,” answered the baronet, kindly, “and
-enthusiasts in every cause are juggled out of their reward. Take a leaf
-from the book of your employers, and remember their own watchword: ‘Box
-it about, it will come to my father.’ Do you let them box it about, till
-it has nearly reached the—the—well—the claimant of the British crown, and
-when he has opened his hands to seize the prize, _you_ give it the last
-push that sends it into his grasp—the Pope could not offer you better
-counsel. If you have drunk enough claret, let us go to our coffee in Lady
-Hamilton’s boudoir.”
-
-But Florian excused himself on the plea of fatigue and business. He had
-letters to write, he said, which was perfectly true, though they might
-well have been postponed for a day, or even a week—but he wanted an
-hour’s solitude to survey his position, to look steadily on the future,
-and determine how far he should persevere in the course on which he had
-embarked. Neither had he courage to face Cerise again so soon. He felt
-anxious, agitated, unnerved, by her very presence, and the sound of her
-voice. To-morrow he would feel more like himself. To-morrow he could
-learn to look upon her as she must always be to him in future, the wife
-of his friend. Of course, he argued, this task would become easier day
-by day; and so, to begin it, he leaned out of window, watching the stars
-come one by one into view, breathing the perfume from the late autumn
-flowers in her garden, and thinking that, while to him she was more
-beautiful than the star, more loveable than the flower, he might as well
-hope to reach the one as to pluck _her_ like the other, and wear her for
-himself.
-
-Still, he resolved that his affection, mad, hopeless as it was, should
-never exceed the limits he had marked out. He would watch over her steps
-and secure her happiness; he would make her husband great and noble for
-her sake; everything belonging to her should be for him a sacred and
-inviolable trust. He would admire her as an angel, and adore her as a
-saint! It was good, he thought, for both of them, that he was a priest!
-
-Enthusiasm in all but the cause of Heaven is, indeed, usually juggled out
-of its reward, and Sir George had read Florian’s character aright when he
-called him an enthusiast.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLV
-
-THE LITTLE RIFT
-
-
- _From Lady Hamilton to Madame la Marquise de Montmirail._
-
-“MY VERY DEAR MAMMA,—
-
-“You shall not again have cause to complain of my negligence in writing,
-nor to accuse me of forgetting my own dear mother, amongst all the new
-employments and dissipations of my English home.
-
-“You figure to yourself that both are extremely engrossing, and so
-numerous that I have not many moments to spare, even for the most sacred
-of duties. Of employments, yes, these are indeed plentiful, and recur
-day by day. Would you like to know what they are? At seven every morning
-my coffee is brought by an English maid, who stares at me open-mouthed
-while I drink it, and wonders I do not prefer to breakfast like herself,
-directly I am up, on salt beef and small beer. She has not learned any
-of my dresses by name; and when she fastens my hair, her hands tremble
-so, that it all comes tumbling about my shoulders long before I can get
-downstairs. She is stupid, awkward, slow, but gentle, willing, and rather
-pretty. Somehow I cannot help loving her, though I wish with all my heart
-she was a better maid.
-
-“If George has not already gone out on some sporting expedition—and he
-is passionately fond of such pursuits, perhaps because they relieve the
-monotony of married life, which, I fear, is inexpressibly tedious to men
-like him, who have been accustomed to constant excitement—I find him
-in the great hall eating as if he were famished, and in a prodigious
-hurry to be off. I fill him his cup of claret with my own hands, for
-my darling says he can only drink wine in the morning when I pour it
-out for him myself; and before I have time to ask a single question he
-is in the saddle and gallops off. Mamma, I never _have_ time to ask him
-any questions. I suppose men are always so busy. I sometimes think I
-too should like to have been a man. Perhaps, then, this large, dark,
-over-furnished house would not look so gloomy when he is gone.
-
-“Perhaps, too, the housekeeper would not tell me such long stories about
-what they did in the time when Barbara, Lady Hamilton, reigned here. By
-all accounts she must have been an ogress, with a mania for accumulating
-linen. You will laugh at me, dear mamma—you who never feared the face of
-any human being—but I am a little afraid of this good Dame Diaper, and so
-glad when our interview is over. I wish I had more courage. George must
-think me such a coward, he who is so brave. I heard him say the other
-day that the finest sight he ever saw in his life was the _beautiful
-Marquise_ (meaning you, mamma) at bay. I asked him if he did not see
-poor frightened me at a sad disadvantage? and he answered by—No, I won’t
-tell you how he answered. Ah! dear mother, I always wished to be like
-you from the time I was a little girl. Every day now I wish it more and
-more. After my release from Dame Diaper I go to the garden and look at my
-Provence roses—there are seven buds to flower yet; and the autumn here,
-though finer than I expected, is much colder than in France. Then I walk
-out and visit my poor. I wish I could understand their _patois_ better,
-but I am improving day by day.
-
-“The hours do not pass by very quick till three o’clock; but at three we
-dine, and George is sure to be back, often bringing a friend with him who
-stays all night, for in this country the gentlemen do not like travelling
-after dinner, and perhaps they are very right. When we have guests I see
-but little of George again till supper-time, and then I am rather tired,
-and he is forced to attend to his company, so that I have no opportunity
-of conversing with him. Would you believe it, mamma, for three days I
-have wanted to speak to him about an alteration in my garden, and we have
-never yet had a spare five minutes to go and look at it together?
-
-“Our employments in England, you see, are regular, and perhaps a little
-monotonous, but they are gaiety itself, compared with our amusements. I
-like these English, or rather, I should say, I respect them (mind, mamma,
-I do not call my husband a regular Englishman), but I think when they
-amuse themselves they appear to the greatest disadvantage.
-
-“We were invited, George and I, the other day, to dine with our
-neighbour, Sir Marmaduke Umpleby. Heavens! what a strange name! We
-started at noon, because he lives three leagues off, and the roads are
-infamous; they are not paved like ours, but seem mere tracts through
-the fields and across the moor. It rained the whole journey; and though
-we had six horses, we stuck twice and were forced to get out and walk.
-George carried me in his arms that I might not wet my feet, and swore
-horribly, but with good humour, and only, as he says, _en Mousquetaire_!
-I was not a bit frightened—I never am with _him_. At last there we are
-arrived, a party of twenty to meet us, and dinner already served. I am
-presented to every lady in turn—there are nine of them—and they all shake
-hands with me; but, after that, content themselves with hoping I am not
-wet, and then they stare—how they stare! as if I were some wild animal
-caught in a trap. I do not know where to look. You cannot think, mamma,
-what a difference there is between a society in England and with us. The
-gentlemen are then presented to me, and I like these far better than the
-ladies; they are rather awkward perhaps and unpolished in manner, but
-they seem gentlemen at heart, terribly afraid of a woman, one and all,
-yet respecting her, obviously because she _is_ a woman; and though they
-blush, and stammer, and tread on your dress, something seems to tell you
-that they are really ready to sacrifice for you their own vanity and
-convenience.
-
-“This is to me more flattering than the external politeness of our French
-gallants, who bow indeed with an air of inimitable courtesy, and use the
-most refined phrases, while all the time they are saying things that make
-you feel quite hot. Now, George never puts one in a false position—I
-mean, he never used. He has an Englishman’s heart, and the manners of a
-French prince; but then, you know, there is nobody like my own Musketeer.
-
-“At last we go to dinner. Such a dinner! Enormous joints of sheep and
-oxen steaming under one’s very nose! In England, to amuse oneself, it is
-not only necessary to have prodigious quantities to eat, but one must
-also sit among the smoke and savour of the dishes till they are consumed.
-
-“It took away my appetite completely, and I think my fan has smelt
-of beef ever since. I sat next Sir Marmaduke, and he good-naturedly
-endeavoured to make conversation for me by talking of Paris and the
-Regent’s Court. His ideas of our manners and customs were odd, to say
-the least, and he seemed quite surprised to learn that unmarried ladies
-never went into general society alone, and even married ones usually with
-their husbands. I hope he has a better opinion of us now. I am quite sure
-the poor old gentleman thought the proprieties were sadly disregarded in
-Paris till I enlightened him.
-
-“The English ladies are scrupulously correct in their demeanour; they
-are, I do believe, the most excellent of wives and mothers; but oh!
-mamma, to be virtuous, is it necessary to be so ill-dressed? When we
-left the gentlemen to their wine, which is always done here, and which,
-I think, must be very beneficial to the wine-trade, we adjourned to a
-large cold room, where we sat in a circle, and had nothing to do but
-look at each other. I thought I had never seen so many bright colours so
-tastelessly put together. My hostess herself, a fresh, well-preserved
-woman of a certain age, wore a handsome set of amethysts with a purple
-dress—Amethysts and purple! great Heaven! It would have driven Célandine
-mad!
-
-“It was dull—figure to yourself how dull—nine women waiting for their
-nine husbands, and not a subject in common except the probability of
-continued rain! Still we talked—it must be admitted we contrived to
-talk—and after a while the gentlemen appeared, and supper came; so the
-day was over at last, and next morning we were to go home. Believe me, I
-was not sorry.
-
-“Yesterday we had a visitor, and imagine if he was welcome, since he
-brought me news of my dear mamma. He had seen Madame la Marquise passing
-the Palais Royal in her coach before she left Paris for Touraine. ‘How
-was she looking?’ ‘As she always does, avowedly the most beautiful lady
-in France.’ ‘Like a damask rose,’ says George, with a laugh at poor pale
-me. Our visitor did not speak to Madame, for he has not the honour of her
-acquaintance; ‘but it is enough to see her once in a season,’ said he,
-‘and do homage from a distance.’
-
-“Was not all this very polite, and very prettily expressed? Now can you
-guess who this admirer of yours may be? I will give you ten chances; I
-will give you a hundred. Monsieur de St. Croix! the priest who was my
-director at the convent, and who appeared so opportunely at the little
-white chapel above Port Welcome. Is it not strange that he should be here
-now? I have put him into the oak-room on the _entresol_, because it is
-warm and quiet, and he looks so pale and ill. He is the mere shadow of
-what he used to be, and I should hardly have known him but for his dark
-expressive eyes. So different from George, who is the picture of health,
-and handsomer, I think, than ever. He (I mean Monsieur de St. Croix) is
-very agreeable and full of French news. He is also an excellent gardener,
-and helps me out-of-doors almost every day, now that George is so much
-occupied. He says that the priests of his Order learn to do everything;
-and I believe if I asked him to dress an omelette, he would manage to
-accomplish it. At least, I am sure he would try. To-day he is gone to see
-some of his colleagues who have an establishment far up in the Dales, as
-we call them here, and George is out with his hawks, so I am rather dull;
-but do not think that is the reason I have sat down to write you this
-foolish letter. Next to hearing from you, it is my greatest pleasure to
-tell you all about myself, and fancy that I am speaking to you even at
-this great distance. Think of me, dear mamma, very often, for scarcely an
-hour passes that I do not think of you.”
-
-The letter concluded with an elaborate account of a certain white dress,
-the result of a successful combination, in which lace, muslin, and
-cherry-coloured ribbons formed the principal ingredients, which George
-had admired very much—not, however, until his attention was called to it
-by the wearer—and which was put on for the first time the day of Monsieur
-de St. Croix’s arrival.
-
-Madame de Montmirail received this missive in little more than a week
-after it was written, and replied at once.
-
- _Madame de Montmirail to Lady Hamilton._
-
-“It rejoiced me so much to hear from you, my dear child. I was getting
-anxious about your health, your spirits, a thousand things that I think
-of continually; for my darling Cerise is never out of my mind. What you
-say of your society amuses me, and I can well imagine my shy girl feeling
-lost amongst an assemblage of awkward gentlemen and stupid ladies, far
-more than in a court ball at the Palais Royal, or a reception at Marly
-as it used to be; alas! as it will be no more. When you are as old as
-I am—for I am getting very old now, as you would say if you could see
-me closeted every morning over my accounts with my intendant—when you
-are as old as I am, you will have learned that there is very little
-difference between one society and another, so long as people are of a
-certain class, of course, and do not eat with their knives. Manner is
-but a trick, easily acquired if we begin young, but impossible to learn
-after thirty. Real politeness, which is a different thing altogether,
-is but good nature in its best clothes, and consists chiefly in the
-faculty of putting oneself in another person’s place, and the wish to do
-as one would be done by. I have often seen people with very bad manners
-exceedingly polite. I have also even oftener seen the reverse. If you do
-not suffer yourself to find these English tedious, you will extract from
-them plenty of amusement; and the talent of being easily entertained is
-one to be cultivated to the utmost.
-
-“Even in Paris, they tell me to-day, such a talent would be most
-enviable; for all complain of the dulness pervading society, and
-the oppressive influence of the Court. I cannot speak from my own
-observation, for I have been careful to go nowhere while in the capital,
-and to retire to my estates here in Touraine as quickly as possible. I
-have not even seen the Prince-Marshal, nor do I feel that my spirits
-would be good enough to endure his importunate kindness. I hear,
-moreover, that he devotes himself now to Mademoiselle de Villeroy, the
-old Marshal’s youngest daughter; so you will excuse me of pique rather
-than ingratitude.
-
-“I am not unhappy here, for I think I like a country life. My intendant
-is excessively stupid, and supplies me with constant occupation. I pass
-my mornings in business, and see my housekeeper too, but am not the
-least afraid of her, and I write an infinity of letters, some of them to
-Montmirail West. Célandine is still there with her husband, and they have
-got the estate once more under cultivation. Had I left it immediately
-after the revolt, I am persuaded every acre of it would have passed out
-of our possession. We had a narrow escape, my darling, though I think I
-could have held out five minutes longer; but I shall never forget the
-flash of Sir George’s sword as he leaped in, nor, I think, will _you_.
-He is a brave man, my child, and a resolute. Such are the easiest for a
-woman to manage; but still the art of guiding a husband is not unlike
-that of ruling a horse. You must adapt yourself instinctively to his
-movements; but, although you should never seem mistrustful, you must
-not altogether abandon the rein. Whilst you feel it gently, he has all
-imaginable liberty; but you know _exactly where he is_. Above all, never
-wound yours in his self-love. He would not show he was hurt, but the
-injury with him would, therefore, be incurable. I do not think he would
-condescend to expostulate, or to give you a chance of explanation; but
-day by day you would find yourselves farther and farther apart. You would
-be miserable, and perhaps so would he.
-
-“You will wonder that I should have studied his character so carefully;
-but is not your happiness now the first, my only object, in the world?
-
-“Monsieur de St. Croix seems to be an agreeable addition to your family
-_tête-à-tête_. Not that such an addition can be already required; but I
-suppose, as an old comrade and friend, your husband cannot but entertain
-him so long as he chooses to remain. Was not he the man with the romantic
-story, who had been priest, fencing-master, pirate, what shall I say?
-and priest again? I cannot imagine such avocations imparting a deeper
-knowledge of flowers than is possessed by your own gardener at home; and
-if I were in your place, I should on no account permit him to interfere
-with the omelette in any way. Neither in a flower-garden nor a kitchen
-is a priest in his proper place. I think yours would be better employed
-in the saddle _en route_ for St. Omer, or wherever his college is
-established.
-
-“Talking of the last-named place reminds me of Malletort. The Abbé,
-strange to say, has thrown himself into the arms of the Jesuits. Though I
-have seen him repeatedly, I cannot learn his intentions, nor the nature
-of his schemes, for scheme he will, I know, so long as his brain can
-think. He talks of absence from France, and hints at a mission from the
-Order to some savage climes; but if he anticipates martyrdom, which I
-cannot easily believe, his spirits are wonderfully little depressed by
-the prospect, and he seems, if possible, more sarcastic than ever. He
-even rode with me after dinner the last time he was here, and asked me a
-thousand questions about you. I ride by myself now, and I like it better.
-I can wander about these endless woods, and think—think. What else is
-left when the time to act is gone by?
-
-“You tell me little about Sir George; his health, his looks, his
-employments. Does he mingle with the society of the country? Does he
-interest himself in politics? Whatever his pursuits, I am sure he will
-take a leading part. Give him my kindest regards. You will both come and
-see me here some day before very long. Write again soon to your loving
-mother. They brought me a half-grown fawn last week from the top of the
-Col St. Jacques, where you dropped your glove into the waterfall. We are
-trying to tame it in the garden, and I call it Cerise.”
-
-No letter could be more affectionate, more motherly. Why did Lady
-Hamilton shed the first tears of her married life during its perusal?
-She wept bitterly, confessed she was foolish, nervous, hysterical; read
-it over once more, and wept again. Then she bathed her eyes, as she used
-at the convent, but without so satisfactory a result, smoothed her hair,
-composed her features, and went downstairs.
-
-Florian had been absent all the morning. He had again ridden abroad to
-meet a conclave of his Order, held at an old abbey far off amongst the
-dales, and was expected back to dinner. It now occurred to her, for
-the first time, that the hours passed less quickly in his absence. She
-was provoked at the thought, and attributed her ill-humour, somewhat
-unfairly, to her mother’s letter. The tears nearly sprang to her eyes
-again, but she sent them back with an effort, and descended the wide old
-staircase in an uncomfortable, almost an irritable, frame of mind, for
-which she could give no reason even to herself.
-
-Strange to say, George was waiting for her in the hall. He had returned
-wet from hunting, and was now dressed and ready for dinner a few minutes
-before the usual time. Florian had not yet made his appearance.
-
-“What has become of our priest?” called out the baronet, good-humouredly,
-as his wife descended the stairs. “I thought, Cerise, he was tied to your
-apron-strings, and would never be absent at this hour of the day. I wish
-he may not have met with some disaster,” he added more gravely; “there
-are plenty of hawks even in this out-of-the-way place, to whom Florian’s
-capture, dead or alive, would be worth a purse of gold!”
-
-It was impossible to help it, coming thus immediately on her mother’s
-letter, and although she was fiercely angry with herself for the
-weakness, Cerise blushed down to the very tips of her fingers. George
-could not but remark her confusion, and observed, at the same time, that
-her eyelids were red from recent tears. He looked surprised, but his
-voice was kindly and reassuring as usual.
-
-“Good heavens, my darling! What has happened?” he asked, putting his arm
-round her waist. “You have had bad news, or you are ill, or something is
-amiss!”
-
-She was as pale now as she had been crimson a moment before. How could
-she explain to _him_ the cause of her confusion? How could she hope to
-make a _man_ understand her feelings? Her first impulse was to produce
-her mother’s letter, but the remarks in it about their guest prevented
-her following so wise a course, and yet if she ignored it altogether
-would not this be the first secret from her husband? No wonder she turned
-pale. It seemed as if her mother’s warning were required already.
-
-In such a dilemma she floundered, of course, deeper and deeper. By way
-of changing the subject, she caught at her husband’s suggestion, and
-exclaimed with her pale face and tearful eyes—
-
-“Capture! Monsieur de St. Croix captured! Heavens, George, we cannot go
-to dinner unconcerned if our guest is in real danger. You can save him,
-you _must_ save him! What shall we do?”
-
-He had withdrawn his arm from her waist. He looked her scrutinisingly in
-the face, and then turned away to the window.
-
-“Make yourself easy, Cerise,” he answered, coldly. “I see him riding up
-the avenue. Your suspense will be over in less than five minutes now.”
-
-Then he began to play with the hawk on its perch, teasing the bird, and
-laughing rather boisterously at its ruffled plumage and impotent anger.
-
-She felt she had offended, though she scarcely knew how, and after a
-moment’s consideration determined to steal behind him, put her arms round
-his neck and tell him so. The very conflict showed she loved him, the
-victory over her own heart’s pride proved how dearly, but unfortunately
-at this moment Florian entered full of apologies for being late, followed
-by Slap-Jack and a line of servants bringing dinner.
-
-Unfortunately, also, and according to the usual fatality in such cases,
-Monsieur de St. Croix addressed most of his conversation to Lady
-Hamilton during the meal, and she could not but betray by her manner an
-embarrassment she had no cause to feel. Sir George may possibly have
-observed this, some womanly intuition told Cerise that he did, but his
-bearing was frank and good-humoured to both, though he filled his glass
-perhaps oftener than usual, and laughed a little louder than people do
-who are quite at ease. The wife’s quick ear, no doubt, detected so much,
-and it made her wretched. She loved him very dearly, and it seemed so
-hard that without any fault of her own she should thus mark “the little
-rift within the lute,” threatening her with undeserved discord; “the
-little pitted speck in the garnered fruit,” eating into all the bloom and
-promise of her life.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVI
-
-THE MUSIC MUTE
-
-
-When Cerise found herself alone, she naturally read her mother’s letter
-once again, and made a variety of resolutions for her future conduct
-which she could not but acknowledge were derogatory to her own dignity
-the while. It was her duty, she told herself, to yield to her husband’s
-prejudices, however unreasonable; to give way to him in this, as in every
-other difference of married life—for she felt it _was_ a difference,
-though expressed only by a turn of his eyebrow, a contraction of his
-lip—and to trample her own pride under foot when he required it, however
-humiliating and disagreeable it might be to herself. If George was so
-absurd as to think she showed an over-anxiety for the safety of their
-guest, why, she must bear with his folly because he was her husband, and
-school her manner to please him, as she schooled her thoughts. After all,
-was she not interested in Florian only as _his_ friend? What was it, what
-_could_ it be to her, if the priest were carried off to York gaol, or
-the Tower of London, to-morrow? Lady Hamilton passed very rapidly over
-this extreme speculation, and perhaps she was right; though it is easy
-to convince yourself by argument that you are uninterested in any one,
-the actual process of your thoughts is apt to create something very like
-a special interest which increases in proportion to the multitude of
-reasons adduced against its possibility, and that which was but a phantom
-when you sat down to consider it has grown into a solid and tangible
-substance when you get up. Lady Hamilton, therefore, was discreet in
-reverting chiefly to what her husband thought of _her_, not to what
-_she_ thought of Monsieur de St. Croix.
-
-“He is jealous!” she said to herself, clasping her hands with an emotion
-that was not wholly without pleasure. “Jealous, poor fellow, and that
-shows he loves me. Ah! he little knows! he little knows!”
-
-By the time the two gentlemen had finished their wine, and come to her
-small withdrawing-room, according to custom, for coffee, Cerise had
-worked herself up into a high state of self-sacrifice and wife-like
-devotion. It created rather a reaction to find that Sir George’s manner
-was as cordial and open as ever. He was free with his guest, and familiar
-with herself, laughing and jesting as if the cloud that had overshadowed
-his spirits before dinner was now completely passed away and forgotten.
-She was a little disappointed—a little provoked. After all, then, what
-mountains had she been making of mole-hills! What a deep grief and
-abject penitence that had been to _her_, which was but a chance moment
-of ill-humour, an unconsidered thoughtless whim of her husband, and what
-a fool had she been so to distress herself, and to resolve that she
-would even relax the rules of good breeding—fail in the common duties of
-hospitality, for such a trifle!
-
-She conversed with Florian, therefore, as usual, which was a little. She
-listened to him also as usual, which was a good deal. Sir George forced
-the thought from his mind again and again, yet he could not get rid of
-it. “How bright Cerise looks when he is talking to her! I never saw her
-so amused and interested in any one before!”
-
-Now, Monsieur de St. Croix’s life at Hamilton Hill ought to have been
-sufficiently agreeable, if it be true that the real way to make time pass
-pleasantly is to alternate the labour of the head and the hands; to be
-daily engaged in some work of importance, varied by periods of relaxation
-and moderate excitement. Florian’s correspondence usually occupied him
-for several hours in the morning, and it was remarked that the voluminous
-packets he received and transmitted were carried by special couriers who
-arrived and departed at stated times. Some of the correspondence was in
-cipher, most of it in French, with an English translation, and it seemed
-to refer principally to the geological formation of the neighbourhood,
-though a line or two of political gossip interspersed would relieve
-the dryness of that profound subject. Perhaps many of these packets,
-ciphers, scientific information, and all, were intended to be read by the
-authorities at St. James’s. Perhaps every courier was entrusted with a
-set of despatches on purpose to be seized, and a line in the handle of
-his whip, a word or two spoken in apparent jest, a mere sign that might
-be forwarded to a confederate looker-on, signifying the real gist of his
-intelligence.
-
-At any rate the papers required a deal of preparation, and Florian was
-seldom able to accompany his host on the sporting expeditions in which
-the latter took such delight.
-
-Sir George, then, would be off soon after daylight, to return at
-dinner-time, and in a whole fortnight had not yet found that spare five
-minutes for a visit to Lady Hamilton’s garden, while Florian would be
-at leisure by noon, and naturally devoted himself to the service of his
-hostess for the rest of the day.
-
-They read together—they walked together—they gardened together. Some of
-those special packets that arrived from France, even contained certain
-seeds which Cerise had expressed a wish to possess, and they talked of
-their future crop, and the result of their joint labours next year, as if
-Florian had become an established member of the family, and was never to
-depart.
-
-This mode of life might have been interrupted by her ladyship’s
-misgivings at first, but she reflected that it would be absurd for her
-to discontinue an agreeable companionship of which her husband obviously
-approved, only because she had misapplied her mother’s letter, or her
-mother had misunderstood hers; also it is difficult to resume coldness
-and reserve, where we have given, and wish to give, confidence and
-friendship, so Florian and Cerise were to be seen every fine day on the
-terrace at Hamilton Hill hard at work, side by side, like brother and
-sister, over the same flower-bed.
-
-“Florian!” she would say, for Cerise had so accustomed herself to his
-Christian name in talking of him with her husband, that she did not
-always call him Monsieur de St. Croix to his face. “Florian! come and
-help me to tie up this rose-tree—there, hold the knot while I fasten
-it—now run and fetch me the scissors, they are lying by my flowers on the
-step. Quick—or it will slip out of my hands! So _there_ is my Provence
-rose at last—truly a rose without a thorn!”
-
-And Florian did her bidding like a dog, watched her eye, followed her
-about, and seemed to take a dog’s pleasure in the mere fact of being
-near her. His reward, too, was much the same as that faithful animal’s,
-a kind word, a bright look, a wave of the white hand, denoting a mark of
-approval rather than a caress. Sometimes, for a minute or two, he could
-almost fancy he was happy.
-
-And Sir George—did Sir George approve of this constant intercourse, this
-daily companionship? Were his hawks and his hounds, his meetings with his
-neighbours for the administration of justice and the training of militia,
-for the excitement of a cock-fight or the relaxation of a bowling-match,
-so engrossing that he never thought of his fair young wife, left for
-hours in that lonely mansion on the hill to her own thoughts and the
-society of a Jesuit priest? It was hard to say—Sir George Hamilton’s
-disposition was shrewd though noble, ready to form suspicion but
-disdaining to entertain it, prone more than another to suffer from
-misplaced confidence, but the last in the world to confess its injuries
-even to himself.
-
-He had never seemed more energetic, never showed better spirits than now.
-His hawks struck their quarry, his hounds ran into their game, his horses
-carried him far ahead of his fellow-sportsmen. His advice was listened to
-at their meetings, his opinions quoted at their tables, his popularity
-was at its height with all the country gentlemen of the neighbourhood.
-He cheered lustily in the field, and drank his bottle fairly at the
-fire-side, yet all the time, under that smooth brow, that jovial manner,
-that comely cheek, there lurked a something which turned the chase to
-penance, and the claret to gall.
-
-He was not jealous, far from it. _He_ jealous—what degradation! And of
-Cerise—what sacrilege! No, it was not jealousy that thus obtruded its
-shadow over those sunny moors, athwart that fair autumn sky; it was
-more a sense of self-reproach, of repentance, of remorse, as if he
-had committed some injustice to a poor helpless being, that he could
-never now repay. A lower nature incapable of the sentiment would in
-its inferiority have been spared much needless pain. It was as if he
-had wounded a child, a lamb, or some such weak loveable creature, by
-accident, and could not stanch the wound. It would have been cowardly had
-he meant it, but he did not mean it, and it was only clumsy; yet none the
-less was he haunted by the patient eyes, the mute appealing sorrow that
-spoke so humbly to his heart.
-
-What if this girl, whose affection he had never doubted, did really not
-love him after all? What if the fancy that he knew she had entertained
-for him was but a girl’s fancy for the first man who had roused her
-vanity and flattered her self-esteem? It might be that she had only
-prized him because she had seen so few others, that her ideal was
-something quite different, he said in bitterness of spirit, to a rough
-ignorant soldier, a mere hunting, hawking, north-country baronet,
-whose good qualities, if he had any, were but a blunt honesty, and an
-affection for herself he had not the wit to express; whose personal
-advantages did but consist in a strong arm, and a weather-browned cheek,
-like any ploughman on his estate. Perhaps the man who would really have
-suited her was of a different type altogether, a refined scholar, an
-accomplished courtier, one who could overlay a masculine understanding
-with the graceful trickeries of a woman’s fancy, who could talk to her of
-sentiment, romance, affinity of spirits, and congeniality of character.
-Such a man as this pale-faced priest—not him in particular, that had
-nothing to do with it! but some one like him—there were hundreds of them
-whom she might meet at any time. It was not that he thought she loved
-another, but that the possibility now dawned of her not loving him.
-
-He did not realise this at first. It was long before he could bring
-himself to look such a privation in the face—the blank it would make in
-his own life was too chilling to contemplate—and to do him justice his
-first thought was not of his own certain misery, but of her lost chances
-of happiness. If now, when it was too late, she should find one whom she
-could really love, had he not stood between her and the light? Would he
-not be the clog round her neck, the curse rather than the blessing of her
-existence?
-
-Of all this he was vaguely conscious, not actually thinking out his
-reflections, far less expressing them, but aware, nevertheless, of some
-deadening, depressing influence that weighed him down like a nightmare,
-from which, morning after morning, he never woke.
-
-But this inner life which all men must live, affected the outer not
-at all. Sir George flung his hawks aloft and cheered his hounds with
-unabated zest, while Florian held Lady Hamilton’s scissors, and helped to
-tie up her roses, under the grey and gold of the soft autumnal sky.
-
-They had a thousand matters to talk about, a thousand reminiscences in
-common, now that the old intimacy had returned. On many points they
-thought alike, and discoursed pleasantly enough, on many they differed,
-and it was to these, I think, that they reverted with the keenest relish
-again and again.
-
-Cerise was a rigid Catholic—the more so now that she lived in a
-Protestant country, and with a husband whose antecedents had taught him
-to place little value on the mere external forms of religion. One of the
-dogmas on which she chiefly insisted was the holiness of the Church,
-and the separation of the clergy from all personal interests in secular
-pursuits.
-
-“A priest,” said Cerise, snipping off the ends of the matting with which
-she had tied up her rose-tree, “a priest is priest _avant tout_—that
-of course. But in my opinion his character is not one bit less sacred
-outside, in the street, than when he is saying high mass before the
-altar. He should never approach the line of demarcation that separates
-him from the layman. So long as he thinks only the thoughts of the
-Church, and speaks her words, he is infallible. When he expresses his own
-opinions and yields to his own feelings, he is no longer the priest, but
-the man. He might as well, perhaps better, be a courtier or a musketeer!”
-
-He stooped low down over the rose-tree, and his voice was very sad and
-gentle while he replied—
-
-“Far better—far better—a labourer, a lackey, or a shoe-black. It is a
-cruel lot to bear a yoke that is too heavy for the neck, and to feel that
-it can never be taken off. To sit in a prison looking into your empty
-grave and knowing there is no escape till you fill it—perhaps not even
-then—while all the time the children are laughing at their play outside,
-and the scent of the summer roses comes in through the bars—the summer
-roses that your hands shall never reach, your lips shall never press! Ah!
-that is the ingenuity of the torture, when perhaps, to wear one of these
-roses in your bosom for an hour, you would barter your priesthood here,
-and your soul hereafter!”
-
-“It must be hard sometimes,” answered Cerise, kindly—“very hard; but is
-not that the whole value of the ordeal? What do _we_ give up for our
-faith—even we poor women, who hold ourselves good Catholics?—three hours
-at most in the week, and a slice of the sirloin or the haunch on Friday.
-Oh, Florian, it is dreadful to me to think how little I can do to further
-the work of the Church! I feel as if a thousand strong men were pulling,
-with all their might, at a load, and I could only put one of my poor weak
-fingers on the rope for a second at a time.”
-
-“My daughter,” he answered, assuming at once the sacerdotal character,
-“the weakest efforts, rendered with a will, are counted by the Church
-with the strongest. St. Clement says that ‘if one, going on his daily
-business, shall move out of his way but two steps towards the altar, he
-shall not be without his reward.’ Submit yourself to the Church and her
-ministers, in thought, word, and deed, so will she take your burden on
-her own shoulders, and be answerable for your welfare in this world and
-the next.”
-
-It was the old dangerous doctrine he had learned by rote and repeated
-to so many penitents during his ministration. He saw the full influence
-of it now, and wished, for one wild moment, that he could be a better
-Christian, or a worse! But when she turned her eyes on him so hopefully,
-so trustfully, the evil spirit was rebuked, and came out of the man,
-tearing him the while, and almost tempting him to curse her—the woman
-he worshipped—because, for the moment, her face was “as the face of
-an angel.” He had a mind then to return to St. Omer at once—to trust
-himself no longer with this task, this duty, this penance, whatever their
-cruelty chose to call it—to confess his insubordination without reserve,
-and accept whatever penalty the Order might inflict! But she put her
-hand softly on his arm, and spoke so kindly, that evil desires and good
-resolutions were dispelled alike.
-
-“Florian,” said she, “you will help me to do right, I know. And I, too—I
-can be of some small aid even to you. You are happy here, I am sure.”
-
-“Happy!” he repeated, almost with a sob; and, half-conquering his enemy,
-half-giving in, adopted at last that middle course, which runs so smooth
-and easy, like a tram-way down the broad road. “I am happy in so far as
-that, by remaining at Hamilton, I can hope to speed the interests of the
-true Church. You say that a priest should never mix himself with secular
-affairs. You little know how, in these evil days, our chief duties are
-connected with political intrigue—our very existence dependent on the
-energy we show as men of action and men of the world. Why am I here, Lady
-Hamilton, do you think? Is it to counsel you, as I used at the convent,
-and hold your gloves, and look in your face, and tie up your roses? It
-would be happy for me, indeed, if such were all my duties; for I could
-live and die, desiring no better. Alas! it is not so. My mission to
-England does not affect you. Its object is the aggrandisement of your
-husband.”
-
-“Not affect _me_!” she exclaimed, clasping her hands eagerly. “Oh,
-Florian! how can you say so? Tell me what it is, quick! I am dying to
-know. Is it a secret? Not now. Here he comes!”
-
-Sir George may, perhaps, have heard these last words, as he ascended the
-terrace steps. Whether he heard them or not, he could scarce fail to mark
-his wife’s excited gestures—her brightened eyes—her raised colour—and the
-sudden check in the conversation, caused by his own arrival.
-
-Again that dull pain seemed to gnaw at his heart, when he thought how
-bright and eager and amused she always seemed in Florian’s company.
-
-He had seen the two on the terrace as he rode home across the park, and
-joined them by the shortest way from the stable, without a tinge of that
-suspicion he might not be wanted, which was so painful now. Still he kept
-down all such unworthy feelings as he would have trampled an adder under
-his heavy riding-boots.
-
-“Bring me a rose, Cerise,” he said, cheerily, as he passed his wife.
-“There are not many of them left now. Here, Florian,” he added, tossing
-him a packet he held in his hand. “A note from pretty Alice at the
-‘Hamilton Arms.’ Have a care, man! there are a host of rivals in the
-field.”
-
-Florian looked at the writing on the cover, and turned pale. This might
-easily be accounted for, but why should Cerise, at the same instant, have
-blushed so red—redder even than the rose she was plucking for her husband?
-
-Perhaps that was the question Sir George asked himself as he walked
-moodily into the house to dress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVII
-
-THE “HAMILTON ARMS”
-
-
-Like many old country places of the time, Hamilton Hill had a village
-belonging to it, which seemed to have nestled itself into the valley
-under shelter of the great house, just near enough to reap the benefits
-of so august a neighbourhood, but at such a distance as not to infringe
-on the sacred precincts of the deer-park, or on the romantic privacy of
-the pleasure-grounds.
-
-Where there is a village there will be thirst, and thirst seems to be
-an Englishman’s peculiar care and privilege; therefore, instead of
-slaking and quenching it at once by the use of water, he cherishes
-and keeps it alive, so to speak, with the judicious application of
-beer. A public-house is, accordingly, as necessary an adjunct to an
-English hamlet as an oven to a cookshop, a copper to a laundry, or a
-powder-magazine to a privateer.
-
-The village of Nether-Hamilton possessed, then, one of these
-indispensable appendages; but, fortunately for the landlady, its
-inhabitants were obliged to ascend a steep hill, for the best part of a
-mile, before they could fill their cans with beer;—I say fortunately for
-the landlady, because such an exertion entailed an additional draught
-of this invigorating beverage to be consumed and paid for on the spot.
-The “Hamilton Arms,” for the convenience of posting, stood on the Great
-North Road, at least half a league, as the crow flies, from that abrupt
-termination of upland, the ridge of which was crowned by the towers and
-terraces of Hamilton Hill. Twice a week a heavy lumbering machine, drawn
-by six, and in winter, often by eight horses, containing an infinity of
-passengers, stopped for a fresh relay at the “Hamilton Arms”; and when
-this ponderous vehicle had once been pulled up, it was not to be set
-going again without many readjustments, inquiries, oaths, protestations,
-and other incentives to delay.
-
-The “Flying-Post Coach,” as it was ambitiously called, did not change
-horses in a minute and a half; a bare-armed helper at each animal to pull
-the rugs off, almost before the driver had time to exchange glances with
-the barmaid, in days of which the speed, esteemed so wondrous then, was
-but a snail’s crawl compared with our rate of travelling now. Nothing
-of the kind. The “Flying-Post Coach” was reduced to a deliberate walk
-long before it came in sight of its haven, where it stopped gradually,
-and in a succession of spasmodic jerks, like a musical-box running down.
-The coachman descended gravely from his perch, and the passengers,
-alighting one and all, roamed about the yard, or hovered round the inn
-door, as leisurely as if they had been going to spend the rest of the
-afternoon at the “Hamilton Arms,” and scarcely knew how to get rid of
-the spare time on their hands. Till numerous questions had been asked
-and answered—the weather, the state of the roads, and the last highway
-robbery discussed—packets delivered, luggage loaded or taken off, and
-refreshments of every kind consumed—there seemed to be no intention of
-proceeding with the journey. At length, during a lull in the chatter of
-many voices, one lumbering horse after another might be seen wandering
-round the gable-end of the building; two or three ostlers, looking and
-behaving like savages, fastened the broad buckles and clumsy straps of
-harness, in which rope and chain-work did as much duty as leather, and
-after another pause of preparation, the passengers were summoned, the
-coachman tossed off what he called his “last toothful” of brandy and
-ascended solemnly to his place, gathering his reins with extreme caution,
-and imparting a scientific flourish to the thong of his heavy whip.
-
-The inexperienced might have now supposed a start would be immediately
-effected. Not a bit of it. Out rushed a bare-armed landlady with
-streaming cap-ribbons—a rosy chambermaid, all smiles and glances—a
-rough-headed potboy, with a dirty apron—half-a-dozen more hangers-on of
-both sexes, each carrying something that had been forgotten—more oaths,
-more protestations, more discussions, and at least ten more minutes of
-the waning day unnecessarily wasted—then the coachman, bending forward,
-chirped and shouted—the poor sore-shouldered horses jerked, strained, and
-scrambled, plunging one by one at their collars, and leaning in heavily
-against the pole—the huge machine creaked, tottered, wavered, and finally
-jingled on at a promising pace enough, which, after about twenty yards,
-degenerated into the faintest apology for a trot.
-
-But the portly landlady looked after it nevertheless well pleased; for
-its freight had carried off a goodly quantity of fermented liquors,
-leaving in exchange many welcome pieces of silver and copper to replenish
-the insatiable till.
-
-Mrs. Dodge had but lately come to reside at the “Hamilton Arms.”
-Originally a plump comely lass, only daughter of a drunken old
-blacksmith at Nether-Hamilton, and inheriting what was termed in that
-frugal locality “a tidy bit of money,” she was sought in marriage by a
-south-country pedlar, who visited her native village in the exercise of
-his calling, and whose silver tongue persuaded her to leave kith and kin
-and country for his sake. After many ups and downs in life, chiefly the
-result of her husband’s rascality, she found herself established in a
-southern seaport, at a pot-house called the “Fox and Fiddle,” doing, as
-she expressed it, “a pretty business enough,” in the way of crimping for
-the merchant service; and here, previous to the death of her husband,
-known by his familiars as “Butter-faced Bob,” she made the acquaintance
-of Sir George Hamilton, then simple captain of ‘The Bashful Maid,’ little
-dreaming she would ever become his tenant so near her old home.
-
-Mrs. Dodge made lamentable outcries for her pedlar when she lost him;
-but there can be no question she was much better off after his death. He
-was dishonest, irritable, self-indulgent, harsh; and she had probably no
-better time of it at the “Fox and Fiddle” than is enjoyed by any other
-healthy, easy-tempered woman, whose husband cheats a good deal, drinks
-not a little, and is generally dissatisfied with his lot. He left her,
-however, a good round sum of money, such as placed her completely beyond
-fear of want; and after a decent term of mourning had expired, after she
-had received the condolences of her neighbours, besides two offers of
-marriage from publicans in adjoining streets, she took her niece home to
-live with her, sold off the good-will of the “Fox and Fiddle,” wished her
-rejected suitors farewell, and sought the hamlet of her childhood, to sit
-down for life, as she said, in the bar of the “Hamilton Arms.” “It would
-be lonesome, no doubt,” she sometimes observed, “without Alice; and if
-ever Alice took and left her, as leave her she might for a home of her
-own any day, being a good girl and a comely, why then;” and here Mrs.
-Dodge would simper and look conscious, bristling her fat neck till her
-little round chin disappeared in its folds, and inferring thereby that,
-in the event of such a contingency, she might be induced to make one
-of her customers happy, by consenting to embark on another matrimonial
-venture before she had done with the institution for good and all. Nor,
-though Mrs. Dodge was fifty years of age, and weighed fifteen stone,
-would she have experienced any difficulty in finding a second husband,
-save, perhaps, the pleasing embarrassment of selection from the multitude
-at her command. And if her aunt could thus have “lovyers,” as she said,
-“for the looking at ’em,” it may be supposed that pretty Alice found no
-lack of admirers in a house-of-call so well frequented as the “Hamilton
-Arms.” Pretty Alice, with her pale brow, her hazel eyes, her sweet smile,
-and soft gentle manners, that made sad havoc in the hearts of the young
-graziers, cattle-dealers, and other travellers that came under their
-comforting influence off the wild inhospitable moor. Even Captain Bold,
-the red-nosed “blood,” as such persons were then denominated, whose
-calling nobody knew or dared ask him, but who was conspicuous for his
-flowing wig, laced coat, and wicked bay mare, would swear, with fearfully
-ingenious oaths, that Alice was prettier than any lady in St. James’s;
-and if she would but say the word, why burn him, blight him, sink him
-into the lowest depths of Hamilton Mere, if _he_, John Bold, wouldn’t
-consent to throw up his profession, have his comb cut, and subside at
-once into a homely, helpless, henpecked, barndoor fowl.
-
-But Alice would not say the word, neither to Captain Bold nor to any
-honester man. She had been true to her sailor-love, through a long weary
-time of anxiety, and now she had her reward. Slap-Jack was domiciled
-within a mile of her, by one of those unforeseen strokes of fortune which
-he called a “circumstance,” and Alice thanked heaven on her knees day and
-night for the happiness of her lot.
-
-It may be supposed that her sweetheart spent much of his leisure
-at the “Hamilton Arms.” Though he got through half the work of Sir
-George’s household, for the foretopman never could bear to be idle, his
-occupations did not seem so engrossing as to prevent a daily visit to
-Alice. It was on one of these occasions that, gossiping with Mrs. Dodge,
-as was his wont, he observed a gold cross heaving on her expansive bosom,
-and taxed her with a favoured lover and a speedy union forthwith.
-
-“Go along with you,” wheezed the jolly landlady, in no way offended
-by the accusation. “It’s our new lodger as gave me this trinket only
-yesterday. Lovyers! say you. ‘Marry!’ as my poor Bob used to say, ‘_his_
-head is not made of the wood they cut blocks from;’ an’ let me tell you,
-Master Slap-Jack, a man’s never so near akin to a fool as when he’s
-a-courting. Put that in your pipe, my lad, and smoke it. Why Alice, my
-poppet, how you blush! Well, as I was a sayin’, this is a nice civil
-gentleman, and a well spoken. Takes his bottle with his dinner, and,
-mind ye, he _will_ have it o’ the best. None of your ranting, random,
-come-by-chance roysterers, like Captain Bold, who’ll sing as many songs
-and tell as many—well, _lies_ I call ’em, honest gentleman—over a rummer
-of punch, as would serve most of my customers two gallons of claret and a
-stoup of brandy to finish up with.”
-
-“There’s not much pith in that Captain Bold,” interposed Slap-Jack,
-contemptuously. “You put a strain on him, and see if he don’t start
-somewhere. Captain, indeed! It’s a queer ship’s company where they made
-_him_ skipper, askin’ your pardon, Mrs. Dodge.”
-
-Slap-Jack had on one occasion interrupted the captain in a warmer
-declaration to his sweetheart than he quite relished, and hated him
-honestly enough in consequence.
-
-“Hoity-toity!” laughed the landlady. “The captain’s nothing to me. I
-never could abide your black men; and I don’t know that they’re a bit
-better set off by wearing a red nose. The captain’s Alice’s admirer, not
-mine; and I think Alice likes him a bit too sometimes, I do!”
-
-This was said, as the French express it, “with intention.” It made Alice
-toss her head; but Slap-Jack only winked.
-
-“I know better,” said he. “Alice always _was_ heart-of-oak; as true as
-the compass; wasn’t you, my lass? See how she hoists her colours if
-you do but hail her. No, no, Aunt Dodge—for aunt you’ll be to me afore
-another year is out—it’s your broad bows and buxom figure-head as brings
-the customers cruising about this here bar, like flies round a honey-pot.
-Come, let’s have the rights now of your gold cross. Is it a keepsake, or
-a charm, or a love-token, or what?”
-
-“Love-token!” repeated Mrs. Dodge, in high glee. “What do you know of
-love-tokens? Got a wisp of that silly girl’s brown hair, may be, and a
-broken sixpence done up in a rag of canvas all stained with sea-water!
-Why, when my poor Bob was a-courtin’ _me_, the first keepsake as ever he
-gave me was eighteen yards of black satin, all off of the same piece,
-and two real silver bodkins for my hair, as thick a’most as that kitchen
-poker. Ay, lass! it was something like keeping company in my day to have
-a pedlar for a bachelor. Well, well; our poor sailor lad maybe as good as
-here and there a one after all. Who knows?”
-
-“Good enough for _me_, aunt,” whispered Alice, looking shyly up at her
-lover from the dish she was wiping, ere she put it carefully on the shelf.
-
-Mrs. Dodge laughed again. “There’s as good fish in the sea, Alice, as
-ever came out of it; and a maid may take her word back again, ay, at the
-church door, if she has a mind. The foreign gentleman in the blue room,
-him as gave me this little cross, he says to me only yesterday morning,
-‘Madame,’ says he, as polite as you please, ‘no man was ever yet deceived
-by a woman if he trusted her entirely. I repose entire confidence in
-madame,’ that was _me_, Alice; ‘her face denotes good manners, a good
-heart, a good life.’ Perhaps he meant good living; but that’s what he
-said. ‘I am going to ask madame to charge herself with an important
-trust for me, because I rely securely on her integrity.’ Oh! he spoke
-beautiful, I can tell you. ‘In case of my absence,’ says he, ‘from your
-respectable apartments, I will confide to you a sealed packet, to be
-delivered to a young man who will call for it at a certain hour on a
-certain day that I shall indicate before I leave. If the young man does
-not appear, I can trust madame to commit this packet to the flames.’ He
-was fool enough to add,” simpered Mrs. Dodge, looking a little conscious,
-“‘that it was rare to see so much discretion joined to so much beauty,’
-or some such gammon; but of course I made no account of that.”
-
-“If he paid out his palaver so handsome,” observed Slap-Jack, “take my
-word for it the chap’s a papist.”
-
-But Mrs. Dodge would not hear of such a construction being put on her
-lodger’s gallantry.
-
-“Papist!” she repeated angrily; “no more a papist than you are! Why,
-I sent him up a slice o’ powdered beef was last Friday, with a bit of
-garnishing, parsnips and what not, and he eats it up every scrap, and
-asks for another plateful. Papist! says you! and what if he were? I
-tell you if he was the Pope o’ Rome, come to live respectable on my
-first floor, he’s a sight more to my mind for a lodger than his friend
-the captain! Papists, indeed! If I wanted to lay my hand on a papist,
-I needn’t to travel far for to seek one. Though, I will say, my lady’s
-liker a hangel nor a Frenchwoman, and if all the papists was made up to
-her pattern, why for my part, I’d up and cry ‘Bless the Pope!’ with the
-rankest on ’em all!”
-
-It was obvious that this northern district took no especial credit to
-itself for the bigotry of its Protestantism, and Mrs. Dodge, though a
-staunch member enough of the reformed religion, allowed no scruples of
-conscience to interfere with the gains of her hostelry, nor perhaps
-entertained any less kindly sentiments towards the persecuted members of
-the Church of Rome, that they formed some of her best customers, paying
-handsomely for the privacy of their apartments, while they ate and drank
-of the choicest during their seclusion.
-
-But this unacknowledged partiality was a bone of contention between his
-sweetheart’s aunt and Slap-Jack. The latter prided himself especially on
-being what he termed True-Blue, holding in great abhorrence everything
-connected with Rome, St. Germains, and the Jacobite party. He allowed of
-no saints in the calendar except Lady Hamilton, whom he excepted from his
-denunciations by some reasoning process of his own which it is needless
-to follow out. Nevertheless Alice knew right well that such an argument
-as now seemed imminent was the sure forerunner of a storm. “Aunt,” said
-she softly, “I’ve looked out all the table linen, and done my washing-up
-till supper-time. If you want nothing particular, I’ll run out and get a
-breath of fresh air off the moor before it gets dark.”
-
-“And it’s time for me to be off, Aunt Dodge!” exclaimed Slap-Jack, as
-Alice knew full well he would. “Bless ye, we shall beat to quarters at
-the Hill, now in less than half an hour, and being a warrant-officer, as
-you may say, o’ course it’s for me to set a good example to the ship’s
-company. Fare ye well, Mrs. Dodge, and give the priest a wide berth, if
-he comes alongside, though I’ll never believe as you’ve turned papist,
-until I see you barefoot at the church door, in a white sheet with a
-candle in your hand!”
-
-With this parting shot, Slap-Jack seized his hat and ran out, leaving
-Mrs. Dodge to smile blandly over the fire, fingering her gold cross,
-and thinking drowsily, now of her clean sanded floor, now of her bright
-dishes and gaudy array of crockery, now of her own comely person and the
-agreeable manners of her lodger overhead.
-
-Meanwhile it is scarcely necessary to say, that although Slap-Jack had
-expressed such haste to depart, he lingered in the cold wind off the moor
-not far from the house door, till he saw Alice emerge for the mouthful
-of fresh air that was so indispensable, but against which she fortified
-herself with a checked woollen shawl, which she muffled in a manner he
-thought very becoming, round her pretty head.
-
-Neither need I describe the start of astonishment with which she
-acknowledged the presence of her lover, as if he was the very last
-person she expected to meet; nor the assumed reluctance of her consent
-to accompany him a short distance on his homeward way; nor even the
-astonishment she expressed at his presumption in adjusting her muffler
-more comfortably, and exacting for his assistance the payment that is
-often so willingly granted while it is so vehemently refused. These
-little manœuvres had been rehearsed very often of late, but had not yet
-begun to pall in the slightest degree. The lovers had long ago arrived at
-that agreeable phase of courtship, when the reserve of an agitating and
-uncertain preference has given way to the confidence of avowed affection.
-They had a thousand things to talk about, and they talked about them very
-close together, perhaps because the wind swept bleak and chill over the
-moor in the gathering twilight. It was warmer no doubt, and certainly
-pleasanter, thus to carry two faces under one hood.
-
-It is impossible to overhear the conversation of people in such close
-juxtaposition, nor is it usually, we believe, worth much trouble on the
-part of an eavesdropper. I imagine it consists chiefly of simple, not
-to say idiotic remarks, couched in corresponding language, little more
-intelligible to rational persons than that with which a nurse endeavours
-to amuse a baby, whose demeanour, by the way, generally seems to express
-a dignified contempt for the efforts of its attendant. When we consider
-the extravagances of speech by which we convey our strongest sentiments,
-we need not be surprised at the follies of which we are guilty in their
-indulgence. When we recall the absurdities with which an infant’s
-earliest ideas of conversation must be connected, can we wonder what
-fools people grow up in after life?
-
-It was nearly dark when they parted, and a clear streak of light still
-lingered over the edge of the moor. Alice indeed would have gone further,
-but Slap-Jack had his own ideas as to his pretty sweetheart being abroad
-so late, and the chance of an escort home, from Captain Bold returning
-not quite sober on the wicked bay mare; so he clasped her tenderly in
-his arms, receiving at the same time a hearty kiss given ungrudgingly
-and with good-will, ere she fleeted away like a phantom, while he stood
-watching till the last flutter of her dress disappeared through the
-gloom. Then he, too, turned unwillingly homeward, with a prayer for the
-woman he loved on his lips.
-
-If Alice looked round, it was under the corner of her muffler, and she
-sped back to her gleaming saucepans, her white dishes, and the warm glow
-of her aunt’s kitchen, with a step as light as her happy maiden heart.
-
-But there were only two ways of re-entering the “Hamilton Arms”—up a
-gravel-walk that led straight to the front door across a washing green,
-separated from the high road by a thick close-cut hedge, or through the
-stable-yard and back entrance into the scullery. This last ingress was
-effectually closed for the present by the arrival of Captain Bold, rather
-more drunk than common, swearing strings of new and fashionable oaths,
-while he consigned his wicked bay mare to the charge of the admiring
-ostler. Alice heard his reckless treble screaming above the hoarse notes
-of the stableman before she turned the corner of the house, and shrank
-back to enter at the other door. But here, also, much to her dismay, she
-found her retreat cut off. Two gentlemen were pacing up and down the
-gravel path in earnest conversation. One of them, even in the dusk, she
-recognised as the inmate of their blue room, who had given her aunt the
-gold cross. The other was a younger, taller, and slimmer man than his
-companion. Both were dressed in dark plain garments, gesticulating much
-while they spoke, and seemed deeply engrossed with the subject under
-discussion. Foolish Alice might well have run past unnoticed, and taken
-shelter at once in the house, but the girl had some shy feeling as to her
-late tryst with her sweetheart, and shrank perhaps from the good-humoured
-banter of the elder man, whose quiet sarcastic smile she had already
-learned to dread. So she stopped short, and cowered down with a beating
-heart under shelter of the hedge, thinking to elude them as they turned
-in their walk, and glide by unobserved into the porch.
-
-They talked with such vehemence, that had they been Englishmen she would
-have thought they were quarrelling. Their arms waved, their hands worked,
-their voices rose and fell. The elder man was the principal speaker, and
-seemed to be urging something with considerable vehemence to which the
-other was disinclined; but none of his arguments, pointedly as they were
-put, arrested Alice’s attention so much as two proper names muttered in
-a tone of deprecation by his companion. These were “Lady Hamilton” and
-“Slap-Jack.” Of the first she was almost sure, in the latter she could
-not be mistaken.
-
-Her experience on a southern seaboard, to which many smugglers from
-the opposite coast resorted, had taught Alice to understand the French
-language far better than she could speak it. With her ears sharpened and
-her faculties roused, by the mention of her lover’s name, she cowered
-down in her hiding-place, and listened, rapt, fearful, attentive, like a
-hare with the beagles on its track.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVIII
-
-PRESSURE
-
-
-“Do you suppose I came here to amuse myself?” asked Malletort, passing
-his arm under his companion’s so as to turn him round on the gravel walk
-within a yard of Alice’s hiding-place. “Do you think it is agreeable
-to reside in a pot-house where eggs and bacon form the _ne plus ultra_
-of cookery, and if a man cannot drink sour claret he must be satisfied
-with muddy ale? Every one of us has to sacrifice his own identity,
-has to consecrate himself entirely to such an effort as ours. Look at
-me, Florian, and ask yourself, was I born for such a life as this, to
-vegetate by the wayside in the dullest province of the dullest country
-in Europe—my only society, that awful landlady, my only excitement, the
-daily fear of a blunder from that puzzle-headed brigand who calls himself
-Captain Bold, and whom I can hang at any moment I please, or I would not
-trust him five yards from my side. If I should be discovered, and unable
-to get out of the way in time, why it _might_ go very hard with me, but
-even against this contingency I have provided. You would find all the
-directions you need drawn out in our own cipher, and consigned to my
-respectable hostess. I have left the money for her weekly account sealed
-up and addressed to Mrs. Dodge on my chimneypiece, also the day and hour
-of your visit, as we have agreed. If we _both_ fall into difficulties,
-which is most improbable, the packet will be burned, for I can trust the
-woman, I believe, and with so much the more confidence, that I doubt
-if any one on this side the Channel has the key to our cipher. So far,
-you observe, I have provided for all contingencies; and now, my good
-Florian, what have _you_ done? You tell me you have failed with his
-confidential servant.”
-
-“What, Slap-Jack!” answered Florian, and the name brought Alice’s heart
-to her mouth as the two priests again approached her hiding-place.
-“Impossible! I tell you he is as true as steel. Why, he sailed with us
-in the brigantine. We were all like brothers. Ah, Malletort, you cannot
-understand these things!”
-
-“I can understand any scruple, any superstition, any weakness of
-humanity, for I see examples every day,” replied the Abbé, “but I
-cannot and _will_ not understand that such imaginary obstacles are
-insurmountable. Bah! You have _carte blanche_ in promises, you have
-even a round sum to draw upon in hard cash. Will you tell me that man’s
-honesty or woman’s virtue is not to be bought if you bid high enough?
-The whole business is simply a game of _bouillote_. Not the best card,
-nor even the deepest purse, but the boldest player sweeps the stakes.
-Florian, I fear you have done but little in all these long weeks; that
-was why, at great risk, I sent you a note, begging an interview, that I
-might urge on you the importance of despatch.”
-
-“It was a risk,” observed Florian. “The note was brought by Sir George
-himself.”
-
-Malletort laughed. “He carried his fate without knowing it,” commented
-the Abbé. “After all, it is the destiny of mankind. Every one of us
-bears about with him the germ of that which shall some day prove his
-destruction. I don’t know that one’s step is the heavier till palsy has
-begun to tingle, or one’s appetite the worse till digestion already
-fails. Come, Florian, the plot is nearly ripe now, and there is little
-more time to lose. We must have Sir George in it up to his neck. He
-carries this district with him, and I am then sure of all the country
-north of the Trent. You have impressed on him, I trust, that it is an
-earldom to begin with, if we win?”
-
-“And if we lose?” asked the other wistfully.
-
-Malletort smacked his tongue against the roof of his mouth, making, at
-the same time, a significant gesture with his hand under his ear.
-
-“A leap from a ladder would finish it,” he remarked abruptly. “For that
-matter we are all in the same boat. If a plank starts, it is simply, _Bon
-soir la compagnie!_”
-
-Florian could control himself no longer. “Are you a man?” he burst out.
-“A man? Are you anything less devilish than the arch-fiend himself, to
-bid me take part in such a scheme? And what a part! To lure my only
-friend, my comrade, whose bread has fed me in want, whose hand has kept
-me in danger, down, down, step by step, to crime, ruin, and a shameful
-death. What am I? What have I done, that you should ask me to join in
-such a plot as this?”
-
-“What you _are_, is a novice of the Society of Jesus,” answered Malletort
-coldly, “degraded to that rank for what you have _done_, which I need
-hardly remind you. Florian, it is well that you have to deal with me,
-who am a man of the world no less than a priest, instead of some stern
-provincial who would report your disobedience to the Order, even before
-he referred you to its statutes. Look your task firmly in the face. What
-is it? To make your friend, the man for whom you profess this ludicrous
-attachment, one of the first subjects in England. To raise his charming
-wife—they tell me she has grown more charming than ever—to a station for
-which she is eminently fitted; and all this at a certain risk of course,
-but what risk?—that the best organised movement Europe has seen for a
-hundred years, should fail at the moment of success, and that Sir George
-should be selected for a victim, amongst a score of names nobler, richer,
-more obnoxious to the Government than his own. And even then. If worst
-came to worst, what would be Lady Hamilton’s position? An heiress in her
-own right, a widow further enriched by marriage, beautiful, unencumbered,
-and free. I cannot see why you should hesitate a moment.”
-
-Florian groaned. “Have mercy on me!” he muttered hoarsely, writhing his
-hands in despair. “Can you not spare me this one trial, remit this one
-penance? Send me anywhere—Tartary, Morocco, Japan. Let me starve in
-a desert, pine in a dungeon, suffer martyrdom at the stake; anything
-but this, and I submit myself cheerfully, willingly, nay, thankfully.
-Malletort, you _must_ have a human heart. You are talented, respected,
-powerful. You have influence with the Order. You have known me since I
-was a boy. For the love of Heaven have pity on me, and spare me this!”
-
-The Abbé was not one of those abnormal specimens of humanity who take
-pleasure in the sufferings of their fellow-creatures. It could not be
-said of him that his heart was cruel or malicious. He had simply no heart
-at all. But it was a peculiarity he shared with many governing spirits,
-that he grew cooler and cooler in proportion to the agitation with which
-he came in contact. He took a pinch of snuff, pausing for the refreshment
-of a sneeze before he replied:
-
-“And with the next report I furnish to the Order send in your refusal
-to obey? Your refusal, Florian; you know what that means? Well, be it
-so. The promotion to a coadjutor’s rank is revoked, the former novice is
-recalled, and returns to St. Omer at once, where I will not enlarge on
-his reception. Riding post to the seaboard he meets another traveller,
-young, handsome, well provided, and unscrupulous, hurrying northward on
-a mission which seems to afford him considerable satisfaction. It is
-Brother Jerome, we will say, or Brother Boniface! the one known in the
-world as Beauty Adolphe of the King’s Musketeers, the other as Count
-Victor de Rosny, whose boast it is that love and credit are universally
-forced on him, though he has never paid a tradesman nor kept faith with
-a woman in his life. Either of these would be an agreeable addition to
-the family party up there on the hill. Either would labour hard to obtain
-influence over Sir George, and do his best or worst to be agreeable to
-Lady Hamilton. Shall I forward your refusal by to-morrow’s courier,
-Florian, or will you think better of it, and at least take a night to
-consider the subject in all its bearings?”
-
-Florian pondered, passed his hand across his brow, and looked wildly in
-his adviser’s face.
-
-“Not a moment!” said he, “not a moment! I was wrong—I was impatient—I
-was a fool—I was wicked, _mea culpa, mea culpa_. What am I that I should
-oppose the will of the Order—that I should hesitate in anything they
-think fit to command? What is a Jesuit priest, what is _any_ one, after
-all, but a leaf blown before the wind—a bubble floating down the stream?
-There is no free agency—Destiny rules the game. The Moslem is not far
-wrong when he refuses to stir out of the destroyer’s way, and says, ‘It
-is ordained!’ I am wiser now—I seem to have woke up from a dream. What
-is it you would have me do? Am I to put poison in his wine, or cut Sir
-George’s throat to-night when he is asleep? You have only to say the
-word—are you not my superior? Am I not a Jesuit? I must obey!”
-
-Alice, still crouching behind the close-cut hedge, might well be alarmed
-at the scraps she overheard of such a dialogue as this. Malletort, on
-the contrary, watched his junior with the well-satisfied air of a cook
-who perceives the dish on which his skill is concentrated bubbling
-satisfactory towards projection. He allowed the young man’s emotion to
-exhaust itself ere he plied him again with argument, and knowing that all
-strong feelings have their ebb and flow like the tide, trusted to find
-him more malleable than ever after his late outbreak.
-
-It was difficult to explain to Florian that his superiors desired him
-to make love to Lady Hamilton, in order that he might bring her husband
-into their hands; and the task was only rendered the more delicate by
-the young Jesuit’s hopeless yet sincere attachment to his hostess—an
-attachment which had in it the germ of ruin or salvation according to his
-own powers of self-control—such an attachment as the good call a trial
-and the weak a fatality.
-
-At times the Abbé almost wished he had selected some less scrupulous
-novice for the execution of this critical manœuvre—one like Brother
-Jerome or Brother Boniface, who would have disposed himself to it with
-all the relish and good-will of those who resume a favourite occupation
-which circumstances have obliged them, for a time, to forego. Such
-tools would have been easier to manipulate; but perhaps, he reflected,
-their execution would not be so effectual and complete. The steel was
-dangerously flexible and elastic, but then it was of the truest and
-finest temper forged. He flattered himself it was now in the hands of a
-workman.
-
-“Let us talk matters over like men of the world my dear Florian,”
-said the Abbé, after they had made two turns of the walk in silence,
-approaching within a foot of Alice while he spoke. “We are neither of us
-boys, but men playing a game at _bouillote_, _ombre_, _picquet_, what
-you will, and holding nearly all the winning cards in our hands. You are
-willing, I think, to believe I am your friend?”
-
-Florian shuddered, but nodded assent.
-
-“Well, then, as friends,” continued the Abbé, “let there be no
-concealment between us. I have already gone over the details of our
-programme. I need not recapitulate the plan of the campaign, nor, to a
-man of intelligence like yourself, need I insist on the obvious certainty
-of success. All dispositions of troops and such minor matters are left
-to our commanders, and they number some of the first soldiers of the
-age. With such affairs we need not meddle. Intellect confines itself to
-intrigue, and leaves hard knocks to the hard-fisted, hard-headed fools
-whose business it is to give and take them. I have been busy since I came
-here—busier almost than you could believe. I have made acquaintance with
-―, and ―, and ―.”
-
-Here the Abbé sank his voice to a cautious whisper, so that Alice,
-straining her ears to listen, could not catch the names he enumerated.
-
-“Although they seemed lukewarm at first, and are esteemed loyal subjects
-of King George, they are ripe for a restoration now. By the by with
-these people never forget to call it a Restoration. Nothing affects an
-Englishman so strongly as a phrase, if it be old enough. I have seen a
-red-nosed squire of to-day fidget uneasily in his chair, and get quite
-hot and angry if you mentioned the Warrant of the Parliament; call it the
-law of the land and he submits without a murmur. They eat beef, these
-islanders, and they drink ale, muddy ale, so thick, my dear Florian, you
-might cut it with a knife. Perhaps that is what makes them so stupid. It
-is hard work to drive an idea into their heads; but when once there, it
-must be admitted, you cannot eradicate it. If they are the most obstinate
-of opponents, they are also the staunchest of partisans. Well, I have
-a score of names here in my pocket—men who have pledged themselves to
-go through with us, even if it comes to cold steel, sequestration—ay,
-hanging for high treason! Not a man of them will flinch. I can undertake
-to say so much; and this, you observe, my dear Florian, would greatly
-facilitate _our_ escape in the event of a failure. But in the entire list
-I have none fit to be a leader—none whose experience would warrant him in
-taking command of the others, or whose adventurous spirit would urge him
-to assume such authority. Sir George Hamilton is the very man I require.
-He is bold, reckless, ambitious, not entirely without brains, and has
-been a soldier of France. Florian, we _must_ have him at the head of the
-movement. It is your duty to put him there.”
-
-Florian bowed submissively.
-
-“I can only persuade,” said he; “but you do not know your man as well as
-I do. Nothing will induce Sir George so much as to have a horse saddled
-until he can see for himself that there is a reasonable prospect of
-success. I have heard him say a hundred times, ‘Never show your teeth
-till your guns are shotted;’ and he has acted up to his maxim, ever
-since I have known him, in all the relations of life. It is, perhaps,
-presumptuous in me to advise one of your experience and abilities, but
-I warn you to be careful in this instance. On every account I am most
-anxious that our undertaking should not miscarry. I am pledged to you
-myself, but, believe me, I must have something more than empty assurances
-to enlist my friend.”
-
-“Quite right,” answered the other, slapping him cheerfully on the
-shoulder; “quite right. A man who goes blindly into these matters seldom
-sees his way very clearly afterwards. But what would your friend have? We
-possess all the material of success, only waiting to be set in motion;
-and this I can prove to him in black and white. We have men, arms,
-artillery, ammunition, and money. This insurrection shall not fail, like
-some of its predecessors, for lack of the grease that keeps all human
-machinery in motion. A hundred thousand louis are ready at an hour’s
-notice, and another hundred thousand every week till the new coinage of
-James the Third is issued from the mint. Here, in the next province, in
-Lancashire, where the sun never shines, every _seigneur_, squire—what are
-they called?—has mounted his dependents, grooms, falconers, huntsmen,
-tenants—all horsemen of the first force. Five thousand cavalry will
-be in the saddle at twenty-four hours’ notice. Several battalions of
-Irish soldiers, brave and well-disciplined as our own, are assembled
-on the coast of Normandy, waiting only the signal to embark. Our
-infantry have shoes and clothes; our cavalry are provided with farriers
-and accoutrements; our artillery, on _this_ occasion, not without
-draught-horses and harness. Come to me to-morrow afternoon, and I will
-furnish you with a written statement of our resources for Sir George’s
-information. And, Florian, you believe honestly that he might be tempted
-to join us?”
-
-The other was revolving a thousand probabilities in his mind.
-
-“I will do my best,” he answered, absently.
-
-“Then I will risk it,” replied Malletort. “You shall also have a list of
-the principal noblemen and gentlemen who have given their adhesion to
-their rightful sovereign. I have upstairs a manifesto, to which these
-loyal cavaliers have attached their signatures. I never trust a man by
-halves, Florian, just as I never trust a woman at all. Nothing venture,
-nothing have. That paper would hang us all, no doubt; but I will confide
-it to you and take the risk. Yours shall be the credit of persuading Sir
-George to subscribe to it in his own hand.”
-
-Florian assented, with a nod. Too much depressed to speak, he felt
-like some poor beast driven to the shambles, blundering on, dogged and
-stupefied, to its fate.
-
-Malletort’s keen perceptions detected this despondency, and he
-endeavoured to cheer him up.
-
-“At the new Court,” said he, “we shall probably behold our retired
-Musketeer commanding the Guards of his Sovereign, and carrying his gold
-baton on the steps of the throne. A peer, a favourite, a Councillor of
-State—what you will. His beautiful wife the admired and envied of the
-three kingdoms. They will owe their rank, their grandeur, their all, to
-Florian de St. Croix. Will not he—will not she be grateful? And Florian
-de St. Croix shall choose his own reward. Nothing the Church can offer
-will be esteemed too precious for such a servant. I am disinterested for
-once, since I shall return to France. In England, a man may exist; were
-it not for the climate he might even vegetate; but it is only in Paris
-that he can be said to live. Florian, it is a glorious prospect, and the
-road to fortune lies straight before us.”
-
-“Through an enemy’s country,” replied the other, gravely. “Nothing
-shall persuade me but that the mass of the people are staunch to the
-Government.”
-
-“The mass of the people!” repeated Malletort, contemptuously; “the mass
-of the people neither make revolutions nor oppose them. In point of
-fact they are the women and children who sit quietly at home. It is the
-highest and the lowest who are the discontented classes, and if you set
-these in motion, the one to lead in front, the other to push behind, why,
-the mass of the people, as you call them, may be driven whichever way
-you please, like a flock of sheep into a pen. Listen to those peasants
-singing over their liquor, and tell me if their barbarian ditties do
-not teach you which way the tide of feeling acts at present amongst the
-rabble?”
-
-They stopped in their walk, and through the open window of the tap-room
-could hear Captain Bold’s treble quavering out a Jacobite ballad of the
-day, no less popular than nonsensical, as was attested by the stentorian
-chorus and wild jingling of glasses that accompanied it.
-
- “We are done with sodden kale,
- Are we not? Are we not?
- We are done with sodden kale,
- Are we not?
- And the reptile in his mail,
- Though he tore with tooth and nail,
- We have got him by the tail,
- Have we not?
-
- “We will bring the Stuart back,
- Will we not? Will we not?
- We will bring the Stuart back,
- Will we not?
- With a whip to curl and crack
- Round the Hanoverian pack,
- And ’twill lend King George a smack,
- Will it not?
-
- “We are done with rebel rigs,
- Are we not? Are we not?
- We are done with rebel rigs,
- Are we not?
-
- We will teach them ‘Please the pigs!’
- English tunes for foreign jigs,
- And the devil take the Whigs!
- Will he not? Will he not?
- And the devil take the Whigs!
- Will he not?”
-
-While the priests were thus occupied, Alice darting past them unobserved,
-took refuge in the house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIX
-
-POOR EMERALD
-
-
-Of all passions that tear and worry at the human heart, jealousy seems to
-be not only the most painful but the most contradictory. Anger, desire,
-avarice, revenge, all these propose to themselves a certain end, in the
-accomplishment of which there is doubtless an evil satisfaction for the
-moment, however closely remorse may tread on the heels of indulgence,
-but jealousy, conscious only of its own bitterness, knows not even what
-to hope or what to fear. It hates itself, though its torture is purely
-selfish; it hates another whom all the while it madly loves. It is proud,
-yet stoops to meanness—cruel, yet quivers with the pain it inflicts,
-desperate while cowardly, pitiless though sensitive, obstinate and
-unstable, a mass of incongruities, and a purgatory from which there is
-neither present purification nor prospective escape.
-
-It may please a woman to feel that she can make her lover jealous, it
-may even please her, in her feminine relish for dominion, to mark the
-painful effect of her power; but if it were possible to love and be
-wise, he would know that he had better hold his hand in the fire without
-wincing, than let her discover the force of the engine with which she
-can thus place him on the rack. Some women are generous enough not to
-inflict a torture so readily at command, but even these take credit for
-their forbearance, and assume, in consequence, a position of authority,
-which is sometimes fatal to the male interest in such a partnership. The
-sweetest kisses to a woman are those she gives on tiptoe. A man, at least
-such a one as is best worth winning, cares for a woman because she loves
-_him_. A woman, I imagine, is never so devoted as when she feels there is
-yet something more to be gained of that dominion at which she is always
-striving, but which she is apt to undervalue when attained.
-
-Now, if she has taken it into her head to make her lover jealous, and
-finds his equanimity utterly undisturbed, the result is a mortifying
-and irremediable defeat to the aggressive Amazon. She has hazarded a
-large stake and won nothing. Worse than this, she is led to suspect
-the stability of her empire, and sees it (because women always jump to
-conclusions) slipping like ice out of her grasp. Besides, she has put
-herself in the wrong, as after a burst of tears and a storm of unfounded
-reproaches, she will herself acknowledge; and the probable result of
-her operations will be a penitent and unqualified submission. Let the
-conqueror be high-minded enough to abstain from ever casting this little
-vagary in her teeth, and he will have reason to congratulate himself on
-his own self-command for the rest of the alliance.
-
-But if the indulgence of jealousy be thus impolitic in a lover, it is
-not only an unworthy weakness, but a fatal mistake on the part of a
-husband. The doubts and fears, the uncertainties and anxieties, that
-are only ludicrous in the outer courts of Cupid, become contemptible at
-the fire-side of Hymen, derogatory to the man’s dignity, and insulting
-to the woman’s faith. There are few individuals of either sex, even
-amongst the worst natures, but can be safely trusted, if only the trust
-be complete and unqualified. It is the little needless reservation,
-the suspicion rather inferred than expressed, that leads to breach of
-confidence and deceit. With ninety-nine women out of every hundred, the
-very fact of possessing full and unquestioned freedom constitutes the
-strongest possible restraint from its abuse. To suspect a wife, is to
-kindle a spark of fire that eats into, and scorches, and consumes the
-whole comfort of home; to let her know she is suspected, is to blow that
-spark into a conflagration which soon reduces the whole domestic edifice
-to ruins.
-
-There are some noble natures, however, that unite with generosity of
-sentiment, keen perceptive faculties, and a habit of vigilance bordering
-on suspicion. These cannot but suffer under the possibility of betrayal,
-the more so that they despise themselves for a weakness which yet they
-have not power to shake off. They stifle the flame indeed, and it burns
-them all the deeper to the quick—they scorn to cry out, to groan, even to
-remonstrate, but the sternest and bravest cannot repress the quiverings
-of the flesh under the branding-iron, and perhaps she, of all others,
-from whom it would be wise to conceal the injury, is the first to find
-it out. Wounded affections chafe in silence on one side, insulted pride
-scowls and holds aloof on the other; the evil festers, the sore spreads,
-the breach widens, the gloom gathers; it is well if some heavy blow falls
-to bring the sufferers to their senses, if some grand explosion takes
-place to clear the conjugal atmosphere, and establish a footing of mutual
-confidence once more.
-
-Cerise could hardly keep her tears back when Sir George, passing hastily
-through the hall, booted as usual for the saddle, would stop to address
-her in a few commonplace words of courtesy, with as much deference, she
-told herself bitterly, as if she had been an acquaintance of yesterday.
-There were no more little foolish familiarities, no more affected
-chidings, betraying in their childish absurdities the overflowing of
-happy affection, no more silly jests of which only themselves knew the
-import. It was all grave politeness and ceremonious kindness now. It
-irritated, it maddened her—the harshest usage had been less distressing.
-If he would only speak cruel words! If he would only give her an excuse
-to complain!
-
-She could not guess how this change had been caused, or if she did guess,
-she was exceedingly careful not to analyse her suppositions; but she
-hunted her husband about wistfully, looking penitent without a fault,
-guilty without a crime, longing timidly for an explanation which yet she
-had not courage to demand.
-
-The room at Hamilton in which Sir George spent his mornings on those
-rare occasions when he remained indoors, was, it is needless to observe,
-the gloomiest and most uncomfortable apartment in the house. Its
-furniture consisted chiefly of guns, fishing-rods, and jack-boots. It
-was generally very untidy, and contained for its only ornaments a model
-of a brigantine and a sketch in crayons of his wife. Whenever Sir George
-thought he had anything very particular to do, it was his habit to retire
-here and barricade himself in.
-
-The morning after Florian’s interview with Malletort, Cerise took up her
-post at the door of this stronghold, with a vague hope that chance might
-afford an opportunity for the explanation she desired.
-
-“If he is really angry,” thought poor Cerise, “and I am sure he must be,
-perhaps he will have taken my picture down, and I can ask him why, and he
-will scold me, and I shall put my arms round his neck, and he cannot help
-forgiving me then! Nobody else would be so unkind without a reason. And
-yet he is not unkind; I wish he were; and I wish, too, I had courage to
-speak out! Ah! it would be so much easier if I did not care for him!”
-
-Lady Hamilton’s hands were very cold while she stood at the door. After
-waiting at least five minutes she took courage, gave a timid little
-knock, and went in.
-
-Nothing in the aspect of the apartment or its inmate afforded the
-opportunity she desired. Sir George, tranquilly engaged with a pair
-of compasses and a foot-rule, was whistling softly over a plan of his
-estates. Her own picture hung in its usual place. Glancing at it, she
-wondered whether she had ever been so pretty, and if so, how he could
-have got tired of her already. His calmness, too, was in irritating
-contrast to her own agitation. Altogether she did not feel half so meek
-as on the other side of the door.
-
-He looked up from his employment, and rose.
-
-“What is it, my lady?” he asked, pushing the implements aside. “Can I be
-of any service to you before I get on my horse? Emerald is at this moment
-saddled and waiting for me.”
-
-The tone was good-humoured enough, but cool and unconcerned as if he
-had been speaking to his grandmother. Besides, scarcely yet more than a
-bride, and to be called _my lady_! It was unbearable!
-
-“If you are in such a hurry,” she answered, angrily, “I will not detain
-you. What I had to say was of no importance, and probably would not in
-the least interest _you_. I am sorry I came in.”
-
-“Not at all,” he replied, in the same matter-of-course voice. “When I am
-at leisure I am always glad of your society. Just now, I fear, I cannot
-take advantage of it. I must be absent all the morning, but St. Croix is,
-doubtless, at home, and will keep you company.”
-
-Guarded as was his tone, either her woman’s ear detected a false note in
-the mention of Florian’s name, whom he seldom spoke of so ceremoniously,
-or her woman’s intuition taught her to suspect the true grievance. At
-any rate, she persuaded herself she ought to be more displeased than she
-really felt. It would have been only right to show it. Now was the time
-to get upon her high horse, and she would have mounted at once, but that
-her blushes would not be kept down. It was too provoking! What must her
-husband think of them? She could have burst out crying, but that would
-be infinitely worse. She turned away, therefore, and assuming all the
-dignity she could muster, walked off to her own apartment without another
-word.
-
-Sir George did not follow. Had he done so, it might have altered his
-whole morning’s employment, to see his young wife fling herself down on
-her knees at the bedside, and weep as if her heart would break.
-
-No, _he_ flung himself into the saddle, and in five minutes was alone
-with Emerald on the moor.
-
-I wonder what the good horse thought of his rider, when he felt his head
-steadied by the strong familiar hand, the well-known limbs grasping his
-sides with pliant energy, the caressing voice whispering its cheering
-words of caution and encouragement? Did he know that his master urged him
-to his speed because the care that is proverbially said to sit behind
-the horseman _cannot_ keep her seat on a fine goer, in good condition,
-when fairly in his swing? Did he know that while that smooth, powerful
-stride, regular and untiring as machinery, swept furlong by furlong over
-the elastic surface of the moor, she must be left panting behind, to come
-up indeed at the first check, rancorous and vindictive as ever, but still
-beaten by a horse’s length at least so long as the excitement of the
-gallop lasted and the extreme pace could hold?
-
-Emerald enjoyed it as much as his master. When pulled up, he stopped
-willingly, his whole frame glowing with health and energy, his eye
-glancing, his ear alert, his broad red nostril drinking in the free
-moorland air like a cordial, and his bit ringing cheerfully, while he
-tossed his head in acknowledgment of the well-earned caress that smoothed
-the warm supple skin on his swelling neck.
-
-The horse seemed a little puzzled too, looking round in vain for his
-friends the hounds, as if he wondered why he had been brought thus
-merrily over the moor, good fun as it was, without any further object
-than the ride.
-
-In this matter there was little sympathy between man and horse. Sir
-George was thinking neither of hounds, nor hawks, nor any other
-accessories of the chase. He neither marked the secluded pool in which
-he had set up the finest stag of the season at bay last month, nor the
-ledge of rocks into which he ran his fox to ground last week. He was far
-back in the past. He was a young Musketeer again, with neither rank,
-nor wealth, nor broad acres, but with that limitless reversion of the
-future which was worth all his possessions ten times told. Yet even thus
-looking back to his earliest manhood, he could not shake himself free
-from the memory of Cerise. Ever since he could remember, that gentle face
-and those blue eyes had softened his waking thoughts and haunted him in
-his dreams; there was no period in his life at which she had not been
-the ideal of his imagination, the prize he desired. Even if he had not
-married her, he thought with a groan, he would still be cursed with this
-gnawing, festering pain that drove him out here into the wilderness for
-the mere bodily relief of incessant action. If he had not married her!
-Another thought stung him now. Perhaps then she might have continued
-to love him. Were they all alike, these women? All vain, unstable,
-irrational creatures; best acted on by the jugglery of false sentiment,
-alive only to the unworthy influence of morbid pique or unbridled
-passion, tempted to evil by an infamous notoriety, or dazzled by the
-glare of an impossible romance? He asked himself these questions, and his
-own observation afforded no satisfactory reply.
-
-He had lived much at the Court of France, when that Court, with all
-its splendour and all its refinement, was little distinguished by
-self-denial in man, or self-restraint in woman. Amongst those of his own
-age and sphere, he was accustomed to hear conjugal fidelity spoken of
-as a prejudice not only superfluous but unrefined and in bad taste. The
-wife _as_ a wife was to be considered a proper object of pursuit, the
-husband to be borne with as an encumbrance, but in right of his office
-habitually to be derided, out-witted, and despised. That a woman should
-care for the man to whom she had plighted her faith at the altar seemed
-an absurdity not to be contemplated; that a man should continue to love
-the girl he had chosen was a vulgarity to which no gentleman would
-willingly plead guilty. Such were the morals of the stage, such was the
-too common practice of real life. And George had laughed with the rest at
-the superstition of matrimony, had held its sanctity in derision, perhaps
-trifled with its vows _en mousquetaire_.
-
-And now was the punishment overtaking him at last? Was the foundation of
-_his_ happiness, like that of others, laid in sand, and the whole edifice
-crumbling to pieces in his very sight? It was hard, but he was a man, he
-thought, and he must bear it as best he might. As for the possibility
-that Cerise should actually love another, he dismissed such an idea
-almost ere it was formed. That was not the grievance, he told Emerald
-aloud, while he stood by the good horse on the solitary moor, it was that
-Cerise should not love _him_! He could scarcely believe it, and yet he
-could see she was unhappy, she for whose happiness he would sacrifice so
-willingly wealth, influence, position, life itself, everything but his
-honour. When he thought of the pale pining face, it seemed as if a knife
-was driven into his heart.
-
-He sprang into his saddle, and once more urged his horse to a gallop.
-Once more the brown heathery acres flew back beneath his eyes, but
-Emerald began to think that all this velocity was a waste of power when
-unaccompanied by the music of the hounds, and stopped of his own accord
-to look for them within a bow-shot of the great north road where it led
-past the “Hamilton Arms.”
-
-Ordinary people do not usually talk to themselves, but I believe every
-man speaks aloud to his horse.
-
-“Quite right, old fellow!” said Sir George, as if he were addressing a
-comrade. “I may as well stop and have a glass of beer, for I am as hot as
-you are, and I dare say twice as thirsty.”
-
-Emerald acquiesced with a snort and a prolonged shake the moment his
-rider’s foot touched the ground, and Sir George, filling the whole of the
-narrow passage to the bar, bounced against Florian de St. Croix returning
-from an interview with the Abbé on the first floor. Each must have been
-thinking of the other, for both exclaimed mentally, “The very man!” while
-at the same instant Slap-Jack, looking rather sheepish, and not in his
-usual spirits, slunk out of another room and tried to leave unobserved.
-
-“Foretop, there!” hallooed Sir George, good-humouredly, “as you are
-aloft, look smart and make yourself useful. See that lubber gives Emerald
-a go-down of chilled water, and tows him about at a walk till I come out.”
-
-“Ay, ay, sir,” replied Slap-Jack, his whole face brightening up. He loved
-to be so addressed by his old commander; and although he was to-day not
-without his own troubles, or he would scarce have been here so early, he
-set to work to obey instructions with a will.
-
-Florian accompanied the new arrival into the bar, where Mrs. Dodge,
-all smiles and ribbons, drew for this honoured guest a measure of the
-best with her own fat hands; while Alice, who looked as if she had been
-crying, hovered about admiringly, watching Sir George quench his thirst
-as if he had been some rare and beautiful animal she had paid her penny
-to see.
-
-“Good stuff!” said the baronet, setting down his jug with a sigh. “Better
-than _vin ordinaire_, or even three-water grog. Eh, Florian?”
-
-But Florian’s mind was bent on other matters. “You are always so
-occupied,” said he, “that I can never catch you for half an hour alone.
-Will you have your horse led home, and walk back the short way with me?
-We had more leisure on board ‘The Bashful Maid,’ after all; especially in
-the ‘Trades.’”
-
-Sir George assented cheerily. For the moment his gloomy thoughts fled at
-the sound of the other’s voice. They were tried comrades in many a rough
-adventure, and it takes a good deal to turn a man’s heart from an old
-friend.
-
-“Of course I will,” he assented, putting his arm through Florian’s. “We
-can cross the deer-park, and go over the footbridge above the waterfall.
-It saves nearly half a mile. Slap-Jack,” he added, emerging from the
-house, “take that horse home, under easy sail, d’ye mind? and see him
-well dressed over when you get to the stable.”
-
-Then he and Florian strolled quietly away to cross the deer-park and
-thread a certain picturesque dingle adorned by the above-mentioned
-waterfall. It was the show bit of scenery at Hamilton Hill, and the track
-leading to it was so precipitous as to be impassable by any four-footed
-animal less nimble than a goat.
-
-It was Slap-Jack’s duty to conduct Emerald by an easier route to his
-own stable; and for this purpose the adventurous seaman proceeded to
-“get up the side,” as he called it, an ascent which he effected with
-some difficulty, and so commenced his voyage with considerable prudence,
-according to orders, “under easy sail.”
-
-But Emerald’s blood was up after his gallop. The seaman’s awkward seat
-and unskilled hand on the rein irritated him considerably. He fretted,
-he danced, he sidled, he snatched at his bridle, he tossed his head, he
-showed symptoms of mutiny from the very beginning.
-
-“I knowed as we should make bad weather of it,” said Slap-Jack, relating
-his adventure that evening in the servants’ hall, “when we come into open
-sea. Steer he wouldn’t, and every time I righted him he broached-to, as
-if he was going down stern foremost. So I lashed the helm amid-ships, and
-held on by my eyelids to stand by for a capsize.”
-
-In truth the horse soon took the whole affair into his own management,
-and after one or two long reaching plunges, that would have unseated
-Slap-jack had he not held on manfully by the mane, started off at a
-furious gallop, which brought him to his own stable-yard in about five
-minutes from the time he left the inn door.
-
-Cerise, wandering pale and listless amongst her roses, heard the clatter
-of hoofs entering at this unusual pace, and rushed to the stables
-in some alarm. She was relieved to find that no serious casualty had
-occurred, and that Slap-Jack, very much out of breath, with his legs
-trembling and powerless from the unwonted exercise, was the only
-sufferer. He gasped and panted sadly; but she gathered that he had been
-ordered to bring the horse quietly home, at which she could not forbear
-smiling, and that Sir George was going to walk back the short way. It was
-a chance to be seized eagerly. She had been very low and dispirited all
-the morning, wishing she had spoken out to him before he went, and now
-here came another opportunity. Cerise was still young, and, to use the
-graphic expression of her own country, “a woman to the very tips of her
-fingers.” She ran upstairs, put on her prettiest hat, and changed her
-breast-knots for fresh ribbons of newer gloss and a more becoming colour.
-Then she fluttered out through her garden, and crossing the home-park
-with a rising colour and a more elastic step, as the fresh air told upon
-her animal spirits, reached one end of the wooden footbridge as the two
-gentlemen arrived at the other.
-
-She had only expected _one_. It was a disappointment; more, it was an
-embarrassment. She coloured violently, and looked, as she felt, both
-agitated and put out. Sir George could not but observe her distress, and
-again his heart ached with the dull, wearing, unacknowledged pain.
-
-He jumped to conclusions; a man under such an influence always does. It
-seemed clear to him that his wife must have chosen this direction for
-her walk in order to meet the Jesuit. He did not blame Florian, for the
-priest had himself proposed they should return together, and could not,
-therefore, have expected her. Stay! Was this a blind? He stole a glance
-at him, and thought he seemed as much discomposed as her ladyship. All
-that he could disentangle afterwards. In the meantime one thing alone
-seemed clear. That Cerise, contrary to her usual habits, had come this
-distance on foot to meet her lover, and had found—her husband! He laughed
-to himself fiercely, with a grim savage humour, and felt as once or twice
-formerly in a duel, when his adversary, taking unfair advantage, had been
-foiled by his own act. Well, he would fight this battle at least with all
-the skill of fence he knew; patiently, warily, scientifically, without
-loss of temper or coolness, neglecting no precaution, overlooking no
-mistake, and giving no quarter.
-
-He could not help thinking of his old comrade, Bras-de-Fer, as he
-remembered him, one gloomy morning in Spain, stripped and in silk
-stockings on the wet turf outside the lines, with the deadliest point
-in three armies six inches from his throat, and how nothing but perfect
-self-command and endurance had given his immoveable old comrade the
-victory. His heart softened when he thought of those merry campaigning
-days, but not to Lady Hamilton nor to the pale thoughtful Jesuit on the
-other side.
-
-It was scarcely a pleasant walk home for any one of the three. Florian,
-though he loved the very ground she trod on, was disconcerted at her
-ladyship’s inopportune appearance just as he thought he was gaining
-ground in his canvass, and had prepared the most telling arguments for
-the conversion of his proselyte. Moreover, he had now passed the stage
-at which he could converse freely with Cerise in company, and grudged
-her society even to the man who had a right to it. Alone with her he had
-plenty to say; but, without approaching forbidden topics, he had acquired
-a habit of conversing on abstruse and speculative subjects, interesting
-enough to two persons in the same vein of thought, but which strike even
-these as exaggerated when submitted to the criticism of a third. Many a
-pleasant and harmonious duet jangles painfully when played as a trio.
-He was impatient now of any interference with Lady Hamilton’s opinions.
-These he considered his own, in defiance of a thousand husbands; and so
-strangely constituted is the human mind, he could presume to be jealous
-even of the vague, shadowy, unsubstantial share in her mind that he
-imagined he possessed.
-
-So he answered in monosyllables, and took nothing off the constraint
-under which they all laboured. Sir George conversed in a cold formal
-tone on indifferent matters, and was as unlike himself as possible. He
-addressed his remarks alternately to Florian and Cerise, scanning the
-countenance of each narrowly the while. This did not tend to improve
-their good understanding; and Lady Hamilton, walking with head erect and
-set face, looking straight before her, dared not trust herself to answer.
-It was a relief when they reached the house, and most of all to her, for
-she rushed upstairs and locked herself into her own room, where she could
-be miserable to her heart’s content.
-
-It was hard for this fair young wife, good, loving, and true, to seek
-that refuge, so cruelly wounded, twice in one day.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER L
-
-CAPTAIN BOLD
-
-
-I have mentioned that Slap-Jack, too, while he rode perforce so
-rapidly homewards, was pursued by a black Care of his own, waiting for
-a momentary halt to leap up behind. Even with a foretopman, though,
-perhaps, no swain ought to have a better chance, the course of true love
-does not always run smooth. There was a pebble now ruffling Slap-Jack’s
-amatory stream, and that pebble was known at the “Hamilton Arms” as
-Captain Bold.
-
-He might have had a score of other designations in a score of other
-places; in fact, he was just the sort of gentleman whom one name would
-suffice less than one shirt; but here, at least, he was welcomed, and, to
-a certain extent, trusted under that title.
-
-Now Captain Bold, if he ever disguised himself for the many expeditions
-in which he boasted to have been engaged, must have done considerable
-violence to his feelings by suppressing the three peculiarities for
-which he was most conspicuous, and in which he seemed to take the
-greatest pride. These specialities were the Captain’s red nose, his
-falsetto voice, and his bay mare. The first he warmed and comforted with
-generous potations at all hours, for though not a deep, he was a frequent
-drinker; the second, he exercised continually in warbling lyrics tending
-to the subversion of morals—in shrieking out oaths denoting a fertile
-imagination, with a cultivated talent for cursing—and in narrating
-interminable stories over his cups, of which his own triumphs in love and
-war formed the groundwork; the third—he was never tired of riding to and
-fro over the moor, of going to visit in the stable, or of glorifying in
-the tap-room for the edification of all comers, expatiating on her shape,
-her qualities, her speed, her mettle, and her queer temper, amenable to
-no authority but his own.
-
-The captain’s first acquaintance with Mrs. Dodge dated some two months
-back, when he entered the hostelry one stormy evening, and swaggered
-about the stable-yard and premises as if thoroughly familiar with
-the place. This did not astonish the landlady, who, herself a late
-arrival, concluded he was some old customer of her predecessor’s; but,
-hazarding that natural supposition to an ancient ostler, who had been
-at the “Hamilton Arms” from a boy, and never slept out of the stable
-since he could remember, she was a little surprised to learn old Robin
-had no recollection whatever of the captain, though he was perfectly
-well acquainted with the mare. That remarkable animal had been fed and
-dressed over by his own hands, he declared, only last winter, and was
-then the property of a Quaker from the East Riding, a respectable-looking
-gentleman as ever he clapped eyes on—warm, no doubt, for the mare was in
-first-rate condition, and her master paid him from a purse full of broad
-pieces—a _wet_ Quaker, old Robin thought, by reason of his smelling so
-strong of brandy when he mounted before daylight in the morning.
-
-Mrs. Dodge, conversing with her guest of the wonderful mare, mentioned
-her old servant’s reminiscences.
-
-“Right!” exclaimed the captain, with his accustomed flourish—“right as
-my glove! or, I should say, my dear madam, right as your own bodice! A
-Quaker—very true! A man about my own size, with a—well, a _prominent_
-nose. Pale, flaxen-haired; would have been a good-looking chap with a
-little more colouring; and respectable—most respectable! Oh, yes! that’s
-the Quaker I bought her of and a good bargain I made. We’ll drink the
-Quaker’s health, if you please. A very good bargain!”
-
-And the captain laughed heartily, though Mrs. Dodge could not, for the
-life of her, see the point of his jest.
-
-But, while she reprobated his profane conversation, and entertained no
-very profound respect for his general character, the captain was yet a
-welcome guest in Mrs. Dodge’s sanctum. His anecdotes were so lively—his
-talk was so fluent—he took off his glass with so gallant a flourish to
-her own and her niece’s health, paying them, at the same time, such
-extravagant compliments of the newest town mode—that it was impossible to
-damp this genial spirit with an austerity which must have been assumed,
-or rebukes uttered by lips endeavouring to repress a smile.
-
-But with Alice it was not so; she held the captain in a natural
-abhorrence, and shrank from him as people sometimes do from a toad or
-other reptile, when she happened to meet him in passages, staircases,
-or out-of-the-way corners, never permitting him to approach her unless
-protected by the company of her aunt.
-
-Mrs. Dodge, however, would sometimes spend an hour and more in certain
-household duties upstairs, leaving Alice to mind the bar during her
-absence. The girl was singing over her needlework, according to custom,
-thinking, in all probability, of Slap-Jack, when, much to her annoyance,
-the captain’s red nose protruded itself over the half-door, followed, in
-due course, by his laced coat, his jack-boots, and the rest of his gaudy,
-tarnished, and somewhat dissipated person.
-
-Seeing Alice alone, he affected to start with pleasure, made a feint
-of retiring, and then insinuated himself towards the fireplace, with a
-theatrical gallantry that was to her, of all his airs and graces, the
-most insupportable.
-
-“Divine Alice!” he exclaimed, flourishing his dirty hand, adorned with
-rings, “alone in her bower, and singing over her sampler like a siren.
-The jade Fortune owed honest Jack Bold this turn. Strike him blind if
-she didn’t! He comes for a vulgar drain, and lo! a cordial—the elixir of
-life—the rosy dew of innocence—the balmy breath of beauty!”
-
-“What d’ye lack, sir?” asked Alice, contemptuously ignoring this
-rhodomontade, and stretching her pretty hand towards a shelf loaded with
-divers preparations of alcohol well known to the visitor.
-
-“What I lacked, my sweetest,” said the unabashed captain, “when I entered
-this bower of bliss and bastion of beauty, was a mere mortal’s morning
-draught—a glass of strong waters, we will say, with a clove in it, or
-perhaps a mouthful of burnt brandy, to keep out the raw moorland air.
-What I lack now, since I have seen your lovely lips, seems to be the
-chaste salute valour claims from beauty. We will take the brandy and
-cloves afterwards!”
-
-So speaking, the captain moved a little round table out of his way, and,
-taking off his cocked hat with a flourish, advanced the red nose and
-forbidding face very close to Alice, as if to claim the desired salute.
-In his operations, the skirt of his heavily laced coat brought work,
-work-box, thimble, and all to the ground.
-
-Alice stooped to pick them up. When she rose again her colour was very
-bright, possibly from the exertion, and she pointed once more to the
-bottles.
-
-“Give your orders, sir,” said she, angrily, “and go! I am sure I never—I
-never expected to be rude to a customer, but—there—it’s too bad—I won’t
-stand it, I won’t—not if I go up to my aunt in her bedroom this very
-minute!”
-
-Poor Alice was now dissolved in tears, but, true to her instincts, filled
-the captain his glass of brandy all the same.
-
-The latter drank it slowly, relishing every drop, and, keeping his
-person between Alice and the half-door, seemed to enjoy her confusion,
-which, obviously, from the conceited satisfaction of his countenance,
-he attributed to an unfortunate passion for himself. Suddenly her face
-brightened, a well-known footstep hastened up the passage, and the next
-moment Slap-Jack entered the bar.
-
-Alice dashed away her tears, the captain assumed an attitude of profound
-indifference, and the new arrival looked from one to the other with a
-darkening brow.
-
-“What, again?” said he, turning fiercely on the intruder, and approaching
-very close, in that aggressive manner which is almost equivalent to a
-blow. “I thought as I’d given _you_ warning already to let this here
-young woman be. You think as you’re lying snug enough, may be, in smooth
-water, with your name painted out and a honest burgee at your truck; but
-I’ll larn you better afore I’ve done with you, if you comes cruising any
-more in my fishing-ground. There’s some here as’ll make you show your
-number, and we’ll soon see who’s captain then!”
-
-Honest Jack Bold, as he called himself, was not deficient in
-self-command. Sipping his brandy with the utmost coolness, he turned to
-Alice, and, motioning towards Slap-Jack, boiling over within six inches
-of him, observed, in his high-quavering voice:
-
-“Favoured lover, I presume! Visits here, I hope, with our good aunt’s
-sanction. Seems a domestic servant by his dress, though I gather, from
-the coarseness of his language, he has served before the mast!—a sad
-come-down, sweet Alice! for a girl with your advantages. These seaman, I
-fancy, are all given to liquor. Offer your bachelor something to drink,
-and score it, if you please, to my account. A sad come-down!—a sad
-come-down! Why burn me, Mistress Alice, with your good looks, you might
-almost have married a gentleman—you might, indeed! Sink me to the lowest
-depths of matrimonial perdition, if you might not!”
-
-Slap-Jack could have stood a good deal, but to be offered a dram by a
-rival in this off-hand way, through the medium of his own sweetheart,
-was more than flesh and blood could swallow. In defiance of Alice’s
-entreaties, who was horribly frightened at the prospect of a quarrel, and
-as pale now as she had been flushed a few minutes back, he shook a broad
-serviceable fist in the captain’s face, and burst out—
-
-“A gentleman! you swab! What do _you_ know about gentlemen? All the
-sort as _you’ve_ seen is them that hangs at Tyburn; and look, if you’re
-not rove up there yourself some fine morning, my saucy blade, with your
-night-cap over your ears, and a bunch of rue in your hand. Gentlemen
-indeed! Now look you here, Captain John Bold, or whatever other _alias_
-your papers may show when they’re overhauled, if ever I catches of you
-in here alone, a parsecutin’ of my Alice, or even hears o’ your so much
-as standing’ off-and-on, a watchin’ for her clearin’ out, or on the open
-moor, or homeward bound, or what not, I’ll smash that great red nose
-of yours as flat as a Port-Royal jelly-fish, you ugly, brandy-faced,
-bottle-nosed, lop-sided son of a gun!”
-
-The captain had borne with considerable equanimity his adversary’s
-quarrelsome gestures and threats of actual violence, keeping very near
-the door, corporeally, indeed, and entrenching himself morally, as it
-were, in the dignity of his superior position, but at these allusions to
-his personal appearance he lost all self-control. His face grew livid,
-his very nose turned pale, his eyes blazed, and his hand stole to the
-short cutlass or hanger he carried at his side. Something in Slap-Jack’s
-face, whose glance followed the movement of his fingers, checked any
-resort to this weapon, and even in his fury, the captain had the presence
-of mind to place himself outside the half-door of the bar; but when there
-he caught hold of it with both hands, for he was trembling all over, and
-burst forth—
-
-“You think the sun is on _your_ side of the hedge, my fine fellow, I
-dare say, but you’ll know better before a week’s out. Ay, you may laugh,
-but you’ll laugh the other side of your mouth when the right end is
-uppermost, as uppermost it will be, and I take you out on the terrace
-with a handkerchief over your eyes, and a file of honest fellows, with
-carbines loaded, who are in my pay even now. Ay, you’ll sing small then,
-I think, for all your blare and bluster to-day. You’ll sing small, d’ye
-hear? on the wet grass under the windows at Hamilton Hill, and your
-master’ll sing small with his feet tied under his horse’s belly, riding
-down the north road and on his way to Tyburn, under a warrant from King
-Ja― Well, a warrant from the king; and that Frenchified jade, your
-missus’ll sing small―”
-
-But here the captain sprang to the door, at which his mare was standing
-ready, leaped to the saddle, and rode off at a gallop, cursing his tongue
-the while, which, in his exasperation, he had suffered to get so entirely
-the better of his discretion.
-
-It was high time; Slap-Jack, infuriated at the allusion to his lady, had
-broken from the gentle grasp of Alice, and in another moment would have
-been upon him. He even followed the mare for a few paces and shook his
-fist at the retreating figure fleeting away over the moor like the wind;
-then he returned to his sweetheart, and drowned his wrath in a flagon of
-sound ale drawn by her sympathising hands.
-
-He soon ceased to think of his opponent’s threats, for when the
-excitement of action was over, the seaman bore no malice and nursed no
-apprehensions; but Alice, who, like many silent, quiet women, was of a
-shrewd and reflective turn of mind, pondered them deeply in her heart.
-She seemed to see the shadow of some great danger threatening her lover
-and the family whose bread he ate.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LI
-
-SIR MARMADUKE
-
-
-A woman’s wits are usually quick to detect intrigue, and are sharpened
-all the more keenly when she suspects danger to the one she loves.
-
-The threats Captain Bold had been so indiscreet as to utter afforded an
-explanation of much that had hitherto puzzled Alice in the habits and
-demeanour of her aunt’s guests. It seemed clear enough now, that the
-shrewd, dark-clothed gentleman upstairs, and his friend from the Hill,
-were involved in a treasonable plot, of which her abhorred suitor with
-the bay mare was a paid instrument. From the hints dropped by the last,
-it looked that some signal vengeance was contemplated against Sir George
-Hamilton, and worse still, against her own beloved Slap-Jack. Alice was
-not the girl to sit still with folded hands and bemoan herself in such
-a predicament. Her first impulse was at once to follow Sir George home
-and warn him of all she knew, all she suspected; but reflecting how
-little there was of the former, and how much of the latter; remembering,
-moreover, that one chief conspirator was his fast friend, and then in his
-company, she hesitated to oppose her own bare word against the latter’s
-influence, and resolved to strike boldly across the moor till she saw
-the chimneys of Brentwood, and tell her tale to Sir Marmaduke Umpleby, a
-justice of the peace, therefore, in all probability, a loyal subject of
-King George.
-
-It was a long walk for a girl accustomed to the needlework and
-dish-scouring of an indoor life, but Alice’s legs had been stretched and
-her lungs exercised on the south-country downs, till she could trip over
-a Yorkshire moor as lightly and as gracefully, if not so swiftly, as
-a hind. Leaving word, then, for her aunt, that she should not be back
-till after dark, she put on her best shoe-buckles, her lace pinners, her
-smartest hat, and tucking her red stuff gown through its pocket-holes,
-started boldly on her mission in the teeth of an east wind.
-
-Brentwood was a snug-looking long grey house, lying low amongst tall
-trees in a little green nook of the moor, sheltered by brown swelling
-undulations that rose all round. A straight road, rough in some places,
-swampy in others, and execrable in all, led up to the door, between
-two dilapidated stone walls coped with turf. There was no pretence of
-porch or other abutment, as in newer residences, nor were there curves
-round clumps of plantation, sweeps to coast flower-beds, nor any such
-compromise from a direct line in the approach to the house. The inmates
-of Brentwood might see their visitors for a perspective of half a mile
-from the front windows, and at these windows would take up their position
-from dawn till dark.
-
-Dame Umpleby and her five daughters were at their usual station when
-Alice appeared in sight. These young ladies, of whom the eldest seemed
-barely fifteen, were being educated under their mother’s eye, that is
-to say, they were writing out recipes, mending house-linen, reading the
-“Pilgrim’s Progress,” and working samplers, according to their several
-ages. They had a spinet also, somewhat out of repair, on which the elder
-girls occasionally practised, but father would not stand this infliction
-within ear-shot, and father was now enjoying his after-dinner slumbers in
-their common sitting-room.
-
-Sir Marmaduke did not appear to advantage in the attitude he had chosen.
-His wig was off, and hung stately on its own account over a high-backed
-chair. His round smooth head was discoloured in patches like the shield
-of a tortoise, his heavy features looked the heavier that they were
-somewhat swollen after eating, the lower jaw had dropped comfortably to
-its rest, and his whole frame was sunk in an attitude of complete and
-ungainly repose.
-
-A half-smoked pipe had dropped from his relaxed fingers to the floor, and
-a remnant of brown ale stood at his elbow in a plain silver tankard on
-the table.
-
-The apartment was their usual family parlour, as it was then called, and
-therefore plainly, not to say meanly, furnished. Sir Marmaduke being a
-gentleman of ancient blood and considerable possessions, owned flocks and
-herds in plenty, fertile corn land under the plough, miles of pasturage
-over the hill. He kept good horses in his stable, fleet greyhounds in
-his kennel, and a cast of hawks in his mews, only surpassed by those
-of Sir George Hamilton; but he could not afford, he said, to waste his
-substance on “Frenchified luxuries,” and this opprobrious term seemed to
-comprise all such vanities as carpets, curtains, couches, pictures, and
-ornaments of every description. For indoors, he argued, why, he didn’t
-frequent that side of the house much himself, and what had been good
-enough for his mother must be good enough for his wife and the girls.
-When hard pressed, as be sure he was by these on the score of certain
-damask hanging and gorgeous carpets at Hamilton Hill, he would reply that
-Lady Hamilton was the sweetest woman in Europe, whereat his audience
-dissented, but that extravagance was her crying fault, only excusable on
-the ground of her foreign birth and education, and it couldn’t go on. It
-could _not_ go on! He should live to see his neighbour ruined, and sold
-up, but he should be sorry for it, prodigiously sorry! for Hamilton was a
-good fellow, very strong in the saddle, and took his bottle like a man!
-
-He had spoken to the same effect just before he dropped asleep, and Dame
-Umpleby with her daughters had continued the subject in whispers till it
-died out of itself just as the far-off figure of Alice, coming direct to
-the house, afforded fresh food for conversation.
-
-Margery being the youngest, saw the arrival some half-second before her
-sisters, and for one rapturous moment believed her dearest visions were
-realised, and little Red Riding Hood was coming to pay them a visit
-in person; but this young woman being about five years of age, and of
-imaginative temperament, was already accustomed to disillusions, and
-felt, therefore, more disgusted than surprised when her eldest sister
-Janet suggested the less startling supposition that it was Goody Round’s
-grand-daughter on an errand for red salve and flannel, offering, at the
-same time, to procure those palliatives in person from the store-room.
-Janet, like most elder girls in a large family, was as steady as a
-matron, taking charge of the rest with the care of an aunt, and the
-authority of a governess. But the mother’s sight was sharper than her
-children’s. “Bessie Round’s not half the height of that girl,” said she,
-rising for a better look. “See how she skims across the stepping-stones
-at the ford! She’s in a hurry, whoever she is! But that is no reason,
-Margery, why you shouldn’t learn your spelling, nor that I should have to
-unpick the last half-dozen stitches in Marian’s sampler. Hush! my dears,
-I pray you! Less noise, or you will wake father.”
-
-Pending this discussion, Alice, whose pace was at least twice as good
-as Bessie Round’s, had reached the house. She looked very pretty, all
-flushed and tumbled out of the moorland breezes, and Dame Umpleby’s
-heart reproached her for the hundredth time that she had allowed her
-husband to establish as a rule the administration of justice in his own
-room, unhampered by her presence. He had once in their early married
-life admitted her assistance to his judicial labours, but such confusion
-resulted from this indulgence that the experiment was never repeated.
-
-Though Sir Marmaduke had been married a score of years, and was the model
-of a steady-going, middle-aged gentleman, such is the self-tormenting
-tendency of the female mind that his wife could not mark without certain
-painful twinges, the good looks of this visitor waiting at the hall-door,
-lest her errand should prove as usual—“A young woman, if you please,
-wants to see Sir Marmaduke on justice business!”
-
-Such twinges are generally prophetic. Long before Margery and Marian had
-settled a disputed point as to the identity of the wolf and little Red
-Riding Hood’s grandmother in the story-book, a plethoric serving-man, who
-had obviously been employing his leisure in the kitchen, like his master
-in the parlour, entered with a red shining face, and announced Alice’s
-arrival in the very words his mistress knew so well.
-
-Sir Marmaduke woke up with a start, rubbed his eyes, his nose, the whole
-of his bald head, and replied as usual—
-
-“Directly, Jacob, directly. Offer the young woman a horn of small ale,
-and show her into the justice-room.”
-
-It was a tradition at Brentwood that no visitor, however humble, should
-walk six steps within the threshold dry-lipped, and old Jacob, who loved
-a gossip only less than a drink, was exceedingly careful not to break
-through this hospitable practice.
-
-Sir Marmaduke, blinking like an old owl in the daylight, adjusted his
-wig, shook himself to rights, and, ignoring his wife’s uneasiness,
-wandered off scarce half-awake, to receive the new arrival in the
-justice-room.
-
-There were few eavesdroppers at Brentwood, least of all at that hour of
-the day. A general stagnation habitually pervaded the establishment from
-dinner-time till dusk. The men slumbered over the fire in the hall, the
-women, at least the elder ones, crossed their arms under their aprons,
-and dozed in the kitchen; the younger maids stole out to meet their
-bachelors in the wood-house of the cattle-sheds. Even Rupert, the old
-mastiff, retired to his kennel, and unless the provocation was of an
-extraordinary nature, refused to open more than one eye at a time, so
-that fear was uncalled-for, which Alice obviously entertained, lest her
-communication to Sir Marmaduke should be overheard.
-
-The latter concluding it was the usual grievance, cast a hasty glance
-at the girl as he passed on to the leathern arm-chair that formed his
-throne, but seating himself thereon, and obtaining a full view of her
-face, gave a start of recognition, and exclaimed in surprise—
-
-“Why, it’s Mistress Alice! Take a chair, Mistress Alice, and believe me,
-you’re welcome. Heartily welcome, however tangled be the skein you’ve
-brought me to unravel.”
-
-Pretty Alice of the “Hamilton Arms” was as well known as the sign of that
-hostelry itself to every hard-riding, beer-drinking, cattle-jobbing,
-country gentleman within fifty miles. Sir Marmaduke often said, and
-sometimes swore, that “he didn’t care how they bred ’em in London and
-thereabouts, but to _his_ mind Alice was the likeliest girl he saw north
-o’ Trent, be t’other who she might!”
-
-The object of his admiration, standing very near the door, hoped “Lady
-Umpleby and the young ladies were well,” a benevolent wish it seemed she
-had walked all this distance to express, for she immediately broke down,
-and began to adjust plaits in the hem of her pinners with extreme nicety.
-
-Sir Marmaduke, marking her confusion, suspected it _must_ be the old
-business after all.
-
-“Take a seat, my dear,” repeated he paternally. “Don’t ye be frightened;
-nobody will hear ye here. Take your own time, and tell your own story.”
-
-Thus adjured, Alice still close to the door, looked anxiously round, and
-whispered—
-
-“Oh! Sir Marmaduke, are you quite sure nobody can hear us?”
-
-The justice smiled, and pulled his wig straight. It was evident she
-had something very secret to confide. He was glad she had come to him
-at once, and what a pretty girl she was! Of course, he would stand her
-friend. He told her so.
-
-“Oh! Sir Marmaduke,” said Alice, “it’s something dreadful. It’s something
-I’ve found out. I know I shall get killed by some of them! It’s a plot,
-Sir Marmaduke! That’s what it is. There!”
-
-The justice started. His brow clouded, and his very wig seemed to
-come awry. He was a stout-hearted gentleman enough, and feared danger
-certainly less than trouble. But a plot! Ever since he could remember in
-his own and his father’s time, the word had been synonymous with arrests,
-imprisonments, authorised oppression, packed juries, commissions of
-inquiry, false witness, hard swearing, and endless trouble to justices of
-the peace.
-
-It was, perhaps, the one thing of all others that he most dreaded, so his
-first impulse was, of course, to ignore the whole matter.
-
-“Plot! My dear. Pooh! Nonsense! What do you know of plots, except a plot
-to get married, you little jade? Hey? Plot! There’s no such thing in
-these days. We smothered the whole brood, eggs and all, in Fifteen. We’ll
-give you a drop of burnt sherry, and send you home behind Ralph on a
-pillion. Don’t ye trouble your pretty head about plots, my dear. If you’d
-seen as many as I have, you’d never wish for another.”
-
-Alice thought of Slap-Jack, and collected her ideas. “I’m sure,” said
-she, “I wouldn’t have taken the liberty of coming to trouble your
-honour, but I thought as you would like to know, Sir Marmaduke, being as
-it concerns Sir George Hamilton, who’s aunt’s landlord, you know, Sir
-Marmaduke, and his sweet lady; and if they were to come for to be taken
-and carried to London town with their feet tied under their horses’
-bellies, Sir Marmaduke, why whatever would become of us all?”
-
-The picture that Alice conjured up was too much for her, and she dried
-her tears on her apron.
-
-Sir Marmaduke opened his eyes wider than he had done since he closed
-them for his afternoon nap. “Sir George Hamilton!” he repeated, in great
-astonishment; “how can he be implicated? What d’ye mean, my dear? Dry
-your eyes, there’s a good girl, and tell your story from the beginning.”
-
-She had recovered her composure now, and made her statement lucidly and
-without reserve. She detailed the whole circumstances of her lover’s
-dispute with Captain Bold, and the latter’s threats, from which she
-gathered, reasonably enough, that another Jacobite rising was imminent,
-in which their party were to be successful, whereby the loyal subjects of
-King George, including the Hamiltons, Slap-Jack, her aunt, and herself,
-were to be ruined, and utterly put to confusion. She urged Sir Marmaduke
-to lay his hands at once on the conspirators within reach. Three of them,
-she said, would be together at the “Hamilton Arms” that very evening.
-She did not suppose two of the gentlemen would make much resistance, as
-they seemed to be priests; and fighting, she thought, could not be their
-trade; while as for the red-nosed captain, with his bay mare, though he
-talked very big, and said he had served in every country in Europe, why,
-she would not be afraid to promise that cook and herself could do his
-business, for that matter, with a couple of brooms and a slop-pail.
-
-Sir Marmaduke laughed, but he was listening very attentively now,
-altogether changed from the self-indulgent slumberer of half an hour ago.
-As she continued her story his interest became more and more excited,
-the expression of his face cleared from lazy indifference into shrewd,
-penetrating common sense, and denoted the importance he attached to her
-communication, of which not a word escaped him.
-
-At the mention of the red-nosed captain with his bay mare, he interrupted
-her, dived into a table-drawer, from which he produced a note-book, and
-referred to an entry amongst its red-lined pages.
-
-“Stop a moment, Mistress Alice,” said he, turning over the leaves. “Here
-it is. Bay mare, fast, well-bred, kicks in the stable, white hind-foot,
-star, and snip on muzzle. Owner, middle height, speaks in a shrill voice,
-long nose, pale face, and flaxen hair in a club.”
-
-Alice’s eyes kindled with the first part of this description, but she
-seemed disappointed when he reached the end.
-
-“That’s not our captain, Sir Marmaduke,” said she. “Our captain’s got
-a squeaky voice, sure enough; but his hair is jet-black, and his face,
-especially his nose, as red, ay, red as my petticoat. It’s the moral
-of the mare, to be sure, and a wicked beast she is,” added Alice,
-reflectively.
-
-Sir Marmaduke pondered. “Is your captain, as you call him, a good-looking
-man?” said he, slyly.
-
-Alice was indignant. “As ugly as sin!” she exclaimed. “Bloodshot eyes,
-scowling eyebrows, and a seam down one cheek that reaches to his
-chin. No, Sir Marmaduke, to do him justice, he’s a very hard-featured
-gentleman, is the captain.”
-
-Sir Marmaduke, keeping his finger between the leaves of his note-book,
-referred once more to the entry.
-
-“Tastes differ, Mistress Alice,” said he, good-humouredly. “I think I
-can recognise the gentleman, though I’ve got him described here, and by
-one of your sex too, as ‘exceedingly handsome-featured, of commanding
-presence, with an air of the highest fashion.’ Never mind. I knew he
-was somewhere this side of the Border, but did not guess he was such a
-near neighbour. If it’s any satisfaction, I don’t mind telling you, my
-dear, he’s likely enough to be in York gaol before the month’s out. In
-the meantime, don’t you let anybody know you’ve seen me, and keep your
-captain, if you possibly can, at the ‘Hamilton Arms’ till I want him.”
-
-Alice curtsied demurely. She had caught the excitement inseparable from
-everything that resembles a pursuit by this time, and had so thoroughly
-entered into the spirit of the game, that she felt she could let the
-captain make love to her for an hour at a stretch, red nose and all,
-rather than he should escape out of their clutches.
-
-“And the other gentleman?” she asked, glancing at the note-book, as if
-she thought they too might be inscribed on its well-filled pages. “Him
-that sits upstairs writing all day, and him that lives up with Sir George
-at the Hill, and only comes down our way about dusk. There can’t be much
-harm about that one, Sir Marmaduke, I think. Such a pale, thin, quiet
-young gentleman, and for all he seems so unhappy, as meek as a mouse.”
-
-“Let the other gentlemen alone, Alice,” answered the justice. “You’re a
-good girl, and a pretty one, and you showed your sense in coming over
-here at once without saying a word to anybody. Now, you’ll take my
-advice, my dear; I am sure you will. Get home before it’s dark. I’d send
-you with Ralph and old Dapple, but that it would make a talk. Never mind,
-you’ve a good pair of legs, I know; so make all the use you can of them.
-I don’t like such a blooming lass to be tramping about these wild moors
-of ours after nightfall. Tell your aunt to brew you a posset the moment
-you get home. If she asks any questions, say I told you to come up here
-about renewing the license. Above all, don’t tattle. Keep silence for a
-week, only a week, and I’ll give you leave after that to chatter till
-your tongue aches. And now, Alice, you’re a sensible girl, I believe, and
-not easily frightened. Listen to what these two priests say. Hide behind
-the window-curtain, under the bed, anywhere, only find out for certain
-what they’re at, and come again to me.”
-
-“But they speak French,” objected Alice, whereat her listener’s face
-fell, though he smiled well-pleased when she added, modestly; “not but
-what I know enough to understand them, if I don’t have to answer.”
-
-“Quite right, quite right, my dear,” assented the justice; “you’re a
-clever girl enough. Mind you show your cleverness by keeping your tongue
-between your teeth. And now it’s high time you were off. Remember what
-I’ve told you. Mum’s the word, my dear; and fare ye well.”
-
-So the justice, opening the door for Alice with all courtesy, imprinted
-such a kiss upon her blooming face, as middle-aged gentlemen of those
-days distributed liberally without scandal, a kiss that, given in all
-honour and kindliness, left the maiden’s cheek no rosier than before.
-
-Then, as soon as the door was shut, Sir Marmaduke pulled his wig off, and
-began pacing his chamber to and fro, as was his custom when in unusual
-perplexity.
-
-“A plot,” he reflected; “no doubt of it. Another veritable Jacobite plot,
-to disturb private comfort and public credit; to make every honest man
-suspect his neighbour, and to set the whole country by the ears.”
-
-Though he had wisely concealed from Alice the importance he really
-attached to her information, he could not but admit her story was very
-like many another that had previously warned him of these risings, in one
-of which, long ago, he had himself been concerned on the other side. His
-sympathies even to-day were not enthusiastically with his duty. That duty
-doubtless was, to warn the executive at once.
-
-He wished heartily that he knew which of his friends and neighbours was
-concerned in the business. It would be terrible if some of his intimates
-(by no means an unlikely supposition) were at its head. He thought it
-extremely probable that Sir George Hamilton was only named as a victim
-for a blind, and had really accepted a prominent part in the rising.
-Could he not give him a hint he was suspected, in time to get out of the
-way? Sir Marmaduke was not very bitter against the Jacobites; and perhaps
-it occurred to him, moreover, that if they should get the upper hand,
-it would be well to have such an advocate as Sir George on the winning
-side. He might tell him what he had heard, under pretence of asking his
-assistance and advice.
-
-At all events he thought he had shut Alice’s mouth for the present, by
-setting her to watch the conspirators closely in her aunt’s house. “If
-she finds _them_ out,” said Sir Marmaduke, rubbing his bald head, “I
-shall have timely notice of their doings, and if they find _her_ out,
-why, they will probably change the scene of operation with all haste, and
-I shall have got an exceedingly awkward job off my hands.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LII
-
-THE BOWL ON THE BIAS
-
-
-It was Sir Marmaduke’s maxim, as he boasted it had been his father’s and
-grandfather’s, to sleep on a resolution before putting it in practice.
-He secured, therefore, a good night’s rest and a substantial breakfast
-ere he mounted his best horse to wait upon his neighbour at Hamilton
-Hill, ordering the grey to be saddled, because Sir George had sometimes
-expressed his approval of that animal. The lord of Brentwood was
-sufficiently a Yorkshireman to seize the opportunity of “a deal,” even
-while more important matters were under consideration.
-
-“He was getting on,” he meant to tell Sir George. “His nerve was
-beginning to fail. The grey was as good as gold, but _a little too much
-of a horse_ for him now. He was scarce able to do the animal justice like
-a younger man.”
-
-And as this suggestion could not but be flattering to the _younger man_,
-he thought it not improbable his friend might be tempted to purchase on
-the spot.
-
-So he rode the horse quietly and carefully, avoiding the high road, which
-would have taken him past the “Hamilton Arms,” and, threading a labyrinth
-of bridleways through the moor, very easy to find for those who were
-familiar with them, but exceedingly puzzling to those who were not.
-
-The grey looked fresh and sleek, as if just out of the stable, when Sir
-Marmaduke rode into the courtyard at Hamilton Hill, whence he was ushered
-by Slap-Jack, who had a great respect for him as a “True Blue, without
-any gammon,” to the terrace where Sir George, her ladyship, and Monsieur
-de St. Croix were engaged in a game of bowls.
-
-Sir Marmaduke followed boldly, although, finding he had to confront Lady
-Hamilton, he was at some pains to adjust his neckcloth and tie-wig,
-wishing, at the same time, he had got on his flowing “Steinkirk” cravat
-and a certain scarlet waistcoat with gold-lace, now under repair.
-
-The game was proceeding with much noise and hilarity, especially from
-Sir George. Florian, an adept at every pastime demanding bodily skill,
-had already acquired a proficiency not inferior to his host’s, who was
-no mean performer. They were a capital match, particularly without
-lookers-on; but the baronet remarked, with prim inward sarcasm, that he
-could generally beat his adversary in the presence of Cerise. The very
-sound of Lady Hamilton’s voice seemed to take Florian’s attention off the
-game.
-
-She was watching the players now with affected interest—smiling
-encouragement to her husband with every successful rub—bringing all her
-artless charms to bear on the man whom she had resolved to win back if
-she could. She was very humble to-day, but no less determined to make a
-desperate struggle for her lost dominion, feeling how precious it was
-now, and that her heart would break if it was really gone for ever.
-
-And Sir George saw everything through the distorted glass of his own
-misgivings.
-
-“All these caressing ways—all these smiles and glances,” thought
-he, bitterly, “only prove her the most fickle of women, or the most
-hypocritical of wives!”
-
-He could not but acknowledge their power, and hated himself for the
-weakness. He could not prevent their thrilling to his heart, but he
-steeled it against her all the more. The better he loved her, the deeper
-was her treachery, the blacker was her crime. There should be no haste,
-no prejudice, no violence, and—no forgiveness!
-
-All the while he poised his bowl with a frank brow and a loud laugh. He
-sipped from a tankard on the rustic table with a good-humoured jest. With
-a success which surprised him, and for which he hated himself while he
-admired, he acted the part of a confiding, indulgent husband towards
-Cerise—of a hearty, unsuspicious friend towards St. Croix.
-
-And the latter was miserable, utterly and confessedly miserable! Every
-caress lavished on her husband by the wife, was a shaft that pierced
-him to the marrow. Every kind word addressed by the latter to himself,
-steeped that shaft in venom, and sent the evil curdling through his blood.
-
-“Penance,” he murmured inwardly. “They talk of penance—of punishment for
-sin—of purgatory—of hell! Why, _this_ is hell! I am in hell already!”
-
-The arrival of Sir Marmaduke, therefore, with his broad brown face, his
-old-fashioned dress, and his ungainly manners, was felt as a relief to
-the whole party; and, probably, not one of them separately would have
-given him half so gratifying a reception as was now accorded him by all
-three.
-
-Nevertheless, his greeting to Lady Hamilton was so ludicrous in its
-ceremonious awkwardness, that she could scarcely repress a laugh.
-Catching Florian’s eye, she did, indeed, indulge in a smile, which she
-hoped might be unobserved. So it was by Sir Marmaduke, whose faculties
-were completely absorbed in his bow; but her husband noted the glance of
-intelligence exchanged, and scored it up as an additional proof against
-the pair.
-
-“Good-morrow, Sir George,” continued the new arrival, completing his
-salutations, as he flattered himself, in the newest mode; “and to you
-sir,” he added, turning rather sternly upon Florian, whom he was even
-then mentally committing, under a magistrate’s warrant, to take his trial
-for high treason. “I made shift to ride over thus early in order to be
-sure of finding my host before he went abroad. Harbouring our stag, as we
-say, my lady, before he rouses; for if I had come across his blemish in
-the rack as I rode up the park, it would have been a disappointment to
-myself, and a disgrace to my reputation as a woodsman.”
-
-Cerise did not in the least understand, but she bowed her pretty head and
-answered—
-
-“Yes, of course—clearly—so it would.”
-
-[Illustration: “THE ARRIVAL OF SIR MARMADUKE WAS A RELIEF.”
-
-(_Page 460._)]
-
-“Therefore,” continued Sir Marmaduke, somewhat inconsequently, for the
-sweet foreign accent rang in his ears and heated his brain, as if he had
-been a younger man. “Therefore St. George, I thought you might like to
-have another look at Grey Plover before I send him to Catterick fair. He
-stands ready saddled at this present speaking in your own stable, and if
-you would condescend to mount and try his paces in the park, I think you
-must allow that you have seldom ridden a more gallant goer.”
-
-Sir Marmaduke was pleased with his own diplomacy. Casting his eyes on
-her ladyship’s pretty feet, he had quite satisfied himself she was
-too lightly shod to accompany her husband through the most luxuriant
-herbage of the park. The priest, too, being a Frenchman, would be safe
-to know little, and care less, about a horse. He could thus secure an
-uninterrupted interview with his friend, and might, possibly, make an
-advantageous sale into the bargain.
-
-“Oh, go with him, George!” exclaimed Cerise, thinking to please her
-husband, who was, as she knew, still boy enough dearly to love a gallop.
-“Go with him, and ride round by the end of the garden into the park. We
-can watch you from here. I do so like to see you on horseback!”
-
-He laughed and assented, leaving her again alone with Florian. Always
-alone with Florian! He ground a curse between his teeth, as he strode
-off to the stable, and, trying Grey Plover’s speed over the undulating
-surface of the home-park, took that animal in a grasp of iron that made
-it exert its utmost powers, in sheer astonishment.
-
-Sir Marmaduke scanning from underneath a clump of trees, thought he had
-never seen his horse go so fast.
-
-Once round the home-park—once across the lower end at speed—a leap
-over a ditch and bank—a breather up the hill—and Sir George trotted
-Grey Plover back to his owner, in an easy, self-satisfied manner that
-denoted the horse was sold. Never once had he turned his head towards
-the terrace where Cerise stood watching. She knew it as well as he did,
-but made excuses for him to herself. He was so fond of horses—he rode
-so beautifully—nobody could ride so well unless his whole attention was
-fixed on his employment. But she sighed nevertheless, and Florian, at her
-side, heard the sigh, and echoed it in his heart.
-
-“Fifty broad pieces,” said Sir George, drawing up to the owner’s side,
-and sliding lightly to the ground.
-
-“He’s worth more than that,” answered the other, loosening the horse’s
-girths and turning his distended nostrils to the wind. “But we’ll talk
-about the price afterwards. We are not likely to differ on that point.
-You never rode behind such shoulders, Sir George; and did you remark how
-he breasted the hill? Like a lion, Ah! If I was twenty years younger, or
-even ten! But it’s no matter for that. I want your advice, Sir George.
-You carry a grey lining, as we say, to a green doublet. Give me the
-benefit. There’s something brewing here between your house and mine that
-will come to hell-broth anon, if we take not some order with it in the
-meantime!”
-
-The other turned his back resolutely on the terrace where his wife was
-standing, and shot a penetrating glance at the speaker.
-
-“Let it brew!” said he. “If it’s hot from the devil’s caldron, I think
-you and I can make shift to drink it out between us.”
-
-Sir Marmaduke laughed.
-
-“I don’t like the smell of it,” he answered, “not to speak of the taste.
-Seriously, my friend, I’ve lit on a nest of Jacobites, here, on your own
-property, at the ‘Hamilton Arms’! They’ve got another of their cursed
-plots hatching in the chimney-corner, about fit to chip the shell by now.
-There’s a couple of priests in it, of course; a lad, I know well enough,
-with a good bay mare, that has saved his neck in more ways than one, for
-a twelvemonth past. He’s only put to the dirty work, you may be sure, and
-I can guess, though on this point I have no certain information, there
-are two or three more honest gentlemen, friends of yours and mine, whom
-I had rather meet at Otterdale Head with the hounds than see badgered by
-an attorney-general at the Exchequer Bar or the Old Bailey, with as many
-witnesses arrayed against them, at half a guinea an oath, as would swear
-away the nine lives of a cat! A murrain of their plots! say I; there’s
-neither pleasure nor profit in ’em, try ’em which side you will, and I’ve
-had _my_ experience o’ both!”
-
-Sir George’s brow went down, and his lips closed. In his frank, manly
-face came the pitiless expression of a duellist who spies the weakness of
-his adversary’s sword, and braces his muscles to dash in. He had got the
-Jesuit, he told himself, “on the hip”!
-
-It was all over with the scheme, he felt. Ere such intelligence could
-have reached his thick-witted neighbour, he argued, it must be known in
-other, and more dangerous quarters. If he had ever suffered the promised
-earldom to dazzle him for an instant, his eyes were opened now; that
-bit of parchment was but a patent for the gallows. He could hang the
-tempter who had offered it him, within a week! At this reflection the
-whole current of his passions turned—the man’s nature was of the true
-conquering type—stern, fierce, almost savage, while confronted with his
-adversary; generous, forbearing, even tender, when the foe was at his
-feet.
-
-The noblest instincts of chivalry were at work within his bosom; they
-found expression in the simple energy with which he inwardly ejaculated,
-“No! D―n it! I’ll fight fair!”
-
-“My advice,” said he, quietly, “is easily followed. Do nothing in a
-hurry—this country is not like France; these cancers often die out of
-themselves, because the whole body is healthy and full of life, but, for
-that very reason, if you eradicate them with the knife, your loss of
-blood, is more injurious than the sore itself. Get all the information
-you can, Sir Marmaduke, and when the time arrives, act with your usual
-vigour and good sense. Come! Fifty pieces for the grey horse? my man
-shall fetch him from Brentwood to-morrow.”
-
-Sir Marmaduke was well pleased. He flattered himself that he had
-fulfilled his delicate mission with extraordinary dexterity, and sold
-Grey Plover very fairly, besides. His friends were warned now, and if
-they chose to persist in thrusting their heads through a halter, why he
-could do no more. He was satisfied Sir George had taken the hint he meant
-to offer. Very likely the conspiracy would come to nothing after all,
-but, at any rate, it was time to hang Captain Bold. He must see about
-it that afternoon, so he would take his leave at once, and return to
-Brentwood by the way he came.
-
-Conscious of the disadvantage under which he laboured for want of the red
-waistcoat, Sir Marmaduke sturdily refused his host’s hospitable offer
-of refreshment, and was steering Grey Plover through the oaks at the end
-of the avenue by the time George had rejoined his wife and Florian on
-the terrace. Walking back, the latter smiled and shook his head. He was
-thinking, perhaps, how his neighbour’s loyalty was leavened with a strong
-disinclination to exertion, and no little indulgence for those whose
-political opinions differed from his own.
-
-But the smile clouded over as he approached the terrace. Together
-again—always together! and in such earnest conversation. He could see his
-wife’s white hands waving with the pretty trick of gesticulation he loved
-so dearly. What could they have to say? what could _she_ have to say that
-demanded so much energy? If he might only have heard. She was talking
-about himself; praising his horsemanship, his strength, his courage,
-his manly character, in the fond, deprecatory way that a woman affects
-when speaking of the man she loves. Every word the sweet lips uttered
-made Florian wince and quiver, yet her husband, striding heavily up the
-terrace-steps, almost wished that he could change places with the Jesuit
-priest.
-
-The latter left her side when Sir George approached; and Cerise, who was
-conscious of something in her husband’s manner that wounded her feelings
-and jarred upon her pride, assumed a colder air and a reserved bearing,
-not the least natural to her character, but of late becoming habitual.
-Everything conspired to increase the distance between two hearts that
-ought to have been knit together by bonds no misunderstanding nor want of
-confidence should ever have been able to divide.
-
-Sir George, watching his wife closely, addressed himself to Florian—
-
-“Bad news!” said he, whereat she started and changed colour. “But not
-so bad as it might have been. The hounds are on the scent, my friend. I
-told you I expected it long ago, and if the fox breaks cover now, as Sir
-Marmaduke would say, they will run into him as sure as fate. Halloa, man!
-what ails you? You never used to hoist the white ensign thus, when we
-cleared for action!”
-
-The Jesuit’s discomposure was so obvious as to justify his host’s
-astonishment. Florian felt, indeed, like a man who, having known an
-earthquake was coming, and wilfully kept it out of his mind, sees the
-earth at last sliding from beneath his feet. His face grew livid, and the
-drops stood on his brow. In proportion to his paleness, Lady Hamilton’s
-colour rose. Sir George looked from one to the other with a curling lip.
-
-“There is no occasion for all this alarm,” he observed, rather
-contemptuously. “The fox can lie at earth till the worst danger of the
-chase is over. Perhaps his safest refuge is the very hen-roost he has
-skulked in to rob! Cheer up, Florian,” he added, in a kinder tone. “You
-don’t suppose I would give up a comrade so long as the old house can
-cover him! I must only make you a prisoner, that is all, with my lady,
-here, for your gaoler. Keep close for a week or two, and the fiercest of
-the storm will have blown over. It will be time enough then to smuggle
-you back to St. Omer, or wherever you have to furnish your report. Don’t
-be afraid, man. Why, you used to be made of sterner stuff than this!”
-
-Florian could not answer. A host of conflicting feelings filled his
-breast to suffocation, but at that moment how cheerfully, how gladly,
-would he have laid down his life for the husband of the woman he so madly
-loved! Covering his face in his hands he sobbed aloud.
-
-Cerise raised her eyes with a look of enthusiastic approval; but they
-sank terrified and disheartened by the hard, inscrutable expression of
-Sir George’s countenance. Her gratitude, he thought, was only for the
-preservation of Florian. They might congratulate each other, when his
-back was turned, on the strange infatuation that befriended them, and
-perhaps laugh at his blind stupidity; but he would fight fair. Yes,
-however hard it seemed, he was a gentleman, and he would fight fair!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LIII
-
-FAIR FIGHTING
-
-
-So the duel began. The moral battle that a man wages with his own temper,
-his own passions, words, actions, his very thoughts, and a few days of
-the uncongenial struggle seemed to have added years to Sir George’s life.
-Of all the trials that could have been imposed on one of his nature,
-this was, perhaps, the severest, to live day by day, and hour by hour,
-on terms of covert enmity with the woman best loved—the friend most
-frankly trusted in the world. Two of the chief props that uphold the
-social fabric seemed cut away from under him. Outward sorrows, injuries,
-vexations can be borne cheerfully enough while domestic happiness
-remains, and the heart is at peace within. They do but beat outside, like
-the blast of a storm on a house well warmed and water-tight. Neither can
-the utmost perfidy of woman utterly demoralise him who owns some staunch
-friend to trust, on whose vigorous nature he can lean, in whose manly
-counsel he can take comfort, till the sharp anguish has passed away.
-But when love and friendship fail both at once, there is great danger
-of a moral recklessness which affirms, and would fain believe, that no
-truth is left in the world. This is the worst struggle of all. Conduct
-and character flounder in it hopelessly, because it affords no foothold
-whence to make an upward spring, so that they are apt to sink and
-disappear without even a struggle for extrication.
-
-Sir George had indeed a purpose to preserve him from complete
-demoralisation, but that purpose was in itself antagonistic to every
-impulse and instinct of his nature. It did violence to his better
-feelings, his education, his principles, his very prejudices and habits,
-but he pursued it consistently nevertheless, whilst it poisoned every
-hour of his life. He went about his daily avocations as usual. He never
-thought of discontinuing those athletic exercises and field sports which
-were elevated into an actual business by men of his station at that
-period, but except for a few thrilling moments at long intervals, the
-zest seemed to be gone from them all.
-
-He flung his hawks aloft on the free open moor, and cursed them bitterly
-when they failed to strike. He cheered his hounds in the deep wild dales
-through which they tracked their game so busily, and hurried Emerald
-or Grey Plover along at the utmost speed those generous animals could
-compass, but was with a grim sullen determination to succeed, rather than
-with the hearty jovial enthusiasm that naturally accompanies the chase.
-Hawks, hounds, and horses were neither cordials nor stimulants now. Only
-anodynes, and scarcely efficacious as such for more than a few minutes at
-a time.
-
-It had been settled that for a short period, depending on the alarm
-felt by the country at the proposed rising, and consequent strictness
-of search for suspected characters, Florian should remain domiciled as
-before at Hamilton Hill. It was only stipulated that he should not show
-himself abroad by daylight, nor hold open communication with such of his
-confederates as might be prowling about the “Hamilton Arms.” With Sir
-Marmaduke’s good-will, and the general laxity of justice prevailing in
-the district, he seemed to incur far less peril by hiding in his present
-quarters than by travelling southward even in disguise on his way to the
-coast.
-
-There were plenty more of his cloth, little distinguished by the
-authorities indeed, from non-juring clergymen of the Church of England,
-who remained quietly unnoticed, on sufferance as it were, in the northern
-counties. Even if watched, Florian might pass for one of these, so his
-daily life went on much as before Sir Marmaduke’s visit. He did not
-write perhaps so many letters, for his correspondence with the continent
-had been discontinued, but this increase of leisure only gave him more
-time for Lady Hamilton’s society, and as he could not accompany her
-husband to the moor, for fear of being seen, he now spent every day till
-dinner-time under the same roof with Cerise.
-
-Sir George used to wonder sometimes in his own heavy heart what they
-could find to talk about through all those hours that seemed so long to
-him in the saddle amongst the dales—the dales he had loved so dearly
-a few short weeks ago, that seemed so wearisome, so gloomy, and so
-endless now—wondered what charm his wife could discover in this young
-priest’s society; in which of the qualities, he himself wanted, lay
-the subtle influence that so entwined her when Florian first arrived,
-that had changed her manner and depressed her spirits of late since
-they had been more thrown together, and caused her to look so unhappy
-now that they were soon to part. Stronger and stronger, struggle
-as he might, grew a horrible conviction that she loved the visitor
-in her heart. Like a gallant swimmer, beating against the tide, he
-strove not to give way, battling inch by inch, gaining less with every
-effort—stationary—receding—till, losing head and heart alike, and
-wheeling madly with the current, he struck out in sheer despair for
-the quicksands, instinctively preferring to meet rather than await
-destruction.
-
-Abroad all the morning from daybreak, forcing himself to leave the house
-lest he should be unable to resist the temptation of watching her, Sir
-George gave Cerise ample opportunities to indulge in Florian’s society,
-had she been so inclined. He thought she availed herself of them to
-the utmost, he thought that while he was away chafing and fretting,
-and eating his own heart far away on those bleak moors, Lady Hamilton,
-passing gracefully amongst her rose-trees on the terrace, or sitting
-at ease in her pretty boudoir, appreciated the long release from his
-company, and made the most of it with her guest. He could fancy he saw
-the pretty head droop, the soft cheek flush, the white hands wave. He
-knew all her ways so well. But not for him now. Not for _him_!
-
-Then Grey Plover would wince and swerve aside, scared by the fierce
-energy of that half-spoken oath, or Emerald would plunge wildly forward,
-maddened by the unaccustomed spur, the light grasp bearing suddenly so
-hard upon the rein. But neither Emerald nor Grey Plover, mettled hunters
-both, could afford more than a temporary palliative to the goad that
-pricked their rider’s heart.
-
-Sir George had better have been _more_ or _less_ suspicious. Had he
-chosen to lower himself in his own eyes by ascertaining how Lady Hamilton
-spent her mornings, he would have discovered that she employed herself in
-filling voluminous sheets with her neat, illegible French hand, writing
-in her boudoir, where she sat _alone_. Very unhappy poor Cerise was,
-though she scorned to complain. Very pale she grew and languid, going
-through her housekeeping duties with an effort, and ceasing altogether
-from the carolling of those French ballads in which the Yorkshire
-servants took an incomprehensible delight.
-
-She seemed, worst sign of all, to have no heart even for her flowers now,
-and did not visit the terrace for five days on a stretch. The very first
-time she went there, George happened to spend the morning at home.
-
-From the window of his room he could see one end of the terrace with some
-difficulty, and a good deal of inconvenience to his neck; nevertheless,
-catching a glimpse of his wife’s figure as she moved about amongst
-her rose-trees, he could not resist watching it for a while, neither
-suspiciously nor in anger, but with something of the dull aching
-tenderness that looks its last on the dead face a man has loved best on
-earth. It is, and it is _not_. The remnant left serves only to prove how
-much is lost, and that which makes his deepest sorrow affords his sole
-consolation—to feel that love remains while the loved one is for ever
-gone.
-
-Half a dozen times he rose from his occupation. It was but refitting some
-tackle on the model brigantine, yet it connected itself, like everything
-else, with _her_. Half a dozen times he sat down again with a crack in
-his neck, and an inward curse on his own folly, but he went back once
-more just the same. Then he resumed his work, smiling grimly while his
-brown face paled, for Monsieur de St. Croix had just made his appearance
-on the terrace.
-
-“As usual, I suppose,” muttered Sir George, waxing an inch or two of
-twine with the nicest care, and fitting it into a block the size of a
-silver penny. But somehow he could not succeed in his manipulation;
-he was inventing a self-reefing topsail, but he couldn’t get the four
-haulyards taut enough, and do what he would the jack-stay came foul of
-the yard. “As usual,” he repeated more bitterly. “Easy it is! He’s the
-best helmsman who knows when to let the ship steer herself!” Then he
-applied once more to his task, whistling an old French quickstep somewhat
-out of time.
-
-Florian had been watching his opportunity, and took advantage of it at
-once. He, too, had suffered severely during the past few days. Perhaps,
-in truth, his greatest torture was to have been deprived of Lady
-Hamilton’s society. He fancied she avoided him, though in this he was
-wrong, for lately she had hardly given him a thought, except of friendly
-pity for his lot. Had it been otherwise, Cerise would have taken care to
-allow no such interviews as the present, because she would have suspected
-their danger. Young, frank, and as little of a coquette as it was
-possible for her mother’s daughter to be, she had never yet even thought
-of analysing her feelings towards Florian.
-
-And he, too, was probably fool enough to shrink from the idea of her
-shunning him, forgetting (as men always do forget, the fundamental
-principles of gallantry in regard to the woman they really love) that
-such a mistrust would have been a step, and a long one, towards the
-interest he could not but feel anxious to inspire.
-
-Had she been more experienced or less preoccupied, she must have learned
-the truth from his changing colour, his faltering step, his awkward
-address, to all others so quiet, graceful, and polite. She was thinking
-of George, she was low-spirited and unhappy. Florian’s society was a
-change and a distraction. She welcomed him with a kind greeting and a
-bewitching smile.
-
-The more anxious men are to broach an interesting subject, the more
-surely do they approach it by a circuitous route. Florian asked half a
-dozen questions concerning the budding, grafting, and production of roses
-in general, before he dared approach the topic nearest his heart. Cerise
-answered good-humouredly, and became more cheerful under the influence of
-fresh air, a gleam of sun, and the scent of her favourite flowers.
-
-Bending sedulously over an especial treasure, she did not remark how long
-a silence was preserved by her companion, though rising she could not
-fail to observe the agitation of his looks nor the shaking hands with
-which he strove to assist her in a task already done.
-
-“These are very late roses,” said he, in a tone strangely earnest for the
-enunciation of so simple a remark. “There are still half a dozen more
-buds to blow, and winter has already arrived.”
-
-“That’s why I am so fond of them,” she replied. “Winter comes too early
-both in the garden and in the house. I like to keep my flowers as long as
-I can, and my illusions too.”
-
-She sighed while she spoke, and Florian, looking tenderly in her face,
-noticed its air of languor and despondency. A wild, mad hope shot through
-his heart, and coming close to her side, he resumed—
-
-“It will be a week at least before this green bud blows, and in a week,
-Lady Hamilton, I shall be gone.”
-
-“So soon?” she said, in a low, tender voice, modulated to sadness by
-thoughts of her own in no way connected with his approaching departure.
-“I had hoped you would stay with us the whole winter, Monsieur de St.
-Croix. We shall miss you dreadfully.”
-
-“I shall be gone,” he repeated, mournfully, “and a man in my position can
-less control his own movements than a wisp of seaweed on the wave. In a
-day or two, perhaps in a few hours, I must wish you good-bye, and—and—it
-is more than probable that I shall never see you again.”
-
-Clasping her hands, she looked at him with her blue eyes wide open,
-like a child who is half-grieved, half-frightened, to see its plaything
-broken, yet not entirely devoid of curiosity to know what there is
-inside. Like a flash came back to him the white walls, the drooping
-laburnums, the trellised beech-walk in the convent garden, and before him
-stood Mademoiselle de Montmirail, the Cerise of the old, wild, hopeless
-days, whom he ought never to have loved, whom least of all should he dare
-to think of now.
-
-“Do you remember our Lady of Succour?” said he; “do you remember the
-pleasant spring-time, the smiling fields, and the sunny skies of our
-own Normandy? How different from these grey, dismal hills! And do you
-remember the day you told me your mother recalled you to Paris? You
-cannot have forgotten it! Lady Hamilton, everything else is changed, but
-I alone remain the same.”
-
-The broken voice, the trembling gestures betrayed deep and uncontrollable
-emotion. Even Cerise could not but feel that this man was strangely
-affected by her presence, that his self-command was every moment
-forsaking him, and that already words might be hovering on his lips to
-which she must not listen. Perhaps, too, there was some little curiosity
-to hear what those words could be—some half-scornful reflection that when
-spoken it would be time enough to disapprove—some petulant triumph to
-think that everybody was not distant, reserved, impenetrable, like Sir
-George.
-
-“And who wishes you to change?” said she, softly. “Not I for one.”
-
-“I shall remember those words when I am far away,” he answered,
-passionately. “Remember them! I shall think of them day by day, and hour
-by hour, long after you have forgotten there was ever such a person
-in existence as Florian de St. Croix. Your director, your worshipper.
-Cerise! your slave!”
-
-She turned on him angrily. All her dignity was aroused by such an appeal
-in such a tone, made to _her_, a wedded wife, but her indignation,
-natural as it was, changed to pity when she marked his pale, worn face,
-his imploring looks, his complete prostration, as it seemed, both of mind
-and body. It was no fault of hers, yet was it the wreck she herself had
-made. Angry! No, she could not be angry, when she thought of all he must
-have suffered, and for _her_; when she remembered how this man had never
-so much as asked for a kind word in exchange for the sacrifice of his
-soul.
-
-The tears stood in her eyes, and when she spoke again her voice was very
-low and pitiful.
-
-“Florian,” said she, “listen to me. If not for your own sake, at least
-for mine, forbear to speak words that can never be unsaid. You have been
-to me, I hope and believe, the truest friend man ever was to woman. Do
-you think I have forgotten the white chapel above Port Welcome, or the
-bright morning that made me a happy wife?” Her face clouded, but she
-resumed in a more composed tone, “We have all our own burdens to bear,
-our own trials to get through. It is not for _me_ to teach _you_ that
-this world is no place of unchequered sunshine. You are right. I shall,
-perhaps, never see you again. Nay; it is far better so. But let me always
-remember you hereafter as the Florian St. Croix, on whose truth, and
-unselfishness, and right feeling Cerise Hamilton could rely, even if the
-whole world besides should fail, and turn against her at her need!”
-
-He was completely unmanned. Her feminine instinct had taught her to use
-the only weapon against which he was powerless, and she conquered, as a
-woman always does conquer, when madly loved by him who has excited her
-interest, her pity, and her vanity, but who has failed to touch her heart.
-
-“And you _will_ remember me? Promise that!” was all he could answer.
-“It is enough; it is my reward. What happiness have I, but to obey your
-lightest wish?”
-
-“You go to France?” she asked, cheerfully, opining with some discretion
-that it would be well to turn the conversation as soon as possible into a
-less compromising channel. “You will see the Marquise? You will be near
-her, at any rate? Will you charge yourself with a packet I have been
-preparing for days, hoping it would be conveyed to my dear mother by no
-hand but yours?”
-
-It was a masterly stroke enough. It not only changed the whole
-conversation, but gave Cerise an opportunity of escaping into the house,
-and breaking up the interview.
-
-He bowed assent of course. He would have bowed assent had she bid him
-shed his own blood then and there on the gravel-walk at her feet; but
-when she left him to fetch her packet, he waited for her return with the
-open mouth and fixed gaze of one who has been vouchsafed a vision from
-another world, and looks to see it just once again before he dies.
-
-The rigging of the brigantine proceeded but slowly. Sir George could not
-apply himself to his task for five minutes at a time; and had the tackle
-of the real ‘Bashful Maid’ ever become so hopelessly fouled and tangled
-as her model’s, she must have capsized with the first breeze that filled
-her sails. His right hand had forgotten its cunning, and his very head
-seemed so utterly confused that, to use his own professional metaphor,
-“He didn’t know truck from taffrail; the main-brace from the captain’s
-quadrant.”
-
-What a lengthened interview was held by those two on the terrace! Again
-and again rising and dislocating his neck to look—there they were still!
-In the same place, in the same attitude, the same earnest conversation!
-What subject could there be but one to bear all this discussion
-from two young people like these? So much at least he had learned
-_en mousquetaire_, but it is difficult to look at such matters _en
-mousquetaire_, when they affect oneself. Ha! She is gone at last. And he,
-why does he stand there watching like an idiot? Sir George turned once
-more to the brigantine, and her dolphin-striker snapped short off between
-his fingers.
-
-Again to the window. Florian not gone yet! And with reason, too, as it
-seems; for Lady Hamilton returns, and places a packet in his hand. He
-kisses hers as he bends over it, and hides the packet carefully away
-in his breast. Zounds! This is too much. But Sir George will command
-himself. Yes, he will command himself from respect to his own character,
-if for nothing else.
-
-So with an affectation of carelessness, so marked as to be utterly
-transparent, the baronet walked down to the garden-door, where he could
-not fail to meet his wife as she re-entered the house for a second time,
-leaving Florian without. It added little to his peace of mind that her
-manner was flurried, and traces of recent tears were on her face.
-
-“Cerise,” said he, and she looked up smiling; “I beg your pardon, Lady
-Hamilton, may I ask what was that packet you brought out even now, and
-delivered to Monsieur de St. Croix?”
-
-She flashed at him a glance of indignant reproach, not, as he believed,
-to reprove his curiosity, but because he had checked himself in calling
-her by the name he loved.
-
-“They are letters for Madame le Marquise, Sir George,” she answered,
-coldly; and, without turning her head, walked haughtily past him into the
-house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LIV
-
-FRIENDS IN NEED
-
-
-“What a sky! what weather! what a look-out! what an apartment, and what
-chocolate!” exclaimed Madame de Montmirail to her maid, in an accent of
-intense Parisian disgust; while the latter prepared her mistress to go
-abroad and encounter in the streets of London the atmosphere of a really
-tolerably fine day for England at the time of year. “Quick, Justine!
-do not distress yourself about costume. My visits this morning are of
-business rather than ceremony. And what matters it now? Yet, after all,
-I suppose a woman never likes to look her worst, especially when she is
-growing old.”
-
-Justine made no answer. The ready disclaimer which would indeed have
-been no flattery died upon her lips; for Justine also felt aggrieved
-in many ways by this untoward expedition to the English capital. In
-the first place, having spent but one night in Paris, she had been
-compelled to leave it at the very period when its attractions were
-coming into bloom: in the next, she had encountered, while crossing the
-Channel, such a fresh breeze, as she was pleased to term, “_un vent de
-Polichinelle!_” and which upset her digestive process for a week; in
-the third, though disdaining to occupy a hostile territory with her war
-material disorganised, she was painfully conscious of looking her worst;
-while, lastly, she had no opportunity for resetting the blunted edge of
-her attractions, because in the whole household below-stairs could be
-discovered but one of the opposite sex, sixty years old, and obviously
-given, body and soul, to that mistress who cheers while she inebriates.
-
-So Justine bustled about discontentedly, and her expressive French face,
-usually so pleasant and lively, now looked dull, and bilious, and cross.
-
-She brightened up a little, nevertheless, when a chair stopped at the
-door, and a visitor was announced. The street, though off the Strand,
-then a fashionable locality, was yet tolerably quiet and retired.
-
-It cheered Justine’s spirits to bring up a gentleman’s name for
-admission; and she almost recovered her good-humour when she learned he
-was a countryman of her own.
-
-The Marquise, sipping chocolate and dressed to go out, received her
-visitor more than cordially. She had been restless at Chateau-la-Fierté,
-restless in Paris, restless through her whole journey, and was now
-restless in London. But restlessness is borne the easier when we have
-some one to share it with; and this young man had reason to be gratified
-with the welcome accorded him by so celebrated a beauty as Madame de
-Montmirail.
-
-She might almost have been his mother, it is true; but all his life he
-had accustomed himself to think of her as the brilliant Marquise with
-whom everybody of any pretence to distinction was avowedly in love, and
-without looking much at her face, or affecting her society, he accepted
-the situation too. What would you have? It was _de rigueur_. He declared
-himself her adorer just as he wore a Steinkirk cravat, and took snuff,
-though he hated it, from a diamond snuff-box.
-
-The Marquise could not help people making fools of themselves, she said;
-and perhaps did not wish to help it. She too had dreamed her dream, and
-all was over. The sovereignty of beauty can at no time be disagreeable,
-least of all when the bloom begins to fade, and the empire grows day by
-day more precarious. If young Chateau-Guerrand chose to be as absurd as
-his uncle, let him singe his wings, or his wig, or any part of his attire
-he pleased. She was not going to put her lamp out because the cockchafer
-is a blunderer, and the moth a suicide.
-
-He was a good-looking young gentleman enough, and in Justine’s opinion
-seemed only the more attractive from the air of thorough coxcombry with
-which his whole deportment, person, and conversation were imbued. He
-had quarrelled with his uncle, the Prince-Marshal, on the score of that
-relative’s undutiful conduct. The veteran had paid the young soldier’s
-debts twice, and lo! the third time he remonstrated. His nephew, under
-pretext of an old wound disabling the sword-arm, obtained permission to
-retire from the army, thinking thus to annoy his uncle, and accepted
-an appointment as _attaché_ to the French embassy at the Court of St.
-James’s, for which he was specially unfitted both by nature and education.
-
-“You arrived, madame, but yesterday,” said he, bowing over the hand
-extended to him, with an affectation of extreme devotion. “I learned it
-this morning, and behold I fly here on the instant, to place myself, my
-chief, and all the resources of my country, at the disposition of madame.”
-
-“Of course,” she answered, smiling; “but in the meantime, understand
-me, I neither want yourself, however charming, nor your chief, however
-discreet, nor the resources of your country and mine, however powerful.
-I am here on private affairs, and till they are concluded I shall have
-no leisure to enter society. What I ask of your devotion now is, to sit
-down in that chair, and tell me the news, while I finish my chocolate in
-peace.”
-
-He obeyed delighted—evidently, she was rejoiced to meet him here, so
-unexpectedly, and could not conceal her gratification. He was treated
-like an intimate friend, an established favourite—Justine had retired.
-The Marquise loitered over her chocolate. She looked well, wonderfully
-handsome for her age, and she had never appeared so kind. “Ah, rogue!”
-thought this enviable youth, apostrophising the person he most admired in
-the world, “must it always be so? mothers and daughters, maids, wives,
-and widows.—No escape, _parbleu_, and no mercy. What is it about you,
-my boy, that thus prostrates every creature in a petticoat before the
-feet of Casimir de Chateau-Guerrand? Is it looks, is it manners, is it
-intellect? Faith, I think it must be a happy mixture of them all!”
-
-“Well!” said the Marquise with one of her victorious glances, “I am not
-very patient, you know that of old. Quick! out with the news, you who
-have the knack of telling it so well.”
-
-He glanced in an opposite mirror, and looked as fascinating as he could.
-
-“It goes no further, madame, of course; and indeed I would trust you with
-my head, as I have long since trusted you with my heart.” An impatient
-gesture of his listener somewhat discomfited him, but he proceeded,
-nevertheless, in a tone of ineffable self-satisfaction.
-
-“We are behind the scenes, you know, we diplomatists, and see the players
-before the wigs are adjusted or the paint laid on. Such actors! madame,
-and oh! such actresses! the old Court is a comedy to which no one pays
-attention. The young Court is a farce played with a tragic solemnity.
-Even Mrs. Bellenden has thrown up her part. There is no gooseberry bush
-now behind which the heir-apparent fills his basket. Some say that none
-is necessary, but Mrs. Howard still dresses the Princess, and―”
-
-“Spare me your green-room scandal,” interrupted the Marquise. “Surely I
-have heard enough of it in my time. At Fontainebleau, at Versailles, at
-Marly. I am sick to death of all the gossips and slanders that gallop up
-and down the backstairs of a palace. Talk politics to me, for heaven’s
-sake, or don’t talk at all!”
-
-“I know not what you call politics, madame,” answered the unabashed
-attaché, “if the Prince’s likings and vagaries are not to be included in
-the term. What say you to a plot, a conspiracy, more, a Jacobite rising?
-In the north of course! that established stronghold of legitimacy. Do I
-interest you now?”
-
-He did indeed, and though she strove hard not to betray her feelings, no
-observer, less preoccupied with the reflection of his own beloved image
-in the looking-glass, could have failed to remark the gleam of her dark
-eyes, her rising colour, and quick-drawn breath. Though she recovered
-herself with habitual self-command, there was still a slight tremor in
-her voice, while she repeated as unconcernedly as she could—
-
-“In the north, you say? Ah! it is a long distance from the capital. Your
-department is very likely misinformed, or has itself dressed up a goblin
-to frighten idle children like yourself, monsieur, into paying more
-attention to their lessons.”
-
-But Casimir, who laid great stress on his own diplomatic importance,
-vehemently repudiated such an assumption.
-
-“Goblin, indeed!” he cried, indignantly. “It is a goblin that will be
-found to have body and bones, and blood too, I fear, unless I am much
-misinformed and mistaken. We have nothing to do with it of course, but I
-can tell you, madame, that we have information of the time, the locality,
-the numbers, the persons implicated. I believe if you put me to it, I
-could even furnish you with the names of the accused.”
-
-She bowed carelessly. “A few graziers, I suppose, and cattle-drivers,”
-she observed, “with a Scottish house-breaker, and a drunken squire or two
-for leaders. It is scarcely worth the trouble to ask any more questions.”
-
-“Far graver than that, madame,” he answered, determined not to be put
-down. “Some of the best names in the north, as I am informed, are already
-compromised beyond power to retreat. I could tell them over from memory,
-but my tongue fails to pronounce the barbarous syllables. Would you like
-to have them in black and white?”
-
-“Not this morning, monsieur,” she answered with a shrug of the
-shoulders. “Do you think I came to London in order to mix myself up in
-an unsuccessful rebellion? I, who have private affairs of my own that
-require all my attention. You might as well suppose I had followed
-yourself across the Channel because I could not exist apart from Casimir
-de Chateau-Guerrand! Frankly, I am glad to see you too. Very glad,” she
-added, stretching her white hand to the young man, with another of her
-bewitching smiles. “But I must hunt you away now. Positively I must; I
-ought to have sold an estate, and touched the purchase-money by this
-time. I am a thorough woman of business, monsieur, I would have you know;
-which does not prevent my loving amusement at the right season, like
-other people.”
-
-He took his hat to depart, feeling perhaps, for the first time, that
-there were women in the world to whom even he dare not aspire, and that
-it was provoking such should be the best worth winning. The Marquise had
-not yet lost the knack of playing a game from which she had never risen
-a loser but once, and indeed if her weapons were a little less bright,
-her skill of fence was better than ever. Few women have thoroughly
-learned the art of man-taming till they are past their prime, and even
-then, perhaps the influence that subdued his fellows, is powerless alone
-on him whom most they wish to capture.
-
-Admiration from young Chateau-Guerrand gratified the Marquise as some
-stray woodcock in a bag of a hundred head, gratifies a sportsman. It
-hardly even stimulated her vanity. She wanted him though, like the
-woodcock for ulterior purposes, and shot him, therefore, so to speak,
-gracefully, neatly, and in proper form.
-
-“I should fear to commit an indiscretion by remaining one moment longer,
-madame,” said he, “but—but—” and he looked longingly, though with less
-than his accustomed assurance, in the beautiful eyes that met his own so
-kindly.
-
-“But—but—” she interposed laughing, “you may come again to-morrow at
-the same time; I shall be alone. And, Casimir, I have some talent for
-curiosity, bring with you that list you spoke of—at least if no one else
-has seen it. A scandal, you know, is like a rose, if I may not gather it
-fresh from the stalk, I had rather not wear it at all!”
-
-“Honour,” said he, kissing the hand she extended to him, and in high glee
-tripped downstairs to regain his chair in the street.
-
-Satisfied with the implied promise, Madame de Montmirail looked wistfully
-at a clock on the chimneypiece and pondered.
-
-“Twenty-four hours gained on that young man’s gossiping tongue at least.
-To-morrow night I might be there—the horses are good in this country.
-I have it! When I near the place I must make use of their diligence. I
-shall overtake more than one. I cannot appear too quickly. I shall have
-a famous laugh at Malletort, to be sure, if my information is earlier
-than his—and at any rate, I shall embrace my darling Cerise, and see her
-husband—my son-in-law now—my son-in-law! How strange it seems! Well,
-business first and pleasure afterwards.”
-
-“Justine!”
-
-“Madame!” replied Justine, re-entering with a colour in her cheek and a
-few particles of soot, such as constitute an essential part of a London
-atmosphere, on her dainty forehead, denoting that she had been leaning
-out at window to look down the street.
-
-“Madame called, I think. Can I do anything more for madame before she
-goes out?”
-
-Much to Justine’s astonishment, she was directed to pack certain
-articles of wearing apparel without delay. These were to be ready in two
-hours’ time. Was madame going again to voyage? That was no business of
-Justine’s. Was Pierre not to accompany Madame? nor Alphonse? nor even
-old Busson? If any of these were wanted, madame would herself let them
-know. And when was madame coming back? Shortly; Justine should learn in
-a day or two. So, without further parley, madame entered her chair and
-proceeded to that business which she imagined was the sole cause of her
-journey to London.
-
-After some hesitation, and a few tiresome interviews with her intendant,
-the Marquise had lately decided on selling her estates in the West
-Indies, stipulating only, for the sake of Célandine, that Bartoletti
-should be retained as overseer at _Cash-a-crou_. The locality, indeed,
-had but few agreeable associations connected with it. Months of wearisome
-exile, concluded by a night of bloodshed and horror, had not endeared
-Montmirail West in the eyes of its European owner.
-
-It is not now necessary to state that Madame de Montmirail was a lady of
-considerable enterprise, and especially affected all matters connected
-with business or speculation. In an hour she made up her mind that London
-was the best market for her property, and in twenty-four she was in her
-carriage, on the road to England. Much to her intendant’s admiration, she
-also expressed her decided intention of managing the whole negotiations
-herself. The quiet old Frenchman gratefully appreciated an independence
-of spirit that saved him long journeys, heavy responsibilities, and one
-or two of his mistress’s sharpest rebukes.
-
-To effect her sale, the preliminaries of which had been already arranged
-by letter, the Marquise had to proceed as far as St. Margaret’s Hill
-in the borough of Southwark. Her chairmen, after so long a trot, felt
-themselves doubtless entitled to refreshment, and took advantage of
-her protracted interview with the broker whom she visited, to adjourn
-to a neighbouring tavern for the purpose of recruiting their strength.
-The beer was so good that, returning past the old Admiralty Office,
-her leading bearer was compelled to sit down between the poles of his
-chair, taking off his hat, and proceeding to wipe his brows in a manner
-extremely ludicrous to the bystanders, and equally provoking to the
-inmate, who desired to be carried home. His yokefellow, instead of
-reproving him, burst into a drunken laugh, and the Marquise inside,
-though half-amused, was yet at the same time provoked to find herself
-placed in a thoroughly false position by so absurd a casualty.
-
-She let down the window and expostulated, but with no result, except
-to collect a crowd, who expressed their sympathy with the usual good
-taste and kind feeling of a metropolitan mob. Madame de Montmirail’s
-appearance denoted she was a highborn lady, and her accent proclaimed her
-a foreigner. The combination was irresistible; presently coarse jests
-and brutal laughter rose to hootings of derision, accompanied by ominous
-cries—“Down with the Pretender! No Popery! Who heated the warming-pan?”
-and such catchwords of political rancour and ill-will.
-
-Ere long an apple or two began to fly, then a rotten egg, and the body
-of a dead cat, followed by a brickbat, while the less drunken chairman
-had his hat knocked over his eyes. That which began in horse-play was
-fast growing to a riot, and the Marquise might have found herself
-roughly handled if it had not been for an irruption of seamen from a
-neighbouring tavern, who were whiling away their time by drinking strong
-liquors during the examination of their papers at the Admiralty Office,
-adjoining. Though not above half a dozen in number, they were soon
-“alongside the wreck,” as they called it, making a lane through the crowd
-by the summary process of knocking down everybody who opposed them, but
-before they had time to give “three cheers for the lady,” their leader,
-a sedate and weatherworn tar, who had never abandoned his pipe during
-the heat of the action, dropped it short from between his lips, and stood
-aghast before the chair window, rolling his hat in his hands, speechless
-and spell-bound with amazement.
-
-The Marquise recognised him at once.
-
-“It is Smoke-Jack! and welcome!” she exclaimed. “I should know you
-amongst a thousand! Indeed, I scarcely wanted your assistance more the
-night you saved us at _Cash-a-crou_. Ah! I have not forgotten the men
-of ‘The Bashful Maid,’ nor how to speak to them. _Come, bear a hand, my
-hearty!_ Is it not so?”
-
-The little nautical slang spoken in her broken English, acted like a
-charm. Not a man but would have fought for her to the death, or drank her
-health till all was blue!
-
-They cheered lustily now, they crowded round in enthusiastic admiration,
-and the youngest of the party, with a forethought beyond all praise,
-rushed back to the tavern he had quitted, for a jorum of hot punch, in
-case the lady should feel faint after her accident.
-
-Smoke-Jack’s stoicism was for once put to flight.
-
-“Say the word, marm!” exclaimed the old seaman, “and we’ll pull the
-street down. Who began it?” he added, looking round and doubling his
-great round fists. “Who began it?—that’s all I want to know. Ain’t nobody
-to be started for this here game? Ain’t nobody to get his allowance? I’ll
-give it him, hot and hot!”
-
-With difficulty Smoke-Jack was persuaded that no benefit would accrue
-to the Marquise from his doing immediate battle with the bystanders,
-consisting by this time of a few women and street-urchins, for most of
-the able-bodied rioters had slunk away before the threatening faces of
-the seamen. He had to content himself, therefore, with administering
-sundry kicks and cuffs to the chairmen, both of whom were too drunk to
-proceed, and with carrying the Marquise home, in person, assisted by
-a certain elderly boatswain’s mate, on whom he seemed to place some
-reliance, while the rest of the sailors sought their favourite resort
-once more, to drink success and a pleasant voyage to the lady, in the
-money with which she had liberally rewarded them.
-
-“It is droll!” thought Madame de Montmirail, as she felt the chair jerk
-and sway to the unaccustomed action of its maritime bearers. “Droll
-enough to be thus carried through the streets of London by the British
-navy! and droller than all, that I should have met Smoke-Jack at a time
-like the present. This accident may prove extremely useful in the end.
-Doubtless, he is still devoted to his old captain. Everybody seems
-devoted to that man. Can I wonder at my little Cerise? And Sir George
-may be none the worse of a faithful follower in days like these. I will
-ask him, at any rate, and it is not often when I ask anything that I am
-refused!”
-
-So when the chair halted at last before Madame de Montmirail’s door,
-she dismissed the boatswain’s mate delighted, with many kind words and
-a couple of broad pieces, while Smoke-Jack, no less delighted, found
-himself ushered into the sitting-room upstairs, even before he had time
-to look round and take his bearings.
-
-The Marquise prided herself on knowledge of mankind, and offered him
-refreshment on the spot.
-
-“Will you have grog?” she said. “It is bad for you sailors to talk with
-the mouth dry.”
-
-Smoke-Jack, again, prided himself on his manners, and declined
-strenuously. Neither would he be prevailed upon to sit down, but balanced
-his person on either leg alternately, holding his hat with both hands
-before the pit of his stomach.
-
-“Smoke-Jack,” said the Marquise, “I know you of old; brave, discreet,
-and trustworthy. I am bound on a journey in which there is some little
-danger, and much necessity for caution; have you the time and the
-inclination to accompany me?”
-
-His impulse was to follow her to the end of the world, but he mistrusted
-these sirens precisely because it _was_ always his impulse so to follow
-them.
-
-“Is it for a spell, marm?” he asked; “or for a long cruise? If I might
-make so free, marm, I’d like to be told the name of the skipper and the
-tonnage of the craft!”
-
-“I start in an hour for the north,” she continued, neither understanding
-nor heeding his proviso. “I am going into the neighbourhood of your old
-captain, Sir George Hamilton.”
-
-“Captain George!” exclaimed the seaman, with difficulty restraining
-himself from shying his hat to the ceiling, and looking sheepishly
-conscious, he had almost committed this tempting solecism. “What! _our_
-Captain George? I’m not much of a talking chap, marm; I haven’t got the
-time, but if that’s the port you’re bound for, I’ll sail round the world
-with you, if we beat against a headwind the whole voyage through!”
-
-With such sentiments the preliminaries were easily adjusted, and it was
-arranged that Smoke-Jack should accompany the Marquise on her journey
-with no more delay than would be required to purchase him landsman’s
-attire. He entered into the scheme with thorough good-will, though
-expressing, and doubtless feeling, some little disappointment when he
-learned that Justine, of whom he had caught a glimpse on the stairs, was
-not to be of the party.
-
-Avowedly a woman-hater, he had, of course, a _real_ weakness for the
-softer sex, and with all his deference to the Marquise, would have found
-much delight in the society of her waiting-maid. Such specimens as
-Justine he considered his especial study, and believed that of all men he
-best understood their qualities, and was most conversant with “the trim
-on ’em.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LV
-
-FOREWARNED
-
-
-It is needless to follow Madame de Montmirail and her new retainer
-through the different stages of their journey to the north. By dint of
-liberal pay, with some nautical eloquence on the part of Smoke-Jack, who,
-being a man of few words, spoke those few to the purpose, they overtook
-the ‘Flying Post’ coach by noon of the second day at a town some fifteen
-miles south of Hamilton Hill. Calculating to arrive before nightfall,
-they here transferred themselves and their luggage to that lumbering
-conveyance; and if the Marquise wished to avoid notice, such a measure
-was prudent enough. In the masked lady closely wrapped up and silent, who
-sat preoccupied inside, no one could suspect the brilliant and sumptuous
-Frenchwoman, the beauty of two consecutive Courts. Nor, so long as he
-kept his mouth shut, did Smoke-Jack’s seafaring character show through
-his shore-going disguise, consisting of jack-boots, three-cornered hat,
-scratch-wig, and long grey duffle greatcoat, in which he might have
-passed for a Quaker, but that the butt-end of a pistol peeped out of its
-side-pockets on each side.
-
-Their fellow-passengers found their curiosity completely baffled by the
-haughty taciturnity of the one and the surly answers of the other. Even
-the ascent of Otterdale Scaur failed to elicit anything, although the
-rest of the freight alighted to walk up that steep and dangerous incline.
-In vain the ponderous coach creaked, and strained, and laboured; in vain
-driver flogged and guard expostulated; the lady inside was asleep, and
-must not be disturbed. Smoke-Jack, on the roof, swore that he had paid
-his passage, and would stick to the ship while a plank held. It was
-impossible to make anything satisfactory out of this strangely-assorted
-couple, and the task was abandoned in despair long before the weary
-stretch of road had been traversed that led northward over the brown
-moorland past the door of the “Hamilton Arms.”
-
-The lady was tired—the lady would alight. Though their places were taken
-for several miles further, she and her domestic would remain here. It was
-impossible she could proceed. Were these rooms vacant?
-
-Rooms vacant! Mrs. Dodge, in a pair of enormous earrings, with the gold
-cross glittering on her bosom, lifted her fat hands in protestation.
-Theoretically, she never had a corner to spare in which she could stow
-away a mouse; practically, she so contrived that no wealthy-looking
-traveller ran a risk by “going further—of faring worse.” On the present
-occasion “she was very full,” she said. “Never was such markets; never
-was such a press of customers, calling here and calling there, and not
-to be served but with the best! Nevertheless, madam should have a room
-in five minutes! Alice, lay a fire in the Cedars. The room was warm and
-comfortable, but the look-out (into the stable-yard) hardly so airy as
-she could wish. Madam would excuse that—madam—” Here Mrs. Dodge, who was
-no fool, pulled herself short up. “She begged pardon. Her ladyship, she
-hoped, would find no complaints to make. She hoped her ladyship would be
-satisfied!”
-
-Her ladyship simply motioned towards the staircase, up which Alice had
-run a moment before with a red-hot poker in her hand, and, preceded by
-Mrs. Dodge, retired to the apartment provided for her, while a roar of
-laughter, in a tone that seemed not entirely strange, reached her ears
-from the bar, into which her new retainer had just dragged her luggage
-from off the coach.
-
-Now the Marquise, though never before in England, was not yet ignorant of
-the general economy prevailing at the “Hamilton Arms,” or the position of
-its different apartments. She had still continued her correspondence with
-Malletort, or rather she had suffered him to write to her, as formerly,
-when he chose.
-
-His very last letter contained, amongst political gossip and
-protestations of friendship, a ludicrous description of his present
-lodgings, in which the very room she now occupied, opening through
-folding-doors into his own, was deplored as one of his many annoyances.
-
-Even had she not known his step, therefore, she would have no difficulty
-in deciding that it was the Abbé himself whom she now heard pacing the
-floor of the adjoining apartment, separated only by a thin deal door,
-painted to look like cedar-wood.
-
-She was not given to hesitation. Trying the lock, she found it
-unfastened, and, taking off her travelling mask, opened the door
-noiselessly, to stand like a vision in the entrance, probably the very
-last person he expected to see.
-
-Malletort was a difficult man to surprise. At least he never betrayed any
-astonishment. With perfectly cool politeness he handed a chair, as if he
-had been awaiting her for an hour.
-
-“Sit down, madame,” said he, “I entreat you. The roads in this weather
-are execrable for travelling. You must have had a long and fatiguing
-journey.”
-
-She could not repress a laugh.
-
-“It seems, then, that you expected me,” she answered, accepting the
-proffered seat. “Perhaps you know why I have come.”
-
-“Without presumption,” he replied, “I may be permitted to guess. Your
-charming daughter lives within half a league of this spot. You think of
-her day by day. You look on her picture at your château, which, by the
-way, is not too amusing a residence. You pine to embrace her. You fly
-on the wings of maternal love and tired post-horses. You arrive in due
-course, like a parcel. In short, here you are. Ah! what it is to have a
-mother’s heart!”
-
-She appreciated and admired his coolness. The man had a certain
-diplomatic kind of courage about him, and was worth saving, after
-all. How must he have suffered, too, this poor Abbé, in his gloomy
-hiding-place, with the insufferable cooking that she could smell even
-here!
-
-“Abbé,” she resumed, “I am serious, though you make me laugh. Listen. I
-did _not_ come here to see my daughter, though I hope to embrace her
-this very night. More, I came to see _you_—to warn you that the sooner
-you leave this place the better. I know you too well to suppose you
-have not secured your retreat. Sound the _alerte_, my brave Abbé, and
-strike your tents without delay. Your plot has failed—the whole thing has
-exploded—and I have travelled night and day to save a kinsman, and, I
-believe, as far as his nature permits, a friend! There is nothing more to
-be said on the subject.”
-
-Malletort was moved, but he would not show it any more than he would
-acknowledge this intelligence came upon him like a thunderclap. He
-fidgeted with some papers to hide his face for a moment, but looked up
-directly afterwards calm and clear as ever.
-
-“I know—I know,” said he. “I was prepared for this—though, perhaps, not
-quite so soon. I might have been prepared too, for my cousin’s kindness
-and self-devotion. She has always been the noblest and bravest of women.
-Madame, you have by this as by many previous benefits, won my eternal
-gratitude. We shall be uninterrupted here, and cannot be overheard.
-Detail to me the information that has reached you in the exact words
-used. I wish to see if it tallies with mine.”
-
-The Marquise related her interview with young Chateau-Guerrand, adding
-several corroborative facts she had learned in the capital, none of which
-were of much importance apart, though, when taken together, they afforded
-strong evidence that the British Government was alive to the machinations
-of the Abbé and his confederates.
-
-“It is an utter rout,” concluded the Marquise, contemptuously; “and there
-is no honour, as far as I can see, to save. Best turn bridle out of the
-press, Abbé, like a defeated king in the old romances, put spurs to your
-horse, and never look over your shoulder on the field you have deserted!”
-
-“Not quite so bad as that, madame,” replied he. “’Tis but a leak sprung
-as yet, and we may, perhaps, make shift to get safe into port after all.
-In the meantime, I need scarcely remain in such absolute concealment any
-longer. It must be known in London that I am here. Once more, madame,
-accept my heartfelt thanks. When you see her this evening, commend me
-humbly to your beautiful daughter and to her husband, my old friend, the
-Captain of Musketeers.”
-
-So speaking, the Abbé held open the door of communication and bowed the
-Marquise into the adjoining room, where food and wine were served with
-all the ceremonious grace of the old Court. His brow was never smoother,
-his smile never more assured; but as soon as he found himself alone, he
-sat down at the writing-table and buried his face in his hands.
-
-“So fair a scheme!” he muttered. “So deep! So well-arranged! And to fail
-at last like this! But what tools I have had to work with! What tools!
-What tools!”
-
-Meantime two honest voices in the bar were pealing louder and louder
-in joyous interchange of questions, congratulations, and entreaties to
-drink. The shouts of laughter that had reached the Marquise at the top of
-the stairs came from no less powerful lungs than those of Slap-Jack, who
-had stolen down from the hill as usual for the hindrance of Alice in her
-household duties. He was leaning over her chair, probably to assist her
-in mending the house linen, when his occupation was interrupted by the
-arrival of a tall, dried-up looking personage dressed in a long duffle
-coat, who entered the sanctum with a valise and other luggage in his
-hands. Something in the ship-shape accuracy with which he disposed of
-these roused Slap-Jack’s professional attention, and when the stranger
-turning round pushed his hat off his forehead, and shut one eye to have a
-good look, recognition on both sides was instantaneous and complete.
-
-“Why, Alice, it’s Smoke-Jack!” exclaimed her sweetheart, while volumes
-would have failed to express more of delight and astonishment than the
-new-comer conveyed in the simple ejaculation, “Well! Blow me!”
-
-A bowl of punch was ordered, and pipes were lit forthwith, Alice filling
-her lover’s coquettishly, and applying a match to it with her own pretty
-fingers. Smoke-Jack looked on approving, and winked several times in
-succession. Mentally he was scanning the damsel with a critical eye,
-her bows, her run, her figure-head, her tackle, and the trim of her
-generally. When the punch came he filled three glasses to the brim, and
-observed with great solemnity—
-
-“My sarvice to you, shipmate, and your consort. The sooner you two gets
-spliced the better. No offence, young woman. If I’d ever come across
-such a craft as yourn, mate, I’d have been spliced myself. But these
-here doesn’t swim to windward in shoals like black fish, and I was never
-a chap to take and leap overboard promiscuous after a blessed mermyed
-’a-cause she hailed me off a reef. That’s why I’m a driftin’ to leeward
-this day. I’ll take it as a favour, young woman, if you’ll sip from my
-glass!”
-
-This was the longest speech Slap-Jack ever remembered from his shipmate,
-and was valued accordingly. It was obvious that Smoke-Jack, contrary to
-his usual principles, which were anti-matrimonial, looked on his old
-friend’s projected alliance with the utmost favour. The three found
-themselves extremely pleasant company. Alice, indeed, moved in and out
-on her household duties, rendered the more engrossing that her aunt was
-occupied in the kitchen, but the two seamen stuck to the leeside of their
-bowl of punch till it was emptied, and never ceased smoking the whole
-time. They had so much to talk about, so many old stories to recall,
-questions to ask, and details to furnish on their own different fortunes
-since they met, to say nothing of the toasts that accompanied each
-separate glass.
-
-They drank ‘The Bashful Maid’ twice, and Alice three times, in the course
-of their merry-making. Now it came to pass that during their conversation
-the name of Captain Bold was mentioned by Slap-Jack, as an individual
-whose head it would give him extreme gratification to punch on some
-fitting occasion; and that his friend showed some special interest in the
-subject appeared by the cock of his eye and the removal of his pipe from
-between his lips.
-
-“Bold!” repeated Smoke-Jack, as if taxing his memory. “Captain Bold you
-calls him. Not a real skipper, but only a soger captain, belike?”
-
-“Not even good enough for a soger to my thinking,” answered the other,
-in a tone of disgust. “Look ye here, brother, I’ve heard some of the old
-hands say, though, mind ye, I doesn’t go along with them, that sogers is
-like onions, never looks so well as when you hangs them up in a string.
-But this here captain’s not even good enough for hanging, though he’ll
-come to the yard-arm at last, or I’m mistaken.”
-
-Again Smoke-Jack pondered, and took a pull at his punch.
-
-“A flaxen-haired chap,” inquired he, “with a red nose and a pair of
-cunning eyes? As thirsty as a sand-bank, and hails ye in a voice like the
-boatswain’s whistle?”
-
-“That’s about the trim, all but the hair,” answered his friend. “To be
-sure, he may have hoisted a wig. This beggar’s got the gift of the gab,
-though, and pays ye out a yarn as long as the maintop bowline.”
-
-“It _must_ be the same,” said Smoke-Jack, and proceeded to relate his
-grievances, which were as follows:—
-
-Paid off from a cruise, and finding he was pretty well to do in the
-world, Smoke-Jack had resolved to amuse himself in London, by studying
-life in a more enlarged phase than was afforded at his usual haunts near
-the river-side. For this purpose he had dressed himself in a grave suit,
-which made him look like some retired merchant captain, and in that
-character frequented the more respectable ordinaries about the Savoy and
-such civilised parts of the town. Here he made casual acquaintances,
-chiefly of sedate exterior, especially affecting those who assumed a wise
-port and talked heavy nonsense in the guise of philosophy.
-
-Not many weeks ago he had met a person at one of these dinner-tables
-with whose conversation he was much delighted. Flaxen-haired, dark-eyed,
-red-nosed, with a high voice, and of _quasi_-military appearance, but
-seeming to be well versed in a spurious kind of science, and full
-of such grave saws and aphorisms as made a deep impression on a man
-like Smoke-Jack, reflective, uneducated, and craving for intellectual
-excitement. That he could not understand half the captain said did
-but add to the charm of that worthy’s discourse, and for two days the
-pair were inseparable. On the third they concluded a dry argument on
-fluids with the appropriate termination of a debauch, and the landsman
-drugged the sailor’s liquor, so as to rob him of his purse, containing
-twenty-five broad pieces, with the utmost facility, whilst he slept.
-
-Waking and finding his companion and his money gone, while the score was
-left unpaid, Smoke-Jack remembered to have seen the captain stroke the
-neck of a bay mare held by a boy at the door of the tavern they entered,
-though he denied all knowledge of the animal. After this the sailor never
-expected to set eyes on his scientific friend again.
-
-The mention of the bay mare proved beyond a doubt that the two shipmates
-owed a grudge to the same individual. They laid their heads together to
-pay it off accordingly, and called Alice, who was nowise unwilling, into
-council.
-
-Her feminine aversion to violence dissuaded them from their first
-intention of avenging their grievances by the strong hand.
-
-“It’s far better that such boasters as the captain should be frightened
-than hurt,” observed gentle Alice. “If I’d my way, he should be well
-scared once for all, like a naughty child, and then perhaps he’d never
-come here any more.”
-
-Smoke-Jack listened as if spell-bound to hear a woman speak so wisely;
-but her sweetheart objected—
-
-“It’s not so easy to frighten a man, Alice. I don’t quite see my bearings
-how to set about it.”
-
-“He’s not like _you_, dear,” answered Alice, with a loving smile, and
-showing some insight into the nature of true courage. “It would be easy
-enough to scare _him_, for I’ve heard him say many a time he feared
-neither man nor devil, and if Satan himself was to come across him, he’d
-turn him round and catch him by the tail.”
-
-“I should like to see them grapple-to!” exclaimed both seamen
-simultaneously.
-
-“Well,” answered Alice, in her quiet voice, “old Robin skinned our black
-bullock only yesterday. Hide, and horns, and tail are all together in
-the corner of the cow-house now. I’m sure I quite shuddered when I went
-by. It’s an ugly sight enough, and I’m very much mistaken if it wouldn’t
-frighten a braver man than Captain Bold!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LVI
-
-FOREARMED
-
-
-Notwithstanding the excitement under which she laboured, and the emotion
-she painfully though contemptuously kept down, Madame de Montmirail
-could not but smile at the unpretending mode in which she reached her
-daughter’s new home. Slap-Jack, leading an old pony, that did all the odd
-work of the “Hamilton Arms,” and that now swayed from side to side under
-the traveller’s heavy valises, showed the way across the moor, while the
-Marquise, on a pillion, sat behind Smoke-Jack, who, by no means at home
-in the position, bestrode a stamping cart-horse with unexampled tenacity,
-and followed his shipmate with perhaps more circumspection, and certainly
-less confidence than if he had been steering the brigantine through shoal
-water in a fog. He was by no means the least rejoiced of the three to
-“make the lights” that twinkled in the hospitable windows of Hamilton
-Hill.
-
-It is needless to enlarge on the reception of so honoured a guest as
-Lady Hamilton’s mother, or the delighted welcome, the affectionate
-inquiries, the bustle of preparation, the running to and fro of servants,
-the tight embrace of Cerise, the cordial greeting of Sir George, the
-courteous salute of Florian, and the strange restraint that, after the
-first demonstrative warmth had evaporated, seemed to lour like a cloud
-over the whole party. Under pretext of the guest’s fatigue, all retired
-earlier than usual to their apartments; yet long before they broke up for
-the night the quick perception of the Marquise warned her something was
-wrong, and this because she read Sir George’s face with a keener eye
-than scanned even her daughter’s. How handsome he looked, she thought,
-standing stately in the doorway of his hall, to greet her with the frank
-manly courtesy of which she knew the charm so well. Yes, Cerise was
-indeed a lucky girl! and could she be unworthy of her happiness? Could
-she have mismanaged or trifled with it? This was always the way. Those
-who possessed the treasure never seemed to appreciate its worth. Ah! It
-was a strange world! She had hoped Cerise would be so happy! And now—and
-now! Could the great sacrifice have been indeed offered up in vain?
-
-Cerise was a good girl too; so kind, so truthful, so affectionate. Yet
-in the present instance, if a shadow had really come between husband and
-wife, Cerise must be in the wrong!
-
-Women generally argue thus when they adjudicate for the sexes. In the
-absence of proof they almost invariably assume that their own is in
-fault. Perhaps they decide from internal evidence, and know best.
-
-Lady Hamilton accompanied the Marquise to her bedroom, where mother and
-daughter found themselves together again as they used to be in the old
-days. It was not quite the same thing now. Neither could tell why, yet
-both were conscious of the different relation in which they stood to each
-other. It was but a question of perspective after all. Formerly the one
-looked up, the other down. Now they occupied the dead level of a common
-experience, and the mother felt her child was in leading-strings no more.
-
-Then came the old story; the affectionate fencing match, wherein one
-tries to obtain a full and free confession without asking a single direct
-question, while the other assumes an appearance of extreme candour, to
-cover profound and impenetrable reserve. The Marquise had never loved
-her child so little as when the latter took leave of her for the night,
-having seen with her own eyes to every appliance for her mother’s
-comfort, combining gracefully and fondly the solicitude of a hostess
-with the affectionate care of a daughter; and Lady Hamilton, seeking her
-own room, with a pale face and a heavy heart, wondered she could feel so
-little inspirited by dear mamma’s arrival, and acknowledged with a sigh
-that the bloom was gone from everything in life, and the world had grown
-dull and dreary since this cold shadow came between her and George.
-
-He alone seemed satisfied with the turn affairs had taken. There need be
-no more hesitation now, and it was well to know the worst. Sir George’s
-demeanour always became the more composed the nearer he approached
-a disagreeable necessity. Though Madame de Montmirail’s arrival had
-exceedingly startled him, as in the last degree unexpected, he received
-her with his customary cordial hospitality. Though he had detected, as
-he believed, a deliberate falsehood, told him for the first time by the
-wife of his bosom, he in no way altered the reserved, yet good-humoured
-kindness of manner with which he forced himself to accost her of
-late. Though he had discovered, as he thought, a scheme of black and
-unpardonable treachery on the part of his friend, he could still afford
-the culprit that refuge which was only to be found in his protection;
-could treat him with the consideration due to every one beneath his own
-roof.
-
-But none the more for this did Sir George propose to sit down patiently
-under his injuries. I fear the temper cherished by this retired
-Captain of Musketeers savoured rather of a duellist’s politeness than
-a philosopher’s contempt, or the forgiveness of a Christian. When he
-sought his chamber that night, the chamber in which stood the unfinished
-model of his brigantine, and from the window of which he had watched his
-wife and Florian on the terrace, there was an evil smile round his lips,
-denoting that thirst of all others the most insatiable, the thirst for
-blood. He went calmly through the incidents of the past day, as a man
-adds up a sum, and the wicked smile never left his face. Again he saw
-his wife’s white dress among the roses, and her graceful figure bending
-over the flower-beds with that pale dark-eyed priest. Every look of both,
-every gesture, seemed stamped in fire on his brain. He remembered the
-eagerness with which she brought out her packet and confided it to the
-Jesuit. He had not forgotten the cold, haughty tone in which she told
-him, _him_, her husband, who perhaps had some little right to inquire,
-that it contained letters for her mother in France. In France! And that
-very night her mother appears at his own house in the heart of Great
-Britain!
-
-He shuddered in a kind of pity to think of his own Cerise descending
-to so petty a shift. Poor Cerise! Perhaps, after all, this coquetry
-was bred in her, and she could not help it. She was her mother’s own
-daughter, that was all. He remembered there used to be strange stories
-about the Marquise in Paris, and he himself, if he had chosen—well, it
-was all over now; but he ought never to have entrusted his happiness to
-_that_ family. Of course if a married woman was a thorough coquette, as a
-Montmirail seemed sure to be, she must screen herself with a lie! It was
-contemptible, and he only despised her!
-
-But was nobody to be punished for all the annoyances thus thrust upon
-himself; the disgrace that had thus overtaken his house? The smile
-deepened and hardened now, while he took down a glittering rapier from
-the wall, and examined the blade and hilt carefully, bending the weapon
-and proving its temper against the floor.
-
-His mind was made up what to do, and to-morrow he would set about his
-task.
-
-So long as Florian remained under his roof, he argued, the rights of
-hospitality required that a host should be answerable for his guest’s
-safety. Nay more, he would never forgive himself if, from any undue haste
-or eagerness of his own, the satisfaction should elude him of avenging
-his dishonour for himself. What gratification would it be to see the
-Jesuit hanged by the neck on Tower Hill? No, no. His old comrade and
-lieutenant should die a fairer death than that. Die like a soldier, on
-his back, with an honourable man’s sword through his heart. But how if it
-came about the other way? Florian’s was a good blade, the best his own
-had ever crossed. He flourished his wrist involuntarily, remembering that
-deadly disengagement which had run poor Flanconnade through the body, and
-was the despair of every scientific fencer in the company. What if it
-should be his own lot to fall? Well, at least, he should have taken no
-advantage, he would have fought fair all through, and Cerise, in the true
-spirit of coquetry, would love him very dearly when she found she was
-never to see him again.
-
-He resolved, therefore, that he and Florian should depart forthwith. His
-own character for loyalty stood so high, his intimacy with Sir Marmaduke
-Umpleby and other gentlemen in authority was so well known, that he
-anticipated no danger of discovery to any one who travelled under his
-protection. Monsieur St. Croix should simply assume the ordinary dress
-of a layman; they would not even ride on horseback. Every precaution
-should be taken to avoid notice, and the ‘Flying Post’ coach, with its
-interminable crawl, and innumerable delays, would probably answer the
-purpose of unpretending secrecy better than any other mode of conveyance,
-especially when they approached London. Thence, without delay, they would
-post to the seaboard, charter a fast-sailing lugger, and so proceed in
-safety to the coast of France. Once there, they would be on equal terms,
-and no power on earth should come between them then. He liked to think of
-the level sand, the grey sky overhead, the solitary shore, the moaning
-wave, not a soul in sight or hearing but his enemy and his own point
-within six inches of that enemy’s throat!
-
-Sir George’s night was disturbed and restless, but he slept sound towards
-morning, as he had accustomed himself in his former life to sleep at any
-given time, after he had placed his sentries on an outpost, or gone below
-to his cabin for an hour’s rest while giving chase to a prize.
-
-When he awoke a cold grey sky loured overhead, and a light fall of snow
-sprinkled the ground. It was the first morning of winter, come earlier
-than usual even to those bleak moorlands, and strange to say, a foolish,
-hankering pity for Lady Hamilton’s roses was the feeling uppermost in
-his mind while he looked gloomily out upon the terrace. “Poor Cerise!”
-he muttered. “Bleak sky and withered flowers—lover and husband both gone
-by this time to-morrow! She will be lonely at first, no doubt, and it
-is fortunate her mother should have arrived last night. But she will
-console herself. They always do. Ah! these women, these women! That a man
-should ever be such an idiot as to entrust his honour. Psha! his honour
-has nothing to do with it—his happiness, nay, his mere comfort in their
-hands. There is something even ludicrous in the infatuation. It reminds
-me of Madame Parabére’s monkey playing with the Regent’s porcelain
-flower-basket!—a laugh, a chatter, a stealthy glance or two, and down
-goes the basket. What does it matter? They are all alike, I suppose, and
-cannot help themselves. A man’s dog is faithful, his horse is honest, his
-very hawk stoops to no lure but her master’s, while his wife. And I loved
-her—I loved her. Fool that I am, I love her still! By the faith of a
-gentleman, Monsieur de St. Croix, you will need every trick of the trade
-to keep my point off your body if I once get you within distance!”
-
-Then Sir George descended to meet his guest with a quiet manner and an
-unclouded brow, though the murderous smile still hovered about his mouth.
-
-“Florian,” said he, “do not condemn my hospitality if I announce
-that you must depart this evening. Hamilton Hill is no longer a
-sure refuge, though I believe that my company can still afford you
-protection—therefore I travel with you. I do not leave you till I see you
-landed in France. Till I have placed you in safety it concerns my honour
-that you should be my care. But not a moment longer—not a moment longer,
-remember that! You had better walk quietly down to the ‘Hamilton Arms’
-during the day. I will follow with your luggage and my own. We shall
-proceed to London in the weekly coach, which passes southward to-night.
-We can be across the water by the fifth day. Do you understand? The fifth
-day. You must be well armed. Take any sword of mine that pleases you,
-only be sure you choose one with two feet six inches of blade, and not
-too pliant; you might meet with an adversary who uses brute force rather
-than skill. A strong arm drives a stiff blade home. In the meantime I
-recommend you to make your farewell compliments at once to the Marquise
-and—and Lady Hamilton.”
-
-Florian assented, confused and stupefied like one in a dream. The hour he
-had expected was come at last, and seemed none the more welcome for his
-expectation. He must go—must leave the woman he worshipped, and the man
-whom, strange to say, he loved as a brother, though that woman’s husband.
-His senses seemed numbed, and he felt that to-day he could scarcely
-appreciate his desolate condition. To-morrow it would not matter. There
-was no to-morrow for him. Henceforth everything would be a blank. What
-was it Sir George had said about a sword? Ah! the weapon might prove his
-best friend. One home-thrust would put an end to all his sufferings. His
-heart was dead within him, but he would see Cerise once more before he
-left. A quick sharp pang warned him that his heart was not yet paralysed,
-when he reflected how the Marquise was here, and he would not, therefore,
-see Lady Hamilton alone.
-
-But the latter, pitiful, perhaps, because of her own sorrow, met him by
-one of those accidents that are essentially feminine, as he traversed the
-hall, booted and cloaked for his departure. She gave him her hand kindly,
-and he pressed it to his lips. He knew then, while she passed on, that
-never in this world was he to set eyes on her again.
-
-The door clanged to, the wind moaned, the crisp brown leaves eddied round
-his feet on the frozen path, the cold struck to his very heart. How
-dreary looked the white outline of those swelling moors against the black
-laden clouds that scowled behind the hill.
-
-But Sir George was careful to avoid an uninterrupted interview with his
-wife. He shut himself into his own apartment, and found the time pass
-quicker than he expected, for he had many dispositions to make, many
-affairs of business to arrange. If he came alive out of that prospective
-conflict, he meant to be absent from England for an indefinite period.
-Come what might, he would never see Cerise again. Not that he believed
-her guilty—no, he said to himself, a thousand times, but she was as bad
-as guilty—she had deceived him—she could never have loved him. It was all
-over. There was nothing more to be said.
-
-The early night began to close ere his last pile of papers was burned,
-his last packet sealed. Then Sir George took the compromising list of
-his friends and neighbours with which Florian had entrusted him, and
-placed it carefully in his breast. It might be an effective weapon, he
-thought, if the Jesuit should prove restive about leaving England, or if
-he himself should meet with opposition from any of the confederates. A
-brace of pistols were now to be loaded and disposed in the large pockets
-of his riding-coat, the trusty rapier to be buckled on, hat, gloves,
-and cloak to be placed on the hall-table, Slap-Jack summoned to be in
-readiness with the luggage, and Sir George was prepared for his journey.
-
-Not till these arrangements were made did he seek Lady Hamilton’s
-withdrawing-room, where, perhaps to his disappointment, he found the
-Marquise alone.
-
-His wife, however, soon entered, and accosted him with a very wife-like
-inquiry—
-
-“Have you had no dinner, George? and before travelling, too? We would
-have waited, but the servants said you had given orders not to be
-disturbed.”
-
-“Sleep is food,” observed the Marquise. “I believe you have been
-preparing for your journey with a _siesta_?”
-
-How homelike and comfortable looked the pretty room, with its blazing
-fire and its beautiful occupants! And perhaps he was never to see it
-again; was certainly never again to hear the voice he loved in that
-endearing and familiar tone.
-
-But he would not pain his wife even now. As far as _he_ could spare
-her she should be spared. They must not part on any terms but those of
-kindness and good-will. He drew her towards his chair and called her by
-her Christian name.
-
-“I would have dined with you, indeed, but I had not a moment to bestow,”
-said he, “and the Marquise will excuse ceremony in such a family party as
-ours. You will take care of Cerise, madame, when I am gone? I know I can
-trust her safely with _you_.”
-
-The tears were standing in Lady Hamilton’s eyes, and she bent her face
-towards her husband.
-
-“You will come back soon, George?” said she in a broken voice. “London is
-not so far. Promise me you will only be a week away.”
-
-He drew her down and kissed her, once, twice, fondly, passionately, but
-answered not a word. Then he took leave of the Marquise with something
-less than his usual composure, which she did not fail to remark, and
-notwithstanding a certain delay in the hall, of which Cerise tried in
-vain to take advantage for another embrace, he summoned Slap-Jack and
-departed.
-
-“My head must be going,” thought Sir George, as he walked with his old
-foretopman across the frozen park. “I could have sworn I put both gloves
-on the hall-table with my hat. Never mind, I have _one_ left at least for
-Monsieur de St. Croix to take up. Five days more—only five days more! and
-then―”
-
-Slap-Jack, looking into his master’s face under the failing light, saw
-something there that strangely reminded him of the night when the captain
-of ‘The Bashful Maid’ passed his sword through Hippolyte’s black body at
-_Cash-a-crou_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LVII
-
-AN ADDLED EGG
-
-
-“Go ahead, Jack!” said the baronet, after they had crunched the frozen
-snow in silence for a quarter of a mile. “See that everything is ready,
-and secure a couple of berths in the ‘Weekly Dispatch,’ or whatever they
-call that lumbering ‘Flying Post’ coach’s consort, for the whole trip.
-I’ll be down directly.”
-
-“For you and me, Sir George?” asked Slap-Jack, exhilarated by the
-prospect of a voyage to London. “Deck passengers, both, if I may be so
-bold? The fore-hold of a slaver’s a joke to them London coaches between
-decks.”
-
-“Do as you’re ordered,” answered his master, “and be smart about it. Keep
-your tongue between your teeth, and wait at the ‘Hamilton Arms’ till I
-come.”
-
-Sir George was obviously disinclined for conversation, and Slap-Jack
-hastened on forthwith, delighted to have an hour or two of leisure in his
-favourite resort, for reasons which will hereafter appear.
-
-No sooner was his servant out of sight than the baronet retraced
-his steps, and took up a position under some yew-trees, so as to be
-completely screened from observation. Hence he could watch the door
-opening on his wife’s garden, and the windows of the gallery, already
-lighted, which she must traverse to reach her own room.
-
-It was a pitiful weakness, he thought, but it could do no harm just to
-see her shadow pass once more for the last, last time!
-
-Meanwhile Slap-Jack, arriving all in a glow at the “Hamilton Arms,” found
-that hostelry in a great state of turmoil and confusion; the stables
-were full of horses, the parlours were crowded with guests, even the bar
-was thronged with comers and goers, most of whom had a compliment to
-spare for mistress Alice. It was some minutes before she could find an
-opportunity of speaking to him, but the whisper must have been ludicrous
-as well as affectionate, for her sweetheart burst out laughing, and
-exploded again at intervals, while he sat with Smoke-Jack over a cup of
-ale in the tap.
-
-The two shipmates adjourned presently to the stable, where they were
-followed by Alice, with a lanthorn, an armful of waxed twine, and a large
-needle, furnished by the elder seaman, such as is used for thrumming
-sails.
-
-Their occupation seemed to afford amusement, for they laughed so much as
-greatly to endanger the secrecy enjoined by their feminine assistant, who
-was so pleased with its progress that she returned to visit them more
-than once from her avocations in the bar.
-
-The press of company to-night at the “Hamilton Arms” consisted of a very
-different class from the usual run of its customers; the horses in the
-stable were well-bred, valuable animals, little inferior in quality to
-Captain Bold’s bay mare herself; the guests, though plainly dressed,
-were of a bearing that seemed at once to extinguish the captain’s claims
-to consideration, and caused him to slink about in a very unassuming
-manner till he had fortified his failing audacity with strong drink. They
-threw silver to old Robin the ostler, and called for measures of claret
-or burnt sack with an unostentatious liberality that denoted habits of
-affluence, while their thoughtful faces and intellectual features seemed
-strangely at variance with the interest they displayed in the projected
-cock-fight, which was their ostensible cause of gathering. A match for
-fifty broad pieces a side need scarcely have elicited such eager looks,
-such anxious whispers, such restless, quivering gestures, above all, such
-morbid anxiety for the latest news from the capital. They wore their
-swords, in which there was nothing remarkable, but every man was also
-provided with a brace of pistols, carried on his person, as though loth
-to trust the insecurity of saddle-holsters.
-
-Malletort walked about from one to the other like the presiding genius
-of the commotion. For these he had a jest, for those a secret, for all a
-word of encouragement, a smile of approval; and yet busy as he was, he
-never took his eye off Florian, watching him as one watches a wild animal
-caught in a snare too weak to insure its capture, and likely to break
-with every struggle.
-
-Without appearing to do so, he had counted over the guests and found
-their number complete.
-
-“Gentlemen,” said he, in a loud, open voice, “I have laid out pen and
-ink in the Cedars, as my poor apartment is loftily entitled. If you will
-honour me so far, I propose that we now adjourn to that chamber, and
-there draw out the conditions of our match!”
-
-Every man of them knew he had a halter round his neck, and the majority
-were long past the flush of youth, yet they scuffled upstairs, and played
-each other practical jokes, like schoolboys, as they shouldered through
-the narrow doorway into the room.
-
-Malletort, signing to Captain Bold, and taking Florian’s arm, brought up
-the rear.
-
-“How now, Mrs. Dodge?” he called out, as he crossed the threshold. “I
-ordered a fire to be lighted. What have you been about?”
-
-“Alice must be sent for! Alice had been told! Alice had forgotten! How
-careless of Alice!” And Mrs. Dodge, in the presence of such eligible
-customers, really felt much of the sorrow she expressed for her niece’s
-thoughtlessness.
-
-When Alice did arrive to light the fire, her candle went out, her paper
-refused to catch, her sticks to burn; altogether, she put off so much
-time about the job, that, despite her good looks, the meeting lost
-patience, and resolved to go to business at once; Captain Bold, who had
-recovered his impudence, remarking that, “If what he heard from London
-was true, some of them would have warm work enough now before all was
-done!”
-
-The captain seemed a privileged person: all eyes turned on him anxiously,
-while several eager voices asked at once—
-
-“What more have you heard?”
-
-Bold looked to the Abbé for permission, and on a sign from the latter,
-handed him a letter, which Malletort retained unopened in his hand.
-
-Sensations of excitement, and even apprehension, now obviously pervaded
-the assembly. Rumours had as usual mysteriously flown ahead of the real
-intelligence they were about to learn, and men looked in each other’s
-faces, for the encouragement they desired, in vain.
-
-“Gentlemen,” said the Abbé, taking his place at the table, and motioning
-the others to be seated, whilst he remained standing, “if I fail to
-express myself as clearly as I should wish, I pray you attribute my
-shortcomings to a foreign idiom, and an ignorance of your expressive
-language, rather than to any doubt or hesitation existing in my own mind
-as to our line of conduct in the present crisis. I will not conceal from
-you—why should I conceal from you—nay, how _can_ I conceal from you, that
-the moment of action has now arrived. I look around me, and I see on
-every countenance but one expression, a noble and courageous anxiety to
-begin.”
-
-Murmurs of applause went through the apartment, while two or three voices
-exclaimed, “Hear! hear!” “Well said!” “Go on!”
-
-“Yes, gentlemen,” resumed the Abbé, “the moment has at last arrived, the
-pear is ripe, and has dropped off the wall from its own weight. The first
-shot, so to speak, has been fired by the enemy. It is the signal for
-attack. Gentlemen, I have advices here, informing me that the Bishop of
-Rochester has been arrested, and is now imprisoned in the Tower.”
-
-His listeners rose to a man, some even seizing their hats, and drawing
-the buckles of their sword-belts, as if under an irresistible impulse to
-be off. One by one, however, they sat down again, with the same wistful
-and even ludicrous expression of shame on the countenance of each, like a
-pack of foxhounds that have been running hare.
-
-The reaction did not escape Malletort, who was now in his element.
-
-“I should have been unworthy of your confidence, gentlemen,” he
-proceeded, with something of triumph in his tone, “had such a blow
-as this fallen and found me unprepared. I was aware it had been
-meditated, I was even aware that it had been resolved on, and although
-the moment of execution could only be known to the government, I learned
-enough yesterday to impress on me the policy of calling together this
-influential meeting to-night. Our emissary, Captain Bold, here, will tell
-you that the intelligence had only reached his colleague at the next post
-two hours ago, though it travelled from London as fast as your English
-horses can gallop and your English couriers can ride. It must be apparent
-to every gentleman here that not another moment should be lost. My lord,
-I will ask your lordship to read over the resolutions as revised and
-agreed to at our last meeting.”
-
-He bowed low to an elderly and aristocratic-looking personage, who,
-taking a paper from the Abbé’s hands, proceeded somewhat nervously to
-read aloud as follows:—
-
-“Resolved—No. 1. That this Meeting do constitute itself a Committee of
-Direction for the re-establishment of public safety, by authority of His
-Majesty King James III., as authorised under his hand and seal.
-
-“No. 2. That the noblemen and gentlemen whose signatures are attached to
-the document annexed, do pledge themselves to act with zeal, secrecy, and
-unanimity, for the furtherance of the sacred object declared above.
-
-“No. 3. That for this purpose the oath be administered, jointly and
-severally, as agreed.
-
-“No. 4. That the person now officially in correspondence with His
-Majesty’s well-wishers in Artois be appointed Secretary to the Committee,
-with full powers, as detailed under the head of Secret Instructions for
-Committee of Safety, No. 7.
-
-“No. 5. That the Secretary be authorised in all cases of emergency to
-call a meeting of the entire Committee at his discretion.”
-
-His lordship here paused to take breath, and Malletort again struck in.
-
-“By authority of that resolution, I have called you together to-night. I
-cannot conceive it possible that there is present here one dissentient
-to our great principle of immediate action. Immediate, because thus only
-simultaneous. At the same time, if any nobleman or gentleman at this
-table has a suggestion to make, let him now submit his views to the
-meeting.”
-
-Several heads were bent towards each other, and a good deal of
-conversation took place in whispers, ere a stout, good-humoured looking
-man, constituting himself a mouthpiece for the rest, observed bluntly—
-
-“Tell us your plan, Mr. Secretary, and we’ll answer at once. Not one of
-us is afraid of a leap in the dark, or we should scarcely be here now;
-but there is no harm in taking a look whilst we can!”
-
-A murmur of applause denoted the concurrence of the majority in this
-prudent remark, and Malletort, still with his eye on Florian, rose once
-more to address them.
-
-“I need not recapitulate to this meeting, and especially to you, Sir
-Rupert (saluting the last speaker), all the details set forth in those
-secret instructions of which each man present has a copy. The invasion
-from the Continent will take place on the appointed day, but with this
-additional assurance of success, that three thousand Irish troops are
-promised from a quarter on which we can implicitly rely. His lordship
-here, as you are aware, following the instincts of his illustrious
-line, assumes the post of honour and the post of danger amongst us in
-the north, by placing himself at the head of a loyal and enthusiastic
-multitude, only waiting his signal to take up arms. You, Sir Rupert, have
-pledged yourself and your dalesmen to overawe the Whigs and Puritans of
-the east. Other gentlemen, now listening to me, are prepared to bring
-their several troops of an irregular, but highly efficient cavalry, into
-the field. To you, who are all intimately acquainted with our military
-dispositions, I need not insist on the certainty of success. Let each man
-read over his secret instructions and judge for himself. But gentlemen,
-the scheme of a campaign on a grand scale is not all with which we
-have to occupy ourselves. Something more than a military triumph,
-something more than a victorious battle is indispensable to our complete
-success. And I need not remind you that there is no compromise between
-complete success and irremediable disaster. It is an unavoidable choice
-between St James’s Palace and Temple Bar. I now come to the germ of the
-undertaking—the essence of the whole movement—the keystone of that
-bridge we must all pass over to reach the wished-for shore. I allude to
-the suppression of the Usurper and the fall of the House of Hanover.”
-
-A stir, almost a shudder, went through the assemblage. Men looked
-askance at the papers on the table, the buckles of their sword-belts,
-the spur-leathers on their boots, anything rather than betray to their
-neighbours either too eager an apprehension of the Abbé’s meaning, or
-too cold an approval of his object. He was speaking high treason with a
-vengeance, and the one might place them in too dangerous a prominence,
-while the other might draw down the equally dangerous mistrust of their
-fellow-conspirators. Malletort knew well what was passing in his hearers’
-minds, but he never expected to get the iron hotter than it was to-night,
-and he struck at it with his whole force.
-
-“The arrangements for our great blow,” said he, “have been confided to
-a few zealous loyalists, with whose plans, as your Secretary, I have
-been made acquainted. In five days from the present, King George, as he
-is still called, returns to Kensington. He will arrive at the palace
-about dusk. What do I say? He will never arrive there at all! Captain
-Bold here, whom I have had the honour to present to this meeting, has
-organised a small body of his old comrades, men of tried bravery and
-broken fortunes, who are pledged to possess themselves of the Usurper’s
-person. His guard will be easily overpowered, for it will be outnumbered
-three to one. The titular Prince of Wales and his children will at the
-same time be made prisoners, and the chief officers of state secured,
-if possible without bloodshed. Such a bold stroke, combined with a
-simultaneous rising here in the north, cannot but insure success. It is
-for you, gentlemen, to assemble your followers, to hold yourselves in
-readiness, and trusting implicitly to the co-operation of your friends in
-London, to declare on the same day for His Majesty King James III.!”
-
-The enthusiasm Malletort contrived to fling into his last sentence caught
-like wildfire.
-
-“Long live James the Third!”—“Down with the Whigs!” exclaimed several of
-his listeners; and Sir Rupert flung his hat to the low ceiling ere he
-placed it on his head, as if preparing to depart; but the tall figure of
-the elderly nobleman, as he rose from his chair, seemed to dominate the
-tumult, and every syllable was distinctly audible, while he inquired,
-gravely—
-
-“Can this be accomplished without violence to the person of him whom we
-deem a Usurper?”
-
-Only the narrowest observers could have detected the sneer round
-Malletort’s mouth, while he replied—
-
-“Certainly, my lord!—certainly! With as little personal violence as is
-possible when armed men are fighting round a king in the dark! My lord,
-if you please, we will now pass on to a few trifling matters of finance,
-after which I need detain the meeting no longer.”
-
-The meeting, as usual, was only too happy to be dissolved. In less than
-ten minutes hats and cloaks were assumed, reckonings paid, horses led out
-from the stable, and riders, with anxious hearts, diverging by twos and
-threes on their homeward tracks.
-
-There was no question, however, about the cock-fight which was supposed
-to have called these gentlemen together.
-
-Malletort, Florian, and Captain Bold remained in the Cedars. The two
-priests seemed anxious, thoughtful, and preoccupied; but the Captain’s
-eye twinkled with sly glances of triumphant vanity, and he appeared
-extremely self-satisfied, though a little fidgety, and anxious for his
-employer to leave the room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LVIII
-
-HORNS AND HOOFS
-
-
-“There is nothing but the Declaration to be provided for now,” observed
-Malletort, after a pause. “You had better give it me back, Florian, even
-without Sir George’s name subscribed. He is a man of mettle, and will be
-in the saddle as soon as he hears steel and stirrup ring.”
-
-Although the Abbé did not fail to observe how strange an alteration had
-to-day come over his young friend’s manner, he simply attributed it to
-the qualms of conscience which are often so embarrassing to beginners
-in the science of deception, but which, as far as his own experience
-served him, he had found invariably disappeared with a little practice.
-He never doubted that Florian was equally interested with himself in
-the success of their undertaking, though for different reasons. He
-attributed it to nervousness, anxiety, and a foolish hankering after Lady
-Hamilton, the wildness of the young priest’s dark eye—the fixed spot of
-colour in his cheek, lately so pale and wan—the resolute expression of
-his feminine mouth, denoting some desperate intention—and the general
-air of abstraction that showed as well unconsciousness of the present
-as recklessness of the future into which he seemed to project his whole
-being. The Abbé simply expected that Florian would place his hand in
-his bosom and bring out the roll of paper required. He was surprised,
-therefore, to receive no answer; and repeated, hastily, for he had still
-a press of business to get through—
-
-“The manifesto, my friend—quick! It must be retained in my care till it
-is printed!”
-
-Florian woke up from a brown study, and looked vacantly around.
-
-“It is still in Sir George’s hands,” said he. “I believe I have asked him
-for it more than once, but I could not get it back.”
-
-“In Sir George’s hands!” repeated the Abbé, almost losing patience, “and
-without Sir George’s signature! Do you know what you are saying? Florian,
-listen, man, and look up. Are you awake?”
-
-The other passed his hand wearily across his brow.
-
-“I have slept little of late,” was all he answered. “It is as I tell you.”
-
-Even Captain Bold could not but admire the Abbé’s self-control, that
-kept down the impatience naturally resulting from such a confession, so
-composedly announced. He mused for a moment with his peculiar smile, and
-observed, quietly—
-
-“You travel to London to-night, I believe, and you travel together?”
-
-Florian only bowed his head in reply.
-
-“I wish you a pleasant journey,” continued the Abbé. “Had you not better
-go now and make the necessary preparations?”
-
-Then, as soon as the door closed on Florian, who walked out dejectedly,
-without another word, he grasped Captain Bold’s arm, and laughed a low,
-mocking laugh.
-
-“Business increases, captain,” said he. “Yours is a trade sure to thrive,
-for its occasions come up fresh every day. Did you hear that Sir George
-Hamilton possesses a paper I require? and that he proceeds to London
-to-night?”
-
-“I heard it,” answered the captain, doggedly.
-
-He, too, knew something of Sir George, and did not much relish the job
-which he began to suspect was provided for him.
-
-“That paper must be in my hands before daybreak,” continued the Abbé,
-speaking in such low, distinct accents, as his emissary had already
-learned admitted of no appeal. “You will name your own price, Captain
-Bold, and you will bring me what I require—as little blood on it as
-possible—at least two hours before dawn.”
-
-The captain pondered, and his face fell.
-
-“Do you know how Sir George travels?” said he, in his high, quavering
-voice, more tremulous than its wont. “There has been such a press of
-work lately that I am rather short both of men and horses. If he takes
-anything like a following with him it might come to a coil; and such jobs
-won’t bear patching. They must be done clean or let alone. That’s my
-principle! He’s a cock of the game, this, you see,” added the captain,
-apologetically; “and you’ll not cut his comb without a thick pair of
-gloves on, I’ll warrant him!”
-
-“Permit me to observe, my friend,” replied Malletort, coolly, “that this
-is a mere matter of detail with which I can have no concern. It is not
-the least in my line, but exclusively in yours. Must I repeat? You name
-your own price, and work in your own way.”
-
-“It cannot be done without cutting his throat,” said Bold, despondingly,
-regretting the while, not so much a necessity for bloodshed, as his own
-sorry chance of carrying out the adventure with a whole skin.
-
-“Of course not,” assented the Abbé. “Why, he was in the Grey Musketeers
-of the King!”
-
-“To-night, you say,” continued the captain, in the same mournful tone. “I
-wonder if he rides that bay with the white heels. I’ve seen him turn the
-horse on a sixpence, and he’s twice as heavy as my mare.”
-
-Again Malletort laughed his low, mocking laugh.
-
-“Fear not,” said he; “there need be no personal collision on foot or
-on horseback. Sir George travels by the heavy post-coach, like any fat
-grazier or cattle-dealer, whom you may bid ‘Stand and deliver’ without a
-qualm.”
-
-“By the coach!” repeated Bold, his face brightening. “That’s a different
-job altogether. That makes the thing much more like business, especially
-if there’s many passengers. You see, they frighten and hamper one
-another. Why, if there’s a stoutish old woman or two anyways near him,
-it’s as likely as not they’ll pinion Sir George by both arms, and hold
-on till we’ve finished, screaming awful, of course! But you won’t make
-any difference in the price on account of the coach, now, will you? Even
-chancing the old women, you see, we’re very short-handed to do it clean.”
-
-“I have said more than once, name your own price,” answered the Abbé.
-“I deduct nothing for a friend whom I will myself place by Sir George’s
-side, and who will do the pinioning you speak of more effectually, if
-with less noise, than a ton of old women. How many hands can you muster?”
-
-“Mounted, of course?” replied the captain. “There’s myself, and Blood
-Humphrey, and Black George. I don’t think I can count on any others, but
-we ought to have one more to do it handsome.”
-
-“I will come with you myself,” said the Abbé. “I have a horse here in the
-stable, and better arms than any of you.”
-
-The captain stared aghast, but so great was the respect with which
-Malletort inspired his subordinates, that he never dreamed for an instant
-of dissuading the Abbé from an adventure which he might have thought
-completely out of a churchman’s line. On the contrary, satisfied that
-whatever the chief of the plot undertook would be well accomplished, he
-looked admiringly in his principal’s face, and observed—
-
-“We’ll stop them at the old thorns, half-way up Borrodaile Rise. The
-coach will back off the road, and likely enough upset in the soft moor.
-I’ll cover Sir George, and pull the moment he’s off his seat to get down.
-The others will rob the passengers, and—and I suppose there is nothing
-more to arrange?”
-
-The Abbé, folding up his papers to leave the room, nodded carelessly and
-replied:—
-
-“We mount in half an hour. Through the heart, I think, Bold. The head is
-easily missed at a dozen paces from the saddle.”
-
-“Through the heart,” answered the captain, but Malletort had already
-quitted the room and closed the door.
-
-“Half an hour,” mused Bold, now left to himself in the cold and
-dimly-lighted apartment. “In half an hour a good deal may be done both
-in love and war. And Alice promised to be here by now. I thought the
-gentleman never _would_ go away. What a time they were, to be sure!
-We make quicker work of it in our trade. How cold it is! I wish I’d a
-glass of brandy; but I dursn’t, no, I dursn’t, though I’m all of a shake
-like. I’ll have one ‘steadier’ just before I get on the mare. If I’m
-over-primed I shall miss him, and he’s not the sort to give a chap a
-second chance. I wish this job was over. I never half-liked it from the
-first. Hush! I think that’s Alice’s cough. Poor little girl! She loves
-the very boots I wear. I wish she’d come, though. This room is cursed
-lonesome, and I don’t like my own company unless I can have it really to
-myself. I always fancy there’s somebody else I can’t see. How my teeth
-chatter. It’s the cold. It _must_ be the cold! Well, there’s no harm in
-lighting the fire, at any rate.”
-
-So speaking, or rather muttering, the captain, on whose nerves repeated
-glasses of brandy at all hours of the day and night had not failed to
-make an impression, proceeded to collect with trembling hands certain
-covers of despatches and other coarse scraps of paper left on the floor
-and table, which litter he placed carefully on the hearth, building the
-damp sticks over them skilfully enough, and applying his solitary candle
-to the whole.
-
-His paper flared brightly, but with no other effect than to produce
-thick, stifling clouds of smoke from the saturated fuel and divers oaths
-spoken out loud from the disgusted captain.
-
-“May the devil fly away with them!” said he, in a towering rage, “to a
-place where they’ll burn fast enough without lighting. And me, too!” he
-added yet more wrathfully, “for wasting my time like a fool waiting for a
-jilt who can’t even lay a fire properly in an inn chimney.”
-
-The words had scarce left his lips when a discordant roar resounded, as
-it seemed, from the very wall of the house, and a hideous monster, that
-he never doubted was the Arch Fiend whom he had invoked, came sprawling
-on all-fours down the chimney which the smoke had refused to ascend, and
-made straight for the terrified occupant of the apartment, whose hair
-stood on end, and whose whole senses were for a moment paralysed with
-horror and dismay.
-
-In a single glance the captain beheld the black shaggy hide, the
-wide-spreading horns, the cloven hoofs, the long and tufted tail!
-That glance turned him for one instant to a man of stone. The next,
-with an irrepressible shout that denoted the very anguish of fear, he
-sprang through the door, upsetting and extinguishing the candle in his
-flight, and hurried downstairs, closely, though silently followed by the
-monster, who thus escaped from the room before Malletort, alarmed at the
-disturbance, could re-enter it with a light.
-
-“He’s not heart of oak, isn’t that chap!” said Slap-Jack, as he turned
-noiselessly into the stable, where he proceeded to divest himself of the
-bullock’s hide he had worn for his masquerade, and so much of the filth
-it had left as could be effaced by scraping his garments and washing face
-and hands with soap and water. But the jest which had been compiled so
-merrily with his friend and sweetheart seemed to have lost all its mirth
-in the execution, for the seaman looked exceedingly grave and thoughtful,
-stealing quietly into the bar in search of his shipmate, with whom he
-presently disappeared to hold mysterious conference outside the house,
-secure from all eavesdroppers.
-
-Captain Bold, though for a short space well-nigh frightened out of
-his wits, was not so inexperienced in the maladies of those who,
-like himself, applied freely and continuously to the brandy bottle,
-to be ignorant that such jovial spirits are peculiarly subject to
-hallucinations, and often visited by phantoms which only exist in their
-own diseased imaginations. He had scarcely reached the bar, therefore—a
-refuge he sought unconsciously and by instinct—ere he recovered himself
-enough to remember that alcohol was the only specific for the horrors,
-and he proceeded accordingly to swallow glass after glass till his
-usual composure of mind should return. He was nothing loth to use the
-remedy, yet each succeeding draught, while it strung his nerves, seemed
-to increase his depression, and for the first time in his life, he felt
-unable to shake off an uncomfortable conviction, that whether the phantom
-was really in the chimney or only in his own brain, he had that night
-received a warning, and was doomed.
-
-There was little leisure, however, either for apprehension or remorse.
-Malletort, booted and well armed beneath his cassock, was already
-descending the stairs, and calling for his horse. To judge by his open
-brow and jaunty manner, his final interview with Florian, whom he had
-again summoned for a few last words, must have been satisfactory in the
-extreme. The latter, too, carried his head erect, and there was a proud
-glance in his eye, as of one who marches to victory.
-
-“You will not fail at the last moment?” said the Abbé, pressing St.
-Croix’s hand while they descended the wooden staircase in company, and
-Florian’s reply, “Trust me, I will not fail!” carried conviction even to
-the cold heart of the astute and suspicious churchman.
-
-So Captain Bold tossed off his last glass of brandy, examined the
-priming of his pistols, and swung himself into the saddle. His staunch
-comrades were at his side. The Abbé, of whose administrative powers he
-entertained the highest opinion, was there to superintend the expedition.
-It was easy, it was safe. Once accomplished, his fortune was made for
-life. As they emerged upon the snow, just deep enough to afford their
-horses a sure foothold, the bay mare shook her bit and laid her ears
-back cheerfully. Even Black George, usually a saturnine personage,
-acknowledged the bracing influence of the keen night air and the
-exhilarating prospect of action. He exchanged a professional jest with
-Blood Humphrey, and slapped his commander encouragingly on the shoulder;
-but, for all this, a black shadow seemed to hover between Captain Bold
-and the frosty stars—something seemed to warn him that the hour he had so
-often jested of was coming on him fast, and that to-night he must look
-the death he had so lightly laughed at in the face.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LIX
-
-A SUBSTITUTE
-
-
-We left Sir George watching in the cold, under a clump of yews, for the
-chance of seeing his wife’s shadow cross one of the lighted windows in
-the gallery. He remained there far longer than he supposed. So many
-thoughts were passing through his mind, so many misgivings for the
-future, so many memories of the past, that he was conscious neither of
-bodily discomfort nor lapse of time, the chill night-wind nor the waning
-evening. At length he roused himself from his abstraction with a smile of
-self-contempt, and, wrapping his cloak around him, would have departed
-at once, but that his attention was arrested by a muffled figure passing
-swiftly and stealthily into the garden through the very door he had been
-watching so long. A thrill of delight shot through him at the possibility
-of its being Cerise, followed by one of anger and suspicion, as he
-thought she might, in sheer despair at her lover’s absence, be preparing
-to follow Florian in his flight. But the figure walked straight to his
-hiding-place, and long before it reached him, even in the doubtful light,
-he recognised the firm step and graceful bearing of the Marquise.
-
-How did she know he was there? How long could she have been watching him?
-He felt provoked, humiliated; but all such angry feelings dissolved at
-the sound of her sweet voice, so like her daughter’s, while she asked him
-softly, as if it was the most natural thing in the world that he should
-be waiting outside within twenty paces of his own house—
-
-“George, what is it? You are disturbed; you are anxious. Can I help you?
-George, I would do anything in the world for you. Are you not dear to me
-as my own child, _almost_?”
-
-He tried to laugh it off, but his mirth was forced and hollow.
-
-“I have so many preparations to make. There are so many trifles to be
-thought of, even in leaving a place like this, that really, madame, I was
-only waiting here for a while to remember if I had forgotten anything.”
-
-She laid her hand on his arm, as she had laid it long ago at the masked
-ball, and perhaps the gesture brought back that time to both.
-
-“Even if you can blind Cerise,” she said, “you cannot deceive me. And
-Cerise, poor child, is crying her eyes out by herself; miserable, utterly
-miserable, as if you had gone away from her for ever. But it is no
-question now of my daughter; it is a question of yourself, George. _You_
-are unhappy, I tell you. I saw it as soon as I came here. And I have been
-watching ever since you left the house, till it should be quite dark,
-to come and speak to you before you go, and ask for the confidence that
-Heaven only knows how fully I, of all people, deserve.”
-
-There was a world of suppressed feeling in her voice while she spoke
-the last sentence, but he marked it not. He was thinking of Cerise.
-“Miserable,” said her mother, “utterly miserable, as if he had gone away
-from her for ever.” Then it was for Florian she was grieving, of course.
-Bah! he had known it all through. Of what use was it thus to add proof to
-proof—to pile disgrace upon disgrace? It irritated him, and he answered
-abruptly—
-
-“You must excuse me, madame; this is no time for explanations, even were
-any necessary, and I have already loitered here too long.”
-
-She placed herself directly in his path, standing with her hands clasped,
-as was her habit when moved by any unusual agitation.
-
-“If you had gone away at once,” said she, “I was prepared to follow you.
-I have watched you from the moment you crossed the threshold. Am I blind?
-Am I a young inexperienced girl, who has never felt, never suffered, to
-be imposed on by a haughty bearing and a forced smile? Bah! Do people
-stand for an hour in the snow reflecting if they have forgotten their
-luggage? You men think women have no perception, no mind, no heart. You
-are going, George, and I shall never set eyes on you again—never, never;
-for I could not bear to see you miserable, and I alone of all the world
-must not endeavour to console you. Therefore I do not fear to speak
-frankly now. Listen; something has come between you and Cerise. Do not
-interrupt me. I know it. I feel it. Do not ask me why. It is not your
-hand that should add one stripe to my punishment. George, my poor girl
-is breaking her heart for your sake; and you, you the man of all others
-qualified to make a woman happy, and to be happy with her yourself, are
-destroying your home with your own hands. Look at me, George. I have seen
-the world, as you know. My lot has been brilliant, fortunate, envied by
-all; and yet—and yet—I have never had the chance that you so recklessly
-throw away. No, no; though I may have dreamed of it, I never so deceived
-myself as to fancy for a moment it was mine! Cerise loves you, George,
-loves the very ground you walk on, and you are leaving her in anger.”
-
-“I wish I could believe it,” he muttered, in a hoarse, choking voice; for
-he was thinking of the pale, dark-eyed priest bending over the rose-trees
-with his wife.
-
-“Do you think I can be deceived?” broke out the Marquise, seizing his
-hand with both her own, and then flinging it off in a burst of sorrowful
-reproach. “Wilful! heartless! cruel! Go, then, if go you must, and so
-farewell for ever. But remember, I warned you. I, who know by bitter
-experience, the madness, the shame, the agony of an impossible love!”
-
-She turned from him and fled into the house, muttering, as she crossed
-its threshold, “The poor pelican! how it must hurt when she digs her beak
-into her bosom, and feeds her young with her own heart’s blood!”
-
-Sir George Hamilton stood looking after her for a moment; then he shook
-his head, drew his cloak tighter round him, and strode resolutely across
-the park to the “Hamilton Arms.”
-
-Thus it fell out that when he arrived there, he found the hostelry,
-lately so full of guests, occupied only by Florian and the two seamen;
-the first depressed, silent, preoccupied; the others obviously swelling
-with importance, and bursting to communicate some great intelligence at
-once.
-
-It was fortunate that the former commander of ‘The Bashful Maid,’
-retained enough of his old habits to comprehend the tale Slap-Jack had to
-tell, garnished as it was with professional phrases and queer sea-going
-metaphors that no landsman could have followed out. From his faithful
-retainer the baronet learned all the particulars of the Jacobite meeting,
-and the conspiracy so carefully organised against the throne, discovered
-by no less futile a contingency than the freak of a barmaid to frighten a
-highwayman. Sir George believed it his duty now to warn the Government at
-once. Yet even while reflecting on the importance of his information, and
-the noble reward it might obtain, he was pondering how he could escape
-the delay of an hour in London, and longing for the moment when he should
-find himself face to face with Florian on the coast of France.
-
-It was characteristic of the man that he gave little thought to the
-attack meditated upon his own person, simply examining his arms as usual,
-and desiring Slap-Jack, who had come unprovided, to borrow a brace of
-pistols wherever he could get them, while he bestowed on Smoke-Jack, who
-piteously entreated leave to “join the expedition,” a careless permission
-“to take his share in the spree if he liked.”
-
-So these four men waited in the warm inn-parlour for the roll of the
-lumbering coach that was to bear them, so each well knew, into a struggle
-for life and death.
-
-When their vehicle arrived at last, they found themselves its only
-passengers. The burly coachman descending from his seat to refresh,
-cursed the cold weather heartily, and in the same breath tendered a
-gruff salutation to Sir George. The guard, whose face was redder, whose
-shoulders were broader, and whose voice was huskier even than the
-coachman’s, endorsed his companion’s remarks, and followed suit in his
-greetings to the baronet, observing, at the same time, that he should
-“take a glass of brandy neat, to drive the cold out of his stomach.”
-This stimulant was accordingly administered by Alice, and paid for by Sir
-George, who had not lived at Hamilton Hill without learning the etiquette
-of coach travelling as practised on the north road. While he placed some
-silver on the counter, it did not escape him that both functionaries had
-been drinking freely, possibly to console them for the lack of company,
-while Slap-Jack, grinning in delight, whispered to his mate—
-
-“If you an’ me was to go for to take _our_ spell at the wheel,
-half-slewed, like them chaps, my eyes, wot a twistin’ _we_ should get
-to-morrow mornin’ afore eight bells!”
-
-With so light a freight there was less delay in changing horses than
-usual. Scarcely a quarter of an hour had elapsed since its arrival ere
-four moderate-looking animals were harnessed to the coach. The luggage
-was hoisted on, old Robin rewarded, Mrs. Dodge paid, Alice kissed with
-much energy by her sweetheart, and Sir George, with Florian, invited
-to take their places on the front seat behind the driver; then the
-two seamen clambered up beside the guard, the whip cracked, the hoofs
-clattered, the whole machine creaked and jingled, while Smoke-Jack,
-removing the pipe from his mouth with a certain gravity, expressed his
-devout hope that “old brandy-face would keep her well up in the wind and
-steer small!”
-
-It was a cold night, and a cheerless, though light as day, for the moon
-had risen and the ground was white with snow. Sir George, wrapped in his
-cloak, with his hand on the butt of a pistol, after some vague remarks
-about the weather, which Florian appeared not to hear, relapsed into the
-silence of one who prepares all his energies for an approaching crisis.
-
-The Jesuit seemed unconscious of his companion’s existence. Pale as
-death, even to the lips, his face set, his teeth clenched, his eyes fixed
-on the horizon before him, as his mental sight projected itself into the
-unknown future he had this night resolved to penetrate, there pervaded
-the whole bearing of the man that unearthly air of abstraction peculiar
-to those who are doomed, whose trial is over, whose sentence is recorded,
-for whom henceforth there can be neither hope nor fear.
-
-Sir George meditated on a thousand possible contingencies. Already his
-mind had overleaped the immediate affairs of the night, the coming
-skirmish, and its possible disaster. These were but every-day matters,
-familiar to his old habits, and scarce worth thinking of. But there was
-one scene beyond which his imagination could not be forced; it seemed, as
-it were, to limit his future in its bounds, and afterwards there would be
-no aim, no purpose, no relish in life. It represented a spit of sand on
-the coast of Picardy, and a man with shirt-sleeves rolled up, grasping a
-bloody rapier in his hand, who was smiling bitterly down on a dead face
-white and rigid at his feet.
-
-Florian, too, sitting by his side, had his own vision. This, also, was of
-blood, but blood freely offered in atonement to friendship, and expiation
-for love.
-
-The night was still, and the moonlight tempered by a misty sky that
-denoted there would be more snow before morning. The coachman dozed over
-his wheelers. The guard, overcome with brandy, laid his head on a hamper,
-and went fast asleep. The two seamen, silently consoling themselves with
-tobacco, shut an eye apiece, and screwed their faces into the expression
-of inscrutable sagacity affected by their class when they expect bad
-weather of any kind. The horses, taking counsel together, as such beasts
-do, jogged on at the slowest possible pace that could not be stigmatised
-for a walk, and the heavy machine lumbered wearily up the gradual ascent,
-which half a mile further on, where the hill became steeper and the road
-worse, was known as Borrodaile Rise.
-
-Now the Abbé, in command of his little troop, had intended to conceal
-them behind a clump of thorns that diversified the plain surface of the
-moor, almost on the summit of this acclivity, and so pounce out upon his
-prey at the moment it was most hampered by the difficulties of its path;
-but, like other good generals, he suffered his plans to be modified by
-circumstances, and would change them, if advisable, at the very moment of
-execution.
-
-On the right of the road, if road that could be called, which was but a
-soft and deeply-rutted track through the heather, stood the four walls of
-a roofless building, uninhabited within the memory of man, about twenty
-paces from a deep holding slough, through which the coach must pass;
-this post, with the concurrence of Bold and his confederates, the Abbé
-seized at once. It offered them some shelter against the storms of sleet
-that drove at intervals across the moor, while it afforded a covert from
-which, though mounted, they could reconnoitre unseen, for two miles in
-every direction, and rush out at a moment’s notice on their unsuspecting
-prey.
-
-So, behind those grey, weather-stained walls, the little party sat their
-horses, erect and vigilant, reins shortened, firearms primed, swords
-loosened in the sheath, like a picket of light-cavalry when the alarm has
-sounded, and its outposts have been driven in.
-
-The advancing coach made but little noise as it crept slowly onward
-through the snow, nevertheless a muttered oath from Blood Humphrey, and
-the scowl on Black George’s brow, announced its arrival ere it came
-in sight. By the time it could emerge from a certain hollow at fifty
-yards’ distance, and gain the slough, through which it moved heavily and
-wearily, like a hearse, its huge black mass brought out against the dead
-white of the misty, moonlit sky, afforded as fair a target for close
-shooting as a marksman need desire.
-
-Captain Bold had been trembling all over but a few minutes back, now
-he was firm as a rock, but it cost him a desperate effort thus to man
-himself, and even while he cocked the pistol in his right hand, gathering
-his mare at the same time, for a dash to the front, he wished, from the
-bottom of his heart, he had undertaken any job but this.
-
-“Steady, my friend!” whispered the Abbé. “In ten more paces the whole
-machine must come to a halt. At the instant it stops, cover your man, and
-level low!”
-
-Then Malletort placed himself behind the others in readiness for any
-emergency that should arrive.
-
-The slough reached nearly to the axles, the wheels scarce moved, the
-horses laboured—failed—stopped; the coachman, waking with a jerk, swore
-lustily as he nearly fell from his seat; the guard jumped up and shook
-himself; Florian’s eyes flashed, and a strange, wild smile played over
-his wan face, while Slap-Jack protested angrily, that “the lubber was
-aground, d’ye see? and however could he expect the poor thing would
-answer her helm, when she hadn’t got no steerage-way!”
-
-Even while he spoke, a horseman, rising, as it seemed, from the earth,
-dashed out before the leaders, followed by three more, who, in the hurry
-and confusion of the moment, looked like a dozen at least.
-
-“Stand and deliver!” exclaimed the foremost, in the customary language of
-“the road”; but, without waiting to see if this formidable command would
-be obeyed, he pulled his bay mare together, till she stood motionless
-like a statue, covered the larger of the two figures behind the coachman,
-as it rose from its seat, and—fired!
-
-Bold’s hand and eye had never served him better than in this, his last
-crime; but he was anticipated, foiled by a quicker eye, a readier hand
-than his own. With the very flash of the pistol, even ere the smoke that
-curled above their heads had melted into air, a heavy body, falling
-across Sir George’s knees, knocked him back into his seat, and Florian,
-shot through the lungs, lay gasping out his life in jets of blood with
-every breath he drew.
-
-It was instinct, rather than inhumanity, that caused the old Musketeer
-to take steady aim at the assassin over the very body of his preserver.
-Ever coolest in extremity of danger, Sir George was, perhaps, surer of
-his mark than he would have been shooting for a wager in the galleries of
-Marly or Versailles. Ere a man could have counted ten, his finger pressed
-the trigger, and Bolt, shot clean through the heart, fell from the saddle
-in a heap, nor, after one quiver of the muscles, did he ever move again.
-
-The bay mare, snorting wildly, would not leave her master, but snuffed
-wistfully and tenderly round that tumbled wisp of tawdry clothes, from
-which a crimson stain was soaking slowly into the snow.
-
-Then Sir George turned to Florian, and rested the dying, drooping form
-against his own broad breast. Where was the spit of sand, the lonely
-duel, now?—the pitiless arm, the bloody rapier, and all the hideous
-vision of revenge? Gone—vanished—as if it had never been; and, in its
-stead, a tried, beloved comrade, pale, sinking, prostrate, bleeding
-helplessly to death.
-
-“Courage, Florian!” whispered Sir George, tenderly. “Lean on me while I
-stanch the blood. You will pull through yet. We will have you back at the
-Hill in an hour. D― it, man! Lady Hamilton shall nurse you herself till
-you get well!”
-
-A gleam came over the dying face, like a ray of sunlight gilding the
-close of a bleak winter’s day.
-
-“I have never been false,” he murmured, “never false really in my heart.
-I swore to save you, George, life for life, and I have kept my oath. I
-shall not live to see Lady Hamilton again, but—but—you will tell her that
-it was _my_ body which―”
-
-He turned fainter now, and lay half-propped against the seat he had
-lately occupied, holding Sir George’s hand, and effectually preventing
-the baronet from taking any further part in the fray.
-
-It is not to be supposed that the two seamen in the back of the coach had
-been idle witnesses of a tumult which so exactly coincided with their
-notions of what they termed “a spree.” Protected from the fire of the
-horsemen by a pile of luggage on its roof, or, as Slap-Jack called it, by
-the deck-cargo, they had made an excellent defence, and better practice
-than might have been looked for with a brace of borrowed pistols, apt to
-hang fire and throw high. The guard, too, after a careful and protracted
-aim, discharged his blunderbuss, with a loud explosion; and the result
-of their joint efforts was, that the highwaymen, as the last-named
-functionary believed them, were beaten off. Blood Humphrey’s horse was
-shot through the flank, though the poor brute made shift to carry his
-rider swiftly away. Black George had his ankle-bone broken, but managed
-to gallop across the moor after his comrade, writhing in pain, and with
-his boot full of blood. Bold lay dead on the ground. There was but one of
-the assailants left—a well-armed man in a cassock, who had kept somewhat
-in the background; and _his_ horse, too, was badly wounded behind its
-girths.
-
-Sir George was occupied with Florian, but the others sprang down to take
-the last of their foes captive; ere they could reach him, however, he had
-leaped into the bay mare’s saddle, and was urging her over the heather at
-a pace that promised soon to place him in safety, for the bay mare was
-the fastest galloper in Yorkshire, and her rider knew it was a race for
-life and death.
-
-“By heavens, it is Malletort!” exclaimed Sir George, looking up from
-his charge, at sound of the flying hoofs, to observe something in the
-fugitive’s seat and figure that identified him with the Abbé, and
-gazing after him so intently, that he did not mark the expression of
-satisfaction on Florian’s pain-stricken face when he learned the other
-had escaped. “I never thought he could ride so well,” muttered the
-baronet, while he watched the good bay mare speeding steadily over the
-open, and saw the Frenchman put her straight at a high stone wall, beyond
-which he knew, by his own experience, there was a considerable drop into
-a ravine. The mare jumped it like a deer, and after a time rose the
-opposite slope at a swifter pace than ever. Sir George could only make
-her out very indistinctly now, yet something in the headlong manner of
-her career caused him to fancy she was going without a rider.
-
-He had more important matters to occupy him. It had begun to snow
-heavily, and Florian was growing weaker every minute. With a dying man
-for their freight; with the absence of other passengers; above all, with
-the prospect of increased difficulty in progression at every yard they
-advanced, for the sky had darkened, and the flakes fell thicker, guard
-and driver were easily persuaded to turn their horses’ heads, and make
-the best of their way back to Hamilton Hill.
-
-It was but a few miles distant, and Sir George, hoping against hope,
-tried to persuade himself that if he could only get Florian under his own
-roof alive, he might be saved.
-
-They were good nurses, that tried campaigner and his two rough, hardy
-seamen. Tenderly, like women, they stanched the welling life-blood,
-supported the nerveless, drooping figure, and wiped the froth from
-the dry, white lips that could no longer speak, but yet made shift to
-smile. Tenderly, too, they whispered soothing words, in soft, hushed
-voices, looking blankly in each other’s faces for the hope their hearts
-denied; and thus slowly, sadly, solemnly, the dark procession laboured
-back, taking the road they had lately travelled, passed the well-known
-hostelry, and so wearily climbed the long ascent to the grim, looming
-towers of Hamilton Hill.
-
-Not a word was spoken. Scarce a sound betrayed their progress. The air
-was hushed—the flakes fell softly, heavily—the earth lay wrapped in a
-winding-sheet of snow—and Florian was dead before they reached the house!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LX
-
-SOLACE
-
-
-Bad news proverbially flies apace, and it is strange how soon the
-intelligence of any catastrophe pervades an entire household.
-
-Though it was towards the small hours of morning that the coach arrived,
-with its dead freight, at the gates of Hamilton Hill, the whole
-establishment seemed to arouse itself on the instant, and to become
-aware, as though by instinct, that something had occurred productive of
-general confusion and dismay.
-
-Cerise, pale and spiritless, was sitting in her bed-chamber, over the
-embers of a dying fire, thinking wearily of her husband, wondering, with
-aching heart and eyes full of tears, what could be this shadow that had
-of late come up between them, and now threatened to darken her whole life.
-
-How she wished, yes, she actually wished now, she had never married
-him. He would have remembered her then as the girl he might have loved.
-For his own happiness, she protested, she could give him up readily,
-cheerfully even, to another woman. Then she reviewed all the women of
-her acquaintance, without, however, being able to fix on one to whom she
-could make this sacrifice ungrudgingly. She thought, too, how forlorn
-she would feel deprived of George. And yet, was she not deprived of
-him already? Could any separation be more complete than theirs? It was
-torture to reflect that he could not really have loved her, or it would
-never have come to this. And to leave her thus, without an opportunity
-for inquiry or explanation. It was careless, unkind, unpardonable.
-Better to have been sure of his affection, to have known his last thought
-was for her, and to have seen him brought in dead before her very eyes
-into the house!
-
-A hurried step was on the stair, a trembling hand flung open the door,
-and Lady Hamilton’s maid rushed into the room, pale, scared, and
-incoherent, to exclaim—
-
-“Oh! my lady—my lady! Whatever are we to do? The coach has been robbed,
-and they’ve brought him back home! They’re carrying him up the front
-stairs now. Stone dead, my lady! He never spoke, Ralph says, nor moved
-after the shot. Such a home-coming! such a home-coming! Oh dear! oh dear!”
-
-Lady Hamilton’s jaw dropped, and her whole face stiffened, as if she
-had been shot herself. Then she wailed out, “He was angry with me when
-he went away,” repeating the same words over and over again, as though
-attaching no meaning to the sounds, and staggering, with hands extended,
-like a blind woman to the staircase, while, numbed and palsied, as it was
-by the cruel pain, a silent prayer went out from her heart that she might
-die.
-
-A strong form caught her in its arms, and she looked up in her husband’s
-face, living, unhurt, and kindly; but saddened with a grave and sorrowing
-expression she had never seen there before.
-
-“Cerise,” he whispered, “a great grief has come upon us. There has been a
-skirmish on the moor, and Florian, poor Florian, has lost his life.”
-
-She was sobbing in his embrace, sobbing with an intense and fearful joy.
-
-“Thank God!” she gasped, putting her hair back from her white face, and
-devouring him with wild, loving eyes. “Darling, they told me it was
-_you_—they told me it was _you_.”
-
-Nearer, nearer, he clasped her, and a tear stole down his cheek. It was
-_him_, then, all the time she had loved with her whole heart _in spite_
-of his being her husband. It was for his departure she had been grieving
-in patient silence; it was his displeasure, and no unhallowed fondness
-for another, that had lately dimmed the soft blue eyes, and turned the
-sweet face so pale.
-
-“My love!” he whispered; but, notwithstanding his past suspicions, his
-injustice, his cruel condemnation, this seemed all the amends he was
-disposed to make; for he went on to tell her how the coach had been
-beset, and how he must himself have been killed, but for Florian’s
-self-devotion—Florian, who was now lying dead in the very room that had
-lately come to be called his own.
-
-She wanted no explanation, no apology. She had forgiven him long before
-he spoke. She had thought him estranged; she had believed him dead; and
-now he was alive again, and he was her own.
-
-“I care not! I care not!” she exclaimed, wildly. “Let them live or die;
-what is it to me, so that you are safe! Shame on me,” she added, with
-more composure, “how selfish I am—how heartless! Let us go to him,
-George, and see if nothing can be done.”
-
-Nothing could be done, of course. Hand in hand, husband and wife visited
-the chamber of death, hand in hand they left it, with saddened faces
-and slow, reverential step. But Sir George never forgot the lesson of
-that night; never again doubted the woman who had given him her whole
-heart; nor joined in the sneer of those who protest that purity and
-self-sacrifice are incompatible with earthly love.
-
-But for the snow, Madame de Montmirail would have left Hamilton Hill next
-day. It was delightful, no doubt, to witness the perfect understanding,
-the mutual confidence, that had been re-established between Cerise
-and her husband; but it was not amusing. “Gratifying, but a little
-wearisome,” said the Marquise to herself, while she looked from her
-window on the smooth undulating expanse of white that forbade the
-prospect of travelling till there should come a thaw. Never perhaps
-in her whole life had this lady so much felt the want of excitement,
-intrigue, business, dissipation, even danger, to take her out of herself,
-as she expressed it, and preserve the blood from stagnating in her veins.
-It is only doing her justice also to state that she was somewhat anxious
-about Malletort. With half a yard of snow on the ground, however, not to
-mention drifts, it was hopeless to speculate on any subject out of doors
-till the weather changed.
-
-For Slap-Jack, nevertheless, whose whole life had been passed in conflict
-with the elements, even a heavy fall of snow seemed but a trifling
-obstacle, easily to be overcome, and on no account to interfere with so
-important a ceremony as a seaman’s wedding. Assisted by his shipmate, who
-had consented to officiate as “best man” on the occasion, he set to work,
-“with a will,” so he expressed it, and cleared away a path four feet
-broad from the Hill to the “Hamilton Arms.” Down this path he proceeded
-in great state to be married, on the very day the thaw set in, attended
-by Sir George and Lady Hamilton, the Marquise, Smoke-Jack, and all the
-servants of the establishment. Ere the ceremony was accomplished, the
-wind blew high and the rain fell in torrents, omens to which the old
-foretopman paid not the slightest attention, but of which his best man
-skilfully availed himself to congratulate the bridegroom on his choice.
-
-“It looks dirty to windward,” he proclaimed, in a confidential whisper,
-heard by the whole company; “and a chap ain’t got overmuch sea-room when
-he’s spliced. But she’s weatherly, mate; that’s what _she_ is—wholesome
-and weatherly. I knows the trim on ’em.”
-
-At a later period in the afternoon, however, when I am sorry to say,
-he had become more than slightly inebriated, Smoke-Jack was heard to
-express an equally flattering opinion as to the qualities, “wholesome
-and weatherly,” of Mrs. Dodge, not concealing his intention of making a
-return voyage, “in ballast o’ coorse,” as he strongly insisted, to these
-latitudes, when he had delivered a cargo in London. Shrewd observers were
-of opinion, from these compromising remarks and other trifling incidents
-of the day, that it was possible the hostess of the “Hamilton Arms”
-might be induced to change her name once more, under the irresistible
-temptation of subjugating so consistent a woman-hater as Smoke-Jack.
-
-But in the last century, as in the present, death and marriage trod close
-on each other’s heels. The customers at the “Hamilton Arms” had not done
-carousing to the health of bride and bridegroom, the wintry day had not
-yet closed in with a mild, continuous rain, and Smoke-Jack was in the
-middle of an interminable forecastle yarn, when a couple of labouring
-men brought in the body of a darkly-clad foreign gentleman, who had
-lately been lodging at this roadside hostelry. They had found him half
-covered by a waning snow-wreath just under the wall in the “stell,” said
-these honest dalesmen, below Borrodaile Rise. He must have been dead for
-days, but there was no difficulty in identifying the Abbé, for the frozen
-element in which he was wrapped had kept off the very taint of death,
-and preserved him, to use their own language, “in uncommon fettle, to be
-sure!” Except the Marquise, I doubt if any one regretted him, and yet
-it seemed a strange and piteous fate for the gifted scholar, the able
-churchman, the polished courtier, thus to perish by breaking his neck off
-a Yorkshire mare on a Yorkshire moor.
-
-“Men are so different!” observed Cerise, as she and George discussed the
-Abbé’s death, and, indeed, his character, walking together through the
-park, after the snow was gone, in the soft air of a mild winter’s day,
-nowhere so calm and peaceful as in our English climate.
-
-“And women, too,” replied George, looking fondly in the dear face he
-had loved all his life, and thinking that her like could only be found
-amongst the angels in heaven.
-
-Cerise shook her head.
-
-“You know nothing about us,” said she. “My own, how blind you must have
-been when you went away and left me nothing of your cruel self but a
-riding-glove.”
-
-He laughed, no doubt well pleased.
-
-“It was you, then, who had taken it? I looked for it everywhere, and was
-forced to go away without it.”
-
-“You did not look _here_,” she answered, and warm from the whitest bosom
-in the world she drew the missing glove that had lain there ever since
-the night he left her.
-
-“George,” she added, and the love-light in her eyes betrayed her feelings
-no less than the low, soft accents of her voice, “you know now that I
-prize your little finger more than all the rest of the world. I never saw
-another face than yours that I cared twice to look upon, and it is my
-happiness, my pride, to think that I was never loved by any man on earth
-but _you_!”
-
-She raised her head and looked around in triumph while she spoke. Her
-eye, resting on the church of the distant village, caught a gleam of
-white from a newly-raised tomb-stone amongst its graves. An old man
-wrapping up his tools was in the act of leaving that stone, for he had
-finished his task. It was but to cut the following inscription:—
-
- FLORIAN DE ST. CROIX.
- ✚
- R. I. P.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] Au petit couvert.
-
-[2] A national banking scheme was about this period proposed to the
-Regent of France by a financial speculator of Scottish extraction named
-Law.
-
-[3] The progeny of a white and a Quadroon, sometimes called an Octoroon.
-
-[4] A witch.
-
-[5] Evil eye.
-
-[6] Runaway negroes who join in bands and live by plunder in the woods.
-
-
-UNWIN BROTHERS, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CERISE***
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-<h1 class="pgx" title="">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Cerise, by G. J. (George John)
-Whyte-Melville, Illustrated by G. P. Jacomb-Hood</h1>
-<p>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'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Cerise</p>
-<p> A Tale of the Last Century</p>
-<p>Author: G. J. (George John) Whyte-Melville</p>
-<p>Release Date: June 15, 2021 [eBook #65619]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CERISE***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="">E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (https://www.pgdp.net)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (https://archive.org)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff; max-width: 80%; margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/cu31924013570126
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Cerise</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
-<img src="images/illus1.jpg" width="450" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“CARESSING HER HORSE WITH ONE HAND.”</p>
-<p class="caption-r">(<a href="#Page_35"><i>Page 35.</i></a>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">Cerise<br />
-<span class="smaller">A Tale of the Last Century</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">By</span><br />
-G. J. Whyte-Melville<br />
-<span class="smaller">Author of “Market Harborough,” “Katerfelto,”<br />
-“Satanella,” etc., etc.</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">Illustrated<br />
-by</span><br />
-G. P. Jacomb-Hood</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">London<br />
-Ward, Lock &amp; Co., Limited<br />
-<span class="smaller">New York and Melbourne.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">CHAP.</span></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><span class="allsmcap">PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">I.</span></td>
- <td>The Daisy-Chain</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">9</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">II.</span></td>
- <td>The Montmirails</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">III.</span></td>
- <td>Monsieur l’Abbé</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">25</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">IV.</span></td>
- <td>Tantara!</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">34</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">V.</span></td>
- <td>The Usher of the Black Rod</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">44</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">VI.</span></td>
- <td>A Jesuit’s Task</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">51</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">VII.</span></td>
- <td>St. Mark’s Balsam</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">59</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">VIII.</span></td>
- <td>The Grey Musketeers</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">68</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">IX.</span></td>
- <td>Eugène Beaudésir</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">76</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">X.</span></td>
- <td>The Boudoir of Madame</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">86</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XI.</span></td>
- <td>What the Serpent Said</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">94</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XII.</span></td>
- <td>Out-manœuvred</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XIII.</span></td>
- <td>The Mother of Satan</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">113</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XIV.</span></td>
- <td>The Débonnaire</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">122</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XV.</span></td>
- <td>The Masked Ball</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">132</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XVI.</span></td>
- <td>Raising the Devil</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">144</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XVII.</span></td>
- <td>A Quiet Supper</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">151</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XVIII.</span></td>
- <td>Baiting the Trap</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">160</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XIX.</span></td>
- <td>Mater Pulchrâ, Filia Pulchrior</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">167</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XX.</span></td>
- <td>A General Rendezvous</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">177</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXI.</span></td>
- <td>The Fox and Fiddle</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">185</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXII.</span></td>
- <td>Three Strands of a Yarn</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">193</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXIII.</span></td>
- <td>The Parlour-Lodger</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">202</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXIV.</span></td>
- <td>A Volunteer</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">210</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXV.</span></td>
- <td>Three Pressed Men</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">218</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXVI.</span></td>
- <td>“Yo-heave-yo!”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">227</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXVII.</span></td>
- <td>‘The Bashful Maid’</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">235</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXVIII.</span></td>
- <td>Dirty Weather</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">244</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXIX.</span></td>
- <td>Port Welcome</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">250</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXX.</span></td>
- <td>Montmirail West</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">259</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXXI.</span></td>
- <td>Black, but Comely</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">272</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXXII.</span></td>
- <td>A Wise Child</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">277</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXXIII.</span></td>
- <td>Jack Aground</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">286</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXXIV.</span></td>
- <td>Jack Afloat</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">294</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXXV.</span></td>
- <td>Besieged</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">301</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXXVI.</span></td>
- <td>At Bay</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">309</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXXVII.</span></td>
- <td>Just in Time</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">317</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXXVIII.</span></td>
- <td>Mère avant tout</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVIII">326</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XXXIX.</span></td>
- <td>All Adrift</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIX">335</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XL.</span></td>
- <td>Homeward Bound</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XL">341</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XLI.</span></td>
- <td>Lady Hamilton</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLI">351</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XLII.</span></td>
- <td>The Desire of the Moth</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLII">360</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XLIII.</span></td>
- <td>For the Star</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIII">370</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XLIV.</span></td>
- <td>“Box it About”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIV">379</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XLV.</span></td>
- <td>The Little Rift</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLV">389</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XLVI.</span></td>
- <td>The Music Mute</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLVI">399</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XLVII.</span></td>
- <td>The “Hamilton Arms”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLVII">408</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XLVIII.</span></td>
- <td>Pressure</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLVIII">419</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">XLIX.</span></td>
- <td>Poor Emerald</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIX">429</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">L.</span></td>
- <td>Captain Bold</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_L">441</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">LI.</span></td>
- <td>Sir Marmaduke</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_LI">448</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">LII.</span></td>
- <td>The Bowl on the Bias</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_LII">458</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">LIII.</span></td>
- <td>Fair Fighting</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_LIII">466</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">LIV.</span></td>
- <td>Friends in Need</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_LIV">475</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">LV.</span></td>
- <td>Forewarned</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_LV">486</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">LVI.</span></td>
- <td>Forearmed</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_LVI">494</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">LVII.</span></td>
- <td>An Addled Egg</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_LVII">503</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">LVIII.</span></td>
- <td>Horns and Hoofs</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_LVIII">511</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">LIX.</span></td>
- <td>A Substitute</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_LIX">518</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap">LX.</span></td>
- <td>Solace</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_LX">529</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span></p>
-
-<h1>CERISE<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>A TALE OF THE LAST CENTURY</i></span></h1>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE DAISY-CHAIN</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the gardens of Versailles, as everywhere else within the
-freezing influence of the <i>Grand Monarque</i>, nature herself
-seemed to accept the situation, and succumbed inevitably
-under the chain of order and courtly etiquette. The grass
-grew, indeed, and the Great Waters played, but the former
-was rigorously limited to certain mathematical patches,
-and permitted only to obtain an established length, while
-the latter threw their diamond showers against the sky with
-the regular and oppressive monotony of clockwork. The
-avenues stretched away straight and stiff like rows of lately-built
-houses; the shrubs stood hard and defiant as the
-white statues with which they alternated, and the very sunshine
-off the blinding gravel glared and scorched as if its
-duty were but to mark a march of dazzling hours on square
-stone dials for the kings of France.</p>
-
-<p>Down in Touraine the woods were sleeping, hushed, and
-peaceful in the glowing summer’s day, sighing, as it were,
-and stirring in their repose, while the breeze crept through
-their shadows, and quivered in their outskirts, ere it passed
-on to cool the peasant’s brow, toiling contented in his clearing,
-with blue home-spun garb, white teeth, and honest
-sunburnt face.</p>
-
-<p>Far off in Normandy, sleek of skin and rich of colour,
-cows were ruminating knee-deep in pasturage; hedges were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-loaded with wild flowers, thickets dark with rank luxuriance
-of growth, while fresh streams, over which the blue kingfisher
-flitted like a dragon-fly, rippled merrily down towards
-the sea. Through teeming orchards, between waving cornfields,
-past convent-walls grown over with woodbine and
-lilac and laburnum, under stately churches, rearing Gothic
-spires, delicate as needlework, to heaven, and bringing
-with them a cool current of air, a sense of freedom and
-refreshment as they hurried past. Nay, even where the
-ripening sun beat fiercely on the vineyards, terraced tier
-upon tier, to concentrate his rays—where Macon and
-Côte-d’Or were already tinged with the first faint blush of
-their coming vintage, even amidst the grape-rows so orderly
-planted and so carefully trained, buxom peasant-girls could
-gather posies of wild flowers for their raven hair, to make
-their black eyes sparkle with merrier glances, and their
-dusky cheeks mantle in rich carnation, type of southern
-blood dancing through their veins.</p>
-
-<p>But Versailles was not France, and at Versailles nothing
-seemed free but the birds and the children.</p>
-
-<p>One of the alleys, commanded from the king’s private
-apartments, was thickly crowded with loungers. Courtiers
-in silk stockings, laced coats, and embroidered waistcoats
-reaching to their thighs, wearing diamond hilts on their
-rapiers, and diamond buckles in their shoes, could not move
-a step without apology for catching in the spreading skirts
-of magnificent ladies—magnificent, be it understood, in
-gorgeousness of apparel rather than in beauty of face or
-symmetry of figure. The former, indeed, whatever might
-be its natural advantages, was usually coated with paint
-and spotted with patches, while the latter was so disguised
-by voluminous robes, looped-up skirts, falling laces, and
-such outworks and appendages, not to mention a superstructure
-of hair, ribbon, and other materials, towering so
-high above the head as to place a short woman’s face somewhere
-about the middle of her whole altitude, that it must
-have been difficult even for the maid who dressed her to
-identify, in one of these imposing triumphs of art, the slender
-and insignificant little framework upon which the whole
-fabric had been raised. Devotion in woman is never more
-sublime than when sustaining the torture of dress.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was all artificial together. Not a word was spoken but
-might have been overheard with entire satisfaction by the
-unseen sovereign who set the whole pageant in motion.
-Not a gesture but was restrained by the consciousness of
-supervision. Not a sentiment broached but had for its
-object the greater glorification of a little old man, feeble
-and worn-out, eating iced fruit and sweetmeats in a closet
-opening from a formal, heavily-furnished, over-gilded saloon,
-that commanded the broad gravel-walk on which the courtiers
-passed to and fro in a shifting, sparkling throng. If a compliment
-was paid by grinning gallant to simpering dame, it
-was offered and accepted with a sidelong glance from each
-towards the palace windows. If a countess whispered scandal
-to a duchess behind her fan, the grateful dish was sauced
-and flavoured for the master’s palate, to whom it would be
-offered by the listener on the first opportunity. Marshals
-of a hundred fights tapped their jewelled snuff-boxes to
-inhale a pinch of the King’s Mixture. Blooming beauties,
-whose every breath was fragrance, steeped their gossamer
-handkerchiefs in no other perfume than an extract from
-orange-flowers, called <i>Bouquet du Roi</i>.</p>
-
-<p>For Louis the Fourteenth, if he might believe his household,
-Time was to stand still, and the Seasons brought no
-change. “I am the same age as everybody else,” said a
-courtier of seventy to his Majesty at sixty-five. “The rain
-of Marly does not wet one,” urged another, as an excuse
-for not covering his head in a shower while walking with
-the king. By such gross flattery was that sovereign to be
-duped, who believed himself a match for the whole of Europe
-in perceptive wisdom and diplomatic <i>finesse</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But though powdered heads were bowing, and laced hats
-waving, and brocades ruffling in the great walk, swallows
-skimmed and darted through the shades of a green alley
-behind the nearest fountain, and a little girl was sitting on
-the grass, making daisy-chains as busily as if there were no
-other interest, no other occupation at Court or in the world.</p>
-
-<p>Her flapping hat was thrown aside, and her head bent
-studiously over her work, so that the brown curls, silken
-and rich and thick, as a girl’s curls should be, hid all of her
-face but a little soft white brow. Her dimpled arms and
-hands moved nimbly about her task, and a pair of sturdy,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-well-turned legs were stuck out straight before her, as if she
-had established herself in her present position with a resolution
-not to stir till she had completed the long snowy chain
-that festooned already for several yards across the turf.
-She had just glanced in extreme content at its progress
-without raising her head, when a spaniel scoured by, followed
-at speed by a young gentleman in a page’s dress, who,
-skimming the level with his toe, in all the impetuous haste
-of boyhood, caught the great work round his ankles, and
-tore it into a dozen fragments as he passed.</p>
-
-<p>The little girl looked up in consternation, having duly
-arranged her face for a howl; but she controlled her feelings,
-partly in surprise, partly in bashfulness, partly perhaps
-in gratification at the very obvious approval with which the
-aggressor regarded that face, while, stopping short, he begged
-“Mademoiselle’s pardon” with all the grand manner of the
-Court grafted on the natural politeness of France.</p>
-
-<p>It was indeed a very pretty, and, more, a very lovable
-little face, with its large innocent blue eyes, its delicate
-peach-like cheeks, and a pair of curling ruddy lips, that,
-combined with her own infantine pronunciation of her baptismal
-name Thérèse, had already obtained for the child
-the familiar appellation of “Cerise.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon, mademoiselle!” repeated the page, colouring
-boy-like to his temples—“Pardon! I was running so fast;
-I was in such a hurry—I am so awkward. I will pick you
-a hatful more daisies—and—and I can get you a large slice
-of cake this evening when the king goes out of the little
-supper-room to the music-hall.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mademoiselle” thus adjured, rose to her full stature of
-some forty inches, and spreading her short stiff skirt around
-her with great care, replied by a stately reverence that would
-have done credit to an empress. Notwithstanding her dignity,
-however, she cast a wistful look at the broken daisy-chain,
-while her little red lips quivered as if a burst of tears
-was not far off.</p>
-
-<p>The boy was down on his knees in an instant, gathering
-handfuls of the simple flowers, and flinging them impetuously
-into his hat. It was obvious that this young gentleman
-possessed already considerable energy of character, and
-judging from the flash of his bold dark eyes, a determined<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-will of his own. His figure, though as yet unformed, was
-lithe, erect, and active, while his noble bearing denoted
-self-reliance beyond his years, and a reckless, confident
-disposition, such as a true pedagogue would have longed
-and failed to check with the high hand of coercion. In a
-few minutes he had collected daisies enough to fill his laced
-hat to the rims, and flinging himself on the turf, began
-stringing them together with his strong, well-shaped, sunburnt
-fingers. The little girl, much consoled, had reseated
-herself as before. It was delightful to see the chain thus
-lengthening by fathoms at a time, and this new friend seemed
-to enter heart and soul into the important work. Active
-sympathy soon finds its way to a child’s heart; she nestled
-up to his side, and shaking her curls back, looked confidingly
-in his face.</p>
-
-<p>“I like you,” said the little woman, honestly, and without
-reserve. “You are good—you are polite—you make daisy-chains
-as well as mamma. My name’s Cerise. What’s
-<i>your</i> name?”</p>
-
-<p>The page smiled, and with the smile his whole countenance
-grew handsome. In repose, his face was simply that of a
-well-looking youth enough, with a bold, saucy expression
-and hardy sunburned features; but when he smiled, a
-physiognomist watching the change would have pronounced,
-“That boy <i>must</i> be like his mother, and his mother <i>must</i>
-have been beautiful!”</p>
-
-<p>“Cerise,” repeated the lad. “What a pretty name!
-Mine is not a pretty name. Boys don’t have pretty names.
-My name’s George—George Hamilton. You mustn’t call
-me Hamilton. I am never called anything but George at
-Court. I’m not big enough to be a soldier yet, but I am
-page to <i>Louis le Grand</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>The child opened her eyes very wide, and stared over her
-new friend’s head at a gentleman who was listening attentively
-to their conversation, with his hat in his hand, and
-an expression of considerable amusement pervading his old,
-worn, melancholy face.</p>
-
-<p>This gentleman had stolen round the corner of the alley,
-treading softly on the turf, and might have been watching
-the children for some minutes unperceived. He was a small,
-shrunken, but well-made person, with a symmetrical leg<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-and foot, the arched instep of the latter increased by the
-high heels of his diamond-buckled shoes. His dress in
-those days of splendour was plain almost to affectation; it
-consisted of a full-skirted, light-brown coat, ornamented only
-with a few gold buttons; breeches of the same colour, and
-a red satin waistcoat embroidered at the edges, the whole
-suit relieved by the <i>cordon bleu</i> which was worn outside.
-The hat he dangled in his pale, thin, unringed hand was
-trimmed with Spanish point, and had a plume of white
-feathers. His face was long, and bore a solemn, saddened
-expression, the more remarkable for the rapidity with which,
-as at present, it succeeded a transient gleam of mirth.
-Notwithstanding all its advantages of dress and manner,
-notwithstanding jewelled buckles, and point lace, and full
-flowing periwig, the figure now standing over the two children,
-in sad contrast to their rich flow of youth and health, was
-that of a worn-out, decrepid old man, fast approaching,
-though not yet actually touching, the brink of his grave.</p>
-
-<p>The smile, however, came over his wrinkled face once
-more as the child looked shyly up, gathering her daisy-chain
-distrustfully into her lap. Then he stooped to stroke her
-brown curls with his white wasted hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Your name is Thérèse,” said he gravely. “Mamma
-calls you Cerise, because you are such a round, ruddy little
-thing. Mamma is waiting in the painted saloon for the
-king’s dinner. You may look at him eating it, if your <i>bonne</i>
-takes you home past the square table in the middle window
-opposite the Great Fountain. She is to come for you in a
-quarter of an hour. You see I know all about it, little one.”</p>
-
-<p>Cerise stared in utter consternation, but at the first sound
-of that voice the boy had started to his feet, blushing
-furiously, and catching up his hat, to upset an avalanche of
-daisies in the action, stood swinging it in his hand, bolt
-upright like a soldier who springs to “attention” under the
-eye of his officer. The old gentleman’s face had resumed
-its sad expression, but he drew up his feeble figure with
-dignity, and motioned the lad, who already nearly
-equalled him in height, a little further back. George
-obeyed instinctively, and Cerise, still sitting on the grass,
-with the daisy-chain in her lap, looked from one to the other
-in a state of utter bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be frightened, little one,” continued the old gentleman,
-caressingly. “Come and play in these gardens
-whenever you like. Tell Le Notre to give you prettier
-flowers than these to make chains of, and when you get older,
-try to leave off turning the heads of my pages with your
-brown curls and cherry lips. As for you, sir,” he added,
-facing round upon George, “I have seldom seen any of you
-so innocently employed. Take care of this pretty little
-girl till her <i>bonne</i> comes to fetch her, and show them both
-the place from whence they can see the king at dinner.
-How does the king dine to-day, sir? and when?” he concluded,
-in a sharper and sterner tone. George was equal to
-the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no council to-day, sire,” he answered, without
-hesitation. “His Majesty has ordered ‘The Little Service’<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
-this morning, and will dine in seventeen minutes exactly,
-for I hear the Grey Musketeers already relieving guard in
-the Front Court.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go, sir,” exclaimed the old gentleman, in great good-humour.
-“You have learnt your duty better than I expected.
-I think I may trust you with the care of this pretty child.
-Few pages know anything of etiquette or the necessary
-routine of a Court. I am satisfied with you. Do you
-understand?”</p>
-
-<p>The boy’s cheeks flushed once more, as he bowed low and
-stood silent, whilst the old gentleman passed on. The
-latter, however, had not gone half-a-dozen paces ere he
-turned back, and again addressed the younger of the children.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not forget, little one, to ask Le Notre for any flowers
-you want, and—and—if you think of it, tell mamma you
-met the honest <i>bourgeois</i> who owns these gardens, and that
-he knew you, and knew your name, and knew how old you
-were, and, I dare say, little one, you are surprised the
-<i>bourgeois</i> should know so much!”</p>
-
-<p>That Cerise was surprised admitted of small doubt. She
-had scarcely found her voice ere the old gentleman turned
-out of the alley and disappeared. Then she looked at her
-companion, whose cheeks were still glowing with excitement,
-and presently burst into a peal of childish laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“What a funny old man!” cried Cerise, clapping her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-hands; “and I am to have as many flowers as I like—what
-a funny old man!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush, mademoiselle,” answered the boy, gravely, as
-though his own dignity had received a hurt, “you must not
-speak like that. It is very rude. It is very wrong. If a
-man were to say such things it should cost him his life.”</p>
-
-<p>Cerise opened her blue eyes wider than ever.</p>
-
-<p>“Wrong!” she repeated, “rude! what have I done?
-who is it, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is the King!” answered the boy, proudly. “It is
-<i>Louis le Grand</i>!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE MONTMIRAILS</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Ladies first. Let us identify the pretty little girl in the
-gardens of Versailles, who answered to the name of Cerise,
-before we account for the presence of George Hamilton the
-page.</p>
-
-<p>It is a thing well understood—it is an arrangement
-universally conceded in France—that marriages should be
-contracted on principles of practical utility, rather than on
-the vague assumption of a romantic and unsuitable preference.
-It was therefore with tranquil acquiescence, and
-feelings perfectly under control, that Thérèse de la Fierté,
-daughter of a line of dukes, found herself taken out of a
-convent and wedded to a chivalrous veteran, who could
-scarcely stand long enough at the altar, upon his well-shaped
-but infirm old legs, to make the necessary responses for the
-conversion of the beautiful <i>brunette</i> over against him into
-Madame la Marquise de Montmirail. The bridegroom was
-indeed infinitely more agitated than the bride. He had
-conducted several campaigns; he was a Marshal of France;
-he had even been married before, to a remarkably plain
-person, who adored him; he had undergone the necessary
-course of gallantry inflicted on men of his station at the
-Court and in the society to which he belonged; nevertheless,
-as he said to himself, he felt like a recruit in his first
-“affair” when he encountered the plunging fire of those
-black eyes, raking him front, and flanks, and centre, from
-under the bridal wreath and its drooping white lace veil.</p>
-
-<p>Thérèse had indeed, in right of her mother, large black
-eyes as well as large West Indian possessions; and her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-light-haired rivals were good enough to attribute the rich
-radiance of her beauty to a stain of negro blood somewhere
-far back in that mother’s race.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, the old Marquis de Montmirail was really
-over head and ears in love with his brilliant bride. That
-he should have indulged her in every whim and every folly
-was but reasonably to be expected, but that <i>she</i> should
-always have shown for <i>him</i> the warm affection of a wife,
-tempered by the deference and respect of a daughter, is only
-another instance, added to the long score on record of
-woman’s sympathy and right feeling when treated with
-gentleness and consideration.</p>
-
-<p>Not even at Court did Madame de Montmirail give a
-single opportunity to the thousand tongues of scandal during
-her husband’s lifetime; she was indeed notorious for sustaining
-the elaborate homage and tedious admiration of
-majesty itself, without betraying, by the flutter of an eyelash,
-that ambition was roused or vanity gratified during the
-ordeal. It seemed that she cared but for three people in the
-world. The chivalrous old wreck who had married her, and
-who was soon compelled to move about in a wheeled chair;
-the lovely little daughter born of their union, who inherited
-much of her mother’s effective beauty with the traditional
-grace and delicate complexion of the handsome Montmirails,
-a combination that had helped to distinguish her by the
-appropriate name of Cerise, and the young Abbé Malletort,
-a distant cousin of her own, as remarkable for shrewd
-intellect and utter want of sentiment as for symmetry of
-figure and signal ugliness of face. The <i>Grand Monarque</i>
-was not famous for consideration towards the nobles of his
-household. Long after the Marquis de Montmirail had commenced
-taking exercise on his own account in a chair, the
-king commanded his attendance at a shooting-party, kept
-him standing for three-quarters of an hour on damp grass,
-under heavy rain, and dismissed him with a pompous compliment,
-and an attack of gout driven upwards into the region
-of the stomach. The old courtier knew he had got his
-death-blow. The old soldier faced it like an officer of France.
-He sent for Madame la Marquise, and complimented her
-on her <i>coiffure</i> before proceeding to business. He apologised
-for the pains that took off his attention at intervals, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-bowed her out of the room, more than once, when the
-paroxysms became unbearable. The Marquise never went
-further than the door, where she fell on her knees in the
-passage and wept. He explained clearly enough how he
-had bequeathed to her all that was left of his dilapidated
-estates. Then he sent his duty to the king, observing that
-“He had served his Majesty under fire often, but never
-under water till now. He feared it was the last occasion
-of presenting his homage to his sovereign.” And so, asking
-for Cerise, who was brought in by her weeping mother, died
-brave and tranquil, with his arm round his child and a gold
-snuff-box in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Ladies cannot be expected to sorrow as inconsolably for
-a mate of seventy as for one of seven-and-twenty, but the
-Marquise de Montmirail grieved very honestly, nevertheless,
-and mourned during the prescribed period, with perhaps
-even more circumspection than had she lost a lover as well
-as, or instead of, a husband. Wagers were laid at Court
-that she would marry again within a year; yet the year
-passed by and Madame had not so much as seen anybody
-but her child and its <i>bonne</i>. Even Malletort was excluded
-from her society, and that versatile ecclesiastic, though
-pluming himself on his knowledge of human nature, including
-its most inexplicable half, was obliged to confess
-he was at a loss!</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Peste!</i>” he would observe, taking a pinch of snuff, and
-flicking the particles delicately off his ruffles, “was not the
-sphinx a woman? At least down to the waist. So, I
-perceive, is the Marquise. What would you have? There
-is a clue to every labyrinth, but it is not always worth while
-to puzzle it out!”</p>
-
-<p>After a time, when the established period for seclusion
-had expired, the widow, more beautiful than ever, made her
-appearance once more at Court. That she loved admiration
-there could not now be the slightest doubt, and the self-denial
-became at length apparent with which she had
-declined it during her husband’s lifetime, that she might
-not wring his kind old heart. So, in all societies—at balls,
-at promenades, at concerts—at solemn attendances on the
-king, at tedious receptions of princes and princesses, dukes
-and duchesses, sons and daughters of majesty, legitimate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-or otherwise—she accepted homage with avidity, and returned
-compliment for compliment, and gallantry for
-gallantry, with a coquetry perfectly irresistible. But this
-was all: the first step was fatal taken by an admirer across
-that scarce perceptible boundary which divides the gold and
-silver grounds, the gaudy flower-beds of flattery from the
-sweet wild violet banks of love. The first tremble of interest
-in his voice, the first quiver of diffidence in his glance, was
-the signal for dismissal.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Montmirail knew neither pity nor remorse.
-She had the softest eyes, the smoothest skin, the sweetest
-voice in the bounds of France, but her heart was declared by
-all to be harder than the very diamonds that became her so
-well. Nor, though she seldom missed a chance of securing
-smiles and compliments, did she seem inclined to afford
-opportunity for advances of a more positive kind. Cerise
-was usually in her arms, or on her lap; and suitors of every
-time must have been constrained to admit that there is no
-<i>duenna</i> like a daughter. Besides, the child’s beauty was
-of a nature so different from her mother’s, that the most
-accomplished coxcomb found it difficult to word his admiration
-of mademoiselle so as to infer a yet stronger approval
-of madame herself. The slightest blunder, too, was as
-surely made public as it was quickly detected. The Marquise
-never denied herself or her friends an opportunity for a
-laugh, and her sarcasm was appropriate as pitiless; so to
-become a declared admirer of Madame de Montmirail
-required a good deal of that courage which is best conveyed
-by the word <i>sang-froid</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And even for those reckless spirits, who neither feared
-the mother’s wit nor respected the daughter’s presence,
-there was yet another difficulty to encounter in the person
-of the child’s <i>bonne</i>, a middle-aged quadroon to whom Cerise
-was ardently attached, and who never left her mistress’s
-side when not employed in dressing or undressing her charge.
-This faithful retainer, originally a slave on the La-Fierté
-estates, had passed—with lands, goods, and chattels—into
-the possession of the Marquise after the death of her mother,
-the duchess, who was said to have a black drop of blood in
-her veins, and immediately transferred her fidelity and
-affections to her present owner. She was a large, strong<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-woman, with the remains of great beauty. Her age might
-be anything under fifty; and she was known at Court as
-“The Mother of Satan,” a title she accepted with considerable
-gratification, and much preferred to the sweeter-sounding
-name of Célandine, by which she was called on the
-West Indian estate and in the family of her proprietors.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding her good looks, there was something
-about Célandine that made her an object of dread to her
-fellow-servants, whether slaves or free. The woman’s
-manner was scowling and suspicious, she suffered from long
-fits of despondency; she muttered and gesticulated to
-herself; she walked about during the night, when the rest
-of the household were in bed. Altogether she gave occasion,
-by her behaviour, to those detractors who affirmed that,
-whether his <i>mother</i> or not, there was no doubt she was a
-faithful worshipper of Satan.</p>
-
-<p>In the island whence she came, and among the kindred
-people who had brought with them from Africa their native
-barbarism and superstitions, the dark rites of Obi were still
-sedulously cultivated, as the magic power of its votaries was
-implicitly believed. The three-fourths of white blood in the
-veins of Célandine had not prevented her, so they said, from
-becoming a priestess of that foul order; and the price paid
-for her impious exaltation was differently estimated, according
-to the colour of those who discussed the revolting
-and mysterious question, even amongst the French domestics
-of Madame de Montmirail, and in so practical an age as
-the beginning of the eighteenth century. The quadroon,
-finding herself shunned by her equals, was drawn all the
-closer to her mistress and her little charge.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the woman who pushed her way undaunted
-through the crowd of courtiers now thronging the Grand
-Alley at Versailles, eliciting no small share of attention by
-the gorgeousness of her costume; the scarlet shawl she
-had bound like a turban round her head, the profusion
-of gold ornaments that serpentined about her neck and arms,
-together with the glaring pattern of white and orange conspicuous
-on her dress, till she reached the secluded corner
-where Cerise was sitting with her broken daisy-chain and
-her attendant page, as she had been left by the king.</p>
-
-<p>The quadroon’s whole countenance brightened into beauty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-when she approached her darling, and the child bounding
-up to meet her, ran into her arms with a cry of delight
-that showed their attachment was mutual. George,
-extremely proud of his commission, volunteered to guide
-them to the spot whence, as directed, they could witness
-the progress of the king’s dinner, and the strangely-matched
-trio proceeded through the now decreasing crowd, to all
-appearance perfectly satisfied with each other.</p>
-
-<p>They had already taken up their position opposite the
-window which his Majesty had indicated, and were in full
-enjoyment of the thrilling spectacle he had promised them,
-namely, a little old man in a wig, served by half-a-dozen
-servants at once, and eating to repletion, when Cerise, who
-clung to Célandine’s hand, hid her face in the <i>bonne’s</i>
-gown, to avoid the gaze of two gentlemen who were staring
-at her with every mark of approval. “What is it, my
-cherished one?” said the quadroon, in tender accents.
-“Who dares frighten my darling?” But the fierce voice
-changed into coaxing tones when the <i>bonne</i> recognised a
-familiar face in one of her charge’s unwelcome admirers.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, it’s <i>Monsieur l’Abbé</i>! Surely you know <i>Monsieur
-l’Abbé</i>! Come, be a good child, then; make <i>Monsieur
-l’Abbé</i> a reverence, and wish him good-day!”</p>
-
-<p>But Cerise persistently declined any friendly overtures
-whatever to <i>Monsieur l’Abbé</i>; hanging her head and turning
-her toes in most restively; so the three passed on to
-witness the process of eating as performed by <i>Louis le
-Grand</i>; and <i>Monsieur l’Abbé</i>, crumpling his extremely
-plain features into a sneer, observed his companion, “It is
-droll enough, Florian, children never take to me, though I
-make my way as well as another with grown-up people.
-They seem to mistrust me from the first. Can it be because
-I am so very ugly?”</p>
-
-<p>The other smiled deprecatingly. “Good looks,” said
-he, “have nothing to do with it. Children are like their
-elders—they hate intellect because they fear it. Oh,
-Malletort! had I the beauty of Absalom, I would give it all
-willingly to possess your opportunities and your powers of
-using them!”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” replied Malletort, looking gratified in
-spite of himself at the compliment, but perhaps envying<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-in his secret heart the outward advantages which his friend
-seemed so little to appreciate.</p>
-
-<p>Florian de St. Croix, just on the verge of manhood, was
-as handsome a youth as might be met with amongst the
-thousand candidates for the priesthood, of whom he was one
-of the most sanguine and enthusiastic. Not even the
-extreme plainness of his dress, appropriate to the sacred
-calling he was about to enter—not even his close-cut hair
-and pallid hue, result of deep thought and severe application—could
-diminish the beauty of his flashing eyes, his clear-cut
-features, and high, intellectual forehead, that denoted
-ideality and self-sacrifice as surely as the sweet womanly
-mouth betrayed infirmity of purpose and fatal subservience
-to the affections. His frame, though slender, was extremely
-wiry and muscular; cast, too, in the mould of an Apollo.
-No wonder there was a shadow of something like jealousy
-on his companion’s shrewd, ugly face, while he regarded one
-so superior in external advantages to himself.</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé Malletort was singular in this respect. He
-possessed the rare faculty of appreciating events and
-individuals at their real value. He boasted that he had no
-prejudices, and especially prided himself on the accuracy
-with which he predicted the actions of his fellow-creatures
-by the judgment he had formed of their characters. He
-made no allowance for failure, as he gave no credit to success.
-Men, with him, were capable or useless only as they conquered
-or yielded in the great struggle of life. Systems
-proved good or bad simply according to their results. The
-Abbé professed to have no partialities, no feelings, no
-veneration, and no affections. He had entered the Church
-as a mere matter of calculation and convenience. Its prizes,
-like those of the army, were open to intellect and courage.
-If the priest’s outward conduct demanded more of moderation
-and self-restraint, on the other hand the fasts and vigils
-of Rome were less easily enforced than the half-rations of a
-march or the night-watches of an outpost.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, the tonsure in those days might be clipped (not
-close enough to draw attention) from a skull that roofed
-the teeming brain of a politician; and, indeed, the Church
-of Rome not only permitted but encouraged the assumption
-of secular power by her votaries, so that the most important<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-and lucrative posts of the empire were as open to Abbé and
-Cardinal as to a Colonel of the Body-guard or a Marshal of
-France; while the soldier’s training fitted him far less than
-the priest’s to countermine the subtleties of diplomacy or
-unravel the intricacies of finance. There remained, then,
-but the vow of celibacy to swallow, and, in truth, the vow
-of celibacy suited Malletort admirably well. Notwithstanding
-his ugly face, he was an especial favourite with women,
-on whom his ready wit, his polished manners, and, above
-all, his imperturbable coolness, made a pleasing impression.
-They liked him none the less that his reputed hardness of
-heart and injustice towards themselves were proverbial.
-While, as for his plain features, why, to quote the words of
-Ninon de l’Enclos, who ought to have been a good judge in
-such matters, “A man’s want of beauty is of small account
-if he be not deficient in other amiable qualities, for there is
-no conquest without the affections, and what mole can be
-so blind as a woman in love?”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br />
-<span class="smaller">MONSIEUR L’ABBÉ</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The crowd had passed on to witness the king’s dinner, now
-in full progress, and the two soberly-clad friends found themselves
-the only occupants of the gardens. Side by side they
-took their seats on a bench under a row of lime-trees, and
-continued the conversation which had originated in little
-Cerise and her childish beauty.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a face as God made it,” said Florian, his boyish
-features lighting up with enthusiasm. “Children are surely
-nearer Heaven than ourselves. What a pity to think that
-they should grow into the painted, patched, powdered
-hypocrites, of whom so many have passed by us even now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Beautifully dressed, however,” answered his worldly
-senior, placidly indifferent, as usual, to all that did not concern
-his own immediate comfort. “If there were no women,
-Florian, there would be no children, I conclude. Both seem
-necessary evils. You, I observe, prefer the lesser. As for
-being near Heaven, that, I imagine, is a mere question of
-altitude. The musketeer over there is at least a couple of
-inches nearer it than either of us. What matter? It will
-make little difference eventually to any one of the three.”</p>
-
-<p>Florian looked as if he did not understand. Indeed, the
-Abbé’s manner preserved a puzzling uncertainty between
-jest and earnest. He took a pinch of snuff, too, with the
-air of a man who had thoroughly exhausted the question.
-But his companion, still harping on the beauty of the child,
-continued their conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“Is she not a cousin of yours, this little angel? I know
-you are akin to that beautiful Marquise, her mother. Oh,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-Malletort, what advantages you possess, and how unconscious
-you seem of them!”</p>
-
-<p>“Advantages!” repeated the Abbé, musing. “Well,
-perhaps you are right. Handsome women are the court-cards
-of the game, if a man knows how to play them. It is
-a grand game, too, and the stakes are well worth winning.
-Yet I sometimes think if I had foreseen in time how entirely
-you must devote body and soul to play it, I might never
-have sat down at all. I could almost envy a boy, like that
-merry page who passed us with my baby-cousin—a boy,
-whose only thought or care is to spend the time gaily now,
-and wear a sword as soon as his beard is grown hereafter.”</p>
-
-<p>“The boy will carry a sword fairly enough,” answered
-Florian; “for he looks like a little adventurer already.
-Who is he? I have remarked him amongst the others for
-a certain bold bearing, that experience and sorrow alone will,
-I fear, be able to tame.”</p>
-
-<p>“It will take a good deal of both to tame any of that
-family,” answered Malletort; “and this young game-chick
-will no doubt prove himself of the same feather as the rest
-of the brood when his spurs are grown. He’s a Hamilton,
-Florian; a Hamilton from the other side of the water, with
-a cross of the wildest blood in France or Europe in his veins.
-You believe the old monkish chronicles—I don’t. They
-will tell you that boy’s direct ancestor went up the breach
-at Acre in front of Cœur de Lion—an Englishman of the
-true pig-headed type, who had sense enough, however, to
-hate his vassal ever after for being a bigger fool than himself.
-On the mother’s side he comes of a race that can
-boast all its sons brave, and its daughters—well, its
-daughters—very much the same as other people’s daughters.
-The result of so much fighting and gasconading being,
-simply, that the elder branch of the family is sadly impoverished,
-while the younger is irretrievably ruined.”</p>
-
-<p>“And this lad?” asked Florian, interested in the boy,
-perhaps because the page’s character was in some respects
-so completely the reverse of his own.</p>
-
-<p>“Is of the younger branch,” continued Malletort, “and
-given over body and soul to the cause of this miserable
-family, whose head died, not half-a-dozen years ago, under<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-the shadow of our grand and gracious monarch, a victim to
-prejudice and indigestion. Well, these younger Hamiltons
-have always made it their boast that they grudged neither
-blood nor treasure for the Stuarts; and the Stuarts, I need
-hardly tell you, Florian, for you read your breviary, requited
-them as men must expect to be requited who put their trust
-in princes—particularly of that dynasty. The elder branch
-wisely took the oaths of allegiance, for the ingratitude of a
-reigning house is less hopeless than that of a dethroned
-family. I believe any one of them would be glad to accept
-office under the gracious and extremely ungraceful lady who
-fills the British throne, established, as I understand she is,
-on so broad a basis, there is but little room for a consort.
-They are scarce likely to obtain their wish. The younger
-branch would scout the idea, enveloped, one and all, in an
-atmosphere of prejudice truly insular, which ignorant people
-call loyalty. This boy’s great-grandfather died in a battle
-fought by Charles I., at a place with an unpronounceable
-name, in the province of ‘Yorkshires.’ His grandfather
-was shot by a platoon of musketeers in his own courtyard,
-under an order signed by the judicious Cromwell; and his
-father was drowned here, in the channel, carrying despatches
-for his king, as he persisted in calling him, under the
-respectable disguise of a smuggler. I believe this boy was
-with him at the time. I know when first he came to Court,
-people pretended that although so young he was an accomplished
-sailor; and I remember his hands were hard and
-dirty, and he always seemed to smell of tar. I will own
-that now, <i>for</i> a page, he is clean, polished, and well dressed.”</p>
-
-<p>Florian’s dark eyes kindled.</p>
-
-<p>“You interest me,” said he; “I love to hear of loyalty.
-It is the reflection of religion upon earth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Precisely,” replied the other. “A shadow of the
-unsubstantial. Well, all his line are loyal enough, and I
-doubt not the boy has been brought up to believe that in the
-world there are men, women, and Stuarts. The fact of his
-being page here, I confess, puzzles me. Lord Stair protested
-against it, I know, but the king would not listen, and used
-his own wise discretion, consenting, however, that the lad
-should drop his family name and be called simply—George.
-So George fulfils the destiny of a page, whatever that may<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-be—as gaudy, as troublesome, and to all appearance as
-useless an item in creation as the dragon-fly.”</p>
-
-<p>“And has the child no relations?” asked Florian; “no
-friends, nobody to whom he belongs? What a position;
-what a fate; what a cruel isolation!”</p>
-
-<p>“He is indeed in that enviable situation which I cannot
-agree with you in thinking merits one grain of pity. You
-and I, Florian, with our education and in our career, should,
-of all people, best appreciate the advantages of perfect
-freedom from those trammels which old women of both
-sexes call the domestic affections.”</p>
-
-<p>“So young, so hopeful, so spirited,” continued Florian,
-speaking rather to himself than his informant, “and to
-have no mother!”</p>
-
-<p>“But he <i>had</i> a mother, I tell you,” replied Malletort,
-“only she died of a broken heart, as women always do
-when a little energy is required to repair their broken
-fortunes. <i>Our</i> mother, my son,” he proceeded, still in
-the same half-mocking, half-impressive tone, “<i>our</i> mother
-is the Church. She provides for us carefully during life,
-and when we die in her embrace, at least affords us decent
-burial and prayers for our welfare hereafter. I tell you,
-Florian, she is the most thoughtful as she is the most
-indulgent of mothers. She offers us opportunity for
-distinction, or allows us shelter and repose according as
-our ambition soars to heaven, or limits itself, as I confess
-mine does, to the affairs of earth. Who shall be found
-exalted above their kind in the next world? (I speak as
-I am taught)—Priests. Who fill the high places in
-this? (I speak as I learn)—Priests. The king’s wisest
-councillors, his ablest financiers, are men of the sober
-garment and the shaven crown; nay, judging from the
-simplicity of his habits, and the austerity of his demeanour,
-I cannot but think that the bravest marshal in our armies is
-only a priest in disguise.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are but two careers worthy of a life-sacrifice,”
-observed Florian, his countenance glowing with enthusiasm,
-“and glory is the aim of each. But who would compare
-the soldier of France with the soldier of Rome?—the banner
-of the Bourbon with the cross of Calvary? How much less
-noble is it to serve earth than heaven?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span></p>
-
-<p>Malletort looked in his young friend’s face as if he thought
-such exalted sentiments could not possibly be real, and
-shrewdly suspected him of covert sarcasm or jest; but
-Florian’s open brow admitted of no misconstruction, and
-the elder man’s features gradually relaxed into the quiet
-expression of amusement, not devoid of pity, with which a
-professor in the swimmer’s art, for instance, watches the
-floundering struggles of a neophyte.</p>
-
-<p>“You are right,” said he, calmly and after a pause;
-“ours is incomparably the better profession of the two,
-and the safer. We risk less, no doubt, and gain more.
-Persecution, in civilised countries at least, is happily all
-the other way. It is extremely profitable to be saints, and
-there is no call for us to become martyrs. I think, Florian,
-we have every reason to be satisfied with our bargain.
-Why, the very ties we sever, the earthly affections we
-resign, are, to my mind, but so many more enforced
-advantages, for which we cannot be too thankful.”</p>
-
-<p>“There would be no merit were there no effort,”
-answered the other. “No self-denial were there nothing
-to give up; but with us it is different. I am proud to
-think we <i>do</i> resign, and cheerfully, all that gives warmth
-and colouring to the hard outlines of an earthly life. Is it
-nothing to forego the triumphs of the camp, the bright
-pageantry, the graceful luxuries of the Court? Is it
-nothing to place yourself at once above and outside the
-pale of those sympathies which form the very existence of
-your fellow-men? More than all, is it nothing, Malletort,”—the
-young man hesitated, blushed, and cast his eyes
-down—“is it nothing to trample out of your heart,
-passions, affections—call them what you will—that seem
-the very mainspring of your being? Is it nothing to deny
-yourself at once and for ever the solace of woman’s companionship
-and the rapture of woman’s love?”</p>
-
-<p>“You declaim well,” replied Malletort, not affecting to
-conceal that he was amused, “and your arguments would
-have even more weight were it not that you are so palpably
-in earnest. This of itself infers error. You will observe,
-my dear Florian, as a general rule, that the reasoner’s
-convictions are strong in direct proportion to the weakness
-of his arguments. But let us go a little deeper into this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-question of celibacy. Let us strip it of its conventional
-treatment, its supposed injustice, its apparent romance.
-To what does it amount? That a priest must not marry—good.
-I repeat, so much the better for the priest. What
-is marriage in the abstract?—The union of persons for the
-continuation of the species in separate and distinct races.
-What is it in the ideal?—The union of souls by an unphilosophical
-and impossible fusion of identity, which
-happily the personality of every human being forbids to
-exist. What is it in reality?—A fetter of oppressive
-weight and inconvenient fabric, only rendered supportable
-from the deadening influence of habit, combined with its
-general adoption by mankind. Look around you into
-families and observe for yourself how it works. The
-woman has discovered all her husband’s evil qualities, of
-which she does not fail to remind him; and were she a
-reflective being, which admits of argument, would wonder
-hourly how she could ever have endured such a mass of
-imperfections. The man bows his head and shrugs his
-shoulders in callous indifference, scorning to analyse the
-disagreeable question, but clear only of one thing—that if
-he were free, no consideration would induce him to place
-his neck again beneath the same yoke. Another—perhaps!
-The same—never! Both have discovered a dissimilarity
-in tastes, habits, and opinions, so remarkable that it seems
-scarcely possible that it should be fortuitous. To
-neither does it occur that each was once the very reflection
-of the other, in thought, word, and deed; and that a
-blessing pronounced by a priest—a few years, nay a few
-months, of unrestricted companionship—have wrought the
-miraculous change. Sometimes there are quarrels, scenes,
-tears, reproaches, recriminations. More often, coldness,
-self-restraint, inward scorn, and the forbearance of a
-repressed disgust. Then is the separation most complete
-of all. Their bodies preserve to each other the
-outward forms of an armed and enforced neutrality, but
-their souls are so far asunder that perhaps, of all in the
-universe, this pair alone could, under no circumstances,
-come together again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sacrilege!” broke in Florian, indignantly. “What
-you say is sacrilege against our very nature! You speak<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-of marriage as if it <i>must</i> be the grave of Love. But at
-least Love has lived. At least the angel has descended and
-been seen of men, even though he touched the mountain
-only to spring upward on his flight again towards the skies.
-He who has really loved, happily or unhappily, married or
-alone, is for that love ever after a wiser, a nobler, and a
-better man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not if he should happen to love a Frenchwoman,”
-observed the other, taking a pinch of snuff. “Thus much I
-will not scruple to say for my countrywomen: their coquetries
-are enough to drive an honest man mad. With regard to
-less civilised nations (mind, I speak not from personal experience
-so much as observation of my kind), I admit that
-for a time, at least, the delusion may possess a charm,
-though the loss must in all cases far exceed the gain. Set
-your affections on a German, for instance, and observe
-carefully, for the experiment is curious, if a dinner with
-the idol does not so disgust you that not a remnant of
-worship is left to be swept away by supper-time. A Pole
-is simply a beautiful barbarian, with more clothing but less
-manner than an Indian squaw. An Italian deafens you
-with her shrill voice, pokes your eye out with her fingers,
-and betrays your inmost secrets to her director, if indeed she
-does not prefer him to you in every respect. An Englishwoman,
-handsome, blonde, silent, and retiring, keeps you
-months in uncertainty while you woo, and when won, believes
-she has a right to possess you body and soul, and becomes,
-from a sheer sentiment of appropriation, the most exacting
-of wives and the most disobliging of mistresses. To make
-love to a Spaniard is a delicate phrase for paying court to a
-tigress. Beautiful, fierce, impulsive—with one leap she is
-in your arms—and then for a word, a look, she will stab
-you, herself, a rival, perhaps all three, without hesitation
-or remorse. Caramba! she considers it a compliment no
-doubt! Yet I tell you, Florian, were I willing to submit
-to such weaknesses, I had rather love any one of these, or
-all of them at once for that matter, than attach myself to a
-Frenchwoman.”</p>
-
-<p>Florian opened his dark eyes wide. This was new
-ground to the young student. These were questions
-more interesting than the principles of Aristotle or the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-experiences of the Saints. He was penetrated, too, with
-that strange admiration which the young entertain for
-familiarity with evil in their elders. The other scanned
-him with half-pitying interest; broke a branch from the
-fragrant lime-tree under which they sat, and proceeded to
-elucidate his theory.</p>
-
-<p>“With all other women,” said Malletort, “you have
-indeed a thousand rivals to out-do; still you know their
-numbers and can calculate their resources; but with the
-Frenchwoman, in addition to these, you have yet another,
-who changes and multiplies himself day by day—who
-assumes a thousand Protean forms, and against whom
-you cannot employ the most efficient weapons—such as
-vanity, gaiety, and love of dissipation, by which the others
-are to be subdued. This enemy is dress—King Chiffon
-is the absolute monarch of these realms. Your mistress
-is gay when you are sad, sarcastic when you are plaintive,
-reserved when you are adventurous. All this is a matter
-of course; but as Monsieur Vauban told the king the
-other day in these gardens, ‘no fortress is stronger than
-its weakest place,’ and every citadel may be carried by a
-<i>coup de main</i>, or reduced by the slower process of blockade.
-But here you have a stronghold within a stronghold; a
-reserve that can neither be tampered with in secret nor
-attacked openly; in brief a rival who owns this incalculable
-advantage, that in all situations and under all circumstances
-he occupies the first place in your mistress’s thoughts.
-Bah!” concluded the Abbé, throwing from him the branch
-which he had stripped of leaves and blossoms, with a
-gesture that seemed thus to dismiss the subject once
-for all; “put a Frenchwoman into what position you
-will, her sympathies indeed may be with her lover, but
-her first consideration is for her dress!”</p>
-
-<p>As the Abbé spoke he observed a group of four persons
-passing the front of the palace, under the windows of the
-king’s dining-saloon. It consisted of little Cerise, her
-mother, Célandine, and the page. They were laughing
-and chatting gaily, George apparently taking his leave of
-the other three. Florian observed a shadow cross the
-Abbé’s face, that disappeared, however, from those obedient
-features quickly as it came; and at the same moment the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-Marquise passed her hand caressingly over the boy’s dark
-curls, while he bent low before her, and seemed to do
-homage to her beauty in the act of bidding her a courteous
-farewell.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br />
-<span class="smaller">TANTARA!</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Year by year a certain stag had been growing fatter and
-fatter in the deep glades and quiet woodlands that surrounded
-Fontainebleau. He was but a pricket when Cerise
-made her daisy-chain in the gardens of Versailles, but each
-succeeding summer he had rubbed the velvet off another
-point on his antlers, and in all the king’s chase was no
-finer head than he carried the day he was to die. Brow,
-bay, and tray, twelve in all, with three in a cup at the summits,
-had been the result of some half-score years passed in
-the security and shelter of a royal forest; nor was the
-lapse of time which had thus brought head and haunch to
-perfection without its effect upon those for whose pastime
-the noble beast must fall.</p>
-
-<p>Imagine, then, a glowing afternoon, the second week in
-August. Not a cloud in the sky, a sun almost tropical in
-its power, but a pure clear air that fanned the brow wherever
-the forest opened into glades, and filled the broad nostrils
-of a dozen large, deep-chested, rich-coloured stag-hounds,
-snuffing and questing busily down a track of arid grass that
-seemed to have checked their steady, well-considered unrelenting
-chase, and brought their wondrous instinct to a
-fault. One rider alone watched their efforts with a preoccupied
-air, yet with the ready glance of an old sportsman.
-He had apparently reached his point of observation before
-the hounds themselves, and far in advance of the rest of the
-chase. His close-fitting blue riding-coat, trimmed with
-gold-lace and turned back with scarlet facings, called a
-“<i>just au corps</i>,” denoted that he was a courtier; but the
-keen eye, the erect figure, the stateliness, even stiffness of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-his bearing, smacked of the old soldier, more, the old
-soldier of France, perhaps the most professional veteran in
-the world.</p>
-
-<p>He was not so engrossed with his own thoughts, however,
-but that his eye gleamed with pleasure when a tan-coloured
-sage, intent on business, threw a square sagacious head
-into the air, proclaiming in full deep notes his discovery of
-the line, and solemn conviction that he was right. The
-horseman swore a good round garrison oath, and cheered
-the hound lustily. A cry of tuneful tongues pealed out to
-swell the harmony. A burst of music from a distant glade
-announced that the stag had passed yet farther on. A
-couple of royal foresters, in blue and red, arrived on foot,
-breathless, with fresh hounds struggling in the leash; and
-a lady on a Spanish barb, attended by a plainly-dressed
-ecclesiastic, came cantering down the glade to rein up at
-the veteran’s side, with a smile of greeting on her face.</p>
-
-<p>“Well met, <i>Monsieur le Prince</i>, once more,” said she,
-flashing a look from her dark eyes, under which, old as he
-was, he lowered his own. “Always the same—always
-successful. In the Court—in the camp—in the ball-room—in
-the field—if you seek the Prince-Marshal, look in the
-most forward post, and you will find him.”</p>
-
-<p>She owed him some reparation for having driven him from
-her side in a fit of ill-humour half an hour before, and this
-was her way of making amends.</p>
-
-<p>“I have won posts in my time, madame,” said the old
-soldier, an expression of displeasure settling once more on
-his high worn features, “and held them, too, without dishonour.
-It is perhaps no disgrace to be worsted by a
-woman, but it is humiliating and unpleasant all the same.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dishonour and disgrace are words that can never be
-coupled with the name of Chateau-Guerrand,” returned the
-lady, smiling sweetly in his face, a process that appeared to
-mollify him considerably. Then she completed his subjection
-by caressing her horse with one hand, while she reined
-him in so sharply with the other, that he rose on his hind-legs
-as if to rear straight on end.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a hard mistress, madame,” said the gentleman,
-looking at the beautiful barb chafing and curveting to
-its bit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It is only to show I <i>am</i> mistress,” she answered in a
-low voice, that seemed to finish the business, for turning to
-her attendant cavalier, who had remained discreetly in the
-background, she signed to him that he might come up and
-break the <i>tête-à-tête</i>, while she added gaily—</p>
-
-<p>“I am as fond of hunting as you are, prince. Hark!
-The stag is still forward. Our poor horses are dying with
-impatience. Let us gallop on together.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise de Montmirail had considerably altered in
-character since she tended the infirmities of her poor old
-husband, or sat in widow’s garments with her pretty child
-on her knee. A few years at the Court of France had
-brought to the surface all the evil of her character, and
-seemed to have stifled in her everything that was good.
-She had lost the advantage of her daughter’s companionship,
-for Cerise (and in this perhaps the Marquise was
-right) had been removed to a distance from the Court and
-capital, to bloom into womanhood in the healthier atmosphere
-of a provincial convent. She missed her darling
-sadly, no doubt, and for the first year or two contented herself
-with the gaieties and distractions common to her companions.
-She encouraged no lover, properly so called, and
-had seldom fewer than three admirers at a time. Nor had
-the king of late taken special notice of her; so she was only
-hated by the other Court ladies with the due hatred to which
-she was entitled from her wealth, beauty, and attractions.</p>
-
-<p>After a while, however, she put in for universal dominion,
-and then of course the outcry raised against her was loud
-and long sustained. She heeded it little; nay, she seemed
-to like it, and bandied sarcasms with her own sex as joyously,
-to all appearance, as she exchanged compliments
-with the other.</p>
-
-<p>She never faltered. She never committed herself. She
-stood on the brink, and never turned giddy nor lost her
-presence of mind. What she required, it seemed, what she
-could not live without, was influence, more or less, but the
-stronger the better, over every male creature that crossed
-her path. When this was gained, she had done with them
-unless they were celebrities, or sufficiently frivolous to be
-as variable as herself. In either of such cases she took considerable
-pains to secure the empire she had won. What<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-she liked best was to elicit an offer of marriage. She was
-supposed to have refused more men, and of more different
-ranks, than any woman in France. For bachelor or widower
-who came within the sphere of her influence there was no
-escape. Sooner or later he must blunder into the net, and
-the longer he fought the more complete and humiliating
-was his eventual defeat. “Nothing,” said the Abbé Malletort,
-“nothing but the certainty of the king’s unacknowledged
-marriage to Madame de Maintenon prevented his
-cousin from obtaining and refusing an offer of the crown of
-France.”</p>
-
-<p>She was beautiful, too, no doubt, which made it so much
-worse—beautiful both with the beauty of the intellect and
-the senses. Not strictly by any rules of art, but from grace
-of outline, richness of colouring, and glowing radiance of
-health. She had all the ways, too, of acknowledged beauty;
-and even people who did not care for her were obliged to
-admit she possessed that strange, indefinite, inexplicable
-charm which every man finds in the woman he loves.</p>
-
-<p>The poor Prince-Marshal, Hector de Chateau-Guerrand,
-had undergone the baptism of fire at sixteen, had fought
-his duels, drank his Burgundy, and lost an estate at lansquenet
-in a night before he was twenty. Since then he
-had commanded the Musketeers of the Guard—divisions of
-the great king’s troops—more than once a French army in
-the field. It was hard to be a woman’s puppet at sixty—with
-wrinkles and rheumatism, and failing health, with
-every pleasure palling, and every pain enhanced. Well, as
-he said himself, “<i>le cœur ne vieillit jamais</i>!” There is
-no fool like an old one. The Prince-Marshal, for that was
-the title by which he was best known, had never been
-ardently attached to anybody but himself till now. We
-need not envy him his condition.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us gallop on together,” said the Marquise; but ere
-they could put their horses in motion a yeoman-pricker,
-armed to the teeth, rode rapidly by, and they waited until
-his Majesty should have passed. Their patience was not
-tried for long. While a fresh burst of horns announced
-another view of the quarry further on, the king’s little
-calèche turned the corner of the alley at speed, and was
-pulled up with considerable dexterity, that its occupant might<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-listen for a moment to determine on his future course.
-Louis sat by himself in a light, narrow carriage, constructed
-to hold but one person. He was drawn by four cream-coloured
-horses, small, well-bred, and active. A child of
-some ten years of age acted postilion to the leaders, but
-the king’s own hand drove the pair at wheel, and guided
-them with all the skill and address of his early manhood.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, he looked very old and feeble when he returned
-the obeisance of the Prince-Marshal and his fair
-companion. Always punctiliously polite, Louis lifted his
-hat to salute the Marquise, but his chin soon sank back on
-his chest, and the momentary gleam died out in his dull and
-weary eyes.</p>
-
-<p>It was obvious his health was failing day by day; he was
-now nearly seventy-seven years of age, and the end could
-not be far off. As he passed on, an armed escort followed
-at a few paces distance. It was headed by a young officer
-of the Grey Musketeers, who saluted the Prince-Marshal
-with considerable deference, and catching the eye of the
-Marquise, half halted his horse; and then, as if thinking
-better of it, urged him on again, the colour rising visibly in
-his brown handsome face.</p>
-
-<p>The phenomenon of a musketeer blushing was not likely
-to be lost on so keen an observer as Madame de Montmirail,
-particularly when the musketeer was young, handsome, and
-an excellent horseman.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is that on guard?” said she, carelessly of course,
-because she really wanted to know. “A captain of the Grey
-Musketeers evidently. And yet I do not remember to have
-seen his face at Court before.”</p>
-
-<p>Now it was not to be expected that a Marshal of France
-should show interest, at a moment’s notice, in so inferior an
-official as a mere captain of musketeers, more particularly
-when riding with a “ladye-love” nearly thirty years younger
-than himself, and of an age far more suitable to the good-looking
-gentleman about whom she made inquiries. Nevertheless,
-the Prince had no objection to enter on any subject
-redounding to his own glorification, particularly in war, and
-it so happened that the officer in question had served as his
-aide-de-camp in an affair that won him a Marshal’s baton;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-so he reduced his horse’s pace forthwith, and plunged into
-the tempting subject.</p>
-
-<p>“A fine young man, madame,” said the Prince-Marshal,
-like a generous old soldier as he was, “and a promising
-officer as ever I had the training of. He was with me while
-a mere cadet in that business when I effected my junction
-with Vendôme at Villa-Viciosa, and I sent him with despatches
-from Brighuega right through Staremberg’s uhlans,
-who ought to have cut him into mince-meat. Even Vendôme
-thanked him in person, and told me himself I must
-apply for the brave child’s promotion.”</p>
-
-<p>Like other ladies, the Marquise suffered her attention to
-wander considerably from these campaigning reminiscences.
-She roused herself, however, enough to answer, not very pertinently—</p>
-
-<p>“What an odious man the Duke is, and how hideous.
-Generally drunk, besides, and always disagreeable!”</p>
-
-<p>The Prince-Marshal looked a little put out, but he did
-not for this allow himself to be diverted from his subject.</p>
-
-<p>“A very <i>fortunate</i> soldier, madame,” he replied, pompously;
-“perhaps more fortunate than really deserving.
-Nevertheless, in war as in love, merit is of less importance
-than success. His Majesty thought well to place the Duke
-over the head of officers whose experience was greater, and
-their services more distinguished. It is not for me to offer
-an opinion. I serve France, madame, and <i>you</i>,” he added,
-with a smile, not too unguarded, because some of his teeth
-were gone, “I am proud to offer my homage to both.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise moved her horse impatiently. The subject
-did not seem to amuse her, but the Prince-Marshal had got
-on a favourite theme, and was not going to abandon it without
-a struggle.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not think, madame,” he proceeded, laying his hand
-confidentially on the barb’s crest—“I do not think I have
-ever explained to you in detail the strategical reasons of my
-forced march on Villa-Viciosa in order to co-operate with
-Vendôme. I have been blamed in military circles for evacuating
-Brighuega after taking it, and abandoning the position
-I held at the bridge the day before the action, which I
-had caused to be strengthened during the night. Now there
-is much to be urged on both sides regarding this movement,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-and I will endeavour to make clear to you the arguments for
-and against the tactics I thought it my duty to adopt. In
-the first place, you must bear in mind that the enemy’s
-change of front on the previous morning, which was unexpected
-by us, and for which Staremberg had six cogent
-reasons, being as follows―”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise looked round to her other cavalier in despair;
-but no assistance was to be expected from the cynical
-Abbé—for it was Malletort in attendance, as usual, on his
-cousin.</p>
-
-<p>The Prince-Marshal was, doubtless, about to recount the
-dispositions and manœuvres of three armies seriatim, with
-his own advice and opinions thereon, when relief came to
-his listener from a quarter in which she least expected it.</p>
-
-<p>She was preparing herself to endure for the hundredth
-time the oft-told tale, when her horse started, snorted,
-trembled violently, and attempted to wheel round. In
-another instant an animal half as big as itself leaped
-leisurely into the glade, and went lurching down the dry
-sunny vista as if in utter disregard and contempt of its
-pursuers.</p>
-
-<p>The stag had been turned back at several points by the
-horns of the foresters, who thus melodiously greeted every
-appearance of their quarry. He was beginning to think
-some distant refuge would be safer and more agreeable;
-also his instinct told him that the scent would improve while
-he grew warmer, and that his noisy pursuers would track
-him more and more unerringly as the sun went down.</p>
-
-<p>Already he felt the inconvenience of those fat haunches
-and that broad russet back he carried so magnificently;
-already he heard the deep-mouthed chorus chiming nearer
-and nearer, full, musical, and measured, like a death-bell.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>En avant!</i>” exclaimed Madame de Montmirail, as the
-stag, swerving from a stray hound, stretched into an honest,
-undisguised gallop down the glade, followed by the straggler
-at its utmost speed, labouring, over-paced, distressed, but
-rolling on, mute, resolute, and faithful to the line. The love
-of rapid motion, inseparable from health, energy, and high
-spirits, was strong in the Marquise. Her barb, in virtue of
-his blood, possessed pace and endurance; his mistress called
-on him to prove both, while she sped along on the line of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-chase, accompanied by several of the hounds, as they
-straggled up in twos and threes, and followed by most of
-the equestrians.</p>
-
-<p>Thus they reached the verge of the forest, and here stood
-the king’s calèche drawn up, his Majesty signing to them
-feebly yet earnestly that the stag was away over the
-plain.</p>
-
-<p>Great was now the confusion at so exciting and so unexpected
-an event. The foresters, with but little breath to
-spare, managed to raise a final flourish on their horns.
-The yeoman-prickers spurred their horses with a vigour
-more energetic than judicious; the hounds, collecting as it
-seemed from every quarter of the forest, were already stringing,
-one after another, over the dusty plain. The king, too
-feeble to continue the chase, yet anxious to know its result,
-whispered a few words to his officer of the guard, and the
-Musketeer, starting like an arrow from a bow, sped away
-after the hounds with some half-dozen of the keenest equestrians,
-amongst whom were the Marquise and the Prince-Marshal.
-Many of the courtiers, including the Abbé,
-seemed to think it disloyal thus to turn their backs on his
-Majesty, and gathered into a cluster to watch with interjections
-of interest and delight the pageant of the fast-receding
-chase. The far horizon was bounded by another range of
-woods, and that shelter the stag seemed resolved to reach.
-The intervening ground was a vast undulating plain, crossed
-apparently by no obstacles to hounds or horsemen, and
-varied only by a few lines of poplars and a <i>paved</i> high-road
-to the nearest market-town.</p>
-
-<p>The stag then made direct for this road, but long ere he
-could reach it, the chase had become so severe that many
-of the hounds dropped off one by one; and of the horses,
-only those ridden by the Marquise, the Prince-Marshal, and
-the Grey Musketeer, were able to keep up the appearance of
-a gallop.</p>
-
-<p>Presently these successful riders drew near enough to distinguish
-clearly the object of their pursuit. The Musketeer
-was in advance of the others, who galloped on abreast, every
-nerve at its highest strain, and too preoccupied to speak a
-syllable.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly a dip in the ground hid the stag from sight;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-then he appeared again on the opposite rise, looking darker,
-larger, and fresher than before.</p>
-
-<p>The Musketeer turned round and pointed towards the
-hollow in front. In a few more strides his followers perceived
-a fringe of alders serpentining between the two
-declivities. Madame de Montmirail’s dark eyes flashed,
-and she urged her barb to yet greater exertions.</p>
-
-<p>The Musketeer sat back in his saddle, and seemed to
-collect his horse’s energies for an effort. There was an
-increase of speed, a spring, a stagger, and he was over the
-rivulet that stole deep and cool and shining between the
-alders.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise followed his horse’s footmarks to an inch,
-and though the barb threw his head up wildly, and galloped
-furiously at it, he too cleared the chasm and reached the
-other side in safety.</p>
-
-<p>The Prince-Marshal’s old blood was warmed up now, and
-he flew along, feeling as he used in the days of the duels,
-and the Burgundy, and the lansquenet. He shouted and
-spurred his steed, urging it with hand and voice and leg,
-but the highly-broken and well-trained animal felt its
-powers failing, and persistently declined to attempt the feat
-it had seen the others accomplish; so the Prince-Marshal
-was forced to discontinue the chase and remain on the safe
-side of the rubicon, whence he turned his horse unwillingly
-homewards, heated, angry, and swearing many strange oaths
-in different languages.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the other two galloped on, the Marquise,
-though she spared no effort, finding herself unable to overtake
-the captain of Grey Musketeers.</p>
-
-<p>All at once he stopped short at a clump of willows, through
-which the chase had disappeared, and jumping off his horse,
-left the panting beast to its own devices. When she
-reached the trees, and looked down into the hollow below,
-she perceived the stag up to its chest in a bright, shallow
-pool, at bay, and surrounded by the eager though exhausted
-hounds.</p>
-
-<p>The Musketeer had drawn his <i>couteau de chasse</i>, and was
-already knee-deep in the water, but hearing her approach,
-turned back, and, taking his hat off, with a low obeisance,
-offered her the handle of his weapon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was the customary form when a lady happened to be
-present on such an occasion, though, as now, the compliment
-was almost always declined.</p>
-
-<p>He had scarcely gone in and given the <i>coup de grace</i>,
-which he did like an accomplished sportsman, before some
-of the yeomen-prickers and other attendants came up, so
-that the disembowelling and other obsequies were performed
-with proper ceremony. Long, however, ere these had been
-concluded the Marquise was riding her tired horse slowly
-homeward through the still, sweet autumn evening, not the
-least disturbed that she had lost the Abbé and the rest of
-her escort, but ruminating, pleasantly and languidly, as her
-blood cooled down, on the excitement of the chase and the
-events of the day.</p>
-
-<p>She watched the sunset reddening and fading on the
-distant woods; the haze of twilight gradually softening, and
-blurring and veiling the surrounding landscape; the curved
-edge of the young moon peering over the trees, and the
-evening-star hanging, like a golden lamp, against the purple
-curtain of the sky.</p>
-
-<p>With head bent down, loose reins, and tired hands resting
-on her lap, Madame de Montmirail pondered on many
-matters as the night began to fall.</p>
-
-<p>She wondered at the Abbé’s want of enterprise, at the
-Prince-Marshal’s activity—if the first could have yet reached
-home, and whether the second, with his rheumatism, was
-not likely to spend a night in the woods.</p>
-
-<p>She wondered at the provoking cynicism of the one and
-the extraordinary depressive powers possessed by the other;
-more than all, how she could for so long have supported the
-attentions of both.</p>
-
-<p>She wondered what would have happened if the barb had
-fallen short at his leap; whether the Musketeer would have
-stopped in his headlong course to pity and tend her, and
-rest her head upon his knee, inclining to the belief that he
-would have been very glad to have the opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>Then she wondered what it was about this man’s face
-that haunted her memory, and where she could have seen
-those bold keen eyes before.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE USHER OF THE BLACK ROD</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>For the courtiers of <i>Louis le Grand</i> there was no such
-thing as hunger or thirst, want of appetite, heat, cold,
-lassitude, depression, or fatigue. If he chose they should
-accompany him on long journeys, in crowded carriages, over
-bad roads, they were expected, nevertheless, to appear fresh,
-well-dressed, exuberant in spirits, inclined to eat or content
-to starve, unconscious of sun and wind; above all, ready to
-agree with his Majesty upon every subject at a moment’s
-notice. Ladies enjoyed in this respect no advantage over
-gentlemen. Though a fair amazon had been hunting the
-stag all day, she would be required to appear just the same
-in grand Court toilet at night; to take her place at lansquenet;
-to be present at the royal concerts, twenty fiddles
-playing a heavy opera of Cavalli right through; or, perhaps,
-only to assist in lining the great gallery, which the king
-traversed on his way to supper. Everything must yield to
-the lightest whim of royalty, and no more characteristic
-reply was ever made to the arbitrary descendant of St. Louis
-than that of the eccentric Cardinal Bonzi, to whom the king
-complained one day at dinner that he had no teeth.
-“Teeth, sire!” replied the astute churchman, showing,
-while he spoke, a strong, even well-polished row of his own.
-“Why, who <i>has</i> any teeth?”</p>
-
-<p>His Majesty, however, like mortals of inferior rank, did
-not touch on the accomplishment of his seventy-seventh
-year without sustaining many of the complaints and inconveniences
-of old age. For some time past not only had his
-teeth failed, but his digestion, despite of the regimen of iced<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-fruits and sweetmeats, on which he was put by his physician
-Fagon, became unequal to its task. Everybody but himself
-and his doctor perceived the rapidity with which a change
-was approaching. In vain they swaddled him up in feather-pillows
-at night, to draw the gout from him through the
-pores of his skin; in vain they administered sage, veronica,
-cassia, and Jesuit-bark between meals, while they limited
-his potations to a little weak Burgundy and water, thereby
-affording some amusement to those present from the wry
-faces made by foreign lords and grandees who were curious
-to taste the king’s beverage. In vain they made him begin
-dinner with mulberries, and melons, and rotten figs, and
-strong soups, and salads. There is but one remedy for old
-age, and it is only to be found in the pharmacopœia, at the
-last chapter of the book. To that remedy the king was fast
-approaching—and yet hunting, fiddling, dining, promenades,
-concerts, and the whole round of empty Court gaiety went
-on all the same.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise de Montmirail returned to her apartments
-at the palace with but little time to spare. It wanted but
-one hour from the king’s supper, and she must attend with
-the other ladies of the Court, punctual as clockwork,
-directly the folding-doors opened into the gallery, and his
-Majesty, in an enormous wig, should totter in at one end to
-totter out again at the other. Nevertheless, a good deal of
-decoration can be done in sixty minutes, when a lady,
-young and beautiful, is assisted by an attendant whose
-taste becomes chastened and her activity quickened by the
-superintendence of four distinct toilets every day. So the
-Marquise and Célandine between them had put the finishing
-touches to their great work within the appointed time. The
-former was going through a gratifying revision of the whole
-at her looking-glass, and the latter was applying to her
-mistress’s handkerchief that perfume of orange-flowers which
-alone his Majesty could endure, when a loud knocking at
-the outer door of the apartment suspended the operations
-of each, bringing an additional colour to the Marquise’s
-cheek, and a cloud of displeasure on the quadroon’s
-brow.</p>
-
-<p>“See what it is Célandine,” said the former, calmly,
-wondering in her heart, though it seemed absurd, whether<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-this disturbance could relate in any manner to the previous
-events of the day.</p>
-
-<p>“It is the Abbé, I’ll be bound,” muttered Célandine,
-proceeding to do as she was bid; adding, sulkily, though
-below her breath, “He might knock there till his knuckles
-were sore if I was mistress instead of maid!”</p>
-
-<p>It was the Abbé, sure enough, in plain attire, as became
-his profession; but with an expression of hope and elation
-on his brow which even his perfect self-command seemed
-unable to conceal.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon, madame!” said he, standing, hat in hand, on
-the threshold; “I was in attendance to conduct you to the
-gallery, as usual, when the intelligence that reached me,
-and, indeed, the confusion I myself witnessed, induced me to
-take the liberty of waiting on you at once.”</p>
-
-<p>“No great liberty,” answered the Marquise, smiling,
-“seeing that I must have encountered you, at any rate,
-within three paces of my door. But what is this alarming
-news, my cousin, that agitates even your imperturbable
-front? Nothing wrong with the barb, I hope!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not so bad as that, madame,” replied the Abbé, who
-was rapidly recovering his calmness. “It is only a matter
-affecting his Majesty. I have just learned the king is taken
-seriously ill. Fagon crossed the courtyard five minutes
-ago. Worse than that, Père Tellier has been sent for.”</p>
-
-<p>“Père Tellier!” repeated the Marquise. “The king’s
-confessor! Then the attack is dangerous?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is no doubt that his Majesty’s state is precarious
-in the extreme,” answered the Abbé, seriously. “It is a
-severe and exhausting malady from which he suffers, and at
-his time of life we may anticipate the gravest results.
-Madame, I must be in Paris by break of day to-morrow, to
-wait on the Duke of Orleans.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him with a half-contemptuous indulgence,
-and laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“So soon?” said she. “Nay, then, I am satisfied you
-think the worst. My cousin, you are wise in your generation,
-no doubt; and it would be a sudden blow, indeed, that
-should fall and find you unprepared. Nevertheless, is not
-this haste indecent? Worse; is it not ill-judged? The
-king has a wonderful constitution; Fagon is a cautious<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-physician. His Majesty may recover in spite of the
-doctor.”</p>
-
-<p>“And sin again in spite of his confessor,” added the
-Abbé. “Nevertheless, I think both have foreseen a crisis
-for some time past. Fagon has called in Marechal to help
-him; and Père Tellier has been asking for every vacant
-benefice during the last three weeks.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was very polite of you, my cousin,” observed the
-Marquise, after a pause, “to come and tell me at once;
-though the only immediate result of all this confusion to
-<i>me</i> is, that I suppose I may undress and go to bed. I have
-had a fatiguing day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon again,” answered the Abbé. “I fear you must
-attend as usual in the gallery; and, indeed, it would be a
-thousand pities that such a toilette should be wasted, for
-you look beautiful, and are charmingly dressed. You know,
-besides, that only the king’s own order can rescind the daily
-regulations for the Court.”</p>
-
-<p>“We had better proceed, then,” said Madame de
-Montmirail. “Célandine has revised me thoroughly, and
-the sooner I go the sooner I shall get it over. Believe me,
-it would require some excitement stronger than common to
-keep me awake to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“One instant, madame,” replied the Abbé. “I will not
-detain you longer; but at a crisis like the present what I
-have to say merits your most earnest attention. In the
-first place, will you permit Célandine to examine if the
-outer door be shut?”</p>
-
-<p>The scowl on the quadroon’s brow grew deeper, while, in
-obedience to a sign from her mistress, she retired into the
-outer chamber. The Marquise seated herself on a couch
-near the toilet-table, spreading her skirts out carefully, lest
-their freshness might sustain damage in that position, and
-prepared to receive her cousin’s confidences, as he stood
-near, cool, polished, smiling, but obviously repressing, with
-an effort, the strong agitation under which he laboured.</p>
-
-<p>While she sat in that graceful attitude, her head turned
-up towards his face, one beautifully moulded arm and hand
-resting in her lap, the other yet ungloved holding a closed
-fan against her lips, it may have occurred to the Abbé that
-so many charms of person and manner might be applied to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-a worthier purpose than the furtherance of Court intrigues
-or the advancement of any one man’s ambition. It may
-even have occurred to him, though doubtless if it did so the
-thought had to be stifled as it rose, that it would be no
-unpleasant task, however difficult, to woo and win and wear
-such beauty for himself and his own happiness; and that
-to be his cousin’s favoured lover was a more enviable
-position than could be afforded by comptroller’s wand, or
-cardinal’s cap, or minister’s portfolio. For a moment his
-rugged features softened like a clearing landscape under a
-gleam of sun, while he looked on her and basked, as it
-were, in the radiance of her beauty, ere he turned back to
-the chill, shadowy labyrinth of deceit in which he spent his
-life.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Montmirail’s exterior was of that sparkling
-kind which, like the diamond, is enhanced by the richness
-of its setting. In full Court toilette as he saw her now, few
-women would have cared to enter the lists as her rivals.
-The dress she wore was of pale yellow satin, displaying,
-indeed, with considerable liberality, her graceful neck and
-shoulders, glowing in the warm tints of a brunette. It
-fitted close to her well-turned bust, spreading into an enormous
-volume of skirts below the waist, overlaid by a delicate
-fabric of black lace, and looped up here and there in strings
-of pearls. Her waving hair, black and glossy, was turned
-back from a low, broad forehead, and gathered behind her
-ears into a shining mass, from which a ringlet or two escaped,
-smooth and elastic, to coil, snake-like, on her bosom. One
-row of large pearls encircled her neck, and one bracelet of
-diamonds and emeralds clung to her ungloved arm. Other
-ornaments she had none, though an open dressing-case on
-the toilet-table flashed and glittered like a jeweller’s shop.</p>
-
-<p>And now I have only made an inventory of her dress after
-all. How can I hope to convey an idea of her face? How
-is it possible to describe that which constitutes a woman’s
-loveliness? that subtle influence which, though it generally
-accompanies harmony of colouring and symmetry of feature,
-is by no means the result of these advantages; nay, often
-exists without them, and seems in all cases independent of
-their aid. I will only say of her charms, that Madame de
-Montmirail was already past thirty, and nine men out of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-every ten in the circle of her acquaintance were more or less
-in love with her.</p>
-
-<p>She had a beautiful foot, besides. It was peeping out now
-from beneath her dress. The Abbé’s eyes unconsciously
-fixed themselves on the small white satin shoe, as he proceeded
-with his confidences.</p>
-
-<p>“It is good to be prepared, my cousin,” said he, in a
-low, hurried voice, very different from his usual easy, careless
-tone. “Everything will now be changed, if, as I
-expect, the indisposition of to-night is but the beginning of
-the end. You know my situation; you know my hopes; you
-know the difficulties I have had to contend with. The king’s
-suspicions, the courtiers’ jealousy, the imprudence of my
-patron himself; and you know, too, that through good and
-evil I have always stood firm by the Duke of Orleans. It
-is evident that in a few days he will be the most powerful
-man in France.”</p>
-
-<p>“Afterwards?” asked the Marquise, apparently unmoved
-by the contingency.</p>
-
-<p>“Afterwards!” repeated Malletort, almost with indignation.
-“Do you not see the career that opens itself before
-us all? Who is best acquainted with the Duke’s early
-history?—Abbé Malletort. Who is the Duke bound to
-serve before the whole world? Not from gratitude—bah!
-that is a thing of course—but from motives of the clearest
-self-interest?—Abbé Malletort. In brief, in whom does
-he confide?—In Abbé Malletort. And to whom does
-the Abbé lay bare his hopes, his aspirations, his ambition?—To
-whom but to his sweet cousin, Madame de Montmirail?”</p>
-
-<p>“And what would you have me do?” asked the Marquise,
-yawning, while she carelessly fastened the bracelet
-on her arm.</p>
-
-<p>“I would have you guard your lips with a clasp of iron,”
-answered the Abbé. “I would have you keep watch to-night
-and to-morrow, and every day till the end comes—on
-your words, your looks, your gestures—the very trimmings
-and colour of the dresses you wear. Be polite to all; but
-familiar, cordial, even communicative with none. In brief,
-have no friends, no enemies, no dislikes, no predilections,
-till the old state of affairs is ended and the new begun.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I think you can trust me,” answered the Marquise.
-“My feelings are little likely to betray me into indiscretion;
-and though I have plenty of lovers at Court, I do not imagine
-I have many friends.”</p>
-
-<p>She spoke wearily, and finished with something like a
-sigh.</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé’s eyes sparkled. “I <i>know</i> I can!” said he.
-“My cousin has none of the weaknesses of her sex, and all
-its beauty for her own share.” Then he opened the door
-and spoke loud enough for Célandine to hear. “We must
-have mademoiselle back from her pension. She is old
-enough now to take her place as an ornament to society
-and the Court.”</p>
-
-<p>Malletort understood true economy, and he knew that this
-bribe, while it cost him nothing, would purchase favour with
-the quadroon, whose dislike he had observed and resolved
-to efface.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Montmirail bowed and took his arm. It was
-now high time they were both in attendance on his Majesty,
-should the concert fixed for that night be permitted to take
-place.</p>
-
-<p>As they walked through the corridor, however, a great
-confusion was heard in the gallery they were about to enter.
-There was a scuffling of feet, a murmur of agitated voices
-suppressed to whispers, and the smothered sobs of women,
-denoting some sad catastrophe. When the door opened,
-the musicians crowded hurriedly out, carrying with them
-their instruments, and tumultuously impeding the progress
-of a spare grave man in a priest’s dress, who pushed his
-way through, with every appearance of anxiety and dismay.</p>
-
-<p>It was Père Tellier, the king’s confessor, summoned in
-mortal haste to the bedside of his dying master.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise and the Abbé had that day looked their
-last upon the face of <i>Louis le Grand</i>. Already, through
-pale attendants and anxious courtiers, through valets and
-chamberlains and musketeers of the guard, might be seen
-approaching the real Usher of the Black Rod.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br />
-<span class="smaller">A JESUIT’S TASK</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Of all armies on earth, there is none with a discipline so
-perfect as exists in the ranks of the Jesuits. No similar
-brotherhood embraces so extensive a scheme; no society
-spreads its ramifications so wide and deep. The soldier
-who enlists under that black banner abandons at once and
-for ever his own affections, his own opinions, his own
-responsibilities; nay, his very identity becomes fused in the
-general organisation of his order. Florian de St. Croix,
-with his warm, impulsive disposition, his tendency to self-sacrifice,
-and his romantic temperament, had better have
-hanged round his neck any other millstone than this.</p>
-
-<p>As he walked rapidly down a long perspective of paved
-road, between two lofty rows of poplars, his head bent low,
-his hands clenched, his lips muttering, and his swift unequal
-strides denoting both impetuosity and agitation, he
-seemed strangely and sadly altered from the bright enthusiastic
-youth who sat with Abbé Malletort under the limes
-at Versailles.</p>
-
-<p>His very name had been put off, with every other
-association that could connect the past life of the layman
-with the future labours of the priest. He was known as
-Brother Ambrose now in the muster-rolls of the order;
-though, out of it, he was still addressed as Florian by his
-former friends. It was supposed, perhaps, in the wisdom
-of his superiors, that the devoted knight could fight best
-under a plain shield on which no achievements might ever
-be emblazoned, but which, in theory at least, was to be
-preserved pure and stainless, until he was carried home on
-it from his last field.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span></p>
-
-<p>For Florian, indeed, the battle had already commenced.
-He was fighting it now, fiercely, under that smiling summer
-sky, between those fragrant meadows, fringed with flowering
-hedges, amongst the clustering orchards and smiling
-farms, the green nooks, the gleaming waters, and the free,
-fresh range of wooded hill and dale in pleasant Normandy.
-Little thought the buxom peasant-woman, with her clean
-white cap, long earrings, and handsome weather-beaten
-face, as she crossed herself in passing, and humbly received
-the muttered benediction—how much of war was in his
-breast who proffered peace to her and hers; or the
-prosperous farmer riding by on his stamping grey stallion,
-with tail tied up, broad, well-fed back, huge brass-bound
-saddle, and red-fronted bridle—how enviable was his own
-contented ignorance compared with the learning and
-imagination and aspirations running riot in the brain
-of that wan hurrying priest. The fat curé, thinking
-of his dinner, his duties, and the stone-fruit ripening on his
-wall, greeted him with professional friendliness, tempered by
-profound respect; for in his person he beheld the principle
-of self-devotion which constitutes the advance, the vanguard,
-the very forlorn hope of an army in which he felt
-himself a mere suttler or camp-follower at the best; but
-his sleep that afternoon over a bottle of light wine in his
-leafy arbour would have been none the sounder could he
-have known the horror of doubt and darkness that weighed
-like lead on his brother’s spirit—the fears, the self-reproaches,
-the anxieties that tore at his brother’s heart.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the same sun was shining on them all; the same
-glorious landscape of wood and water, waving corn and
-laughing upland—gold, and silver, and blue, and green,
-and purple—spread out for their enjoyment; the same
-wild-flowers blooming, the same wild-birds carolling, to
-delight their senses; the same heaven looking down in
-tender pity on the wilful blindness and reckless self-torture
-of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>Florian had entered the order, believing that in so
-doing he adopted the noblest career of chivalry below,
-to end in the proudest triumph of victory above. Like
-the crusaders of the Middle Ages, he turned to his profession,
-and beheld in it a means of ambition, excitement,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-influence over his fellow-men, purchased—not at the
-sacrifice—but in the salvation of his soul. Like them,
-he was to have the best of it both for earth and heaven;
-like them, he was to submit to labour, privation, all the
-harassing exigencies of warfare; but, like them, he was
-upheld by the consciousness of power which springs from
-discipline and cohesion, by an unselfish sentiment of professional
-pride, not more peculiar to the soldier than the
-priest.</p>
-
-<p>He took the vows of obedience—the blind, unreasoning,
-unhesitating obedience exacted by the order—with a thrill
-of exultation. As a Jesuit, he must henceforth know
-neither friendship nor affection; neither sentiment, passion,
-nor self-regard. His brain must be always clear, his eye
-keen, his hand ready; but brain must think, eye see, and
-hand strike only in conformity with the will of a superior.
-He was to preserve every faculty of nature except volition.
-He was to become a galvanised corpse rather than a living
-man.</p>
-
-<p>And now these hideous vows, this impossible obedience,
-must be put to the test. Like the demoniacs of old, he
-writhed in torture as he walked. It seemed that the evil
-spirit rent and tore the man because it could not come out
-of him.</p>
-
-<p>He was hurrying on foot to the convent of our Lady of
-Succour. He knew every stone in that paved road as he
-knew the fingers on his own hand. His superior had lately
-installed him confessor to the establishment; <i>him</i>, young,
-handsome, impressionable, with his dark eyes and his
-loving smile. There was another confessor, too, a stout
-old man, with a rosy face and a kind heart, altogether, as it
-would seem, a far more judicious appointment; but Florian’s
-duties brought him little in contact with the nuns and lay
-amongst the young ladies, several of whom were daughters
-of noble families, receiving their education in a pension
-attached to the convent.</p>
-
-<p>Of these, Brother Ambrose had been specially enjoined
-to turn his attention to Mademoiselle de Montmirail; to
-obtain all the influence in his power over the frank, innocent
-mind of that engaging girl; to win her affections as much as
-possible from earthly vanities, to which, as she was on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-verge of womanhood, it is probable she was not disinclined;
-and to lead her gradually into a train of thought that
-might at last bring her home to the bosom of the Church as
-a nun. That Church would at the same time protect her from
-temptation, by relieving her of the earthly dross with which
-she would be encumbered, and which would pass into its
-holy keeping the day the heiress should assume the black
-veil.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the reversion of her mother’s wealth, she would
-inherit considerable property of her own when she came of
-age. Had it been otherwise, it is possible the same
-interest might not have been shown for the insurance of
-her salvation, and Brother Ambrose might have been
-making fires of camel’s dung in Tartary, or bearing
-witness by martyrdom in Morocco, instead of hurrying
-through the shade of those quivering poplars in homely,
-happy Normandy.</p>
-
-<p>But as he approached the convent of our Lady of Succour,
-Brother Ambrose—or Florian, as we shall call him for the
-present—reduced his walk to a much slower step, and
-became conscious of a hot feeling about his eyes, a cold
-moisture in the palms of his hands, that had no connection
-with theology, polemics, or the usual duties of a priest.
-There are proverbs used in the world, such as “Tit-for-tat;”
-“The biter bit;” “Go for wool, and come back
-shorn,” which are applicable to ecclesiastics as to laymen.
-It is no safer to play with edged tools in a convent than in a
-ball-room, and it is a matter of the merest hazard who shall
-get the best of an encounter in which the talents and education
-of a clever but susceptible man are pitted against the
-bright looks and fresh roses of girlhood at eighteen.</p>
-
-<p>Florian had been enjoined to use every effort for the
-subjugation of Mademoiselle de Montmirail. He was to
-be restricted by no considerations such as hamper the proceedings
-of ordinary minds, for was not this one of the
-fundamental principles of his order—“It is lawful to do
-evil that good may come”? He had not, indeed,
-swallowed this maxim without considerable repulsion, so
-utterly at variance, as it seemed, not only with reason, but
-with that instinctive sentiment of right which is often a
-surer guide than even reason itself; but he had been convinced<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-against his will by those under whose feet he had
-chosen to place his neck, and had at last brought his
-opinions, if not his feelings, to the necessary state of
-control. A few interviews with Mademoiselle de Montmirail
-in the cool dark convent parlour—a few calm, still
-evenings in the quiet convent garden, under the shade of
-the trellised beeches, amidst the fragrance of the flower-beds
-and the heavy perfume of the syringa, waiting for the
-rustle of that white dress along the gravel-walk—a few
-questions and misgivings from the penitent—a few phrases
-of advice or encouragement from the priest—and Florian
-found himself wildly, hopelessly, wickedly in love with the
-girl whom it was his duty, his sacred duty on which his
-soul’s salvation depended, to persuade, or lure, or force
-into a cloister. These things come by degrees. No man
-can complain that timely warning is not given him; yet
-the steps are so gradual, so easy, so imperceptible, by
-which he descends into the pleasant flood, that it is only
-when his footing is lost he becomes really aware of danger,
-or knows he is sentenced, and must swim about in it till he
-drowns.</p>
-
-<p>Florian’s task was to obtain influence over the girl.
-Thus he salved his conscience till it was too late, and
-thus excused himself for the eagerness with which he
-caught every glance of her eye and drank in every
-tone of her voice. It was only when his own looks fell
-before hers, when he trembled and turned pale at the
-sound of her step—when her image—serene, and fair, and
-gracious—rose between him and the Cross at which he
-knelt, that he knew his peril, his weakness and his
-sin.</p>
-
-<p>But it was too late then; though he wrestled with the
-phantom, it overcame him time by time. Prostrate,
-bleeding, vanquished, he would confess with something of
-the bitterness of spirit and plaintive proud self-sacrifice
-of a lost angel, that he had given his soul to Cerise and
-did not grudge her the gift.</p>
-
-<p>Not even though she refused to love him in return.
-Perhaps, after all, this was the poisoned edge of the
-weapon—the bitter drop in the cup; and yet had it
-been otherwise, it may be the young Jesuit could have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
-found strength to conquer his infatuation, self-sacrifice, to
-give up freely that which was freely his own.</p>
-
-<p>It was not so, however. The very innocence that
-guarded the girl, while it lured him irresistibly to destruction,
-was the most insurmountable barrier in his path;
-and so he hovered on, hoping that which he dared not
-realise—wishing for all he felt he would yet be unwilling
-to accept; striving for a prize unspeakably precious, though,
-perhaps I should say, <i>because</i> impossible of attainment,
-and which, even if he could win it, he might not wear it so
-much as an hour. No wonder his heart beat and his
-breath came quick, while he passed with stealthy gait
-into the convent garden, a pitfall for the feet that walked
-in innocence—a black sheep in a stainless flock—a leper
-where all the rest were clean.</p>
-
-<p>But Cerise, radiant in her white dress, crossed the sunny
-lawn and came down the accustomed path with more than
-their usual light shining in her blue eyes, with a fresher
-colour than common on her soft young cheeks. To him
-she had never looked so beautiful, so womanly, so attractive.
-The struggle had been very fierce during his solitary walk;
-the defeat was flagrant in proportion. He ought to have
-known a bitter disappointment must be in store to balance
-the moment of rapture in which he became conscious of
-her approach. Some emanation seemed to glorify the air
-all around her, and to warn him of her presence long before
-she came. To the lady-superior of the convent, to her
-elders and instructors, Mademoiselle de Montmirail was
-nothing more than a well-grown damsel, with good eyes
-and hair, neither more nor less frivolous and troublesome
-than her fellows, with much room for improvement in the
-matters of education, music, manners, and deportment;
-but to the young Jesuit she was simply—an angel.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise held both hands out to her director, with a greeting
-so frank and cordial that it should have undeceived him
-on the spot. The lady-superior, from her shaded windows,
-might or might not be a witness to their interview, and there
-is no retreat perhaps of so much seclusion, yet so little
-privacy, as a convent garden; but Cerise did not care though
-nuns and lay-sisters and all overlooked her every gesture
-and overheard every word she spoke.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I am so pleased!” she burst out, clapping her hands,
-as soon as he released them. “Wish me joy, good father!
-I have such happy news! My dear kind mamma! And
-she writes to me herself! I knew the silk that fastened it
-even before I saw her hand on the cover. Such good news!
-Oh, I am so pleased! so pleased!”</p>
-
-<p>She would have danced for pure joy had she not remembered
-she was nearly eighteen. Also perhaps—for a girl’s
-heart is very pitiful—she may have had some faint shadowy
-conception that the news so delightful to herself would be
-less welcome to her companion.</p>
-
-<p>He was looking at her with the admiration in his heart
-shining out of his deep dark eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“You have not told me what your good news is, my
-daughter,” he observed, in a tone that made her glance into
-and away from his face, but that sobered the effervescence
-of her gaiety like a charm.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a long letter from mamma!” she said, “and a
-whole month before I expected one. Judge if that is not
-charming. But, better still, I am to go back to her very
-soon. I am to live with her at the Hôtel Montmirail. She
-is fitting up my apartment already. I am to quit the convent
-when my quarter is out!”</p>
-
-<p>He knew it was coming. There is always consciousness
-of a blow for a moment before it falls.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you have but a few more days to remain in Normandy,”
-replied the young priest; and again the change in
-his voice arrested her attention. “My daughter, will you
-not regret the happy hours you have spent here, the quiet,
-the repose of the convent, and—and—the loving friends you
-leave behind?”</p>
-
-<p>He glanced round while he spoke, and thought how
-different the white walls, the drooping branches, the lawn,
-the flower-beds, and the walk beneath the beeches would
-look when she was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I shall never cease to love all those I have
-known here,” she answered; and her eye met his own fearlessly,
-while there was no tinge of sorrow such as he would
-have liked to detect in her voice. “But I am going home,
-do you see! home to my dear mamma; and I shall be in
-Paris, and assist at operas, and balls, and fêtes. My father!
-I fear, I shall like it—oh! so much!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span></p>
-
-<p>There remained little time for further explanations. The
-refectory bell was ringing, and Cerise must hurry in and
-present herself for her ration of fruit and chocolate; to which
-refreshment, indeed, she seemed more than usually inclined.
-Neither her surprise nor her feelings had taken away her
-appetite, and she received her director’s benediction with a
-humility respectful, edifying, and filial, as if he had been her
-grandfather.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall perhaps not visit you at the convent again, my
-daughter,” he had said, revolving in his own mind a thousand
-schemes, a thousand impossibilities, tinged alike with fierce,
-bitter disappointment; and to this she had made answer
-meekly—</p>
-
-<p>“But you will think of me very often, my father; and, oh,
-remember me, I entreat of you, in your prayers!”</p>
-
-<p>Then Florian knew that the edifice he had taken such
-pains to rear was crumbling away before his eyes, because,
-in his anxiety to build it for his own habitation, he had laid
-its foundations in the sand.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br />
-<span class="smaller">ST. MARK’S BALSAM</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The death of the great king, and the first transactions of the
-Regency, left little leisure to Abbé Malletort for the thousand
-occupations of his every-day life. With the busy
-churchman, to stagnate was a cessation of existence. As
-some men study bodily health and vigour, carefully attending
-to the development of their frames by constant and
-unremitting exercise, so did the Abbé preserve his intellect
-in the highest possible training by its varied use, and seemed
-to grudge the loss of every hour in which he either omitted
-to learn something new or lay a fresh stepping-stone for
-the employment of knowledge previously acquired. Like
-Juvenal’s Greek, he studied all the sciences in turn, but his
-labour was never without an object, nor had he the slightest
-scruples in applying its results to his own advantage.
-Malletort was qualified to deal with the most consummate
-knave, but he might have been unconsciously out-manœuvred
-by a really honest man, simply from his own
-habitual disregard of the maxim, as true in ethics as in
-mathematics, which teaches that the shortest way from any
-one given point to another is a straight line.</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé had therefore many irons in his fire, careful,
-however, so to hold them that he should preserve his own
-fingers from being burnt; and amongst others, he often
-applied his spare hours to the study of chemistry.</p>
-
-<p>Now in the time of which I am speaking the tree of
-knowledge had not been entirely denuded of its parasite
-credulity. Science and superstition were not yet finally
-divorced, and the philosopher’s stone was still eagerly sought<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-by many an enthusiast who liked to regenerate the world in a
-process of which the making a colossal fortune for himself
-should be the first step. Not that the Abbé quite believed
-in the possibility of creating gold, but that, true to his
-character, he was prepared to be satisfied with any glittering
-substitute which the world could be induced to accept
-in its stead. So he too had his little laboratory, his little
-forge, his little crucibles, and vials, and acids, and essences,
-all the rudiments of science, and some faint foreshadowings
-of her noblest discoveries.</p>
-
-<p>If a man goes into his garden, and seeks eagerly on hands
-and knees, we will suppose, for a four-leaved shamrock, I am
-not prepared to say that he will succeed in finding that rare
-and abnormal plant; but in his search after it, and the close
-attention thereby entailed, he will doubtless observe many
-beauties of vegetation, many curious arrangements of nature
-that have hitherto escaped his notice; and though he fails to
-discover the four-leaved shamrock, he makes acquaintance
-with a hundred no less interesting specimens, and returns
-home a wiser naturalist than he went out. So was it with
-the adepts, as they called themselves, who sought diligently
-after the philosopher’s stone. They read, they thought,
-they fused, they dissolved, they mingled; they analysed
-fluids, they separated gases; they ascertained the combinations
-of which one substance was formed, and the ingredients
-into which another could be resolved. They missed the
-object of their search, no doubt, but they lost neither for
-themselves nor their successors all the result of their labours;
-for while the precious elixir itself escaped them, they
-captured almost everything else that was worth learning for
-the application of chemistry to the humbler purposes of
-every-day life. Unfortunately, too, in tampering with so
-many volatile essences, they became familiar with the
-subtler kinds of poison. A skilful adept of that school knew
-how to rid a patron of his enemies in twenty-four hours without
-fail, and to use the while no more overt weapon than the
-grasp of a gloved hand, a pinch of scented snuff, or the
-poisoned fragrance of a posy of flowers.</p>
-
-<p>Such men drove a thriving trade in Paris during the
-Regency, and our Abbé, himself no mean proficient in the
-craft, was in the habit of spending many an hour in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
-laboratory of one who could boast he was a match for the
-most skilful of the brotherhood.</p>
-
-<p>It was for this purpose that Malletort crossed the Seine,
-and penetrated into one of the loftiest, gloomiest, and
-narrowest streets of Old Paris—how different from Imperial
-Paris of to-day!—to thread its windings, with his accustomed
-placid face and jaunty step, ere he stopped at the door of
-the tallest, most dilapidated, and dirtiest building in the
-row.</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé’s face was, if possible, more self-satisfied, his
-step even lighter than usual. He was in high favour with
-the Regent, and the Regent, at least among the lower
-classes, was still the most popular man in France. They
-were aware of his vices, indeed, but passed them over in a
-spirit of liberality, bordering on want of principle, with
-which the French, in this respect so unlike ourselves, permit
-their leading men a latitude of private conduct proportioned
-to their public utility. Had the Abbé doubted his patron’s
-popularity, he need only have listened to an impudent little
-urchin, who ran almost between his legs, shouting at the top
-of his voice a favourite street song of the day called “The
-Débonnaire.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“’Tis a very fine place to be monarch of France,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Most Christian king, and St. Louis’s son,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">When he takes up his fiddle the others must dance,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And they durstn’t sit down till the music’s done.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But I’d rather be Regent—eh! wouldn’t you, Pierre?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Such a Regent as ours, so débonnaire.</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Tra-la-la—tra-la-la—such a mien, such an air!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Oh, yes! our Regent is débonnaire.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“A monarch of France, when they bring him to dine,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">They must hand him a cloth, and a golden bowl;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But the Regent can call for a flagon of wine,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And need never sit down till he’s emptied the whole.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He wouldn’t give much for your dry-lipped fare,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">This Regent of ours, so débonnaire.</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Tra-la-la—tra-la-la—how he’ll stagger and swear,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Oh, yes! our Regent is débonnaire.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“A monarch of France has a mate on the throne,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And his likings and loves must be under the rose;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But the Regent takes all the sweet flowers for his own,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And he pulls them by handfuls wherever he goes.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of the bright and the fair, the rich and the rare,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Our Regent, you see, is so débonnaire.</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Tra-la-la—tra-la-la—he puts in for his share,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Oh, yes! our Regent is débonnaire.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“A monarch of France has his peers in a row,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And they bring him his boots with the morning light;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But our Regent is never caught bare-footed so,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">For his roués and he, they sit booted all night!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And they drink and they swear, and they blink and they stare—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And never a monarch of France can compare,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Neither Louis the Fat, nor yet Philip the Fair,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With this Regent of ours, so débonnaire.</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Tra-la-la—tra-la-la—let us drink to him, Pierre!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Oh, yes! our Regent is débonnaire.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Tra-la-la, tra-la-la, he is débonnaire!” hummed the
-Abbé, as he mounted the wooden staircase, and stopped at
-the first door on the landing. “Monsieur le Duc is welcome
-to make all the music for our puppet dance so long as he
-leaves it to Monsieur l’Abbé to pull the strings.”</p>
-
-<p>Two gaudily dressed footmen answered Malletort’s
-summons and admitted him obsequiously, as being a well-known
-friend of their master’s, before he had time to ask if
-Signor Bartoletti was within. The Abbé had visited here
-too often to be surprised at the luxuries of the apartment
-into which he was ushered, so little in character with the
-dirt and dilapidation that prevailed outside; but Signor
-Bartoletti, alleging in excuse the requirements of his
-southern blood, indulged in every extravagance to which
-his means would stretch, was consequently always in
-difficulties, and therefore ready to assist in any scheme,
-however nefarious, provided he was well paid.</p>
-
-<p>The Signor’s tastes were obviously florid. Witness the
-theatrical appearance of his lackeys, the bright colour of
-his furniture, the gaudy ornaments on his chimneypiece,
-the glaring pictures on his walls; nay, the very style and
-chasing of a massive flagon of red wine standing on the
-table by a filagree basket of fruit for his refection.</p>
-
-<p>The man himself, too, was palpably over-dressed, wearing
-a sword here in the retirement of his chamber, yet wearing
-it as one whose hand was little familiar with its guard.
-Every resource of lace, velvet, satin, and embroidery had
-been employed in vain to give him an outward semblance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-of distinction, but there was an expression of intellect and
-energy in his dark beetle-browed face, with its restless
-black eyes, that, in spite of low stature and ungainly make,
-redeemed him from the imputation of utter vulgarity.</p>
-
-<p>His hands, too (and there is a good deal of character
-in the hand), were strong, nervous, and exceedingly well-shaped,
-though sadly stained and scorched by the acids he
-made use of in the prosecution of his art.</p>
-
-<p>A less keen observer than the Abbé might not have
-remarked beneath the signor’s cordial greeting symptoms of
-anxiety, and even apprehension, blended with something of
-the passive defiance which seems to say, “I am in a corner.
-I have no escape. I don’t like it; but I must make the
-best of it.”</p>
-
-<p>A less keen observer, too, might not have detected a ring
-of bravado in the tone with which he accosted his visitor as
-a disciple and fellow-labourer in the cause of science.</p>
-
-<p>“Welcome, monsieur,” said he—“welcome to the teacher
-who needs the assistance of his pupil every step he travels
-on the radiant path. Have you made discoveries, Monsieur
-l’Abbé? Fill your glass, and impart them. Have you
-encountered difficulties?—Fill your glass, and conquer
-them. Have you seen the true light glimmering far, far
-off across the black waters?—Fill your glass, I say, and
-let us drink success to our voyage ere we embark once more
-in search of the Great Secret.”</p>
-
-<p>“Faith, I believe we’re nearer it than you think for,
-Bartoletti,” answered Malletort, smiling coldly; “though
-I doubt if you could look to the right point of the
-compass for it with all your geography. What do you
-think of the Scotchman’s banking scheme, my gold-seeking
-friend? Is not Monsieur Las<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> a better alchemist than
-either of us? Has he not discovered the Great Arcanum?
-And without fire or bellows, crucible, alembic, or retort?
-Why, the best of us have used up every metal that the earth
-produces without arriving—though I grant you we have come
-very near it—yet without arriving at perfection; and here’s
-an Englishman only asks for a ton or so of paper, a Government<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
-stamp, and—presto!—with a stroke of the pen he
-turns it all to gold.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you, too, bought Mississippi Stock?” asked the
-Signor, eagerly. “Then the scheme is prospering; the
-shares will rise once more. It is good to hold on!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not quite such a fool!” answered the Abbé; and
-Bartoletti’s swarthy face fell several inches, for he had a
-high opinion of his visitor’s financial perceptions.</p>
-
-<p>“And yet the Rue Quincampoix was so thronged
-yesterday, I was compelled to leave my coach, and bid
-my lackeys force a passage for me through the crowd,”
-urged the Signor. “Madame was there, and the Duc du
-Maine, and more peers of France than you would see at the
-council. There <i>must</i> be life in it! All the world cannot be
-dupes. And yet the shares have fallen even since this
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“All the world are not likely to be on the winning side,”
-replied the Abbé, quietly, “or who would be left to pay the
-stakes? From whom do you suppose Monsieur Las makes
-his profits? You know he has bought the Hôtel Mazarin.
-You know he has bought Count de Tessé’s house, furniture,
-pictures, plate, and all, even to the English carriage-horses
-that his coachman does not know how to drive. Where do
-you suppose the money comes from? When a society of
-people are engaged in eating one another, it seems to me
-that the emptiest stomach has the best chance.”</p>
-
-<p>His listener looked thoughtfully on his scorched, scarred
-fingers. It might be that he reflected in how many ways
-he had burnt them.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you advise me to do?” he asked, after a
-pause, during which he had filled and emptied a goblet of
-the red wine that stood at his elbow.</p>
-
-<p>“Realise,” was the answer. “Realise, and without
-delay. The game is like tennis, and must be played with
-the same precision. If your ball be not taken at the first
-rebound, its force is so deadened that your utmost skill
-falls short of cutting it over the net.”</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé’s metaphor, drawn from that fashionable pastime
-which had been a favourite amusement of the late king,
-was not without its effect on his listener. Like a skilful
-practitioner, he suffered his advice to sink into the adept’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
-mind before he took advantage of its effects. In other
-sciences besides chemistry and cookery, it is well to let
-your ingredients simmer undisturbed in the crucible till
-they are thoroughly fused and amalgamated.</p>
-
-<p>He wanted the Signor malleable, and nothing, he knew
-by experience, rendered Bartoletti so obliging as a conviction
-that he lacked means to provide for his self-indulgence.
-Like the general public, he had been tempted
-by the great Mississippi scheme, and had invested in its
-shares the small amount of ready money at his command.
-It was gradually dawning on him that his speculations
-would entail considerable loss—that loss he felt, and
-showed he felt, must be made good. This was the Abbé’s
-opportunity. He could offer his own price now for the
-co-operation of his friend.</p>
-
-<p>“We are wasting time sadly,” said the visitor, after a
-pause. “Let us go to our studies at once,” and he led
-the way to an inner apartment, as though he had been host
-and teacher rather than visitor and disciple.</p>
-
-<p>The Signor followed, obedient though unwilling, like a
-well-trained dog bid to heel by its master.</p>
-
-<p>Malletort turned his cuffs back, seized a small pair of
-bellows, and blew a heap of powdered coal, mingled with
-other substances, into a deep violet glow.</p>
-
-<p>“By the by,” he asked as if suddenly recollecting
-something of no importance, “have you ever had any
-dealings with negroes? Do you know anything of the
-superstitions of Obi?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know something of every superstition in the world,”
-answered the other, “Christian as well as pagan, or how
-could I afford to drink such wine as you tasted in the next
-room?”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed while he spoke, heartily enough, and so did
-Malletort, only the mirth of the latter was assumed. He
-believed in very little, this Abbé, very little indeed, either
-for good or evil; but he would have liked, if he could, to
-believe in the philosopher’s stone.</p>
-
-<p>“I have made acquaintance with an Obi-woman lately,”
-pursued he; “she may be useful to us both. I will
-bring her to see you in a day or two, if you will refresh
-your mind in the meantime with what you can<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-remember of their mysteries, so as to meet her on equal
-terms.”</p>
-
-<p>Bartoletti looked much relieved, and indeed gratified, when
-informed that this Obi-woman, instead of being a hideous
-old negress, was a fine-looking quadroon.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that all you wanted?” said he, quite briskly; but
-his countenance fell once more on perceiving that the Abbé
-made no preparations for departure.</p>
-
-<p>“Not quite,” replied the latter. “I am hardly perfect
-yet in the nature of those essences we studied at my last
-lesson. Let us go over their powers and properties
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>The Signor turned a shade paler, but taking down some
-phials, and two or three papers of powders from a shelf, he
-did as he was bid, and proceeded systematically enough to
-explain their contents, gaining confidence, and even growing
-enthusiastic in his subject as he went on.</p>
-
-<p>At the third packet the Abbé stopped him.</p>
-
-<p>“It is harmless, you say, as a perfume when sprinkled in
-the form of a powder?”</p>
-
-<p>The Signor nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“But a deadly poison, mixed with three drops of St.
-Mark’s balsam?”</p>
-
-<p>“Right!” assented the Italian.</p>
-
-<p>“And combined with any vegetable substance, its very
-odour would be dangerous and even fatal to animal life?”</p>
-
-<p>“You are an apt pupil,” said the other, not without
-approval, though he turned paler still. “It took me seven
-weeks’ close study, and a hundred experiments, to find that
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>“You worked with the glass mask on, of course,” continued
-the Abbé; “what would have been the effect had you
-inhaled the odour?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should have come out in red spots at the first inspiration,
-turned black at the second, and at the third Monsieur
-l’Abbé should have been lost to the world, to science, and
-to you,” was the conclusive reply.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not quite satisfied yet,” said Malletort. “I will
-take a packet home with me for further examination, if you
-please, and ten drops of St. Mark’s balsam as well.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is worth a thousand francs a drop,” observed the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
-adept, producing at the same time a tiny sealed phial from
-a drawer under his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you name your own price,” replied Malletort,
-snatching up his purchase with impatience, and leaving in
-its place a purse through which the gold shone temptingly,
-and which clanked down on the table as if the weight of its
-lining was satisfactory enough.</p>
-
-<p>The two men seemed to understand each other, for almost
-before the Signor’s grasp was on the purse his visitor had
-left the house; but Bartoletti, locking up the drawer,
-returned to his gaudy sitting-room, with a twitching lip and
-a cold sweat bursting from his brow.</p>
-
-<p>Till the adept had summoned his theatrical footman, and
-ordered another flagon of the red wine, he gasped and
-panted like a man awaking from a nightmare; nor did he
-recover his equanimity till the flagon was three-parts
-emptied.</p>
-
-<p>By that time, however, he was scarce in a condition to
-pursue his researches after the philosopher’s stone.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE GREY MUSKETEERS</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A bugler, thirteen years of age, and about three feet high,
-a veritable “Child of the Regiment,” was blowing “The
-Assembly” for the Grey Musketeers with a vigour that
-made itself heard through the adjoining Faubourg.</p>
-
-<p>The miniature soldier, who had already smelt powder,
-strutted and swelled like a bantam-cock. His plumage, too,
-was nearly as gorgeous, and he seemed more than satisfied
-with himself and his advantages. In no other country,
-perhaps, could a combination so ridiculous, yet so admirable,
-have been found as in this union of innocence and precocity;
-this simplicity of the child, underlying the bearing of a
-giant, the courage of a hero, and the coquetry of a girl.</p>
-
-<p>Ten minutes precisely were allowed by the regulations of
-the late king between the mustering call and the “fall-in,”
-or final summons for the men to take their places in the
-ranks.</p>
-
-<p>The Musketeers lounged and straggled over their parade-ground,
-laughing, chatting, bantering each other; fastening
-here a buckle, there a shoulder-strap; humming snatches
-of bivouac songs, fixing flints, adjusting belts, and pulling
-their long moustaches, as they conversed, disrespectfully
-enough it must be admitted, in hoarse, short murmurs of
-Vendôme, Villeroy, Staremberg, Prince Eugène, Malbrook,
-the great military authorities of the day, and how old Turenne
-would have <i>arranged</i> them one and all.</p>
-
-<p>The Grey Musketeers were so called from their uniform,
-which, except for its sober hue, shone as splendid as was
-compatible with the possibility of manœuvring. The men<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-were all veterans; that is to say, had fought through one or
-more campaigns, so that many a young, delicate face in the
-ranks was seamed and scarred by the shot and shell of the
-enemy. The majority, however, were grim, and grey, and
-bronzed; men who could eat ammunition-bread and suttlers’
-beef without fear of colic; who could sleep round a bivouac
-fire, and rise refreshed and ready to be killed; who had
-looked death in the face and laughed at him in a score of
-fields.</p>
-
-<p>A large proportion were of noble birth, and all were at
-home in the drawing-room, the refinements and delicate airs
-of which it was their affectation to carry with them under
-fire. They could be rough and outspoken enough, jesting
-with each other over the wine-cup, or arguing as now while
-waiting for parade; but put them before an enemy, the
-nearer the better, and they became lambs—ladies—perfect
-dancing-masters in the postures and graces they assumed.
-If the baggage was not too far in the rear, they dressed
-and scented themselves for a battle as for a ball. They
-flourished lace handkerchiefs, wore white gloves, and took
-snuff from gold boxes in the act of advancing to charge a
-column or to storm a battery. Marlborough’s grenadiers had
-many a tussle with them, and loved them dearly. “Close
-in, Jack,” these honest fellows would say to each other,
-when they saw the laced hats, with their jaunty grey cockades,
-advancing through the smoke. “There’ll be wigs on
-the green now—here’s <i>the Dandies</i> a-coming!”</p>
-
-<p>And in good truth, ere <i>the Dandies</i> and they parted,
-many a comely head was down to rise no more.</p>
-
-<p>There were several companies of these picked troops, distinguished
-by the different colours of their uniforms. It
-was their pride to vie with each other in daring, as in extravagance
-and dissipation. If a post were unusually formidable,
-a battery in a peculiarly strong position, one or other
-of these companies, black, red, or grey, would entreat
-permission to storm it. The Grey Musketeers had of late
-esteemed themselves very fortunate in opportunities for
-leaving half their number dead on the field.</p>
-
-<p>They were commanded by the young officer whose acquaintance
-Madame de Montmirail made during the stag-hunt at
-Fontainebleau. Captain George, as he was called, had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
-obtained this enviable post, no less by skill and conspicuous
-bravery, than by great good luck, and perhaps, though last
-not least, by an affection of coolness and danger, so exaggerated
-as to be sublime while it was ridiculous.</p>
-
-<p>The little bugler was waiting for him now. When the
-ten minutes should have elapsed, and the silver lace on the
-Captain’s uniform come gleaming round the corner, he was
-prepared to blow his heroic soul into the mouthpiece of his
-instrument.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile he stood aloof from his comrades. He looked
-so much taller thus than when oppressed by comparison
-with those full-grown warriors.</p>
-
-<p>The men were grouped about in knots, talking idly enough
-on indifferent subjects. Presently the majority gathered
-round a fresh arrival—a tall, forbidding-looking soldier, with
-iron-grey moustaches that nearly reached his elbows—who
-seemed to have some important news to communicate. As
-the circle of his listeners increased, there was obviously a
-growing interest and excitement in his intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is it?” panted one, hurrying up.</p>
-
-<p>“Killed?” asked another, tightening his sword-belt and
-twisting his moustaches fiercely to his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a credit to the bourgeois!” “It’s a disgrace to
-the corps!” exclaimed a couple in a breath; while, “Tell
-us all about it, Bras-de-Fer!” from half-a-dozen eager
-voices at once, served to hush the noisy assemblage into
-comparative silence.</p>
-
-<p>Bras-de-Fer was nothing loth. A pompous old soldier,
-more of a martinet and less of a dandy perhaps than most
-of his audience, he loved, above all things, to hear himself
-speak. He was a notorious duellist, moreover, and a formidable
-swordsman, whence the nickname by which he was
-known among his comrades. He entered on his recital with
-all the zest of a professor.</p>
-
-<p>“I was sitting,” said he, with an air of grave superiority,
-“immediately in front of the coffee-house, Louis-Quatorze, a
-little after watch-setting. I was improving my knowledge of
-my profession by studying the combinations in a game of
-dominoes. By myself, Adolphe? Yes—right hand against
-left. Yet not altogether by myself, for I had a bottle of great
-Bordeaux wine—there is nothing to laugh at, gentlemen—on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-the table in my front. Flanconnade had just entered, and
-called for a measure of lemonade, when a street-boy began
-singing a foolish song about the Regent, with a jingle of
-‘Tra-la-la,’ ‘Débonnaire,’ and some rubbish of that kind.
-Now this poor Flanconnade, you remember, comrades, never
-was a great admirer of the Regent. He used to say we
-Musketeers of the Guard owed allegiance, first to the young
-king, then to the Duc du Maine, lastly to the Marshal de
-Villeroy, and that we should take our orders only from those
-three.</p>
-
-<p>“So we do! So we should!” interrupted a dozen voices.
-But Bras-de-Fer, raising a brown, sinewy hand, imposed
-silence by the gesture, and continued.</p>
-
-<p>“Flanconnade, therefore, was displeased at the air of
-gasconnade with which the urchin sang his song. ‘What!
-thou, too, art a little breechless roué of the Regent!’ said
-he, turning round from his drink, and applying a kick that
-sent the boy howling across the street. There was an outcry
-directly amongst the cuckold citizens in the coffee-house;
-half of them, I have no doubt, were grocers and
-haberdashers in the Regent’s employ. ‘Shame! shame!’
-they exclaimed. ‘Down with the bully!’ ‘Long live the
-Grey Musketeers!’ I was up, and had put on my hat, you
-may well believe, gentlemen, at the first alarm; but with
-their expression of good-will to the corps, I sat down again
-and uncovered. It was simply a personal matter for Flanconnade,
-and I knew no man better able to extricate himself
-from such an affair. So, leaving the dominoes, I filled
-my glass and waited for the result. Our friend looked about
-him from one to the other, like a man who seeks an antagonist,
-but the bourgeoisie avoided his glances, all but one
-young man, wrapped in a cloak, who had seemed at first to
-take little part in the disturbance. Flanconnade, seeing this,
-stared him full in the face, and observed, ‘Monsieur made
-a remark? Did I understand clearly what it was?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I said <i>shame</i>!’ replied the other, boldly. ‘And I
-repeat, monsieur is in the wrong.’</p>
-
-<p>“By this time the bystanders had gathered round, and I
-heard whispers of—‘Mind what you do; it’s a Grey Musketeer;
-fighting is his trade;’ and such friendly warnings;
-while old Bouchon rushed in with his face as white as his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-apron, and taking the youth by the arm, exclaimed in
-trembling accents, ‘Do you know what you’re about, in
-Heaven’s name? It’s Flanconnade, I tell you. It’s the
-fencing-master to the company!’</p>
-
-<p>“Our poor friend appeared so pleased with this homage
-that I almost thought he would be pacified; but you remember
-his maxim—‘Put yourself in the right first, and
-then keep your arm bent and your point low.’ He acted
-on it now.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Monsieur is prepared for results?’ he asked, quietly;
-and raising the tumbler in his hand, dashed its contents
-into his antagonist’s face.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a murmur of applause amongst the Musketeers,
-for whom such an argument combined all the elements
-of reasoning, and Bras-de-Fer proceeded.</p>
-
-<p>“I rose now, for I saw the affair would march rapidly.
-‘It is good lemonade,’ said the young man, licking his lips,
-while he wiped the liquor from his face. ‘Monsieur has
-given me a lesson in politeness. He will permit me in
-return to demand five minutes’ attention while I teach him
-to dance.’</p>
-
-<p>“The youth’s coolness, I could not but admit, was that
-of a well-bred man, and surprised me the more because,
-when he opened his cloak to get at his handkerchief, I perceived
-he wore no weapon, and was dressed in plain dark
-garments like a scholar or a priest.</p>
-
-<p>“Flanconnade winked at me. There was plenty of
-moonlight in the garden behind the coffee-house, but there
-were two difficulties—the youth had no second and no
-sword.</p>
-
-<p>“By great good fortune, at this moment in stepped
-young Chateau-Guerrand of the Duc du Maine’s dragoons,
-with his arm still in a sling, from the wound he received at
-Brighuega, when serving on his uncle’s staff. He had
-been supping with the Prince-Marshal, and of course was
-in full-dress, with a rapier at his belt. He accepted the
-duty willingly, and lent our youth the weapon he could not
-use. We measured their swords. They were right to a
-hair’s-breadth, but that the guard of Chateau-Guerrand’s
-hilt was open; and as he and I could not possibly exchange
-a pass or two for love, we set ourselves to watch the affair<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-with interest, fearing only that Flanconnade’s skill would
-finish it almost ere it had well commenced.</p>
-
-<p>“The moon was high, and there was a beautiful fighting-light
-in the garden. At twenty paces I could see the faces
-of the guests and servants quite distinctly, as they crowded
-the back door and windows of the house.</p>
-
-<p>“We placed the adversaries at open distance on the level.
-They saluted and put themselves on guard.</p>
-
-<p>“The moment I saw the young man’s hand up, I knew
-there would be a fight for it. I observed that his slight
-frame was exceedingly muscular, and though he looked very
-pale, almost white in the moonlight, his eyes glittered and
-his face lost all its gravity when the blades touched. I was
-sure the rogue loved the steel-clink in his heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Moreover, he must have been <i>there</i> before. He
-neglected no precaution. He seemed to know the whole
-game. He bound his handkerchief round his fingers, to
-make up for Chateau-Guerrand’s open sword-hilt, and feeling
-some inequality of ground beneath his feet, he drew his
-adversary inch by inch, till he got him exactly level with
-his point.</p>
-
-<p>“Flanconnade’s face showed me that he was aware of his
-antagonist’s force. After two passes, he tried his own
-peculiar plunging thrust in tierce (I never was quick enough
-for it myself, and always broke ground when I saw it
-coming), but this youth parried it in carte. In carte! by
-heavens! and Flanconnade was too good a fencer to dare
-try it again.”</p>
-
-<p>“In carte!” repeated the listeners, with varied accents
-of interest and admiration. “It’s incredible!” “It’s
-beautiful!” “That is <i>real</i> fencing, and no sabre-play!”
-“Go on! Flanconnade had met with his match!”</p>
-
-<p>“More than his match,” resumed Bras-de-Fer. “In a
-dozen passes he was out of breath, and this youth had never
-moved a foot after his first traverse. I tell you his defence
-was beautiful; so close you could hardly see his wrist move,
-and he never straightened his arm but twice. The first
-time Flanconnade leaped out of distance, for it was impossible
-to parry the thrust; although, as far as I could see, he
-made a simple disengagement and came in outside. But
-the next time he drew our comrade six inches nearer, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-I knew by his face he was as certain as I was that he had
-got him at last.</p>
-
-<p>“Bah! One—Two! That single disengagement—a
-lunge home; and I saw six inches of Chateau-Guerrand’s
-sword through our poor comrade’s back ere he went down.
-The youth wiped it carefully before he returned it, with a
-profusion of thanks, and found time, while Bouchon and his
-people gathered round the fallen man, to express his regrets
-with a perfect politeness to myself.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Monsieur,’ said he, ‘I am distressed to think your
-friend will not profit by the lesson he has had the kindness
-to accept. I am much afraid he will never dance again.’”</p>
-
-<p>“And where was the thrust?” asked Adolphe, a promising
-young fencer, who had been listening to the recital
-of the duel, open-mouthed.</p>
-
-<p>“Through the upper lung,” answered Bras-de-Fer.</p>
-
-<p>“In five minutes Flanconnade was as dead as Louis
-Quatorze! Here comes the Captain, gentlemen. It is
-time to fall in.”</p>
-
-<p>While he finished speaking, the little bugler blew an
-astonishing volume of sound through his instrument. The
-Musketeers fell into their places. The line was dressed
-with military accuracy. The standard of France was displayed;
-the ranks were opened, and Captain George walked
-through them, scanning each individual of that formidable
-band with a keen, rapid glance that would have detected
-a speck on steel, a button awry, a weapon improperly
-handled, as surely as such breach of discipline could have
-been summarily visited with a sharp and galling reprimand.
-Nevertheless, these men were his own associates and equals;
-many of them his chosen friends. Hardly one but had
-interchanged with him acts of courtesy and kindness at the
-bivouac or on the march. Some had risked life for him;
-others he had rescued from death in the field. In half an
-hour all would be on a footing of perfect equality once more,
-but now Captain George was here to command and the
-rest to obey.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the discipline of the Grey Musketeers—a
-discipline they were never tired of extolling, and believed
-to be unequalled in the whole of the armies of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>There was little room for fault-finding in the order or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
-accoutrements of such troops, and in a short space of time—easily
-calculated by the bystanders outside, from the
-arrival of sundry riding-horses and carriages of these gentlemen
-privates to throng the street—their inspection was
-over—their ranks were closed. The duties for the day,
-comprising an especial guard for the young king’s person
-were told off—Bras-de-Fer reported the death of the
-fencing-master—the commandant observed they must
-appoint another immediately—the parade was dismissed, and
-Captain George was at liberty to return to his quarters.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br />
-<span class="smaller">EUGÈNE BEAUDÉSIR</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was no wonder the Marquise de Montmirail, amid the
-hurry and excitement of a stag-hunt, failed to recognise the
-merry page who used to play with her child in that stalwart
-musketeer whom she pressed her eager barb so hard to
-overtake. The George Hamilton of royal ante-chambers
-and palace stairs, with eyes full of mirth and pockets full
-of bon-bons, laughing, skipping, agile, and mischievous as
-a monkey, had grown into a strong, fine-looking man, a
-distinguished soldier, well known in the army and at Court
-as Captain George of the Grey Musketeers. He had dropped
-the surname of Hamilton altogether now, and nothing
-remained to him of his nationality and family characteristics
-but a certain depth of chest and squareness of shoulder,
-accompanied by the bold keen glance that had shone even
-in the boy’s eyes, and was not quenched in the man’s,
-denoting a defiant and reckless disposition which, for a
-woman like the Marquise, possessed some indescribable
-charm.</p>
-
-<p>As he flung his sword on a couch, and sat down to breakfast
-in his luxurious quarters—booted, belted, and with his
-hat on—the man seemed thoroughly in character with the
-accessories by which he was surrounded. He was the
-soldier all over—but the soldier adventurer—the soldier of
-fortune, rather than the soldier of <i>routine</i>. The room in
-which he sat was luxurious indeed and highly ornamented,
-but the luxuries were those of the senses rather than the
-intellect; the ornaments consisted chiefly of arms and such
-implements of warfare. Blades of the finest temper, pistols<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-of exquisite workmanship, saddles with velvet housings,
-and bridle-bits embossed with gold—decked the wall which
-in more peaceful apartments would have been adorned by
-pictures, vases, or other works of art. One or two military
-maps, and a model of some fortified place in Flanders,
-denoted a tendency to the theoretical as well as practical
-branches of his profession; and a second regimental suit of
-grey velvet, almost covered with silver lace, hanging on a
-chair, showed that its gaudier exigences, so important in
-the Musketeers, were not forgotten. There were also two
-or three somewhat incongruous articles littered about
-amongst the paraphernalia of the soldier—such as a chart
-of the Caribbean Sea, another of the Channel, with its
-various soundings pricked off in red ink, a long nautical
-telescope, and a model of a brigantine more than half rigged.
-Captain George was possessed of certain seafaring tastes
-and habits picked up in early life, and to which he still
-clung with as much of sentiment as was compatible with
-his character. He was not an impressionable person, this
-musketeer; but if a foreign shoot could once be grafted on
-his affections, it took root and became gradually a part of
-the actual tree itself: then it could neither be torn out nor
-pruned away. Youthful associations, with such a disposition,
-attained a power hardly credible to those who only
-knew the external strength and hardness of the man.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George’s predilections, however, seemed to be at
-present completely engrossed by his breakfast. Venison
-steaks and a liberal flagon of Medoc stood before him; he
-applied himself to each with a vigorous industry that denoted
-good teeth, good will, and good digestion. He was so intent
-on business that a knock at his door was twice repeated ere
-he answered it, and then the “Come in!” sounded hardly
-intelligible, hampered as were the syllables by the process
-of mastication.</p>
-
-<p>At the summons, however, Bras-de-Fer entered, and
-stood opposite his captain. The latter nodded, pointed to
-a seat, pushed a plate and wine-cup across the table, and
-continued his repast.</p>
-
-<p>Bras-de-Fer had already breakfasted once; nevertheless
-he sat down and made almost as good play as his entertainer
-for about ten minutes, when they stopped simultaneously.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-Then Captain George threw himself back in his chair,
-loosened his belt, undid the two lower buttons of his heavily-laced
-grey <i>just au corps</i>, and passing the Medoc, now at
-low ebb, to his comrade, asked abruptly—</p>
-
-<p>“Have you found him?”</p>
-
-<p>“And brought him with me, my captain,” answered
-Bras-de-Fer. “He is at this moment waiting outside.
-’Tis a queer lad, certainly. He was reading a Latin book
-when I came upon him. He would have no breakfast, nor
-even taste a pot of wine with me as we walked along.
-Bah! The young ones are not what they used to be in
-my time.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shouldn’t mind a few recruits of your sort still,”
-answered his captain, good-humouredly. “That thick head
-of yours is pretty strong, both inside and out; nevertheless,
-we must take them as we find them, and I should not like
-to miss a blade that could out-manœuvre poor Flanconnade.
-If he joins, I would give him the appointment. What
-think you, Bras-de-Fer? Would he like to be one of us?
-What did he say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Say!” repeated the veteran, “I couldn’t understand
-half he said—I can’t make him out, my captain. I tell you
-that I, Bras-de-Fer of the Grey Musketeers, am unable
-to fathom this smooth-faced stripling. Eyes like a girl’s,
-yet quick and true as a hawk’s; white, delicate hands, but
-a wrist of steel, that seems to move by machinery. Such
-science, too! and such style! Who taught him? Then
-he rambles so in his talk, and wept when I told him our
-fencing-master never spoke after that disengagement.
-Only a simple disengagement, my captain; he makes no
-secret of it. I asked him myself. And he wouldn’t taste
-wine—not a mouthful—not a drop—though I offered to treat
-him!” And Bras-de-Fer shook his head solemnly, with
-something of a monkey’s expression who has got a nut too
-hard to crack.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George cut short his friend’s reflections by
-calling for a servant.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a gentleman outside,” said he, when the lackey
-appeared. “Ask his pardon for keeping him waiting, and
-beg him to step in.”</p>
-
-<p>The well-drilled lackey, all politeness, threw the door<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
-open for the visitor, who entered with a diffident bow and a
-timid, hesitating step. Bras-de-Fer could not help remarking
-how much less assured was his manner now than when
-he crossed swords last night with the best fencer in the
-company.</p>
-
-<p>The Musketeers both rose at his entrance, and all three
-continued standing during the interview.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George scanned the new-comer from head to
-foot, and from foot to head, as a sergeant inspects a recruit.
-Its subject blushed painfully during the examination. Then
-the officer inquired, abruptly—</p>
-
-<p>“You wish to join the Musketeers? As a cadet, of course?”</p>
-
-<p>Something stern in the tone recalled the youth’s firmness,
-and he answered, boldly enough—</p>
-
-<p>“Under certain circumstances—yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Eugène Beaudésir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your age?”</p>
-
-<p>“More than twenty-five.”</p>
-
-<p>The Musketeers exchanged looks. He did not appear
-nearly so much. Captain George continued—</p>
-
-<p>“Your certificates of baptism and gentle birth?”</p>
-
-<p>Again the young man changed colour. He hesitated—he
-looked down—he seemed ill at ease.</p>
-
-<p>“You need not produce these if other particulars are
-satisfactory,” observed the Captain, with a certain rough
-sympathy which won him a gratitude he little suspected;
-far more, indeed, than it deserved.</p>
-
-<p>“Reach me that muster-roll, Bras-de-Fer,” continued
-the officer. “We can put his name down, at least for
-the present, as a cadet. The rest will come in time.
-But look you, young sir,” he added, turning sharply
-round on the recruit, “before going through any more
-formalities, I have still a few questions to ask. Answer
-them frankly, or decline to answer at all.”</p>
-
-<p>The visitor bowed and stole another look in his
-questioner’s face. Frank, romantic, impressionable, he
-had become strangely prepossessed with this manly,
-soldier-like captain of musketeers—younger in years than
-himself, yet so many more steps up the social ladder, he
-thought, than he could now ever hope to reach.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I will answer,” he said, with a hesitation and simplicity
-almost boyish, yet engaging in its helplessness—“if you
-will promise not to use my answers to my injury, and to
-take me all the same.”</p>
-
-<p>Captain George smiled good-humouredly.</p>
-
-<p>“Once on the roll of the King’s Musketeers,” he replied,
-“you are amenable to none but his Majesty and your own
-officers. As we say ourselves, you need fear neither duke
-nor devil.”</p>
-
-<p>The other looked somewhat relieved, and glancing at
-Bras-de-Fer, observed timidly—</p>
-
-<p>“I had a misfortune last night. It was a broil I could
-not avoid without great dishonour. I killed my adversary,
-I fear—and—and—he belongs to your company.”</p>
-
-<p>“So it is reported to me,” answered the Captain, coolly;
-“and if you are capable, it may perhaps be your good
-fortune to find yourself promoted at last into his place.”</p>
-
-<p>Beaudésir looked as if he scarcely understood, and Bras-de-Fer
-gladly seized the opportunity to explain.</p>
-
-<p>“You do not know us yet, young man. In a short time
-you will be better acquainted with the constitution and
-discipline of the Grey Musketeers. It is our study, you
-will find, to become the best fencers in the French army.
-To this end we appoint our fencing-master by competition,
-and he is always liable to be superseded in favour of a
-successful adversary. It cost Flanconnade twenty-three
-duels to obtain his grade, and in his last affair—(pardon—I
-should say his <i>last but one</i>) he killed his man. You,
-monsieur, have disposed of Flanconnade scientifically, I
-must admit, and our captain here is likely enough to promote
-you to the vacant post.”</p>
-
-<p>“Horror!” exclaimed Beaudésir, shuddering. “Like
-the priests of Aricia!”</p>
-
-<p>It was now Bras-de-Fer’s turn to be puzzled, but he rose
-to the occasion. Quaffing the remains of the Medoc, he
-nodded approvingly, and repeated—</p>
-
-<p>“Like the priests of Aricia. The same system precisely
-as established by His Holiness the Pope. It works remarkably
-well in the Grey Musketeers.”</p>
-
-<p>Beaudésir looked at the Captain, and said in a low,
-agitated voice—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I am most anxious to serve under you. I can be faithful,
-attentive—above all, obedient. I have no friends, no
-resources, nothing to care for. I only wish for an honest
-livelihood and an honourable death.”</p>
-
-<p>“We can find you both, I doubt not,” answered George,
-carelessly opening once more the muster-roll of the company.
-“I have your name down and your age; no further particulars.
-Where were you educated?”</p>
-
-<p>“In a school of silence, vigilance, self-restraint, and
-implicit obedience,” answered the recruit.</p>
-
-<p>“Good,” observed his captain; “but we must put down
-a name.”</p>
-
-<p>“At Avranches, in Normandy,” said the other, after a
-moment’s hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>George closed the roll. “Enough for the present,”
-said he; “and now tell me, monsieur, as between friends,
-where did you learn to fence with so much address?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wherever I could find a foil with a button on,” was
-the reply. “I never had a naked sword in my hand till
-last night.”</p>
-
-<p>Something in the ready simplicity of such an answer
-pleased the captain of musketeers, while it interested him
-still more in his recruit.</p>
-
-<p>“You must be careful of your parries amongst your new
-comrades,” said he; “at least till you have measured the
-force of each. I warn you fairly, one-half the company
-will want to try your mettle, and the other half to learn
-your secret, even at the cost of an awkward thrust or two.
-In the meantime, let us see what you can do. There are
-a brace of foils in the cupboard there. Bras-de-Fer, will
-you give him a benefit?”</p>
-
-<p>But Bras-de-Fer shook his head. What he had seen
-the night before had inspired him with an extraordinary
-respect for the youth’s prowess, and being justly vain of his
-own skill, he was averse to expose his inferiority in the
-science of defence before his captain. He excused himself,
-therefore, on the ground of rheumatism which had settled
-in an old wound.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George did not press the veteran, but opening
-the cupboard, pulled out the foils, presented one to his
-visitor, and put himself in position with the other.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span></p>
-
-<p>Beaudésir performed an elaborate salute with such grace
-and precision as showed him a perfect master of his weapon.
-He then threw his foil in the air, caught it by the blade,
-and returned it courteously to the captain.</p>
-
-<p>But George was not yet satisfied. “One assault at
-least,” said he, stamping his right foot. “I want to
-see if I cannot find a parry for this famous thrust of
-yours.”</p>
-
-<p>The other smiled quietly and took his ground. Though
-within a few inches of the chamber-door, he seemed to
-require no more room for his close and quiet evolutions.</p>
-
-<p>Ere they had exchanged two passes, the captain came
-over his adversary’s point with a rapid flanking movement,
-like the stroke of a riding-whip, and lending all the strength
-of his iron wrist to the jerk, broke the opposing foil short
-off within six inches of the guard. It was the only
-resource by which he could escape a palpable hit.</p>
-
-<p>“Enough!” he exclaimed, laughing. “There are no
-more foils in the cupboard, and I honestly confess I should
-not wish to renew the contest with the real bloodsuckers.
-You may be perfectly tranquil as regards your comrades,
-my friend. I do not know a musketeer in the whole guard
-that would care to take a lesson from you with the buttons
-off. What say you, Bras-de-Fer? Come, gentlemen,
-there is no time to be lost. The Marshal de Villeroy will
-not yet have left his quarters. Do you, old comrade, take him
-the fresh appointment for his signature. He never requires
-to see our recruits till they can wait on him in uniform;
-and you, young man, come with me to the <i>Rue des Quatres
-Fripons</i>, where I will myself order your accoutrements, and
-see you measured for a <i>just au corps</i>. Recollect, sir, next
-to their discipline on parade, I am most particular about
-the clothes of those I have the honour to command.
-Slovenliness in a musketeer is a contradiction as impossible
-as poltroonery; and it is a tradition in our corps that
-we never insulted Malbrook’s grenadiers by appearing
-before them in anything but full-dress; or by opening
-fire until we were close enough for them to mark the
-embroidery on our waistcoats. I congratulate you, my
-young friend: you are now a soldier in the pick of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
-that army which is itself the pick of all the armies in
-the world!”</p>
-
-<p>With such encouraging conversation Captain George
-led his lately-enlisted recruit through a variety of winding
-streets, thronged at that busy hour with streams of
-passengers. These, however, for the most part, made
-way, with many marks of respect, for the officer of
-Musketeers; the women especially, looking back with
-unfeigned admiration and interest at the pair, according
-as they inclined to the stately symmetry of the one or
-the graceful and almost feminine beauty of the other.
-Perhaps, could they have known that the pale, dark-eyed
-youth following timidly half a pace behind his leader had
-only last night killed the deadliest fencer in Paris, they
-would have wasted no glances even on such a fair specimen
-of manhood as Captain George, but devoured his comrade
-with their bold black eyes, in a thrill of mingled horror,
-interest, and admiration, peculiar to their sex.</p>
-
-<p>To reach the <i>Rue des Quatres Fripons</i>, it was necessary
-to pass a barrier, lately placed by Marshal de Villeroy’s
-directions, to check the tide of traffic on occasion of the
-young King’s transit through his future capital. This
-barrier was guarded by a post of Grey Musketeers, and at
-the moment Captain George approached it, one of his
-handsomest young officers was performing a series of bows
-by the door of a ponderous, heavily-gilt family coach, and
-explaining with considerable volubility his own desolation at
-the orders which compelled him to forbid the advance of
-this unwieldy vehicle. Six heavy coach-horses, two postilions,
-a coachman, four footmen, and two outriders,
-armed to the teeth—all jammed together in a narrow
-street, with a crowd of bystanders increasing every minute,
-served to create a sufficient complication, and a very pretty
-young lady inside, accompanied by one attendant, was
-already in tears. The attendant, a dark woman with a
-scarlet turban, scolded and cursed in excellent French,
-whilst one of the leaders took immediate advantage of
-the halt to rear on end and seize his comrade by the crest
-with a savage and discordant scream.</p>
-
-<p>In such a turmoil it took George a few moments to
-recognise Madame de Montmirail’s liveries, which he knew<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-perfectly well. To his companion, of course, fresh from
-Avranches, in Normandy, all liveries in Paris must have
-been equally strange. Nevertheless he followed close
-behind his leader, who pushed authoritatively through
-the crowd, and demanded what was the matter. The
-officer of Musketeers, seeing his own captain, fell back
-from the carriage-door, and Cerise, with her eyes full of
-tears, found a face she had never forgotten staring in at
-the window scarcely six inches from her own.</p>
-
-<p>They recognised each other in an instant. For the first
-sentence it was even “George!” and “Cerise!” Though,
-of course, it cooled down to “Monsieur” and “Mademoiselle”
-as they talked on. She was very little altered, he
-thought, only taller and much more beautiful; while for
-her, it was the same brave brown face and kind eyes that
-she had known by heart since she was a child, only braver,
-browner, kinder, nobler, just as she had expected. It was
-wonderful she could see it so distinctly, with her looks cast
-down on the pretty gloved hands in her lap.</p>
-
-<p>The affair did not take long. “You can pass them by
-my orders, Adolphe,” said his captain; and ere the savage
-stallion had time for a second attack, the huge vehicle
-rolled through and lumbered on, leaving handsome Adolphe
-ejaculating protestations and excuses, believing implicitly
-that he had won the beautiful mademoiselle’s affections at
-first sight during the process.</p>
-
-<p>Except by this voluble young gentleman, very little had
-been said. People <i>do</i> say very little when they mean a
-great deal. It seemed to George, mademoiselle had offered
-no more pertinent remark than that “She had made a long
-journey, and was going to the Hôtel Montmirail <i>to stop</i>.”
-Whilst Cerise—well, I have no doubt Cerise could have
-repeated every word of their conversation, yet she did
-nothing of the kind neither to Célandine then, nor to
-mamma afterwards; though by the time she reached
-home her eyes were quite dry, and no wonder, considering
-the fire in her cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>Altogether, the interview was certainly provocative of
-silence. Neither Captain George nor Beaudésir uttered
-a syllable during the remainder of their walk. Only on
-the threshold of the tailor’s shop in the <i>Rue des Quatres<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-Fripons</i> the latter awoke from a deep fit of musing, and
-asked, very respectfully—</p>
-
-<p>“My captain, do you think I should have got the best
-of it this morning if we had taken the buttons off the
-foils?”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE BOUDOIR OF MADAME</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There was plenty of room in the Hôtel Montmirail when it
-was opened at night for Madame’s distinguished receptions.
-Its screen of lights in front, its long rows of windows,
-shedding lustrous radiance on the ground and second floors,
-caused it to resemble, from outside, the enchanted palace of
-the White Cat, in that well-known fairy tale which has
-delighted childhood for so many generations. Within, room
-after room stretched away in long perspective, one after
-another, more polished, more decorated, more shining, each
-than its predecessor. The waiting-room, the gallery, the
-reception-room, the dining-hall, the two withdrawing-rooms,
-all with floors inlaid by the most elaborate and slippery of
-wood-work, all heavy with crimson velvet and massive
-gilding in the worst possible taste, all adorned by mythological
-pictures, bright of colour, cold of tone, and scant of
-drapery, led the oppressed and dazzled visitor to Madame’s
-bed-chamber, thrown open like every other apartment on the
-floor for <i>his</i> or <i>her</i> admiration. Here the eye reposed at
-last, on flowers, satin, ivory, mirrors, crystal, china—everything
-most suggestive of the presence of beauty, its influence
-and the atmosphere that seems to surround it in its home.
-The bed, indeed, with lofty canopy, surmounted by ciphers
-and coronets, was almost solemn in its magnificence; but
-the bath of Madame, her wardrobe, above all, her toilet-table,
-modified with their graceful, glittering elegance the
-oppressive grandeur of this important article in a sleeping-apartment.</p>
-
-<p>At each of the four corners strips of looking-glass reached<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-from ceiling to floor, while opposite the bed the first object
-on which Madame’s eyes rested in waking was a picture
-that conveyed much delicate and appropriate flattery to herself.</p>
-
-<p>It represented the Judgment of Paris. That dangerous
-shepherd of Mount Ida was depicted in appropriate costume
-of brown skin, laughing eyes, a crook, and a pair of sandals,
-with a golden apple in his hand. Juno stood on one side—Minerva
-on the other. The ox-eyed goddess, with her rich
-colouring and radiant form, affording a glowing type of those
-attractions which are dependent on the senses alone; while
-Minerva’s deep grey eyes, serene, majestic air, and noble,
-thoughtful brow, seemed to promise a triumph, glorious in
-proportion to the wisdom and intellect to be overcome.</p>
-
-<p>Paris stood between them, somewhat in front of the
-immortal rivals, his right arm skilfully foreshortened, and
-offering the apple—to whom? To neither of these, but to
-the Marquise, as she got out of bed every morning; thereby
-inferring that <i>she</i> was the Olympian Venus, the Queen of
-Love and Beauty both for gods and men!</p>
-
-<p>Malletort, in his many visits to the Hôtel Montmirail,
-never passed this picture without a characteristic grin of
-intense amusement and delight.</p>
-
-<p>Traversing the bed-chamber, one arrived at last in a small
-apartment which concluded the series, and from which there
-appeared no further egress, though, in truth, a door, concealed
-in the panelling, opened on a narrow staircase which
-descended to the garden. This room was more plainly
-furnished than the others, but an air of comfort pervaded it
-that denoted the owner’s favourite retreat. Its tables were
-littered, its furniture was worn. The pens and portfolio
-were disordered; a woman’s glove lay near the inkstand;
-some half-finished embroidery occupied the sofa; and a
-sheet of blotted music had fallen on the floor. There was
-no kind of mirror in any part of the apartment. It was an
-affectation of the Marquise, pardonable enough in a handsome
-woman, to protest that she hated the reflection of her
-own features; and this little chamber was her favourite
-retreat—her inner citadel, her sanctuary of seclusion—or,
-as the servants called it, the Boudoir of Madame.</p>
-
-<p>It was undoubtedly the quietest room in the house, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
-farthest removed from the noise of the courtyard, the
-domestics, even their guests. Profound silence would have
-reigned in it now, but for the ring of a hooked hard beak
-drawn sharply at intervals across a row of gilt wires, and a
-ghastly muttering, like that of a demoniac, between whisper
-and croak, for the encouragement of somebody or something
-named “Pierrot.”</p>
-
-<p>It was Madame’s West Indian parrot, beguiling his
-solitude by the conscientious study of his part. Presently
-the bird gave a long shrill whistle, for he heard a well-known
-step on the garden stair, and his mistress’s voice singing—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Non, je te dis</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ma sœur, c’est lui,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">C’est mon Henri,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A l’habit gris</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Des Mousquetaires, des Mousquetaires,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Des Mousquetaires</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Du roi Louis.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Amant gentil</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Qui chante, qui rit,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Joli, poli,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Fidèle? Mais, Oui</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Comme Mousquetaire, comme Mousquetaire,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Comme Mousquetaire,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Du roi Louis.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">At which conclusive point in its argument Pierrot interrupted
-the ballad with a deafening shriek, and Madame,
-sliding the panel back, passed into the apartment.</p>
-
-<p>She was dressed in a simple morning toilet of white,
-with scarlet breast-knots, and a ribbon of the same colour
-gathering the shining masses of her black hair. It suited
-her well. Even Pierrot, gazing at her with head on one
-side, and upturned eye, seemed to be of this opinion, though
-bigger and better talkers by rote had probably long ago
-informed her of the fact. She had a large <i>bouquet</i> of
-flowers, fresh gathered, in her hand, and she gave the bird a
-caressing word or two as she moved through her boudoir,
-disposing of them here and there to the best advantage;
-then she selected a few of the rarest, and put them carefully
-in water, telling the parrot “these are for Cerise, Pierrot,”
-and endeavouring to make it repeat her daughter’s name.
-Of course, without success; though on other occasions this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-refractory pupil would shriek these well-known syllables,
-time after time, till the very cook, far off in the basement,
-was goaded to swear hideously, wishing in good Gascon he
-had the accursed fowl picked and trussed and garnished with
-olives in the stew-pan.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise had been brought back from her pension in Normandy,
-as we have seen, partly by Malletort’s advice, partly
-because her mother longed to have the girl by her side once
-more. They had been inseparable formerly, and it is possible
-she was conscious, without confessing it, that her
-whole character deteriorated during her daughter’s absence.
-So the heavy family coach, postilions, outriders, footmen,
-and all, rolled into the courtyard of the Hôtel Montmirail,
-after a slight delay, as we have seen, at one of the barriers,
-and deposited its freight to the great jubilation of the
-whole household. These were never tired of praising
-mademoiselle’s beauty, mademoiselle’s grace—her refinement,
-her manners, her acquirements, her goodness of heart,
-were on every lip. But though she said less about it than
-the domestics, nobody in her establishment was so alive to
-the merits of Cerise as her mother. In good truth, the
-Marquise loved her daughter very dearly. She never
-thought she could love anything half so much, except—except
-perhaps, the germ of a new idea that had lately been
-forming itself in her heart, and of which the vague shadowy
-uncertainty, the shame, the excuses, the unwillingness with
-which she acknowledged it, constituted no small portion of
-the charm. Is it possible that Love is painted blind
-because, if people could see before them, they would never
-be induced to move a step along the pleasant path?—the
-pleasant path that leads through cool shades and clustering
-roses, down the steep bank where the nettles grow, through
-briar and bramble, to end at last in a treacherous morass,
-whence extrication is generally difficult, sometimes impossible,
-and always unpleasant. Nevertheless, to get Cerise
-back from her pension, to find that she had grown into a
-woman, yet without losing the child’s blue eyes, fond and
-frank and innocent as ever—to watch her matured intellect,
-to feel that the plaything was a companion now, though
-playful and light-hearted still—lastly, to discover that she
-was a beauty, but a beauty who could never become a rival,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-because in quite a different style from her mother—all this
-was very delightful, and the Marquise, seldom low-spirited
-at any time, had become perfectly sparkling since her
-daughter came home.</p>
-
-<p>So she carolled about the boudoir like a girl, coaxing
-Pierrot, arranging the flowers, and warning Célandine,
-between the notes of her foolish love-song, not to let
-mademoiselle’s chocolate get cold. Mademoiselle, you see,
-was tired and not yet down; indeed, to tell the truth, not
-yet up, but pressing a soft flushed cheek against her laced
-pillow, having just awoke from a dream, in which she was
-back at the convent in Normandy once more, sauntering
-down the beech-walk with her director, who somehow,
-instead of a priest’s habit, wore the uniform of the Grey
-Musketeers, an irregularity that roused the wrath of the
-Lady Superior and made her speak out freely; whereat the
-Musketeer took his pupil’s part, looking down on her with
-a brave brown face and kind eyes, while he clasped her hand
-in fond assurance of his aid. Waking thus, she tried hard
-to get back to sleep, in hopes of dreaming it all over again.</p>
-
-<p>The mother, meanwhile, having disposed her chamber to
-her liking, sank into the recesses of a deep arm-chair, and
-began to speculate on her daughter’s future. It is not to
-be supposed that such an important consideration as the
-child’s marriage now occupied her attention for the first
-time. Indeed her habits, her education, the opinions of
-that society in which she lived, even her own past, with its
-vicissitudes and experiences, seemed to urge on her the
-necessity of taking some step towards an early settlement
-in life for her attractive girl. Cerise was beautiful, no
-doubt, thought the Marquise; not indeed in her mother’s
-wicked, provoking style, of which that mother well knew the
-power, but with the innocent beauty of an angel. At
-such a Court, it was good she should be provided as soon as
-possible with a legitimate protector. Of suitors there would
-be no lack, for two strains of the best blood in France
-united in the person of this fair damsel, whose wealth,
-besides, would make her a desirable acquisition to the
-noblest gentleman in the realm. Then she reviewed in
-turn all the eligible matches she could think of in the large
-circle of her acquaintance; scanning them mentally, one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
-after another, with the proverbial fastidiousness that,
-looking for a perfectly straight stick, traverses the wood from
-end to end in vain. The first man was too young, the
-second too old, a third too clever, a fourth too stupid.
-Count Point d’Appui had been hawked at by all the beauties
-in Paris, and owned half Picardy; but she was afraid of
-him. No, she could not trust him with her Cerise. He
-was worn out, debauched, one of the roués, and worse than
-the Regent! Then there was the Marquis de la Force
-Manquée, he would have been the very thing, but he had
-sustained a paralytic stroke. Ah! she knew it. The
-family might hush it up, talk of a fall in hunting, a shock
-to the system, a cold bath after exercise, but Fagon had
-told her what it was. The late king’s physician should
-understand such matters, and she was not to be deceived!
-To be sure, there was still the Duc de Beaublafard left—noble
-rank, tolerable possessions, easy temper, and a
-taste for the fine arts. She wavered a long time, but decided
-against him at last. “It is a pity!” said the Marquise, in
-a half-whisper, shaking her head, and gazing thoughtfully
-at Pierrot; “a thousand pities! but I dare not risk it.
-He is too good-looking—even for a lover—decidedly for a
-husband!”</p>
-
-<p>It was strange that, with her knowledge of human nature,
-her experience, by observation at least, of human passions,
-she should so little have considered that person’s inclinations
-who ought to have been first consulted in such a
-matter. She never seemed to contemplate for an instant
-that Cerise herself might shrink from the character of the
-Count, appeal against becoming sick-nurse to the Marquis,
-or incline to the excessive and objectionable beauty of the
-Duke. It seemed natural the girl should accept her mother’s
-choice just as that mother had herself accepted, without
-even seeing, the chivalrous old Montmirail whom she had
-so cherished and respected, whose snuff-box stood there
-under glass on her writing-table, and for whom, though he
-had been dead more years than she liked to count, she sometimes
-felt as if she could weep even now.</p>
-
-<p>Such a train of reflection gradually brought the Marquise
-to her own position in life, and a calculation of the advantages
-and disadvantages attendant on marriage as regarded<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-herself. She could not but know she was in the full meridian
-of her beauty. Her summer, so to speak, was still in its
-July; the fruit bright, glowing, and mature; not a leaf yet
-changed in colour with forewarning of decay. She might
-take her choice of a dozen noble names whenever she would,
-and she felt her heart beat while she wondered why this
-consideration should of late have been so often present to
-her mind. It could only arise from an anxiety to settle
-Cerise, she argued with herself; there <i>could</i> be no other
-reason. Impossible! absurd! No—no—a thousand times—No!</p>
-
-<p>She went carefully back over her past life, analysing,
-with no foolish, romantic, tendencies, but in a keen,
-impartial spirit, the whole history of her feelings. She
-acknowledged, with a certain hard triumph, that in her
-young days she had never loved. Likings, flirtations,
-passing fancies she had indulged in by hundreds, a dozen
-at a time, but to true feminine affection her nearest approach
-had been that sentiment of regard which she entertained for
-her husband. She did not stop to ask herself if this was
-love, as women understand the word.</p>
-
-<p>And was she to be always invulnerable? Was she
-indeed incapable of that abstraction, that self-devotion
-which made the happiness and the misery of nearly all
-her sex? She <i>did</i> ask herself this question, but she did
-<i>not</i> answer it; though Pierrot, still watching her out of one
-eye, must have seen her blush.</p>
-
-<p>Certainly, none of her declared suitors had hitherto
-inspired it. Least of all, he to whom the world had lately
-given her as his affianced wife. Brave he was, no doubt,
-chivalrous in thought and action; stupid enough besides;
-yes, quite stupid enough for a husband! generous too, and
-considerate—but oh! not like the kind, unselfish, indulgent
-old heart she mourned for in widow’s weeds all those years
-ago. She could almost have cried again now, and yet she
-laughed when she thought of the united ages of her late
-husband and her present adorer. Was it her destiny, then,
-thus ever to captivate the affections of old men? and were
-their wrongs to be avenged at last by her own infatuation
-for a lover many years younger than herself? Again the
-burning blushes rose to her brow, and though Pierrot was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-the only witness present, she buried her face in her
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>Lifting her eyes once more, they rested on a picture that
-held the place of honour in her boudoir. It was a coloured
-drawing of considerable spirit, and had been given her by
-no less a favourite than the Prince-Marshal himself, for
-whose glorification it had been executed by a rising artist.</p>
-
-<p>It represented a battle-field, of which the Prince de
-Chateau-Guerrand constituted the principal object; and
-that officer was portrayed with considerable fidelity,
-advancing to the succour of the Count de Guiches, who
-at the head of the Guards was covering Villeroy’s retreat
-before Marlborough at Ramillies. Two or three broad,
-honest faces of the English grenadiers came well out from
-the smoke and confusion in the background, ingeniously
-increased by a fall of rafters and conflagration of an
-imaginary farm-house; but the Count de Guiches himself
-occupied no prominent place in the composition, dancing
-about on a little grey horse in one corner, as if studious not
-to interfere with the dominant figure, who was, indeed, the
-artist’s patron, and who presided over the whole in a full-bottomed
-wig, with a conceited smile on his face and a
-laced hat in his hand. There lay, also, a dead Musketeer
-in the foreground, admirably contrived to impart reality to
-the scene of conflict; and it was on this figure that the eyes
-of the Marquise fixed themselves, devouring it with a
-passionate gaze, in which admiration, longing, self-scorn,
-and self-reproach, seemed all combined.</p>
-
-<p>For a full minute the wild, pitiful expression never left
-her face, and during that minute she tore her handkerchief
-to the coronet near its hem. Then she rose and paced the
-room for a couple of turns, restless as a leopard; but ere
-she had made a third, footsteps were heard approaching
-through the bed-chamber. The door opened, and one of
-her servants announced “Monsieur l’Abbé Malletort!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br />
-<span class="smaller">WHAT THE SERPENT SAID</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>HE came in smiling, of course. When was the Abbé to be
-caught without his self-possessed smile, his easy manner,
-and his carefully-arranged dress? On the present occasion
-he carried with him some rare flowers as well. The
-Marquise sprang at them almost before he had time to offer
-his elaborate homage, while he bent over her extended
-hand. He snatched the nosegay away, however, with
-great quickness, and held it behind his back.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon, madame,” said he, “this is forbidden fruit.
-As such I bring it into the garden of Paradise; where my
-cousin dwells there is Eden, and the resemblance is the
-more striking that neither here are found mirrors to offend
-me with the reflection of my own ugly face. Consequently,
-my attention is concentrated on yourself. I look at you,
-Marquise, as Adam looked at Eve. Bah! that father of
-horticulture was but a husband. I should rather say, as
-the subtle creature who relieved their domestic <i>tête-à-tête</i>
-looked at the lady presiding over that charming scene. I
-look at you, I say, with delight and admiration, for I find
-you beautiful!”</p>
-
-<p>“And is it to tell me this important news that you are
-abroad so early?” asked the Marquise, laughing gaily,
-while she pointed to the easy-chair she had just left. “Sit
-down, Monsieur l’Abbé, and try to talk sense for five minutes.
-You can be rational; none more so, when you choose. I
-want your opinion—nay, I even think I want your advice.
-Mind, I don’t promise to take it, that of course! Don’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
-look so interested. It’s not about myself. It’s about
-Cerise.”</p>
-
-<p>“How can I look anything else?” asked the Abbé,
-whose face, to do him justice, never betrayed his thoughts or
-feelings. “Madame, or Mademoiselle, both are near and
-dear to me—too much so for my own repose.”</p>
-
-<p>He sighed, and laid his white hand on his breast. She
-was so accustomed to his manner that she never troubled
-herself whether he was in jest or earnest. Moreover, she
-was at present engrossed with her daughter’s future, and
-proceeded thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Cerise is a woman now, my cousin. Her girlhood is
-past, and she has arrived at an age when every woman
-should think of establishing herself in life. Pardon! that
-bouquet is in your way; put it down yonder in the window-sill.”</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé rose and placed the flowers in the open window,
-whence a light air from without wafted their sweet and heavy
-perfume into the apartment.</p>
-
-<p>When he reseated himself the Marquise had relapsed into
-silence. She was thinking deeply, with her eyes fixed on
-the dead musketeer in the picture.</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé spoke first. He began in a low tone of emotion,
-that, if fictitious, was admirably assumed.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not for <i>me</i>, perhaps, madame, to give an opinion
-on such matters as concern the affections. For <i>me</i>, the
-churchman, the celibate, the man of the world, whose whole
-utility to those he loves depends on subjection of his love at
-any cost—at any sacrifice; who must trample his feelings
-under foot, lest they rise and vanquish him, putting him to
-torture, punishment, and shame. My cousin, have not I
-seemed to you a man of marble rather than a creature of
-flesh and blood?”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise opened her black eyes wide. He had
-succeeded at least in rousing her attention, and continued
-in the same low, hurried voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you not make allowance for a position so constrained
-and unnatural as mine? Can you not comprehend a
-devotion that exists out of, and apart from self? Is not
-the hideous Satyr peering from behind his tree at the nymph
-whose beauty awes him from approach, an object more touching,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-more to be respected than vain Narcissus languishing,
-after all, but for the mere reflection of himself? Is not that
-a true and faithful worship which seeks only the elevation of
-its idol, though its own crushed body may be exacted to raise
-the pedestal, if but by half a foot? Do you believe—I ask
-you, my cousin, in the utmost truth and sincerity—do you
-believe there breathes a man on earth so completely consecrated
-to your interests as myself?”</p>
-
-<p>“You have always been a kind counsellor—and—and—an
-affectionate kinsman,” answered the Marquise, a little
-confused; adding, with an air of frankness that became her
-well—“Come! Abbé, you are a good friend, neither more
-nor less, staunch, honest, constant. You always have been,
-you always will be. Is it not so?”</p>
-
-<p>His self-command was perfect. His face betrayed neither
-disappointment, vexation, nor wounded pride. His voice
-retained just so much of tremor as was compatible with the
-warm regard of friendship, yet not too little to convey the
-deeper interest of love. He did not approach his cousin by
-an inch. He sat back in the arm-chair, outwardly composed
-and tranquil, yet he made it appear that he was pleading a
-subject of vital importance both to her welfare and his own.</p>
-
-<p>“Pass over <i>me</i>, madame!” he exclaimed, throwing both
-his white hands up with a conclusive gesture. “Walk over
-<i>my</i> body without scruple if it will keep you dry-shod. Why
-am I here; nay, why do I exist at all but to serve you—and
-yours? Nevertheless it is not now a question of the daughter’s
-destiny—that will arrive in course of time—it is of the
-mother I would speak. For the mother I would plead, even
-against myself. What temptation is there in the world like
-ambition? What has earth to offer compared to its promises?
-The draught of love may be, nay, I feel too keenly <i>must</i> be,
-very sweet, but what bitter drops are mingled in the cup!
-Surely I know it; but what matters its taste to me? the
-Abbé! the priest! Marquise, you have a future before you
-the proudest woman in Europe might envy. That fair hand
-might hold a sceptre, that sweet brow be encircled by a
-crown. Bah! they are but baubles, of course,” continued
-the Abbé, relapsing without a moment’s warning into his
-usual tone; “the one would make your arm ache and the
-other your head; nevertheless, my cousin, you could endure<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-these inconveniences without complaint, perhaps even with
-patience and resignation to your fate?”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise, it must be confessed, was relieved at his
-change of tone. Her feelings had been stimulated, her
-sympathies enlisted, and now her curiosity was aroused.
-This last quality is seldom weak in her sex, and the Abbé,
-though it is needless to inquire where or how he learned the
-trade, was far too experienced a practitioner to neglect so
-powerful an engine as that desire for knowledge which made
-shipwreck of Eve and is the bane of all her daughters.
-Madame de Montmirail was proud—most women are. She
-loved power—most women do. If a thought flashed through
-her mind that the advancement of her own position might
-benefit those in whom she felt interest, what was this but a
-noble instinct, unselfish as are all the instincts of womanhood?</p>
-
-<p>“You speak in parables, my good Abbé,” said she, with
-a laugh that betrayed some anxiety to know more. “You
-talk of crowns and sceptres as familiarly as I do of fans and
-bracelets. You must expound to me what you mean, for I am
-one of those who find out a riddle admirably when they
-have been told the answer.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will instruct you, then,” was his reply, “in the form
-of a parable. Listen and learn. A certain Sultan had a
-collection of jewels, and he changed them from time to time—because
-he could not find a gem that sparkled with equal
-brilliance by day and by night. So he consulted every
-jeweller in his dominions, and squandered great sums of
-money, both in barter and in a search for what he required.
-Nay, he would trample under foot and defile the treasures
-he possessed, passionate, languishing, wretched, for want of
-that he possessed not. So his affairs went to ruin, and his
-whole country was in want and misery.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, a Dervish praying at sunset by a fountain, saw a
-beautiful bird fly down to the water to drink. Between its
-eyes grew a jewel that flamed and glittered like the noonday
-sun on the Sultan’s drawn scimitar. And the Dervish
-bethought him, this jewel would be a rare addition to the
-collection of his lord; so he rolled his prayer-carpet into
-a pillow, and went to sleep by the side of the fountain, under
-a tree.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span></p>
-
-<p>“At midnight the Dervish woke up to pray, and on the
-branch above his head he saw something flash and sparkle
-like the sun on the Sultan’s scimitar at noonday. So he said,
-‘This is the gem for which my lord pineth. Lo! I will
-take the bird captive, and bring it with me to the feet of my
-lord.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then the Dervish took the bird craftily with his hand,
-and though the fowl was beautiful, and the gem was precious,
-he kept neither of them for himself, but brought them both
-for his lord, to be the delight of the Sultan and the salvation
-of the land.”</p>
-
-<p>“And suppose the poor bird would rather have had her
-liberty,” replied the Marquise. “It seems to me that in
-their dealings with men the birds get the worst of it from
-first to last.”</p>
-
-<p>“This bird was wise in her generation, as the goose that
-saved Rome,” answered the Abbé; “but the bird I have in
-my thoughts wants only opportunity to soar her pitch, like
-the falcon, Queen of Earth and Air. Seriously, madame—look
-at the condition of <i>our</i> Sultan. I speak not of the
-young king, a weak and rickety boy, with all respect be it
-said, ill in bed at this very moment, perhaps never to leave
-his chamber alive. I mean the Regent, my kind patron,
-your devoted admirer—the true ruler of France. And look
-at the jewels in his casket. Do you think there is one that
-he prizes at the value of a worn-out glove?”</p>
-
-<p>The subject possessed a certain degree of interest, trenching
-though it was upon very delicate ground.</p>
-
-<p>“He has plenty to choose from, at any rate,” observed
-the Marquise; “and I must say I cannot compliment him
-on the taste he has displayed in these valuables,” she added,
-with a mischievous laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“He would throw them all willingly into the Seine to-morrow,”
-continued Malletort, “might he but possess the
-gem he covets, and set it in the Crown-royal of France.
-Yes, madame, the Crown-royal, I repeat it. Where are the
-obstacles? Louis XV. may not, will not, nay, perhaps, <i>shall</i>
-not live to be a man. Madame d’Orleans inherits the feeble
-constitution, without the beauty of her mother, Madame
-de Montespan. Fagon himself will tell you her life is not
-worth nine months’ purchase, and since she has quarrelled<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span>
-with her daughter she has less interest with the Regent
-than one of the pages. Her party is no longer in power,
-the Comte de Toulouse is in disgrace, the Duc du Maine is
-in disgrace. Illegitimacy is at a discount, though, <i>parbleu</i>,
-it has no want of propagators in our day. To speak frankly,
-my cousin, a clever woman who could influence the Regent
-might sway the destinies of the whole nation in six weeks,—might
-be Queen of France in six months from this
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise listened, as Eve may have listened to
-the serpent when he pressed her to taste the apple. For
-different palates, the fruit, tempting, because forbidden,
-assumes different forms. Sometimes it represents power,
-sometimes pique, sometimes lucre, and sometimes love.
-According to their various natures, the tempted nibble at it
-with their pretty teeth, suck it eagerly with clinging lips,
-or swallow it whole, like a bolus, at a gulp. The Marquise
-was only nibbling, but her cheek glowed, her eyes shone,
-and she whispered below her breath, “The Queen of
-France;” as if there was music in the very syllables.</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé paused to let the charm work, ere he resumed,
-in his half-jesting way—</p>
-
-<p>“The Queen, madame! Despite the injustice on our
-Salic law, you may say <i>the King</i>! Such a woman, and I
-know well of whom I speak, would little by little obtain all
-the real power of the crown. She might sway the council—she
-might rule the parliament—she might control the
-finances. In and out of the palace she would become the
-dispenser of rank, the fountain of honour. Nay,” he
-added, with a laugh, “she might usurp the last privileges
-of royalty, and command the very Musketeers of the Guard
-themselves!”</p>
-
-<p>Did he know that he had touched a string to vibrate
-through his listener’s whole being? She rose and walked
-to the window, where the flowers were, while at the same
-moment he prepared to recall her hastily. It was needless,
-for she started, turning very pale, and came quietly back to
-her seat. The Abbé’s quick ear detected the tramp of a
-boot crunching the gravel walk outside, but it was impossible
-to gather from his countenance whether he suspected
-the passer-by to be of more importance than one of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>
-gardeners. The Marquise, however, had caught a glimpse
-of a figure she was beginning to know by heart too well.
-Captain George had of late, indeed ever since Cerise came
-home, contracted a habit of traversing the gardens of the
-Hôtel Montmirail to visit a post of his musketeers in the
-neighbourhood. These guards were permitted to enter
-everywhere, and Madame de Montmirail was the last person
-to interfere, in this instance, with their privileges. So
-little annoyance, indeed, did she seem to experience from
-the intrusion, that the windows of her boudoir were generally
-wide open at this hour of the day. Though to visit this
-post might be a necessary military precaution, it was
-obviously a duty requiring promptitude less than consideration.
-Captain George usually walked slowly through the
-garden, and returned in a very short time at the same
-deliberate pace. The Marquise knew perfectly well that it
-took him exactly ten minutes by the clock in her boudoir.
-When she sat down again, Malletort, without noticing her
-movement or her confusion, proceeded in a sincere and
-affectionate tone—</p>
-
-<p>“I need not explain more clearly, madame; I need not
-urge my motives nor dwell upon my own self-sacrifice. It
-is sufficient for the Abbé to see his peerless cousin set out
-on her journey to fame, and to feel that he has indicated the
-shortest path. There are obstacles, no doubt; but for
-what purpose do obstacles exist save to be surmounted or
-swept away? Let us take them as they come. I can
-count them all on the fingers of my hand.” The Abbé
-began systematically at his thumb. “The young King
-and Madame d’Orleans are already disposed of, or, at worst,
-soon will be, in the common course of events. Remain—the
-<i>roués</i>—Madame de Sabran, and Madame Parabére. Of
-these, I can manage the first without assistance. I have
-influence with the whole gang. Some may be persuaded,
-others intimidated, all can be bribed. I anticipate no
-opposition worth speaking of from the male element, fond of
-pleasure, fond of wine, and embarrassed as they are good
-for nothing. With the last two it is different. Madame de
-Sabran is witty, handsome, and well-bred; but she spares
-no person, however exalted, in her sarcasm, and the Regent
-fears her tongue while he is oppressed with her society.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-One or two more of her cutting sayings, and she will sever
-the cord, already frayed very thin, by which she holds on to
-fortune. Then she becomes but yesterday’s <i>bouquet</i>, and
-we need trouble ourselves no more with <i>her</i>! Exit
-Madame de Sabran. Enter—whom shall we name, my
-beautiful cousin? Whoever it is will have it in her power
-to become Queen of France. Now there is only Madame
-de Parabére left; but alas! she is the most dangerous and
-the most powerful of all. It is against <i>her</i> that I must ask
-you, madame, to lend me your assistance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mine!” repeated the Marquise, half surprised and half
-unwilling, though with no especial liking for the lady in
-question. “Mine! what can I do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Much,” replied Malletort, earnestly. “Indeed, everything!
-Yet, it is very little I will ask you to undertake,
-though it must eventually lead to the greatest results.
-Listen. The Regent, while he has confessed to me over
-and over again that he grows weary of Madame de Parabére,
-is yet fascinated by her beauty—the beauty, after all,
-of a baby-face with a skin like cream. Such beauty as even
-the devil must have possessed when he was young. She
-has neither wit, nor grace, nor intellect, nor form, nor even
-features. But she has her <i>skin</i>, and that I must admit
-is wonderfully clear and soft. This attraction possesses
-some incredible fascination for the Duke. If she went out
-in the sun to-morrow and came home tanned, <i>adieu</i> to her
-power for ever! I cannot make her go out in the sun, but
-I think if you will help me I can arrange that she shall
-become tanned—aye, worse than tanned, speckled all over
-like a toad. Do you remember once when they praised
-your beauty at the late King’s dinner, she said, ‘Yes, you
-were very well for a mulatto?’”</p>
-
-<p>“I have not forgotten it!” replied the Marquise, and
-her flashing eye showed that neither had she forgiven the
-offence.</p>
-
-<p>“That little compliment alone would make me her
-enemy,” continued the Abbé, “if I allowed myself such
-luxuries as likes and dislikes; but she is in our way, and
-that is a far better reason for putting her aside. Now my
-beautiful cousin has admired those flowers in the window
-more than once. She thinks they are an offering from her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-faithful kinsman. It is not so. I have procured them with
-no small trouble for Madame de Parabére!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why bring them here?” asked the Marquise,
-with a spice of pardonable pique in her tone.</p>
-
-<p>“Because, if I sent them to her with the compliments of
-Monsieur l’Abbé Malletort, the Swiss would probably not
-take them in; because if I offered them to her myself, I,
-the cynic, the unimpressionable, the man of marble, who
-has eyes but for his kinswoman, she would suspect a trick,
-or perhaps some covert insult or irony that would cause her
-to refuse the gift point-blank. No, my plan is better laid.
-You go to the masked ball at the opera to-night. She will
-be there on the Regent’s arm. Jealous, suspicious, domineering,
-she will never leave him. There is not another
-petal of stephanotis to be procured for love or money within
-thirty leagues of Paris; I have assured myself of this.
-They are her favourite flowers. You will appear at the ball
-with your <i>bouquet</i>; but for the love of heaven, my cousin,”
-and the Abbé’s countenance was really in earnest while he
-thus adjured her, “do not, even with a mask on, put it
-within six inches of your face!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is poisoned!” exclaimed the Marquise, walking,
-nevertheless, to the open window where the flowers stood.
-“Poisoned! I will have nothing to do with it. If we were
-men, I would force her to cross swords with me on the turf
-down there. But poison! No, my cousin. I tell you no.
-Never!”</p>
-
-<p>“Poison is entirely a relative term,” observed the Abbé,
-philosophically. “All drugs in excess become poisons.
-These pretty flowers are not poisoned so much as medicated.
-There is no danger to life in smelling them—none. But
-their effect on the skin is curious, really interesting from a
-scientific point of view. A few hours after inspiration, even
-of one leaf, the complexion loses its freshness, fades, comes
-out in spots—turns brown.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise listened attentively.</p>
-
-<p>“Brown! Deep brown! Browner than any mulatto!”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise wavered.</p>
-
-<p>“It really would not be a bad joke, and I think she
-deserves it for what she said of you.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise consented.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I will take them to the ball,” said she, “and if
-Madame de Parabére asks for them, why, in common
-politeness, she must have them. But mask or no mask, I
-will take care to let her know who I <i>am</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>“Better not,” said the more cautious Abbé, and would
-have explained why, but the Marquise paid no attention to
-what he said. She seemed uneasy, and moved behind the
-window-curtain with a nervous gesture and a rising colour
-in her cheek. “Another complication,” muttered her
-companion, catching once more the measured boot-tramp
-on the gravel-walk. “So be it! The more cards dealt,
-the better chance for the player who can peep at his adversary’s
-hand!”</p>
-
-<p>Looking into the garden, he perceived the Musketeer’s
-tall figure moving leisurely along the walk. His pace
-became slower and slower, and the Marquise, behind the
-curtain, blushed deeper and deeper as he came directly
-below the window, peering up at the house with an air of
-caution, not lost on Malletort’s observation.</p>
-
-<p>“I will force one of them to play a court card,” thought
-the Abbé, and muttering something about “stifling heat,”
-pushed the window noisily, as far open as it would go.</p>
-
-<p>The Musketeer looked quickly up, and at the same
-moment something white and buoyant fluttered lightly to
-the ground at his very feet.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise was trembling and blushing behind her
-window-curtain.</p>
-
-<p>The ruffles at Malletort’s wrist had brushed a cluster of
-blossoms from the stephanotis, and it fell within six inches
-of Captain George’s boot.</p>
-
-<p>He picked it up with a murmur of delight. In another
-moment he would have pressed it to his lips, but the Marquise
-could keep silence no longer. Shrouding herself in
-the window-curtain, she exclaimed in a hoarse whisper,
-“Hold! Monsieur, in Heaven’s name! It is poisoned!”</p>
-
-<p>He cast a rapid penetrating glance, up, down, all round.
-His monitress was invisible, and the Abbé had shrunk back
-into the room. Then he examined the blossoms minutely,
-though at arm’s-length, holding them in his gloved hand,
-and so twirling them carelessly about, as if to avoid observation,
-went on a few paces, ere he threw them on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
-walk and crushed them to pieces beneath his heel. For
-two minutes Madame Montmirail had been hot and cold by
-turns, giddy, choking—the Abbé, the room, the gardens,
-swimming before her eyes—now she drew a long breath of
-relief and turned to her cousin.</p>
-
-<p>“By my faith, Monsieur l’Abbé,” said she, “that soldier
-down there is a true gentleman!”</p>
-
-<p>And Malletort took his leave, reflecting that in research
-after general information, his last hour’s work had been by
-no means thrown away.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br />
-<span class="smaller">OUT-MANŒUVRED</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Captain George was not the only soldier of France whom
-a visit to the Hôtel Montmirail affected that morning with
-the slighter and premonitory symptoms of fever, such as
-dry mouth, irregular pulse, and a tendency to flush without
-physical exertion. While the Musketeer was visiting his
-outposts in anything but a warlike frame of mind, his former
-general was working his temper up to a state of nervous
-irritation more trying than usual to the valets and other
-domestics of his household. The Prince-Marshal busied
-himself to-day with preparations for his grand attack, and,
-contrary to the whole practice of his lifetime, in the event
-of failure, had made no disposition for retreat.</p>
-
-<p>He felt, indeed, a good deal more agitated now than when
-he led a forlorn-hope of Black Musketeers at twenty, an
-exploit from which he came off with three flesh wounds
-and a broken collar-bone, owing to the usual mistake of too
-short a scaling-ladder; but he consoled himself by reflecting
-how this very agitation denoted that the fountain of
-youth was not yet dried up in his heart.</p>
-
-<p>He rose early, though he could not decently present
-himself at the Hôtel Montmirail for hours to come. He
-stormed and swore because his chocolate was not ready,
-though he hardly tasted it when it was served, and indeed
-broke his fast on yolk of egg and pounded sugar, mixed
-up with a small glass of brandy.</p>
-
-<p>This stimulating refreshment enabled him to encounter
-the fatigue of dressing, and very careful the veteran was to
-marshal his staunch old forces in their most imposing array.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span></p>
-
-<p>The few teeth he could boast were polished up white and
-glistening. Their ranks indeed had been sadly thinned,
-but, like the last survivors of a beleaguered garrison, though
-shattered and disordered, they mustered bravely to the
-front. His wrinkled cheeks and pointed chin were shaved
-trim and smooth, while the moustaches on his upper lip,
-though nearly white, were carefully clipped and arranged
-in the prevailing fashion. More than once during the
-progress of the toilet, before a mirror which, he cursed repeatedly
-for a dull and unbecoming glass, his heart misgave
-him, and he treated his valets to a few camp compliments
-current amongst the old <i>die-hards</i> of Turenne; but when
-at last his cravat was fastened—his frills adjusted, his <i>just
-au corps</i> fitted on, his delicate ruffles pulled over his wasted
-hands, with their swollen knuckles and magnificent rings,
-his diamond-hilted rapier hung exactly at his hip, and his
-laced hat, cocked jauntily <i>à la Mousquetaire</i>, he took one
-approving survey in the mirror, unbecoming as it was, and
-marched forth confident and resolved to conquer.</p>
-
-<p>His carriage was waiting for him at the porter’s lodge of
-his hotel. A nobleman of those days seldom walked afoot
-in the streets, and it took four horses at least, one coachman,
-one postilion, and two or three footmen in laced coats, to
-convey a single biped the distance of a couple of hundred
-metres.</p>
-
-<p>As the door of his heraldry-covered coach closed on him
-with a bang, quoth Auguste, who had dressed him, to
-Etienne, who had handed the clothes and shared impartially
-in his master’s maledictions—</p>
-
-<p>“Come, that’s not so bad, Etienne! Hein? What
-would you have at sixty-three? And without <i>me</i>, Bones of
-St. Martin! what is he? A monkey, a skeleton, a heap
-of rugs and refuse! Ah! What it is! the toilet!—when
-a man is really master of his work.”</p>
-
-<p>The Prince-Marshal, you see, like other heroes, was none
-to his <i>valet de chambre</i>; but Auguste, a true artist, having
-neglected none of the <i>minutiæ</i>, on which success depended,
-looked to general results, and exulted in the masterpiece
-that he felt was a creation of his own genius.</p>
-
-<p>Now it fell out that the Prince de Chateau-Guerrand,
-hereditary Grand Chasseur to the King, Master of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-Horse to the Dauphin, State Exon to the sons and daughters
-of France, Marshal of its armies, and chevalier of half-a-dozen
-orders in his own and other countries, with no
-decoration on earth left to wish for but the Golden Fleece
-of Spain, which he coveted greedily in consequence, and
-prized above them all, arrived at the Hôtel Montmirail
-almost in the moment when Abbé Malletort quitted it at
-the front entrance, and Captain George of the Grey Musketeers
-left it by the garden door.</p>
-
-<p>Though the Prince’s chance of victory must have been
-doubtful at any time, I do not think he could have chosen
-a more unfavourable moment to deploy into line, as it were,
-and offer battle in the open field. His fair enemy had
-already been skirmishing with one foe, and caught sight of
-another, whom she would willingly have engaged. Her
-trumpets had sounded the <i>Alerte</i>, her colours were displayed,
-her artillery was in advance, guns unlimbered, matches
-lighted, front cleared, all her forces ready and quivering for
-action—woe to the veteran when he should leave his entrenchments,
-and sally forth to hazard all his past successes
-on the rash issue of one stand-up fight!</p>
-
-<p>His instincts told him he was wrong, even while he
-followed the obsequious lackey, in the Montmirail livery,
-through the glittering suite of rooms that led him to his
-fate. Followed, with cold hands and shaking knees, he
-who had led stormers and commanded armies! Even to
-himself there was a something of ridicule in the position;
-and he smiled, as a man smiles who is going to the dentist,
-while he whispered—“Courage, my child! It is but a
-quarter of an hour, after all! and yet—I wish I had put
-that other glass of brandy into my <i>Lait de Poule</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise received him more graciously than usual,
-and this, too, had he known it, was an omen of ill-success.
-But it is strange how little experience teaches in the
-campaigns of Cupid, how completely his guerilla style of
-warfare foils all regular strategy and established system of
-tactics. I believe any school-girl in her teens to be a match
-for the most insidious adversary of the opposite sex; and
-I think that the older the male serpent, and the oftener he
-has cast his skin, the more easily does his subtlety succumb
-to the voice of the innocent and unconscious charmer.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-What chance then had an honest, conceited, thick-headed
-old soldier, with nothing of the snake about him but his
-glistening outside, and labouring under the further disadvantage
-of being furiously in earnest, against such a
-proficient as the Marquise—a coquette of a dozen years’
-standing, rejoicing in battle, accustomed to triumph, witty,
-scornful, pitiless, and to-day, for the first time, doubtful of
-her prowess, and dissatisfied with herself?</p>
-
-<p>She had never looked better in her life; the flushed
-cheeks, the brilliant eyes, the simple white dress, with its
-scarlet breast-knots, these combined to constitute a very
-seductive whole, and one that, had there been a mirror in
-which she could see it reflected, might have gone far to
-strengthen the Abbé’s arguments, and to convince her that
-his schemes, aspiring though they seemed, were founded on
-a knowledge of human nature, experience, and common
-sense. Neither, I imagine, does a woman ever believe in
-her heart that any destiny can be quite beyond her reach.
-Though fortune may offer man something more than his
-share of goods and tangible possessions on this material
-earth, nature has conferred on woman the illimitable inheritance
-of the possible; and no beggar maiden is so lowly
-but that she may dream of King Cophetua and his crown-matrimonial
-laid at her shoeless feet.</p>
-
-<p>To see the chance, vague, yet by no means unreasonable,
-of becoming Queen of France looming in the future—to
-entertain a preference, vague, yet by no means doubtful, for
-a handsome captain of Grey Musketeers—and to be made
-honourable love to at a little past thirty by a man and a
-marshal a little past sixty—was not all this enough to impart
-a yet deeper lustre to the glowing cheeks and the bright
-eyes, to bid the scarlet breast-knots heave and quiver over
-that warm, wilful, and impassioned heart?</p>
-
-<p>It was not a fair fight; far from it. It was Goliath
-against David, and David, moreover, with neither stone nor
-sling, nor ruddy countenance, nor the mettle of untried
-courage, nor youthful confidence in his cause.</p>
-
-<p>He came up boldly, however, when he confronted his
-enemy, and kissed her hand with a ponderous compliment
-to her good looks, which she cut short rudely enough.</p>
-
-<p>Then he took his hat from the floor, and began to smooth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
-its lace against his heavy coat-cuff. She knew it was
-coming, and though it made her nervous, she rather liked
-it, notwithstanding.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame!” said the Prince-Marshal, and then he
-stopped, for his voice sounded so strange he thought he had
-better begin again.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame, I have for a long period had the honour and
-advantage of your friendship. Nay, I hope that I have, in
-all that time, done nothing to forfeit your good opinion?”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed a little unmeaning laugh, and of course
-avoided a direct answer to the question.</p>
-
-<p>“I always stand up for my friends,” said he, “and yourself,
-monsieur, amongst the number. It is no light task, I
-can assure you!”</p>
-
-<p>The veteran had opened fire now, and gained confidence
-every moment. The first step, the first plunge, the first
-sentence. It is all the same. Fairly in deep water, a
-brave man finds his courage come back even faster than it
-failed him.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame,” he resumed, laying his hat on the floor again,
-and sitting bolt upright, while his voice, though hoarser
-than usual, grew very stern, “madame, I am in earnest.
-Seriously in earnest at present. Listen. I have something
-of importance to say to you!”</p>
-
-<p>In spite of herself she was a little cowed. “One moment,
-Prince!” she exclaimed, rising to shut the door and window
-of her boudoir, as if against listeners. It was a simple
-feminine manœuvre to gain time; but, looking into the
-garden, she spied a remnant of the Stephanotis left where
-George had trodden it, and when she sat down again she
-was as brave as a lioness once more. Her change of position
-rather disordered her suitor’s line of battle, and as she
-had skilfully increased the distance between them, his
-tactics were still further impeded. In his love affairs the
-Prince-Marshal’s system had always been to come as soon
-as possible to close quarters; but it was so long since he
-had made a regular formal proposal of marriage, that he
-could not for the life of him remember the precise attitude
-in which he had advanced. Some vague recollection he
-entertained, strengthened by what he had seen on the stage,
-of going down on his knees, but the floor was very slippery,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-and he was not quite confident about getting up again. It
-would be ridiculous, he felt, to urge his suit on all-fours,
-and he knew the Marquise well enough, besides, to be quite
-sure her paroxysms of laughter in such a difficulty would
-render her incapable of returning an intelligible answer.
-Altogether, he decided on sitting still, and though it was
-obviously a disadvantage, doing his love-making at arm’s
-length.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame!” he repeated for the fourth time, “I am a
-soldier; I am a man of few words; I am, I hope, a gentleman,
-but I am no longer young. I do not dissemble this;
-I am even past my prime. Frankly, madame, I am getting
-an old man.”</p>
-
-<p>It was incontestable. She smothered a smile as she
-mentally conceded the position, but in reply she had
-nothing to say, and she said it.</p>
-
-<p>The Prince-Marshal, expecting the disclaimer that perhaps
-politeness demanded, seemed here a little bothered.
-He had no doubt gone through many rehearsals of the
-imaginary scene, and it confused him to lose his anticipated
-cue. Seeking inspiration once more, then, from his hat, he
-proceeded rather inconsequently. “Therefore it is that I
-feel emboldened in the present instance to lay before you,
-madame, the thoughts, the intentions, the wishes, in brief—the
-anticipations that I had formed of my own future, and to
-ask your opinion, and, indeed, your advice, or perhaps, I
-should say, your approval of my plans.”</p>
-
-<p>What a quick ear she had! Far off, upstairs, she heard
-the door of her daughter’s bedroom shut, and she knew that
-Cerise, after stopping at every flower-stand in the gallery,
-would as usual come straight to her mamma’s boudoir.
-Such a diversion would be invaluable, as it must for the
-present prevent any decided result from her interview with
-the Prince-Marshal. She had resolved not to accept him
-for a husband, we know, and sooner or later, she must come
-to a definite understanding with her faithful old suitor; but
-she seemed in this instance strangely given to procrastination,
-and inclined from time to time to put off the evil day.</p>
-
-<p>Why she did not prefer to have done with it once for all,
-why she could not wait calmly for his proposal and refuse
-him with a polite reverence, as she had refused a score of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-others, it is not for me to explain. Perhaps she would not
-willingly abdicate a sovereignty that became year by year
-more precious and more precarious. Perhaps she loved a
-captive, as a cat loves a mouse, allowing it so much liberty
-as shall keep it just within reach of the cruel velvet paw.
-Perhaps she shrunk from any decided step that would force
-her own heart to confess it was interested elsewhere. A
-woman’s motives may be countless as the waves on the
-shore, her intention fathomless as mid-ocean by the deep-sea
-lead.</p>
-
-<p>Hearing the march of her auxiliaries, she made light of
-an engagement at closer quarters now. Looking affectionately
-in the Prince-Marshal’s face, she drew her chair
-a little nearer, and observed in a low voice—</p>
-
-<p>“I am pretty sure to approve of any plan, my Prince,
-that conduces to your comfort—to your welfare, nay”—for
-she heard the rustle of her daughter’s dress, and the lock
-of the door move—“to your happiness!”</p>
-
-<p>The tone and accompanying glance were irresistible.
-Any male creature must have fallen a victim on the spot.
-The Prince-Marshal, sitting opposite the door, dropped his
-hat, sprang from his chair a yard at a bound, made a pounce
-at the white hand of the Marquise, and before he could
-grasp it, stopped midway as if turned to stone, his mouth
-open, his frame rigid, his very moustaches stiffening, and
-his eyes staring blankly at the figure of Cerise in the doorway,
-who, although a good deal discomposed, for she thought
-to find mamma alone, rose, or rather <i>sank</i>, to the occasion,
-and bestowed on him the lowest, the most voluminous, and
-the longest reverence that was ever practised for months
-together at their <i>pension</i> by the best brought-up young
-ladies in France. The Prince-Marshal was too good a
-soldier to neglect such an opportunity for retreat, and retired
-in good order, flattering himself that though he had suffered
-severely, it might still be considered a drawn battle with
-the Marquise.</p>
-
-<p>When he had made his bow with a profusion of compliments
-to the fresh and beautiful Mademoiselle, whom he
-wished at a worse place than back in her convent, mother
-and daughter sat down to spend the morning together.</p>
-
-<p>Contrary to custom, the pair were silent and preoccupied;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span>
-each, while she tried to seem at ease, immersed in her own
-thoughts, and yet, though engrossed with the same subject
-or meditation, it was strange that neither of them mentioned
-it to the other.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE MOTHER OF SATAN</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Malletort, leaving his cousin’s house by its principal
-egress, did not enter his coach at once, but whispering
-certain directions to the servants, proceeded leisurely down
-a narrow lane or alley, leading, after a variety of windings,
-into one of the great thoroughfares of Paris. The street
-was well adapted for such an interview, either of love or
-business, as it was desirable to keep secret, consisting, on one
-side, only of the backs of the houses, in which the windows
-were built up, and on the other, of the high dead wall that
-bounded the extensive premises of the Hôtel Montmirail.
-Casting a hasty glance before and behind, to make sure he
-was not watched, the Abbé, when he reached the narrowest
-part of the narrow passage—for it was hardly more—halted,
-smiled, and observed to himself: “A man’s character must
-be either very spotless or very good for nothing if he can
-thus afford to set the decencies of life at defiance. A
-churchman with an assignation! and at noon in this
-quarter of Paris! My friend, it is rather a strong
-measure, no doubt! And suppose, nevertheless, she
-should fail to appear? It would be the worse for her,
-that’s all! Ah! the sweet sultana! There she is!”</p>
-
-<p>While he spoke, a woman, wrapped in a large shawl,
-with another folded round her head, came swiftly down the
-alley, and stopped within two paces of him. It was the
-Quadroon, agitated, hurried, a good deal out of breath, and,
-perhaps, also a little out of temper.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s no use, Monsieur l’Abbé!” were the first words
-she gasped. “I cannot, and I dare not, and I <i>will</i> not.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-Besides, I have no time, I must be back directly. There’s
-Mademoiselle, most likely, wanting me this minute. The
-idea of such a thing! It’s out of the question altogether!”</p>
-
-<p>Malletort laughed good-humouredly. He could afford to
-be good-humoured, for the woman was in his power.</p>
-
-<p>“And the alternative?” said he. “Not that I want to
-<i>drive</i> you, my Queen of Sheba, but still, a bargain is a
-bargain. Do you think Mademoiselle would engross your
-time much longer if the Marquise knew all I know, and,
-indeed, all that it is my duty to tell her?”</p>
-
-<p>Célandine clasped her hands imploringly, and dropped at
-once into complete submission.</p>
-
-<p>“I will go with you, Monsieur l’Abbé,” said she, humbly.
-“But you will not forget your promise. If you were to
-betray me I should die.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I, too,” thought Malletort, who knew the nature
-with which he had to deal, and treated it as a keeper treats
-the tigress in her cage. “It is no question of betrayal,”
-he said, aloud. “Follow me. When we reach the carriage,
-step in. My people know where to drive.”</p>
-
-<p>He walked on very fast, and she followed him; her black
-eyes glancing fierce misgivings, like those of a wild animal
-that suspects a snare.</p>
-
-<p>Two or three more windings with which he seemed
-thoroughly familiar, a glance around that showed not a
-passenger visible, nor indeed a living soul, save a poor old
-rag-picker raking a heap of refuse with her hook, and the
-Quadroon suddenly emerged in mid-stream, so to speak,
-surrounded by the life and bustle of one of the main streets
-in Paris. At a few paces distant stood a plain, well-appointed
-coach, and the Abbé, pointing to its door, which
-a servant was holding open, Célandine found herself, ere
-she could look round, rumbling, she knew not where, over
-the noisy pavement, completely in that man’s power, for
-whom, perhaps, of all men in the world, she entertained the
-strongest feelings of terror, stronger even than her aversion.</p>
-
-<p>She did not take long, however, to recover herself. The
-strain of savage blood to which she owed those fierce black
-eyes and jetty locks gave her also, with considerable physical
-courage, the insensibility of rude natures to what we may
-term <i>moral</i> fear. She might shudder at a drawn knife if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-she were herself unarmed, or cower before a whip if her
-hands were tied and her back bared; but to future evil, to
-danger, neither visible nor tangible, she was callous as a
-child.</p>
-
-<p>They had not travelled half a mile ere she showed her
-delight in every feature of her expressive face at the rapid
-motion and the gay scenes through which she was driven.
-In a few minutes she smiled pleasantly, and asked their
-destination as gaily as if they had been going to a ball.</p>
-
-<p>Malletort thought it a good opportunity for a few impressive
-words.</p>
-
-<p>“Célandine,” said he, gravely, “every one of us has a
-treasure somewhere hidden up in the heart. What is it
-that you love better than everything else in the world?”</p>
-
-<p>The dark face, tanned by many a year of sun, yet comely
-still, saddened and softened while he spoke, the black eyes
-grew deeper and deeper as they seemed to look dreamily
-into the past. After a pause she drew a sorrowful sigh,
-and answered, “Mademoiselle!”</p>
-
-<p>“Good,” replied the Abbé. “You are bound on an
-errand now for which Mademoiselle will be grateful to you
-till her dying day.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked curiously in his face. “Cerise is dear to me
-as my own,” said she. “How can I do more for her to-day
-than yesterday, and to-morrow, and every day of my
-life?”</p>
-
-<p>He answered by another question.</p>
-
-<p>“Would you like to see your darling a Princess of
-France?”</p>
-
-<p>The Quadroon’s eyes glistened and filled with tears.</p>
-
-<p>“I would lay down my life for the child,” was all she
-said in reply.</p>
-
-<p>But he had got her malleable now, and he knew it.
-Those tear-drops showed him she was at the exact
-temperature for fusion. A little less, she would have
-remained too cold and hard. A little more, and over-excitement
-would have produced irritation, anger, defiance:
-then the whole process must have been begun again. It
-was a good time to secure her confederacy, and let her see
-a vague shadowy outline of his plans.</p>
-
-<p>In a few short sentences, but glowing and eloquent,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-because of the tropical nature to which they were
-addressed, Malletort sketched out the noble destiny he
-had in view for her mistress, and the consequent elevation
-of Cerise to the rank of royalty. He impressed on his
-listener the necessity of implicit, unquestioning obedience
-to his commands. Above all, of unbroken silence and unvaried
-caution till their point was gained.</p>
-
-<p>“As in your own beautiful island,” said the Abbé,
-soaring for the occasion to the metaphorical; “if you
-would pass by night through its luxuriant jungles, you
-must keep the star that guides you steadily in view, nor
-lose sight of it for an instant; so in the path I shall
-indicate, never forget, however distant and impracticable
-it may seem, the object to which our efforts are directed.
-In either case, if your attention wanders for a moment, in
-that moment your feet stray from the path; you stumble
-amongst the tangled creepers—you pierce yourself with the
-cruel cactus—you tread on some venomous reptile that
-turns and stings you to the bone; nay, you may topple
-headlong down a precipice into the deep, dark, silent waters
-of the lagoon. Once there, I tell you fairly, you might wait
-for a long while before the Marquise, or Mademoiselle, or
-myself would wet a finger to pull you out!”</p>
-
-<p>Thus urging on his listener the importance of her task,
-now in plain direct terms, now in the figurative language
-of parables, their drive seemed to have lasted but a few
-minutes, when it was brought to an abrupt termination by the
-stoppage of the coach before Signor Bartoletti’s residence.</p>
-
-<p>It appeared that the visitors were expected, for a couple
-of his heavily-decorated footmen waited on the stairs, and
-Célandine, following the Abbé with wondering eyes and
-faltering steps, found herself received with as much
-pomp and ceremony as if she had been a Princess of
-the Blood.</p>
-
-<p>They were ushered into the room that communicated
-with his laboratory. It was empty, but wine and fruit
-stood on the table. Malletort pressed the Quadroon to
-taste the former in vain. Then he passed without ceremony
-into the adjoining apartment, assuring her of his speedy
-return.</p>
-
-<p>Left to herself, Célandine drank greedily from the water-jug<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-ere she crossed the floor on tiptoe, stealthy as a wild
-cat, and pressing her ear to the door, applied all her
-faculties intently to the one act of listening.</p>
-
-<p>She heard the Abbé’s greeting distinctly enough, and
-the sentence immediately following, spoken laughingly, as
-usual.</p>
-
-<p>“The parts are cast,” said he, “and the stage prepared.
-It remains but to dress the principal actress and make her
-perfect in her cue.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you brought her?” answered an eager voice,
-hurried, agitated, and scarcely above a whisper.</p>
-
-<p>Indistinct as were the syllables, their effect on the
-Quadroon was like magic. She started, she passed her
-hand wildly across her face; her very lips turned white,
-and she trembled in every limb. Her attitude was no
-longer the simple act of listening. In concentrated
-eagerness it resembled the crouch of a leopard before
-its spring.</p>
-
-<p>The door opened, and she sprang in good earnest. As
-Bartoletti crossed the threshold she flew at him, and with
-one pounce had him fast by the throat.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he?” she screamed, with foaming lips and
-flashing eyes. “Where is he? What have you done with
-him? I will kill you if you do not tell me. Man! Beast!
-Monster! Where have you hid my child?”</p>
-
-<p>It took all the Abbé’s strength, combined with the
-Italian’s own efforts, to untwine those nervous fingers.
-At last he shook himself free, to stand gasping, panting,
-wiping his face, exhausted, terror-stricken, and unmanned.</p>
-
-<p>When her physical powers yielded, her nervous system
-gave way as well. Sinking into a chair, she sobbed and
-wept hysterically, rocking herself to and fro, murmuring—</p>
-
-<p>“My baby! My fair-faced baby! My own! My only
-child!”</p>
-
-<p>Bartoletti had by this time found his voice, though still
-husky and unstrung.</p>
-
-<p>“Célandine!” he exclaimed, and the tone denoted fear,
-anxiety, surprise, even disgust, yet a something of tenderness
-and interest ran through it all.</p>
-
-<p>Malletort lifted his eyebrows, shrugged his shoulders, and
-had recourse to his snuff-box. A few words had settled his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
-business with the Adept, and his fine perceptions told him
-that in a scene like the present, however it originated, the
-interference of a third person would do more harm than
-good. Had he permitted himself such weaknesses, he felt
-he could have been astonished; but the Abbé had long
-established as an axiom, that, “he might be disgusted, but
-could never be surprised.” He had skill to distinguish,
-moreover, the nice point at which a delicate piece of workmanship
-may be quite spoiled by one additional touch, and
-knew the exact moment when it is advisable to leave both
-well and ill alone; so he pocketed his snuff-box, and made
-a bow to the agitated pair.</p>
-
-<p>“An unexpected recognition,” said he, politely, “and
-agitating, I perceive, to both. My introduction is then
-unnecessary. Pardon! You will permit me to wish you
-good-day, and leave you to arrange matters between yourselves!”</p>
-
-<p>Insensibly Bartoletti opened the door for his guest. Insensibly
-he returned the parting salutation, and insensibly,
-like a sleep-walker, he sat down opposite and gazed blankly
-in the Quadroon’s face.</p>
-
-<p>She at least was awake, and on the alert. The storm of
-her emotion had subsided. She summoned all her energies
-for the object she had in view.</p>
-
-<p>“Stefano!” she said, in a kindly conciliating tone,
-“forgive my violence. You and I have been friends for
-years. You know my quick temper of old. I can trust
-you. You can never be indifferent to my welfare.”</p>
-
-<p>He was sufficiently reassured by this time to fill a large
-goblet of wine, which he half emptied at a gulp. His cheek
-regained its swarthy bloom, and his little black eye glistened
-fondly, while he answered—</p>
-
-<p>“Never indifferent, Célandine! Never false! Never
-changed in all these years!”</p>
-
-<p>She was, as we know, one-fourth a negress, and past
-middle age—of an exterior so wild and weird, that the
-courtiers called her, as we also know, “The Mother of
-Satan.” He was turned fifty, self-indulgent, dishonest,
-with oily skin and beady eyes; short, swarthy, thick-set,
-and altogether not unlike a mole! Yet was there a spark
-of true love for his visitor lurking somewhere not entirely<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
-smothered amongst all the mass of impurities with which
-the man’s heart was filled.</p>
-
-<p>She was too much a woman to be quite unconscious of
-her power. She spoke in soft and coaxing accents now,
-while she replied—</p>
-
-<p>“I know it, Stefano. I believe it. I have also a good
-memory, and am not likely to forget. And, Stefano, you
-have a kind heart—you will not keep me longer in suspense
-about the child. He is here? In this house? In the
-next room? Oh! let me see him! Let me only see him,
-and I will do anything you ask!”</p>
-
-<p>She had slid from her chair, and knelt before him, holding
-the Adept’s scarred, burned fingers to her lips.</p>
-
-<p>His face betrayed the pain he suffered in inflicting pain
-on her. “What can I tell you?” he answered. “It is cruel
-to deceive you. It is cruel to speak the truth. I have never
-seen the boy since he left me. Do you think I would have
-kept him from you? How can I find him? How can I
-bring him back? You talk as if I was King of France!”</p>
-
-<p>A horrible fear came across her. She rose to her feet,
-and shook both fists in his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Man!” she exclaimed, “do not tell me he is dead!
-You shall answer for it, if heaven or hell have any power
-on earth!”</p>
-
-<p>There were tears in his little beady eyes, unaccustomed
-tears, that vouched for his truth, even to <i>her</i>, while he
-replied—</p>
-
-<p>“You are unjust, Célandine; and you would see your injustice
-if you did but think for a moment. What had I to
-gain by taking care of the boy? What had I to gain by
-ridding myself of him? Had I been to blame, do you
-suppose I should have sent you the earliest information of
-his flight? Have I not felt your sorrows keenly as if they
-were my own? Do I not feel for you now? Listen. I
-am the same Stefano Bartoletti who told you the secret of
-his life, the desire of his heart, by the side of that sweet
-serene lagoon, in the beautiful island which probably neither
-of us may ever see again. I have learned many strange
-lessons—I have witnessed many strange scenes since then.
-Many years have passed over my head, and wisdom has not
-despised me as the least apt among her pupils. Statesmen,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-nobles, princes themselves have been glad to visit me in
-person, and reap the fruit of my studies and my experience.
-But I tell you, Célandine,” and here the little man smote
-his breast, and for the moment looked every inch a champion,
-“I am the same Stefano Bartoletti. I swear to you
-that if you will but join me heart and hand in this, the last
-and greatest of my schemes, I will never rest till I have
-found the boy, and brought him back into his mother’s arms!”</p>
-
-<p>She gave a wild, fierce cry of joy, and was hugging the
-brown hand to her bosom once more.</p>
-
-<p>“Money,” observed the Signor, walking thoughtfully up
-and down the room as soon as she had sufficiently composed
-herself to listen, “money, you perceive, is the one thing
-we require. Money alone can overcome this, like all other
-difficulties on earth. Money in sufficient quantity would
-make me independent, contented, perhaps happy.” Here
-he stole a tender look in the Quadroon’s face. “Money
-would enable me to quit these cold, dull regions; this constrained,
-confined, unnatural life. Money would restore <i>me</i>
-my liberty, and <i>you</i> your child. Célandine, will you help
-me to get it?”</p>
-
-<p>He had touched the right chord. There was eager
-hope and wild unscrupulous energy in her face while she
-answered—</p>
-
-<p>“I will! I swear it! Heart and hand I go in with you
-for this object, and neither fire nor water, nor steel nor
-poison shall turn me now. You know me, Stefano. I will
-shrink from nothing. But it is—it is not a question of
-blood?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no!” he replied, laughing. “You, too, are
-unchanged, Célandine. Always in extremes. Make yourself
-easy on that score. It is but a trick of your former
-trade. None but yourself can do it half so well. I will
-explain it all in five minutes when I have finished this cup
-of wine. But, Célandine,” and here her old admirer drew
-closer and whispered in her ear.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot tell,” she laughed. “It is impossible to give
-an answer yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the price?” continued he, earnestly. “Surely it
-must have fallen now, though the Marquise is hard to deal
-with on such matters.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Quadroon shook her head archly, indeed, coquettishly
-for her years and replied—</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly not less than a couple of thousand francs?”</p>
-
-<p>“But suppose she knew everything!” urged the lover.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I think she would be so angry, she would have
-me flogged and give me away for nothing!”</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head, pondering deeply. The flogging was
-indeed a serious consideration. But then, what a reduction
-it would make in the price!</p>
-
-<p>There was grave matter, he thought, for reflection in the
-whole business, and his manner was more sedate than usual,
-while he instructed Célandine in a certain part that the
-Abbé and he had agreed she should perform.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE DÉBONNAIRE</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“It is good to be superior to mortal weakness,” said
-Malletort to himself as he re-entered his coach and drove
-from Bartoletti’s door. “In the human subject I cannot
-but observe how few emotions are conducive to happiness.
-That which touches the heart seems always prejudicial to
-the stomach. How ridiculous, how derogatory, and how
-uncomfortable to turn red and pale, to burst into tears, to
-spring at people’s throats, nay, even to feel the pulse beat,
-the head swim, the voice fail at a word, a look, a presence!
-What, then, constitutes the true well-being of man, the
-<i>summum bonum</i>, the vantage point, the grand <i>desideratum</i>
-to which all philosophy is directed? Self-command! But
-self-command leads to the command of others—to success,
-to victory, to power! and power, with none to share it, none
-to benefit by it, is it worth the labour of attainment? Can
-it be that its eminence is but like the crest of a mountain,
-from which the more extended the horizon the flatter and
-the more monotonous appears the view. It may, but what
-matter? Let me only get to the summit, and I can always
-come down again at my leisure. <i>Basta!</i> here we are.
-Now to gain a foothold on the slippery path that leads to
-the very top!”</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé’s carriage was brought to a halt while he spoke
-by a post of Grey Musketeers stationed in front of the
-Palais-Royal. The churchman’s plain and quiet equipage
-had no right of entrance, and he alighted to pass through
-the narrow ingress left unguarded for foot-passengers.
-Hence he crossed a paved court, turned short into a wing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>
-of the building with which he seemed well acquainted, and
-stopped at the foot of a narrow staircase, guarded by one
-solitary sentry of the corps.</p>
-
-<p>It was our acquaintance, Bras-de-Fer, beguiling the
-tedium of his watch by a mental review of his own adventures
-in love and war.</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé knew everybody, and the grim Musketeer
-saluted his holy friend cordially enough, excusing himself,
-while he balanced his heavy weapon across his breast, that
-his orders forbade him to allow any one to pass.</p>
-
-<p>“Lay down your arms, my son,” said the churchman,
-good-humouredly. “How your wrists must ache by supper-time!
-I have but three words to say to your captain, and
-if you will bend your tall head lower by a few inches I can
-give you the countersign.”</p>
-
-<p>With that he whispered it in his ear, and Bras-de-Fer,
-again excusing himself, bade him pass on, regaining an
-attitude of extreme stiffness and martial severity, as if to
-make amends for past civility somewhat at variance with
-established discipline.</p>
-
-<p>A green-baize door at the head of the staircase swung
-open to the Abbé’s push, admitting him to an ante-room,
-of which Captain George was the only occupant. He, too,
-seemed weary of his watch, which was tedious from its dull
-unvarying routine—void of excitement, yet entailing grave
-and oppressive responsibilities. His greeting to Malletort,
-however, was more cordial, so thought that keen observer,
-than is afforded by a man who merely wearies of his own
-society; and the Abbé was right in his general impression,
-only wrong in detail.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George was indeed favourably affected to everybody
-connected, however distantly, with the house of
-Montmirail. So far the Abbé judged correctly enough, but
-he missed the true cause by a hair’s-breadth, and attributed
-to the magic of black eyes an effect exclusively owing to
-blue.</p>
-
-<p>There was little leisure, however, for exchange of compliments,
-and the Musketeer’s solitude was to be relieved
-but for a few precious moments at a time.</p>
-
-<p>“His Highness has already twice asked for you,” said
-he, in the tone of an injured man. “You had better go in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-at once.” So Malletort, leaving the ill-used warrior to his
-own companionship, passed on to an inner apartment, taking
-with him a stool in his hand, as was the custom, in case
-the interview should be protracted, and the Regent require
-him to sit down.</p>
-
-<p>The room he entered was small, gloomy, panelled with a
-dark-coloured wood, octagonal in shape, relieved by very
-little furniture, and having another door, opposite that
-which admitted the visitor, concealed by heavy velvet
-curtains. At the solitary table, and on the single chair
-the apartment contained, a man was seated, writing busily,
-with his back to the Abbé. A general air of litter pervaded
-the place, and although the table was heaped with papers,
-several more were scattered in disorder over the floor.</p>
-
-<p>The writer continued his occupation for several minutes,
-as if unconscious of the Abbé’s presence. Suddenly he
-gave a sigh of relief, pushed his chair back from the table,
-and looked up joyously, like a schoolboy interrupted in his
-task.</p>
-
-<p>“You are welcome, monsieur, you are welcome,” said he,
-rising and pacing to and fro with short, quick steps, while
-Malletort performed a series of courtly and elaborate bows.
-“I am about wearied of figures, and I have been saying to
-myself, with every passing step for the last half-hour, ‘Ah!
-here comes my little Abbé, who confines himself exclusively
-to facts—my material and deep-thinking churchman, the
-best judge in Christendom of wine, pictures, carriages,
-cutlets, ankles, eyelashes, probabilities, dress, devilry, and
-deeds of darkness. Here are calculations of Las, to show
-us all how we need only be able to write our names, and so
-acquire boundless wealth; but the miserable Scotchman
-knows no more than the dead how to spend his millions.
-Would you believe it, my dear fellow, Vaudeville dined with
-him last night, and they served olives with the stewed
-ortolans? Olives, I tell you, with ortolans! The man
-must be a hog!” And the Regent wrinkled up his forehead
-while he spoke in a favourite grimace, that he flattered
-himself resembled the portraits of Henri Quatre.</p>
-
-<p>He bore, indeed, a kind of spurious resemblance to that
-great king and gallant soldier, but the resemblance of the
-brach to the deer-hound, the palfrey to the war-horse, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-hawk to the eagle. He made the most of it, however, such
-as it was; brushed his dark hair into a cluster on the top of
-his head, contracted the point of his nose, elongated his
-chin, and elevated his eyebrows, till he almost fancied himself
-the first Bourbon who sat on the throne of France.
-Nay, he even went so far as to wear his stockings and the
-knees of his breeches extremely tight, while the latter were
-gathered and puckered loosely about the waist, to approach
-as nearly as possible the costume in which the hero was
-usually portrayed.</p>
-
-<p>In all the worst points of his paragon’s character he
-copied him to the life, only exaggerating to habitual vice the
-love of pleasure that was Henry’s principal weakness. As
-the Duke’s face was broad, high-coloured, good-humoured,
-nay, notwithstanding the marks it bore of his excesses,
-tolerably well-favoured, while his figure, though scarcely tall
-enough for dignity, was robust and in fair proportion, the
-imitation seemed, perhaps, not entirely unfaithful to its
-original. Both possessed in a high degree the charm of an
-exquisite manner; but while the King of Navarre combined
-with a monarch’s condescension the frank and simple bearing
-of a soldier, the Duke of Orleans was especially distinguished
-for the suavity and external ease that mark the
-address of an accomplished gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>This prince possessed, no doubt, the germ of many good
-qualities, but how could the most promising seed bear fruit
-when it was choked up and overgrown by such rank weeds
-as gluttony, drunkenness, and sensuality? vices which seem
-to sap the energy of the mind as surely, if not so rapidly,
-as they destroy the vigour of the body.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the Regent was gifted with a certain persuasive
-eloquence, a certain facility of speech and gesture, invaluable
-to those who have the conduct of public affairs. He
-possessed a faithful memory, ready wit, imperturbable good-humour,
-and quickness of perception in seizing the salient
-points of a subject, which made him appear, at least, a
-capable politician, if not a deep and far-seeing statesman.
-Neither was he wanting in that firmness which was so
-much required by the state of parties at the time when he
-assumed the Regency, and this was the more remarkable,
-that his nervous system could not but have been much<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
-deteriorated and deranged by the frequency and extravagance
-of his debauches. Meantime, we have left the Abbé
-bowing and the Duke grimacing at the bare idea of brown
-game and olives in the same stew-pan, a subject that occupied
-his attention for several minutes. Rousing himself
-after a while, he began, as usual, to detail the proceedings
-of the morning’s council to Malletort, who had grown by
-degrees, from a mere comrade of his pleasures, into the confidential
-and principal adviser of his schemes. It promised
-to be a long report, and he motioned the Abbé, who had
-fortunately prepared himself with a stool, to sit down.
-There were many complaints to make—many knots to
-unfasten—many interests to reconcile, but the Abbé listened
-patiently, and suggested remedies for each in turn.</p>
-
-<p>The parliament had been refractory. Nothing could bring
-them to subjection but a Bed of Justice, or full assemblage
-of peers and representatives in presence of the young king.</p>
-
-<p>The Keeper of the Seals was unreasonable. He must be
-forced into collision with the parliament, whom he had
-always held in antagonism, and they might be left to punish
-each other.</p>
-
-<p>The Duc du Maine and Marshal de Villeroy, constant
-thorns in the Regent’s side, had applied for more powers,
-more pomp, and, worse still, more money, on the score of
-the young king. His Majesty must be set against his
-governors, and it could best be done by making a festival
-for him to which these would not trust his person, and from
-which an enforced restriction would cause the royal pupil to
-feel himself shamefully aggrieved. In short, conflicting
-interests were to be reconciled, if their disunion seemed to
-threaten the Government; political parties to be dissolved
-by a judicious apple of discord thrown in their midst at the
-Abbé’s instigation; and a general balance of power to be
-established, in which the Regent could always preponderate
-by lending his own weight to the scale. Altogether
-a dozen difficulties of statecraft were disposed of in as
-many minutes, and the Duke, rising from the table, pressed
-his hand familiarly on the confidant’s shoulder, to keep him
-in his seat, and exclaimed, gaily—</p>
-
-<p>“They may well call me the ‘Débonnaire,’ little Abbé.
-Hein! There have been but two Bourbons yet who ever<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
-<i>understood</i> France. One was a king, and the other—well,
-the other is only a regent. No matter. Cric! Crac! Two
-snaps of the fingers, and everything fits into its place like
-a game at dominoes. But, little Abbé,” added the exulting
-politician, while his brow clouded and he forgot to look like
-Henri Quatre, “to govern the nation signifies but ruling
-<i>men</i>. Such matters arrange themselves. The state machine
-can go without a push. But I have worse complications
-than these. Counsel me, my dear Abbé. There is discord
-dire this morning throughout the women. I tell you the
-whole heap are at daggers drawn with one another, and my
-life is hardly safe amongst them all.”</p>
-
-<p>Malletort smiled and shook his head. The difficulty was
-natural enough, but the remedy required consideration. So
-he opened his snuff-box.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a tribe of Arabs,” he replied, “Highness, far
-up in the desert, of whom I have heard that their religion
-permits each man to marry two wives, but with the stipulation,
-at first sight reasonable enough, that he should live
-with them both in one tent. The practice of bigamy, I
-understand, has in that tribe so fallen into disuse as to be
-completely unknown.”</p>
-
-<p>The Regent laughed loudly. “I believe it,” said he, “I
-believe it implicitly. Powers of strife! and parts of speech.
-A man should be blind and deaf also to endure the Parabére
-and the Sabran in neighbouring <i>faubourgs</i>, not to speak of
-the same tent! Ah! these Orientals understand domestic
-government thoroughly. The harem is a place for repose,
-and a noisy woman soon quits it, I believe, by the river-gate.
-We too have the Seine, but alas! where is the sack?
-I tell you, Malletort, I am tired of them both. I am tired
-of them all. Madame la Duchesse may be cold, pompous,
-stiff, contradictory, and, oh! as wearisome as a funeral! but
-at least she remains half the day in her own apartments,
-and can command herself sufficiently to behave with decency
-when she leaves them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Madame la Duchesse,”replied the Abbé, bowing reverentially,
-“is an exemplary and adorable princess. She has
-but one fault, perhaps I should say less her fault than her
-misfortune—she is your Highness’s wife.”</p>
-
-<p>The Débonnaire laughed again, loud and long. “Well<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-said, little Abbé!” he exclaimed. “<i>My</i> fault, <i>her</i> misfortune.
-Nevertheless the crime is unpardonable—so no more
-of <i>her</i>. How shall I reconcile Madame de Sabran and
-Madame de Parabére? I tell you, they sup with us this
-very night. You make one, Abbé, of course!” Malletort
-bowed lower than ever. “But think of these two at enmity
-across my narrow table! Why the Centaurs and Lapithæ
-would be a love-feast compared to it. Like my ancestor of
-Navarre, Monsieur l’Abbé, I fear neither man nor devil, but
-there are some women, I honestly confess, whose anger I
-dare not encounter, and that is the truth!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know nothing of women and their ways,” answered
-Malletort, humbly. “It is a science my profession and my
-inclinations forbid me alike to understand, but I imagine
-that in gallantry as in chemistry, counteracting influences
-are most effectual when of a cognate nature to the evil.
-<i>Similia similibus curantur</i>; and your Highness can have
-no difficulty, surely, in applying a thousand smiling soft-spoken
-antidotes to two scowling women.”</p>
-
-<p>The Regent shook his head gravely. It was a subject of
-which he had diligently studied both theory and practice, yet
-found he knew little more about it than when he began.</p>
-
-<p>“They are all so different,” he complained, peevishly,
-“and yet all so alike in their utter insensibility to reason,
-their perverted wilfulness in looking on impossibilities as
-accomplished facts. There is Madame de Sabran wants me
-to make her a duchess of France! ‘How can I make you
-a duchess of France, madame?’ said I. ‘Would you have
-your “mastiff,” as you call him, created a duke for <i>your</i>
-services?’ ‘He would make a better than so and so, and
-so and so,’ she answered, as coolly as possible, naming half-a-dozen,
-who it must be confessed are not one bit more
-respectable! That is another thing about the woman, she
-always contrives to have a distorted shadow of reason, like
-a stick in the water, on her side. It was only the other
-day I made him one of my chamberlains, and now she
-declares he ought to be given a step of rank to uphold the
-dignity of the office. How can you reason with such a
-woman as that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Waste of time, Highness!” answered Malletort, composedly.
-“They are born not to be instructed, but admired!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I used to admire her more than I do now,” observed
-the Regent, thoughtfully. “Still the woman is amusing
-and witty; there is no denying it. Besides, she speaks her
-mind freely, and however violent the passions she puts
-herself in, they are over in five minutes. But what am I to
-do with the other? I give you the honour of a Bourbon,
-my friend, she has not uttered a syllable beyond ‘Yes,
-monsieur,’ ‘No, monsieur,’ since yesterday afternoon, when
-she dropped at once from the height of good-humour into a
-fit of impenetrable sulks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Without the slightest cause, of course!” observed the
-Abbé.</p>
-
-<p>“Without the slightest cause,” repeated the Prince, “at
-least that I could discover. There was indeed a slight
-difficulty about some flowers. I had promised her a
-bouquet of stephanotis for the masked ball to-night. It
-is rare—its smell is to me overpowering, but it is her
-favourite perfume. Well, my people scoured the country
-for half-a-dozen leagues round Paris, and none was to be
-procured. With you or me, Abbé, the conclusion would
-seem natural enough, that if the stephanotis has not yet
-bloomed, the stephanotis cannot yet be in flower. But to
-a woman—bah—such an argument is no reason at all! It
-is quite possible she may even refuse to accompany me to
-the ball to-night!”</p>
-
-<p>Malletort did not think so, and his hopes, just now so
-buoyant, lost nothing by a suggestion which only betrayed
-his patron’s ignorance of the female mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Highness,” he exclaimed, throwing a gleam of
-sympathy into his eyes, which contrasted much with their
-usual expression, “how completely is your condescension
-misjudged! how utterly your kind heart thrown away!
-You say truly, women are so different. These think of
-their own aggrandisement even while they bask in your
-affection. Others here at Court would throw themselves
-body and soul at your feet were you to-morrow changed into
-a simple page from Duke of Orleans and Master of France!”</p>
-
-<p>“How?” exclaimed the Regent, unable to conceal that
-his vanity was gratified. “Do you speak from your own
-knowledge? Are you laughing at me? How can you
-possibly have found this out?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It is indeed a matter quite beyond my province,”
-answered the Abbé; “but circumstances have thrown me
-so frequently into the society of one of the ladies in question,
-that I must indeed have been blind not to perceive the
-truth. Excuse me, Highness, I had rather not pursue the
-subject any farther.”</p>
-
-<p>But the Regent was not so to be put off. With all his
-shrewdness, he had considerable personal vanity, and but
-for his debaucheries, might perhaps have shown some
-sensibility of heart. In his mind he ran over the leading
-beauties of the Court, and as he had been little scrupulous
-in paying them attention, one and all, the riddle was perhaps
-the less difficult to solve. His eye sparkled, and he
-clapped his hands like a schoolboy, while he shouted out—</p>
-
-<p>“I have it! I have it! Little Abbé, you have let the
-cat out of the bag. Now I know why the proudest names
-in France have been offered her in vain. Now I understand
-her defiance, her coldness, her unapproachable dignity.
-Do you know, my friend, what you tell me is a veritable
-romance, and, in return, I assure you I have never been
-insensible to the charms of Madame de Montmirail!”</p>
-
-<p>“You are speaking of my kinswoman, Monsieur le
-Duc,” replied the Abbé, haughtily; “and a member of
-the proudest house in the kingdom. Your Highness will
-be good enough to reflect that I mentioned no names, and
-I have been too faithful a servant, I think, to deserve a
-gratuitous insult.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon, my dear Abbé!” exclaimed the Regent, with
-an affectation of deep concern, though accepting Malletort’s
-protest, no doubt, at its real value. “None can respect
-the house of Montmirail more than I do. None can value
-the friendship of Abbé Malletort so much; but these women
-and their whims turn my poor head. What did you advise
-about the Parabére? I forget.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dismiss her!” answered the churchman, shortly. “It
-will be one embarrassment the less in your Highness’s
-career.”</p>
-
-<p>“But she is so beautiful,” whimpered the Regent.
-“There is not such another complexion in France. If I
-were to leave her, do you not think half my nobility would
-be mad to pay their court to her? She is so white, you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
-see—so exceedingly white and soft. Such a skin, my dear
-Abbé. Such a skin!”</p>
-
-<p>“Skin her then!” replied Malletort, “and make a
-covering of her integument for your arm-chair. It is the
-best advice I can offer your Highness, and what I should
-do myself in your case.”</p>
-
-<p>Then they both laughed at the brutal jest. The one
-because he was in high good-humour with the prospect of
-his hinted conquest; the other because he had not forgotten
-the bouquet, of which a few inhalations could turn the whole
-face black; and because, reflecting on the rapid progress of
-his schemes, he thought it only fair that those should laugh
-who win.</p>
-
-<p>But in order thoroughly to act his part out, he returned
-to business before he took his leave. “Those <i>Lettres de
-Cachet</i>!” he exclaimed, as if he had just recollected them.
-“Did your Highness express your views on the subject to
-your council?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did indeed,” answered the Regent, significantly;
-“and the good old custom is revived by an edict. But
-though he who seeks finds, I think he is more sure to find
-who <i>hides</i>, and I will take care no man in France shall
-use them but myself.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Malletort bowed himself out, well satisfied, and
-found Captain George in the ante-room, putting on his
-belts to receive the Black Musketeers, whose band could be
-heard playing and their arms clashing as they marched into
-the court to relieve guard.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE MASKED BALL</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>That night much noise and confusion reigned outside the
-Grand Opera House. Torches flared, linkmen shouted,
-horses plunged, backed, and clattered; oaths flew here and
-there, whips were plied, carriage-wheels grated, coachmen
-swore, and, at short intervals, tall figures of the Black
-Musketeers were called in to keep order, a duty they fulfilled
-in a summary manner, with little forbearance to the
-public, dealing kicks, cuffs, and such remonstrances freely
-around, and clearing a space, wherever space was required,
-by dropping the butts of their heavy weapons on the feet of
-the recoiling crowd. With such powerful assistance, coach
-after coach deposited its load at the grand entrance, around
-which were congregated valets and lackeys wearing the
-liveries of the noblest families in France.</p>
-
-<p>Beautiful and gorgeous were the dresses thus emerging
-for an instant under the red glare of torchlight, to disappear
-through the folding-doors within. Shimmering the satin,
-and sparkling with jewels, the loveliest women of the capital
-passed in review for three paces before the populace, little
-loth, perhaps, to submit their toilets to the scientific
-criticism of a Parisian crowd, a criticism that reached,
-however, no higher than the chin, for every one of those
-fair French faces was hidden in a black mask. Their
-gallants, on the contrary, came unprovided with these
-defences, and the male bird, indeed, though without
-question the uglier animal, was on the present occasion
-equal in brilliancy of plumage to his mate.</p>
-
-<p>It is, however, with the interior that we have to do;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-behind the folding-doors that swallowed up these radiant
-visions in succession so greedily. That interior was flooded
-in a warm yellow light. A hundred glittering lustres shone
-and twinkled at narrow intervals, to stud the curves of
-white and gold and crimson that belted the ample circle of
-the building, while high in the centre of its dome an enormous
-chandelier flashed and gleamed and dazzled, like some
-gigantic diamond shivered into a thousand prismatic fragments.
-From roof to flooring fresh bright colours bloomed
-in the boxes, as bloom the posies on a flower-stall; while
-pit, stage, and orchestra, boarded to a level, had become a
-shifting sea of brilliant hues, whirling, coiling, undulating,
-ebbing, flowing, surging into a foam of light and snowy
-plumes, bearing in turn each colour of the rainbow to its
-surface—flashing and glistening through all its waters with
-a blaze of gems and gold.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George was wading about in it, more preoccupied
-and less inclined to take advantage of its gaieties than a
-musketeer usually found himself in such a scene of revelry.
-His distinguished air and manly bearing drew on him,
-indeed, gibes and taunts, half-raillery, half-compliment,
-from many a rosy mouth smiling under its black mask; but
-to these he answered not a word.</p>
-
-<p>He was unlike himself to-night—dull, abstracted, and out
-of spirits. Even Bras-de-Fer, he felt, would have composed
-and propounded his heaviest retorts in less time than it
-took his captain to understand any one of the jests levelled
-at a taciturnity so out of place. He was in no mood for
-banter, nor intrigue, nor amusement—not even for supper.
-He wanted to see Cerise; he confessed it to himself without
-reserve, yet he neither expected nor wished to find her in
-such a scene as this.</p>
-
-<p>An attachment between two young persons, if of a nature
-to arrive at maturity, seems to gain growth and vigour in an
-inverse proportion to the amount of care bestowed on its
-cultivation. The plant is by no means an exotic, scarce
-even a garden-flower. Nay, I think a chance seedling of
-this tribe comes to fuller perfection than either graft or
-cutting. It is good for it also to be crushed, mangled, mown
-over, or trodden down. Storms and snows and bitter frosts
-bring it rapidly into flower, and it is astonishing, though a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
-tropical blaze could not satisfy its wants, how little sunshine
-is required to keep it alive.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George’s meetings with Cerise were indeed as
-numerous as five or six in the week; but they took place at
-an interval of twenty feet, and consisted of low bows and
-eager glances from a gentleman on a gravel walk, returned
-by the formal reverence and deep blush of a young lady in
-a window-seat. On the principle that half a loaf is better
-than no bread, I presume crumbs are acceptable when
-crusts are not to be obtained. So the Musketeer had felt
-ill at ease all day, and was now in the most unsuitable
-frame of mind possible for a masquerade, because the girl
-had been absent from her window when he passed, which
-was indeed his own fault, since, in his impatience, he had
-crossed the gardens of the Hôtel Montmirail a quarter of an
-hour before his usual time, and had thus perhaps inflicted
-as much disappointment as he sustained.</p>
-
-<p>Now people in the irritable frame of mind caused by a
-little anxiety, a little disappointment, and a good deal of
-uncertainty, seldom betake themselves to solitude, which is
-indeed rather the resort of real happiness or the refuge of
-utter despair. The simply discontented are more prone to
-rush into a crowd, and Captain George had no idea of
-abstaining from the Great Masked Ball at the Opera House,
-but rather made his appearance somewhat earlier than his
-wont at this festivity, though when there, he roamed about
-in a desultory and dissatisfied manner, first dreading, then
-faintly hoping, and lastly ardently desiring to meet Mademoiselle
-de Montmirail amongst that brilliant, shifting,
-bantering, and mysterious throng. Disguised indeed!
-He would know her, he felt sure, by her pretty feet alone,
-if she were masked down to her very ankles.</p>
-
-<p>He was not so well versed in feminine arts but that he
-had yet to learn how a lady who really wished to remain
-unknown at these gatherings would alter her voice, her
-gestures, her figure, her gait—nay, the very shape of her
-hands and feet, to deceive those on whom she wished to
-practise.</p>
-
-<p>The majority, on the contrary, were most unwilling thus
-to sink their identity, and only wore masks, I imagine, to
-hide the absence of blushes at such direct compliments as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-were sure to be addressed to them, also as an excuse for
-considerable freedom of speech in return.</p>
-
-<p>The orchestra was pealing out a magnificent “Minuet de
-la Cour,” and that stately measure, performed by a few
-couples of the handsomest gallants and ladies of the Court,
-was eliciting the applause of a large and critical circle,
-amongst whom Captain George made one, when a voice
-thrilled in his ear, the tone of which brought the blood to
-his cheek, while a masked figure beside him passed her
-hand lightly through his arm. A tremendous flourish of
-brass instruments rendered the moment well-chosen for
-secret communication; but the mask had apparently nothing
-more confidential to say than this—</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Qui cherche trouve!</i> You seek something, fair Musketeer.
-If you are in earnest, you shall find what you require!”</p>
-
-<p>The voice reminded him almost painfully of Cerise, yet
-was it deeper and fuller than the girl’s in tone. He
-scanned the figure at his side with a quick penetrating
-glance; but she was so shrouded in a black satin cloak
-reaching to the flounces of her ball-dress, that he gathered
-but little from her inspection. He noted, however, a leaf
-of the stephanotis, peeping from under the folds that concealed
-her bouquet, and recollecting the events of the
-morning, made a shrewd guess at his companion.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps she would have thought him very stupid had it
-been otherwise. All this elaborate artifice of disguise may
-have been for her own deception, not his. She might talk
-to him more freely under protest, as it were, that he had no
-right to know her; and she was, moreover, so well enveloped
-and altered, that she could scarcely be identified by passing
-acquaintances, or, indeed, by any one with whom she refused
-to converse.</p>
-
-<p>“I seek only amusement,” answered the Musketeer, with
-the natural instinct of mankind to disavow sentiment. “I
-have not yet found much, I confess, though Point d’Appui’s
-airs and graces in the dance there would afford it to any
-one who had not seen them as often as I have.”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed scornfully, leaning on his arm. “And they
-call that thing <i>a Man</i>!” said she, with an accent on the
-substantive extremely uncomplimentary to Count Point
-d’Appui, who was indeed a handsome, conceited, pleasant,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-young good-for-nothing enough; “and these are the objects
-women break their hearts about—dress for them, dance for
-them, die for them; nay, even come to masked balls, disfigured
-and disguised for their unworthy sakes. What fools
-you must think us, Captain George; and what fools we
-are!”</p>
-
-<p>“You know me, madame,” exclaimed the Musketeer,
-affecting surprise, rather as entering into the spirit of the
-scene than with any deeper motive. “You must know,
-then, that I am amongst the most devoted and respectful
-admirers of your sex.”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed again the low soft laugh that was one of her
-greatest charms, and lost, moreover, none of its attraction
-from her disguise.</p>
-
-<p>“Know you!” she repeated, still leaning on his arm
-perhaps a little heavier than before. “What lady in Paris
-does not know you as the citadel to resist all her efforts of
-attack?—as the Orson, the woman-hater, the man of
-marble, who has no vanity, no feelings, no heart?—the
-only creature left in this uninteresting town worth conquering?
-And all those who have tried it, no small number,
-vow that victory is impossible.”</p>
-
-<p>“It shows how little they comprehend me,” he replied,
-in a tone of jest, and still pretending not to recognise his
-companion, who held her head down and took refuge
-studiously beneath her mask. “If you, madame, would
-condescend to become better acquainted with me, you
-would soon learn the falsehood of these ladies’ reports to
-my discredit!”</p>
-
-<p>“Discredit!” she echoed, and to his surprise, nay, to
-his dismay, a tear fell on the gloved hand within his arm.
-What could he do but dry it with a kiss? “Discredit!”
-she said again, in a tone of increasing emotion. “How
-little you must understand us if you can make use of such
-a term! Who would care to possess that which half the
-town has worn and thrown away? What is the value of a
-heart that has been cut into little scraps and shreds, and
-left in portions at different friends’ houses like gifts on
-New-year’s-day? No, monsieur, if I must give all I am
-worth for a diamond, let it be such a diamond as the
-Regent’s—large, clear, and entire—not a collection of fragments<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-only held together by their golden setting, like a
-necklace of Madame de Sabran or Madame de Parabére.”</p>
-
-<p>Captain George did not quite follow out the metaphor,
-his attention being at this moment somewhat distracted by
-a figure that reminded him of Cerise, yet that he felt was
-as unlike Cerise as possible. The Musketeer was also a
-very moderate proficient in the lighter accomplishments of
-gallantry, being of a self-contained though energetic nature,
-that was disposed to do its work thoroughly or not at all.
-He was one of those men, of whom there are more in the
-world than ladies suppose, whose respect for the sex restrains
-them from taking that initiative which they forget the latter
-are especially privileged to decline. Unless, therefore, a
-woman throws herself at their heads, they make no advances
-at all, and then these wretches are just the sort of characters
-with which such a course, repugnant to their instinctive
-sense of fitness, is least likely to succeed, after all. They
-are consequently very difficult birds to tame, and either
-escape altogether, or are lured into the cage, accidentally
-as it were, by a pretty face, a shy manner, and some rare
-combination of circumstances which nobody on earth could
-have foreseen. When a lady has fairly started, however,
-and got warmed to her subject, I imagine little is to be
-gained by interrupting her, and that no efforts of eloquence
-find so much favour as the forbearance of a good listener.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise thought she had turned her last phrase
-very prettily, and applied the image of the necklace with
-considerable art, so she continued, without waiting for an
-answer, “You do not know me, Captain George, though I
-know <i>you</i>. Also, I mention no names, therefore I break no
-confidences. Do you remember the day the late king was
-taken ill, and brought home, never to recover?”</p>
-
-<p>His English blood stirred at the recollection of that
-gallant stag-hunt, and his eye brightened. She observed
-it, and not sharing the insular passion for an <i>innocent</i>
-pursuit, drew her conclusions accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I have not forgotten it,” he replied, calmly, “nor the
-beautiful Marquise and her barb!”</p>
-
-<p>She trembled with pleasure, but commanded her voice,
-and repeated indifferently, “Ah! the beautiful Marquise!
-I fancy she nearly rode the poor barb to death that day.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
-What will a woman not do when her heart is interested?
-Well, monsieur, have you ever spoken since to the beautiful
-Marquise, as you call her, doubtless in ridicule?”</p>
-
-<p>He began to think he <i>had</i> been somewhat remiss,
-and that to prosecute his intimacy with the mother would
-have been the easiest way of obtaining access to the daughter.
-He was not given to self-examination, and did not perceive
-that his very love for Cerise had prevented him yet entering
-the house. “Do you know the Marquise de Montmirail?”
-was all he could find at the moment to say.</p>
-
-<p>“A little!” answered the mask, nodding her head.
-“But I have an intimate friend who is very intimate with
-her indeed. You think women cannot be friends, monsieur;
-you think they have no hearts; you little know the lady of
-whom we speak. You see her as the world does, and you
-judge her accordingly. How blind men are! If your eyes
-are not dazzled by self-conceit, they are bandaged by an
-impenetrable and cold egotism. A thing must touch your
-very noses, close like that,” and she thrust her pretty hand
-up within an inch of his face, “or you will not believe in
-its existence. Nevertheless, I could sometimes find it in
-my heart to envy you your callousness, your stupidity, your
-indifference, and to wish that I had been born a man.”</p>
-
-<p>I think at the moment he almost wished it too, for
-although the voice was very fascinating, and the situation
-not without its charm, she encumbered him sadly in his
-search for the young lady whom yet he did not the least
-expect to find.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise, however, was quite satisfied with her
-position, and disposed to improve the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>“A woman can have no <i>friends</i>,” she proceeded, speaking
-in a low tone that the music rendered inaudible to all
-but her companion. “How I wish she could! I know the
-sort of one I should choose—brave, steadfast, constant,
-self-controlled; a gallant soldier, a loyal gentleman; above
-all, a man uninfluenced by every eye that flashes, every lip
-that smiles. And yet—and yet,” she added, while her soft
-voice sank to a whisper as the music rose and swelled,
-“such an one would soon cease to be a friend. Because—because―”</p>
-
-<p>“Because why?” he asked, bending tenderly over her,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>
-for it was not in man’s nature to remain uninfluenced by
-such words now spoken.</p>
-
-<p>The dark eyes flashed through their mask, and the hand
-that rested on his arm clenched tight while she replied—</p>
-
-<p>“Because I should love him foolishly, madly, if he cared
-for me; and if not—I should hate him so fiercely that―”</p>
-
-<p>“You come with me from here!” said a loud good-humoured
-voice at this interesting juncture, while a man’s
-hand was laid familiarly on the Musketeer’s shoulder.
-“In a quarter of an hour my coach will be waiting at the
-stage entrance. Not one of my <i>roués</i> dare face it! I want
-a fellow like you, who fears neither man nor devil!”</p>
-
-<p>Captain George bowed low, with the mask, still leaning
-on his arm curtsied to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>“Highness,” said he, “I shall have the honour! It is
-a mere duty to serve under his orders but it becomes <i>a
-pleasure</i> when Monsieur le Duc commands in person.”</p>
-
-<p>“And to supper afterwards, of course,” added very
-graciously a lady who was hanging on the Regent’s arm,
-and who carried her mask in her hand. “Captain George
-is always welcome, as he knows, and we shall not be more
-than a half-a-dozen at the outside.”</p>
-
-<p>Again the Musketeer bowed low, and the Marquise,
-scanning the last speaker intently, could not but acknowledge
-that to-night Madame de Parabére looked more than usually
-beautiful. The <i>brunette</i>, too, probably overrated the charms
-of the <i>blonde</i>, the exceeding delicacy of complexion, the
-softness of skin, and the innocent baby face which so
-fascinated the Regent. Also she thought she detected on
-that baby face a decided preference for the Musketeer, and
-Madame de Montmirail was not a woman to entertain the
-strongest passions of her sex and leave out jealousy.</p>
-
-<p>Had it not been for these suspicions, the bouquet of
-stephanotis might have remained all night innocuous
-beneath her cloak, to be consumed in the stove that warmed
-her chocolate when she got home. But the Marquise
-allowed no one to cross her designs with impunity, and
-watching her new enemy narrowly, began to handle her
-weapons and prepare for action.</p>
-
-<p>The Regent had been traversing the throng of revellers
-with Madame de Parabére on his arm; the latter, proud of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
-her disgrace, and exulting in her infamous position as his
-acknowledged mistress, had bared her face, in order to receive
-the full tribute of admiration which her beauty really
-deserved. Now, while the Duke stood still for a moment,
-and exchanged a few jesting compliments and well-bred
-sarcasms with the passing maskers, an encounter in which
-he acquitted himself with considerable tact and ingenuity,
-his companion, dearly loving mischief, turned all her
-batteries on Captain George.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise was, therefore, left planted as one too
-many; a situation to which she, the spoiled child of society,
-was so unaccustomed, that she could have cried with vexation,
-but for the revenge now literally within her grasp.</p>
-
-<p>So she peered, and watched, and waited, like a Grey
-Musketeer skirmishing.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Parabére, observing the Regent’s attention
-engaged elsewhere, whispered something to George, looking
-insolently the while at his companion, and laughed.</p>
-
-<p>Then the Marquise primed her weapon, as it were, and
-shook the powder well up in the pan. A leaf of the rare
-bouquet peeped from under its covering.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Parabére, flirting and ogling outrageously, as
-was her custom, whispered again in Captain George’s ear,
-with a little affected laugh. It seemed to the eager watcher
-that her lips shaped the hated syllables—“Mulatto.”</p>
-
-<p>It was time to take aim now, sure and deadly, preparatory
-to giving fire. A cluster of stephanotis showed out like
-ivory against the smooth black satin.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Parabére clapped her hands, and exclaimed
-with a child’s glee, “But madame, what a bouquet!
-Madame is indeed fortunate! Such flowers are not to be
-procured within leagues of Paris. How exquisite! How
-ravishing! Madame is so good. Madame will permit
-me to have one little breath of their fragrance. Only one!”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise hesitated. An instinct of womanly forbearance
-prompted mercy even to another woman.
-Vindictive as she felt, and with her finger on the trigger,
-she would yet spare her, she thought; but the insolent
-creature should know her enemy, and should be taught
-that even the Regent’s favourite could not command such
-bouquets as the acknowledged beauty of the Court.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span></p>
-
-<p>“They were sent me as a gift, madame,” she observed,
-haughtily, and withholding the flowers. “I value them
-because ours are not yet blown at the Hôtel Montmirail.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon, madame!” retorted the other, unable, now
-that she knew her, to forego this opening for a thrust.
-“Tropical, of course! From an admirer, madame? or
-perhaps a kinsman? Very dark, no doubt, and with close
-curled hair. I offer you my compliments from the bottom
-of my heart!”</p>
-
-<p>No quarter now. She had rushed upon her fate, and
-must be shot down without the least compunction. “If
-madame will deign to accept my bouquet,” said the
-Marquise, “she will do me the highest honour.” And she
-displayed the whole of it, a wonder of nature, brought to
-perfection by art.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Parabére, giddy, thoughtless, fond of flowers,
-stretched her hand out eagerly, and Captain George,
-whose attention the Regent’s conversation had diverted
-from this passage of arms between the ladies, turned round
-while she was in the act of putting them enthusiastically to
-her face.</p>
-
-<p>He saw the situation at a glance, and his promptitude
-served him as usual.</p>
-
-<p>“I must be ready for your Highness!” he exclaimed
-hurriedly, addressing the Regent, but with his eye fixed on
-the treacherous flowers. “Madame, I have the honour of
-wishing you a good-night!” he added in the same breath;
-while with an energetic flourish of his cocked hat he
-knocked them clean out of the lady’s hands to a few paces’
-distance on the floor, letting the hat follow; and as he
-recovered the latter, crushing the bouquet to pieces, as if
-inadvertently, beneath his foot. It was the second time he
-had practised this manœuvre within twelve hours, and he
-was perfect in his lesson.</p>
-
-<p>Rising with an affectation of great confusion, he made his
-excuses to Madame de Parabére, contriving, amongst a
-torrent of phrases, to convey, unobserved, the single word
-“Beware!” And she understood him, contenting herself
-with a glance of intense gratitude, and an inward vow she
-would never rest till she had found opportunity to repay
-both friend and foe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Regent laughed heartily at the joke. “You must
-have supped already, my friend,” said he, “and not spared
-the wineflask. So much the better; you are all the fitter
-for your night’s work. Come! let us be moving. It is
-time we were off!”</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Montmirail stood a while, stupefied, paralysed,
-as it were, at the failure of an attack thus foiled by the last
-person in whom she expected to find an opponent. The
-first instant she could have hated him with all the fierceness
-of baffled rage. The next, she felt she had never loved him
-half so well as now. He had thwarted her; he had tamed
-her; he had saved her from crime, from ruin, from <i>herself</i>!
-All in one glance of the keen eye, one turn of the ready
-hand. She acknowledged him for her master, and to her
-such a sentiment was as fascinating as it was new. She
-would have liked to burst out crying, and kneel at his feet,
-imploring to be forgiven, had time and place permitted so
-romantic an exhibition. At least, she could not let him go
-without another word, and Captain George, following the
-Regent through the crowd towards the door, felt a hand laid
-timidly on his arm, heard a broken voice whispering softly
-in his ear.</p>
-
-<p>She trembled all over. Her very lips shook while she
-murmured, “Forgive me, monsieur! I must explain all.
-I <i>must</i> see you again. Where do you go to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>“To sup with his Highness,” answered the Musketeer,
-keeping the Duke’s figure in sight as it threaded the jostling,
-shifting throng of noisy revellers.</p>
-
-<p>“But that is not till midnight,” she urged. “He said
-something about duty. You are brave! You are rash!
-For heaven’s sake, promise you will not rush into needless
-danger!”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed good-humouredly, and reassured her at once.
-“Danger! madame! Nothing of the kind. I can trust
-you not to gossip. It is a mere frolic. We are going a
-league or two out of Paris, <i>to raise the devil</i>!” And
-observing the Duke turning back for him, he escaped from
-her and was lost in the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>She looked longingly after him, and sighed. “To
-raise the devil!” she repeated, pressing both hands on
-her heart. “And not the only one to-night. Alas!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
-you have raised one here that none but yourself can
-lay!”</p>
-
-<p>Then the Marquise, still retaining her disguise, passed
-hastily through the ball, till she reached the street, and
-gaining her carriage, was driven straight home to the Hôtel
-Montmirail, weeping, softly and patiently, behind her
-mask.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-<span class="smaller">RAISING THE DEVIL</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Black Musketeers on duty cleared a lane for the Regent
-at the door, and the lower orders, with whom, despite his
-bad character, a certain joviality of manner made him no
-small favourite, cheered vociferously as he passed. “The
-Débonnaire goes home early,” said one. “He has a child
-in the pot for supper,” shouted another. “I wish his Highness
-would ask me to eat with him!” exclaimed a third.
-“Or drink with him!” added a fourth. While a little
-hunchback, hideous and distorted, observed, in a dry, shrill
-voice, that made itself heard above all the clamour, “His
-Highness has a <i>rendezvous</i>, I tell you! Lads, where are
-your manners? Débonnaire! send me the bones to pick
-when you’ve done with them!”</p>
-
-<p>A peal of laughter and a volley of cheers followed his state-coach
-as it rolled off at a slow, lumbering trot, with which
-a man on foot could easily keep up. Captain George had
-been directed to do so, and accompanied it to the entrance
-of a gloomy narrow street, where the tall cloaked figure of
-Bras-de-Fer was waiting, according to orders. Here it
-stopped, the Regent alighted rapidly, and signing to his
-coachman to drive on, dived into a gulf of darkness, closely
-attended by the Musketeer and his comrade.</p>
-
-<p>A few paces brought them to an open <i>calèche</i>, drawn by
-a pair of English horses, driven from the saddle, and containing
-one solitary occupant, also enveloped in a cloak, who
-leaped out when he heard footsteps, and uncovered while
-he assisted the Regent to his place. He then seated himself
-opposite; Bras-de-Fer followed, his example; Captain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
-George, at a signal from the Duke, placed himself by his
-Highness; and in a few minutes the whole party were
-across the Seine, beyond the barrier, which had been thrown
-back, and clattering along a paved road at a gallop through
-the open country.</p>
-
-<p>The moon came out as they cleared Paris, and each man
-looked in the other’s face to read, according to their respective
-temperaments, signs of amusement, self-confidence, anxiety,
-or alarm. The Duke, though nervous, seemed strung to a
-certain pitch of resolution. Bras-de-Fer swelled with pride
-at the royal confidence thus reposed in him; and Captain
-George smiled quietly to mark the trepidation of their fourth
-companion, none other than Signor Stefano Bartoletti—chemist,
-philosopher, astrologer, professor of medicine,
-mathematics, and magic—black or white as required.</p>
-
-<p>It is strange how the most effective impostors become so
-saturated, as it were, with their profession, that they cannot
-resist the influence of a vague enthusiasm which breeds
-artificial belief, fascinating, though transparently absurd,
-in the tricks they themselves practise. Perhaps there is
-something of the true artist in every man who succeeds,
-whatever be the nature of his enterprise; and the true artist
-can never place himself entirely apart from, or outside of,
-his art. Signor Bartoletti, who had engaged to raise the
-enemy of mankind for the Regent’s gratification, was unquestionably
-the most nervous of the whole party lest they
-should be taken at their word.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George, to begin with, anticipated nothing but
-a trick, and took the matter, therefore, as coolly as he did
-everything else unconnected with Cerise de Montmirail.
-Bras-de-Fer, on the contrary, was persuaded he should be
-called on to confront the arch-fiend in person; but believing
-himself a good Catholic, while he knew he was an excellent
-swordsman, his courage rose, and he smiled grimly in his
-moustache at the thought of so distinguished an adversary.
-Even the devil, he argued, could not be much worse than
-Marlborough’s Grenadiers, and he had faced them many a
-time without getting the worst of the encounter. He even
-calculated whether he might not bring into play, with considerable
-effect, the thrust lately introduced into the corps
-by Beaudésir, but postponed further consideration of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
-point till he should know what kind of weapons were to be
-used in the field. The Regent, excited, credulous, impressible,
-loving the marvellous, and inclined to believe anything
-that was <i>not</i> in the Bible, found his spirits rise with the
-anticipation of a new distraction; and being in that exalted
-state which those experience at rare intervals whose orgies
-are alternated with strong intellectual labour, found himself
-actually dreading a disappointment in the vision he anticipated.</p>
-
-<p>Bartoletti felt how uncomfortably it would turn out, if,
-after all the pains of Malletort and himself to instruct the
-actress in her part, after all their care in scenery, decorations,
-and rehearsal, the original should take it into his head to
-assist at the performance in person!</p>
-
-<p>Ere they were a league out of Paris his teeth began to
-chatter, though his breath smelt strong of the last suck
-of brandy that had comforted him before they
-started.</p>
-
-<p>The English horses drew them swift as the wind. It
-seemed but a short half-hour ere they stopped at a gate
-opening into a wood, shadowy, dark, and dreadful, after the
-dusty road and level meadows glistening silver-white in the
-moonlight. The two Musketeers, accustomed to look about
-them, perceived at their feet a track of wheels, which had
-obviously preceded their carriage. Bras-de-Fer felt a little
-disappointed.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>L’affaire commence!</i>” whispered the Regent, loosening
-his sword, as he prepared to follow Bartoletti through the
-wood. “Keep close to me, gentlemen, and look that we be
-not taken in rear!”</p>
-
-<p>The path was narrow, winding, and exceedingly dark;
-but after a furlong or two the party emerged on an open
-space, and found their progress stopped by a level wall of
-rock, hewn perfectly smooth, and several yards in height.
-Bathed in a strong moonlight, every particle on its gritty
-surface glistened like crystal, and its crest of stunted trees
-and thick-growing shrubs cut clear and black against the
-cloudless sky.</p>
-
-<p>Here the adept halted and looked round. “Highness,”
-he whispered, “we have reached our journey’s end; have
-you courage to enter the cave?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Duke’s face was pale, but he glanced at his two
-Musketeers, and answered, “After you, monsieur!”</p>
-
-<p>Then the four, in Indian file, turned through an opening,
-or rather a mere hole in the rock, to follow a low, narrow
-passage, in which, ere they had advanced three paces, the
-darkness became impenetrable. They groped their way in
-silence, each listening to the hard breathing of his predecessor.
-Bras-de-Fer, who was last, fervently hoping their
-ghostly enemy might not attack them until, as he would
-have expressed it, they could “deploy into line.”</p>
-
-<p>The corridor, however, as we may call it, grew wider and
-loftier at every step. Presently they marched upright, and
-two abreast. There was a constant drip from the damp stone
-that encircled them, and the hard smooth surface on which
-they trod felt cool and refreshing to their feet.</p>
-
-<p>Bras-de-Fer could not restrain a sneeze. It resounded
-above their heads, and died away farther and fainter in a
-hundred whispering echoes.</p>
-
-<p>Bartoletti started violently, and the Duke’s hand went to
-his sword. Then the magician halted, pulled a vial from
-his breast, and dipping a match in it, produced a strong
-rose-coloured flame, from which he lit the small lamp that
-hung at his belt.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst the match flared and shone, they saw plainly for
-several yards in every direction. They were in a low vaulted
-cavern, hewn, to all appearance, by no mortal hands, out of
-the rock. They stood on a slightly-elevated platform, and
-at their feet lay a glistening sheet of black that could only
-be water. It was, however, a hasty examination, for the
-match soon spent itself, and Bartoletti’s lamp gave but
-light enough, as Bras-de-Fer observed, “to show how dark
-it was.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are we on the banks of the Seine or the Styx?” asked
-the Regent, jestingly, yet with a slight tremor in his voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Man knoweth not whither this dark stream may lead,”
-replied Bartoletti, solemnly, lighting at the same time a
-spare wick of his lamp, to embark it on a morsel of wood
-which he pushed into the current.</p>
-
-<p>For several minutes, as it seemed to their watching eyes,
-the light floated farther and farther, till swallowed up by
-degrees in the black distance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span></p>
-
-<p>All were now somewhat impressed with the gloom and
-mysterious silence of the place. Bartoletti took courage,
-and informed the Regent he was about to begin.</p>
-
-<p>“Not till you have drawn a pentacle!” objected the
-Duke, apprehensively. “Such a precaution should on no
-account be neglected.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is unnecessary, Highness,” answered the other.
-“Against the lesser fiends, indeed, it forms an impregnable
-defence; but he who is approaching now, the very Prince
-of Darkness himself, cares no more for a pentacle than you
-do!”</p>
-
-<p>The Regent would not be satisfied, however, till, under
-Malletort’s superintendence, he had drawn with the point
-of his sword a circle and triangle in magic union on the bare
-rock. Then he ensconced himself carefully within his lines,
-and bade the magician “go on.”</p>
-
-<p>After a considerable display of mummery, and the repetition
-of many sentences, which, as they were couched in
-Latin, Bartoletti felt would be liable to little criticism from
-his listeners, he produced a small bundle of shavings from
-under his cloak, and piling these on the water’s edge, poured
-over the heap certain essences, ere he set the whole on
-fire. The cavern now became filled with a thick cloud of
-smoke, fragrant in smell, and though stupefying to the
-senses, not suffocating the lungs. Reflected in the black
-water beneath, as the flames waved and leaped and flickered,
-the unsteady light produced an effect of vast and shadowy
-distance on the dim recesses of the cavern, and prepared
-the minds of the spectators for some vague, uncertain, yet
-awful result.</p>
-
-<p>Plunging it once more into his bundle, Bartoletti spread
-his hand over the embers. A blue lurid glare, that turned
-all their faces ashen white, now replaced the shifting
-wavering light of the flames.</p>
-
-<p>“It is the death-fire!” whispered the Italian; and
-touching the Duke’s shoulder, he pointed to the roof of the
-cavern.</p>
-
-<p>A gigantic arm and hand, with forefinger pointed downwards,
-were shadowed distinctly on its ribbed and slimy
-surface.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke trembled, and sweat stood on his brow;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>
-Bartoletti, too, shivered, though with less reason. Captain
-George nodded approvingly, and Bras-de-Fer pulled the
-buckle of his sword-belt to the front.</p>
-
-<p>“You may ask three questions,” whispered the shaking
-Italian. “Not another syllable, if you would leave the cave
-alive!”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke cleared his throat to speak, and his voice came
-dry and husky, while he formed the words with effort, like
-a man using a foreign tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“I adjure you, tell me truly, who is my chief enemy?”</p>
-
-<p>Not one of them drew breath whilst they waited for the
-answer; and the questioner himself looked down to see that
-his feet were scrupulously within the pentacle.</p>
-
-<p>It came sad, solemn, and as if from a distance, chanted
-in a full, mournful and melodious tone:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The foes a prince behoves to dread, that turn and tear their lord,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Are those that haunt about his bed, and blush beside his board.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then the Regent, gaining courage, asked in a firmer voice,
-“Who is my best friend?”</p>
-
-<p>The reply was more distinct, and its clear emphasis
-seemed to vouch for the speaker’s truth, Father of Lies
-though he might be called:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“One friend is thine, whose silent kiss clings subtle, sure, and fast;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When all shall fail, yet shall not this, the swiftest, though the last.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus encouraged, the royal questioner gathered heart
-with every fresh answer, and it was in his customary unrestrained
-tone that he propounded his last inquiry, “Shall I
-live to wear the crown of France?”</p>
-
-<p>This time, however, the phantom arm waved backwards
-and forwards, clenching its gigantic hand, while the demon’s
-voice seemed again to rise from distant and mysterious
-depths, as it replied:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“When woman’s love can trust thy vows, when woman’s guileless glance</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Can thrill thy breast, bind on thy brows the diadem of France!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Enough! For more I dare not tell. Glad life, and lusty reign!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Predestined Prince, and fare thee well!—till we shall meet again!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In five minutes all were once more in the open air. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
-Regent, grave and preoccupied, spoke not a word while they
-passed swiftly through the wood to gain their carriage; but
-Bras-de-Fer whispered in his comrade’s ear, “It seems the
-devil is like the rest, and had rather not come to close
-quarters with the Grey Musketeers.” To which professional
-remark Captain George replied, thoughtfully—</p>
-
-<p>“He is an adversary for whom I would choose a weapon
-that kept me as far off him as possible!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-<span class="smaller">A QUIET SUPPER</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In less than an hour, how changed the scene for two of the
-actors in that mysterious drama—of which Bartoletti was
-chief manager and Malletort sat in the prompter’s box! The
-Captain of Musketeers had been invited to sup with the
-Regent, and found in his prince’s private apartments a little
-party collected, whose mirth and high spirits were well
-calculated to drive away any remains of superstitious gloom
-left by the incantations of the cavern and their result.</p>
-
-<p>The select suppers of the Duke of Orleans were conducted
-with an absence of ceremony or restraint that indeed degenerated
-on occasion into the grossest license; but even under
-the Regency men did not necessarily conclude every night
-in the week with an orgy, and the mirth of the <i>roués</i> themselves
-was not always degraded into drunkenness, nor their
-wit pushed to profanity and shameless indecency of speech.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George found himself seated at a round table in
-an oval room, of which the only other occupants, besides his
-royal host, were Madame de Parabére, Madame de Sabran,
-Malletort, and Count Point d’Appui. The latter, be it
-observed, excelled (for no one was admitted to these reunions
-who had not some marked speciality) in the grace with
-which he danced a minuet and the gravity with which he
-propounded the emptiest and silliest remarks. Some of the
-courtiers affected to think this simplicity only masked an
-intriguing disposition, and that Point d’Appui was, after
-all “not quite such a fool as he looked.” A charitable
-suggestion, endorsed by Madame de Sabran, with the observation,
-“The saints forbid he should be!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span></p>
-
-<p>Altogether it was generally admitted that the Count’s
-strong point must be sought rather in his heels than his
-head. He sat directly opposite the Musketeer, and next to
-Abbé Malletort, who was between him and Madame de
-Sabran. The latter was thus placed opposite the Regent,
-at whose right hand Madame de Parabére had taken up her
-usual post. Captain George found himself accordingly with
-a lady on either side, and as he was distinguished, manly,
-quiet in manner, and above all, supposed to be impenetrable
-of heart, he became an object of interest to both.</p>
-
-<p>These hated each other, of course, but in a treacherous,
-well-bred manner, and not so rancorously as to spoil their
-appreciation of an excellent repast, served in pleasant company,
-under all the most promising conditions for success.
-They were therefore, outwardly, wondrous affectionate, and
-under protest as it were, with the buttons on their foils,
-could be good companions enough.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke prided himself on his suppers. Working at
-state affairs during the day, and with a digestion considerably
-impaired by habitual excess, dinner was a mere matter
-of form, often restricted indeed to a morsel of bread and a
-cup of chocolate, served in the cabinet where he wrote. But
-when the hours of business were past, and his system, too
-much gorged over-night, had recovered from the fumes of
-wine and the torpor of repletion, it was his delight to rush
-once more into those excesses of appetite which unfitted his
-mornings for exertion, which robbed him of half his existence
-while he lived, and killed him in the prime of manhood at
-last.</p>
-
-<p>But he understood well how the sacrifice should be offered.
-The supper-room, we have said, was oval, panelled in a light
-cheerful wood, highly-varnished, and decorated only by short
-pithy sentences, inlaid in gaudy colours, of which the purport
-was to crop the flower while it bloomed, to empty the
-cup while it sparkled, practically, to eat the cutlet while it
-was hot, and consume as eagerly as possible the good things
-provided for the senses. No pictures, no vases, no works
-of art were suffered upon the walls to distract the attention
-of the guests from their main object. The intellect, as
-seated at the farthest distance from the stomach, might
-indeed be gently stimulated with wit, but the imagination,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-the feelings, above all, the emotions that affect the heart,
-were on no account to be disturbed during the ecstacies of
-the palate or the pleasing languor and subsequent comfort
-of digestion. Not a lackey nor servant of any kind entered
-the room. When one course had been consumed, deliberately,
-methodically, and with much practical comment on
-its merits, the table sank slowly through the floor, to be
-replaced by another, bearing fresh dishes, fresh flowers,
-fresh napkins, everything fresh prepared, to the very bills
-of fare, beautifully emblazoned, that lay beside the cover of
-each guest. A strong light from above was shaded to throw
-its rays directly on the board; but as plenty of this enlivener
-is conducive to festivity, numerous lamps with bright
-reflectors flashed at short distances from the walls. No
-pealing band deafened the ears of the sitters, or drowned
-their conversation in its overpowering strains; only ever
-and anon a faint long-drawn note, like the tone of a far-distant
-organ, rose and fell and wavered, ere it died sweetly
-and calmly away.</p>
-
-<p>On these occasions, Point d’Appui never failed to pause,
-even with a tempting morsel on his fork, and intimate to
-his neighbours that “he was passionately given to music,
-and it reminded him of heaven!”</p>
-
-<p>The Regent seemed much impressed with the visit he had
-made to the cavern before supper, and it was not till he had
-emptied several goblets of champagne that he regained his
-usual spirits. With the influence of wine, however, his
-nerves recovered their tone, his eye brightened, his hand
-steadied, and he joined in conversation as heretofore.</p>
-
-<p>By this time a favourite dish had made its appearance,
-which went by the name of the <i>pâté d’Orleans</i>. It consisted
-of the wings of pheasants and other white game, boned,
-stuffed, and so manipulated as to resemble the limbs of
-children; a similarity that gave rise to the most hideous
-rumours amongst the lower classes. Many a worthy gossip
-in Paris believed firmly that two or three infants were consumed
-nightly at the Regent’s table, and none seemed to
-relish the report more than himself. He ate vigorously
-of the <i>pâté</i>, emptied another goblet, and began to talk.
-Madame de Parabére watched him closely. Something was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-going on she had not fathomed, but she resolved to be at
-the bottom of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Abbé!” shouted the Duke, “what are you about? Do
-you think I would suffer little heathens on my table, that
-you baptize them with water? They are the best of
-Christians, I tell you, my friend, and should be well soused,
-like all good Christians, in wine.” Malletort, who had
-been pouring stealthily out of a carafe at his elbow, accepted
-his host’s challenge, and filled up from a flask.</p>
-
-<p>“To your health, Highness! and confusion to your
-enemies—White and Red,” said he, pointing to two
-measures of those Burgundies that happened to stand
-before the ladies.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke started. Malletort’s observation, simple as it
-seemed, brought the diabolical prophecy to his mind, and
-again he sought courage from his glass.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean that for <i>us</i>, monsieur?” asked Madame
-de Sabran; “since his Highness loves the Burgundy too
-well to count it a foe, though it has put him on his back, I
-doubt not, often enough.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, madame,” answered the Abbé, bowing politely;
-“such as you can never be foes, since you are born to be
-conquerors. If it did come to a fight, I presume you would
-grant no quarter.”</p>
-
-<p>“None,” said she, laughing. “Church and laymen, we
-should put you all to the sword.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the Church are non-combatants,” interposed Count
-Point d’Appui, with perfect sincerity. “You would be
-excommunicated by our Father the Pope. It is a different
-species, madame, altogether—a separate race.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit of it!” answered the lady. “Men to the
-tips of their fingers, every one of them! Are you not,
-Abbé? No! When all is said and done, there are but
-two distinct creations, and I never can believe they have a
-common origin. Men and women I put in the one, princes
-and lackeys in the other. What say <i>you</i>, madame?”</p>
-
-<p>But Madame de Parabére said nothing. She sat in
-silence, pouting, because it suited the shape of her mouth,
-and listening, for other reasons of her own.</p>
-
-<p>The Regent, who had now drunk wine enough to be both
-easily offended and appeased, felt that the shaft aimed at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-him was not entirely undeserved. So he asked, in anger,
-“How mean you, madame? I see not the drift of your
-jest. In what are princes and lackeys so alike, and so
-different from the rest of mankind?”</p>
-
-<p>“Other bipeds” answered the lady, bitterly, “lie from
-habit, with intention, or on occasion; but this variety
-never speaks the truth at all, even by accident.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke’s face turned purple. Captain George, hoping
-to divert an explosion, and feeling that he had been invited
-rather as a compliment than for the sake of his society,
-rose and took his leave, on the score of military duty;
-receiving, as he went out, a glance from Madame de Parabére’s
-beautiful eyes, that assured him of her gratitude,
-her interest, and her good-will.</p>
-
-<p>His departure changed the subject of conversation. In
-two minutes the Regent forgot he had been offended, and
-Madame de Sabran was busied in the unworthy task of
-mystifying Count Point d’Appui, an employment which her
-rival contemplated with a drowsy, languid air, as if she
-could hardly keep herself awake.</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé had watched her for some time with increasing
-interest and considerable misgivings; the poison, he thought,
-should long ere this have taken effect, and he expected
-every moment to observe a disturbance of the placid
-features, a discolouration of the beautiful skin. Before
-supper was over, he concluded that, as far as the flowers
-were concerned, his plot had failed; but Malletort did not
-now need to learn the archer’s want of another arrow in
-the quiver, a spare string for the bow: it behoved him
-only to make the more use of such implements as he had
-kept in reserve.</p>
-
-<p>All his energy and all his cunning had been brought into
-play during the night. Without his assistance, he felt
-sure the mummery of the cavern must have failed, for he
-could trust neither the shaking nerves of the Italian nor
-the superstitious self-deception of the quadroon. It was no
-easy task to return to Paris so swiftly as to change his
-dress, show himself at a reception in the Faubourg St.
-Germain, and thence proceed leisurely to sup with the
-Regent. Well-bred horses, however, and a well-broke
-valet, had accomplished this part of the undertaking, with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
-a few seconds to spare. It now remained to play the last
-and most difficult strokes of the game. He felt equal to
-the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>Moving round the table with his glass, in unceremonious
-fashion, he took advantage of George’s departure to place
-himself between Madame de Parabére and her host, whispering
-in that lady’s ear, “I have a favour to ask of the
-Regent, in which you, too, are interested!” She made
-room for him carelessly, listlessly, and her face looked so
-innocent and unsuspicious as to delude even his acuteness
-into the belief that the few faculties she could command
-were engrossed by Point d’Appui and his tormentor.</p>
-
-<p>These were in full swing at a game called, in England,
-Flirtation. It is an elastic process, embracing an extensive
-area in the field of gallantry, and so far resembling the
-tournaments of the Middle Ages, that while its encounters
-are presumed to be waged with weapons of courtesy, blunted
-for bloodless use, such fictitious conflicts very frequently
-bring on the real combat <i>à l’outrance</i> with sharp weapons,
-and then, as in other death-struggles, <i>væ victis</i>! If girth
-breaks, or foot slips, the fallen fighter must expect no
-mercy.</p>
-
-<p>Pitted against Point d’Appui, Madame de Sabran might
-be likened to an accomplished swordsman practising cut and
-thrust on a wooden trunk. But the block was good-natured
-and good-looking. When such is the case, I have observed
-that a witty woman takes no small delight in the exercise
-of her talent. There is a generosity about the sex not
-sufficiently appreciated, and if a man will only keep quiet,
-silent, receptive, and immoveable, it will pour its treasures
-at his feet in a stream of lavish and inexhaustible profusion.</p>
-
-<p>Point d’Appui contented himself with looking very handsome
-and drinking a great deal of Burgundy. His neighbour
-hacked and hewed him without intermission, and Madame
-de Parabére’s attention seemed entirely engrossed by the
-pair.</p>
-
-<p>Malletort, in possession of the Regent’s ear, proceeded
-diligently with the edifice for which he had so artfully laid
-the foundations.</p>
-
-<p>“I must ask permission to take my leave early to-night,
-Highness,” observed the churchman. “Like our friend<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
-the Musketeer, who has served his purpose, by the way, as
-I learn, so may I be rubbed out of the calculation; and I
-must drink no more of this excellent Burgundy, for I have
-promised to present myself in a lady’s drawing-room, late
-as it is, before I go to bed.”</p>
-
-<p>Though somewhat confused by wine, the Regent understood
-his confidant’s meaning perfectly well, and his eye
-kindled as he gathered its purport. “I will accompany
-you, little Abbé,” he whispered with a hiccough, and a
-furtive glance at the ladies, lest they should overhear.</p>
-
-<p>“Too late, my Prince,” answered the other, “and useless
-besides, even for you, since I have not yet obtained permission.
-Oh! trust me. The fortress is well guarded, and
-has scarce ever been summoned; much less has it offered a
-parley.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke looked disappointed, but emptied another
-bumper. He was rapidly arriving at the state Malletort
-desired, when a well-turned compliment would have induced
-him to sign away the crown of France.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow then,” he grunted, with his hands on the
-Abbé’s shoulder. “The great Henry used to say—what
-used he to say? Something about waiting; you remember,
-Abbé. <i>Basta!</i> Reach me the Burgundy.”</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow, Highness,” answered Malletort, more and
-more respectfully, as his patron became less able to enforce
-respect. “At the hour agreed on, I will be at your orders
-with everything requisite. There is but one more detail,
-and though indispensable, I fear to press it with your
-Highness now, for it trenches on business, and your brain,
-like mine, must be somewhat heated with the Burgundy.”</p>
-
-<p>Probably no other consideration on earth would have
-induced the Duke to look at a paper after supper, but this
-remark about the Burgundy touched him nearly.</p>
-
-<p>He took pride in his convivial powers, and remembering
-that Henri Quatre was said to have drunk a glass of red
-wine before his infant lips had tasted mother’s milk, always
-vowed that he inherited from that ancestor a constitution
-with which the juice of the grape assimilated itself harmlessly
-as food.</p>
-
-<p>“Burgundy, little Abbé!” he repeated, staring vacantly
-at Malletort, who had produced a small packet and an ink-horn<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>
-from his pockets. “Burgundy, Beaune, brandy—these
-do but serve to <i>clear</i> the brains of a Bourbon! Give
-me the paper!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is only your signature, Highness,” said Malletort,
-sitting completely round, so as to interpose his person
-between Madame de Parabére and the sheet under his
-hand. “I can fill it up afterwards, to save you further
-trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>But a drunkard’s cunning is the last faculty that forsakes
-him. Though the paper danced and wavered beneath his
-gaze, he detected at once that it was a <i>Lettre de cachet</i>,
-formidable, henceforth, from the edict issued that day in
-Council.</p>
-
-<p>Without troubling himself to inquire how the document
-came into Malletort’s possession, who had indeed free
-access to his <i>bureau</i>, he wagged his head gravely, exclaiming,
-with the good-humoured persistency of inebriety—</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! little Abbé. A thousand times no! I fill in
-the names myself. Oh! I am Regent of France. I know
-what I am doing. Here, give me the pen.”</p>
-
-<p>He scrawled his signature on the page, and waited for
-Malletort to speak.</p>
-
-<p>The latter glanced furtively round—Madame de Sabran
-was laughing, the Count listening, Madame de Parabére
-yawning. No one seemed to pay attention. Nevertheless
-he was still cautious. Mentioning no names, he looked
-expressively at the Musketeer’s vacant place, while he
-whispered—“We have done with him. He has fulfilled
-his task. Let him be well taken care of. He deserves it,
-and it is indispensable.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is indispensable, must be!” answered the Duke
-carelessly, and filled in the name of the victim on the blank
-space left for it.</p>
-
-<p>Then he sprinkled some blue sand from the Abbé’s portable
-writing-case over the characters; and because they
-did not dry fast enough, turned the sheet face downwards
-on the white table-cloth, and passed his wrist once or twice
-across the back.</p>
-
-<p>When he lifted it, the ink had marked the damask, which
-was of the finest texture and rarest pattern in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Malletort never neglected a precaution. Reaching his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-hand to a flask of white Hermitage, and exclaiming, “We
-chemists are never without resource,” he was about to pour
-from it on the table, when a soft voice murmured languidly,
-“Give me a few drops, monsieur, I am thirsty,” and
-Madame de Parabére, half turning round, held her glass
-out to be helped.</p>
-
-<p>He was forced to comply, but in another second had
-flooded the ink-marks with Hermitage, and blurred the
-stains on the cloth into one faded shapeless blot.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Parabére’s face remained immoveable, and
-her fine eyes looked sleepy as ever, yet in that second she
-had read a capital <i>G</i>, with a small <i>r</i>, reversed, and had
-drawn her own conclusions.</p>
-
-<p>There is but one sentiment in a woman’s mind stronger
-than gratitude—its name is Love. Nevertheless, her love
-for the Regent was not so overpowering as to shake her
-determination that she would save the Captain of Musketeers
-at any sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the object of her solicitude returned to his
-quarters by way of the Hôtel Montmirail, coasting the dead
-wall surrounding that mansion very slowly, and absorbed
-in his own reflections. To reach it he diverged considerably
-from his direct road, although the guard posted in its
-vicinity consisted that night of Black Musketeers, who were
-not to be relieved till the next afternoon by their comrades
-of the Grey Company. To prove their vigilance seemed,
-however, the aim of Captain George’s walk, for after a brief
-reconnoitre, he retired quietly to rest about the time that his
-royal host, with the assistance of two valets, staggered from
-banqueting-room to bed-chamber.</p>
-
-<p>And no wonder, for notwithstanding a liberal consumption
-of champagne, the flasks of red and white Burgundy
-stood empty on the supper-table.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">BAITING THE TRAP</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In transactions with womankind, the sharpest of men are
-apt to overlook in their calculations the paramount influence
-of dress.</p>
-
-<p>Malletort had long ago expressed an opinion on the
-despotism of King Chiffon, but he little expected to be
-thwarted by that monarch in dealing with one of his most
-devoted subjects. When Captain George knocked the
-poisoned bouquet out of Madame de Parabére’s hand, with
-a happy awkwardness seldom displayed in ball-rooms, a
-cluster of its blossoms caught in the flounces of her dress.
-Despite languor of manner and immobility of feature, this
-lady possessed coolness, resolution, and resource in
-emergency. She concealed the stray cluster in her handkerchief,
-said nothing about it, took it home, put it under
-glass, and then locked it carefully away in a cabinet.
-After she had heard mass next morning, she walked quietly
-off to Bartoletti’s house, attended by two armed domestics
-and accompanied by her maid, as if going to buy cosmetics,
-and produced the blossoms for that unwilling chemist to
-analyse. The Signor, to tell the truth, was always averse
-to tampering with poisons, although in the way of business
-it was difficult to keep clear of them. As, on the present
-occasion, he felt nothing was to be gained by falsehood, as
-Madame de Parabére was a dangerous enemy to provoke,
-and above all, as she paid him liberally, he produced his
-tests without delay, and informed her she had narrowly
-escaped loss of beauty, if not of life, by the inhalation of a
-subtle and effectual poison.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Signor argued in this way. He compromised nobody,
-neither was it any business of his that certain ingredients,
-sold to a brother student in separate quantities, had been
-scientifically mingled and sprinkled over these treacherous
-exotics. With the sums he had lately received from the
-Abbé on different accounts—with the liberal reward now
-brought him by Madame de Parabére—with the proceeds
-from his shares in Mississippi stock, of a feverish rise in
-which he had, by his friend’s advice, taken immediate advantage—with
-the sale of his wine, pictures, plate, and furniture—lastly,
-with the firm determination to abscond promptly,
-leaving his debts unpaid, he should find himself master of
-so much wealth as would enable him to purchase the freedom
-of Célandine (at a damaged valuation), to marry her,
-and settle down somewhere, perhaps under the glowing sky
-of the tropics, in luxury and scientific indolence for the rest
-of his life.</p>
-
-<p>Sensualist and impostor though he was, the man had yet
-some glimmering of a better and nobler existence than his
-necessities had hitherto permitted him to lead. He saw
-himself basking in the sun, sleeping in the shade, eating
-luxuriantly, drinking of the best, lying soft, yet devoting
-his leisure to the interests of science, and, when it did not
-interfere with his gratifications, giving those who needed
-help the benefit of his medical experience and advice.
-There are few but can be pitiful while they want occupation,
-and generous while it costs them nothing but a word.</p>
-
-<p>When Bartoletti attended his visitor to the door, he felt
-it would be neither wise nor prudent to remain longer in
-Paris.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Parabére did not act without reflection. She
-possessed in his own handwriting, with his own signature
-attached, the chemist’s analysis of the noxious essences that
-had been offered her in a nosegay; and although Bartoletti
-extorted the price of a necklace for it, she felt the document
-was cheap at the money. Instinct told her that in the
-Marquise de Montmirail she had found a rival; but reason
-assured her also that with such proofs as she now possessed
-she could ruin any rival in the Regent’s good graces as soon
-as he had slept off the effects of last night’s wine. Though
-his whole afternoon, as often happened, might be engaged,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-she must meet her royal admirer that evening at the opera.
-He should then be put in possession of the facts, and woe
-to the traitress when he knew the truth!</p>
-
-<p>“We shall see, madame!” said the lady, between her
-small white teeth, under the sweet, calm face, and crossing
-herself as she passed a crucifix in the street. “We shall
-see! A <i>lettre de cachet</i> is a very compromising <i>billet-doux</i>,
-but it may be sent to a lady quite as appropriately as a
-gentleman. That reminds me! Business first—pleasure
-afterwards; gratitude to-day—vengeance to-night. I will
-preserve that brave Musketeer, if it costs me my rank and
-my reputation. Oh! if men were all prompt, generous,
-honourable, like him, how differently we poor women should
-behave; I wonder if we should be much better or much
-worse?”</p>
-
-<p>The maid walking at her side thought she was repeating
-an “Ave,” and appreciating the temptations of her mistress,
-greatly admired so edifying a display of piety under difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Parabére was perfectly right in believing she
-would have no opportunity for conversation with the Regent
-till they met at the opera. The whole of that prince’s
-morning was employed in struggling with the drowsy fiend
-who on a sensualist’s couch represents sleep, and is such a
-hideous mockery of its original. At these hours the tendency
-to apoplexy, which the Duke strengthened and pampered by
-indulgence, displayed itself in alarming colours, and none
-of his attendants could have been surprised when, a few
-years later, the destroyer swooped down and carried off his
-prey at a stroke. It took him many an hour of heavy, unhealthy,
-and disturbed slumber to regain sufficient clearness
-of mind for the duties of the day, but once in exercise, his
-intellect, which was doubtless above mediocrity, soon reasserted
-itself, and the Prince, shaved, bathed, dressed, and
-seated over a pile of papers in his cabinet, seemed quite
-capable of grasping the political helm, and guiding with a
-steady hand the destinies of France. But it was only by a
-strong mental effort he thus overcame the effects of his
-pernicious habits; such an effort as, when often repeated,
-saps the vital energies beyond the power of nature to restore
-them, and the wasting effects of which are best conveyed by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-the familiar expression—“burning the candle at both
-ends.”</p>
-
-<p>When business was concluded, and the Regent, leaving
-his cabinet, entered the adjoining dressing-room to prepare
-for amusement, he was generally much fatigued, but in
-excellent spirits. A thorough Bourbon, he could work if it
-was necessary, but his native element was play. When he
-shut up his portfolio the virtual King of France felt like
-a boy out of school.</p>
-
-<p>It was in such a mood the Abbé Malletort found him the
-afternoon succeeding his necromantic visit to the cavern.
-The valets were dismissed, the wardrobe stood open, various
-suits of clothes hung on chairs or lay scattered about the
-floor, yet it seemed the visitor was expected; for no sooner
-did he enter than the door was locked, and his Highness,
-taking him by the shoulders, accosted him with a rough,
-good-humoured welcome.</p>
-
-<p>“True to time,” said he, in a boisterous yet somewhat
-nervous tone. “True and punctual as a tailor, a confessor,
-and a creditor should be!—since for me, little Abbé, you
-combine these several characters in one! A tailor, for you
-must dress me; a confessor, for you know most of my sins
-already, and I have no desire to conceal from you the
-remainder; and a creditor, because I owe you a heavy debt
-of gratitude which you need not fear I shall forget to pay!”</p>
-
-<p>“Tailor and confessor as much as your Highness pleases,”
-answered the Abbé, “but creditor, no! I had rather
-possess the free assurance of the Regent’s good-will than
-his name to a blank assignment on the Bank of France!
-It is my pride and my pleasure to be at your service, and
-only when the Duke shall propose a scheme to his own
-manifest disadvantage will the Abbé find courage to expostulate
-or refuse.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can trust you, I believe,” answered the Regent,
-“none the less, my friend, that your interests and mine are
-identical. If d’Orleans were at Dourlens, and Du Maine at
-the Tuileries, it is just possible Malletort might find himself
-at Vincennes. What say you, my adventurous Abbé?
-Such an <i>alerte</i> would call every man to his post! No;
-where I gain an inch I pull you up a metre; but in return,
-if I make a false step in the <i>entresol</i>, you tumble down two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
-pair of stairs and break your neck in the street! Yes—I
-think I can trust you.”</p>
-
-<p>Malletort laughed pleasantly. “Your Highness’s ethics
-are like my own,” said he. “There is no tie so close as self-interest,
-and it is certainly none the looser when accompanied
-by inclination. I trust the events of to-night will
-render it yet more binding on us both.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you prepared everything?” asked the Regent,
-with anxiety. “The slightest omission might be not only
-inconvenient, but dangerous.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have but a short note to write,” answered the Abbé,
-“and I can accomplish that while your Highness finishes
-dressing. It must be sealed with the arms of the royal
-Body-guard, and you may believe I have no such uncanonical
-trinkets in my possession.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke looked in a drawer and shook his head. Then
-he called a valet, who appeared from the adjoining chamber.</p>
-
-<p>“Go to the officer of the guard,” said he, “and ask him
-for the regimental seal. Say it is for <i>me</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The man returned almost immediately, indeed before the
-Abbé had finished a note on which he was engaged, writing
-it slowly and with great care.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is on guard?” he asked, carelessly, while the
-servant set the massive seal on the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur George,” was the answer, “Captain of the
-Company of Grey Musketeers.”</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé did not look up, but continued assiduously
-bent over his task, smiling the while as at some remarkable
-and whimsical coincidence.</p>
-
-<p>When he had folded his letter carefully, and secured it
-with the military seal, he begged his Highness, in a tone of
-great simplicity, to lend him an orderly.</p>
-
-<p>“As many as you please,” answered the Regent; “but
-may I ask the nature of a missive that requires so warlike
-a messenger?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is a challenge,” answered the Abbé, and they both
-laughed heartily; nor was their mirth diminished when the
-required orderly, standing gaunt and rigid in the doorway,
-turned out to be the oldest, the fiercest, and the ugliest
-veteran in the whole Body-guard.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was now declining, and it would soon be dusk.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>
-Malletort urged on the Regent to lose no time in preparing
-for his enterprise.</p>
-
-<p>“And the opera?” observed the latter, suddenly recollecting
-his appointment with Madame de Parabére at that
-entertainment.</p>
-
-<p>“Must be given up for to-night,” answered Malletort.
-“There is no time for your Highness to show yourself in
-public, and return here for a change of dress. Moreover,
-your disguise cannot be properly accomplished in a hurry,
-and to be late by five minutes would render all our plans
-useless. You have promised to trust everything to me, and
-if your Highness will be guided by my directions, I can
-insure you an undoubted success. Give me your attention,
-I entreat, monsieur, whilst once more I recapitulate my
-plan.”</p>
-
-<p>“You dismiss, now, on the instant, all your valets, except
-Robecque, on whom we can depend. With his assistance
-and mine, you disguise yourself as an officer of Musketeers—Grey,
-of course, since that company furnishes the guard
-of to-night. Your Highness can thus pass through their
-posts, without remark, on giving the countersign supplied
-this morning by yourself. An escort will be provided from
-the barracks, at the last moment, by Marshal de Villeroy’s
-orders, without consulting the officer of the guard. This
-arrangement is indispensable in case of accidents. Every
-contingency has been anticipated, yet swords might be
-drawn, and though your Highness loves the clash of steel,
-the most valuable life in France must not be risked even
-for such a prize. Ah! you may trust us men of peace to
-take precautions; and, in <i>our</i> profession, when we act with
-the strong hand, we think we cannot make the hand <i>too</i>
-strong.</p>
-
-<p>“Nevertheless, I anticipate no difficulties whatever.
-Your Highness, as a gallant Musketeer, will enter the
-garden of the Hesperides without opposition. There is no
-dragon that I know of, though people sometimes pay your
-humble servant the compliment of believing him to hold
-that post; and once within, it wants but a bold hand to
-pluck the fruit from the bough. Win it then, my Prince,
-and wear it happily. Nay, forget not hereafter, that many
-a man less favoured would have bartered life willingly but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-to lie prostrate under the tree and look his last on the
-tempting beauty of the golden apple he might never hope
-to reach.”</p>
-
-<p>There was something unusual in the Abbé’s tone, and
-the Duke, glancing in his face, thought he had turned very
-pale; but in another moment he was smiling pleasantly at
-his own awkwardness, while he assisted the Regent into the
-uniform, and fitted on the accoutrements of a Musketeer.</p>
-
-<p>It took some little time, and cost many remonstrances
-from Robecque, who was not gifted with a military eye, to
-complete the transformation. Nevertheless, by dint of
-persuasion and perseverance, the moustaches were at length
-blacked and twisted, the belts adjusted, the boots wrinkled,
-and the hat cocked with that mixture of ease, fierceness,
-good-humour and assumption, which was indispensable to a
-proper conception of the character—a true rendering of the
-part.</p>
-
-<p>It was somewhat against the grain to resign for a while
-the attitudes and gestures of Henri Quatre, but even such
-a sacrifice was little regretted when the Duke scanned himself
-from top to toe in a long mirror, with a smile of undisguised
-satisfaction at the result of his toilet.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis the garrison type to the life!” said he, exultingly.
-“Guard-room, parade, and bivouac combined. Abbé!
-Abbé! what a flower of Musketeers she spoiled when blind
-Fortune made me Regent of France!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX<br />
-<span class="smaller">MATRE PULCHRÂ, FILIA PULCHRIOR</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Since Horace wrote that musical ode in which he expresses
-a poet’s admiration pretty equally divided between mother
-and daughter, how many similes have been exhausted, how
-many images distorted to convey the touching and suggestive
-resemblance by which nature reproduces in the bud a beauty
-that has bloomed to maturity in the flower! Amongst all the
-peculiarities of race, family likeness is the commonest,
-the most prized, and the least understood. Perhaps, because
-the individuality of women is more easily affected by
-extraneous influences, it seems usually less impressed upon
-the sons than the daughters of a House. Then a girl often
-marries so young, that she has scarcely done with her girl’s
-graces, certainly lost none of her woman’s charms, ere she
-finds a copy at her side as tall as herself; a very counterpart
-in figure, voice, eyes, hair, complexion; all the externals
-in which she takes most pride; whose similarity and companionship
-are a source of continual happiness, alloyed only
-by the dread of a contingency that shall make herself a
-grandmother!</p>
-
-<p>As they sat in the boudoir of the Hôtel Montmirail,
-enjoying the cool evening breeze at an open window, the
-Marquise and her daughter might have been likened to a
-goddess and a nymph, a rose and a rosebud—what shall I
-say?—a cat and her kitten, or a cow and her calf! But
-although in voice, manner, gestures, and general effect,
-this similarity was so remarkable, a closer inspection might
-have found many points of difference; and the girl seemed,
-indeed, an ideal sketch rather than a finished portrait of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-the woman, bearing to her mother the vague, spiritualised
-resemblance that memory bears to presence—your dreams
-to your waking thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise was altogether fairer in complexion and fainter in
-colouring, slenderer, and perhaps a little taller, with more
-of soul in her blue eyes but less of intellect, and a pure,
-serene face that a poet would have fallen down and worshipped,
-but from which a painter would have turned to
-study the richer tones of the Marquise.</p>
-
-<p>Some women seem to me like statues, and some like
-pictures. The latter fascinate you at once, compelling your
-admiration even on the first glance, while you pass by the
-former with a mere cold and critical approval. But every
-man who cares for art must have experienced how the
-influence of the model or the marble grows on him day by
-day. How, time after time, fresh beauties seem to spring
-beneath his gaze as if his very worship called them into life,
-and how, when he has got the masterpiece by heart, and
-sees every curve of the outline, every turn of the chisel in
-his dreams, he no longer wonders that it was not a painter,
-but a sculptor, who languished to death in hopeless adoration
-of his handiwork. These statue-women move, in no
-majestic march, over the necks of captive thousands to the
-strains of all kinds of music, but stand in their leafy,
-shadowy nooks apart, teaching a man to love them by
-degrees, and he never forgets the lesson, nor would he if he
-could.</p>
-
-<p>It is scarcely necessary to say that the Marquise loved
-her daughter very dearly. For years, the child had occupied
-the first place in her warm impassioned heart. To send
-Cerise away was the first lesson in self-sacrifice the proud
-and prosperous lady had ever been forced to learn, and
-many a tear it used to cost her, when her ball-dress had
-been folded up and Célandine dismissed for the night. Nor,
-indeed, was the Quadroon’s pillow quite dry when first she
-lost her nursling; and long after Cerise slept calmly and
-peacefully between those quiet convent walls, far off in
-Normandy, the two women would lie broad awake, calling to
-remembrance the blue eyes and the brown curls and the
-pretty ways of their darling, till their very hearts ached
-with longing to look on her once more. Now, since<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-mademoiselle had returned, the Marquise thought she loved
-her better than ever, and perhaps all the feelings and
-impulses of a heart not too well disciplined had of late been
-called into stronger play.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
-<img src="images/illus2.jpg" width="450" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I LIKE GOING OUT SO MUCH, MAMMA.”</p>
-<p class="caption-r">(<a href="#Page_169"><i>Page 169.</i></a>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Madame de Montmirail threw herself back in her chair
-with an exclamation of pleasure, for the cool, soft breeze
-lifted the hair from her temples, and stirred the delicate
-lace edging on her bosom. “It is delightful, my child!”
-she said, “after the heat of to-day, which was suffocating.
-And we have nothing for to-night, I thank the saints with
-my whole heart! Absolutely nothing! Neither ball, nor
-concert, nor opera (for I could not sit out another of
-Cavalli’s), nor even a horrid reception at the Luxembourg.
-This is what I call veritable repose.”</p>
-
-<p>Like all people with a tinge of southern blood, the
-Marquise cried out at the slightest increase of temperature.
-Like all fashionable ladies, she professed to consider those
-gaieties without which she could not live, duty, but
-martyrdom.</p>
-
-<p>Mademoiselle, however, loved a ball dearly, and was not
-ashamed to say so. She entered such gatherings, indeed,
-with something of the nervousness felt by a recruit in his first
-engagement. The prospect of triumph was enhanced by
-the chance of danger; but the sense of personal apprehension
-forcibly overcome, which is, perhaps, the true
-definition of courage, added elasticity to her spirits, keenness
-to her intellect, and even charms to her person.
-Beauty, moving gracefully amongst admiring glances, under
-a warm light in a cloud of muslin, carries, perhaps, as high
-a heart beneath her bodice as beats behind the steel cuirass
-of Valour, riding his mailed war-horse in triumph through
-the shock of opposing squadrons.</p>
-
-<p>“And I like going out so much, mamma,” said the girl,
-sitting on a footstool by her chair, and leaning both elbows
-on her mother’s lap. “With you I mean; that must, of
-course, be understood. Alone in a ball-room without the
-petticoats of Madame la Marquise, behind which to run
-when the wolf comes, I should be so frightened, I do believe
-I should begin to cry! Seriously, mamma, I should not
-like it at all. Tell me, dear mother, how did you manage
-at first, when you entered a society by yourself?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I was never afraid of the wolf,” answered the Marquise,
-laughing, “and lucky for me I was not, since the late king
-could not endure shy people, and if you showed the slightest
-symptoms of awkwardness or want of tact you were simply
-not asked again. But you are joking, my darling; you who
-need fear no criticism, with your youth, your freshness, the
-best dressmaker in Paris, and all that brown hair which
-Célandine talks of till the tears stand in her eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hate my hair!” interrupted Cerise. “I think it’s
-hideous! I wish it was black, like yours. A horrid man
-the other night at ‘Madame’s’ took me for an Englishwoman!
-He did, mamma! A Prince somebody, all over
-decorations. I could have run a pin into the wretch with
-pleasure. One of the things I like going out for is to
-watch my beautiful mamma, and the way to flatter me is to
-start back and hold up both hands, exclaiming, ‘Ah!
-mademoiselle, none but the blind could take you for anything
-but the daughter of Madame la Marquise!’ The
-Prince-Marshal does it every time we meet. Dear old man!
-that is why I am so fond of him.”</p>
-
-<p>The young lady illustrated this frank confession by an
-absurd little pantomime that mimicked her veteran admirer
-to the life, causing her mother to laugh heartily.</p>
-
-<p>“I did not know he was such a favourite,” said the
-Marquise. “You are in luck, my daughter. I expect him
-to pay us a visit this very evening.”</p>
-
-<p>Cerise made a comical little face of disgust.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall go to bed before he catches me, then,” she
-answered; “not that he is in the least out of favour; on
-the contrary, I love him dearly; but when he has been
-here five minutes I yawn, in ten I shut my eyes, and long
-before he gets to that bridge which Monsieur de Vendôme
-ought, or ought not, to have blown up—there—it’s no use!
-The thing is stronger than I am, and I go fast asleep.”</p>
-
-<p>“And so my little rake is disappointed,” said the elder
-lady, taking her child’s pretty head caressingly between her
-hands. “She would like to have a ball, or a reception, or
-something that would make an excuse for a sumptuous
-toilet, and she finds it very wearisome to sit at home, even
-for one night, and take care of her old mother!”</p>
-
-<p>“Very!” repeated the girl playfully, while her tone<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-made so ungracious an avowal equivalent to the fondest
-expression of attachment. “My old mother is so cross and
-so tiresome and so very <i>very</i> old. Now, listen, mamma.
-Shall I have a dress exactly like yours for the ball at the
-Tuileries? The young king is to dance. I know it, for my
-dear Prince-Marshal told me so while I was still awake. I
-have never seen a king, only a regent, and I <i>do</i> think Monsieur
-d’Orleans so ugly. Don’t tell him, mamma, but our writing-master
-at the convent was the image of him, and had the
-same wrinkles in his forehead. He used to wipe our pens
-in his wig, and we called him ‘Pouf-Pouf!’ I was the
-worst writer amongst all the girls, and the best arithmetician.
-‘Pouf-Pouf’ said I had a geometrical head! Well,
-mamma, you must order me a dress the exact pattern of
-yours; the same flounces, the same trimmings, the same
-ribbons, and I will present myself before the Prince-Marshal
-the instant he arrives in the ball-room, to receive his accustomed
-compliment. Perhaps on that occasion he will take
-me for <i>you</i>! Would it not be charming? My whole
-ambition just now is to be exactly like my mother in every
-respect!”</p>
-
-<p>As she finished, her eyes insensibly wandered to the
-picture of the Prince de Chateau-Guerrand, which adorned
-the boudoir, but falling short of its principal figure, rested
-on the dead musketeer in the foreground. The Marquise
-also happened to be looking at the same object, so that
-neither observed how the other’s gaze was employed, nor
-guessed that besides figure, manner, features, voice, and
-gestures, there was yet a stronger point in which they bore
-too close and fatal a resemblance. Deep in the heart of each
-lurked the cherished image of a certain Grey Musketeer. The
-girl draping her idol, as it were, even to herself, not daring
-so much as to lift a corner of its veil; yet rejoicing unconsciously
-in its presence, and trusting with a vague but
-implicit faith to its protection. The woman alternately
-prostrating herself at its pedestal, and spurning it beneath
-her feet, striving, yielding, hesitating, struggling, losing
-ground inch by inch, and forced against her judgment,
-against her will, to love him with a fierce, eager, anxious
-love, embittered by some of the keenest elements of hate.</p>
-
-<p>These two hearts were formed in the same mould, were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>
-of the same blood, were knit together by the fondest and
-closest of ties, and one must necessarily be torn and bruised
-and pierced by the happiness of the other.</p>
-
-<p>It was so far fortunate that neither of them knew the
-very precarious position in which Captain George found
-himself placed. Under such a ruler as the Débonnaire, it
-was no jesting matter for any man that his name should be
-written in full on a <i>lettre de cachet</i>, formally signed, sealed,
-and in possession of an ambitious intriguer, who, having no
-feelings of personal enmity to the victim, would none the
-less use his power without scruple or remorse. A woman
-was, of course, at the bottom of the scrape in which Captain
-George found himself; but it was also to a woman that he
-was indebted for timely warning of his danger. Madame de
-Parabére had not only intimated to him that he must make
-his escape without delay, but had even offered to sell her
-jewels that he might be furnished with the means of flight.
-Such marks of gratitude and generosity were none the less
-touching that the sacrifice proved unnecessary. A Musketeer
-was seldom overburdened with ready money, but our Captain
-of the Grey Company not only bore a Scottish surname, he
-had also a cross of Scottish blood in his veins. The first
-helped him to get money, the second enabled him to keep
-it. Monsieur Las, or Law, as he should properly have been
-called, like his countrymen, “kept a warm side,” as he
-expressed it, towards any one claiming a connection, however
-remote, with his native land, and had given Captain
-George so many useful hints regarding the purchase and
-sale of Mississippi stock, that the latter, who was by no
-means deficient in acuteness, found himself possessed of a
-good round sum, in lawful notes of the realm, at the
-moment when such a store was absolutely necessary to his
-safety.</p>
-
-<p>He laid his plans accordingly with habitual promptitude
-and caution. He knew enough of these matters to think it
-improbable he would be publicly arrested while on guard,
-for in such cases profound secrecy was usually observed, as
-increasing the suddenness and mystery of the blow. He
-had, therefore, several hours to make his preparations, and
-the messenger whom he at once despatched to prepare relays
-of horses for him the whole way to the coast was several<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-leagues on his road long before the sun went down. A
-valise, well packed, containing a change of raiment, rested
-on the loins of his best horse, ready saddled, with pistols
-in holsters and bridle hanging on the stall-post, to be put
-on directly he was fed. Soon after dark, this trusty animal
-was to be led to a particular spot, not far from the Hôtel
-Montmirail, and there walked gently to and fro in waiting
-for his master. By daybreak next morning, the Musketeer
-hoped to be half-way across Picardy.</p>
-
-<p>Having made his dispositions for retreat like a true
-soldier, he divested his mind of further anxiety as to his
-own personal safety, and turned all his attention to a subject
-that was now seldom absent from his thoughts. It weighed
-on his heart like lead, to reflect how soon he must be parted
-from Cerise, how remote was the chance of their ever
-meeting again. In his life of action and adventure he had
-indeed learned to believe that for a brave man nothing was
-impossible, but he could not conceal from himself that it
-might be years before he could return to France, and his
-ignorance in what manner he could have offended the Regent
-only made his course the more difficult, his future the more
-gloomy and uncertain. On one matter he was decided.
-If it cost him liberty or life he would see the girl he loved
-once more, assure her of his unalterable affection, and so
-satisfy the great desire that had grown lately into a necessity
-of his very being.</p>
-
-<p>So it fell out that he was thinking of Cerise, while Cerise,
-with her eyes on the Musketeer in the picture, was thinking
-of him; the Marquise believing the while that her child’s
-whole heart was fixed on her ball-dress for the coming
-gaieties at the Tuileries. With the mother’s thoughts we
-will not interfere, inasmuch as, whatever their nature, the
-fixed expression of her countenance denoted that she was
-keeping them down with a strong hand.</p>
-
-<p>The two had been silent longer than either of them
-would have allowed, when Célandine entered with a note—observing,
-as she presented it to her mistress, “Mademoiselle
-is pale; mademoiselle looks fatigued; madame takes her
-too much into society for one so young; she had better go
-to bed at once, a long sleep will bring back the colour to her
-cheeks.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Marquise laughed at her old servant’s carefulness.
-“You would like to put her to bed as you used when she
-was a baby. Who brought this?” she added, with a start,
-as, turning the note in her hand, she observed the royal
-arms of the Body-guard emblazoned on its seal; bending
-her head over it the while to conceal the crimson that rose
-to her very temples.</p>
-
-<p>What a wild gush of happiness filled her heart while she
-read on—her warm wilful heart, that sent tears of sheer
-pleasure to her eyes so that she could scarcely decipher the
-words, and that beat so loud, she hardly heard Célandine’s
-disapproving accents in reply.</p>
-
-<p>“The fiercest soldier, and the ugliest I have yet set eyes
-on. Nine feet high at least, and the rudest manners I ever
-encountered, even in a Musketeer!”</p>
-
-<p>Cerise was no longer to be pitied for want of colour, but
-Célandine, though she observed the change, took no notice
-of it, only urging on her young lady the propriety of going
-immediately to bed.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the Marquise read her note again. It was
-not (what letter ever was?) so enchanting on the second
-perusal as the first.</p>
-
-<p>It ran thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="noindent">“<span class="smcap">Madame</span>,</p>
-
-<p>“I am distressed beyond measure to trouble a lady
-with a question of military discipline. I cannot sufficiently
-regret that my duty compels me to post a sentry in the
-grounds of the Hôtel Montmirail. In order that this inconvenient
-arrangement may interfere as little as possible with
-the privacy of Madame, I urgently request, as the greatest
-favour, that she will indicate by her commands the exact
-spot on which she will permit one of my Musketeers to be
-stationed, and I will be at Madame’s orders at the usual
-time of going my rounds to-night. I have the honour to
-remain, with assurances of the most distinguished consideration,
-the humblest of Madame’s humble servants.</p>
-
-<p class="right">(Signed) “<span class="smcap">George</span>,<br />
-“Captain, Grey Musketeers of the King.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was a polite document enough, and obviously the merest
-affair of military arrangement, yet the Marquise, after a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-third perusal, kept it crumpled up in her hand, and when
-she thought herself unobserved, hid it away, probably for
-security, in the bosom of her dress.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no answer, Célandine,” said she, with well-acted
-calmness, belied by the fixed crimson spot in each
-cheek. “My darling,” she added caressingly, to her
-daughter, “your old <i>bonne</i> is quite right. The sooner you
-are in bed the better. Good-night, my child. I shall come
-and see you as usual after you are asleep. Ah! Cerise,
-how I used to miss that nightly visit when you were at the
-convent. You slept better without it than your mother did,
-I am sure!”</p>
-
-<p>Then, after her daughter left the room, she moved the
-lamp far back into a recess, and sat down at the open
-window, pressing both hands against her bosom, as though
-to restrain the beating of her heart.</p>
-
-<p>How her mind projected itself into the future! What
-wild inconceivable, impracticable projects she formed,
-destroyed, and reconstructed once more! She overleaped
-probability, possibility, the usages of life, the very lapse of
-time. At a bound she was walking with him through her
-woods in Touraine, his own, his very own. They had given
-up Paris, the Court, ambition, society, everything in the
-world for each other, and they were so happy! so happy!
-Cerise, herself, and <i>him</i>. Ah! she felt now the capabilities
-she had for goodness. She knew what she could be with a
-man like that—a man whom she could respect as well as
-love. She almost felt the pressure of his arm, while his
-kind, brave face looked down into her own, under just such
-a moon as that rising even now through the trees above the
-guard-house. Then she came back to her boudoir in the
-Hôtel Montmirail, and the consciousness, the triumphant
-consciousness that, come what might, she must at least see
-him and hear his voice within an hour; but recalling the
-masked ball at the Opera House the night before, she
-trembled and turned pale, thinking she would never dare to
-look him in the face again.</p>
-
-<p>There was yet another subject of anxiety. The Prince-Marshal
-was to come, as he often did of an evening, and
-pass half-an-hour over a cup of coffee before he retired to
-rest. It made her angry to think of her old admirer, as if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-she did indeed already belong to some one else. How long
-that some one seemed in coming, and yet she had sat there,
-hot and cold by turns, for but five minutes, unless her clock
-had stopped.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, with a great start, she sprang from her chair,
-and listened, upright, with parted lips and hair put back.
-No! her ear was not deceived! It had caught the clink of
-spurs, and a faint measured footfall, outside in the distant
-street.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX<br />
-<span class="smaller">A GENERAL RENDEZVOUS</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Cerise, not the least sleepy, though sent prematurely
-to bed, dismissed her attendant protesting vehemently,
-and sat herself down also at an open window, to
-breathe the night air, look at the moon, and dream, wide-awake,
-on such subjects as arise most readily in young ladies’
-minds when they find themselves alone with their own
-thoughts in the summer evening. However exalted these
-may have been, they can scarcely have soared to the actual
-romance of which she was an unconscious heroine, or foreseen
-the drama of action and sentiment she was about to
-witness in person. Little did she imagine, while she leaned
-a sweet face, pale and serene in the moonlight, on an arm
-half hidden in the wealth of her unbound hair, that two men
-were watching every movement who could have kissed the
-very ground she trod on; for one of whom she was the type
-of all that seemed best and loveliest in woman, teaching him
-to look from earth to heaven; for the other, an angel of
-light, pure and holy in herself, yet luring him irresistibly
-down the path to hell.</p>
-
-<p>The latter had been hidden since dusk, that he might
-but see her shadow cross the windows of the gallery, one by
-one, when she sought her chamber; the other was visiting
-his guard two hours earlier than usual, with a silent caution
-that seemed mistrustful of their vigilance, in order that he
-might offer her the heart of an honest man, ere he fled for
-his life to take refuge in another land.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George, entering the garden through a private
-door, could see plainly enough the figure of Mademoiselle de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>
-Montmirail brought into relief by the lamp-light in her room.
-She must have heard his step in the street, he thought,
-for she had risen and was looking earnestly out into the
-darkness; but from some cause or another, at the instant
-the door in the garden wall closed behind him, she shrank
-back and disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>His heart beat high. Could she have expected him?
-Could she know intuitively why he was there to-night?
-Was it possible she would run down and grant him a meeting
-in the garden? The thought was rapture! Yet
-perhaps with all its intoxication, he scarcely loved her so
-dearly as he had done a moment before, as he did a moment
-after, when he actually distinguished a white dress flitting
-along the terrace at the farthest corner of the building.</p>
-
-<p>Then indeed he forgot duty, danger, exile, uncertainty,
-the future, the past, everything but the intense happiness
-of that moment. He was conscious of the massive trees,
-the deep shadows, the black clusters of shrubs, the dusky
-outlines of the huge indistinct building traversed here and
-there by a broad shimmer of light, the stars above his head,
-the crescent moon, the faint whisper of leaves, the drowsy
-perfume of flowers, but only because of <i>her</i> presence who
-turned the whole to a glimpse of fairyland. He stole
-towards the terrace, treading softly, keeping carefully in
-the shadow of the trees. So intent was he, and so cautious,
-that he never observed Cerise return to her post of observation.</p>
-
-<p>She had resumed it, however, at the very moment when
-the Musketeer, having advanced some ten paces with the
-crouching stealthy gait of a Red Indian drawing on his
-game, stopped short—like the savage when he has gone a
-step too far—rigid, motionless, scarcely breathing, every
-faculty called up to <i>watch</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The attention of Mademoiselle de Montmirail was
-aroused at the same moment by the same cause.</p>
-
-<p>It is scarcely necessary to observe that the Duke of
-Orleans, Regent of France, was no less ambitious of
-distinction in the fields of love than of war. That in the
-one, though falling far short of his heroic ancestor, whom
-he so wished to resemble, his prowess was not below the
-average, scandal itself must admit; but that, if experience<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-ought to count for anything, his encounters in the other
-should have made him the most successful campaigner of
-his time, history cannot conscientiously deny.</p>
-
-<p>Like all such freebooters, however, he met with many a
-bitter reverse, many a signal defeat never mentioned in
-despatches. His rebuffs, we may be sure, were written on
-water, though his triumphs were carved in stone; and it
-was for those on whom he could make least impression
-that he cherished the greatest interest. The way to
-captivate the Regent was not so much to <i>profess</i>, as to
-<i>entertain</i> a thorough contempt for his character, an utter
-disregard of his position. The noble mind, the stout
-heart, the strong will, the sagacious, deep-thinking, yet
-open disposition, true type of manhood, is to be won by
-love; but the sensualist, the coward, the false, the wicked,
-and the weak, are all best tamed by scorn. With a new
-face, the Regent was captivated, as a matter of course, for
-an hour or two; seldom during a whole day; though on
-occasion, if the face were very beautiful, and strictly guarded,
-he besieged its owner for a week; but Madame de Montmirail
-was the only long-established beauty of the Court
-who had seriously captivated his fancy, and, indeed, what
-little was left of his miserable self-indulgent heart. This
-triumph she owed to her perfect unconsciousness of it, and
-complete disregard for her admirer, therefore it became
-more firmly established day by day; and when Malletort,
-who thoroughly comprehended the nature he wished to rule,
-hinted that his kinswoman was not insensible to the Prince’s
-merits, he did but blow into flame a fire that had been
-smouldering longer than even he was aware.</p>
-
-<p>Now the Abbé had sufficient confidence in her powers
-and her attractions to be sure that if Madame de Montmirail
-once obtained an acknowledged and ostensible
-influence over the Regent she would become the virtual
-ruler of France; and the Abbé, in his own way, loved his
-cousin better than anything but the excitement of ambition
-and the possession of political power. He believed that
-her disgrace would be of infinite advantage to herself as
-well as to him, and thought he could see her way clearly,
-with his own assistance, to an eventual throne. He was
-a man without religion, without principle, without honour,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-without even the common sympathies of humanity. It is
-difficult in our days to conceive such a character, though
-they were common enough in France during the last
-century; but in his views for his cousin, evil as they
-were, he seemed at least honest—more, self-sacrificing,
-since she was the only creature on earth for whom he
-cared.</p>
-
-<p>With his knowledge of her disposition, he did not conceal
-from himself that great difficulties attended his task.
-However lightly the cynical Abbé might esteem a woman’s
-virtue, his experience taught him not to underrate the
-obstinacy of a woman’s pride. That his cousin, in common
-with her family, possessed an abundance of the latter
-quality, he was well aware, and he played his game accordingly.
-It was his design to compromise her by a <i>coup-de-main</i>,
-after he had sapped her defences to the utmost by
-the arguments of ambition and self-interest. Like all
-worldly men in their dealings with women, he undervalued
-both her strength and her weakness—her aversion to the
-Regent, and her fancy for the Musketeer; this even while
-he made use of the latter to overcome the former sentiment.
-If she could be induced by any means, however fraudulent,
-to grant the Prince an interview at night in her own
-gardens, he argued, that first step would have been taken,
-which it is always so difficult to retract; and to bring this
-about, he had forged Captain George’s signature to the
-polite note which had proved so effectual in luring the Marquise
-down the terrace steps, and across the velvet lawn,
-under the irresistible temptation of a meeting by moonlight
-with the man she loved. As a measure of mere politeness,
-connected with certain military precautions, of course!</p>
-
-<p>But under such circumstances it would appear that <i>one</i>
-Musketeer ought to be company enough for <i>one</i> lady at a
-time. Cerise, viewing the performances from her window
-above, might have come to the conclusion, had she not been
-too anxious, agitated, terrified, to retain full possession of
-her faculties, that the arrival of a few more of these guardsmen
-on such a scene, at such a crisis, was conducive rather
-to tumult and bloodshed than appropriate conversation.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George, stopping short in his eager though
-stealthy advance towards the white figure flitting noiselessly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-across the lawn, first thought he was dreaming; next, that
-he beheld a spectral or illusive image of himself, denoting
-near approach of death; lastly, that the discipline of the
-corps had become relaxed to a degree which his military
-indignation resolved should be severely visited within an
-hour, though he abandoned his command the next.</p>
-
-<p>A Grey Musketeer, hatted, cloaked, booted precisely like
-himself, was advancing from the direction of the guard-house
-towards the white figure, that now stopped short as
-if expecting him. While yet a few feet apart, both stood
-still, and Captain George, in dark shadow at ten paces’
-distance, not only recognised the Marquise by her voice,
-but saw her face distinctly, as she turned it towards the
-moonlight, framed in its masses of black hair.</p>
-
-<p>His heart beat calmly now, and he was the cool resolute
-man of action once more.</p>
-
-<p>She was the first to speak, and though they trembled a
-little, very soft and musical fell her tones on the listener’s
-ear.</p>
-
-<p>“I received monsieur’s note. It was most kind and considerate
-on his part. I have been expecting him for this
-hour past.”</p>
-
-<p>The cloaked figure uncovered. George, watching Madame
-de Montmirail, observed her start and raise her head
-defiantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame will forgive the intrusion then,” said her
-companion, “since it is not unexpected. She will consider
-also the temptation, and the discretion of her visitor.”</p>
-
-<p>There was no mistaking the tones of the Regent, good-humoured,
-easy, and, though a little husky, pleasant as if
-mellowed by Bourdeaux. She drew back hastily, but the
-speaker at the same time possessed himself of her hand,
-almost by force, and, drawing her towards him, whispered
-in her ear.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise broke from him furiously. Her eyes
-glittered like steel, and she stamped upon the turf, while
-she exclaimed—</p>
-
-<p>“What have I ever done that your Highness should offer
-me this insult? And here, in the midst of my own people!
-The Montmirails have been always loyal,” she added, in a
-tone of bitter scorn, “and know how to spare a Bourbon!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>
-Quit the garden instantly by that door, and your Highness
-shall suffer no further humiliation for an act that is at once
-a folly and an impertinence.”</p>
-
-<p>She extended her white hand with the gesture of one
-who orders a disobedient hound to kennel, and Captain
-George, in his hiding-place, felt the blood mounting to his
-brain. But the Regent was not so easily discouraged. Clasping
-both her hands in his own, he knelt at her feet, and while
-cloak and hat fell off, proceeded to pour out a stream
-of professions, promises, and protestations, with a good-humoured
-carelessness that was in itself an outrage.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, though she struggled fiercely to get free,
-cool, courageous, and self-possessed, she made no outcry;
-but in her efforts a bracelet flew from her arm, and the skirt
-of her muslin dress was torn to its hem.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George could stand it no longer. In two strides
-he was upon him, hovering over the aggressor with his
-drawn sword.</p>
-
-<p>Then the Regent’s nerve failed. Shaken, excited,
-irritated, he suspected a plot; he shrank from assassination;
-he imagined himself surrounded.</p>
-
-<p>“Help! help!” he shouted loudly, staggering to his
-feet, and looking wildly about him. “To me! my
-Musketeers, to me! Down with them! fire on them all!
-The traitors! the assassins!”</p>
-
-<p>Lights twinkled in the hotel, and servants came rushing
-out in great alarm, but long ere they could reach the scene
-of action, half-a-dozen Musketeers had arrived, with Bras-de-Fer
-at their head.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, ’tis the Captain!” exclaimed the latter, stopping
-short with his point lowered, in sheer bewilderment—a
-lack of promptitude that probably saved his officer’s life.</p>
-
-<p>“Arrest him, I tell you, idiots!” shrieked the Regent,
-with a horrible oath, trembling and glaring about him for a
-fresh enemy.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise had plenty of courage. Still she was but a
-woman, and not actually hemmed in a corner; so, when
-the Musketeers ran in with levelled weapons, she turned
-and fled; only as far as the terrace steps, however, where
-she took up her post and watched the sequel with a wild
-fixed face, white and stony as the balustrades themselves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span></p>
-
-<p>The servants hovered round, chattering, flinching, and
-doing nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Half-a-dozen blades flashed in Captain George’s eyes;
-as many points were levelled at his heart. His own men
-had been bid to take him, and they must obey. He knew
-well they were some of the best swordsmen in the French
-army; but his good horse should by this time be waiting
-in the street beyond, and if he could fight his way to the
-garden-gate there was yet a chance left.</p>
-
-<p>Even in this extremity he was conscious that the light
-still streamed from Cerise’s window. Catching a couple of
-thrusts in his cloak, and engaged with a third adversary,
-he was aware of Bras-de-Fer’s tall figure advancing upon
-him. For an instant his heart sank, and he felt he was
-over-matched.</p>
-
-<p>But an unexpected auxiliary, who seemed to have risen
-out of the very ground, stood at his side. With a thrill of
-triumph he recognised Beaudésir’s voice in his ear.</p>
-
-<p>“Courage, my captain!” said the professional coolly, as
-if giving a lesson. “Carte and counter-carte—carte and
-counter-carte! Keep the wrist going like a windmill, and
-we shall fight through them all.”</p>
-
-<p>He was yet speaking when Bras-de-Fer went down with
-an ugly thrust through the lower ribs, exclaiming as he
-lost his footing—</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Peste!</i> Had I known <i>you</i> were in it, I’d have parried
-<i>your</i> blade with a pistol-shot!”</p>
-
-<p>A few flashing passes, a clink of rapiers, an oath or two,
-a shriek from upstairs, shouts, groans, a scuffling of feet,
-and George was safe through the garden-door and out in
-the street. He looked for Beaudésir: the youth had disappeared.
-He looked for his horse; the good beast was
-walking quietly off in the custody of two Musketeers. A
-patrole of the same corps were entering the street from the
-other end. It seemed hard to be taken here after all.</p>
-
-<p>But, once more to-night, Captain George found a friend
-where he least expected one. A coach was drawn up
-within six paces. A lackey, with a lighted torch in one
-hand, held the door open with the other. Old Chateau-Guerrand
-caught him by the arm.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a brave lad,” said he, “and, Regent or <i>roué</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-I am not going to turn my back on my aide-de-camp! I
-watched you from the roof of my coach over the wall. By
-the cross of St. Louis, I never saw so good a fight, and I
-have had fifty years of it, my boy. Here! take my
-carriage. They dare not stop <i>that</i> at their barriers.
-Those English horses can go like the wind: bid them
-carry you where you will.”</p>
-
-<p>George pressed his hand and whispered in his ear.</p>
-
-<p>“Relays!” exclaimed the Prince-Marshal. “Then you
-are safe. Shut him in! And you, coachman, be off!
-Drive as if you had the devil or old Turenne in your
-rear!”</p>
-
-<p>It was about this moment that Célandine, rushing into
-her young lady’s room to comfort her, in the alarm, found
-Cerise extended, motionless and unconscious, on the floor.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE FOX AND FIDDLE</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Three dirty children with blue eyes, fair locks, and round,
-chubby faces, deepened by a warm peach-like tint beneath
-the skin, such as are to be seen in plenty along our
-southern seaboard, were busily engaged building a grotto
-of shells opposite their home, at the exact spot where its
-construction was most in the way of pedestrians passing
-through the narrow ill-paved street. Their shrill cries and
-blooming looks denoted the salubrious influence of sea air,
-while their nationality was sufficiently attested by the
-vigour with which the eldest, a young lady less than ten
-years of age, called out “Frenchie! Frenchie! Froggie!
-Froggie!” after a foreign-looking man with a pale face
-and dark eyes, who stepped over the low half-door that
-restrained her infant brothers and sisters from rolling out
-into the gutter, as if he was habitually a resident in the
-house. He appeared, indeed, a favourite with the children,
-for while they recalled him to assist their labours, which
-he did with a good-nature and address peculiarly winning
-to architects of that age, they chanted in his praise, and
-obviously with the intention of doing him high honour, a
-ditty of no particular tune, detailing the matrimonial
-adventures of an amphibious animal, supposed in the last
-century to bear close affinity to all Frenchmen, as related
-with a remarkable chorus by one Anthony Rowley; and
-the obliging foreigner, suspecting neither sarcasm nor
-insult, but only suffering torture from an utter absence
-of tune, hummed lustily in accompaniment.</p>
-
-<p>Over the heads of these urchins hung their paternal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-sign-board, creaking and swinging in the breeze now
-freshening with an incoming tide. Its representation of
-a fox playing the fiddle was familiar to seafaring men as
-indicating a favourite house of call for the consumption of
-beer, tobacco, and that seductive compound known to
-several generations by the popular name of punch.</p>
-
-<p>The cheerful fire, the red curtains, the sanded floor, the
-wooden chairs, and liberal measures of their jovial haunt,
-had been present to the mind’s eye of many an honest tar
-clinging wet and cold to a slippery yard, reefing topsails in
-a nor’-wester, or eating maggoty biscuit and sipping six-water
-grog, on half rations, homeward bound with a headwind,
-but probably none of them had ever speculated on
-the origin of the sign they knew so well and thought of so
-often. Why a fox and fiddle should be found together in a
-seaport town, what a fox had to do with a fiddle, or, however
-appropriate to their ideas of jollity the instrument
-might appear, wherefore its player should be represented
-as the cunning animal whom destiny had already condemned
-to be hunted by English country gentlemen, was a
-speculation on which they had no wish to embark. Neither
-have I. It is enough to know that the Fox and Fiddle
-sold loaded beer, strong tobacco, and scalding punch, to an
-extent not even limited by the consumer’s purse; for when
-Jack had spent all his <i>rhino</i>, the landlord’s liberality
-enabled him to run up a score, hereafter to be liquidated
-from the wages of a future voyage. The infatuated debtor,
-paying something like two hundred <i>per cent.</i> on every
-mouthful for this accommodation, by a farther arrangement,
-that he should engage with any skipper of the landlord’s
-providing, literally sold himself, body and soul, for a
-nipperkin of rum and half-a-pound of tobacco.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, several score of the boldest hearts and
-readiest hands in England were to be bought at this low
-price, and Butter-faced Bob, as his rough-spoken customers
-called the owner of the Fox and Fiddle, would furnish as
-many of them at a reasonable tariff, merchant and man-of-war’s
-men, as the captain wanted or the owners could
-afford to buy. It was no wonder his children had strong
-lungs, and round, well-fed cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a good chap!” observed a deep hoarse voice,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
-which made the youngest grotto-builder start and shrink
-behind its sister, while a broad elderly figure rolled and
-lurched after the obliging foreigner into the house. It
-would have been as impossible to mistake the new-comer
-for a landsman as Butter-faced Bob himself for anything
-but a publican. His gait on the pavement was that of one
-who had so thoroughly got his <i>sea-legs</i> that he was, to the
-last degree, incommoded by the uneven though stable
-surface of the shore; and while he trod the passage, as
-being planked, with more confidence, he nevertheless ran
-his hand, like a blind man, along tables and other articles
-of furniture while he passed them, seeming, in every
-gesture, to be more ready with his arms than his legs.</p>
-
-<p>Broad-faced, broad-shouldered, broad-handed, he looked
-a powerful, and at the same time a strong-constitutioned
-man, but grizzled hair and shaggy eyebrows denoted he
-was past his prime; while a reddened neck and tanned
-face, with innumerable little wrinkles round the eyes,
-suggested constant watchfulness and exposure in hard
-weather afloat, no less than swollen features and marked
-lines told of deep drinking and riotous living ashore.</p>
-
-<p>The seamen of that period, though possessing an undoubted
-claim to the title, were far more than to-day a class
-distinct and apart from their fellow-countrymen. The
-standing army, an institution of which our parliaments had
-for generations shown themselves so jealous, could boast,
-indeed, a consolidation and discipline under Marlborough
-which made them, as the Musketeers of the French king
-allowed, second to no troops in Europe. But their triumphs,
-their organisation, even their existence, was comparatively
-of recent date. The navy, on the other hand, had been a
-recognised and constitutional force for more than a century,
-and had enjoyed, from the dispersion of the Spanish Armada
-downwards, a series of successes almost uninterrupted. It
-is true that the cannonade of a Dutch fleet had been heard in
-the Thames, but few of the lowest seamen were so ignorant
-as to attribute this national disgrace to want of courage in
-their officers or incapacity in themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Their leaders, indeed, were usually more remarkable for
-valour than discretion, nor was this surprising under the
-system by which captains were appointed to their ships.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span></p>
-
-<p>A regiment and a three-decker were considered by the
-Government equivalent and convertible commands. The
-cavalry officer of to-day might find himself directing the
-manœuvres of a fleet to-morrow. The relics of so untoward
-an arrangement may be detected in certain technical phrases
-not yet out of use. The word “squadron” is even now
-applied alike to a handful of horse and a powerful fleet,
-numbering perhaps a dozen sail of the line. Raleigh, himself,
-began his fighting career as a soldier, and Rupert
-finished his as a sailor.</p>
-
-<p>With such want of seamanship, therefore, amongst its
-commanders, our navy must have possessed in its construction
-some great preponderating influence to account for its
-efficiency. This compensating power was to be found in its
-masters, its petty-officers, and its seamen.</p>
-
-<p>The last were thoroughly impregnated with the briny
-element on which they passed their lives. They boasted
-themselves a race apart. “Land-lubber” was for them a
-term conveying the utmost amount of derision and contempt.
-To be an “old salt” was the ideal perfection at which
-alone it was worth while for humanity to aim. The seaman,
-exulting in his profession, was never more a seaman
-than when rolling about on shore, swearing strange oaths,
-using nautical phrases, consuming vast quantities of beer
-and tobacco, above all, flinging his money here and there
-with a profuse and injudicious liberality especially distinctive
-of his kind.</p>
-
-<p>The popularity of such characters amongst the lower
-classes may be readily imagined; for, with the uneducated
-and unreflecting, a reckless bearing very generally passes
-for courage; a tendency to dissipation for manliness; and a
-boastful expenditure for true generosity of heart. Perhaps,
-to the erroneous impressions thus disseminated amongst
-the young, should be attributed the inclination shown
-towards a service of which the duties entailed continual
-danger, excessive hardship, and daily privation. Certainly
-at a period when the worst provision was made, both
-physical and moral, for the welfare of men before the mast,
-there never seems to have been found a difficulty in keeping
-up the full complement of the British navy.</p>
-
-<p>They were, indeed, a race apart, not only in their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-manners, their habits, their quaint expressions, their simple
-modes of thought, but in their superstitions and even their
-religious belief. They cultivated a rough, honest kind of
-piety, well illustrated in later years by Dibdin, himself a
-landsman, when he sang of</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The sweet little cherub that sits up aloft</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To take care of the life of poor Jack.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">But it was overloaded and interspersed with a thousand
-strange fancies not more incongruous than unreasonable
-and far-fetched.</p>
-
-<p>No power would induce them to clear out of port, or,
-indeed, commence any important undertaking on a Friday.
-Mother Carey’s chickens were implicitly believed to be
-messengers sent express from another world to warn the
-mariner of impending storm, and bid him shorten sail ere
-it began to blow. Carlmilhan, the famous pirate, who,
-rather than be taken alive, had in default of gunpowder
-scuttled his own ship and gone down with it, all standing,
-was still to be heard giving notice in deep unearthly tones
-from under her very keel when the ship approached shoal
-water, shifting sands, or treacherous coral reefs in the
-glittering seas beneath the tropics. That phantom Dutchman,
-who had been provoked by baffling winds about the
-Cape to speak “unadvisedly with his lips,” was still to be
-seen in those tempestuous latitudes careering through the
-storm-drift under a press of sail, when the best craft that
-swam hardly dared show a stitch of canvas. The speaking-trumpet
-was still to be heard from her deck, shouting her
-captain’s despairing request to take his letters home, and
-the magic ship still disappeared at half-a-cable’s length
-and melted into air, while the wind blew fiercer and the sea
-rose higher, and sheets of rain came flashing down from
-the black squall lowering overhead.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was it only in the wonders of this world that the tar
-professed his unaccountable belief. His credulity ran riot
-in regions beyond the grave, or, to use his own words, after
-he had “gone to Davy Jones.” A mystical spot which he
-called Fiddler’s Green was for him both the Tartarus and
-Elysium of the ancients—a land flowing, not indeed with
-milk and honey, but with rum and limejuice; a land of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
-perpetual music, mirth, dancing, drinking, and tobacco; a
-land in which his weary soul was to find an intervening
-spell of enjoyment and repose, ere she put out again for her
-final voyage into eternity.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, the new arrival at the Fox and Fiddle,
-seating himself at a small table in the public room, or tap
-as it would now be called, ordered a quart of ale and half-a-pint
-of rum. These fluids he mingled with great care, and
-sipped his beverage in a succession of liberal mouthfuls,
-dwelling on each with an approving smack as a man drinks
-a good bottle of claret. Butter-faced Bob, who waited on
-him, remarked that he pulled out but one gold piece in
-payment, and knowing the ways of his patrons, concluded
-it was his last, or he would have selected it from a handful.
-The landlord remembered he had a customer in the parlour
-who wanted just such articles as this burly broad-shouldered
-seaman, with pockets at low water.</p>
-
-<p>The man did not, however, count his change when it was
-brought him, but shovelled it into his seal-skin tobacco
-pouch, a coin or two short, without looking at it. He then
-filled carefully, drank, and pondered with an air of grave
-and imposing reflection. Long before his measure was
-finished a second guest entered the tap-room, whose
-manners, gait, and gestures were an exact counterpart
-of the first. He was taller, however, and thinner,
-altogether less robust and prosperous-looking, showing a
-sallow face and withered skin, that denoted he had spent
-much of his life in hot climates. Though he looked
-younger than the other, his bearing was more staid and
-solemn, nor did he at once vociferate for something to
-drink. Beer seemed his weakness less than ’baccy, for he
-placed a small copper coin on a box ingeniously constructed
-so that, opening only by such means, it produced exactly
-the money’s worth of the fragrant weed, and loading a pipe
-with a much-tattooed hand, proceeded to puff volumes of
-smoke through the apartment.</p>
-
-<p>Butter-faced Bob, entering, cheerfully proffered all kinds
-of liquids as a matter of course, but was received with surly
-negatives, and retired to speculate on the extreme of wealth
-or poverty denoted by this abstinence. A man, he thought,
-to be proof against such temptations must be either so rich,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
-and consequently so full of liquor that he was unable to
-drink any more, or so poor that he couldn’t afford to be
-thirsty.</p>
-
-<p>So the last comer smoked in silence at a little table of
-his own, which he had drawn into a corner, and his predecessor
-drank at <i>his</i> table, looking wiser and wiser, while
-each glanced furtively at the other without opening his lips.
-Presently the eyes of the elder man twinkled: he had got
-an idea—nay, he actually launched it. Filling his glass,
-and politely handing it to the smoker, but reserving the jug
-to drink from himself, he proposed the following comprehensive
-toast—</p>
-
-<p class="center">“All ships at sea!”</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">They both drank it gravely and without farther comment.
-It was a social challenge, and felt to be such; the smoker
-pondered, put out the glass he had drained to be refilled,
-and holding it on a level with his eyes, enunciated
-solemnly—</p>
-
-<p class="center">“All ships in port!”</p>
-
-<p>When equal justice had been done to this kindred sentiment,
-and the navies of the world were thus exhausted,
-they came to a dead-lock and relapsed into silence once more.</p>
-
-<p>This calm might have remained unbroken for a considerable
-time but for the entrance of a third seaman, much
-younger than either of the former, whose appearance in the
-passage had been received by a round of applause from the
-children, a hearty greeting from the landlady—though that
-portly woman, with her handsome face, would not have left
-her arm-chair to welcome an admiral—and a “good-morrow,”
-louder, but not more sincere, from Bob himself.
-It appeared that this guest was well known and also trusted
-at the Fox and Fiddle, for, entering the public room with a
-sea-bow and a scrape of his foot on its sanded floor, he
-called lustily for a quart of strong ale and a pipe, while he
-produced an empty purse, and shook it in the landlord’s
-face with a laugh of derision that would have become the
-wealthiest nobleman in Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, lad,” said Bob, shaking his head, but setting before<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span>
-his customer the beer and tobacco as desired. “’Tis well
-enough to begin a fresh score when the old one’s wiped out;
-but I saw that purse, with my own eyes, half full of broad
-pieces at the ebb. See now; you’ve gone and cleared it out—not
-a blessed groat left—and it’s scarce high-water yet!”</p>
-
-<p>“What o’ that, old shiney?” laughed the other. “Isn’t
-there plenty more to be yarned when them’s all gone?
-Slack water be hanged! I tell you I’ll have a doubloon for
-every one of these here rain-drops afore a month’s out. I
-know where they grows, old man; I know where they grows.
-My sarvice to ye, mates! Here’s ‘Outward bound and an
-even keel!’”</p>
-
-<p>While he spoke he whirled the rain-drops off his shining
-hat upon the floor, and nodding to the others, took a long
-pull at his ale, which nearly emptied the jug; then he filled
-a pipe, winked at the retiring landlord, and smoked in
-silence. The others scanned him attentively. He was an
-active, well-built young fellow of two or three-and-twenty,
-with foretopman written on every feature of his reckless,
-saucy, good-looking face—in every gesture of his wiry,
-loose, athletic limbs. He was very good-looking; his eyes
-sparkled with fun and his teeth were as white as a lady’s;
-his hair too might have been the envy of many a woman,
-clustering as it did in a profusion of curls over a pair of real
-gold earrings—a fashion now beginning to find considerable
-favour amongst the rising generation of seamen, though
-regarded with horror by their seniors as a new and monstrous
-affectation, proving, if indeed proof were needed for so self-evident
-a fact, that, as in all previous and subsequent ages,
-“the service was going to the devil.”</p>
-
-<p>Even his joviality, however, seemed damped by the taciturnity
-of his comrades. He too smoked in silence and
-gave himself up to meditation. The rain pattered outside,
-and gusts of wind dashed it fitfully against the window-pane.
-The tide moaned sullenly, and a house-dog, chained
-in the back-yard, lifted up his voice to howl in unison.
-The three seamen smoked and drank and brooded, each
-occasionally removing his pipe from his mouth as if about
-to break the silence, on which the others looked in his face
-expectant, and for a time this was the whole extent of the
-conversation.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII<br />
-<span class="smaller">THREE STRANDS OF A YARN</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>As in a council of war, the youngest spoke first. “Mates!”
-said he, “here be three of us, all run for the same port,
-and never a one sported bunting. I ain’t a chap, I ain’t,
-as must be brought to afore he’ll show his number. When
-I drinks with a man I likes to fit his name on him ship-shape,
-so here’s my sarvice to you messmates both! They
-calls me Slap-Jack. That’s about what they calls <i>me</i> both
-ashore and afloat.”</p>
-
-<p>It was absolutely necessary after such an exordium that
-more liquor should be brought in, and a generous contention
-immediately arose between the three occupants of the tap-room
-as to who should pay for it; at once producing
-increased familiarity, besides a display of liberality on the
-part of the eldest and first comer, who was indeed the only
-one possessing ready money. Butter-faced Bob being
-summoned, the jugs were replenished and Slap-Jack continued
-his remarks.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been cruising about ashore,” said he, between the
-whiffs of his pipe, “and very bad weather I made on it
-standing out over them Downs, as they calls ’em, in these
-here latitudes. Downs, says I, the Downs is mostly smooth
-water and safe anchorage; but these here Ups and Downs
-is a long leg and a short one, a head wind and an ebb tide
-all the voyage through. I made my port, though, d’ye
-mind me, my sons, at last, and—and—well, we’ve all had
-our sweethearts in our day, so we’ll drink her health by
-your leave. Here’s to Alice, mates! and next round it
-shall be <i>your</i> call, and thank ye hearty.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span></p>
-
-<p>So gallant a toast could not but be graciously accepted.
-The second comer, however, shook his head while he did it
-justice, and drank, so to speak, under protest, thereby in no
-measure abating the narrator’s enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a trim-built craft is my Alice,” continued the
-other reflectively. “On a wind or off a wind, going large
-or close hauled, moored in dock or standing out in blue
-water, there’s not many of ’em can show alongside of she.
-And she’s weatherly besides, uncommon weatherly she is.
-When I bids her good-bye at last, and gives her a bit of a
-squeeze, just for a reminder like, she wipes her eyes, and
-she smiles up in my face, and, ‘God bless you, Jack!’
-says she; ‘you won’t forget me,’ says she; ‘an’ you’ll
-think of me sometimes, when it’s your watch on deck;
-and as for me, Jack, I’ll think of you every hour of the
-day and night till you comes back again; it won’t be so
-very long first.’ She’s heart of oak, is that lass, mates,
-and I wouldn’t be here now but that I’m about high and
-dry, and that made me feel a bit lubberly, d’ye see, till
-I got under weigh for the homeward trip; an’ you’ll never
-guess what it was as raised my spirits, beating to windward
-across them Downs, with a dry mouth and my heart shrunk
-up to the size of a pea.”</p>
-
-<p>“A stiff glass of grog nor’-nor’-west?” suggested the
-oldest sailor, with a grunt. “Another craft on the same
-lines, with new sails bent and a lick of fresh paint on,”
-snarled the second, whose opinion of the fair sex, derived
-chiefly from seaport towns, was none of the highest.</p>
-
-<p>“Neither one nor t’other,” replied Slap-Jack, triumphantly.
-“Scalding punch wouldn’t have warmed my heart
-up just then, and I wasn’t a-goin’ to clear out from Alice
-like that, and give chase to a fresh sail just because she cut
-a feather across my fore-foot. It was neither more nor less
-than a chap swinging in chains; a chap as had been
-swinging to all appearance so long he must have got used to
-it, though I doubt he was very wet up there in nothing but
-his bones. He might have been a good-looking blade
-enough when he began, but I can’t say much for his figure-head
-when I passed under it for luck. It wanted painting,
-mates, let alone varnish, and he grinned awful in the teeth
-of the wind. So I strikes my topmast as I forges ahead,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
-and I makes him a low bow, and, says I, ‘Thank ye kindly,
-mate,’ says I, ‘for putting it in my mind,’ says I; ‘you’ve
-been “on the account,” in all likelihood, and that’s where
-I’ll go myself next trip, see if I won’t;’ and I ask your
-pardon, by sons, for you’re both older men than me by a
-good spell, if that isn’t the trade for a lad as looks to a
-short voyage and good wages, every man for himself, grab
-what you see, an’ keep all you can?”</p>
-
-<p>Thus appealed to, the elder seaman felt bound to give an
-opinion; so he cleared his throat and asked huskily—</p>
-
-<p>“Have you <i>tried</i> it, mate? You seems like a lad as has
-dipped both hands in the tar-bucket, though you be but
-young and sarcy. Look ye, now, you hoisted signals first,
-an’ I ain’t a-going to show a false ensign, I ain’t. You
-may call me Bottle-Jack; you won’t be the first by a many,
-and I ain’t ashamed o’ my name.”</p>
-
-<p>The next in seniority then removed the pipe from his
-lips, and smiting the table with a heavy fist, observed, sententiously—</p>
-
-<p>“And me, Smoke-Jack, young man. It’s a rum name,
-ain’t it, for as smart a foretopman as ever lay out upon a
-yard? but I’ve yarned it, that’s what I sticks to. I’ve
-yarned it. Here’s your health, lad; I wish ye well.”</p>
-
-<p>The three having thus gone through all the forms necessary
-to induce a long and staunch friendship amongst men
-of their class, Slap-Jack made a clean breast of it, as if he
-had known his companions for years.</p>
-
-<p>“I <i>have</i> tried it, mates,” said he; “and a queer game it
-is; but I don’t care how soon I try it again. I suppose I
-must have been born a landsman somehow, d’ye see?
-though I can’t make much of that when I come to think it
-over. It don’t seem nat’ral like, but I suppose it was so.
-Well, I remember as I runned away from a old bloke wot
-wanted to make me a sawbones—a sawbones! and I took
-and shipped myself, like a young bear, aboard of the ‘Sea
-Swallow,’ cabin-boy to Captain Delaval. None o’ your
-merchantmen was the ‘Sea Swallow,’ nor yet a man-o’-war,
-though she carried a royal ensign at the gaff, and six brass
-carronades on the main-deck. She was a waspish craft as
-ever you’d wish to see, an’ dipped her nose in it as though she
-loved the taste of blue water, the jade!—wet, but weatherly,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
-an’ such a picture as you never set eyes on, close-hauled
-within five points of the wind. First they gammoned me
-as she was a slaver, and then a sugar-merchant’s pleasure-boat,
-and sometimes they said she was a privateer, with
-letters of marque from the king; but I didn’t want to
-know much about that; King George or King Louis, it
-made no odds, bless ye; I warn’t a goin’ to turn sawbones,
-an’ Captain Delaval was <i>my</i> master, that was enough for
-me! Such a master he was, too! No seaman—not he.
-His hands were as white as a lady’s, an’ I doubt if he knew
-truck from taffrail; but with old Blowhard, the master, to
-sail her, and do what the skipper called swabbing and dirty
-work, there wasn’t a king’s officer as ever I’ve heard of
-could touch him. Such a man to fight his ship was Captain
-Delaval. I’ve seen him run her in under a Spanish battery,
-with a table set on deck and a awning spread, and him
-sitting with a glass of wine in his hand, and give his orders
-as cool and comfortable as you and me is now. ‘Easy,
-Blowhard!’ he’d sing out, when old ‘Blow’ was sweating,
-and cursing, and stamping about to get the duty done.
-‘Don’t ye speak so sharp to the men,’ says he; ‘spoils their
-ear for music,’ says he. ‘We’ll be out o’ this again afore
-the breeze falls, and we’ll turn the fiddles up and have a
-dance in the cool of the evening.’ Then he’d smile at me,
-and say, ‘Slap-Jack, you little blackguard, run below for
-another pineapple; not so rotten-ripe as the last;’ and by
-the time I was on deck again, he’d be wiping his sword
-carefully, and drawing on his gloves—that man couldn’t
-so much as whistle a hornpipe without his gloves; and let
-who would be <i>second</i> on board the prize, be she bark,
-schooner, brig, galleon, or square-rigged ship, Captain
-Delaval he would be <i>first</i>. Look ye here, mates: I made
-two voyages with Captain Delaval, and when I stepped on
-the quay at Bristol off the second—there! I was worth a
-hundred doubloons, all in gold, besides as much silk as
-would have lined the foresail, and a pair of diamond
-earrings that I lost the first night I slept ashore. I thought,
-then, as perhaps I wasn’t to see my dandy skipper again,
-but I was wrong. I’ve never been in London town but
-once, an’ I don’t care if I never goes no more. First man
-I runs against in Thames Street is Captain Delaval, ridin’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-in a cart with his hands tied; and old Blowhard beside
-him, smelling at a nosegay as big as the binnacle. I don’t
-think as old ‘Blow’ knowed me again, not in long togs;
-but the skipper he smiles, and shows his beautiful white
-teeth as he was never tired of swabbing and holystoning,
-and ‘There’s Slap-Jack!’ says he; ‘Good-bye, Slap-Jack;
-I’ll be first man over the gunwale in this here scrimmage,
-too,’ says he, ‘for they’ll hang me first, and then Blowhard,
-when he’s done with his nosegay.’ I wish I could find such
-another skipper now; what say ye, mates?”</p>
-
-<p>Smoke-Jack, who was sitting next him, did not immediately
-reply. He was obviously of a logical and argumentative
-turn of mind, with a cavilling disposition, somewhat
-inclined to speculative philosophy; such a character, in
-short, as naval officers protest against under the title of a
-lawyer. He turned the matter over deliberately ere he
-replied, with a voluminous puff of smoke between each
-sentence—</p>
-
-<p>“Some likes a barky, and some wouldn’t touch a rope
-in any craft but a schooner; and there’s others, again,
-swears a king’s cutter will show her heels to the liveliest of
-’em, with a stiffish breeze and a bobble of sea on. I ain’t
-a-goin’ to dispute it. Square-rigged, or fore-and-aft, if so
-be she’s well-found and answers her helm, I ain’t a-goin’
-to say but what she’ll make good weather of it the whole
-voyage through. Men thinks different, young chap; that’s
-where it is. Now you asks me <i>my</i> opinion, and I’ll give it
-you, free. I’m a old man-of-war’s man, I am. I’ve eat
-the king’s biscuit and drank the king’s allowance ever since
-I were able to eat and drink at all. Now I’ll tell you,
-young man, a-cause you’ve asked me, free. The king’s
-sarvice is a good sarvice; I ain’t a-goin’ to say as it isn’t,
-but for two things: there’s too much of one, and too little
-of the other. The fuss is the work, and the second is the
-pay. If they’d halve the duty, and double the allowance,
-and send all the officers before the mast, I ain’t goin’ to
-dispute but the king’s sarvice would be more to my fancy
-than I’ve ever found it yet. You see the difference atwixt
-one of our lads when he gits ashore and the Dutch! I
-won’t say as the Dutchman is the better seaman, far from
-it; though as long as he’s got a plank as’ll catch a nail,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
-an’ a rag as’ll hold a breeze, he’ll weather it <i>somehow</i>;
-nor I won’t say but what Mynheer is as ugly a customer as
-a king’s ship can get alongside of, yard-arm to yard-arm,
-and let the best man win! But you see him ashore!
-Spree, young man? Why, a Dutchman <i>never</i> has his
-spree out! You take and hail a man before the mast, able
-seaman or what not, when he’s paid off of a cruise—and
-mind ye, he doesn’t engage for a long spell, doesn’t
-Mynheer—and he’ll tow you into dry dock, and set you
-down to your grub, and blow you out with <i>schnaps</i> as if he
-was a admiral. Such a berth as he keeps ashore! Pots
-and pans as bright as the Eddystone; deck scoured and
-holystoned, till you’d like to eat your rations off of it.
-Why, Black Sam, him as was boatswain’s mate on board of
-the ‘Mary Rose,’ sitting with me in the tap of the Golden
-Lion, at Amsterdam, he gets uneasy, and he looks here
-and there an’ everywhere, first at the white floor, then at
-the bright stove, turning his quid about and about, till at
-last he ups and spits right in the landlord’s face. There
-<i>was</i> a breeze then! I’m not a-goin’ to deny it, but Sam he
-asks pardon quite gentle and humble-like, ‘for what could
-I do?’ says he; ‘it was the only dirty place I could find
-in the house,’ says he. Young chap, I’m not a-goin’ to
-say as you should take and ship yourself on board a Dutchman;
-’cause why—maybe if he struck his colours and you
-was found atween decks, you’d swing at the yard-arm, but
-if you be thinking of the king’s sarvice, and you asks my
-advice, says I, think about it a little longer, says I. Young
-chap, I gives you <i>my</i> opinion, free. What say you, messmate?
-Bear a hand and lower away, for I’ve been payin’
-of it out till my mouth’s dry.”</p>
-
-<p>Bottle-Jack, who did not give his mouth a chance of
-becoming dry, took a long pull at the beer before he
-answered; but as his style was somewhat involved, and
-obscured besides by the free use of professional metaphors,
-applied in a sense none but himself could thoroughly
-appreciate, I will not venture to detail in his own words the
-copious and illustrative exposition on which he embarked.</p>
-
-<p>It was obvious, however, that Bottle-Jack’s inclinations
-were adverse to the regular service, and although he would
-have scouted such a notion, and probably made himself<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-extremely disagreeable to the man who broached it, there
-was no question the old sailor had been a pirate, and deserved
-hanging as richly as any ghastly skeleton now bleaching in
-its chains and waving to the gusts of a sou’-wester on the
-exposed sky-line of the Downs. By his own account he had
-sailed with the notorious Captain Kidd, in the ‘Adventure’
-galley, originally fitted out by merchants and traders of
-London as a scourge for those sea-robbers who infested
-the Indian Ocean, and whose enormities made honest men
-shudder at their bare recital. The ‘Adventure,’ manned by
-some of the most audacious spirits to be procured from the
-banks of the Thames and the Hudson, seemed, like her stout
-commander, especially qualified for such a purpose. She
-carried heavy guns, was well found in every respect, and
-possessed the reputation of a fast sailer and capital sea
-boat. Kidd himself was an experienced officer, and had
-served with distinction. He was intimately acquainted
-with the eastern seas, and seemed in all respects adapted
-for an expedition in which coolness, daring, and unswerving
-honesty of purpose were indispensable qualifications.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, Captain Kidd sailed for the Indian coast,
-and Bottle-Jack, by his own account, was boatswain’s mate
-on board the ‘Adventure.’</p>
-
-<p>There is an old proverb, recommending the selection of a
-“thief to catch a thief,” which in this instance received a
-new and singular interpretation. Kidd was probably a
-thief, or at least a pirate, at heart. No sooner had he
-reached his destination off the coast of Malabar, than he
-threw off his sheep’s clothing, and appeared at once the
-master-wolf in the predatory pack he was sent to destroy.
-Probably the temptation proved too much for him. With
-his seamanship, his weight of metal, and his crew, he could
-outsail, out-manœuvre, and outfight friends and foes alike.
-It soon occurred to him that the former were easy and
-lucrative prizes, the latter, bad to capture, and often not
-worth the trouble when subdued. It was quicker work to
-gain possession at first hand of silk and spices, cinnamon
-and sandal-wood, gold, silver, rum, coffee, and tobacco, than
-to wait till the plunder had been actually seized by another,
-and then, after fighting hard to retake it, obtain but a
-jackal’s share from the Home Government. In a short space<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>
-of time there was but one pirate dreaded from the Cape of
-Good Hope to the Straits of Malacca, and his name was
-Kidd.</p>
-
-<p>From Surat down to the mouth of the Tap-tee, Captain
-Kidd ruled like a petty sovereign; Bottle-Jack, if he was to
-be believed, like a grand vizier. Not only did they take tax
-and toll from every craft that swam, but they robbed,
-murdered, and lorded it as unmercifully on dry land.
-Native merchants, even men of rank and position, were put
-to torture, for purposes of extortion, by day; peasants
-burned alive in their huts to illuminate a seaman’s frolic by
-night. Her crew behaved like devils broke loose ashore,
-and the ‘Adventure,’ notwithstanding a certain discipline
-exacted by her commander, was, doubtless, a hell afloat.
-Money, however, came in rapidly. Kidd, with all his
-crimes, possessed the elements of success in method,
-organisation, and power of command. His sailors forgot
-the horrors they had inflicted and their own degradation
-when they counted the pile of doubloons that constituted
-their share of plunder. Amongst the swarm of rovers who
-then swept the seas, Captain Kidd was considered the most
-successful, and even in a certain sense, notwithstanding his
-enormities, the most <i>respectable</i> of all.</p>
-
-<p>Bottle-Jack did not appear to think the relation of his
-adventures in any way derogatory to his own credit. He
-concluded with the following peroration, establishing his
-position in the confident tone of a man who is himself convinced
-of its justice:—</p>
-
-<p>“Wot I says, is this here. The sea was made for them
-as sails upon it, and you ain’t a-goin’ to tell me as it can be
-portioned out into gardens an’ orchards, and tobacco plantations,
-like the dirt we calls land. Werry well, if the sea be
-free, them as sails upon it can make free with wot it offers
-them. If in case now, as I’m look-out man, we’ll say, in
-the maintop, and I makes a galleon of her, for instance,
-deep in the water under easy sail, you’re not to tell me as
-because she shows Spanish colours I’m not to take what I
-want out of her. Stow that, mates, for it’s clean nonsense!
-The way old Kidd acted was this here—First, he got her
-weather-gage; then he brought her to with a gun, civil and
-reasonable; arter that, whether she showed fight, or whether<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
-she showed friendly, he boarded her, and when he’d taken
-all he wanted, captain, crew, and passengers just walked the
-plank, easy and quiet, and no words about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the craft?” asked Slap-Jack, breathless with
-interest in the old pirate’s reminiscences.</p>
-
-<p>“Scuttled her!” answered the other, conclusively.
-“Talking’s dry work. Let’s have some more beer.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE PARLOUR-LODGER</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There was a tolerably snug parlour under the roof of the
-Fox and Fiddle, notwithstanding that its dimensions were
-small, its floor uneven, and its ceiling so low that a solitary
-inmate could not but feel enlivened by the company of the
-landlord’s family, who inhabited the rooms overhead. This
-apartment, which was usually occupied by some skipper
-from beyond seas, put forward certain claims to magnificence
-as well as comfort; and although the vaguest attempts at
-cleanliness seemed to have been suppressed, there was no
-little pretension apparent in the furniture, the chimney
-ornaments, and the “History of the Prodigal Son” on the
-walls. China shepherdesses stood on the mantelpiece, surmounted
-by the backbone of a shark. Two gilt chairs, with
-frayed velvet cushions, supported an unframed representation
-of a three-decker, with every available sail set, and British
-colours flying at the main, stemming a grass-green sea,
-under a sky of intense blue. A contracted square of real
-Turkey carpet covered a few feet in the middle, and the rest
-of the floor, ornamented at regular intervals by spittoons,
-stood inch-deep in dust. The hearth could not have been
-swept for days, nor the smouldering fire raked out for hours;
-but on a mahogany sideboard, that had obviously sustained
-at least one sea-voyage, stood a dozen different drinking-measures,
-surrounding a punch-bowl capacious enough to
-have baptized a full-grown pirate.</p>
-
-<p>The occupant of this chamber was sitting at the table
-engrossed by a task that seemed to tax all his energies and
-employ his whole attention. He was apparently no adept<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>
-at accounts, and every time he added a column afresh, and
-found its result differed from his previous calculation, he
-swore a French oath in a whisper and began again. It was
-nearly dusk before the landlord came in with the candles,
-when his guest looked up, as if much relieved at a temporary
-interruption of work.</p>
-
-<p>Butter-faced Bob was a plausible fellow enough, well fitted
-for the situation he filled, crimp, publican, free-trader, and,
-on occasion, receiver of stolen goods. From the seaman in
-the tap, to the skipper in the parlour, he prided himself on
-his facility in making conversation to his customers, saying
-the right thing to each; or, as he expressed it, “oiling the
-gear so as the crank should work easy.”</p>
-
-<p>Setting down the candles, therefore, he proceeded to
-lubrication without delay.</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry shall we be to lose ye, Captain! and indeed it
-will drive me out of the public line at last, to see the way
-as the best o’ friends must part. My dame, she says to
-me, it was but this blessed day as I set down to my nooning,
-says she, Bob, says she, whatever we shall do when the
-Captain’s gone foreign, says she, I, for one, can’t tell no
-more than the dead. You step round to the quay, says she,
-when you’ve a-taken a drink, and see if ‘The Bashful Maid’
-ha’n’t histed her blue-Peter at the fore, and the Captain
-he’ll make a fair wind o’ this here sou’-wester, see if he
-won’t, and maybe weigh at the ebb; an’ it’ll break my
-heart, let alone the chil’en’s, to wish him a good voyage, it
-will. She’s about ready for sea, Captain, <i>now</i>; I see them
-gettin’ the fresh water aboard myself.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain, as his host called him, smiled good-humouredly.</p>
-
-<p>“Your dame will have many a better lodger than I have
-been, Bob,” said he, fixing his bold eyes on the landlord,
-which the latter, who never seemed comfortable under an
-honest man’s gaze, avoided by peering into every corner of
-the room; “one that will stay longer with you, and entertain
-more friends than I have done. What of that? The
-heaviest purse makes the best lodger, and the highest score,
-the merriest landlord, at every hostelry in Europe. Well,
-I shall be ready for sea now, when I’ve got my complement;
-but I’m not going to cruise in the”—here the speaker<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-stopped short and corrected himself—“not going to cruise
-<i>anywhere</i>, short-handed.”</p>
-
-<p>Bob’s eyes glistened, and he stole a look in the Captain’s
-face.</p>
-
-<p>“How many would you be wanting?” said he, cautiously,
-“and where would they have to serve? First-class men is
-very bad to get hereaway, just now.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I had a gunner, a boatswain’s-mate, and a good
-captain of the foretop, I’d weigh next tide, and chance it,”
-replied the other, cheerfully, but his chin fell while his
-eye rested on the pile of accounts, and he wondered how
-he could ever comb them into shape for inspection.</p>
-
-<p>Bob thought of the seamen still drinking in his tap-room,
-and the obviously low state of their finances. It would work
-he decided, but it must be done under three influences,
-viz., beer, secrecy, and caution.</p>
-
-<p>“Captain,” said he, shutting the door carefully, “I’d
-rather do you a turn than any lodger I’ve had yet. If I
-can help you to a hand or two, I’m the man as’ll do it.
-You’ll be willing to pay the expenses, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain did not appear totally inexperienced in such
-matters, for, on asking the amount and receiving for answer
-a sum that would have purchased all the stock of liquors in
-the house over and over again, he showed neither indignation
-nor surprise, but observed quietly—</p>
-
-<p>“Able seamen, of course?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course!” repeated Bob. “Honour, you know,
-Captain, honour!” If he had added “among thieves,” he
-would none the less clearly have expressed the situation.
-Reflecting for a moment, he approached his guest and
-whispered in his ear, “For the account?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ask me no questions,” answered the Captain,
-significantly. “You know as well as I do that your price
-covers everything. Is it a bargain?”</p>
-
-<p>“That would make a difference, you see, Captain,”
-urged Bob, determined to get all he could. “It’s not what
-it used to be, and the Government is uncommon hard upon
-a look-out man now, if he makes a mistake in the colours of
-a prize. In King James’s time, I’ve seen the gentlemen-rovers
-drinking at this very table with the mayor and the
-magistrates, ay, and sending up their compliments and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>
-what not, maybe, to the Lord-Lieutenant himself. Why,
-that very mug as you see there was given me by poor
-Captain Delaval; quite the gentleman he was! An’ he
-made no secret where he took it from, nor how they cut the
-Portuguese chap’s throat as was drinking from it in the
-after-cabin. And now, it’s as likely as not the Whigs
-would hang a man in chains for such a thing. I tell you,
-Captain, the hands don’t fancy it. They can’t cruise a
-mile along-shore without running foul of a gibbet with a
-pi—I mean, with a skeleton on it, rattling and grinning
-as if he was alive. It makes a difference, Captain—it
-makes a difference!”</p>
-
-<p>“Take it or leave it,” replied the other, looking like a
-man who had made his highest bid, which no consideration
-would induce him to increase by a shilling.</p>
-
-<p>Bob evidently thought so. “A bargain be it,” said he,
-with a villainous smile on his shining face, and muttering
-something about his wish to oblige a customer and the
-high respect he entertained for his guest’s character, in all
-its relations, public, private, and nautical, he shambled out
-of the room, leaving the latter to tackle once more with his
-accounts.</p>
-
-<p>A shade of melancholy crossed the Captain’s brow, deeper
-and darker than was to be attributed to the unwelcome nature
-of his employment or the sombre surroundings of his position.
-The light of two tallow-candles, by which he worked was
-not indeed enlivening, bringing into indistinct relief the
-unsightly furniture and the gloomy pictures on the walls.
-The yard-dog, too, behind the house, had not entirely
-discontinued his lamentations, and the dip and wash of a
-retiring tide upon the shingle no farther off than the end
-of the street was like the voice from some unearthly mourner
-in its solemn and continuous wail. It told of lonely nights
-far out on the wild dark sea; of long shifting miles of surf
-thundering in pitiless succession on the ocean shore; of
-mighty cliffs and slabs of dripping rock, flinging back their
-defiance to the gale in the spray of countless hungry, leaping
-waves, that toss and madden round their prey ere she
-breaks up and goes to pieces in the storm. More than all,
-it told of desolation, and doubt, and danger, and death, and
-the uncertainty beyond.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span></p>
-
-<p>But to him, sitting there between the candles, his head
-bent over his work, it seemed the voice of a counsellor and
-a friend. Each wave that, fuller than ordinary, circled up
-with a fiercer lash, to ebb with a louder, angrier, and more
-protracted hiss, seemed to brighten the man’s face, and he
-listened like a prisoner who knows the step that leads him
-out to life, and liberty, and love. At such times he would
-glance round the room, congratulating himself that his
-charts, his instruments, his telescope, were all safe on
-board, and perhaps, would rise, take a turn or two, and open
-the window-shutter for a consoling look at a certain bright
-speck in the surrounding darkness, which might be either
-in earth, or sea, or air, and was indeed the anchor-light in
-the foretop of his ship. Then he would return, refreshed
-and comforted, to his accounts.</p>
-
-<p>He was beginning to hope he had really got the better
-of these, and had so far succeeded that two consecutive
-columns permitted themselves to be added up with an
-appearance of probability, when an unusually long-drawn
-howl from the house-dog, following the squeak of a fiddle,
-distracted him from his occupation, and provoked him to
-swear once more in a foreign tongue.</p>
-
-<p>It was difficult to make calculations, involving a thousand
-probabilities, with that miserable dog howling at regular
-intervals. It was impossible to speculate calmly on the
-value of his cargo, the quantity of his powder, and the
-chances of peace and war. While he sat there he knew
-well enough that his letters of marque would bear him out
-in pouncing on any unfortunate merchantman he could
-come across under Spanish colours, but there had been
-whispers of peace in London, and the weekly news-letter
-(substitute for our daily paper), read aloud that afternoon
-in the coffee-house round the corner, indorsed the probability
-of these rumours. By the time he reached his cruising-ground,
-the treaty might have been signed which would
-change a privateer into a pirate, and the exploit that would
-earn a man his knighthood this week might swing him at
-his own yard-arm the next. In those times, however, considerable
-latitude, if not allowed, was at least claimed by
-these kindred professions, and the calculator in the parlour
-of the Fox and Fiddle seemed unlikely to be over-scrupulous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>
-in the means by which he hoped to attain his
-end.</p>
-
-<p>He had resolved on earning, or winning, or taking, such
-a sum of money as would render him independent of fortune
-for life. He had an object in this which he deemed worthy
-of any sacrifice he could offer. Therefore he had fitted out
-and freighted his brigantine partly at his own expense,
-partly at that of certain confiding merchants in Leadenhall
-Street, so as to combine the certain gains of a peaceful
-trader with the more hazardous venture of a licensed sea-robber
-who takes by the strong hand. If the license
-should expire before his rapacity was satisfied, he would
-affect ignorance while he could, and when that was no
-longer practicable, throw off all disguise and hoist the
-black flag openly at the main.</p>
-
-<p>To this end he had armed his brigantine with the
-heaviest guns she could carry; had taken in store of provisions,
-water, spare tackle, gunpowder, pistols, cutlasses,
-and musquetoons; had manned her with the best seamen
-and wildest spirits he could lay hands on. These items
-had run up a considerable bill. He was now preparing a
-detailed statement of the cost, for the information of his
-friends in Leadenhall Street.</p>
-
-<p>And all this time, had he only known it, fortune was
-preparing for him, without effort on his part, the independence
-he would risk life and character to gain. That very
-sou’-wester wailing up the narrow street was rattling the
-windows of a castle on a hill hundreds of miles away, and
-disturbing the last moments of a dying man in his lordly
-bed-chamber; was driving before it, over a bleak, barren
-moor, pelting storms of rain to drench the cloaked and
-booted heir, riding post to reach that death-bed; sowing
-in a weak constitution the seeds of an illness that would
-allow him but a brief enjoyment of his inheritance; and
-the next in succession, the far-off cousin, was making up
-his accounts in the humble parlour of a seaport pot-house,
-because he was to sail for the Spanish main with the next
-tide.</p>
-
-<p>“One, two, tree!”—thump—“one, two, tree!”—thump—“<i>Balancez!
-Chassez. Un, deux, trois!</i>” Thump
-after thump, louder and heavier than before. The rafters<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>
-shook, the ceiling quivered. The Captain rose, irritated
-and indignant, to call fiercely for the landlord.</p>
-
-<p>Butter-faced Bob, anticipating a storm, wisely turned a
-deaf ear, ensconcing himself in the back kitchen, whence
-he refused to emerge.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain shouted again, and receiving no answer
-walked into the passage.</p>
-
-<p>“Stow that noise!” he hallooed from the foot of the
-half-dozen wooden steps that led to the upper floor.
-“Who is to get any business done with a row like that
-going on aloft, as if the devil was dead and the ship gone
-overboard?” The Captain’s voice was powerful and his
-language plain, but the only reply he received was a
-squeak from the fiddle, a wail from the dog, and a “One,
-two, tree”—thump—louder than ever.</p>
-
-<p>His patience began to fail.</p>
-
-<p>“Zounds! man,” he broke out; “will you leave off
-that cursed noise, or must I come up and <i>make</i> you?”</p>
-
-<p>Then the fiddle stopped, the dog was silent, and
-children’s voices were heard laughing heartily.</p>
-
-<p>The last sound would have appeased the Captain had his
-wrath been ever so high, but a strange, puzzled expression
-overspread his features while he received the following
-answer in an accent that denoted the speaker was no
-Englishman.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a rude, gross man. I sall continue my instructions
-to my respectable young friends in the dance
-wizout your permission. <i>Monsieur</i>, you are insolent.
-<i>Tiens!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>The last word carried with it such an amount of anger,
-defiance, and contempt as can only be conveyed in that
-monosyllable by a Frenchman. The Captain’s frown
-changed to a broad smile, but he affected wrath none the
-less, while he exclaimed in a coarse, sailor-like voice—</p>
-
-<p>“Insolent! you dancing dog of a Mounseer! Insolent!
-I’ll teach <i>you</i> manners afore I’ve done with you. If you
-don’t drop it <i>now</i>, this instant, I’ll come aloft in a pig’s
-whisper, and pull you down by the ears!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ears! <i>Les oreilles!</i>” repeated the voice above stairs,
-in a tone of repressed passion, that seemed to afford his
-antagonist intense amusement. “<i>Soyez tranquil, mes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-enfants.</i> My children, do not derange yourselves. Sir,
-you have insulted me; you have insulted my society. You
-shall answer me. <i>Monsieur! vous allez me rendre
-raison!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Thus speaking, the dancing-master, for such was the
-foreign gentleman whose professional avocations the
-parlour-lodger had interrupted, made his appearance at
-the head of the stairs, with a small fiddle under his arm
-and a sheathed rapier in his hand; the passage below was
-quite dark, but the light from an open door behind him
-brought his figure into relief, whilst the skipper, on the
-contrary, remained unseen in the gloom. Notwithstanding
-that the one was in a towering passion, the other shook
-with suppressed laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on,” he shouted roughly, though he could scarce
-command his voice, adding in a more natural tone, and
-with a perfect French accent—“<i>On prétend, dans les
-Mousquetaires du Roi, que Monsieur est de la première
-force pour l’epée!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>The effect was instantaneous. With one spring the
-dancing-master was upon him, kissing both his cheeks,
-hugging him in his arms, and repeating, with eyes full of
-tears—</p>
-
-<p>“Captain George! Captain George! My comrade, my
-captain, my officer; and I thought I was without a friend
-in this miserable country; without a friend and without a
-<i>sou</i>! Now I have found the one, I don’t care about the
-other. Oh, what happiness! What fortune! What
-luck!”</p>
-
-<p>The former Captain of Musketeers seemed equally pleased,
-if in a less demonstrative manner, at this unexpected meeting,
-though he had been better prepared for so strange a
-termination of their dispute by his recognition of the
-other’s voice before he caught sight of his figure. Now he
-pulled him into the parlour, sent for Butter-faced Bob to
-fill the capacious punch-bowl, pressed him into a chair
-with both hands on his shoulders, and looked gravely into
-his face, saying—</p>
-
-<p>“Eugène, I owe you my life, and I am a man who
-never left a debt unpaid.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV<br />
-<span class="smaller">A VOLUNTEER</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Beaudésir, by the wretched light of two tallow-candles,
-looked paler, thinner, more dejected, than even that pale,
-thin, anxious recruit who had joined the Grey Musketeers
-with so formidable a character as a master of defence some
-months before. No wonder. He was an enthusiast at
-heart, and an enthusiast can seldom withstand the pressure
-of continuous adversity. A temporary gleam of sunshine,
-indeed, warms him up to the highest pitch of energy,
-daring, and intellectual resource; nay, he will battle
-nobly against the fiercest storm so long as the winds blow,
-the thunder peals overhead, and less exalted spirits fly
-cowering to the nearest shelter; but it is in a bitter,
-bleak, protracted frost that he droops and fades away.
-Give him excitement, even the excitement of pain, and he
-becomes a hero. Put him to mere drudgery, though it be
-the honest drudgery of duty, and he almost ceases to be a
-man.</p>
-
-<p>There is, nevertheless, something essentially elastic in
-the French character, which even in such a disposition as
-Beaudésir’s preserved him from giving way to utter despair.
-Though he might well be excused for repining, when thus
-compelled to gain his bread by teaching the landlord’s
-children to dance at a low pot-house, yet this young man’s
-natural temperament enabled him to take interest even in
-so unworthy an occupation, and he was jealous enough of
-their progress to resent that rude interruption he experienced
-from the parlour with a flash of the old spirit
-cherished in the King’s Musketeers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span></p>
-
-<p>Still he looked pale and wan, nor was it till George had
-forced on him a beaker of steaming punch that his eye
-recovered its brightness and the blood mantled once more
-in his clear sallow cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“And you escaped them?” said the Captain, reverting
-to the fatal night of their affray in the Montmirail gardens.
-“Escaped them without a scratch! Well, it was ten to one
-against you, and I cursed the Duke with all my heart as I
-galloped on towards the coast when I thought of your predicament.
-Guard-room, court-martial, confession, and a
-firing party was the best I could wish you; for on the
-reverse of the card I pictured a <i>lettre de cachet</i>, and imprisonment
-for life in Vincennes or the Bastile! But how
-did you get away? and above all, how did you elude the
-search afterwards?”</p>
-
-<p>Eugène wet his lips with the hot punch, which he seemed
-to relish less than his more robust comrade, and looked distrustfully
-about him while he replied—</p>
-
-<p>“I had little difficulty in extricating myself from the
-gardens, my Captain, for when I had disposed of Bras-de-Fer,
-there was no <i>real</i> swordsman left. The Musketeers
-fight well, no doubt; but they are yet far from true perfection
-in the art, and their practice is more like our fishermen’s
-cudgel-play than scientific fencing. I wounded two of them
-slightly, made a spring at the wall, and was in the street at
-the moment you entered the Prince-Marshal’s carriage.
-My difficulty then was, where to conceal myself. I do not
-know Paris thoroughly, to begin with, and I confess I
-shuddered at the idea of skulking for weeks in some squalid
-haunt of vice and misery. I think I had rather have been
-taken and shot down at once.”</p>
-
-<p>“You would not have been safe even in dens like those,”
-interrupted the other. “Our Débonnaire is not so refined
-in his orgies but that I believe every garret in the Faubourgs
-is frequented by himself and his <i>roués</i>. Bah! when we
-drew pay from Louis le Grand at least we served a <i>gentleman</i>.
-The Jesuits would have been your best chance.
-Why did you not take refuge with <i>them</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>Eugène shuddered, and the pale face turned paler still,
-but he did not answer the question.</p>
-
-<p>“When we used to hunt the hare in Normandy,” he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-resumed, “I have observed that, if hard pressed, she would
-return to her form, and often thus made her escape, whereas
-the wolf and the stag, flying straight away, were generally
-run down. Like the hare, then, I doubled back and lay
-hid in the very house where I habitually lodged. It was
-the first place they searched, but they never came near it
-again; and the second day an old comrade found me out,
-took me to his own home, and furnished me with a disguise.”</p>
-
-<p>“An old comrade!” repeated the Captain. “<i>Bravo!</i>
-Ah! we had always plenty of <i>esprit de corps</i> in the
-Musketeers. It was Adolphe, I’ll wager a crown, or the
-young Count de Guiches, or Bellegarde!”</p>
-
-<p>“None of these, my Captain,” explained Eugène. “It
-was no Musketeer; Black, Red, or Grey. When I said
-comrade, I meant an old college friend. It was an Abbé.
-I know not why I should keep it secret. Abbé Malletort.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain pondered. “Abbé Malletort!” said he.
-“That is more than strange. The Regent’s confidant;
-his chief adviser, men said; his principal favourite! He
-must have had some reason—some deep-laid scheme of
-double treachery. I know the man. A smooth-spoken
-churchman; a pleasant fellow to drink with, and a good
-judge of drill. But if it was his interest to betray the poor
-thing, I wouldn’t trust him with the life of a dog!”</p>
-
-<p>“You little know him,” urged the other, eagerly. “Generous,
-kind, and secret—had it not been for his advice and
-his exertions I should never have got away alive. He kept
-me a fortnight in his apartment, till the heat of the pursuit
-was over and Paris had ceased to talk of our affray, which
-everybody believed an organised conspiracy of the Huguenots—of
-the Jansenists—of the young King’s party—of the
-British Government. What shall I say?—of the Great
-Mogul. I did not dare show myself, of course. I could
-only hear the news from my friend, and I saw him but
-seldom. I was forced to leave Paris at last without knowing
-how far the disturbance affected the ladies in whose
-grounds it took place. I tried hard to find out, but it was
-impossible.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain glanced sharply in his face, and took a
-strong gulp at the punch. Eugène continued:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I got through the barrier with an Italian company of
-jugglers, disguised as a Pantaleone. It was not too
-amusing to be obliged to perform antics for the amusement
-of the Guard, fortunately they were of the Prince de Condé’s
-regiment, which had just marched into Paris. But the
-mountebanks were good people, kindly, and perfectly trustworthy.
-They were polite enough to say that I might make
-an excellent livelihood if I would but take in earnest to the
-business. I left them at Rouen, and from that place reached
-the seaboard on foot. My object was to take refuge in
-England. Here alone I felt I should be safe for a time,
-and when the storm should blow over I hoped to return
-again. I little knew what a climate it is! what a country!
-what people! They are somewhat better when you are used
-to them, and I own I accustom myself more easily than I
-could have believed to their beef, their beer, their barbarous
-language, and their utter want of politeness. But they
-have been kind to me, these rough islanders. It was an
-English fishing-boat that landed me from Havre, and the
-fisherman made me stay a week in his house for nothing
-because he discovered accidentally that I had exhausted my
-purse to pay for my passage. Since then, my Captain, I
-have supported myself by teaching these awkward English
-to dance. It is a noble exercise after all, were they not so
-stiff, so ungraceful! And yet my pupils make progress!
-These children above stairs have already begun the minuet.
-Egotist that I am! Tell me, my Captain, how you too
-come to find yourself in this miserable town, without gardens,
-without barriers, without barracks, without <i>Hôtel de Ville</i>,
-without a church, even without an opera!”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain smiled. “You have a good right to ask,”
-said he, “since, but for you, I should not have been here at
-this moment. When I drew on the Regent that night, as
-I would have drawn on the young King himself had I seen
-him guilty of such an outrage, I was, as you know,
-surrounded and attacked by an escort of my own men. I
-tell you, Beaudésir, I never expected to leave the gardens
-alive, and I do not believe there is another fencer in France
-who could have helped me out of so awkward a scrape. I
-was sorry to see our old Bras-de-Fer go down, I admit;
-but what would you have? When it’s give and take,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>
-thrust and parry, ten against two, one cannot stand on
-these little delicacies of feeling. As I vanished through
-the garden-gate I looked for you everywhere, but there was
-no time to lose, and I thought we could escape more easily
-separate than in company. I knew you were neither down
-nor taken, because there was no shout of triumph from
-the men to announce the fact. The Prince du Chateau-Guerrand,
-my old general, was standing at the door of his
-coach when I gained the street. How he came there I am
-at a loss to guess, for you may believe I asked no questions;
-but that you and he should have dropped from the clouds
-at the Hôtel Montmirail, in the moment of my need, is one
-of those happy strokes of accident by which battles are won,
-and which we call fortune of war. I thought him a martinet
-when I was on his staff, with his everlasting parades,
-and reports, and correspondence, to say nothing of his
-interminable stories about Turenne, but I always knew his
-heart was in the right place. ‘Jump in!’ said he, catching
-me by the arm. ‘Drive those English horses to death, and
-take the coach where you will!’ In five minutes we were
-out of Paris, and half a league off on our way to the
-coast.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope the English horses may have survived the
-journey, but they brought me to my first relay as fast as ever
-I went in the saddle, and I knew that with half an hour’s
-start of everything I was safe. Who was to question a
-Captain of King’s Musketeers riding post for England on
-the Regent’s business? The relays were even so good
-that I had time to stop and breakfast comfortably, at
-leisure, and to feed my horse, half-way through the longest
-stage.</p>
-
-<p>“I had little delay when I reached the Channel. The
-wind was easterly, and before my horse had done shaking
-himself on the quay, an honest fellow had put his two sons,
-a spare oar, and a keg of brandy, on board a shallop about
-as weatherly as an egg-shell, hoisted a sail the size of a
-pocket-handkerchief, and stood out manfully with a following
-wind and an ebb tide. I know the Channel well, and
-I was as sure as he must have been that the wind would
-change when the tide turned, and we should be beating
-about, perhaps in a stiffish breeze, all night. It was not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span>
-for me to baulk him, however, and I only stipulated for a
-loaf or two of bread and a beaker of water in the bows. I
-tell you before they led my horse to the stable, we were a
-cable’s length off shore.</p>
-
-<p>“A fair wind, Eugène, does not always make a short
-voyage. At sundown it fell to a dead calm. The lads and
-the old man, and I, who speak to you, took our turns, and
-pulled like galley-slaves at the oars. With the moon-rise,
-a light breeze came up from the south-west, and it
-freshened by degrees till at midnight it was blowing half a
-gale. The egg-shell behaved nobly, and swam like a duck,
-but it took all the old man’s time to steer her, and the
-sons said as many <i>Aves</i> before dawn as would have lasted
-a whole convent for a month.</p>
-
-<p>“At one time I feared we must put her head about, and
-run for it, on the chance of making Ambleteuse, or even
-Calais, but the old fellow who owned her had a conscience,
-and to give him his due he was a first-rate sailor. The
-wind moderated at sunrise, drawing round by the south,
-and at noon we had made Beachy Head, when it fell a dead
-calm, with a ground swell that was no child’s play when we
-laid out on our oars. By dint of hard pulling we
-ran her ashore on the English coast about sundown, and
-my friend put off again with his two sons, none the worse
-for the voyage, and all the better for some twenty gold
-pieces with which I paid my passage. He deserved it, for
-he earned it fairly. She was but an egg-shell, as I said
-before, but she swam like a duck; it’s only fair to allow
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“And now, my Captain,” asked Beaudésir, looking round
-the strangely-furnished apartment, “you are living here?
-you are settled? you are a householder? Are you reconciled
-to spend your life in this dirty little town, ill-paved,
-ill-lighted, smelling of salt water and tar, where it always
-rains, and they bring you nothing to drink but black beer
-and hot punch?”</p>
-
-<p>Captain George laughed heartily. “Not such a bad
-thing that hot punch,” said he, “when you can get neither
-Chambertin, Burgundy, nor Bourdeaux. But I understand
-you nevertheless, comrade. It is not likely that a man who
-has served Louis le Grand in the Musketeers would be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>
-content to vegetate here like a wisp of seaweed left at
-high-water mark. It was lucky I met you to-night. In
-twenty-four hours, at most, I hope to be off the Needles if
-the wind holds.”</p>
-
-<p>Beaudésir looked interrogatively at the pile of accounts
-on the table.</p>
-
-<p>“You have turned trader, my Captain?” said he. “You
-will make a fortune in two voyages. At College they
-pretended I had some skill in reading characters. You
-have luck written on your forehead. I wish I was going
-with you, were it only as a clerk.”</p>
-
-<p>Captain George pondered for a while before he answered,
-nay, he filled and emptied his glass, took two or three
-turns in the narrow apartment, which admitted indeed but
-of what sailors called “a fisherman’s walk—two steps and
-overboard,” and finally, pulling back the shutter, pointed
-to the light in the foretop of his brigantine.</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t catch me afloat again,” said he, “in a craft
-like a walnut-shell, with a scrap of paper for a sail. No,
-no. There she rides, my lad, the lady that would take me
-round the world, and never wet a stitch on my back from
-head to heel. Why, close-hauled, in a stiff breeze, there’s
-not a King’s cutter in the Channel can hold her own with
-her; and off a wind, she’d have the whole fleet hull-down
-in six hours, making such good weather of it, too, all the
-while! I wish you could see her by daylight, with her
-straight run, and her raking masts, and bran new spars,
-and a fresh lick of paint I gave her in dock before we came
-round. She looks as trim as a pincushion, and as saucy as
-a dancing-girl. She carries a few popguns too, in case of
-accidents; and when she shows her teeth, she means to
-bite, you may take your oath! I’ll tell you what, Eugène,
-you must come on board to-morrow before I weigh. I
-should like to show you over ‘The Bashful Maid’ myself,
-and I hope to get my anchor up and shake out my foretopsail
-with the afternoon tide.”</p>
-
-<p>Landsman, Frenchman, though he was, Beaudésir’s eyes
-kindled, and he caught his friend’s enthusiasm like wildfire.</p>
-
-<p>“I would give my right arm to be going with you,” said
-he. “Excitement, adventure, storms, seamanship, and all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
-the wonders of the tropics! While for me, muddy beer,
-gloomy fogs, dirty streets, and clumsy English children
-learning to dance! Well! every man to his trade. Here’s
-a good voyage to you and my best wishes!”</p>
-
-<p>Again he wet his lips with the punch, now grown cold
-and sticky in his glass. Captain George was so preoccupied,
-he forgot to acknowledge the courtesy.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you keep accounts?” he asked abruptly, pointing
-to the papers on the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Any schoolboy might keep such as these,” answered
-Eugène, running his eye over one of the columns, and
-adding, as he examined it, “Nevertheless, my Captain,
-here is an error that will falsify the whole sum.”</p>
-
-<p>He pointed to a mistake in the numerals that had
-repeatedly escaped the other’s observation, and from which
-much of his labour had arisen. In a few minutes, he had
-gone through, and corrected as many pages of calculation.
-The figures came right now, as if by magic. Captain
-George had found what he wanted.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you learn all this?” he inquired in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“At Avranches, in Normandy,” was the answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Where they taught you to fence?”</p>
-
-<p>“Precisely; and to shoot with musquetoon or pistol. I
-can pick the ace of diamonds off a card at fifteen paces
-with either weapon.”</p>
-
-<p>He spoke modestly, as he always did of his proficiency in
-such feats of skill. They came so easily to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you sail with me?” asked George frankly. “You
-can help me with my papers, and earn your share of the
-plun―I should say of the profits. No, my friend! you
-shall not leap blindfold. Listen. I have letters of marque
-in my cabin, and I mean them to hold good whether peace
-be proclaimed or not. It may be, we shall fight with a rope
-round our necks. The gains are heavy, but the risk is
-great.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never count risk!” was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Then finish the punch!” said Captain George; and
-thus the bargain was ratified, which added yet one more to
-the <i>rôle</i> of characters Beaudésir was destined to enact on
-the stage of life.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV<br />
-<span class="smaller">THREE PRESSED MEN</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>While the occupants of the parlour were sipping punch
-those of the tap-room had gone systematically through the
-different stages of inebriety—the friendly, the argumentative,
-the captious, the communicative, the sentimental, the
-quarrelsome, the maudlin-affectionate, and the extremely
-drunk. By nightfall, neither Smoke-Jack, Bottle-Jack, nor
-Slap-Jack could handle a clay-pipe without breaking it, nor
-fix their eyes steadily on the candle for five consecutive
-moments. Notwithstanding, however, the many conflicting
-opinions that had been broached during their sitting, there
-were certain points on which they agreed enthusiastically—that
-they were the three finest fellows under the sun, that
-there was no calling like seamanship, no element like salt
-water, and no craft in which any one of them had yet sailed
-so lively in a sea-way as this, which seemed now to roll
-and pitch and stagger beneath their besotted senses. With
-a confirmed impression, varied only by each man’s own
-experience, that they were weathering a gale under considerable
-difficulties, in a low latitude, and that it was their
-watch on deck, though they kept it somewhat unaccountably
-below, all three had gone through the abortive ceremony
-they called “pricking for the softest plank,” had pulled
-their rough sea-coats over their heads, and lain down on the
-floor among the spittoons, to sleep out the dreamless sleep
-of intoxication.</p>
-
-<p>Long before midnight, Butter-faced Bob, looking in,
-well satisfied, beheld his customers of the afternoon now
-transformed into actual goods and chattels, bales of bone<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
-and sinew and courage, that he could sell, literally by weight,
-at an enormous price, and for ready money. While he
-turned the light of his candle from one sleeper to another,
-he was running over a mental sum comprising all the
-elementary rules of arithmetic. He added the several prices
-of the recumbent articles in guineas. He subtracted the
-few shillings’-worth of liquor they had consumed. He
-multiplied by five the hush-money he expected, over and
-above, from the purchaser, and finally, he divided the total,
-in anticipation, between himself, his wife, the tax-gatherer,
-and the most pressing of his creditors.</p>
-
-<p>When he had finished these calculations, he returned to
-the parlour, where Captain George sat brooding over the
-remains of his punch, the late enlisted recruit having retired
-to pack up his fiddle and the very small stock of clothes he
-possessed.</p>
-
-<p>Their bargain was soon concluded, although there was
-some little difficulty about delivering the goods. Notwithstanding,
-perhaps in consequence of, the many cases of
-oppression that had stained the last half of the preceding
-century, a strong reaction had set in against anything in
-the shape of “kidnapping”; and a press-gang, even for a
-king’s ship, was not likely to meet with toleration in the
-streets of a seaport town. Moreover, suspicions had already
-been aroused as to the character of ‘The Bashful Maid.’
-A stricter discipline seemed to be observed on board that
-wicked-looking craft than was customary even in the regular
-service, and this unusual rigour was accounted for by the
-lawless conduct of her “liberty-men” when they <i>did</i> come
-ashore. Nobody knew better than her Captain that, under
-the present aspect of political affairs in London, it would be
-wise to avoid notice by the authorities. The only thing he
-dreaded on earth and sea was a vision, by which he was
-haunted daily, till he could get all his stores shipped. It
-represented a sloop-of-war detached from the neighbouring
-squadron in the Downs, coming round the Point, dropping
-her anchor in the harbour, and sending a lieutenant and
-boat’s crew on board to overhaul his papers, and, maybe,
-summarily prevent his beautiful craft from standing out to
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>Neither was Butter-faced Bob rash or indiscreet where<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
-his own interests were affected. Using a metaphor he had
-picked up from his customers, it was his boast that he could
-“keep a bright look-out, and steer small” with the best of
-them; and he now impressed on Captain George, with great
-earnestness, the necessity of secrecy and caution in getting
-the three fresh hands down to the quay and tumbling them
-up the side of the brigantine.</p>
-
-<p>Had the Captain known their inclinations, he might
-have made his own bargain, and saved three-fourths of the
-expense, but his landlord took care that in such cases the
-principals should never come together, telling the officers
-they could make what terms they chose when the men
-found themselves fairly trapped and powerless in blue water,
-while he kept the latter in a state of continuous inebriety
-so long as they dwelt in his house, which rendered them
-utterly reckless of everything but liquor and tobacco.</p>
-
-<p>His shining face wore the well-satisfied expression of a
-man who has performed a good action, while he motioned
-with his thumb to the adjoining tap-room.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve a cart ready in the back yard,” said he, “and a
-few empty casks to tumble in along with our chaps. It
-will only look like the fresh water going aboard, so as you
-may weigh with the morning tide. Will they send a boat
-off if you show a light?”</p>
-
-<p>Captain George nodded. The boatswain whom he had
-left in charge, and on whom he could rely, had directions
-for a certain code of signals, amongst which, the waving of
-a lantern thrice from the end of the quay was to be answered
-by a boat ashore.</p>
-
-<p>“We’d best get them in at once, then,” said Bob, only
-anxious now to be rid of his guests. “I’ll go and put the
-horse to, and perhaps you and me and the French gentleman,
-as he seems a friend of yours, can manage it between
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, Bob betook himself to the back yard and
-the stable, while Beaudésir was summoned to assist the
-process of embarkation. In ten minutes all was prepared,
-and it was only necessary to lift the three drunken tars into
-the carriage provided for them.</p>
-
-<p>With the two elder and heavier men there was no difficulty.
-They grunted, indeed, impatiently, though without<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
-opening their eyes, and seemed to sleep as soundly, while
-being dragged along a dusty passage and hoisted into a
-narrow cart amongst empty water-casks, as if they took
-their rest habitually under such disadvantages; but Slap-Jack’s
-younger constitution had not been so completely overcome,
-and it was necessary to soothe him by a fiction which
-has possessed in all times an indescribable charm for the
-seafaring imagination.</p>
-
-<p>Bob whispered impressively in his ear that he had been
-sent for, thus in the dead of night, by the Admiral’s
-daughter, who had conceived for him a fatal and consuming
-passion, having seen him in his “long togs” in the street.
-Muttering inarticulately about “Alice,” Slap-Jack at once
-abandoned himself to the illusion, and dropped off to sleep
-again, with delightful anticipations of the romantic fate in
-store for him.</p>
-
-<p>As the wheels rumbled over the rough streets, through
-the rainy gusts and the dark night, followed by Captain
-George and Beaudésir, the latter could not but compare the
-vehicle to a dead-cart, carrying away its burden through
-some city stricken with the plague. This pleasing fancy
-he communicated to his comrade, who made the following
-inconsequent reply—</p>
-
-<p>“I only hope the harbour-watch may be as drunk as they
-are. It’s our best chance to get them aboard without a
-row. There’s her light Eugène. If the sky would lift a
-little, you might make out her spars, the beauty! but I’m
-almost afraid now you’ll have to wait for dawn.”</p>
-
-<p>The harbour-watch was drunk, or at least fast asleep in
-the sentry-box on wheels that afforded him shelter, and the
-sky did <i>not</i> lift in the least degree; so very soon after the
-waving of the lantern a boat from ‘The Bashful Maid’
-touched the stone steps of the quay, having been cunningly
-impelled thither by a screw-driving process, worked with
-one oar at the stern, and which made far less noise than
-the more powerful practice of pulling her with even strokes.</p>
-
-<p>Two swarthy ill-looking fellows sat in the boat, and a scowl
-passed over their features when they saw their Captain’s
-attitude of precaution, with one hand on the pistol he wore
-at his belt. Perhaps they were disappointed not to be
-able to elude his vigilance, and have one more run on shore<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
-before they sailed. It was no use trying to “gammon the
-skipper,” though. They had discovered that already, and
-they lent their aid with a will, when they found it must be so,
-to place their future comrades in the same predicament as
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The whole affair was managed so quietly that, even had
-the harbour-guard, a brandy-faced veteran of sixty, remained
-wide-awake and perfectly sober, he might have been excused
-for its escaping his vigilance. Bob himself, standing with
-his empty cart on the quay, could hardly hear the dip of the
-oars as his late guests were pulled cautiously away. He did
-not indeed remain there very long to listen. He had done
-with them one and all—for was not the score paid? and it
-behoved him to return home and prepare for fresh arrivals.
-He turned, therefore, with a well-satisfied glance towards
-the light in the foretop of the brigantine, and wished ‘The
-Bashful Maid’ a good voyage, while at the same moment
-Beaudésir stumbled awkwardly up her side. To the latter
-this was, indeed, a new and startling phase of life, but it
-was full of excitement, and consequently very much to his
-taste. Captain George, taking him below, and pointing out
-a couch in his cabin on which to pass the rest of the night,
-though he had seen a good deal of worse material for a
-privateer’s-man, or even a pirate, than this pale gentle
-young adventurer, late of the Grey Musketeers.</p>
-
-<p>Covered by a boat-cloak, and accommodated with two or
-three cushions, Eugène’s bed was quite as comfortable as
-that which he occupied at the Fox and Fiddle. It was
-long past sunrise when he awoke, and realising his position
-he ran on deck with a landsman’s usual conviction that he
-was already miles out at sea. It was startling, and a little
-disappointing, to observe the quay, the straggling buildings
-of the town, the lighthouse, and other well-known objects
-within musket-shot, and to find that the brigantine, in
-spite of her lively motions, still rode at anchor, not half a
-cable’s length from a huge, smooth, red buoy, which was
-dancing and dipping in the morning sun as if it were alive.
-There was a fresh breeze off shore, and a curl on the green
-sparkling water that, far away down Channel, beyond the
-point, swelled into a thousand varying lines of white, while
-a schooner in the offing might be observed standing out to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-sea with a double reef in her topsails. One of the crew,
-sluicing the deck with a bucket of water, that eddied round
-Eugène’s feet, pointed her out to his mate with an oath,
-and the mate, a tall strong negro, grinning hideously, replied
-“Iss! very well!”</p>
-
-<p>‘The Bashful Maid’ herself, rising buoyantly to each
-succeeding wave, ere with a dip and toss of her bows she
-sent the heavy spray-drops splashing over her like a seabird,
-seemed chafing with eagerness to be off. There was
-but little of the bustle and confusion on board usually produced
-by clearing out of port. The deck, though wet and
-slippery, was as clean as a dinner-plate, the yards were
-squared, the ropes coiled, new sails had been bent, and the
-last cask of fresh water was swinging over the hold: trim
-and taut, every spar and every sheet seemed to express
-“Outward bound,” not to mention a blue-Peter flying at
-the fore.</p>
-
-<p>All this Eugène observing, began to suffer from an uncomfortable
-sensation in the pit of his stomach, which
-parched his mouth, depressed his spirits, and destroyed his
-appetite. He was not, however, so much affected by it
-but that he could take note of his fellow-voyagers, an occupation
-sufficiently interesting when he reflected on the
-probable result of their preparations. In his experience of
-life he had never yet seen such an assemblage. The crew
-had indeed been got together with considerable care, but
-with utter disregard to nationality or uniformity of any
-kind. The majority were Englishmen, but there were also
-Swedes, Dutch, French, Portuguese, a negro, and even a
-Spaniard on board. The brigantine was strongly manned
-for her size, and the hands, with scarcely an exception, were
-stout daring fellows, capable of any exploit and a good
-many enormities, but such as a bold commander, cool,
-judicious, and determined, might bring into a very efficient
-state of discipline. Eugène could not but remark, however,
-that on the face of each was expressed impatience of delay,
-and an ardent desire to be in blue water. The liberty to
-go on shore had been stopped, and indeed the pockets of
-these gentlemen-adventurers, as the humblest of them
-called themselves, were completely cleaned out. Obviously,
-therefore, it would be well to lose no time in refilling them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span></p>
-
-<p>Leaning over the side, lazily watching the lap and wash
-of the leaping water, Eugène was rapidly losing himself in
-his own thoughts, when, rousing up, he felt the Captain’s
-hand on his shoulder, and heard the Captain’s voice whisper
-in his ear:—</p>
-
-<p>“Come below with me; I shall want your assistance by-and-by,
-and you have had no breakfast yet.”</p>
-
-<p>His qualms took flight at the prospect of fresh excitement,
-though the offer of breakfast was received with little
-enthusiasm, and he followed the Captain into his comfortable
-and well-furnished cabin. Here he learned that,
-while he was sleeping, George had hailed a fishing-boat
-returning warily into harbour, and, under pretence of
-buying fresh fish, boarded her with a bottle or two of
-spirits and a roll of tobacco. In ten minutes he extracted
-all the fisherman had to tell, and discovered that a large
-King’s ship was cruising in the offing, watching, as his
-informant opined, the very port in which they lay. Under
-these circumstances, Captain George considered it would
-be prudent to wait till midnight, when they might run out
-of the harbour, with wind and tide in their favour, and so
-showing the man-of-war a clean pair of heels, be hull-down
-and out of sight before sunrise.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing that swims can touch her in squally
-weather like this,” continued the Captain, “if she can get
-an hour’s start; and I wouldn’t mind running under his
-very boltsprit, in the dark, if this wind holds. My chief
-difficulty is about the men. There will be black looks, and
-something very like mutiny, if I keep them twelve more
-hours in sight of the beer-shops without liberty for shore.
-Those drunken rascals too, that we hove aboard last night,
-will have come to themselves by that time, and we shall
-perhaps have some trouble in persuading them they are
-here of their own free will. You must help me, Eugène,
-all day. Between us we must watch the crew like a cat
-watches a mouse. Once we’re in blue water, you’ll have
-nothing to do but sit in my cabin and amuse yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>The skipper understood the nature of those with whom
-he had to deal. When the men saw no disposition to get
-the anchor up, when noon passed and they went to
-dinner as usual with the brigantine’s head pointing steadily<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span>
-to windward, when another tide ebbed and flowed, but
-failed to waft them away from the temptations of port, they
-began to growl freely, without however proceeding to any
-overt acts of insubordination, and towards evening they
-became pacified with the anticipation of weighing anchor
-before the following day. The hours passed wearily to all
-on board, excepting perhaps the three Jacks, who, waking
-simultaneously at sunrise, turned round, perfectly satisfied,
-to go to sleep again, and so recovered complete possession
-of their faculties towards the dusk of the evening.</p>
-
-<p>They had been stowed away on some spare bunting outside
-the door of the Captain’s cabin. Their conversation,
-therefore, though carried on in a low tone, was distinctly
-audible both to him and Beaudésir, as they sat waiting for
-midnight and the turn of the tide.</p>
-
-<p>After a few expressions of astonishment, and vague
-inquiries how they got there, each sailor seemed to realise
-his position pretty clearly and without much dissatisfaction.
-Bottle-Jack shrewdly suspected he was once more at the old
-trade. Smoke-Jack was comforted by the prospect of
-refilling his empty pockets, and Slap-Jack, whilst vowing
-eternal fidelity to Alice, seemed impressed with the flattering
-notion that somehow his own attractions and the good taste
-of the Admiral’s daughter were at the bottom of it all.</p>
-
-<p>The craft, they agreed, was a likely one, the fittings ship-shape
-Bristol-fashion, the cruise promised to be prosperous;
-but such an unheard-of solecism as to weigh without one
-more drinking bout in honour of the expedition, was not to
-be thought of; therefore Bottle-Jack opined it was indispensable
-they should immediately go ashore.</p>
-
-<p>The others agreed without scruple. One difficulty alone
-presented itself: the quay stood a good quarter of a mile off,
-and even in harbour it was rather a stormy night for a
-swim. As Slap-Jack observed, “it couldn’t be done comfortable
-without a plank of some kind; but most like, if
-they waited till dark, they might make free with the
-skipper’s dingy hanging over the starn!”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis but totting up another figure or two on the score
-with old Shiney-face,” argued Smoke-Jack, who, considering
-his profession, was of a frugal turn of mind, and who
-little knew how completely the purchase-money of his own<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-body and bones had wiped off the chalk behind the door.
-“Such a voyage as we’re a-goin’ to make will square longer
-accounts than ours, though I am uncommon dry, considerin’.
-Just one more spree on the quiet, you know, my sons, and
-back to duty again as steady as a sou’-wester. There’s no
-fear they’ll weigh without us, a-course?”</p>
-
-<p>“A-course not,” grunted old Bottle-Jack, who could
-scarce have been half sober yet, to hazard such a suggestion.
-“The skipper is quite the gentleman, no doubt, and most
-like when he misses us he’ll send the ship’s pinnace ashore
-with his compliments.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pinnace be blowed!” retorted Slap-Jack; “anyway
-you may be sure he won’t sail without the dingy;” and in
-this more reasonable conclusion the others could not but
-acquiesce.</p>
-
-<p>With a smile on his face, the Captain listened to the
-further development of their plan. One by one they would
-creep aft without their shoes, unobserved by the anchor-watch,
-now sure to be on the forecastle (none of the Jacks
-had a clear idea of the craft in which they were plotting);
-if any one could put his hand on a bit of grease it would be
-useful to make the tackle work noiselessly. When they
-reached the stern, Slap-Jack should seat himself in the
-dingy, as being the lightest weight; the others would lower
-away, and as soon as she touched water, shin down after
-him, and shove off. There was no time to lose, best set
-about it at once.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George whispered in his companion’s ear, “Take
-my hat and cloak, and go forward to the hold with a lantern
-in your hand. Make plenty of noise as you pass those
-lubbers, but do not let them see your face.”</p>
-
-<p>Eugène obeyed, and Captain George, blowing out the
-lights, set himself to watch at the stern windows.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI<br />
-<span class="smaller">“YO-HEAVE-YO!”</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was pitch dark in the cabin, but although under a cloudy
-sky there was light enough to discern objects on deck or
-alongside. As Smoke-Jack observed, stealing aft with bare
-feet, and in a louder whisper than was prudent, “A good
-pair of eyes might see as far as a man could heave a bull by
-the tail.” George had determined to give the crew a lesson,
-once for all, in the matter of discipline, and felt well pleased
-to make example of the new-comers, who must be supposed
-as yet ignorant of his system.</p>
-
-<p>So he sat in the dark, pistol in hand, at the stern
-window, which was open, and watched like the hunter for
-his prey.</p>
-
-<p>He heard the three Jacks creeping along the deck overhead,
-he heard low whispers and a smothered laugh, followed
-by a few brief expostulations as to priority of disembarkation,
-the language far less polite than the intention; lastly,
-he heard the tackle by which his boat was made fast
-running gently over its blocks.</p>
-
-<p>Then he cocked his pistol without noise, and laughed to
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually the cabin window was obscured. A dark
-object passed smoothly down, and revealed in its progress a
-human figure indistinctly visible above its black horizontal
-mass, which was indeed the slow-descending boat, containing
-no less a personage than the adventurous Slap-Jack;
-also two lines of tackle were dimly visible supporting that
-boat’s head. A turn of the body, as he covered them steadily
-with his pistol, enabled the Captain to bring these two lines
-into one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span></p>
-
-<p>Hand and eye were equally true. He was sure of his
-mark before he pulled the trigger. With a flash that
-lighted up the cabin, and an explosion that filled it with
-smoke, the bullet cut clean through the “falls,” or ropes,
-supporting the boat’s head, bringing her perpendicularly on
-end, and shooting every article she contained—planks,
-bottom-boards, stretchers, oars, boat-hook, an empty hen-coop,
-and the astonished occupant—plump into seven fathom
-of water.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was the consternation created by this alarming capsize
-confined to the unfortunate Slap-Jack. His comrades,
-lowering away industriously from the taffrail, started back
-in the utmost bewilderment, the anchor-watch rushed aft,
-persuaded a mutiny had broken out, and in grievous indecision
-whether to take the skipper’s part or assist in cutting
-his throat. The crew tumbled up the hatchway, and blundered
-about the deck, asking each other absurd questions,
-and offering wild suggestions, if anything were really amiss,
-as to breaking open the spirit-room. Nay, the harbour-guard
-himself awoke from his nap, emerged from his sentry-box,
-took a turn on the quay, hailing loudly, and receiving no
-answer, was satisfied he had been dreaming, so swore and
-turned in again.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George reloaded his pistol, and sang out lustily,
-“Man overboard! Show a light on the deck there, and
-heave a rope over the side. Bear a hand to haul him in,
-the lubber! I don’t much think he’ll want to try that
-game in a hurry again!”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, hapless Slap-Jack was incapacitated for the
-present from that, or indeed any other game involving physical
-effort. A plank, falling with him out of the boat, had
-struck him on the head and stunned him; seventy fathom
-of water would have floated him no better than seven, and
-with the first plunge he went down like a stone. Captain
-George had intended to give him a fright and a ducking;
-but now, while he stretched his body out of the cabin
-window, peering over the gloomy water and listening eagerly
-for the snort and gasp of a swimmer who never came up, he
-wished with all his heart that his hand had been less steady
-on the pistol.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately, however, Beaudésir, after he had fulfilled the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span>
-Captain’s orders by personating him at the hold, remained
-studiously on watch. It was a peculiarity of this man that
-his faculties seemed always on the stretch, as is often to be
-observed with those over whom some constant dread impends,
-or who suffer from the tortures of remorse. At the moment
-he heard the shot, he sprang to the side, threw off hat and
-cloak, as if anticipating danger, and kept his eyes eagerly
-fixed on the water, ready, if need be, for a pounce. The
-tide was still flowing, the brigantine’s head lay to seaward,
-where all was dark, and fortunately the little light on the
-ruffled surface was towards the shore. Slap-Jack’s inanimate
-form was carried inwards by the flood, and crossed the
-moorings of that huge red buoy which Eugène remembered
-gazing on listlessly in the morning. Either the contact
-with its rope woke an instinctive consciousness in the
-drowning man, or some swirl of the water below brought his
-body to the surface, but for a few seconds Slap-Jack’s form
-became dimly visible, heaving like a wisp of seaweed on a
-wave. In those few seconds Eugène dashed overboard,
-cleaving the water to reach him with the long springing
-strokes of a powerful swimmer.</p>
-
-<p>A drowning man is not to be saved but at the imminent
-risk of his life who goes in for the rescue, and this gallant
-feat indeed can only be accomplished by a thorough proficient
-in the art; so on the present occasion it was well that
-Beaudésir felt as much at home in the water as on dry land.</p>
-
-<p>How the crew cheered the Frenchman while he was
-hauled on board with his dripping burden; how the two
-Jacks who had remained in the brigantine, and were now
-thoroughly sobered, vowed eternal gratitude to the landsman
-who had dived for their messmate; how the harbour-guard
-was once more disturbed by the cheering, and cheered
-lustily in reply; how Captain George clapped his comrade
-on the shoulder while he took him below to change his wet
-garments, and vowed he was fit to be King of France,
-adding, with a meaning smile, “If ever I go to school
-again, I’ll ask them to give me a berth at Avranches in
-Normandy!”—all this it is unnecessary to relate; but if
-the Captain gained the respect of the crew by the promptitude
-with which he resented an attempt at insubordination,
-the gallant self-devotion of his friend, clerk, supercargo,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span>
-cabin-passenger, or whatever he was, won their affection and
-good-will for the rest of the voyage.</p>
-
-<p>This was especially apparent about sunrise, when Captain
-George beat to quarters and paraded his whole crew on
-deck, preparatory to weighing anchor and standing out down
-Channel with a fair wind and a following tide. He calculated
-that the King’s ship, even if on watch, must be still some
-distance from land, and he had such implicit confidence in
-the sailing qualities of his brigantine that if he could only
-get a fair start he feared a chase from no craft that swam.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to his early education and the experiences of his
-boyhood, notwithstanding his late career in the service of
-King Louis, he was a seaman at heart. In nothing more
-so than a tendency to idealise the craft he commanded as if
-it were a living creature, endowed with feelings and even
-reason. For him ‘The Bashful Maid,’ with her exquisite
-trim, her raking masts, her graceful spars, her long fluttering
-pennon, and her elaborately-carved figure-head, representing
-a brazen-faced beauty baring her breast boastfully to the
-breeze, was less a triumph of design and carpentering, of
-beams, and blocks, and yarn, and varnish, and tar, than a
-metaphorical mistress, to be cajoled, commanded, humoured,
-trusted, above all, admired. He spoke of her as possessing
-affections, caprices, impulses, and self-will. When she
-answered her helm steadily, and made good weather of it,
-in a stiff breeze and a heavy sea, she was “behaving admirably”—“she
-liked the job”—“a man had only to trust
-her, and give her a new coat of paint now and then, she’d
-never fail him—not she!” While, on the other hand, she
-might dive and plunge, and dip her boltsprit in the brine,
-shipping seas that swept her decks fore and aft, and she
-was “only a trifle saucy, the beauty! Carried a weather-helm
-like the rest of her sex, and must be humoured a bit,
-till she came round!”</p>
-
-<p>As was the skipper, so were the crew. All these different
-natures, men of various nations, dispositions, and characters,
-were equally childlike in their infatuation about ‘The
-Bashful Maid.’ The densest of them had imagination
-enough to invest her with a thousand romantic qualities;
-even the negro would have furiously resented a word in her
-disparagement—nay, the three newly-shipped Jacks themselves,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span>
-men of weighty authority in such matters, caught
-the infection, and were ready to swear by the brigantine,
-while it was yet so dark they could scarcely see whether she
-was a three-masted merchantman or a King’s cutter.</p>
-
-<p>But when the breeze freshened towards sunrise, and the
-tide was once more on the turn, the regard thus freely
-accorded to their ship was largely shared by their new shipmate.
-Beaudésir, passing forward in the grey light of morning,
-truth to tell moved only by the restlessness of a man
-not yet accustomed to perpetual motion, accompanied by the
-odours of bilge-water and tar, was greeted with admiring
-glances and kind words from all alike. Dutchman, Swede,
-Spaniard, vied with each other in expressions of good-will.
-Slap-Jack was still below, swaddled in blankets, but his two
-comrades had tumbled up with the first streaks of dawn,
-and were loud in their praises, Bottle-Jack vowing Captain
-Kidd would have made him first-lieutenant on the spot for
-such a feat, and Smoke-Jack, with more sincerity than
-politeness, declaring “he couldn’t have believed it of a
-Frenchman!” Nay, the very negro, showing all his teeth
-as if he longed to eat him, embarked on an elaborate oration
-in his honour, couched partly in his native language as
-spoken on the Gold Coast, partly in a dialect he believed to
-be English, obscured by metaphor, though sublime doubtless
-in conception, and prematurely cut short by the shrill
-whistle of the boatswain, warning all hands without delay
-to their quarters.</p>
-
-<p>It was an enlivening sight, possessing considerable
-attractions for such a temperament as Beaudésir’s. The
-clear gap of morning low down on the horizon was widening
-and spreading every moment over the sky; the breeze, cold
-and bracing, not yet tempered by the coming sun, freshened
-sensibly off shore, driving out to sea a grand procession of
-dark rolling clouds, moving steadily and continuously westward
-before the day. The lighthouse off the harbour showed
-like a column of chalk against the dull background of this
-embankment, vanishing so imperceptibly into light; while
-to landward, far beyond the low level line of coast, a faint
-quiver of purple already mingled with the dim grey outline
-of the smooth and swelling downs.</p>
-
-<p>In harbour, human life had not yet woke up, but the white<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
-sea-birds were soaring and dipping, and wheeling joyously
-on the wing. The breeze whistled through the tackle, the
-waves leaped and lashed merrily against her sides, and the
-crew of the brigantine took their places, clean, well dressed,
-brown-faced, and bare-footed, on her deck. While the
-boatswain, who from sheer habit cast an eye continually
-aloft, observed her truck catch the first gleams of the morning
-sun, Captain George, carefully attired, issued from his cabin
-with a telescope under his arm, and made his first and last
-oration to the crew.</p>
-
-<p>“My lads!” said he, “I’ve beat to quarters, this fine
-morning, before I get my anchor up, because I want to say
-a few words to you, and the sooner we understand each
-other the better! You’ve heard I’m a soldier. So I am!
-That’s right enough; but, mark, you! I dipped my hand
-in the tar-bucket before I was old enough to carry a sword;
-so don’t you ever think to come over me with skulking, for
-I’ve seen that game played out before. Mind you, I don’t
-believe I’ve got a skulker on board; if I have, let him step
-forward and show himself. Over the side he goes, and I
-sail without him! Now, my lads, I know <i>my</i> duty and I
-know <i>yours</i>. I’ll take care both are done. I’ll have no
-grumbling and no quarrelling. If any man has a complaint
-to make, let him come to me, and out with it. A quarrelsome
-chap with his messmates is generally a shy cock when
-you put him down to fight. I’ll have man-of-war’s discipline
-aboard. You all know what that is, and those that don’t
-like it must lump it. Last night there were three of you
-tried to take French leave and to steal my boat; I stopped
-that game with a little friend I keep in my belt. Look ye,
-my sons, next bout I’ll cover the <i>man</i> instead of the tackle!
-I know who they are, well enough, but I mean to forget as
-soon as ever the anchor’s up. I’ll have a clean bill of
-health to take out into blue water. Now, my lads, attend
-to me! We’ve a long cruise before us, but we’ve a craft
-well-provisioned, well-found, and, I heartily believe, well-manned.
-Whatever prizes we take, whatever profit we
-make on the cargo, from skipper to ship’s boy, every one
-shall have his share according to the articles hung up in my
-cabin. We <i>may</i> have to fight, and we may <i>not</i>; it’s the
-last job you’re likely to shirk; but mind this—<i>one</i> skipper’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-enough for <i>one</i> ship. I’ll have no <i>lawyer</i> sail with <i>me</i>, and
-no opinions ‘whether or no’ before the mast. If you think
-of disobeying orders, just remember it’s a short walk from
-my berth to the powder-room, and the clink of a flint
-will square all accounts between captain and crew. If I’m
-not to be skipper, nobody else shall, and what I say I mean.
-Lastly, no man is to get drunk except in port. And now,
-my lads, here’s a fair wind, and a following tide! Before
-we get the fiddle up for a ‘Stamp and go, cheerily ho!’
-we’ll give three cheers for ‘The Bashful Maid,’ and then
-shake out every rag of canvas and make a good run while
-the breeze holds!”</p>
-
-<p>The men cheered with a will. The Captain’s notions of
-sea-oratory were founded on a knowledge of his audience,
-and answered his purpose better than the most finished style
-of rhetoric. As the shouting died out, a strong voice was
-heard, demanding “one cheer more for the skipper.” It
-was given enthusiastically—Slap-Jack, who had sneaked
-on deck with his head bandaged, having taken this sailor-like
-method of showing he bore no malice for a ducking,
-and was indeed only desirous that his late prank should be
-overlooked. Nevertheless, in the hurry and confusion of
-getting the anchor up, he contrived to place himself at
-Beaudésir’s side and to grasp him cordially by the hand.</p>
-
-<p>“You <i>be</i> a good chap,” said this honest seaman, with a
-touch of feeling that he hid under an affectation of exceeding
-roughness; “as good a chap as ever broke a biscuit!
-Look ye, mate; my name’s Slap-Jack; so long as I can
-show my number, when anything’s up, you sings out ‘Slap-Jack!’
-and if I don’t answer ‘Slap-Jack <i>it is</i>!’ why―”</p>
-
-<p>The imprecation with which this peculiar acknowledgment
-concluded did not render it one whit more intelligible to
-Beaudésir, who gathered enough, however, from the
-speaker’s vehemence to feel that he had made at least one
-stanch friend among the crew. By the time he had
-realised this consoling fact, the brigantine’s head, released
-from the restraint of her cable, swung round to leeward, her
-strong new sails filled steadily with the breeze, and while
-the ripple gurgled louder and louder round her bows, already
-tossing and plunging through the increasing swell, the quay,
-the lighthouse, the long low spit of land, the town, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span>
-downs themselves seemed to glide quietly away; and Beaudésir,
-despite the beauty of the scene and the excitement of
-his position, became uncomfortably conscious of a strange
-desire to retire into a corner, lay himself down at full length,
-and die, if need be, unobserved.</p>
-
-<p>A waft of savoury odours from the cook’s galley, where
-the men’s breakfasts were prepared, did nothing towards
-allaying this untimely despondency, and after a short
-struggle he yielded, as people always do yield in such cases,
-and staggering into the cabin, pillowed his head on a couch,
-and gave himself over to despair.</p>
-
-<p>Ere he raised it again ‘The Bashful Maid,’ making an
-excellent run down Channel in a south-westerly course,
-was already a dozen leagues out at sea.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII<br />
-<span class="smaller">‘THE BASHFUL MAID’</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>If Captain George kept a log, as is probable, or Eugène
-Beaudésir a diary, as is possible, I have no intention of
-copying it. In the history of individuals, as of nations, the
-exception is Stir, the rule Stagnation. There are long
-links in the Silver Cord, smooth, polished, uniform, one
-exactly like the other, ere its sameness is varied by the
-carving of a boss or the flash of a gem. It is only here
-and there that life-like figures and spirit-stirring scenes
-start from the dead surface of the Golden Bowl. Perhaps,
-when both are broken, neither brilliancy nor workmanship,
-but sterling worth of metal, shall constitute the true value
-of each.</p>
-
-<p>‘The Bashful Maid’ found her share of favouring winds
-and baffling breezes; trim and weatherly, she made the
-best of them all. Her crew, as they gained confidence in
-their skipper and became well acquainted amongst themselves,
-worked her to perfection. In squally weather, she
-had the great advantage of being over-manned, and could
-therefore carry the broadest surface of canvas it was
-possible to show. After a few stormy nights all shook into
-their places, and every man found himself told off to the
-duty he was best able to perform. The late Captain of
-Musketeers had the knack of selecting men, and of making
-them obey him. His last-joined hands were perhaps the
-best of his whole ship’s company. Bottle-Jack became
-boatswain’s mate, Smoke-Jack gunner, and Slap-jack
-captain of the foretop. These three were still fast friends
-and sworn adherents of Beaudésir. The latter, though he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-had no ostensible rank or office, seemed, next to the skipper
-himself, the most influential and the most useful person on
-board. He soon picked up enough knowledge of navigation
-to bring his mathematical acquirements into play. He
-kept the accounts of stores and cargo. He possessed a
-slight knowledge of medicine and surgery. He played the
-violin with a taste and feeling that enchanted the Spaniard,
-his only rival in this accomplishment, and caused many a
-stout heart to thrill with unaccustomed thoughts of green
-nooks and leafy copses, of laughing children and cottage-gardens,
-and summer evenings at home; lastly, the three
-Jacks, his fast friends, found him an apt pupil in lessons
-relating to sheets and tacks, blocks and braces, yards
-and spars, in fine, all the practical mysteries of seamanship.</p>
-
-<p>During stirring times, such as the first half of the
-eighteenth century, a brigantine like ‘The Bashful Maid,’
-well-armed, well-manned, commanded by a young adventurous
-captain having letters of marque in his cabin, and
-no certain knowledge that peace had yet been proclaimed
-with Spain, was not likely long to preserve her sails
-unbleached by use nor the paint and varnish undimmed on
-her hull. Not many months elapsed ere she was very
-different in appearance from the yacht-like craft that ran
-past the Needles, carrying Eugène Beaudésir prone and
-helpless as a log in her after-cabin. He could scarcely
-believe himself the same man when, bronzed, robust, and
-vigorous, feeling every inch a sailor, he paced her deck
-under the glowing stars and the mellow moonlight of the
-tropics. Gales had been weathered since then, shots fired,
-prizes taken, and that career of adventure embarked on
-which possesses so strange a fascination for the majority of
-mankind, partly, I think, from its permanent uncertainty,
-partly from its pandering to their self-esteem. A few more
-swoops, another prize or two taken, pillaged, but suffered
-to proceed if not worth towing into port, and the cruise
-would have been so successful, that already the men were
-calculating their share of profit and talking as if their
-eventual return to Britain was no longer a wild impossibility.
-Everything, too, had as yet been done according to fair
-usage of war. No piracy, no cruelty, nothing that could
-justify a British three-decker in capturing the brigantine,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
-to impress her crew and hang her captain at his own yard-arm.
-Eugène’s counsels had so far prevailed with George
-that he had resolved on confining himself to the legitimate
-profits of a privateer, and not overstepping the narrow line
-of demarcation that distinguished him from a pirate.</p>
-
-<p>While, however, some of her crew had been killed and
-some wounded, ‘The Bashful Maid’ herself had by no
-means emerged scatheless from her encounters. Eugène
-was foolish enough to experience a thrill of pride while he
-marked the grim holes, planked and caulked, in her sides;
-the workmanlike splicing of such yards and spars as had
-not suffered too severely for repair, and the carefully-mended
-foresail, now white and weather-bleached, save
-where the breadths of darker, newer canvas betrayed it had
-been riddled by round-shot.</p>
-
-<p>But soon his impressionable temperament, catching the
-influence of the hour, threw off its warlike thoughts and
-abandoned itself to those gentler associations that could
-hardly fail to be in the ascendant.</p>
-
-<p>The night was such as is only to be seen in the tropics.
-Above, like golden lamps, the stars were flaming rather
-than twinkling in the sky; while low down on the horizon
-a broad moon, rising from the sea, spread a lustrous path
-along the gently-heaving waves to the very ship’s side; a
-path on which myriads of glittering fairies seem to dance
-and revel, and disappear in changing sparkles of light.</p>
-
-<p>Through all this blaze of beauty, the brigantine glided
-smoothly and steadily on her course. For several days
-and nights not a sail had been altered, not a rope shifted,
-before that soft and balmy breeze. The men had nothing
-to do but tell each other interminable yarns and smoke.
-It was the fair side of the medal, the bloom on the fruit, the
-smooth of the profession, this enchanted voyage over an
-enchanted sea.</p>
-
-<p>Eugène revelled in its charm, but with his enjoyment
-was mingled that quiet melancholy so intimately associated
-with all beauty in those hearts (and how many of them are
-there!) which treasure up an impossible longing, a dream
-that can never come to pass. It is a morbid sentiment, no
-doubt, which can thus extract from the loveliest scenes of
-nature, and even from the brightest triumphs of art, a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span>
-strange wild ecstasy of pain, possessing a fascination of its
-own; but it is a sentiment to which the most generous and
-the most noble minds are peculiarly susceptible; a sentiment
-that in itself denotes excessive capability, for the
-happiness denied or withheld. Were it better for them to
-be of duller spirit and coarser fibre, callous to the spur,
-unequal to the effort? Who knows? I think Beaudésir
-would not willingly have parted with the sensibility from
-which he experienced so much pain, from the memories on
-which, at moments like these, under a moonlit sky, he
-brooded and dwelt so fondly, yet so despondently, to have
-obtained in exchange the inexhaustible good-humour of
-Slap-Jack or the imperturbable self-command of Captain
-George.</p>
-
-<p>Immersed in his own thoughts, he did not observe the
-latter leave his cabin, walk from sheer habit to the binnacle
-in order to satisfy himself the brigantine was lying her
-course, and glance over the side to measure her speed
-through the water, and he started when the Captain placed
-his hand familiarly on his shoulder, and jeered him good-humouredly
-for his preoccupation. These men, whose
-acquaintance had commenced with important benefits conferred
-and received on both sides, were now thrown together
-by circumstances which brought out the finer qualities of
-both. They had learned thoroughly to depend on each
-other, and had become fast friends. Perhaps their strongest
-link was the dissimilarity of their characters. To Beaudésir’s
-romantic and impressionable temperament there
-had been, from the first, something very imposing in the
-vigorous and manly nature of Captain George, and the
-influence of the latter became stronger day by day, when he
-proved himself as calm, courageous, and capable on the
-deck of a privateer as he had appeared in his quarters at
-Paris, commanding a company of the Royal Guards.</p>
-
-<p>For George, again, with his frank, soldier-like manner
-and somewhat abrupt address, which seemed impatient of
-anything like delicacy or over-refinement, there was, nevertheless,
-an unspeakable charm in his friend’s half-languid,
-half-fiery, and wholly romantic disposition, redeemed by a
-courage no danger could shake, and an address with his
-weapons few men could withstand. The Captain was not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span>
-demonstrative, far from it, and would have been ashamed
-to confess how much he valued the society of that pale,
-studious, effeminate youth, in looks, in manner, in simplicity
-of thought so much younger than his actual years; who
-was so often lost in vague day-dreams, and loved to follow
-up such wild and speculative trains of thought; but who
-could point the brigantine’s bow-chasers more accurately
-than the gunner himself; who had learned how to hand,
-reef, and steer before he had been six weeks on board.</p>
-
-<p>Their alliance was the natural consequence of companionship
-between two natures of the same material, so to speak,
-but of different fabric. Their respective intellects represented
-the masculine and feminine types. Each supplying
-that which the other wanted, they amalgamated accordingly.
-Beaudésir looked up to the Musketeer as his ideal of perfection
-in manhood; Captain George loved Eugène as a
-brother, and trusted him without reserve.</p>
-
-<p>It was pleasant after the turmoil and excitement of the
-last few weeks to walk the deck in that balmy region under
-a serene and moonlit sky, letting their thoughts wander
-freely to scenes so different on far-distant shores,
-while they talked of France, and Paris, and Versailles, and
-a thousand topics all connected with dry land. But
-Eugène, though he listened with interest, and never
-seemed tired of confidences relating to his companion’s
-own family and previous life, frankly and freely imparted,
-refrained from such confessions in return, and George was
-still as ignorant of his friend’s antecedents as on that
-memorable day when the pale, dark youth accompanied
-Bras-de-Fer to their Captain’s quarters, to be entered on
-the roll of the Grey Musketeers, after running poor Flanconnade
-through the body. That they had once belonged
-to this famous <i>corps d’élite</i> neither of them seemed likely to
-forget. Its merits and its services formed the one staple
-subject of discourse when all else failed. As in his quarters
-at Paris he had kept the model of a similar brigantine for
-his own private solace, so now, in the cabin of ‘The Bashful
-Maid,’ the skipper treasured up with the greatest care, in
-a stout sea-chest, a handsome full-dress uniform, covered
-with velvet and embroidery, flaunting with grey ribbons,
-and having a coating of thin paper over its silver lace.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span></p>
-
-<p>There was one topic of conversation, however, on which
-these young men had never yet embarked, and this is the
-more surprising, considering their age and the habits of
-those warriors amongst whom they were so proud to have
-been numbered. This forbidden subject was the charm of
-the other sex, and it was perhaps because each felt himself
-so constituted as to be keenly alive to its power that neither
-ventured an allusion to the great influence by which, during
-the first half of life, men’s fortunes, characters, happiness,
-and eventual destiny, are more or less affected. It required
-a fair breeze, a summer sea, and a moonlight night in the
-tropics to elicit their opinions on such matters, and the
-manly, rough-spoken skipper was the first to broach a theme
-that had been already well-nigh exhausted by the watch on
-deck—gathered on the forecastle in tranquil enjoyment of a
-cool, serene air and a welcome interval of repose.</p>
-
-<p>Old Turenne’s system of tactics had been declared
-exploded; the Duke of Marlborough’s character criticised;
-Cavalli’s last opera canvassed and condemned. Captain
-George took two turns of the deck in silence, stopped short
-at the taffrail, and looked thoughtfully over the stern—</p>
-
-<p>“What is to be the end of it?” he asked abruptly.
-“More fighting, of course! More prizes, more doubloons,
-and then? After all, I believe there are things to make
-a man’s life happier than even such a brigantine as
-this.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is heaven on earth, and there is heaven above,”
-answered the other, in his dreamy, half-earnest, half-speculative
-way; “and some men, not always the hardest-hearted
-nor the most vicious, are to be shut out of both.
-Calvin is a disheartening casuist, but I believe Calvin is
-right!”</p>
-
-<p>“Steady there!” replied George. “Nothing shall make
-me believe but that a brave man can sail what course he
-will, provided his charts are trustworthy and he steers by
-them. Nothing is <i>impossible</i>, Eugène. If I had thought
-that I should have lost heart long ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“And then?” asked Beaudésir, sadly.</p>
-
-<p>“And then,” repeated the Captain, with a shudder, “I
-might have become a brute rather than a man. Do you
-remember the British schooner we retook from those<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span>
-Portuguese rovers, and the <i>mustee</i>,<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> who commanded
-them? I tell you I <i>hate</i> to think it possible, and yet
-I believe a man utterly without hope might come to be
-such a wretch as that!”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>You</i> never would,” said Beaudésir, “and <i>I</i> never should;
-I <i>know</i> it. Even hope may be dispensed with if memory
-remains. My pity is for those who have neither.”</p>
-
-<p>“I could not live without hope,” resumed the Captain,
-cheerily. “I own I do hope most sincerely, at some future
-time, for a calmer and happier lot than this; a lot that
-would also make the happiness of another; and that other
-so gentle, so trusting, and so true!”</p>
-
-<p>Eugène looked in his face surprised. Then he smiled
-brightly, and laid his hand on his friend’s shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“It will come!” he exclaimed; “never doubt it for a
-moment. It will come! do you remember what I said to
-you of my skill in fortune-telling? I repeat, success is
-written in your face. What you really wish and strive to
-attain is as sure to arrive at last as a fair wind in the trades
-or a flood-tide at full moon.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope so,” returned the Captain; “I believe it. I
-suppose I am as bold as my neighbours, and luckily it never
-comes across me when there’s anything to do; but sometimes
-my heart fails when I think, if I <i>should</i> go down and
-lose my number, how she’ll sit and wonder, poor thing, why
-I never come back!”</p>
-
-<p>“Courage, my Captain!” said Eugène, cheerily, affecting
-the tone and manner of their old corps. “Courage. <i>En
-arant! à la Mousquetaire!</i> You will lose nothing, not
-even the cargo; we shall return with both pockets full of
-money. You will buy a <i>château</i>. There will be a fête at
-your wedding: I shall bring there my violin, and, believe
-me, I shall rejoice in your happiness as if it were my own.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is so young, so beautiful, so gentle,” continued the
-Captain; “I could not bear that her life should be darkened,
-whatever comes of me. If, at last, the great happiness <i>does</i>
-arrive, Eugène, I shall not forget my friend. <i>Château</i> or
-cottage, you will be welcome with your violin. You would
-admire her as I do; we both think alike on so many subjects.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span>
-So young, so fresh, so beautiful! I wish you could see
-her. I am not sure but that you <i>have</i> seen her. Do you
-remember the day―?”</p>
-
-<p>What further confidences the skipper was about to impart
-were here cut short by a round of applause from the forecastle,
-apparently arising from some proposal much approved
-by the whole assemblage. The Captain, with his friend,
-paused to listen. It was a request that Bottle-Jack would
-sing, and seemed not unfavourably received by that veteran.
-After many excuses, and much of a mock modesty to be
-observed under similar conditions in the most refined
-societies, he took his quid from his cheek, and cleared his
-voice with great pomp ere he embarked on a ditty of which
-the subject conveyed a delicate compliment to the proclivities
-of his friend Smoke-Jack, who had originated the call, and
-which he sang in that flat, monotonous, and dispiriting key,
-only to be accomplished, I firmly believe, by an able seaman
-in the daily exercise of his profession. He designated it
-“The Real Trinidado,” and it ran as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">“Oh! when I was a lad,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Says my crusty old dad,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Says he,—‘Jack! you must stick to the spade, oh!”</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But he grudged me my prog,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And he grudged me my grog,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And my pipe of the real Trinidado.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">“Says my Syousan to me,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">‘Jack, if you goes to sea,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I’ll be left but a desolate maid, oh!’</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Then I answers her—‘Sue!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Can’t I come back to you</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When I’m done with the old Trinidado?”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">“So to sea we clears out,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And the ship’s head, no doubt,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sou’-west and by sou’ it was laid, oh!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">For the isles of the sun,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Where there’s fiddlers and fun,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And no end of the real Trinidado.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">“Says our skipper, says he,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">‘Be she close-hauled or free,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">She’d behave herself in a tornado!’</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">So he handles the ship</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With a canful of flip,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And a pipe of the real Trinidado.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">“She’s a weatherly craft,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Werry wet, fore-and-aft,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And she rolls like a liquorish jade, oh!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But she steers werry kind,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">On a course to her mind,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When she’s bound for the isle Trinidado.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">“Soon a sail we espies,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Says the skipper—‘My eyes!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That’s the stuff for us lads of the trade, oh!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Bales of silk in his hold,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Casks of rum—maybe gold—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Not forgetting the real Trinidado!’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">“Then it’s ‘Stand by! My sons!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Steady! Run out your guns—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We’ve the Don’s weather-gage. Who’s afraid, oh!’</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">So we takes him aback,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">He is ours in a crack,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And we scuttles him off Trinidado!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">“Now, here’s to the crew!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And the skipper! and Sue!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And here’s ‘Luck to the boys of the blade, oh!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">May they ne’er want a glass,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">A fair wind, a fair lass!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor a pipe of the real Trinidado!’”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The applause elicited by this effort was loud and long.
-Ere it subsided, George looked more than once anxiously to
-windward. Then he went to his cabin and consulted the
-barometer, after which he reappeared on deck and whispered
-in Eugène’s ear—</p>
-
-<p>“I am going to caulk it for an hour or two. Hold on,
-unless there’s any change in the weather, and be sure you
-come below and rouse me out at eight bells.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">DIRTY WEATHER</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>At eight bells the Captain came on deck again, glancing
-once more somewhat anxiously astern. Not a cloud was to
-be seen in the moonlit sky, and the breeze that had blown so
-steadily, though so softly, for weeks, was sinking gradually,
-dying out, as it were, in a succession of gentle, peaceful
-sighs. Eugène, with the weather-wisdom of a man who
-had been but a few months at sea, rather inclined to think
-they might be becalmed. The crew did not trouble themselves
-about the matter. Every rag the brigantine could
-show was already set, and if a sail flapped idly against the
-mast, it soon drew again as before, to propel them smoothly
-on their course.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, a topic had been lately broached on the forecastle,
-of engrossing interest to every man before the mast.
-It affected no less delicate a subject than the beauty of
-‘The Bashful Maid’ herself, as typified by her figure-head.
-This work of art had unfortunately suffered a slight defacement
-in one of their late exploits, nearly the whole of its
-nose having been carried away by an untoward musket-shot.
-Such a loss had been replaced forthwith by the ship’s carpenter,
-who supplied his idol with a far straighter, severer,
-and more classical feature than was ever yet beheld on the
-human countenance. Its proportions were proclaimed perfect
-by the whole crew; but though the artist’s execution was
-universally approved, his florid style of colouring originated
-many conflicting opinions and much loud discussion on the
-first principles of imitative art. The carpenter was a man
-of decided ideas, and made large use of a certain red paint<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-nearly approaching vermilion in his flesh tints. ‘The
-Bashful Maid’s’ nose, therefore, bloomed with a hue as
-rosy as her cheeks, and these, until toned down by wind and
-weather, had been an honest scarlet. None of the critics
-ventured to dispute the position that the carpenter’s theory
-was sound. Slap-Jack, indeed, with a lively recollection of
-her wan face when he took leave of his Alice, suggested that
-for his part he liked them “a little less gaudy about the
-gills”; but this heresy was ignominiously coughed down at
-once. It was merely a question as to whether the paint
-was, or was not, laid on a trifle too thick, and each man
-argued according to his own experience of the real human
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>All the older hands (particularly Bottle-Jack, who protested
-vehemently that the figure-head of ‘The Bashful
-Maid,’ so far from being a representation of feminine beauty,
-was in fact an elevated ideal of that seductive quality, a
-very model to be imitated, though hardly possible to be
-approached) were in favour of red noses, as adding warmth
-and expression to the female face. Their wives, their sweethearts,
-their sisters, their mothers, their grandmothers, all
-had red noses, and were careful to keep up the colouring by
-the use of comforting stimulants.</p>
-
-<p>“What,” said the principal speaker, “was the pints of a
-figur’-head, as laid down in the song? and no man on this
-deck was a-goin’ to set up his opinion again <i>that</i>, he should
-think! Wasn’t ’em this here?—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Eyes as black as sloes,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Cheeks like any rose.’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">And if the song was played out further, which it might or it
-might <i>not</i>, d’ye see, wouldn’t the poet have naturally added—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘With a corresponding nose?’”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was a telling argument, and although two or three of the
-foretopmen, smart young fellows, whose sweethearts had
-not yet taken to drinking, seemed disinclined to side with
-Slap-Jack, it insured a triumphant majority, which ought to
-have set the question at rest, even without the conclusive
-opinion delivered by the negro.</p>
-
-<p>“Snowball,” said Bottle-Jack, “you’ve not told us <i>your</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
-taste. Now you’re impartial, you are, a-cause you can’t
-belong to either side. What say ye, man? Red or white?
-Sing out and hoist your ensign!”</p>
-
-<p>The black nodded, grinned, and voted—</p>
-
-<p>“Iss! berry well,” said he; “I like ’em white berry well;
-like ’em red berry better!”</p>
-
-<p>At this interesting juncture the men were a good deal
-surprised by an order from the Captain to “turn all hands
-up and shorten sail.” They rose from the deck, wondering
-and grumbling. Two or three, who had been sleeping below,
-came tumbling up with astonished faces and less willing steps
-than usual. All seemed more or less discontented, and
-muttered to each other that “the skipper must be mad to
-shorten sail at midnight with a bright moon, and in a light
-breeze, falling every moment to a calm!”</p>
-
-<p>They went about the job somewhat unwillingly, and
-indeed were so much less ready than usual as to draw a
-good deal of animadversion from the deck. Something in this
-style—</p>
-
-<p>“Now, my lads, bear a hand, and look smart. Foretop
-there! What are you about with that foretopsail? Lower
-away on your after-haulyards! Easy! Hoist on those
-forehaulyards, ye lubbers! Away with it, men! Altogether,
-and <i>with a will</i>! Why, you are going to sleep over it!
-I’d have done it smarter with the crew of a collier!”</p>
-
-<p>To all such remonstrances, it is needless to say, the
-well-disciplined Slap-Jack made no reply; only once, finding
-a moment to look to windward from his elevated position as
-captain of the foretop, and observing a white mist-like scud
-low down on the horizon, he whispered quietly to his mate,
-then busied himself with a reef-knot—</p>
-
-<p>“Blowed if he bain’t right, arter all, Jem! We’ll be
-under courses afore the sun’s up. If we don’t strike
-topmasts, they’ll be struck for us, I shouldn’t wonder. I
-see <i>him</i> once afore,” explained Slap-Jack, jerking his head
-in the direction of the coming squall; “and he’s a snorter,
-mate, that’s about wot <i>he</i> is!”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain’s precautions were not taken too soon. The
-topsails were hardly close reefed, all the canvas not absolutely
-required to steer the brigantine had been hardly
-taken in, ere the sky was darkened as if the moon had been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-suddenly snuffed out, and the squall was upon them. ‘The
-Bashful Maid’ lay over, gunwale under, driving fiercely
-through the seething water, which had not yet risen to the
-heavy sea that was too surely coming. She plunged, she
-dived, she strained, she quivered like some living thing
-striving earnestly and patiently for its life. The rain hissed
-down in sheets, the lightning lit up the slippery deck, the
-dripping pale-faced men, the bending spars, the straining
-tackle, and the few feet of canvas that must be carried at
-any price. In the quick-succeeding flashes every man on
-board could see that the others did their duty. From the
-Captain, holding on by one hand, composed and cheerful,
-with his speaking-trumpet in the other, to the ship’s boy,
-with his little bare feet and curling yellow hair, there was
-not a skulker amongst them! They remembered it long
-afterwards with honest pride, and ‘The Bashful Maid’
-behaved beautifully! Yes, in defiance of the tempestuous
-squall, blowing as it seemed from all points of the compass
-at once; in defiance of crackling lightning, and thunder
-crashing overhead ere it rolled away all round the horizon,
-reverberating over the ocean for miles; in defiance of black
-darkness and lurid gleams, and drenching rain, and the
-cruel raging sea rising every moment and running like a
-mill-race, Captain and crew were alike confident they would
-weather it. And they did.</p>
-
-<p>But it was a sadly worn, and strained, and shattered
-craft that lay upon the fast subsiding water, some six hours
-after the squall, under the glowing sun of a morning in the
-tropics; a sun that glinted on the sea till its heaving surface
-looked all one sheet of burnished gold; a sun that was
-truly comforting to the drenched and wearied crew, although
-its glare exposed pitilessly the whole amount of damage the
-brigantine had sustained. That poor ‘Bashful Maid’ was
-as different now from the trim yacht-like craft that sailed
-past the Needles, gaudy with paint and gleaming with
-varnish, as is the dead seabird, lying helpless and draggled
-on the wave, from the same creature soaring white and
-beautiful, in all its pride of power and plumage, against the
-summer sky.</p>
-
-<p>There was but one opinion, however, amongst the crew
-as to the merits of the craft, and the way she had been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span>
-handled. Not one of them, and it was a great acknowledgment
-for sailors to make, who never think their present
-berth the best—not one of them had ever before sailed in
-any description of vessel which answered her helm so
-readily or could lay her head so near the wind’s eye—not
-one of them had ever seen a furious tropical squall weathered
-so scientifically and so successfully, nor could call to mind
-a captain who seemed so completely master of his trade.
-The three Jacks compared notes on the subject before
-turning in about sunrise, when the worst was indeed over,
-but the situation, to a landsman at least, would have yet
-appeared sufficiently precarious: The brigantine was still
-driving before a heavy sea, showing just so much canvas as
-should save her from being becalmed in its trough, overtaken
-and buried under the pursuing enemy. The gale was still
-blowing with a fury that offered the best chance of its force
-soon becoming exhausted, and two men were at the helm
-under the immediate supervision of the skipper himself.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, the three stout tars betook themselves to
-their berth without the slightest anxiety, well aware that
-each would be sleeping like a child almost before he could
-clamber into his hammock.</p>
-
-<p>But while he took off and wrung his dripping sea-coat,
-Bottle-Jack observed sententiously to his mates—</p>
-
-<p>“Captain Kidd could fight a ship, my sons, and Captain
-Kidd could sail a ship. Now if you asks my opinion, it’s
-this here—In such a squall as we’ve a-weathered, or pretty
-nigh a-weathered, Captain Kidd, he’d a-run afore it at once,
-an’ he’d a bin in it now. This here young skipper, he laid
-to, so long as she <i>could</i> lay to, an’ he never run till he
-couldn’t fight no more. That’s why he’ll be out on it afore
-the middle watch. Belay now, I’m a-goin’ to caulk it for a
-spell.”</p>
-
-<p>Neither Smoke-Jack nor Slap-Jack were in a humour for
-discussion, and each cheerfully conceded the Captain’s
-judicious seamanship. The former expressing his opinion
-that nothing in the King’s navy could touch the brigantine,
-and the latter, recurring to his previous experience, rejoicing
-that he no longer sailed under the gallant but unseamanlike
-Captain Delaval.</p>
-
-<p>The honest fellows, thoroughly wearied, were soon in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
-land of dreams. Haunted no more by visions of dancing
-spars, wet slippery ropes, yards dripping in the waves, and
-flapping sails struggling wildly for the freedom that must be
-their own destruction, and the whole ship’s company’s doom.
-No, their thoughts were of warm sanded parlours, cheerful
-coal-fires, endless pipes of tobacco, messmates singing,
-women dancing, the unrestrained festivities and flowing
-ale-jugs of the Fox and Fiddle. Perhaps, to the imagination
-of the youngest, a fair pale face, loving and tearful,
-stood out from all these jovial surroundings, and Slap-Jack
-felt a purer and a better man while, though but in imagination,
-he clasped his true and tender Alice to his heart once
-more.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX<br />
-<span class="smaller">PORT WELCOME</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was a refreshing sight to behold Slap-Jack, “rigged,” as
-he was pleased to term it, “to the nines,” in the extreme
-of sea-dandyism, enacting the favourite part of a “liberty-man”
-ashore.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing had been left undone for the brilliancy of his
-exterior that could be achieved by scrubbing, white linen,
-and robust health. The smart young captain of the foretop
-seemed to glow and sparkle in the vertical sun, as he stood
-on the quay of Port Welcome, and cast a final glance of
-professional approval on the yards he had lately squared to
-a nicety and the trim of such gear and tackle aloft as
-seemed his own especial pride and care.</p>
-
-<p>‘The Bashful Maid,’ after all the buffetings she had
-sustained, particularly from the late squall, having made
-her port in one of the smallest and most beautiful of the
-West India islands, now lay at anchor, fair and motionless,
-like a living thing sleeping on the glistening sea. It yet
-wanted some hours of noon, nevertheless the sun had
-attained a power that seemed to bake the very stones on
-the quay, and warmed the clear limpid water fathom deep.
-Even Slap-Jack protested against the heat, as he lounged
-and rolled into the town, to find it swarming with negroes of
-both sexes, sparingly clothed, but with such garments as they
-did wear glowing in the gaudiest colours, and carrying on
-their hard, woolly heads baskets containing eggs, kids,
-poultry, fruit, vegetables, and every kind of market produce
-in the island. That island was indeed one of those jewels
-of the Caribbean Sea to which no description can do justice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span></p>
-
-<p>For the men left on board ‘The Bashful Maid,’ now
-heaving drowsily at her anchor, it realised, with its vivid
-and varied hues, its fantastic outlines, its massive brakes,
-its feathery palms, its luxuriant redundancy of vegetation,
-trailing and drooping to the sparkling water’s-edge, a
-sailor’s idea of Paradise; while for the three Jacks rolling
-into the little town of Port Welcome, with its white houses,
-straggling streets, frequent drinking-shops, and swarming
-population—black, white, and coloured, it represented the
-desirable haven of Fiddler’s Green, where they felt, no
-doubt, they had arrived before their time. Slap-Jack
-made a remark to that effect, which was cordially endorsed
-by his comrades as they turned into the main thoroughfare
-of the town, and agreed that, in order to enjoy their holiday
-to the utmost, it was essential to commence with something
-to drink all round.</p>
-
-<p>Now, ‘The Bashful Maid’ having been already a few
-days in port, had in that time disposed of a considerable
-portion of her cargo, and such an event as the arrival of a
-saucy brigantine, combining the attractions of a man-of-war
-with the advantages of a free-trader, not being an every-day
-occurrence among the population of Port Welcome, much
-stir, excitement, and increase of business was the result.
-The French storekeepers bid eagerly for wares of European
-manufacture, the French planters sent their slaves down in
-dozens to purchase luxuries only attainable from beyond
-sea, while the negroes, grinning from ear to ear, jostled
-and scolded each other in their desire to barter yams,
-plantains, fruit, poultry, and even, on occasion, pieces
-of actual money, for scarfs, gloves, perfumes, and ornaments—the
-tawdrier the better, which they thought might add
-to the gloss of their black skins, and set off their quaint,
-honest, ugly, black faces to advantage.</p>
-
-<p>Here and there, too, a Carib, one of the aboriginal lords
-of the island, distinguished by his bronze colour, his grave
-demeanour—so unlike the African, and his disfigured nose,
-artificially flattened from infancy, would stalk solemnly
-away, rich in the possession of a few glass beads or a bit
-of tinsel, for which he had bartered all his worldly wealth,
-and which, like more civilised people, he valued, not at its
-intrinsic worth, but at its cost price. The three Jacks<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
-observed the novelties which surrounded them from different
-points of view according to their different characters, yet
-with a cool imperturbable demeanour essentially professional.
-To men of their calling, nothing ever appears
-extraordinary. They see so many strange sights in different
-countries, and have so little time to become acquainted
-with the wonders they behold, that they soon acquire a
-profound and philosophical indifference to everything
-beyond their ordinary range of experience, persuaded
-that the astonishment of to-day is pretty sure to be
-exceeded by the astonishment of to-morrow. Neither
-can they easily discover anything perfectly and entirely
-new, having usually witnessed something of the same
-kind before, or heard it circumstantially described at
-considerable length by a messmate; so that a seaman
-is but little impressed with the sight of a foreign town, of
-which, indeed, he acquires in an hour or two a knowledge
-not much more superficial than he has of his native
-village.</p>
-
-<p>Bottle-Jack was in the habit of giving his opinion, as he
-expressed it, “free.” That it was complimentary to Port
-Welcome, his comrades gathered from the following sentiment:—</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a gettin’ strained and weatherworn,” observed the
-old seaman, impressively, “and uncommon dry besides.
-Tell ye what it is, mates—one more cruise, and blowed if I
-won’t just drop my anchor here, and ride out the rest of my
-time all snug at my moorings.”</p>
-
-<p>Smoke-Jack turned his quid with an expression of intense
-disgust.</p>
-
-<p>“And get spliced to a nigger, old man!” said he,
-argumentatively. “Never go for to say it! I’m not
-a-goin’ to dispute as this here’s a tidy bit of a island
-enough, and safe anchorage. Likewise, as I’ve been told
-by them as tried it, plenty to drink, and good. Nor I
-won’t say but what a craft might put in here for a spell to
-refit, do a bit of caulking, and what not. But for dry-dock,
-mate, never go for to say it. Why you couldn’t get anything
-like a decent missis, man, hereaway; an’ think o’ the
-price o’ beer!”</p>
-
-<p>“Regardin’ a missis,” returned the other, reflectively,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span>
-“’tain’t the craft wot crowds the most canvas as makes the
-best weather, mate, and at my years a man looks less to
-raking masts an’ a gay figur’-head than to good tonnage
-and wholesome breadth of beam. Now, look ye here, mates—wot
-say ye to this here craft?—her with the red ensign
-at the main, as is layin’ to, like, with her fore-sheet to
-windward and her helm one turn down?”</p>
-
-<p>While he spoke, he pointed to our old acquaintance,
-Célandine, who was cheapening fancy articles at a store
-that spread its goods out under an awning far into the
-middle of the modest street. The Quadroon was, as usual,
-gorgeously dressed, wearing the scarlet turban that covered
-her still black hair majestically, as a queen carries her
-diadem. Like the coloured race in general, she seemed
-to have renewed her youth under a tropical sun, and at a
-short distance, particularly in the eyes of Bottle-Jack,
-appeared a fine-looking woman, with pretensions to the
-remains of beauty still.</p>
-
-<p>The three seamen, of course, ranged up alongside for
-careful criticism, but Célandine’s attention was by no
-means to be distracted from the delightful business of
-shopping she had on hand. Shawls, scarfs, fans, gloves,
-tawdry jewels, and perfumery, lay heaped in dazzling profusion
-on a shelf before her, and the African blood danced
-in her veins with childish glee at the tempting sight. The
-storekeeper, a French Creole, with sharp features, sallow
-complexion, and restless, down-looking black eyes, taking
-advantage of her eagerness, asked three times its value for
-every article he pointed out; but Célandine, though profuse,
-was not inexperienced, and dearly loved, moreover, the
-feminine amusement of driving a bargain. Much expostulation
-therefore, contradiction, wrangling, and confusion
-of tongues was the result.</p>
-
-<p>The encounter seemed at the warmest, and the French
-Creole, notwithstanding his villainous countenance and
-unscrupulous assertions, was decidedly getting the worst
-of it, when Slap-Jack’s quick eye detected amongst the
-wares exposed for sale certain silks and other stuffs which
-had formed part of ‘The Bashful Maid’s’ cargo, and had,
-indeed, been wrested by the strong hand from a Portuguese
-trader, after a brisk chase and a running fight, which cost<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span>
-the brigantine a portion of her boltsprit and two of her
-smartest hands. The chest containing these articles had
-been started in unloading, so that its contents had sustained
-much damage from sea-water. It was a breadth
-of stained satin out of this very consignment that the
-Creole storekeeper now endeavoured to persuade Célandine
-she would do well to purchase at an exorbitant
-valuation.</p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack, like many of his calling, had picked up a
-smattering of negro-French, and could understand the
-subject of dispute sufficiently to interfere, a course from
-which he was not to be dissuaded by his less impressionable
-companions.</p>
-
-<p>“Let her be!” growled Smoke-Jack. “Wot call have
-<i>you</i> now to come athwart-hawse of that there jabbering
-mounseer, as a man might say, dredging in his own
-fishing-ground? It’s no use hailing her, I tell ye, mate,
-I knows the trim on ’em; maybe she’ll lay her foresail
-aback, and stand off-and-on till sundown, then just when
-a man least expects it, she’ll up stick, shake out every rag
-of canvas, and run for port. Bless ye, young <i>and</i> old, fair
-<i>and</i> foul, black, white, <i>and</i> coloured, nigger, quadroon, <i>and</i>
-mustee—I knows ’em all, and not one on ’em but carries a
-weather-helm in a fresh breeze, and steers wild and wilful
-in a sea-way.”</p>
-
-<p>But Slap-Jack was not to be diverted from his purpose.
-With considerable impudence, and an impressive sea-bow,
-he walked up to Célandine under the eyes of his admiring
-shipmates, and, mustering the best negro-French at his
-command, warned her in somewhat incomprehensible jargon
-of the imposition intended to be practised. Now it happened
-that Port Welcome, and the island in which it was
-situated, had been occupied in its varying fortunes by
-French, Spaniards, and English so equally, that these
-languages, much corrupted by negro pronunciation, were
-spoken indiscriminately, and often altogether. It was a
-great relief, therefore, to Slap-Jack that Célandine thanked
-him politely for his interposition in his native tongue, and
-when she looked into the young foretopman’s comely brown
-face, she found herself so fascinated with something she
-detected there as to continue the conversation in tolerably<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
-correct English, for the purpose of improving their acquaintance.
-The seaman congratulated himself on having made
-so happy a discovery, while his friends looked on in mute
-admiration of the celerity with which he had completed his
-conquest.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a smart chap, mate,” enunciated Bottle-Jack,
-with a glance of intense approval at the two figures
-receding up the sunny street, as Célandine marched their
-companion off, avowedly for the purpose of refreshing him
-with cooling drinks in return for his good-nature—“a
-smart young chap, and can hold his own with the best
-of ’em as ever hoisted a petticoat, silk or dowlas. See
-now, that’s the way to do it in these here latitudes! First
-he hails ’em, speaking up like a man, then he ranges
-alongside, and gets the grapplers out, and so tows his prize
-into port in a pig’s whisper. He’s a smart young chap, I
-tell ye, and a match for the sauciest craft as ever sailed
-under false colours, and hoisted a red pennant at the
-main.”</p>
-
-<p>But Smoke-Jack shook his head, and led his shipmate,
-nothing loth, into a tempting store-house, redolent with the
-fragrance of limes, tobacco, decaying melons, and Jamaica
-rum. He said nothing, however, until he had quenched
-his thirst; then after a vigorous pull at a tall beaker, filled
-with a fragrant compound in which neither ice nor alcohol
-had been forgotten, observed, as if the subject still occupied
-his thoughts—</p>
-
-<p>“I knows the trim on ’em, I tell ye; I knows the trim
-on ’em. As I says to the young chap now, I never found
-one yet as would steer kind in a sea-way.”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Célandine, moved by an impulse for which
-she could not account, or perhaps dreading to analyse a
-sentiment that might after all be founded on a fallacy, led
-the young seaman into a cool, quiet room in a wooden
-house, on the shady side of the street, of which the apparent
-mistress was a large bustling negress, with a numerous
-family of jet-black children, swarming and crawling about
-the floor like garden-snails after a shower. This proprietress
-seemed to hold the Quadroon in considerable awe,
-and was delighted to bring the best her house afforded for
-the entertainment of such visitors. Slap-jack, accommodated<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span>
-with a deep measure of iced rum-and-water, lit his
-pipe, played with the children, stared at his black hostess
-in unmitigated astonishment, and prepared himself to
-answer the questions it was obvious the Quadroon was
-burning to put.</p>
-
-<p>Célandine hovered restlessly about the room, fixing her
-bright black eyes upon the seaman with an eager, inquiring
-glance, that she withdrew hastily when she thought herself
-observed, and thereby driving into a state of abject terror
-the large sable hostess, whose pity for the victim, as she
-believed him, at last overcame her fear of the Quadroon,
-and impelled her to whisper in Slap-Jack’s ear—</p>
-
-<p>“Obi-woman! <i>bruxa</i>,<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> buckra-massa, <i>bruxa</i>! <i>Mefiez-vous!—Ojo-malo.</i><a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>
-No drinkee for drunkee! Look out!
-<i>Gare!</i>” A warning utterly incomprehensible to its object,
-who winked at her calmly over his tumbler, while he drank
-with exceeding relish the friendly mother’s health, and that
-of her thriving black progeny.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing like a woman’s tact to wind the secrets
-out of a man’s bosom, gradually, insensibly, and by much
-the same smooth, delicate process as the spinning of flax
-off a distaff. With a few observations rather than questions,
-a few allusions artfully put, Célandine drew from Slap-Jack
-an account of his early years, and an explanation, offered
-with a certain pride, of the manner in which he became a
-seaman. When he told her how he had made his escape
-while a mere child from his protector, whom he described
-as “the chap wot wanted to bind him ’prentice to a sawbones,”
-he was startled to see the Quadroon’s shining black
-eyes full of tears. He consoled her in his own rough, good-humoured
-way.</p>
-
-<p>“What odds did it make after all,” argued Slap-Jack,
-helping himself liberally to the rum-and-water, “when I
-was out of my bed by sunrise and down to the waterside to
-get aboard-ship in the British Channel, hours afore he was
-up, and so Westward-ho! and away? Don’t ye take on
-about it. A sailor I <i>would</i> be, and a sailor I <i>am</i>. You ask
-the skipper if I’m not. He knows my rating I should
-think, and whether I’m worth <i>my</i> salt or no. Don’t ye
-take on so, mother, I say!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span></p>
-
-<p>But the Quadroon was weeping without concealment now.</p>
-
-<p>“Call me that again!” she exclaimed, sobbing convulsively.
-“Call me that again! I have not been called
-mother for so long. Hush!” she added, starting up, and
-laying her hand forcibly on his lips. “Not another word.
-Fool! Idiot that I am! Not another word. She
-can hear us. She can understand;” and Célandine
-darted a furious glance at the busy negress, which caused
-that poor woman to shake like a jelly down to her misshapen
-black heels.</p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack felt considerably puzzled. His private opinion,
-as he afterwards confided to his messmates, was, that the
-old lady not being drunk, must be mad—a cheerful view,
-which was indeed confirmed by what occurred immediately
-afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>In struggling to keep her hand upon his mouth, she had
-turned back the deep, open collar of his blue shirt till his
-brawny neck was exposed nearly to the shoulder. Espying
-on that neck a certain white mark, contrasting with the
-ruddy weather-browned skin, she gave a half-stifled shriek,
-like that with which a dumb animal expresses its rapture of
-recognition; and taking the man’s head in her arms,
-pressed it to her bosom, rocking herself to and fro, while
-she wept and murmured over him with an inexplicable
-tenderness, by which he was at once astonished and
-alarmed.</p>
-
-<p>For a few moments, and while the negress’s back was
-turned, she held him tight, but released him when the
-other re-entered the room, exacting from him a solemn
-promise that he would meet her again at an indicated place,
-and adding that she would then confide to him matters in
-which, like herself, he was deeply interested, but which
-must be kept religiously secret so long as he remained in
-the island.</p>
-
-<p>Slap-jack, after he had finished his rum-and-water,
-rejoined his comrades, a more thoughtful man than he had
-left them. To their jests and inquiries he returned vague
-and inconclusive answers, causing Bottle-Jack to stare at
-him in solemn wonder, and affording Smoke-Jack another
-illustration of his theory as to the wilfulness of feminine
-steerage in a sea-way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span></p>
-
-<p>Célandine, on the contrary, walked through the town
-with the jaunty step and bright vigilant eye of one who has
-discovered some treasure that must be guarded with a care
-proportioned to its value. She bought no more trinkets
-from the storekeepers now, she loitered no more to gossip
-with sallow white, or shining negro, or dandy coloured
-man. At intervals her brow indeed clouded over, and the
-scowl of which it was so capable deepened ominously, while
-she clenched her hands and set her teeth; but the frown
-soon cleared away, and she smiled bright and comely once
-more.</p>
-
-<p>She had found her boy at last. Her first-born, the image
-of her first love. Her heart warmed to him from the very
-moment he came near her at the store. She was sure of it
-long before she recognised the mark on his neck—the same
-white mark she had kissed a thousand times, when he
-danced and crowed on her knees. It was joy, it was
-triumph. But she must be very silent, very cautious. If
-it was hard that a mother might not openly claim her son,
-it would be harder still that such acknowledgment should
-rivet on him the yoke of a slavery to which he was born by
-that mother, herself a slave.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX<br />
-<span class="smaller">MONTMIRAIL WEST</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>At a distance of less than a league from Port Welcome
-stood the large and flourishing plantation of <i>Cash-a-crou</i>,
-known to the European population, and, indeed, to many
-of the negroes, by the more civilised appellation of Montmirail
-West. It was the richest and most important
-establishment on the island, covering a large extent of
-cultivation, reclaimed at no small cost of labour from the
-bush, and worked by a numerous gang of slaves. Not a
-negro was purchased for these grounds till he had undergone
-a close inspection by the shrewd and pitiless overseer,
-who never missed a good investment, be it Coromantee,
-Guinea-man, or Congo, and never bought a hand, of however
-plausible an appearance, in whom his quick eye
-could detect a flaw; consequently, no such cheerful faces,
-fresh lips, sound teeth, strong necks, open chests, sinewy
-arms, dry, large hands, flat stomachs, powerful loins, round
-thighs, muscular calves, lean ankles, high feet, and similar
-physical points of servile symmetry, were to be found in
-any other gang as in that which worked the wide clearings
-on the <i>Cash-a-crou</i> estate, which, for convenience, we will
-call by its more civilised name. It was said, however, that
-in the purchase of female negroes this overseer was not so
-particular; that a saucy eye, a nimble tongue, and such an
-amount of good looks as is compatible with African colouring
-and features, found more favour in his judgment than
-size, strength, substance, vigorous health, or the prolific
-qualities so desirable in these investments. The overseer,
-indeed, was a married man, living, it was thought, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span>
-wholesome dread of his Quadroon wife, and so completely
-did he identify himself with the new character he had
-assumed, that even Célandine could hardly believe her
-present husband was the same Stefano Bartoletti who had
-wooed her unsuccessfully in her girlhood, had met her
-again under such strange circumstances in France, eventually
-to follow her fortunes, and those of her mistress, the
-Marquise, and obtain from the latter the supervision of her
-negroes on the estate she had inherited by her mother’s
-will, which she chose to call Montmirail West.</p>
-
-<p>Bartoletti had intended to settle down for the rest of his
-life in a state of dignified indolence with Célandine. He
-had even offered to purchase the Quadroon’s freedom,
-which was generously given to her by the Marquise with
-that view; but he had accustomed himself through the whole
-of his early life to the engrossing occupation of money-making,
-and like many others he found it impossible to leave
-off. He and his wife now devoted themselves entirely
-to the acquisition of wealth; she with the object of discovering
-her long-lost son, he, partly from inborn covetousness,
-and yet more from force of habit. Quick, shrewd, and
-indeed enterprising, where there was no personal risk, he
-had been but a short time in the service of the Marquise
-ere he became an excellent overseer, by no means neglecting
-her interests, while he was scrupulously attentive to his
-own. The large dealings in human merchandise which
-now occupied his attention afforded scope for his peculiar
-qualities, and Signor Bartoletti found few competitors in
-the slave-market who, in caution, cupidity, and knowledge
-of business, could pretend to be his equals. Moreover, he
-dearly loved the constant speculation, amounting to actual
-gambling, inseparable from such transactions, nor was he
-averse, besides, to that pleasing sensation of superiority
-experienced by all but the noblest natures from absolute
-authority, however unjustifiable, over their fellow-creatures.</p>
-
-<p>The Signor was a great man in the plantation, a great
-man in Port Welcome, a great man on the deck of a trader
-just arrived with her swarthy cargo from the Bight of Benin
-or the Gold Coast; but his proportions seemed to shrink
-and his step to falter when he crossed the threshold of his
-own home. The older negroes, who knew he had married an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span>
-Obi-woman, and respected him for his daring, were persuaded
-that he had been quelled and brought into subjection
-through some charm put upon him by Célandine. To the
-same magical influence they attributed the Quadroon’s
-favour with her mistress, and this superstitious dread had
-indeed been of service to both; for a strong feeling of dissatisfaction
-was gaining ground rapidly amongst the blacks,
-and then, as now, notwithstanding all that has been said
-and written in their favour, they were less easily ruled by
-love than fear.</p>
-
-<p>It is not that they are naturally savage, inhuman, brutal.
-Centuries of Christianity and cultivation might probably
-have done for the black man what they have done for the
-white; but those centuries have been denied him; and if
-he is to be taken at once from a state of utter ignorance and
-degradation to be placed on a footing of social equality with
-those who have hitherto been his masters—a race that has
-passed gradually through the successive stages he is expected
-to compass in one stride—surely it must be necessary to
-restrain him from the excesses peculiar to the lusty adolescence
-of nations, as of individuals, by some stronger
-repressive influence than need be applied to the staid and
-sober demeanour of a people arrived long ago at maturity, if
-not already past their prime.</p>
-
-<p>Signor Bartoletti did not trouble himself with such speculations.
-Intimidation he found answered his purpose
-tolerably, corporal punishment extremely well.</p>
-
-<p>Passing from the supervision of some five-score hoes,
-picking their labour out with great deliberation amongst the
-clefts and ridges of a half-cleared mountain, clothed to its
-summit in a tangle of luxuriant beauty, he threaded a line of
-wattled mud cottages, cool with thick heavy thatch, dazzling
-in whitewash, and interspersed with fragrant almond-trees,
-breaking the scorching sunlight into a thousand shimmering
-rays, as they rustled and quivered to the whisper of the
-land-breeze, not yet exhausted by the heat.</p>
-
-<p>At the door of one of these huts he spied a comely negro
-girl, whose duties should have kept her in the kitchen of
-the great house. He also observed that she concealed something
-bulky under her snowy apron, and looked stealthily
-about as if afraid of being seen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span></p>
-
-<p>He had a step noiseless and sure as a cat; she never
-heard him coming, but started with a loud scream when she
-felt his hand on her shoulder, and incontinently began to
-cry.</p>
-
-<p>“What have you got there, Fleurette?” asked the overseer,
-sternly. “Bring it out at once, and show it up!”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing, Massa,” answered Fleurette, of course, though
-she was sobbing all the time. “It only Aunt Rosalie’s
-piccaninny, I take him in please, just now, to his mammy,
-out of the wind.”</p>
-
-<p>There was but such a light breath of air as kept the
-temperature below actual suffocation.</p>
-
-<p>“Wind! nonsense!” exclaimed Bartoletti, perspiring
-and exasperated. “Aunt Rosalie’s child was in the baby-yard
-half an hour ago; here, let me look at him!” and the
-overseer snatched up Fleurette’s apron to discover a pair of
-plump black hands, clasped over a well-fattened turkey,
-cleaned, plucked, and ready for the pot.</p>
-
-<p>The girl laughed through her tears. “You funny man,
-Signor!” said she, archly, yet with a gleam of alarm in
-her wild black eyes; “you no believe only when you see.
-Piccaninny gone in wash-tub long since; Fleurette talkee
-trash, trash; dis lilly turkey fed on plantation at Maria
-Gralante; good father give um to Fleurette a-cause dis nigger
-say ‘Ave’ right through, and spit so at Mumbo-Jumbo.”</p>
-
-<p>This story was less credible than the last, inasmuch as
-the adjoining plantation of Maria Galante, cultivated by a
-few Jesuit priests, although in a thriving condition, and
-capable of producing the finest poultry reared, was more
-than an hour’s walk from where they stood, and it was
-impossible that Fleurette could have been absent so long
-from her duties at that period of the day. So Bartoletti,
-placing his hand in his waistcoat, pulled out a certain roll,
-which the slaves called his “black book,” and inserted
-Fleurette’s name therein for corporal punishment to the
-amount of stripes awarded for the crime of theft.</p>
-
-<p>It was a common action enough; scarce a day passed,
-scarce even an hour, without the production of this black
-book by the overseer, and a torrent of entreaties, couched in
-the mingled jargon of French, Spanish, and British, I have
-endeavoured to render through the conventional negro-English,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
-which, indeed, formed its basis, from the unfortunate
-culprit whose name was thus inscribed; but on this
-occasion Fleurette seemed to entertain a morbid terror of the
-ordeal quite out of proportion to its frequency, and, indeed,
-its severity—for though sufficiently brutal, the lash was not
-dangerous to life or limb. She screamed, she wept, she
-prayed, she caught the overseer by his knees and clasped
-them to her bosom, entreating him, with a frantic earnestness
-that became almost sublime, to spare her this
-degradation! to forgive her only this once! to bid her work
-night and day till crop-time, and then to send her into the
-field-gang for the hardest labour they could devise—nay, to
-sell her to the first trader that touched at Port Welcome,
-never to look on her home at <i>Cash-a-crou</i> again—anything,
-anything, rather than tie her to a stake and flog her like a
-disobedient hound!</p>
-
-<p>But Bartoletti was far too practised an overseer to be in
-the slightest degree moved by such entreaties. Replacing
-the black book in his waistcoat, he walked coolly away,
-without deigning to look back at his despairing suppliant,
-writhing under such a mixture of grief and shame as soon
-maddened into rage. Perhaps, had he done so, he would
-have been frightened into mercy, for a bolder man than the
-Italian might have been cowed by the glare of that girl’s
-eyes, when she drew up her slender figure, and clenching
-her hands till the nails pierced them, spat after him with an
-intensity of hatred that wanted only opportunity to slake
-its fierce desire in blood.</p>
-
-<p>The Signor, however, wiping his brow, unconscious, passed
-quietly on, to report his morning’s work to the Marquise,
-and obtain her sanction for Fleurette’s punishment, because
-the mistress never permitted any slave on her estate to be
-chastised but by her own express command.</p>
-
-<p>Long years ago, when his heart was fresh and high, the
-Italian had spent a few months in this very island, a period
-to which he still looked back as to the one bright ray that
-gilded his dreary, wandering, selfish life. It was here he
-met Célandine while both were young, and wooed her with
-little encouragement indeed, for she confessed honestly
-enough that he was too late, yet not entirely without hope.
-And now in gleams between the cane-pieces he could catch<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span>
-a glimpse of that silver-spread lagoon by which they had
-walked more than once in the glowing evenings, till darkness,
-closing without warning like a curtain, found them together
-still.</p>
-
-<p>He had conceived for himself then an ideal of Paradise,
-which had never in after years faded completely away. To
-win the Quadroon for his own—to make himself a peaceful
-home in easy circumstances, somewhere amidst this tangled
-wilderness of beauty from which Port Welcome peeped out
-on the Caribbean Sea—to sit in his own porch and watch
-the tropical sunset dying off through its blended hues of
-gold, and crimson, and orange, into the pale, serene depths
-of opal, lost ere he could look again, amongst the gathering
-shades of night—such were his dreams, and at last he had
-realised them to the letter; but he never watched the sunset
-now, nor walked by the cool glistening lagoon with the
-woman whom in his own selfish way he had loved for half a
-lifetime. She was his wife, you see, and a very imperious
-wife she proved. When he had leisure to speculate on such
-matters, which was seldom, he could not but allow that he
-was disappointed; that the ideal was a fallacy, the romance
-a fiction, the investment a failure; practically, the home
-was dull, the lagoon damp, and the sunset moonshine!</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, as he walked on, though the material Paradise
-was there, as it had always been, he never wasted a look or
-thought on its glowing beauties, intent only on the dust that
-covered his shoes, the thirst that fired his throat, and the
-perspiration that streamed from his brow. Yet palm, cocoa,
-orange, and lime-tree were waving overhead; while the wild
-vine, pink, purple, and delicate creamy-white, winding here
-about his path, ran fifty feet aloft round some bare stem to
-which it clung in a succession of convolvulus-like blossoms
-from the same plant he trod beneath his very feet. Birds
-of gaudy feather—purple, green, and flaming scarlet, flashed
-from tree to tree with harsh, discordant cries, and a <i>Louis
-d’or</i> flitted round him in its bright, golden plumage, looking,
-as its name implies, like a guinea upon wings.</p>
-
-<p>The grass-grown road he followed was indeed an avenue
-to the great house, and as he neared his destination he
-passed another glimpse of tropical scenery without a glance.
-It was the same view that delighted the eyes of the Marquise<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span>
-daily from her sitting-room, and that Cerise would
-look at in quiet enjoyment for hours.</p>
-
-<p>A slope of vivid green, dotted with almond-trees, stretched
-away from the long, low, white building to a broad, clear
-river, shining between the plantains and bananas that
-clothed its banks; beyond these, cattle pasture and cane-pieces
-shot upward in variegated stripes through the tangled
-jungle of the steep ascent, while at short intervals hog-plum,
-or other tall trees of the forest, reared their heads against
-the cloudless sky, to break the dark thick mass that clothed
-the mountain to its very summit—save where some open,
-natural savannah, with its crop of tall, rank, feathering
-grass, relieved the eye from the vivid colouring and gaudy
-exuberance of beauty in which nature dresses these West
-Indian islands.</p>
-
-<p>Bartoletti knew well that he should find the Marquise in
-her sitting-room, for the sun was still high and the heat
-intense; none therefore but slaves, slave-drivers, or overseers
-would be abroad for hours. The Signor had however
-been reduced to such proper subjection by Célandine
-that he never ventured to approach the Marquise without
-making a previous report to his wife, and as the Quadroon
-had not yet returned from the visit to Port Welcome, in
-which she made acquaintance with Slap-Jack, some
-considerable delay took place before the enormity of
-Fleurette’s peculations could be communicated to her
-mistress.</p>
-
-<p>Mother and daughter were inseparable here, in the glowing
-tropical heat, as under the cool breezes and smiling skies of
-their own beautiful France, a land to which they constantly
-reverted with a longing that seemed only to grow more and
-more intense as every hour of their unwelcome banishment
-dragged by.</p>
-
-<p>They were sitting in a large low room, with the smallest
-possible amount of furniture and the greatest attainable of
-air. To insure a thorough draught, the apartment occupied
-the whole breadth of the house, and the windows, scarcely
-closed from year’s-end to year’s-end, were placed opposite
-each other, so that there was free ingress on all sides for
-the breeze that, notwithstanding the burning heat of the
-climate, blows pretty regularly in these islands from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span>
-morning till night and from night till morning. It wafted
-through the whole apartment the fragrance of a large
-granadilla, cut in half for the purpose, that stood surrounded
-by a few shaddocks, limes, and pomegranates, heaped
-together like a <i>cornucopia</i> on a small table in the corner;
-it fluttered the leaves of a book that lay on Mademoiselle
-de Montmirail’s knee, who was pretending to read, with her
-eyes resting wearily on a streak of blue sea, far off between
-the mountains; and it lifted the dark hair from the temples
-of the Marquise, fanning with grateful breath, yet scarce
-cooling, the rich crimson of her cheek.</p>
-
-<p>The resemblance between these two grew closer day by
-day. While the mother remained stationary at that point
-of womanly beauty to which the daughter was approaching,
-figure and face, in each, became more and more alike; and
-though the type of the elder was still the richer and more
-glowing, of the younger, the more delicate and classical,
-Cerise seemed unaccountably to have gained some of that
-spirit and vitality which the Marquise seemed as unaccountably
-to have lost.</p>
-
-<p>Also on the countenance of each might be traced the same
-expression—the longing, wistful look of those who live in
-some world of their own, out of and far beyond the present,
-saddened in the woman’s face with memory as it was
-brightened in the girl’s by hope.</p>
-
-<p>“It is suffocating!” exclaimed the former, rising
-restlessly from her seat, and pushing the hair off her temples
-with a gesture of impatience. “Cerise, my darling, are you
-made of stone that you do not cry out at this insupportable
-heat? It irritates me to see you sit reading there as calmly
-as if you could feel the wind blowing off the heights of
-Montmartre in January. It seems as if the sun would
-never go down in this oven that they call an island.”</p>
-
-<p>Cerise shut her book and collected her scattered ideas
-with an obvious effort. “I read, mamma,” she answered
-smiling, “because it is less fatiguing than to think, but I
-obtain as little result from the one process as the other.
-Do you know, I begin to believe the stories we used to hear
-in Paris about the West Indies, and I am persuaded that
-we shall not only be shrivelled up to mummies in a few more
-weeks, but that our tongues will be so dry and cracked as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span>
-to be incapable of expressing our thoughts, even if our poor
-addled brains could form them. Look at Pierrot even, who
-is a native; he has not said a syllable since breakfast.”</p>
-
-<p>Pierrot, however, like the historical parrot of all ages,
-though silent on the present occasion, doubtless <i>thought</i> the
-more, for the attitude in which he held his head on one side,
-peering at his young mistress with shrewd unwinking eye,
-implied perceptions more than human, nay, even diabolical
-in their malignant sagacity.</p>
-
-<p>“What can I do?” said the Marquise, vehemently,
-pacing the long room with quick steps ill suited to the
-temperature and the occasion. “While the Regent lives I
-can never return to Paris. For myself, I sometimes fancy
-I could risk it; but when I think of you, Cerise—I dare
-not—I <i>dare</i> not; that’s the truth. An insult, an injury, he
-might forgive, or at least forget; but a scene in which he
-enacted the part of the <i>Pantaleone</i>, whom everybody kicks
-and cuffs; in which he was discovered as a coxcomb, an
-intruder, and a <i>polisson</i>, and through the whole of which he
-is conscious, moreover, that he was intensely ridiculous—I
-protest to you I cannot conceive any outrage so horrible as
-to satisfy his revenge. No, my child, for generations my
-family have served the Bourbons, and we should know
-what they are: with all their good qualities there are certain
-offences they can never forgive, and this Regent is the worst
-of the line.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, mamma,” observed Cerise cheerfully, though
-she smothered a sigh, “we must have patience and live
-where we are. It might be worse,” she added, pointing to
-the streak of deep-blue sea that belted the horizon. “This
-is a wider view and a fairer than the dead wall of Vincennes
-or the gratings of the Bastile, and some day, perhaps, some
-of our friends from France may drop in quite unexpectedly
-to offer their homage to Madame la Marquise. How the
-dear old Prince-Marshal would gasp in this climate, and
-how dreadfully he would swear at the lizards, centipedes,
-galley-wasps, red ants, and cockroaches! He who, brave
-as he is, never dared face a spider or an earwig! Mamma,
-I think if I could see his face over a borer-worm, I should
-have one more good laugh, even in such a heat as this.”</p>
-
-<p>“You might laugh, my dear,” answered her mother,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span>
-“but I think I should be more inclined to cry—yes, to cry
-for sheer joy at seeing him again. I grant you he was a
-little ridiculous; but what courage! what sincerity! what
-a true gentleman! I hear that he too is out of favour at
-the Palais Royal, and has returned to his estates at Chateau-Guerrand.
-His coach was seen near the Hôtel Montmirail
-the night of Monsieur le Duc’s creditable <i>escapade</i>, and
-that is crime enough, I conclude, to balance a dozen battles
-and forty years of loyal service to the throne. No, Cerise,
-I tell you while the monster lives we must remain exiled in
-this purgatory of fire. But my friends keep me well informed
-of passing events. I hear his health is failing. They tell
-me his face is purple now in the mornings when he comes
-to Council, and he drinks harder than ever with his <i>roués</i>
-at night. Of course, my child, it would be wicked to wish
-for the death of a fellow-creature, but while there is a
-Regent in France you and I must be content with the
-lizards and the cockroaches for society, and for amusement,
-the supervision of these miserable, brutalised negro slaves.”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor things!” said the younger lady, tenderly. “I
-am sure they have kind hearts under their black skins. I
-cannot but think that if they were taught and encouraged,
-and treated less like beasts of burden, they would show as
-much intelligence as our own peasants at La Fierté or the
-<i>real</i> Montmirail. Why, Fleurette brought me a bouquet of
-jessamines and tuberoses yesterday, with a compliment to
-the paleness of my complexion that could not have been
-outdone by Count Point-d’Appui himself. Oh! mamma, I
-wish you would let me establish <i>my</i> civil code for the
-municipal government of the blacks.”</p>
-
-<p>“You had better let it alone, my child,” answered the
-Marquise, gravely. “Wiser brains than yours have puzzled
-over the problem, and failed to solve it. I have obtained
-all the information in my power from those whose experience
-is reliable, and considered it for myself besides, till my
-head ached. It seems to me that young colonists, and all
-who know nothing about negroes, are for encouragement
-and indulgence; old planters, and those who are well
-acquainted with their nature, for severity and repression.
-I would not be cruel; far from it; but as for treating them
-like white people, Cerise, in my opinion all such liberality<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
-is sheer nonsense. Jaques and Pierre, at home, are ill-fed,
-ill-clothed (I wish it were not so), up early, down late, and
-working often without intermission from sunrise till sunset;
-nevertheless, Jaques or Pierre will doff his red cap, tuck up
-his blouse, and run a league bareheaded, after a hard day’s
-work, if you or I lift up a finger; and why?—because we
-are La Fiertés or Montmirails. But Hippolyte or Achille,
-fat, strong, lazy, well-fed, grumbles if he is bid to carry a
-message to the boiling-house after his eight hours’ labour,
-and only obeys because he knows that Bartoletti can order
-him a hundred lashes by my authority at his discretion.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not like the Italian, mamma! I am sure that
-man is not to be trusted,” observed Cerise, inconsequently,
-being a young lady. “What could make my dear old <i>bonne</i>
-marry him, I have never been able to discover. He is an
-alchemist, you know, and a conjuror, and worse. I shudder
-to think of the stories they told about him at home, and I
-believe he bewitched her!”</p>
-
-<p>Here Mademoiselle de Montmirail crossed herself
-devoutly, and her mother laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“He is a very good overseer,” said she, “and as for his
-necromancy, even if he learned it from the Prince of
-Darkness, which you seem to believe, I fancy Célandine
-would prove a match for his master. Between them, the
-Signor, as he calls himself, and his wife, manage my people
-wonderfully well, and this is no easy matter at present, for
-I am sorry to say they show a good deal of insubordination
-and ill-will. There is a spirit of disaffection amongst
-them,” added the Marquise, setting her red lips firmly
-together, “that must be kept down with the strong hand.
-I do not mind your going about amongst the house negroes,
-Cerise, or noticing the little children, though taking anything
-black on your lap is, in my opinion, an injudicious
-piece of condescension; but I would not have you be seen
-near the field-gang at present, men or women, and above
-all, never trust them. Not one is to be depended on except
-Célandine, for I believe they hate her as much as her
-husband, and fear her a great deal more.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise had indeed cause for uneasiness as to the
-condition of her plantation, although she had never before
-hinted so much to her daughter, and indeed, like the generality<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span>
-of people who live on the crust of a volcano, she
-forced herself to ignore the danger of which she was yet
-uncomfortably conscious. For some time, perhaps ever
-since the arrival of the Italian overseer, there had been
-symptoms of discontent and disaffection among the slaves.
-The work indeed went on as usual, for Bartoletti was unsparing
-of the lash, but scarce a week passed without a
-runaway betaking himself to the bush, and vague threats,
-forerunners of some serious outbreak, had been heard from
-the idlest and most mutinous of the gang when under
-punishment. It would not have been well in such difficulties
-to relax the bonds of discipline, yet it was scarcely wise to
-draw them tighter than before. The Marquise, however,
-came of a race that had never yet learned to yield, and to
-which, for generations, the assertion of his rights by an
-inferior had seemed an intolerable presumption that must
-be resisted to the death. As her slaves, therefore, grew
-more defiant she became more severe, and of late the
-slightest offences had been visited with the utmost rigour,
-and under no circumstances passed over without punishment.
-It was an unfortunate time therefore that poor Fleurette
-had chosen to be detected in the abstraction of a turkey
-ready plucked for cooking, and she could not have fallen
-into worse hands than those of the pitiless Italian overseer.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise had scarce concluded her warning, ere
-Bartoletti entered the sitting-room with his daily report.
-His manner was extremely obsequious to Madame de
-Montmirail, and polite beyond expression to Mademoiselle.
-The former scarcely noticed his demeanour at any time;
-the latter observed him narrowly, with the air of a child
-who watches a toad or any such object for which it feels an
-unaccountable dislike.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise usually left the room soon after the Signor entered
-it, but something in her mother’s face on the present
-occasion, as she ran her eye over the black book, induced
-her to remain.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise read the punishment list twice; frowned,
-hesitated, and looked discomposed.</p>
-
-<p>“It is her first offence?” said she, inquiringly. “And
-the girl is generally active and well-behaved enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon, Madame la Marquise,” answered Bartoletti.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span>
-“Madame forgave her only last week when she lost half-a-dozen
-of Mademoiselle’s handkerchiefs, that she had taken
-to wash; or <i>said</i> she lost them,” he added pointedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, mamma!” interposed Cerise, but the Marquise
-checked her with a sign, and Bartoletti proceeded.</p>
-
-<p>“One of her brothers is at the head of a gang of
-<i>Maroons</i>,<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> who infest the very mountains above our cane-pieces,
-and another ran away to join him last week. They
-say at the Plantation we <i>dare</i> not punish any of the family,
-and I am pledged to make an example of the first that
-comes into my hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said the Marquise, decidedly, returning his
-black book to her overseer, and observing to Cerise, who
-was by this time in tears, “A case, my dear, that it would
-be most injudicious to pardon. After all, the pain is not
-much, and the disgrace, you know, to these sort of people
-is nothing!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI<br />
-<span class="smaller">BLACK, BUT COMELY</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Transplanted, like some delicate flower from her native
-soil, to this glowing West Indian Island, Mademoiselle de
-Montmirail had lost but little of the freshness that bloomed
-in the Norman convent, and had gained a more decided
-colouring and a deeper expression, which added the one
-womanly grace hitherto wanting in her beauty. Even the
-negroes, chattering to one another as they hoed between the
-cane-rows, grinned out their approval of her beauty, and
-Hippolyte, a gigantic and hideous Coromantee, imported
-from Africa, had been good enough to express his opinion
-that she only wanted a little more colour, as he called it,
-meaning a shade of yellow in her skin, to be handsome
-enough for his wife; whereat his audience shouted and
-showed their white teeth, wagging their woolly heads
-applauding, while the savage shook his great black
-shoulders, and looked as if he thought more unlikely events
-might come to pass.</p>
-
-<p>Had it not been for these very slaves, who gave their
-opinions so freely on her personal appearance, Cerise would
-have been tolerably happy. She was, indeed, far from the
-scenes that were most endeared to her by memory and
-association. She was very uncertain when or how she
-should return to France, and until she returned, there was
-apparently no hope, however remote, that she could realise
-a certain dream which now constituted the charm of her
-whole life. Still the dream had been dreamed, vague,
-romantic, wild, and visionary; yet the girl dwelt upon it
-day by day, with a tenderness and a constancy the deeper<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-and the more enduring that they seemed so hopeless and so
-thrown away.</p>
-
-<p>I would not have it supposed, however, that Mademoiselle
-de Montmirail was a foolish love-sick maiden, who allowed
-her fancies to become the daily business of her life. On
-the contrary, she went through her duties scrupulously,
-making for herself occupation where she did not find it,
-helping her mother, working, reading, playing, improving
-her mind, and doing all she could for the negroes on the
-estate, but tinging everything unconsciously, whether of joy
-or sorrow, trouble or pleasure, with the rosy light of a love
-she had conceived without reason, cherished without reflection,
-and now brooded over without hope, in the depths of
-her own heart.</p>
-
-<p>But although the welfare of the slaves afforded her continual
-occupation, and probably prevented her becoming
-utterly wearied and overpowered by the sameness of her
-daily life, their wilfulness, their obstinacy, their petulant
-opposition to every experiment she was disposed to try for
-their moral and physical benefit, occasioned her many an
-hour of vexation and depression. Above all, the frequency
-of corporal punishment, a necessity of which she was dimly
-conscious, but would by no means permit herself to acknowledge,
-cut her to the heart. Silently and earnestly she
-would think over the problem, to leave it unsolved at last,
-because she could not but admit that the dictates of her
-feelings were opposed to the conclusions of her reason.
-Then she would wish she had absolute power on the plantation,
-would form vague schemes for the enlightenment of
-their own people and the enfranchisement of every negro as
-he landed, till, having once entered on the region of romance,
-she would pursue her journey to its usual termination, and
-see herself making the happiness of every one about her,
-none the less earnestly that the desire of her own heart was
-granted, her schemes, her labours, all her thoughts and
-feelings shared by the Grey Musketeer, whom yet it seemed
-so improbable she was ever to see again.</p>
-
-<p>It wanted an hour of sunset. The evening breeze had
-set in with a refreshing breath that fluttered the skirt of her
-white muslin dress and the pink ribbons on her wide straw
-hat, as Mademoiselle de Montmirail strolled towards the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span>
-negro-houses, carrying a <i>tisane</i> she had herself prepared for
-Aunt Rosalie’s sick child. The slaves were already down
-from the cane-pieces, laughing, jesting, singing, carrying
-their tools over their shoulders and their baskets or calabashes
-on their heads. A fat little negro of some eight
-years old, who reminded Cerise of certain bronze casts that
-held wax-lights in the Hôtel Montmirail, and who was
-indeed little less sparingly clad than those works of art,
-came running by, his saucy features shining with a merry
-excitement, in such haste that he could only pull himself
-up to make her a droll little reverence when he was almost
-under her feet. She recognised him as an elder brother of
-the very infant she was about to visit, and asked if baby
-was any better, but the child seemed so intent on some
-proceeding of his own that she could not extort an
-answer.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, Hercule?” said she, laying her white hand
-on the little knotted woolly head. “Where are you off to
-in such a hurry? Is it a dance at the negro-houses, or a
-merry-making in the Square?”</p>
-
-<p>The Square was a clear space, outside the huts of the
-field negroes, devoted to occasions of unusual display, and
-Hercule’s thoughts were as obviously turned in that direction
-as his corpulent little person.</p>
-
-<p>“Better bobbery nor dance,” answered the imp, looking
-up earnestly in her face. “M’amselle Fleurette tied safe
-to howling-tree! Massa Hippolyte, him tall black nigger,
-floggee criss-cross. So! Make dis good little nigger laugh,
-why for, I go see!” and away scampered Hercule as fast
-as his short legs would carry him, followed by Cerise,
-who felt her cheek paling and her blood tingling to her
-fingers’-ends.</p>
-
-<p>But Aunt Rosalie’s baby never got the <i>tisane</i>, for Mademoiselle
-de Montmirail spilt it all as she hurried on.</p>
-
-<p>Coming beyond the rows of negro-houses, she found a
-large assemblage of slaves, both men and women, ranged in
-a circle, many of the latter being seated on the ground, with
-their children crawling about their feet, while the fathers
-looked over the heads of their families, grinning in curiosity
-and delight.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
-<img src="images/illus3.jpg" width="450" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“CERISE BURST THROUGH LIKE A FLASH.”</p>
-<p class="caption-r">(<a href="#Page_275"><i>Page 275.</i></a>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>They were all eager to enjoy one of those spectacles to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span>
-which the Square, as they chose to call it, was especially
-devoted.</p>
-
-<p>In the centre of this open space, with the saffron light of
-a setting sun full upon her closed eyes and contracted
-features, cowered poor Fleurette, naked to the waist,
-secured hand and foot to a strong upright post which prevented
-her from falling, with her wrists tied together and
-drawn to a level somewhat higher than her head, so that she
-was unable even to contract her shoulders for protection from
-the lash. Though her shapely dark form and bosom were
-thus exposed, she seemed to feel less shame than fear;
-but the reason was now obvious why she had shrunk with
-such unusual terror from her odious and degrading punishment.</p>
-
-<p>Looking on with callous indifference, and holding his
-black book in his hand, stood Bartoletti, austerely satisfied
-with this public recognition of his authority, but little
-interested in the result, save as it affected the length of
-time, more or less, during which the victim would be
-incapacitated from service.</p>
-
-<p>Behind the girl, and careful to remain at such a distance
-as allowed room for the sweep of his right arm, was
-stationed the most hideous figure in the scene: a tall
-powerful Coromantee negro, African-born, with all his
-savage propensities intensified by food, servitude, and the
-love of rum. He brandished a long-lashed, knotted whip
-in his broad hand, and eyeing the pliant shrinking figure
-before him, grinned like a demon in sheer desire of blood.</p>
-
-<p>He was to take his cue from the overseer. At the
-moment Cerise rounded the last of the negro-houses and
-came into full view of this revolting spectacle, Bartoletti’s
-harsh Italian voice grated on the silence—“One!”</p>
-
-<p>Hippolyte, such was the Coromantee’s inappropriate
-name, drew himself back, raised his brawny arm, and the
-lash fell with a dull jerk, deadened by the flesh into which
-it cut.</p>
-
-<p>There was a faint moan, and the poor back quivered in
-helpless agony.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise, in her white dress, burst through the sable circle
-like a flash.</p>
-
-<p>“Two!” grated that harsh voice, and again the cruel<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span>
-lash came down, but it was dripping now with blood, and a
-long wailing shriek arose that would not be suppressed.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Halte là!</i>” exclaimed Mademoiselle de Montmirail,
-standing in the midst, pale, trembling, dilated, and with
-fire flashing from her blue eyes. “Take that girl down!
-this instant! I command it! Let me see who will dare
-to disobey!”</p>
-
-<p>Even Hippolyte shrunk back, like some grotesque fiend
-rebuked. Bartoletti strove to expostulate, but somehow he
-was awed by the beauty of that holy wrath, so young, so
-fair, so terrible, and he dared not lift his eyes to meet
-those scorching looks. He cowered, he trembled, he
-signed to two negro women to obey Mademoiselle, and then
-slunk doggedly away.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise passed her arm caressingly round Fleurette’s neck,
-she wiped the poor torn shoulders with her own laced handkerchief,
-she rested the dark woolly head on her bosom,
-and lifting the slave’s face to her own, kissed her, once,
-twice, tenderly and pitifully on the lips.</p>
-
-<p>Then Fleurette’s tears gushed out: she sank to her
-young mistress’s knees, she grovelled at her very feet, she
-kissed them, she hugged them, she pressed them to her
-eyes and mouth; she vowed, she sobbed, she protested,
-and, at least while her passion of gratitude and affection
-lasted, she spoke no more than the truth when she declared
-that she asked no better than to consecrate every drop of
-blood in her body, her life, her heart, her soul, to the
-service of Mademoiselle de Montmirail.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII<br />
-<span class="smaller">A WISE CHILD</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>‘The Bashful Maid’ was still lying peacefully at anchor in
-the harbour of Port Welcome, yards squared, sails furled,
-decks polished to a dazzling white, every article of gear
-and tackle denoting profound repose, even the very pennon
-from her truck drooping motionless in the heat. Captain
-George spent much of his time below, making up his
-accounts, with the invaluable assistance of Beaudésir, who,
-having landed soon after their arrival, remained an hour or
-two in the town, and returned to the brigantine, expressing
-no desire for further communication with the shore.</p>
-
-<p>George himself postponed his visit to the island until he
-had completed the task on which he was engaged. In the
-meantime he gave plenty of liberty to the crew, an indulgence
-of which none availed themselves more freely than
-Slap-Jack and his two friends.</p>
-
-<p>These last indeed seldom stirred beyond the town. Here
-they found all they wanted in the shape of luxury or
-amusement: strong tobacco, new rum, an occasional scrape
-of a fiddle with a thrumming accompaniment on the banjo,
-nothing to do, plenty to drink, and a large room to smoke
-in.</p>
-
-<p>But the foretopman was not so easily satisfied. Much
-to the disgust of his comrades, he seemed to weary of their
-society, to have lost his relish for fiery drinks and sea
-stories; nay, to have acquired diverse tastes and habits
-foreign to his nature and derogatory to his profession.</p>
-
-<p>“Gone cruisin’ thereaway,” observed Bottle-Jack, vaguely
-waving his pipe in the direction of the mountains. “Never<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span>
-taken no soundings, nor kept no dead reckoning, nor
-signalled for a pilot, but just up foresail, drive-ahead,
-stem on, happy-go-lucky, an’ who cares!” While Smoke-Jack,
-puffing out solemn clouds of fragrant Trinidado,
-enunciated sententiously that he “Warn’t a-goin’ to
-dispute but what every craft should hoist her own ensign,
-an’ lay her own course; but when he see a able seaman
-clearing out from such a berth as this here, leaving the
-stiffest of grog and the strongest of ‘bacca’ a-cause of a
-old yaller woman with a red burgee; why, <i>he</i> knowed the
-trim on ’em, that was <i>where</i> it was. See if it wasn’t.
-Here’s my service to you, mate—All ships at sea!”</p>
-
-<p>Long ere the two stanch friends, however, had arrived at
-this intelligible conclusion, the object of their anxiety was
-half-way up the mountain, in fulfilment of the promise he
-had made Célandine to meet her at an appointed place.</p>
-
-<p>In justice to Slap-Jack, it is but fair to admit that his
-sentiments in regard to the Quadroon were those of keen
-curiosity mingled with pity for the obvious agitation under
-which she seemed to labour in his presence. Fair Alice
-herself, far off in her humble home among the downs, need
-not have grudged the elder woman an hour of her young
-seaman’s society, although every minute of it seemed so
-strangely prized by this wild, energetic, and mysterious
-person, with her swarthy face, her scarlet head-dress, and
-her flashing eyes, gleaming with the fierce anxious tenderness
-of a leopardess separated from her whelps.</p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack’s sea legs had hardly time to become fatigued,
-ere at a turn in the mountain-path he found Célandine
-waiting for him, and somewhat to his disgust, peering
-about in every direction, as if loth to be observed; a
-clandestine interpretation of their harmless meeting which
-roused the young seaman’s ire, and against which he
-would have vehemently protested, had she not placed her
-hand over his mouth and implored him urgently, though in
-a whisper, to keep silence. Then she bade him follow, still
-below her breath, and so preceded him up the steep ascent
-with cautious, stealthy steps, but at a pace that made the
-foretopman’s unaccustomed knees shake and his breath
-come quick.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was hot, the mountain high, the path overgrown<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span>
-with cactus and other prickly plants, tangled with creepers
-and not devoid of snakes. Monkeys chattered, parrots
-screamed, glittering insects quivered like tinsel in the sun,
-or darted like flashes of coloured light across the forest-shade.
-Vistas of beauty, such as he had never dreamed of,
-opened out on either side, and looking back more than once
-to take breath while he ascended, the deep blue sea lay
-spread out beneath him, rising broader and broader to meet
-the blue transparent sky.</p>
-
-<p>But Slap-Jack, truth to tell, was sadly indifferent to it
-all. Uneasiness of the legs sadly counteracted pleasure of
-the eye. It was with considerable gratification that he
-observed his leader diverge from the upward path, and
-rounding the shoulder of the hill, take a direction somewhat
-on the downward slope. Then he wiped his brows, with
-a sigh of relief, and asked audibly enough for something to
-drink.</p>
-
-<p>She seemed less afraid of observation now, although she
-did not comply with his request, but pointed downward to
-a dark hollow, from which ascended a thin, white, spiral
-line of smoke, the only sign denoting human habitation in
-the midst of this luxuriant wilderness of tropical growth
-and fragrance. Then, parting the branches with both
-hands, she dived into the thicket, to stop at the door of a
-hut, so artfully concealed amongst the dense luxuriant
-foliage that a man might have passed within five yards and
-never known it was there but for the smoke.</p>
-
-<p>Célandine closed the door cautiously behind her visitor,
-handed him a calabash of water, into which she poured
-some rum from a goodly stone jar—holding at least a
-gallon—watched him eagerly while he drank, and when he
-set the measure down, flung both arms round his neck, and
-kissing him all over the eyes and face, murmured in fondest
-accents—</p>
-
-<p>“Do you not know why I have brought you here? Do
-you not know who and what you are?”</p>
-
-<p>“I could have told you half an hour back,” answered
-Slap-Jack, with a puzzled air, “but so many queer starts
-happen hereaway, mother, that I’m blessed if I can tell you
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>Tears shone in the fierce black eyes that never left his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span>
-face, but seemed to feast on its comeliness with the desire
-of a famished appetite for food.</p>
-
-<p>“Call me mother again!” exclaimed the Quadroon.
-“You called me mother down yonder at the store, and my
-heart leaped to hear the word. Sit ye down, my darling,
-there in the light, where I can see your innocent face.
-How like you are to your father, my boy. You’ve got his
-own bold eyes, and broad shoulders, and large, strong
-hands. I could not be deceived. I knew you from the
-first. Tell me true; you guessed who I was. You would
-never have gone up to a stranger as you did to me!”</p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack looked completely mystified. Wisely reflecting,
-however, that if a woman be left uninterrupted she will
-never “belay,” as he subsequently observed, “till she has
-payed-out the whole of her yarn,” he took another pull at
-the rum-and-water, and held his peace.</p>
-
-<p>“Look about you, boy,” continued Célandine, “and mark
-the wild, mysterious retreat I have made myself, on your
-account alone. No other white man has ever entered the
-Obi-woman’s hut. Not a negro in the island but shakes
-with fear when he approaches that low doorway; not one
-but leaves a gift behind when he departs. And now,
-chance has done for the Obi-woman that which all her
-perseverance and all her cunning has failed to effect.
-Influence I have always had amongst the blacks, for I am
-of their kindred, and they believe that I possess supernatural
-powers. You need not smile, boy. I can sometimes
-foretell the future so far as it affects others, though
-blindly ignorant where it regards myself; just as a man
-reads his neighbour’s face clearly, though he cannot see
-his own. All my influence I have devoted to the one great
-object of making money. For that, I left my sunny home
-to live years in the bleak, cold plains of France; for that,
-I sold myself in my old age to one whom I could not care
-for, even in my youth; for that I have been tampering of late
-with the most desperate and dangerous characters in the
-island; and money I only valued because, without it, I
-feared I could never find my boy. Listen, my darling, and
-learn how a mother’s love outlives the fancy of youth, the
-devotion of womanhood, and the covetousness of old age.
-Look at me now, child. It is not so long since men have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
-told me—even in France, where they profess to understand
-such matters—that I retained my attractions still. You
-may believe that thirty years ago the Quadroon of Cash-a-crou,
-as they called her, had suitors, lovers, and admirers
-by the score. Somehow, I laughed at them all. It seemed
-to me that a man’s affection for a girl only lasted while
-she despised him, and I resolved that no weakness of my
-own should ever bring me down a single step from the
-vantage-ground I held. Planters, overseers, councillors,
-judges, all were at my feet; not a white man in the island
-but would have given three months’ pay for a smile from
-the yellow girl at Cash-a-crou; and the yellow girl—slave
-though she was—carried her head high above them all.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, one bright morning, a week before crop-time, a
-fine large ship, twice the size of that brigantine in the
-harbour, came and dropped her anchor off the town. The
-same night her sailors gave a dance at one of the negro-houses
-in Port Welcome. I never hear a banjo in the still,
-calm evenings but it thrills to my very marrow still, though
-it will be five-and-twenty long years, when the canes are
-cut, since I went into that dancing-room a haughty, wilful
-beauty, and came out a humble, love-stricken maid. Turn a
-bit more to the light, my boy, that I may look into your blue
-eyes; they shine like his, when he came across the floor
-and asked me to dance. I’ve heard the Frenchwoman say
-that it takes a long time for a man to win his way into a
-girl’s heart. Theirs is a cold country, and they have no
-African blood in their veins. All I know is, that your
-father had not spoken half-a-dozen words ere I felt for him
-as I never felt for any creature on earth before. I’d have
-jumped off the Sulphur Mountain, and never thought twice
-about it, if he had asked me. When we walked home together
-in the moonlight—for he begged hard to see me safe
-to my own door, and you may think I wasn’t very difficult
-to persuade—I told him honestly that I had never loved
-any man but him, and never would love another, come what
-might. He looked down into my eyes for a moment
-astonished, just as you look now, and then he smiled—no
-face ever I saw had such a smile as your father’s—and
-wound his great strong arm round my waist, and pressed
-me to his heart. I was happy then. If I might live over<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
-just one minute of my life again, it should be that first
-minute when I felt I belonged no more to myself, but to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“So we were married by an old Spanish priest in the
-little white chapel between the lighthouse and the town—yes,
-married right enough, my boy, never doubt it, though
-I was but a slave.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not know how a great lady like our Marquise feels
-who can give herself and all her possessions, proudly and in
-public, to the man she loves, but she ought to be very happy.
-I was very happy, though I might only meet your father by
-stealth, and with the fear of a punishment I shuddered to
-think of before my eyes. I thought of it very often, too, yet
-not without pride and pleasure, to risk it all for his sake.
-What I dreaded far worse than punishment—worse than
-death, was the day his ship would sail, and though she lay
-weeks and months refitting in the harbour, that day arrived
-too soon. Never tell me people die of grief, my boy, since
-I came off the hill alive when I had seen the last of those
-white sails. I could have cursed the ship for taking him
-away, and yet I blessed her for his sake.</p>
-
-<p>“There was consolation for me too. I had his solemn
-promise to come back again, and I’ll never believe but he
-would have kept it had he been alive. Nothing shall persuade
-me that my brave, blue-eyed Englishman has not been
-sleeping many a year, rolled in his hammock, under the
-deep, dark sea. It was well the conviction came on me by
-degrees that I was never to see him again. I should have
-gone mad if I had known it that last night when he bade
-me keep my heart up, and trust him to the end. After a
-while I fretted less, for my time was near, and my beautiful
-boy was born. Such an angel never lay on a mother’s knees.
-My son, my son, you have the same eyes, and the same
-sweet smile still. I knew you that day in the street, long
-before I turned your collar down, and saw the little white
-mark like an anchor on your neck. How proud I was of
-you, and how I longed to show my sturdy, blue-eyed boy,
-who began to speak at eleven months, to every mother in
-the island, but I dared not—I dared not, for your sake more
-than for my own. I was cunning then—ay, cunning, and
-brave, and enduring as a panther. They never found me<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
-out—they never so much as suspected me. I had money,
-plenty of it, and influence too, with one man at least, who
-would have put his hand in the fire, coward as I think he is,
-if I had only made him a sign. With his help, I concealed
-the existence of my boy from every creature on the plantation—black
-or white. In his house I used to come and
-nurse you, dear, and play with you by the hour together.
-That man is my husband now, and I think he deserves a
-better fate.</p>
-
-<p>“At last he was forced to leave the island, and then came
-another parting, worse than the first. It was only for
-myself I grieved when I lost your father, but when I was
-forced to trust my beautiful boy to the care of another, to
-cross the sea, to sleep in strange beds, to be washed and
-dressed by other hands, perhaps to meet with hard words
-and angry looks, or worse still, to clasp his pretty arms
-about a nurse’s neck, and to forget the mother that bore
-him, I thought my heart would break. My boy, there is no
-such thing—I tell you again, these are fables—grief does
-not kill.</p>
-
-<p>“For a long time I heard regularly of your welfare, and
-paid liberally for the good news. I was sure the man to
-whom I had entrusted you looked upon me as his future
-wife, and though I hated him for the thought, I—who loved
-that bold, strong, outspoken sailor—I permitted it, I encouraged
-it, for I believed it would make him kinder to my
-boy. When you were a little older, I meant to buy my own
-freedom, and take you with me to live in Europe—wherever
-you could be safe.</p>
-
-<p>“At last a ship sailed into Port Welcome, and brought
-no letter for me, no news of my child. Another, and yet
-another, till months of longing, sickening anxiety had grown
-to years, and I was nearly mad with fear and pain. The
-father I had long despaired of, but I thought I was never to
-be used so hardly as to lose the child.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you again, my boy, grief does not kill. I lived on,
-but I was a different creature now. My youth was gone,
-my beauty became terrible rather than attractive. I possessed
-certain powers that rendered me an object of dread
-more than love, and here, in this very hut, I devoted myself
-to the practice of Obi, and the study of that magic which has<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
-made the name of Célandine a word of fear to every negro
-in the island.</p>
-
-<p>“One only aim, one only hope, kept me from going mad.
-Money I was resolved to possess, the more the better, for by
-the help of money alone, I thought, could I ever gain tidings
-of my boy. The slaves paid well in produce for the amulets
-and charms I sold them. That produce I converted into
-coin, but it came in too slow. In Europe I might calculate
-on better opportunities for gain, and to Europe I took the
-first opportunity of sailing, that I might join the mistress I
-had never seen, as attendant on her and her child. In their
-service I have remained to this day. The mother I have
-always respected for her indomitable courage; the daughter
-I loved from the first for her blue eyes, that reminded me of
-my boy.</p>
-
-<p>“And now look at me once more, my child—my darling.
-I have found you when I had almost left off hoping; I have
-got you when I never expected to see you again; and I am
-rewarded at last!”</p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack, whose sentiments of filial affection came out
-the mellower for rum-and-water, accepted the Quadroon’s
-endearments with sufficient affability, and being naturally a
-good-hearted, easy-going fellow, gladly enacted the part of
-dutiful son to a mother who had suffered such long anxiety
-on his account.</p>
-
-<p>“A-course,” said he, returning her embrace, “now you’ve
-got a son, you ain’t a-goin’ to keep him in this here round-house,
-laid up in lavender like, as precious as a Blue Mountain
-monkey pickled in rum. We’ll just wait here a bit,
-you and me, safe and snug, while the land-breeze holds, and
-then drop easily down into the town, rouse out my shipmates,
-able seamen every man of them, and go in for a regular
-spree. ’Tain’t every day as a chap finds his mother, you
-know, and such a start as this here didn’t ought to be passed
-over without a bobbery.”</p>
-
-<p>She listened to him delighted. His queer phrases were
-sweet in her ears; to her they were no vulgar sea-slang, but
-the echo of a love-music that had charmed her heart, and
-drowned her senses half a lifetime ago; that rang with
-something of the old thrilling vibration still; but the wild
-look of terror that had scared him more than once gleamed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span>
-again in her eyes, and she laid her hand on his shoulder as
-if to keep him down by force, while she whispered—“My
-child, not so! How rash, how reckless! Just like your
-father; but he, at least, had not your fate to fear. Do you
-not see your danger? Can you not guess why I concealed
-your birth, hid you up in your babyhood, and smuggled you
-out of the island as soon as you could run? Born of a
-slave, on a slave estate, do you not know, my boy, that you,
-too, are a slave?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gammon! mother,” exclaimed Slap-Jack, nothing
-daunted. “What <i>me</i>?—captain of the foretop on board
-‘The Bashful Maid,’—six guns on the main-deck, besides
-carronades—master and owner, Captain George! and talk
-to me as if I was one of them darkies what does mule’s work
-with monkey’s allowance! Who’s to come and take me, I
-should like to know? Let ’em heave ahead an’ do it,
-that’s all—a score at a spell if they can muster ’em. I’ll
-show ’em pretty quick what sort of a slave they can make
-out of an able seaman!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush, hush!” she exclaimed, listening earnestly, and
-with an expression of intense fear contracting her worn
-features; “I can hear them coming—negroes by the footfall,
-and a dozen at least. They will be at the door in five
-minutes. They have turned by the old hog-plum now. As
-you love your life, my boy; nay, as you love your mother,
-who has pined and longed for you all these years, let me
-hide you away in there. You will be safe. Trust me, you
-will be safe enough; they will never think of looking for you
-there!”</p>
-
-<p>So speaking, and notwithstanding much good-humoured
-expostulation and resistance from Slap-Jack, who, treating
-the whole affair as a jest, was yet inclined to fight it out all
-the same, Célandine succeeded in pushing her son into an
-inner division of the hut, containing only a bed-place, shut
-off by a strong wooden door. This she closed hurriedly, at
-the very moment a dozen pattering footsteps halted outside,
-and a rough negro voice, in accents more imperative than
-respectful, demanded instant admission.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">JACK AGROUND</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Opening the door with a yawn, and stretching her arms
-like one lately roused from sleep, the Quadroon found herself
-face to face with the Coromantee, backed by nearly a
-score of negroes, the idlest and most dissolute slaves on the
-estate. All seemed more or less intoxicated, and Célandine,
-who knew the African character thoroughly, by no means
-liked their looks. She was aware that much disaffection
-existed in the plantation, and the absence of this disorderly
-gang from their work at so early an hour in the afternoon
-argued something like open revolt. It would have been
-madness, however, to show fear, and the Obi-woman possessed,
-moreover, a larger share of physical courage than is
-usual with her sex; assuming, therefore, an air of extreme
-dignity, she stationed herself in the doorway and demanded
-sternly what they wanted.</p>
-
-<p>Hippolyte, who seemed to be leader of the party, doffed his
-cabbage-tree hat with ironical politeness, and pointing over
-his shoulder at two grinning negroes laden with plantains
-and other garden produce, came to business at once.</p>
-
-<p>“We buy,—you sell, Missee Célandine. Same as storekeeper
-down Port Welcome. Fust ask gentlemen step in,
-sit down, take something to drink.”</p>
-
-<p>There was that in his manner which made her afraid to
-refuse, and inviting the whole party to enter, she accommodated
-them with difficulty in the hut. Reviewing her
-assembled guests, the Quadroon’s heart sank within her;
-but she was conscious of possessing cunning and courage,
-so summoned both to her aid.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span></p>
-
-<p>A negro, under excitement, from whatever cause, is a
-formidable-looking companion. Those animal points of
-head and countenance, by which he is distinguished from
-the white man, then assume an unseemly prominence. The
-lips thicken, the temples swell, the eyes roll, the brow
-seems to recede, and the whole face alters for the worse,
-like that of a vicious horse, when he lays his ears back,
-prepared to kick.</p>
-
-<p>Célandine’s visitors displayed all these alarming signs,
-and several other disagreeable peculiarities, the result of
-partial intoxication. Some of them carried axes, she
-observed, and all had knives. Their attire too, though of
-the gaudiest colours, was extremely scanty, ragged, and
-unwashed. They jested with one another freely enough, as
-they sat huddled together on the floor of the hut, but showed
-little of the childish good-humour common among prosperous
-and well-ordered slaves; while she augured the worst
-from the absence of that politeness which, to do him justice,
-is a prominent characteristic of the negro. Nevertheless,
-she dissembled her misgivings, affected an air of dignified
-welcome, handed round the calabash, with its accompanying
-stone bottle, to all in turn, and felt but little
-reassured to find that the rum was nearly exhausted when
-it had completed the circle.</p>
-
-<p>“Thirteen gentlemen, Missee Célandine,” observed the
-Coromantee, tossing off his measure of raw spirits with
-exceeding relish; “thirteen charms, best Obi-woman can
-furnish for the price, ’gainst evil eye, snake-bite, jumbo-stroke,
-fire, water, and cold steel, all ’counted for, honourable,
-in dem plantain baskets. Hi! you lazy nigger, pay
-out. Say, again, missee, what day this of the month?”</p>
-
-<p>Célandine affected to consider.</p>
-
-<p>“The thirteenth,” she answered gravely; “the most
-unlucky day in the whole year.”</p>
-
-<p>Hippolyte’s black face fell. “Golly?” said he. “Unlucky!
-for why? for what? Dis nigger laugh at luck,”
-he added, brightening up and turning what liquor was left
-in the stone bottle down his own throat. “Lookee here,
-missee; you Obi-woman, right enough; you nigger too,
-yaller all same as black: you go pray Jumbo for luck.
-All paid for in dat basket. Pray Jumbo no rain to-night,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span>
-put um fire out. Our work, make bobbery; your work,
-stay up mountain where spirit can hear, and pray Jumbo
-till monkeys wake.”</p>
-
-<p>A suspicion that had already dawned on the Quadroon’s
-mind was now growing horribly distinct. It was obvious
-some important movement must be intended by the gang
-that filled her hut, and there was every fear a general rising
-might take place of all the slaves on the plantation, if indeed
-the insurrection spread no further than the Montmirail
-estate. She knew, none better, the nature of the half-reclaimed
-savage. She thought of her courageous, high-souled
-mistress, of her delicate, beautiful nursling, and
-shivered while she pictured them in the power of this huge
-black monster who sat grinning at her over the empty
-calabash. She even forgot for the moment her own long-lost
-son, hidden up within six feet of her, and the double
-danger he would run in the event of detection. She could
-only turn her mind in one direction, and that was,
-where Madame and Mademoiselle were sitting, placid and
-unconscious, in the rich white dresses her own fingers had
-helped to make.</p>
-
-<p>Their possible fate was too horrible to contemplate. She
-forced it from her thoughts, and with all her power of self-concentration,
-addressed herself to the means of saving
-them at any cost. In such an emergency as the present,
-surrounded, and perhaps suspected, by the mutineers, dissimulation
-seemed her only weapon left, and to dissimulation
-she betook herself without delay.</p>
-
-<p>“Hippolyte,” said she, “you are a good soldier. You
-command all these black fellows; I can see it in your walk.
-I always said you had the air of an officer of France.”</p>
-
-<p>The Coromantee seemed not insensible to flattery. He
-grinned, wagged his head, rolled his eyes, and was obviously
-well pleased.</p>
-
-<p>“Dese niggers make me deir colonel,” said he, springing
-from the floor to an attitude of military attention. “Hab
-words of command like buckra musketeer. <i>Par file à droite—Marche!
-Volte-face!</i> Run for your lives!”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew it,” she replied, “and you ought to have learned
-already to trust your comrades. Are we not in the same
-ranks? You say yourself, yellow and black are all one.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span>
-You and I are near akin; your people are the people of my
-mother’s mother; whom you trust, I trust; whom you hate,
-I hate, but far more bitterly, because my injuries are older
-and deeper than yours.”</p>
-
-<p>He opened his eyes wondering, but the rum had taken
-effect, and nothing, not even the Quadroon’s disloyalty to
-her mistress, seemed improbable now. An Obi-woman too,
-if really in earnest, he considered a valuable auxiliary; so
-signed his approval by another grin and a grunt of acquiescence.</p>
-
-<p>“I live but for one object now,” continued Célandine, in
-a tone of repressed fury that did credit to her power of
-acting. “I have been waiting all my life for my revenge,
-and it seems to have come at last. The Marquise should
-have given me my freedom long ago if she wished me to
-forgive. Ay, they may call me <i>Mustee</i>, but I am black,
-black as yourself, my brave Hippolyte, at heart. She
-struck me once,—I tell you, struck me with her riding-whip,
-far away yonder in France, and I will have her
-blood.”</p>
-
-<p>It is needless to observe this imputed violence was a
-fabrication for the especial benefit of Hippolyte, and the
-energy with which he pronounced the ejaculation, “Golly!”
-denoted that he placed implicit reliance on its truth.</p>
-
-<p>“You are brave,” continued Célandine; “you are
-strong; you are the fine tall negro whom we call the
-Pride of the Plantation. You do not know what it is
-to hate like a poor weak woman. I would have no
-scruple, no mercy; I would spare none, neither Madame
-nor Mademoiselle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ma’amselle come into woods with me,” interrupted
-Hippolyte, with a horrible leer. “Good enough wife for
-Pride of Plantation. Lilly-face look best by um side of
-black man. Ma’amselle guess me come for marry her.
-When floggee Fleurette, look at me so, afore all de niggers,
-sweet as molasses!”</p>
-
-<p>Again Célandine shivered. The wretch’s vanity would
-have been ludicrous, had he not been so formidable from
-his recklessness, and the authority he seemed to hold over
-his comrades. She prepared to learn the worst.</p>
-
-<p>“They will both be in our power to-night, I suppose,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span>
-said she, repressing with a strong effort her disgust and
-fierce desire to snatch his long knife and stab him where
-he stood. “Tell me your plan of attack, my brave colonel,
-and trust me to help you to the utmost.”</p>
-
-<p>The Coromantee looked about him suspiciously, rolling
-his eyes in obvious perplexity. The superstition inherent
-in his nature made him desirous of obtaining her assistance,
-while the Quadroon’s antecedents, and particularly her
-marriage with the overseer, seemed to infer that she would
-prove less zealous than she affected to be in the cause of
-insurrection. He made up his mind therefore to bind her
-by an oath, which he himself dictated, and made her swear
-by the mysterious power she served, and from which she
-derived her influence, to be true, silent, and merciless, till
-the great event had been accomplished, all the whites in
-authority massacred, and the whole estate in the power of
-the slaves. Every penalty, both horrible and ludicrous,
-that the grotesque imagination of a savage could devise,
-was called down upon her head in the event of treachery;
-and Célandine, who was a sufficiently good Catholic at
-heart, swallowed all these imprecations imperturbably
-enough, pledging herself, without the slightest hesitation,
-to the conspiracy.</p>
-
-<p>Then Hippolyte was satisfied and unfolded his plans,
-while the others gathered round with fearful interest,
-wagging their heads, rolling their eyes, grinning, stamping,
-and ejaculating deep gutturals of applause.</p>
-
-<p>His scheme was feasible enough; nor to one who knew
-no scruples of gratitude, no instincts of compassion, did it
-present any important obstacles. He was at the head of
-an organised body, comprising nearly all the male slaves
-on the plantation; a body prepared to rise at a moment’s
-notice, if only assured of success. The dozen negroes who
-accompanied him had constituted themselves his guards,
-and were pledged to strike the first blow, at his command.
-They were strong, able-bodied, sensual, idle, dissolute, unscrupulous,
-and well enough fitted for their enterprise, but
-that they were arrant cowards, one and all. As, however,
-little resistance could be anticipated, this poltroonery was
-the more to be dreaded by their victims, that in the hour
-of triumph it would surely turn to cruelty and excess.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span></p>
-
-<p>Hippolyte, who was not deficient in energy, had also
-been in communication with the disaffected slaves on the
-adjoining estates; these too were sworn to rise at a given
-signal, and the Coromantee, feeling that his own enterprise
-could scarcely fail, entertained a fervent hope that in a few
-hours the whole of the little island, from sea to sea, would
-be in possession of the negroes, and he himself chosen as
-their chief. The sack and burning of Port Welcome, the
-massacre of the planters and abduction of their families,
-were exciting little incidents of the future, on which he
-could hardly trust himself to dwell; but the first step in
-the great enterprise was to be taken at Montmirail West,
-and to its details Célandine now listened with a horror
-that, while it curdled her blood, she was forced to veil
-under a pretence of zeal and enthusiasm in the cause.</p>
-
-<p>Her only hope was in the brigantine. Her early associations
-had taught her to place implicit reliance on a boat’s
-crew of English sailors, and if she could but delay the
-attack until she had communicated with the privateer,
-Mademoiselle, for it was of Mademoiselle she chiefly
-thought, might be rescued even yet. If she could but
-speak to her son, lying within three feet of her! If she
-could but make him understand the emergency! How she
-trusted he overheard their conversation! How she prayed
-he might not have been asleep the whole time!</p>
-
-<p>Hippolyte’s plan of attack was simple enough. It would
-be dark in a couple of hours. Long before then, he and
-his little band meant to advance as far as the skirts of the
-bush, from whence they could reconnoitre the house. Doors
-and windows would all be open. There was but one white
-man in the place, and he unarmed. Nothing could be
-easier than to overpower the overseer, and perhaps, for
-Célandine’s sake, his life might be spared. Then, it was
-the Coromantee’s intention to secure the Marquise and her
-daughter, which he opined might be done with little risk,
-and at the expense of a shriek or two; to collect in the
-store-room any of the domestic slaves, male or female, who
-showed signs of resistance, and there lock them up; to
-break open the cellar, serve out a plentiful allowance of
-wine to his guards, and then, setting fire to the house, carry
-the Marquise and her daughter into the mountains. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span>
-former, to be kept as a hostage, slain, or otherwise disposed
-of, according to circumstances; the latter, as the African
-expressed it with hideous glee, “for make lilly-face chief
-wife to dis here handsome nigger!”</p>
-
-<p>Célandine affected to accept his views with great
-enthusiasm, but objected to the time appointed.</p>
-
-<p>“The moon,” said she gravely, “is yet in her first
-quarter. Her spirit is gone a journey to the mountains of
-Africa to bless the bones of our forefathers. It will be back
-to-morrow. Jumbo has not been sufficiently propitiated.
-Let us sacrifice to him for one night more with jar and
-calabash. I will send down for rum to the stores. Brave
-colonel, you and your guards shall bivouac here outside her
-hut, while the Obi-woman remains within to spend the night
-in singing and making charms. Jumbo will thus be
-pleased, and to-morrow the whole island may be ours without
-opposition.”</p>
-
-<p>But Hippolyte was not to be deceived so easily. His
-plans admitted of no delay, and the flames ascending from
-the roof of Montmirail West, that same night, were to be
-the signal for a general rising from sea to sea. His short
-period of influence had already taught him that such a blow
-as he meditated, to be effectual, must be struck at once.
-Moreover, the quality of cunning in the savage seems
-strong in proportion to his degradation; the Coromantee
-was a very fox for vigilance and suspicion, nor did he fail
-to attribute Célandine’s desire for procrastination to its true
-motive.</p>
-
-<p>“To-night, Obi-woman!” said he resolutely. “To-night,
-or no night at all. Dis nigger no leave yaller woman
-here, fear of accidents. Perhaps to-morrow free blacks
-kill you same as white. You come with us down mountain-side
-into clearing. We keep you safe. You make prayer
-and sing whole time.”</p>
-
-<p>With a mischievous leer at a couple of his stalwart
-followers, he pointed to the Quadroon. They sprang from
-the ground and secured her, one on each side. The
-unfortunate Obi-woman strove hard to disarm suspicion by
-an affectation of ready compliance, but it was obvious they
-mistrusted her fidelity and had no intention of letting her
-out of their sight. It was with difficulty that she obtained<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>
-a few moments’ respite, on the plea that night was about
-to fall, for the purpose of winding her shawl more carefully
-round her head, and in that brief space she endeavoured to
-warn her son of the coming outbreak, with a maddening
-doubt the while that he might not understand their purport,
-even if he could hear her words. Turning towards the
-door, behind which he was concealed, under pretence of
-arranging her head-gear at a bit of broken looking-glass
-against the panel, she sang, with as marked an emphasis as
-she dared, a scrap of some doggrel sea-ditty, which she had
-picked up from her first love in the old happy days, long
-ago:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The boatswain looked upon the land,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And shrill his whistle blew,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The oars were out, the boat was manned,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Says he, ‘My gallant crew,</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“‘Our captain in a dungeon lies,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The sharks have got him flat,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But if we fire the town, my boys,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">We’ll have him out of that!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“‘We’ll stop their jaw, we’ll spike their guns!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">We’ll larn ’em what they’re at—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You bend your backs, and pull, my sons,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">We’ll have him out of that!’”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This she sang twice, and then professed her readiness to
-accompany Hippolyte and his band down the mountain,
-delaying their departure, however, by all the means she
-could think of, including profuse offers of hospitality, which
-had but little effect, possibly because the guests were personally
-satisfied that there was nothing left to drink.</p>
-
-<p>Nay, even on the very threshold of the hut she turned
-back once more, affecting to have forgotten the most important
-of the amulets she carried about her person, and,
-crossing the floor with a step that must have awakened the
-soundest sleeper, repeated, in clear loud tones, the boatswain’s
-injunction to his men—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“You bend your backs, and pull, my sons,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We’ll have him out of that!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV<br />
-<span class="smaller">JACK AFLOAT</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But Slap-Jack was not asleep; far from it. His narrow
-hiding-place offered but little temptation to repose, and
-almost the first sentence uttered by Hippolyte aroused the
-suspicions of a man accustomed to anticipate, without fearing,
-danger, or, as he expressed it, “to look out for squalls.”</p>
-
-<p>He listened therefore intently the whole time, and although
-the Coromantee’s jargon was often unintelligible, managed
-to gather quite enough of its meaning to assure him that
-some gross outrage was in preparation, of which a white
-lady and her daughter were to be the victims. Now it is
-not only on the boards of a seaport theatre that the British
-sailor vindicates his character for generous courage on behalf
-of the conventional “female in distress.” The stage is,
-after all, a representation, however extravagant, of real life,
-and the caricature must not be exaggerated out of all likeness
-to its original. Coarse in his language, rough in his
-bearing, reckless and riotous from the very nature of his
-calling, there is yet in the thorough-going English seaman
-a leavening of tenderness, simplicity, and self-sacrifice,
-which, combined with his dauntless bravery, affords no
-ignoble type of manhood. He is a child in his fancies, his
-credulity, his affections; a lion in his defiance of peril and
-his sovereign contempt for pain.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to women, whatever may be his practice,
-his creed is pure, exalted, and utterly opposed to his own
-experience; while his instincts prompt him on all occasions,
-and against any odds, to take part with the weaker side.
-Compared with the landsman, he is always a little behind<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
-the times in worldly knowledge, possessing the faults and
-virtues of an earlier age. With both of these in some excess,
-his chivalry is unimpeachable, and a sense of honour that
-would not disgrace the noblest chapters of knighthood is to
-be found nerving the blue-streaked arms and swelling the
-brawny chests that man the forecastle.</p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack knew enough of his late-discovered mother’s
-position to be familiar with the name of the Marquise and
-the situation of Montmirail West. As he was the only
-seaman belonging to ‘The Bashful Maid’ who had been
-tempted beyond the precincts of the port, this knowledge
-was shared by none of his shipmates. Captain George
-himself, postponing his shore-going from hour to hour, while
-he had work in hand, little dreamed he was within two
-leagues of Cerise. Beaudésir had never repeated his visit
-to the town; and every other man in the brigantine was
-too much occupied by duty or pleasure—meaning anchor-watch
-on board, alternated by rum and fiddlers ashore—to
-think of extending his cruise a yard further inland than the
-nearest drinking-house.</p>
-
-<p>On Slap-Jack, therefore, devolved the task of rescuing
-the Marquise and her daughter from the grasp of “that big
-black swab,” as the foretopman mentally denominated him,
-whom he longed ardently to “pitch into” on the spot.
-He understood the position. His mother’s sea-song was
-addressed to no inattentive nor unwilling ears. He saw
-the difficulties and, indeed, the dangers of his undertaking;
-but the latter he despised, while the former he resolved to
-overcome; and he never lay out upon a yard to reef topsails
-in the fiercest squall with a clearer brain or a stouter heart
-than he now summoned to his aid on behalf of the ladies
-whom his mother loved so well.</p>
-
-<p>Creeping from his hiding-place, he listened anxiously
-to the retreating footfall of the blacks, and even waited
-several minutes after it had died away to assure himself the
-coast was clear. Discovery would have been fatal; for
-armed though he was with a cutlass and pistols, thirteen to
-one, as he sagely reflected, was long odds; and “if I should
-be scuttled,” thought he, “before I can make signals, why,
-what’s to become of the whole convoy?” Therefore he
-was very cautious and reflective. He pondered, he calculated,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span>
-he reckoned his time, he enumerated his obstacles, he laid
-out his plans before he proceeded to action. His only chance
-was to reach the brigantine without delay, and report the
-whole matter to the skipper forthwith, who he was convinced
-would at once furnish a boat’s crew to defend the ladies,
-and probably put himself at their head.</p>
-
-<p>Emerging from the hut, he observed to his consternation
-that it was already dusk. There is but a short twilight in
-these low latitudes, where the evening hour—sweetest of
-the whole twenty-four—is gone almost as soon as it
-arrives—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The sun’s rim dips,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The stars rush out,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">At one stride comes the dark.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">And that dark, in the jungle of a West Indian island, is
-black as midnight.</p>
-
-<p>It was well for Slap-Jack that a seaman’s instinct had
-prompted him to take his bearings before he came up the
-mountain. These, from time to time, he corrected during
-his ascent, at the many places where he paused for breath.
-He knew, therefore, the exact direction of the town and
-harbour. Steering by the stars, he was under no apprehension
-of losing his way, and could make for the brigantine
-where she lay. Tightening his belt, then, he commenced
-the descent at a run, resolving to keep the path as long as
-he could see it, and when it was lost in the bush at last, to
-plunge boldly through till he reached the shore.</p>
-
-<p>The misadventure he foresaw soon came to pass. A
-path which he could hardly have followed by daylight, without
-Célandine to pilot him, soon disappeared from beneath
-his feet in the deepening gloom. He had not left the hut
-many minutes ere he was struggling, breast-high, amongst
-the wild vines and other creepers that twined and festooned
-in a tangle of vegetable network from tree to tree.</p>
-
-<p>The scene was novel and picturesque, yet I am afraid he
-cursed and swore a good deal, less impressed with its beauty
-than alive to its inconveniences. Overhead, indeed, he
-caught a glimpse of the stars, by which he guided his
-course through the interlacing boughs of the tall forest
-trees, and underfoot, the steady lamp of the glow-worm,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
-and the sparks of a thousand wheeling fire-flies shed a light
-about his path; but these advantages only served to point
-out the dangers and difficulties of his progress. With their
-dubious help, every creeper thicker than ordinary assumed
-the appearance of some glistening snake, swinging from the
-branch in a grim repose that it was death to disturb;
-every rotten stump leaning forward in its decay, draped
-with its garment of trailing parasites, took the form of a
-watchful savage, poising his gigantic form in act to strike;
-while a wild boar, disturbed from his lair between the roots
-of an enormous gum-tree, to shamble off at a jog-trot,
-grumbling, in search of thicker covert, with burning eye,
-gnashing tusks, and most discordant grunt, swelled to the
-size of a rhinoceros. Slap-Jack’s instincts prompted him
-to salute the monster with a shot from one of the pistols
-that hung at his belt, but reflecting on the necessity of
-caution, he refrained with difficulty, consoling himself by
-the anticipation of several days’ leave ashore, and a regular
-shooting party with his mates, in consideration of his
-services to-night.</p>
-
-<p>Thus he struggled on, breathless, exhausted, indefatigable—now
-losing himself altogether, till a more open space in
-the branches, through which he could see the stars, assured
-him that he was in a right direction—now obtaining a
-glimpse of some cane-piece, or other clearing, white in the
-tender light of the young moon, which had already risen,
-and thus satisfying himself that he was gradually emerging
-from the bush, and consequently nearing the shore—now
-tripping over a fallen tree—now held fast in a knot of
-creepers—now pierced to the bone by a prickly cactus, torn,
-bleeding, tired, sore, and drenched with perspiration, but
-never losing heart for a moment, nor deviating, notwithstanding
-his enforced windings, one cable’s length from
-the direct way.</p>
-
-<p>Thus at last he emerged on a clearing already trenched
-and hoed for the reception of sugar-canes, and, to his
-infinite joy, beheld his own shadow, black and distinct, in
-the trembling moonlight. The bush was now behind him,
-the slope of the hill in his favour, and he could run down,
-uninterrupted, towards the pale sea lying spread out like a
-sheet of silver at his feet. He crossed a road here that he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span>
-knew must lead him into the town, but it would have taken
-him somewhat out of his course for the brigantine, and he
-had resolved to lose no time, even for the chance of obtaining
-a boat.</p>
-
-<p>He made, therefore, direct for the shore, and in a few
-minutes he was standing on a strip of sand, with the retiring
-tide plashing gratefully on his ear, while his eyes were fixed
-on the tapering spars of ‘The Bashful Maid,’ and the light
-glimmering in her foretop.</p>
-
-<p>He stepped back a few paces to lay his arms and some of
-his garments behind a rock, a little above high-water mark.
-There was small chance he would ever find them again, but
-he belonged to a profession of which the science is essentially
-precautionary, and the habit of foresight was a second nature
-to Slap-Jack. In a few more seconds he was up to his
-knees, his middle, his breast-bone, in the cooling waters,
-till a receding wave lifted him off his feet, and he struck out
-boldly for the brigantine.</p>
-
-<p>How delightful to his heated skin was the contact of the
-pure, fresh, buoyant element! Notwithstanding his fatigue,
-his hurry, his anxiety, he could have shouted aloud in joy
-and triumph, as he felt himself wafted on those long, regular,
-and powerful strokes nearer and nearer to his object. It
-was the exultation of human strength and skill and daring,
-dominant over nature, unassisted by mechanical art.</p>
-
-<p>Yet was there one frightful drawback, a contingency which
-had been present to his mind from the very beginning, even
-while he was beating laboriously through the jungle, but
-which he had never permitted himself to realise, and on
-which it would now be maddening to dwell: Port Welcome
-was infested with sharks! He forced himself to ignore the
-danger, and swam gallantly on, till the wash and ripple of
-the tide upon the shore was far behind him, and he heard
-only his own deep measured breathing, and the monotonous
-plash of those springing, regulated strokes that drove him
-steadily out to sea. He was already tired, and had turned on
-his back more than once for relief, ere the hull of the brigantine
-rose black and steep out of the water half a cable’s length
-ahead. He counted that after fifty more strokes he would
-summon breath to hail the watch on deck. He had scarce
-completed them ere a chill went curdling through his veins<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span>
-from head to heel, and if ever Slap-Jack lost heart it
-was then. The water surged beneath him, and lifted his
-whole body, like a wave, though the surrounding surface
-was smooth as a mill-pond. One desperate kick, that shot
-him two fathoms at a stroke, and his passing foot grazed
-some slimy, scaly substance, while from the corner of his
-eye he caught a glimpse the moment after of the back-fin of
-a shark. Then he hailed in good earnest, swimming his
-wickedest the while, and ere the voracious sea-scourge, or
-its consort, could turn over for a leisurely snap at him, Slap-Jack
-was safe in the bight of a rope, and the anchor-watch,
-not a little astonished, were hauling their exhausted shipmate
-over the side.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on board, sir!” exclaimed the new arrival,
-scrambling breathless to his feet, after tumbling head-foremost
-over the gunwale, and pulling with ludicrous courtesy
-at his wet hair. “Come on board, sir. Hands wanted
-immediate. Ax your honour’s pardon. So blown I can
-hardly speak. First-class row among the niggers. Bobbery
-all over the island. Devil to pay, and no pitch hot!”</p>
-
-<p>Captain George was on deck, which perhaps accounted
-for the rapidity of the foretopman’s rescue, and although
-justly affronted by so unceremonious a return on the part
-of a liberty-man who had out-stayed his leave, he saw at a
-glance that some great emergency was imminent, and prepared
-to meet it with habitual coolness.</p>
-
-<p>“Silence, you fool!” said he, pointing to a negro amongst
-the crew. “Lend him a jacket, some of you. Come below
-at once to my cabin, and make your report. You can be
-punished afterwards.”</p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack followed his commander nothing loth. The
-after-punishment, as being postponed for twenty-four hours
-at least, was a matter of no moment, but a visit to the
-Captain’s cabin entailed, according to the <i>etiquette</i> of the
-service, a measure of grog, mixed on certain liberal principles,
-that from time immemorial have regulated the
-strength of that complimentary refreshment.</p>
-
-<p>In all such interviews it is customary for the skipper to
-produce his spirit-case, a tumbler, and a jug of water. The
-visitor helps himself from the former, and esteems it only
-good breeding that he should charge his glass to the depth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
-of three fingers with alcohol, filling it up with the weaker
-fluid. When the thickness of a seaman’s fingers is considered,
-and the breadth to which he can spread them out
-on such occasions, it is easy to conceive how little space is
-left near the rim of the vessel for that insipid element, every
-additional drop of which is considered by competent judges
-to spoil the beverage. Slap-Jack mixed as liberally as
-another. Ere his draught, however, was half-finished, or
-his report nearly concluded, the Captain had turned the
-hands up, and ordered a boat to be manned forthwith,
-leaving Beaudésir to command in his absence; but true to
-his usual system, informing no one, not even the latter, of
-his intentions, or his destination.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV<br />
-<span class="smaller">BESIEGED</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the meantime poor Célandine found herself hurried
-down the mountain by Hippolyte and his band, in a state
-of anxiety and alarm that would have paralysed the energies
-of most women, but that roused all the savage qualities
-dormant in the character of the Quadroon. Not a word of
-her captors, not a look escaped her; and she soon discovered,
-greatly to her dismay, that she was regarded less
-as an auxiliary than a hostage. She was placed in the
-centre of the band, unbound indeed, and apparently at
-liberty; but no sooner did she betray, by the slightest
-independence of movement, that she considered herself a
-free agent, than four stalwart blacks closed in on her with
-brutal glee, attempting no concealment of a determination
-to retain her in their power till they had completed their
-merciless design.</p>
-
-<p>“Once gone,” said Hippolyte, politely affecting great
-reverence for the Obi-woman’s supernatural powers, “never
-catchee no more!—Jumbo fly away with yaller woman,
-same as black. Dis nigger no ’fraid of Jumbo, so long as
-Missee Célandine at um back. Soon dark now. March on,
-you black villains, and keep your ranks, same as buckra
-musketeer!”</p>
-
-<p>With such exhortations to discipline, and an occasional
-compliment to his own military talents, Hippolyte beguiled
-their journey down the mountain. It seemed to Célandine
-that far too short a space of time had elapsed ere they
-reached the skirts of the forest, and even in the deepening
-twilight could perceive clearly enough the long low building
-of <i>Cash-a-crou</i>, now called Montmirail West.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span></p>
-
-<p>The lamps were already lit in the sitting-room on the
-ground floor. From where she stood, in the midst of the
-band, outwardly stern and collected, quivering with rage
-and fear within, the Quadroon could distinguish the figures
-of Madame la Marquise and her daughter, moving here and
-there in the apartment, or leaning out at window for a
-breath of the cool, refreshing evening air.</p>
-
-<p>Their commander kept his men under covert of the
-woods, waiting till it should be quite dark. There was
-little to fear from a garrison consisting of but two ladies,
-backed by Fleurette and Bartoletti, for the other domestic
-slaves were either involved in the conspiracy or had been
-inveigled out of the way by its chief promoters; yet notwithstanding
-the weakness of the besieged, some dread of
-their ascendancy made the negroes loth to encounter by
-daylight even such weak champions of the white race as
-two helpless women and a cowardly Italian overseer.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, every moment gained was worth a purse of
-gold. Célandine, affecting to identify herself with the
-conspirators, urged on them the prudence of delay.
-Hippolyte, somewhat deceived by her enthusiasm, offered
-an additional reason for postponing the attack, in the
-brilliancy of a conflagration under a night sky. He intended,
-he said, to begin by setting fire to the house—there
-could then be no resistance from within. There
-would be plenty of time, he opined, for drink and plunder
-before the flames gained a complete ascendancy, and he
-seemed to cherish some vague half-formed notion that
-it would be a fine thing to appear before Cerise in the
-character of a hero, who should rescue her from a frightful
-death.</p>
-
-<p>A happy thought struck the Quadroon.</p>
-
-<p>“It was lucky you brought me with you,” said she
-earnestly. “Brave as you are, I fancy you would have
-been scared had you acted on your own plan. You talk of
-firing <i>Cash-a-crou</i>, as you would of roasting a turtle in its
-shell. Do you know that madame keeps a dozen barrels
-of gunpowder stowed away about the house—nobody knows
-where but herself. You would have looked a little foolish,
-I think, my brave colonel, to find your long body blown
-clean over the Sulphur Mountain into the sea on the other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span>
-side of the island. You and your guard here are as handsome
-a set of blacks as a yellow woman need wish to look
-on. Not a morsel would have been left of any one of you
-the size of my hand!”</p>
-
-<p>“Golly!” exclaimed Hippolyte in consternation.
-“Missee Célandine, you go free for tanks, when this
-job clean done. Hi! you black fellows, keep under
-shadow of gum-tree dere—change um plan now,” he
-added, thoughtfully; and without taking his keen eyes
-off Célandine, walked from one to the other of his band,
-whispering fresh instructions to each.</p>
-
-<p>The Quadroon counted the time by the beating of her
-heart. “Now,” she thought, “my boy must have gained
-the edge of the forest—ten minutes more to cross the new
-cane-pieces—another ten to reach the shore. He can swim
-of course—his father swam like a pilot-fish. In forty
-minutes he might be on board. Five to man a boat—and
-ten more to pull her in against the ebb. Then they have
-fully a league to march, and sailors are such bad walkers.”
-At this stage of her reflections something went through her
-heart like a knife. She thought of the grim ground-sharks,
-heaving and gaping in the warm translucent depths of the
-harbour at Port Welcome.</p>
-
-<p>But meanwhile Hippolyte had gathered confidence from
-the bearing of his comrades. Their numbers and fierceness
-inspired him with courage, and he resolved to enter the
-house at the head of his chosen body-guard, whilst he surrounded
-it with a score of additional mutineers who had
-joined him according to previous agreement at the head of
-the forest. These, too, had brought with them a fresh supply
-of rum, and Célandine observed with horror its stimulating
-effects on the evil propensities of the band.</p>
-
-<p>While he made his further dispositions, she found herself
-left for a few seconds comparatively unwatched, and at once
-stole into the open moonlight, where her white dress could
-be discerned plainly from the house. She knew her husband
-would be smoking his evening tobacco, according to custom,
-in the verandah. At little more than a hundred paces he
-could hardly fail to see her; and in an instant she had
-unbound the red turban and waved it round her head, in the
-desperate hope that he might accept that warning for a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span>
-danger signal. The quick-witted Italian seemed to comprehend
-at once that something was wrong. He imitated
-her gesture, retired into the house, and the next minute his
-figure was seen in the sitting-room with the Marquise and
-her daughter. By this time Hippolyte had returned to her
-side, and she could only watch in agony for the result.
-Completely surrounded by the intoxicated and infuriated
-negroes, there seemed to be no escape for the besieged,
-while the looks and gestures of their leader, closely copied
-by his chosen band, denoted how little of courtesy or
-common humanity was to be expected from the Coromantee,
-excited to madness by all the worst passions of
-his savage nature bursting from the enforced restraints that
-had so long kept them down.</p>
-
-<p>A bolder spirit than the Signor’s might have been excused
-for betraying considerable apprehension in such a crisis, and
-in good truth Bartoletti was fairly frightened out of his wits.
-In common with the rest of the whites on the island, he had
-long suspected a conspiracy amongst the negroes, and feared
-that such an insurrection would take place; but no great
-social misfortune is ever really believed in till it comes, and
-he had neither taken measures for its prevention, nor
-thoroughly realised the magnitude of the evil. Now that he
-felt it was upon him he knew not where to turn for aid.
-There was no time to make phrases or to stand on ceremony.
-He rushed into the sitting-room with a blanched cheek and
-a wild eye, that caused each of the ladies to drop her work
-on her lap, and gaze at him in consternation.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame!” he exclaimed, and his jaw shook so that he
-could hardly form the syllables, “we must leave the house
-at once—we must save ourselves. There is an <i>émeute</i>, a
-revolt, a rebellion among the slaves. I know them—the
-monsters! They will not be appeased till they have drunk
-our blood. Oh! why did I ever come to this accursed
-country?”</p>
-
-<p>Cerise turned as white as a sheet—her blue eyes were
-fixed, her lips apart. Even the Marquise grew pale, though
-her colour came back, and she held her head the more erect
-a moment afterwards. “Sit down,” she said, imperiously,
-yet kindly enough. “Take breath, my good man, and take
-courage also. Tell me exactly what you have seen;” and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span>
-added, turning to Cerise, “don’t be frightened, child—these
-overseers are sad alarmists. I daresay it is only
-what the negroes call a ‘bobbery,’ after all!”</p>
-
-<p>Then Bartoletti explained that he had seen his wife
-waving a red shawl from the edge of the jungle; that this
-was a preconcerted signal by which they had agreed to warn
-each other of imminent danger; that it was never to be
-used except on great emergencies; and that he was quite
-sure it was intended to convey to him that she was in the
-power of the slaves, and that the rising they had so often
-talked about had taken place at last.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise thought for a moment. She seemed to
-have no fear now that she realised her danger. Only once,
-when her eye rested on her daughter, she shuddered visibly.
-Otherwise, her bearing was less that of a tender woman in
-peril of her life, than of some wise commander, foiled and
-beset by the enemy, yet not altogether without hope of
-securing his retreat.</p>
-
-<p>So might have looked one of her warlike ancestors when
-the besiegers set fire to his castle by the Garonne, and he
-resolved to betake himself, with his stout veterans, to the
-square stone keep where the well was dug—a maiden
-fortress, that had never yet succumbed to famine nor been
-forced by escalade.</p>
-
-<p>“Is there any one in the house whom we can trust?” said
-the Marquise; and even while she spoke a comely black
-girl came crawling to her feet, and seized her hand to cover
-it with tears and kisses.</p>
-
-<p>“Iss, missis!” exclaimed Fleurette, for Fleurette it was,
-who had indeed been listening at the door for the last five
-minutes. “You trust <i>me</i>! Life for life! Blood for blood!
-No fear Jumbo, so lilly ma’amselle go out safe. Trust
-Fleurette, missis. Trust Fleurette, ma’amselle. Fleurette
-die at um house-door, so! better than ugly black floggee-man
-come in.” The Marquise listened calmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Attend to me, Fleurette,” said she, with an authoritative
-gesture. “Go at once through the kitchen into the
-dark path that leads to the old summer-house. See if the
-road to Port Welcome is clear. There is no bush on that
-side within five hundred paces, and if they mean to stop us,
-they must post a guard between the house and the gum-trees.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span>
-Do not show yourself, girl, but if they take you, say
-Célandine sent you down to the negro-houses for eggs.
-Quick, and come back here like lightning. Bartoletti—have
-you any firearms? Do not be afraid, my darling,”
-she repeated, turning to her daughter, “I know these
-wretched people well. You need but show a bold front,
-and they would turn away from a lady’s fan if you only shook
-it hard at them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not afraid, mamma,” answered Cerise, valiantly,
-though her face was very pale, and her knees shook. “I—I
-don’t <i>like</i> it, of course, but I can do anything you tell me.
-Oh, mamma! do you—do you think they will kill us?” she
-added, with rather a sudden breakdown of the courage she
-tried so gallantly to rally.</p>
-
-<p>“Kill us, mademoiselle!” exclaimed the overseer, quaking
-in every limb. “Oh, no! never! They cannot be so bad
-as that. We will temporise, we will supplicate, we will
-make terms with them; we will offer freedom, and rum, and
-plunder; we will go on our knees to their chief, and entreat
-his mercy!”</p>
-
-<p>The girl looked at him contemptuously. Strange to say,
-her courage rose as his fell, and she seemed to gather
-strength and energy from the abject selfishness of his
-despair. The Marquise did not heed him, for she heard
-Fleurette’s footsteps returning, and was herself busied
-with an oblong wooden case, brass-bound, and carefully
-locked up, that she lifted from the recess of a cupboard
-in the room.</p>
-
-<p>Fleurette’s black feet could carry her swiftly and lightly
-as a bird. She had followed her instructions implicitly, had
-crept noiselessly through the kitchen, and advanced unseen
-to the old summer-house. Peering from that concealment
-on the moonlit surface of the lawn, she was horrorstruck to
-observe nearly a score of slaves intently watching the house.
-She hurried back panting to her mistress’s presence, and
-made her discouraging report.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Montmirail was very grave now. The affair
-had become more than serious. It was, in truth, desperate.
-Once again, as she looked at her daughter, came that strange
-quiver over her features, that shudder of repressed horror
-rather than pain. It was succeeded, as before, by a moment<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span>
-of deep reflection, and then her eye kindled, her lips
-tightened, and all her soft voluptuous beauty hardened
-into the obstinate courage of despair.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise sank on her knees to pray, and rose with a pale,
-serene, undaunted face. Hers was the passive endurance
-of the martyr. Her mother’s the tameless valour of the
-champion, inherited through a long line of the turbulent La
-Fiertés, not one of whom had ever blenched from death nor
-yielded an inch before the face of man.</p>
-
-<p>“Bartoletti!” said the Marquise. “Bar the doors and
-windows; they can be forced with half-a-dozen strokes, but
-in war every minute is of value. Hold this rabble in parley
-as long as you can. I dare not trust you with my pistols,
-for a weak heart makes a shaking hand, and I think fighting
-seems less your trade than mine. When you can delay
-them no longer, arrange your own terms with the villains.
-It is possible they may spare you for your wife’s sake.
-Quick, man! I hear them coming now. Cerise, our bedroom
-has a strong oaken door, and they cannot reach the
-window without a ladder, which leaves us but one enemy to
-deal with at a time. Courage, my darling! Kiss me!
-Again, again! my own! And now. A woman dies but
-once! Here goes for France, and the lilies on the White
-Flag!”</p>
-
-<p>Thus encouraging her child, the Marquise led the way to
-the bed-chamber they jointly occupied, a plainly-furnished
-room, of which the only ornament was the Prince-Marshal’s
-portrait, already mentioned as having occupied the place of
-honour in Madame’s <i>boudoir</i> at the Hôtel Montmirail.
-Both women glanced at it as they entered the apartment.
-Then the Marquise, laying down the oblong box she carried,
-carefully shaded the night-lamp that burned by her bedside,
-and peered stealthily from the window to reconnoitre.</p>
-
-<p>“Four, six, ten,” said she, calmly, “besides their leader,
-a tall, big negro, very like Hippolyte. It <i>is</i> Hippolyte.
-<i>You</i> at least, my friend, will not leave this house alive! I
-can hardly miss so fair a mark as those broad black
-shoulders. This of course is the <i>corps d’élite</i>. Those at
-the back of the house I do not regard so much. The
-kitchen door is strong, and they will do nothing if their
-champions are repulsed. Courage again, my child! All is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span>
-not lost yet. Open that box and help me to load my
-pistols. Strange, that I should have practised with them
-for years, only to beat Madame de Sabran, and now to-night
-we must both trust our safety to a true eye and a steady
-hand!”</p>
-
-<p>Pale, tearless, and collected, Cerise obeyed. Her mother,
-drawing the weapons from their case, wiped them with her
-delicate handkerchief, and proceeded to charge them carefully,
-and with a preoccupied air, like a mother preparing
-medicine for a child. Holding the ramrod between
-her beautiful white teeth, while her delicate and
-jewelled fingers shook the powder into the pan, she
-explained to Cerise the whole mystery of loading and
-priming the deadly weapons. She would thus, as she
-observed, always have one barrel in reserve. The younger
-woman listened attentively. Her lip was steady, though
-her hand shook, and now that the worst was come she
-showed that peculiar quality of race which is superior to the
-common fighting courage possessed indiscriminately by all
-classes—the passive concentrated firmness, which can take
-every advantage so long as a chance is left, and die without
-a word at last, when hope gives place to the resignation of
-despair.</p>
-
-<p>She even pointed out to her mother, that by half closing
-the shutter, the Marquise, herself unseen, could command
-the approach to the front door. Then taking a crucifix
-from her bosom, she pressed it to her lips, and said, “I am
-ready now, mamma. I am calm. I can do anything you
-tell me. Kiss me once more, dear, as you used when I
-was a child. And if we <i>must</i> die, it will not seem so hard
-to die together.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise answered by a long clinging embrace, and
-then the two women sat them down in the gloomy shadows
-of their chamber, haggard, tearless, silent, watching for
-the near approach of a merciless enemy armed with horrors
-worse than death.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[309]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI<br />
-<span class="smaller">AT BAY</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In obedience to his mistress, Bartoletti had endeavoured to
-secure the few weak fastenings of the house, but his hands
-shook so, that without Fleurette’s aid not a bolt would have
-been pushed nor a key turned. The black girl, however,
-seconded his efforts with skill and coolness, so that Hippolyte’s
-summons to surrender was addressed to locked doors
-and closed windows. The Coromantee was now so inflamed
-with rum as to be capable of any outrage, and since neither
-his band nor himself were possessed of firearms, nothing
-but Célandine’s happy suggestion about the concealed
-powder restrained him from ordering a few faggots to be
-cut, and the building set in a blaze. Advancing with an
-air of dignity, that would at any other time have been
-ludicrous, and which he would certainly have abandoned
-had he known that the Marquise covered his body with her
-pistol the while, he thumped the door angrily, and demanded
-to know why “dis here gentleman comin’ to pay compliment
-to buckra miss,” was not immediately admitted; but
-receiving no answer, proceeded at once to batter the panels
-with an iron crowbar, undeterred by the expostulations of
-Fleurette, who protested vehemently, first, that her mistress
-was engaged with a large party of French officers; secondly,
-that she lay sick in bed, on no account to be disturbed;
-and lastly, that neither she nor ma’amselle were in the
-house at all.</p>
-
-<p>The Coromantee of course knew better. Shouting a
-horrible oath, and a yet more hideous threat, he applied
-his burly shoulders to the entrance, and the whole wood-work<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[310]</span>
-giving way with a crash, precipitated himself into the
-passage, followed by the rest of the band, to be confronted
-by Fleurette alone, Bartoletti having fled ignominiously to
-the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>“I could have hit him through the neck,” observed the
-Marquise, withdrawing from her post behind the shutter,
-“but I was too directly above him to make sure, and every
-charge is so valuable I would not waste one on a mere
-wound. My darling, I still hope that two or three deadly
-shots may intimidate them, and we shall escape after all.”</p>
-
-<p>Cerise answered nothing, though her lips moved. The
-two ladies listened, with every faculty sharpened, every
-nerve strung to the utmost.</p>
-
-<p>A scream from Fleurette thrilled through them like a
-blow. Hippolyte, though willing enough to dally with the
-comely black girl for a minute or two, lost patience with
-her pertinacity in clinging about him to delay his entrance,
-and struck her brutally to the ground. Turning fiercely on
-him where she lay, she made her sharp teeth meet in the
-fleshy part of his leg, an injury the savage returned with a
-kick, that after the first shriek it elicited left poor Fleurette
-stunned and moaning in the corner of the passage, to be
-crushed and trampled by the blacks, who now poured in
-behind their leader, elated with the success of this, their
-first step in open rebellion.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, loud shouts, or rather howls of triumph,
-announced that the overseer’s place of concealment was
-discovered. Bartoletti, pale or rather yellow, limp, stammering,
-and beside himself with terror, was dragged out of
-the house and consigned to sundry ferocious-looking negroes,
-who proceeded to amuse themselves by alternately kicking,
-cuffing, and threatening him with instantaneous death.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise listened eagerly; horror, pity, and disgust
-succeeding each other on her haughty, resolute face. Once,
-something like contempt swept over it, while she caught the
-tone of Bartoletti’s abject entreaties for mercy. He only
-asked for life—bare life, nothing more; they might make a
-slave of him then and there. He was their property, he
-and his wife, and all that he had, to do what they liked
-with. Only let him live, he said, and he would join them
-heart and hand; show them where the rum was kept, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[311]</span>
-money, the jewels; nay, help them cheerfully to cut every
-white throat on the island. The man was convulsed with
-terror, and the negroes danced round like fiends, mocking,
-jeering, flouting him, exulting in the spectacle of a <i>buckra</i>
-overseer brought so low.</p>
-
-<p>“There is something in <i>race</i> after all,” observed the
-Marquise, as if discussing an abstract proposition. “I
-suppose it is only the <i>canaille</i> that can thus degrade themselves
-from mere dread of death. Though our families have
-not always <i>lived</i> very decently, I am glad to think that
-there was never yet a Montmirail or La Fierté who did not
-know how <i>to die</i>. My child, it is the pure old blood that
-carries us through such moments as these; neither of us
-are likely to disgrace it now.”</p>
-
-<p>Again her daughter’s lips moved, although no sound
-escaped them. Cerise was prepared to die, but she could
-not bring herself to reason on the advantages of noble birth
-at such a moment, like the Marquise; and indeed the girl’s
-weaker frame and softer heart quailed in terror at the prospect
-of the ordeal they had to go through.</p>
-
-<p>From their chamber of refuge the two ladies could hear
-the insulting jests and ribald gibberish of the slaves, now
-bursting into the sitting-room, breaking the furniture,
-shivering the mirrors, and wantonly destroying all the
-delicate articles of use and ornament, of which they could
-neither understand the purpose nor appreciate the value.
-Presently a discordant scream from Pierrot announced that
-the parrot had protested against the intrusion of these
-riotous visitors, while a shout of pain, followed by loud
-bursts of laughter, proclaimed the manner in which he had
-resented the familiarity of one more daring than the rest.
-Taking the bird roughly off its perch, a stout young negro
-named Achille had been bitten to the bone, and the cross-cut
-wound inflicted by the parrot’s beak so roused his
-savage nature, that twisting its neck round with a vindictive
-howl, he slew poor Pierrot on the spot.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise in her chamber above could hear the
-brutal acclamations that greeted this exploit, and distinguished
-the smothered thump of her favourite’s feathered
-body as it was dashed into a corner of the room.</p>
-
-<p>Then her lips set tight, her brows knit, and the white<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312"></a>[312]</span>
-hand clenched itself round her pistol, firm, rigid, and pitiless
-as marble.</p>
-
-<p>Heavy footsteps were now heard hurrying on the stairs,
-and whispered voices urging contrary directions, but all with
-the same purport. There seemed to be no thought of
-compassion, no talk of mercy. Even while hearing their
-victims, Hippolyte and Achille, who was his second in
-command, scrupled not to discuss the fate of the ladies
-when they should have gained possession of their persons—a
-fate which turned the daughter’s blood to ice, the
-mother’s to fire. It was no time now to think of compromise
-or capitulation, or aught but selling life at the
-dearest, and gaining every moment possible by the sacrifice
-of an enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Even in the last extremity, however, the genius of
-system, so remarkable in all French minds, did not desert
-the Marquise. She counted the charges in her pistol-case,
-and calculated the resources of her foes with a cool,
-methodical appreciation of the chances for and against
-her, totally unaffected by the enormous disproportion of the
-odds. She was good, she argued, for a dozen shots in all.
-She would allow for two misses; sagely reflecting that in
-a chance medley like the present she could hardly preserve
-a steadiness of hand and eye that had heretofore so discomfited
-Madame de Sabran in the shooting galleries of
-Marly and Versailles. Eight shots would then be left,
-exclusive of two that she determined at all risks to reserve
-for the last. The dead bodies of eight negroes she considered,
-slain by the hand of one white woman, ought to
-put the whole black population of the island to the rout;
-but supposing that the rum they had drunk should have
-rendered them so reckless as to disregard even such a
-warning, and that, with her defences broke down, she found
-herself and daughter at their mercy, then—and while the
-Marquise reasoned thus, the blood mounted to her eyes,
-and a hand of ice seemed to close round her heart—the two
-reserve shots should be directed with unerring hand, the
-one into her daughter’s bosom, the other through her own.</p>
-
-<p>And Cerise, now that the crisis had arrived at last, in so
-far as they were to be substantiated by the enforced composure
-of a passive endurance, fully vindicated her claims<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313"></a>[313]</span>
-to noble blood. She muttered many a prayer indeed, that
-arose straight from her heart, but her eyes were fixed on
-her mother the while, and she had disposed the ammunition
-on a chair beside her in such a manner as to reload for the
-Marquise with rapidity and precision. “We are like a
-front and rear rank of the Grey Musketeers,” said the latter,
-with a wild attempt at hilarity, in which a strong hysterical
-tendency, born of over-wrought feelings, was with difficulty
-kept down. “The affair will soon commence now, and, my
-child, if worst comes to worst, remember there is no surrender.
-I hear them advancing to the assault. Courage!
-my darling. Steady! and <i>Vive la France</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>The words were still upon her lips, when a swarm of
-negroes, crowding and shouldering up the narrow passage,
-halted at her door. Hippolyte commenced his summons to
-the besieged by a smashing blow with the crowbar, that
-splintered one of the panels and set the whole wood-work
-quivering to its hinges. Then he applied his thick lips to
-the keyhole, and shouted in brutal glee—</p>
-
-<p>“Time to wake up now, missee! You play ’possum no
-longer, else cut down gum-tree at one stroke. Wot you say
-to dis nigger for buckra bridegroom? Time to come out
-now and dance jigs at um wedding.”</p>
-
-<p>There was not a quiver in her voice while the Marquise
-answered in cold imperious tones—</p>
-
-<p>“You are running up a heavy reckoning for this night’s
-work. I know your ringleaders, and refuse to treat with
-them. Nevertheless, I am not a severe mistress. If the rest
-of the negroes will go quietly home, and resume their duties
-with to-morrow’s sunrise, I will not be hard upon <i>them</i>. You
-know me, and can trust my word.”</p>
-
-<p>Cheers of derision answered this haughty appeal, and
-loud suggestions for every kind of cruelty and insult, to
-be inflicted on the two ladies, were heard bandied about
-amongst the slaves. Hippolyte replied fiercely—</p>
-
-<p>“Give in at once! Open this minute, or neither of you
-shall leave the house alive! For the Marquise—Achille!
-I give her to you! For lilly ma’amselle—I marry her this
-very night. See! before the moon goes down!”</p>
-
-<p>Cerise raised her head in scornful defiance. Her face
-was livid, but it was stamped with the same expression as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314"></a>[314]</span>
-her mother’s now. There could be no question both were
-prepared to die game to the last.</p>
-
-<p>The blows of Hippolyte’s crowbar resounded against the
-strong oaken panels of the door, but the massive wood-work,
-though it shook and groaned, resisted stoutly for a time.
-It was well for the inmates that Célandine’s imaginative
-powers had suggested the concealed gunpowder. Had it
-not been for their fears of an explosion the negroes would
-ere this have set fire to the building, when no amount of
-resistance could have longer delayed the fate of the two
-ladies. Bartoletti, intimidated by the threats of his captors,
-and preoccupied only with the preservation of his own life,
-had shown the insurgents where the rum was kept, and
-many of these were rapidly passing from the reckless to the
-stupefied stage of intoxication. The Italian, who was not
-deficient in cunning, encouraged their potations with all his
-might. He thus hoped to elude them before morning, and
-leaving his employers to their fate, reach Port Welcome in
-safety; where he doubted not he should be met by Célandine,
-whose influence as an Obi-woman, he rightly conjectured,
-would be sufficient to insure her safety. A coward rarely
-meets with the fate he deserves, and Bartoletti did indeed
-make his eventual escape in the manner he had proposed.</p>
-
-<p>Plying his crowbar with vigorous strokes, Hippolyte succeeded
-at length in breaking through one of the door panels,
-a measure to be succeeded by the insertion of hand and arm
-for withdrawal of the bolts fastened on the inside. The
-Coromantee possessed, however, a considerable share of
-cunning mixed with the fierce cruelty of a savage. When
-he had torn away enough wood-work to make a considerable
-aperture, he turned to his lieutenant and desired him to
-introduce his body and unbar the door from within. It is
-difficult to say what he feared, since even had he been aware
-that his mistress possessed firearms, he could not have
-conceived the possibility of her using them so recklessly in
-a house that he had reason to believe was stored with
-powder. It was probably some latent dread of the white
-race that prompted his command to his subordinate. “You
-peep in, you black nigger. Ladies all in full dress now.
-Bow-’ticks rosined and fiddlers dry. Open um door, and
-ask polite company to walk in.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315"></a>[315]</span></p>
-
-<p>Thus adjured, Achille thrust his woolly head and half
-his shining black body through the aperture. Madame de
-Montmirail, standing before her daughter, was not five paces
-off. She raised her white arm slowly, and covered him with
-steady aim. Ere his large thick hand had closed round the
-bolt for which it groped, there was a flash, a loud report, a
-cloud of smoke curling round the toilet accessories of a
-lady’s bed-chamber, and Achille, shot through the brain,
-fell back stone dead into the passage.</p>
-
-<p>“A little lighter charge of powder, my dear,” said the
-Marquise, giving the smoking weapon to her daughter to be
-reloaded, while she poised its fellow carefully in her hand.
-“I sighted him <i>very</i> fine, and was a trifle over my mark even
-then. These pistols always throw high at so short a distance.”</p>
-
-<p>Then she placed herself in readiness for another enemy,
-and during a short space waited in vain.</p>
-
-<p>The report of her pistol had been followed by a general
-scramble of the negroes, who tumbled precipitately downstairs,
-and in some cases even out of the house, under the
-impression that every succeeding moment might find them
-all blown into the air. But the very cause of the besiegers’
-panic proved, when their alarm subsided, of the utmost
-detriment to the garrison. Hippolyte, finding himself still
-in possession of his limbs and faculties, on the same side
-of the Sulphur Mountain as before, argued, reasonably
-enough, that the concealed powder was a delusion, and with
-considerable promptitude at once set fire to the lower part
-of the house; after which, once more mustering his followers,
-and encouraging them by his example, he ascended
-the staircase, and betaking himself to the crowbar with a
-will, soon battered in the weak defence that alone stood
-between the ladies and their savage enemies.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise had loaded her mother’s pistol to perfection; that
-mother, roused out of all thought of self by her child’s
-danger, was even now reckoning the last frail chance by
-which her daughter might escape. During the short respite
-afforded by the panic of the negroes, they had dragged with
-desperate strength a heavy chest of drawers, and placed it
-across the doorway. Even when the latter was forced, this
-slight breast-work afforded an additional impediment to the
-assailants.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316"></a>[316]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You must drop from the window, my child,” whispered
-the Marquise, when the shattered door fell in at length
-across this last obstruction, revealing a hideous confusion
-of black forms, and rolling eyes, and grinning fiendish faces.
-“It is not a dozen feet, but mind you turn round so as to
-light on your hands and knees. Célandine <i>must</i> be outside.
-If you can reach her you are safe. Adieu, darling! I can
-keep the two foremost from following you, still!”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise grasped a pistol in each hand, but she
-bent her brow—the haughty white brow that had never been
-carried more proudly than now—towards her child, and the
-girl’s pale lips clung to it lovingly, while she vowed that
-neither life nor death should part her from her mother.</p>
-
-<p>“It is all over, dear,” she said, calmly. “We can but
-die together as we have lived.”</p>
-
-<p>Their case was indeed desperate. The room was already
-darkening with smoke, and the wood-work on the floor below
-crackling in the flames that began to light up the lawn outside,
-and tip with saffron the sleeping woods beyond. The
-door was broken in; the chest of drawers gave way with a
-loud crash, and brandishing his crowbar, Hippolyte leaped
-into the apartment like a fiend, but stood for an instant
-aghast, rigid, like that fiend turned to bronze, because the
-white lady, shielding her daughter with her body, neither
-quailed nor flinched. Her eye was bright, her colour raised,
-her lips set, her hand steady, her whole attitude resolute
-and defiant. All this he took in at a glance, and the
-Coromantee felt his craven heart shrink up to nothing in
-his breast, thus covered by the deadly pistol of the Marquise.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317"></a>[317]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII<br />
-<span class="smaller">JUST IN TIME</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Moments are precious at such a time. The negro, goaded
-by shame, rage, and alcohol, had drawn his breath for a
-spring, when a loud cheer was heard outside, followed by
-two or three dropping shots, and the ring of a hearty
-English voice exclaiming—</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on, mates! Don’t ye shoot wild a-cause of the
-ladies. It’s yard-arm to yard-arm, this spell, and we’ll give
-these here black devils a taste of the naked steel!”</p>
-
-<p>In another moment Slap-Jack was in the passage, leaving
-a couple of wounded ruffians on the stairs to be finished by
-his comrades, and cutting another down across the very door-sill
-of the Marquise’s bed-chamber. Ere he could enter it,
-however, his captain had dashed past him, leaping like a
-panther over the dead negroes under foot, and flashing his
-glittering rapier in the astonished eyes of the Coromantee,
-who turned round bewildered from his prey to fight with the
-mad energy of despair.</p>
-
-<p>In vain. Of what avail was the massive iron crowbar,
-wielded even by the strength of a Hercules, against the
-deadliest blade but one in the Great Monarch’s body-guard?</p>
-
-<p>A couple of dazzling passes, that seemed to go over, under,
-all round the clumsier weapon—a stamp—a muttered oath,
-shut in by clenched, determined teeth, and the elastic steel
-shot through Hippolyte’s very heart, and out on the other
-side.</p>
-
-<p>Spurning the huge black body with his foot, Captain
-George withdrew his sword, wiped it grimly on the dead
-man’s woolly head, and, uncovering, turned to the ladies<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318"></a>[318]</span>
-with a polite apology for thus intruding under the pressure
-of so disagreeable a necessity.</p>
-
-<p>He had scarcely framed a sentence ere he became
-deadly pale, and began to stammer, as if he, too, was
-under the influence of some engrossing and incontrollable
-emotion.</p>
-
-<p>The two women had shrunk into the farthest corner of
-the room. With the prospect of a rescue, Madame de
-Montmirail’s nerves, strung to their utmost tension, had
-completely given way. In a state of mental and bodily prostration,
-she had laid her head in the lap of Cerise, whose
-courage, being of a more passive nature, did not now fail
-her so entirely.</p>
-
-<p>The girl, indeed, pushing her hair back from her temples,
-looked wildly in George’s face for an instant, like one who
-wakes from a dream; but the next, her whole countenance
-lit up with delight, and holding out both hands to him, she
-exclaimed, in accents of irrepressible tenderness and self-abandonment,
-“<i>C’est toi!</i>” then the pale face flushed
-crimson, and the loving eyes drooped beneath his own. To
-him she had always been beautiful—most beautiful, perhaps,
-in his dreams—but never in dreams nor in waking reality
-so beautiful as now.</p>
-
-<p>He gazed on her entranced, motionless, forgetful of everything
-in the world but that one loved being restored, as it
-seemed, by a miracle, at the very time when she had been
-most lost to him. His stout heart, thrilling to its core from
-her glance, quailed to think of what must have befallen had
-he arrived a minute too late, and a prayer went up from it
-of hearty humble thanksgiving that he was in time. He
-saw nothing but that drooping form in its delicate white
-dress, with its gentle feminine gestures and rich dishevelled
-hair; heard nothing but the accents of that well-remembered
-voice vibrating with the love that he felt was deep and
-tender as his own. He was unconscious of the cheers of
-his victorious boat’s crew, of the groans and shrieks uttered
-by wounded or routed negroes, of the dead beneath his feet,
-the blazing rafters overhead, the showers of sparks and
-rolling clouds of smoke that already filled the house; unconscious
-even of Madame de Montmirail’s recovery from
-her stupor, as she too recognised him, and raising herself<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319"></a>[319]</span>
-with an effort from her daughter’s embrace, muttered in
-deep passionate tones, “C’est lui!”</p>
-
-<p>But it was no time for the exchanges of ceremonious
-politeness, or the indulgence of softer emotions. The house
-was fairly on fire, the negroes were up in arms all over the
-island. A boat’s crew, however sturdy, is but a handful
-of men, and courage becomes foolhardy when it opposes
-itself voluntarily at odds of one against a score. Slap-Jack
-was the first to speak. “Askin’ <i>your</i> pardon, ladies,” said
-he, with seamanlike deference to the sex; “the sooner we
-can clear out of this here the better. If you’ll have the
-kindness to point out your sea-chests, and possibles, and
-such like, Bottle-Jack here, he’ll be answerable for their
-safety, and me an’ my mates we’ll run you both down to
-the beach and have you aboard in a pig’s whisper. The
-island’s getting hot, miss,” he added confidentially to
-Cerise, who did not the least understand him. “In these
-low latitudes, a house afire and a hundred of blacks means
-a bobbery, just as sure as at home four old women and a
-goose makes a market!”</p>
-
-<p>“He is right,” observed the Captain, who had now
-recovered his presence of mind. “From what I saw as I
-came along, I fear there is a general rising of the slaves
-through the whole island. My brigantine, I need not say,
-is at the disposal of madame and mademoiselle (Cerise
-thanked him with a look), and I believe that for a time at
-least it will be the only safe place of refuge.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus speaking, he offered his hand to conduct the
-Marquise from the apartment, with as much courtliness and
-ceremony as though they had been about to dance a minuet
-at Versailles, under the critical eye of the late king. Hers
-trembled violently as she yielded it. That hand, so steady
-but a few minutes ago, while levelling its deadly weapon
-against the leader of a hundred enemies, now shook as if
-palsied. How little men understand women. He attributed
-her discomposure entirely to fright.</p>
-
-<p>There is a second nature, an acquired instinct in the
-habits of good-breeding, irrepressible even by the gravest
-emergency. Captain George, conducting Madame de Montmirail
-down her own blazing staircase, behaved with as
-ceremonious a politeness as if they had been descending in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320"></a>[320]</span>
-accordance with etiquette to a formal dinner-party. Cerise,
-following close, hung no doubt on every word that came from
-his lips, but it must be confessed the conversation was somewhat
-frivolous for so important a juncture.</p>
-
-<p>“I little thought,” said the Captain, performing another
-courtly bow, “that it was Madame la Marquise whom I
-should have the honour of escorting to-night out of this
-unpleasant little <i>fracas</i>. Had I known madame was on the
-island, she will believe that I should have come ashore and
-paid my respects to her much sooner.”</p>
-
-<p>“You could not have arrived at a more opportune moment,
-monsieur,” answered the lady, whose strong physical energy
-and habitual presence of mind were now rapidly reasserting
-themselves. “You have always been welcome to my
-receptions; never more so than to-night. You found it a
-little hot, I fear, and a good deal crowded. The latter
-disadvantage I was remedying, to the best of my abilities,
-when you announced yourself. The society, too, was hardly
-so polite as I could have wished. Oh, monsieur!” she
-added, in a changed and trembling voice, suddenly discarding
-the tone of banter she had assumed, “where should we
-have been now, and what must have become of us, but for
-you? <i>You</i>, to whom we had rather owe our lives than to
-any man in the world!”</p>
-
-<p>He was thinking of Cerise. He accepted the kind words
-gratefully, happily; but, like all generous minds, he made
-light of the service he had rendered.</p>
-
-<p>“You are too good to say so, madame,” was his answer.
-“It seemed to me you were making a gallant defence enough
-when I came in. One man had already fallen before your
-aim, and I would not have given much for the life of that
-ugly giant whom I took the liberty of running through the
-body without asking permission, although he is probably,
-like myself, a slave of your own.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise laughed. “Confess, monsieur,” said she,
-“that I have a steady hand on the pistol. Do you know,
-I never shot at anything but a playing-card till to-night.
-It is horrible to kill a man, too. It makes me shudder
-when I think of it. And yet, at the moment, I had no pity,
-no scruples—I can even imagine that I experienced something
-of the wild excitement which makes a soldier’s trade<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_321"></a>[321]</span>
-so fascinating. I hope it is not so; I trust I may not be
-so cruel—so unwomanly. But you talk of slaves. Are we
-not yours? Yours by every right of conquest; to serve and
-tend you, and follow you all over the world. Ah! it would
-be a happy lot for her who knew its value!”</p>
-
-<p>The last sentence she spoke in a low whisper and an
-altered tone, as if to herself. It either escaped him or he
-affected not to hear.</p>
-
-<p>By this time they were out of the house, and standing on
-the lawn to windward of the flames, which leaped and
-flickered from every quarter of the building; nor, in escaping
-from the conflagration, had they by any means yet placed
-themselves in safety. Captain George and the three trusty
-Jacks, with half-a-dozen more stout seamen, constituting a
-boat’s crew, had indeed rescued the ladies, for the moment,
-from a hideous alternative; but it was more than doubtful,
-if even protected by so brave an escort, they could reach the
-shore unmolested. Bands of negroes, ready to commit
-every enormity, were ere now patrolling all parts of the
-island. It was too probable that the few white inhabitants
-had been already massacred, or, if still alive, would have
-enough to do to make terms for themselves with the infuriated
-slaves.</p>
-
-<p>A slender garrison occupied a solitary fort on the other
-side of the mountains, but so small a force might easily be
-overmastered, and even if they had started on the march it
-was impossible they could arrive for several hours in the
-vicinity of Port Welcome. By that time the town might
-well be burned to the ground, and George, who was
-accustomed to reason with rapidity on the chances and
-combinations of warfare, thought it by no means unlikely
-that the ruddy glare, fleeting and wavering on the night-sky
-over the blazing roof of Montmirail West, might be
-accepted as a signal for immediate action by the whole of
-the insurgents.</p>
-
-<p>Hippolyte had laid his plans with considerable forethought,
-the result, perhaps, of many a crafty war-path—many a
-savage foray in his own wild home. He had so disposed
-the negroes under his immediate orders, that Madame de
-Montmirail’s house was completely surrounded in every
-direction by which escape seemed possible. The different<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_322"></a>[322]</span>
-egresses leading to the huts, the mills, the cane-pieces,
-were all occupied, and a strong force was posted on the high
-road to Port Welcome, chiefly with a view to prevent the
-arrival of assistance from that quarter. One only path was
-left unguarded; it was narrow, tangled, difficult to find,
-and wound up through the jungle, across the wildest part of
-the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>By this route he had probably intended to carry off
-Mademoiselle de Montmirail to some secure fastness of his
-own. Not satisfied with the personal arrangements he had
-made for burning the house and capturing the inmates, he
-had also warned his confederates, men equally fierce and
-turbulent, if of less intelligence than his own, that they
-should hold themselves in readiness to take up arms the
-instant they beheld a glare upon the sky above <i>Cash-a-crou</i>;
-that each should then despatch a chosen band of
-twenty stout negroes to himself for orders; and that the
-rest of their forces should at once commence the work of
-devastation on their own account, burning, plundering,
-rioting, and cutting all white throats, without distinction
-of age or sex.</p>
-
-<p>That this wholesale butchery failed in its details was
-owing to no fault of conception, no scruples of humanity on
-the part of its organiser. The execution fell short of the
-original design simply because confided to several different
-heads, acted on by various interests, and all more or less
-bemused with rum. The ringleader had every reason to
-believe that if his directions were carried out he would find
-himself, ere sunrise, at the head of a general and successful
-revolt—a black emperor, perhaps, with a black population
-offering him a crown.</p>
-
-<p>But this delusion had been dispelled by one thrust of
-Captain George’s rapier, and the Coromantee’s dark body lay
-charring amongst the glowing timbers of Madame de
-Montmirail’s bed-chamber.</p>
-
-<p>The dispositions that he had made, however, accounted
-for the large force of negroes now converging on the burning
-house. Their shouts might be heard echoing through the
-woods in all directions. When George had collected his
-men, surrounded the two ladies by a trusty escort of blue-jackets,
-and withdrawn his little company, consisting but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323"></a>[323]</span>
-of a dozen persons, under cover of the trees, he held a
-council of war as to the best means of securing a rapid
-retreat. Truth to tell, the skipper would willingly have
-given the whole worth of her cargo to be once more on her
-deck, or even under the guns of ‘The Bashful Maid.’</p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack gave his opinion unasked.</p>
-
-<p>“Up foresail,” said he, with a characteristic impetuosity:
-“run out the guns—double-shotted and depressed; sport
-every rag of bunting; close in round the convoy; get plenty
-of way on, and run clean through, exchanging broadsides
-as we go ahead!”</p>
-
-<p>But Smoke-Jack treated the suggestion with contempt.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s wot I call rough-and-tumble fighting, your
-honour,” he grumbled, with a sheepish glance at the ladies;
-for with all his boasted knowledge of their sex, he was
-unaccustomed to such specimens as these, and discomfited,
-as he admitted to himself, by the “trim on ’em.”
-“Them’s not games as is fitted for such a company as this
-here, if I may make so bold. No, no, your honour, it’s
-good advice to keep to windward of a nigger, and it’s my
-opinion as we should weather them on this here tack; get
-down to the beach with a long leg and a short one—half-a-mile
-and more below the town—fire three shots, as agreed
-on, for the boat, and so pull the ladies aboard on the quiet.
-After that, we might come ashore again, d’ye see, and have
-it out comfortable. What say <i>you</i>, Bottle-Jack?”</p>
-
-<p>That worthy turned his quid, and looked preternaturally
-wise; the more so that the question was somewhat
-unexpected. He was all for keeping the ladies safe, he
-decided, now they had got them. Captain Kidd always did
-so, he remembered, and Captain Kidd could sail a ship and
-fight a ship, &amp;c.; but Bottle-Jack was more incoherent
-than usual—utterly adrift under the novelty of his situation,
-and gasping like a gudgeon at the Marquise and her
-daughter, whose beauty seemed literally to take away his
-breath.</p>
-
-<p>George soon made up his mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Is there any way to the beach,” said he, addressing
-himself rather to Cerise than her mother, “without
-touching the road to Port Welcome? It seemed to me,
-as we marched up, that the high road made a considerable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_324"></a>[324]</span>
-bend. If we could take the string instead of the bow
-we might save a good deal of time, and perhaps escape
-observation altogether.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise and her daughter looked at each other
-helplessly. Had they been Englishwomen, indeed, even in
-that hot climate, they would probably have known every
-by-road and mountain path within three leagues of their
-home; but the ladies of France, though they dance exquisitely,
-are not strong walkers, and neither of these,
-during the months they had spent at <i>Cash-a-crou</i>, had
-yet acquired such a knowledge of the locality as might now
-have proved the salvation of the whole party.</p>
-
-<p>In this extremity a groan was heard to proceed out of
-the darkness at a few paces’ distance. Slap-Jack, guided
-by the sound, and parting some shrubs that concealed her,
-discovered poor Fleurette, more dead than alive, bruised,
-exhausted, terrified, scarcely able to stand, and shot through
-the ankle by a chance bullet from the blue-jackets, yet
-conscious enough still to drag herself to the feet of Cerise
-and cover them with kisses, forgetting everything else in
-her joy to find her young mistress still alive.</p>
-
-<p>“You would serve me, Fleurette, I know,” said Mademoiselle
-de Montmirail, in a cautious whisper; for, to her
-excited imagination, every shrub that glistened in the
-moonlight held a savage. “I can trust you; I feel it.
-Tell me, is there no way to the sea but through our
-enemies? Must we witness more cruelties—more bloodshed?
-Oh! have we not had fighting and horrors
-enough?”</p>
-
-<p>The black girl twined herself upwards, like a creeper, till
-her head was laid against the other’s bosom; then she wept
-in silence for a few seconds ere she could command her
-voice to reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Trust me, lilly ma’amselle,” said she, in a tone of
-intense feeling that vouched for her truth. “Trust poor
-Fleurette, give last drop of blood to help young missee safe.
-Go to Jumbo for lilly ma’amselle now. Show um path safe
-across Sulphur Mountain down to sea-shore. Fleurette
-walk pretty well tank you, now, if only buckra blue-jacket
-offer um hand. Not so, sar! Impudent tief!” she added,
-indignantly, as Slap-Jack, thoroughly equal to the occasion,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_325"></a>[325]</span>
-at once put his arm round her waist. “Keep your distance,
-sar! You only poor foretopman. Dis good daddy help
-me along fust.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus speaking, she clung stoutly to Bottle-Jack, and
-proceeded to guide the party up the mountain along a path
-that she assured them was known but to few of the negroes
-themselves, and avoided even by these, as being the resort
-of Jumbo and several other evil spirits much dreaded by
-the slaves. Of such supernatural terrors, she was good
-enough to inform them, they need have no fear, for that
-Jumbo and his satellites were fully occupied to-night in
-assisting the “bobbery” taking place all over the island;
-and that even were they at leisure they would never
-approach a party in the centre of which was walking such
-an angel of light as Ma’amselle Cerise.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_326"></a>[326]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">MÈRE AVANT TOUT</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The path was steep and narrow, leading them, moreover,
-through the most tangled and inaccessible parts of the
-jungle. Their progress was necessarily tardy and laborious.
-Fleurette took the lead, supported by Bottle-Jack, whose
-sea-legs seemed to carry him uphill with difficulty, and
-who stopped to take breath more than once. The black
-girl’s wound was painful enough, but she possessed that
-savage spirit of endurance which successfully resists mere
-bodily suffering, and walked with an active and elastic,
-though limping step. Blood, however, was still oozing
-from her wound, and a sense of faintness, resisted by sheer
-force of will, threatened at every moment to overpower her.
-She might just reach the crest of the hill, she thought, and
-then it would be all over with poor Fleurette; but the rest
-would need no guide after that point was gained, and the
-faithful girl struggled on.</p>
-
-<p>Next came Smoke-Jack, in attendance on the ladies,
-much exhilarated by the dignity of his position, yet
-ludicrously on his good behaviour, and afraid of committing
-himself, on the score of manners, by word or
-deed. The Marquise and her daughter walked hand
-in hand, wasting few words, and busied each with her
-own thoughts. They seemed to have exchanged characters
-with the events of the last few hours. Cerise, ever since
-her rescue, had displayed an amount of energy and resolution
-scarcely to be expected from her usual demeanour,
-making light of present fatigue and coming peril in a true
-military spirit of gaiety and good-humour; while her mother,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_327"></a>[327]</span>
-on the contrary, betrayed in every word and gesture the
-languor of subdued emotion, and a certain softened,
-saddened preoccupation of manner, seldom to be remarked
-in the self-possessed and brilliant Marquise.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George, with Slap-Jack and the rest of the blue-jackets,
-brought up the rear. His fighting experience
-warned him that in no previous campaign had he ever
-found himself in so critical a position as at present. He
-was completely surrounded by the enemy. His own force,
-though well-armed and full of confidence, was ridiculously
-weak in numbers. He was encumbered with baggage (not
-to speak it disrespectfully) that must be protected at any
-sacrifice, and he had to make a forced march, through
-ground of which he was ignorant, dependent on the
-guidance of a half-savage girl, who might after all turn out
-to be a traitress.</p>
-
-<p>Under so many disadvantages, the former captain of
-musketeers showed that he had not forgotten his early
-training. All eyes and ears, he seemed to be everywhere
-at once, anticipating emergencies, multiplying precautions,
-yet finding a moment every now and then for a word of
-politeness and encouragement to the ladies, to regret the
-roughness of the path, to excuse the prospective discomforts
-of the brigantine, or to assure them of their speedy
-arrival in a place of safety. On these occasions he
-invariably directed his speech to the Marquise and his
-looks to her daughter.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, as they continued to wind up the hill, the
-ascent grew more precipitous. At length, having crossed
-the bed of a rivulet that they could hear tumbling into a
-cascade many hundred feet below, they reached a pass on
-the mountain side where the path became level, but seemed
-so narrow as to preclude farther progress. It turned at a
-sharp angle round the bare face of a cliff, which rose on
-one side sheer and perpendicular several fathoms above
-their heads, and on the other shelved as abruptly into a
-dark abyss, the depth of which, not even one of the seamen,
-accustomed as they were to giddy heights, dared measure
-with his eye. Fleurette alone, standing on the brink,
-peered into it without wavering, and pointing downwards,
-looked back on the little party with triumph.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_328"></a>[328]</span></p>
-
-<p>“See down there,” said she, in a voice that grew fainter
-with every syllable. “No road round up above; no road
-round down below. Once past here all safe, same as in
-bed at home. Come by, you! take hands one by one—so—small
-piece more—find white lagoon. All done then.
-Good-night!”</p>
-
-<p>Holding each other by the hand, the whole party, to use
-Slap-Jack’s expression, “rounded the point” in safety.
-They now found themselves in an open and nearly flat
-space, encircled but unshadowed by the jungle. Below
-them, over a level of black tree tops, the friendly sea was
-shining in the moonlight; and nearer yet, a gleam through
-the dark mass of forest denoted that white lagoon of which
-Fleurette had spoken.</p>
-
-<p>On any other night it would have been a peaceful and a
-lovely sight; but now a flickering glare on the sky showed
-them where the roof-tree of Montmirail West was burning
-into ashes, and the yells of the rioters could be heard,
-plainer and plainer, as they scoured the mountain in pursuit
-of the fugitives, encouraging each other in their search.</p>
-
-<p>Some of these shouts sounded so near in the clear still
-night, that Captain George was of opinion their track had
-been already discovered and followed up. If this were
-indeed the case, no stand could be made so effectually as
-at the defile they had lately threaded, and he determined
-to defend it to the last. For this purpose he halted his
-party and gave them their directions.</p>
-
-<p>“Slap-Jack,” said he, “I’ve got a bit of soldier’s work
-for you to do. It’s play to a sailor, but you attend to my
-orders all the same. If these black devils overhaul us,
-they can only round that corner one at a time. I’ll leave
-you with a couple of your own foretopmen here to stop <i>that</i>
-game. But we soldiers never want to fight without a support.
-Smoke-Jack and the rest of the boat’s crew will
-remain at your back. What say ye, my lads? It will be
-something queer if you can’t hold a hundred darkies and
-more in such a post as this, say, for three-quarters of an
-hour. I don’t ask ye for a minute longer; but mind ye, I
-expect <i>that</i>, if not a man of you ever comes on board again.
-When you’ve killed all the niggers, make sail straight away
-to the beach, fire three shots, and I’ll send a boat off.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_329"></a>[329]</span>
-You won’t want to break your leave after to-night’s work.
-At all events, I wouldn’t advise you to try, and I shall get
-the anchor up soon after sunrise. Bottle-Jack comes with
-me, in case the ladies should want more assistance, and
-this dark girl—what d’ye call her?—Fleurette, to show us
-the way. God bless ye, my lads! Keep steady, level low,
-and don’t pull till you see the whites of their eyes!”</p>
-
-<p>Bottle-Jack, slewing his body about with more than customary
-oscillation, declared his willingness to accompany
-the Captain, but pointing to Fleurette, expressed a fear
-that “this here gal had got a megrim or something, and
-wanted caulkin’ very bad, if not refittin’ altogether in dry
-dock.”</p>
-
-<p>The moon shed a strong light upon the little party, and
-it was obvious that Fleurette, who had now sunk to the
-ground, with her head supported by Bottle-Jack as tenderly
-and carefully as if the honest tar had been an experienced
-nurse of her own sex, was seriously, if not mortally
-wounded, and certainly unable to proceed. The Marquise
-and her daughter were at her side in an instant, but she
-took no heed of the former, fixing her filmy eyes on Cerise,
-and pressing her young mistress’s hand to her heart.</p>
-
-<p>“You kiss me once again,” said she, faintly, and with a
-sad smile on her swarthy face, now turning to that wan
-leaden hue which makes a pale negro so ghastly an object.
-“Once again, so sweet! ma’amselle, same as before. You
-go straight on to white lagoon—see! Find canoe tied up.
-Stop here berry well, missee—Fleurette camp out all night.
-No fear Jumbo now. Sleep on long after monkeys wake!
-Good-night!”</p>
-
-<p>It was with difficulty that Cerise could be prevailed on
-to leave the faithful girl who had sacrificed herself so willingly,
-and whom, indeed, she could hardly expect to see
-again; but the emergency admitted of no delay, even on
-the score of gratitude and womanly compassion. George
-hurried the ladies forward in the direction of the lagoon,
-leaving Fleurette, now prostrate and unconscious, to the
-care of Slap-Jack, who pitied her from the depths of his
-honest heart.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a bad job,” said he, taking off his jacket and folding
-it into a pillow for the poor girl’s head, with as much<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_330"></a>[330]</span>
-tender care as if she had been his own Alice, of whom,
-indeed, he was thinking at the moment. “A real bad job,
-if ever there was one. Such a heart of oak as this here;
-an’ a likely lass too, though as black as a nor’-easter.
-Well, <i>somebody</i>’ll have to pay for this night’s work, that’s
-sartin. Ay! yell away, you black beggars. We’ll give
-you something to sing out for presently—an’ you shall have
-it hot and heavy when you <i>do</i> get it, as sure as my name’s
-Slap-Jack!”</p>
-
-<p>Captain George, in the meantime, led the two ladies
-swiftly down the open space before them, in the direction
-of the lagoon, which was now in sight. They had but to
-thread one more belt of lofty forest-trees, from which the
-wild vines hung in a profusion of graceful festoons, and
-they were on the brink of the cool, peaceful water, spread
-like a sheet of silver at their feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Five minutes more,” said he, “and we are safe. Once
-across, and if that girl speaks truth, less than a quarter of
-a league will bring us to the beach. All seems quiet, too,
-on this side, and there is little chance of our being intercepted
-from the town. The boat will be in waiting within
-a cable’s length off shore, and my signal will bring her in
-at once. Then I shall hope to conduct you safe on board,
-but both madame and mademoiselle must excuse a sailor’s
-rough accommodation and a sailor’s unceremonious welcome.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise did not immediately answer. She was
-looking far ahead into the distance, as though she heard
-not, or at least heeded not, and yet every tone of his voice
-was music to her ears, every syllable he spoke curdled like
-some sweet and subtle poison in her blood. Notwithstanding
-the severe fatigue and fierce excitement of the night,
-she walked with head erect, and proud imperious step, like
-a queen amongst her courtiers, or an enchantress in the
-circle she has drawn. There was a wild brilliancy in her
-eyes, there was a fixed red spot on either cheek; but for
-all her assumption of pride, for all her courage and all her
-self-command, her hand trembled, her breath came quick,
-and the Marquise knew that she had never yet felt so
-thoroughly a weak and dependent woman as now, when
-she turned at last to thank her preserver for his noble<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_331"></a>[331]</span>
-efforts, and dared not even raise her eyes to meet his
-own.</p>
-
-<p>“You have saved us, monsieur,” was all she could
-stammer out, “and how can we show our gratitude enough?
-We shall never forget the moment of supreme danger, nor
-the brave man who came between those ruffians and their
-prey. Shall we, Cerise?”</p>
-
-<p>But Cerise made no answer, though she managed to
-convey her thanks in some hidden manner that afforded
-Captain George a satisfaction quite out of proportion to
-their value.</p>
-
-<p>They had now reached the edge of the lagoon, to find,
-as Fleurette had indicated, a shallow rickety canoe,
-moored to a post half-buried in the water, worm-eaten,
-rotten, and crumbling to decay. The bark itself was in
-little better preservation, and on a near inspection they
-discovered, much to their discomfiture, that it would hold
-at best but one passenger at a time. It had evidently not
-been used for a considerable period, and after months of
-exposure and ill-usage, without repair, was indeed, as a
-means of crossing the lagoon, little better than so much
-brown paper. George’s heart sank while he inspected it.
-There was no paddle, and although such a want might
-easily be remedied with a knife and the branch of a tree,
-every moment of delay seemed so dangerous, that the
-Captain made up his mind to use another mode of propulsion,
-and cross over at once.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame,” said he to the Marquise, “our only safety is
-on the other side of this lagoon. Fifty strokes of a strong
-swimmer would take him there. No paddle has been left in
-that rickety little craft, nor dare I waste the few minutes it
-would take to fashion one. Moreover, neither mademoiselle
-nor yourself could use it, and you need only look at your
-shallop to be sure that it would never carry two. This, then,
-is what I propose. I will place one of you in the canoe,
-and swim across, pushing it before me. Bottle-Jack will
-remain here to guard the other. For that purpose I will
-leave him my pistols in addition to his own. When my
-first trip is safely accomplished, I will return with the canoe
-and repeat the experiment. The whole can be done in a
-short quarter of an hour. Excuse me, madame, but for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_332"></a>[332]</span>
-this work I must divest myself of coat, cravat, and waistcoat.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus speaking, Captain George disencumbered himself
-rapidly of these garments, and assisted by Bottle-Jack, tilted
-the light vessel on its side, to get rid of its superfluous
-weight of water. Then standing waist-deep in the lagoon,
-he prepared it for the reception of its freight; no easy
-matter with a craft of this description, little more roomy
-and substantial than a cockle-shell, without the advantage of
-being water-tight. Spreading his laced coat along the
-bottom of the canoe, he steadied it carefully against the
-bank, and signed to the ladies that all was now in readiness
-for embarkation.</p>
-
-<p>They exchanged wistful looks. Neither seemed disposed
-to grasp at her own safety and leave the other in danger.
-Bottle-Jack, leaning over the canoe, continued bailing the
-water out with his hand. Notwithstanding the Captain’s
-precautions it leaked fast, and seemed even now little calculated
-to land a passenger dry on the farther shore.</p>
-
-<p>“Mamma, I <i>will</i> not leave you,” said Cerise, “you shall
-go first with George. With monsieur, I mean.” She corrected
-herself, blushing violently. “Monsieur can then
-return for me, and I shall be quite safe with this good old
-man, who is, you perceive, armed to the teeth, and as brave
-as a lion besides.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is why I do not fear to remain,” returned the
-Marquise. “Child, I could not bear to see this sheet of
-water between us, and you on the dangerous side. We can
-neither fly nor swim, alas! though the latter art we <i>might</i>
-have learned long ago. Cerise, I <i>insist</i> on your crossing
-first. It may be the last command I shall ever lay upon
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>But Cerise was still obstinate, and the canoe meanwhile
-filled fast, in spite of Bottle-Jack’s exertions. That worthy,
-whose very nose was growing pale, though not with fear,
-took no heed of their dilemma, but continued his task with
-a mechanical, half-stupefied persistency, like a man under
-the influence of opium. The quick eye of the Marquise had
-detected this peculiarity of manner, and it made her the
-more determined not to leave her daughter under the old
-seaman’s charge. Their dispute might have been protracted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_333"></a>[333]</span>
-till even Captain George’s courtesy would have given way;
-but a loud yell from the defile they had lately quitted, followed
-by a couple of shots and a round of British cheers,
-warned them all that not a moment was to be lost, for that
-their retreat was even now dependent on the handful of
-brave men left behind to guard the pass.</p>
-
-<p>“My daughter shall go first, monsieur? Is it not so?”
-exclaimed the Marquise, with an eagerness of eye and
-excitement of manner she had not betrayed in all the
-previous horrors of the night.</p>
-
-<p>“It is better,” answered George. “Mademoiselle is
-perhaps somewhat the lightest.” And although he strove
-to make his voice utterly unmoved and indifferent, there
-was in its tone a something of intense relief, of deep, heartfelt
-joy, that told its own tale.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise knew it all at last. She saw the past now,
-not piece by piece, in broken detail as it had gone by, but
-all at once, as the mariner, sailing out of a fogbank, beholds
-the sunny sky, and the blue sea, and the purple outlines of
-the shore. It came upon her as a shot goes through a wild
-deer. The creature turns sick and faint, and knowing all is
-over, yet would fain ignore its hurt and keep its place, erect,
-stately, and uncomplaining, amongst the herd; not the less
-surely has it got its death-wound.</p>
-
-<p>How carefully he placed Cerise in the frail bark of which
-she was to be the sole occupant. How tenderly he drew the
-laced coat between the skirt of her delicate white dress and
-the flimsy shattered wood-work, worn, splintered, and dripping
-wet even now. Notwithstanding the haste required,
-notwithstanding that every moment was of such importance
-in this life and death voyage, how he seemed to linger over
-the preparations that brought him into contact with his
-precious freight. At last they were ready. A farewell
-embrace between mother and daughter; a husky cheer
-delivered in a whisper from Bottle-Jack; a hurried thanksgiving
-for perils left behind; an anxious glance at the
-opposite shore, and the canoe floated off with its burden,
-guided by George, who in a few yards was out of his depth
-and swimming onward in long measured strokes that pushed
-it steadily before him.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise, watching their progress with eager restless<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_334"></a>[334]</span>
-glance, that betrayed strong passions and feelings kept down
-by a stronger will, observed that when within a pistol-shot
-of the opposite shore the bark was propelled swiftly through
-the water, as if the swimmer exerted himself to the utmost—so
-much so as to drive it violently against the bank.
-George’s voice, while his dripping figure emerged into sight,
-warned her that all was well; but straining her eyes in the
-uncertain light, the Marquise, though she discerned her
-daughter’s white dress plainly enough, could see nothing of
-the boat. Again George shouted, but she failed to make
-out the purport of what he said; though a gleam of intelligence
-on the old seaman’s face made her turn to Bottle-Jack.
-“What is it?” she asked anxiously. “Why does he not
-come back to us with the canoe?”</p>
-
-<p>“The canoe will make no more voyages, my lady,”
-answered the old man, with a grim leer that had in it less
-of mirth than pain. “She’s foundered, that’s wot she’s
-been an’ done. They’ll send back for us, never fear; so you
-an’ me will keep watch and watch till they come; an’ if you
-please, my lady, askin’ your pardon, I’ll keep <i>my</i> watch
-first.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_335"></a>[335]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX<br />
-<span class="smaller">ALL ADRIFT</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Marquise scarcely heard him. She was intent on those
-two figures scrambling up the opposite shore, and fast disappearing
-into the darkness beyond. It seemed that the
-darkness was closing in around herself, never again to be
-dispelled. When those were gone what was there left on
-earth for <i>her</i>? She had lost Cerise, she told herself, the
-treasure she had guarded so carefully; the darling for whom
-she would have sacrificed her life a thousand times, as the
-events of the last few hours proved; the one aim and object
-of her whole existence, without which she was alone in the
-world. And now this man had come and taken her child away,
-and it would never be the same thing again. Cerise loved
-him, she was sure of that. Ah! they could not deceive <i>her</i>;
-and he loved Cerise. She knew it by his voice in those
-few words when he suggested that the girl should cross the
-water first. The Marquise twined her fingers together, as
-if she were in pain.</p>
-
-<p>They must be safe now. Walking side by side on the
-peaceful beach, waiting for the boat that should bear them
-away, would they forget all about her in the selfishness of
-their new-found happiness, and leave her to perish here?
-She wished they would. She wished the rioters, coming on
-in overwhelming numbers, might force the pass and drive
-these honest blue-jackets in before them to make a last desperate
-stand at the water’s edge. She could welcome death
-then, offering herself willingly to ensure the safety of those
-two.</p>
-
-<p>And what was this man to her that she should give him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_336"></a>[336]</span>
-up her daughter, that she should be ready to give up her
-life rather than endanger his happiness? She winced, she
-quivered with pain and shame because of the feelings her
-own question called up. What was he to her? The
-noblest, the dearest, the bravest, the best-beloved; the
-realisation of her girl’s dreams, of her woman’s passions,
-the type of all that she had ever honoured and admired and
-longed for to make her happiness complete! She remembered
-so well the boy’s gentle brow, the frank kind eyes
-that smiled and danced with delight to be noticed by her, a
-young and beautiful widow, flattered and coveted of all the
-Great King’s Court. She recalled, as if it were but yesterday,
-the stag-hunt at Fontainebleau; the manly figure and
-the daring horsemanship of the Grey Musketeer; her own
-mad joy in that wild gallop, and the strange keen zest life
-seemed to have acquired when she rode home through those
-sleeping woods, under the dusky purple of that soft autumnal
-night. How she used to watch for him afterwards, amidst
-all the turmoil of feasts and pleasures that constituted the
-routine of the new Court. How well she knew his place
-of ceremony, his turn of duty, and loved the very sentries at
-the palace-gate for his sake. Often had she longed to hint
-by a look, a gesture, the flirt of a fan, the dropping of a
-flower, that he had not far to seek for one who would care
-for him as he deserved; but even the Marquise shrank, and
-feared, and hesitated, woman-like, where she really loved.
-Then came that ever-memorable night at the Masked Ball,
-when she cried out aloud, in her longing and her loneliness,
-and never knew afterwards whether she was glad or sorry
-for what she had done.</p>
-
-<p>It was soon to be over then, for ere a few more days had
-elapsed the Regent ventured on his shameless outrage at the
-Hôtel Montmirail, and lo! in the height of her indignation
-and her need, who should drop down, as it seemed, from
-the skies, to be her champion, but the man of all others
-whom most she could have loved and trusted in the
-world!</p>
-
-<p>Since then, had she not thought of him by day and
-dreamt of him by night, dwelling on his image with a fond
-persistency none the less cherished because sad and desponding—content,
-if better might not be, to worship it in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_337"></a>[337]</span>
-secret to the last, though she might never look on its
-original again?</p>
-
-<p>The real and the ideal had so acted on each other, that
-while he seemed to her the perfection of all manhood
-should be, that very type was unconsciously but a faithful
-copy of himself. In short, she loved him; and when such
-a man is loved by such a woman it is usually but little conducive
-to his happiness, and thoroughly destructive of her own.</p>
-
-<p>If I have mistaken the originator of so beautiful and
-touching an illustration, I humbly beg his pardon, but I
-think it is Alphonse Karr who teaches, in his remarks on
-the great idolatry of all times and nations, that it is well
-to sow plenty of flowers in that prolific soil which is fertilised
-by the heart’s sunshine and watered by its tears—plenty
-of flowers, the brighter, the sweeter, the more
-fragile, perhaps, the better. Winter may cut them down
-indeed to the cold earth, yet spring-time brings another
-crop as fair, as fresh, as fragile, and as easily replaced as
-those that bloomed before. But it is unwise to plant a
-tree; <i>because, if that tree be once torn up by the roots, the
-flowers will never grow over the barren place again</i>!</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise had not indeed planted the tree, but she
-had allowed it unwittingly to grow. Perhaps she would
-never have confessed its existence to herself had it not
-thus been forcibly torn away by roots that had for years
-twined deeper and deeper among all its gentlest and all its
-strongest feelings, till they had become as the very fibres
-of her heart.</p>
-
-<p>It is needless to say that the Marquise was a woman
-elevated both by disposition and education above the
-meaner and pettier weaknesses of her sex. If she was
-masculine in her physical courage and moral recklessness
-of consequences, she was masculine also in a certain generosity
-of spirit and noble disdain for anything like malice
-or foul-play. Jealousy with her—and, like all strong
-natures, she could feel jealousy very keenly—would never
-be visited on the object that had caused it. She would
-hate and punish herself under the torture; she might even
-be goaded to hate and punish the man at whose hands she
-was suffering; but she would never have injured the woman
-whom she preferred, and, indeed, supported by a scornful<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_338"></a>[338]</span>
-pride, would have taken a strange morbid pleasure in enhancing
-her own pain by ministering to that woman’s happiness.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore she was saved a keen pang now. A pang that
-might have rendered her agony too terrible to endure.
-She had not concealed from herself to-night that the thrill
-of delight she experienced from the arrival of succour was
-due rather to the person who brought it than to the assistance
-itself; but almost ere she had time to realise its
-charm the illusion had been dispelled, and she felt that,
-dream as it all was, she had been wakened ere she had
-time to dream it out.</p>
-
-<p>And now it seemed to her that nothing would be so good
-as the excitement of another skirmish, another struggle,
-and a sudden death, with the cheers of these brave Englishmen
-ringing in her ears. A death that Cerise would
-never forget had been encountered for her safety, that <i>he</i>
-would sometimes remember, and remembering, accord a
-smile and a sigh to the beauty he had neglected, and the
-devotion he had never known till too late.</p>
-
-<p>Engrossed with such thoughts, the Marquise was less
-alive than usual to surrounding impressions. Presently a
-deep groan, forced from her companion by combined pain
-and weakness, against which the sufferer could no longer
-hold out, roused her to a sense of her situation, which was
-indeed sufficiently precarious to have warranted much
-anxiety and alarm.</p>
-
-<p>Hastening to his side, she was shocked to perceive that
-Bottle-Jack had sunk to the ground, and was now endeavouring
-ineffectually to support himself on his knees in an
-attitude of vigilance and defence. The Captain’s pistols
-lay beside him, and he carried his own in each hand, but
-his glazing eye and fading colour showed that the weapons
-could be but of little service, and the time seemed fast
-approaching when the old sailor should be relieved from
-his duty by an order against which there was no appeal.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise had scarcely listened to the words while
-he spoke them, but they came back now, and she understood
-what he meant when he told her that, if she pleased,
-“he would keep <i>his</i> watch first.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked around and shuddered. It was, indeed, a
-cheerless position enough. The moon was sinking, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_339"></a>[339]</span>
-that darkest hour of the night approached which is followed
-by dawn, just as sorrow is succeeded by consolation,
-and death by immortality. The breeze struck damp and
-chill on her unprotected neck and bosom, for there had
-been no time to think of cloaks or shawls when she
-escaped, nor was the air sufficiently cold before midnight
-to remind her of such precautions. The surrounding
-jungle stirred and sighed faintly, yet sadly, in the night
-air. The waters of the deep lagoon, now darkening with a
-darkening sky, lapped drearily against their bank. Other
-noises were there none, for the rioters seemed to have
-turned back from the resistance offered by Slap-Jack with
-his comrades, and to have abandoned for the present their
-search in that direction. The seamen who guarded the
-defile were peering stealthily into the gloom, not a man
-relaxing in his vigilance, not a man stirring on his post.
-The only sounds that broke her solitude were the restless
-movements of Bottle-Jack, and the groans that would not
-be suppressed. It was no wonder the Marquise shuddered.</p>
-
-<p>She stooped over the old seaman and took his coarse,
-heavy hand in hers. Even at such an extremity, Bottle-Jack
-seemed conscious of the contrast, and touched it
-delicately, like some precious and fragile piece of porcelain.
-“I fear you are hurt,” said she, in his own language, which
-she spoke with the measured accent of her countrywomen.
-“Tell me what it is; I am not a bad doctor myself.”</p>
-
-<p>Bottle-Jack tried to laugh. “It’s a flea-bite, my lady,”
-said he, setting his teeth to conceal the pain he suffered.
-“’Tis but a poke in the side after all, though them black
-beggars does grind their spear-heads to an edge like a
-razor. It’s betwixt wind and water, d’ye see, marm, if I
-may be so bold, and past caulking, in my opinion. I’m a-fillin’
-fast, that’s where it is, askin’ your pardon again for
-naming it to a lady like you.”</p>
-
-<p>She partly understood him, and for the first time to-night
-the tears came into her eyes. They did her good. They
-seemed to clear her faculties and cool her brain. She examined
-the old man’s hurt, after no small resistance on his
-part, and found a deep wound between his ribs, which even
-her experience warned her must be mortal. She stanched it
-as well as she could, tearing up the lace and other trimmings<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_340"></a>[340]</span>
-of her dress to form a temporary bandage. Then
-she bent down to the lagoon to dip her coroneted handkerchief
-in water and lay it across his brow, while she supported
-his sinking frame upon her knees. He looked in
-her face with a puzzled, wandering gaze, like a man in a
-dream. The vision seemed so unreal, so impossible, so
-unlike anything he had ever seen before, Bottle-Jack began
-to think he had reached Fiddler’s Green at last.</p>
-
-<p>The minutes dragged slowly on. The sky became
-darker, the breeze colder, and the strangely matched pair
-continued in the same position on the brink of the white
-lagoon, the Marquise dipping her handkerchief at short
-intervals, and moistening the sailor’s mouth. It was all she
-could do for him, and like a faithful old dog, wounded to
-the death, he could only thank her with his eyes. More
-than once she thought he was gone, but as moment after
-moment crept by, so sad, so slow, she knew he was still alive.</p>
-
-<p>Would it never be day? She could scarcely see him
-now, though his heavy head rested on her knees, though
-her hand with the moistened handkerchief was laid on his
-very lips. At last the breeze freshened, sighing audibly
-through the tree-tops, which were soon dimly seen swaying
-to and fro against a pale streak of sky on the horizon.
-Bottle-Jack started and sat up.</p>
-
-<p>“Stand by!” he exclaimed, looking wildly round.
-“You in the fore-chains! Keep you axe ready to cut
-away when she rounds to. Easy, lads! She’ll weather it
-now, and I’ll go below and turn in.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he laid his head once more on Madame de Montmirail’s
-knees, like a child who turns round to go to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>The grey streak had grown to a wide rent of pale green,
-now broadening and brightening into day. Ere the sky
-flecked with crimson, or the distant tree-tops tinged with
-golden fire, the life of the whole jungle was astir, waking
-the discords of innumerable menageries. Cockatoos
-whistled, monkeys chattered, parrots screamed, mockingbirds
-reproduced these and a thousand other sounds a
-thousandfold. All nature seemed renewed, exulting in
-the freshened energies of another day, but still the Marquise
-sat by the lagoon, pale, exhausted, worn out, motionless,
-with the dead seaman’s head in her lap.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_341"></a>[341]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XL">CHAPTER XL<br />
-<span class="smaller">HOMEWARD BOUND</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“But, madame, I am as anxious as you can be! Independent
-of my own feelings—and judge if they be not
-strong—the brigantine should not lie here another hour.
-After last night’s work, it will not be long before a Spanish
-man-of-war shows herself in the offing, and I have no desire
-that our papers should be overhauled, now when my cruise
-is so nearly finished. I tell you, my dearest wish is to
-have it settled, and weigh with the next tide.”</p>
-
-<p>Captain George spoke from his heart, yet the Marquise
-seemed scarcely satisfied. Her movements were abrupt
-and restless, her eyes glittered, and a fire as of fever
-burned in her cheeks, somewhat wasted with all her late
-excitement and suspense. For the first time, too, he
-detected silver lines about the temples, under those heavy
-black locks that had always seemed to him only less
-beautiful than her child’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Not a moment must be lost,” said she, “not a
-moment—not a moment,” and repeating her words, walked
-across the deck to gaze wistfully over the side on Port
-Welcome, with its white houses glistening in the morning
-sun. They were safe on board ‘The Bashful Maid,’ glad to
-escape with life from the successful revolt that had burned
-Montmirail West to the ground, and destroyed most of the
-white people’s property on the island. Partly owing to its
-distance from the original scene of outbreak, partly from its
-lying under the very guns of the brigantine, of which the
-tonnage and weight of metal had been greatly exaggerated
-by the negroes, Port Welcome was yet standing, but its<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_342"></a>[342]</span>
-black population were keeping high holiday, apparently
-masters of the situation, and its white residents crept about
-in fear and trembling, not knowing how much longer they
-might be allowed to call their very lives their own. It had
-been a memorable night, a night of murder and rapine,
-and horror and dismay. Few escaped so well as Madame
-de Montmirail and her daughter. None indeed had
-the advantage of such a rescue. The negroes who
-tracked them into the bush, and who had delayed their
-departure to appropriate such plunder as they could snatch
-from the burning house, or to drink from its cellars success
-to the revolt, only reached that defile through which the
-fugitives were guided by Fleurette after these had passed
-by. The disappointed pursuers were there received by a
-couple of shots from Slap-Jack and his shipmates, which
-drove them back in disorder, yelling, boasting, vowing
-vengeance, but without any thought of again placing themselves
-in danger of lead or steel. In the death of Hippolyte,
-the revolt had lost its chief, and became from that
-moment virtually a failure. The Coromantee was the only
-negro concerned really capable of directing such a movement;
-and when his leadership was disposed of by a rapid
-thrust from Captain George’s rapier, the whole scheme was
-destined to fall to pieces of itself, after the reaction which
-always follows such disorders had taken place, and the
-habits of every-day life began to reassert themselves. In
-the meantime, the blacks had more congenial amusements
-in store than voluntary collision with an English boat’s
-crew, and soon desisted from a search through the jungle,
-apparently as troublesome and hazardous as a hunt for a
-hornet’s nest.</p>
-
-<p>By sunrise, therefore, Slap-Jack was able to draw off his
-party from their post, and fall back to where the Marquise
-sat watching by the dead seaman, on the brink of the
-lagoon. Nor was Bottle-Jack the only victim of their
-escape, for poor Fleurette had already paid the price of her
-fidelity with her life.</p>
-
-<p>A strong reinforcement from ‘The Bashful Maid,’ led by
-her Captain in person, who had returned at once, after
-placing Cerise in safety, enabled Madame de Montmirail
-and her defenders to take the high road to Port Welcome<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_343"></a>[343]</span>
-in defiance of all opposition. They therefore rounded the
-lagoon at once, and proceeding by an easier route than that
-which her daughter followed, reached the quay at their
-leisure, thence to embark on board the brigantine unmolested
-by the crowds of rioters with whom the town was
-filled.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore it was that Madame de Montmirail now found
-herself on the deck of ‘The Bashful Maid,’ urging with a
-strange persistency, unusual and even unbecoming in a
-mother, Captain George’s immediate marriage to her
-child, who was quietly sleeping off the night’s fatigues
-below.</p>
-
-<p>“There is the chapel, madame,” said George, pointing
-to the little white edifice that stood between the lighthouse
-and the town, distinguished by a cross that surmounted
-its glistening roof, “and here is the bride, safe, happy,
-and I hope sound asleep beneath the very spot where we
-are standing. I know not why there should be an hour’s
-delay, if indeed the priest have not taken flight. There
-must have been a prospect of martyrdom last night, which
-he would scarce wish to inspect too closely. Ah! madame,
-I may seem cold and undemonstrative, but if you could
-look into my heart you would see how happy I am!”</p>
-
-<p>His voice and manner carried with them a conviction
-not to be disputed. It probed the Marquise to the quick,
-and true to her character, she pressed the instrument
-deeper and deeper into the wound.</p>
-
-<p>“You love her then, monsieur?” she said, speaking
-very clearly and distinctly through her set teeth. “You
-love her as a woman must be loved if she would be happy—unreservedly,
-with your whole heart?”</p>
-
-<p>“I love her so well,” he answered, “that I only ask to
-pass my life in contributing to her happiness. Mine has
-been a rude wild career, in many scenes and many
-countries. I have lived <i>in</i> society and <i>out of</i> society, afloat
-and ashore, at bivouac fires and Court receptions, yet I
-have always carried the portrait of that one gentle loving
-face printed on my heart.”</p>
-
-<p>“I compliment you on your constancy,” she answered,
-rather bitterly. “Such gallants have been very rare of
-late both at the old and new Courts. You must have seen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_344"></a>[344]</span>
-other women too, as amiable, as beautiful, who could have
-loved you perhaps as well.”</p>
-
-<p>Something like a sigh escaped her with the concluding
-sentence, but there is no egotist like a happy lover, and he
-was too preoccupied with his own thoughts to perceive it.
-Smiling in his companion’s face, with the old honest
-expression that reminded her of what he had been as a
-boy, he took her hand and kissed it affectionately.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame,” said he, “shall I make you a frank
-avowal? Ever since I was a wild page at Versailles, and
-you were so kind to me, I have believed in Madame de
-Montmirail as my ideal of all that woman should be, and
-perhaps might never have loved Cerise so well had she not
-resembled her mother.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise was not without plenty of self-command,
-but she wanted it all now. Under pretence of adjusting
-her glove, she snatched away the hand he held, that he
-might not feel it tremble, and forced herself to laugh while
-she replied lightly—</p>
-
-<p>“You are complimentary, monsieur, but your compliments
-are somewhat out of date. An <i>old</i> woman, you
-know, does not like to be reminded of her age, and you
-were, yes, I honestly confess you were, a dear, mischievous,
-good-looking, good-for-nothing boy in that far-off time so
-long ago. But all this is nothing to the purpose. Let us
-send ashore at once to the priest. The ceremony may take
-place at noon, and I can give the young couple my blessing
-before wishing them good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p>“How, madame?” replied he, astonished. “You will
-surely accompany us? You will return with us to Europe?
-You will never trust yourself amongst these savages again,
-after once escaping out of their hands?”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be safe enough when the garrison has crossed
-the mountain,” she answered, “and that must be in a few
-hours, for they are probably even now on the march. Till
-then I will take refuge with the Jesuits on their plantation
-at Maria-Galante. I do not think all my people can have
-rebelled. Some of them will escort me faithfully as far as
-that. No, monsieur, the La Fiertés have never been accustomed
-to abandon a post of danger, and I shall not leave
-the island until this rising has been completely put down.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_345"></a>[345]</span></p>
-
-<p>She spoke carelessly, almost contemptuously, but she
-scarcely knew what she said. Her actual thoughts, had
-she allowed herself to utter them, would have thus framed
-themselves: “Can there be anything so blind, so heartless,
-so self-engrossed—shall I say it?—so entirely and hopelessly
-<i>stupid</i> as a man?”</p>
-
-<p>It was not for George to dispute her wishes. Though
-little given to illusions, he could scarcely believe that he
-was not dreaming now, so strange did it seem to have
-achieved in the last twelve hours that which had hitherto
-formed the one engrossing object of his life, prized,
-coveted, dwelt on the more that it looked almost impossible
-of fulfilment. There was but one drawback to his
-joy, one difficulty left, perplexing indeed, although simple,
-and doubly annoying because others of apparently far
-greater moment had been surmounted. There was no
-priest to be found in Port Welcome! The good old
-Portuguese Curé who took spiritual charge of the white
-inhabitants, and such negroes as could be induced to pay
-attention to his ministering, had been nearly frightened
-out of his wits by the outbreak. This quiet meek old
-man, who, since he left his college forty years before, had
-never known an excitement or anxiety greater than a visit
-from his bishop or a blight in his plantain-ground, now
-found himself surrounded by swarms of drunken and
-infuriated slaves, yelling for his life. It was owing to the
-presence of mind shown by an old coloured woman who
-lived with him as housekeeper, and to no energy or activity
-of his own, that he made his escape. She smuggled him
-out of the town through a by-street, and when he had once
-got his mule into an amble he never drew rein till he
-reached the Jesuits’ establishment at Maria-Galante, where
-he found a qualified welcome and a precarious refuge.
-From this shelter, defenceless and uncertain as it was,
-nothing would induce him to depart till the colours of a
-Spanish three-decker were flying in the harbour, and ere
-such an arrival could restore confidence to the colony it
-would behove ‘The Bashful Maid’ to spread her wings and
-flee away.</p>
-
-<p>Captain George was at his wits’ end. In such a dilemma
-he bethought him of consulting his second in command.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_346"></a>[346]</span>
-For this purpose he went below to seek Beaudésir, and
-found him keeping guard at the cabin door within which
-Mademoiselle de Montmirail was reposing, a post he had
-held without stirring since she came on board before dawn,
-and was confided by the Captain to his care. He had not
-spoken to her, he had not even seen her face; but from
-that moment he had exchanged no words with his comrades,
-standing as pale, as silent, and almost as motionless
-as a statue. He started violently when the Captain spoke,
-and collected his faculties with an obvious effort. George
-could not but observe his preoccupation.</p>
-
-<p>“I am in a difficulty,” said the latter, “as I have
-already told you more than once. Try and comprehend
-me. I do not often ask for advice, but I want yours
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>“You shall have it at any cost,” replied the other.
-“Do not I owe everything in the world to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Listen,” continued George. “The young lady whom
-my honest fellows rescued last night, and whom I brought
-on board, is—is—Mademoiselle de Montmirail herself.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know—I know,” answered Beaudésir, impatiently.
-“At least, I mean you mentioned it before.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very likely,” returned the Captain, “though I do not
-remember it. Well, it so happens, you see, that this is
-the same young lady—the person—the individual—in
-short, I have saved the woman of all others who is most
-precious to me in the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course—of course,” repeated Beaudésir, impatiently,
-“she cannot go back—she <i>shall</i> not go back amongst
-those wretches. She must stay on board. You must take
-her to Europe. There should be no delay. You must be
-married—now—immediately—within two hours—before we
-get the anchor up.”</p>
-
-<p>He seemed strangely eager, restless, excited. Without
-actually acknowledging it, George felt instinctively that
-something in his friend’s manner reminded him of the
-Marquise.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a grave difficulty,” said the Captain. “Where
-can we find a priest? That fat little Portuguese who
-looked like a guinea-pig is sure to have run away, if the
-negroes have not cut his throat.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_347"></a>[347]</span></p>
-
-<p>The other reflected, his pale face turning paler every
-moment. Then he spoke, in a low determined voice—</p>
-
-<p>“My Captain, there is a Society of Jesuits on the
-island: I know it for certain; do not ask me why. I have
-never failed you, have I? Trust me yet this once. Order
-a boat to be manned; I will go ashore instantly; follow in
-an hour’s time with a strong guard; bring your bride with
-you; I will undertake that everything shall be ready at the
-chapel, and a priest in waiting to perform the ceremony.”</p>
-
-<p>George looked him straight in the face. “You are a
-true friend,” said he, and gave him his hand. The other
-bent over it as if he would have put it to his lips, and
-when he raised his head again his eyes were full of tears.
-He turned away hastily, sprang on deck, and in five
-minutes the boat was lowered and Beaudésir over the side.</p>
-
-<p>George tapped humbly at the cabin door, and a gentle
-face, pale but lovely, peeped out to greet him. After his
-whisper the face was anything but pale, and although the
-little monosyllable “No” was repeated again and again
-in that pleading, yielding tone which robs the negative of
-all its harshness, the boon he begged must have been
-already nearly accorded if there be any truth in the old
-Scottish proverb which affirms that “Nineteen nay-says
-make half a grant.”</p>
-
-<p>In less than two hours the bridal procession was formed
-upon the quay, guarded by some score of stalwart, weather-beaten
-tars, and presenting an exceedingly formidable
-front to the crowds of grinning negroes who were idling
-in the sun, talking over the events of the past night,
-and congratulating themselves that no such infliction as
-field-work was ever to be heard of in the island again.</p>
-
-<p>It was a strange and picturesque wedding, romantic
-enough in appearance and reality to have satisfied the
-wildest imagination. Smoke-Jack and certain athletic
-able seamen marched in front; Slap-Jack and his foretopmen
-brought up the rear. In the centre walked the
-Marquise and her daughter, accompanied by the bridegroom.
-Four deep on each side were the special attendants
-of the bride, reckless in gait, free in manner, bronzed,
-bearded, broad-shouldered, and armed to the teeth, yet
-cherishing perhaps as deep a devotion for her whom they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_348"></a>[348]</span>
-attended to the altar as could have been entertained by the
-fairest bevy of bridesmaids that ever belonged to her own sex.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise was very grave and very silent; happy indeed
-beyond expression, yet a little frightened at the extent as
-at the suddenness of her own happiness.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed so strange to be besieged, rescued, carried off
-by a lover, and married to him, all within twenty-four
-hours. The Marquise, on the contrary, was gay, talkative,
-brilliant, full of life and spirits; more beautiful too than
-usual, in the bright light of that noonday sun. Slap-Jack,
-who considered himself no mean judge of such matters,
-was much distracted by the conflict in his own mind as to
-whether, under similar circumstances, he would have
-chosen the mother or the child.</p>
-
-<p>Taking little notice of the crowd who followed at a
-respectful distance, having received from the free-handed
-sailors several very intelligible hints not to come too near,
-the bridal procession moved steadily through the outskirts
-of the town and ascended the hill on which the chapel stood.</p>
-
-<p>Halting at its door, the crew formed a strong guard to
-prevent interruption, and the principal performers, accompanied
-only by Smoke-Jack, Slap-Jack, and the Marquise,
-entered the building. There were flowers on the altar,
-with wax tapers already lighted, and everything seemed
-prepared for the ceremony. A priest, standing with his
-back to them, was apparently engaged in putting a finishing
-touch to the decorations when they advanced. Cerise,
-bewildered, frightened, agitated, clung to her mother’s arm.
-“Courage, my child,” said the Marquise, “it will soon
-be over, and you need never do this again!”</p>
-
-<p>There was something in the voice so hard, so measured,
-so different from its usual tone, that the girl glanced
-anxiously in her face. It betrayed no symptoms of emotion,
-not even the little flutter of maternal pride and anxiety
-natural to the occasion. It was flushed, imperious, defiant,
-and strangely beautiful. Slap-Jack entertained no longer
-the slightest doubt of its superiority to any face he had
-ever seen. And yet no knightly visor, or Eastern <i>yashmak</i>
-ever concealed its real wearer more effectually than that
-lovely mask which she forced to do her bidding, though
-every muscle beneath was quivering in pain the while.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_349"></a>[349]</span></p>
-
-<p>Nor was the Marquise the only person under this consecrated
-roof who curbed unruly feelings with a strong and
-merciless hand. That priest, with his back to the little
-congregation, adjusting with trembling gestures the sacred
-symbols of his faith, had fought during the last hour or two
-such a battle as a man can only fight once in a lifetime; a
-battle that, if lost, yields him a prey to evil without hope
-of rescue; if won, leaves him faint, exhausted, bleeding,
-a maimed and shattered champion for the rest of his
-earthly life. Since sunrise he had wrestled fiercely with
-sin and self. They had helped each other lustily to pull
-him down, but he had prevailed at last. Though one
-insuperable barrier already existed between himself and
-the woman he loved so madly at the cost of his very soul,
-it was hard to rear another equally insurmountable, with
-his own hand; but it would insure her happiness—he
-resolved to do it, and therefore he was here.</p>
-
-<p>So when Cerise and her lover advanced to the altar, and
-the Jesuit priest, whom they had imagined to be a stranger
-from Maria-Galante, turned round to confront them, in
-spite of his contracted features, in spite of the wan, death-like
-hue of his face, they recognised him at once, and
-exclaimed simultaneously, in accents of intense surprise,
-“Brother Ambrose!” and “Beaudésir!”</p>
-
-<p>The sailors, too much taken aback to speak, gasped at
-each other in mute astonishment, nor did Slap-Jack, who
-had constituted himself in a manner director of the proceedings,
-recover his presence of mind till the conclusion
-of the ceremony.</p>
-
-<p>If a corpse could be galvanised and set up in priest’s
-robes to bless a loving couple whom Heaven has joined
-together, its benediction could scarcely be more passionless
-and mechanical than was that which Florian de St. Croix—the
-Brother Ambrose who had been the bride’s confessor,
-the Beaudésir who had been the bridegroom’s lieutenant—now
-pronounced over George Hamilton and Cerise de
-Montmirail. Not an eyelash quivered, not a muscle
-trembled, not a tone of emotion could be detected in his
-voice. Still young, still enthusiastic, still, though it was
-wild and warped and wilful, possessing a human heart, he
-believed honestly that he then bade farewell at once and
-for ever to earth and earthly things.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_350"></a>[350]</span></p>
-
-<p>When they left the chapel, he was gone; gone back, so
-said some negroes lounging in the neighbourhood, to the
-other Jesuits at Maria-Galante. They believed him to be a
-priest of that order, resident at their plantation, who had
-simply come across the island, and returned in the regular
-performance of his duty. They cheered him when he
-emerged from a side door and departed swiftly through
-their ranks. They cheered the bridal party a few minutes
-later, leaving the chapel to re-embark. They even cheered
-the Marquise, when, after bidding them farewell, she
-separated from the others, and sought a house in the
-town, where Célandine had already collected several faithful
-slaves who could be trusted to defend her, and in the
-cellars of which refuge the Italian overseer was even then
-concealed. They cheered Slap-Jack more than any one,
-turning round to curse them, not without blows, for crowding
-in too close. Lighthearted and impressionable, they
-were delighted with the glitter, the bustle, the parade of
-the whole business, and thought it little inferior to the
-“bobbery” of the preceding night.</p>
-
-<p>So Cerise and her husband embarked on board the
-brigantine without delay. In less than an hour the
-anchor was up, and with a following tide and a wind
-off shore, ‘The Bashful Maid’ stood out to sea, carrying
-at least two happy hearts along with her, whatever
-she may have left behind.</p>
-
-<p>Before sunset she was hull-down on the horizon, but
-long after white sails vanished their last gleam seemed yet
-to linger on the eyes of two sad, wistful watchers, for whom,
-henceforth, it was to be a gloomier world.</p>
-
-<p>They knew not each other’s faces, they never guessed
-each other’s feelings, nor imagined how close a link between
-the two existed in that sunny speck, fading to
-leeward on the deep blue sea.</p>
-
-<p>None the less longingly did they gaze eastward; none
-the less keenly did the Marquise de Montmirail and Florian
-de St. Croix feel that their loves, their hopes, their better
-selves-all that brightened the future, that enhanced the
-past, that made life endurable—was gone from them in the
-Homeward Bound.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_351"></a>[351]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLI">CHAPTER XLI<br />
-<span class="smaller">LADY HAMILTON</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The daisies we string in chains before ten, we tread under
-foot without compunction after twenty. Cerise, pacing a
-noble terrace rolled and levelled beneath the windows of her
-husband’s home, gave no thought to the humble petals
-bending to her light footfall, and rising again when it passed
-on; gave no thought to the flaring hollyhocks, the crimson
-roses, all the bright array of autumn’s gaudier flowers
-flaunting about her in the imposing splendour of maturity;
-gave no thought even to the fair expanse of moor and
-meadow, dale and dingle, copse and corn-field, wood, wold,
-and water, on which her eyes were bent.</p>
-
-<p>She might have travelled many a mile, too, even through
-beautiful England, without beholding such a scene. Overhead,
-the sky, clear and pure in the late summer, or the
-early autumn, seemed but of a deeper blue, because flecked
-here and there with wind-swept streaks of misty white.
-Around her glowed, in Nature’s gaudiest patch-work, all the
-garden beauty that had survived July. On a lower level by
-a few inches lay a smooth, trim bowling-green, dotted with
-its unfinished game; and downward still, foot by foot, like
-a wide green staircase, row after row of terraces were
-banked, and squared, and spread between their close-cut
-black yew hedges, till they descended to the ivy-grown
-wall that divided pleasure-ground from park. Here, slopes
-of tufted grass, swelling into bolder outlines as they
-receded, rolled, like the volume of a freshening sea, into
-knolls, and dips, and ridges, feathered in waving fern—dotted
-with goodly oaks—traversed by deep, narrow<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_352"></a>[352]</span>
-glades, in which the deer were feeding—shy, wild, and
-undisturbed. Beyond this, again, the variegated plain,
-rich in orchards, hedgerows, and enclosures studded with
-shocks of corn, seamed too by the silver of more than one
-glistening stream, was girdled by a belt of purple moorland;
-while, in the far distance, the horizon was shut in by
-a long low range of hills, lost in a grey-blue vapour, where
-they melted into sky.</p>
-
-<p>Behind her stood the grim and weatherworn mansion,
-with its thick stone walls, dented, battered, and defaced, as
-if it had defied a thousand tempests and more than one
-siege, which, indeed, was the fact. Every old woman in
-the country-side could tell how the square grey keep, at the
-end of the south wing, had resisted the Douglas, and there
-was no mistaking Cromwell’s handwriting on more than one
-rent in the comparatively modern portions of the building.
-Hamilton Hill, though it had never been called a fort, a
-castle, or even a hall, was known far and wide for a stronghold,
-that, well supplied and garrisoned, might keep fifty
-miles of the surrounding district in check; and the husband
-of Cerise was now lord of Hamilton Hill.</p>
-
-<p>No longer the soldier adventurer, the leader of Grey
-Musketeers, compound of courtier and bravo—no longer
-the doubtful skipper of a suspicious craft, half-trader, half-pirate—Sir
-George Hamilton, with position, property,
-tenants, and influence, found himself a very different person
-from the Captain George who used to relieve guard at the
-Palais Royal, and lay ‘The Bashful Maid’ broadside on
-to a Spanish galleon deep in the water, with her colours
-down and her foresail aback, a rich prize and an easy prey.
-Ere the brigantine had dropped her anchor in the first
-English port she made, George received intelligence of his
-far-off kinsman’s death, and his own succession to a noble
-inheritance. It came at an opportune moment, and he was
-disposed to make the most of it. Therefore it was that
-Cerise (now Lady Hamilton) looked from the lofty terrace
-over many a mile of fair English scenery, much of which
-belonged, like herself, to the man she loved.</p>
-
-<p>They were fairly settled now, and had taken their established
-place—no lowly station—amongst their neighbours.
-Precedence had not, indeed, been yielded them without a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_353"></a>[353]</span>
-struggle; for in the last as in the present century,
-detraction claimed a fair fling at all new-comers, and
-not what they were, but <i>who</i> they were, was the important
-question amongst a provincial aristocracy, who made up by
-minute inquiry for the limited sphere of their research. At
-first people whispered that the husband was an adventurer
-and the wife an actress. Well, if not an actress, at least a
-dancing-girl, whom he had picked up in Spain, in Paris,
-in the West Indies, at Tangiers, Tripoli, or Japan! Lady
-Hamilton’s beauty, her refined manners, her exquisite
-dresses, warranted the meanest opinion of her in the minds
-of her own sex; and although, when they could no longer
-conceal from themselves that she was a Montmirail of the
-real Montmirails, they were obliged to own she had at least
-the advantage of a high birth, I doubt if they loved her any
-better than before. They pitied Sir George, they said, one
-and all—“He, if you like, was charming. He had been
-page to the great King; he had been adored by the ladies
-of the French Court; he had killed a Prince of the Blood
-in a duel; he had sacked a convent of Spanish nuns, and
-wore the rosary of the Lady Abbess under his waistcoat;
-he had been dreadfully wicked, but he was so polite! he had
-the <i>bel air</i>; he had the <i>tourneur Louis Quatorze</i>; he had
-the manners of the princes, and the electors, and the archdukes
-now passing away. Such men would be <i>impossible</i>
-soon; and to think he could have been entrapped by that
-tawdry Frenchified Miss, with her airs and graces, her fans
-and furbelows, and yards of the best Mechlin lace on the
-dress she went gardening in! It was nothing to <i>them</i>, of
-course, that the man should have committed such an
-absurdity; but, in common humanity, they could not help
-being sorry for it, and, unless they were very much deceived,
-so was he!”</p>
-
-<p>With the squires, again, and county grandees of the male
-sex, including two or three baronets, a knight of the shire,
-and the lord-lieutenant himself, it was quite different.
-These honest gentlemen, whether fresh or fasting in the
-morning, or bemused with claret towards the afternoon,
-prostrated themselves before Cerise, and did homage to her
-charms. Her blue eyes, her rosy lips, the way her gloves
-fitted, the slender proportions of her feet, the influence of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_354"></a>[354]</span>
-her soft, sweet manner, resulting from a kindly, innocent
-heart—above all, the foreign accent, which added yet
-another grace, childish, mirth-inspiring, and bewitching, to
-everything she said—caused men of all ages and opinions
-to place their necks voluntarily beneath the yoke. They
-swore by her; they toasted her; they broke glasses innumerable
-in her honour; they vowed, with repeated
-imprecations, nothing had ever been seen like her before;
-and they held out to her husband the right hand of fellowship,
-as much for her sake as for his own.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George’s popularity increased on acquaintance. A
-man who could fly a hawk with science—who could kill his
-game on the wing—who could ride any horse perfectly
-straight over any part of their country—who seemed to care
-very little for politics, except in so far as that the rights of
-<i>venerie</i> should be protected—who was reputed a consummate
-swordsman, and seen, on occasion, to empty his bottle
-of claret with exceeding good-will—was not likely to remain
-long in the background amongst the hardy northern gentlemen
-with whom his lot was cast. Very soon Sir George
-Hamilton’s society was sought as eagerly by both sexes, as
-his wife’s beauty was admired by the one and envied—shall
-I say denied?—by the other.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding female criticism, which female instinct
-may possibly rate at its true value, Cerise found herself
-very happy. Certainly, the life she led was very different
-from that to which she had been accustomed in her youth.
-An English lady of the last century devoted much of her
-time to duties that are now generally performed by a
-housekeeper, and Cerise had resolved to become a thorough
-English lady simply, I imagine, because she thought it
-would please George. So she rose early, inspected the
-dairies, betrayed contemptible ignorance in the manufacture
-of butter and cream, reviewed vast stores of linen,
-put her white arms through a coarse canvas apron, and
-splashed little dabs of jam upon her delicate nose, with
-the conviction that she was a perfectly competent and
-efficient housewife. Such occupations, if more healthy,
-were certainly less exciting than the ever-recurring gaieties
-of the family hotel in Paris, less agreeable than the
-luxurious tropical indolence of Montmirail West.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_355"></a>[355]</span></p>
-
-<p>There were servants, plenty of them, at Hamilton Hill,
-who would literally have shed their blood in defence of
-their mistress, but they showed neither the blind obedience
-of the negro nor the shrewd readiness of the Parisian
-domestic. On the contrary, they seemed persuaded that
-length of service entitled them to be obstinate, perverse,
-and utterly negligent of orders. There were two or three
-seniors of whom Lady Hamilton positively stood in awe,
-and an old grey-headed butler, perfectly useless from gout
-and obesity, would expostulate angrily with his mistress for
-walking bareheaded on the terrace in an east wind. That
-same east wind, too, was another trial to Cerise. It gave
-her cold, it made her shiver, and she was almost afraid it
-sometimes made her cross. There were drawbacks, you
-see, even to a love-match, a fortune, and Hamilton Hill!</p>
-
-<p>Yet she was very happy. She continually repeated to
-herself how happy she was. To be sure, she missed her
-mother’s society, missed it far more than she expected
-when at first she acquired the freedom of the Matron’s
-Guild. Perhaps, too, she may have missed the incense
-of flattery so delicately offered at the receptions of the
-Marquise; nay, even the ponderous and well-turned compliments
-of the Prince-Marshal, who, to do him justice,
-treated her with a chivalrous affection, compounded of
-romantic devotion to her mother, and paternal regard for
-herself. But I am sure she would never have allowed that
-a drop could be wanting in the full cup of her happiness,
-for was not George the whole world to her, and had she
-not got him here all to herself?</p>
-
-<p>She walked thoughtfully on the terrace, surrounded by
-the glorious beauty of earth and sky, looking, and seeing
-not. Perhaps she was back in Touraine amongst the vineyards,
-perhaps she was in the shady convent-garden, cooling
-her temples in the pure fresh breeze that whispered to the
-beeches how it had gathered perfumes from the orchards
-and the hedgerows and the scented meadows of pleasant
-Normandy. Perhaps she was rustling through a minuet in
-the same set with a daughter of France, or fanning mamma
-in the hot West Indian evening, or straining her eyes to
-windward from the deck of ‘The Bashful Maid,’ with
-George’s arm round her waist, and his telescope pointing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_356"></a>[356]</span>
-to the distant sail, that seemed plain to every eye on board
-but hers. At any rate, she appeared to be leagues off in
-mind, though her dainty feet, with slow, measured steps,
-were pacing to and fro on the terrace at Hamilton Hill. All
-at once her colour came, her eyes sparkled, she brightened
-up like one who wakes from sleep, for her heart still leaped
-to the trample of boot and jingle of spur, as it had leaped
-in the days gone by, when a certain Musketeer would visit
-his guard at unseasonable hours, that he might have an
-excuse for passing under her window.</p>
-
-<p>She ran across the terrace to meet him, with a little
-exclamation of delight. “How long you have been,
-George!” she said, smiling up in his face; “<i>why</i> did
-you not ride faster? It is so dull here without <i>you</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>She had him by the arm, and clasped her pretty white
-hands across his sleeve, leaning her weight on his wrist.
-He looked affectionately down in the fair young face, but
-he had come at a gallop for five or six miles across the
-moor, as the state of his boots no less than his flushed face
-indicated, and he did not feel inclined to admit he had
-been dilatory, so his answer was less that of the lover than
-the husband.</p>
-
-<p>“Dull, Cerise! I am sorry you find this place so dull,
-seeing that you and I must spend the greater part of our
-lives here. I thought you liked England, and a country
-life!”</p>
-
-<p>Why is a man flattered by those exactions in a mistress
-that gall him so in a wife? Perhaps it is because a generous
-nature concedes willingly the favour, but is stern to resist
-the claim. When his mistress says she cannot do without
-him, all the protective instincts, so strong in masculine
-affection rise in her behalf, but the same sentiment expressed
-by one who assumes a right to his time and
-attention, rather awakes a sense of apprehension, and a
-spirit of revolt. Where woman only sees the single
-instance, man establishes the broad principle. If he
-yields on this occasion, he fears his time will never again
-be his own, and such misgivings show no little ignorance
-of the nature with which he has to deal, a nature to be
-guided rather than taught, persuaded rather than convinced,
-sometimes advised, but never confuted, and on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_357"></a>[357]</span>
-which close reasoning is but labour thrown away. I think
-that woman wise who is careful never to weary her husband.
-The little god thrives well on smiles, and is seldom stronger
-than when in tears. While he frowns and sets his teeth,
-he is capable of a lion’s efforts and a mule’s endurance,
-but when he begins to yawn, he is but like other children,
-and soon falls fast asleep.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise hated George to speak to her in that grave tone.
-It grated on the poor girl’s nerves, and frightened her
-besides, which was indeed unreasonable, for he had never
-said a harsh word to her in his life. She looked timidly in
-his face, and answered meekly enough—</p>
-
-<p>“Every place is dull to me, George, without you. I
-wish I could be always with you—to help you with the
-tenants, to dine with you at the court-house, to sit behind
-you on Emerald when you go for a gallop across the moor.
-Why could I not ride with you this morning?”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed good-humouredly, and stroked the hands
-clasped on his wrist.</p>
-
-<p>“It would have been the very thing, Cerise!” said he.
-“I think I see you assisting at a cock-fight, placing the
-fowls, picking them up, and counting them out! I think I
-can see Sir Marmaduke’s face when you walked into the
-pit. I think I can hear the charitable remarks of all our
-county ladies, who are not disposed to let you off more
-easily, my dear, because you are so much better-looking
-and better dressed than anything they ever saw north of
-the Trent. Yes, my darling, come to the next cock-fight
-by all means. <i>Il ne manquerait que ça!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>The little French sentence was music to her ears. It
-was the language in which he had wooed her; and though
-she spoke <i>his</i> language now assiduously, and spoke it
-well, the other was her mother-tongue. She laughed,
-too.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I shall take you at your word,” said she,
-“though it is a cruel, horrid, wicked amusement. Did
-you win, George?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fifty gold pieces!” was his answer; “and the same
-on a return match next week, which I am equally sure of.
-They will get you two new dresses from Paris.”</p>
-
-<p>“I want no dresses from Paris,” said she, drawing him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_358"></a>[358]</span>
-towards the bowling-green. “I want you to help me in
-my garden. Come and look at my Provence roses.”</p>
-
-<p>But Sir George had no time to spare even for so tempting
-a pursuit. A fresh horse was even now waiting to carry
-him ten miles off to a training of the militia, in which
-constitutional force, as became his station, he took a proper
-interest. He was the country gentleman now from head
-to heel, and frequented all gatherings and demonstrations
-in which country gentlemen take delight. Of these, a
-cock-fight was not the most refined, but it was the fashion
-of his time and class, so we must not judge him more
-severely than did Cerise, who, truth to tell, thought he
-could not possibly do wrong, and would have given him
-absolution for a worse crime, in consideration of his accompanying
-her to the garden to look at her Provence roses.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow,” said he; husbandlike, missing the chance
-of a compliment about the roses, which a lover would not
-have let slip; the latter, indeed, if obliged to depart, would
-probably have ridden away with one of the flowers in his
-bosom. “To-morrow, Cerise. I have a press of business
-to-day, but will get back in time for dinner.” And touching
-her forehead lightly with his lips, Sir George was gone
-before she could stop him, and in another minute his horse’s
-hoofs were clattering out of the stable-yard.</p>
-
-<p>From the terrace where she stood, Cerise watched his
-receding figure as he galloped merrily down the park, knee-deep
-in fern, threading the old oaks, and sending the deer
-scampering on all sides across the open; watched him with
-a cloud upon her young face, and a quiver about her mouth,
-that was near akin to tears; watched long after he was out
-of sight, and then turned wearily away with a languid step
-and a deep-drawn sigh.</p>
-
-<p>She was but going through the ordeal that sooner or
-later must be endured by every young wife who dearly
-loves her husband. She was but learning the unavoidable
-lesson that marriage is not courtship, that reality is not
-illusion, that the consistent tenderness of a husband, if
-more practical, is less flattering than the romantic adoration
-of a lover. She was beginning to shape into suspicion
-certain vague misgivings which had lately haunted her, that
-although George was all the world to <i>her</i>, she was only<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_359"></a>[359]</span>
-part of the world to George! It is from the sweetest
-dreams that we are most unwilling to awake, and therefore
-it is no wonder that Lady Hamilton’s preoccupation prevented
-her observing a strange horseman riding up the
-avenue, slowly and laboriously, as though after a long
-journey, of which the final destination seemed to be
-Hamilton Hill.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_360"></a>[360]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLII">CHAPTER XLII<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE DESIRE OF THE MOTH</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the year 1540, five Spaniards and a Savoyard, styling
-themselves “Clerks of the Company of Jesus,” left Paris
-under the leadership of the famous Ignatius Loyola, to
-found an establishment at Rome.</p>
-
-<p>Here Pope Paul III. presented them with a church, and
-in return these half-dozen of energetic priests gave in an
-unqualified adhesion to the Sovereign Pontiff. Their
-avowed intention in thus forming themselves into a
-separate and independent body (except in so far as they
-owed allegiance to its supreme head), was the propagation
-of the Roman Catholic faith, the conversion of heathens,
-the suppression of heresy, and the education of the young.
-For these purposes a system was at once organised which
-should combine the widest sphere of action with the closest
-surveillance over its agents, the broadest views with the
-most minute attention to details, an absolute unquestioned
-authority with a stanch and implicit obedience. To attain
-universal rule (possibly for a good motive, but at any
-sacrifice to attain it) over the opinions of humanity, however
-different in age, sex, character, and nationalities, was
-the object proposed; and almost the first maxim laid down,
-and never departed from in the Order, established that all
-means were justifiable to such an end. It was obvious
-that to win universal dominion over the moral as over the
-physical world, every effort must not only be vigorous, but
-combined and simultaneous, such waste of power must
-never be contemplated as the possibility of two forces
-acting in opposite directions, and therefore a code of discipline<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_361"></a>[361]</span>
-must be established, minute, stringent, and comprehensive,
-like that of an army before an enemy, but with
-this difference, that its penalties must never be modified by
-circumstances, nor its bonds relaxed by conquest or defeat.
-In the Order of Jesus must be no speaking, no questioning,
-no individuality, and—no forgiveness!</p>
-
-<p>Their constitution was as follows: A “General,” as he
-was styled, resided in perpetuity at Rome, and from that
-central spot sent forth his directions over the whole civilised
-world, enjoying absolute authority and exacting unqualified
-obedience. Even to the supreme head, however, was
-attached an officer entitled his “Admonisher.” It was his
-duty to observe the conduct of his chief, and report on it to
-the five “Assistants,” who constituted that chief’s council.
-These, again, were instructed to watch each other carefully,
-and thus, not even at the very head and fountain of supreme
-authority, could any single individual consider himself a free
-agent, even in the most trifling matters of dress, deportment,
-or daily conversation.</p>
-
-<p>In every country where the Jesuits obtained a footing
-(and while there are few in which they have not been
-notoriously powerful, even in those which betray no traces
-of their presence, who shall say that their influence has not
-been at work below the surface?) a “Provincial,” as he
-was called, assumed the direction of affairs within a certain
-district, and on his administration every one of his subordinates,
-temporal and spiritual, was instructed to report.
-There were three degrees in the Order, according to the
-experience and utility of its votaries—these were “Professors,”
-“Coadjutors,” both priests and laymen, for their
-ramifications extended from the highest to the lowest,
-through all classes of society, and “Novices.”</p>
-
-<p>To enter the Order, many severe examinations had to be
-passed, and while it numbered among its votaries men of
-superlative abilities in a thousand different callings, every
-member was employed according to his capacity of useful
-service.</p>
-
-<p>With such an organisation it may be imagined that the
-society has been a powerful engine for good and for evil.
-It has planted Christianity in the most remote corners of
-the earth, and has sent missionaries of skill, eloquence,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_362"></a>[362]</span>
-piety, and dauntless courage, amongst savages who otherwise
-might never have heard the faintest echo of the Glad
-Tidings, in which all men claim interest alike; but, on the
-other hand, it has done incalculable mischief in the households
-of Christian Europe, has wormed itself into the confidence
-of women, has destroyed the concord of families,
-has afforded the assailants of religion innumerable weapons
-of offence, and in its dealings with those whom it was
-especially bound to succour and protect, has brought on
-them desolation rather than comfort, remorse where there
-should be hope, and war instead of peace.</p>
-
-<p>It is necessary to remember the effect of a constant and
-reciprocal supervision, not only on the outward actions and
-conduct, but on the very thoughts and characters of men
-unavoidably fettered by its influence, to understand the
-position of two priests walking side by side along one of the
-narrow level banks that intersect the marshy country lying
-near the town of St. Omer.</p>
-
-<p>These old friends, if, indeed, under such conditions as
-theirs men can ever be termed friends, had not met since
-they sat together, many years before, beneath the limes at
-Versailles, when the younger had not yet taken orders, and
-the elder, although he accepted the title of Abbé, neither
-led the life of an ecclesiastic, nor admitted openly that he
-was in any way amenable to the discipline observed by the
-Jesuits. Now, both were ostensibly votaries of the Order.
-Its impress might be seen in their measured steps, their
-thoughtful faces, and their downward looks, taking no
-heed of the peaceful scene around: the level marshes, the
-ripening orchards, the lazy cattle knee-deep in rich wet
-herbage, the peasant’s punt pushed drowsily and sluggishly
-along the glistening ditches that divided his fields, the
-mellow warmth of the autumnal sun, and the swarms of
-insects wheeling in his slanting, reddening rays.</p>
-
-<p>They saw, or at least they heeded, none of this—deep in
-conversation, their subject seemed of engrossing interest;
-yet each looked only by stealth in the other’s face, withdrawing
-his glance and bending it on the path at his feet
-the instant it met his friend’s.</p>
-
-<p>At times neither spoke for several paces, and it was
-during such periods of silence that the expression of habitual<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_363"></a>[363]</span>
-mistrust and constraint became painfully apparent. In the
-elder man it was softened and smoothed over, partly by
-effort, partly by the acquired polish of society, but the
-younger seemed to chafe with repressed ardour, like a rash
-horse, impatient but generous, fretting under the unaccustomed
-curb.</p>
-
-<p>After a longer pause than usual, this one spoke with
-more energy than he had yet displayed.</p>
-
-<p>“I only wish to do <i>right</i>. What is it to me, Malletort,
-that the world should misjudge me, or that I should sink in
-the esteem of those whose good opinion I value? I only
-wish to do right, I say, always in compliance with the
-orders of my superiors.”</p>
-
-<p>The other smiled. “In the first place,” said he, “you
-must not call me Malletort, at least not within so short a
-distance of those college chimneys; but we will let that
-pass; for though a novice, still you are worthy of speedy
-promotion, and it is only for ‘novices’ in the first period
-of probation that our rules are so exacting. You wish to
-do right. So be it. You have done very wrong hitherto,
-or you might have been a ‘provincial’ by this time.
-Well, my son, confession is the first step to amendment,
-and then―”</p>
-
-<p>He paused, and bit his lip. It was difficult to keep down
-the old sarcastic smile, but he did it, and looked gravely in
-the other’s face.</p>
-
-<p>“Penance!” replied the younger. “I know it too well.
-Ah! <i>mea culpa! mea culpa!</i> I have been a great sinner.
-I have repented in sackcloth and ashes. I have confessed
-freely. I wish, yes, I repeat I <i>wish</i> to atone humbly, and
-yet, oh! for mercy’s sake, tell me, is there no way but
-this?”</p>
-
-<p>His agony of mind was too apparent on his face. Even
-Malletort felt a momentary compunction when he remembered
-the hopeful enthusiastic youth who had sat
-with him under the limes at Versailles all those years ago;
-when he remembered the desperate career on which he had
-embarked, his insubordination, his apostasy, and those
-paroxysms of remorse that drove him back into the bosom
-of the church. Could this depressed and miserable penitent
-be the once bright and happy Florian de St. Croix?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_364"></a>[364]</span>
-and had he been brought to this pass simply because he
-possessed such inconvenient superfluities as a heart and
-a conscience? Malletort, I say, felt a twinge of compunction,
-but of pity very little, of indecision, not one bit.</p>
-
-<p>“Would you go to a doctor,” said he, gravely, “and
-teach him how to cure you of a deadly malady? Would
-you choose your own medicine, my son, and refuse the
-only healing draught prescribed, because it was bitter to
-the taste? There is but one way of retracing your steps.
-You must go back along the very path that led you into
-evil. That the effort will be trying, I admit. All uphill
-work is trying to the utmost, but how else can men attain
-the summit? That the task is painful I allow, but were
-it pleasant, where would be the penance? Besides, you
-know our rules, my son, the time is not far off when I
-shall be permitted to say, my brother. We have got you.
-Will you dare to hesitate ere you obey?”</p>
-
-<p>An expression of intense fear came over Florian’s face,
-but it seemed less the physical fear of danger from without
-than an absorbing dread of the moral enemy within.</p>
-
-<p>“I <i>must</i> obey,” he answered in a low voice, shuddering
-while he spoke. “I <i>must</i> obey, I know, readily, willingly.
-Alas! Malletort, there is my unforgiven sin, my mortal
-peril. <i>Too</i> willingly do I undertake the task. It is my
-dearest wish to find myself addressed to it—that is why I
-entreat not to be sent—that is why I implore them to spare
-me. It is my soul that is in danger. Heart, hope, happiness,
-home, liberty, identity, are all gone from me, and now
-I shall lose my soul.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your soul!” repeated the other, again repressing a
-sneer. “Do not distress yourself, my son, about your soul.
-It is in very safe keeping, and your superiors are, doubtless,
-the best judges of its value and eventual destination. In
-the meantime, do not give way to a far-fetched casuistry, or
-a morbid delicacy of sentiment. If your heart is in your
-task, and you go to it willingly, it will be the more easily
-and the more effectually accomplished. Congratulate yourself,
-therefore, that your penance is not distasteful as well
-as dangerous, a torture of bodily weakness, rather than a
-trial of spiritual strength. Remember, there is no sin of
-action where there is none of intention. There can be none<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_365"></a>[365]</span>
-of intention where a deed is done simply in compliance with
-the superior’s will. If that deed be pleasurable, it is but so
-much gained on the chances of the service. Enjoy it as you
-would enjoy the sun’s rays if you were standing sentry on a
-winter’s day at the Louvre. It is not for <i>you</i>, a simple
-soldier of the Order, to speculate on your own merits or
-your own failures, those above you will take care that neither
-are overlooked. Eat your rations and be thankful. Your
-duty, first and last, is but to obey!”</p>
-
-<p>It will be seen by these phrases, so carefully worded
-according to the rules of the Order, yet bearing the while a
-covert sarcasm for his own private gratification, that the real
-character of Malletort was but little changed, since he
-intrigued at the council table or drank at the suppers of
-the Regent.</p>
-
-<p>He was a Jesuit priest now in garb and outward semblance;
-he was still the clever, unscrupulous, unbelieving,
-pleasure-loving Abbé at the core. So necessary had he
-become to the Regent as the confidant of his secret schemes,
-whether their object were the acquisition of a province or
-the dismissal of a mistress, that he would have found little
-difficulty in making his peace with his Prince, even after
-the untoward failure of the Montmirail Gardens, had he
-chosen to do so. The Regent, maddened with disappointment,
-and especially sore because of the ridicule created by
-the whole business, turned at first fiercely enough on his
-trusty adviser, but found, to his surprise, that the Abbé was
-beforehand with him. The latter assumed an air of high-minded
-indignation, talked of the honour of an ancient
-house, of the respect due, at least in outward courtesy, to
-a kinswoman of his own, hinted at his fidelity and his services,
-protested against the ingratitude with which they had
-been requited, and ended by tendering his resignation, with
-a request for leave to absent himself from Paris. The result,
-as usual with the Duke of Orleans, was a compromise. His
-outraged servant should quit him for a time, but would
-remain at least faithful in heart to the master who now
-entreated his pardon. In a few weeks the matter, he
-thought, would be forgotten, and for those few weeks he
-must manage his own affairs without the Abbé’s assistance.</p>
-
-<p>Malletort had several good reasons for thus detaching<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_366"></a>[366]</span>
-himself from the Court. The first, and most important,
-was the state of the Duke’s health. The Abbé had not
-failed to mark the evil effects produced even by so slight an
-excitement as the affair at the Hôtel Montmirail. He perceived
-the Regent’s tendency to apoplexy growing stronger
-day by day; he observed that the slightest emotion now
-caused him to flush a dark red even in the morning, and he
-knew that at supper his fulness of habit was so obvious as to
-alarm the very <i>roués</i>, lest every draught should be his last.
-If sudden death were to carry off the Regent, Malletort felt
-all his labour would have been thrown away, and he must
-begin at the lowest round of the ladder again.</p>
-
-<p>His connection with the Jesuits, for he had long ago
-enlisted himself as a secret member of that powerful Order,
-was now of service to him. They had influence with the
-advisers of the young king, they were ardent promoters of
-the claims to the British crown, laid by that James Stuart,
-whom history has called the Old Pretender. It was quite
-possible that under a new state of things they might hold
-some of the richest rewards in France and England to
-bestow on their adherents. Above all, the very keystone of
-their system, the power that set all their machinery in
-motion, was a spirit of busy and unremitting intrigue. Abbé
-Malletort never breathed so freely as in an atmosphere of
-plots and counterplots. With all the energy of his nature,
-he devoted himself to the interests of the Order, keeping up
-his connection with the Court, chiefly on its behalf. He
-was as ready now to betray the Regent to his new allies, as
-he had been a few months before to sacrifice honour and
-probity for the acquisition of that prince’s good-will.</p>
-
-<p>There are few men, however, who can thoroughly divest
-themselves of all personal feelings in pursuit of their own
-interest. Even Malletort possessed the weaknesses of pride,
-pique, and certain injudicious partialities which he could
-not quite overcome. He hated his late patron for many
-reasons of his own, for none more than that his persecution
-had compelled Madame de Montmirail and her daughter to
-leave France and seek a refuge beyond the sea. If he cared
-for anything on earth, besides his own aggrandisement, it
-was his kinswoman; and when he thought of the Marquise,
-a smile would overspread his features that denoted anything<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_367"></a>[367]</span>
-but Christian charity or good-will to her royal
-admirer.</p>
-
-<p>He spent much of his time at St. Omer now, where
-several provincials and other influential members of the
-Order were assembled, organising a movement in favour
-of the so-called James III.; these were in constant correspondence
-with the English Jacobites, and according to their
-established principle, were enlisting every auxiliary, legitimate
-or otherwise, for the furtherance of their schemes.
-They possessed lists of surprising accuracy, in which were
-noted down the names, resources, habits, and political
-tendencies of many private gentlemen in remote countries,
-who little dreamed they were of such importance.</p>
-
-<p>An honest squire, whose ideas scarcely soared beyond his
-harriers, his claret, and his fat cattle, would have been
-surprised to learn that his character, his income, his pursuits,
-his domestic affections, and his habitual vices were
-daily canvassed by a society of priests, numbering amongst
-them the keenest intellects in Europe, who had travelled
-many hundred leagues expressly to meet in a quiet town in
-Artoise, of which he had never heard the name, and give
-their opinions on himself. Perhaps his insular love of isolation
-would have been disgusted, and he might have been
-less ready to peril life and fortune, had he known the truth.</p>
-
-<p>But every landholder of importance was the object of considerable
-discussion. It was Abbé Malletort’s familiarity with
-previous occurrences, and the characters of all concerned,
-that led him now to put the pressure on the renegade who
-had lost his rank with his desertion, and returned in the
-lowest grade as a novice, to make his peace with the Order.</p>
-
-<p>“My friend,” resumed the Abbé, after another long
-silence, during which the sun had reached the horizon, and
-was now shedding a broad red glare on his companion’s
-face, giving him an excuse to shade it with his hand;
-“your penance has been well begun, and needs but this
-one culminating effort to be fully accomplished. I have
-been at Rome very lately, and the General himself spoke
-approvingly of your repentance and your return. The provincial
-at Maria-Galante had reported favourably on your
-conduct during the disturbances in the island, and your
-unfeigned penitence, when you gave yourself up as a deserter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_368"></a>[368]</span>
-from the Order. We have no secrets, you know, amongst
-ourselves; or rather, I should say nothing is so secret but
-that it has its witnesses. Here, at Paris, in Rome, will be
-known all that you do in England; more, all that you leave
-undone. I need scarcely charge you to be diligent, trustworthy,
-secret; but I must warn you not to be over-scrupulous.
-Remember, the intention justifies the deed. It is
-not only expedient, but meritorious to do evil that good
-may come.”</p>
-
-<p>They were now approaching the town, and the sentry was
-being relieved at its fortified gate. The clash of arms, the
-measured tramp, the martial bearing of the soldiers, called
-up in Florian’s mind such associations as for the moment
-drowned the sentiments of religious penitence and self-accusation
-that had lately taken possession of his heart.
-He longed to throw off the priest’s robe, the grave deportment,
-the hateful trammels of an enforced and professional
-hypocrisy, and to feel a man once more—a man, adventurous,
-free, desperate, relying for very life on the plank beneath
-his foot or the steel in his hand, but at least able to carry
-his head high amongst his fellows, and to know that were
-it but for five minutes, the future was his own. It was sin
-even to dream of such things.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Mea culpa, mea culpa!</i>” he muttered in a desponding
-tone, and beat his breast, and bent his eyes once more upon
-the ground.</p>
-
-<p>“When am I to go?” said he meekly, reverting to their
-previous conversation, and abandoning, as though after deep
-reflection, the unwillingness he had shown from the first.</p>
-
-<p>“This evening, after vespers,” answered the Abbé, with
-a scarce perceptible inflection of contempt in his voice that
-denoted he had read him through like a book. “You will
-attend as usual. Everything is prepared, even to a garb
-less grave than that you wear, and a good horse (ah! you
-cannot help smiling now) will be waiting for you at the little
-gate. You ought to be half way to Calais before the moon
-is up.”</p>
-
-<p>His face brightened now, though he strove hard to conceal
-his satisfaction. Here was change, freedom, excitement,
-liberty, at least for a time, and an adventurous journey, to
-terminate in <i>her</i> presence, who was still to his eyes the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_369"></a>[369]</span>
-ideal of womankind. All, too, in the fulfilment of a
-penance, the execution of a duty. His heart leaped
-beneath his cassock, and warned him of the danger he
-incurred. Danger, indeed! It did but add to the intoxication
-of the draught. With difficulty he restrained the
-bounding impatience of his step, and kept his face averted
-from his friend.</p>
-
-<p>The precaution was useless. Malletort knew his thoughts
-as well as if he had been his penitent in the confessional,
-and laughed within himself. The tool at least was sharp
-and ready, quivering, highly-tempered, and flexible; it
-needed but a steady hand to drive it home.</p>
-
-<p>“You will come to the provincial for final instructions
-half an hour before you mount,” said he gravely, and added,
-without altering his tone or moving a muscle of his countenance,
-“Your especial duty is to gain over Sir George.
-For this object it is essential to obtain the good-will of
-Lady Hamilton.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_370"></a>[370]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLIII">CHAPTER XLIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">FOR THE STAR</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>He ought to have known, he <i>did</i> know, his danger. If he
-was not sure of it during his ride to the coast, while he
-crossed the Channel, and felt the wild spray dash against
-his face like the greeting of an old friend, nor in the long
-journey that took him northward through many a smiling
-valley and breezy upland of that country which he had once
-thought so gloomy and desolate, which seemed so fair and
-sunny now, because it was <i>hers</i>, he ought to have realised
-it when he rode under the old oaks at Hamilton Hill, and
-dreaded, even more than he longed, to see her white dress
-glancing among their stems. Above all, he ought to have
-been warned, when, entering the house, though Lady
-Hamilton herself did not appear, he felt surrounded by
-her presence, and experienced that sensation of repose
-which, after all his tumult of anxiety and uncertainty,
-pervades a man’s whole being in the home of the woman
-he loves. There were her gardening gloves, and plain straw
-hat, perhaps yet warm from her touch, lying near the door.
-There were flowers that surely must have been gathered by
-her hands but a few hours ago, on the table where he laid
-his pistols and riding-wand. There was her work set aside
-on a chair, her shawl thrown over its back, the footstool she
-had used pushed half across the floor, and an Iceland
-hawk, with hood, bell, and jesses, moving restlessly on the
-perch, doubtless in expectation of its mistress’s return.</p>
-
-<p>He tried hard to deceive himself, and he succeeded. He
-felt that in all his lawless infatuation for this pure, spotless
-woman, he had never loved her so well as now—now, that
-she was his friend’s wife! But he argued, he pleaded, he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_371"></a>[371]</span>
-convinced himself in his madness, that such a love as his,
-even a husband must approve. It was an affection, he
-repeated, or rather a worship, completely spiritualised and
-self-sacrificing, to outlast the material trammels of this life,
-and follow her, still faithful, still changeless, into eternity.
-So true, so holy, however hopeless, however foolish, could
-such a love as this, deprived of all earthly leaven, be criminal,
-even in <i>him</i>, the priest, for <i>her</i>, the wedded wife? No, no,
-he told himself, a thousand times, no! And all the while
-the man within the man, who sits, and mocks, and judges,
-and condemns us all, said Yes—a thousand times—Yes!</p>
-
-<p>There is but one end to such debate, when the idol is
-under the same roof with the worshipper. He put the
-question from him for the present, and only resolved that,
-at least, he might love all belonging to her, for her sake.
-All, even to the very flowers she gathered and the floor she
-trod. He took up the work she had set aside, and pressed
-it passionately to his lips, his heart, his eyes. The door
-opened, and he dropped it, scared, startled, guilty, like a
-man detected in a crime. It was a disappointment, yet he
-felt it a relief, to find that the intruder was not Cerise. He
-had scarcely yet learned to call her Lady Hamilton. There
-was no disappointment, however, in the new-comer’s face,
-as he stood for a moment with the door in his hand, looking
-at Florian with a quaint comical smile, in which respect for
-Sir George’s guest was strangely mingled with a sailor’s
-hearty welcome to his shipmate. The latter sentiment
-soon predominated, and Slap-Jack, hurrying forward with
-a scrape of his foot and a profusion of sea-bows, seized the
-visitor by both hands, called him “my hearty!” several
-times over; and, finally, relapsing with considerable effort
-into the staid and confidential servant of the family, offered
-him, in his master’s absence, liquid refreshment on the spot.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a fair wind, whichever way it blowed, as brought
-<i>you</i> here,” exclaimed the late foretopman, when the energy
-of his greeting had somewhat subsided; “and so the skipper,
-I mean Sir George, will swear, when he knows his first
-lieutenant’s turned up in this here anchorage, and my lady
-too, askin’ your reverence’s pardon once more, being that
-I’m not quite so sure as I ought to be of your honour’s
-rating.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_372"></a>[372]</span></p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack was becoming a little confused, remembering
-the part played by Beaudésir on the last occasion of their
-meeting.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir George does not expect me,” answered Florian,
-returning the seaman’s greeting with cordial warmth; “but
-unless he is very much altered, I think his welcome will be
-no less hearty than your own.”</p>
-
-<p>“That I’ll swear it will—that I’ll swear he doesn’t,”
-protested Slap-Jack, taking upon himself the character of
-confidential domestic more and more. “Sir George never
-ordered so much as a third place to be laid at dinner; but
-we’ll make that all ship-shape with a round turn in no
-time; an’ if you don’t drink ‘Sweethearts and Wives’ to-day
-in a flagon of the best, why, say I’m a Dutchman!
-When I see them towing your nag into harbour, and our
-old purser’s steward, butler, as we calls him ashore, he hails
-me and sings out as there’s a visitor between decks, I
-knowed as something out of the common was aboard. I can’t
-tell you for why; but I knowed it as sure as the compass.
-I haven’t been pleased since I was paid off. If it wasn’t
-that my lady’s in the room above this, and it’s not discipline
-to disturb her, blowed if I wouldn’t give three such cheers
-as should shake the acorns down at the far end of the
-west avenue. But I’ll do it to-night after quarters, see if I
-won’t, Lieutenant Bo―askin’ your pardon, your honour’s
-reverence.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus conversing, and occupying himself the whole time
-with the guest’s comforts, for Slap-Jack, sailor-like, had
-not forgotten to be two-handed, he showed Florian into a
-handsome bed-chamber, and unpacked with ready skill the
-traveller’s valise, taken off his horse’s croup, that contained
-the modest wardrobe, which in those days of equestrian
-journeys was considered sufficient for a gentleman’s requirements.
-He then assured him that Sir George’s arrival
-could not be long delayed, as dinner would be served in
-half an hour, and the waiting-woman had already gone upstairs
-to dress her ladyship; also, that there was a sirloin
-of beef on the spit and ale in the cellar brewed thirty-five
-years ago next October; with which pertinent information
-he left the visitor to his toilet and his reflections.</p>
-
-<p>The former was soon concluded; the latter lasted him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_373"></a>[373]</span>
-through his labours, and accompanied him downstairs to
-the great hall, where Slap-Jack had told him he would find
-dinner prepared. His host and hostess were already there.
-Of Lady Hamilton’s greeting he was unconscious, for his
-head swam, and he dared not lift his eyes to her face; but
-Sir George’s welcome was hearty, even boisterous. Florian
-could not help thinking that, had he been in the hospitable
-baronet’s place, he would have been less delighted with the
-arrival of a visitor.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever people’s feelings may be, however, they go to
-dinner all the same. Slap-Jack, an old grey-headed butler,
-and two or three livery servants stood in attendance. The
-dishes were uncovered, and Florian found himself seated at
-a round table in the centre of the fine old hall like a man
-in a dream, confused indeed and vaguely bewildered, yet
-conscious of no surprise at the novelty of his situation, and
-taking in all its accessories with a glance. He was aware
-of the stag’s skeleton frontlet, crowned by its gigantic
-antlers, beetling, bleached, and grim, over the door; of the
-oak panelling and stained glass, the high carved chimneypiece,
-with its grotesque supporters, the vast logs smouldering
-in embers on the hearth, the dressed deer-skins, that
-served for rug or carpet wherever a covering seemed needed
-on the polished floor; nay, even of a full-length picture
-by Vandyck, representing the celebrated Count Anthony
-Hamilton, looking his very politest, in a complete suit of
-plate armour, with a yard or two of cambric round his neck,
-and an enormous wig piling its hyacinthine curls above his
-forehead, to descend in coarse cascades of hair below his
-waist.</p>
-
-<p>All this had Florian taken note of before he could conscientiously
-declare that he had looked his hostess in the
-face.</p>
-
-<p>It made him start to hear the sweet voice once more,
-frank, cordial, and caressing as of old. One of the many
-charms which Cerise exercised over her fellow-creatures was
-the gentle, kindly tone in which she spoke to all.</p>
-
-<p>“You have just come from France, you say, Father
-Ambrose. Pardon, Monsieur de St. Croix. How am I to
-address you? From our dear France, George. Only think.
-He has scarcely left it a week.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_374"></a>[374]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Where they did not give you such ale as that, I’ll be
-bound,” answered Sir George, motioning Slap-Jack to fill
-for the guest, a hospitable rite performed by the old
-privateer’s-man with extreme good-will, and a solemn wink
-of approval, as he placed the beaker at his hand. “What!
-You have not learned to drink our <i>vin ordinaire</i> yet?
-And now, I remember, you were always averse to heavy
-potations. Here, fill him a bumper of claret, some of you!
-Taste that, my friend. I don’t think we ever drank better
-in the ‘Musketeers.’ Welcome to Hamilton Hill, old comrade.
-My lady will drink to your health too, before she
-hears the latest Paris news. She has not forgotten her
-country; and as for me, why, you know our old principle,
-<i>Mousquetaire avant tout!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Sir George emptied his glass, and Cerise, bowing
-courteously, touched hers with her lips. Florian found
-himself at once, so to speak “<i>enfant de la maison</i>,” and
-recovered his presence of mind accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>He addressed himself, however, chiefly to his host.
-“You forget,” said he, “that I have been living in the
-seclusion of a cloister. Though I have carried a sword
-and kept my watch under your command, and spent
-almost the happiest days of my life in your company, I was
-a priest before I was a Musketeer, and a priest I must
-always remain. Nevertheless, even at St. Omer, we are
-not utterly severed from the world and its vanities; and
-though we do not participate in them, we hear them freely
-canvassed. The first news, of course, for madame (pardon!
-I must learn to call you by your English name—for Lady
-Hamilton), regards the despotism of King Chiffon. The
-farthingale is worn more oval; diamond buckles are gone
-out; it is bad taste just now to carry a fan anywhere
-except to church.”</p>
-
-<p>In spite of his agitation he adopted a light tone of jest
-befitting the subject—for was he not a Jesuit?—and stole
-a look at Cerise while he spoke. Many a time had he
-dreamt of a lovely girl blooming into womanhood, in the
-Convent of our Lady of Succour. Ever since the tumult of
-her hasty wedding, after the escape from <i>Cash-a-crou</i>, he
-had been haunted by a pale, sweet, agitated face, on which
-he had invoked a blessing at the altar from the depths of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_375"></a>[375]</span>
-his tortured heart; but what did he think of her now? She
-had reached that queenly standard to which women only
-attain after marriage; and while she had lost none of her
-early charms, her frankness, her simplicity, her radiant
-smile, her deep truthful eyes, she had added to them that
-gentle dignity, that calm, assured repose of manner, which
-completes the graces of mature womanhood, and adorns the
-wedded wife as fitly as her purple robe becomes a queen.</p>
-
-<p>She could look him in the face quietly and steadily
-enough; but while his very heart thrilled at her voice, his
-eyes fell, as though dazzled, beneath her beauty.</p>
-
-<p>“You forget, monsieur,” said she, with an affectionate
-glance at her husband, “I am an Englishwoman now;
-and we have deeper interests here even than the change
-of fashions and the revolutions in the kingdom of dress.
-Besides, mamma keeps me informed on all such subjects,
-as well as those of more importance; but she is in
-Touraine now, and I am quite in the dark as regards
-everything at Paris; above all, the political state of the
-Court. You see we are no longer Musketeers.”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled playfully at George, in allusion to the sentiment
-he had lately broached, and looked, Florian thought,
-lovelier than ever.</p>
-
-<p>The excitement of conversation had brought a colour to
-her cheek. Now, when she ceased, it faded away, leaving
-her perhaps none the less beautiful, that she was a little
-pale and seemed tired. He observed the change of course.
-Not an inflection of her voice, not a quiver of an eyelash,
-not one of those silken hairs out of place on her soft
-forehead, could have escaped his notice. “Was she
-unhappy?” he thought; “was she, too, dissatisfied with
-her lot? Had she failed to reach that resting-place of the
-heart which is sought for eagerly by so many, and found
-but by so few?” It pained him; yes, he was glad to feel
-that it pained him to think this possible. Yet would he
-have been better pleased to learn that her languor of
-manner, her pale weariness of brow, were only the effects
-of her morning’s disappointment, when she waited in vain
-for the company of her husband?</p>
-
-<p>But such an under-current of reflection in no way affected
-the tide of his conversation; nor had he forgotten the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_376"></a>[376]</span>
-primary cause of his journey, the especial object for which
-he was now sitting at Sir George Hamilton’s table.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot pretend,” said he, “to be so well informed
-on political matters as Madame la Marquise. I can only
-tell you the news of all the world—the gossip that people
-talk in the streets. The Regent is unpopular, and grows
-more so day by day. His excesses have at last disgusted
-the good <i>bourgeoisie</i> of the capital; and these honest
-citizens, who think only of selling spices over a counter,
-will, as you know, endure a good deal before they venture
-to complain of a prince who throws money about with both
-hands. As the young King grows older, they are more
-encouraged to cry out; and in Paris, as in Persia, they tell
-me, it is now the fashion to worship the rising sun. Of
-course France will follow suit; but we are quiet people at
-St. Omer; and I do not think our peasantry in Artois have
-yet realised the death of Louis Quatorze. When Jean
-Baptiste is thoroughly satisfied on that point, he will, of
-course, throw up his red cap, and shout, “Vive Louis
-Quinze!” Till then the Regency assumes all the indistinct
-terrors of the Unknown. Seriously, I believe the
-Duke’s day is over, and that the way to Court favour lies
-through Villeroy’s orderly-room into the apartment of the
-young King!”</p>
-
-<p>“And the Musketeers?” asked Sir George, eagerly.
-“That must be all in their favour. They have stood so
-firm by the Marshal and the <i>real</i> throne, their privileges
-will now surely be respected and increased.”</p>
-
-<p>“On the contrary,” replied Florian, “the Musketeers
-are in disgrace. The grey company was actually warned
-to leave Paris for Marly, although neither the King nor
-the Regent were to be there in person. At the last
-moment the order was revoked, or there must have been
-a mutiny. As it was, they refused to parade on the Duke’s
-birthday, and were only brought to reason by Bras-de-Fer,
-who made them a speech as long as that interminable
-sword he wears at his belt.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which was not long enough to reach my ribs, however,”
-interrupted Sir George, heartily, “with the Cadet Eugène
-Beaudésir at my side to parry it. Oh! that such a fencer
-should be thrown away on the Church! Well, fill your<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_377"></a>[377]</span>
-glass, Sir Priest, and never blush about it. Cerise here
-knows the whole story, and has only failed to thank you
-because she has not yet had the opportunity.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I do now,” interposed Lady Hamilton, bending on
-him her blue eyes with the pure tenderness of an angel.
-“I thank you for it with my whole heart.”</p>
-
-<p>He felt at that moment how less than trifling had been
-his service compared with his reward. In his exaltation
-he would have laid his life down willingly for them both.</p>
-
-<p>“That was a mere chance,” said he, making light of
-his exploit with a forced laugh. “The whole affair was
-but the roughest cudgel-play from beginning to end. I, at
-least, have no cause to regret it, speaking in my secular
-capacity, for it led to an agreeable cruise and a sight of
-the most beautiful island in the world, where, I hope, I was
-fortunate enough to be of some service to Sir George in a
-manner more befitting my calling.”</p>
-
-<p>Again he forced himself to smile, addressing his speech
-to Lady Hamilton, without looking at her.</p>
-
-<p>“And what of the new Court?” asked Cerise, observing
-his confusion with some astonishment, and kindly endeavouring
-to cover it. “Will the young King fulfil all
-the promise of his boyhood? They used to say he would
-grow up the image of Louis le Grand.”</p>
-
-<p>“The new Court,” answered Florian, lightly, “like all
-other new Courts, is the exact reverse of the old. To be
-in favour with the Regent is to be an eyesore to the King;
-to have served Louis le Grand faithfully, is to be wearisome,
-<i>rococo</i>, and behind the times; while, if a courtier wishes to
-bid for favour with the Duke, he must forswear the rest of
-the Royal family—go about drunk by daylight, and set at
-open defiance, not only the sacred moralities of life, but all
-the common decencies of society.”</p>
-
-<p>“The scum, then, comes well to the surface,” observed
-Sir George, laughing. “It seems that in the respectable
-Paris of to-day there is a better chance than ever for a
-reprobate!”</p>
-
-<p>“There is a way to fortune for honest men,” answered
-the Jesuit, “that may be trodden now with every appearance
-of safety, and without the loss of self-esteem. It
-leads, in my opinion, directly to success, and keeps the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_378"></a>[378]</span>
-straight, unswerving path of honour all the time. ‘The
-Bashful Maid,’ Sir George, used to lay her course faithfully
-by the compass, and I have often thought what a
-good example that inanimate figure-head showed to those
-who controlled her movements. But I must ask Lady
-Hamilton’s pardon,” he added, with mock gravity, “for
-thus mentioning her most formidable rival in her presence.
-If you can call to mind, madame, her resolute front, her
-coal-black hair, her glaring eyes, her complexion of rich
-vermilion, mantling even to the tip of her nose, and the
-devotion paid to her charms by captain as well as crew, you
-must despair of equalling her in Sir George’s eyes, and can
-never know a moment’s peace again.”</p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack, clearing the table with much ceremony,
-could scarcely refrain from giving audible expression to
-his delight.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Hamilton laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“As you have chosen such a subject of conversation,”
-said she, “it is time for me to retire. After you have
-done justice to the charms of ‘The Bashful Maid,’ whom,
-when she was not too lively, I admired as much as any one,
-and have exhausted your Musketeer’s reminiscences, you
-will find <i>me</i>, and, what is more to the purpose, a dish of
-hot coffee, in the little room at the end of the gallery.
-Till then, <i>Sans adieu</i>!” And her ladyship walked out,
-laying her hand on Sir George’s shoulder to prevent his
-rising while she passed, with an affectionate gesture that
-was in itself a caress.</p>
-
-<p>The Jesuit gazed after her as she disappeared, and,
-resuming his place at the table, felt that whatever difficulties
-he had already experienced, the worst part of his task was
-now to come.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_379"></a>[379]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV<br />
-<span class="smaller">“BOX IT ABOUT”</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>When the door had closed on his wife, Sir George settled
-himself comfortably in his chair, filled a bumper from the
-claret jug, and, passing it to Florian, proposed the accustomed
-toast, drank at many hundred tables in merry
-England about the same hour.</p>
-
-<p>“Church and King!” said the baronet, and quaffed off
-a goodly draught, as if he relished the liquor no less than
-the pledge.</p>
-
-<p>It gave the Jesuit an opening, and, like a skilful fencer,
-he availed himself of it at once.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>true</i> Church,” said he, wetting his lips with wine,
-“and the <i>true</i> King.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir George laughed, and looked round the hall.</p>
-
-<p>“Ashore,” he observed, “I respect every man’s opinions,
-though nobody has a right to think differently from the
-skipper afloat; but let me tell you, my friend, such
-sentiments as your qualification implies had better be kept
-to yourself. They might shorten your visit to Hamilton,
-and even cause your journey to end at Traitor’s Gate in the
-Tower of London.”</p>
-
-<p>He spoke in his usual reckless, good-humoured tone.
-Despite the warning, Florian perceived that the subject was
-neither dreaded nor discouraged by his host. He proceeded,
-therefore, to feel his ground cautiously, but with confidence.</p>
-
-<p>“Your English Government,” said he, “is doubtless
-on the watch, and with good reason. In the Trades, I
-remember, we used to say that ‘The Bashful Maid’ might
-be left to steer herself but when we got among the squalls<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_380"></a>[380]</span>
-of the Caribbean Sea, we kept a pretty sharp look-out, as
-you know, to shorten sail at a moment’s warning. Your
-ship up there in London is not making very good weather
-of it even now, and the breeze is only springing up to-day
-that will freshen to a gale to-morrow. At least, so we
-think over the water. Perhaps we are misinformed.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir George raised his eyebrows, and pondered. He had
-guessed as much for some time. Though with so many
-new interests, he had busied himself of late but little with
-politics, yet it was not in his nature to be entirely unobservant
-of public affairs. He had seen plenty of clouds
-on the horizon, and knew they portended storms; but the
-old habits of military caution had not deserted him, and he
-answered, carelessly—</p>
-
-<p>“That depends on what you think, you know. These
-Jesuits—pardon me, comrade, I cannot help addressing
-you as a Musketeer—these Jesuits sometimes know a great
-deal more than their prayers, but rather than prove
-mistaken, they will themselves create the complications
-they claim to have discovered. Frankly, you may speak
-out here. Our oak panels have no ears, and my servants
-are most of them deaf, and all faithful. What is the last
-infallible scheme at St. Omer? How many priests are
-stirring hard at the broth? How many marshals of France
-are longing to scald their mouths? Who is blowing the
-fire up, to keep it all hot and insure the caldron’s bubbling
-over at the right moment?”</p>
-
-<p>Florian laughed. “Greater names than you think for,”
-he replied; “fewer priests, more marshals. Peers of
-France to light the fire, and a prince of the blood to take
-the cover off. Oh! trust me this is no <i>soupe maigre</i>. The
-stock is rich, the liquid savoury, and many a tempting
-morsel lies floating here and there for those who are not
-afraid of a dash with the flesh-hook, and will take their
-chance of burnt fingers in the process.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is all very well for people who are hungry,”
-answered Sir George; “but when a man has dined, you
-can no longer tempt with a <i>ragoût</i>. The desire of a full
-man is to sit still and digest his food.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ambition has never dined,” argued the other; “ambition
-is always hungry and has the digestion of an ostrich.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_381"></a>[381]</span>
-Like that insatiable bird, it can swallow an earl’s patent,
-parchment, ribbons, seals, and all, thankfully and at a
-gulp!”</p>
-
-<p>The baronet considered, took a draught of claret, and
-spoke out.</p>
-
-<p>“Earls’ patents don’t go begging about in a Jesuit’s
-pocket without reason; nor are they given to the first
-comer who asks, only because he can swallow them. Tell
-me honestly what you mean Eugène—Florian. How am
-I to call you? With <i>me</i>, you are as safe as in the
-confessional at St. Omer. But speak no more in parables.
-Riddles are my aversion. A hidden meaning is as irritating
-as an ugly woman in a mask, and I never in my life could
-fence for ten minutes with an equal adversary, but I longed
-to take the buttons off the foils!”</p>
-
-<p>Thus adjured, Florian proceeded to unfold the object of
-his mission.</p>
-
-<p>“You were surprised, perhaps,” said he, “to learn from
-Slap-Jack, who no doubt thought me a ghost till I spoke
-first, that your old comrade would be sitting with his legs
-at the same table as yourself this afternoon. You were
-gratified, I am sure, but you must have been puzzled.
-Now, Sir George, if you believe that my only reason for
-crossing the Channel, and riding post a couple of hundred
-miles, was that I might empty a stoup of this excellent
-claret in your company, you are mistaken.” He stopped,
-blushed violently, somewhat to his host’s astonishment, and
-hid his confusion by replenishing his glass.</p>
-
-<p>“I had another object of far more importance both to
-yourself and to your country. Besides this, I am but
-fulfilling the orders of my superiors. They employed me—Heaven
-knows why they employed me!” he broke out
-vehemently, “except that they thought you the dearest
-friend I had on earth. And so you <i>are</i>! and so you <i>shall</i>
-be! Listen, Sir George. The last person I spoke with
-before leaving France, had dined with Villeroy, previous to
-setting out for St. Omer. The young King had just seen
-the Marshal, the latter was charged with his Majesty’s
-congratulations to the King of England (the real King of
-England) on his infant’s recovery. The boy who had been
-ailing is still in arms, and his Majesty asked if the young<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_382"></a>[382]</span>
-Prince Charles could speak yet? ‘When he does,’ said
-Villeroy, who has been a courtier for forty years, ‘the first
-sentence he ought to say is ‘God bless the King of France.’
-‘Not so,’ answered his Majesty, laughing, ‘let him learn
-the Jacobite countersign, “Box it about, it will come to my
-father!” If they only “box it about” enough,’ he added,
-‘that child in arms should be as sure of the British crown
-as I am of the French!’ This is almost a declaration in
-form. It is considered so in Paris. The King’s sentiments
-can no longer be called doubtful, and with the strong party
-that I have every reason to believe exists in England
-disaffected to your present Government, surely the time for
-action has arrived. They thought so at St. Omer, in a
-conclave to which I am a mere mouthpiece. I should
-think so myself, might a humble novice presume to offer
-an opinion; and when the movement takes place, if Sir
-George Hamilton is found where his blood, his antecedents,
-his high spirit and adventurous character are likely to lead
-him, I have authority to declare that he will be Sir George
-Hamilton no longer. The earl’s patent is already made
-out, which any moment he pleases may be swallowed at a
-gulp, for digestion at his leisure. I have said my say; I
-have made a clean breast of it; send for Slap-Jack and
-your venerable butler; put me in irons; hand me over to
-your municipal authorities, if you have any, and let them
-drag me to prison; but give me another glass of that excellent
-claret first, for my throat is dry with so much talking!”</p>
-
-<p>Sir George laughed and complied.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a plausible advocate, Florian,” he observed,
-after a moment’s thought, “and your powers of argument
-are little inferior to your skill in fence. But this is a
-lee-shore, my good friend, to which you are driving, a lee-shore
-with bad anchorage, shoal water, and thick weather
-all round. I like to keep the lead going on such a course,
-and only to carry sail enough for steerage-way. As far as
-I am concerned, I should wish to see them ‘box it about’
-a little longer, before I made up my mind how the game
-would go!”</p>
-
-<p>“That is not like <i>you</i>!” exclaimed the Jesuit hotly.
-“The Hamiltons have never yet waited to draw till they
-knew which was the winning side.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_383"></a>[383]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No man shall say that of me,” answered the other, in
-a stern, almost an angry tone, and for a space, the two old
-comrades sat sipping their wine in silence.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George had spoken the truth when he said that a full
-man is willing to sit still—at least as far as his own
-inclinations were concerned. He had nothing to gain by
-a change, and everything to lose, should that change leave
-him on the beaten side. Moreover, he relished the advantages
-of his present position far more than had he been
-born with the silver spoon in his mouth. Then, perhaps,
-he would have depreciated the luxury of plate and believed
-that the pewter he had not tried might be equally agreeable.
-People who have never been really hungry hardly understand
-the merits of a good dinner. You must sleep on the
-bare ground for a week or two before you know the value of
-sheets and blankets and a warm soft bed. Sir George had
-got into safe anchorage now, and it required a strong
-temptation to lure him out to sea again. True, the man’s
-habits were those of an adventurer. He had led a life of
-action from the day he first accompanied his father across
-the Channel in an open boat, at six years old, till he found
-himself a prosperous, wealthy, disengaged country gentleman
-at Hamilton Hill. He might grow tired of that
-respectable position—it was very likely he would—but not
-yet. The novelty was still pleasant; the ease, the leisure,
-the security, the freedom from anxiety, were delightful to a
-man who had never before been “off duty,” so to speak,
-in his life. Then he enjoyed above all things the field
-sports of the wild country in which he lived. His hawks
-were the best within a hundred miles. His hounds, hardy,
-rough, steady, and untiring, would follow a lean travelling
-fox from dawn to dark of the short November day, and
-make as good an account of him at last as of a fat wide-antlered
-stag under the blazing sun of August. He had
-some interest, some excitement for every season as it
-passed. If all his broad acres were not fertile in corn, he
-owned wide meres covered with wild-fowl, streams in which
-trout and grayling leaped in the soft May mornings, like
-rain-drops in a shower, where the otter lurked and vanished,
-where the noble salmon himself came arrowing up triumphant
-from the sea. Woods, too, in which the stately red<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_384"></a>[384]</span>
-deer found a shelter, and swelling hills of purple heather,
-where the moorcock pruned his wing, and the curlew’s
-plaintive wail died off in the surrounding wilderness.</p>
-
-<p>All this afforded pleasant pastime, none the less pleasant
-that his limbs were strong, his health robust, and the
-happy, hungry sportsman could return at sundown to a
-comfortable house, an excellent table, and a cellar good
-enough for the Pope. Such material comforts are not to
-be despised—least of all by men who have known the want
-of them. Ask any old campaigner whether he does not
-appreciate warmth, food, and shelter; even idleness, so long
-as the effects of previous fatigue remain. These things
-may pall after a time, but until they <i>do</i> so pall they are
-delightful, and not to be relinquished but for weighty
-motives, nor even then without regret.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George, too, in taking a wife, had “given pledges
-to fortune,” as Lord Bacon hath it. He loved Cerise very
-dearly, and although an elevating affection for a worldly
-object will never make a man a coward, it tones down all
-the wild recklessness of his nature, and bids the boldest
-hesitate ere he risks his earthly treasure even at the call of
-ambition. It is the sore heart that seeks an anodyne in
-the excitement of danger and the confusion of tumultuous
-change.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, men’s habits of thought are acted on far more
-easily than they will admit, by the opinions of those
-amongst whom they live.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George’s friends and neighbours, the honest country
-gentlemen with whom he cheered his hounds or killed his
-game abroad, and drank his claret at home, were enthusiastic
-Jacobites in theory, but loyal and quiet subjects of
-King George in practice. They inherited, indeed, much of
-the high feeling, and many of the chivalrous predilections
-that had instigated their grandfathers and great-grandfathers
-to strike desperately for King Charles at Marston
-Moor and Naseby Field, but they inherited also the sound
-sense that was often found lurking under the Cavalier’s
-love-locks, the dogged patriotism, and strong affection for
-their church, which filled those hearts that beat so stoutly
-behind laced shirts and buff coats when opposed to Cromwell
-and his Ironsides.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_385"></a>[385]</span></p>
-
-<p>With the earlier loyalists, to uphold the Stuart was to
-fight for principle, property, personal freedom, and liberty
-of conscience, but to support his grandson now was a
-different matter altogether. His cause had but one argument
-in its favour, and that was the magic of a name. To
-take up arms on his behalf was to lose lands, position,
-possibly life, if defeated, of which catastrophe there seemed
-every reasonable prospect; while, in the event of victory,
-there was too much ground to suppose that the reward of
-these efforts would be to see the Church of England, the
-very institution for which they had been taught by their
-fathers to shed their blood, oppressed, persecuted, and
-driven from her altars by the Church of Rome.</p>
-
-<p>As in a long and variable struggle between two wrestlers,
-each of the great contending parties might now be said to
-stand upon the adversary’s ground, their tactics completely
-altered, their positions exactly reversed.</p>
-
-<p>It was only in the free intercourse of conviviality, with
-feelings roused by song, or brains heated by claret, that the
-bulk of these Northern country gentlemen ever thought of
-alluding to the absent family in terms of affection and
-regret. They were for the most part easy in their circumstances
-and happy in their daily course of life; their heads
-were safe, their rents rising, and they were satisfied to
-leave well alone.</p>
-
-<p>George had that day met some dozen of his new companions,
-neighbouring gentlemen with whom he was now
-on friendly and familiar terms, at a cock-fight; this little
-assemblage represented fairly enough the tone of feeling
-that prevailed through the whole district, these jovial
-squires might be taken as fair representatives of their order
-in half a dozen counties north of the Trent. As he passed
-them mentally in review, one by one, he could not think of
-a single individual likely to listen favourably to such proposals
-as Florian seemed empowered to make, at least at an
-earlier hour than three in the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>When dinner was pretty well advanced, many men, in
-those days, were wont to display an enthusiastic readiness
-for any wild scheme broached, irrespective of their inability
-to comprehend its bearings, and their impatience of its
-details; but when morning brought headache and reflection,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_386"></a>[386]</span>
-such over-hasty partisans were, of all others, the least
-disposed to encounter the risk, the expense, and especially
-the trouble, entailed by another Jacobite rising in favour
-of the Stuarts. Sir George could think of none who, in
-sober earnest, would subscribe a shilling to the cause, or
-bring a single mounted soldier into the field.</p>
-
-<p>There was also one more reason, touching his self-interest
-very closely, which rendered Sir George Hamilton essentially
-an upholder of the existing state of things. He had broad
-acres, indeed, but the men with broad acres have never in
-the history of our country been averse to meddling with
-public affairs—they have those acres to look to in every
-event. If worst comes to worst, sequestration only lasts
-while the enemy remains in power, and landed property,
-though it may elude its owner for a while, does not vanish
-entirely off the face of the earth. But Sir George had
-made considerable gains during his seafaring career, with
-the assistance of ‘The Bashful Maid,’ and these he had
-invested in a flourishing concern, which, under the respectable
-title of the Bank of England, has gone on increasing
-in prosperity to the present day. The Bank of England
-had lent large sums of money to the Government, and as a
-revolution would have forced it to stop payment, Sir George,
-even if he had chosen to accept his earl’s patent, must have
-literally bought it with all the hard cash he possessed in the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>Such a consideration alone would have weighed but little,
-for he was neither a timid man nor a covetous; but when,
-with his habitual quickness of thought, he reviewed the
-whole position, scanning all its difficulties at a glance, he
-made up his mind that unless his old lieutenant had some
-more dazzling bait to offer than an earl’s coronet, he would
-not entertain his proposals seriously for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“And what have <i>you</i> to gain?” he asked, good-humouredly,
-after a short silence, during which each had been
-busy with his own meditations. “What do they offer the
-zealous Jesuit priest in consideration of his services,
-supposing those services are successful? What will they
-give you? The command of the Body-Guard in London, or
-the fleet at Sheerness? Will they make you a councillor,
-a colonel, or a commodore? Lord Mayor of London, or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_387"></a>[387]</span>
-Archbishop of Canterbury? On my honour, Florian, I
-believe you are capable of filling any one of these posts
-with infinite credit. Something has been promised you,
-surely, were it only a pair of scarlet hose and a cardinal’s
-hat.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Nothing</i>! as I am a gentleman and a priest!” answered
-Florian, eagerly. “My advocacy is but for your own sake!
-For the aggrandisement of yourself and those who love you!
-For the interests of loyalty and the true religion!”</p>
-
-<p>“You were always an enthusiast,” answered the baronet,
-kindly, “and enthusiasts in every cause are juggled out of
-their reward. Take a leaf from the book of your employers,
-and remember their own watchword: ‘Box it about, it will
-come to my father.’ Do you let them box it about, till it
-has nearly reached the—the—well—the claimant of the
-British crown, and when he has opened his hands to seize
-the prize, <i>you</i> give it the last push that sends it into his
-grasp—the Pope could not offer you better counsel. If you
-have drunk enough claret, let us go to our coffee in Lady
-Hamilton’s boudoir.”</p>
-
-<p>But Florian excused himself on the plea of fatigue and
-business. He had letters to write, he said, which was
-perfectly true, though they might well have been postponed
-for a day, or even a week—but he wanted an hour’s
-solitude to survey his position, to look steadily on the
-future, and determine how far he should persevere in the
-course on which he had embarked. Neither had he courage
-to face Cerise again so soon. He felt anxious, agitated,
-unnerved, by her very presence, and the sound of her voice.
-To-morrow he would feel more like himself. To-morrow he
-could learn to look upon her as she must always be to him
-in future, the wife of his friend. Of course, he argued, this
-task would become easier day by day; and so, to begin it,
-he leaned out of window, watching the stars come one by
-one into view, breathing the perfume from the late autumn
-flowers in her garden, and thinking that, while to him she
-was more beautiful than the star, more loveable than the
-flower, he might as well hope to reach the one as to pluck
-<i>her</i> like the other, and wear her for himself.</p>
-
-<p>Still, he resolved that his affection, mad, hopeless as it
-was, should never exceed the limits he had marked out.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_388"></a>[388]</span>
-He would watch over her steps and secure her happiness;
-he would make her husband great and noble for her sake;
-everything belonging to her should be for him a sacred and
-inviolable trust. He would admire her as an angel, and
-adore her as a saint! It was good, he thought, for both of
-them, that he was a priest!</p>
-
-<p>Enthusiasm in all but the cause of Heaven is, indeed,
-usually juggled out of its reward, and Sir George had read
-Florian’s character aright when he called him an enthusiast.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_389"></a>[389]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLV">CHAPTER XLV<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE LITTLE RIFT</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><i>From Lady Hamilton to Madame la Marquise de Montmirail.</i></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">“<span class="smcap">My very dear Mamma</span>,—</p>
-
-<p>“You shall not again have cause to complain of my
-negligence in writing, nor to accuse me of forgetting my
-own dear mother, amongst all the new employments and
-dissipations of my English home.</p>
-
-<p>“You figure to yourself that both are extremely engrossing,
-and so numerous that I have not many moments to
-spare, even for the most sacred of duties. Of employments,
-yes, these are indeed plentiful, and recur day by day.
-Would you like to know what they are? At seven every
-morning my coffee is brought by an English maid, who
-stares at me open-mouthed while I drink it, and wonders I
-do not prefer to breakfast like herself, directly I am up, on
-salt beef and small beer. She has not learned any of my
-dresses by name; and when she fastens my hair, her hands
-tremble so, that it all comes tumbling about my shoulders
-long before I can get downstairs. She is stupid, awkward,
-slow, but gentle, willing, and rather pretty. Somehow I
-cannot help loving her, though I wish with all my heart
-she was a better maid.</p>
-
-<p>“If George has not already gone out on some sporting
-expedition—and he is passionately fond of such pursuits,
-perhaps because they relieve the monotony of married life,
-which, I fear, is inexpressibly tedious to men like him, who
-have been accustomed to constant excitement—I find him
-in the great hall eating as if he were famished, and in a
-prodigious hurry to be off. I fill him his cup of claret with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_390"></a>[390]</span>
-my own hands, for my darling says he can only drink wine
-in the morning when I pour it out for him myself; and
-before I have time to ask a single question he is in the
-saddle and gallops off. Mamma, I never <i>have</i> time to ask
-him any questions. I suppose men are always so busy. I
-sometimes think I too should like to have been a man.
-Perhaps, then, this large, dark, over-furnished house would
-not look so gloomy when he is gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps, too, the housekeeper would not tell me such
-long stories about what they did in the time when Barbara,
-Lady Hamilton, reigned here. By all accounts she must
-have been an ogress, with a mania for accumulating linen.
-You will laugh at me, dear mamma—you who never feared
-the face of any human being—but I am a little afraid of
-this good Dame Diaper, and so glad when our interview is
-over. I wish I had more courage. George must think me
-such a coward, he who is so brave. I heard him say the
-other day that the finest sight he ever saw in his life was
-the <i>beautiful Marquise</i> (meaning you, mamma) at bay. I
-asked him if he did not see poor frightened me at a sad
-disadvantage? and he answered by—No, I won’t tell you
-how he answered. Ah! dear mother, I always wished to
-be like you from the time I was a little girl. Every day
-now I wish it more and more. After my release from Dame
-Diaper I go to the garden and look at my Provence roses—there
-are seven buds to flower yet; and the autumn here,
-though finer than I expected, is much colder than in France.
-Then I walk out and visit my poor. I wish I could understand
-their <i>patois</i> better, but I am improving day by day.</p>
-
-<p>“The hours do not pass by very quick till three o’clock;
-but at three we dine, and George is sure to be back, often
-bringing a friend with him who stays all night, for in this
-country the gentlemen do not like travelling after dinner,
-and perhaps they are very right. When we have guests I
-see but little of George again till supper-time, and then I
-am rather tired, and he is forced to attend to his company,
-so that I have no opportunity of conversing with him.
-Would you believe it, mamma, for three days I have
-wanted to speak to him about an alteration in my garden,
-and we have never yet had a spare five minutes to go and
-look at it together?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_391"></a>[391]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Our employments in England, you see, are regular, and
-perhaps a little monotonous, but they are gaiety itself, compared
-with our amusements. I like these English, or rather,
-I should say, I respect them (mind, mamma, I do not call
-my husband a regular Englishman), but I think when they
-amuse themselves they appear to the greatest disadvantage.</p>
-
-<p>“We were invited, George and I, the other day, to dine
-with our neighbour, Sir Marmaduke Umpleby. Heavens!
-what a strange name! We started at noon, because he
-lives three leagues off, and the roads are infamous; they are
-not paved like ours, but seem mere tracts through the fields
-and across the moor. It rained the whole journey; and
-though we had six horses, we stuck twice and were forced
-to get out and walk. George carried me in his arms that I
-might not wet my feet, and swore horribly, but with good
-humour, and only, as he says, <i>en Mousquetaire</i>! I was not
-a bit frightened—I never am with <i>him</i>. At last there we
-are arrived, a party of twenty to meet us, and dinner
-already served. I am presented to every lady in turn—there
-are nine of them—and they all shake hands with me;
-but, after that, content themselves with hoping I am not
-wet, and then they stare—how they stare! as if I were
-some wild animal caught in a trap. I do not know where
-to look. You cannot think, mamma, what a difference
-there is between a society in England and with us. The
-gentlemen are then presented to me, and I like these far
-better than the ladies; they are rather awkward perhaps
-and unpolished in manner, but they seem gentlemen at
-heart, terribly afraid of a woman, one and all, yet
-respecting her, obviously because she <i>is</i> a woman; and
-though they blush, and stammer, and tread on your dress,
-something seems to tell you that they are really ready to
-sacrifice for you their own vanity and convenience.</p>
-
-<p>“This is to me more flattering than the external politeness
-of our French gallants, who bow indeed with an air
-of inimitable courtesy, and use the most refined phrases,
-while all the time they are saying things that make you
-feel quite hot. Now, George never puts one in a false
-position—I mean, he never used. He has an Englishman’s
-heart, and the manners of a French prince; but then,
-you know, there is nobody like my own Musketeer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_392"></a>[392]</span></p>
-
-<p>“At last we go to dinner. Such a dinner! Enormous
-joints of sheep and oxen steaming under one’s very nose! In
-England, to amuse oneself, it is not only necessary to have
-prodigious quantities to eat, but one must also sit among
-the smoke and savour of the dishes till they are consumed.</p>
-
-<p>“It took away my appetite completely, and I think my
-fan has smelt of beef ever since. I sat next Sir Marmaduke,
-and he good-naturedly endeavoured to make conversation
-for me by talking of Paris and the Regent’s Court.
-His ideas of our manners and customs were odd, to say the
-least, and he seemed quite surprised to learn that unmarried
-ladies never went into general society alone, and even
-married ones usually with their husbands. I hope he
-has a better opinion of us now. I am quite sure the
-poor old gentleman thought the proprieties were sadly
-disregarded in Paris till I enlightened him.</p>
-
-<p>“The English ladies are scrupulously correct in their
-demeanour; they are, I do believe, the most excellent of
-wives and mothers; but oh! mamma, to be virtuous, is it
-necessary to be so ill-dressed? When we left the gentlemen
-to their wine, which is always done here, and which,
-I think, must be very beneficial to the wine-trade, we
-adjourned to a large cold room, where we sat in a circle,
-and had nothing to do but look at each other. I thought
-I had never seen so many bright colours so tastelessly put
-together. My hostess herself, a fresh, well-preserved
-woman of a certain age, wore a handsome set of
-amethysts with a purple dress—Amethysts and purple!
-great Heaven! It would have driven Célandine mad!</p>
-
-<p>“It was dull—figure to yourself how dull—nine women
-waiting for their nine husbands, and not a subject in
-common except the probability of continued rain! Still
-we talked—it must be admitted we contrived to talk—and
-after a while the gentlemen appeared, and supper came;
-so the day was over at last, and next morning we were to
-go home. Believe me, I was not sorry.</p>
-
-<p>“Yesterday we had a visitor, and imagine if he was
-welcome, since he brought me news of my dear mamma.
-He had seen Madame la Marquise passing the Palais Royal
-in her coach before she left Paris for Touraine. ‘How was
-she looking?’ ‘As she always does, avowedly the most<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_393"></a>[393]</span>
-beautiful lady in France.’ ‘Like a damask rose,’ says
-George, with a laugh at poor pale me. Our visitor did
-not speak to Madame, for he has not the honour of her
-acquaintance; ‘but it is enough to see her once in a season,’
-said he, ‘and do homage from a distance.’</p>
-
-<p>“Was not all this very polite, and very prettily expressed?
-Now can you guess who this admirer of yours may be? I
-will give you ten chances; I will give you a hundred.
-Monsieur de St. Croix! the priest who was my director at
-the convent, and who appeared so opportunely at the little
-white chapel above Port Welcome. Is it not strange that
-he should be here now? I have put him into the oak-room
-on the <i>entresol</i>, because it is warm and quiet, and he looks
-so pale and ill. He is the mere shadow of what he used to
-be, and I should hardly have known him but for his dark
-expressive eyes. So different from George, who is the
-picture of health, and handsomer, I think, than ever. He
-(I mean Monsieur de St. Croix) is very agreeable and full
-of French news. He is also an excellent gardener, and
-helps me out-of-doors almost every day, now that George is so
-much occupied. He says that the priests of his Order learn
-to do everything; and I believe if I asked him to dress an
-omelette, he would manage to accomplish it. At least, I
-am sure he would try. To-day he is gone to see some of
-his colleagues who have an establishment far up in the
-Dales, as we call them here, and George is out with his
-hawks, so I am rather dull; but do not think that is the
-reason I have sat down to write you this foolish letter.
-Next to hearing from you, it is my greatest pleasure to tell
-you all about myself, and fancy that I am speaking to you
-even at this great distance. Think of me, dear mamma,
-very often, for scarcely an hour passes that I do not think
-of you.”</p>
-
-<p>The letter concluded with an elaborate account of a
-certain white dress, the result of a successful combination,
-in which lace, muslin, and cherry-coloured ribbons formed
-the principal ingredients, which George had admired very
-much—not, however, until his attention was called to it by
-the wearer—and which was put on for the first time the
-day of Monsieur de St. Croix’s arrival.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Montmirail received this missive in little<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_394"></a>[394]</span>
-more than a week after it was written, and replied at
-once.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Madame de Montmirail to Lady Hamilton.</i></p>
-
-<p>“It rejoiced me so much to hear from you, my dear
-child. I was getting anxious about your health, your
-spirits, a thousand things that I think of continually;
-for my darling Cerise is never out of my mind. What you
-say of your society amuses me, and I can well imagine my
-shy girl feeling lost amongst an assemblage of awkward
-gentlemen and stupid ladies, far more than in a court ball
-at the Palais Royal, or a reception at Marly as it used to
-be; alas! as it will be no more. When you are as old as
-I am—for I am getting very old now, as you would say if
-you could see me closeted every morning over my accounts
-with my intendant—when you are as old as I am, you will
-have learned that there is very little difference between one
-society and another, so long as people are of a certain class,
-of course, and do not eat with their knives. Manner is
-but a trick, easily acquired if we begin young, but impossible
-to learn after thirty. Real politeness, which is a
-different thing altogether, is but good nature in its best
-clothes, and consists chiefly in the faculty of putting oneself
-in another person’s place, and the wish to do as one
-would be done by. I have often seen people with very bad
-manners exceedingly polite. I have also even oftener seen
-the reverse. If you do not suffer yourself to find these
-English tedious, you will extract from them plenty of
-amusement; and the talent of being easily entertained is
-one to be cultivated to the utmost.</p>
-
-<p>“Even in Paris, they tell me to-day, such a talent would
-be most enviable; for all complain of the dulness pervading
-society, and the oppressive influence of the Court. I cannot
-speak from my own observation, for I have been careful
-to go nowhere while in the capital, and to retire to my
-estates here in Touraine as quickly as possible. I have
-not even seen the Prince-Marshal, nor do I feel that my
-spirits would be good enough to endure his importunate
-kindness. I hear, moreover, that he devotes himself now
-to Mademoiselle de Villeroy, the old Marshal’s youngest
-daughter; so you will excuse me of pique rather than
-ingratitude.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_395"></a>[395]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I am not unhappy here, for I think I like a country
-life. My intendant is excessively stupid, and supplies me
-with constant occupation. I pass my mornings in business,
-and see my housekeeper too, but am not the least afraid of
-her, and I write an infinity of letters, some of them to
-Montmirail West. Célandine is still there with her husband,
-and they have got the estate once more under cultivation.
-Had I left it immediately after the revolt, I am
-persuaded every acre of it would have passed out of our
-possession. We had a narrow escape, my darling, though
-I think I could have held out five minutes longer; but I
-shall never forget the flash of Sir George’s sword as he
-leaped in, nor, I think, will <i>you</i>. He is a brave man, my
-child, and a resolute. Such are the easiest for a woman to
-manage; but still the art of guiding a husband is not
-unlike that of ruling a horse. You must adapt yourself
-instinctively to his movements; but, although you should
-never seem mistrustful, you must not altogether abandon
-the rein. Whilst you feel it gently, he has all imaginable
-liberty; but you know <i>exactly where he is</i>. Above all,
-never wound yours in his self-love. He would not show he
-was hurt, but the injury with him would, therefore, be incurable.
-I do not think he would condescend to expostulate,
-or to give you a chance of explanation; but day by day you
-would find yourselves farther and farther apart. You
-would be miserable, and perhaps so would he.</p>
-
-<p>“You will wonder that I should have studied his character
-so carefully; but is not your happiness now the first, my
-only object, in the world?</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur de St. Croix seems to be an agreeable addition
-to your family <i>tête-à-tête</i>. Not that such an addition
-can be already required; but I suppose, as an old comrade
-and friend, your husband cannot but entertain him so long
-as he chooses to remain. Was not he the man with the
-romantic story, who had been priest, fencing-master, pirate,
-what shall I say? and priest again? I cannot imagine
-such avocations imparting a deeper knowledge of flowers
-than is possessed by your own gardener at home; and if I
-were in your place, I should on no account permit him
-to interfere with the omelette in any way. Neither in
-a flower-garden nor a kitchen is a priest in his proper place.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_396"></a>[396]</span>
-I think yours would be better employed in the saddle <i>en
-route</i> for St. Omer, or wherever his college is established.</p>
-
-<p>“Talking of the last-named place reminds me of Malletort.
-The Abbé, strange to say, has thrown himself into
-the arms of the Jesuits. Though I have seen him repeatedly,
-I cannot learn his intentions, nor the nature
-of his schemes, for scheme he will, I know, so long as
-his brain can think. He talks of absence from France, and
-hints at a mission from the Order to some savage climes;
-but if he anticipates martyrdom, which I cannot easily
-believe, his spirits are wonderfully little depressed by the
-prospect, and he seems, if possible, more sarcastic than
-ever. He even rode with me after dinner the last time he
-was here, and asked me a thousand questions about you. I
-ride by myself now, and I like it better. I can wander
-about these endless woods, and think—think. What else
-is left when the time to act is gone by?</p>
-
-<p>“You tell me little about Sir George; his health, his
-looks, his employments. Does he mingle with the society
-of the country? Does he interest himself in politics?
-Whatever his pursuits, I am sure he will take a leading
-part. Give him my kindest regards. You will both come
-and see me here some day before very long. Write again
-soon to your loving mother. They brought me a half-grown
-fawn last week from the top of the Col St. Jacques, where
-you dropped your glove into the waterfall. We are trying
-to tame it in the garden, and I call it Cerise.”</p>
-
-<p>No letter could be more affectionate, more motherly.
-Why did Lady Hamilton shed the first tears of her married
-life during its perusal? She wept bitterly, confessed she
-was foolish, nervous, hysterical; read it over once more, and
-wept again. Then she bathed her eyes, as she used at the
-convent, but without so satisfactory a result, smoothed her
-hair, composed her features, and went downstairs.</p>
-
-<p>Florian had been absent all the morning. He had again
-ridden abroad to meet a conclave of his Order, held at an
-old abbey far off amongst the dales, and was expected back
-to dinner. It now occurred to her, for the first time, that
-the hours passed less quickly in his absence. She was provoked
-at the thought, and attributed her ill-humour, somewhat
-unfairly, to her mother’s letter. The tears nearly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_397"></a>[397]</span>
-sprang to her eyes again, but she sent them back with an
-effort, and descended the wide old staircase in an uncomfortable,
-almost an irritable, frame of mind, for which she
-could give no reason even to herself.</p>
-
-<p>Strange to say, George was waiting for her in the hall.
-He had returned wet from hunting, and was now dressed
-and ready for dinner a few minutes before the usual time.
-Florian had not yet made his appearance.</p>
-
-<p>“What has become of our priest?” called out the
-baronet, good-humouredly, as his wife descended the stairs.
-“I thought, Cerise, he was tied to your apron-strings, and
-would never be absent at this hour of the day. I wish he
-may not have met with some disaster,” he added more
-gravely; “there are plenty of hawks even in this out-of-the-way
-place, to whom Florian’s capture, dead or alive,
-would be worth a purse of gold!”</p>
-
-<p>It was impossible to help it, coming thus immediately on
-her mother’s letter, and although she was fiercely angry
-with herself for the weakness, Cerise blushed down to the
-very tips of her fingers. George could not but remark her
-confusion, and observed, at the same time, that her eyelids
-were red from recent tears. He looked surprised, but his
-voice was kindly and reassuring as usual.</p>
-
-<p>“Good heavens, my darling! What has happened?” he
-asked, putting his arm round her waist. “You have had
-bad news, or you are ill, or something is amiss!”</p>
-
-<p>She was as pale now as she had been crimson a moment
-before. How could she explain to <i>him</i> the cause of her
-confusion? How could she hope to make a <i>man</i> understand
-her feelings? Her first impulse was to produce her mother’s
-letter, but the remarks in it about their guest prevented her
-following so wise a course, and yet if she ignored it altogether
-would not this be the first secret from her husband? No
-wonder she turned pale. It seemed as if her mother’s
-warning were required already.</p>
-
-<p>In such a dilemma she floundered, of course, deeper and
-deeper. By way of changing the subject, she caught at her
-husband’s suggestion, and exclaimed with her pale face and
-tearful eyes—</p>
-
-<p>“Capture! Monsieur de St. Croix captured! Heavens,
-George, we cannot go to dinner unconcerned if our guest is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_398"></a>[398]</span>
-in real danger. You can save him, you <i>must</i> save him!
-What shall we do?”</p>
-
-<p>He had withdrawn his arm from her waist. He looked
-her scrutinisingly in the face, and then turned away to the
-window.</p>
-
-<p>“Make yourself easy, Cerise,” he answered, coldly. “I
-see him riding up the avenue. Your suspense will be over
-in less than five minutes now.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he began to play with the hawk on its perch,
-teasing the bird, and laughing rather boisterously at its
-ruffled plumage and impotent anger.</p>
-
-<p>She felt she had offended, though she scarcely knew how,
-and after a moment’s consideration determined to steal behind
-him, put her arms round his neck and tell him so. The
-very conflict showed she loved him, the victory over her own
-heart’s pride proved how dearly, but unfortunately at this
-moment Florian entered full of apologies for being late,
-followed by Slap-Jack and a line of servants bringing
-dinner.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, also, and according to the usual fatality in
-such cases, Monsieur de St. Croix addressed most of his
-conversation to Lady Hamilton during the meal, and she
-could not but betray by her manner an embarrassment she
-had no cause to feel. Sir George may possibly have
-observed this, some womanly intuition told Cerise that he
-did, but his bearing was frank and good-humoured to both,
-though he filled his glass perhaps oftener than usual, and
-laughed a little louder than people do who are quite at ease.
-The wife’s quick ear, no doubt, detected so much, and
-it made her wretched. She loved him very dearly, and it
-seemed so hard that without any fault of her own she should
-thus mark “the little rift within the lute,” threatening her
-with undeserved discord; “the little pitted speck in the
-garnered fruit,” eating into all the bloom and promise of
-her life.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_399"></a>[399]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLVI">CHAPTER XLVI<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE MUSIC MUTE</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>When Cerise found herself alone, she naturally read her
-mother’s letter once again, and made a variety of resolutions
-for her future conduct which she could not but
-acknowledge were derogatory to her own dignity the while.
-It was her duty, she told herself, to yield to her husband’s
-prejudices, however unreasonable; to give way to him in
-this, as in every other difference of married life—for she
-felt it <i>was</i> a difference, though expressed only by a turn of
-his eyebrow, a contraction of his lip—and to trample her
-own pride under foot when he required it, however humiliating
-and disagreeable it might be to herself. If George
-was so absurd as to think she showed an over-anxiety for
-the safety of their guest, why, she must bear with his folly
-because he was her husband, and school her manner to
-please him, as she schooled her thoughts. After all, was
-she not interested in Florian only as <i>his</i> friend? What
-was it, what <i>could</i> it be to her, if the priest were carried off
-to York gaol, or the Tower of London, to-morrow? Lady
-Hamilton passed very rapidly over this extreme speculation,
-and perhaps she was right; though it is easy to convince
-yourself by argument that you are uninterested in any one,
-the actual process of your thoughts is apt to create something
-very like a special interest which increases in proportion
-to the multitude of reasons adduced against its
-possibility, and that which was but a phantom when you sat
-down to consider it has grown into a solid and tangible
-substance when you get up. Lady Hamilton, therefore,
-was discreet in reverting chiefly to what her husband<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_400"></a>[400]</span>
-thought of <i>her</i>, not to what <i>she</i> thought of Monsieur de
-St. Croix.</p>
-
-<p>“He is jealous!” she said to herself, clasping her hands
-with an emotion that was not wholly without pleasure.
-“Jealous, poor fellow, and that shows he loves me. Ah!
-he little knows! he little knows!”</p>
-
-<p>By the time the two gentlemen had finished their wine,
-and come to her small withdrawing-room, according to
-custom, for coffee, Cerise had worked herself up into a high
-state of self-sacrifice and wife-like devotion. It created
-rather a reaction to find that Sir George’s manner was as
-cordial and open as ever. He was free with his guest, and
-familiar with herself, laughing and jesting as if the cloud
-that had overshadowed his spirits before dinner was now
-completely passed away and forgotten. She was a little
-disappointed—a little provoked. After all, then, what
-mountains had she been making of mole-hills! What a
-deep grief and abject penitence that had been to <i>her</i>,
-which was but a chance moment of ill-humour, an unconsidered
-thoughtless whim of her husband, and what a
-fool had she been so to distress herself, and to resolve
-that she would even relax the rules of good breeding—fail
-in the common duties of hospitality, for such a trifle!</p>
-
-<p>She conversed with Florian, therefore, as usual, which
-was a little. She listened to him also as usual, which was
-a good deal. Sir George forced the thought from his mind
-again and again, yet he could not get rid of it. “How
-bright Cerise looks when he is talking to her! I never
-saw her so amused and interested in any one before!”</p>
-
-<p>Now, Monsieur de St. Croix’s life at Hamilton Hill
-ought to have been sufficiently agreeable, if it be true that
-the real way to make time pass pleasantly is to alternate
-the labour of the head and the hands; to be daily engaged
-in some work of importance, varied by periods of relaxation
-and moderate excitement. Florian’s correspondence usually
-occupied him for several hours in the morning, and it was
-remarked that the voluminous packets he received and
-transmitted were carried by special couriers who arrived
-and departed at stated times. Some of the correspondence
-was in cipher, most of it in French, with an English
-translation, and it seemed to refer principally to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_401"></a>[401]</span>
-geological formation of the neighbourhood, though a line
-or two of political gossip interspersed would relieve the
-dryness of that profound subject. Perhaps many of these
-packets, ciphers, scientific information, and all, were
-intended to be read by the authorities at St. James’s.
-Perhaps every courier was entrusted with a set of
-despatches on purpose to be seized, and a line in the
-handle of his whip, a word or two spoken in apparent jest,
-a mere sign that might be forwarded to a confederate
-looker-on, signifying the real gist of his intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>At any rate the papers required a deal of preparation,
-and Florian was seldom able to accompany his host on the
-sporting expeditions in which the latter took such delight.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George, then, would be off soon after daylight, to
-return at dinner-time, and in a whole fortnight had not yet
-found that spare five minutes for a visit to Lady Hamilton’s
-garden, while Florian would be at leisure by noon, and
-naturally devoted himself to the service of his hostess for
-the rest of the day.</p>
-
-<p>They read together—they walked together—they
-gardened together. Some of those special packets that
-arrived from France, even contained certain seeds which
-Cerise had expressed a wish to possess, and they talked
-of their future crop, and the result of their joint labours
-next year, as if Florian had become an established member
-of the family, and was never to depart.</p>
-
-<p>This mode of life might have been interrupted by her
-ladyship’s misgivings at first, but she reflected that it
-would be absurd for her to discontinue an agreeable companionship
-of which her husband obviously approved, only
-because she had misapplied her mother’s letter, or her
-mother had misunderstood hers; also it is difficult to
-resume coldness and reserve, where we have given, and
-wish to give, confidence and friendship, so Florian and
-Cerise were to be seen every fine day on the terrace at
-Hamilton Hill hard at work, side by side, like brother
-and sister, over the same flower-bed.</p>
-
-<p>“Florian!” she would say, for Cerise had so accustomed
-herself to his Christian name in talking of him with
-her husband, that she did not always call him Monsieur
-de St. Croix to his face. “Florian! come and help me to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_402"></a>[402]</span>
-tie up this rose-tree—there, hold the knot while I fasten it—now
-run and fetch me the scissors, they are lying by my
-flowers on the step. Quick—or it will slip out of my
-hands! So <i>there</i> is my Provence rose at last—truly a rose
-without a thorn!”</p>
-
-<p>And Florian did her bidding like a dog, watched her eye,
-followed her about, and seemed to take a dog’s pleasure in
-the mere fact of being near her. His reward, too, was
-much the same as that faithful animal’s, a kind word, a
-bright look, a wave of the white hand, denoting a mark of
-approval rather than a caress. Sometimes, for a minute or
-two, he could almost fancy he was happy.</p>
-
-<p>And Sir George—did Sir George approve of this constant
-intercourse, this daily companionship? Were his hawks
-and his hounds, his meetings with his neighbours for the
-administration of justice and the training of militia, for the
-excitement of a cock-fight or the relaxation of a bowling-match,
-so engrossing that he never thought of his fair young
-wife, left for hours in that lonely mansion on the hill to her
-own thoughts and the society of a Jesuit priest? It was
-hard to say—Sir George Hamilton’s disposition was shrewd
-though noble, ready to form suspicion but disdaining to
-entertain it, prone more than another to suffer from misplaced
-confidence, but the last in the world to confess its
-injuries even to himself.</p>
-
-<p>He had never seemed more energetic, never showed
-better spirits than now. His hawks struck their quarry,
-his hounds ran into their game, his horses carried him far
-ahead of his fellow-sportsmen. His advice was listened to
-at their meetings, his opinions quoted at their tables, his
-popularity was at its height with all the country gentlemen
-of the neighbourhood. He cheered lustily in the field, and
-drank his bottle fairly at the fire-side, yet all the time,
-under that smooth brow, that jovial manner, that comely
-cheek, there lurked a something which turned the chase to
-penance, and the claret to gall.</p>
-
-<p>He was not jealous, far from it. <i>He</i> jealous—what
-degradation! And of Cerise—what sacrilege! No, it was
-not jealousy that thus obtruded its shadow over those
-sunny moors, athwart that fair autumn sky; it was more a
-sense of self-reproach, of repentance, of remorse, as if he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_403"></a>[403]</span>
-had committed some injustice to a poor helpless being, that
-he could never now repay. A lower nature incapable of the
-sentiment would in its inferiority have been spared much
-needless pain. It was as if he had wounded a child, a
-lamb, or some such weak loveable creature, by accident,
-and could not stanch the wound. It would have been
-cowardly had he meant it, but he did not mean it, and it
-was only clumsy; yet none the less was he haunted by the
-patient eyes, the mute appealing sorrow that spoke so
-humbly to his heart.</p>
-
-<p>What if this girl, whose affection he had never doubted,
-did really not love him after all? What if the fancy that
-he knew she had entertained for him was but a girl’s fancy
-for the first man who had roused her vanity and flattered
-her self-esteem? It might be that she had only prized him
-because she had seen so few others, that her ideal was
-something quite different, he said in bitterness of spirit, to
-a rough ignorant soldier, a mere hunting, hawking, north-country
-baronet, whose good qualities, if he had any, were
-but a blunt honesty, and an affection for herself he had not
-the wit to express; whose personal advantages did but
-consist in a strong arm, and a weather-browned cheek,
-like any ploughman on his estate. Perhaps the man who
-would really have suited her was of a different type
-altogether, a refined scholar, an accomplished courtier, one
-who could overlay a masculine understanding with the
-graceful trickeries of a woman’s fancy, who could talk to
-her of sentiment, romance, affinity of spirits, and congeniality
-of character. Such a man as this pale-faced
-priest—not him in particular, that had nothing to do with
-it! but some one like him—there were hundreds of them
-whom she might meet at any time. It was not that he
-thought she loved another, but that the possibility now
-dawned of her not loving him.</p>
-
-<p>He did not realise this at first. It was long before he
-could bring himself to look such a privation in the face—the
-blank it would make in his own life was too chilling to
-contemplate—and to do him justice his first thought was
-not of his own certain misery, but of her lost chances of
-happiness. If now, when it was too late, she should find
-one whom she could really love, had he not stood between<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_404"></a>[404]</span>
-her and the light? Would he not be the clog round her
-neck, the curse rather than the blessing of her existence?</p>
-
-<p>Of all this he was vaguely conscious, not actually thinking
-out his reflections, far less expressing them, but aware,
-nevertheless, of some deadening, depressing influence that
-weighed him down like a nightmare, from which, morning
-after morning, he never woke.</p>
-
-<p>But this inner life which all men must live, affected the
-outer not at all. Sir George flung his hawks aloft and
-cheered his hounds with unabated zest, while Florian held
-Lady Hamilton’s scissors, and helped to tie up her roses,
-under the grey and gold of the soft autumnal sky.</p>
-
-<p>They had a thousand matters to talk about, a thousand
-reminiscences in common, now that the old intimacy had
-returned. On many points they thought alike, and discoursed
-pleasantly enough, on many they differed, and it
-was to these, I think, that they reverted with the keenest
-relish again and again.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise was a rigid Catholic—the more so now that she
-lived in a Protestant country, and with a husband whose
-antecedents had taught him to place little value on the
-mere external forms of religion. One of the dogmas
-on which she chiefly insisted was the holiness of the
-Church, and the separation of the clergy from all personal
-interests in secular pursuits.</p>
-
-<p>“A priest,” said Cerise, snipping off the ends of the
-matting with which she had tied up her rose-tree, “a priest
-is priest <i>avant tout</i>—that of course. But in my opinion
-his character is not one bit less sacred outside, in the street,
-than when he is saying high mass before the altar. He
-should never approach the line of demarcation that separates
-him from the layman. So long as he thinks only the
-thoughts of the Church, and speaks her words, he is infallible.
-When he expresses his own opinions and yields to
-his own feelings, he is no longer the priest, but the man. He
-might as well, perhaps better, be a courtier or a musketeer!”</p>
-
-<p>He stooped low down over the rose-tree, and his voice
-was very sad and gentle while he replied—</p>
-
-<p>“Far better—far better—a labourer, a lackey, or a shoe-black.
-It is a cruel lot to bear a yoke that is too heavy for
-the neck, and to feel that it can never be taken off. To sit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_405"></a>[405]</span>
-in a prison looking into your empty grave and knowing
-there is no escape till you fill it—perhaps not even then—while
-all the time the children are laughing at their play
-outside, and the scent of the summer roses comes in through
-the bars—the summer roses that your hands shall never
-reach, your lips shall never press! Ah! that is the ingenuity
-of the torture, when perhaps, to wear one of these
-roses in your bosom for an hour, you would barter your
-priesthood here, and your soul hereafter!”</p>
-
-<p>“It must be hard sometimes,” answered Cerise, kindly—“very
-hard; but is not that the whole value of the ordeal?
-What do <i>we</i> give up for our faith—even we poor women,
-who hold ourselves good Catholics?—three hours at most in
-the week, and a slice of the sirloin or the haunch on Friday.
-Oh, Florian, it is dreadful to me to think how little I can
-do to further the work of the Church! I feel as if a thousand
-strong men were pulling, with all their might, at a load, and
-I could only put one of my poor weak fingers on the rope
-for a second at a time.”</p>
-
-<p>“My daughter,” he answered, assuming at once the
-sacerdotal character, “the weakest efforts, rendered with a
-will, are counted by the Church with the strongest. St.
-Clement says that ‘if one, going on his daily business, shall
-move out of his way but two steps towards the altar, he
-shall not be without his reward.’ Submit yourself to the
-Church and her ministers, in thought, word, and deed, so
-will she take your burden on her own shoulders, and be
-answerable for your welfare in this world and the next.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the old dangerous doctrine he had learned by rote
-and repeated to so many penitents during his ministration.
-He saw the full influence of it now, and wished, for one
-wild moment, that he could be a better Christian, or a
-worse! But when she turned her eyes on him so hopefully,
-so trustfully, the evil spirit was rebuked, and came out of
-the man, tearing him the while, and almost tempting him
-to curse her—the woman he worshipped—because, for the
-moment, her face was “as the face of an angel.” He had
-a mind then to return to St. Omer at once—to trust himself
-no longer with this task, this duty, this penance, whatever
-their cruelty chose to call it—to confess his insubordination
-without reserve, and accept whatever penalty the Order<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_406"></a>[406]</span>
-might inflict! But she put her hand softly on his arm, and
-spoke so kindly, that evil desires and good resolutions were
-dispelled alike.</p>
-
-<p>“Florian,” said she, “you will help me to do right, I
-know. And I, too—I can be of some small aid even to you.
-You are happy here, I am sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Happy!” he repeated, almost with a sob; and, half-conquering
-his enemy, half-giving in, adopted at last that
-middle course, which runs so smooth and easy, like a tram-way
-down the broad road. “I am happy in so far as that,
-by remaining at Hamilton, I can hope to speed the interests
-of the true Church. You say that a priest should never
-mix himself with secular affairs. You little know how, in
-these evil days, our chief duties are connected with political
-intrigue—our very existence dependent on the energy we
-show as men of action and men of the world. Why am I
-here, Lady Hamilton, do you think? Is it to counsel you,
-as I used at the convent, and hold your gloves, and look in
-your face, and tie up your roses? It would be happy for
-me, indeed, if such were all my duties; for I could live and
-die, desiring no better. Alas! it is not so. My mission to
-England does not affect you. Its object is the aggrandisement
-of your husband.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not affect <i>me</i>!” she exclaimed, clasping her hands
-eagerly. “Oh, Florian! how can you say so? Tell me
-what it is, quick! I am dying to know. Is it a secret?
-Not now. Here he comes!”</p>
-
-<p>Sir George may, perhaps, have heard these last words, as
-he ascended the terrace steps. Whether he heard them or
-not, he could scarce fail to mark his wife’s excited gestures—her
-brightened eyes—her raised colour—and the sudden
-check in the conversation, caused by his own arrival.</p>
-
-<p>Again that dull pain seemed to gnaw at his heart, when
-he thought how bright and eager and amused she always
-seemed in Florian’s company.</p>
-
-<p>He had seen the two on the terrace as he rode home
-across the park, and joined them by the shortest way from
-the stable, without a tinge of that suspicion he might not
-be wanted, which was so painful now. Still he kept down
-all such unworthy feelings as he would have trampled an
-adder under his heavy riding-boots.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_407"></a>[407]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Bring me a rose, Cerise,” he said, cheerily, as he
-passed his wife. “There are not many of them left now.
-Here, Florian,” he added, tossing him a packet he held in
-his hand. “A note from pretty Alice at the ‘Hamilton
-Arms.’ Have a care, man! there are a host of rivals in
-the field.”</p>
-
-<p>Florian looked at the writing on the cover, and turned
-pale. This might easily be accounted for, but why should
-Cerise, at the same instant, have blushed so red—redder
-even than the rose she was plucking for her husband?</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps that was the question Sir George asked himself
-as he walked moodily into the house to dress.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_408"></a>[408]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLVII">CHAPTER XLVII<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE “HAMILTON ARMS”</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Like many old country places of the time, Hamilton Hill
-had a village belonging to it, which seemed to have nestled
-itself into the valley under shelter of the great house, just
-near enough to reap the benefits of so august a neighbourhood,
-but at such a distance as not to infringe on the
-sacred precincts of the deer-park, or on the romantic privacy
-of the pleasure-grounds.</p>
-
-<p>Where there is a village there will be thirst, and thirst
-seems to be an Englishman’s peculiar care and privilege;
-therefore, instead of slaking and quenching it at once by
-the use of water, he cherishes and keeps it alive, so to
-speak, with the judicious application of beer. A public-house
-is, accordingly, as necessary an adjunct to an English
-hamlet as an oven to a cookshop, a copper to a laundry, or
-a powder-magazine to a privateer.</p>
-
-<p>The village of Nether-Hamilton possessed, then, one of
-these indispensable appendages; but, fortunately for the
-landlady, its inhabitants were obliged to ascend a steep
-hill, for the best part of a mile, before they could fill their
-cans with beer;—I say fortunately for the landlady, because
-such an exertion entailed an additional draught of this
-invigorating beverage to be consumed and paid for on the
-spot. The “Hamilton Arms,” for the convenience of
-posting, stood on the Great North Road, at least half a
-league, as the crow flies, from that abrupt termination of
-upland, the ridge of which was crowned by the towers and
-terraces of Hamilton Hill. Twice a week a heavy lumbering
-machine, drawn by six, and in winter, often by eight<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_409"></a>[409]</span>
-horses, containing an infinity of passengers, stopped for a
-fresh relay at the “Hamilton Arms”; and when this
-ponderous vehicle had once been pulled up, it was not to
-be set going again without many readjustments, inquiries,
-oaths, protestations, and other incentives to delay.</p>
-
-<p>The “Flying-Post Coach,” as it was ambitiously called,
-did not change horses in a minute and a half; a bare-armed
-helper at each animal to pull the rugs off, almost
-before the driver had time to exchange glances with the
-barmaid, in days of which the speed, esteemed so wondrous
-then, was but a snail’s crawl compared with our rate of
-travelling now. Nothing of the kind. The “Flying-Post
-Coach” was reduced to a deliberate walk long before it
-came in sight of its haven, where it stopped gradually, and
-in a succession of spasmodic jerks, like a musical-box
-running down. The coachman descended gravely from his
-perch, and the passengers, alighting one and all, roamed
-about the yard, or hovered round the inn door, as leisurely
-as if they had been going to spend the rest of the afternoon
-at the “Hamilton Arms,” and scarcely knew how to get
-rid of the spare time on their hands. Till numerous
-questions had been asked and answered—the weather, the
-state of the roads, and the last highway robbery discussed—packets
-delivered, luggage loaded or taken off, and
-refreshments of every kind consumed—there seemed to be
-no intention of proceeding with the journey. At length,
-during a lull in the chatter of many voices, one lumbering
-horse after another might be seen wandering round the
-gable-end of the building; two or three ostlers, looking
-and behaving like savages, fastened the broad buckles and
-clumsy straps of harness, in which rope and chain-work
-did as much duty as leather, and after another pause of
-preparation, the passengers were summoned, the coachman
-tossed off what he called his “last toothful” of brandy
-and ascended solemnly to his place, gathering his reins
-with extreme caution, and imparting a scientific flourish to
-the thong of his heavy whip.</p>
-
-<p>The inexperienced might have now supposed a start
-would be immediately effected. Not a bit of it. Out
-rushed a bare-armed landlady with streaming cap-ribbons—a
-rosy chambermaid, all smiles and glances—a rough-headed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_410"></a>[410]</span>
-potboy, with a dirty apron—half-a-dozen more
-hangers-on of both sexes, each carrying something that had
-been forgotten—more oaths, more protestations, more discussions,
-and at least ten more minutes of the waning day
-unnecessarily wasted—then the coachman, bending forward,
-chirped and shouted—the poor sore-shouldered horses
-jerked, strained, and scrambled, plunging one by one at
-their collars, and leaning in heavily against the pole—the
-huge machine creaked, tottered, wavered, and finally
-jingled on at a promising pace enough, which, after about
-twenty yards, degenerated into the faintest apology for a
-trot.</p>
-
-<p>But the portly landlady looked after it nevertheless well
-pleased; for its freight had carried off a goodly quantity of
-fermented liquors, leaving in exchange many welcome
-pieces of silver and copper to replenish the insatiable
-till.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dodge had but lately come to reside at the “Hamilton
-Arms.” Originally a plump comely lass, only daughter
-of a drunken old blacksmith at Nether-Hamilton, and
-inheriting what was termed in that frugal locality “a tidy
-bit of money,” she was sought in marriage by a south-country
-pedlar, who visited her native village in the exercise
-of his calling, and whose silver tongue persuaded her to
-leave kith and kin and country for his sake. After many
-ups and downs in life, chiefly the result of her husband’s
-rascality, she found herself established in a southern seaport,
-at a pot-house called the “Fox and Fiddle,” doing,
-as she expressed it, “a pretty business enough,” in the
-way of crimping for the merchant service; and here,
-previous to the death of her husband, known by his
-familiars as “Butter-faced Bob,” she made the acquaintance
-of Sir George Hamilton, then simple captain of ‘The
-Bashful Maid,’ little dreaming she would ever become his
-tenant so near her old home.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dodge made lamentable outcries for her pedlar
-when she lost him; but there can be no question she was
-much better off after his death. He was dishonest, irritable,
-self-indulgent, harsh; and she had probably no
-better time of it at the “Fox and Fiddle” than is enjoyed
-by any other healthy, easy-tempered woman, whose husband<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_411"></a>[411]</span>
-cheats a good deal, drinks not a little, and is generally
-dissatisfied with his lot. He left her, however, a good
-round sum of money, such as placed her completely beyond
-fear of want; and after a decent term of mourning had
-expired, after she had received the condolences of her
-neighbours, besides two offers of marriage from publicans
-in adjoining streets, she took her niece home to live with
-her, sold off the good-will of the “Fox and Fiddle,” wished
-her rejected suitors farewell, and sought the hamlet of her
-childhood, to sit down for life, as she said, in the bar of the
-“Hamilton Arms.” “It would be lonesome, no doubt,”
-she sometimes observed, “without Alice; and if ever Alice
-took and left her, as leave her she might for a home of her
-own any day, being a good girl and a comely, why then;”
-and here Mrs. Dodge would simper and look conscious,
-bristling her fat neck till her little round chin disappeared
-in its folds, and inferring thereby that, in the event of such
-a contingency, she might be induced to make one of her
-customers happy, by consenting to embark on another
-matrimonial venture before she had done with the institution
-for good and all. Nor, though Mrs. Dodge was fifty
-years of age, and weighed fifteen stone, would she have
-experienced any difficulty in finding a second husband, save,
-perhaps, the pleasing embarrassment of selection from the
-multitude at her command. And if her aunt could thus
-have “lovyers,” as she said, “for the looking at ’em,” it
-may be supposed that pretty Alice found no lack of
-admirers in a house-of-call so well frequented as the
-“Hamilton Arms.” Pretty Alice, with her pale brow, her
-hazel eyes, her sweet smile, and soft gentle manners, that
-made sad havoc in the hearts of the young graziers, cattle-dealers,
-and other travellers that came under their comforting
-influence off the wild inhospitable moor. Even Captain
-Bold, the red-nosed “blood,” as such persons were then
-denominated, whose calling nobody knew or dared ask him,
-but who was conspicuous for his flowing wig, laced coat,
-and wicked bay mare, would swear, with fearfully ingenious
-oaths, that Alice was prettier than any lady in St. James’s;
-and if she would but say the word, why burn him, blight
-him, sink him into the lowest depths of Hamilton Mere, if
-<i>he</i>, John Bold, wouldn’t consent to throw up his profession,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_412"></a>[412]</span>
-have his comb cut, and subside at once into a homely,
-helpless, henpecked, barndoor fowl.</p>
-
-<p>But Alice would not say the word, neither to Captain
-Bold nor to any honester man. She had been true to her
-sailor-love, through a long weary time of anxiety, and now
-she had her reward. Slap-Jack was domiciled within a
-mile of her, by one of those unforeseen strokes of fortune
-which he called a “circumstance,” and Alice thanked
-heaven on her knees day and night for the happiness of
-her lot.</p>
-
-<p>It may be supposed that her sweetheart spent much of
-his leisure at the “Hamilton Arms.” Though he got
-through half the work of Sir George’s household, for the
-foretopman never could bear to be idle, his occupations did
-not seem so engrossing as to prevent a daily visit to Alice.
-It was on one of these occasions that, gossiping with Mrs.
-Dodge, as was his wont, he observed a gold cross heaving
-on her expansive bosom, and taxed her with a favoured
-lover and a speedy union forthwith.</p>
-
-<p>“Go along with you,” wheezed the jolly landlady, in no
-way offended by the accusation. “It’s our new lodger as
-gave me this trinket only yesterday. Lovyers! say you.
-‘Marry!’ as my poor Bob used to say, ‘<i>his</i> head is not
-made of the wood they cut blocks from;’ an’ let me tell
-you, Master Slap-Jack, a man’s never so near akin to a
-fool as when he’s a-courting. Put that in your pipe, my
-lad, and smoke it. Why Alice, my poppet, how you blush!
-Well, as I was a sayin’, this is a nice civil gentleman, and a
-well spoken. Takes his bottle with his dinner, and, mind
-ye, he <i>will</i> have it o’ the best. None of your ranting,
-random, come-by-chance roysterers, like Captain Bold,
-who’ll sing as many songs and tell as many—well, <i>lies</i> I
-call ’em, honest gentleman—over a rummer of punch, as
-would serve most of my customers two gallons of claret and
-a stoup of brandy to finish up with.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s not much pith in that Captain Bold,” interposed
-Slap-Jack, contemptuously. “You put a strain on
-him, and see if he don’t start somewhere. Captain, indeed!
-It’s a queer ship’s company where they made <i>him</i> skipper,
-askin’ your pardon, Mrs. Dodge.”</p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack had on one occasion interrupted the captain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_413"></a>[413]</span>
-in a warmer declaration to his sweetheart than he quite
-relished, and hated him honestly enough in consequence.</p>
-
-<p>“Hoity-toity!” laughed the landlady. “The captain’s
-nothing to me. I never could abide your black men; and
-I don’t know that they’re a bit better set off by wearing a
-red nose. The captain’s Alice’s admirer, not mine; and I
-think Alice likes him a bit too sometimes, I do!”</p>
-
-<p>This was said, as the French express it, “with intention.”
-It made Alice toss her head; but Slap-Jack only
-winked.</p>
-
-<p>“I know better,” said he. “Alice always <i>was</i> heart-of-oak;
-as true as the compass; wasn’t you, my lass? See
-how she hoists her colours if you do but hail her. No, no,
-Aunt Dodge—for aunt you’ll be to me afore another year is
-out—it’s your broad bows and buxom figure-head as brings
-the customers cruising about this here bar, like flies round
-a honey-pot. Come, let’s have the rights now of your gold
-cross. Is it a keepsake, or a charm, or a love-token, or
-what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Love-token!” repeated Mrs. Dodge, in high glee.
-“What do you know of love-tokens? Got a wisp of that
-silly girl’s brown hair, may be, and a broken sixpence done
-up in a rag of canvas all stained with sea-water! Why,
-when my poor Bob was a-courtin’ <i>me</i>, the first keepsake as
-ever he gave me was eighteen yards of black satin, all off of
-the same piece, and two real silver bodkins for my hair, as
-thick a’most as that kitchen poker. Ay, lass! it was something
-like keeping company in my day to have a pedlar for
-a bachelor. Well, well; our poor sailor lad maybe as good
-as here and there a one after all. Who knows?”</p>
-
-<p>“Good enough for <i>me</i>, aunt,” whispered Alice, looking
-shyly up at her lover from the dish she was wiping, ere she
-put it carefully on the shelf.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dodge laughed again. “There’s as good fish in
-the sea, Alice, as ever came out of it; and a maid may take
-her word back again, ay, at the church door, if she has a
-mind. The foreign gentleman in the blue room, him as
-gave me this little cross, he says to me only yesterday
-morning, ‘Madame,’ says he, as polite as you please, ‘no
-man was ever yet deceived by a woman if he trusted her
-entirely. I repose entire confidence in madame,’ that was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_414"></a>[414]</span>
-<i>me</i>, Alice; ‘her face denotes good manners, a good heart,
-a good life.’ Perhaps he meant good living; but that’s
-what he said. ‘I am going to ask madame to charge herself
-with an important trust for me, because I rely securely
-on her integrity.’ Oh! he spoke beautiful, I can tell you.
-‘In case of my absence,’ says he, ‘from your respectable
-apartments, I will confide to you a sealed packet, to be
-delivered to a young man who will call for it at a certain
-hour on a certain day that I shall indicate before I leave.
-If the young man does not appear, I can trust madame to
-commit this packet to the flames.’ He was fool enough to
-add,” simpered Mrs. Dodge, looking a little conscious,
-“‘that it was rare to see so much discretion joined to so
-much beauty,’ or some such gammon; but of course I
-made no account of that.”</p>
-
-<p>“If he paid out his palaver so handsome,” observed
-Slap-Jack, “take my word for it the chap’s a papist.”</p>
-
-<p>But Mrs. Dodge would not hear of such a construction
-being put on her lodger’s gallantry.</p>
-
-<p>“Papist!” she repeated angrily; “no more a papist
-than you are! Why, I sent him up a slice o’ powdered
-beef was last Friday, with a bit of garnishing, parsnips
-and what not, and he eats it up every scrap, and asks for
-another plateful. Papist! says you! and what if he
-were? I tell you if he was the Pope o’ Rome, come to
-live respectable on my first floor, he’s a sight more to my
-mind for a lodger than his friend the captain! Papists,
-indeed! If I wanted to lay my hand on a papist, I
-needn’t to travel far for to seek one. Though, I will say,
-my lady’s liker a hangel nor a Frenchwoman, and if all the
-papists was made up to her pattern, why for my part, I’d
-up and cry ‘Bless the Pope!’ with the rankest on ’em
-all!”</p>
-
-<p>It was obvious that this northern district took no
-especial credit to itself for the bigotry of its Protestantism,
-and Mrs. Dodge, though a staunch member enough of the
-reformed religion, allowed no scruples of conscience to
-interfere with the gains of her hostelry, nor perhaps
-entertained any less kindly sentiments towards the
-persecuted members of the Church of Rome, that they
-formed some of her best customers, paying handsomely for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_415"></a>[415]</span>
-the privacy of their apartments, while they ate and drank
-of the choicest during their seclusion.</p>
-
-<p>But this unacknowledged partiality was a bone of contention
-between his sweetheart’s aunt and Slap-Jack.
-The latter prided himself especially on being what he
-termed True-Blue, holding in great abhorrence everything
-connected with Rome, St. Germains, and the Jacobite
-party. He allowed of no saints in the calendar except
-Lady Hamilton, whom he excepted from his denunciations
-by some reasoning process of his own which it is needless
-to follow out. Nevertheless Alice knew right well that
-such an argument as now seemed imminent was the sure
-forerunner of a storm. “Aunt,” said she softly, “I’ve
-looked out all the table linen, and done my washing-up till
-supper-time. If you want nothing particular, I’ll run out
-and get a breath of fresh air off the moor before it gets
-dark.”</p>
-
-<p>“And it’s time for me to be off, Aunt Dodge!”
-exclaimed Slap-Jack, as Alice knew full well he would.
-“Bless ye, we shall beat to quarters at the Hill, now in
-less than half an hour, and being a warrant-officer, as you
-may say, o’ course it’s for me to set a good example to the
-ship’s company. Fare ye well, Mrs. Dodge, and give the
-priest a wide berth, if he comes alongside, though I’ll
-never believe as you’ve turned papist, until I see you barefoot
-at the church door, in a white sheet with a candle in
-your hand!”</p>
-
-<p>With this parting shot, Slap-Jack seized his hat and ran
-out, leaving Mrs. Dodge to smile blandly over the fire,
-fingering her gold cross, and thinking drowsily, now of her
-clean sanded floor, now of her bright dishes and gaudy
-array of crockery, now of her own comely person and the
-agreeable manners of her lodger overhead.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile it is scarcely necessary to say, that although
-Slap-Jack had expressed such haste to depart, he lingered
-in the cold wind off the moor not far from the house door,
-till he saw Alice emerge for the mouthful of fresh air that
-was so indispensable, but against which she fortified
-herself with a checked woollen shawl, which she muffled in
-a manner he thought very becoming, round her pretty head.</p>
-
-<p>Neither need I describe the start of astonishment with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_416"></a>[416]</span>
-which she acknowledged the presence of her lover, as if he
-was the very last person she expected to meet; nor the
-assumed reluctance of her consent to accompany him a
-short distance on his homeward way; nor even the
-astonishment she expressed at his presumption in
-adjusting her muffler more comfortably, and exacting for
-his assistance the payment that is often so willingly
-granted while it is so vehemently refused. These little
-manœuvres had been rehearsed very often of late, but had
-not yet begun to pall in the slightest degree. The lovers
-had long ago arrived at that agreeable phase of courtship,
-when the reserve of an agitating and uncertain preference
-has given way to the confidence of avowed affection. They
-had a thousand things to talk about, and they talked about
-them very close together, perhaps because the wind swept
-bleak and chill over the moor in the gathering twilight. It
-was warmer no doubt, and certainly pleasanter, thus to
-carry two faces under one hood.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to overhear the conversation of people
-in such close juxtaposition, nor is it usually, we believe,
-worth much trouble on the part of an eavesdropper. I
-imagine it consists chiefly of simple, not to say idiotic
-remarks, couched in corresponding language, little more
-intelligible to rational persons than that with which a
-nurse endeavours to amuse a baby, whose demeanour, by
-the way, generally seems to express a dignified contempt
-for the efforts of its attendant. When we consider the
-extravagances of speech by which we convey our strongest
-sentiments, we need not be surprised at the follies of which
-we are guilty in their indulgence. When we recall the
-absurdities with which an infant’s earliest ideas of conversation
-must be connected, can we wonder what fools
-people grow up in after life?</p>
-
-<p>It was nearly dark when they parted, and a clear streak
-of light still lingered over the edge of the moor. Alice
-indeed would have gone further, but Slap-Jack had his own
-ideas as to his pretty sweetheart being abroad so late, and
-the chance of an escort home, from Captain Bold returning
-not quite sober on the wicked bay mare; so he clasped her
-tenderly in his arms, receiving at the same time a hearty
-kiss given ungrudgingly and with good-will, ere she fleeted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_417"></a>[417]</span>
-away like a phantom, while he stood watching till the last
-flutter of her dress disappeared through the gloom. Then
-he, too, turned unwillingly homeward, with a prayer for the
-woman he loved on his lips.</p>
-
-<p>If Alice looked round, it was under the corner of her
-muffler, and she sped back to her gleaming saucepans, her
-white dishes, and the warm glow of her aunt’s kitchen, with
-a step as light as her happy maiden heart.</p>
-
-<p>But there were only two ways of re-entering the “Hamilton
-Arms”—up a gravel-walk that led straight to the front
-door across a washing green, separated from the high road
-by a thick close-cut hedge, or through the stable-yard and
-back entrance into the scullery. This last ingress was
-effectually closed for the present by the arrival of Captain
-Bold, rather more drunk than common, swearing strings of
-new and fashionable oaths, while he consigned his wicked bay
-mare to the charge of the admiring ostler. Alice heard his
-reckless treble screaming above the hoarse notes of the
-stableman before she turned the corner of the house, and
-shrank back to enter at the other door. But here, also,
-much to her dismay, she found her retreat cut off. Two
-gentlemen were pacing up and down the gravel path in
-earnest conversation. One of them, even in the dusk, she
-recognised as the inmate of their blue room, who had given
-her aunt the gold cross. The other was a younger, taller,
-and slimmer man than his companion. Both were dressed
-in dark plain garments, gesticulating much while they
-spoke, and seemed deeply engrossed with the subject under
-discussion. Foolish Alice might well have run past unnoticed,
-and taken shelter at once in the house, but the
-girl had some shy feeling as to her late tryst with her
-sweetheart, and shrank perhaps from the good-humoured
-banter of the elder man, whose quiet sarcastic smile she
-had already learned to dread. So she stopped short, and
-cowered down with a beating heart under shelter of the
-hedge, thinking to elude them as they turned in their walk,
-and glide by unobserved into the porch.</p>
-
-<p>They talked with such vehemence, that had they been
-Englishmen she would have thought they were quarrelling.
-Their arms waved, their hands worked, their voices rose
-and fell. The elder man was the principal speaker, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_418"></a>[418]</span>
-seemed to be urging something with considerable vehemence
-to which the other was disinclined; but none of his arguments,
-pointedly as they were put, arrested Alice’s attention
-so much as two proper names muttered in a tone
-of deprecation by his companion. These were “Lady
-Hamilton” and “Slap-Jack.” Of the first she was almost
-sure, in the latter she could not be mistaken.</p>
-
-<p>Her experience on a southern seaboard, to which many
-smugglers from the opposite coast resorted, had taught
-Alice to understand the French language far better than
-she could speak it. With her ears sharpened and her
-faculties roused, by the mention of her lover’s name, she
-cowered down in her hiding-place, and listened, rapt,
-fearful, attentive, like a hare with the beagles on its track.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_419"></a>[419]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLVIII">CHAPTER XLVIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">PRESSURE</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“Do you suppose I came here to amuse myself?” asked
-Malletort, passing his arm under his companion’s so as to
-turn him round on the gravel walk within a yard of Alice’s
-hiding-place. “Do you think it is agreeable to reside in a pot-house
-where eggs and bacon form the <i>ne plus ultra</i> of cookery,
-and if a man cannot drink sour claret he must be satisfied
-with muddy ale? Every one of us has to sacrifice his own
-identity, has to consecrate himself entirely to such an effort
-as ours. Look at me, Florian, and ask yourself, was I born
-for such a life as this, to vegetate by the wayside in the
-dullest province of the dullest country in Europe—my only
-society, that awful landlady, my only excitement, the daily
-fear of a blunder from that puzzle-headed brigand who calls
-himself Captain Bold, and whom I can hang at any
-moment I please, or I would not trust him five yards from
-my side. If I should be discovered, and unable to get out of
-the way in time, why it <i>might</i> go very hard with me, but
-even against this contingency I have provided. You would
-find all the directions you need drawn out in our own cipher,
-and consigned to my respectable hostess. I have left the
-money for her weekly account sealed up and addressed to
-Mrs. Dodge on my chimneypiece, also the day and hour of
-your visit, as we have agreed. If we <i>both</i> fall into difficulties,
-which is most improbable, the packet will be burned,
-for I can trust the woman, I believe, and with so much the
-more confidence, that I doubt if any one on this side the
-Channel has the key to our cipher. So far, you observe,
-I have provided for all contingencies; and now, my good<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_420"></a>[420]</span>
-Florian, what have <i>you</i> done? You tell me you have
-failed with his confidential servant.”</p>
-
-<p>“What, Slap-Jack!” answered Florian, and the name
-brought Alice’s heart to her mouth as the two priests again
-approached her hiding-place. “Impossible! I tell you
-he is as true as steel. Why, he sailed with us in the
-brigantine. We were all like brothers. Ah, Malletort,
-you cannot understand these things!”</p>
-
-<p>“I can understand any scruple, any superstition, any
-weakness of humanity, for I see examples every day,”
-replied the Abbé, “but I cannot and <i>will</i> not understand
-that such imaginary obstacles are insurmountable. Bah!
-You have <i>carte blanche</i> in promises, you have even a round
-sum to draw upon in hard cash. Will you tell me that
-man’s honesty or woman’s virtue is not to be bought if you
-bid high enough? The whole business is simply a game
-of <i>bouillote</i>. Not the best card, nor even the deepest
-purse, but the boldest player sweeps the stakes. Florian,
-I fear you have done but little in all these long weeks;
-that was why, at great risk, I sent you a note, begging an
-interview, that I might urge on you the importance of
-despatch.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was a risk,” observed Florian. “The note was
-brought by Sir George himself.”</p>
-
-<p>Malletort laughed. “He carried his fate without
-knowing it,” commented the Abbé. “After all, it is the
-destiny of mankind. Every one of us bears about with
-him the germ of that which shall some day prove his
-destruction. I don’t know that one’s step is the heavier
-till palsy has begun to tingle, or one’s appetite the worse
-till digestion already fails. Come, Florian, the plot is
-nearly ripe now, and there is little more time to lose. We
-must have Sir George in it up to his neck. He carries this
-district with him, and I am then sure of all the country
-north of the Trent. You have impressed on him, I trust,
-that it is an earldom to begin with, if we win?”</p>
-
-<p>“And if we lose?” asked the other wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>Malletort smacked his tongue against the roof of his
-mouth, making, at the same time, a significant gesture
-with his hand under his ear.</p>
-
-<p>“A leap from a ladder would finish it,” he remarked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_421"></a>[421]</span>
-abruptly. “For that matter we are all in the same boat.
-If a plank starts, it is simply, <i>Bon soir la compagnie!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Florian could control himself no longer. “Are you a
-man?” he burst out. “A man? Are you anything less
-devilish than the arch-fiend himself, to bid me take part in
-such a scheme? And what a part! To lure my only
-friend, my comrade, whose bread has fed me in want, whose
-hand has kept me in danger, down, down, step by step, to
-crime, ruin, and a shameful death. What am I? What
-have I done, that you should ask me to join in such a plot
-as this?”</p>
-
-<p>“What you <i>are</i>, is a novice of the Society of Jesus,”
-answered Malletort coldly, “degraded to that rank for what
-you have <i>done</i>, which I need hardly remind you. Florian,
-it is well that you have to deal with me, who am a man of
-the world no less than a priest, instead of some stern
-provincial who would report your disobedience to the Order,
-even before he referred you to its statutes. Look your task
-firmly in the face. What is it? To make your friend,
-the man for whom you profess this ludicrous attachment,
-one of the first subjects in England. To raise his charming
-wife—they tell me she has grown more charming than ever—to
-a station for which she is eminently fitted; and all
-this at a certain risk of course, but what risk?—that the
-best organised movement Europe has seen for a hundred
-years, should fail at the moment of success, and that Sir
-George should be selected for a victim, amongst a score of
-names nobler, richer, more obnoxious to the Government
-than his own. And even then. If worst came to worst,
-what would be Lady Hamilton’s position? An heiress in
-her own right, a widow further enriched by marriage,
-beautiful, unencumbered, and free. I cannot see why you
-should hesitate a moment.”</p>
-
-<p>Florian groaned. “Have mercy on me!” he muttered
-hoarsely, writhing his hands in despair. “Can you not
-spare me this one trial, remit this one penance? Send me
-anywhere—Tartary, Morocco, Japan. Let me starve in a
-desert, pine in a dungeon, suffer martyrdom at the stake;
-anything but this, and I submit myself cheerfully, willingly,
-nay, thankfully. Malletort, you <i>must</i> have a human heart.
-You are talented, respected, powerful. You have influence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_422"></a>[422]</span>
-with the Order. You have known me since I was a boy.
-For the love of Heaven have pity on me, and spare me
-this!”</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé was not one of those abnormal specimens of
-humanity who take pleasure in the sufferings of their fellow-creatures.
-It could not be said of him that his heart was
-cruel or malicious. He had simply no heart at all. But it
-was a peculiarity he shared with many governing spirits,
-that he grew cooler and cooler in proportion to the agitation
-with which he came in contact. He took a pinch of
-snuff, pausing for the refreshment of a sneeze before he
-replied:</p>
-
-<p>“And with the next report I furnish to the Order send in
-your refusal to obey? Your refusal, Florian; you know
-what that means? Well, be it so. The promotion to a
-coadjutor’s rank is revoked, the former novice is recalled,
-and returns to St. Omer at once, where I will not enlarge
-on his reception. Riding post to the seaboard he meets
-another traveller, young, handsome, well provided, and
-unscrupulous, hurrying northward on a mission which
-seems to afford him considerable satisfaction. It is
-Brother Jerome, we will say, or Brother Boniface! the one
-known in the world as Beauty Adolphe of the King’s
-Musketeers, the other as Count Victor de Rosny, whose
-boast it is that love and credit are universally forced on
-him, though he has never paid a tradesman nor kept faith
-with a woman in his life. Either of these would be an
-agreeable addition to the family party up there on the hill.
-Either would labour hard to obtain influence over Sir
-George, and do his best or worst to be agreeable to Lady
-Hamilton. Shall I forward your refusal by to-morrow’s
-courier, Florian, or will you think better of it, and at least
-take a night to consider the subject in all its bearings?”</p>
-
-<p>Florian pondered, passed his hand across his brow, and
-looked wildly in his adviser’s face.</p>
-
-<p>“Not a moment!” said he, “not a moment! I was
-wrong—I was impatient—I was a fool—I was wicked,
-<i>mea culpa, mea culpa</i>. What am I that I should oppose
-the will of the Order—that I should hesitate in anything
-they think fit to command? What is a Jesuit priest, what
-is <i>any</i> one, after all, but a leaf blown before the wind—a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_423"></a>[423]</span>
-bubble floating down the stream? There is no free agency—Destiny
-rules the game. The Moslem is not far wrong
-when he refuses to stir out of the destroyer’s way, and says,
-‘It is ordained!’ I am wiser now—I seem to have woke
-up from a dream. What is it you would have me do?
-Am I to put poison in his wine, or cut Sir George’s throat
-to-night when he is asleep? You have only to say the
-word—are you not my superior? Am I not a Jesuit? I
-must obey!”</p>
-
-<p>Alice, still crouching behind the close-cut hedge, might
-well be alarmed at the scraps she overheard of such a
-dialogue as this. Malletort, on the contrary, watched his
-junior with the well-satisfied air of a cook who perceives
-the dish on which his skill is concentrated bubbling
-satisfactory towards projection. He allowed the young
-man’s emotion to exhaust itself ere he plied him again with
-argument, and knowing that all strong feelings have their
-ebb and flow like the tide, trusted to find him more
-malleable than ever after his late outbreak.</p>
-
-<p>It was difficult to explain to Florian that his superiors
-desired him to make love to Lady Hamilton, in order that
-he might bring her husband into their hands; and the task
-was only rendered the more delicate by the young Jesuit’s
-hopeless yet sincere attachment to his hostess—an attachment
-which had in it the germ of ruin or salvation according
-to his own powers of self-control—such an attachment as
-the good call a trial and the weak a fatality.</p>
-
-<p>At times the Abbé almost wished he had selected some
-less scrupulous novice for the execution of this critical
-manœuvre—one like Brother Jerome or Brother Boniface,
-who would have disposed himself to it with all the relish
-and good-will of those who resume a favourite occupation
-which circumstances have obliged them, for a time, to forego.
-Such tools would have been easier to manipulate; but
-perhaps, he reflected, their execution would not be so
-effectual and complete. The steel was dangerously flexible
-and elastic, but then it was of the truest and finest temper
-forged. He flattered himself it was now in the hands of a
-workman.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us talk matters over like men of the world my
-dear Florian,” said the Abbé, after they had made two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_424"></a>[424]</span>
-turns of the walk in silence, approaching within a foot of
-Alice while he spoke. “We are neither of us boys, but
-men playing a game at <i>bouillote</i>, <i>ombre</i>, <i>picquet</i>, what you
-will, and holding nearly all the winning cards in our
-hands. You are willing, I think, to believe I am your
-friend?”</p>
-
-<p>Florian shuddered, but nodded assent.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, as friends,” continued the Abbé, “let
-there be no concealment between us. I have already gone
-over the details of our programme. I need not recapitulate
-the plan of the campaign, nor, to a man of intelligence like
-yourself, need I insist on the obvious certainty of success.
-All dispositions of troops and such minor matters are left
-to our commanders, and they number some of the first
-soldiers of the age. With such affairs we need not meddle.
-Intellect confines itself to intrigue, and leaves hard knocks
-to the hard-fisted, hard-headed fools whose business it is to
-give and take them. I have been busy since I came here—busier
-almost than you could believe. I have made
-acquaintance with ―, and ―, and ―.”</p>
-
-<p>Here the Abbé sank his voice to a cautious whisper, so
-that Alice, straining her ears to listen, could not catch the
-names he enumerated.</p>
-
-<p>“Although they seemed lukewarm at first, and are
-esteemed loyal subjects of King George, they are ripe for a
-restoration now. By the by with these people never forget
-to call it a Restoration. Nothing affects an Englishman
-so strongly as a phrase, if it be old enough. I have seen a
-red-nosed squire of to-day fidget uneasily in his chair, and
-get quite hot and angry if you mentioned the Warrant
-of the Parliament; call it the law of the land and he
-submits without a murmur. They eat beef, these islanders,
-and they drink ale, muddy ale, so thick, my dear Florian,
-you might cut it with a knife. Perhaps that is what makes
-them so stupid. It is hard work to drive an idea into their
-heads; but when once there, it must be admitted, you
-cannot eradicate it. If they are the most obstinate of
-opponents, they are also the staunchest of partisans. Well,
-I have a score of names here in my pocket—men who have
-pledged themselves to go through with us, even if it comes
-to cold steel, sequestration—ay, hanging for high treason!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_425"></a>[425]</span>
-Not a man of them will flinch. I can undertake to say so
-much; and this, you observe, my dear Florian, would
-greatly facilitate <i>our</i> escape in the event of a failure. But
-in the entire list I have none fit to be a leader—none
-whose experience would warrant him in taking command of
-the others, or whose adventurous spirit would urge him to
-assume such authority. Sir George Hamilton is the very
-man I require. He is bold, reckless, ambitious, not entirely
-without brains, and has been a soldier of France. Florian,
-we <i>must</i> have him at the head of the movement. It is your
-duty to put him there.”</p>
-
-<p>Florian bowed submissively.</p>
-
-<p>“I can only persuade,” said he; “but you do not know
-your man as well as I do. Nothing will induce Sir George
-so much as to have a horse saddled until he can see for
-himself that there is a reasonable prospect of success. I
-have heard him say a hundred times, ‘Never show your
-teeth till your guns are shotted;’ and he has acted up to
-his maxim, ever since I have known him, in all the relations
-of life. It is, perhaps, presumptuous in me to advise one
-of your experience and abilities, but I warn you to be
-careful in this instance. On every account I am most
-anxious that our undertaking should not miscarry. I am
-pledged to you myself, but, believe me, I must have
-something more than empty assurances to enlist my
-friend.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite right,” answered the other, slapping him cheerfully
-on the shoulder; “quite right. A man who goes
-blindly into these matters seldom sees his way very clearly
-afterwards. But what would your friend have? We
-possess all the material of success, only waiting to be set in
-motion; and this I can prove to him in black and white.
-We have men, arms, artillery, ammunition, and money.
-This insurrection shall not fail, like some of its predecessors,
-for lack of the grease that keeps all human machinery in
-motion. A hundred thousand louis are ready at an hour’s
-notice, and another hundred thousand every week till the
-new coinage of James the Third is issued from the mint.
-Here, in the next province, in Lancashire, where the sun
-never shines, every <i>seigneur</i>, squire—what are they called?—has
-mounted his dependents, grooms, falconers, huntsmen,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_426"></a>[426]</span>
-tenants—all horsemen of the first force. Five
-thousand cavalry will be in the saddle at twenty-four hours’
-notice. Several battalions of Irish soldiers, brave and well-disciplined
-as our own, are assembled on the coast of
-Normandy, waiting only the signal to embark. Our
-infantry have shoes and clothes; our cavalry are provided
-with farriers and accoutrements; our artillery, on <i>this</i>
-occasion, not without draught-horses and harness. Come
-to me to-morrow afternoon, and I will furnish you with a
-written statement of our resources for Sir George’s information.
-And, Florian, you believe honestly that he might be
-tempted to join us?”</p>
-
-<p>The other was revolving a thousand probabilities in his
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“I will do my best,” he answered, absently.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I will risk it,” replied Malletort. “You shall
-also have a list of the principal noblemen and gentlemen
-who have given their adhesion to their rightful sovereign.
-I have upstairs a manifesto, to which these loyal cavaliers
-have attached their signatures. I never trust a man by
-halves, Florian, just as I never trust a woman at all.
-Nothing venture, nothing have. That paper would hang
-us all, no doubt; but I will confide it to you and take
-the risk. Yours shall be the credit of persuading Sir
-George to subscribe to it in his own hand.”</p>
-
-<p>Florian assented, with a nod. Too much depressed to
-speak, he felt like some poor beast driven to the shambles,
-blundering on, dogged and stupefied, to its fate.</p>
-
-<p>Malletort’s keen perceptions detected this despondency,
-and he endeavoured to cheer him up.</p>
-
-<p>“At the new Court,” said he, “we shall probably behold
-our retired Musketeer commanding the Guards of his
-Sovereign, and carrying his gold baton on the steps of the
-throne. A peer, a favourite, a Councillor of State—what
-you will. His beautiful wife the admired and envied of the
-three kingdoms. They will owe their rank, their grandeur,
-their all, to Florian de St. Croix. Will not he—will not
-she be grateful? And Florian de St. Croix shall choose
-his own reward. Nothing the Church can offer will be
-esteemed too precious for such a servant. I am disinterested
-for once, since I shall return to France. In<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_427"></a>[427]</span>
-England, a man may exist; were it not for the climate he
-might even vegetate; but it is only in Paris that he can be
-said to live. Florian, it is a glorious prospect, and the
-road to fortune lies straight before us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Through an enemy’s country,” replied the other,
-gravely. “Nothing shall persuade me but that the mass
-of the people are staunch to the Government.”</p>
-
-<p>“The mass of the people!” repeated Malletort, contemptuously;
-“the mass of the people neither make
-revolutions nor oppose them. In point of fact they are
-the women and children who sit quietly at home. It is
-the highest and the lowest who are the discontented
-classes, and if you set these in motion, the one to lead in
-front, the other to push behind, why, the mass of the
-people, as you call them, may be driven whichever way
-you please, like a flock of sheep into a pen. Listen to
-those peasants singing over their liquor, and tell me if
-their barbarian ditties do not teach you which way the tide
-of feeling acts at present amongst the rabble?”</p>
-
-<p>They stopped in their walk, and through the open
-window of the tap-room could hear Captain Bold’s treble
-quavering out a Jacobite ballad of the day, no less popular
-than nonsensical, as was attested by the stentorian chorus
-and wild jingling of glasses that accompanied it.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“We are done with sodden kale,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Are we not? Are we not?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We are done with sodden kale,</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Are we not?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the reptile in his mail,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Though he tore with tooth and nail,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We have got him by the tail,</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Have we not?</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“We will bring the Stuart back,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Will we not? Will we not?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We will bring the Stuart back,</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Will we not?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With a whip to curl and crack</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Round the Hanoverian pack,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And ’twill lend King George a smack,</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Will it not?</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“We are done with rebel rigs,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Are we not? Are we not?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We are done with rebel rigs,</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Are we not?</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_428"></a>[428]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">We will teach them ‘Please the pigs!’</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">English tunes for foreign jigs,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the devil take the Whigs!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Will he not? Will he not?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the devil take the Whigs!</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Will he not?”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>While the priests were thus occupied, Alice darting past
-them unobserved, took refuge in the house.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_429"></a>[429]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLIX">CHAPTER XLIX<br />
-<span class="smaller">POOR EMERALD</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Of all passions that tear and worry at the human heart,
-jealousy seems to be not only the most painful but the
-most contradictory. Anger, desire, avarice, revenge, all
-these propose to themselves a certain end, in the accomplishment
-of which there is doubtless an evil satisfaction
-for the moment, however closely remorse may tread on the
-heels of indulgence, but jealousy, conscious only of its own
-bitterness, knows not even what to hope or what to fear.
-It hates itself, though its torture is purely selfish; it hates
-another whom all the while it madly loves. It is proud,
-yet stoops to meanness—cruel, yet quivers with the pain
-it inflicts, desperate while cowardly, pitiless though sensitive,
-obstinate and unstable, a mass of incongruities, and a
-purgatory from which there is neither present purification
-nor prospective escape.</p>
-
-<p>It may please a woman to feel that she can make her
-lover jealous, it may even please her, in her feminine relish
-for dominion, to mark the painful effect of her power; but
-if it were possible to love and be wise, he would know that
-he had better hold his hand in the fire without wincing, than
-let her discover the force of the engine with which she can
-thus place him on the rack. Some women are generous
-enough not to inflict a torture so readily at command, but
-even these take credit for their forbearance, and assume,
-in consequence, a position of authority, which is sometimes
-fatal to the male interest in such a partnership. The
-sweetest kisses to a woman are those she gives on tiptoe.
-A man, at least such a one as is best worth winning, cares<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_430"></a>[430]</span>
-for a woman because she loves <i>him</i>. A woman, I imagine,
-is never so devoted as when she feels there is yet something
-more to be gained of that dominion at which she is
-always striving, but which she is apt to undervalue when
-attained.</p>
-
-<p>Now, if she has taken it into her head to make her lover
-jealous, and finds his equanimity utterly undisturbed, the
-result is a mortifying and irremediable defeat to the aggressive
-Amazon. She has hazarded a large stake and won
-nothing. Worse than this, she is led to suspect the stability
-of her empire, and sees it (because women always jump to
-conclusions) slipping like ice out of her grasp. Besides,
-she has put herself in the wrong, as after a burst of tears
-and a storm of unfounded reproaches, she will herself
-acknowledge; and the probable result of her operations will
-be a penitent and unqualified submission. Let the conqueror
-be high-minded enough to abstain from ever casting this
-little vagary in her teeth, and he will have reason to congratulate
-himself on his own self-command for the rest of
-the alliance.</p>
-
-<p>But if the indulgence of jealousy be thus impolitic in a
-lover, it is not only an unworthy weakness, but a fatal
-mistake on the part of a husband. The doubts and fears,
-the uncertainties and anxieties, that are only ludicrous in
-the outer courts of Cupid, become contemptible at the fire-side
-of Hymen, derogatory to the man’s dignity, and insulting
-to the woman’s faith. There are few individuals of either
-sex, even amongst the worst natures, but can be safely
-trusted, if only the trust be complete and unqualified. It is
-the little needless reservation, the suspicion rather inferred
-than expressed, that leads to breach of confidence and
-deceit. With ninety-nine women out of every hundred,
-the very fact of possessing full and unquestioned freedom
-constitutes the strongest possible restraint from its abuse.
-To suspect a wife, is to kindle a spark of fire that eats into,
-and scorches, and consumes the whole comfort of home; to
-let her know she is suspected, is to blow that spark into a
-conflagration which soon reduces the whole domestic edifice
-to ruins.</p>
-
-<p>There are some noble natures, however, that unite with
-generosity of sentiment, keen perceptive faculties, and a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_431"></a>[431]</span>
-habit of vigilance bordering on suspicion. These cannot
-but suffer under the possibility of betrayal, the more so that
-they despise themselves for a weakness which yet they have
-not power to shake off. They stifle the flame indeed, and
-it burns them all the deeper to the quick—they scorn to cry
-out, to groan, even to remonstrate, but the sternest and
-bravest cannot repress the quiverings of the flesh under
-the branding-iron, and perhaps she, of all others, from
-whom it would be wise to conceal the injury, is the first to
-find it out. Wounded affections chafe in silence on one
-side, insulted pride scowls and holds aloof on the other;
-the evil festers, the sore spreads, the breach widens, the
-gloom gathers; it is well if some heavy blow falls to bring
-the sufferers to their senses, if some grand explosion takes
-place to clear the conjugal atmosphere, and establish a
-footing of mutual confidence once more.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise could hardly keep her tears back when Sir George,
-passing hastily through the hall, booted as usual for the
-saddle, would stop to address her in a few commonplace
-words of courtesy, with as much deference, she told herself
-bitterly, as if she had been an acquaintance of yesterday.
-There were no more little foolish familiarities, no more
-affected chidings, betraying in their childish absurdities the
-overflowing of happy affection, no more silly jests of which
-only themselves knew the import. It was all grave politeness
-and ceremonious kindness now. It irritated, it maddened
-her—the harshest usage had been less distressing.
-If he would only speak cruel words! If he would only give
-her an excuse to complain!</p>
-
-<p>She could not guess how this change had been caused, or
-if she did guess, she was exceedingly careful not to analyse
-her suppositions; but she hunted her husband about wistfully,
-looking penitent without a fault, guilty without a crime,
-longing timidly for an explanation which yet she had not
-courage to demand.</p>
-
-<p>The room at Hamilton in which Sir George spent his
-mornings on those rare occasions when he remained
-indoors, was, it is needless to observe, the gloomiest and
-most uncomfortable apartment in the house. Its furniture
-consisted chiefly of guns, fishing-rods, and jack-boots. It
-was generally very untidy, and contained for its only ornaments<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_432"></a>[432]</span>
-a model of a brigantine and a sketch in crayons of
-his wife. Whenever Sir George thought he had anything
-very particular to do, it was his habit to retire here and
-barricade himself in.</p>
-
-<p>The morning after Florian’s interview with Malletort,
-Cerise took up her post at the door of this stronghold, with
-a vague hope that chance might afford an opportunity for
-the explanation she desired.</p>
-
-<p>“If he is really angry,” thought poor Cerise, “and I am
-sure he must be, perhaps he will have taken my picture
-down, and I can ask him why, and he will scold me, and I
-shall put my arms round his neck, and he cannot help
-forgiving me then! Nobody else would be so unkind
-without a reason. And yet he is not unkind; I wish he
-were; and I wish, too, I had courage to speak out!
-Ah! it would be so much easier if I did not care for
-him!”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Hamilton’s hands were very cold while she stood
-at the door. After waiting at least five minutes she took
-courage, gave a timid little knock, and went in.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing in the aspect of the apartment or its inmate
-afforded the opportunity she desired. Sir George, tranquilly
-engaged with a pair of compasses and a foot-rule,
-was whistling softly over a plan of his estates. Her own
-picture hung in its usual place. Glancing at it, she
-wondered whether she had ever been so pretty, and if so,
-how he could have got tired of her already. His calmness,
-too, was in irritating contrast to her own agitation.
-Altogether she did not feel half so meek as on the other
-side of the door.</p>
-
-<p>He looked up from his employment, and rose.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, my lady?” he asked, pushing the implements
-aside. “Can I be of any service to you before I get
-on my horse? Emerald is at this moment saddled and
-waiting for me.”</p>
-
-<p>The tone was good-humoured enough, but cool and
-unconcerned as if he had been speaking to his grandmother.
-Besides, scarcely yet more than a bride, and to
-be called <i>my lady</i>! It was unbearable!</p>
-
-<p>“If you are in such a hurry,” she answered, angrily,
-“I will not detain you. What I had to say was of no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_433"></a>[433]</span>
-importance, and probably would not in the least interest
-<i>you</i>. I am sorry I came in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all,” he replied, in the same matter-of-course
-voice. “When I am at leisure I am always glad of your
-society. Just now, I fear, I cannot take advantage of it.
-I must be absent all the morning, but St. Croix is,
-doubtless, at home, and will keep you company.”</p>
-
-<p>Guarded as was his tone, either her woman’s ear detected
-a false note in the mention of Florian’s name, whom he
-seldom spoke of so ceremoniously, or her woman’s intuition
-taught her to suspect the true grievance. At any rate, she
-persuaded herself she ought to be more displeased than she
-really felt. It would have been only right to show it.
-Now was the time to get upon her high horse, and she
-would have mounted at once, but that her blushes would
-not be kept down. It was too provoking! What must
-her husband think of them? She could have burst out
-crying, but that would be infinitely worse. She turned away,
-therefore, and assuming all the dignity she could muster,
-walked off to her own apartment without another word.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George did not follow. Had he done so, it might
-have altered his whole morning’s employment, to see his
-young wife fling herself down on her knees at the bedside,
-and weep as if her heart would break.</p>
-
-<p>No, <i>he</i> flung himself into the saddle, and in five minutes
-was alone with Emerald on the moor.</p>
-
-<p>I wonder what the good horse thought of his rider, when
-he felt his head steadied by the strong familiar hand, the
-well-known limbs grasping his sides with pliant energy, the
-caressing voice whispering its cheering words of caution
-and encouragement? Did he know that his master urged
-him to his speed because the care that is proverbially said
-to sit behind the horseman <i>cannot</i> keep her seat on a fine
-goer, in good condition, when fairly in his swing? Did he
-know that while that smooth, powerful stride, regular and
-untiring as machinery, swept furlong by furlong over the
-elastic surface of the moor, she must be left panting behind,
-to come up indeed at the first check, rancorous and
-vindictive as ever, but still beaten by a horse’s length at
-least so long as the excitement of the gallop lasted and the
-extreme pace could hold?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_434"></a>[434]</span></p>
-
-<p>Emerald enjoyed it as much as his master. When
-pulled up, he stopped willingly, his whole frame glowing
-with health and energy, his eye glancing, his ear alert, his
-broad red nostril drinking in the free moorland air like a
-cordial, and his bit ringing cheerfully, while he tossed his
-head in acknowledgment of the well-earned caress that
-smoothed the warm supple skin on his swelling neck.</p>
-
-<p>The horse seemed a little puzzled too, looking round in
-vain for his friends the hounds, as if he wondered why he
-had been brought thus merrily over the moor, good fun as
-it was, without any further object than the ride.</p>
-
-<p>In this matter there was little sympathy between man
-and horse. Sir George was thinking neither of hounds,
-nor hawks, nor any other accessories of the chase. He
-neither marked the secluded pool in which he had set up
-the finest stag of the season at bay last month, nor the
-ledge of rocks into which he ran his fox to ground last
-week. He was far back in the past. He was a young
-Musketeer again, with neither rank, nor wealth, nor broad
-acres, but with that limitless reversion of the future which
-was worth all his possessions ten times told. Yet even thus
-looking back to his earliest manhood, he could not shake
-himself free from the memory of Cerise. Ever since
-he could remember, that gentle face and those blue eyes
-had softened his waking thoughts and haunted him in his
-dreams; there was no period in his life at which she had
-not been the ideal of his imagination, the prize he desired.
-Even if he had not married her, he thought with a groan,
-he would still be cursed with this gnawing, festering pain
-that drove him out here into the wilderness for the mere
-bodily relief of incessant action. If he had not married
-her! Another thought stung him now. Perhaps then she
-might have continued to love him. Were they all alike,
-these women? All vain, unstable, irrational creatures;
-best acted on by the jugglery of false sentiment, alive only
-to the unworthy influence of morbid pique or unbridled
-passion, tempted to evil by an infamous notoriety, or
-dazzled by the glare of an impossible romance? He
-asked himself these questions, and his own observation
-afforded no satisfactory reply.</p>
-
-<p>He had lived much at the Court of France, when that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_435"></a>[435]</span>
-Court, with all its splendour and all its refinement, was
-little distinguished by self-denial in man, or self-restraint
-in woman. Amongst those of his own age and sphere, he
-was accustomed to hear conjugal fidelity spoken of as a
-prejudice not only superfluous but unrefined and in bad
-taste. The wife <i>as</i> a wife was to be considered a proper
-object of pursuit, the husband to be borne with as an
-encumbrance, but in right of his office habitually to be
-derided, out-witted, and despised. That a woman should
-care for the man to whom she had plighted her faith at the
-altar seemed an absurdity not to be contemplated; that a
-man should continue to love the girl he had chosen was a
-vulgarity to which no gentleman would willingly plead
-guilty. Such were the morals of the stage, such was the
-too common practice of real life. And George had laughed
-with the rest at the superstition of matrimony, had held its
-sanctity in derision, perhaps trifled with its vows <i>en
-mousquetaire</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And now was the punishment overtaking him at last?
-Was the foundation of <i>his</i> happiness, like that of others,
-laid in sand, and the whole edifice crumbling to pieces in
-his very sight? It was hard, but he was a man, he
-thought, and he must bear it as best he might. As for the
-possibility that Cerise should actually love another, he
-dismissed such an idea almost ere it was formed. That
-was not the grievance, he told Emerald aloud, while he
-stood by the good horse on the solitary moor, it was that
-Cerise should not love <i>him</i>! He could scarcely believe it,
-and yet he could see she was unhappy, she for whose
-happiness he would sacrifice so willingly wealth, influence,
-position, life itself, everything but his honour. When he
-thought of the pale pining face, it seemed as if a knife was
-driven into his heart.</p>
-
-<p>He sprang into his saddle, and once more urged his
-horse to a gallop. Once more the brown heathery acres
-flew back beneath his eyes, but Emerald began to think
-that all this velocity was a waste of power when unaccompanied
-by the music of the hounds, and stopped of his own
-accord to look for them within a bow-shot of the great
-north road where it led past the “Hamilton Arms.”</p>
-
-<p>Ordinary people do not usually talk to themselves, but I
-believe every man speaks aloud to his horse.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_436"></a>[436]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Quite right, old fellow!” said Sir George, as if he
-were addressing a comrade. “I may as well stop and have
-a glass of beer, for I am as hot as you are, and I dare say
-twice as thirsty.”</p>
-
-<p>Emerald acquiesced with a snort and a prolonged shake
-the moment his rider’s foot touched the ground, and Sir
-George, filling the whole of the narrow passage to the bar,
-bounced against Florian de St. Croix returning from an
-interview with the Abbé on the first floor. Each must
-have been thinking of the other, for both exclaimed
-mentally, “The very man!” while at the same instant
-Slap-Jack, looking rather sheepish, and not in his usual
-spirits, slunk out of another room and tried to leave
-unobserved.</p>
-
-<p>“Foretop, there!” hallooed Sir George, good-humouredly,
-“as you are aloft, look smart and make yourself useful.
-See that lubber gives Emerald a go-down of chilled water,
-and tows him about at a walk till I come out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, ay, sir,” replied Slap-Jack, his whole face
-brightening up. He loved to be so addressed by his old
-commander; and although he was to-day not without his
-own troubles, or he would scarce have been here so early,
-he set to work to obey instructions with a will.</p>
-
-<p>Florian accompanied the new arrival into the bar, where
-Mrs. Dodge, all smiles and ribbons, drew for this honoured
-guest a measure of the best with her own fat hands; while
-Alice, who looked as if she had been crying, hovered about
-admiringly, watching Sir George quench his thirst as if he
-had been some rare and beautiful animal she had paid her
-penny to see.</p>
-
-<p>“Good stuff!” said the baronet, setting down his jug
-with a sigh. “Better than <i>vin ordinaire</i>, or even three-water
-grog. Eh, Florian?”</p>
-
-<p>But Florian’s mind was bent on other matters. “You are
-always so occupied,” said he, “that I can never catch you
-for half an hour alone. Will you have your horse led home,
-and walk back the short way with me? We had more
-leisure on board ‘The Bashful Maid,’ after all; especially
-in the ‘Trades.’”</p>
-
-<p>Sir George assented cheerily. For the moment his
-gloomy thoughts fled at the sound of the other’s voice.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_437"></a>[437]</span>
-They were tried comrades in many a rough adventure, and
-it takes a good deal to turn a man’s heart from an old
-friend.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I will,” he assented, putting his arm through
-Florian’s. “We can cross the deer-park, and go over the
-footbridge above the waterfall. It saves nearly half a mile.
-Slap-Jack,” he added, emerging from the house, “take
-that horse home, under easy sail, d’ye mind? and see him
-well dressed over when you get to the stable.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he and Florian strolled quietly away to cross the
-deer-park and thread a certain picturesque dingle adorned
-by the above-mentioned waterfall. It was the show bit
-of scenery at Hamilton Hill, and the track leading to it
-was so precipitous as to be impassable by any four-footed
-animal less nimble than a goat.</p>
-
-<p>It was Slap-Jack’s duty to conduct Emerald by an easier
-route to his own stable; and for this purpose the adventurous
-seaman proceeded to “get up the side,” as he called
-it, an ascent which he effected with some difficulty, and
-so commenced his voyage with considerable prudence,
-according to orders, “under easy sail.”</p>
-
-<p>But Emerald’s blood was up after his gallop. The seaman’s
-awkward seat and unskilled hand on the rein
-irritated him considerably. He fretted, he danced, he
-sidled, he snatched at his bridle, he tossed his head, he
-showed symptoms of mutiny from the very beginning.</p>
-
-<p>“I knowed as we should make bad weather of it,” said
-Slap-Jack, relating his adventure that evening in the
-servants’ hall, “when we come into open sea. Steer he
-wouldn’t, and every time I righted him he broached-to, as
-if he was going down stern foremost. So I lashed the
-helm amid-ships, and held on by my eyelids to stand by for
-a capsize.”</p>
-
-<p>In truth the horse soon took the whole affair into his
-own management, and after one or two long reaching
-plunges, that would have unseated Slap-jack had he not
-held on manfully by the mane, started off at a furious
-gallop, which brought him to his own stable-yard in about
-five minutes from the time he left the inn door.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise, wandering pale and listless amongst her roses,
-heard the clatter of hoofs entering at this unusual pace,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_438"></a>[438]</span>
-and rushed to the stables in some alarm. She was relieved
-to find that no serious casualty had occurred, and that
-Slap-Jack, very much out of breath, with his legs trembling
-and powerless from the unwonted exercise, was the only
-sufferer. He gasped and panted sadly; but she gathered
-that he had been ordered to bring the horse quietly home,
-at which she could not forbear smiling, and that Sir
-George was going to walk back the short way. It was a
-chance to be seized eagerly. She had been very low and
-dispirited all the morning, wishing she had spoken out to
-him before he went, and now here came another opportunity.
-Cerise was still young, and, to use the graphic
-expression of her own country, “a woman to the very tips
-of her fingers.” She ran upstairs, put on her prettiest hat,
-and changed her breast-knots for fresh ribbons of newer
-gloss and a more becoming colour. Then she fluttered out
-through her garden, and crossing the home-park with a
-rising colour and a more elastic step, as the fresh air told
-upon her animal spirits, reached one end of the wooden
-footbridge as the two gentlemen arrived at the other.</p>
-
-<p>She had only expected <i>one</i>. It was a disappointment;
-more, it was an embarrassment. She coloured violently,
-and looked, as she felt, both agitated and put out. Sir
-George could not but observe her distress, and again his
-heart ached with the dull, wearing, unacknowledged pain.</p>
-
-<p>He jumped to conclusions; a man under such an influence
-always does. It seemed clear to him that his wife
-must have chosen this direction for her walk in order to
-meet the Jesuit. He did not blame Florian, for the priest
-had himself proposed they should return together, and
-could not, therefore, have expected her. Stay! Was
-this a blind? He stole a glance at him, and thought he
-seemed as much discomposed as her ladyship. All that he
-could disentangle afterwards. In the meantime one thing
-alone seemed clear. That Cerise, contrary to her usual
-habits, had come this distance on foot to meet her lover,
-and had found—her husband! He laughed to himself
-fiercely, with a grim savage humour, and felt as once or
-twice formerly in a duel, when his adversary, taking unfair
-advantage, had been foiled by his own act. Well, he would
-fight this battle at least with all the skill of fence he knew;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_439"></a>[439]</span>
-patiently, warily, scientifically, without loss of temper or
-coolness, neglecting no precaution, overlooking no mistake,
-and giving no quarter.</p>
-
-<p>He could not help thinking of his old comrade, Bras-de-Fer,
-as he remembered him, one gloomy morning in Spain,
-stripped and in silk stockings on the wet turf outside the
-lines, with the deadliest point in three armies six inches
-from his throat, and how nothing but perfect self-command
-and endurance had given his immoveable old comrade the
-victory. His heart softened when he thought of those
-merry campaigning days, but not to Lady Hamilton nor to
-the pale thoughtful Jesuit on the other side.</p>
-
-<p>It was scarcely a pleasant walk home for any one of the
-three. Florian, though he loved the very ground she trod
-on, was disconcerted at her ladyship’s inopportune appearance
-just as he thought he was gaining ground in his
-canvass, and had prepared the most telling arguments for
-the conversion of his proselyte. Moreover, he had now
-passed the stage at which he could converse freely with
-Cerise in company, and grudged her society even to the man
-who had a right to it. Alone with her he had plenty to
-say; but, without approaching forbidden topics, he had
-acquired a habit of conversing on abstruse and speculative
-subjects, interesting enough to two persons in the same
-vein of thought, but which strike even these as exaggerated
-when submitted to the criticism of a third. Many a
-pleasant and harmonious duet jangles painfully when
-played as a trio. He was impatient now of any interference
-with Lady Hamilton’s opinions. These he
-considered his own, in defiance of a thousand husbands;
-and so strangely constituted is the human mind, he could
-presume to be jealous even of the vague, shadowy, unsubstantial
-share in her mind that he imagined he
-possessed.</p>
-
-<p>So he answered in monosyllables, and took nothing off
-the constraint under which they all laboured. Sir George
-conversed in a cold formal tone on indifferent matters, and
-was as unlike himself as possible. He addressed his
-remarks alternately to Florian and Cerise, scanning the
-countenance of each narrowly the while. This did not
-tend to improve their good understanding; and Lady<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_440"></a>[440]</span>
-Hamilton, walking with head erect and set face, looking
-straight before her, dared not trust herself to answer. It
-was a relief when they reached the house, and most of all
-to her, for she rushed upstairs and locked herself into her
-own room, where she could be miserable to her heart’s
-content.</p>
-
-<p>It was hard for this fair young wife, good, loving, and
-true, to seek that refuge, so cruelly wounded, twice in
-one day.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_441"></a>[441]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_L">CHAPTER L<br />
-<span class="smaller">CAPTAIN BOLD</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I have mentioned that Slap-Jack, too, while he rode perforce
-so rapidly homewards, was pursued by a black Care of
-his own, waiting for a momentary halt to leap up behind.
-Even with a foretopman, though, perhaps, no swain ought
-to have a better chance, the course of true love does not
-always run smooth. There was a pebble now ruffling Slap-Jack’s
-amatory stream, and that pebble was known at the
-“Hamilton Arms” as Captain Bold.</p>
-
-<p>He might have had a score of other designations in a
-score of other places; in fact, he was just the sort of
-gentleman whom one name would suffice less than one
-shirt; but here, at least, he was welcomed, and, to a certain
-extent, trusted under that title.</p>
-
-<p>Now Captain Bold, if he ever disguised himself for the
-many expeditions in which he boasted to have been engaged,
-must have done considerable violence to his feelings by suppressing
-the three peculiarities for which he was most
-conspicuous, and in which he seemed to take the greatest
-pride. These specialities were the Captain’s red nose, his
-falsetto voice, and his bay mare. The first he warmed and
-comforted with generous potations at all hours, for though
-not a deep, he was a frequent drinker; the second, he
-exercised continually in warbling lyrics tending to the
-subversion of morals—in shrieking out oaths denoting a
-fertile imagination, with a cultivated talent for cursing—and
-in narrating interminable stories over his cups, of
-which his own triumphs in love and war formed the
-groundwork; the third—he was never tired of riding to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_442"></a>[442]</span>
-and fro over the moor, of going to visit in the stable, or of
-glorifying in the tap-room for the edification of all comers,
-expatiating on her shape, her qualities, her speed, her
-mettle, and her queer temper, amenable to no authority but
-his own.</p>
-
-<p>The captain’s first acquaintance with Mrs. Dodge dated
-some two months back, when he entered the hostelry one
-stormy evening, and swaggered about the stable-yard and
-premises as if thoroughly familiar with the place. This did
-not astonish the landlady, who, herself a late arrival, concluded
-he was some old customer of her predecessor’s; but,
-hazarding that natural supposition to an ancient ostler,
-who had been at the “Hamilton Arms” from a boy, and
-never slept out of the stable since he could remember, she
-was a little surprised to learn old Robin had no recollection
-whatever of the captain, though he was perfectly well
-acquainted with the mare. That remarkable animal had
-been fed and dressed over by his own hands, he declared,
-only last winter, and was then the property of a Quaker
-from the East Riding, a respectable-looking gentleman as
-ever he clapped eyes on—warm, no doubt, for the mare was
-in first-rate condition, and her master paid him from a purse
-full of broad pieces—a <i>wet</i> Quaker, old Robin thought, by
-reason of his smelling so strong of brandy when he mounted
-before daylight in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dodge, conversing with her guest of the wonderful
-mare, mentioned her old servant’s reminiscences.</p>
-
-<p>“Right!” exclaimed the captain, with his accustomed
-flourish—“right as my glove! or, I should say, my dear
-madam, right as your own bodice! A Quaker—very true!
-A man about my own size, with a—well, a <i>prominent</i> nose.
-Pale, flaxen-haired; would have been a good-looking chap
-with a little more colouring; and respectable—most
-respectable! Oh, yes! that’s the Quaker I bought her of
-and a good bargain I made. We’ll drink the Quaker’s
-health, if you please. A very good bargain!”</p>
-
-<p>And the captain laughed heartily, though Mrs. Dodge
-could not, for the life of her, see the point of his jest.</p>
-
-<p>But, while she reprobated his profane conversation, and
-entertained no very profound respect for his general
-character, the captain was yet a welcome guest in Mrs.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_443"></a>[443]</span>
-Dodge’s sanctum. His anecdotes were so lively—his talk
-was so fluent—he took off his glass with so gallant a flourish
-to her own and her niece’s health, paying them, at the same
-time, such extravagant compliments of the newest town
-mode—that it was impossible to damp this genial spirit
-with an austerity which must have been assumed, or
-rebukes uttered by lips endeavouring to repress a smile.</p>
-
-<p>But with Alice it was not so; she held the captain in a
-natural abhorrence, and shrank from him as people sometimes
-do from a toad or other reptile, when she happened
-to meet him in passages, staircases, or out-of-the-way
-corners, never permitting him to approach her unless protected
-by the company of her aunt.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dodge, however, would sometimes spend an hour
-and more in certain household duties upstairs, leaving Alice
-to mind the bar during her absence. The girl was singing
-over her needlework, according to custom, thinking, in all
-probability, of Slap-Jack, when, much to her annoyance,
-the captain’s red nose protruded itself over the half-door,
-followed, in due course, by his laced coat, his jack-boots,
-and the rest of his gaudy, tarnished, and somewhat dissipated
-person.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing Alice alone, he affected to start with pleasure,
-made a feint of retiring, and then insinuated himself towards
-the fireplace, with a theatrical gallantry that was to
-her, of all his airs and graces, the most insupportable.</p>
-
-<p>“Divine Alice!” he exclaimed, flourishing his dirty
-hand, adorned with rings, “alone in her bower, and singing
-over her sampler like a siren. The jade Fortune owed
-honest Jack Bold this turn. Strike him blind if she didn’t!
-He comes for a vulgar drain, and lo! a cordial—the elixir
-of life—the rosy dew of innocence—the balmy breath of
-beauty!”</p>
-
-<p>“What d’ye lack, sir?” asked Alice, contemptuously
-ignoring this rhodomontade, and stretching her pretty hand
-towards a shelf loaded with divers preparations of alcohol
-well known to the visitor.</p>
-
-<p>“What I lacked, my sweetest,” said the unabashed captain,
-“when I entered this bower of bliss and bastion of
-beauty, was a mere mortal’s morning draught—a glass of
-strong waters, we will say, with a clove in it, or perhaps a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_444"></a>[444]</span>
-mouthful of burnt brandy, to keep out the raw moorland
-air. What I lack now, since I have seen your lovely lips,
-seems to be the chaste salute valour claims from beauty.
-We will take the brandy and cloves afterwards!”</p>
-
-<p>So speaking, the captain moved a little round table out
-of his way, and, taking off his cocked hat with a flourish,
-advanced the red nose and forbidding face very close to
-Alice, as if to claim the desired salute. In his operations,
-the skirt of his heavily laced coat brought work, work-box,
-thimble, and all to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Alice stooped to pick them up. When she rose again
-her colour was very bright, possibly from the exertion, and
-she pointed once more to the bottles.</p>
-
-<p>“Give your orders, sir,” said she, angrily, “and go! I
-am sure I never—I never expected to be rude to a
-customer, but—there—it’s too bad—I won’t stand it, I won’t—not
-if I go up to my aunt in her bedroom this very
-minute!”</p>
-
-<p>Poor Alice was now dissolved in tears, but, true to her
-instincts, filled the captain his glass of brandy all the
-same.</p>
-
-<p>The latter drank it slowly, relishing every drop, and,
-keeping his person between Alice and the half-door,
-seemed to enjoy her confusion, which, obviously, from the
-conceited satisfaction of his countenance, he attributed to
-an unfortunate passion for himself. Suddenly her face
-brightened, a well-known footstep hastened up the passage,
-and the next moment Slap-Jack entered the bar.</p>
-
-<p>Alice dashed away her tears, the captain assumed an
-attitude of profound indifference, and the new arrival
-looked from one to the other with a darkening brow.</p>
-
-<p>“What, again?” said he, turning fiercely on the
-intruder, and approaching very close, in that aggressive
-manner which is almost equivalent to a blow. “I thought
-as I’d given <i>you</i> warning already to let this here young
-woman be. You think as you’re lying snug enough, may
-be, in smooth water, with your name painted out and a
-honest burgee at your truck; but I’ll larn you better afore
-I’ve done with you, if you comes cruising any more in my
-fishing-ground. There’s some here as’ll make you show
-your number, and we’ll soon see who’s captain then!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_445"></a>[445]</span></p>
-
-<p>Honest Jack Bold, as he called himself, was not
-deficient in self-command. Sipping his brandy with the
-utmost coolness, he turned to Alice, and, motioning towards
-Slap-Jack, boiling over within six inches of him, observed,
-in his high-quavering voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Favoured lover, I presume! Visits here, I hope,
-with our good aunt’s sanction. Seems a domestic servant
-by his dress, though I gather, from the coarseness of his
-language, he has served before the mast!—a sad come-down,
-sweet Alice! for a girl with your advantages. These
-seaman, I fancy, are all given to liquor. Offer your
-bachelor something to drink, and score it, if you please,
-to my account. A sad come-down!—a sad come-down!
-Why burn me, Mistress Alice, with your good looks, you
-might almost have married a gentleman—you might,
-indeed! Sink me to the lowest depths of matrimonial
-perdition, if you might not!”</p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack could have stood a good deal, but to be offered
-a dram by a rival in this off-hand way, through the medium
-of his own sweetheart, was more than flesh and blood
-could swallow. In defiance of Alice’s entreaties, who was
-horribly frightened at the prospect of a quarrel, and as
-pale now as she had been flushed a few minutes back, he
-shook a broad serviceable fist in the captain’s face, and
-burst out—</p>
-
-<p>“A gentleman! you swab! What do <i>you</i> know about
-gentlemen? All the sort as <i>you’ve</i> seen is them that
-hangs at Tyburn; and look, if you’re not rove up there
-yourself some fine morning, my saucy blade, with your
-night-cap over your ears, and a bunch of rue in your hand.
-Gentlemen indeed! Now look you here, Captain John
-Bold, or whatever other <i>alias</i> your papers may show when
-they’re overhauled, if ever I catches of you in here alone,
-a parsecutin’ of my Alice, or even hears o’ your so much
-as standing’ off-and-on, a watchin’ for her clearin’ out, or
-on the open moor, or homeward bound, or what not, I’ll
-smash that great red nose of yours as flat as a Port-Royal
-jelly-fish, you ugly, brandy-faced, bottle-nosed, lop-sided
-son of a gun!”</p>
-
-<p>The captain had borne with considerable equanimity his
-adversary’s quarrelsome gestures and threats of actual<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_446"></a>[446]</span>
-violence, keeping very near the door, corporeally, indeed,
-and entrenching himself morally, as it were, in the dignity
-of his superior position, but at these allusions to his
-personal appearance he lost all self-control. His face
-grew livid, his very nose turned pale, his eyes blazed, and
-his hand stole to the short cutlass or hanger he carried at
-his side. Something in Slap-Jack’s face, whose glance
-followed the movement of his fingers, checked any resort to
-this weapon, and even in his fury, the captain had the
-presence of mind to place himself outside the half-door of
-the bar; but when there he caught hold of it with both
-hands, for he was trembling all over, and burst forth—</p>
-
-<p>“You think the sun is on <i>your</i> side of the hedge, my
-fine fellow, I dare say, but you’ll know better before a
-week’s out. Ay, you may laugh, but you’ll laugh the other
-side of your mouth when the right end is uppermost, as
-uppermost it will be, and I take you out on the terrace with
-a handkerchief over your eyes, and a file of honest fellows,
-with carbines loaded, who are in my pay even now. Ay,
-you’ll sing small then, I think, for all your blare and
-bluster to-day. You’ll sing small, d’ye hear? on the wet
-grass under the windows at Hamilton Hill, and your
-master’ll sing small with his feet tied under his horse’s
-belly, riding down the north road and on his way to Tyburn,
-under a warrant from King Ja― Well, a warrant from
-the king; and that Frenchified jade, your missus’ll sing
-small―”</p>
-
-<p>But here the captain sprang to the door, at which his
-mare was standing ready, leaped to the saddle, and rode off
-at a gallop, cursing his tongue the while, which, in his
-exasperation, he had suffered to get so entirely the better
-of his discretion.</p>
-
-<p>It was high time; Slap-Jack, infuriated at the allusion
-to his lady, had broken from the gentle grasp of Alice, and
-in another moment would have been upon him. He even
-followed the mare for a few paces and shook his fist at the
-retreating figure fleeting away over the moor like the wind;
-then he returned to his sweetheart, and drowned his wrath
-in a flagon of sound ale drawn by her sympathising hands.</p>
-
-<p>He soon ceased to think of his opponent’s threats, for
-when the excitement of action was over, the seaman bore<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_447"></a>[447]</span>
-no malice and nursed no apprehensions; but Alice, who,
-like many silent, quiet women, was of a shrewd and
-reflective turn of mind, pondered them deeply in her heart.
-She seemed to see the shadow of some great danger
-threatening her lover and the family whose bread he ate.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_448"></a>[448]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LI">CHAPTER LI<br />
-<span class="smaller">SIR MARMADUKE</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A woman’s wits are usually quick to detect intrigue, and
-are sharpened all the more keenly when she suspects
-danger to the one she loves.</p>
-
-<p>The threats Captain Bold had been so indiscreet as to
-utter afforded an explanation of much that had hitherto
-puzzled Alice in the habits and demeanour of her aunt’s
-guests. It seemed clear enough now, that the shrewd,
-dark-clothed gentleman upstairs, and his friend from the
-Hill, were involved in a treasonable plot, of which her
-abhorred suitor with the bay mare was a paid instrument.
-From the hints dropped by the last, it looked that some
-signal vengeance was contemplated against Sir George
-Hamilton, and worse still, against her own beloved Slap-Jack.
-Alice was not the girl to sit still with folded hands
-and bemoan herself in such a predicament. Her first
-impulse was at once to follow Sir George home and warn
-him of all she knew, all she suspected; but reflecting how
-little there was of the former, and how much of the latter;
-remembering, moreover, that one chief conspirator was his
-fast friend, and then in his company, she hesitated to oppose
-her own bare word against the latter’s influence, and
-resolved to strike boldly across the moor till she saw the
-chimneys of Brentwood, and tell her tale to Sir Marmaduke
-Umpleby, a justice of the peace, therefore, in all probability,
-a loyal subject of King George.</p>
-
-<p>It was a long walk for a girl accustomed to the needlework
-and dish-scouring of an indoor life, but Alice’s legs
-had been stretched and her lungs exercised on the south-country
-downs, till she could trip over a Yorkshire moor as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_449"></a>[449]</span>
-lightly and as gracefully, if not so swiftly, as a hind.
-Leaving word, then, for her aunt, that she should not be
-back till after dark, she put on her best shoe-buckles, her
-lace pinners, her smartest hat, and tucking her red stuff
-gown through its pocket-holes, started boldly on her
-mission in the teeth of an east wind.</p>
-
-<p>Brentwood was a snug-looking long grey house, lying
-low amongst tall trees in a little green nook of the moor,
-sheltered by brown swelling undulations that rose all
-round. A straight road, rough in some places, swampy in
-others, and execrable in all, led up to the door, between
-two dilapidated stone walls coped with turf. There was no
-pretence of porch or other abutment, as in newer residences,
-nor were there curves round clumps of plantation,
-sweeps to coast flower-beds, nor any such compromise from
-a direct line in the approach to the house. The inmates of
-Brentwood might see their visitors for a perspective of half
-a mile from the front windows, and at these windows would
-take up their position from dawn till dark.</p>
-
-<p>Dame Umpleby and her five daughters were at their
-usual station when Alice appeared in sight. These young
-ladies, of whom the eldest seemed barely fifteen, were being
-educated under their mother’s eye, that is to say, they were
-writing out recipes, mending house-linen, reading the
-“Pilgrim’s Progress,” and working samplers, according to
-their several ages. They had a spinet also, somewhat out
-of repair, on which the elder girls occasionally practised,
-but father would not stand this infliction within ear-shot,
-and father was now enjoying his after-dinner slumbers in
-their common sitting-room.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke did not appear to advantage in the
-attitude he had chosen. His wig was off, and hung stately
-on its own account over a high-backed chair. His round
-smooth head was discoloured in patches like the shield of a
-tortoise, his heavy features looked the heavier that they
-were somewhat swollen after eating, the lower jaw had
-dropped comfortably to its rest, and his whole frame was
-sunk in an attitude of complete and ungainly repose.</p>
-
-<p>A half-smoked pipe had dropped from his relaxed fingers
-to the floor, and a remnant of brown ale stood at his elbow
-in a plain silver tankard on the table.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_450"></a>[450]</span></p>
-
-<p>The apartment was their usual family parlour, as it was
-then called, and therefore plainly, not to say meanly,
-furnished. Sir Marmaduke being a gentleman of ancient
-blood and considerable possessions, owned flocks and herds
-in plenty, fertile corn land under the plough, miles of
-pasturage over the hill. He kept good horses in his stable,
-fleet greyhounds in his kennel, and a cast of hawks in his
-mews, only surpassed by those of Sir George Hamilton;
-but he could not afford, he said, to waste his substance on
-“Frenchified luxuries,” and this opprobrious term seemed
-to comprise all such vanities as carpets, curtains, couches,
-pictures, and ornaments of every description. For indoors,
-he argued, why, he didn’t frequent that side of the house
-much himself, and what had been good enough for his
-mother must be good enough for his wife and the girls.
-When hard pressed, as be sure he was by these on the score
-of certain damask hanging and gorgeous carpets at Hamilton
-Hill, he would reply that Lady Hamilton was the sweetest
-woman in Europe, whereat his audience dissented, but that
-extravagance was her crying fault, only excusable on the
-ground of her foreign birth and education, and it couldn’t
-go on. It could <i>not</i> go on! He should live to see his
-neighbour ruined, and sold up, but he should be sorry for
-it, prodigiously sorry! for Hamilton was a good fellow, very
-strong in the saddle, and took his bottle like a man!</p>
-
-<p>He had spoken to the same effect just before he dropped
-asleep, and Dame Umpleby with her daughters had continued
-the subject in whispers till it died out of itself just
-as the far-off figure of Alice, coming direct to the house,
-afforded fresh food for conversation.</p>
-
-<p>Margery being the youngest, saw the arrival some half-second
-before her sisters, and for one rapturous moment
-believed her dearest visions were realised, and little Red
-Riding Hood was coming to pay them a visit in person;
-but this young woman being about five years of age, and of
-imaginative temperament, was already accustomed to disillusions,
-and felt, therefore, more disgusted than surprised
-when her eldest sister Janet suggested the less startling
-supposition that it was Goody Round’s grand-daughter on
-an errand for red salve and flannel, offering, at the same
-time, to procure those palliatives in person from the store-room.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_451"></a>[451]</span>
-Janet, like most elder girls in a large family, was
-as steady as a matron, taking charge of the rest with the
-care of an aunt, and the authority of a governess. But the
-mother’s sight was sharper than her children’s. “Bessie
-Round’s not half the height of that girl,” said she, rising
-for a better look. “See how she skims across the stepping-stones
-at the ford! She’s in a hurry, whoever she is!
-But that is no reason, Margery, why you shouldn’t learn
-your spelling, nor that I should have to unpick the last
-half-dozen stitches in Marian’s sampler. Hush! my dears,
-I pray you! Less noise, or you will wake father.”</p>
-
-<p>Pending this discussion, Alice, whose pace was at least
-twice as good as Bessie Round’s, had reached the house.
-She looked very pretty, all flushed and tumbled out of the
-moorland breezes, and Dame Umpleby’s heart reproached
-her for the hundredth time that she had allowed her husband
-to establish as a rule the administration of justice in his
-own room, unhampered by her presence. He had once in
-their early married life admitted her assistance to his
-judicial labours, but such confusion resulted from this
-indulgence that the experiment was never repeated.</p>
-
-<p>Though Sir Marmaduke had been married a score of
-years, and was the model of a steady-going, middle-aged
-gentleman, such is the self-tormenting tendency of the
-female mind that his wife could not mark without certain
-painful twinges, the good looks of this visitor waiting at
-the hall-door, lest her errand should prove as usual—“A
-young woman, if you please, wants to see Sir Marmaduke
-on justice business!”</p>
-
-<p>Such twinges are generally prophetic. Long before
-Margery and Marian had settled a disputed point as to the
-identity of the wolf and little Red Riding Hood’s grandmother
-in the story-book, a plethoric serving-man, who had
-obviously been employing his leisure in the kitchen, like
-his master in the parlour, entered with a red shining face,
-and announced Alice’s arrival in the very words his mistress
-knew so well.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke woke up with a start, rubbed his eyes,
-his nose, the whole of his bald head, and replied as usual—</p>
-
-<p>“Directly, Jacob, directly. Offer the young woman a
-horn of small ale, and show her into the justice-room.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_452"></a>[452]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was a tradition at Brentwood that no visitor, however
-humble, should walk six steps within the threshold dry-lipped,
-and old Jacob, who loved a gossip only less than a
-drink, was exceedingly careful not to break through this
-hospitable practice.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke, blinking like an old owl in the daylight,
-adjusted his wig, shook himself to rights, and, ignoring his
-wife’s uneasiness, wandered off scarce half-awake, to receive
-the new arrival in the justice-room.</p>
-
-<p>There were few eavesdroppers at Brentwood, least of
-all at that hour of the day. A general stagnation habitually
-pervaded the establishment from dinner-time till dusk.
-The men slumbered over the fire in the hall, the women,
-at least the elder ones, crossed their arms under their
-aprons, and dozed in the kitchen; the younger maids stole
-out to meet their bachelors in the wood-house of the
-cattle-sheds. Even Rupert, the old mastiff, retired to his
-kennel, and unless the provocation was of an extraordinary
-nature, refused to open more than one eye at a time, so
-that fear was uncalled-for, which Alice obviously entertained,
-lest her communication to Sir Marmaduke should
-be overheard.</p>
-
-<p>The latter concluding it was the usual grievance, cast a
-hasty glance at the girl as he passed on to the leathern
-arm-chair that formed his throne, but seating himself
-thereon, and obtaining a full view of her face, gave a start
-of recognition, and exclaimed in surprise—</p>
-
-<p>“Why, it’s Mistress Alice! Take a chair, Mistress
-Alice, and believe me, you’re welcome. Heartily welcome,
-however tangled be the skein you’ve brought me to
-unravel.”</p>
-
-<p>Pretty Alice of the “Hamilton Arms” was as well
-known as the sign of that hostelry itself to every hard-riding,
-beer-drinking, cattle-jobbing, country gentleman
-within fifty miles. Sir Marmaduke often said, and sometimes
-swore, that “he didn’t care how they bred ’em in London
-and thereabouts, but to <i>his</i> mind Alice was the likeliest
-girl he saw north o’ Trent, be t’other who she might!”</p>
-
-<p>The object of his admiration, standing very near the
-door, hoped “Lady Umpleby and the young ladies were
-well,” a benevolent wish it seemed she had walked all this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_453"></a>[453]</span>
-distance to express, for she immediately broke down, and
-began to adjust plaits in the hem of her pinners with
-extreme nicety.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke, marking her confusion, suspected it
-<i>must</i> be the old business after all.</p>
-
-<p>“Take a seat, my dear,” repeated he paternally.
-“Don’t ye be frightened; nobody will hear ye here. Take
-your own time, and tell your own story.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus adjured, Alice still close to the door, looked
-anxiously round, and whispered—</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Sir Marmaduke, are you quite sure nobody can
-hear us?”</p>
-
-<p>The justice smiled, and pulled his wig straight. It was
-evident she had something very secret to confide. He was
-glad she had come to him at once, and what a pretty girl
-she was! Of course, he would stand her friend. He told
-her so.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Sir Marmaduke,” said Alice, “it’s something
-dreadful. It’s something I’ve found out. I know I shall
-get killed by some of them! It’s a plot, Sir Marmaduke!
-That’s what it is. There!”</p>
-
-<p>The justice started. His brow clouded, and his very
-wig seemed to come awry. He was a stout-hearted gentleman
-enough, and feared danger certainly less than trouble.
-But a plot! Ever since he could remember in his own
-and his father’s time, the word had been synonymous with
-arrests, imprisonments, authorised oppression, packed
-juries, commissions of inquiry, false witness, hard swearing,
-and endless trouble to justices of the peace.</p>
-
-<p>It was, perhaps, the one thing of all others that he most
-dreaded, so his first impulse was, of course, to ignore the
-whole matter.</p>
-
-<p>“Plot! My dear. Pooh! Nonsense! What do you
-know of plots, except a plot to get married, you little
-jade? Hey? Plot! There’s no such thing in these
-days. We smothered the whole brood, eggs and all, in
-Fifteen. We’ll give you a drop of burnt sherry, and send
-you home behind Ralph on a pillion. Don’t ye trouble
-your pretty head about plots, my dear. If you’d seen as
-many as I have, you’d never wish for another.”</p>
-
-<p>Alice thought of Slap-Jack, and collected her ideas.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_454"></a>[454]</span>
-“I’m sure,” said she, “I wouldn’t have taken the liberty
-of coming to trouble your honour, but I thought as you
-would like to know, Sir Marmaduke, being as it concerns
-Sir George Hamilton, who’s aunt’s landlord, you know, Sir
-Marmaduke, and his sweet lady; and if they were to come
-for to be taken and carried to London town with their feet
-tied under their horses’ bellies, Sir Marmaduke, why whatever
-would become of us all?”</p>
-
-<p>The picture that Alice conjured up was too much for her,
-and she dried her tears on her apron.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke opened his eyes wider than he had done
-since he closed them for his afternoon nap. “Sir George
-Hamilton!” he repeated, in great astonishment; “how can
-he be implicated? What d’ye mean, my dear? Dry your
-eyes, there’s a good girl, and tell your story from the
-beginning.”</p>
-
-<p>She had recovered her composure now, and made her
-statement lucidly and without reserve. She detailed the
-whole circumstances of her lover’s dispute with Captain
-Bold, and the latter’s threats, from which she gathered,
-reasonably enough, that another Jacobite rising was imminent,
-in which their party were to be successful, whereby
-the loyal subjects of King George, including the Hamiltons,
-Slap-Jack, her aunt, and herself, were to be ruined, and
-utterly put to confusion. She urged Sir Marmaduke to lay
-his hands at once on the conspirators within reach. Three
-of them, she said, would be together at the “Hamilton
-Arms” that very evening. She did not suppose two of the
-gentlemen would make much resistance, as they seemed to
-be priests; and fighting, she thought, could not be their
-trade; while as for the red-nosed captain, with his bay
-mare, though he talked very big, and said he had served in
-every country in Europe, why, she would not be afraid to
-promise that cook and herself could do his business, for
-that matter, with a couple of brooms and a slop-pail.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke laughed, but he was listening very
-attentively now, altogether changed from the self-indulgent
-slumberer of half an hour ago. As she continued her
-story his interest became more and more excited, the expression
-of his face cleared from lazy indifference into
-shrewd, penetrating common sense, and denoted the importance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_455"></a>[455]</span>
-he attached to her communication, of which not a
-word escaped him.</p>
-
-<p>At the mention of the red-nosed captain with his bay
-mare, he interrupted her, dived into a table-drawer, from
-which he produced a note-book, and referred to an entry
-amongst its red-lined pages.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop a moment, Mistress Alice,” said he, turning over
-the leaves. “Here it is. Bay mare, fast, well-bred, kicks
-in the stable, white hind-foot, star, and snip on muzzle.
-Owner, middle height, speaks in a shrill voice, long nose,
-pale face, and flaxen hair in a club.”</p>
-
-<p>Alice’s eyes kindled with the first part of this description,
-but she seemed disappointed when he reached the end.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not our captain, Sir Marmaduke,” said she.
-“Our captain’s got a squeaky voice, sure enough; but his
-hair is jet-black, and his face, especially his nose, as red,
-ay, red as my petticoat. It’s the moral of the mare, to be
-sure, and a wicked beast she is,” added Alice, reflectively.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke pondered. “Is your captain, as you call
-him, a good-looking man?” said he, slyly.</p>
-
-<p>Alice was indignant. “As ugly as sin!” she exclaimed.
-“Bloodshot eyes, scowling eyebrows, and a seam down one
-cheek that reaches to his chin. No, Sir Marmaduke, to do
-him justice, he’s a very hard-featured gentleman, is the
-captain.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke, keeping his finger between the leaves of
-his note-book, referred once more to the entry.</p>
-
-<p>“Tastes differ, Mistress Alice,” said he, good-humouredly.
-“I think I can recognise the gentleman, though I’ve got
-him described here, and by one of your sex too, as ‘exceedingly
-handsome-featured, of commanding presence,
-with an air of the highest fashion.’ Never mind. I knew
-he was somewhere this side of the Border, but did not
-guess he was such a near neighbour. If it’s any satisfaction,
-I don’t mind telling you, my dear, he’s likely
-enough to be in York gaol before the month’s out. In the
-meantime, don’t you let anybody know you’ve seen me,
-and keep your captain, if you possibly can, at the
-‘Hamilton Arms’ till I want him.”</p>
-
-<p>Alice curtsied demurely. She had caught the excitement
-inseparable from everything that resembles a pursuit by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_456"></a>[456]</span>
-this time, and had so thoroughly entered into the spirit of
-the game, that she felt she could let the captain make love
-to her for an hour at a stretch, red nose and all, rather
-than he should escape out of their clutches.</p>
-
-<p>“And the other gentleman?” she asked, glancing at the
-note-book, as if she thought they too might be inscribed on
-its well-filled pages. “Him that sits upstairs writing all
-day, and him that lives up with Sir George at the Hill, and
-only comes down our way about dusk. There can’t be much
-harm about that one, Sir Marmaduke, I think. Such a
-pale, thin, quiet young gentleman, and for all he seems so
-unhappy, as meek as a mouse.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let the other gentlemen alone, Alice,” answered the
-justice. “You’re a good girl, and a pretty one, and you
-showed your sense in coming over here at once without
-saying a word to anybody. Now, you’ll take my advice, my
-dear; I am sure you will. Get home before it’s dark. I’d
-send you with Ralph and old Dapple, but that it would make
-a talk. Never mind, you’ve a good pair of legs, I know; so
-make all the use you can of them. I don’t like such a
-blooming lass to be tramping about these wild moors of
-ours after nightfall. Tell your aunt to brew you a posset
-the moment you get home. If she asks any questions, say
-I told you to come up here about renewing the license.
-Above all, don’t tattle. Keep silence for a week, only a
-week, and I’ll give you leave after that to chatter till your
-tongue aches. And now, Alice, you’re a sensible girl, I
-believe, and not easily frightened. Listen to what these
-two priests say. Hide behind the window-curtain, under
-the bed, anywhere, only find out for certain what they’re at,
-and come again to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“But they speak French,” objected Alice, whereat her
-listener’s face fell, though he smiled well-pleased when she
-added, modestly; “not but what I know enough to understand
-them, if I don’t have to answer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite right, quite right, my dear,” assented the justice;
-“you’re a clever girl enough. Mind you show your cleverness
-by keeping your tongue between your teeth. And now
-it’s high time you were off. Remember what I’ve told you.
-Mum’s the word, my dear; and fare ye well.”</p>
-
-<p>So the justice, opening the door for Alice with all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_457"></a>[457]</span>
-courtesy, imprinted such a kiss upon her blooming face, as
-middle-aged gentlemen of those days distributed liberally
-without scandal, a kiss that, given in all honour and kindliness,
-left the maiden’s cheek no rosier than before.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as soon as the door was shut, Sir Marmaduke
-pulled his wig off, and began pacing his chamber to and fro,
-as was his custom when in unusual perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>“A plot,” he reflected; “no doubt of it. Another veritable
-Jacobite plot, to disturb private comfort and public
-credit; to make every honest man suspect his neighbour,
-and to set the whole country by the ears.”</p>
-
-<p>Though he had wisely concealed from Alice the importance
-he really attached to her information, he could not
-but admit her story was very like many another that had
-previously warned him of these risings, in one of which,
-long ago, he had himself been concerned on the other side.
-His sympathies even to-day were not enthusiastically with
-his duty. That duty doubtless was, to warn the executive
-at once.</p>
-
-<p>He wished heartily that he knew which of his friends and
-neighbours was concerned in the business. It would be
-terrible if some of his intimates (by no means an unlikely
-supposition) were at its head. He thought it extremely
-probable that Sir George Hamilton was only named as a
-victim for a blind, and had really accepted a prominent part
-in the rising. Could he not give him a hint he was suspected,
-in time to get out of the way? Sir Marmaduke
-was not very bitter against the Jacobites; and perhaps
-it occurred to him, moreover, that if they should get the
-upper hand, it would be well to have such an advocate as
-Sir George on the winning side. He might tell him what
-he had heard, under pretence of asking his assistance and
-advice.</p>
-
-<p>At all events he thought he had shut Alice’s mouth for
-the present, by setting her to watch the conspirators closely
-in her aunt’s house. “If she finds <i>them</i> out,” said Sir
-Marmaduke, rubbing his bald head, “I shall have timely
-notice of their doings, and if they find <i>her</i> out, why, they
-will probably change the scene of operation with all haste,
-and I shall have got an exceedingly awkward job off my
-hands.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_458"></a>[458]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LII">CHAPTER LII<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE BOWL ON THE BIAS</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was Sir Marmaduke’s maxim, as he boasted it had been
-his father’s and grandfather’s, to sleep on a resolution before
-putting it in practice. He secured, therefore, a good night’s
-rest and a substantial breakfast ere he mounted his best
-horse to wait upon his neighbour at Hamilton Hill, ordering
-the grey to be saddled, because Sir George had
-sometimes expressed his approval of that animal. The
-lord of Brentwood was sufficiently a Yorkshireman to seize
-the opportunity of “a deal,” even while more important
-matters were under consideration.</p>
-
-<p>“He was getting on,” he meant to tell Sir George.
-“His nerve was beginning to fail. The grey was as good
-as gold, but <i>a little too much of a horse</i> for him now. He
-was scarce able to do the animal justice like a younger
-man.”</p>
-
-<p>And as this suggestion could not but be flattering to the
-<i>younger man</i>, he thought it not improbable his friend might
-be tempted to purchase on the spot.</p>
-
-<p>So he rode the horse quietly and carefully, avoiding the
-high road, which would have taken him past the “Hamilton
-Arms,” and, threading a labyrinth of bridleways through
-the moor, very easy to find for those who were familiar with
-them, but exceedingly puzzling to those who were not.</p>
-
-<p>The grey looked fresh and sleek, as if just out of the
-stable, when Sir Marmaduke rode into the courtyard at
-Hamilton Hill, whence he was ushered by Slap-Jack, who
-had a great respect for him as a “True Blue, without any
-gammon,” to the terrace where Sir George, her ladyship,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_459"></a>[459]</span>
-and Monsieur de St. Croix were engaged in a game of
-bowls.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke followed boldly, although, finding he had
-to confront Lady Hamilton, he was at some pains to adjust
-his neckcloth and tie-wig, wishing, at the same time, he had
-got on his flowing “Steinkirk” cravat and a certain scarlet
-waistcoat with gold-lace, now under repair.</p>
-
-<p>The game was proceeding with much noise and hilarity,
-especially from Sir George. Florian, an adept at every
-pastime demanding bodily skill, had already acquired a
-proficiency not inferior to his host’s, who was no mean performer.
-They were a capital match, particularly without
-lookers-on; but the baronet remarked, with prim inward
-sarcasm, that he could generally beat his adversary in the
-presence of Cerise. The very sound of Lady Hamilton’s
-voice seemed to take Florian’s attention off the game.</p>
-
-<p>She was watching the players now with affected interest—smiling
-encouragement to her husband with every successful
-rub—bringing all her artless charms to bear on the man
-whom she had resolved to win back if she could. She was
-very humble to-day, but no less determined to make a
-desperate struggle for her lost dominion, feeling how
-precious it was now, and that her heart would break if it
-was really gone for ever.</p>
-
-<p>And Sir George saw everything through the distorted
-glass of his own misgivings.</p>
-
-<p>“All these caressing ways—all these smiles and glances,”
-thought he, bitterly, “only prove her the most fickle of
-women, or the most hypocritical of wives!”</p>
-
-<p>He could not but acknowledge their power, and hated
-himself for the weakness. He could not prevent their
-thrilling to his heart, but he steeled it against her all the
-more. The better he loved her, the deeper was her
-treachery, the blacker was her crime. There should be
-no haste, no prejudice, no violence, and—no forgiveness!</p>
-
-<p>All the while he poised his bowl with a frank brow and a
-loud laugh. He sipped from a tankard on the rustic table
-with a good-humoured jest. With a success which surprised
-him, and for which he hated himself while he
-admired, he acted the part of a confiding, indulgent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_460"></a>[460]</span>
-husband towards Cerise—of a hearty, unsuspicious friend
-towards St. Croix.</p>
-
-<p>And the latter was miserable, utterly and confessedly
-miserable! Every caress lavished on her husband by the
-wife, was a shaft that pierced him to the marrow. Every
-kind word addressed by the latter to himself, steeped that
-shaft in venom, and sent the evil curdling through his blood.</p>
-
-<p>“Penance,” he murmured inwardly. “They talk of
-penance—of punishment for sin—of purgatory—of hell!
-Why, <i>this</i> is hell! I am in hell already!”</p>
-
-<p>The arrival of Sir Marmaduke, therefore, with his broad
-brown face, his old-fashioned dress, and his ungainly
-manners, was felt as a relief to the whole party; and,
-probably, not one of them separately would have given him
-half so gratifying a reception as was now accorded him by
-all three.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, his greeting to Lady Hamilton was so
-ludicrous in its ceremonious awkwardness, that she could
-scarcely repress a laugh. Catching Florian’s eye, she did,
-indeed, indulge in a smile, which she hoped might be unobserved.
-So it was by Sir Marmaduke, whose faculties
-were completely absorbed in his bow; but her husband
-noted the glance of intelligence exchanged, and scored it up
-as an additional proof against the pair.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-morrow, Sir George,” continued the new arrival,
-completing his salutations, as he flattered himself, in the
-newest mode; “and to you sir,” he added, turning rather
-sternly upon Florian, whom he was even then mentally
-committing, under a magistrate’s warrant, to take his trial
-for high treason. “I made shift to ride over thus early in
-order to be sure of finding my host before he went abroad.
-Harbouring our stag, as we say, my lady, before he rouses;
-for if I had come across his blemish in the rack as I rode
-up the park, it would have been a disappointment to myself,
-and a disgrace to my reputation as a woodsman.”</p>
-
-<p>Cerise did not in the least understand, but she bowed
-her pretty head and answered—</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, of course—clearly—so it would.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
-<img src="images/illus4.jpg" width="450" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“THE ARRIVAL OF SIR MARMADUKE WAS A RELIEF.”</p>
-<p class="caption-r">(<a href="#Page_460"><i>Page 460.</i></a>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Therefore,” continued Sir Marmaduke, somewhat inconsequently,
-for the sweet foreign accent rang in his ears
-and heated his brain, as if he had been a younger man.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_461"></a>[461]</span>
-“Therefore St. George, I thought you might like to have
-another look at Grey Plover before I send him to Catterick
-fair. He stands ready saddled at this present speaking in
-your own stable, and if you would condescend to mount and
-try his paces in the park, I think you must allow that you
-have seldom ridden a more gallant goer.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke was pleased with his own diplomacy.
-Casting his eyes on her ladyship’s pretty feet, he had quite
-satisfied himself she was too lightly shod to accompany her
-husband through the most luxuriant herbage of the park.
-The priest, too, being a Frenchman, would be safe to know
-little, and care less, about a horse. He could thus secure
-an uninterrupted interview with his friend, and might,
-possibly, make an advantageous sale into the bargain.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, go with him, George!” exclaimed Cerise, thinking
-to please her husband, who was, as she knew, still boy
-enough dearly to love a gallop. “Go with him, and ride
-round by the end of the garden into the park. We can
-watch you from here. I do so like to see you on horseback!”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed and assented, leaving her again alone with
-Florian. Always alone with Florian! He ground a curse
-between his teeth, as he strode off to the stable, and, trying
-Grey Plover’s speed over the undulating surface of the
-home-park, took that animal in a grasp of iron that made
-it exert its utmost powers, in sheer astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke scanning from underneath a clump of
-trees, thought he had never seen his horse go so fast.</p>
-
-<p>Once round the home-park—once across the lower end at
-speed—a leap over a ditch and bank—a breather up the hill—and
-Sir George trotted Grey Plover back to his owner,
-in an easy, self-satisfied manner that denoted the horse was
-sold. Never once had he turned his head towards the
-terrace where Cerise stood watching. She knew it as well
-as he did, but made excuses for him to herself. He was so
-fond of horses—he rode so beautifully—nobody could ride
-so well unless his whole attention was fixed on his employment.
-But she sighed nevertheless, and Florian, at her
-side, heard the sigh, and echoed it in his heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Fifty broad pieces,” said Sir George, drawing up to the
-owner’s side, and sliding lightly to the ground.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_462"></a>[462]</span></p>
-
-<p>“He’s worth more than that,” answered the other,
-loosening the horse’s girths and turning his distended
-nostrils to the wind. “But we’ll talk about the price
-afterwards. We are not likely to differ on that point.
-You never rode behind such shoulders, Sir George; and
-did you remark how he breasted the hill? Like a lion,
-Ah! If I was twenty years younger, or even ten! But it’s
-no matter for that. I want your advice, Sir George. You
-carry a grey lining, as we say, to a green doublet. Give
-me the benefit. There’s something brewing here between
-your house and mine that will come to hell-broth anon, if
-we take not some order with it in the meantime!”</p>
-
-<p>The other turned his back resolutely on the terrace
-where his wife was standing, and shot a penetrating glance
-at the speaker.</p>
-
-<p>“Let it brew!” said he. “If it’s hot from the devil’s
-caldron, I think you and I can make shift to drink it out
-between us.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t like the smell of it,” he answered, “not to
-speak of the taste. Seriously, my friend, I’ve lit on a nest
-of Jacobites, here, on your own property, at the ‘Hamilton
-Arms’! They’ve got another of their cursed plots hatching
-in the chimney-corner, about fit to chip the shell by now.
-There’s a couple of priests in it, of course; a lad, I know
-well enough, with a good bay mare, that has saved his neck
-in more ways than one, for a twelvemonth past. He’s only
-put to the dirty work, you may be sure, and I can guess,
-though on this point I have no certain information, there
-are two or three more honest gentlemen, friends of yours
-and mine, whom I had rather meet at Otterdale Head with
-the hounds than see badgered by an attorney-general at
-the Exchequer Bar or the Old Bailey, with as many
-witnesses arrayed against them, at half a guinea an oath,
-as would swear away the nine lives of a cat! A murrain of
-their plots! say I; there’s neither pleasure nor profit in
-’em, try ’em which side you will, and I’ve had <i>my</i> experience
-o’ both!”</p>
-
-<p>Sir George’s brow went down, and his lips closed. In
-his frank, manly face came the pitiless expression of a
-duellist who spies the weakness of his adversary’s sword,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_463"></a>[463]</span>
-and braces his muscles to dash in. He had got the Jesuit,
-he told himself, “on the hip”!</p>
-
-<p>It was all over with the scheme, he felt. Ere such
-intelligence could have reached his thick-witted neighbour,
-he argued, it must be known in other, and more dangerous
-quarters. If he had ever suffered the promised earldom to
-dazzle him for an instant, his eyes were opened now; that
-bit of parchment was but a patent for the gallows. He
-could hang the tempter who had offered it him, within a
-week! At this reflection the whole current of his passions
-turned—the man’s nature was of the true conquering type—stern,
-fierce, almost savage, while confronted with his
-adversary; generous, forbearing, even tender, when the
-foe was at his feet.</p>
-
-<p>The noblest instincts of chivalry were at work within
-his bosom; they found expression in the simple energy with
-which he inwardly ejaculated, “No! D―n it! I’ll
-fight fair!”</p>
-
-<p>“My advice,” said he, quietly, “is easily followed. Do
-nothing in a hurry—this country is not like France; these
-cancers often die out of themselves, because the whole
-body is healthy and full of life, but, for that very reason,
-if you eradicate them with the knife, your loss of blood,
-is more injurious than the sore itself. Get all the
-information you can, Sir Marmaduke, and when the time
-arrives, act with your usual vigour and good sense. Come!
-Fifty pieces for the grey horse? my man shall fetch him
-from Brentwood to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Marmaduke was well pleased. He flattered himself
-that he had fulfilled his delicate mission with extraordinary
-dexterity, and sold Grey Plover very fairly, besides. His
-friends were warned now, and if they chose to persist in
-thrusting their heads through a halter, why he could do no
-more. He was satisfied Sir George had taken the hint he
-meant to offer. Very likely the conspiracy would come to
-nothing after all, but, at any rate, it was time to hang
-Captain Bold. He must see about it that afternoon, so he
-would take his leave at once, and return to Brentwood by
-the way he came.</p>
-
-<p>Conscious of the disadvantage under which he laboured
-for want of the red waistcoat, Sir Marmaduke sturdily<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_464"></a>[464]</span>
-refused his host’s hospitable offer of refreshment, and was
-steering Grey Plover through the oaks at the end of the
-avenue by the time George had rejoined his wife and
-Florian on the terrace. Walking back, the latter smiled
-and shook his head. He was thinking, perhaps, how his
-neighbour’s loyalty was leavened with a strong disinclination
-to exertion, and no little indulgence for those
-whose political opinions differed from his own.</p>
-
-<p>But the smile clouded over as he approached the terrace.
-Together again—always together! and in such earnest
-conversation. He could see his wife’s white hands waving
-with the pretty trick of gesticulation he loved so dearly.
-What could they have to say? what could <i>she</i> have to say
-that demanded so much energy? If he might only have
-heard. She was talking about himself; praising his
-horsemanship, his strength, his courage, his manly
-character, in the fond, deprecatory way that a woman affects
-when speaking of the man she loves. Every word the
-sweet lips uttered made Florian wince and quiver, yet her
-husband, striding heavily up the terrace-steps, almost
-wished that he could change places with the Jesuit priest.</p>
-
-<p>The latter left her side when Sir George approached;
-and Cerise, who was conscious of something in her
-husband’s manner that wounded her feelings and jarred
-upon her pride, assumed a colder air and a reserved
-bearing, not the least natural to her character, but of late
-becoming habitual. Everything conspired to increase the
-distance between two hearts that ought to have been knit
-together by bonds no misunderstanding nor want of
-confidence should ever have been able to divide.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George, watching his wife closely, addressed himself
-to Florian—</p>
-
-<p>“Bad news!” said he, whereat she started and
-changed colour. “But not so bad as it might have been.
-The hounds are on the scent, my friend. I told you I
-expected it long ago, and if the fox breaks cover now, as
-Sir Marmaduke would say, they will run into him as sure
-as fate. Halloa, man! what ails you? You never used
-to hoist the white ensign thus, when we cleared for action!”</p>
-
-<p>The Jesuit’s discomposure was so obvious as to justify
-his host’s astonishment. Florian felt, indeed, like a man<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_465"></a>[465]</span>
-who, having known an earthquake was coming, and wilfully
-kept it out of his mind, sees the earth at last sliding from
-beneath his feet. His face grew livid, and the drops
-stood on his brow. In proportion to his paleness, Lady
-Hamilton’s colour rose. Sir George looked from one to the
-other with a curling lip.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no occasion for all this alarm,” he observed,
-rather contemptuously. “The fox can lie at earth till the
-worst danger of the chase is over. Perhaps his safest
-refuge is the very hen-roost he has skulked in to rob!
-Cheer up, Florian,” he added, in a kinder tone. “You
-don’t suppose I would give up a comrade so long as the old
-house can cover him! I must only make you a prisoner,
-that is all, with my lady, here, for your gaoler. Keep close
-for a week or two, and the fiercest of the storm will have
-blown over. It will be time enough then to smuggle you
-back to St. Omer, or wherever you have to furnish your
-report. Don’t be afraid, man. Why, you used to be made
-of sterner stuff than this!”</p>
-
-<p>Florian could not answer. A host of conflicting feelings
-filled his breast to suffocation, but at that moment how
-cheerfully, how gladly, would he have laid down his life for
-the husband of the woman he so madly loved! Covering
-his face in his hands he sobbed aloud.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise raised her eyes with a look of enthusiastic approval;
-but they sank terrified and disheartened by the hard, inscrutable
-expression of Sir George’s countenance. Her gratitude,
-he thought, was only for the preservation of Florian. They
-might congratulate each other, when his back was turned,
-on the strange infatuation that befriended them, and perhaps
-laugh at his blind stupidity; but he would fight fair. Yes,
-however hard it seemed, he was a gentleman, and he would
-fight fair!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_466"></a>[466]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LIII">CHAPTER LIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">FAIR FIGHTING</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>So the duel began. The moral battle that a man wages
-with his own temper, his own passions, words, actions, his
-very thoughts, and a few days of the uncongenial struggle
-seemed to have added years to Sir George’s life. Of all the
-trials that could have been imposed on one of his nature,
-this was, perhaps, the severest, to live day by day, and
-hour by hour, on terms of covert enmity with the woman
-best loved—the friend most frankly trusted in the world.
-Two of the chief props that uphold the social fabric seemed
-cut away from under him. Outward sorrows, injuries,
-vexations can be borne cheerfully enough while domestic
-happiness remains, and the heart is at peace within. They
-do but beat outside, like the blast of a storm on a house
-well warmed and water-tight. Neither can the utmost
-perfidy of woman utterly demoralise him who owns some
-staunch friend to trust, on whose vigorous nature he can
-lean, in whose manly counsel he can take comfort, till the
-sharp anguish has passed away. But when love and friendship
-fail both at once, there is great danger of a moral
-recklessness which affirms, and would fain believe, that no
-truth is left in the world. This is the worst struggle of all.
-Conduct and character flounder in it hopelessly, because it
-affords no foothold whence to make an upward spring, so
-that they are apt to sink and disappear without even a
-struggle for extrication.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George had indeed a purpose to preserve him from
-complete demoralisation, but that purpose was in itself
-antagonistic to every impulse and instinct of his nature. It<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_467"></a>[467]</span>
-did violence to his better feelings, his education, his principles,
-his very prejudices and habits, but he pursued it
-consistently nevertheless, whilst it poisoned every hour of
-his life. He went about his daily avocations as usual.
-He never thought of discontinuing those athletic exercises
-and field sports which were elevated into an actual business
-by men of his station at that period, but except for a few
-thrilling moments at long intervals, the zest seemed to be
-gone from them all.</p>
-
-<p>He flung his hawks aloft on the free open moor, and
-cursed them bitterly when they failed to strike. He cheered
-his hounds in the deep wild dales through which they
-tracked their game so busily, and hurried Emerald or Grey
-Plover along at the utmost speed those generous animals
-could compass, but was with a grim sullen determination
-to succeed, rather than with the hearty jovial enthusiasm
-that naturally accompanies the chase. Hawks, hounds,
-and horses were neither cordials nor stimulants now. Only
-anodynes, and scarcely efficacious as such for more than a
-few minutes at a time.</p>
-
-<p>It had been settled that for a short period, depending on
-the alarm felt by the country at the proposed rising, and
-consequent strictness of search for suspected characters,
-Florian should remain domiciled as before at Hamilton
-Hill. It was only stipulated that he should not show himself
-abroad by daylight, nor hold open communication with
-such of his confederates as might be prowling about the
-“Hamilton Arms.” With Sir Marmaduke’s good-will,
-and the general laxity of justice prevailing in the district,
-he seemed to incur far less peril by hiding in his present
-quarters than by travelling southward even in disguise on
-his way to the coast.</p>
-
-<p>There were plenty more of his cloth, little distinguished
-by the authorities indeed, from non-juring clergymen of the
-Church of England, who remained quietly unnoticed, on
-sufferance as it were, in the northern counties. Even if
-watched, Florian might pass for one of these, so his daily
-life went on much as before Sir Marmaduke’s visit. He
-did not write perhaps so many letters, for his correspondence
-with the continent had been discontinued, but
-this increase of leisure only gave him more time for Lady<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_468"></a>[468]</span>
-Hamilton’s society, and as he could not accompany her
-husband to the moor, for fear of being seen, he now spent
-every day till dinner-time under the same roof with Cerise.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George used to wonder sometimes in his own heavy
-heart what they could find to talk about through all those
-hours that seemed so long to him in the saddle amongst
-the dales—the dales he had loved so dearly a few short
-weeks ago, that seemed so wearisome, so gloomy, and so
-endless now—wondered what charm his wife could discover
-in this young priest’s society; in which of the qualities, he
-himself wanted, lay the subtle influence that so entwined
-her when Florian first arrived, that had changed her
-manner and depressed her spirits of late since they had
-been more thrown together, and caused her to look so
-unhappy now that they were soon to part. Stronger and
-stronger, struggle as he might, grew a horrible conviction
-that she loved the visitor in her heart. Like a gallant
-swimmer, beating against the tide, he strove not to give
-way, battling inch by inch, gaining less with every effort—stationary—receding—till,
-losing head and heart alike, and
-wheeling madly with the current, he struck out in sheer
-despair for the quicksands, instinctively preferring to meet
-rather than await destruction.</p>
-
-<p>Abroad all the morning from daybreak, forcing himself to
-leave the house lest he should be unable to resist the
-temptation of watching her, Sir George gave Cerise ample
-opportunities to indulge in Florian’s society, had she been
-so inclined. He thought she availed herself of them to the
-utmost, he thought that while he was away chafing and
-fretting, and eating his own heart far away on those bleak
-moors, Lady Hamilton, passing gracefully amongst her
-rose-trees on the terrace, or sitting at ease in her pretty
-boudoir, appreciated the long release from his company,
-and made the most of it with her guest. He could fancy
-he saw the pretty head droop, the soft cheek flush, the
-white hands wave. He knew all her ways so well. But
-not for him now. Not for <i>him</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Then Grey Plover would wince and swerve aside, scared
-by the fierce energy of that half-spoken oath, or Emerald
-would plunge wildly forward, maddened by the unaccustomed
-spur, the light grasp bearing suddenly so hard upon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_469"></a>[469]</span>
-the rein. But neither Emerald nor Grey Plover, mettled
-hunters both, could afford more than a temporary palliative
-to the goad that pricked their rider’s heart.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George had better have been <i>more</i> or <i>less</i> suspicious.
-Had he chosen to lower himself in his own eyes by ascertaining
-how Lady Hamilton spent her mornings, he would
-have discovered that she employed herself in filling
-voluminous sheets with her neat, illegible French hand,
-writing in her boudoir, where she sat <i>alone</i>. Very unhappy
-poor Cerise was, though she scorned to complain. Very
-pale she grew and languid, going through her housekeeping
-duties with an effort, and ceasing altogether from the
-carolling of those French ballads in which the Yorkshire
-servants took an incomprehensible delight.</p>
-
-<p>She seemed, worst sign of all, to have no heart even for
-her flowers now, and did not visit the terrace for five days
-on a stretch. The very first time she went there, George
-happened to spend the morning at home.</p>
-
-<p>From the window of his room he could see one end of
-the terrace with some difficulty, and a good deal of inconvenience
-to his neck; nevertheless, catching a glimpse of
-his wife’s figure as she moved about amongst her rose-trees,
-he could not resist watching it for a while, neither
-suspiciously nor in anger, but with something of the dull
-aching tenderness that looks its last on the dead face a
-man has loved best on earth. It is, and it is <i>not</i>. The
-remnant left serves only to prove how much is lost, and
-that which makes his deepest sorrow affords his sole consolation—to
-feel that love remains while the loved one is
-for ever gone.</p>
-
-<p>Half a dozen times he rose from his occupation. It was
-but refitting some tackle on the model brigantine, yet it
-connected itself, like everything else, with <i>her</i>. Half a
-dozen times he sat down again with a crack in his neck,
-and an inward curse on his own folly, but he went back
-once more just the same. Then he resumed his work,
-smiling grimly while his brown face paled, for Monsieur
-de St. Croix had just made his appearance on the terrace.</p>
-
-<p>“As usual, I suppose,” muttered Sir George, waxing an
-inch or two of twine with the nicest care, and fitting it into
-a block the size of a silver penny. But somehow he could<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_470"></a>[470]</span>
-not succeed in his manipulation; he was inventing a self-reefing
-topsail, but he couldn’t get the four haulyards taut
-enough, and do what he would the jack-stay came foul of
-the yard. “As usual,” he repeated more bitterly. “Easy
-it is! He’s the best helmsman who knows when to let
-the ship steer herself!” Then he applied once more to
-his task, whistling an old French quickstep somewhat out
-of time.</p>
-
-<p>Florian had been watching his opportunity, and took
-advantage of it at once. He, too, had suffered severely
-during the past few days. Perhaps, in truth, his greatest
-torture was to have been deprived of Lady Hamilton’s
-society. He fancied she avoided him, though in this he
-was wrong, for lately she had hardly given him a thought,
-except of friendly pity for his lot. Had it been otherwise,
-Cerise would have taken care to allow no such interviews
-as the present, because she would have suspected their
-danger. Young, frank, and as little of a coquette as it was
-possible for her mother’s daughter to be, she had never
-yet even thought of analysing her feelings towards Florian.</p>
-
-<p>And he, too, was probably fool enough to shrink from the
-idea of her shunning him, forgetting (as men always do
-forget, the fundamental principles of gallantry in regard to
-the woman they really love) that such a mistrust would
-have been a step, and a long one, towards the interest he
-could not but feel anxious to inspire.</p>
-
-<p>Had she been more experienced or less preoccupied, she
-must have learned the truth from his changing colour, his
-faltering step, his awkward address, to all others so quiet,
-graceful, and polite. She was thinking of George, she was
-low-spirited and unhappy. Florian’s society was a change
-and a distraction. She welcomed him with a kind greeting
-and a bewitching smile.</p>
-
-<p>The more anxious men are to broach an interesting
-subject, the more surely do they approach it by a circuitous
-route. Florian asked half a dozen questions concerning
-the budding, grafting, and production of roses in general,
-before he dared approach the topic nearest his heart.
-Cerise answered good-humouredly, and became more cheerful
-under the influence of fresh air, a gleam of sun, and the
-scent of her favourite flowers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_471"></a>[471]</span></p>
-
-<p>Bending sedulously over an especial treasure, she did
-not remark how long a silence was preserved by her companion,
-though rising she could not fail to observe the
-agitation of his looks nor the shaking hands with which he
-strove to assist her in a task already done.</p>
-
-<p>“These are very late roses,” said he, in a tone strangely
-earnest for the enunciation of so simple a remark. “There
-are still half a dozen more buds to blow, and winter has
-already arrived.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s why I am so fond of them,” she replied.
-“Winter comes too early both in the garden and in the
-house. I like to keep my flowers as long as I can, and my
-illusions too.”</p>
-
-<p>She sighed while she spoke, and Florian, looking tenderly
-in her face, noticed its air of languor and despondency. A
-wild, mad hope shot through his heart, and coming close
-to her side, he resumed—</p>
-
-<p>“It will be a week at least before this green bud blows,
-and in a week, Lady Hamilton, I shall be gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“So soon?” she said, in a low, tender voice, modulated
-to sadness by thoughts of her own in no way connected
-with his approaching departure. “I had hoped you would
-stay with us the whole winter, Monsieur de St. Croix.
-We shall miss you dreadfully.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be gone,” he repeated, mournfully, “and a
-man in my position can less control his own movements
-than a wisp of seaweed on the wave. In a day or two,
-perhaps in a few hours, I must wish you good-bye, and—and—it
-is more than probable that I shall never see you
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>Clasping her hands, she looked at him with her blue eyes
-wide open, like a child who is half-grieved, half-frightened,
-to see its plaything broken, yet not entirely devoid of
-curiosity to know what there is inside. Like a flash came
-back to him the white walls, the drooping laburnums, the
-trellised beech-walk in the convent garden, and before him
-stood Mademoiselle de Montmirail, the Cerise of the old,
-wild, hopeless days, whom he ought never to have loved,
-whom least of all should he dare to think of now.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you remember our Lady of Succour?” said he;
-“do you remember the pleasant spring-time, the smiling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_472"></a>[472]</span>
-fields, and the sunny skies of our own Normandy? How
-different from these grey, dismal hills! And do you remember
-the day you told me your mother recalled you to
-Paris? You cannot have forgotten it! Lady Hamilton,
-everything else is changed, but I alone remain the same.”</p>
-
-<p>The broken voice, the trembling gestures betrayed deep
-and uncontrollable emotion. Even Cerise could not but
-feel that this man was strangely affected by her presence,
-that his self-command was every moment forsaking him,
-and that already words might be hovering on his lips to
-which she must not listen. Perhaps, too, there was some
-little curiosity to hear what those words could be—some
-half-scornful reflection that when spoken it would be time
-enough to disapprove—some petulant triumph to think that
-everybody was not distant, reserved, impenetrable, like Sir
-George.</p>
-
-<p>“And who wishes you to change?” said she, softly.
-“Not I for one.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall remember those words when I am far away,” he
-answered, passionately. “Remember them! I shall think
-of them day by day, and hour by hour, long after you have
-forgotten there was ever such a person in existence as
-Florian de St. Croix. Your director, your worshipper.
-Cerise! your slave!”</p>
-
-<p>She turned on him angrily. All her dignity was aroused
-by such an appeal in such a tone, made to <i>her</i>, a wedded
-wife, but her indignation, natural as it was, changed to
-pity when she marked his pale, worn face, his imploring
-looks, his complete prostration, as it seemed, both of mind
-and body. It was no fault of hers, yet was it the wreck
-she herself had made. Angry! No, she could not be
-angry, when she thought of all he must have suffered, and
-for <i>her</i>; when she remembered how this man had never so
-much as asked for a kind word in exchange for the sacrifice
-of his soul.</p>
-
-<p>The tears stood in her eyes, and when she spoke again
-her voice was very low and pitiful.</p>
-
-<p>“Florian,” said she, “listen to me. If not for your own
-sake, at least for mine, forbear to speak words that can
-never be unsaid. You have been to me, I hope and believe,
-the truest friend man ever was to woman. Do you think I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_473"></a>[473]</span>
-have forgotten the white chapel above Port Welcome, or
-the bright morning that made me a happy wife?” Her
-face clouded, but she resumed in a more composed tone,
-“We have all our own burdens to bear, our own trials to
-get through. It is not for <i>me</i> to teach <i>you</i> that this world
-is no place of unchequered sunshine. You are right. I
-shall, perhaps, never see you again. Nay; it is far better
-so. But let me always remember you hereafter as the
-Florian St. Croix, on whose truth, and unselfishness, and
-right feeling Cerise Hamilton could rely, even if the whole
-world besides should fail, and turn against her at her
-need!”</p>
-
-<p>He was completely unmanned. Her feminine instinct
-had taught her to use the only weapon against which he
-was powerless, and she conquered, as a woman always does
-conquer, when madly loved by him who has excited her
-interest, her pity, and her vanity, but who has failed to
-touch her heart.</p>
-
-<p>“And you <i>will</i> remember me? Promise that!” was all
-he could answer. “It is enough; it is my reward. What
-happiness have I, but to obey your lightest wish?”</p>
-
-<p>“You go to France?” she asked, cheerfully, opining
-with some discretion that it would be well to turn the conversation
-as soon as possible into a less compromising
-channel. “You will see the Marquise? You will be near
-her, at any rate? Will you charge yourself with a packet
-I have been preparing for days, hoping it would be conveyed
-to my dear mother by no hand but yours?”</p>
-
-<p>It was a masterly stroke enough. It not only changed
-the whole conversation, but gave Cerise an opportunity of
-escaping into the house, and breaking up the interview.</p>
-
-<p>He bowed assent of course. He would have bowed
-assent had she bid him shed his own blood then and there
-on the gravel-walk at her feet; but when she left him to
-fetch her packet, he waited for her return with the open
-mouth and fixed gaze of one who has been vouchsafed a
-vision from another world, and looks to see it just once
-again before he dies.</p>
-
-<p>The rigging of the brigantine proceeded but slowly. Sir
-George could not apply himself to his task for five minutes
-at a time; and had the tackle of the real ‘Bashful Maid’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_474"></a>[474]</span>
-ever become so hopelessly fouled and tangled as her model’s,
-she must have capsized with the first breeze that filled her
-sails. His right hand had forgotten its cunning, and his
-very head seemed so utterly confused that, to use his own
-professional metaphor, “He didn’t know truck from taffrail;
-the main-brace from the captain’s quadrant.”</p>
-
-<p>What a lengthened interview was held by those two on
-the terrace! Again and again rising and dislocating his
-neck to look—there they were still! In the same place, in
-the same attitude, the same earnest conversation! What
-subject could there be but one to bear all this discussion
-from two young people like these? So much at least he
-had learned <i>en mousquetaire</i>, but it is difficult to look at
-such matters <i>en mousquetaire</i>, when they affect oneself.
-Ha! She is gone at last. And he, why does he stand
-there watching like an idiot? Sir George turned once more
-to the brigantine, and her dolphin-striker snapped short off
-between his fingers.</p>
-
-<p>Again to the window. Florian not gone yet! And with
-reason, too, as it seems; for Lady Hamilton returns, and
-places a packet in his hand. He kisses hers as he bends
-over it, and hides the packet carefully away in his breast.
-Zounds! This is too much. But Sir George will command
-himself. Yes, he will command himself from respect to his
-own character, if for nothing else.</p>
-
-<p>So with an affectation of carelessness, so marked as to be
-utterly transparent, the baronet walked down to the garden-door,
-where he could not fail to meet his wife as she re-entered
-the house for a second time, leaving Florian without. It
-added little to his peace of mind that her manner was flurried,
-and traces of recent tears were on her face.</p>
-
-<p>“Cerise,” said he, and she looked up smiling; “I beg
-your pardon, Lady Hamilton, may I ask what was that
-packet you brought out even now, and delivered to Monsieur
-de St. Croix?”</p>
-
-<p>She flashed at him a glance of indignant reproach, not,
-as he believed, to reprove his curiosity, but because he had
-checked himself in calling her by the name he loved.</p>
-
-<p>“They are letters for Madame le Marquise, Sir George,”
-she answered, coldly; and, without turning her head, walked
-haughtily past him into the house.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_475"></a>[475]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LIV">CHAPTER LIV<br />
-<span class="smaller">FRIENDS IN NEED</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“What a sky! what weather! what a look-out! what an
-apartment, and what chocolate!” exclaimed Madame de
-Montmirail to her maid, in an accent of intense Parisian
-disgust; while the latter prepared her mistress to go abroad
-and encounter in the streets of London the atmosphere of a
-really tolerably fine day for England at the time of year.
-“Quick, Justine! do not distress yourself about costume.
-My visits this morning are of business rather than ceremony.
-And what matters it now? Yet, after all, I suppose a
-woman never likes to look her worst, especially when she is
-growing old.”</p>
-
-<p>Justine made no answer. The ready disclaimer which
-would indeed have been no flattery died upon her lips; for
-Justine also felt aggrieved in many ways by this untoward
-expedition to the English capital. In the first place, having
-spent but one night in Paris, she had been compelled to
-leave it at the very period when its attractions were coming
-into bloom: in the next, she had encountered, while crossing
-the Channel, such a fresh breeze, as she was pleased to
-term, “<i>un vent de Polichinelle!</i>” and which upset her
-digestive process for a week; in the third, though disdaining
-to occupy a hostile territory with her war material disorganised,
-she was painfully conscious of looking her worst;
-while, lastly, she had no opportunity for resetting the
-blunted edge of her attractions, because in the whole household
-below-stairs could be discovered but one of the opposite
-sex, sixty years old, and obviously given, body and soul, to
-that mistress who cheers while she inebriates.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_476"></a>[476]</span></p>
-
-<p>So Justine bustled about discontentedly, and her expressive
-French face, usually so pleasant and lively, now looked
-dull, and bilious, and cross.</p>
-
-<p>She brightened up a little, nevertheless, when a chair
-stopped at the door, and a visitor was announced. The
-street, though off the Strand, then a fashionable locality,
-was yet tolerably quiet and retired.</p>
-
-<p>It cheered Justine’s spirits to bring up a gentleman’s
-name for admission; and she almost recovered her good-humour
-when she learned he was a countryman of her own.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise, sipping chocolate and dressed to go out,
-received her visitor more than cordially. She had been
-restless at Chateau-la-Fierté, restless in Paris, restless
-through her whole journey, and was now restless in London.
-But restlessness is borne the easier when we have some
-one to share it with; and this young man had reason to be
-gratified with the welcome accorded him by so celebrated a
-beauty as Madame de Montmirail.</p>
-
-<p>She might almost have been his mother, it is true; but
-all his life he had accustomed himself to think of her as the
-brilliant Marquise with whom everybody of any pretence to
-distinction was avowedly in love, and without looking much
-at her face, or affecting her society, he accepted the situation
-too. What would you have? It was <i>de rigueur</i>. He
-declared himself her adorer just as he wore a Steinkirk
-cravat, and took snuff, though he hated it, from a diamond
-snuff-box.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise could not help people making fools of themselves,
-she said; and perhaps did not wish to help it. She
-too had dreamed her dream, and all was over. The
-sovereignty of beauty can at no time be disagreeable, least
-of all when the bloom begins to fade, and the empire grows
-day by day more precarious. If young Chateau-Guerrand
-chose to be as absurd as his uncle, let him singe his wings,
-or his wig, or any part of his attire he pleased. She was
-not going to put her lamp out because the cockchafer is a
-blunderer, and the moth a suicide.</p>
-
-<p>He was a good-looking young gentleman enough, and in
-Justine’s opinion seemed only the more attractive from the
-air of thorough coxcombry with which his whole deportment,
-person, and conversation were imbued. He had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_477"></a>[477]</span>
-quarrelled with his uncle, the Prince-Marshal, on the score
-of that relative’s undutiful conduct. The veteran had paid
-the young soldier’s debts twice, and lo! the third time he
-remonstrated. His nephew, under pretext of an old wound
-disabling the sword-arm, obtained permission to retire from
-the army, thinking thus to annoy his uncle, and accepted
-an appointment as <i>attaché</i> to the French embassy at the
-Court of St. James’s, for which he was specially unfitted
-both by nature and education.</p>
-
-<p>“You arrived, madame, but yesterday,” said he, bowing
-over the hand extended to him, with an affectation of
-extreme devotion. “I learned it this morning, and
-behold I fly here on the instant, to place myself, my chief,
-and all the resources of my country, at the disposition of
-madame.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” she answered, smiling; “but in the meantime,
-understand me, I neither want yourself, however
-charming, nor your chief, however discreet, nor the
-resources of your country and mine, however powerful.
-I am here on private affairs, and till they are concluded I
-shall have no leisure to enter society. What I ask of your
-devotion now is, to sit down in that chair, and tell me the
-news, while I finish my chocolate in peace.”</p>
-
-<p>He obeyed delighted—evidently, she was rejoiced to meet
-him here, so unexpectedly, and could not conceal her
-gratification. He was treated like an intimate friend, an
-established favourite—Justine had retired. The Marquise
-loitered over her chocolate. She looked well, wonderfully
-handsome for her age, and she had never appeared so kind.
-“Ah, rogue!” thought this enviable youth, apostrophising
-the person he most admired in the world, “must it always
-be so? mothers and daughters, maids, wives, and widows.—No
-escape, <i>parbleu</i>, and no mercy. What is it about
-you, my boy, that thus prostrates every creature in a petticoat
-before the feet of Casimir de Chateau-Guerrand? Is
-it looks, is it manners, is it intellect? Faith, I think it
-must be a happy mixture of them all!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” said the Marquise with one of her victorious
-glances, “I am not very patient, you know that of old.
-Quick! out with the news, you who have the knack of telling
-it so well.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_478"></a>[478]</span></p>
-
-<p>He glanced in an opposite mirror, and looked as
-fascinating as he could.</p>
-
-<p>“It goes no further, madame, of course; and indeed I
-would trust you with my head, as I have long since trusted
-you with my heart.” An impatient gesture of his listener
-somewhat discomfited him, but he proceeded, nevertheless,
-in a tone of ineffable self-satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>“We are behind the scenes, you know, we diplomatists,
-and see the players before the wigs are adjusted or the
-paint laid on. Such actors! madame, and oh! such
-actresses! the old Court is a comedy to which no one pays
-attention. The young Court is a farce played with a tragic
-solemnity. Even Mrs. Bellenden has thrown up her part.
-There is no gooseberry bush now behind which the heir-apparent
-fills his basket. Some say that none is necessary,
-but Mrs. Howard still dresses the Princess, and―”</p>
-
-<p>“Spare me your green-room scandal,” interrupted the
-Marquise. “Surely I have heard enough of it in my time.
-At Fontainebleau, at Versailles, at Marly. I am sick to
-death of all the gossips and slanders that gallop up and
-down the backstairs of a palace. Talk politics to me, for
-heaven’s sake, or don’t talk at all!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know not what you call politics, madame,” answered
-the unabashed attaché, “if the Prince’s likings and vagaries
-are not to be included in the term. What say you to a
-plot, a conspiracy, more, a Jacobite rising? In the north
-of course! that established stronghold of legitimacy. Do
-I interest you now?”</p>
-
-<p>He did indeed, and though she strove hard not to betray
-her feelings, no observer, less preoccupied with the reflection
-of his own beloved image in the looking-glass, could have
-failed to remark the gleam of her dark eyes, her rising
-colour, and quick-drawn breath. Though she recovered
-herself with habitual self-command, there was still a slight
-tremor in her voice, while she repeated as unconcernedly
-as she could—</p>
-
-<p>“In the north, you say? Ah! it is a long distance
-from the capital. Your department is very likely misinformed,
-or has itself dressed up a goblin to frighten idle
-children like yourself, monsieur, into paying more attention
-to their lessons.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_479"></a>[479]</span></p>
-
-<p>But Casimir, who laid great stress on his own diplomatic
-importance, vehemently repudiated such an assumption.</p>
-
-<p>“Goblin, indeed!” he cried, indignantly. “It is a
-goblin that will be found to have body and bones, and blood
-too, I fear, unless I am much misinformed and mistaken.
-We have nothing to do with it of course, but I can tell you,
-madame, that we have information of the time, the locality,
-the numbers, the persons implicated. I believe if you put
-me to it, I could even furnish you with the names of the
-accused.”</p>
-
-<p>She bowed carelessly. “A few graziers, I suppose, and
-cattle-drivers,” she observed, “with a Scottish house-breaker,
-and a drunken squire or two for leaders. It is
-scarcely worth the trouble to ask any more questions.”</p>
-
-<p>“Far graver than that, madame,” he answered, determined
-not to be put down. “Some of the best names in
-the north, as I am informed, are already compromised
-beyond power to retreat. I could tell them over from
-memory, but my tongue fails to pronounce the barbarous
-syllables. Would you like to have them in black and
-white?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not this morning, monsieur,” she answered with a
-shrug of the shoulders. “Do you think I came to London
-in order to mix myself up in an unsuccessful rebellion? I,
-who have private affairs of my own that require all my
-attention. You might as well suppose I had followed yourself
-across the Channel because I could not exist apart
-from Casimir de Chateau-Guerrand! Frankly, I am glad
-to see you too. Very glad,” she added, stretching her
-white hand to the young man, with another of her bewitching
-smiles. “But I must hunt you away now. Positively
-I must; I ought to have sold an estate, and touched the
-purchase-money by this time. I am a thorough woman of
-business, monsieur, I would have you know; which does
-not prevent my loving amusement at the right season, like
-other people.”</p>
-
-<p>He took his hat to depart, feeling perhaps, for the first
-time, that there were women in the world to whom even he
-dare not aspire, and that it was provoking such should be
-the best worth winning. The Marquise had not yet lost the
-knack of playing a game from which she had never risen a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_480"></a>[480]</span>
-loser but once, and indeed if her weapons were a little less
-bright, her skill of fence was better than ever. Few women
-have thoroughly learned the art of man-taming till they are
-past their prime, and even then, perhaps the influence that
-subdued his fellows, is powerless alone on him whom most
-they wish to capture.</p>
-
-<p>Admiration from young Chateau-Guerrand gratified the
-Marquise as some stray woodcock in a bag of a hundred
-head, gratifies a sportsman. It hardly even stimulated
-her vanity. She wanted him though, like the woodcock for
-ulterior purposes, and shot him, therefore, so to speak,
-gracefully, neatly, and in proper form.</p>
-
-<p>“I should fear to commit an indiscretion by remaining one
-moment longer, madame,” said he, “but—but—” and he
-looked longingly, though with less than his accustomed
-assurance, in the beautiful eyes that met his own so kindly.</p>
-
-<p>“But—but—” she interposed laughing, “you may come
-again to-morrow at the same time; I shall be alone. And,
-Casimir, I have some talent for curiosity, bring with you
-that list you spoke of—at least if no one else has seen it.
-A scandal, you know, is like a rose, if I may not gather it
-fresh from the stalk, I had rather not wear it at all!”</p>
-
-<p>“Honour,” said he, kissing the hand she extended to
-him, and in high glee tripped downstairs to regain his chair
-in the street.</p>
-
-<p>Satisfied with the implied promise, Madame de Montmirail
-looked wistfully at a clock on the chimneypiece and
-pondered.</p>
-
-<p>“Twenty-four hours gained on that young man’s gossiping
-tongue at least. To-morrow night I might be there—the
-horses are good in this country. I have it! When I
-near the place I must make use of their diligence. I shall
-overtake more than one. I cannot appear too quickly. I
-shall have a famous laugh at Malletort, to be sure, if my
-information is earlier than his—and at any rate, I shall
-embrace my darling Cerise, and see her husband—my
-son-in-law now—my son-in-law! How strange it seems!
-Well, business first and pleasure afterwards.”</p>
-
-<p>“Justine!”</p>
-
-<p>“Madame!” replied Justine, re-entering with a colour in
-her cheek and a few particles of soot, such as constitute an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_481"></a>[481]</span>
-essential part of a London atmosphere, on her dainty forehead,
-denoting that she had been leaning out at window to
-look down the street.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame called, I think. Can I do anything more for
-madame before she goes out?”</p>
-
-<p>Much to Justine’s astonishment, she was directed to
-pack certain articles of wearing apparel without delay.
-These were to be ready in two hours’ time. Was madame
-going again to voyage? That was no business of Justine’s.
-Was Pierre not to accompany Madame? nor Alphonse?
-nor even old Busson? If any of these were wanted,
-madame would herself let them know. And when was
-madame coming back? Shortly; Justine should learn
-in a day or two. So, without further parley, madame
-entered her chair and proceeded to that business which
-she imagined was the sole cause of her journey to
-London.</p>
-
-<p>After some hesitation, and a few tiresome interviews
-with her intendant, the Marquise had lately decided on
-selling her estates in the West Indies, stipulating only, for
-the sake of Célandine, that Bartoletti should be retained
-as overseer at <i>Cash-a-crou</i>. The locality, indeed, had but
-few agreeable associations connected with it. Months of
-wearisome exile, concluded by a night of bloodshed and
-horror, had not endeared Montmirail West in the eyes of
-its European owner.</p>
-
-<p>It is not now necessary to state that Madame de Montmirail
-was a lady of considerable enterprise, and especially
-affected all matters connected with business or speculation.
-In an hour she made up her mind that London was the
-best market for her property, and in twenty-four she was
-in her carriage, on the road to England. Much to her
-intendant’s admiration, she also expressed her decided
-intention of managing the whole negotiations herself. The
-quiet old Frenchman gratefully appreciated an independence
-of spirit that saved him long journeys, heavy
-responsibilities, and one or two of his mistress’s sharpest
-rebukes.</p>
-
-<p>To effect her sale, the preliminaries of which had been
-already arranged by letter, the Marquise had to proceed as
-far as St. Margaret’s Hill in the borough of Southwark.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_482"></a>[482]</span>
-Her chairmen, after so long a trot, felt themselves doubtless
-entitled to refreshment, and took advantage of her
-protracted interview with the broker whom she visited, to
-adjourn to a neighbouring tavern for the purpose of recruiting
-their strength. The beer was so good that,
-returning past the old Admiralty Office, her leading bearer
-was compelled to sit down between the poles of his chair,
-taking off his hat, and proceeding to wipe his brows in a
-manner extremely ludicrous to the bystanders, and equally
-provoking to the inmate, who desired to be carried home.
-His yokefellow, instead of reproving him, burst into a
-drunken laugh, and the Marquise inside, though half-amused,
-was yet at the same time provoked to find herself
-placed in a thoroughly false position by so absurd a
-casualty.</p>
-
-<p>She let down the window and expostulated, but with no
-result, except to collect a crowd, who expressed their
-sympathy with the usual good taste and kind feeling of a
-metropolitan mob. Madame de Montmirail’s appearance
-denoted she was a highborn lady, and her accent proclaimed
-her a foreigner. The combination was irresistible;
-presently coarse jests and brutal laughter rose to hootings
-of derision, accompanied by ominous cries—“Down with
-the Pretender! No Popery! Who heated the warming-pan?”
-and such catchwords of political rancour and
-ill-will.</p>
-
-<p>Ere long an apple or two began to fly, then a rotten egg,
-and the body of a dead cat, followed by a brickbat, while
-the less drunken chairman had his hat knocked over his
-eyes. That which began in horse-play was fast growing
-to a riot, and the Marquise might have found herself
-roughly handled if it had not been for an irruption of
-seamen from a neighbouring tavern, who were whiling
-away their time by drinking strong liquors during the
-examination of their papers at the Admiralty Office,
-adjoining. Though not above half a dozen in number,
-they were soon “alongside the wreck,” as they called it,
-making a lane through the crowd by the summary process
-of knocking down everybody who opposed them, but before
-they had time to give “three cheers for the lady,” their
-leader, a sedate and weatherworn tar, who had never<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_483"></a>[483]</span>
-abandoned his pipe during the heat of the action, dropped
-it short from between his lips, and stood aghast before the
-chair window, rolling his hat in his hands, speechless and
-spell-bound with amazement.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise recognised him at once.</p>
-
-<p>“It is Smoke-Jack! and welcome!” she exclaimed.
-“I should know you amongst a thousand! Indeed, I
-scarcely wanted your assistance more the night you saved
-us at <i>Cash-a-crou</i>. Ah! I have not forgotten the men of
-‘The Bashful Maid,’ nor how to speak to them. <i>Come,
-bear a hand, my hearty!</i> Is it not so?”</p>
-
-<p>The little nautical slang spoken in her broken English,
-acted like a charm. Not a man but would have fought
-for her to the death, or drank her health till all was blue!</p>
-
-<p>They cheered lustily now, they crowded round in
-enthusiastic admiration, and the youngest of the party,
-with a forethought beyond all praise, rushed back to the
-tavern he had quitted, for a jorum of hot punch, in case
-the lady should feel faint after her accident.</p>
-
-<p>Smoke-Jack’s stoicism was for once put to flight.</p>
-
-<p>“Say the word, marm!” exclaimed the old seaman,
-“and we’ll pull the street down. Who began it?” he
-added, looking round and doubling his great round fists.
-“Who began it?—that’s all I want to know. Ain’t
-nobody to be started for this here game? Ain’t nobody to
-get his allowance? I’ll give it him, hot and hot!”</p>
-
-<p>With difficulty Smoke-Jack was persuaded that no
-benefit would accrue to the Marquise from his doing
-immediate battle with the bystanders, consisting by this
-time of a few women and street-urchins, for most of the
-able-bodied rioters had slunk away before the threatening
-faces of the seamen. He had to content himself, therefore,
-with administering sundry kicks and cuffs to the chairmen,
-both of whom were too drunk to proceed, and with carrying
-the Marquise home, in person, assisted by a certain elderly
-boatswain’s mate, on whom he seemed to place some
-reliance, while the rest of the sailors sought their favourite
-resort once more, to drink success and a pleasant voyage to
-the lady, in the money with which she had liberally
-rewarded them.</p>
-
-<p>“It is droll!” thought Madame de Montmirail, as she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_484"></a>[484]</span>
-felt the chair jerk and sway to the unaccustomed action of
-its maritime bearers. “Droll enough to be thus carried
-through the streets of London by the British navy! and
-droller than all, that I should have met Smoke-Jack at a
-time like the present. This accident may prove extremely
-useful in the end. Doubtless, he is still devoted to his old
-captain. Everybody seems devoted to that man. Can I
-wonder at my little Cerise? And Sir George may be none
-the worse of a faithful follower in days like these. I will
-ask him, at any rate, and it is not often when I ask
-anything that I am refused!”</p>
-
-<p>So when the chair halted at last before Madame de
-Montmirail’s door, she dismissed the boatswain’s mate
-delighted, with many kind words and a couple of broad
-pieces, while Smoke-Jack, no less delighted, found himself
-ushered into the sitting-room upstairs, even before he had
-time to look round and take his bearings.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise prided herself on knowledge of mankind,
-and offered him refreshment on the spot.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you have grog?” she said. “It is bad for you
-sailors to talk with the mouth dry.”</p>
-
-<p>Smoke-Jack, again, prided himself on his manners, and
-declined strenuously. Neither would he be prevailed upon
-to sit down, but balanced his person on either leg
-alternately, holding his hat with both hands before the
-pit of his stomach.</p>
-
-<p>“Smoke-Jack,” said the Marquise, “I know you of old;
-brave, discreet, and trustworthy. I am bound on a
-journey in which there is some little danger, and much
-necessity for caution; have you the time and the inclination
-to accompany me?”</p>
-
-<p>His impulse was to follow her to the end of the world,
-but he mistrusted these sirens precisely because it <i>was</i>
-always his impulse so to follow them.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it for a spell, marm?” he asked; “or for a long
-cruise? If I might make so free, marm, I’d like to be told
-the name of the skipper and the tonnage of the craft!”</p>
-
-<p>“I start in an hour for the north,” she continued,
-neither understanding nor heeding his proviso. “I am
-going into the neighbourhood of your old captain, Sir
-George Hamilton.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_485"></a>[485]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Captain George!” exclaimed the seaman, with
-difficulty restraining himself from shying his hat to the
-ceiling, and looking sheepishly conscious, he had almost
-committed this tempting solecism. “What! <i>our</i> Captain
-George? I’m not much of a talking chap, marm; I
-haven’t got the time, but if that’s the port you’re bound for,
-I’ll sail round the world with you, if we beat against a
-headwind the whole voyage through!”</p>
-
-<p>With such sentiments the preliminaries were easily
-adjusted, and it was arranged that Smoke-Jack should
-accompany the Marquise on her journey with no more
-delay than would be required to purchase him landsman’s
-attire. He entered into the scheme with thorough good-will,
-though expressing, and doubtless feeling, some little
-disappointment when he learned that Justine, of whom he
-had caught a glimpse on the stairs, was not to be of the
-party.</p>
-
-<p>Avowedly a woman-hater, he had, of course, a <i>real</i>
-weakness for the softer sex, and with all his deference to
-the Marquise, would have found much delight in the
-society of her waiting-maid. Such specimens as Justine
-he considered his especial study, and believed that of all
-men he best understood their qualities, and was most
-conversant with “the trim on ’em.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_486"></a>[486]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LV">CHAPTER LV<br />
-<span class="smaller">FOREWARNED</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It is needless to follow Madame de Montmirail and her new
-retainer through the different stages of their journey to the
-north. By dint of liberal pay, with some nautical eloquence
-on the part of Smoke-Jack, who, being a man of few words,
-spoke those few to the purpose, they overtook the ‘Flying
-Post’ coach by noon of the second day at a town some
-fifteen miles south of Hamilton Hill. Calculating to arrive
-before nightfall, they here transferred themselves and their
-luggage to that lumbering conveyance; and if the Marquise
-wished to avoid notice, such a measure was prudent enough.
-In the masked lady closely wrapped up and silent, who sat
-preoccupied inside, no one could suspect the brilliant and
-sumptuous Frenchwoman, the beauty of two consecutive
-Courts. Nor, so long as he kept his mouth shut, did
-Smoke-Jack’s seafaring character show through his shore-going
-disguise, consisting of jack-boots, three-cornered hat,
-scratch-wig, and long grey duffle greatcoat, in which he
-might have passed for a Quaker, but that the butt-end of a
-pistol peeped out of its side-pockets on each side.</p>
-
-<p>Their fellow-passengers found their curiosity completely
-baffled by the haughty taciturnity of the one and the surly
-answers of the other. Even the ascent of Otterdale Scaur
-failed to elicit anything, although the rest of the freight
-alighted to walk up that steep and dangerous incline. In
-vain the ponderous coach creaked, and strained, and
-laboured; in vain driver flogged and guard expostulated;
-the lady inside was asleep, and must not be disturbed.
-Smoke-Jack, on the roof, swore that he had paid his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_487"></a>[487]</span>
-passage, and would stick to the ship while a plank held.
-It was impossible to make anything satisfactory out of this
-strangely-assorted couple, and the task was abandoned in
-despair long before the weary stretch of road had been
-traversed that led northward over the brown moorland past
-the door of the “Hamilton Arms.”</p>
-
-<p>The lady was tired—the lady would alight. Though
-their places were taken for several miles further, she and
-her domestic would remain here. It was impossible she
-could proceed. Were these rooms vacant?</p>
-
-<p>Rooms vacant! Mrs. Dodge, in a pair of enormous
-earrings, with the gold cross glittering on her bosom, lifted
-her fat hands in protestation. Theoretically, she never
-had a corner to spare in which she could stow away a
-mouse; practically, she so contrived that no wealthy-looking
-traveller ran a risk by “going further—of faring
-worse.” On the present occasion “she was very full,” she
-said. “Never was such markets; never was such a press
-of customers, calling here and calling there, and not to be
-served but with the best! Nevertheless, madam should
-have a room in five minutes! Alice, lay a fire in the
-Cedars. The room was warm and comfortable, but the
-look-out (into the stable-yard) hardly so airy as she could
-wish. Madam would excuse that—madam—” Here
-Mrs. Dodge, who was no fool, pulled herself short up.
-“She begged pardon. Her ladyship, she hoped, would
-find no complaints to make. She hoped her ladyship
-would be satisfied!”</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship simply motioned towards the staircase, up
-which Alice had run a moment before with a red-hot poker
-in her hand, and, preceded by Mrs. Dodge, retired to the
-apartment provided for her, while a roar of laughter, in a
-tone that seemed not entirely strange, reached her ears
-from the bar, into which her new retainer had just dragged
-her luggage from off the coach.</p>
-
-<p>Now the Marquise, though never before in England, was
-not yet ignorant of the general economy prevailing at the
-“Hamilton Arms,” or the position of its different apartments.
-She had still continued her correspondence with
-Malletort, or rather she had suffered him to write to her,
-as formerly, when he chose.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_488"></a>[488]</span></p>
-
-<p>His very last letter contained, amongst political gossip
-and protestations of friendship, a ludicrous description of
-his present lodgings, in which the very room she now
-occupied, opening through folding-doors into his own, was
-deplored as one of his many annoyances.</p>
-
-<p>Even had she not known his step, therefore, she would
-have no difficulty in deciding that it was the Abbé himself
-whom she now heard pacing the floor of the adjoining
-apartment, separated only by a thin deal door, painted to
-look like cedar-wood.</p>
-
-<p>She was not given to hesitation. Trying the lock, she
-found it unfastened, and, taking off her travelling mask,
-opened the door noiselessly, to stand like a vision in the
-entrance, probably the very last person he expected to
-see.</p>
-
-<p>Malletort was a difficult man to surprise. At least he
-never betrayed any astonishment. With perfectly cool
-politeness he handed a chair, as if he had been awaiting
-her for an hour.</p>
-
-<p>“Sit down, madame,” said he, “I entreat you. The
-roads in this weather are execrable for travelling. You
-must have had a long and fatiguing journey.”</p>
-
-<p>She could not repress a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems, then, that you expected me,” she answered,
-accepting the proffered seat. “Perhaps you know why I
-have come.”</p>
-
-<p>“Without presumption,” he replied, “I may be permitted
-to guess. Your charming daughter lives within half a league
-of this spot. You think of her day by day. You look on
-her picture at your château, which, by the way, is not too
-amusing a residence. You pine to embrace her. You fly
-on the wings of maternal love and tired post-horses. You
-arrive in due course, like a parcel. In short, here you are.
-Ah! what it is to have a mother’s heart!”</p>
-
-<p>She appreciated and admired his coolness. The man had
-a certain diplomatic kind of courage about him, and was
-worth saving, after all. How must he have suffered, too,
-this poor Abbé, in his gloomy hiding-place, with the insufferable
-cooking that she could smell even here!</p>
-
-<p>“Abbé,” she resumed, “I am serious, though you make
-me laugh. Listen. I did <i>not</i> come here to see my daughter,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_489"></a>[489]</span>
-though I hope to embrace her this very night. More, I came
-to see <i>you</i>—to warn you that the sooner you leave this
-place the better. I know you too well to suppose you
-have not secured your retreat. Sound the <i>alerte</i>, my brave
-Abbé, and strike your tents without delay. Your plot has
-failed—the whole thing has exploded—and I have travelled
-night and day to save a kinsman, and, I believe, as far as
-his nature permits, a friend! There is nothing more to be
-said on the subject.”</p>
-
-<p>Malletort was moved, but he would not show it any more
-than he would acknowledge this intelligence came upon him
-like a thunderclap. He fidgeted with some papers to hide
-his face for a moment, but looked up directly afterwards
-calm and clear as ever.</p>
-
-<p>“I know—I know,” said he. “I was prepared for this—though,
-perhaps, not quite so soon. I might have been
-prepared too, for my cousin’s kindness and self-devotion.
-She has always been the noblest and bravest of women.
-Madame, you have by this as by many previous benefits,
-won my eternal gratitude. We shall be uninterrupted here,
-and cannot be overheard. Detail to me the information
-that has reached you in the exact words used. I wish to
-see if it tallies with mine.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise related her interview with young Chateau-Guerrand,
-adding several corroborative facts she had learned
-in the capital, none of which were of much importance
-apart, though, when taken together, they afforded strong
-evidence that the British Government was alive to the
-machinations of the Abbé and his confederates.</p>
-
-<p>“It is an utter rout,” concluded the Marquise, contemptuously;
-“and there is no honour, as far as I can
-see, to save. Best turn bridle out of the press, Abbé, like
-a defeated king in the old romances, put spurs to your
-horse, and never look over your shoulder on the field you
-have deserted!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not quite so bad as that, madame,” replied he. “’Tis
-but a leak sprung as yet, and we may, perhaps, make shift
-to get safe into port after all. In the meantime, I need
-scarcely remain in such absolute concealment any longer.
-It must be known in London that I am here. Once more,
-madame, accept my heartfelt thanks. When you see her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_490"></a>[490]</span>
-this evening, commend me humbly to your beautiful
-daughter and to her husband, my old friend, the Captain
-of Musketeers.”</p>
-
-<p>So speaking, the Abbé held open the door of communication
-and bowed the Marquise into the adjoining room,
-where food and wine were served with all the ceremonious
-grace of the old Court. His brow was never smoother, his
-smile never more assured; but as soon as he found himself
-alone, he sat down at the writing-table and buried his face
-in his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“So fair a scheme!” he muttered. “So deep! So
-well-arranged! And to fail at last like this! But what
-tools I have had to work with! What tools! What
-tools!”</p>
-
-<p>Meantime two honest voices in the bar were pealing
-louder and louder in joyous interchange of questions, congratulations,
-and entreaties to drink. The shouts of
-laughter that had reached the Marquise at the top of the
-stairs came from no less powerful lungs than those of
-Slap-Jack, who had stolen down from the hill as usual
-for the hindrance of Alice in her household duties. He
-was leaning over her chair, probably to assist her in mending
-the house linen, when his occupation was interrupted
-by the arrival of a tall, dried-up looking personage dressed
-in a long duffle coat, who entered the sanctum with a valise
-and other luggage in his hands. Something in the ship-shape
-accuracy with which he disposed of these roused
-Slap-Jack’s professional attention, and when the stranger
-turning round pushed his hat off his forehead, and shut one
-eye to have a good look, recognition on both sides was
-instantaneous and complete.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Alice, it’s Smoke-Jack!” exclaimed her sweetheart,
-while volumes would have failed to express more of
-delight and astonishment than the new-comer conveyed
-in the simple ejaculation, “Well! Blow me!”</p>
-
-<p>A bowl of punch was ordered, and pipes were lit forthwith,
-Alice filling her lover’s coquettishly, and applying a
-match to it with her own pretty fingers. Smoke-Jack
-looked on approving, and winked several times in succession.
-Mentally he was scanning the damsel with a critical
-eye, her bows, her run, her figure-head, her tackle, and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_491"></a>[491]</span>
-trim of her generally. When the punch came he filled
-three glasses to the brim, and observed with great
-solemnity—</p>
-
-<p>“My sarvice to you, shipmate, and your consort. The
-sooner you two gets spliced the better. No offence, young
-woman. If I’d ever come across such a craft as yourn,
-mate, I’d have been spliced myself. But these here
-doesn’t swim to windward in shoals like black fish, and I
-was never a chap to take and leap overboard promiscuous
-after a blessed mermyed ’a-cause she hailed me off a reef.
-That’s why I’m a driftin’ to leeward this day. I’ll take it
-as a favour, young woman, if you’ll sip from my glass!”</p>
-
-<p>This was the longest speech Slap-Jack ever remembered
-from his shipmate, and was valued accordingly. It was
-obvious that Smoke-Jack, contrary to his usual principles,
-which were anti-matrimonial, looked on his old friend’s
-projected alliance with the utmost favour. The three
-found themselves extremely pleasant company. Alice,
-indeed, moved in and out on her household duties, rendered
-the more engrossing that her aunt was occupied in the
-kitchen, but the two seamen stuck to the leeside of their
-bowl of punch till it was emptied, and never ceased smoking
-the whole time. They had so much to talk about, so many
-old stories to recall, questions to ask, and details to furnish
-on their own different fortunes since they met, to say
-nothing of the toasts that accompanied each separate glass.</p>
-
-<p>They drank ‘The Bashful Maid’ twice, and Alice three
-times, in the course of their merry-making. Now it came
-to pass that during their conversation the name of Captain
-Bold was mentioned by Slap-Jack, as an individual whose
-head it would give him extreme gratification to punch
-on some fitting occasion; and that his friend showed some
-special interest in the subject appeared by the cock of his
-eye and the removal of his pipe from between his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Bold!” repeated Smoke-Jack, as if taxing his memory.
-“Captain Bold you calls him. Not a real skipper, but
-only a soger captain, belike?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not even good enough for a soger to my thinking,”
-answered the other, in a tone of disgust. “Look ye here,
-brother, I’ve heard some of the old hands say, though,
-mind ye, I doesn’t go along with them, that sogers is like<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_492"></a>[492]</span>
-onions, never looks so well as when you hangs them up in
-a string. But this here captain’s not even good enough for
-hanging, though he’ll come to the yard-arm at last, or I’m
-mistaken.”</p>
-
-<p>Again Smoke-Jack pondered, and took a pull at his
-punch.</p>
-
-<p>“A flaxen-haired chap,” inquired he, “with a red nose
-and a pair of cunning eyes? As thirsty as a sand-bank,
-and hails ye in a voice like the boatswain’s whistle?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s about the trim, all but the hair,” answered his
-friend. “To be sure, he may have hoisted a wig. This
-beggar’s got the gift of the gab, though, and pays ye out a
-yarn as long as the maintop bowline.”</p>
-
-<p>“It <i>must</i> be the same,” said Smoke-Jack, and proceeded
-to relate his grievances, which were as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>Paid off from a cruise, and finding he was pretty well to
-do in the world, Smoke-Jack had resolved to amuse himself
-in London, by studying life in a more enlarged phase than
-was afforded at his usual haunts near the river-side. For
-this purpose he had dressed himself in a grave suit, which
-made him look like some retired merchant captain, and in
-that character frequented the more respectable ordinaries
-about the Savoy and such civilised parts of the town.
-Here he made casual acquaintances, chiefly of sedate
-exterior, especially affecting those who assumed a wise port
-and talked heavy nonsense in the guise of philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>Not many weeks ago he had met a person at one of these
-dinner-tables with whose conversation he was much
-delighted. Flaxen-haired, dark-eyed, red-nosed, with a
-high voice, and of <i>quasi</i>-military appearance, but seeming
-to be well versed in a spurious kind of science, and full of
-such grave saws and aphorisms as made a deep impression
-on a man like Smoke-Jack, reflective, uneducated, and
-craving for intellectual excitement. That he could not
-understand half the captain said did but add to the charm
-of that worthy’s discourse, and for two days the pair were
-inseparable. On the third they concluded a dry argument
-on fluids with the appropriate termination of a debauch,
-and the landsman drugged the sailor’s liquor, so as to rob
-him of his purse, containing twenty-five broad pieces, with
-the utmost facility, whilst he slept.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_493"></a>[493]</span></p>
-
-<p>Waking and finding his companion and his money gone,
-while the score was left unpaid, Smoke-Jack remembered to
-have seen the captain stroke the neck of a bay mare held by
-a boy at the door of the tavern they entered, though he
-denied all knowledge of the animal. After this the sailor
-never expected to set eyes on his scientific friend again.</p>
-
-<p>The mention of the bay mare proved beyond a doubt that
-the two shipmates owed a grudge to the same individual.
-They laid their heads together to pay it off accordingly, and
-called Alice, who was nowise unwilling, into council.</p>
-
-<p>Her feminine aversion to violence dissuaded them from
-their first intention of avenging their grievances by the strong
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s far better that such boasters as the captain should
-be frightened than hurt,” observed gentle Alice. “If I’d
-my way, he should be well scared once for all, like a naughty
-child, and then perhaps he’d never come here any more.”</p>
-
-<p>Smoke-Jack listened as if spell-bound to hear a woman
-speak so wisely; but her sweetheart objected—</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not so easy to frighten a man, Alice. I don’t quite
-see my bearings how to set about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s not like <i>you</i>, dear,” answered Alice, with a loving
-smile, and showing some insight into the nature of true
-courage. “It would be easy enough to scare <i>him</i>, for I’ve
-heard him say many a time he feared neither man nor devil,
-and if Satan himself was to come across him, he’d turn him
-round and catch him by the tail.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to see them grapple-to!” exclaimed both
-seamen simultaneously.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” answered Alice, in her quiet voice, “old Robin
-skinned our black bullock only yesterday. Hide, and horns,
-and tail are all together in the corner of the cow-house now.
-I’m sure I quite shuddered when I went by. It’s an ugly
-sight enough, and I’m very much mistaken if it wouldn’t
-frighten a braver man than Captain Bold!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_494"></a>[494]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LVI">CHAPTER LVI<br />
-<span class="smaller">FOREARMED</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding the excitement under which she laboured,
-and the emotion she painfully though contemptuously kept
-down, Madame de Montmirail could not but smile at the
-unpretending mode in which she reached her daughter’s new
-home. Slap-Jack, leading an old pony, that did all the odd
-work of the “Hamilton Arms,” and that now swayed from
-side to side under the traveller’s heavy valises, showed the
-way across the moor, while the Marquise, on a pillion, sat
-behind Smoke-Jack, who, by no means at home in the
-position, bestrode a stamping cart-horse with unexampled
-tenacity, and followed his shipmate with perhaps more
-circumspection, and certainly less confidence than if he had
-been steering the brigantine through shoal water in a fog.
-He was by no means the least rejoiced of the three to
-“make the lights” that twinkled in the hospitable windows
-of Hamilton Hill.</p>
-
-<p>It is needless to enlarge on the reception of so honoured
-a guest as Lady Hamilton’s mother, or the delighted welcome,
-the affectionate inquiries, the bustle of preparation,
-the running to and fro of servants, the tight embrace of
-Cerise, the cordial greeting of Sir George, the courteous
-salute of Florian, and the strange restraint that, after the
-first demonstrative warmth had evaporated, seemed to lour
-like a cloud over the whole party. Under pretext of the
-guest’s fatigue, all retired earlier than usual to their apartments;
-yet long before they broke up for the night the
-quick perception of the Marquise warned her something was
-wrong, and this because she read Sir George’s face with a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_495"></a>[495]</span>
-keener eye than scanned even her daughter’s. How handsome
-he looked, she thought, standing stately in the doorway
-of his hall, to greet her with the frank manly courtesy
-of which she knew the charm so well. Yes, Cerise was
-indeed a lucky girl! and could she be unworthy of her
-happiness? Could she have mismanaged or trifled with
-it? This was always the way. Those who possessed the
-treasure never seemed to appreciate its worth. Ah! It
-was a strange world! She had hoped Cerise would be so
-happy! And now—and now! Could the great sacrifice
-have been indeed offered up in vain?</p>
-
-<p>Cerise was a good girl too; so kind, so truthful, so affectionate.
-Yet in the present instance, if a shadow had
-really come between husband and wife, Cerise must be in
-the wrong!</p>
-
-<p>Women generally argue thus when they adjudicate for
-the sexes. In the absence of proof they almost invariably
-assume that their own is in fault. Perhaps they decide
-from internal evidence, and know best.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Hamilton accompanied the Marquise to her bedroom,
-where mother and daughter found themselves together
-again as they used to be in the old days. It was not quite
-the same thing now. Neither could tell why, yet both
-were conscious of the different relation in which they stood
-to each other. It was but a question of perspective after
-all. Formerly the one looked up, the other down. Now
-they occupied the dead level of a common experience,
-and the mother felt her child was in leading-strings no
-more.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the old story; the affectionate fencing match,
-wherein one tries to obtain a full and free confession without
-asking a single direct question, while the other assumes
-an appearance of extreme candour, to cover profound and
-impenetrable reserve. The Marquise had never loved her
-child so little as when the latter took leave of her for the
-night, having seen with her own eyes to every appliance
-for her mother’s comfort, combining gracefully and fondly
-the solicitude of a hostess with the affectionate care of a
-daughter; and Lady Hamilton, seeking her own room, with
-a pale face and a heavy heart, wondered she could feel so
-little inspirited by dear mamma’s arrival, and acknowledged<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_496"></a>[496]</span>
-with a sigh that the bloom was gone from everything in life,
-and the world had grown dull and dreary since this cold
-shadow came between her and George.</p>
-
-<p>He alone seemed satisfied with the turn affairs had
-taken. There need be no more hesitation now, and it was
-well to know the worst. Sir George’s demeanour always
-became the more composed the nearer he approached a
-disagreeable necessity. Though Madame de Montmirail’s
-arrival had exceedingly startled him, as in the last degree
-unexpected, he received her with his customary cordial
-hospitality. Though he had detected, as he believed, a
-deliberate falsehood, told him for the first time by the wife
-of his bosom, he in no way altered the reserved, yet good-humoured
-kindness of manner with which he forced himself
-to accost her of late. Though he had discovered, as he
-thought, a scheme of black and unpardonable treachery on
-the part of his friend, he could still afford the culprit that
-refuge which was only to be found in his protection; could
-treat him with the consideration due to every one beneath
-his own roof.</p>
-
-<p>But none the more for this did Sir George propose to
-sit down patiently under his injuries. I fear the temper
-cherished by this retired Captain of Musketeers savoured
-rather of a duellist’s politeness than a philosopher’s contempt,
-or the forgiveness of a Christian. When he sought
-his chamber that night, the chamber in which stood the
-unfinished model of his brigantine, and from the window of
-which he had watched his wife and Florian on the terrace,
-there was an evil smile round his lips, denoting that thirst
-of all others the most insatiable, the thirst for blood. He
-went calmly through the incidents of the past day, as a
-man adds up a sum, and the wicked smile never left his
-face. Again he saw his wife’s white dress among the roses,
-and her graceful figure bending over the flower-beds with
-that pale dark-eyed priest. Every look of both, every
-gesture, seemed stamped in fire on his brain. He remembered
-the eagerness with which she brought out her packet
-and confided it to the Jesuit. He had not forgotten the
-cold, haughty tone in which she told him, <i>him</i>, her husband,
-who perhaps had some little right to inquire, that it
-contained letters for her mother in France. In France!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_497"></a>[497]</span>
-And that very night her mother appears at his own house
-in the heart of Great Britain!</p>
-
-<p>He shuddered in a kind of pity to think of his own
-Cerise descending to so petty a shift. Poor Cerise! Perhaps,
-after all, this coquetry was bred in her, and she could
-not help it. She was her mother’s own daughter, that was
-all. He remembered there used to be strange stories about
-the Marquise in Paris, and he himself, if he had chosen—well,
-it was all over now; but he ought never to have
-entrusted his happiness to <i>that</i> family. Of course if a
-married woman was a thorough coquette, as a Montmirail
-seemed sure to be, she must screen herself with a lie! It
-was contemptible, and he only despised her!</p>
-
-<p>But was nobody to be punished for all the annoyances
-thus thrust upon himself; the disgrace that had thus overtaken
-his house? The smile deepened and hardened now,
-while he took down a glittering rapier from the wall, and
-examined the blade and hilt carefully, bending the weapon
-and proving its temper against the floor.</p>
-
-<p>His mind was made up what to do, and to-morrow he
-would set about his task.</p>
-
-<p>So long as Florian remained under his roof, he argued,
-the rights of hospitality required that a host should be
-answerable for his guest’s safety. Nay more, he would
-never forgive himself if, from any undue haste or eagerness
-of his own, the satisfaction should elude him of avenging
-his dishonour for himself. What gratification would it be
-to see the Jesuit hanged by the neck on Tower Hill? No,
-no. His old comrade and lieutenant should die a fairer
-death than that. Die like a soldier, on his back, with an
-honourable man’s sword through his heart. But how if it
-came about the other way? Florian’s was a good blade,
-the best his own had ever crossed. He flourished his wrist
-involuntarily, remembering that deadly disengagement
-which had run poor Flanconnade through the body, and
-was the despair of every scientific fencer in the company.
-What if it should be his own lot to fall? Well, at least,
-he should have taken no advantage, he would have fought
-fair all through, and Cerise, in the true spirit of coquetry,
-would love him very dearly when she found she was never
-to see him again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_498"></a>[498]</span></p>
-
-<p>He resolved, therefore, that he and Florian should depart
-forthwith. His own character for loyalty stood so high, his
-intimacy with Sir Marmaduke Umpleby and other gentlemen
-in authority was so well known, that he anticipated no
-danger of discovery to any one who travelled under his protection.
-Monsieur St. Croix should simply assume the
-ordinary dress of a layman; they would not even ride on
-horseback. Every precaution should be taken to avoid
-notice, and the ‘Flying Post’ coach, with its interminable
-crawl, and innumerable delays, would probably answer the
-purpose of unpretending secrecy better than any other mode
-of conveyance, especially when they approached London.
-Thence, without delay, they would post to the seaboard,
-charter a fast-sailing lugger, and so proceed in safety to
-the coast of France. Once there, they would be on equal
-terms, and no power on earth should come between them
-then. He liked to think of the level sand, the grey sky
-overhead, the solitary shore, the moaning wave, not a soul
-in sight or hearing but his enemy and his own point within
-six inches of that enemy’s throat!</p>
-
-<p>Sir George’s night was disturbed and restless, but he
-slept sound towards morning, as he had accustomed himself
-in his former life to sleep at any given time, after
-he had placed his sentries on an outpost, or gone below
-to his cabin for an hour’s rest while giving chase to a prize.</p>
-
-<p>When he awoke a cold grey sky loured overhead, and a
-light fall of snow sprinkled the ground. It was the first
-morning of winter, come earlier than usual even to those
-bleak moorlands, and strange to say, a foolish, hankering
-pity for Lady Hamilton’s roses was the feeling uppermost
-in his mind while he looked gloomily out upon the terrace.
-“Poor Cerise!” he muttered. “Bleak sky and withered
-flowers—lover and husband both gone by this time to-morrow!
-She will be lonely at first, no doubt, and it is
-fortunate her mother should have arrived last night. But
-she will console herself. They always do. Ah! these
-women, these women! That a man should ever be such an
-idiot as to entrust his honour. Psha! his honour has
-nothing to do with it—his happiness, nay, his mere comfort
-in their hands. There is something even ludicrous in the
-infatuation. It reminds me of Madame Parabére’s monkey<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_499"></a>[499]</span>
-playing with the Regent’s porcelain flower-basket!—a
-laugh, a chatter, a stealthy glance or two, and down goes
-the basket. What does it matter? They are all alike, I
-suppose, and cannot help themselves. A man’s dog is
-faithful, his horse is honest, his very hawk stoops to no lure
-but her master’s, while his wife. And I loved her—I loved
-her. Fool that I am, I love her still! By the faith of a
-gentleman, Monsieur de St. Croix, you will need every trick
-of the trade to keep my point off your body if I once get
-you within distance!”</p>
-
-<p>Then Sir George descended to meet his guest with a
-quiet manner and an unclouded brow, though the murderous
-smile still hovered about his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“Florian,” said he, “do not condemn my hospitality if
-I announce that you must depart this evening. Hamilton
-Hill is no longer a sure refuge, though I believe that my
-company can still afford you protection—therefore I travel
-with you. I do not leave you till I see you landed in
-France. Till I have placed you in safety it concerns my
-honour that you should be my care. But not a moment
-longer—not a moment longer, remember that! You
-had better walk quietly down to the ‘Hamilton
-Arms’ during the day. I will follow with your
-luggage and my own. We shall proceed to London in the
-weekly coach, which passes southward to-night. We can
-be across the water by the fifth day. Do you understand?
-The fifth day. You must be well armed. Take any sword
-of mine that pleases you, only be sure you choose one with
-two feet six inches of blade, and not too pliant; you might
-meet with an adversary who uses brute force rather than
-skill. A strong arm drives a stiff blade home. In the
-meantime I recommend you to make your farewell compliments
-at once to the Marquise and—and Lady Hamilton.”</p>
-
-<p>Florian assented, confused and stupefied like one in a
-dream. The hour he had expected was come at last, and
-seemed none the more welcome for his expectation. He
-must go—must leave the woman he worshipped, and the
-man whom, strange to say, he loved as a brother, though
-that woman’s husband. His senses seemed numbed, and
-he felt that to-day he could scarcely appreciate his desolate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_500"></a>[500]</span>
-condition. To-morrow it would not matter. There was
-no to-morrow for him. Henceforth everything would be a
-blank. What was it Sir George had said about a sword?
-Ah! the weapon might prove his best friend. One home-thrust
-would put an end to all his sufferings. His heart
-was dead within him, but he would see Cerise once more
-before he left. A quick sharp pang warned him that his
-heart was not yet paralysed, when he reflected how the
-Marquise was here, and he would not, therefore, see Lady
-Hamilton alone.</p>
-
-<p>But the latter, pitiful, perhaps, because of her own
-sorrow, met him by one of those accidents that are
-essentially feminine, as he traversed the hall, booted and
-cloaked for his departure. She gave him her hand kindly,
-and he pressed it to his lips. He knew then, while she
-passed on, that never in this world was he to set eyes on
-her again.</p>
-
-<p>The door clanged to, the wind moaned, the crisp brown
-leaves eddied round his feet on the frozen path, the cold
-struck to his very heart. How dreary looked the white
-outline of those swelling moors against the black laden
-clouds that scowled behind the hill.</p>
-
-<p>But Sir George was careful to avoid an uninterrupted
-interview with his wife. He shut himself into his own
-apartment, and found the time pass quicker than he
-expected, for he had many dispositions to make, many
-affairs of business to arrange. If he came alive out of that
-prospective conflict, he meant to be absent from England
-for an indefinite period. Come what might, he would
-never see Cerise again. Not that he believed her guilty—no,
-he said to himself, a thousand times, but she was as
-bad as guilty—she had deceived him—she could never
-have loved him. It was all over. There was nothing
-more to be said.</p>
-
-<p>The early night began to close ere his last pile of papers
-was burned, his last packet sealed. Then Sir George took
-the compromising list of his friends and neighbours with
-which Florian had entrusted him, and placed it carefully in
-his breast. It might be an effective weapon, he thought, if
-the Jesuit should prove restive about leaving England, or
-if he himself should meet with opposition from any of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_501"></a>[501]</span>
-confederates. A brace of pistols were now to be loaded and
-disposed in the large pockets of his riding-coat, the trusty
-rapier to be buckled on, hat, gloves, and cloak to be placed
-on the hall-table, Slap-Jack summoned to be in readiness
-with the luggage, and Sir George was prepared for his
-journey.</p>
-
-<p>Not till these arrangements were made did he seek Lady
-Hamilton’s withdrawing-room, where, perhaps to his disappointment,
-he found the Marquise alone.</p>
-
-<p>His wife, however, soon entered, and accosted him with
-a very wife-like inquiry—</p>
-
-<p>“Have you had no dinner, George? and before travelling,
-too? We would have waited, but the servants said you
-had given orders not to be disturbed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sleep is food,” observed the Marquise. “I believe
-you have been preparing for your journey with a <i>siesta</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>How homelike and comfortable looked the pretty room,
-with its blazing fire and its beautiful occupants! And
-perhaps he was never to see it again; was certainly never
-again to hear the voice he loved in that endearing and
-familiar tone.</p>
-
-<p>But he would not pain his wife even now. As far as <i>he</i>
-could spare her she should be spared. They must not part
-on any terms but those of kindness and good-will. He
-drew her towards his chair and called her by her Christian
-name.</p>
-
-<p>“I would have dined with you, indeed, but I had not
-a moment to bestow,” said he, “and the Marquise will
-excuse ceremony in such a family party as ours. You will
-take care of Cerise, madame, when I am gone? I know I
-can trust her safely with <i>you</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The tears were standing in Lady Hamilton’s eyes, and
-she bent her face towards her husband.</p>
-
-<p>“You will come back soon, George?” said she in a
-broken voice. “London is not so far. Promise me you
-will only be a week away.”</p>
-
-<p>He drew her down and kissed her, once, twice, fondly,
-passionately, but answered not a word. Then he took
-leave of the Marquise with something less than his usual
-composure, which she did not fail to remark, and notwithstanding
-a certain delay in the hall, of which Cerise tried<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_502"></a>[502]</span>
-in vain to take advantage for another embrace, he summoned
-Slap-Jack and departed.</p>
-
-<p>“My head must be going,” thought Sir George, as he
-walked with his old foretopman across the frozen park. “I
-could have sworn I put both gloves on the hall-table with
-my hat. Never mind, I have <i>one</i> left at least for Monsieur
-de St. Croix to take up. Five days more—only five days
-more! and then―”</p>
-
-<p>Slap-Jack, looking into his master’s face under the
-failing light, saw something there that strangely reminded
-him of the night when the captain of ‘The Bashful Maid’
-passed his sword through Hippolyte’s black body at
-<i>Cash-a-crou</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_503"></a>[503]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LVII">CHAPTER LVII<br />
-<span class="smaller">AN ADDLED EGG</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“Go ahead, Jack!” said the baronet, after they had
-crunched the frozen snow in silence for a quarter of a mile.
-“See that everything is ready, and secure a couple of
-berths in the ‘Weekly Dispatch,’ or whatever they call
-that lumbering ‘Flying Post’ coach’s consort, for the
-whole trip. I’ll be down directly.”</p>
-
-<p>“For you and me, Sir George?” asked Slap-Jack,
-exhilarated by the prospect of a voyage to London. “Deck
-passengers, both, if I may be so bold? The fore-hold of
-a slaver’s a joke to them London coaches between decks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do as you’re ordered,” answered his master, “and be
-smart about it. Keep your tongue between your teeth,
-and wait at the ‘Hamilton Arms’ till I come.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir George was obviously disinclined for conversation,
-and Slap-Jack hastened on forthwith, delighted to have an
-hour or two of leisure in his favourite resort, for reasons
-which will hereafter appear.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner was his servant out of sight than the baronet
-retraced his steps, and took up a position under some yew-trees,
-so as to be completely screened from observation.
-Hence he could watch the door opening on his wife’s
-garden, and the windows of the gallery, already lighted,
-which she must traverse to reach her own room.</p>
-
-<p>It was a pitiful weakness, he thought, but it could do no
-harm just to see her shadow pass once more for the last,
-last time!</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Slap-Jack, arriving all in a glow at the
-“Hamilton Arms,” found that hostelry in a great state of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_504"></a>[504]</span>
-turmoil and confusion; the stables were full of horses, the
-parlours were crowded with guests, even the bar was
-thronged with comers and goers, most of whom had a
-compliment to spare for mistress Alice. It was some
-minutes before she could find an opportunity of speaking
-to him, but the whisper must have been ludicrous as well
-as affectionate, for her sweetheart burst out laughing, and
-exploded again at intervals, while he sat with Smoke-Jack
-over a cup of ale in the tap.</p>
-
-<p>The two shipmates adjourned presently to the stable,
-where they were followed by Alice, with a lanthorn, an
-armful of waxed twine, and a large needle, furnished by the
-elder seaman, such as is used for thrumming sails.</p>
-
-<p>Their occupation seemed to afford amusement, for they
-laughed so much as greatly to endanger the secrecy
-enjoined by their feminine assistant, who was so pleased
-with its progress that she returned to visit them more than
-once from her avocations in the bar.</p>
-
-<p>The press of company to-night at the “Hamilton
-Arms” consisted of a very different class from the usual
-run of its customers; the horses in the stable were well-bred,
-valuable animals, little inferior in quality to Captain
-Bold’s bay mare herself; the guests, though plainly
-dressed, were of a bearing that seemed at once to
-extinguish the captain’s claims to consideration, and
-caused him to slink about in a very unassuming manner
-till he had fortified his failing audacity with strong drink.
-They threw silver to old Robin the ostler, and called for
-measures of claret or burnt sack with an unostentatious
-liberality that denoted habits of affluence, while their
-thoughtful faces and intellectual features seemed strangely
-at variance with the interest they displayed in the projected
-cock-fight, which was their ostensible cause of
-gathering. A match for fifty broad pieces a side need
-scarcely have elicited such eager looks, such anxious
-whispers, such restless, quivering gestures, above all,
-such morbid anxiety for the latest news from the capital.
-They wore their swords, in which there was nothing remarkable,
-but every man was also provided with a brace of
-pistols, carried on his person, as though loth to trust the
-insecurity of saddle-holsters.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_505"></a>[505]</span></p>
-
-<p>Malletort walked about from one to the other like the
-presiding genius of the commotion. For these he had a
-jest, for those a secret, for all a word of encouragement, a
-smile of approval; and yet busy as he was, he never took
-his eye off Florian, watching him as one watches a wild
-animal caught in a snare too weak to insure its capture,
-and likely to break with every struggle.</p>
-
-<p>Without appearing to do so, he had counted over the
-guests and found their number complete.</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen,” said he, in a loud, open voice, “I have
-laid out pen and ink in the Cedars, as my poor apartment
-is loftily entitled. If you will honour me so far, I propose
-that we now adjourn to that chamber, and there draw out
-the conditions of our match!”</p>
-
-<p>Every man of them knew he had a halter round his neck,
-and the majority were long past the flush of youth, yet they
-scuffled upstairs, and played each other practical jokes, like
-schoolboys, as they shouldered through the narrow doorway
-into the room.</p>
-
-<p>Malletort, signing to Captain Bold, and taking Florian’s
-arm, brought up the rear.</p>
-
-<p>“How now, Mrs. Dodge?” he called out, as he crossed
-the threshold. “I ordered a fire to be lighted. What
-have you been about?”</p>
-
-<p>“Alice must be sent for! Alice had been told! Alice
-had forgotten! How careless of Alice!” And Mrs. Dodge,
-in the presence of such eligible customers, really felt much
-of the sorrow she expressed for her niece’s thoughtlessness.</p>
-
-<p>When Alice did arrive to light the fire, her candle went
-out, her paper refused to catch, her sticks to burn;
-altogether, she put off so much time about the job, that,
-despite her good looks, the meeting lost patience, and
-resolved to go to business at once; Captain Bold, who
-had recovered his impudence, remarking that, “If what he
-heard from London was true, some of them would have
-warm work enough now before all was done!”</p>
-
-<p>The captain seemed a privileged person: all eyes turned
-on him anxiously, while several eager voices asked at
-once—</p>
-
-<p>“What more have you heard?”</p>
-
-<p>Bold looked to the Abbé for permission, and on a sign<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_506"></a>[506]</span>
-from the latter, handed him a letter, which Malletort
-retained unopened in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Sensations of excitement, and even apprehension, now
-obviously pervaded the assembly. Rumours had as usual
-mysteriously flown ahead of the real intelligence they were
-about to learn, and men looked in each other’s faces, for
-the encouragement they desired, in vain.</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen,” said the Abbé, taking his place at the
-table, and motioning the others to be seated, whilst he
-remained standing, “if I fail to express myself as clearly
-as I should wish, I pray you attribute my shortcomings to
-a foreign idiom, and an ignorance of your expressive language,
-rather than to any doubt or hesitation existing in
-my own mind as to our line of conduct in the present
-crisis. I will not conceal from you—why should I conceal
-from you—nay, how <i>can</i> I conceal from you, that the
-moment of action has now arrived. I look around me,
-and I see on every countenance but one expression, a noble
-and courageous anxiety to begin.”</p>
-
-<p>Murmurs of applause went through the apartment, while
-two or three voices exclaimed, “Hear! hear!” “Well
-said!” “Go on!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, gentlemen,” resumed the Abbé, “the moment
-has at last arrived, the pear is ripe, and has dropped off
-the wall from its own weight. The first shot, so to speak,
-has been fired by the enemy. It is the signal for attack.
-Gentlemen, I have advices here, informing me that the
-Bishop of Rochester has been arrested, and is now imprisoned
-in the Tower.”</p>
-
-<p>His listeners rose to a man, some even seizing their
-hats, and drawing the buckles of their sword-belts, as if
-under an irresistible impulse to be off. One by one,
-however, they sat down again, with the same wistful
-and even ludicrous expression of shame on the countenance
-of each, like a pack of foxhounds that have
-been running hare.</p>
-
-<p>The reaction did not escape Malletort, who was now in
-his element.</p>
-
-<p>“I should have been unworthy of your confidence,
-gentlemen,” he proceeded, with something of triumph in
-his tone, “had such a blow as this fallen and found me<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_507"></a>[507]</span>
-unprepared. I was aware it had been meditated, I was
-even aware that it had been resolved on, and although the
-moment of execution could only be known to the government,
-I learned enough yesterday to impress on me the
-policy of calling together this influential meeting to-night.
-Our emissary, Captain Bold, here, will tell you that the
-intelligence had only reached his colleague at the next post
-two hours ago, though it travelled from London as fast as
-your English horses can gallop and your English couriers
-can ride. It must be apparent to every gentleman here
-that not another moment should be lost. My lord, I will
-ask your lordship to read over the resolutions as revised
-and agreed to at our last meeting.”</p>
-
-<p>He bowed low to an elderly and aristocratic-looking
-personage, who, taking a paper from the Abbé’s hands,
-proceeded somewhat nervously to read aloud as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>“Resolved—No. 1. That this Meeting do constitute
-itself a Committee of Direction for the re-establishment
-of public safety, by authority of His Majesty King
-James III., as authorised under his hand and seal.</p>
-
-<p>“No. 2. That the noblemen and gentlemen whose
-signatures are attached to the document annexed, do
-pledge themselves to act with zeal, secrecy, and unanimity,
-for the furtherance of the sacred object declared above.</p>
-
-<p>“No. 3. That for this purpose the oath be administered,
-jointly and severally, as agreed.</p>
-
-<p>“No. 4. That the person now officially in correspondence
-with His Majesty’s well-wishers in Artois be
-appointed Secretary to the Committee, with full powers, as
-detailed under the head of Secret Instructions for Committee
-of Safety, No. 7.</p>
-
-<p>“No. 5. That the Secretary be authorised in all cases
-of emergency to call a meeting of the entire Committee at
-his discretion.”</p>
-
-<p>His lordship here paused to take breath, and Malletort
-again struck in.</p>
-
-<p>“By authority of that resolution, I have called you
-together to-night. I cannot conceive it possible that
-there is present here one dissentient to our great principle
-of immediate action. Immediate, because thus only
-simultaneous. At the same time, if any nobleman or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_508"></a>[508]</span>
-gentleman at this table has a suggestion to make, let
-him now submit his views to the meeting.”</p>
-
-<p>Several heads were bent towards each other, and a good
-deal of conversation took place in whispers, ere a stout,
-good-humoured looking man, constituting himself a mouthpiece
-for the rest, observed bluntly—</p>
-
-<p>“Tell us your plan, Mr. Secretary, and we’ll answer at
-once. Not one of us is afraid of a leap in the dark, or we
-should scarcely be here now; but there is no harm in
-taking a look whilst we can!”</p>
-
-<p>A murmur of applause denoted the concurrence of the
-majority in this prudent remark, and Malletort, still with
-his eye on Florian, rose once more to address them.</p>
-
-<p>“I need not recapitulate to this meeting, and especially
-to you, Sir Rupert (saluting the last speaker), all the details
-set forth in those secret instructions of which each man
-present has a copy. The invasion from the Continent will
-take place on the appointed day, but with this additional
-assurance of success, that three thousand Irish troops are
-promised from a quarter on which we can implicitly rely.
-His lordship here, as you are aware, following the instincts
-of his illustrious line, assumes the post of honour and the
-post of danger amongst us in the north, by placing himself
-at the head of a loyal and enthusiastic multitude, only
-waiting his signal to take up arms. You, Sir Rupert, have
-pledged yourself and your dalesmen to overawe the Whigs
-and Puritans of the east. Other gentlemen, now listening
-to me, are prepared to bring their several troops of an
-irregular, but highly efficient cavalry, into the field. To
-you, who are all intimately acquainted with our military
-dispositions, I need not insist on the certainty of success.
-Let each man read over his secret instructions and judge
-for himself. But gentlemen, the scheme of a campaign on
-a grand scale is not all with which we have to occupy
-ourselves. Something more than a military triumph,
-something more than a victorious battle is indispensable
-to our complete success. And I need not remind you
-that there is no compromise between complete success and
-irremediable disaster. It is an unavoidable choice between
-St James’s Palace and Temple Bar. I now come to the
-germ of the undertaking—the essence of the whole<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_509"></a>[509]</span>
-movement—the keystone of that bridge we must all pass over to
-reach the wished-for shore. I allude to the suppression of
-the Usurper and the fall of the House of Hanover.”</p>
-
-<p>A stir, almost a shudder, went through the assemblage.
-Men looked askance at the papers on the table, the buckles
-of their sword-belts, the spur-leathers on their boots,
-anything rather than betray to their neighbours either too
-eager an apprehension of the Abbé’s meaning, or too cold
-an approval of his object. He was speaking high treason
-with a vengeance, and the one might place them in too
-dangerous a prominence, while the other might draw down
-the equally dangerous mistrust of their fellow-conspirators.
-Malletort knew well what was passing in his hearers’
-minds, but he never expected to get the iron hotter than it
-was to-night, and he struck at it with his whole force.</p>
-
-<p>“The arrangements for our great blow,” said he, “have
-been confided to a few zealous loyalists, with whose plans,
-as your Secretary, I have been made acquainted. In five
-days from the present, King George, as he is still called,
-returns to Kensington. He will arrive at the palace about
-dusk. What do I say? He will never arrive there at all!
-Captain Bold here, whom I have had the honour to present
-to this meeting, has organised a small body of his old comrades,
-men of tried bravery and broken fortunes, who are
-pledged to possess themselves of the Usurper’s person.
-His guard will be easily overpowered, for it will be outnumbered
-three to one. The titular Prince of Wales and
-his children will at the same time be made prisoners, and
-the chief officers of state secured, if possible without bloodshed.
-Such a bold stroke, combined with a simultaneous
-rising here in the north, cannot but insure success. It is
-for you, gentlemen, to assemble your followers, to hold
-yourselves in readiness, and trusting implicitly to the co-operation
-of your friends in London, to declare on the same
-day for His Majesty King James III.!”</p>
-
-<p>The enthusiasm Malletort contrived to fling into his last
-sentence caught like wildfire.</p>
-
-<p>“Long live James the Third!”—“Down with the
-Whigs!” exclaimed several of his listeners; and Sir
-Rupert flung his hat to the low ceiling ere he placed it on
-his head, as if preparing to depart; but the tall figure of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_510"></a>[510]</span>
-the elderly nobleman, as he rose from his chair, seemed
-to dominate the tumult, and every syllable was distinctly
-audible, while he inquired, gravely—</p>
-
-<p>“Can this be accomplished without violence to the
-person of him whom we deem a Usurper?”</p>
-
-<p>Only the narrowest observers could have detected the
-sneer round Malletort’s mouth, while he replied—</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, my lord!—certainly! With as little personal
-violence as is possible when armed men are fighting
-round a king in the dark! My lord, if you please, we will
-now pass on to a few trifling matters of finance, after which
-I need detain the meeting no longer.”</p>
-
-<p>The meeting, as usual, was only too happy to be
-dissolved. In less than ten minutes hats and cloaks were
-assumed, reckonings paid, horses led out from the stable,
-and riders, with anxious hearts, diverging by twos and
-threes on their homeward tracks.</p>
-
-<p>There was no question, however, about the cock-fight
-which was supposed to have called these gentlemen
-together.</p>
-
-<p>Malletort, Florian, and Captain Bold remained in the
-Cedars. The two priests seemed anxious, thoughtful, and
-preoccupied; but the Captain’s eye twinkled with sly
-glances of triumphant vanity, and he appeared extremely
-self-satisfied, though a little fidgety, and anxious for his
-employer to leave the room.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_511"></a>[511]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LVIII">CHAPTER LVIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">HORNS AND HOOFS</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“There is nothing but the Declaration to be provided for
-now,” observed Malletort, after a pause. “You had
-better give it me back, Florian, even without Sir George’s
-name subscribed. He is a man of mettle, and will be in
-the saddle as soon as he hears steel and stirrup ring.”</p>
-
-<p>Although the Abbé did not fail to observe how strange
-an alteration had to-day come over his young friend’s
-manner, he simply attributed it to the qualms of conscience
-which are often so embarrassing to beginners in the science
-of deception, but which, as far as his own experience served
-him, he had found invariably disappeared with a little
-practice. He never doubted that Florian was equally
-interested with himself in the success of their undertaking,
-though for different reasons. He attributed it to nervousness,
-anxiety, and a foolish hankering after Lady Hamilton,
-the wildness of the young priest’s dark eye—the fixed spot
-of colour in his cheek, lately so pale and wan—the resolute
-expression of his feminine mouth, denoting some desperate
-intention—and the general air of abstraction that showed
-as well unconsciousness of the present as recklessness of
-the future into which he seemed to project his whole being.
-The Abbé simply expected that Florian would place his
-hand in his bosom and bring out the roll of paper required.
-He was surprised, therefore, to receive no answer; and
-repeated, hastily, for he had still a press of business to get
-through—</p>
-
-<p>“The manifesto, my friend—quick! It must be retained
-in my care till it is printed!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_512"></a>[512]</span></p>
-
-<p>Florian woke up from a brown study, and looked vacantly
-around.</p>
-
-<p>“It is still in Sir George’s hands,” said he. “I believe I
-have asked him for it more than once, but I could not get it
-back.”</p>
-
-<p>“In Sir George’s hands!” repeated the Abbé, almost
-losing patience, “and without Sir George’s signature! Do
-you know what you are saying? Florian, listen, man, and
-look up. Are you awake?”</p>
-
-<p>The other passed his hand wearily across his brow.</p>
-
-<p>“I have slept little of late,” was all he answered. “It
-is as I tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>Even Captain Bold could not but admire the Abbé’s self-control,
-that kept down the impatience naturally resulting
-from such a confession, so composedly announced. He
-mused for a moment with his peculiar smile, and observed,
-quietly—</p>
-
-<p>“You travel to London to-night, I believe, and you
-travel together?”</p>
-
-<p>Florian only bowed his head in reply.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you a pleasant journey,” continued the Abbé.
-“Had you not better go now and make the necessary
-preparations?”</p>
-
-<p>Then, as soon as the door closed on Florian, who
-walked out dejectedly, without another word, he grasped
-Captain Bold’s arm, and laughed a low, mocking laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Business increases, captain,” said he. “Yours is a
-trade sure to thrive, for its occasions come up fresh every
-day. Did you hear that Sir George Hamilton possesses
-a paper I require? and that he proceeds to London to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard it,” answered the captain, doggedly.</p>
-
-<p>He, too, knew something of Sir George, and did not much
-relish the job which he began to suspect was provided for
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“That paper must be in my hands before daybreak,”
-continued the Abbé, speaking in such low, distinct accents,
-as his emissary had already learned admitted of no appeal.
-“You will name your own price, Captain Bold, and you
-will bring me what I require—as little blood on it as
-possible—at least two hours before dawn.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_513"></a>[513]</span></p>
-
-<p>The captain pondered, and his face fell.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know how Sir George travels?” said he, in
-his high, quavering voice, more tremulous than its wont.
-“There has been such a press of work lately that I am
-rather short both of men and horses. If he takes anything
-like a following with him it might come to a coil; and
-such jobs won’t bear patching. They must be done clean
-or let alone. That’s my principle! He’s a cock of the
-game, this, you see,” added the captain, apologetically;
-“and you’ll not cut his comb without a thick pair of gloves
-on, I’ll warrant him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Permit me to observe, my friend,” replied Malletort,
-coolly, “that this is a mere matter of detail with which I
-can have no concern. It is not the least in my line,
-but exclusively in yours. Must I repeat? You name
-your own price, and work in your own way.”</p>
-
-<p>“It cannot be done without cutting his throat,” said
-Bold, despondingly, regretting the while, not so much a
-necessity for bloodshed, as his own sorry chance of carrying
-out the adventure with a whole skin.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not,” assented the Abbé. “Why, he was
-in the Grey Musketeers of the King!”</p>
-
-<p>“To-night, you say,” continued the captain, in the same
-mournful tone. “I wonder if he rides that bay with the white
-heels. I’ve seen him turn the horse on a sixpence, and
-he’s twice as heavy as my mare.”</p>
-
-<p>Again Malletort laughed his low, mocking laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Fear not,” said he; “there need be no personal
-collision on foot or on horseback. Sir George travels by
-the heavy post-coach, like any fat grazier or cattle-dealer,
-whom you may bid ‘Stand and deliver’ without a
-qualm.”</p>
-
-<p>“By the coach!” repeated Bold, his face brightening.
-“That’s a different job altogether. That makes the thing
-much more like business, especially if there’s many passengers.
-You see, they frighten and hamper one another.
-Why, if there’s a stoutish old woman or two anyways near
-him, it’s as likely as not they’ll pinion Sir George by both
-arms, and hold on till we’ve finished, screaming awful, of
-course! But you won’t make any difference in the price
-on account of the coach, now, will you? Even chancing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_514"></a>[514]</span>
-the old women, you see, we’re very short-handed to do it
-clean.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have said more than once, name your own price,”
-answered the Abbé. “I deduct nothing for a friend whom
-I will myself place by Sir George’s side, and who will do
-the pinioning you speak of more effectually, if with less
-noise, than a ton of old women. How many hands can
-you muster?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mounted, of course?” replied the captain. “There’s
-myself, and Blood Humphrey, and Black George. I don’t
-think I can count on any others, but we ought to have one
-more to do it handsome.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will come with you myself,” said the Abbé. “I have
-a horse here in the stable, and better arms than any of
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>The captain stared aghast, but so great was the respect
-with which Malletort inspired his subordinates, that he
-never dreamed for an instant of dissuading the Abbé from
-an adventure which he might have thought completely out
-of a churchman’s line. On the contrary, satisfied that
-whatever the chief of the plot undertook would be well
-accomplished, he looked admiringly in his principal’s face,
-and observed—</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll stop them at the old thorns, half-way up Borrodaile
-Rise. The coach will back off the road, and likely
-enough upset in the soft moor. I’ll cover Sir George, and
-pull the moment he’s off his seat to get down. The others
-will rob the passengers, and—and I suppose there is nothing
-more to arrange?”</p>
-
-<p>The Abbé, folding up his papers to leave the room,
-nodded carelessly and replied:—</p>
-
-<p>“We mount in half an hour. Through the heart, I think,
-Bold. The head is easily missed at a dozen paces from the
-saddle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Through the heart,” answered the captain, but Malletort
-had already quitted the room and closed the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Half an hour,” mused Bold, now left to himself in the
-cold and dimly-lighted apartment. “In half an hour a
-good deal may be done both in love and war. And Alice
-promised to be here by now. I thought the gentleman
-never <i>would</i> go away. What a time they were, to be sure!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_515"></a>[515]</span>
-We make quicker work of it in our trade. How cold it is!
-I wish I’d a glass of brandy; but I dursn’t, no, I dursn’t,
-though I’m all of a shake like. I’ll have one ‘steadier’
-just before I get on the mare. If I’m over-primed I shall
-miss him, and he’s not the sort to give a chap a second
-chance. I wish this job was over. I never half-liked it
-from the first. Hush! I think that’s Alice’s cough. Poor
-little girl! She loves the very boots I wear. I wish she’d
-come, though. This room is cursed lonesome, and I don’t
-like my own company unless I can have it really to myself.
-I always fancy there’s somebody else I can’t see. How my
-teeth chatter. It’s the cold. It <i>must</i> be the cold! Well,
-there’s no harm in lighting the fire, at any rate.”</p>
-
-<p>So speaking, or rather muttering, the captain, on whose
-nerves repeated glasses of brandy at all hours of the day
-and night had not failed to make an impression, proceeded
-to collect with trembling hands certain covers of despatches
-and other coarse scraps of paper left on the floor and table,
-which litter he placed carefully on the hearth, building the
-damp sticks over them skilfully enough, and applying his
-solitary candle to the whole.</p>
-
-<p>His paper flared brightly, but with no other effect than
-to produce thick, stifling clouds of smoke from the saturated
-fuel and divers oaths spoken out loud from the disgusted
-captain.</p>
-
-<p>“May the devil fly away with them!” said he, in a
-towering rage, “to a place where they’ll burn fast enough
-without lighting. And me, too!” he added yet more
-wrathfully, “for wasting my time like a fool waiting for
-a jilt who can’t even lay a fire properly in an inn chimney.”</p>
-
-<p>The words had scarce left his lips when a discordant roar
-resounded, as it seemed, from the very wall of the house,
-and a hideous monster, that he never doubted was the Arch
-Fiend whom he had invoked, came sprawling on all-fours
-down the chimney which the smoke had refused to ascend,
-and made straight for the terrified occupant of the apartment,
-whose hair stood on end, and whose whole senses were
-for a moment paralysed with horror and dismay.</p>
-
-<p>In a single glance the captain beheld the black shaggy
-hide, the wide-spreading horns, the cloven hoofs, the long
-and tufted tail! That glance turned him for one instant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_516"></a>[516]</span>
-to a man of stone. The next, with an irrepressible shout
-that denoted the very anguish of fear, he sprang through
-the door, upsetting and extinguishing the candle in his
-flight, and hurried downstairs, closely, though silently
-followed by the monster, who thus escaped from the room
-before Malletort, alarmed at the disturbance, could re-enter
-it with a light.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s not heart of oak, isn’t that chap!” said Slap-Jack,
-as he turned noiselessly into the stable, where he proceeded
-to divest himself of the bullock’s hide he had worn for his
-masquerade, and so much of the filth it had left as could be
-effaced by scraping his garments and washing face and
-hands with soap and water. But the jest which had been
-compiled so merrily with his friend and sweetheart seemed
-to have lost all its mirth in the execution, for the seaman
-looked exceedingly grave and thoughtful, stealing quietly
-into the bar in search of his shipmate, with whom he
-presently disappeared to hold mysterious conference outside
-the house, secure from all eavesdroppers.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Bold, though for a short space well-nigh frightened
-out of his wits, was not so inexperienced in the maladies of
-those who, like himself, applied freely and continuously to
-the brandy bottle, to be ignorant that such jovial spirits are
-peculiarly subject to hallucinations, and often visited by
-phantoms which only exist in their own diseased imaginations.
-He had scarcely reached the bar, therefore—a refuge
-he sought unconsciously and by instinct—ere he recovered
-himself enough to remember that alcohol was the only
-specific for the horrors, and he proceeded accordingly to
-swallow glass after glass till his usual composure of mind
-should return. He was nothing loth to use the remedy,
-yet each succeeding draught, while it strung his nerves,
-seemed to increase his depression, and for the first time in
-his life, he felt unable to shake off an uncomfortable conviction,
-that whether the phantom was really in the chimney
-or only in his own brain, he had that night received a warning,
-and was doomed.</p>
-
-<p>There was little leisure, however, either for apprehension
-or remorse. Malletort, booted and well armed beneath his
-cassock, was already descending the stairs, and calling for
-his horse. To judge by his open brow and jaunty manner,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_517"></a>[517]</span>
-his final interview with Florian, whom he had again summoned
-for a few last words, must have been satisfactory in
-the extreme. The latter, too, carried his head erect, and
-there was a proud glance in his eye, as of one who marches
-to victory.</p>
-
-<p>“You will not fail at the last moment?” said the Abbé,
-pressing St. Croix’s hand while they descended the wooden
-staircase in company, and Florian’s reply, “Trust me, I
-will not fail!” carried conviction even to the cold heart of
-the astute and suspicious churchman.</p>
-
-<p>So Captain Bold tossed off his last glass of brandy,
-examined the priming of his pistols, and swung himself into
-the saddle. His staunch comrades were at his side. The
-Abbé, of whose administrative powers he entertained the
-highest opinion, was there to superintend the expedition.
-It was easy, it was safe. Once accomplished, his fortune
-was made for life. As they emerged upon the snow, just
-deep enough to afford their horses a sure foothold, the bay
-mare shook her bit and laid her ears back cheerfully. Even
-Black George, usually a saturnine personage, acknowledged
-the bracing influence of the keen night air and the exhilarating
-prospect of action. He exchanged a professional jest
-with Blood Humphrey, and slapped his commander encouragingly
-on the shoulder; but, for all this, a black shadow
-seemed to hover between Captain Bold and the frosty stars—something
-seemed to warn him that the hour he had so
-often jested of was coming on him fast, and that to-night he
-must look the death he had so lightly laughed at in the
-face.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_518"></a>[518]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LIX">CHAPTER LIX<br />
-<span class="smaller">A SUBSTITUTE</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>We left Sir George watching in the cold, under a clump of
-yews, for the chance of seeing his wife’s shadow cross one
-of the lighted windows in the gallery. He remained there
-far longer than he supposed. So many thoughts were
-passing through his mind, so many misgivings for the
-future, so many memories of the past, that he was conscious
-neither of bodily discomfort nor lapse of time, the chill
-night-wind nor the waning evening. At length he roused
-himself from his abstraction with a smile of self-contempt,
-and, wrapping his cloak around him, would have departed
-at once, but that his attention was arrested by a muffled
-figure passing swiftly and stealthily into the garden
-through the very door he had been watching so long. A
-thrill of delight shot through him at the possibility of its
-being Cerise, followed by one of anger and suspicion, as he
-thought she might, in sheer despair at her lover’s absence,
-be preparing to follow Florian in his flight. But the figure
-walked straight to his hiding-place, and long before it
-reached him, even in the doubtful light, he recognised the
-firm step and graceful bearing of the Marquise.</p>
-
-<p>How did she know he was there? How long could she
-have been watching him? He felt provoked, humiliated;
-but all such angry feelings dissolved at the sound of her
-sweet voice, so like her daughter’s, while she asked him
-softly, as if it was the most natural thing in the world that
-he should be waiting outside within twenty paces of his own
-house—</p>
-
-<p>“George, what is it? You are disturbed; you are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_519"></a>[519]</span>
-anxious. Can I help you? George, I would do anything
-in the world for you. Are you not dear to me as my own
-child, <i>almost</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>He tried to laugh it off, but his mirth was forced and
-hollow.</p>
-
-<p>“I have so many preparations to make. There are so
-many trifles to be thought of, even in leaving a place like
-this, that really, madame, I was only waiting here for a
-while to remember if I had forgotten anything.”</p>
-
-<p>She laid her hand on his arm, as she had laid it long ago
-at the masked ball, and perhaps the gesture brought back
-that time to both.</p>
-
-<p>“Even if you can blind Cerise,” she said, “you cannot
-deceive me. And Cerise, poor child, is crying her eyes out
-by herself; miserable, utterly miserable, as if you had
-gone away from her for ever. But it is no question now of
-my daughter; it is a question of yourself, George. <i>You</i>
-are unhappy, I tell you. I saw it as soon as I came here.
-And I have been watching ever since you left the house,
-till it should be quite dark, to come and speak to you before
-you go, and ask for the confidence that Heaven only knows
-how fully I, of all people, deserve.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a world of suppressed feeling in her voice
-while she spoke the last sentence, but he marked it not.
-He was thinking of Cerise. “Miserable,” said her
-mother, “utterly miserable, as if he had gone away from
-her for ever.” Then it was for Florian she was grieving,
-of course. Bah! he had known it all through. Of what
-use was it thus to add proof to proof—to pile disgrace upon
-disgrace? It irritated him, and he answered abruptly—</p>
-
-<p>“You must excuse me, madame; this is no time for
-explanations, even were any necessary, and I have already
-loitered here too long.”</p>
-
-<p>She placed herself directly in his path, standing with her
-hands clasped, as was her habit when moved by any unusual
-agitation.</p>
-
-<p>“If you had gone away at once,” said she, “I was prepared
-to follow you. I have watched you from the moment
-you crossed the threshold. Am I blind? Am I a young
-inexperienced girl, who has never felt, never suffered, to be
-imposed on by a haughty bearing and a forced smile?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_520"></a>[520]</span>
-Bah! Do people stand for an hour in the snow reflecting
-if they have forgotten their luggage? You men think
-women have no perception, no mind, no heart. You are
-going, George, and I shall never set eyes on you again—never,
-never; for I could not bear to see you miserable,
-and I alone of all the world must not endeavour to console
-you. Therefore I do not fear to speak frankly now.
-Listen; something has come between you and Cerise.
-Do not interrupt me. I know it. I feel it. Do not ask
-me why. It is not your hand that should add one stripe
-to my punishment. George, my poor girl is breaking her
-heart for your sake; and you, you the man of all others
-qualified to make a woman happy, and to be happy with
-her yourself, are destroying your home with your own
-hands. Look at me, George. I have seen the world, as
-you know. My lot has been brilliant, fortunate, envied by
-all; and yet—and yet—I have never had the chance that
-you so recklessly throw away. No, no; though I may
-have dreamed of it, I never so deceived myself as to fancy
-for a moment it was mine! Cerise loves you, George,
-loves the very ground you walk on, and you are leaving her
-in anger.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I could believe it,” he muttered, in a hoarse,
-choking voice; for he was thinking of the pale, dark-eyed
-priest bending over the rose-trees with his wife.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think I can be deceived?” broke out the
-Marquise, seizing his hand with both her own, and then
-flinging it off in a burst of sorrowful reproach. “Wilful!
-heartless! cruel! Go, then, if go you must, and so farewell
-for ever. But remember, I warned you. I, who
-know by bitter experience, the madness, the shame, the
-agony of an impossible love!”</p>
-
-<p>She turned from him and fled into the house, muttering,
-as she crossed its threshold, “The poor pelican! how it
-must hurt when she digs her beak into her bosom, and
-feeds her young with her own heart’s blood!”</p>
-
-<p>Sir George Hamilton stood looking after her for a
-moment; then he shook his head, drew his cloak tighter
-round him, and strode resolutely across the park to the
-“Hamilton Arms.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus it fell out that when he arrived there, he found the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_521"></a>[521]</span>
-hostelry, lately so full of guests, occupied only by Florian
-and the two seamen; the first depressed, silent, preoccupied;
-the others obviously swelling with importance,
-and bursting to communicate some great intelligence at
-once.</p>
-
-<p>It was fortunate that the former commander of ‘The
-Bashful Maid,’ retained enough of his old habits to comprehend
-the tale Slap-Jack had to tell, garnished as it was
-with professional phrases and queer sea-going metaphors
-that no landsman could have followed out. From his
-faithful retainer the baronet learned all the particulars of
-the Jacobite meeting, and the conspiracy so carefully
-organised against the throne, discovered by no less futile
-a contingency than the freak of a barmaid to frighten a
-highwayman. Sir George believed it his duty now to warn
-the Government at once. Yet even while reflecting on
-the importance of his information, and the noble reward
-it might obtain, he was pondering how he could escape
-the delay of an hour in London, and longing for the
-moment when he should find himself face to face with
-Florian on the coast of France.</p>
-
-<p>It was characteristic of the man that he gave little
-thought to the attack meditated upon his own person,
-simply examining his arms as usual, and desiring Slap-Jack,
-who had come unprovided, to borrow a brace of pistols
-wherever he could get them, while he bestowed on Smoke-Jack,
-who piteously entreated leave to “join the expedition,”
-a careless permission “to take his share in the
-spree if he liked.”</p>
-
-<p>So these four men waited in the warm inn-parlour for
-the roll of the lumbering coach that was to bear them, so
-each well knew, into a struggle for life and death.</p>
-
-<p>When their vehicle arrived at last, they found themselves
-its only passengers. The burly coachman descending from
-his seat to refresh, cursed the cold weather heartily, and in
-the same breath tendered a gruff salutation to Sir George.
-The guard, whose face was redder, whose shoulders were
-broader, and whose voice was huskier even than the coachman’s,
-endorsed his companion’s remarks, and followed
-suit in his greetings to the baronet, observing, at the same
-time, that he should “take a glass of brandy neat, to drive<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_522"></a>[522]</span>
-the cold out of his stomach.” This stimulant was accordingly
-administered by Alice, and paid for by Sir George,
-who had not lived at Hamilton Hill without learning the
-etiquette of coach travelling as practised on the north road.
-While he placed some silver on the counter, it did not
-escape him that both functionaries had been drinking freely,
-possibly to console them for the lack of company, while
-Slap-Jack, grinning in delight, whispered to his mate—</p>
-
-<p>“If you an’ me was to go for to take <i>our</i> spell at the
-wheel, half-slewed, like them chaps, my eyes, wot a twistin’
-<i>we</i> should get to-morrow mornin’ afore eight bells!”</p>
-
-<p>With so light a freight there was less delay in changing
-horses than usual. Scarcely a quarter of an hour had
-elapsed since its arrival ere four moderate-looking animals
-were harnessed to the coach. The luggage was hoisted on,
-old Robin rewarded, Mrs. Dodge paid, Alice kissed with
-much energy by her sweetheart, and Sir George, with
-Florian, invited to take their places on the front seat behind
-the driver; then the two seamen clambered up beside the
-guard, the whip cracked, the hoofs clattered, the whole
-machine creaked and jingled, while Smoke-Jack, removing
-the pipe from his mouth with a certain gravity, expressed
-his devout hope that “old brandy-face would keep her well
-up in the wind and steer small!”</p>
-
-<p>It was a cold night, and a cheerless, though light as day,
-for the moon had risen and the ground was white with snow.
-Sir George, wrapped in his cloak, with his hand on the butt
-of a pistol, after some vague remarks about the weather,
-which Florian appeared not to hear, relapsed into the silence
-of one who prepares all his energies for an approaching crisis.</p>
-
-<p>The Jesuit seemed unconscious of his companion’s existence.
-Pale as death, even to the lips, his face set, his
-teeth clenched, his eyes fixed on the horizon before him, as
-his mental sight projected itself into the unknown future he
-had this night resolved to penetrate, there pervaded the
-whole bearing of the man that unearthly air of abstraction
-peculiar to those who are doomed, whose trial is over, whose
-sentence is recorded, for whom henceforth there can be
-neither hope nor fear.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George meditated on a thousand possible contingencies.
-Already his mind had overleaped the immediate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_523"></a>[523]</span>
-affairs of the night, the coming skirmish, and its possible
-disaster. These were but every-day matters, familiar to his
-old habits, and scarce worth thinking of. But there was
-one scene beyond which his imagination could not be forced;
-it seemed, as it were, to limit his future in its bounds, and
-afterwards there would be no aim, no purpose, no relish in
-life. It represented a spit of sand on the coast of Picardy,
-and a man with shirt-sleeves rolled up, grasping a bloody
-rapier in his hand, who was smiling bitterly down on a dead
-face white and rigid at his feet.</p>
-
-<p>Florian, too, sitting by his side, had his own vision.
-This, also, was of blood, but blood freely offered in atonement
-to friendship, and expiation for love.</p>
-
-<p>The night was still, and the moonlight tempered by a
-misty sky that denoted there would be more snow before
-morning. The coachman dozed over his wheelers. The
-guard, overcome with brandy, laid his head on a hamper,
-and went fast asleep. The two seamen, silently consoling
-themselves with tobacco, shut an eye apiece, and screwed
-their faces into the expression of inscrutable sagacity
-affected by their class when they expect bad weather of
-any kind. The horses, taking counsel together, as such
-beasts do, jogged on at the slowest possible pace that could
-not be stigmatised for a walk, and the heavy machine
-lumbered wearily up the gradual ascent, which half a mile
-further on, where the hill became steeper and the road
-worse, was known as Borrodaile Rise.</p>
-
-<p>Now the Abbé, in command of his little troop, had
-intended to conceal them behind a clump of thorns that
-diversified the plain surface of the moor, almost on the
-summit of this acclivity, and so pounce out upon his prey
-at the moment it was most hampered by the difficulties of
-its path; but, like other good generals, he suffered his
-plans to be modified by circumstances, and would change
-them, if advisable, at the very moment of execution.</p>
-
-<p>On the right of the road, if road that could be called,
-which was but a soft and deeply-rutted track through the
-heather, stood the four walls of a roofless building, uninhabited
-within the memory of man, about twenty paces
-from a deep holding slough, through which the coach must
-pass; this post, with the concurrence of Bold and his confederates,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_524"></a>[524]</span>
-the Abbé seized at once. It offered them some
-shelter against the storms of sleet that drove at intervals
-across the moor, while it afforded a covert from which,
-though mounted, they could reconnoitre unseen, for two
-miles in every direction, and rush out at a moment’s notice
-on their unsuspecting prey.</p>
-
-<p>So, behind those grey, weather-stained walls, the little
-party sat their horses, erect and vigilant, reins shortened,
-firearms primed, swords loosened in the sheath, like a
-picket of light-cavalry when the alarm has sounded, and its
-outposts have been driven in.</p>
-
-<p>The advancing coach made but little noise as it crept
-slowly onward through the snow, nevertheless a muttered
-oath from Blood Humphrey, and the scowl on Black
-George’s brow, announced its arrival ere it came in sight.
-By the time it could emerge from a certain hollow at fifty
-yards’ distance, and gain the slough, through which it
-moved heavily and wearily, like a hearse, its huge black
-mass brought out against the dead white of the misty,
-moonlit sky, afforded as fair a target for close shooting as a
-marksman need desire.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Bold had been trembling all over but a few
-minutes back, now he was firm as a rock, but it cost him a
-desperate effort thus to man himself, and even while he
-cocked the pistol in his right hand, gathering his mare at
-the same time, for a dash to the front, he wished, from the
-bottom of his heart, he had undertaken any job but this.</p>
-
-<p>“Steady, my friend!” whispered the Abbé. “In ten
-more paces the whole machine must come to a halt. At
-the instant it stops, cover your man, and level low!”</p>
-
-<p>Then Malletort placed himself behind the others in
-readiness for any emergency that should arrive.</p>
-
-<p>The slough reached nearly to the axles, the wheels scarce
-moved, the horses laboured—failed—stopped; the coachman,
-waking with a jerk, swore lustily as he nearly fell
-from his seat; the guard jumped up and shook himself;
-Florian’s eyes flashed, and a strange, wild smile played
-over his wan face, while Slap-Jack protested angrily, that
-“the lubber was aground, d’ye see? and however could he
-expect the poor thing would answer her helm, when she
-hadn’t got no steerage-way!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_525"></a>[525]</span></p>
-
-<p>Even while he spoke, a horseman, rising, as it seemed,
-from the earth, dashed out before the leaders, followed by
-three more, who, in the hurry and confusion of the moment,
-looked like a dozen at least.</p>
-
-<p>“Stand and deliver!” exclaimed the foremost, in the
-customary language of “the road”; but, without waiting
-to see if this formidable command would be obeyed, he
-pulled his bay mare together, till she stood motionless like
-a statue, covered the larger of the two figures behind the
-coachman, as it rose from its seat, and—fired!</p>
-
-<p>Bold’s hand and eye had never served him better than
-in this, his last crime; but he was anticipated, foiled by a
-quicker eye, a readier hand than his own. With the very
-flash of the pistol, even ere the smoke that curled above
-their heads had melted into air, a heavy body, falling
-across Sir George’s knees, knocked him back into his seat,
-and Florian, shot through the lungs, lay gasping out his
-life in jets of blood with every breath he drew.</p>
-
-<p>It was instinct, rather than inhumanity, that caused the
-old Musketeer to take steady aim at the assassin over the
-very body of his preserver. Ever coolest in extremity of
-danger, Sir George was, perhaps, surer of his mark than
-he would have been shooting for a wager in the galleries of
-Marly or Versailles. Ere a man could have counted ten,
-his finger pressed the trigger, and Bolt, shot clean through
-the heart, fell from the saddle in a heap, nor, after one
-quiver of the muscles, did he ever move again.</p>
-
-<p>The bay mare, snorting wildly, would not leave her
-master, but snuffed wistfully and tenderly round that
-tumbled wisp of tawdry clothes, from which a crimson
-stain was soaking slowly into the snow.</p>
-
-<p>Then Sir George turned to Florian, and rested the dying,
-drooping form against his own broad breast. Where was
-the spit of sand, the lonely duel, now?—the pitiless arm,
-the bloody rapier, and all the hideous vision of revenge?
-Gone—vanished—as if it had never been; and, in its
-stead, a tried, beloved comrade, pale, sinking, prostrate,
-bleeding helplessly to death.</p>
-
-<p>“Courage, Florian!” whispered Sir George, tenderly.
-“Lean on me while I stanch the blood. You will pull
-through yet. We will have you back at the Hill in an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_526"></a>[526]</span>
-hour. D― it, man! Lady Hamilton shall nurse you
-herself till you get well!”</p>
-
-<p>A gleam came over the dying face, like a ray of sunlight
-gilding the close of a bleak winter’s day.</p>
-
-<p>“I have never been false,” he murmured, “never false
-really in my heart. I swore to save you, George, life for
-life, and I have kept my oath. I shall not live to see
-Lady Hamilton again, but—but—you will tell her that it
-was <i>my</i> body which―”</p>
-
-<p>He turned fainter now, and lay half-propped against the
-seat he had lately occupied, holding Sir George’s hand,
-and effectually preventing the baronet from taking any
-further part in the fray.</p>
-
-<p>It is not to be supposed that the two seamen in the back
-of the coach had been idle witnesses of a tumult which so
-exactly coincided with their notions of what they termed
-“a spree.” Protected from the fire of the horsemen by a
-pile of luggage on its roof, or, as Slap-Jack called it, by
-the deck-cargo, they had made an excellent defence, and
-better practice than might have been looked for with a
-brace of borrowed pistols, apt to hang fire and throw high.
-The guard, too, after a careful and protracted aim, discharged
-his blunderbuss, with a loud explosion; and the
-result of their joint efforts was, that the highwaymen, as
-the last-named functionary believed them, were beaten off.
-Blood Humphrey’s horse was shot through the flank,
-though the poor brute made shift to carry his rider swiftly
-away. Black George had his ankle-bone broken, but
-managed to gallop across the moor after his comrade,
-writhing in pain, and with his boot full of blood. Bold lay
-dead on the ground. There was but one of the assailants
-left—a well-armed man in a cassock, who had kept somewhat
-in the background; and <i>his</i> horse, too, was badly
-wounded behind its girths.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George was occupied with Florian, but the others
-sprang down to take the last of their foes captive; ere they
-could reach him, however, he had leaped into the bay
-mare’s saddle, and was urging her over the heather at a
-pace that promised soon to place him in safety, for the bay
-mare was the fastest galloper in Yorkshire, and her rider
-knew it was a race for life and death.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_527"></a>[527]</span></p>
-
-<p>“By heavens, it is Malletort!” exclaimed Sir George,
-looking up from his charge, at sound of the flying hoofs, to
-observe something in the fugitive’s seat and figure that
-identified him with the Abbé, and gazing after him so
-intently, that he did not mark the expression of satisfaction
-on Florian’s pain-stricken face when he learned the other
-had escaped. “I never thought he could ride so well,”
-muttered the baronet, while he watched the good bay mare
-speeding steadily over the open, and saw the Frenchman
-put her straight at a high stone wall, beyond which he
-knew, by his own experience, there was a considerable drop
-into a ravine. The mare jumped it like a deer, and after
-a time rose the opposite slope at a swifter pace than ever.
-Sir George could only make her out very indistinctly now,
-yet something in the headlong manner of her career caused
-him to fancy she was going without a rider.</p>
-
-<p>He had more important matters to occupy him. It had
-begun to snow heavily, and Florian was growing weaker
-every minute. With a dying man for their freight; with
-the absence of other passengers; above all, with the
-prospect of increased difficulty in progression at every yard
-they advanced, for the sky had darkened, and the flakes
-fell thicker, guard and driver were easily persuaded to turn
-their horses’ heads, and make the best of their way back
-to Hamilton Hill.</p>
-
-<p>It was but a few miles distant, and Sir George, hoping
-against hope, tried to persuade himself that if he could
-only get Florian under his own roof alive, he might be
-saved.</p>
-
-<p>They were good nurses, that tried campaigner and his
-two rough, hardy seamen. Tenderly, like women, they
-stanched the welling life-blood, supported the nerveless,
-drooping figure, and wiped the froth from the dry, white
-lips that could no longer speak, but yet made shift to
-smile. Tenderly, too, they whispered soothing words, in
-soft, hushed voices, looking blankly in each other’s faces
-for the hope their hearts denied; and thus slowly, sadly,
-solemnly, the dark procession laboured back, taking the
-road they had lately travelled, passed the well-known
-hostelry, and so wearily climbed the long ascent to the
-grim, looming towers of Hamilton Hill.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_528"></a>[528]</span></p>
-
-<p>Not a word was spoken. Scarce a sound betrayed their
-progress. The air was hushed—the flakes fell softly,
-heavily—the earth lay wrapped in a winding-sheet of snow—and
-Florian was dead before they reached the house!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_529"></a>[529]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LX">CHAPTER LX<br />
-<span class="smaller">SOLACE</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Bad news proverbially flies apace, and it is strange how
-soon the intelligence of any catastrophe pervades an entire
-household.</p>
-
-<p>Though it was towards the small hours of morning
-that the coach arrived, with its dead freight, at the gates
-of Hamilton Hill, the whole establishment seemed to arouse
-itself on the instant, and to become aware, as though by
-instinct, that something had occurred productive of general
-confusion and dismay.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise, pale and spiritless, was sitting in her bed-chamber,
-over the embers of a dying fire, thinking wearily
-of her husband, wondering, with aching heart and eyes full
-of tears, what could be this shadow that had of late come
-up between them, and now threatened to darken her whole
-life.</p>
-
-<p>How she wished, yes, she actually wished now, she had
-never married him. He would have remembered her then
-as the girl he might have loved. For his own happiness,
-she protested, she could give him up readily, cheerfully
-even, to another woman. Then she reviewed all the
-women of her acquaintance, without, however, being able
-to fix on one to whom she could make this sacrifice ungrudgingly.
-She thought, too, how forlorn she would feel
-deprived of George. And yet, was she not deprived of him
-already? Could any separation be more complete than
-theirs? It was torture to reflect that he could not really
-have loved her, or it would never have come to this. And
-to leave her thus, without an opportunity for inquiry or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_530"></a>[530]</span>
-explanation. It was careless, unkind, unpardonable.
-Better to have been sure of his affection, to have known
-his last thought was for her, and to have seen him brought
-in dead before her very eyes into the house!</p>
-
-<p>A hurried step was on the stair, a trembling hand flung
-open the door, and Lady Hamilton’s maid rushed into the
-room, pale, scared, and incoherent, to exclaim—</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! my lady—my lady! Whatever are we to do?
-The coach has been robbed, and they’ve brought him back
-home! They’re carrying him up the front stairs now.
-Stone dead, my lady! He never spoke, Ralph says, nor
-moved after the shot. Such a home-coming! such a home-coming!
-Oh dear! oh dear!”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Hamilton’s jaw dropped, and her whole face
-stiffened, as if she had been shot herself. Then she
-wailed out, “He was angry with me when he went away,”
-repeating the same words over and over again, as though
-attaching no meaning to the sounds, and staggering, with
-hands extended, like a blind woman to the staircase, while,
-numbed and palsied, as it was by the cruel pain, a silent
-prayer went out from her heart that she might die.</p>
-
-<p>A strong form caught her in its arms, and she looked up
-in her husband’s face, living, unhurt, and kindly; but
-saddened with a grave and sorrowing expression she had
-never seen there before.</p>
-
-<p>“Cerise,” he whispered, “a great grief has come upon
-us. There has been a skirmish on the moor, and Florian,
-poor Florian, has lost his life.”</p>
-
-<p>She was sobbing in his embrace, sobbing with an intense
-and fearful joy.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank God!” she gasped, putting her hair back from
-her white face, and devouring him with wild, loving eyes.
-“Darling, they told me it was <i>you</i>—they told me it was
-<i>you</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Nearer, nearer, he clasped her, and a tear stole down his
-cheek. It was <i>him</i>, then, all the time she had loved with
-her whole heart <i>in spite</i> of his being her husband. It was
-for his departure she had been grieving in patient silence;
-it was his displeasure, and no unhallowed fondness for
-another, that had lately dimmed the soft blue eyes, and
-turned the sweet face so pale.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_531"></a>[531]</span></p>
-
-<p>“My love!” he whispered; but, notwithstanding his
-past suspicions, his injustice, his cruel condemnation, this
-seemed all the amends he was disposed to make; for he
-went on to tell her how the coach had been beset, and how
-he must himself have been killed, but for Florian’s self-devotion—Florian,
-who was now lying dead in the very
-room that had lately come to be called his own.</p>
-
-<p>She wanted no explanation, no apology. She had forgiven
-him long before he spoke. She had thought him
-estranged; she had believed him dead; and now he was
-alive again, and he was her own.</p>
-
-<p>“I care not! I care not!” she exclaimed, wildly.
-“Let them live or die; what is it to me, so that you
-are safe! Shame on me,” she added, with more composure,
-“how selfish I am—how heartless! Let us go
-to him, George, and see if nothing can be done.”</p>
-
-<p>Nothing could be done, of course. Hand in hand,
-husband and wife visited the chamber of death, hand in
-hand they left it, with saddened faces and slow, reverential
-step. But Sir George never forgot the lesson of that night;
-never again doubted the woman who had given him her
-whole heart; nor joined in the sneer of those who protest
-that purity and self-sacrifice are incompatible with earthly
-love.</p>
-
-<p>But for the snow, Madame de Montmirail would have left
-Hamilton Hill next day. It was delightful, no doubt, to
-witness the perfect understanding, the mutual confidence,
-that had been re-established between Cerise and her
-husband; but it was not amusing. “Gratifying, but a
-little wearisome,” said the Marquise to herself, while she
-looked from her window on the smooth undulating expanse
-of white that forbade the prospect of travelling till there
-should come a thaw. Never perhaps in her whole life had
-this lady so much felt the want of excitement, intrigue,
-business, dissipation, even danger, to take her out of herself,
-as she expressed it, and preserve the blood from
-stagnating in her veins. It is only doing her justice also to
-state that she was somewhat anxious about Malletort.
-With half a yard of snow on the ground, however, not to
-mention drifts, it was hopeless to speculate on any subject
-out of doors till the weather changed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_532"></a>[532]</span></p>
-
-<p>For Slap-Jack, nevertheless, whose whole life had been
-passed in conflict with the elements, even a heavy fall of
-snow seemed but a trifling obstacle, easily to be overcome,
-and on no account to interfere with so important a ceremony
-as a seaman’s wedding. Assisted by his shipmate,
-who had consented to officiate as “best man” on the
-occasion, he set to work, “with a will,” so he expressed it,
-and cleared away a path four feet broad from the Hill to
-the “Hamilton Arms.” Down this path he proceeded in
-great state to be married, on the very day the thaw set in,
-attended by Sir George and Lady Hamilton, the Marquise,
-Smoke-Jack, and all the servants of the establishment.
-Ere the ceremony was accomplished, the wind blew high
-and the rain fell in torrents, omens to which the old foretopman
-paid not the slightest attention, but of which his
-best man skilfully availed himself to congratulate the
-bridegroom on his choice.</p>
-
-<p>“It looks dirty to windward,” he proclaimed, in a
-confidential whisper, heard by the whole company; “and a
-chap ain’t got overmuch sea-room when he’s spliced. But
-she’s weatherly, mate; that’s what <i>she</i> is—wholesome and
-weatherly. I knows the trim on ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>At a later period in the afternoon, however, when I am
-sorry to say, he had become more than slightly inebriated,
-Smoke-Jack was heard to express an equally flattering
-opinion as to the qualities, “wholesome and weatherly,” of
-Mrs. Dodge, not concealing his intention of making a return
-voyage, “in ballast o’ coorse,” as he strongly insisted, to
-these latitudes, when he had delivered a cargo in London.
-Shrewd observers were of opinion, from these compromising
-remarks and other trifling incidents of the day, that it was
-possible the hostess of the “Hamilton Arms” might be
-induced to change her name once more, under the irresistible
-temptation of subjugating so consistent a woman-hater as
-Smoke-Jack.</p>
-
-<p>But in the last century, as in the present, death and
-marriage trod close on each other’s heels. The customers
-at the “Hamilton Arms” had not done carousing to the
-health of bride and bridegroom, the wintry day had not
-yet closed in with a mild, continuous rain, and Smoke-Jack
-was in the middle of an interminable forecastle yarn, when<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_533"></a>[533]</span>
-a couple of labouring men brought in the body of a darkly-clad
-foreign gentleman, who had lately been lodging at this
-roadside hostelry. They had found him half covered by a
-waning snow-wreath just under the wall in the “stell,”
-said these honest dalesmen, below Borrodaile Rise. He
-must have been dead for days, but there was no difficulty in
-identifying the Abbé, for the frozen element in which he
-was wrapped had kept off the very taint of death, and
-preserved him, to use their own language, “in uncommon
-fettle, to be sure!” Except the Marquise, I doubt if any
-one regretted him, and yet it seemed a strange and piteous
-fate for the gifted scholar, the able churchman, the
-polished courtier, thus to perish by breaking his neck off a
-Yorkshire mare on a Yorkshire moor.</p>
-
-<p>“Men are so different!” observed Cerise, as she and
-George discussed the Abbé’s death, and, indeed, his
-character, walking together through the park, after the
-snow was gone, in the soft air of a mild winter’s day,
-nowhere so calm and peaceful as in our English climate.</p>
-
-<p>“And women, too,” replied George, looking fondly in
-the dear face he had loved all his life, and thinking that
-her like could only be found amongst the angels in heaven.</p>
-
-<p>Cerise shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>“You know nothing about us,” said she. “My own,
-how blind you must have been when you went away and
-left me nothing of your cruel self but a riding-glove.”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed, no doubt well pleased.</p>
-
-<p>“It was you, then, who had taken it? I looked for it
-everywhere, and was forced to go away without it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You did not look <i>here</i>,” she answered, and warm from
-the whitest bosom in the world she drew the missing glove
-that had lain there ever since the night he left her.</p>
-
-<p>“George,” she added, and the love-light in her eyes
-betrayed her feelings no less than the low, soft accents of
-her voice, “you know now that I prize your little finger
-more than all the rest of the world. I never saw another
-face than yours that I cared twice to look upon, and it is
-my happiness, my pride, to think that I was never loved by
-any man on earth but <i>you</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>She raised her head and looked around in triumph while
-she spoke. Her eye, resting on the church of the distant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_534"></a>[534]</span>
-village, caught a gleam of white from a newly-raised tomb-stone
-amongst its graves. An old man wrapping up his
-tools was in the act of leaving that stone, for he had finished
-his task. It was but to cut the following inscription:—</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Florian de St. Croix.</span><br />
-✚<br />
-R. I. P.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> Au petit couvert.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> A national banking scheme was about this period proposed to the
-Regent of France by a financial speculator of Scottish extraction named
-Law.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> The progeny of a white and a Quadroon, sometimes called an
-Octoroon.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> A witch.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> Evil eye.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> Runaway negroes who join in bands and live by plunder in the woods.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">UNWIN BROTHERS, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter titlepage" style="width: 300px;">
-<img src="images/monogram.jpg" width="300" height="400" alt="Author's monogram: GJWM" />
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CERISE***</p>
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