The next morning my exaltation had
gone. I woke a prey to despondency and sickness
of soul. Not only did difficulty loom large, and
failure seem inevitable, but a disgust for all that
surrounded me seized on my mind, displacing the zest
of adventure and the excitement of enterprise.
But let me not set my virtue too high. It is better
to be plain. Old maxims of morality, and a standard
of right acknowledged by all but observed by none,
have little power over a young man’s hot blood;
to be stirred to indignation, he must see the wrong
threaten one he respects, touch one he loves, or menace
his own honour and pride. I had supported the
scandals of this Court, of which I made a humble part,
with shrugs, smiles, and acid jests; I had felt no
dislike for the chief actors, and no horror at the
things they did or attempted; nay, for one of them,
who might seem to sum up in her own person the worst
of all that was to be urged against King and Court,
I had cherished a desperate love that bred even in
death an obstinate and longing memory. Now a change
had come over me; I seemed to see no longer through
my own careless eyes, but with the shamed and terrified
vision of the girl who, cast into this furnace, caught
at my hand as offering her the sole chance to pass
unscathed through the fire. They were using her
in their schemes, she was to be sacrificed; first
she had been chosen as the lure with which to draw
forth Monmouth’s ambitions from their lair, and
reveal them to the spying eyes of York and his tool
Carford; if that plan were changed now, she would
be no better for the change. The King would and
could refuse this M. de Perrencourt (I laughed bitterly
as I muttered his name) nothing, however great; without
a thought he would fling the girl to him, if the all-powerful
finger were raised to ask for her. Charles would
think himself well paid by his brother king’s
complaisance towards his own inclination. Doubtless
there were great bargains of policy a-making here
in the Castle, and the nature of them I made shift
to guess. What was it to throw in a trifle on
either side, barter Barbara Quinton against the French
lady, and content two Princes at a price so low as
the dishonour of two ladies? That was the game;
otherwise, whence came M. de Perrencourt’s court
and Monmouth’s deference? The King saw
eye to eye with M. de Perrencourt, and the King’s
son did not venture to thwart him. What matter
that men spoke of other loves which the French King
had? The gallants of Paris might think us in England
rude and ignorant, but at least we had learnt that
a large heart was a prerogative of royalty which even
the Parliament dared not question. With a new
loathing I loathed it all, for it seemed now to lay
aside its trappings of pomp and brilliancy, of jest
and wit, and display itself before me in ugly nakedness,
all unashamed. In sudden frenzy I sat up in my
bed, crying, “Heaven will find a way!”
For surely heaven could find one, where the devil
found so many! Ah, righteous wert thou, Simon
Dale, so soon as unrighteousness hurt thee! But
Phineas Tate might have preached until the end of
time.
Earlier than usual by an hour Jonah
Wall came up from the town where he was lodged, but
he found me up and dressed, eager to act, ready for
what might chance. I had seen little of the fellow
lately, calling on him for necessary services only,
and ridding myself of his sombre company as quickly
as I could. Yet I looked on him to-day with more
consideration; his was a repulsive form of righteousness,
grim and gloomy, but it was righteousness, or seemed
such to me against the background of iniquity which
threw it up in strong relief. I spoke to him kindly,
but taking no heed of my advances he came straight
up to me and said brusquely: “The woman
who came to your lodging in London is here in Dover.
She bids you be silent and come quickly. I can
lead you.”
I started and stared at him.
I had set “Finis” to that chapter; was
fate minded to overrule me and write more? Strange
also that Jonah Wall should play Mercury!
“She here in Dover? For
what?” I asked as calmly as I could.
“I don’t doubt, for sin,” he answered
uncompromisingly.
“Yet you can lead me to her house?” said
I with a smile.
“I can,” said he, in sour disregard of
my hinted banter.
“I won’t go,” I declared.
“The matter concerns you, she said, and might
concern another.”
It was early, the Court would not
be moving for two hours yet. I could go and come,
and thereby lose no opportunity. Curiosity led
me on, and with it the attraction which still draws
us to those we have loved, though the love be gone
and more pain than pleasure wait on our visiting.
In ten minutes I was following Jonah down the cliff,
and plunged thence into a narrow street that ran curling
and curving towards the sea. Jonah held on quickly,
and without hesitation, until we reached a confined
alley, and came to a halt before a mean house.
“She’s here,” said
Jonah, pointing to the door and twisting his face as
though he was swallowing something nauseous.
I could not doubt of her presence,
for I heard her voice singing gaily from within.
My heart beat quick, and I had above half a mind not
to enter. But she had seen us, and herself flung
the door open wide. She lodged on the ground
floor; and, in obedience to her beckoning finger, I
entered a small room. Lodging was hard to be had
in Dover now, and the apartment served her (as the
bed, carelessly covered with a curtain, showed) for
sleeping and living. I did not notice what became
of Jonah, but sat down, puzzled and awkward, in a
crazy chair.
“What brings you here?”
I blurted out, fixing my eyes on her, as she stood
opposite to me, smiling and swaying to and fro a little,
with her hands on her hips.
“Even what brings you.
My business,” she answered. “If you
ask more, the King’s invitation. Does that
grieve you, Simon?”
“No, madame,” said I.
“A little, still a little, Simon?
Be consoled! The King invited me, but he hasn’t
come to see me. There lies my business. Why
hasn’t he come to see me? I hear certain
things, but my eyes, though they are counted good
if not large, can’t pierce the walls of the Castle
yonder, and my poor feet aren’t fit to pass
its threshold.”
“You needn’t grieve for that,” said
I sullenly.
“Yet some things I know.
As that a French lady is there. Of what appearance
is she, Simon?”
“She is very pretty, so far as I’ve looked
at her.”
“Ah, and you’ve a discriminating
glance, haven’t you? Will she stay long?”
“They say Madame will be here
for ten or fourteen days yet.”
“And the French lady goes when Madame goes?”
“I don’t know as to that.”
“Why, nor I neither.”
She paused an instant. “You don’t
love Lord Carford?” Her question came abruptly
and unlooked for.
“I don’t know your meaning.”
What concern had Carford with the French lady?
“I think you are in the way
to learn it. Love makes men quick, doesn’t
it? Yes, since you ask (your eyes asked), why,
I’ll confess that I’m a little sorry that
you fall in love again. But that by the way.
Simon, neither do I love this French lady.”
Had it not been for that morning’s
mood of mine, she would have won on me again, and
all my resolutions gone for naught. But she, not
knowing the working of my mind, took no pains to hide
or to soften what repelled me in her. I had seen
it before, and yet loved; to her it would seem strange
that because a man saw, he should not love. I
found myself sorry for her, with a new and pitiful
grief, but passion did not rise in me. And concerning
my pity I held my tongue; she would have only wonder
and mockery for it. But I think she was vexed
to see me so unmoved; it irks a woman to lose a man,
however little she may have prized him when he was
her own. Nor do I mean to say that we are different
from their sex in that; it is, I take it, nature in
woman and man alike.
“At least we’re friends,
Simon,” she said with a laugh. “And
at least we’re Protestants.” She
laughed again. I looked up with a questioning
glance. “And at least we both hate the French,”
she continued.
“It’s true; I have no
love for them. What then? What can we do?”
She looked round cautiously, and,
coming a little nearer to me, whispered:
“Late last night I had a visitor,
one who doesn’t love me greatly. What does
that matter? We row now in the same boat.
I speak of the Duke of Buckingham.”
“He is reconciled to my Lord
Arlington by Madame’s good offices,” said
I. For so the story ran in the Castle.
“Why, yes, he’s reconciled
to Arlington as the dog to the cat when their master
is by. Now there’s a thing that the Duke
suspects; and there’s another thing that he
knows. He suspects that this treaty touches more
than war with the Dutch; though that I hate, for war
swallows the King’s money like a well.”
“Some passes the mouth of the
well, if report speaks true,” I observed.
“Peace, peace! Simon, the treaty touches
more.”
“A man need not be Duke nor Minister to suspect
that,” said I.
“Ah, you suspect? The King’s religion?”
she whispered.
I nodded; the secret was no surprise
to me, though I had not known whether Buckingham were
in it.
“And what does the Duke of Buckingham know?”
I asked.
“Why, that the King sometimes
listens to a woman’s counsel,” said she,
nodding her head and smiling very wisely.
“Prodigious sagacity!” I cried. “You
told him that, may be?”
“Indeed, he had learnt it before
my day, Master Simon. Therefore, should the King
turn Catholic, he will be a better Catholic for the
society of a Catholic lady. Now this Madame how
do you name her?”
“Mlle. de Querouaille?”
“Aye. She is a most devout
Catholic. Indeed, her devotion to her religion
knows no bounds. It’s like mine to the King.
Don’t frown, Simon. Loyalty is a virtue.”
“And piety also, by the same
rule, and in the same unstinted measure?” I
asked bitterly.
“Beyond doubt, sir. But
the French King has sent word from Calais ”
“Oh, from Calais! The Duke
revealed that to you?” I asked with a smile I
could not smother. There was a limit then to the
Duke’s confidence in his ally; for the Duke
had been at Paris and could be no stranger to M. de
Perrencourt.
“Yes, he told me all. The
King of France has sent word from Calais, where he
awaits the signing of the treaty, that the loss of
this Madame Querouaille would rob his Court of beauty,
and he cannot be so bereft. And Madame, the Duke
says, swears she can’t be robbed of her fairest
Maid of Honour (’tis a good name that, on my
life) and left desolate. But Madame has seen
one who might make up the loss, and the King of France,
having studied the lady’s picture, thinks the
same. In fine, Simon, our King feels that he
can’t be a good Catholic without the counsels
of Madame Querouaille, and the French King feels that
he must by all means convert and save so fair a lady
as is the name on your tongue, nay, is
it in your heart, Simon?”
“I know whom you mean,”
I answered, for her revelation came to no more than
what I had scented out for myself. “But
what says Buckingham to this?”
“Why, that the King mustn’t
have his way lest he should thereby be confirmed in
his Popish inclinations. The Duke is Protestant,
as you are and as I am, so please you.”
“Can he hinder it?”
“Aye, if he can hinder the French
King from having his way. And for this purpose
his Grace has need of certain things.”
“Do you carry a message from him to me?”
“I did but say that I knew a
gentleman who might supply his needs. They are
four; a heart, a head, a hand, and perhaps a sword.”
“All men have them, then.”
“The first true, the second
long, the third strong, and the fourth ready.”
“I fear then that I haven’t all of them.”
“And for reward ”
“I know. His life, if he can come off with
it.”
Nell burst out laughing.
“He didn’t say that, but
it may well reckon up to much that figure,” she
admitted. “You’ll think of it, Simon?”
“Think of it? I! Not I!”
“You won’t?”
“Or I mightn’t attempt it.”
“Ah! You will attempt it?”
“Of a certainty.”
“You’re very ready. Is it all honesty?”
“Is ever anything all honesty,
madame saving your devotion to the
King?”
“And the French lady’s
to her religion?” laughed Nell. “On
my soul, I think the picture that the King of France
saw was a fair one. Have you looked on it, Simon?”
“On my life I don’t love her.”
“On my life you will.”
“You seek to stop me by that prophecy?”
“I don’t care whom you
love,” said she. Then her face broke into
smiles. “What liars women are!” she
cried. “Yes, I do care; not enough to grow
wrinkled, but enough to wish I hadn’t grown half
a lady and could ”
“You stop?”
“Could could could slap
your face, Simon.”
“It would be a light infliction
after breaking a man’s heart,” said I,
turning my cheek to her and beckoning with my hand.
“You should have a revenge on
my face; not in kind, but in kindness. I can’t
strike a man who won’t hit back.”
She laughed at me with all her old enticing gaiety.
I had almost sealed the bargain; she
was so roguish and so pretty. Had we met first
then, it is very likely she would have made the offer,
and very certain that I should have taken it.
But there had been other days; I sighed.
“I loved you too well once to
kiss you now, mistress,” said I.
“You’re mighty strange
at times, Simon,” said she, sighing also, and
lifting her brows. “Now, I’d as lief
kiss a man I had loved as any other.”
“Or slap his face?”
“If I’d never cared to
kiss, I’d never care for the other either.
You rise?”
“Why, yes. I have my commission, haven’t
I?”
“I give you this one also, and yet you keep
it?”
“Is that slight not yet forgiven?”
“All is forgiven and all is forgotten nearly,
Simon.”
At this instant and since
man is human, woman persistent, and courtesy imperative,
I did not quarrel with the interruption a
sound came from the room above, strange in a house
where Nell lived (if she will pardon so much candour),
but oddly familiar to me. I held up my hand and
listened. Nell’s rippling laugh broke in.
“Plague on him!” she cried.
“Yes, he’s here. Of a truth he’s
resolute to convert me, and the fool amuses me.”
“Phineas Tate!” I exclaimed,
amazed; for beyond doubt his was the voice. I
could tell his intonation of a penitential psalm among
a thousand. I had heard it in no other key.
“You didn’t know?
Yet that other fool, your servant, is always with him.
They’ve been closeted together for two hours
at a time.”
“Psalm-singing?”
“Now and again. They’re often quiet
too.”
“He preaches to you?”
“Only a little; when we chance
to meet at the door he gives me a curse and promises
a blessing; no more.”
“It’s very little to come to Dover for.”
“You would have come farther for less of my
company once, sir.”
It was true, but it did not solve
my wonder at the presence of Phineas Tate. What
brought the fellow? Had he too sniffed out something
of what was afoot and come to fight for his religion,
even as Louise de Querouaille fought for hers, though
in a most different fashion?
I had reached the door of the room
and was in the passage. Nell came to the threshold
and stood there smiling. I had asked no more questions
and made no conditions; I knew that Buckingham must
not show himself in the matter, and that all was left
to me, heart, head, hand, sword, and also that same
reward, if I were so lucky as to come by it. I
waited for a moment, half expecting that Phineas,
hearing my voice, would show himself, but he did not
appear. Nell waved her hand to me; I bowed and
took my leave, turning my steps back towards the Castle.
The Court would be awake, and whether on my own account
or for my new commission’s sake I must be there.
I had not mounted far before I heard
a puffing and blowing behind. The sound proved
to come from Jonah Wall, who was toiling after me,
laden with a large basket. I had no eagerness
for Jonah’s society, but rejoiced to see the
basket; for my private store of food and wine had
run low, and if a man is to find out what he wants
to know, it is well for him to have a pasty and a
bottle ready for those who can help him.
“What have you there?”
I called, waiting for him to overtake me.
He explained that he had been making
purchases in the town and I praised his zeal.
Then I asked him suddenly:
“And have you visited your friend Mr Tate?”
As I live, the fellow went suddenly
pale, and the bottles clinked in his basket from the
shaking of his hand. Yet I spoke mildly enough.
“I I have seen him
but once or twice, sir, since I learnt that he was
in the town. I thought you did not wish me to
see him.”
“Nay, you can see him as much
as you like, as long as I don’t,” I answered
in a careless tone, but keeping an attentive eye on
Jonah. His perturbation seemed strange.
If Phineas’ business were only the conversion
of Mistress Gwyn, what reason had Jonah Wall to go
white as Dover cliffs over it?
We came to the Castle and I dismissed
him, bidding him stow his load safely in my quarters.
Then I repaired to the Duke of Monmouth’s apartments,
wondering in what mood I should find him after last
night’s rebuff. Little did he think that
I had been a witness of it. I entered his room;
he was sitting in his chair, with him was Carford.
The Duke’s face was as glum and his air as ill-tempered
as I could wish. Carford’s manner was subdued,
calm, and sympathetic. They were talking earnestly
as I entered but ceased their conversation at once.
I offered my services.
“I have no need of you this
morning, Simon,” answered the Duke. “I’m
engaged with Lord Carford.”
I retired. But of a truth that
morning every one in the Castle was engaged with someone
else. At every turn I came on couples in anxious
consultation. The approach of an intruder brought
immediate silence, the barest civility delayed him,
his departure was received gladly and was signal for
renewed consultation. Well, the King sets the
mode, and the King, I heard, was closeted with Madame
and the Duke of York.
But not with M. de Perrencourt.
There was a hundred feet of the wall, with a guard
at one end and a guard at the other, and mid-way between
them a solitary figure stood looking down on Dover
town and thence out to sea. In an instant I recognised
him, and a great desire came over me to speak to him.
He was the foremost man alive in that day, and I longed
to speak with him. To have known the great is
to have tasted the true flavour of your times.
But how to pass the sentries? Their presence
meant that M. de Perrencourt desired privacy.
I stepped up to one and offered to pass. He barred
the way.
“But I’m in the service
of his Grace the Duke of Monmouth,” I expostulated.
“If you were in the service
of the devil himself you couldn’t pass here
without the King’s order,” retorted the
fellow.
“Won’t his head serve
as well as his order?” I asked, slipping a crown
into his hand. “Come, I’ve a message
from his Grace for the French gentleman. Yes,
it’s private. Deuce take it, do fathers
always know of their sons’ doings?”
“No, nor sons all their father’s
sometimes,” he chuckled. “Along with
you quick, and run if you hear me whistle; it will
mean my officer is coming.”
I was alone in the sacred space with
M. de Perrencourt. I assumed an easy air and
sauntered along, till I was within a few yards of him.
Hearing my step then, he looked round with a start
and asked peremptorily,
“What’s your desire, sir?”
By an avowal of himself, even by quoting
the King’s order, he could banish me. But
if his cue were concealment and ignorance of the order,
why, I might indulge my curiosity.
“Like your own, sir,”
I replied courteously, “a breath of fresh air
and a sight of the sea.”
He frowned a little, but I gave him no time to speak.
“That fellow though,”
I pursued, “gave me to understand that none might
pass; yet the King is not here, is he?”
“Then how did you pass, sir?”
asked M. de Perrencourt, ignoring my last question.
“Why, with a lie, sir,”
I answered. “I said I had a message for
you from the Duke of Monmouth, and the fool believed
me. But we gentlemen in attendance must stand
by one another. You’ll not betray me?
Your word on it?”
A slow smile broke across his face.
“No, I’ll not betray you,” said
he. “You speak French well, sir.”
“So M. de Fontelles, whom I
met at Canterbury, told me. Do you chance to
know him, sir?”
M. de Perrencourt did not start now;
I should have been disappointed if he had.
“Very well,” he answered.
“If you’re his friend, you’re mine.”
He held out his hand.
“I take it on false pretences,”
said I with a laugh, as I shook it. “For
we came near to quarrelling, M. de Fontelles and I.”
“Ah, on what point?”
“A nothing, sir.”
“Nay, but tell me.”
“Indeed I will not, if you’ll pardon me.”
“Sir, I wish to know. I
ins I beg.” A stare from me had
stopped the “insist” when it was half-way
through his lips. On my soul, he flushed!
I tell my children sometimes how I made him flush;
the thing was not done often. Yet his confusion
was but momentary, and suddenly, I know not how, I
in my turn became abashed with the cold stare of his
eyes, and when he asked me my name, I answered baldly,
with never a bow and never a flourish, “Simon
Dale.”
“I have heard your name,”
said he gravely. Then he turned round and began
looking at the sea again.
Now, had he been wearing his own clothes
(if I may so say) this conduct would have been appropriate
enough; it would have been a dismissal and I should
have passed on my way. But a man should be consistent
in his disguises, and from M. de Perrencourt, gentleman-in-waiting,
the behaviour was mighty uncivil. Yet my revenge
must be indirect.
“Is it true, sir,” I asked,
coming close to him, “that the King of France
is yonder at Calais? So it’s said.”
“I believe it to be true,” answered M.
de Perrencourt.
“I wish he had come over,”
I cried. “I should love to see him, for
they say he’s a very proper man, although he’s
somewhat short.”
M. de Perrencourt did not turn his
head, but again I saw his cheek flush. To speak
of his low stature was, I had heard Monmouth say, to
commit the most dire offence in King Louis’ eyes.
“Now, how tall is the King,
sir?” I asked. “Is he tall as you,
sir?”
M. de Perrencourt was still silent.
To tell the truth, I began to be a little uneasy;
there were cells under the Castle, and I had need to
be at large for the coming few days.
“For,” said I, “they tell such lies
concerning princes.”
Now he turned towards me, saying,
“There you’re right, sir.
The King of France, is of middle size, about my own
height.”
For the life of me I could not resist
it. I said nothing with my tongue, but for a
moment I allowed my eyes to say, “But then you’re
short, sir.” He understood, and for the
third time he flushed.
“I thought as much,” said
I, and with a bow I began to walk on.
But, as ill-luck would have it, I
was not to come clear off from my indiscretion.
In a moment I should have been out of sight. But
as I started I saw a gentleman pass the guard, who
stood at the salute. It was the King; escape
was impossible. He walked straight up to me, bowing
carelessly in response to M. de Perrencourt’s
deferential inclination of his person.
“How come you here, Mr Dale?”
he asked abruptly. “The guard tells me
that he informed you of my orders and that you insisted
on passing.”
M. de Perrencourt felt that his turn
was come; he stood there smiling. I found nothing
to say; if I repeated my fiction of a message, the
French gentleman, justly enraged, would betray me.
“M. de Perrencourt seemed lonely,
sir,” I answered at last.
“A little loneliness hurts no
man,” said the King. He took out his tablets
and began to write. When he was done, he gave
me the message, adding, “Read it.”
I read, “Mr Simon Dale will remain under arrest
in his own apartment for twenty-four hours, and will
not leave it except by the express command of the
King.” I made a wry face.
“If the Duke of Monmouth wants me ”
I began.
“He’ll have to do without
you, Mr Dale,” interrupted the King. “Come,
M. de Perrencourt, will you give me your arm?”
And off he went on the French gentleman’s arm,
leaving me most utterly abashed, and cursing the curiosity
that had brought me to this trouble.
“So much for the Duke of Buckingham’s
‘long head,’” said I to myself ruefully,
as I made my way towards the Constable’s Tower,
in which his Grace was lodged, and where I had my
small quarters.
Indeed, I might well feel a fool;
for the next twenty-four hours, during which I was
to be a prisoner, would in all likelihood see the issue
in which I was pledged to bear a part. Now I
could do nothing. Yet at least I must send speedy
word to the town that I was no longer to be looked
to for any help, and when I reached my room I called
loudly for Jonah Wall. It was but the middle
of the day, yet he was not to be seen. I walked
to the door and found, not Jonah, but a guard on duty.
“What are you doing here?”
“Seeing that you stay here, sir,” he answered,
with a grin.
Then the King was very anxious that
I should obey his orders, and had lost no time in
ensuring my obedience; he was right to take his measures,
for, standing where I did, his orders would not have
restrained me. I was glad that he had set a guard
on me in lieu of asking my parole. For much as
I love sin, I hate temptation. Yet where was
Jonah Wall, and how could I send my message? I
flung myself on the bed in deep despondency.
A moment later the door opened, and Robert, Darrell’s
servant, entered.
“My master begs to know if you will sup with
him to-night, sir.”
“Thank him kindly,” said
I; “but if you ask that gentleman outside, Robert,
he’ll tell you that I must sup at home by the
King’s desire. I’m under arrest,
Robert.”
“My master will be grieved to
hear it, sir, and the more because he hoped that you
would bring some wine with you, for he has none, and
he has guests to sup with him.”
“Ah, an interested invitation!
How did Mr Darrell know that I had wine?”
“Your servant Jonah spoke of
it to me, sir, and said that you would be glad to
send my master some.”
“Jonah is liberal! But
I’m glad, and assure Mr Darrell of it. Where
is my rascal?”
“I saw him leave the Castle
about an hour ago; just after he spoke to me about
the wine.”
“Curse him! I wanted him.
Well, take the wine. There are six bottles that
he got to-day.”
“There is French wine here,
sir, and Spanish. May I take either?”
“Take the French in God’s
name. I don’t want that. I’ve
had enough of France. Stay, though, I believe
Mr Darrell likes the Spanish better.”
“Yes, sir; but his guests will like the French.”
“And who are these guests?”
Robert swelled with pride.
“I thought Jonah would have
told you, sir,” said he. “The King
is to sup with my master.”
“Then,” said I, “I’m
well excused. For no man knows better than the
King why I can’t come.”
The fellow took his bottles and went
off grinning. I, being left, fell again to cursing
myself for a fool, and in this occupation I passed
the hours of the afternoon.