THE SECRET PASSAGE
The fire had already smouldered down,
and my companion blew out the lamp, so that we had
not taken ten paces before we had lost sight of the
ill-omened cottage, in which I had received so singular
a welcome upon my home-coming. The wind had
softened down, but a fine rain, cold and clammy, came
drifting up from the sea. Had I been left to
myself I should have found myself as much at a loss
as I had been when I first landed; but my companion
walked with a brisk and assured step, so that it was
evident that he guided himself by landmarks which were
invisible to me. For my part, wet and miserable,
with my forlorn bundle under my arm, and my nerves
all jangled by my terrible experiences, I trudged in
silence by his side, turning over in my mind all that
had occurred to me. Young as I was, I had heard
much political discussion amongst my elders in England,
and the state of affairs in France was perfectly familiar
to me. I was aware that the recent elevation
of Buonaparte to the throne had enraged the small
but formidable section of Jacobins and extreme Republicans,
who saw that all their efforts to abolish a kingdom
had only ended in transforming it into an empire.
It was, indeed, a pitiable result of their frenzied
strivings that a crown with eight fleurs-de-lis
should be changed into a higher crown surmounted by
a cross and ball. On the other hand, the followers
of the Bourbons, in whose company I had spent my youth,
were equally disappointed at the manner in which the
mass of the French people hailed this final step in
the return from chaos to order. Contradictory
as were their motives, the more violent spirits of
both parties were united in their hatred to Napoleon,
and in their fierce determination to get rid of him
by any means. Hence a series of conspiracies,
most of them with their base in England; and hence
also a large use of spies and informers upon the part
of Fouche and of Savary, upon whom the responsibility
of the safety of the Emperor lay. A strange
chance had landed me upon the French coast at the
very same time as a murderous conspirator, and had
afterwards enabled me to see the weapons with which
the police contrived to thwart and outwit him and
his associates. When I looked back upon my series
of adventures, my wanderings in the salt-marsh, my
entrance into the cottage, my discovery of the papers,
my capture by the conspirators, the long period of
suspense with Toussac’s dreadful thumb upon my
chin, and finally the moving scenes which I had witnessed the
killing of the hound, the capture of Lesage, and the
arrival of the soldiers I could not wonder
that my nerves were overwrought, and that I surprised
myself in little convulsive gestures, like those of
a frightened child.
The chief thought which now filled
my mind was what my relations were with this dangerous
man who walked by my side. His conduct and bearing
had filled me with abhorrence. I had seen the
depth of cunning with which he had duped and betrayed
his companions, and I had read in his lean smiling
face the cold deliberate cruelty of his nature, as
he stood, pistol in hand, over the whimpering coward
whom he had outwitted. Yet I could not deny that
when, through my own foolish curiosity, I had placed
myself in a most hopeless position, it was he who had
braved the wrath of the formidable Toussac in order
to extricate me. It was evident also that he
might have made his achievement more striking by delivering
up two prisoners instead of one to the troopers.
It is true that I was not a conspirator, but I might
have found it difficult to prove it. So inconsistent
did such conduct seem in this little yellow flint-stone
of a man that, after walking a mile or two in silence,
I asked him suddenly what the meaning of it might
be.
I heard a dry chuckle in the darkness,
as if he were amused by the abruptness and directness
of my question.
’You are a most amusing person,
Monsieur Monsieur let me see,
what did you say your name was?’
‘De Laval.’
’Ah, quite so, Monsieur de Laval.
You have the impetuosity and the ingenuousness of
youth. You want to know what is up a chimney,
you jump up the chimney. You want to know the
reason of a thing, and you blurt out a question.
I have been in the habit of living among people who
keep their thoughts to themselves, and I find you very
refreshing.’
’Whatever the motives of your
conduct, there is no doubt that you saved my life,’
said I. ‘I am much obliged to you for your
intercession.’ It is the most difficult
thing in the world to express gratitude to a person
who fills you with abhorrence, and I fear that my halting
speech was another instance of that ingenuousness
of which he accused me.
‘I can do without your thanks,’
said he coldly. ’You are perfectly right
when you think that if it had suited my purpose I should
have let you perish, and I am perfectly right when
I think that if it were not that you are under an
obligation you would fail to see my hand if I stretched
it out to you just as that overgrown puppy Lasalle
did. It is very honourable, he thinks, to serve
the Emperor upon the field of battle, and to risk
life in his behalf, but when it comes to living amidst
danger as I have done, consorting with desperate men,
and knowing well that the least slip would mean death,
why then one is beneath the notice of a fine clean-handed
gentleman. Why,’ he continued in a burst
of bitter passion, ’I have dared more, and endured
more, with Toussac and a few of his kidney for comrades,
than this Lasalle has done in all the childish cavalry
charges that ever he undertook. As to service,
all his Marshals put together have not rendered the
Emperor as pressing a service as I have done.
But I daresay it does not strike you in that light,
Monsieur Monsieur ’
‘De Laval.’
’Quite so it is curious
how that name escapes me. I daresay you take
the same view as Colonel Lasalle?’
‘It is not a question upon which
I can offer an opinion,’ said I. ‘I
only know that I owe my life to your intercession.’
I do not know what reply he might
have made to this evasion, but at that moment we heard
a couple of pistol shots and a distant shouting from
far away in the darkness. We stopped for a few
minutes, but all was silent once more.
‘They must have caught sight
of Toussac,’ said my companion. ’I
am afraid that he is too strong and too cunning to
be taken by them. I do not know what impression
he left upon you, but I can tell you that you will
go far to meet a more dangerous man.’
I answered that I would go far to
avoid meeting one, unless I had the means of defending
myself, and my companion’s dry chuckle showed
that he appreciated my feelings.
’Yet he is an absolutely honest
man, which is no very common thing in these days,’
said he. ’He is one of those who, at the
outbreak of the Revolution, embraced it with the whole
strength of his simple nature. He believed what
the writers and the speakers told him, and he was
convinced that, after a little disturbance and a few
necessary executions, France was to become a heaven
upon earth, the centre of peace and comfort and brotherly
love. A good many people got those fine ideas
into their heads, but the heads have mostly dropped
into the sawdust-basket by this time. Toussac
was true to them, and when instead of peace he found
war, instead of comfort a grinding poverty, and instead
of equality an Empire, it drove him mad. He became
the fierce creature you see, with the one idea of
devoting his huge body and giant’s strength
to the destruction of those who had interfered with
his ideal. He is fearless, persevering, and
implacable. I have no doubt at all that he will
kill me for the part that I have played to-night.’
It was in the calmest voice that my
companion uttered the remark, and it made me understand
that it was no boast when he said there was more courage
needed to carry on his unsavoury trade than to play
the part of a beau sabreur like Lasalle.
He paused a little, and then went on as if speaking
to himself.
‘Yes,’ said he, ’I
missed my chance. I certainly ought to have
shot him when he was struggling with the hound.
But if I had only wounded him he would have torn
me into bits like an over-boiled pullet, so perhaps
it is as well as it is.’
We had left the salt-marsh behind
us, and for some time I had felt the soft springy
turf of the downland beneath my feet, and our path
had risen and dipped over the curves of the low coast
hills. In spite of the darkness my companion
walked with great assurance, never hesitating for
an instant, and keeping up a stiff pace which was welcome
to me in my sodden and benumbed condition. I
had been so young when I left my native place that
it is doubtful whether, even in daylight, I should
have recognised the countryside, but now in the darkness,
half stupefied by my adventures, I could not form
the least idea as to where we were or what we were
making for. A certain recklessness had taken
possession of me, and I cared little where I went
as long as I could gain the rest and shelter of which
I stood in need.
I do not know how long we had walked;
I only know that I had dozed and woke and dozed again
whilst still automatically keeping pace with my comrade,
when I was at last aroused by his coming to a dead
stop. The rain had ceased, and although the moon
was still obscured, the heavens had cleared somewhat,
and I could see for a little distance in every direction.
A huge white basin gaped in front of us, and I made
out that it was a deserted chalk quarry, with brambles
and ferns growing thickly all round the edges.
My companion, after a stealthy glance round to make
sure that no one was observing us, picked his way amongst
the scattered clumps of bushes until he reached the
wall of chalk. This he skirted for some distance,
squeezing between the cliff and the brambles until
he came at last to a spot where all further progress
appeared to be impossible.
‘Can you see a light behind us?’ asked
my companion.
I turned round and looked carefully
in every direction, but was unable to see one.
‘Never mind,’ said he.
‘You go first, and I will follow.’
In some way during the instant that
my back had been turned he had swung aside or plucked
out the tangle of bush which had barred our way.
When I turned there was a square dark opening in
the white glimmering wall in front of us.
‘It is small at the entrance,
but it grows larger further in,’ said he.
I hesitated for an instant.
Whither was it that this strange man was leading me?
Did he live in a cave like a wild beast, or was this
some trap into which he was luring me? The moon
shone out at the instant, and in its silver light
this black, silent porthole looked inexpressibly cheerless
and menacing.
‘You have gone rather far to
turn back, my good friend,’ said my companion.
’You must either trust me altogether or not
trust me at all.’
‘I am at your disposal.’
‘Pass in then, and I shall follow.’
I crept into the narrow passage, which
was so low that I had to crawl down it upon my hands
and knees. Craning my neck round, I could see
the black angular silhouette of my companion as he
came after me. He paused at the entrance, and
then, with a rustling of branches and snapping of
twigs, the faint light was suddenly shut off from outside,
and we were left in pitchy darkness. I heard
the scraping of his knees as he crawled up behind
me.
‘Go on until you come to a step
down,’ said he. ’We shall have more
room there, and we can strike a light.’
The ceiling was so low that by arching
my back I could easily strike it, and my elbows touched
the wall upon either side. In those days I was
slim and lithe, however, so that I found no difficulty
in making my way onwards until, at the end of a hundred
paces, or it may have been a hundred and fifty, I
felt with my hands that there was a dip in front of
me. Down this I clambered, and was instantly
conscious from the purer air that I was in some larger
cavity. I heard the snapping of my companion’s
flint, and the red glow of the tinder paper leaped
suddenly into the clear yellow flame of the taper.
At first I could only see that stern, emaciated face,
like some grotesque carving in walnut wood, with the
ceaseless fishlike vibration of the muscles of his
jaw. The light beat full upon it, and it stood
strangely out with a dim halo round it in the darkness.
Then he raised the taper and swept it slowly round
at arm’s length so as to illuminate the place
in which we stood.
I found that we were in a subterranean
tunnel, which appeared to extend into the bowels of
the earth. It was so high that I could stand
erect with ease, and the old lichen-blotched stones
which lined the walls told of its great age.
At the spot where we stood the ceiling had fallen
in and the original passage been blocked, but a cutting
had been made from this point through the chalk to
form the narrow burrow along which we had come.
This cutting appeared to be quite recent, for a mound
of debris and some trenching tools were still
lying in the passage. My companion, taper in
hand, started off down the tunnel, and I followed
at his heels, stepping over the great stones which
had fallen from the roof or the walls, and now obstructed
the path.
‘Well,’ said he, grinning
at me over his shoulder, ’have you ever seen
anything like this in England?’
‘Never,’ I answered.
’These are the precautions and
devices which men adopted in rough days long ago.
Now that rough days have come again, they are very
useful to those who know of such places.’
‘Whither does it lead, then?’ I asked.
‘To this,’ said he, stopping
before an old wooden door, powerfully clamped with
iron. He fumbled with the metal-work, keeping
himself between me and it, so that I could not see
what he was doing. There was a sharp snick,
and the door revolved slowly upon its hinges.
Within there was a steep flight of time-worn steps
leading upwards. He motioned me on, and closed
the door behind us. At the head of the stair
there was a second wooden gate, which he opened in
a similar manner.
I had been dazed before ever I came
into the chalk pit, but now, at this succession of
incidents, I began to rub my eyes and ask myself whether
this was young Louis de Laval, late of Ashford, in
Kent, or whether it was some dream of the adventures
of a hero of Pigault Lebrun. These massive moss-grown
arches and mighty iron-clamped doors were, indeed,
like the dim shadowy background of a vision; but the
guttering taper, my sodden bundle, and all the sordid
details of my disarranged toilet assured me only too
clearly of their reality. Above all, the swift,
brisk, business-like manner of my companion, and his
occasional abrupt remarks, brought my fancies back
to the ground once more. He held the door open
for me now, and closed it again when I had passed through.
We found ourselves in a long vaulted
corridor, with a stone-flagged floor, and a dim oil
lamp burning at the further end. Two iron-barred
windows showed that we had come above the earth’s
surface once more. Down this corridor we passed,
and then through several passages and up a short winding
stair. At the head of it was an open door, which
led into a small but comfortable bedroom.
‘I presume that this will satisfy
your wants for to-night,’ said he.
I asked for nothing better than to
throw myself down, damp clothes and all, upon that
snowy coverlet; but for the instant my curiosity overcame
my fatigue.
‘I am much indebted to you,
sir,’ said I. ’Perhaps you will add
to your favours by letting me know where I am.’
’You are in my house, and that
must suffice you for to-night. In the morning
we shall go further into the matter.’ He
rang a small bell, and a gaunt shock-headed country
man-servant came running at the call.
‘Your mistress has retired, I suppose?’
‘Yes, sir, a good two hours ago.’
‘Very good. I shall call
you myself in the morning.’ He closed my
door, and the echo of his steps seemed hardly to have
died from my ears before I had sunk into that deep
and dreamless sleep which only youth and fatigue can
give.