COUSIN SIBYLLE
I could see in my uncle’s grim
face as he looked at us the keenest satisfaction contending
with surprise at this sign of our sudden reconciliation.
All trace of his recent anger seemed to have left
him as he addressed his daughter, but in spite of
his altered tone I noticed that her eyes looked defiance
and distrust.
‘I have some papers of importance
to look over,’ said he. ’For an hour
or so I shall be engaged. I can guess that Louis
would like to see the old place once again, and I
am sure that he could not have a better guide than
you, Sibylle, if you will take him over it.’
She raised no objection, and for my
part I was overjoyed at the proposal, as it gave me
an opportunity of learning more of this singular cousin
of mine, who had told me so much and yet seemed to
know so much more. What was the meaning of this
obscure warning which she had given me against her
father, and why was she so frankly anxious to know
about my love affairs? These were the two questions
which pressed for an answer. So out we went
together into the sweet coast-land air, the sweeter
for the gale of the night before, and we walked through
the old yew-lined paths, and out into the park, and
so round the castle, looking up at the gables, the
grey pinnacles, the oak-mullioned windows, the ancient
wing with its crenulated walls and its meurtrière
windows, the modern with its pleasant verandah and
veil of honeysuckle. And as she showed me each
fresh little detail, with a particularity which made
me understand how dear the place had become to her,
she would still keep offering her apologies for the
fact that she should be the hostess and I the visitor.
‘It is not against you but against
ourselves that I was bitter,’ said she, ’for
are we not the cuckoos who have taken a strange nest
and driven out those who built it? It makes
me blush to think that my father should invite you
to your own house.’
‘Perhaps we had been rooted
here too long,’ I answered. ’Perhaps
it is for our own good that we are driven out to carve
our own fortunes, as I intend to do.’
‘You say that you are going to the Emperor?’
‘Yes.’
‘You know that he is in camp near here?’
‘So I have heard.’
‘But your family is still proscribed?’
’I have done him no harm.
I will go boldly to him and ask him to admit me into
his service.’
‘Well,’ said she, ’there
are some who call him a usurper, and wish him all
evil; but for my own part I have never heard of anything
that he has said and done which was not great and
noble. But I had expected that you would be
quite an Englishman, Cousin Louis, and come over here
with your pockets full of Pitt’s guineas and
your heart of treason.’
‘I have met nothing but hospitality
from the English,’ I answered; ’but my
heart has always been French.’
‘But your father fought against us at Quiberon.’
‘Let each generation settle
its own quarrels,’ said I. ’I am
quite of your father’s opinion about that.’
‘Do not judge my father by his
words, but by his deeds,’ said she, with a warning
finger upraised; ’and, above all, Cousin Louis,
unless you wish to have my life upon your conscience,
never let him suspect that I have said a word to set
you on your guard.’
‘Your life!’ I gasped.
‘Oh, yes, he would not stick
at that!’ she cried. ’He killed my
mother. I do not say that he slaughtered her,
but I mean that his cold brutality broke her gentle
heart. Now perhaps you begin to understand why
I can talk of him in this fashion.’
As she spoke I could see the secret
broodings of years, the bitter resentments crushed
down in her silent soul, rising suddenly to flush
her dark cheeks and to gleam in her splendid eyes.
I realised at that moment that in that tall slim
figure there dwelt an unconquerable spirit.
’You must think that I speak
very freely to you, since I have only known you a
few hours, Cousin Louis,’ said she.
‘To whom should you speak freely
if not to your own relative?’
’It is true; and yet I never
expected that I should be on such terms with you.
I looked forward to your coming with dread and sorrow.
No doubt I showed something of my feelings when my
father brought you in.’
‘Indeed you did,’ I answered.
’I feared that my presence was unwelcome to
you.’
‘Most unwelcome, both for your
own sake and for mine,’ said she. ’For
your sake because I suspected, as I have told you,
that my father’s intentions might be unfriendly.
For mine ’
‘Why for yours?’ I asked
in surprise, for she had stopped in embarrassment.
’You have told me that your
heart is another’s. I may tell you that
my hand is also promised, and that my love has gone
with it.’
‘May all happiness attend it!’
said I. ’But why should this make my coming
unwelcome?’
‘That thick English air has
dimmed your wits, cousin,’ said she, shaking
her stately head at me. ’But I can speak
freely now that I know that this plan would be as
hateful to you as to me. You must know, then,
that if my father could have married us he would have
united all claims to the succession of Grosbois.
Then, come what might Bourbon or Buonaparte nothing
could shake his position.’
I thought of the solicitude which
he had shown over my toilet in the morning, his anxiety
that I should make a favourable impression, his displeasure
when she had been cold to me, and the smile upon his
face when he had seen us hand in hand.
‘I believe you are right!’ I cried.
‘Right! Of course I am right! Look
at him watching us now.’
We were walking on the edge of the
dried moat, and as I looked up there, sure enough,
was the little yellow face toned towards us in the
angle of one of the windows. Seeing that I was
watching him, he rose and waved his hand merrily.
‘Now you know why he saved your
life since you say that he saved it,’
said she. ’It would suit his plans best
that you should marry his daughter, and so he wished
you to live. But when once he understands that
that is impossible, why then, my poor Cousin Louis,
his only way of guarding against the return of the
de Lavals must lie in ensuring that there are none
to return.’
It was those words of hers, coupled
with that furtive yellow face still lurking at the
window, which made me realise the imminence of my danger.
No one in France had any reason to take an interest
in me. If I were to pass away there was no one
who could make inquiry I was absolutely
in his power. My memory told me what a ruthless
and dangerous man it was with whom I had to deal.
‘But,’ said I, ’he
must have known that your affections were already
engaged.’
‘He did,’ she answered;
’it was that which made me most uneasy of all.
I was afraid for you and afraid for myself, but, most
of all, I was afraid for Lucien. No man can
stand in the way of his plans.’
’Lucien! ’The name
was like a lightning flash upon a dark night.
I had heard of the vagaries of a woman’s love,
but was it possible that this spirited woman loved
that poor creature whom I had seen grovelling last
night in a frenzy of fear? But now I remembered
also where I had seen the name Sibylle. It was
upon the fly-leaf of his book. ’Lucien,
from Sibylle,’ was the inscription. I
recalled also that my uncle had said something to
him about his aspirations.
‘Lucien is hot-headed, and easily
carried away,’ said she. ’My father
has seen a great deal of him lately. They sit
for hours in his room, and Lucien will say nothing
of what passes between them. I fear that there
is something going forward which may lead to evil.
Lucien is a student rather than a man of the world,
but he has strong opinions about politics.’
I was at my wit’s ends what
to do, whether to be silent, or to tell her of the
terrible position in which her lover was placed; but,
even as I hesitated, she, with the quick intuition
of a woman, read the doubts which were in my mind.
‘You know something of him,’
she cried. ’I understood that he had gone
to Paris. For God’s sake tell me what you
know about him!’
‘His name is Lesage?’
‘Yes, yes. Lucien Lesage.’
‘I have I have seen him,’ I
stammered.
’You have seen him! And
you only arrived in France last night. Where
did you see him? What has happened to him?’
She gripped me by the wrist in her anxiety.
It was cruel to tell her, and yet
it seemed more cruel still to keep silent. I
looked round in my bewilderment, and there was my uncle
himself coming along over the close-cropped green lawn.
By his side, with a merry clashing of steel and jingling
of spurs, there walked a handsome young hussar the
same to whom the charge of the prisoner had been committed
upon the night before. Sibylle never hesitated
for an instant, but, with a set face and blazing eyes,
she swept towards them.
‘Father,’ said she, ‘what have you
done with Lucien?’
I saw his impassive face wince for
a moment before the passionate hatred and contempt
which he read in her eyes. ’We will discuss
this at some future time,’ said he.
‘I will know here and now,’
she cried. ’What have you done with Lucien?’
‘Gentlemen,’ said he,
turning to the young hussar and me,’ I am sorry
that we should intrude our little domestic differences
upon your attention. You will, I am sure, make
allowances, lieutenant, when I tell you that your
prisoner of last night was a very dear friend of my
daughter’s. Such family considerations
do not prevent me from doing my duty to the Emperor,
but they make that duty more painful than it would
otherwise be.’
‘You have my sympathy, mademoiselle,’
said the young hussar.
It was to him that my cousin had now turned.
‘Do I understand that you took him prisoner?’
she asked.
‘It was unfortunately my duty.’
‘From you I will get the truth. Whither
did you take him?’
‘To the Emperor’s camp.’
‘And why?’
’Ah, mademoiselle, it is not
for me to go into politics. My duties are but
to wield a sword, and sit a horse, and obey my orders.
Both these gentlemen will be my witnesses that I
received my instructions from Colonel Lasalle.’
‘But on what charge was he arrested?’
‘Tut, tut, child, we have had
enough of this!’ said my uncle harshly.
’If you insist upon knowing I will tell you once
and for all, that Monsieur Lucien Lesage has been
seized for being concerned in a plot against the life
of the Emperor, and that it was my privilege to denounce
the would-be assassin.’
‘To denounce him!’ cried
the girl. ’I know that it was you who set
him on, who encouraged him, who held him to it whenever
he tried to draw back. Oh, you villain! you
villain! What have I over done, what sin of
my ancestors am I expiating, that I should be compelled
to call such a man Father?’
My uncle shrugged his shoulders as
if to say that it was useless to argue with a woman’s
tantrums. The hussar and I made as if we would
stroll away, for it was embarrassing to stand listening
to such words, but in her fury she called to us to
stop and be witnesses against him. Never have
I seen such a recklessness of passion as blazed in
her dry wide-opened eyes.
‘You have deceived others, but
you have never deceived me,’ she cried.
’I know you as your own conscience knows you.
You may murder me, as you murdered my mother before
me, but you can never frighten me into being your
accomplice. You proclaimed yourself a Republican
that you might creep into a house and estate which
do not belong to you. And now you try to make
a friend of Buonaparte by betraying your old associates,
who still trust in you. And you have sent Lucien
to his death! But I know your plans, and my
Cousin Louis knows them also, and I can assure you
that there is just as much chance of his agreeing to
them as there is of my doing so. I’d rather
lie in my grave than be the wife of any man but Lucien.’
’If you had seen the pitiful
poltroon that he proved himself you would not say
so,’ said my uncle coolly. ’You are
not yourself at present, but when you return to your
right mind you will be ashamed of having made this
public exposure of your weakness. And now, lieutenant,
you have something to say.’
‘My message was to you, Monsieur
de Laval,’ said the young hussar, turning his
back contemptuously upon my uncle. ’The
Emperor has sent me to bring you to him at once at
the camp at Boulogne.’
My heart leapt at the thought of escaping from my
uncle.
‘I ask nothing better,’ I cried.
‘A horse and an escort are waiting at the gates.’
‘I am ready to start at this instant.’
‘Nay, there can be no such very
great hurry,’ said my uncle. ’Surely
you will wait for luncheon, Lieutenant Gerard.’
‘The Emperor’s commissions,
sir, are not carried out in such a manner,’
said the young hussar sternly. ’I have
already wasted too much time. We must be upon
our way in five minutes.’
My uncle placed his hand upon my arm
and led me slowly towards the gateway, through which
my cousin Sibylle had already passed.
’There is one matter that I
wish to speak to you about before you go. Since
my time is so short you will forgive me if I introduce
it without preamble. You have seen your cousin
Sibylle, and though her behaviour this morning is
such as to prejudice you against her, yet I can assure
you that she is a very amiable girl. She spoke
just now as if she had mentioned the plan which I
had conceived to you. I confess to you that
I cannot imagine anything more convenient than that
we should unite in order to settle once for all every
question as to which branch of the family shall hold
the estates.’
‘Unfortunately,’ said I, ‘there
are objections.’
‘And pray what are they?’
’The fact that my cousin’s
hand, as I have just learned, is promised to another.’
‘That need not hinder us,’
said he, with a sour smile; ’I will undertake
that he never claims the promise.’
’I fear that I have the English
idea of marriage, that it should go by love and not
by convenience. But in any case your scheme is
out of the question, for my own affections are pledged
to a young lady in England.’
He looked wickedly at me out of the
corners of his grey eyes.
‘Think well what you are doing,
Louis,’ said he, in a sibilant whisper which
was as menacing as a serpent’s hiss. ’You
are deranging my plans, and that is not done with
impunity.’
‘It is not a matter in which I have any choice.’
He gripped me by the sleeve, and waved
his hand round as Satan may have done when he showed
the kingdoms and principalities. ’Look
at the park,’ he cried, ’the fields, the
woods. Look at the old castle in which your
fathers have lived for eight hundred years. You
have but to say the word and it is all yours once
more.’
There flashed up into my memory the
little red-brick house at Ashford, and Eugenie’s
sweet pale face looking over the laurel bushes which
grew by the window.
‘It is impossible!’ said I.
There must have been something in
my manner which made him comprehend that it really
was so, for his face darkened with anger, and his
persuasion changed in an instant to menace.
’If I had known this they might
have done what they wished with you last night,’
said he, ‘I would never have put out a finger
to save you.’
‘I am glad to hear you say so,’
I answered, ’for it makes it easier for me to
say that I wish to go my own way, and to have nothing
more to do with you. What you have just said
frees me from the bond of gratitude which held me
back.’
’I have no doubt that you would
like to have nothing more to do with me,’ he
cried. ’You will wish it more heartily
still before you finish. Very well, sir, go your
own way and I will go mine, and we shall see who comes
out the best in the end.’
A group of hussars were standing by
their horses’ heads in the gateway. In
a few minutes I had packed my scanty possessions, and
I was hastening with them down the corridor when a
chill struck suddenly through my heart at the thought
of my cousin Sibylle. How could I leave her alone
with this grim companion in the old castle? Had
she not herself told me that her very life might be
at stake? I had stopped in my perplexity, and
suddenly there was a patter of feet, and there she
was running towards me.
‘Good-bye, Cousin Louis,’
she cried, with outstretched hands.
‘I was thinking of you,’
said I; ’your father and I have had an explanation
and a quarrel.’
‘Thank God!’ she cried.
’Your only chance was to get away from him.
But beware, for he will do you an injury if he can!’
‘He may do his worst; but how
can I leave you here in his power?’
’Have no fears about me.
He has more reason to avoid me than I him. But
they are calling for you, Cousin Louis. Good-bye,
and God be with you!’