THE LIBRARY OF GROSBOIS
And now, my friends, I am coming to
the end of those singular adventures which I encountered
upon my arrival in France, adventures which might
have been of some interest in themselves had I not
introduced the figure of the Emperor, who has eclipsed
them all as completely as the sun eclipses the stars.
Even now, you see, after all these years, in an old
man’s memoirs, the Emperor is still true to his
traditions, and will not brook any opposition.
As I draw his words and his deeds I feel that my
own poor story withers before them. And yet if
it had not been for that story I should not have had
an excuse for describing to you my first and most
vivid impressions of him, and so it has served a purpose
after all. You must bear with me now while I
tell you of our expedition to the Red Mill and of
what befell in the library of Grosbois.
Two days had passed away since the
reception of the Empress Josephine, and only one remained
of the time which had been allowed to my cousin Sibylle
in which she might save her lover, and capture the
terrible Toussac. For my own part I was not
so very anxious that she should save this craven lover
of hers, whose handsome face belied the poor spirit
within him. And yet this lonely beautiful woman,
with the strong will and the loyal heart, had touched
my feelings, and I felt that I would help her to anything even
against my own better judgment, if she should desire
it. It was then with a mixture of feelings that
late in the afternoon I saw her and General Savary
enter the little room in which I lodged at Boulogne.
One glance at her flushed cheeks and triumphant eyes
told me that she was confident in her own success.
‘I told you that I would find
him, Cousin Louis!’ she cried; ’I have
come straight to you, because you said that you would
help in the taking of him.’
‘Mademoiselle insists upon it
that I should not use soldiers,’ said Savary,
shrugging his shoulders.
‘No, no, no,’ she cried
with vehemence. ’It has to be done with
discretion, and at the sight of a soldier he would
fly to some hiding-place, where you would never be
able to follow him. I cannot afford to run a
risk. There is too much already at stake.’
‘In such an affair three men
are as useful as thirty,’ said Savary.
’I should not in any case have employed more.
You say that you have another friend, Lieutenant ?’
‘Lieutenant Gerard of the Hussars of Bercheny.’
’Quite so. There is not
a more gallant officer in the Grand Army than Etienne
Gerard. The three of us, Monsieur de Laval, should
be equal to any adventure.’
‘I am at your disposal.’
‘Tell us then, mademoiselle, where Toussac is
hiding.’
‘He is hiding at the Red Mill.’
‘But we have searched it, I assure you that
he is not there.’
‘When did you search it?’
‘Two days ago.’
’Then he has come there since.
I knew that Jeanne Portal loved him. I have
watched her for six days. Last night she stole
down to the Red Mill with a basket of wine and fruit.
All the morning I have seen her eyes sweeping the
country side, and I have read the terror in them whenever
she has seen the twinkle of a bayonet. I am as
sure that Toussac is in the mill as if I had seen
him with my own eyes.’
‘In that case there is not an
instant to be lost,’ cried Savary. ’If
he knows of a boat upon the coast he is as likely
as not to slip away after dark and make his escape
for England. From the Red Mill one can see all
the surrounding country, and Mademoiselle is right
in thinking that a large body of soldiers would only
warn him to escape.’
‘What do you propose then?’ I asked.
’That you meet us at the south
gate of the camp in an hour’s time dressed as
you are. You might be any gentleman travelling
upon the high road. I shall see Gerard, and
we shall adopt some suitable disguise. Bring
your pistols, for it is with the most desperate man
in France we have to do. We shall have a horse
at your disposal.’
The setting sun lay dull and red upon
the western horizon, and the white chalk cliffs of
the French coast had all flushed into pink when I found
myself once more at the gate of the Boulogne Camp.
There was no sign of my companions, but a tall man,
dressed in a blue coat with brass buttons like a small
country farmer, was tightening the girth of a magnificent
black horse, whilst a little further on a slim young
ostler was waiting by the roadside, holding the bridles
of two others. It was only when I recognised
one of the pair as the horse which I had ridden on
my first coming to camp that I answered the smile
upon the keen handsome face of the ostler, and saw
the swarthy features of Savary under the broad-brimmed
hat of the farmer.
‘I think that we may travel
without fearing to excite suspicion,’ said he.
’Crook that straight back of yours a little,
Gerard! And now we shall push upon our way,
or we may find that we are too late.’
My life has had its share of adventures,
and yet, somehow, this ride stands out above the others.
There over the waters I could dimly
see the loom of the English coast, with its suggestions
of dreamy villages, humming bees, and the pealing
of Sunday bells. I thought of the long, white
High Street of Ashford, with its red brick houses,
and the inn with the great swinging sign. All
my life had been spent in these peaceful surroundings,
and now, here I was with a spirited horse between
my knees, two pistols peeping out of my holsters,
and a commission upon which my whole future might depend,
to arrest the most redoubtable conspirator in France.
No wonder that, looking back over many dangers and
many vicissitudes, it is still that evening ride over
the short crisp turf of the downs which stands out
most clearly in my memory. One becomes blase
to adventure, as one becomes blase to all else
which the world can give, save only the simple joys
of home, and to taste the full relish of such an expedition
one must approach it with the hot blood of youth still
throbbing in one’s veins.
Our route, when we had left the uplands
of Boulogne behind us, lay along the skirts of that
desolate marsh in which I had wandered, and so inland,
through plains of fern and bramble, until the familiar
black keep of the Castle of Grosbois rose upon the
left. Then, under the guidance of Savary, we
struck to the right down a sunken road, and so over
the shoulder of a hill until, on a further slope beyond,
we saw the old windmill black against the evening
sky. Its upper window burned red like a spot
of blood in the last rays of the setting sun.
Close by the door stood a cart full of grain sacks,
with the shafts pointing downwards and the horse grazing
at some distance. As we gazed, a woman appeared
upon the downs and stared round, with her hand over
her eyes.
‘See that!’ said Savary
eagerly. ’He is there sure enough, or why
should they be on their guard? Let us take this
road which winds round the hill, and they will not
see us until we are at the very door.’
‘Should we not gallop forward?’ I suggested.
’The ground is too cut up.
The longer way is the safer. As long as we
are upon the road they cannot tell us from any other
travellers.’
We walked our horses along the path,
therefore, with as unconcerned an air as we could
assume; but a sharp exclamation made us glance suddenly
round, and there was the woman standing on a hillock
by the roadside and gazing down at us with a face
that was rigid with suspicion. The sight of
the military bearing of my companions changed all her
fear into certainties. In an instant she had
whipped the shawl from her shoulders, and was waving
it frantically over her head. With a hearty
curse Savary spurred his horse up the bank and galloped
straight for the mill, with Gerard and myself at his
heels.
It was only just in time. We
were still a hundred paces from the door when a man
sprang out from it, and gazed about him, his head whisking
this way and that. There could be no mistaking
the huge bristling beard, the broad chest, and the
rounded shoulders of Toussac. A glance showed
him that we would ride him down before he could get
away, and he sprang back into the mill, closing the
heavy door with a clang behind him.
‘The window, Gerard, the window!’ cried
Savary.
There was a small, square window opening
into the basement room of the mill. The young
hussar disengaged himself from the saddle and flew
through it as the clown goes through the hoops at Franconi’s.
An instant later he had opened the door for us, with
the blood streaming from his face and hands.
‘He has fled up the stair,’ said he.
‘Then we need be in no hurry,
since he cannot pass us,’ said Savary, as we
sprang from our horses. ’You have carried
his first line of entrenchments most gallantly, Lieutenant
Gerard. I hope you are not hurt?’
‘A few scratches, General, nothing more.’
‘Get your pistols, then. Where is the
miller?’
‘Here I am,’ said a squat,
rough little fellow, appearing in the open doorway.
’What do you mean, you brigands, by entering
my mill in this fashion? I am sitting reading
my paper and smoking my pipe of coltsfoot, as my custom
is about this time of the evening, and suddenly, without
a word, a man comes flying through my window, covers
me with glass, and opens my door to his friends outside.
I’ve had trouble enough with my one lodger
all day without three more of you turning up.’
‘You have the conspirator Toussac in your house.’
‘Toussac!’ cried the miller.
’Nothing of the kind. His name is Maurice,
and he is a merchant in silks.’
‘He is the man we want. We come in the
Emperor’s name.’
The miller’s jaw dropped as he listened.
’I don’t know who he is,
but he offered a good price for a bed and I asked
no more questions. In these days one cannot expect
a certificate of character from every lodger.
But, of course, if it is a matter of State, why,
it is not for me to interfere. But, to do him
justice, he was a quiet gentleman enough until he
had that letter just now.’
’What letter? Be careful
what you say, you rascal, for your own head may find
its way into the sawdust basket.’
’It was a woman who brought
it. I can only tell you what I know. He
has been talking like a madman ever since. It
made my blood run cold to hear him. There’s
someone whom he swears he will murder. I shall
be very glad to see the last of him.’
‘Now, gentlemen,’ said
Savary, drawing his sword, ’we may leave our
horses here. There is no window for forty feet,
so he cannot escape from us. If you will see
that your pistols are primed, we shall soon bring
the fellow to terms.’
The stair was a narrow winding one
made of wood, which led to a small loft lighted from
a slit in the wall.
Some remains of wood and a litter
of straw showed that this was where Toussac had spent
his day. There was, however, no sign of him now,
and it was evident that he had ascended the next flight
of steps. We climbed them, only to find our way
barred by a heavy door.
‘Surrender, Toussac!’
cried Savary. ’It is useless to attempt
to escape us.
A hoarse laugh sounded from behind the door.
’I am not a man who surrenders.
But I will make a bargain with you. I have a
small matter of business to do to-night. If you
will leave me alone, I will give you my solemn pledge
to surrender at the camp to-morrow. I have a
little debt that I wish to pay. It is only to-day
that I understood to whom I owed it.’
‘What you ask is impossible.’
‘It would save you a great deal of trouble.’
‘We cannot grant such a request. You must
surrender.’
‘You’ll have some work first.’
’Come, come, you cannot escape
us. Put your shoulders against the door!
Now, all together?’
There was the hot flash of a pistol
from the keyhole, and a bullet smacked against the
wall between us. We hurled ourselves against
the door. It was massive, but rotten with age.
With a splintering and rending it gave way before
us. We rushed in, weapons in hand, to find ourselves
in an empty room.
‘Where the devil has he got
to?’ cried Savary, glaring round him. ‘This
is the top room of all. There is nothing above
it.’
It was a square empty space with a
few corn-bags littered about. At the further
side was an open window, and beside it lay a pistol,
still smoking from the discharge. We all rushed
across, and, as we craned our heads over, a simultaneous
cry of astonishment escaped from us.
The distance to the ground was so
great that no one could have survived the fall, but
Toussac had taken advantage of the presence of that
cart full of grain-sacks, which I have described as
having lain close to the mill. This had both
shortened the distance and given him an excellent
means of breaking the fall. Even so, however,
the shock had been tremendous, and as we looked out
he was lying panting heavily upon the top of the bags.
Hearing our cry, however, he looked up, shook his
fist defiantly, and, rolling from the cart, he sprang
on to the back of Savary’s black horse, and
galloped off across the downs, his great beard flying
in the wind, untouched by the pistol bullets with which
we tried to bring him down.
How we flew down those creaking wooden
stairs and out through the open door of the mill!
Quick as we were, he had a good start, and by the
time Gerard and I were in the saddle he had become
a tiny man upon a small horse galloping up the green
slope of the opposite hill. The shades of evening,
too, were drawing in, and upon his left was the huge
salt-marsh, where we should have found it difficult
to follow him. The chances were certainly in
his favour. And yet he never swerved from his
course, but kept straight on across the downs on a
line which took him farther and farther from the sea.
Every instant we feared to see him dart away in the
morass, but still he held his horse’s head against
the hill-side. What could he be making for?
He never pulled rein and never glanced round, but
flew onwards, like a man with a definite goal in view.
Lieutenant Gerard and I were lighter
men, and our mounts were as good as his, so that it
was not long before we began to gain upon him.
If we could only keep him in sight it was certain
that we should ride him down; but there was always
the danger that he might use his knowledge of the
country to throw us off his track. As we sank
beneath each hill my heart sank also, to rise again
with renewed hope as we caught sight of him once more
galloping in front of us.
But at last that which I had feared
befell us. We were not more than a couple of
hundred paces behind him when we lost all trace of
him. He had vanished behind some rolling ground,
and we could see nothing of him when we reached the
summit.
‘There is a road there to the
left,’ cried Gerard, whose Gascon blood was
aflame with excitement.
‘On, my friend, on, let us keep to the left!’
‘Wait a moment!’ I cried.
’There is a bridle-path upon the right, and
it is as likely that he took that.’
‘Then do you take one and I the other.’
‘One moment, I hear the sound of hoofs!’
‘Yes, yes, it is his horse!’
A great black horse, which was certainly
that of General Savary, had broken out suddenly through
a dense tangle of brambles in front of us. The
saddle was empty.
‘He has found some hiding-place here amongst
the brambles,’ I cried.
Gerard had already sprung from his
horse, and was leading him through the bushes.
I followed his example, and in a minute or two we
made our way down a winding path into a deep chalk
quarry.
‘There is no sign of him!’ cried Gerard.
‘He has escaped us.’
But suddenly I had understood it all.
His furious rage which the miller had described to
us was caused no doubt by his learning how he came
to be betrayed upon the night of his arrival.
This sweetheart of his had in some way discovered
it, and had let him know. His promise to deliver
himself up to-morrow was in order to give him time
to have his revenge upon my uncle. And now with
one idea in his head he had ridden to this chalk quarry.
Of course, it must be the same chalk quarry into
which the underground passage of Grosbois opened,
and no doubt during his treasonable meetings with
my uncle he had learned the secret. Twice I
hit upon the wrong spot, but at the third trial I gained
the face of the cliff, made my way between it and
the bushes, and found the narrow opening, which was
hardly visible in the gathering darkness. During
our search Savary had overtaken us on foot, so now,
leaving our horses in the chalk-pit, my two companions
followed me through the narrow entrance tunnel, and
on into the larger and older passage beyond.
We had no lights, and it was as black as pitch within,
so I stumbled forward as best I might, feeling my
way by keeping one hand upon the side wall, and tripping
occasionally over the stones which were scattered along
the path. It had seemed no very great distance
when my uncle had led the way with the light, but
now, what with the darkness, and what with the uncertainty
and the tension of our feelings, it appeared to be
a long journey, and Savary’s deep voice at my
elbow growled out questions as to how many more miles
we were to travel in this moleheap.
‘Hush!’ whispered Gerard. ‘I
hear someone in front of us.’
We stood listening in breathless silence.
Then far away through the darkness I heard the sound
of a door creaking upon its hinges.
‘On, on!’ cried Savary,
eagerly. ’The rascal is there, sure enough.
This time at least we have got him!’
But for my part I had my fears.
I remembered that my uncle had opened the door which
led into the castle by some secret catch. This
sound which we had heard seemed to show that Toussac
had also known how to open it. But suppose that
he had closed it behind him. I remembered its
size and the iron clampings which bound it together.
It was possible that even at the last moment we might
find ourselves face to face with an insuperable obstacle.
On and on we hurried in the dark, and then suddenly
I could have raised a shout of joy, for there in the
distance was a yellow glimmer of light, only visible
in contrast with the black darkness which lay between.
The door was open. In his mad thirst for vengeance
Toussac had never given a thought to the pursuers
at his heels.
And now we need no longer grope.
It was a race along the passage and up the winding
stair, through the second door, and into the stone-flagged
corridor of the Castle of Grosbois, with the oil-lamp
still burning at the end of it. A frightful
cry a long-drawn scream of terror and of
pain rang through it as we entered.
‘He is killing him! He
is killing him!’ cried a voice, and a woman
servant rushed madly out into the passage. ’Help,
help; he is killing Monsieur Bernac!’
‘Where is he?’ shouted Savary.
‘There! The library!
The door with the green curtain!’ Again that
horrible cry rang out, dying down to a harsh croaking.
It ended in a loud, sharp snick, as when one cracks
one’s joint, but many times louder. I
knew only too well what that dreadful sound portended.
We rushed together into the room, but the hardened
Savary and the dare-devil hussar both recoiled in
horror from the sight which met our gaze.
My uncle had been seated writing at
his desk, with his back to the door, when his murderer
had entered. No doubt it was at the first glance
over his shoulder that he had raised the scream when
he saw that terrible hairy face coming in upon him,
while the second cry may have been when those great
hands clutched at his head. He had never risen
from his chair perhaps he had been too
paralysed by fear and he still sat with
his back to the door. But what struck the colour
from our cheeks was that his head had been turned
completely round, so that his horribly distorted purple
face looked squarely at us from between his shoulders.
Often in my dreams that thin face, with the bulging
grey eyes, and the shockingly open mouth, comes to
disturb me. Beside him stood Toussac, his face
flushed with triumph, and his great arms folded across
his chest.
‘Well, my friends,’ said
he, ’you are too late, you see. I have
paid my debts after all.’
‘Surrender!’ cried Savary.
‘Shoot away! Shoot away!’
he cried, drumming his hands upon his breast.
’You don’t suppose I fear your miserable
pellets, do you? Oh, you imagine you will take
me alive! I’ll soon knock that idea out
of your heads.’
In an instant he had swung a heavy
chair over his head, and was rushing furiously at
us. We all fired our pistols into him together,
but nothing could stop that thunderbolt of a man.
With the blood spurting from his wounds, he lashed
madly out with his chair, but his eyesight happily
failed him, and his swashing blow came down upon the
corner of the table with a crash which broke it into
fragments. Then with a mad bellow of rage he
sprang upon Savary, tore him down to the ground, and
had his hand upon his chin before Gerard and I could
seize him by the arms. We were three strong
men, but he was as strong as all of us put together,
for again and again he shook himself free, and again
and again we got our grip upon him once more.
But he was losing blood fast. Every instant
his huge strength ebbed away. With a supreme
effort he staggered to his feet, the three of us hanging
on to him like hounds on to a bear. Then, with
a shout of rage and despair which thundered through
the whole castle, his knees gave way under him, and
he fell in a huge inert heap upon the floor, his black
beard bristling up towards the ceiling. We all
stood panting round, ready to spring upon him if he
should move; but it was over. He was dead.
Savary, deadly pale, was leaning with
his hand to his side against the table. It was
not for nothing that those mighty arms had been thrown
round him.
‘I feel as if I had been hugged
by a bear,’ said he. ’Well, there
is one dangerous man the less in France, and the Emperor
has lost one of his enemies. And yet he was
a brave man too!’
‘What a soldier he would have
made!’ said Gerard thoughtfully. ’What
a quartermaster for the Hussars of Bercheny!
He must have been a very foolish person to set his
will against that of the Emperor.’
I had seated myself, sick and dazed,
upon the settee, for scenes of bloodshed were new
to me then, and this one had been enough to shock the
most hardened. Savary gave us all a little cognac
from his flask, and then tearing down one of the curtains
he laid it over the terrible figure of my Uncle Bernac.
‘We can do nothing here,’
said he. ’I must get back and report to
the Emperor as soon as possible. But all these
papers of Bernac’s must be seized, for many
of them bear upon this and other conspiracies.’
As he spoke he gathered together a number of documents
which were scattered about the table among
the others a letter which lay before him upon the
desk, and which he had apparently just finished at
the time of Toussac’s irruption.
‘Hullo, what’s this?’
said Savary, glancing over it. ’I fancy
that our friend Bernac was a dangerous man also.
“My dear Catulle I beg of you to
send me by the very first mail another phial of the
same tasteless essence which you sent three years
ago. I mean the almond decoction which leaves
no traces. I have particular reasons for wanting
it in the course of next week, so I implore you not
to delay. You may rely upon my interest with
the Emperor whenever you have occasion to demand it."’
‘Addressed to a chemist in Amiens,’
said Savary, turning over the letter. ’A
poisoner then, on the top of his other virtues.
I wonder for whom this essence of almonds which leaves
no trace was intended.’
‘I wonder,’ said I.
After all, he was my uncle, and he
was dead, so why should I say further?