I
A man was sitting, huddled up in the
ingle-nook of the small coffee-room, sipping hot ale
from a tankard which he had in his hand.
Anything less suggestive of a rough
sea-faring life than his appearance it would be difficult
to conceive; and how he came by the appellation “the
Captain” must for ever remain a mystery.
He was small and spare, with thin delicate face and
slender hands: though dressed in very rough garments,
he was obviously ill at ease in them; his narrow shoulders
scarcely appeared able to bear the weight of the coarsely
made coat, and his thin legs did not begin to fill
the big fisherman’s boots which reached midway
up his lean thighs. His hair was lank and plentifully
sprinkled with grey: he wore it tied at the nape
of the neck with a silk bow which certainly did not
harmonise with the rest of his clothing. A wide-brimmed
felt hat something the shape of a sailor’s, but
with higher crown-of the shape worn by
the peasantry in Brittany-lay on the bench
beside him.
When the stranger entered he had greeted
him curtly, speaking in French.
The room was inexpressibly stuffy,
and reeked of the fumes of stale tobacco, stale victuals
and stale beer; but it was warm, and the stranger,
stiff to the marrow and wet to the skin, uttered an
exclamation of well-being as he turned to the hearth,
wherein a bright fire burned cheerily. He had
put his hat down when first he entered and had divested
himself of his big coat: now he held one foot
and then the other to the blaze and tried to infuse
new life into his numbed hands.
“The Captain” took scant
notice of his comings and goings. He did not
attempt to help him off with his coat, nor did he make
an effort to add another log to the fire. He
sat silent and practically motionless, save when from
time to time he took a sip out of his mug of ale.
But whenever the new-comer came within his immediate
circle of vision he shot a glance at the latter’s
elegant attire-the well-cut coat, the striped
waistcoat, the boots of fine leather-the
glance was quick and comprehensive and full of scorn,
a flash that lasted only an instant and was at once
veiled again by the droop of the flaccid lids which
hid the pale, keen eyes.
“When the woman has brought
me something to eat and drink,” the stranger
said after a while, “we can talk. I have
a good hour to spare, as those miserable nags must
have some rest.”
He too spoke in French and with an
air of authority, not to say arrogance, which caused
“the Captain’s” glance of scorn to
light up with an added gleam of hate and almost of
cruelty. But he made no remark and continued
to sip his ale in silence, and for the next half-hour
the two men took no more notice of one another, just
as if they had never travelled all those miles and
come to this desolate spot for the sole purpose of
speaking with one another. During the course of
that half-hour the woman brought in a dish of mutton
stew, a chunk of bread, a piece of cheese and a jug
of spiced ale, and placed them on the table:
all of these good things the stranger consumed with
an obviously keen appetite. When he had eaten
and drunk his fill, he rose from the table, drew a
bench into the ingle-nook and sat down so that his
profile only was visible to his friend “the
Captain.”
“Now, citizen Chauvelin,”
he said with at attempt at ease and familiarity not
unmixed with condescension, “I am ready for your
news.”
II
Chauvelin had winced perceptibly both
at the condescension and the familiarity. It
was such a very little while ago that men had trembled
at a look, a word from him: his silence had been
wont to strike terror in quaking hearts. It was
such a very little while ago that he had been president
of the Committee of Public Safety, all powerful, the
right hand of citizen Robespierre, the master sleuth-hound
who could track an unfortunate “suspect”
down to his most hidden lair, before whose keen, pale
eyes the innermost secrets of a soul stood revealed,
who guessed at treason ere it was wholly born, who
scented treachery ere it was formulated. A year
ago he had with a word sent scores of men, women and
children to the guillotine-he had with a
sign brought the whole machinery of the ruthless Committee
to work against innocent or guilty alike on mere suspicion,
or to gratify his own hatred against all those whom
he considered to be the enemies of that bloody revolution
which he had helped to make. Now his presence,
his silence, had not even the power to ruffle the
self-assurance of an upstart.
But in the hard school both of success
and of failure through which he had passed during
the last decade, there was one lesson which Armand
once Marquis de Chauvelin had learned to the last letter,
and that was the lesson of self-control. He had
winced at the other’s familiarity, but neither
by word nor gesture did he betray what he felt.
“I can tell you,” he merely
said quite curtly, “all I have to say in far
less time than it has taken you to eat and drink, citizen
Adet....”
But suddenly, at sound of that name,
the other had put a warning hand on Chauvelin’s
arm, even as he cast a rapid, anxious look all round
the narrow room.
“Hush, man!” he murmured
hurriedly, “you know quite well that that name
must never be pronounced here in England. I am
Martin-Roget now,” he added, as he shook off
his momentary fright with equal suddenness, and once
more resumed his tone of easy condescension, “and
try not to forget it.”
Chauvelin without any haste quietly
freed his arm from the other’s grasp. His
pale face was quite expressionless, only the thin lips
were drawn tightly over the teeth now, and a curious
hissing sound escaped faintly from them as he said:
“I’ll try and remember,
citizen, that here in England you are an aristo, the
same as all these confounded English whom may the devil
sweep into a bottomless sea.”
Martin-Roget gave a short, complacent laugh.
“Ah,” he said lightly,
“no wonder you hate them, citizen Chauvelin.
You too were an aristo here in England once-not
so very long ago, I am thinking-special
envoy to His Majesty King George, what?-until
failure to bring one of these satane Britishers
to book made you ... er ... well, made you what you
are now.”
He drew up his tall, broad figure
as he spoke and squared his massive shoulders as he
looked down with a fatuous smile and no small measure
of scorn on the hunched-up little figure beside him.
It had seemed to him that something in the nature
of a threat had crept into Chauvelin’s attitude,
and he, still flushed with his own importance, his
immeasurable belief in himself, at once chose to measure
his strength against this man who was the personification
of failure and disgrace-this man whom so
many people had feared for so long and whom it might
not be wise to defy even now.
“No offence meant, citizen Chauvelin,”
he added with an air of patronage which once more
made the other wince. “I had no wish to
wound your susceptibilities. I only desired to
give you timely warning that what I do here is no
one’s concern, and that I will brook interference
and criticism from no man.”
And Chauvelin, who in the past had
oft with a nod sent a man to the guillotine, made
no reply to this arrogant taunt. His small figure
seemed to shrink still further within itself:
and anon he passed his thin, claw-like hand over his
face as if to obliterate from its surface any expression
which might war with the utter humility wherewith he
now spoke.
“Nor was there any offence meant
on my part, citizen Martin-Roget,” he said suavely.
“Do we not both labour for the same end?
The glory of the Republic and the destruction of her
foes?”
Martin-Roget gave a sigh of satisfaction.
The battle had been won: he felt himself strong
again-stronger than before through that
very act of deference paid to him by the once all-powerful
Chauvelin. Now he was quite prepared to be condescending
and jovial once again:
“Of course, of course,”
he said pleasantly, as he once more bent his tall
figure to the fire. “We are both servants
of the Republic, and I may yet help you to retrieve
your past failures, citizen, by giving you an active
part in the work I have in hand. And now,”
he added in a calm, business-like manner, the manner
of a master addressing a servant who has been found
at fault and is taken into favour again, “let
me hear your news.”
“I have made all the arrangements
about the ship,” said Chauvelin quietly.
“Ah! that is good news indeed. What is
she?”
“She is a Dutch ship. Her master and crew
are all Dutch....”
“That’s a pity. A Danish master and
crew would have been safer.”
“I could not come across any
Danish ship willing to take the risks,” said
Chauvelin dryly.
“Well! And what about this Dutch ship then?”
“She is called the Hollandia
and is habitually engaged in the sugar trade:
but her master does a lot of contraband-more
that than fair trading, I imagine: anyway, he
is willing for the sum you originally named to take
every risk and incidentally to hold his tongue about
the whole business.”
“For two thousand francs?”
“Yes.”
“And he will run the Hollandia into Le
Croisic?”
“When you command.”
“And there is suitable accommodation
on board her for a lady and her woman?”
“I don’t know what you
call suitable,” said Chauvelin with a sarcastic
tone, which the other failed or was unwilling to note,
“and I don’t know what you call a lady.
The accommodation available on board the Hollandia
will be sufficient for two men and two women.”
“And her master’s name?” queried
Martin-Roget.
“Some outlandish Dutch name,”
replied Chauvelin. “It is spelt K U Y P
E R. The devil only knows how it is pronounced.”
“Well! And does Captain K U Y P E R understand
exactly what I want?”
“He says he does. The Hollandia
will put into Portishead on the last day of this month.
You and your guests can get aboard her any day after
that you choose. She will be there at your disposal,
and can start within an hour of your getting aboard.
Her master will have all his papers ready. He
will have a cargo of West Indian sugar on board-destination
Amsterdam, consignee Mynheer van Smeer-everything
perfectly straight and square. French aristos,
emigres on board on their way to join the army
of the Princes. There will be no difficulty in
England.”
“And none in Le Croisic. The man is running
no risks.”
“He thinks he is. France
does not make Dutch ships and Dutch crews exactly
welcome just now, does she?”
“Certainly not. But in Le Croisic and with
citizen Adet on board....”
“I thought that name was not
to be mentioned here,” retorted Chauvelin dryly.
“You are right, citizen,” whispered the
other, “it escaped me and....”
Already he had jumped to his feet,
his face suddenly pale, his whole manner changed from
easy, arrogant self-assurance to uncertainty and obvious
dread. He moved to the window, trying to subdue
the sound of his footsteps upon the uneven floor.
III
“Are you afraid of eavesdroppers,
citizen Roget?” queried Chauvelin with a shrug
of his narrow shoulders.
“No. There is no one there.
Only a lout from Chelwood who brought me here.
The people of the house are safe enough. They
have plenty of secrets of their own to keep.”
He was obviously saying all this in
order to reassure himself, for there was no doubt
that his fears were on the alert. With a febrile
gesture he unfastened the shutters, and pushed them
open, peering out into the night.
“Hallo!” he called.
But he received no answer.
“It has started to rain,”
he said more calmly. “I imagine that lout
has found shelter in an outhouse with the horses.”
“Very likely,” commented Chauvelin laconically.
“Then if you have nothing more
to tell me,” quoth Martin-Roget, “I may
as well think about getting back. Rain or no rain,
I want to be in Bath before midnight.”
“Ball or supper-party at one
of your duchesses?” queried the other with a
sneer. “I know them.”
To this Martin-Roget vouchsafed no reply.
“How are things at Nantes?” he asked.
“Splendid! Carrier is like
a wild beast let loose. The prisons are over-full:
the surplus of accused, condemned and suspect fills
the cellars and warehouses along the wharf. Priests
and suchlike trash are kept on disused galliots up
stream. The guillotine is never idle, and friend
Carrier fearing that she might give out-get
tired, what?-or break down-has
invented a wonderful way of getting rid of shoals of
undesirable people at one magnificent swoop. You
have heard tell of it no doubt.”
“Yes. I have heard of it,” remarked
the other curtly.
“He began with a load of priests.
Requisitioned an old barge. Ordered Baudet
the shipbuilder to construct half a dozen portholes
in her bottom. Baudet demurred: he
could not understand what the order could possibly
mean. But Foucaud and Lamberty-Carrier’s
agents-you know them-explained
that the barge would be towed down the Loire and then
up one of the smaller navigable streams which it was
feared the royalists were preparing to use as a way
for making a descent upon Nantes, and that the idea
was to sink the barge in midstream in order to obstruct
the passage of their army. Baudet, satisfied,
put five of his men to the task. Everything was
ready on the 16th of last month. I know the woman
Pichot, who keeps a small tavern opposite La
Sécherie. She saw the barge glide up the
river toward the galliot where twenty-five priests
of the diocese of Nantes had been living for the past
two months in the company of rats and other vermin
as noxious as themselves. Most lovely moonlight
there was that night. The Loire looked like a
living ribbon of silver. Foucaud and Lamberty
directed operations, and Carrier had given them full
instructions. They tied the calotins up two
and two and transferred them from the galliot to the
barge. It seems they were quite pleased to go.
Had enough of the rats, I presume. The only thing
they didn’t like was being searched. Some
had managed to secrete silver ornaments about their
person when they were arrested. Crucifixes and
such like. They didn’t like to part with
these, it seems. But Foucaud and Lamberty relieved
them of everything but the necessary clothing, and
they didn’t want much of that, seeing whither
they were going. Foucaud made a good pile, so
they say. Self-seeking, avaricious brute!
He’ll learn the way to one of Carrier’s
barges too one day, I’ll bet.”
He rose and with quick footsteps moved
to the table. There was some ale left in the
jug which the woman had brought for Martin-Roget a
while ago. Chauvelin poured the contents of it
down his throat. He had talked uninterruptedly,
in short, jerky sentences, without the slightest expression
of horror at the atrocities which he recounted.
His whole appearance had become transfigured while
he spoke. Gone was the urbane manner which he
had learnt at courts long ago, gone was the last instinct
of the gentleman sunk to proletarianism through stress
of circumstances, or financial straits or even political
convictions. The erstwhile Marquis de Chauvelin-envoy
of the Republic at the Court of St. James’-had
become citizen Chauvelin in deed and in fact, a part
of that rabble which he had elected to serve, one
of that vile crowd of bloodthirsty revolutionaries
who had sullied the pure robes of Liberty and of Fraternity
by spattering them with blood. Now he smacked
his lips, wiped his mouth with his sleeve, and burying
his hands in the pockets of his breeches he stood
with legs wide apart and a look of savage satisfaction
settled upon his pale face. Martin-Roget had made
no comment upon the narrative. He had resumed
his seat by the fire and was listening attentively.
Now while the other drank and paused, he showed no
sign of impatience, but there was something in the
look of the bent shoulders, in the rigidity of the
attitude, in the large, square hands tightly clasped
together which suggested the deepest interest and an
intentness that was almost painful.
“I was at the woman Pichot’s
tavern that night,” resumed Chauvelin after
a while. “I saw the barge-a moving
coffin, what?-gliding down stream towed
by the galliot and escorted by a small boat. The
floating battery at La Samaritaine challenged
her as she passed, for Carrier had prohibited all
navigation up or down the Loire until further notice.
Foucaud, Lamberty, Fouquet and O’Sullivan the
armourer were in the boat: they rowed up to the
pontoon and Vailly the chief gunner of the battery
challenged them once more. However, they had some
sort of written authorisation from Carrier, for they
were allowed to pass. Vailly remained on guard.
He saw the barge glide further down stream. It
seems that the moon on that time was hidden by a cloud.
But the night was not dark and Vailly watched the
barge till she was out of sight. She was towed
past Trentemoult and Chantenay into the wide reach
of the river just below Chevire where, as you know,
the Loire is nearly two thousand feet wide.”
Once more he paused, looking down
with grim amusement on the bent shoulders of the other
man.
“Well?”
Chauvelin laughed. The query
sounded choked and hoarse, whether through horror,
excitement or mere impatient curiosity it were impossible
to say.
“Well!” he retorted with
a careless shrug of the shoulders. “I was
too far up stream to see anything and Vailly saw nothing
either. But he heard. So did others who
happened to be on the shore close by.”
“What did they hear?”
“The hammering,” replied
Chauvelin curtly, “when the portholes were knocked
open to let in the flood of water. And the screams
and yells of five and twenty drowning priests.”
“Not one of them escaped, I suppose?”
“Not one.”
Once more Chauvelin laughed.
He had a way of laughing-just like that-in
a peculiar mirthless, derisive manner, as if with joy
at another man’s discomfiture, at another’s
material or moral downfall. There is only one
language in the world which has a word to express that
type of mirth; the word is Schadenfreude.
It was Chauvelin’s turn to triumph
now. He had distinctly perceived the signs of
an inward shudder which had gone right through Martin-Roget’s
spine: he had also perceived through the man’s
bent shoulders, his silence, his rigidity that his
soul was filled with horror at the story of that abominable
crime which he-Chauvelin-had
so blandly retailed and that he was afraid to show
the horror which he felt. And the man who is
afraid can never climb the ladder of success above
the man who is fearless.
IV
There was silence in the low raftered
room for awhile: silence only broken by the crackling
and sizzling of damp logs in the hearth, and the tap-tapping
of a loosely fastened shutter which sounded weird and
ghoulish like the knocking of ghosts against the window-frame.
Martin-Roget bending still closer to the fire knew
that Chauvelin was watching him and that Chauvelin
had triumphed, for-despite failure, despite
humiliation and disgrace-that man’s
heart and will had never softened: he had remained
as merciless, as fanatical, as before and still looked
upon every sign of pity and humanity for a victim of
that bloody revolution-which was his child,
the thing of his creation, yet worshipped by him,
its creator-as a crime against patriotism
and against the Republic.
And Martin-Roget fought within himself
lest something he might say or do, a look, a gesture
should give the other man an indication that the horrible
account of a hideous crime perpetrated against twenty-five
defenceless men had roused a feeling of unspeakable
horror in his heart. That was the punishment
of these callous makers of a ruthless revolution-that
was their hell upon earth, that they were doomed to
hate and to fear one another; every man feeling that
the other’s hand was up against him as it had
been against law and order, against the guilty and
the innocent, the rebel and the defenceless; every
man knowing that the other was always there on the
alert, ready to pounce like a beast of prey upon any
victim-friend, comrade, brother-who
came within reach of his hand.
Like many men stronger than himself,
Pierre Adet-or Martin-Roget as he now called
himself-had been drawn into the vortex of
bloodshed and of tyranny out of which now he no longer
had the power to extricate himself. Nor had he
any wish to extricate himself. He had too many
past wrongs to avenge, too much injustice on the part
of Fate and Circumstance to make good, to wish to
draw back now that a newly-found power had been placed
in the hands of men such as he through the revolt
of an entire people. The sickening sense of horror
which a moment ago had caused him to shudder and to
turn away in loathing from Chauvelin was only like
the feeble flicker of a light before it wholly dies
down-the light of something purer, early
lessons of childhood, former ideals, earlier aspirations,
now smothered beneath the passions of revenge and
of hate.
And he would not give Chauvelin the
satisfaction of seeing him wince. He was himself
ashamed of his own weakness. He had deliberately
thrown in his lot with these men and he was determined
not to fall a victim to their denunciations and to
their jealousies. So now he made a great effort
to pull himself together, to bring back before his
mind those memory-pictures of past tyranny and oppression
which had effectually killed all sense of pity in
his heart, and it was in a tone of perfect indifference
which gave no loophole to Chauvelin’s sneers
that he asked after awhile:
“And was citizen Carrier altogether
pleased with the result of his patriotic efforts?”
“Oh, quite!” replied the
other. “He has no one’s orders to
take. He is proconsul-virtual dictator
in Nantes: and he has vowed that he will purge
the city from all save its most deserving citizens.
The cargo of priests was followed by one of malefactors,
night-birds, cut-throats and such like. That
is where Carrier’s patriotism shines out in all
its glory. It is not only priests and aristos,
you see-other miscreants are treated with
equal fairness.”
“Yes! I see he is quite
impartial,” remarked Martin-Roget coolly.
“Quite,” retorted Chauvelin,
as he once more sat down in the ingle-nook. And,
leaning his elbows upon his knees he looked straight
and deliberately into the other man’s face,
and added slowly: “You will have no cause
to complain of Carrier’s want of patriotism when
you hand over your bag of birds to him.”
This time Martin-Roget had obviously
winced, and Chauvelin had the satisfaction of seeing
that his thrust had gone home: though Martin-Roget’s
face was in shadow, there was something now in his
whole attitude, in the clasping and unclasping of
his large, square hands which indicated that the man
was labouring under the stress of a violent emotion.
In spite of this he managed to say quite coolly:
“What do you mean exactly by that, citizen Chauvelin?”
“Oh!” replied the other,
“you know well enough what I mean-I
am no fool, what?... or the Revolution would have
no use for me. If after my many failures she
still commands my services and employs me to keep my
eyes and ears open, it is because she knows that she
can count on me. I do keep my eyes and ears open,
citizen Adet or Martin-Roget, whatever you like to
call yourself, and also my mind-and I have
a way of putting two and two together to make four.
There are few people in Nantes who do not know that
old Jean Adet, the miller, was hanged four years ago,
because his son Pierre had taken part in some kind
of open revolt against the tyranny of the ci-devant
duc de Kernogan, and was not there to take his
punishment himself. I knew old Jean Adet....
I was on the Place du Bouffay at Nantes when he was
hanged....”
But already Martin-Roget had jumped
to his feet with a muttered blasphemy.
“Have done, man,” he said
roughly, “have done!” And he started pacing
up and down the narrow room like a caged panther,
snarling and showing his teeth, whilst his rough,
toil-worn hands quivered with the desire to clutch
an unseen enemy by the throat and to squeeze the life
out of him. “Think you,” he added
hoarsely, “that I need reminding of that?”
“No. I do not think that,
citizen,” replied Chauvelin calmly, “I
only desired to warn you.”
“Warn me? Of what?”
Nervous, agitated, restless, Martin-Roget
had once more gone back to his seat: his hands
were trembling as he held them up mechanically to the
blaze and his face was the colour of lead. In
contrast with his restlessness Chauvelin appeared
the more calm and bland.
“Why should you wish to warn
me?” asked the other querulously, but with an
attempt at his former over-bearing manner. “What
are my affairs to you-what do you know
about them?”
“Oh, nothing, nothing, citizen
Martin-Roget,” replied Chauvelin pleasantly,
“I was only indulging the fancy I spoke to you
about just now of putting two and two together in
order to make four. The chartering of a smuggler’s
craft-aristos on board her-her
ostensible destination Holland-her real
objective Le Croisic.... Le Croisic is now the
port for Nantes and we don’t bring aristos into
Nantes these days for the object of providing them
with a feather-bed and a competence, what?”
“And,” retorted Martin-Roget
quietly, “if your surmises are correct, citizen
Chauvelin, what then?”
“Oh, nothing!” replied
the other indifferently. “Only ... take
care, citizen ... that is all.”
“Take care of what?”
“Of the man who brought me, Chauvelin, to ruin
and disgrace.”
“Oh! I have heard of that
legend before now,” said Martin-Roget with a
contemptuous shrug of the shoulders. “The
man they call the Scarlet Pimpernel you mean?”
“Why, yes!”
“What have I to do with him?”
“I don’t know. But
remember that I myself have twice been after that man
here in England; that twice he slipped through my fingers
when I thought I held him so tightly that he could
not possibly escape and that twice in consequence
I was brought to humiliation and to shame. I am
a marked man now-the guillotine will soon
claim me for her future use. Your affairs, citizen,
are no concern of mine, but I have marked that Scarlet
Pimpernel for mine own. I won’t have any
blunderings on your part give him yet another triumph
over us all.”
Once more Martin-Roget swore one of his favourite
oaths.
“By Satan and all his brood,
man,” he cried in a passion of fury, “have
done with this interference. Have done, I say.
I have nothing to do, I tell you, with your satane
Scarlet Pimpernel. My concern is with....”
“With the duc de Kernogan,”
broke in Chauvelin calmly, “and with his daughter;
I know that well enough. You want to be even with
them over the murder of your father. I know that
too. All that is your affair. But beware,
I tell you. To begin with, the secrecy of your
identity is absolutely essential to the success of
your plan. What?”
“Of course it is. But....”
“But nevertheless, your identity
is known to the most astute, the keenest enemy of
the Republic.”
“Impossible,” asserted Martin-Roget hotly.
“The duc de Kernogan....”
“Bah! He had never the
slightest suspicion of me. Think you his High
and Mightiness in those far-off days ever looked twice
at a village lad so that he would know him again four
years later? I came into this country as an emigre
stowed away in a smuggler’s ship like a bundle
of contraband goods. I have papers to prove that
my name is Martin-Roget and that I am a banker from
Brest. The worthy bishop of Brest-denounced
to the Committee of Public Safety for treason against
the Republic-was given his life and a safe
conduct into Spain on the condition that he gave me-Martin-Roget-letters
of personal introduction to various high-born emigres
in Holland, in Germany and in England. Armed with
these I am invulnerable. I have been presented
to His Royal Highness the Regent, and to the elite
of English society in Bath. I am the friend of
M. lé duc de Kernogan now and the accredited
suitor for his daughter’s hand.”
“His daughter!” broke
in Chauvelin with a sneer, and his pale, keen eyes
had in them a spark of malicious mockery.
Martin-Roget made no immediate retort
to the sneer. A curious hot flush had spread
over his forehead and his ears, leaving his cheeks
wan and livid.
“What about the daughter?” reiterated
Chauvelin.
“Yvonne de Kernogan has never
seen Pierre Adet the miller’s son,” replied
the other curtly. “She is now the affianced
wife of Martin-Roget the millionaire banker of Brest.
To-night I shall persuade M. lé duc to allow
my marriage with his daughter to take place within
the week. I shall plead pressing business in Holland
and my desire that my wife shall accompany me thither.
The duke will consent and Yvonne de Kernogan will
not be consulted. The day after my wedding I shall
be on board the Hollandia with my wife and
father-in-law, and together we will be on our way
to Nantes where Carrier will deal with them both.”
“You are quite satisfied that
this plan of yours is known to no one, that no one
at the present moment is aware of the fact that Pierre
Adet, the miller’s son, and Martin-Roget, banker
of Brest, are one and the same?”
“Quite satisfied,” replied Martin-Roget
emphatically.
“Very well, then, let me tell
you this, citizen,” rejoined Chauvelin slowly
and deliberately, “that in spite of what you
say I am as convinced as that I am here, alive, that
your real identity will be known-if it
is not known already-to a gentleman who
is at this present moment in Bath, and who is known
to you, to me, to the whole of France as the Scarlet
Pimpernel.”
Martin-Roget laughed and shrugged his shoulders.
“Impossible!” he retorted.
“Pierre Adet no longer exists ... he never existed
... much.... Anyhow, he ceased to be on that stormy
day in September, 1789. Unless your pet enemy
is a wizard he cannot know.”
“There is nothing that my pet
enemy-as you call him-cannot
ferret out if he has a mind to. Beware of him,
citizen Martin-Roget. Beware, I tell you.”
“How can I,” laughed the
other contemptuously, “if I don’t know
who he is?”
“If you did,” retorted
Chauvelin, “it wouldn’t help you ... much.
But beware of every man you don’t know; beware
of every stranger you meet; trust no one; above all,
follow no one. He is there where you least expect
him under a disguise you would scarcely dream of.”
“Tell me who he is then-since
you know him-so that I may duly beware
of him.”
“No,” rejoined Chauvelin
with the same slow deliberation, “I will not
tell you who he is. Knowledge in this case would
be a very dangerous thing.”
“Dangerous? To whom?”
“To yourself probably.
To me and to the Republic most undoubtedly. No!
I will not tell you who the Scarlet Pimpernel is.
But take my advice, citizen Martin-Roget,” he
added emphatically, “go back to Paris or to
Nantes and strive there to serve your country rather
than run your head into a noose by meddling with things
here in England, and running after your own schemes
of revenge.”
“My own schemes of revenge!”
exclaimed Martin-Roget with a hoarse cry that was
like a snarl.... It seemed as if he wanted to
say something more, but that the words choked him
even before they reached his lips. The hot flush
died down from his forehead and his face was once more
the colour of lead. He took up a log from the
corner of the hearth and threw it with a savage, defiant
gesture into the fire.
Somewhere in the house a clock struck nine.
V
Martin-Roget waited until the last
echo of the gong had died away, then he said very
slowly and very quietly:
“Forgo my own schemes of revenge?
Can you even remotely guess, citizen Chauvelin, what
it would mean to a man of my temperament and of my
calibre to give up that for which I have toiled and
striven for the past four years? Think of what
I was on that day when a conglomeration of adverse
circumstances turned our proposed expedition against
the chateau de Kernogan into a disaster for our village
lads, and a triumph for the duc. I was knocked
down and crushed all but to death by the wheels of
Mlle. de Kernogan’s coach. I managed
to crawl in the mud and the cold and the rain, on
my hands and knees, hurt, bleeding, half dead, as far
as the presbytery of Vertou where the cure kept
me hidden at risk of his own life for two days until
I was able to crawl farther away out of sight.
The cure did not know, I did not know then of
the devilish revenge which the duc de Kernogan
meant to wreak against my father. The news reached
me when it was all over and I had worked my way to
Paris with the few sous in my pocket which that
good cure had given me, earning bed and bread
as I went along. I was an ignorant lout when I
arrived in Paris. I had been one of the ci-devant
Kernogan’s labourers-his chattel,
what?-little better or somewhat worse off
than a slave. There I heard that my father had
been foully murdered-hung for a crime which
I was supposed to have committed, for which I had not
even been tried. Then the change in me began.
For four years I starved in a garret, toiling like
a galley-slave with my hands and muscles by day and
at my books by night. And what am I now?
I have worked at books, at philosophy, at science:
I am a man of education. I can talk and discuss
with the best of those d -d aristos
who flaunt their caprices and their mincing manners
in the face of the outraged democracy of two continents.
I speak English-almost like a native-and
Danish and German too. I can quote English poets
and criticise M. de Voltaire. I am an aristo,
what? For this I have worked, citizen Chauvelin-day
and night-oh! those nights! how I have
slaved to make myself what I now am! And all
for the one object-the sole object without
which existence would have been absolutely unendurable.
That object guided me, helped me to bear and to toil,
it cheered and comforted me! To be even one day
with the duc de Kernogan and with his daughter!
to be their master! to hold them at my mercy!... to
destroy or pardon as I choose!... to be the arbiter
of their fate!... I have worked for four years:
now my goal is in sight, and you talk glibly of forgoing
my own schemes of revenge! Believe me, citizen
Chauvelin,” he concluded, “it would be
easier for me to hold my right hand into those flames
until it hath burned to a cinder than to forgo the
hope of that vengeance which has eaten into my soul.
It would hurt much less.”
He had spoken thus at great length,
but with extraordinary restraint. Never once
did he raise his voice or indulge in gesture.
He spoke in even, monotonous tones, like one who is
reciting a lesson; and he sat straight in front of
the fire, his elbow on his knee, his chin resting
in his hand and his eyes fixed upon the flames.
Chauvelin had listened in perfect
silence. The scorn, the resentful anger, the
ill-concealed envy of the fallen man for the successful
upstart had died out of his glance. Martin-Roget’s
story, the intensity of feeling betrayed in that absolute,
outward calm had caused a chord of sympathy to vibrate
in the other’s atrophied heart. How well
he understood that vibrant passion of hate, that longing
to exact an eye for an eye, an outrage for an outrage!
Was not his own life given over now to just such a
longing?-a mad aching desire to be even
once with that hated enemy, that maddening, mocking,
elusive Scarlet Pimpernel who had fooled and baffled
him so often?
VI
Some few moments had gone by since
Martin-Roget’s harsh, monotonous voice had ceased
to echo through the low raftered room: silence
had fallen between the two men-there was
indeed nothing more to say; the one had unburthened
his over-full heart and the other had understood.
They were of a truth made to understand one another,
and the silence between them betokened sympathy.
Around them all was still, the stillness
of a mist-laden night; in the house no one stirred:
the shutter even had ceased to creak; only the crackling
of the wood fire broke that silence which soon became
oppressive.
Martin-Roget was the first to rouse
himself from this trance-like state wherein memory
was holding such ruthless sway: he brought his
hands sharply down on his knees, turned to look for
a moment on his companion, gave a short laugh and
finally rose, saying briskly the while:
“And now, citizen, I shall have
to bid you adieu and make my way back to Bath.
The nags have had the rest they needed and I cannot
spend the night here.”
He went to the door and opening it
called a loud “Hallo, there!”
The same woman who had waited on him
on his arrival came slowly down the stairs in response.
“The man with the horses,”
commanded Martin-Roget peremptorily. “Tell
him I’ll be ready in two minutes.”
He returned to the room and proceeded
to struggle into his heavy coat, Chauvelin as before
making no attempt to help him. He sat once more
huddled up in the ingle-nook hugging his elbows with
his thin white hands. There was a smile half
scornful, but not wholly dissatisfied around his bloodless
lips. When Martin-Roget was ready to go he called
out quietly after him:
“The Hollandia remember!
At Portishead on the last day of the month. Captain
K U Y P E R.”
“Quite right,” replied
Martin-Roget laconically. “I’m not
like to forget.”
He then picked up his hat and riding whip and went
out.
VII
Outside in the porch he found the
woman bending over the recumbent figure of his guide.
“He be azleep, Mounzeer,”
she said placidly, “fast azleep, I do believe.”
“Asleep?” cried Martin-Roget
roughly, “we’ll soon see about waking him
up.”
He gave the man a violent kick with
the toe of his boot. The man groaned, stretched
himself, turned over and rubbed his eyes. The
light of the swinging lanthorn showed him the wrathful
face of his employer. He struggled to his feet
very quickly after that.
“Stir yourself, man,”
cried Martin-Roget savagely, as he gripped the fellow
by the shoulder and gave him a vigorous shaking.
“Bring the horses along now, and don’t
keep me waiting, or there’ll be trouble.”
“All right, Mounzeer, all right,”
muttered the man placidly, as he shook himself free
from the uncomfortable clutch on his shoulder and leisurely
made his way out of the porch.
“Haven’t you got a boy
or a man who can give that lout a hand with those
sacre horses?” queried Martin-Roget impatiently.
“He hardly knows a horse’s head from its
tail.”
“No, zir, I’ve no one
to-night,” replied the woman gently. “My
man and my son they be gone down to Watchet to ’elp
with the cargo and the pack-’orzes. They
won’t be ’ere neither till after midnight.
But,” she added more cheerfully, “I can
straighten a saddle if you want it.”
“That’s all right then-but....”
He paused suddenly, for a loud cry
of “Hallo! Well! I’m ...”
rang through the night from the direction of the rear
of the house. The cry expressed both surprise
and dismay.
“What the -
is it?” called Martin-Roget loudly in response.
“The ’orzes!”
“What about them?”
To this there was no reply, and with
a savage oath and calling to the woman to show him
the way Martin-Roget ran out in the direction whence
had come the cry of dismay. He fell straight into
the arms of his guide, who promptly set up another
cry, more dismal, more expressive of bewilderment
than the first.
“They be gone,” he shouted excitedly.
“Who have gone?” queried the Frenchman.
“The ’orzes!”
“The horses? What in -
do you mean?”
“The ’orzes have gone,
Mounzeer. There was no door to the ztables and
they be gone.”
“You’re a fool,”
growled Martin-Roget, who of a truth had not taken
in as yet the full significance of the man’s
jerky sentences. “Horses don’t walk
out of the stables like that. They can’t
have done if you tied them up properly.”
“I didn’t tie them up,”
protested the man. “I didn’t know
’ow to tie the beastly nags up, and there was
no one to ’elp me. I didn’t think
they’d walk out like that.”
“Well! if they’re gone
you’ll have to go and get them back somehow,
that’s all,” said Martin-Roget, whose temper
by now was beyond his control, and who was quite ready
to give the lout a furious thrashing.
“Get them back, Mounzeer,”
wailed the man, “’ow can I? In the
dark, too. Besides, if I did come nose to nose
wi’ ’em I shouldn’t know ’ow
to get ’em. Would you, Mounzeer?”
he added with bland impertinence.
“I shall know how to lay you
out, you satane idiot,” growled Martin-Roget,
“if I have to spend the night in this hole.”
He strode on in the darkness in the
direction where a little glimmer of light showed the
entrance to a wide barn which obviously was used as
a rough stabling. He stumbled through a yard
and over a miscellaneous lot of rubbish. It was
hardly possible to see one’s hands before one’s
eyes in the darkness and the fog. The woman followed
him, offering consolation in the shape of a seat in
the coffee-room whereon to pass the night, for indeed
she had no bed to spare, and the man from Chelwood
brought up the rear-still ejaculating cries
of astonishment rather than distress.
“You are that careless, man!”
the woman admonished him placidly, “and I give
you a lanthorn and all for to look after your ’orzes
properly.”
“But you didn’t give me
a ’and for to tie ’em up in their stalls,
and give ’em their feed. Drat ’em!
I ’ate ’orzes and all to do with ’em.”
“Didn’t you give ’em the feed I
give you for ’em then?”
“No, I didn’t. Think
you I’d go into one o’ them narrow stalls
and get kicked for my pains.”
“Then they was ’ungry,
pore things,” she concluded, “and went
out after the ’ay what’s just outside.
I don’t know ’ow you’ll ever get
’em back in this fog.”
There was indeed no doubt that the
nags had made their way out of the stables, in that
irresponsible fashion peculiar to animals, and that
they had gone astray in the dark. There certainly
was no sound in the night to denote their presence
anywhere near.
“We’ll get ’em all
right in the morning,” remarked the woman with
her exasperating placidity.
“To-morrow morning!” exclaimed
Martin-Roget in a passion of fury. “And
what the d -l am I going to do in
the meanwhile?”
The woman reiterated her offers of
a seat by the fire in the coffee-room.
“The men won’t mind ye,
zir,” she said, “heaps of ’em are
Frenchies like yourself, and I’ll tell ’em
you ain’t a spying on ’em.”
“It’s no more than five
mile to Chelwood,” said the man blandly, “and
maybe you get a better shakedown there.”
“A five-mile tramp,” growled
Martin-Roget, whose wrath seemed to have spent itself
before the hopelessness of his situation, “in
this fog and gloom, and knee-deep in mud....
There’ll be a sovereign for you, woman,”
he added curtly, “if you can give me a clean
bed for the night.”
The woman hesitated for a second or two.
“Well! a zovereign is tempting,
zir,” she said at last. “You shall
’ave my son’s bed. I know ’e’d
rather ’ave the zovereign if ’e was
ever zo tired. This way, zir,” she added,
as she once more turned toward the house, “mind
them ’urdles there.”
“And where am I goin’
to zleep?” called the man from Chelwood after
the two retreating figures.
“I’ll look after the man
for you, zir,” said the woman; “for a matter
of a shillin’ ’e can sleep in the coffee-room,
and I’ll give ’im ’is breakfast
too.”
“Not one farthing will I pay
for the idiot,” retorted Martin-Roget savagely.
“Let him look after himself.”
He had once more reached the porch.
Without another word, and not heeding the protests
and curses of the unfortunate man whom he had left
standing shelterless in the middle of the yard, he
pushed open the front door of the house and once more
found himself in the passage outside the coffee-room.
But the woman had turned back a little
before she followed her guest into the house, and
she called out to the man in the darkness:
“You may zleep in any of them
outhouses and welcome, and zure there’ll be
a bit o’ porridge for ye in the mornin’!”
“Think ye I’ll stop,”
came in a furious growl out of the gloom, “and
conduct that d -d frogeater back
to Chelwood? No fear. Five miles ain’t
nothin’ to me, and ‘e can keep the miserable
shillin’ ’e’d ’ave give
me for my pains. Let ’im get ’is ’orzes
back ’izelf and get to Chelwood as best ’e
can. I’m off, and you can tell ’im
zo from me. It’ll make ’im sleep
all the better, I reckon.”
The woman was obviously not of a disposition
that would ever argue a matter of this sort out.
She had done her best, she reckoned, both for master
and man, and if they chose to quarrel between themselves
that was their business and not hers.
So she quietly went into the house
again; barred and bolted the door, and finding the
stranger still waiting for her in the passage she
conducted him to a tiny room on the floor above.
“My son’s room, Mounzeer,”
she said; “I ’ope as ’ow ye’ll
be comfortable.”
“It will do all right,”
assented Martin-Roget. “Is ‘the Captain’
sleeping in the house to-night?” he added as
with an afterthought.
“Only in the coffee-room, Mounzeer.
I couldn’t give ’im a bed. ’The
Captain’ will be leaving with the pack ’orzes
a couple of hours before dawn. Shall I tell ’im
you be ’ere.”
“No, no,” he replied promptly.
“Don’t tell him anything. I don’t
want to see him again: and he’ll be gone
before I’m awake, I reckon.”
“That ’e will, zir, most like. Good-night,
zir.”
“Good-night. And-mind-that
lout gets the two horses back again for my use in
the morning. I shall have to make my way to Chelwood
as early as may be.”
“Aye, aye, zir,” assented
the woman placidly. It were no use, she thought,
to upset the Mounzeer’s temper once more by telling
him that his guide had decamped. Time enough
in the morning, when she would be less busy.
“And my John can see ’im
as far as Chelwood,” she thought to herself as
she finally closed the door on the stranger and made
her way slowly down the creaking stairs.