I
In order to reach the Carrefour de
la Poissonnerie the two men had to skirt
the whole edifice of Le Bouffay, walk a little along
the quay and turn up the narrow alley opposite the
bridge. They walked on in silence, each absorbed
in his own thoughts.
The house occupied by the citizeness
Adet lay back a little from the others in the street.
It was one of an irregular row of mean, squalid, tumble-down
houses, some of them little more than lean-to sheds
built into the walls of Le Bouffay. Most of them
had overhanging roofs which stretched out like awnings
more than half way across the road, and even at midday
shut out any little ray of sunshine which might have
a tendency to peep into the street below.
In this year 11 of the Republic the
Carrefour de la Poissonnerie was unpaved,
dark and evil-smelling. For two thirds of the
year it was ankle-deep in mud: the rest of the
time the mud was baked into cakes and emitted clouds
of sticky dust under the shuffling feet of the passers-by.
At night it was dimly lighted by one or two broken-down
lanthorns which were hung on transverse chains overhead
from house to house. These lanthorns only made
a very small circle of light immediately below them:
the rest of the street was left in darkness, save
for the faint glimmer which filtrated through an occasional
ill-fitting doorway or through the chinks of some insecurely
fastened shutter.
The Carrefour de la Poissonnerie
was practically deserted in the daytime; only a few
children-miserable little atoms of humanity
showing their meagre, emaciated bodies through the
scanty rags which failed to cover their nakedness-played
weird, mirthless games in the mud and filth of the
street. But at night it became strangely peopled
with vague and furtive forms that were wont to glide
swiftly by, beneath the hanging lanthorns, in order
to lose themselves again in the welcome obscurity
beyond: men and women-ill-clothed and
unshod, with hands buried in pockets or beneath scanty
shawls-their feet, oft-times bare, making
no sound as they went squishing through the mud.
A perpetual silence used to reign in this kingdom
of squalor and of darkness, where night-hawks alone
fluttered their wings; only from time to time a joyless
greeting of boon-companions, or the hoarse cough of
some wretched consumptive would wake the dormant echoes
that lingered in the gloom.
II
Martin-Roget knew his way about the
murky street well enough. He went up to the house
which lay a little back from the others. It appeared
even more squalid than the rest, not a sound came
from within-hardly a light-only
a narrow glimmer found its way through the chink of
a shutter on the floor above. To right and left
of it the houses were tall, with walls that reeked
of damp and of filth: from one of these-the
one on the left-an iron sign dangled and
creaked dismally as it swung in the wind. Just
above the sign there was a window with partially closed
shutters: through it came the sound of two husky
voices raised in heated argument.
In the open space in front of Louise
Adet’s house vague forms standing about or lounging
against the walls of the neighbouring houses were
vaguely discernible in the gloom. Martin-Roget
and Chauvelin as they approached were challenged by
a raucous voice which came to them out of the inky
blackness around.
“Halt! who goes there?”
“Friends!” replied Martin-Roget promptly.
“Is citizeness Adet within?”
“Yes! she is!” retorted
the man bluntly; “excuse me, friend Adet-I
did not know you in this confounded darkness.”
“No harm done,” said Martin-Roget.
“And it is I who am grateful to you all for
your vigilance.”
“Oh!” said the other with
a laugh, “there’s not much fear of your
bird getting out of its cage. Have no fear, friend
Adet! That Kernogan rabble is well looked after.”
The small group dispersed in the darkness
and Martin-Roget rapped against the door of his sister’s
house with his knuckles.
“That is the Rat Mort,”
he said, indicating the building on his left with
a nod of the head. “A very unpleasant neighbourhood
for my sister, and she has oft complained of it-but
name of a dog! won’t it prove useful this night?”
Chauvelin had as usual followed his
colleague in silence, but his keen eyes had not failed
to note the presence of the village lads of whom Martin-Roget
had spoken. There are no eyes so watchful as those
of hate, nor is there aught so incorruptible.
Every one of these men here had an old wrong to avenge,
an old score to settle with those ci-devant
Kernogans who had once been their masters and who were
so completely in their power now. Louise Adet
had gathered round her a far more efficient bodyguard
than even the proconsul could hope to have.
A moment or two later the door was
opened, softly and cautiously, and Martin-Roget asked:
“Is that you, Louise?” for of a truth the
darkness was almost deeper within than without, and
he could not see who it was that was standing by the
door.
“Yes! it is,” replied
a weary and querulous voice. “Enter quickly.
The wind is cruel, and I can’t keep myself warm.
Who is with you, Pierre?”
“A friend,” said Martin-Roget
drily. “We want to see the aristo.”
The woman without further comment
closed the door behind the new-comers. The place
now was as dark as pitch, but she seemed to know her
way about like a cat, for her shuffling footsteps
were heard moving about unerringly. A moment
or two later she opened another door opposite the
front entrance, revealing an inner room-a
sort of kitchen-which was lighted by a
small lamp.
“You can go straight up,”
she called curtly to the two men.
The narrow, winding staircase was
divided from this kitchen by a wooden partition.
Martin-Roget, closely followed by Chauvelin, went up
the stairs. On the top of these there was a tiny
landing with a door on either side of it. Martin-Roget
without any ceremony pushed open the door on his right
with his foot.
A tallow candle fixed in a bottle
and placed in the centre of a table in the middle
of the room flickered in the draught as the door flew
open. It was bare of everything save a table
and a chair, and a bundle of straw in one corner.
The tiny window at right angles to the door was innocent
of glass, and the north-westerly wind came in an icy
stream through the aperture. On the table, in
addition to the candle, there was a broken pitcher
half-filled with water, and a small chunk of brown
bread blotched with stains of mould.
On the chair beside the table and
immediately facing the door sat Yvonne Lady Dewhurst.
On the wall above her head a hand unused to calligraphy
had traced in clumsy characters the words: “Liberté!
Fraternité! Égalité!” and below
that “où la Mort.”
III
The men entered the narrow room and
Chauvelin carefully closed the door behind him.
He at once withdrew into a remote comer of the room
and stood there quite still, wrapped in his mantle,
a small, silent, mysterious figure on which Yvonne
fixed dark, inquiring eyes.
Martin-Roget, restless and excited,
paced up and down the small space like a wild animal
in a cage. From time to time exclamations of
impatience escaped him and he struck one fist repeatedly
against his open palm. Yvonne followed his movements
with a quiet, uninterested glance, but Chauvelin paid
no heed whatever to him.
He was watching Yvonne ceaselessly, and closely.
Three days’ incarceration in
this wind-swept attic, the lack of decent food and
of warmth, the want of sleep and the horror of her
present position all following upon the soul-agony
which she had endured when she was forcibly torn away
from her dear milor, had left their mark on Yvonne
Dewhurst’s fresh young face. The look of
gravity which had always sat so quaintly on her piquant
features had now changed to one of deep and abiding
sorrow; her large dark eyes were circled and sunk;
they had in them the unnatural glow of fever, as well
as the settled look of horror and of pathetic resignation.
Her soft brown hair had lost its lustre; her cheeks
were drawn and absolutely colourless.
Martin-Roget paused in his restless
walk. For a moment he stood silent and absorbed,
contemplating by the flickering light of the candle
all the havoc which his brutality had wrought upon
Yvonne’s dainty face.
But Yvonne after a while ceased to
look at him-she appeared to be unconscious
of the gaze of these two men, each of whom was at this
moment only thinking of the evil which he meant to
inflict upon her-each of whom only thought
of her as a helpless bird whom he had at last ensnared
and whom he could crush to death as soon as he felt
so inclined.
She kept her lips tightly closed and
her head averted. She was gazing across at the
unglazed window into the obscurity beyond, marvelling
in what direction lay the sea and the shores of England.
Martin-Roget crossed his arms over
his broad chest and clutched his elbows with his hands
with an obvious effort to keep control over his movements
and his temper in check. The quiet, almost indifferent
attitude of the girl was exasperating to his over-strung
nerves.
“Look here, my girl,”
he said at last, roughly and peremptorily, “I
had an interview with the proconsul this afternoon.
He chides me for my leniency toward you. Three
days he thinks is far too long to keep traitors eating
the bread of honest citizens and taking up valuable
space in our city. Yesterday I made a proposal
to you. Have you thought on it?”
Yvonne made no reply. She was
still gazing out into nothingness and just at that
moment she was very far away from the narrow, squalid
room and the company of these two inhuman brutes.
She was thinking of her dear milor and of that lovely
home at Combwich wherein she had spent three such
unforgettable days. She was remembering how beautiful
had been the colour of the bare twigs in the chestnut
coppice when the wintry sun danced through and in
between them and drew fantastic patterns of living
gold upon the carpet of dead leaves; and she remembered
too how exquisite were the tints of russet and blue
on the distant hills, and how quaintly the thrushes
had called: “Kiss me quick!” She saw
again those trembling leaves of a delicious faintly
crimson hue which still hung upon the branches of
the scarlet oak, and the early flowering heath which
clothed the moors with a gorgeous mantle of rosy amethyst.
Martin-Roget’s harsh voice brought
her abruptly back to the hideous reality of the moment.
“Your obstinacy will avail you
nothing,” he said, speaking quietly, even though
a note of intense irritation was distinctly perceptible
in his voice. “The proconsul has given
me a further delay wherein to deal leniently with
you and with your father if I am so minded. You
know what I have proposed to you: Life with me
as my wife-in which case your father will
be free to return to England or to go to the devil
as he pleases-or the death of a malefactor
for you both in the company of all the thieves and
evil-doers who are mouldering in the prisons of Nantes
at this moment. Another delay wherein to choose
between an honourable life and a shameful death.
The proconsul waits. But to-night he must have
his answer.”
Then Yvonne turned her head slowly
and looked calmly on her enemy.
“The tyrant who murders innocent
men, women and children,” she said, “can
have his answer now. I choose death which is inevitable
in preference to a life of shame.”
“You seem,” he retorted,
“to have lost sight of the fact that the law
gives me the right to take by force that which you
so obstinately refuse.”
“Have I not said,” she
replied, “that death is my choice? Life
with you would be a life of shame.”
“I can get a priest to marry
us without your consent: and your religion forbids
you to take your own life,” he said with a sneer.
To this she made no reply, but he
knew that he had his answer. Smothering a curse,
he resumed after a while:
“So you prefer to drag your
father to death with you? Yet he has begged you
to consider your decision and to listen to reason.
He has given his consent to our marriage.”
“Let me see my father,”
she retorted firmly, “and hear him say that with
his own lips.
“Ah!” she added quickly,
for at her words Martin-Roget had turned his head
away and shrugged his shoulders with well-assumed indifference,
“you cannot and dare not let me see him.
For three days now you have kept us apart and no doubt
fed us both up with your lies. My father is duc
de Kernogan, Marquis de Trentemoult,” she added
proudly, “he would far rather die side by side
with his daughter than see her wedded to a criminal.”
“And you, my girl,” rejoined
Martin-Roget coldly, “would you see your father
branded as a malefactor, linked to a thief and sent
to perish in the Loire?”
“My father,” she retorted,
“will die as he has lived, a brave and honourable
gentleman. The brand of a malefactor cannot cling
to his name. Sorrow we are ready to endure-death
is less than nothing to us-we will but
follow in the footsteps of our King and of our Queen
and of many whom we care for and whom you and your
proconsul and your colleagues have brutally murdered.
Shame cannot touch us, and our honour and our pride
are so far beyond your reach that your impious and
blood-stained hands can never sully them.”
She had spoken very slowly and very
quietly. There were no heroics about her attitude.
Even Martin-Roget-callous brute though he
was-felt that she had only spoken just
as she felt, and that nothing that he might say, no
plea that he might urge, would ever shake her determination.
“Then it seems to me,”
he said, “that I am only wasting my time by
trying to make you see reason and common-sense.
You look upon me as a brute. Well! perhaps I
am. At any rate I am that which your father and
you have made me. Four years ago, when you had
power over me and over mine, you brutalised us.
To-day we-the people-are your
masters and we make you suffer, not for all-that
were impossible-but for part of what you
made us suffer. That, after all, is only bare
justice. By making you my wife I would have saved
you from death-not from humiliation, for
that you must endure, and at my hands in a full measure-but
I would have made you my wife because I still have
pleasant recollections of that kiss which I snatched
from you on that never-to-be-forgotten night and in
the darkness-a kiss for which you would
gladly have seen me hang then, if you could have laid
hands on me.”
He paused, trying to read what was
going on behind those fine eyes of hers, with their
vacant, far-seeing gaze which seemed like another
barrier between her and him. At this rough allusion
to that moment of horror and of shame, she had not
moved a muscle, nor did her gaze lose its fixity.
He laughed.
“It is an unpleasant recollection,
eh, my proud lady? The first kiss of passion
was not implanted on your exquisite lips by that fine
gentleman whom you deemed worthy of your hand and
your love, but by Pierre Adet, the miller’s
son, what? a creature not quite so human as your horse
or your pet dog. Neither you nor I are like to
forget that methinks....”
Yvonne vouchsafed no reply to the
taunt, and for a moment there was silence in the room,
until Chauvelin’s thin, suave voice broke in
quite gently:
“Do not lose your patience with
the wench, citizen Martin-Roget. Your time is
too precious to be wasted in useless recriminations.”
“I have finished with her,”
retorted the other sullenly. “She shall
be dealt with now as I think best. I agree with
citizen Carrier. He is right after all.
To the Loire with the lot of that foul brood!”
“Nay!” here rejoined Chauvelin
with placid urbanity, “are you not a little
harsh, citizen, with our fair Yvonne? Remember!
Women have moods and megrims. What they indignantly
refuse to yield to us one day, they will grant with
a smile the next. Our beautiful Yvonne is no exception
to this rule, I’ll warrant.”
Even while he spoke he threw a glance
of warning on his colleague. There was something
enigmatic in his manner at this moment, in the strange
suavity wherewith he spoke these words of conciliation
and of gentleness. Martin-Roget was as usual
ready with an impatient retort. He was in a mood
to bully and to brutalise, to heap threat upon threat,
to win by frightfulness that which he could not gain
by persuasion. Perhaps that at this moment he
desired Yvonne de Kernogan for wife, more even than
he desired her death. At any rate his headstrong
temper was ready to chafe against any warning or advice.
But once again Chauvelin’s stronger mentality
dominated over his less resolute colleague. Martin-Roget-the
fowler-was in his turn caught in the net
of a keener snarer than himself, and whilst-with
the obstinacy of the weak-he was making
mental resolutions to rebuke Chauvelin for his interference
later on, he had already fallen in with the latter’s
attitude.
“The wench has had three whole
days wherein to alter her present mood,” he
said more quietly, “and you know yourself, citizen,
that the proconsul will not wait after to-day.”
“The day is young yet,”
rejoined Chauvelin. “It still hath six hours
to its credit.... Six hours.... Three hundred
and sixty minutes!” he continued with a pleasant
little laugh; “time enough for a woman to change
her mind three hundred and sixty times. Let me
advise you, citizen, to leave the wench to her own
meditations for the present, and I trust that she
will accept the advice of a man who has a sincere
regard for her beauty and her charms and who is old
enough to be her father, and seriously think the situation
over in a conciliatory spirit. M. lé duc
de Kernogan will be grateful to her, for of a truth
he is not over happy either at the moment ... and
will be still less happy in the depot to-morrow:
it is over-crowded, and typhus, I fear me, is rampant
among the prisoners. He has, I am convinced-in
spite of what the citizeness says to the contrary-a
rooted objection to being hurled into the Loire, or
to be arraigned before the bar of the Convention, not
as an aristocrat and a traitor but as an unit of an
undesirable herd of criminals sent up to Paris for
trial, by an anxious and harried proconsul. There!
there!” he added benignly, “we will not
worry our fair Yvonne any longer, will we, citizen?
I think she has grasped the alternative and will soon
realise that marriage with an honourable patriot is
not such an untoward fate after all.”
“And now, citizen Martin-Roget,”
he concluded, “I pray you allow me to take my
leave of the fair lady and to give you the wise recommendation
to do likewise. She will be far better alone for
awhile. Night brings good counsel, so they say.”
He watched the girl keenly while he
spoke. Her impassivity had not deserted her for
a single moment: but whether her calmness was
of hope or of despair he was unable to decide.
On the whole he thought it must be the latter:
hope would have kindled a spark in those dark, purple-rimmed
eyes, it would have brought moisture to the lips, a
tremor to the hand.
The Scarlet Pimpernel was in Nantes-that
fact was established beyond a doubt-but
Chauvelin had come to the conclusion that so far as
Yvonne Dewhurst herself was concerned, she knew nothing
of the mysterious agencies that were working on her
behalf.
Chauvelin’s hand closed with
a nervous contraction over the packet of papers in
his pocket. Something of the secret of that enigmatic
English adventurer lay revealed within its folds.
Chauvelin had not yet had the opportunity of examining
them: the interview with Yvonne had been the
most important business for the moment.
From somewhere in the distance a city
clock struck six. The afternoon was wearing on.
The keenest brain in Europe was on the watch to drag
one woman and one man from the deadly trap which had
been so successfully set for them. A few hours
more and Chauvelin in his turn would be pitting his
wits against the resources of that intricate brain,
and he felt like a war-horse scenting blood and battle.
He was aching to get to work-aching to
form his plans-to lay his snares-to
dispose his trap so that the noble English quarry
should not fail to be caught within its meshes.
He gave a last look to Yvonne, who
was still sitting quite impassive, gazing through
the squalid walls into some beautiful distance, the
reflection of which gave to her pale, wan face an added
beauty.
“Let us go, citizen Martin-Roget,”
he said peremptorily. “There is nothing
else that we can do here.”
And Martin-Roget, the weaker morally
of the two, yielded to the stronger personality of
his colleague. He would have liked to stay on
for awhile, to gloat for a few moments longer over
the helplessness of the woman who to him represented
the root of every evil which had ever befallen him
and his family. But Chauvelin commanded and he
felt impelled to obey. He gave one long, last
look on Yvonne-a look that was as full of
triumph as of mockery-he looked round the
four dank walls, the unglazed window, the broken pitcher,
the mouldy bread. Revenge was of a truth the
sweetest emotion of the human heart. Pierre Adet-son
of the miller who had been hanged by orders of the
Duc de Kernogan for a crime which he had never
committed-would not at this moment have
changed places with Fortune’s Benjamin.
IV
Downstairs in Louise Adet’s
kitchen, Martin-Roget seized his colleague by the
arm.
“Sit down a moment, citizen,”
he said persuasively, “and tell me what you
think of it all.”
Chauvelin sat down at the other’s
invitation. All his movements were slow, deliberate,
perfectly calm.
“I think,” he said drily,
“as far as your marriage with the wench is concerned,
that you are beaten, my friend.”
“Tshaw!” The exclamation,
raucous and surcharged with hate came from Louise
Adet. She, too, like Pierre-more so
than Pierre mayhap-had cause to hate the
Kernogans. She, too, like Pierre had lived the
last three days in the full enjoyment of the thought
that Fate and Chance were about to level things at
last between herself and those detested aristos.
Silent and sullen she was shuffling about in the room,
among her pots and pans, but she kept an eye upon
her brother’s movements and an ear on what he
said. Men were apt to lose grit where a pretty
wench was concerned. It takes a woman’s
rancour and a woman’s determination to carry
a scheme of vengeance against another to a successful
end.
Martin-Roget rejoined more calmly:
“I knew that she would still
be obstinate,” he said. “If I forced
her into a marriage, which I have the right to do,
she might take her own life and make me look a fool.
So I don’t want to do that. I believe in
the persuasiveness of the Rat Mort to-night,”
he added with a cynical laugh, “and if that
fails.... Well! I was never really in love
with the fair Yvonne, and now she has even ceased
to be desirable.... If the Rat Mort fails to
act on her sensibilities as I would wish, I can easily
console myself by following Carrier’s herd to
Paris. Louise shall come with me-eh,
little sister?-and we’ll give ourselves
the satisfaction of seeing M. lé duc de
Kernogan and his exquisite daughter stand in the felon’s
dock-tried for malpractices and for evil
living. We’ll see them branded as convicts
and packed off like so much cattle to Cayenne.
That will be a sight,” he concluded with a deep
sigh of satisfaction, “which will bring rest
to my soul.”
He paused: his face looked sullen
and evil under the domination of that passion which
tortured him.
Louise Adet had shuffled up close
to her brother. In one hand she held the wooden
spoon wherewith she had been stirring the soup:
with the other she brushed away the dark, lank hair
which hung in strands over her high, pale forehead.
In appearance she was a woman immeasurably older than
her years. Her face had the colour of yellow parchment,
her skin was stretched tightly over her high cheekbones-her
lips were colourless and her eyes large, wide-open,
were pale in hue and circled with red. Just now
a deep frown of puzzlement between her brows added
a sinister expression to her cadaverous face:
“The Rat Mort?” she queried
in that tired voice of hers, “Cayenne? What
is all that about?”
“A splendid scheme of Carrier’s,
my Louise,” replied Martin-Roget airily.
“We convey the Kernogan woman to the Rat Mort.
To-night a descent will be made on that tavern of
ill-fame by a company of Marats and every man, woman
and child within it will be arrested and sent to Paris
as undesirable inhabitants of this most moral city:
in Paris they will be tried as malefactors or evil-doers-cut
throats, thieves, what? and deported as convicts to
Cayenne, or else sent to the guillotine. The
Kernogans among that herd! What sayest thou to
that, little sister? Thy father, thy lover, hung
as thieves! M. lé Duc and Mademoiselle
branded as convicts! ’Tis pleasant to think
on, eh?”
Louise made no reply. She stood
looking at her brother, her pale, red-dimmed eyes
seemed to drink in every word that he uttered, while
her bony hand wandered mechanically across and across
her forehead as if in a pathetic endeavour to clear
the brain from everything save of the satisfying thoughts
which this prospect of revenge had engendered.
Chauvelin’s gentle voice broke in on her meditations.
“In the meanwhile,” he
said placidly, “remember my warning, citizen
Martin-Roget. There are passing clever and mighty
agencies at work, even at this hour, to wrest your
prey from you. How will you convey the wench
to the Rat Mort? Carrier has warned you of spies-but
I have warned you against a crowd of English adventurers
far more dangerous than an army of spies. Three
pairs of eyes-probably more, and one pair
the keenest in Europe-will be on the watch
to seize upon the woman and to carry her off under
your very nose.”
Martin-Roget uttered a savage oath.
“That brute Carrier has left
me in the lurch,” he said roughly. “I
don’t believe in your nightmares and your English
adventurers, still it would have been better if I
could have had the woman conveyed to the tavern under
armed escort.”
“Armed escort has been denied
you, and anyway it would not be much use. You
and I, citizen Martin-Roget, must act independently
of Carrier. Your friends down there,” he
added, indicating the street with a jerk of the head,
“must redouble their watchfulness. The village
lads of Vertou are of a truth no match intellectually
with our English adventurers, but they have vigorous
fists in case there is an attack on the wench while
she walks across to the Rat Mort.”
“It would be simpler,”
here interposed Louise roughly, “if we were to
knock the wench on the head and then let the lads carry
her across.”
“It would not be simpler,”
retorted Chauvelin drily, “for Carrier might
at any moment turn against us. Commandant Fleury
with half a company of Marats will be posted round
the Rat Mort, remember. They may interfere with
the lads and arrest them and snatch the wench from
us, when all our plans may fall to the ground ...
one never knows what double game Carrier may be playing.
No! no! the girl must not be dragged or carried to
the Rat Mort. She must walk into the trap of her
own free will.”
“But name of a dog! how is it
to be done?” ejaculated Martin-Roget, and he
brought his clenched fist crashing down upon the table.
“The woman will not follow me-or
Louise either-anywhere willingly.”
“She must follow a stranger
then-or one whom she thinks a stranger-some
one who will have gained her confidence....”
“Impossible.”
“Oh! nothing is impossible, citizen,”
rejoined Chauvelin blandly.
“Do you know a way then?” queried the
other with a sneer.
“I think I do. If you will trust me that
is -”
“I don’t know that I do.
Your mind is so intent on those English adventurers,
you are like as not to let the aristos slip through
your fingers.”
“Well, citizen,” retorted
Chauvelin imperturbably, “will you take the
risk of conveying the fair Yvonne to the Rat Mort by
twelve o’clock to-night? I have very many
things to see to, I confess that I should be glad
if you will ease me from that responsibility.”
“I have already told you that
I see no way,” retorted Martin-Roget with a
snarl.
“Then why not let me act?”
“What are you going to do?”
“For the moment I am going for
a walk on the quay and once more will commune with
the North-West wind.”
“Tshaw!” ejaculated Martin-Roget savagely.
“Nay, citizen,” resumed
Chauvelin blandly, “the winds of heaven are
excellent counsellors. I told you so just now
and you agreed with me. They blow away the cobwebs
of the mind and clear the brain for serious thinking.
You want the Kernogan girl to be arrested inside the
Rat Mort and you see no way of conveying her thither
save by the use of violence, which for obvious reasons
is to be deprecated: Carrier, for equally obvious
reasons, will not have her taken to the place by force.
On the other hand you admit that the wench would not
follow you willingly -Well, citizen,
we must find a way out of that impasse, for it is
too unimportant an one to stand in the way of our plans:
for this I must hold a consultation with the North-West
wind.”
“I won’t allow you to do anything without
consulting me.”
“Am I likely to do that?
To begin with I shall have need of your co-operation
and that of the citizeness.”
“In that case ...” muttered
Martin-Roget grudgingly. “But remember,”
he added with a return to his usual self-assured manner,
“remember that Yvonne and her father belong
to me and not to you. I brought them into Nantes
for mine own purposes-not for yours.
I will not have my revenge jeopardised so that your
schemes may be furthered.”
“Who spoke of my schemes, citizen
Martin-Roget?” broke in Chauvelin with perfect
urbanity. “Surely not I? What am I
but an humble tool in the service of the Republic?...
a tool that has proved useless-a failure,
what? My only desire is to help you to the best
of my abilities. Your enemies are the enemies
of the Republic: my ambition is to help you in
destroying them.”
For a moment longer Martin-Roget hesitated:
he abominated this suggestion of becoming a mere instrument
in the hands of this man whom he still would have
affected to despise-had he dared. But
here came the difficulty: he no longer dared
to despise Chauvelin. He felt the strength of
the man-the clearness of his intellect,
and though he-Martin-Roget-still
chose to disregard every warning in connexion with
the English spies, he could not wholly divest his mind
from the possibility of their presence in Nantes.
Carrier’s scheme was so magnificent, so satisfying,
that the ex-miller’s son was ready to humble
his pride and set his arrogance aside in order to see
it carried through successfully.
So after a moment or two, despite
the fact that he positively ached to shut Chauvelin
out of the whole business, Martin-Roget gave a grudging
assent to his proposal.
“Very well!” he said,
“you see to it. So long as it does not interfere
with my plans....”
“It can but help them,”
rejoined Chauvelin suavely. “If you will
act as I shall direct I pledge you my word that the
wench will walk to the Rat Mort of her free will and
at the hour when you want her. What else is there
to say?”
“When and where shall we meet again?”
“Within the hour I will return
here and explain to you and to the citizeness what
I want you to do. We will get the aristos inside
the Rat Mort, never fear; and after that I think that
we may safely leave Carrier to do the rest, what?”
He picked up his hat and wrapped his
mantle round him. He took no further heed of
Martin-Roget or of Louise, for suddenly he had felt
the crackling of crisp paper inside the breast-pocket
of his coat and in a moment the spirit of the man
had gone a-roaming out of the narrow confines of this
squalid abode. It had crossed the English Channel
and wandered once more into a brilliantly-lighted
ball-room where an exquisitely dressed dandy declaimed
inanitiés and doggrel rhymes for the delectation
of a flippant assembly: it heard once more the
lazy, drawling speech, the inane, affected laugh,
it caught the glance of a pair of lazy, grey eyes
fixed mockingly upon him. Chauvelin’s thin
claw-like hand went back to his pocket: it felt
that packet of papers, it closed over it like a vulture’s
talon does upon a prey. He no longer heard Martin-Roget’s
obstinate murmurings, he no longer felt himself to
be the disgraced, humiliated servant of the State:
rather did he feel once more the master, the leader,
the successful weaver of an hundred clever intrigues.
The enemy who had baffled him so often had chosen once
more to throw down the glove of mocking defiance.
So be it! The battle would be fought this night-a
decisive one-and long live the Republic
and the power of the people!
With a curt nod of the head Chauvelin
turned on his heel and without waiting for Martin-Roget
to follow him, or for Louise to light him on his way,
he strode from the room, and out of the house, and
had soon disappeared in the darkness in the direction
of the quay.
V
Once more free from the encumbering
companionship of Martin-Roget, Chauvelin felt free
to breathe and to think. He, the obscure and
impassive servant of the Republic, the cold-blooded
Terrorist who had gone through every phrase of an
exciting career without moving a muscle of his grave
countenance, felt as if every one of his arteries was
on fire. He strode along the quay in the teeth
of the north-westerly wind, grateful for the cold
blast which lashed his face and cooled his throbbing
temples.
The packet of papers inside his coat
seemed to sear his breast.
Before turning to go along the quay
he paused, hesitating for a moment what he would do.
His very humble lodgings were at the far end of the
town, and every minute of time was precious. Inside
Le Bouffay, where he had a small room allotted to
him as a minor representative in Nantes of the Committee
of Public Safety, there was the ever present danger
of prying eyes.
On the whole-since time
was so precious-he decided on returning
to Le Bouffay. The concierge and the clerk fortunately
let him through without those official delays which
he-Chauvelin-was wont to find
so galling ever since his disgrace had put a bar against
the opening of every door at the bare mention of his
name or the display of his tricolour scarf.
He strode rapidly across the hall:
the men on guard eyed him with lazy indifference as
he passed. Once inside his own sanctum he looked
carefully around him; he drew the curtain closer across
the window and dragged the table and a chair well
away from the range which might be covered by an eye
at the keyhole. It was only when he had thoroughly
assured himself that no searching eye or inquisitive
ear could possibly be watching over him that he at
last drew the precious packet of papers from his pocket.
He undid the red ribbon which held it together and
spread the papers out on the table before him.
Then he examined them carefully one by one.
As he did so an exclamation of wrath
or of impatience escaped him from time to time, once
he laughed-involuntarily-aloud.
The examination of the papers took
him some time. When he had finished he gathered
them all together again, retied the bit of ribbon round
them and slipped the packet back into the pocket of
his coat. There was a look of grim determination
on his face, even though a bitter sigh escaped his
set lips.
“Oh! for the power,” he
muttered to himself, “which I had a year ago!
for the power to deal with mine enemy myself.
So you have come to Nantes, my valiant Sir Percy Blakeney?”
he added while a short, sardonic laugh escaped his
thin, set lips: “and you are determined
that I shall know how and why you came! Do you
reckon, I wonder, that I have no longer the power
to deal with you? Well!...”
He sighed again but with more satisfaction this time.
“Well!...” he reiterated
with obvious complacency. “Unless that oaf
Carrier is a bigger fool than I imagine him to be I
think I have you this time, my elusive Scarlet Pimpernel.”