They all looked a merry, even a happy
party, as they sat round the table; Sir Andrew Ffoulkes
and Lord Antony Dewhurst, two typical good-looking,
well-born and well-bred Englishmen of that year of
grace 1792, and the aristocratic French comtesse
with her two children, who had just escaped from such
dire perils, and found a safe retreat at last on the
shores of protecting England.
In the corner the two strangers had
apparently finished their game; one of them arose,
and standing with his back to the merry company at
the table, he adjusted with much deliberation his
large triple caped coat. As he did so, he gave
one quick glance all around him. Everyone was
busy laughing and chatting, and he murmured the words
“All safe!”: his companion then,
with the alertness borne of long practice, slipped
on to his knees in a moment, and the next had crept
noiselessly under the oak bench. The stranger
then, with a loud “Good-night,” quietly
walked out of the coffee-room.
Not one of those at the supper table
had noticed this curious and silent manoeuvre, but
when the stranger finally closed the door of the coffee-room
behind him, they all instinctively sighed a sigh of
relief.
“Alone, at last!” said Lord Antony, jovially.
Then the young Vicomte de Tournay rose, glass in hand, and
with the graceful affection peculiar to the times, he raised it aloft, and said
in broken English,-
“To His Majesty George Three
of England. God bless him for his hospitality
to us all, poor exiles from France.”
“His Majesty the King!”
echoed Lord Antony and Sir Andrew as they drank loyally
to the toast.
“To His Majesty King Louis of
France,” added Sir Andrew, with solemnity.
“May God protect him, and give him victory over
his enemies.”
Everyone rose and drank this toast
in silence. The fate of the unfortunate King
of France, then a prisoner of his own people, seemed
to cast a gloom even over Mr. Jellyband’s pleasant
countenance.
“And to M. lé Comte de
Tournay de Basserive,” said Lord Antony, merrily.
“May we welcome him in England before many days
are over.”
“Ah, Monsieur,” said the
Comtesse, as with a slightly trembling hand she conveyed
her glass to her lips, “I scarcely dare to hope.”
But already Lord Antony had served
out the soup, and for the next few moments all conversation
ceased, while Jellyband and Sally handed round the
plates and everyone began to eat.
“Faith, Madame!” said
Lord Antony, after a while, “mine was no idle
toast; seeing yourself, Mademoiselle Suzanne and my
friend the Vicomte safely in England now, surely you
must feel reasurred as to the fate of Monsieur
lé Comte.”
“Ah, Monsieur,” replied
the Comtesse, with a heavy sigh, “I trust in
God-I can but pray-and hope .
. .”
“Aye, Madame!” here interposed
Sir Andrew Ffoulkes, “trust in God by all means,
but believe also a little in your English friends,
who have sworn to bring the Count safely across the
Channel, even as they have brought you to-day.”
“Indeed, indeed, Monsieur,”
she replied, “I have the fullest confidence
in you and your friends. Your fame, I assure you,
has spread throughout the whole of France. The
way some of my own friends have escaped from the clutches
of that awful revolutionary tribunal was nothing short
of a miracle-and all done by you and your
friends-
“We were but the hands, Madame la Comtesse .
. .”
“But my husband, Monsieur,”
said the Comtesse, whilst unshed tears seemed to veil
her voice, “he is in such deadly peril-I
would never have left him, only . . . there were my
children . . . I was torn between my duty to
him, and to them. They refused to go without me
. . . and you and your friends assured me so solemnly
that my husband would be safe. But, oh! now that
I am here-amongst you all-in
this beautiful, free England-I think of
him, flying for his life, hunted like a poor beast
. . . in such peril . . . Ah! I should not
have left him . . . I should not have left him!
. . .”
The poor woman had completely broken
down; fatigue, sorrow and emotion had overmastered
her rigid, aristocratic bearing. She was crying
gently to herself, whilst Suzanne ran up to her and
tried to kiss away her tears.
Lord Antony and Sir Andrew had said
nothing to interrupt the Comtesse whilst she was speaking.
There was no doubt that they felt deeply for her;
their very silence testified to that-but
in every century, and ever since England has been
what it is, an Englishman has always felt somewhat
ashamed of his own emotion and of his own sympathy.
And so the two young men said nothing, and busied
themselves in trying to hide their feelings, only
succeeding in looking immeasurably sheepish.
“As for me, Monsieur,”
said Suzanne, suddenly, as she looked through a wealth
of brown curls across at Sir Andrew, “I trust
you absolutely, and I know that you will bring
my dear father safely to England, just as you brought
us to-day.”
This was said with so much confidence,
such unuttered hope and belief, that it seemed as
if by magic to dry the mother’s eyes, and to
bring a smile upon everybody’s lips.
“Nay! You shame me, Mademoiselle,”
replied Sir Andrew; “though my life is at your
service, I have been but a humble tool in the hands
of our great leader, who organised and effected your
escape.”
He had spoken with so much warmth
and vehemence that Suzanne’s eyes fastened upon
him in undisguised wonder.
“Your leader, Monsieur?”
said the Comtesse, eagerly. “Ah! of course,
you must have a leader. And I did not think of
that before! But tell me where is he? I
must go to him at once, and I and my children must
throw ourselves at his feet, and thank him for all
that he has done for us.”
“Alas, Madame!” said Lord Antony, “that
is impossible.”
“Impossible?-Why?”
“Because the Scarlet Pimpernel
works in the dark, and his identity is only known
under the solemn oath of secrecy to his immediate followers.”
“The Scarlet Pimpernel?”
said Suzanne, with a merry laugh. “Why!
what a droll name! What is the Scarlet Pimpernel,
Monsieur?”
She looked at Sir Andrew with eager
curiosity. The young man’s face had become
almost transfigured. His eyes shone with enthusiasm;
hero-worship, love, admiration for his leader seemed
literally to glow upon his face. “The Scarlet
Pimpernel, Mademoiselle,” he said at last “is
the name of a humble English wayside flower; but it
is also the name chosen to hide the identity of the
best and bravest man in all the world, so that he
may better succeed in accomplishing the noble task
he has set himself to do.”
“Ah, yes,” here interposed
the young Vicomte, “I have heard speak of this
Scarlet Pimpernel. A little flower-red?-yes!
They say in Paris that every time a royalist escapes
to England that devil, Foucquier-Tinville, the Public
Prosecutor, receives a paper with that little flower
designated in red upon it. . . . Yes?”
“Yes, that is so,” assented Lord Antony.
“Then he will have received one such paper to-day?”
“Undoubtedly.”
“Oh! I wonder what he will
say!” said Suzanne, merrily. “I have
heard that the picture of that little red flower is
the only thing that frightens him.”
“Faith, then,” said Sir
Andrew, “he will have many more opportunities
of studying the shape of that small scarlet flower.”
“Ah, monsieur,” sighed
the Comtesse, “it all sounds like a romance,
and I cannot understand it all.”
“Why should you try, Madame?”
“But, tell me, why should your
leader-why should you all-spend
your money and risk your lives-for it is
your lives you risk, Messieurs, when you set foot
in France-and all for us French men and
women, who are nothing to you?”
“Sport, Madame la Comtesse,
sport,” asserted Lord Antony, with his jovial,
loud and pleasant voice; “we are a nation of
sportsmen, you know, and just now it is the fashion
to pull the hare from between the teeth of the hound.”
“Ah, no, no, not sport only,
Monsieur . . . you have a more noble motive, I am
sure for the good work you do.”
“Faith, Madame, I would like
you to find it then . . . as for me, I vow, I love
the game, for this is the finest sport I have yet
encountered.-Hair-breath escapes . . . the
devil’s own risks!-Tally ho!-and
away we go!”
But the Comtesse shook her head, still
incredulously. To her it seemed preposterous
that these young men and their great leader, all of
them rich, probably wellborn, and young, should for
no other motive than sport, run the terrible risks,
which she knew they were constantly doing. Their
nationality, once they had set foot in France, would
be no safeguard to them. Anyone found harbouring
or assisting suspected royalists would be ruthlessly
condemned and summarily executed, whatever his nationality
might be. And this band of young Englishmen had,
to her own knowledge, bearded the implacable and bloodthirsty
tribunal of the Revolution, within the very walls
of Paris itself, and had snatched away condemned victims,
almost from the very foot of the guillotine. With
a shudder, she recalled the events of the last few
days, her escape from Paris with her two children,
all three of them hidden beneath the hood of a rickety
cart, and lying amidst a heap of turnips and cabbages,
not daring to breathe, whilst the mob howled, “A
la lanterne les aristos!” at
the awful West Barricade.
It had all occurred in such a miraculous
way; she and her husband had understood that they
had been placed on the list of “suspected persons,”
which meant that their trial and death were but a matter
of days-of hours, perhaps.
Then came the hope of salvation; the
mysterious epistle, signed with the enigmatical scarlet
device; the clear, peremptory directions; the parting
from the Comte de Tournay, which had torn the poor
wife’s heart in two; the hope of reunion; the
flight with her two children; the covered cart; that
awful hag driving it, who looked like some horrible
evil demon, with the ghastly trophy on her whip handle!
The Comtesse looked round at the quaint,
old-fashioned English inn, the peace of this land
of civil and religious liberty, and she closed her
eyes to shut out the haunting vision of that West Barricade,
and of the mob retreating panic-stricken when the
old hag spoke of the plague.
Every moment under that cart she expected
recognition, arrest, herself and her children tried
and condemned, and these young Englishmen, under the
guidance of their brave and mysterious leader, had
risked their lives to save them all, as they had already
saved scores of other innocent people.
And all only for sport? Impossible!
Suzanne’s eyes as she sought those of Sir Andrew
plainly told him that she thought that he at any
rate rescued his fellowmen from terrible and unmerited
death, through a higher and nobler motive than his
friend would have her believe.
“How many are there in your
brave league, Monsieur?” she asked timidly.
“Twenty all told, Mademoiselle,”
he replied, “one to command, and nineteen to
obey. All of us Englishmen, and all pledged to
the same cause-to obey our leader and to
rescue the innocent.”
“May God protect you all, Messieurs,”
said the Comtesse, fervently.
“He had done that so far, Madame.”
“It is wonderful to me, wonderful!-That
you should all be so brave, so devoted to your fellowmen-yet
you are English!-and in France treachery
is rife-all in the name of liberty and fraternity.”
“The women even, in France,
have been more bitter against us aristocrats than
the men,” said the Vicomte, with a sigh.
“Ah, yes,” added the Comtesse,
while a look of haughty disdain and intense bitterness
shot through her melancholy eyes, “There was
that woman, Marguerite St. Just for instance.
She denounced the Marquis de St. Cyr and all his family
to the awful tribunal of the Terror.”
“Marguerite St. Just?”
said Lord Antony, as he shot a quick and apprehensive
glance across at Sir Andrew.
“Marguerite St. Just?-Surely . .
.”
“Yes!” replied the Comtesse,
“surely you know her. She was a leading
actress of the Comedie Francaise, and she married an
Englishman lately. You must know her-
“Know her?” said Lord
Antony. “Know Lady Blakeney-the
most fashionable woman in London-the wife
of the richest man in England? Of course, we
all know Lady Blakeney.”
“She was a school-fellow of
mine at the convent in Paris,” interposed Suzanne,
“and we came over to England together to learn
your language. I was very fond of Marguerite,
and I cannot believe that she ever did anything so
wicked.”
“It certainly seems incredible,”
said Sir Andrew. “You say that she actually
denounced the Marquis de St. Cyr? Why should she
have done such a thing? Surely there must be
some mistake-
“No mistake is possible, Monsieur,”
rejoined the Comtesse, coldly. “Marguerite
St. Just’s brother is a noted republican.
There was some talk of a family feud between him and
my cousin, the Marquis de St. Cyr. The St. Justs
are quite plebeian, and the republican government employs
many spies. I assure you there is no mistake.
. . . You had not heard this story?”
“Faith, Madame, I did hear some
vague rumours of it, but in England no one would credit
it. . . . Sir Percy Blakeney, her husband, is
a very wealthy man, of high social position, the intimate
friend of the Prince of Wales . . . and Lady Blakeney
leads both fashion and society in London.”
“That may be, Monsieur, and
we shall, of course, lead a very quiet life in England,
but I pray god that while I remain in this beautiful
country, I may never meet Marguerite St. Just.”
The proverbial wet-blanket seemed
to have fallen over the merry little company gathered
round the table. Suzanne looked sad and silent;
Sir Andrew fidgeted uneasily with his fork, whilst
the Comtesse, encased in the plate-armour of her aristocratic
prejudices, sat, rigid and unbending, in her straight-backed
chair. As for Lord Antony, he looked extremely
uncomfortable, and glanced once or twice apprehensively
towards Jellyband, who looked just as uncomfortable
as himself.
“At what time do you expect
Sir Percy and Lady Blakeney?” he contrived to
whisper unobserved, to mine host.
“Any moment, my lord,” whispered Jellyband
in reply.
Even as he spoke, a distant clatter
was heard of an approaching coach; louder and louder
it grew, one or two shouts became distinguishable,
then the rattle of horses’ hoofs on the uneven
cobble stones, and the next moment a stable boy had
thrown open the coffee-room door and rushed in excitedly.
“Sir Percy Blakeney and my lady,”
he shouted at the top of his voice, “they’re
just arriving.”
And with more shouting, jingling of
harness, and iron hoofs upon the stones, a magnificent
coach, drawn by four superb bays, had halted outside
the porch of “The Fisherman’s Rest.”