The afternoon was rapidly drawing
to a close; and a long, chilly English summer’s
evening was throwing a misty pall over the green Kentish
landscape.
The day dream had set sail,
and Marguerite Blakeney stood alone on the edge of
the cliff over an hour, watching those white sails,
which bore so swiftly away from her the only being
who really cared for her, whom she dared to love,
whom she knew she could trust.
Some little distance away to her left
the lights from the coffee-room of “The Fisherman’s
Rest” glittered yellow in the gathering mist;
from time to time it seemed to her aching nerves as
if she could catch from thence the sound of merry-making
and of jovial talk, or even that perpetual, senseless
laugh of her husband’s, which grated continually
upon her sensitive ears.
Sir Percy had had the delicacy to
leave her severely alone. She supposed that,
in his own stupid, good-natured way, he may have understood
that she would wish to remain alone, while those white
sails disappeared into the vague horizon, so many
miles away. He, whose notions of propriety and
decorum were supersensitive, had not suggested even
that an attendant should remain within call.
Marguerite was grateful to her husband for all this;
she always tried to be grateful to him for his thoughtfulness,
which was constant, and for his generosity, which really
was boundless. She tried even at times to curb
the sarcastic, bitter thoughts of him, which made
her-in spite of herself-say cruel,
insulting things, which she vaguely hoped would wound
him.
Yes! she often wished to wound him,
to make him feel that she too held him in contempt,
that she too had forgotten that she had almost loved
him. Loved that inane fop! whose thoughts seemed
unable to soar beyond the tying of a cravat or the
new cut of a coat. Bah! And yet! . . . vague
memories, that were sweet and ardent and attuned to
this calm summer’s evening, came wafted back
to her memory, on the invisible wings of the light
sea-breeze: the tie when first he worshipped her;
he seemed so devoted-a very slave-and
there was a certain latent intensity in that love
which had fascinated her.
Then suddenly that love, that devotion,
which throughout his courtship she had looked upon
as the slavish fidelity of a dog, seemed to vanish
completely. Twenty-four hours after the simple
little ceremony at old St. Roch, she had told him
the story of how, inadvertently, she had spoken of
certain matters connected with the Marquis de St. Cyr
before some men-her friends-who
had used this information against the unfortunate
Marquis, and sent him and his family to the guillotine.
She hated the Marquis. Years
ago, Armand, her dear brother, loved Angele de St.
Cyr, but St. Just was a plebeian, and the Marquis full
of the pride and arrogant prejudices of his caste.
One day Armand, the respectful, timid lover, ventured
on sending a small poem-enthusiastic, ardent,
passionate-to the idol of his dreams.
The next night he was waylaid just outside Paris by
the valets of Marquis de St. Cyr, and ignominiously
thrashed-thrashed like a dog within an inch
of his life-because he had dared to raise
his eyes to the daughter of the aristocrat. The
incident was one which, in those days, some two years
before the great Revolution, was of almost daily occurrence
in France; incidents of that type, in fact, led to
bloody reprisals, which a few years later sent most
of those haughty heads to the guillotine.
Marguerite remembered it all:
what her brother must have suffered in his manhood
and his pride must have been appalling; what she suffered
through him and with him she never attempted even to
analyse.
Then the day of retribution came.
St. Cyr and his kin had found their masters, in those
same plebeians whom they had despised. Armand
and Marguerite, both intellectual, thinking beings,
adopted with the enthusiasm of their years the Utopian
doctrines of the Revolution, while the Marquis de
St. Cyr and his family fought inch by inch for the
retention of those privileges which had placed them
socially above their fellow-men. Marguerite,
impulsive, thoughtless, not calculating the purport
of her words, still smarting under the terrible insult
her brother had suffered at the Marquis’ hands,
happened to hear-amongst her own coterie-that
the St. Cyrs were in treasonable correspondence with
Austria, hoping to obtain the Emperor’s support
to quell the growing revolution in their own country.
In those days one denunciation was
sufficient: Marguerite’s few thoughtless
words anent the Marquis de St. Cyr bore fruit within
twenty-four hours. He was arrested. His papers
were searched: letters from the Austrian Emperor,
promising to send troops against the Paris populace,
were found in his desk. He was arraigned for treason
against the nation, and sent to the guillotine, whilst
his family, his wife and his sons, shared in this
awful fate.
Marguerite, horrified at the terrible
consequences of her own thoughtlessness, was powerless
to save the Marquis: his own coterie, the leaders
of the revolutionary movement, all proclaimed her as
a heroine: and when she married Sir Percy Blakeney,
she did not perhaps altogether realise how severely
he would look upon the sin, which she had so inadvertently
committed, and which still lay heavily upon her soul.
She made full confession of it to her husband, trusting
his blind love for her, her boundless power over him,
to soon make him forget what might have sounded unpleasant
to an English ear.
Certainly at the moment he seemed
to take it very quietly; hardly, in fact, did he appear
to understand the meaning of all she said; but what
was more certain still, was that never after that could
she detect the slightest sign of that love, which
she once believed had been wholly hers. Now they
had drifted quite apart, and Sir Percy seemed to have
laid aside his love for her, as he would an ill-fitting
glove. She tried to rouse him by sharpening her
ready wit against his dull intellect; endeavouring
to excite his jealousy, if she could not rouse his
love; tried to goad him to self-assertion, but all
in vain. He remained the same, always passive,
drawling, sleepy, always courteous, invariably a gentleman:
she had all that the world and a wealthy husband can
give to a pretty woman, yet on this beautiful summer’s
evening, with the white sails of the day dream
finally hidden by the evening shadows, she felt more
lonely than that poor tramp who plodded his way wearily
along the rugged cliffs.
With another heavy sigh, Marguerite
Blakeney turned her back upon the sea and cliffs,
and walked slowly back towards “The Fisherman’s
Rest.” As she drew near, the sound of revelry,
of gay, jovial laughter, grew louder and more distinct.
She could distinguish Sir Andrew Ffoulkes’ pleasant
voice, Lord Tony’s boisterous guffaws, her husband’s
occasional, drawly, sleepy comments; then realising
the loneliness of the road and the fast gathering
gloom round her, she quickened her steps . . . the
next moment she perceived a stranger coming rapidly
towards her. Marguerite did not look up:
she was not the least nervous, and “The Fisherman’s
Rest” was now well within call.
The stranger paused when he saw Marguerite
coming quickly towards him, and just as she was about
to slip past him, he said very quietly:
“Citoyenne St. Just.”
Marguerite uttered a little cry of
astonishment, at thus hearing her own familiar maiden
name uttered so close to her. She looked up at
the stranger, and this time, with a cry of unfeigned
pleasure, she put out both her hands effusively towards
him.
“Chauvelin!” she exclaimed.
“Himself, citoyenne, at
your service,” said the stranger, gallantly
kissing the tips of her fingers.
Marguerite said nothing for a moment
or two, as she surveyed with obvious delight the not
very prepossessing little figure before her.
Chauvelin was then nearer forty than thirty-a
clever, shrewd-looking personality, with a curious
fox-like expression in the deep, sunken eyes.
He was the same stranger who an hour or two previously
had joined Mr. Jellyband in a friendly glass of wine.
“Chauvelin . . . my friend .
. .” said Marguerite, with a pretty little sigh
of satisfaction. “I am mightily pleased
to see you.”
No doubt poor Marguerite St. Just,
lonely in the midst of her grandeur, and of her starchy
friends, was happy to see a face that brought back
memories of that happy time in Paris, when she reigned-a
queen-over the intellectual coterie of
the Rue de Richelieu. She did not notice the
sarcastic little smile, however, that hovered round
the thin lips of Chauvelin.
“But tell me,” she added
merrily, “what in the world, or whom in the
world, are you doing here in England?”
“I might return the subtle compliment,
fair lady,” he said. “What of yourself?”
“Oh, I?” she said, with
a shrug of the shoulders. “Je m’ennuie,
mon ami, that is all.”
They had reached the porch of “The
Fisherman’s Rest,” but Marguerite seemed
loth to go within. The evening air was lovely
after the storm, and she had found a friend who exhaled
the breath of Paris, who knew Armand well, who could
talk of all the merry, brilliant friends whom she
had left behind. So she lingered on under the
pretty porch, while through the gaily-lighted dormer-window
of the coffee-room sounds of laughter, of calls for
“Sally” and for beer, of tapping of mugs,
and clinking of dice, mingled with Sir Percy Blakeney’s
inane and mirthless laugh. Chauvelin stood beside
her, his shrewd, pale, yellow eyes fixed on the pretty
face, which looked so sweet and childlike in this soft
English summer twilight.
“You surprise me, citoyenne,”
he said quietly, as he took a pinch of snuff.
“Do I now?” she retorted
gaily. “Faith, my little Chauvelin, I should
have thought that, with your penetration, you would
have guessed that an atmosphere composed of fogs and
virtues would never suit Marguerite St. Just.”
“Dear me! is it as bad as that?”
he asked, in mock consternation.
“Quite,” she retorted, “and worse.”
“Strange! Now, I thought
that a pretty woman would have found English country
life peculiarly attractive.”
“Yes! so did I,” she said
with a sigh, “Pretty women,” she added
meditatively, “ought to have a good time in England,
since all the pleasant things are forbidden them-the
very things they do every day.”
“Quite so!”
“You’ll hardly believe
it, my little Chauvelin,” she said earnestly,
“but I often pass a whole day-a whole
day-without encountering a single temptation.”
“No wonder,” retorted
Chauvelin, gallantly, “that the cleverest woman
in Europe is troubled with ennui.”
She laughed one of her melodious,
rippling, childlike laughs.
“It must be pretty bad, mustn’t
it?” she asked archly, “or I should not
have been so pleased to see you.”
“And this within a year of a
romantic love match . . . that’s just the difficulty
. . .”
“Ah! . . . that idyllic folly,”
said Chauvelin, with quiet sarcasm, “did not
then survive the lapse of . . . weeks?”
“Idyllic follies never last,
my little Chauvelin . . . They come upon us like
the measles . . . and are as easily cured.”
Chauvelin took another pinch of snuff:
he seemed very much addicted to that pernicious habit,
so prevalent in those days; perhaps, too, he found
the taking of snuff a convenient veil for disguising
the quick, shrewd glances with which he strove to
read the very souls of those with whom he came in
contact.
“No wonder,” he repeated,
with the same gallantry, “that the most active
brain in Europe is troubled with ennui.”
“I was in hopes that you had
a prescription against the malady, my little Chauvelin.”
“How can I hope to succeed in
that which Sir Percy Blakeney has failed to accomplish?”
“Shall we leave Sir Percy out
of the question for the present, my dear friend? she
said drily.
“Ah! my dear lady, pardon me,
but that is just what we cannot very well do,”
said Chauvelin, whilst once again his eyes, keen as
those of a fox on the alert, darted a quick glance
at Marguerite. “I have a most perfect prescription
against the worst form of ennui, which I would
have been happy to submit to you, but-
“But what?”
“There is Sir Percy.”
“What has he to do with it?”
“Quite a good deal, I am afraid.
The prescription I would offer, fair lady, is called
by a very plebeian name: Work!”
“Work?”
Chauvelin looked at Marguerite long
and scrutinisingly. It seemed as if those keen,
pale eyes of his were reading every one of her thoughts.
They were alone together; the evening air was quite
still, and their soft whispers were drowned in the
noise which came from the coffee-room. Still,
Chauvelin took as step or two from under the porch,
looked quickly and keenly all round him, then seeing
that indeed no one was within earshot, he once more
came back close to Marguerite.
“Will you render France a small
service, citoyenne?” he asked, with
a sudden change of manner, which lent his thin, fox-like
face a singular earnestness.
“La, man!” she replied
flippantly, “how serious you look all of a sudden.
. . . Indeed I do not know if I would render
France a small service-at any rate, it
depends upon the kind of service she-or
you-want.”
“Have you ever heard of the
Scarlet Pimpernel, Citoyenne St. Just?”
asked Chauvelin, abruptly.
“Heard of the Scarlet Pimpernel?”
she retorted with a long and merry laugh, “Faith
man! we talk of nothing else. . . . We have hats
’a la Scarlet Pimpernel’; our horses are
called ‘Scarlet Pimpernel’; at the Prince
of Wales’ supper party the other night we had
a ’souffle a la Scarlet Pimpernel.’ .
. . Lud!” she added gaily, “the other
day I ordered at my milliner’s a blue dress
trimmed with green, and bless me, if she did not call
that ‘a la Scarlet Pimpernel.’”
Chauvelin had not moved while she prattled merrily along; he
did not even attempt to stop her when her musical voice and her childlike laugh
went echoing through the still evening air. But he remained serious and
earnest whilst she laughed, and his voice, clear, incisive, and hard, was not
raised above his breath as he said,-
“Then, as you have heard of
that enigmatical personage, citoyenne, you must
also have guessed, and know, that the man who hides
his identity under that strange pseudonym, is the
most bitter enemy of our republic, of France . . .
of men like Armand St. Just.” “La!”
she said, with a quaint little sigh, “I dare
swear he is. . . . France has many bitter enemies
these days.”
“But you, citoyenne, are
a daughter of France, and should be ready to help
her in a moment of deadly peril.”
“My brother Armand devotes his
life to France,” she retorted proudly; “as
for me, I can do nothing . . . here in England. . .
.”
“Yes, you . . .” he urged
still more earnestly, whilst his thin fox-like face
seemed suddenly to have grown impressive and full of
dignity, “here, in England, citoyenne .
. . you alone can help us. . . . Listen!-I
have been sent over here by the Republican Government
as its representative: I present my credentials
to Mr. Pitt in London to-morrow. One of my duties
here is to find out all about this League of the Scarlet
Pimpernel, which has become a standing menace to France,
since it is pledged to help our cursed aristocrats-traitors
to their country, and enemies of the people-to
escape from the just punishment which they deserve.
You know as well as I do, citoyenne, that once
they are over here, those French EMIGRES try to rouse
public feeling against the Republic . . . They
are ready to join issue with any enemy bold enough
to attack France . . . Now, within the last month
scores of these EMIGRES, some only suspected of treason,
others actually condemned by the Tribunal of Public
Safety, have succeeded in crossing the Channel.
Their escape in each instance was planned, organized
and effected by this society of young English jackanapes,
headed by a man whose brain seems as resourceful as
his identity is mysterious. All the most strenuous
efforts on the part of my spies have failed to discover
who he is; whilst the others are the hands, he is
the head, who beneath this strange anonymity calmly
works at the destruction of France. I mean to
strike at that head, and for this I want your help-through
him afterwards I can reach the rest of the gang:
he is a young buck in English society, of that I feel
sure. Find that man for me, citoyenne!”
he urged, “find him for France.”
Marguerite had listened to Chauvelin’s
impassioned speech without uttering a word, scarce
making a movement, hardly daring to breathe. She
had told him before that this mysterious hero of romance
was the talk of the smart set to which she belonged;
already, before this, her heart and her imagination
had been stirred by the thought of the brave man, who,
unknown to fame, had rescued hundreds of lives from
a terrible, often an unmerciful fate. She had
but little real sympathy with those haughty French
aristocrats, insolent in their pride of caste, of whom
the Comtesse de Tournay de Basserive was so typical
an example; but republican and liberal-minded though
she was from principle, she hated and loathed the
methods which the young Republic had chosen for establishing
itself. She had not been in Paris for some months;
the horrors and bloodshed of the Reign of Terror,
culminating in the September massacres, had only come
across the Channel to her as a faint echo. Robespierre,
Danton, Marat, she had not known in their new guise
of bloody judiciaries, merciless wielders of the guillotine.
Her very soul recoiled in horror from these excesses,
to which she feared her brother Armand-moderate
republican as he was-might become one day
the holocaust.
Then, when first she heard of this
band of young English enthusiasts, who, for sheer
love of their fellowmen, dragged women and children,
old and young men, from a horrible death, her heart
had glowed with pride for them, and now, as Chauvelin
spoke, her very soul went out to the gallant and mysterious
leader of the reckless little band, who risked his
life daily, who gave it freely and without ostentation,
for the sake of humanity.
Her eyes were moist when Chauvelin
had finished speaking, the lace at her bosom rose
and fell with her quick, excited breathing; she no
longer heard the noise of drinking from the inn, she
did not heed her husband’s voice or his inane
laugh, her thoughts had gone wandering in search of
the mysterious hero! Ah! there was a man she might
have loved, had he come her way: everything in
him appealed to her romantic imagination; his personality,
his strength, his bravery, the loyalty of those who
served under him in that same noble cause, and, above
all, that anonymity which crowned him, as if with
a halo of romantic glory.
“Find him for France, citoyenne!”
Chauvelin’s voice close to her
ear roused her from her dreams. The mysterious
hero had vanished, and, not twenty yards away from
her, a man was drinking and laughing, to whom she
had sworn faith and loyalty.
“La! man,” she said with
a return of her assumed flippancy, “you are
astonishing. Where in the world am I to look for
him?”
“You go everywhere, citoyenne,”
whispered Chauvelin, insinuatingly, “Lady Blakeney
is the pivot of social London, so I am told . . . you
see everything, you hear everything.”
“Easy, my friend,” retorted
Marguerite, drawing, herself up to her full height
and looking down, with a slight thought of contempt
on the small, thin figure before her. “Easy!
you seem to forget that there are six feet of Sir
Percy Blakeney, and a long line of ancestors to stand
between Lady Blakeney and such a thing as you propose.”
“For the sake of France,
citoyenne!” reiterated Chauvelin, earnestly.
“Tush, man, you talk nonsense
anyway; for even if you did know who this Scarlet
Pimpernel is, you could do nothing to him-an
Englishman!”
“I’d take my chance of
that,” said Chauvelin, with a dry, rasping little
laugh. “At any rate we could send him to
the guillotine first to cool his ardour, then, when
there is a diplomatic fuss about it, we can apologise-humbly-to
the British Government, and, if necessary, pay compensation
to the bereaved family.”
“What you propose is horrible,
Chauvelin,” she said, drawing away from him
as from some noisome insect. “Whoever the
man may be, he is brave and noble, and never-do
you hear me?-never would I lend a hand to
such villainy.”
“You prefer to be insulted by
every French aristocrat who comes to this country?”
Chauvelin had taken sure aim when
he shot this tiny shaft. Marguerite’s fresh
young cheeks became a thought more pale and she bit
her under lip, for she would not let him see that
the shaft had struck home.
“That is beside the question,”
she said at last with indifference. “I
can defend myself, but I refuse to do any dirty work
for you-or for France. You have other
means at your disposal; you must use them, my friend.”
And without another look at Chauvelin,
Marguerite Blakeney turned her back on him and walked
straight into the inn.
“That is not your last word,
citoyenne,” said Chauvelin, as a flood of
light from the passage illumined her elegant, richly-clad
figure, “we meet in London, I hope!”
“We meet in London,” she
said, speaking over her shoulder at him, “but
that is my last word.”
She threw open the coffee-room door
and disappeared from his view, but he remained under
the porch for a moment or two, taking a pinch of snuff.
He had received a rebuke and a snub, but his shrewd,
fox-like face looked neither abashed nor disappointed;
on the contrary, a curious smile, half sarcastic and
wholly satisfied, played around the corners of his
thin lips.