The weariest nights, the longest days,
sooner or later must perforce come to an end.
Marguerite had spent over fifteen
hours in such acute mental torture as well-nigh drove
her crazy. After a sleepless night, she rose early,
wild with excitement, dying to start on her journey,
terrified lest further obstacles lay in her way.
She rose before anyone else in the house was astir,
so frightened was she, lest she should miss the one
golden opportunity of making a start.
When she came downstairs, she found
Sir Andrew Ffoulkes sitting in the coffee-room.
He had been out half an hour earlier, and had gone
to the Admiralty Pier, only to find that neither the
French packet nor any privately chartered vessel could
put out of Dover yet. The storm was then at its
fullest, and the tide was on the turn. If the
wind did not abate or change, they would perforce
have to wait another ten or twelve hours until the
next tide, before a start could be made. And the
storm had not abated, the wind had not changed, and
the tide was rapidly drawing out.
Marguerite felt the sickness of despair
when she heard this melancholy news. Only the
most firm resolution kept her from totally breaking
down, and thus adding to the young man’s anxiety,
which evidently had become very keen.
Though he tried to hide it, Marguerite
could see that Sir Andrew was just as anxious as she
was to reach his comrade and friend. This enforced
inactivity was terrible to them both.
How they spent that wearisome day
at Dover, Marguerite could never afterwards say.
She was in terror of showing herself, lest Chauvelin’s
spies happened to be about, so she had a private sitting-room,
and she and Sir Andrew sat there hour after hour,
trying to take, at long intervals, some perfunctory
meals, which little Sally would bring them, with nothing
to do but to think, to conjecture, and only occasionally
to hope.
The storm had abated just too late;
the tide was by then too far out to allow a vessel
to put off to sea. The wind had changed, and was
settling down to a comfortable north-westerly breeze-a
veritable godsend for a speedy passage across to France.
And there those two waited, wondering
if the hour would ever come when they could finally
make a start. There had been one happy interval
in this long weary day, and that was when Sir Andrew
went down once again to the pier, and presently came
back to tell Marguerite that he had chartered a quick
schooner, whose skipper was ready to put to sea the
moment the tide was favourable.
From that moment the hours seemed
less wearisome; there was less hopelessness in the
waiting; and at last, at five o’clock in the
afternoon, Marguerite, closely veiled and followed
by Sir Andrew Ffoulkes, who, in the guise of her lacquey,
was carrying a number of impedimenta, found her way
down to the pier.
Once on board, the keen, fresh sea-air
revived her, the breeze was just strong enough to
nicely swell the sails of the foam Crest,
as she cut her way merrily towards the open.
The sunset was glorious after the
storm, and Marguerite, as she watched the white cliffs
of Dover gradually disappearing from view, felt more
at peace and once more almost hopeful.
Sir Andrew was full of kind attentions,
and she felt how lucky she had been to have him by
her side in this, her great trouble.
Gradually the grey coast of France
began to emerge from the fast-gathering evening mists.
One or two lights could be seen flickering, and the
spires of several churches to rise out of the surrounding
haze.
Half an hour later Marguerite had
landed upon French shore. She was back in that
country where at this very moment men slaughtered their
fellow-creatures by the hundreds, and sent innocent
women and children in thousands to the block.
The very aspect of the country and
its people, even in this remote sea-coast town, spoke
of that seething revolution, three hundred miles away,
in beautiful Paris, now rendered hideous by the constant
flow of the blood of her noblest sons, by the wailing
of the widows, and the cries of fatherless children.
The men all wore red caps-in
various stages of cleanliness-but all with
the tricolor cockade pinned on the left-side.
Marguerite noticed with a shudder that, instead of
the laughing, merry countenance habitual to her own
countrymen, their faces now invariably wore a look
of sly distrust.
Every man nowadays was a spy upon
his fellows: the most innocent word uttered in
jest might at any time be brought up as a proof of
aristocratic tendencies, or of treachery against the
people. Even the women went about with a curious
look of fear and of hate lurking in their brown eyes;
and all watched Marguerite as she stepped on shore,
followed by Sir Andrew, and murmured as she passed
along: “Sacres aristos!”
or else “Sacres ANGLAIS!”
Otherwise their presence excited no
further comment. Calais, even in those days,
was in constant business communication with England,
and English merchants were often seen on this coast.
It was well known that in view of the heavy duties
in England, a vast deal of French wines and brandies
were smuggled across. This pleased the French
Bourgeois immensely; he liked to see the English
Government and the English king, both of whom he hated,
cheated out of their revenues; and an English smuggler
was always a welcome guest at the tumble-down taverns
of Calais and Boulogne.
So, perhaps, as Sir Andrew gradually
directed Marguerite through the tortuous streets of
Calais, many of the population, who turned with an
oath to look at the strangers clad in English fashion,
thought that they were bent on purchasing dutiable
articles for their own fog-ridden country, and gave
them no more than a passing thought.
Marguerite, however, wondered how
her husband’s tall, massive figure could have
passed through Calais unobserved: she marvelled
what disguise he assumed to do his noble work, without
exciting too much attention.
Without exchanging more than a few
words, Sir Andrew was leading her right across the
town, to the other side from that where they had landed,
and the way towards Cap Gris Nez. The streets
were narrow, tortuous, and mostly evil-smelling, with
a mixture of stale fish and damp cellar odours.
There had been heavy rain here during the storm last
night, and sometimes Marguerite sank ankle-deep in
the mud, for the roads were not lighted save by the
occasional glimmer from a lamp inside a house.
But she did not heed any of these
petty discomforts: “We may meet Blakeney
at the ‘Chat Gris,’” Sir Andrew had
said, when they landed, and she was walking as if
on a carpet of rose-leaves, for she was going to meet
him almost at once.
At last they reached their destination.
Sir Andrew evidently knew the road, for he had walked
unerringly in the dark, and had not asked his way
from anyone. It was too dark then for Marguerite
to notice the outside aspect of this house. The
“Chat Gris,” as Sir Andrew had called
it, was evidently a small wayside inn on the outskirts
of Calais, and on the way to Gris Nez. It lay
some little distance from the coast, for the sound
of the sea seemed to come from afar.
Sir Andrew knocked at the door with
the knob of his cane, and from within Marguerite heard
a sort of grunt and the muttering of a number of oaths.
Sir Andrew knocked again, this time more peremptorily:
more oaths were heard, and then shuffling steps seemed
to draw near the door. Presently this was thrown
open, and Marguerite found herself on the threshold
of the most dilapidated, most squalid room she had
ever seen in all her life.
The paper, such as it was, was hanging
from the walls in strips; there did not seem to be
a single piece of furniture in the room that could,
by the wildest stretch of imagination, be called “whole.”
Most of the chairs had broken backs, others had no
seats to them, one corner of the table was propped
up with a bundle of faggots, there where the fourth
leg had been broken.
In one corner of the room there was
a huge hearth, over which hung a stock-pot, with a
not altogether unpalatable odour of hot soup emanating
therefrom. On one side of the room, high up in
the wall, there was a species of loft, before which
hung a tattered blue-and-white checked curtain.
A rickety set of steps led up to this loft.
On the great bare walls, with their
colourless paper, all stained with varied filth, there
were chalked up at intervals in great bold characters,
the words: “Liberté-Égalité-Fraternité.”
The whole of this sordid abode was
dimly lighted by an evil-smelling oil-lamp, which
hung from the rickety rafters of the ceiling.
It all looked so horribly squalid, so dirty and uninviting,
that Marguerite hardly dared to cross the threshold.
Sir Andrew, however, had stepped unhesitatingly forward.
“English travellers, citoyen!” he said
boldly, and speaking in French.
The individual who had come to the
door in response to Sir Andrew’s knock, and
who, presumably, was the owner of this squalid abode,
was an elderly, heavily built peasant, dressed in
a dirty blue blouse, heavy sabots, from which
wisps of straw protruded all round, shabby blue trousers,
and the inevitable red cap with the tricolour cockade,
that proclaimed his momentary political views.
He carried a short wooden pipe, from which the odour
of rank tobacco emanated. He looked with some
suspicion and a great deal of contempt at the two travellers,
muttering “SACRRRES ANGLAIS!” and spat
upon the ground to further show his independence of
spirit, but, nevertheless, he stood aside to let them
enter, no doubt well aware that these same SACCRES
ANGLAIS always had well-filled purses.
“Oh, lud!” said Marguerite,
as she advanced into the room, holding her handkerchief
to her dainty nose, “what a dreadful hole!
Are you sure this is the place?”
“Aye! ’this the place,
sure enough,” replied the young man as, with
his lace-edged, fashionable handkerchief, he dusted
a chair for Marguerite to sit on; “but I vow
I never saw a more villainous hole.”
“Faith!” she said, looking
round with some curiosity and a great deal of horror
at the dilapidated walls, the broken chairs, the rickety
table, “it certainly does not look inviting.”
The landlord of the “Chat Gris”-by
name, Brogard-had taken no further notice
of his guests; he concluded that presently they would
order supper, and in the meanwhile it was not for
a free citizen to show deference, or even courtesy,
to anyone, however smartly they might be dressed.
By the hearth sat a huddled-up figure
clad, seemingly, mostly in rags: that figure
was apparently a woman, although even that would have
been hard to distinguish, except for the cap, which
had once been white, and for what looked like the
semblance of a petticoat. She was sitting mumbling
to herself, and from time to time stirring the brew
in her stock-pot.
“Hey, my friend!” said
Sir Andrew at last, “we should like some supper.
. . . The citoyenne there,” he added,
“is concocting some delicious soup, I’ll
warrant, and my mistress has not tasted food for several
hours.”
It took Brogard some few minutes to
consider the question. A free citizen does not
respond too readily to the wishes of those who happen
to require something of him.
“SACRRRES aristos!”
he murmured, and once more spat upon the ground.
Then he went very slowly up to a dresser
which stood in a corner of the room; from this he
took an old pewter soup-tureen and slowly, and without
a word, he handed it to his better-half, who, in the
same silence, began filling the tureen with the soup
out of her stock-pot.
Marguerite had watched all these preparations
with absolute horror; were it not for the earnestness
of her purpose, she would incontinently have fled
from this abode of dirt and evil smells.
“Faith! our host and hostess
are not cheerful people,” said Sir Andrew, seeing
the look of horror on Marguerite’s face.
“I would I could offer you a more hearty and
more appetising meal . . . but I think you will find
the soup eatable and the wine good; these people wallow
in dirt, but live well as a rule.”
“Nay! I pray you, Sir Andrew,”
she said gently, “be not anxious about me.
My mind is scarce inclined to dwell on thoughts of
supper.”
Brogard was slowly pursuing his gruesome
preparations; he had placed a couple of spoons, also
two glasses on the table, both of which Sir Andrew
took the precaution of wiping carefully.
Brogard had also produced a bottle
of wine and some bread, and Marguerite made an effort
to draw her chair to the table and to make some pretence
at eating. Sir Andrew, as befitting his Rôle
of lacquey, stood behind her chair.
“Nay, Madame, I pray you,”
he said, seeing that Marguerite seemed quite unable
to eat, “I beg of you to try and swallow some
food-remember you have need of all your
strength.”
The soup certainly was not bad; it
smelt and tasted good. Marguerite might have
enjoyed it, but for the horrible surroundings.
She broke the bread, however, and drank some of the
wine.
“Nay, Sir Andrew,” she
said, “I do not like to see you standing.
You have need of food just as much as I have.
This creature will only think that I am an eccentric
Englishwoman eloping with her lacquey, if you’ll
sit down and partake of this semblance of supper beside
me.”
Indeed, Brogard having placed what
was strictly necessary upon the table, seemed not
to trouble himself any further about his guests.
The Mere Brogard had quietly shuffled out of the room,
and the man stood and lounged about, smoking his evil-smelling
pipe, sometimes under Marguerite’s very nose,
as any free-born citizen who was anybody’s equal
should do.
“Confound the brute!”
said Sir Andrew, with native British wrath, as Brogard
leant up against the table, smoking and looking down
superciliously at these two SACRRRES ANGLAIS.
“In Heaven’s name, man,”
admonished Marguerite, hurriedly, seeing that Sir
Andrew, with British-born instinct, was ominously clenching
his fist, “remember that you are in France,
and that in this year of grace this is the temper
of the people.”
“I’d like to scrag the
brute!” muttered Sir Andrew, savagely.
He had taken Marguerite’s advice
and sat next to her at table, and they were both making
noble efforts to deceive one another, by pretending
to eat and drink.
“I pray you,” said Marguerite,
“keep the creature in a good temper, so that
he may answer the questions we must put to him.”
“I’ll do my best, but,
begad! I’d sooner scrag him than question
him. Hey! my friend,” he said pleasantly
in French, and tapping Brogard lightly on the shoulder,
“do you see many of our quality along these
parts? Many English travellers, I mean?”
Brogard looked round at him, over his near shoulder, puffed
away at his pipe for a moment or two as he was in no hurry, then muttered,-
“Heu!-sometimes!”
“Ah!” said Sir Andrew,
carelessly, “English travellers always know
where they can get good wine, eh! my friend?-Now,
tell me, my lady was desiring to know if by any chance
you happen to have seen a great friend of hers, an
English gentleman, who often comes to Calais on business;
he is tall, and recently was on his way to Paris-my
lady hoped to have met him in Calais.”
Marguerite tried not to look at Brogard, lest she should
betray before him the burning anxiety with which she waited for his reply.
But a free-born French citizen is never in any hurry to answer questions:
Brogard took his time, then he said very slowly,-
“Tall Englishman?-To-day!-Yes.”
“Yes, to-day,” muttered
Brogard, sullenly. Then he quietly took Sir Andrew’s
hat from a chair close by, put it on his own head,
tugged at his dirty blouse, and generally tried to
express in pantomime that the individual in question
wore very fine clothes. “SACRRE aristo!”
he muttered, “that tall Englishman!”
Marguerite could scarce repress a scream.
“It’s Sir Percy right enough,” she
murmured, “and not even in disguise!”
She smiled, in the midst of all her
anxiety and through her gathering tears, at the thought
of “the ruling passion strong in death”;
of Percy running into the wildest, maddest dangers,
with the latest-cut coat upon his back, and the laces
of his jabot unruffled.
“Oh! the foolhardiness of it!”
she sighed. “Quick, Sir Andrew! ask the
man when he went.”
“Ah yes, my friend,” said
Sir Andrew, addressing Brogard, with the same assumption
of carelessness, “my lord always wears beautiful
clothes; the tall Englishman you saw, was certainly
my lady’s friend. And he has gone, you
say?”
“He went . . . yes . . . but
he’s coming back . . . here-he ordered
supper . . .”
Sir Andrew put his hand with a quick
gesture of warning upon Marguerite’s arm; it
came none too sooe, for the next moment her wild,
mad joy would have betrayed her. He was safe and
well, was coming back here presently, she would see
him in a few moments perhaps. . . . Oh! the wildness
of her joy seemed almost more than she could bear.
“Here!” she said to Brogard,
who seemed suddenly to have been transformed in her
eyes into some heaven-born messenger of bliss.
“Here!-did you say the English gentleman
was coming back here?”
The heaven-born messenger of bliss
spat upon the floor, to express his contempt for all
and sundry aristos, who chose to haunt the “Chat
Gris.”
“Heu!” he muttered, “he
ordered supper-he will come back . . .
SACRRE ANGLAIS!” he added, by way of protest
against all this fuss for a mere Englishman.
“But where is he now?-Do
you know?” she asked eagerly, placing her dainty
white hand upon the dirty sleeve of his blue blouse.
“He went to get a horse and
cart,” said Brogard, laconically, as with a
surly gesture, he shook off from his arm that pretty
hand which princes had been proud to kiss.
“At what time did he go?”
But Brogard had evidently had enough
of these questionings. He did not think that
it was fitting for a citizen-who was the
equal of anybody-to be thus catechised
by these SACRRES aristos, even though they were
rich English ones. It was distinctly more fitting
to his newborn dignity to be as rude as possible;
it was a sure sign of servility to meekly reply to
civil questions.
“I don’t know,”
he said surlily. “I have said enough, VOYONS,
les aristos! . . . He came to-day.
He ordered supper. He went out.-He’ll
come back. Voila!”
And with this parting assertion of
his rights as a citizen and a free man, to be as rude
as he well pleased, Brogard shuffled out of the room,
banging the door after him.