Marguerite’s aching heart stood
still. She felt, more than she heard, the men
on the watch preparing for the fight. Her senses
told her that each, with sword in hand, was crouching,
ready for the spring.
The voice came nearer and nearer;
in the vast immensity of these lonely cliffs, with
the loud murmur of the sea below, it was impossible
to say how near, or how far, nor yet from which direction
came that cheerful singer, who sang to God to save
his King, whilst he himself was in such deadly danger.
Faint at first, the voice grew louder and louder; from
time to time a small pebble detached itself apparently
from beneath the firm tread of the singer, and went
rolling down the rocky cliffs to the beach below.
Marguerite as she heard, felt that
her very life was slipping away, as if when that voice
drew nearer, when that singer became entrapped . .
.
She distinctly heard the click of
Desgas’ gun close to her. . . .
No! no! no! no! Oh, God in heaven!
this cannot be! let Armand’s blood then be on
her own head! let her be branded as his murderer! let
even he, whom she loved, despise and loathe her for
this, but God! oh God! save him at any cost!
With a wild shriek, she sprang to her feet, and darted round
the rock, against which she had been cowering; she saw the little red gleam
through the chinks of the hut; she ran up to it and fell against its wooden
walls, which she began to hammer with clenched fists in an almost maniacal
frenzy, while she shouted,-
“Armand! Armand! for God’s
sake fire! your leader is near! he is coming! he is
betrayed! Armand! Armand! fire in Heaven’s
name!”
She was seized and thrown to the ground. She lay there
moaning, bruised, not caring, but still half-sobbing, half-shrieking,-
“Percy, my husband, for God’s
sake fly! Armand! Armand! why don’t
you fire?”
“One of you stop that woman
screaming,” hissed Chauvelin, who hardly could
refrain from striking her.
Something was thrown over her face;
she could not breathe, and perforce she was silent.
The bold singer, too, had become silent,
warned, no doubt, of his impending danger by Marguerite’s
frantic shrieks. The men had sprung to their
feet, there was no need for further silence on their
part; the very cliffs echoed the poor, heart-broken
woman’s screams.
Chauvelin, with a muttered oath, which boded no good to her,
who had dared to upset his most cherished plans, had hastily shouted the word of
command,-
“Into it, my men, and let no
one escape from that hut alive!”
The moon had once more emerged from
between the clouds: the darkness on the cliffs
had gone, giving place once more to brilliant, silvery
light. Some of the soldiers had rushed to the
rough, wooden door of the hut, whilst one of them
kept guard over Marguerite.
The door was partially open; on of
the soldiers pushed it further, but within all was
darkness, the charcoal fire only lighting with a dim,
red light the furthest corner of the hut. The
soldiers paused automatically at the door, like machines
waiting for further orders.
Chauvelin, who was prepared for a
violent onslaught from within, and for a vigorous
resistance from the four fugitives, under cover of
the darkness, was for the moment paralyzed with astonishment
when he saw the soldiers standing there at attention,
like sentries on guard, whilst not a sound proceeded
from the hut.
Filled with strange, anxious foreboding, he, too, went to the
door of the hut, and peering into the gloom, he asked quickly,-
“What is the meaning of this?”
“I think, citoyen, that there
is no one there now,” replied one of the soldiers
imperturbably.
“You have not let those four
men go?” thundered Chauvelin, menacingly.
“I ordered you to let no man escape alive!-Quick,
after them all of you! Quick, in every direction!”
The men, obedient as machines, rushed
down the rocky incline towards the beach, some going
off to right and left, as fast as their feet could
carry them.
“You and your men will pay with
your lives for this blunder, citoyen sergeant,”
said Chauvelin viciously to the sergeant who had been
in charge of the men; “and you, too, citoyen,”
he added turning with a snarl to Desgas, “for
disobeying my orders.”
“You ordered us to wait, citoyen,
until the tall Englishman arrived and joined the four
men in the hut. No one came,” said the sergeant
sullenly.
“But I ordered you just now,
when the woman screamed, to rush in and let no one
escape.”
“But, citoyen, the four men
who were there before had been gone some time, I think
. . .”
“You think?-You?
. . .” said Chauvelin, almost choking with fury,
“and you let them go . . .”
“You ordered us to wait, citoyen,”
protested the sergeant, “and to implicitly obey
your commands on pain of death. We waited.”
“I heard the men creep out of
the hut, not many minutes after we took cover, and
long before the woman screamed,” he added, as
Chauvelin seemed still quite speechless with rage.
“Hark!” said Desgas suddenly.
In the distance the sound of repeated
firing was heard. Chauvelin tried to peer along
the beach below, but as luck would have it, the fitful
moon once more hid her light behind a bank of clouds,
and he could see nothing.
“One of you go into the hut
and strike a light,” he stammered at last.
Stolidly the sergeant obeyed:
he went up to the charcoal fire and lit the small
lantern he carried in his belt; it was evident that
the hut was quite empty.
“Which way did they go?” asked Chauvelin.
“I could not tell, citoyen,”
said the sergeant; “they went straight down
the cliff first, then disappeared behind some boulders.”
“Hush! what was that?”
All three men listened attentively.
In the far, very far distance, could be heard faintly
echoing and already dying away, the quick, sharp splash
of half a dozen oars. Chauvelin took out his handkerchief
and wiped the perspiration from his forehead.
“The schooner’s boat!” was all he
gasped.
Evidently Armand St. Just and his
three companions had managed to creep along the side
of the cliffs, whilst the men, like true soldiers of
the well-drilled Republican army, had with blind obedience,
and in fear of their own lives, implicitly obeyed
Chauvelin’s orders-to wait for the
tall Englishman, who was the important capture.
They had no doubt reached one of the
creeks which jut far out to see on this coast at intervals;
behind this, the boat of the day dream must
have been on the lookout for them, and they were by
now safely on board the British schooner.
As if to confirm this last supposition,
the dull boom of a gun was heard from out at sea.
“The schooner, citoyen,”
said Desgas, quietly; “she’s off.”
It needed all Chauvelin’s nerve
and presence of mind not to give way to a useless
and undignified access of rage. There was no doubt
now, that once again, that accursed British head had
completely outwitted him. How he had contrived
to reach the hut, without being seen by one of the
thirty soldiers who guarded the spot, was more than
Chauvelin could conceive. That he had done so
before the thirty men had arrived on the cliff was,
of course, fairly clear, but how he had come over in
Reuben Goldstein’s cart, all the way from Calais,
without being sighted by the various patrols on duty
was impossible of explanation. It really seemed
as if some potent Fate watched over that daring Scarlet
Pimpernel, and his astute enemy almost felt a superstitious
shudder pass through him, as he looked round at the
towering cliffs, and the loneliness of this outlying
coast.
But surely this was reality! and the
year of grace 1792: there were no fairies and
hobgoblins about. Chauvelin and his thirty men
had all heard with their own ears that accursed voice
singing “God save the King,” fully twenty
minutes after they had all taken cover around
the hut; by that time the four fugitives must have
reached the creek, and got into the boat, and the
nearest creek was more than a mile from the hut.
Where had that daring singer got to?
Unless Satan himself had lent him wings, he could
not have covered that mile on a rocky cliff in the
space of two minutes; and only two minutes had elapsed
between his song and the sound of the boat’s
oars away at sea. He must have remained behind,
and was even now hiding somewhere about the cliffs;
the patrols were still about, he would still be sighted,
no doubt. Chauvelin felt hopeful once again.
One or two of the men, who had run
after the fugitives, were now slowly working their
way up the cliff: one of them reached Chauvelin’s
side, at the very moment that this hope arose in the
astute diplomatist’s heart.
“We were too late, citoyen,”
the soldier said, “we reached the beach just
before the moon was hidden by that bank of clouds.
The boat had undoubtedly been on the look-out behind
that first creek, a mile off, but she had shoved off
some time ago, when we got to the beach, and was already
some way out to sea. We fired after her, but of
course, it was no good. She was making straight
and quickly for the schooner. We saw her very
clearly in the moonlight.”
“Yes,” said Chauvelin,
with eager impatience, “she had shoved off some
time ago, you said, and the nearest creek is a mile
further on.”
“Yes, citoyen! I ran all
the way, straight to the beach, though I guessed the
boat would have waited somewhere near the creek, as
the tide would reach there earliest. The boat
must have shoved off some minutes before the woman
began to scream.”
“Bring the light in here!”
he commanded eagerly, as he once more entered the
hut.
The sergeant brought his lantern,
and together the two men explored the little place:
with a rapid glance Chauvelin noted its contents:
the cauldron placed close under an aperture in the
wall, and containing the last few dying embers of
burned charcoal, a couple of stools, overturned as
if in the haste of sudden departure, then the fisherman’s
tools and his nets lying in one corner, and beside
them, something small and white.
“Pick that up,” said Chauvelin
to the sergeant, pointing to this white scrap, “and
bring it to me.”
It was a crumpled piece of paper,
evidently forgotten there by the fugitives, in their
hurry to get away. The sergeant, much awed by
the citoyen’s obvious rage and impatience, picked
the paper up and handed it respectfully to Chauvelin.
“Read it, sergeant,” said the latter curtly.
“It is almost illegible, citoyen . . . a fearful
scrawl . . .”
“I ordered you to read it,” repeated Chauvelin,
viciously.
The sergeant, by the light of his
lantern, began deciphering the few hastily scrawled
words.
“I cannot quite reach you, without
risking your lives and endangering the success of
your rescue. When you receive this, wait two minutes,
then creep out of the hut one by one, turn to your
left sharply, and creep cautiously down the cliff;
keep to the left all the time, till you reach the
first rock, which you see jutting far out to sea-behind
it in the creek the boat is on the look-out for you-give
a long, sharp whistle-she will come up-get
into her-my men will row you to the schooner,
and thence to England and safety-once on
board the day dream send the boat back for
me, tell my men that I shall be at the creek, which
is in a direct line opposite the ‘Chat Gris’
near Calais. They know it. I shall be there
as soon as possible-they must wait for me
at a safe distance out at sea, till they hear the usual
signal. Do not delay-and obey these
instructions implicitly.”
“Then there is the signature,
citoyen,” added the sergeant, as he handed the
paper back to Chauvelin.
But the latter had not waited an instant.
One phrase of the momentous scrawl had caught his
ear. “I shall be at the creek which is in
a direct line opposite the ‘Chat Gris’
near Calais”: that phrase might yet mean
victory for him. “Which of you knows this
coast well?” he shouted to his men who now one
by one all returned from their fruitless run, and were
all assembled once more round the hut.
“I do, citoyen,” said
one of them, “I was born in Calais, and know
every stone of these cliffs.”
“There is a creek in a direct line from the
’Chat Gris’?”
“There is, citoyen. I know it well.”
“The Englishman is hoping to
reach that creek. He does not know every
stone of these cliffs, he may go there by the longest
way round, and in any case he will proceed cautiously
for fear of the patrols. At any rate, there is
a chance to get him yet. A thousand francs to
each man who gets to that creek before that long-legged
Englishman.”
“I know of a short cut across
the cliffs,” said the soldier, and with an enthusiastic
shout, he rushed forward, followed closely by his comrades.
Within a few minutes their running
footsteps had died away in the distance. Chauvelin
listened to them for a moment; the promise of the
reward was lending spurs to the soldiers of the Republic.
The gleam of hate and anticipated triumph was once
more apparent on his face.
Close to him Desgas still stood mute
and impassive, waiting for further orders, whilst
two soldiers were kneeling beside the prostrate form
of Marguerite. Chauvelin gave his secretary a
vicious look. His well-laid plan had failed,
its sequel was problematical; there was still a great
chance now that the Scarlet Pimpernel might yet escape,
and Chauvelin, with that unreasoning fury, which sometimes
assails a strong nature, was longing to vent his rage
on somebody.
The soldiers were holding Marguerite
pinioned to the ground, though, she, poor soul, was
not making the faintest struggle. Overwrought
nature had at last peremptorily asserted herself,
and she lay there in a dead swoon: her eyes circled
by deep purple lines, that told of long, sleepless
nights, her hair matted and damp round her forehead,
her lips parted in a sharp curve that spoke of physical
pain.
The cleverest woman in Europe, the
elegant and fashionable Lady Blakeney, who had dazzled
London society with her beauty, her wit and her extravagances,
presented a very pathetic picture of tired-out, suffering
womanhood, which would have appealed to any, but the
hard, vengeful heart of her baffled enemy.
“It is no use mounting guard
over a woman who is half dead,” he said spitefully
to the soldiers, “when you have allowed five
men who were very much alive to escape.”
Obediently the soldiers rose to their feet.
“You’d better try and
find that footpath again for me, and that broken-down
cart we left on the road.”
Then suddenly a bright idea seemed to strike him.
“Ah! by-the-bye! where is the Jew?”
“Close by here, citoyen,”
said Desgas; “I gagged him and tied his legs
together as you commanded.”
From the immediate vicinity, a plaintive
moan reached Chauvelin’s ears. He followed
his secretary, who led the way to the other side of
the hut, where, fallen into an absolute heap of dejection,
with his legs tightly pinioned together and his mouth
gagged, lay the unfortunate descendant of Israel.
His face in the silvery light of the
moon looked positively ghastly with terror: his
eyes were wide open and almost glassy, and his whole
body was trembling, as if with ague, while a piteous
wail escaped his bloodless lips. The rope which
had originally been wound round his shoulders and
arms had evidently given way, for it lay in a tangle
about his body, but he seemed quite unconscious of
this, for he had not made the slightest attempt to
move from the place where Desgas had originally put
him: like a terrified chicken which looks upon
a line of white chalk, drawn on a table, as on a string
which paralyzes its movements.
“Bring the cowardly brute here,” commanded
Chauvelin.
He certainly felt exceedingly vicious, and since he had no
reasonable grounds for venting his ill-humour on the soldiers who had but too
punctually obeyed his orders, he felt that the son of the despised race would
prove an excellent butt. With true French contempt of the Jew, which has
survived the lapse of centuries even to this day, he would not go too near him,
but said with biting sarcasm, as the wretched old man was brought in full light
of the moon by the two soldiers,-
“I suppose now, that being a
Jew, you have a good memory for bargains?”
“Answer!” he again commanded,
as the Jew with trembling lips seemed too frightened
to speak.
“Yes, your Honour,” stammered the poor
wretch.
“You remember, then, the one
you and I made together in Calais, when you undertook
to overtake Reuben Goldstein, his nag and my friend
the tall stranger? Eh?”
“B . . . b . . . but . . . your Honour . . .”
“There is no ‘but.’ I said,
do you remember?”
“Y . . . y . . . y . . . yes . . . your Honour!”
“What was the bargain?”
There was dead silence. The unfortunate
man looked round at the great cliffs, the moon above,
the stolid faces of the soldiers, and even at the
poor, prostate, inanimate woman close by, but said
nothing.
“Will you speak?” thundered Chauvelin,
menacingly.
He did try, poor wretch, but, obviously,
he could not. There was no doubt, however, that
he knew what to expect from the stern man before him.
“Your Honour . . .” he ventured imploringly.
“Since your terror seems to
have paralyzed your tongue,” said Chauvelin
sarcastically, “I must needs refresh your memory.
It was agreed between us, that if we overtook my friend
the tall stranger, before he reached this place, you
were to have ten pieces of gold.”
A low moan escaped from the Jew’s trembling
lips.
“But,” added Chauvelin,
with slow emphasis, “if you deceived me in your
promise, you were to have a sound beating, one that
would teach you not to tell lies.”
“I did not, your Honour; I swear it by Abraham
. . .”
“And by all the other patriarchs,
I know. Unfortunately, they are still in Hades,
I believe, according to your creed, and cannot help
you much in your present trouble. Now, you did
not fulfil your share of the bargain, but I am ready
to fulfil mine. Here,” he added, turning
to the soldiers, “the buckle-end of your two
belts to this confounded Jew.”
As the soldiers obediently unbuckled
their heavy leather belts, the Jew set up a howl that
surely would have been enough to bring all the patriarchs
out of Hades and elsewhere, to defend their descendant
from the brutality of this French official.
“I think I can rely on you,
citoyen soldiers,” laughed Chauvelin, maliciously,
“to give this old liar the best and soundest
beating he has ever experienced. But don’t
kill him,” he added drily.
“We will obey, citoyen,”
replied the soldiers as imperturbably as ever.
He did not wait to see his orders
carried out: he knew that he could trust these
soldiers-who were still smarting under his
rebuke-not to mince matters, when given
a free hand to belabour a third party.
“When that lumbering coward
has had his punishment,” he said to Desgas,
“the men can guide us as far as the cart, and
one of them can drive us in it back to Calais.
The Jew and the woman can look after each other,”
he added roughly, “until we can send somebody
for them in the morning. They can’t run
away very far, in their present condition, and we cannot
be troubled with them just now.”
Chauvelin had not given up all hope.
His men, he knew, were spurred on by the hope of the
reward. That enigmatic and audacious Scarlet
Pimpernel, alone and with thirty men at his heels,
could not reasonably be expected to escape a second
time.
But he felt less sure now: the
Englishman’s audacity had baffled him once,
whilst the wooden-headed stupidity of the soldiers,
and the interference of a woman had turned his hand,
which held all the trumps, into a losing one.
If Marguerite had not taken up his time, if the soldiers
had had a grain of intelligence, if . . . it was a
long “if,” and Chauvelin stood for a moment
quite still, and enrolled thirty odd people in one
long, overwhelming anathema. Nature, poetic, silent,
balmy, the bright moon, the calm, silvery sea spoke
of beauty and of rest, and Chauvelin cursed nature,
cursed man and woman, and above all, he cursed all
long-legged, meddlesome British enigmas with one
gigantic curse.
The howls of the Jew behind him, undergoing
his punishment sent a balm through his heart, overburdened
as it was with revengeful malice. He smiled.
It eased his mind to think that some human being at
least was, like himself, not altogether at peace with
mankind.
He turned and took a last look at
the lonely bit of coast, where stood the wooden hut,
now bathed in moonlight, the scene of the greatest
discomfiture ever experienced by a leading member of
the Committee of Public Safety.
Against a rock, on a hard bed of stone,
lay the unconscious figure of Marguerite Blakeney,
while some few paces further on, the unfortunate Jew
was receiving on his broad back the blows of two stout
leather belts, wielded by the stolid arms of two sturdy
soldiers of the Republic. The howls of Benjamin
Rosenbaum were fit to make the dead rise from their
graves. They must have wakened all the gulls from
sleep, and made them look down with great interest
at the doings of the lords of the creation.
“That will do,” commanded
Chauvelin, as the Jew’s moans became more feeble,
and the poor wretch seemed to have fainted away, “we
don’t want to kill him.”
Obediently the soldiers buckled on
their belts, one of them viciously kicking the Jew
to one side.
“Leave him there,” said
Chauvelin, “and lead the way now quickly to the
cart. I’ll follow.”
He walked up to where Marguerite lay,
and looked down into her face. She had evidently
recovered consciousness, and was making feeble efforts
to raise herself. Her large, blue eyes were looking
at the moonlit scene round her with a scared and terrified
look; they rested with a mixture of horror and pity
on the Jew, whose luckless fate and wild howls had
been the first signs that struck her, with her returning
senses; then she caught sight of Chauvelin, in his
neat, dark clothes, which seemed hardly crumpled after
the stirring events of the last few hours. He
was smiling sarcastically, and his pale eyes peered
down at her with a look of intense malice.
With mock gallantry, he stooped and
raised her icy-cold hand to his lips, which sent a
thrill of indescribable loathing through Marguerite’s
weary frame.
“I much regret, fair lady,”
he said in his most suave tones, “that circumstances,
over which I have no control, compel me to leave you
here for the moment. But I go away, secure in
the knowledge that I do not leave you unprotected.
Our friend Benjamin here, though a trifle the worse
for wear at the present moment, will prove a gallant
defender of your fair person, I have no doubt.
At dawn I will send an escort for you; until then,
I feel sure that you will find him devoted, though
perhaps a trifle slow.”
Marguerite only had the strength to
turn her head away. Her heart was broken with
cruel anguish. One awful thought had returned
to her mind, together with gathering consciousness:
“What had become of Percy?-What of
Armand?”
She knew nothing of what had happened
after she heard the cheerful song, “God save
the King,” which she believed to be the signal
of death.
“I, myself,” concluded
Chauvelin, “must now very reluctantly leave you.
Au Revoir, fair lady. We meet, I hope,
soon in London. Shall I see you at the Prince
of Wales’ garden party?-No?-Ah,
well, Au Revoir!-Remember me,
I pray, to Sir Percy Blakeney.”
And, with a last ironical smile and
bow, he once more kissed her hand, and disappeared
down the footpath in the wake of the soldiers, and
followed by the imperturbable Desgas.