Marguerite listened-half-dazed
as she was-to the fast-retreating, firm
footsteps of the four men.
All nature was so still that she,
lying with her ear close to the ground, could distinctly
trace the sound of their tread, as they ultimately
turned into the road, and presently the faint echo
of the old cart-wheels, the halting gait of the lean
nag, told her that her enemy was a quarter of a league
away. How long she lay there she knew not.
She had lost count of time; dreamily she looked up
at the moonlit sky, and listened to the monotonous
roll of the waves.
The invigorating scent of the sea
was nectar to her wearied body, the immensity of the
lonely cliffs was silent and dreamlike. Her brain
only remained conscious of its ceaseless, its intolerable
torture of uncertainty.
She did not know!-
She did not know whether Percy was
even now, at this moment, in the hands of the soldiers
of the Republic, enduring-as she had done
herself-the gibes and jeers of his malicious
enemy. She did not know, on the other hand, whether
Armand’s lifeless body did not lie there, in
the hut, whilst Percy had escaped, only to hear that
his wife’s hands had guided the human bloodhounds
to the murder of Armand and his friends.
The physical pain of utter weariness
was so great, that she hoped confidently her tired
body could rest here for ever, after all the turmoil,
the passion, and the intrigues of the last few days-here,
beneath that clear sky, within sound of the sea, and
with this balmy autumn breeze whispering to her a
last lullaby. All was so solitary, so silent,
like unto dreamland. Even the last faint echo
of the distant cart had long ago died away, afar.
Suddenly . . . a sound . . . the strangest,
undoubtedly, that these lonely cliffs of France had
ever heard, broke the silent solemnity of the shore.
So strange a sound was it that the
gentle breeze ceased to murmur, the tiny pebbles to
roll down the steep incline! So strange, that
Marguerite, wearied, overwrought as she was, thought
that the beneficial unconsciousness of the approach
of death was playing her half-sleeping senses a weird
and elusive trick.
It was the sound of a good, solid,
absolutely British “Damn!”
The sea gulls in their nests awoke
and looked round in astonishment; a distant and solitary
owl set up a midnight hoot, the tall cliffs frowned
down majestically at the strange, unheard-of sacrilege.
Marguerite did not trust her ears.
Half-raising herself on her hands, she strained every
sense to see or hear, to know the meaning of this
very earthly sound.
All was still again for the space
of a few seconds; the same silence once more fell
upon the great and lonely vastness.
Then Marguerite, who had listened
as in a trance, who felt she must be dreaming with
that cool, magnetic moonlight overhead, heard again;
and this time her heart stood still, her eyes large
and dilated, looked round her, not daring to trust
her other sense.
“Odd’s life! but I wish
those demmed fellows had not hit quite so hard!”
This time it was quite unmistakable,
only one particular pair of essentially British lips
could have uttered those words, in sleepy, drawly,
affected tones.
“Damn!” repeated those
same British lips, emphatically. “Zounds!
but I’m as weak as a rat!”
In a moment Marguerite was on her feet.
Was she dreaming? Were those
great, stony cliffs the gates of paradise? Was
the fragrant breath of the breeze suddenly caused by
the flutter of angels’ wings, bringing tidings
of unearthly joys to her, after all her suffering,
or-faint and ill-was she the
prey of delirium?
She listened again, and once again
she heard the same very earthly sounds of good, honest
British language, not the least akin to whisperings
from paradise or flutter of angels’ wings.
She looked round her eagerly at the
tall cliffs, the lonely hut, the great stretch of
rocky beach. Somewhere there, above or below her,
behind a boulder or inside a crevice, but still hidden
from her longing, feverish eyes, must be the owner
of that voice, which once used to irritate her, but
now would make her the happiest woman in Europe, if
only she could locate it.
“Percy! Percy!” she
shrieked hysterically, tortured between doubt and
hope, “I am here! Come to me! Where
are you? Percy! Percy! . . .”
“It’s all very well calling
me, m’dear!” said the same sleepy, drawly
voice, “but odd’s life, I cannot come to
you: those demmed frog-eaters have trussed me
like a goose on a spit, and I am weak as a mouse .
. . I cannot get away.”
And still Marguerite did not understand.
She did not realise for at least another ten seconds
whence came that voice, so drawly, so dear, but alas!
with a strange accent of weakness and of suffering.
There was no one within sight . . . except by that
rock . . . Great God! . . . the Jew! . . .
Was she mad or dreaming? . . .
His back was against the pale moonlight,
he was half crouching, trying vainly to raise himself
with his arms tightly pinioned. Marguerite ran
up to him, took his head in both her hands . . . and
look straight into a pair of blue eyes, good-natured,
even a trifle amused-shining out of the
weird and distorted mask of the Jew.
“Percy! . . . Percy! .
. . my husband!” she gasped, faint with the fulness
of her joy. “Thank God! Thank God!”
“La! m’dear,” he
rejoined good-humouredly, “we will both do that
anon, an you think you can loosen these demmed ropes,
and release me from my inelegant attitude.”
She had no knife, her fingers were
numb and weak, but she worked away with her teeth,
while great welcome tears poured from her eyes, onto
those poor, pinioned hands.
“Odd’s life!” he
said, when at last, after frantic efforts on her part,
the ropes seemed at last to be giving way, “but
I marvel whether it has ever happened before, that
an English gentleman allowed himself to be licked
by a demmed foreigner, and made no attempt to give
as good as he got.”
It was very obvious that he was exhausted
from sheer physical pain, and when at last the rope
gave way, he fell in a heap against the rock.
Marguerite looked helplessly round her.
“Oh! for a drop of water on
this awful beach!” she cried in agony, seeing
that he was ready to faint again.
“Nay, m’dear,” he
murmured with his good-humoured smile, “personally
I should prefer a drop of good French brandy! an you’ll
dive in the pocket of this dirty old garment, you’ll
find my flask. . . . I am demmed if I can move.”
When he had drunk some brandy, he
forced Marguerite to do likewise.
“La! that’s better now!
Eh! little woman?” he said, with a sigh of satisfaction.
“Heigh-ho! but this is a queer rig-up for Sir
Percy Blakeney, Bart., to be found in by his lady,
and no mistake. Begad!” he added, passing
his hand over his chin, “I haven’t been
shaved for nearly twenty hours: I must look a
disgusting object. As for these curls . . .”
And laughingly he took off the disfiguring
wig and curls, and stretched out his long limbs, which
were cramped from many hours’ stooping.
Then he bent forward and looked long and searchingly
into his wife’s blue eyes.
“Percy,” she whispered,
while a deep blush suffused her delicate cheeks and
neck, “if you only knew . . .”
“I do know, dear . . . everything,”
he said with infinite gentleness.
“And can you ever forgive?”
“I have naught to forgive, sweetheart;
your heroism, your devotion, which I, alas! so little
deserved, have more than atoned for that unfortunate
episode at the ball.”
“Then you knew? . . .”
she whispered, “all the time . . .”
“Yes!” he replied tenderly,
“I knew . . . all the time. . . . But,
begad! had I but known what a noble heart yours was,
my Margot, I should have trusted you, as you deserved
to be trusted, and you would not have had to undergo
the terrible sufferings of the past few hours, in order
to run after a husband, who has done so much that needs
forgiveness.”
They were sitting side by side, leaning
up against a rock, and he had rested his aching head
on her shoulder. She certainly now deserved the
name of “the happiest woman in Europe.”
“It is a case of the blind leading
the lame, sweetheart, is it not?” he said with
his good-natured smile of old. “Odd’s
life! but I do not know which are the more sore, my
shoulders or your little feet.”
He bent forward to kiss them, for
they peeped out through her torn stockings, and bore
pathetic witness to her endurance and devotion.
“But Armand . . .” she
said with sudden terror and remorse, as in the midst
of her happiness the image of the beloved brother,
for whose sake she had so deeply sinned, rose now
before her mind.
“Oh! have no fear for Armand,
sweetheart,” he said tenderly, “did I not
pledge you my word that he should be safe? He
with de Tournay and the others are even now on board
the day dream.”
“But how?” she gasped, “I do not
understand.”
“Yet, ’tis simple enough,
m’dear,” he said with that funny, half-shy,
half-inane laugh of his, “you see! when I found
that that brute Chauvelin meant to stick to me like
a leech, I thought the best thing I could do, as I
could not shake him off, was to take him along with
me. I had to get to Armand and the others somehow,
and all the roads were patrolled, and every one on
the look-out for your humble servant. I knew
that when I slipped through Chauvelin’s fingers
at the ‘Chat Gris,’ that he would lie
in wait for me here, whichever way I took. I wanted
to keep an eye on him and his doings, and a British
head is as good as a French one any day.”
Indeed it had proved to be infinitely
better, and Marguerite’s heart was filled with
joy and marvel, as he continued to recount to her the
daring manner in which he had snatched the fugitives
away, right from under Chauvelin’s very nose.
“Dressed as the dirty old Jew,”
he said gaily, “I knew I should not be recognized.
I had met Reuben Goldstein in Calais earlier in the
evening. For a few gold pieces he supplied me
with this rig-out, and undertook to bury himself out
of sight of everybody, whilst he lent me his cart and
nag.”
“But if Chauvelin had discovered
you,” she gasped excitedly, “your disguise
was good . . . but he is so sharp.”
“Odd’s fish!” he
rejoined quietly, “then certainly the game would
have been up. I could but take the risk.
I know human nature pretty well by now,” he
added, with a note of sadness in his cheery, young
voice, “and I know these Frenchmen out and out.
They so loathe a Jew, that they never come nearer
than a couple of yards of him, and begad! I fancy
that I contrived to make myself look about as loathsome
an object as it is possible to conceive.”
“Yes!-and then?” she asked
eagerly.
“Zooks!-then I carried
out my little plan: that is to say, at first
I only determined to leave everything to chance, but
when I heard Chauvelin giving his orders to the soldiers,
I thought that Fate and I were going to work together
after all. I reckoned on the blind obedience
of the soldiers. Chauvelin had ordered them on
pain of death not to stir until the tall Englishman
came. Desgas had thrown me down in a heap quite
close to the hut; the soldiers took no notice of the
Jew, who had driven Citoyen Chauvelin to this spot.
I managed to free my hands from the ropes, with which
the brute had trussed me; I always carry pencil and
paper with me wherever I go, and I hastily scrawled
a few important instructions on a scrap of paper;
then I looked about me. I crawled up to the hut,
under the very noses of the soldiers, who lay under
cover without stirring, just as Chauvelin had ordered
them to do, then I dropped my little note into the
hut through a chink in the wall, and waited.
In this note I told the fugitives to walk noiselessly
out of the hut, creep down the cliffs, keep to the
left until they came to the first creek, to give a
certain signal, when the boat of the day dream,
which lay in wait not far out to sea, would pick them
up. They obeyed implicitly, fortunately for them
and for me. The soldiers who saw them were equally
obedient to Chauvelin’s orders. They did
not stir! I waited for nearly half an hour; when
I knew that the fugitives were safe I gave the signal,
which caused so much stir.”
And that was the whole story.
It seemed so simple! and Marguerite could be marvel
at the wonderful ingenuity, the boundless pluck and
audacity which had evolved and helped to carry out
this daring plan.
“But those brutes struck you!”
she gasped in horror, at the bare recollection of
the fearful indignity.
“Well! that could not be helped,”
he said gently, “whilst my little wife’s
fate was so uncertain, I had to remain here by her
side. Odd’s life!” he added merrily,
“never fear! Chauvelin will lose nothing
by waiting, I warrant! Wait till I get him back
to England!-La! he shall pay for the thrashing
he gave me with compound interest, I promise you.”
Marguerite laughed. It was so
good to be beside him, to hear his cheery voice, to
watch that good-humoured twinkle in his blue eyes,
as he stretched out his strong arms, in longing for
that foe, and anticipation of his well-deserved punishment.
Suddenly, however, she started:
the happy blush left her cheek, the light of joy died
out of her eyes: she had heard a stealthy footfall
overhead, and a stone had rolled down from the top
of the cliffs right down to the beach below.
“What’s that?” she whispered in
horror and alarm.
“Oh! nothing, m’dear,”
he muttered with a pleasant laugh, “only a trifle
you happened to have forgotten . . . my friend, Ffoulkes
. . .”
“Sir Andrew!” she gasped.
Indeed, she had wholly forgotten the
devoted friend and companion, who had trusted and
stood by her during all these hours of anxiety and
suffering. She remembered him how, tardily and
with a pang of remorse.
“Aye! you had forgotten him,
hadn’t you, m’dear?” said Sir Percy
merrily. “Fortunately, I met him, not far
from the ‘Chat Gris.’ before I had that
interesting supper party, with my friend Chauvelin.
. . . Odd’s life! but I have a score to
settle with that young reprobate!-but in
the meanwhile, I told him of a very long, very circuitous
road which Chauvelin’s men would never suspect,
just about the time when we are ready for him, eh,
little woman?”
“And he obeyed?” asked Marguerite, in
utter astonishment.
“Without word or question.
See, here he comes. He was not in the way when
I did not want him, and now he arrives in the nick
of time. Ah! he will make pretty little Suzanne
a most admirable and methodical husband.”
In the meanwhile Sir Andrew Ffoulkes
had cautiously worked his way down the cliffs:
he stopped once or twice, pausing to listen for whispered
words, which would guide him to Blakeney’s hiding-place.
“Blakeney!” he ventured
to say at last cautiously, “Blakeney! are you
there?”
The next moment he rounded the rock
against which Sir Percy and Marguerite were leaning,
and seeing the weird figure still clad in the Jew’s
long gaberdine, he paused in sudden, complete bewilderment.
But already Blakeney had struggled to his feet.
“Here I am, friend,” he
said with his funny, inane laugh, “all alive!
though I do look a begad scarecrow in these demmed
things.”
“Zooks!” ejaculated Sir
Andrew in boundless astonishment as he recognized
his leader, “of all the . . .”
The young man had seen Marguerite,
and happily checked the forcible language that rose
to his lips, at sight of the exquisite Sir Percy in
this weird and dirty garb.
“Yes!” said Blakeney,
calmly, “of all the . . . hem! . . . My
friend!-I have not yet had time to ask
you what you were doing in France, when I ordered
you to remain in London? Insubordination?
What? Wait till my shoulders are less sore, and,
by Gad, see the punishment you’ll get.”
“Odd’s fish! I’ll
bear it,” said Sir Andrew with a merry laugh,
“seeing that you are alive to give it. . . .
Would you have had me allow Lady Blakeney to do the
journey alone? But, in the name of heaven, man,
where did you get these extraordinary clothes?”
“Lud! they are a bit quaint, ain’t they?”
laughed Sir Percy, jovially, “But, odd’s
fish!” he added, with sudden earnestness and
authority, “now you are here, Ffoulkes, we must
lose no more time: that brute Chauvelin may send
some one to look after us.”
Marguerite was so happy, she could
have stayed here for ever, hearing his voice, asking
a hundred questions. But at mention of Chauvelin’s
name she started in quick alarm, afraid for the dear
life she would have died to save.
“But how can we get back?”
she gasped; “the roads are full of soldiers
between here and Calais, and . . .”
“We are not going back to Calais,
sweetheart,” he said, “but just the other
side of Gris Nez, not half a league from here.
The boat of the day dream will meet us there.”
“The boat of the day dream?”
“Yes!” he said, with a
merry laugh; “another little trick of mine.
I should have told you before that when I slipped
that note into the hut, I also added another for Armand,
which I directed him to leave behind, and which has
sent Chauvelin and his men running full tilt back to
the ‘Chat Gris’ after me; but the first
little note contained my real instructions, including
those to old Briggs. He had my orders to go out
further to sea, and then towards the west. When
well out of sight of Calais, he will send the galley
to a little creek he and I know of, just beyond Gris
Nez. The men will look out for me-we
have a preconcerted signal, and we will all be safely
aboard, whilst Chauvelin and his men solemnly sit
and watch the creek which is ’just opposite the
“Chat Gris."’”
“The other side of Gris Nez?
But I . . . I cannot walk, Percy,” she
moaned helplessly as, trying to struggle to her tired
feet, she found herself unable even to stand.
“I will carry you, dear,”
he said simply; “the blind leading the lame,
you know.”
Sir Andrew was ready, too, to help
with the precious burden, but Sir Percy would not
entrust his beloved to any arms but his own.
“When you and she are both safely
on board the day dream,” he said to
his young comrade, “and I feel that Mlle.
Suzanne’s eyes will not greet me in England
with reproachful looks, then it will be my turn to
rest.”
And his arms, still vigorous in spite
of fatigue and suffering, closed round Marguerite’s
poor, weary body, and lifted her as gently as if she
had been a feather.
Then, as Sir Andrew discreetly kept
out of earshot, there were many things said, or rather
whispered, which even the autumn breeze did not catch,
for it had gone to rest.
All his fatigue was forgotten; his
shoulders must have been very sore, for the soldiers
had hit hard, but the man’s muscles seemed made
of steel, and his energy was almost supernatural.
It was a weary tramp, half a league along the stony
side of the cliffs, but never for a moment did his
courage give way or his muscles yield to fatigue.
On he tramped, with firm footstep, his vigorous arms
encircling the precious burden, and . . . no doubt,
as she lay, quiet and happy, at times lulled to momentary
drowsiness, at others watching, through the slowly
gathering morning light, the pleasant face with the
lazy, drooping blue eyes, ever cheerful, ever illumined
with a good-humoured smile, she whispered many things,
which helped to shorten the weary road, and acted as
a soothing balsam to his aching sinews.
The many-hued light of dawn was breaking
in the east, when at last they reached the creek beyond
Gris Nez. The galley lay in wait: in answer
to a signal from Sir Percy, she drew near, and two
sturdy British sailors had the honour of carrying
my lady into the boat.
Half an hour later, they were on board
the day dream. The crew, who of necessity
were in their master’s secrets, and who were
devoted to him heart and soul, were not surprised
to see him arriving in so extraordinary a disguise.
Armand St. Just and the other fugitives
were eagerly awaiting the advent of their brave rescuer;
he would not stay to hear the expressions of their
gratitude, but found the way to his private cabin as
quickly as he could, leaving Marguerite quite happy
in the arms of her brother.
Everything on board the day dream
was fitted with that exquisite luxury, so dear to
Sir Percy Blakeney’s heart, and by the time they
all landed at Dover he had found time to get into
some of the sumptuous clothes which he loved, and
of which he always kept a supply on board his yacht.
The difficulty was to provide Marguerite
with a pair of shoes, and great was the little middy’s
joy when my lady found that she could put foot on
English shore in his best pair.
The rest is silence!-silence
and joy for those who had endured so much suffering,
yet found at last a great and lasting happiness.
But it is on record that at the brilliant
wedding of Sir Andrew Ffoulkes, Bart., with Mlle.
Suzanne de Tournay de Basserive, a function at which
H. R. H. the Prince of Wales and all the elite
of fashionable society were present, the most beautiful
woman there was unquestionably Lady Blakeney, whilst
the clothes of Sir Percy Blakeney wore were the talk
of the jeunesse DOREE of London for many days.
It is also a fact that M. Chauvelin,
the accredited agent of the French Republican Government,
was not present at that or any other social function
in London, after that memorable evening at Lord Grenville’s
ball.