At Bayonne, a garrison town on the
south frontier of France, two sentinels walked lethargically,
crossing and recrossing before the governor’s
house. Suddenly their official drowsiness burst
into energy; for a pale, grisly man, in rusty, defaced,
dirty, and torn regimentals, was walking into the
courtyard as if it belonged to him. The sentinels
lowered their muskets, and crossed them with a clash
before the gateway.
The scarecrow did not start back.
He stopped and looked down with a smile at the steel
barrier the soldiers had improvised for him, then
drew himself a little up, carried his hand carelessly
to his cap, which was nearly in two, and gave the
name of an officer in the French army.
If you or I, dressed like a beggar
who years ago had stolen regimentals and worn them
down to civil garments, had addressed these soldiers
with these very same words, the bayonets would have
kissed closer, or perhaps the points been turned against
our sacred and rusty person: but there is a freemasonry
of the sword. The light, imperious hand that touched
that battered cap, and the quiet clear tone of command
told. The sentinels slowly recovered their pieces,
but still looked uneasy and doubtful in their minds.
The battered one saw this, and gave a sort of lofty
smile; he turned up his cuffs and showed his wrists,
and drew himself still higher.
The sentinels shouldered their pieces
sharp, then dropped them simultaneously with a clatter
and ring upon the pavement.
“Pass, captain.”
The rusty figure rang the governor’s
bell. A servant came and eyed him with horror
and contempt. He gave his name, and begged to
see the governor. The servant left him in the
hall, and went up-stairs to tell his master.
At the name the governor reflected, then frowned, then
bade his servant reach him down a certain book.
He inspected it. “I thought so: any
one with him?”
“No, your excellency.”
“Load my pistols, put them on
the table, show him in, and then order a guard to
the door.”
The governor was a stern veteran with
a powerful brow, a shaggy eyebrow, and a piercing
eye. He never rose, but leaned his chin on his
hand, and his elbow on a table that stood between
them, and eyed his visitor very fixedly and strangely.
“We did not expect to see you on this side the
Pyrenees,” said he gravely.
“Nor I myself, governor.”
“What do you come for?”
“A suit of regimentals, and money to take me
to Paris.”
“And suppose, instead of that,
I turn out a corporal’s guard, and bid them
shoot you in the courtyard?”
“It would be the drollest thing
you ever did, all things considered,” said the
other coolly, but bitterly.
The governor looked for the book he
had lately consulted, found the page, handed it to
the rusty officer, and watched him keenly: the
blood rushed all over his face, and his lip trembled;
but his eye dwelt stern yet sorrowful on the governor.
“I have read your book, now
read mine.” He drew off his coat and showed
his wrists and arms, blue and waled. “Can
you read that, sir?”
“No.”
“All the better for you:
Spanish fetters, general.” He showed a white
scar on his shoulder. “Can you read that?
This is what I cut out of it,” and he handed
the governor a little round stone as big and almost
as regular as a musket-ball.
“Humph! that could hardly have
been fired from a French musket.”
“Can you read this?” and
he showed him a long cicatrix on his other arm.
“Knife I think,” said the governor.
“You are right, sir: Spanish
knife. Can you read this?” and opening his
bosom he showed a raw wound on his breast.
“Oh, the devil!” cried the governor.
The wounded man put his rusty coat
on again, and stood erect, and haughty, and silent.
The general eyed him, and saw his
great spirit shining through this man. The more
he looked the less could the scarecrow veil the hero
from his practised eye. He said there must be
some mistake, or else he was in his dotage; after
a moment’s hesitation, he added, “Be seated,
if you please, and tell me what you have been doing
all these years.”
“Suffering.”
“Not all the time, I suppose.”
“Without intermission.”
“But what? suffering what?”
“Cold, hunger, darkness, wounds,
solitude, sickness, despair, prison, all that man
can suffer.”
“Impossible! a man would be dead at that rate
before this.”
“I should have died a dozen
deaths but for one thing; I had promised her to live.”
There was a pause. Then the old
soldier said gravely, but more kindly, to the young
one, “Tell me the facts, captain” (the
first time he had acknowledged his visitor’s
military rank).
An hour had scarce elapsed since the
rusty figure was stopped by the sentinels at the gate,
when two glittering officers passed out under the
same archway, followed by a servant carrying a furred
cloak. The sentinels presented arms. The
elder of these officers was the governor: the
younger was the late scarecrow, in a brand-new uniform
belonging to the governor’s son. He shone
out now in his true light; the beau ideal of a patrician
soldier; one would have said he had been born with
a sword by his side and drilled by nature, so straight
and smart, yet easy he was in every movement.
He was like a falcon, eye and all, only, as it were,
down at the bottom of the hawk’s eye lay a dove’s
eye. That compound and varying eye seemed to
say, I can love, I can fight: I can fight, I
can love, as few of you can do either.
The old man was trying to persuade
him to stay at Bayonne, until his wound should be
cured.
“No, general, I have other wounds
to cure of longer standing than this one.”
“Well, promise me to lay up at Paris.”
“General, I shall stay an hour at Paris.”
“An hour in Paris! Well,
at least call at the War Office and present this letter.”
That same afternoon, wrapped in the
governor’s furred cloak, the young officer lay
at his full length in the coupe of the diligence, the
whole of which the governor had peremptorily demanded
for him, and rolled day and night towards Paris.
He reached it worn with fatigue and
fevered by his wound, but his spirit as indomitable
as ever. He went to the War Office with the governor’s
letter. It seemed to create some little sensation;
one functionary came and said a polite word to him,
then another. At last to his infinite surprise
the minister himself sent down word he wished to see
him; the minister put several questions to him, and
seemed interested in him and touched by his relation.
“I think, captain, I shall have
to send to you: where do you stay in Paris?”
“Nowhere, monsieur; I leave
Paris as soon as I can find an easy-going horse.”
“But General Bretaux tells me you are wounded.”
“Not dangerously.”
“Pardon me, captain, but is
this prudent? is it just to yourself and your friends?”
“Yes, I owe it to those who perhaps think me
dead.”
“You can write to them.”
“I grudge so great, so sacred
a joy to a letter. No! after all I have suffered
I claim to be the one to tell her I have kept my word:
I promised to live, and I live.”
“Her? then I say no more, only tell me
what road you take.”
“The road to Brittany.”
As the young officer was walking his
horse by the roadside about a league and a half from
Paris, he heard a clatter behind him, and up galloped
an aide-de-camp and drew up alongside, bringing his
horse nearly on his haunches.
He handed him a large packet sealed
with the arms of France. The other tore it open;
and there was his brevet as colonel. His cheek
flushed and his eye glittered with joy. The aide-de-camp
next gave him a parcel: “Your epaulets,
colonel! We hear you are going into the wilds
where epaulets don’t grow. You are to join
the army of the Rhine as soon as your wound is well.”
“Wherever my country calls me.”
“Your address, then, colonel,
that we may know where to put our finger on a tried
soldier when we want one.”
“I am going to Beaurepaire.”
“Beaurepaire? I never heard of it.”
“You never heard of Beaurepaire?
it is in Brittany, forty-five leagues from Paris,
forty-three leagues and a half from here.”
“Good! Health and honor to you, colonel.”
“The same to you, lieutenant; or a soldier’s
death.”
The new colonel read the precious
document across his horse’s mane, and then he
was going to put one of the epaulets on his right shoulder,
bare at present: but he reflected.
“No; she should make him a colonel
with her own dear hand. He put them in his pocket.
He would not even look at them till she had seen them.
Oh, how happy he was not only to come back to her alive,
but to come back to her honored.”
His wound smarted, his limbs ached,
but no pain past or present could lay hold of his
mind. In his great joy he remembered past suffering
and felt present pain yet smiled. Only
every now and then he pined for wings to shorten the
weary road.
He was walking his horse quietly,
drooping a little over his saddle, when another officer
well mounted came after him and passed him at a hand
gallop with one hasty glance at his uniform, and went
tearing on like one riding for his life.
“Don’t I know that face?” said Dujardin.
He cudgelled his memory, and at last
he remembered it was the face of an old comrade.
At least it strongly reminded him of one Jean Raynal
who had saved his life in the Arno, when they were
lieutenants together.
Yes, it was certainly Raynal, only
bronzed by service in some hot country.
“Ah!” thought Camille;
“I suppose I am more changed than he is; for
he certainly did not recognize me at all. Now
I wonder what that fellow has been doing all this
time. What a hurry he was in! a moment more and
I should have hailed him. Perhaps I may fall in
with him at the next town.”
He touched his horse with the spur,
and cantered gently on, for trotting shook him more
than he could bear. Even when he cantered he had
to press his hand against his bosom, and often with
the motion a bitterer pang than usual came and forced
the water from his eyes; and then he smiled.
His great love and his high courage made this reply
to the body’s anguish. And still his eyes
looked straight forward as at some object in the distant
horizon, while he came gently on, his hand pressed
to his bosom, his head drooping now and then, smiling
patiently, upon the road to Beaurepaire.
Oh! if anybody had told him that in
five days his Josephine was to be married; and that
the bronzed comrade, who had just galloped past him,
was to marry her!
At Beaurepaire they were making and
altering wedding-dresses. Rose was excited, and
even Josephine took a calm interest. Dress never
goes for nothing with her sex. The chairs and
tables were covered, and the floor was littered.
The baroness was presiding over the rites of vanity,
and telling them what she wore at her wedding, under
Louis XV., with strict accuracy, and what we men should
consider a wonderful effort of memory, when the Commandant
Raynal came in like a cannon-ball, without any warning,
and stood among them in a stiff, military attitude.
Exclamations from all the party, and then a kind greeting,
especially from the baroness.
“We have been so dull without you, Jean.”
“And I have missed you once
or twice, mother-in-law, I can tell you. Well,
I have got bad news; but you must consider we live
in a busy time. To-morrow I start for Egypt.”
Loud ejaculations from the baroness
and Rose. Josephine put down her work quietly.
The baroness sighed deeply, and the
tears came into her eyes. “Oh, you must
not be down-hearted, old lady,” shouted Raynal.
“Why, I am as likely to come back from Egypt
as not. It is an even chance, to say the least.”
This piece of consolation completed
the baroness’s unhappiness. She really
had conceived a great affection for Raynal, and her
heart had been set on the wedding.
“Take away all that finery,
girls,” said she bitterly; “we shall not
want it for years. I shall not be alive when he
comes home from Egypt. I never had a son only
daughters the best any woman ever had; but
a mother is not complete without a son, and I shall
never live to have one now.”
“I hate General Bonaparte,” said Rose
viciously.
“Hate my general?” groaned
Raynal, looking down with a sort of superstitious
awe and wonder at the lovely vixen. “Hate
the best soldier the world ever saw?”
“What do I care for his soldiership?
He has put off our wedding. For how many years
did you say?”
“No; he has put it on.”
In answer to the astonished looks
this excited, he explained that the wedding was to
have been in a week, but now it must be to-morrow at
ten o’clock.
The three ladies set up their throats
together. “Tomorrow?”
“To-morrow. Why, what do
you suppose I left Paris for yesterday? left my duties
even.”
“What, monsieur?” asked
Josephine, timidly, “did you ride all that way,
and leave your duties merely to marry
me?” and she looked a little pleased.
“You are worth a great deal
more trouble than that,” said Raynal simply.
“Besides, I had passed my word, and I always
keep my word.”
“So do I,” said Josephine,
a little proudly. “I will not go from it
now, if you insist; but I confess to you, that such
a proposal staggers me; so sudden no preliminaries no
time to reflect; in short, there are so many difficulties
that I must request you to reconsider the matter.”
“Difficulties,” shouted
Raynal with merry disdain; “there are none,
unless you sit down and make them; we do more difficult
things than this every day of our lives: we passed
the bridge of Arcola in thirteen minutes; and we had
not the consent of the enemy, as we have yours have
we not?”
Her only reply was a look at her mother,
to which the baroness replied by a nod; then turning
to Raynal, “This empressement is very flattering;
but I see no possibility: there is an etiquette
we cannot altogether defy: there are preliminaries
before a daughter of Beaurepaire can become a wife.”
“There used to be all that,
madam,” laughed Raynal, putting her down good-humoredly;
“but it was in the days when armies came out
and touched their caps to one another, and went back
into winter quarters. Then the struggle was who
could go slowest; now the fight is who can go fastest.
Time and Bonaparte wait for nobody; and ladies and
other strong places are taken by storm, not undermined
a foot a month as under Noah Quartorze: let me
cut this short, as time is short.”
He then drew a little plan of a wedding
campaign. “The carriages will be here at
9 A.M.,” said he; “they will whisk us down
to the mayor’s house by a quarter to ten:
Picard, the notary, meets us there with the marriage
contract, to save time; the contract signed, the mayor
will do the marriage at quick step out of respect
for me half an hour quarter
past ten; breakfast in the same house an hour and a
quarter: we mustn’t hurry a wedding
breakfast then ten minutes or so for the
old fogies to waste in making speeches about our virtues my
watch will come out my charger will come
round I rise from the table embrace
my dear old mother kiss my wife’s
hand into the saddle canter to
Paris roll to Toulon sail to
Egypt. But I shall leave a wife and a mother behind
me: they will both send me a kind word now and
then; and I will write letters to you all from Egypt,
and when I come home, my wife and I will make acquaintance,
and we will all be happy together: and if I am
killed out there, don’t you go and fret your
poor little hearts about it; it is a soldier’s
lot sooner or later. Besides, you will find I
have taken care of you; nobody shall come and turn
you out of your quarters, even though Jean Raynal
should be dead; I have got to meet Picard at Riviere’s
on that very business I am off.”
He was gone as brusquely as he came.
“Mother! sister!” cried Josephine, “help
me to love this man.”
“You need no help,” cried
the baroness, with enthusiasm, “not love him,
we should all be monsters.”
Raynal came to supper looking bright and cheerful.
“No more work to-day.
I have nothing to do but talk; fancy that.”
This evening Josephine de Beaurepaire,
who had been silent and thoughtful, took a quiet opportunity,
and purred in his ear, “Monsieur!”
“Mademoiselle!” rang the trombone.
“Am I not to go to Egypt?”
“No.”
Josephine drew back at this brusque
reply like a sensitive plant. But she returned
to the attack.
“But is it not a wife’s
duty to be by her husband’s side to look after
his comfort to console him when others vex
him to soothe him when he is harassed?”
“Her first duty is to obey him.”
“Certainly.”
“Well, when I am your husband,
I shall bid you stay with your mother and sister while
I go to Egypt.”
“I shall obey you.”
He told her bluntly he thought none
the worse of her for making the offer; but should
not accept it.
Camille Dujardin slept that night
at a roadside inn about twelve miles from Beaurepaire,
and not more than six from the town where the wedding
was to take place next day.
It was a close race.
And the racers all unconscious of
each other, yet spurred impartially by events that
were now hurrying to a climax.