“Pierre went on pretending to
read, but in reality listening with acute tension
of ear to every little sound. His perceptions
became so sensitive in this respect that he was incapable
of measuring time, every moment had seemed so full
of noises, from the beating of his heart up to the
roll of the heavy carts in the distance. He wondered
whether Virginie would have reached the place of rendezvous,
and yet he was unable to compute the passage of minutes.
His mother slept soundly: that was well.
By this time Virginie must have met the ‘faithful
cousin:’ if, indeed, Morin had not made
his appearance.
“At length, he felt as if he
could no longer sit still, awaiting the issue, but
must run out and see what course events had taken.
In vain his mother, half-rousing herself, called
after him to ask whither he was going: he was
already out of hearing before she had ended her sentence,
and he ran on until, stopped by the sight of Mademoiselle
Cannes walking along at so swift a pace that it was
almost a run; while at her side, resolutely keeping
by her, Morin was striding abreast. Pierre had
just turned the corner of the street, when he came
upon them. Virginie would have passed him without
recognizing him, she was in such passionate agitation,
but for Morin’s gesture, by which he would fain
have kept Pierre from interrupting them. Then,
when Virginie saw the lad, she caught at his arm,
and thanked God, as if in that boy of twelve or fourteen
she held a protector. Pierre felt her tremble
from head to foot, and was afraid lest she would fall,
there where she stood, in the hard rough street.
“‘Begone, Pierre!’ said Morin.
“‘I cannot,’ replied
Pierre, who indeed was held firmly by Virginie.
‘Besides, I won’t,’ he added.
’Who has been frightening mademoiselle in this
way?’ asked he, very much inclined to brave his
cousin at all hazards.
“‘Mademoiselle is not
accustomed to walk in the streets alone,’ said
Morin, sulkily. ’She came upon a crowd
attracted by the arrest of an aristocrat, and their
cries alarmed her. I offered to take charge of
her home. Mademoiselle should not walk in these
streets alone. We are not like the cold-blooded
people of the Faubourg Saint Germain.’
“Virginie did not speak.
Pierre doubted if she heard a word of what they were
saying. She leant upon him more and more heavily.
“‘Will mademoiselle condescend
to take my arm?’ said Morin, with sulky, and
yet humble, uncouthness. I dare say he would
have given worlds if he might have had that little
hand within his arm; but, though she still kept silence,
she shuddered up away from him, as you shrink from
touching a toad. He had said something to her
during that walk, you may be sure, which had made
her loathe him. He marked and understood the
gesture. He held himself aloof while Pierre
gave her all the assistance he could in their slow
progress homewards. But Morin accompanied her
all the same. He had played too desperate a game
to be baulked now. He had given information
against the ci-devant Marquis de Crequy,
as a returned emigre, to be met with at such a time,
in such a place. Morin had hoped that all sign
of the arrest would have been cleared away before Virginie
reached the spot so swiftly were terrible
deeds done in those days. But Clement defended
himself desperately: Virginie was punctual to
a second; and, though the wounded man was borne off
to the Abbaye, amid a crowd of the unsympathising
jeerers who mingled with the armed officials of the
Directory, Morin feared lest Virginie had recognized
him; and he would have preferred that she should have
thought that the ‘faithful cousin’ was
faithless, than that she should have seen him in bloody
danger on her account. I suppose he fancied
that, if Virginie never saw or heard more of him,
her imagination would not dwell on his simple disappearance,
as it would do if she knew what he was suffering for
her sake.
“At any rate, Pierre saw that
his cousin was deeply mortified by the whole tenor
of his behaviour during their walk home. When
they arrived at Madame Babette’s, Virginie fell
fainting on the floor; her strength had but just sufficed
for this exertion of reaching the shelter of the house.
Her first sign of restoring consciousness consisted
in avoidance of Morin. He had been most assiduous
in his efforts to bring her round; quite tender in
his way, Pierre said; and this marked, instinctive
repugnance to him evidently gave him extreme pain.
I suppose Frenchmen are more demonstrative than we
are; for Pierre declared that he saw his cousin’s
eyes fill with tears, as she shrank away from his touch,
if he tried to arrange the shawl they had laid under
her head like a pillow, or as she shut her eyes when
he passed before her. Madame Babette was urgent
with her to go and lie down on the bed in the inner
room; but it was some time before she was strong enough
to rise and do this.
“When Madame Babette returned
from arranging the girl comfortably, the three relations
sat down in silence; a silence which Pierre thought
would never be broken. He wanted his mother
to ask his cousin what had happened. But Madame
Babette was afraid of her nephew, and thought it more
discreet to wait for such crumbs of intelligence as
he might think fit to throw to her. But, after
she had twice reported Virginie to be asleep, without
a word being uttered in reply to her whispers by either
of her companions, Morin’s powers of self-containment
gave way.
“‘It is hard!’ he said.
“‘What is hard?’
asked Madame Babette, after she had paused for a time,
to enable him to add to, or to finish, his sentence,
if he pleased.
“‘It is hard for a man
to love a woman as I do,’ he went on ’I
did not seek to love her, it came upon me before I
was aware before I had ever thought about
it at all, I loved her better than all the world beside.
All my life, before I knew her, seems a dull blank.
I neither know nor care for what I did before then.
And now there are just two lives before me.
Either I have her, or I have not. That is all:
but that is everything. And what can I do to
make her have me? Tell me, aunt,’ and
he caught at Madame Babette’s arm, and gave it
so sharp a shake, that she half screamed out, Pierre
said, and evidently grew alarmed at her nephew’s
excitement.
“‘Hush, Victor!’
said she. ’There are other women in the
world, if this one will not have you.’
“‘None other for me,’
he said, sinking back as if hopeless. ’I
am plain and coarse, not one of the scented darlings
of the aristocrats. Say that I am ugly, brutish;
I did not make myself so, any more than I made myself
love her. It is my fate. But am I to submit
to the consequences of my fate without a struggle?
Not I. As strong as my love is, so strong is my
will. It can be no stronger,’ continued
he, gloomily. ’Aunt Babette, you must
help me you must make her love me.’
He was so fierce here, that Pierre said he did not
wonder that his mother was frightened.
“‘I, Victor!’ she
exclaimed. ’I make her love you?
How can I? Ask me to speak for you to Mademoiselle
Didot, or to Mademoiselle Cauchois even, or to
such as they, and I’ll do it, and welcome.
But to Mademoiselle de Crequy, why you don’t
know the difference! Those people the
old nobility I mean why they don’t
know a man from a dog, out of their own rank!
And no wonder, for the young gentlemen of quality
are treated differently to us from their very birth.
If she had you to-morrow, you would be miserable.
Let me alone for knowing the aristocracy. I
have not been a concierge to a duke and three counts
for nothing. I tell you, all your ways are different
to her ways.’
“‘I would change my “ways,”
as you call them.’
“‘Be reasonable, Victor.’
“’No, I will not be reasonable,
if by that you mean giving her up. I tell you
two lives are before me; one with her, one without
her. But the latter will be but a short career
for both of us. You said, aunt, that the talk
went in the conciergerie of her father’s
hotel, that she would have nothing to do with this
cousin whom I put out of the way to-day?’
“’So the servants said.
How could I know? All I know is, that he left
off coming to our hotel, and that at one time before
then he had never been two days absent.’
“’So much the better for
him. He suffers now for having come between me
and my object in trying to snatch her away
out of my sight. Take you warning, Pierre!
I did not like your meddling to-night.’
And so he went off, leaving Madam Babette rocking
herself backwards and forwards, in all the depression
of spirits consequent upon the reaction after the brandy,
and upon her knowledge of her nephew’s threatened
purpose combined.
“In telling you most of this,
I have simply repeated Pierre’s account, which
I wrote down at the time. But here what he had
to say came to a sudden break; for, the next morning,
when Madame Babette rose, Virginie was missing, and
it was some time before either she, or Pierre, or Morin,
could get the slightest clue to the missing girl.
“And now I must take up the
story as it was told to the Intendant Flechier by
the old gardener Jacques, with whom Clement had been
lodging on his first arrival in Paris. The old
man could not, I dare say, remember half as much of
what had happened as Pierre did; the former had the
dulled memory of age, while Pierre had evidently thought
over the whole series of events as a story as
a play, if one may call it so during the
solitary hours in his after-life, wherever they were
passed, whether in lonely camp watches, or in the foreign
prison, where he had to drag out many years.
Clement had, as I said, returned to the gardener’s
garret after he had been dismissed from the Hotel Duguesclin.
There were several reasons for his thus doubling back.
One was, that he put nearly the whole breadth of
Paris between him and an enemy; though why Morin was
an enemy, and to what extent he carried his dislike
or hatred, Clement could not tell, of course.
The next reason for returning to Jacques was, no
doubt, the conviction that, in multiplying his residences,
he multiplied the chances against his being suspected
and recognized. And then, again, the old man
was in his secret, and his ally, although perhaps
but a feeble kind of one. It was through Jacques
that the plan of communication, by means of a nosegay
of pinks, had been devised; and it was Jacques who
procured him the last disguise that Clement was to
use in Paris as he hoped and trusted.
It was that of a respectable shopkeeper of no particular
class; a dress that would have seemed perfectly suitable
to the young man who would naturally have worn it;
and yet, as Clement put it on, and adjusted it giving
it a sort of finish and elegance which I always noticed
about his appearance and which I believed was innate
in the wearer I have no doubt it seemed
like the usual apparel of a gentleman. No coarseness
of texture, nor clumsiness of cut could disguise the
nobleman of thirty descents, it appeared; for immediately
on arriving at the place of rendezvous, he was recognized
by the men placed there on Morin’s information
to seize him. Jacques, following at a little
distance, with a bundle under his arm containing articles
of feminine disguise for Virginie, saw four men attempt
Clement’s arrest saw him, quick as
lightning, draw a sword hitherto concealed in a clumsy
stick saw his agile figure spring to his
guard, and saw him defend himself with the
rapidity and art of a man skilled in arms. But
what good did it do? as Jacques piteously used to
ask, Monsieur Flechier told me. A great blow
from a heavy club on the sword-arm of Monsieur de
Crequy laid it helpless and immovable by his side.
Jacques always thought that that blow came from one
of the spectators, who by this time had collected
round the scene of the affray. The next instant,
his master his little marquis was
down among the feet of the crowd, and though he was
up again before he had received much damage so
active and light was my poor Clement it
was not before the old gardener had hobbled forwards,
and, with many an old-fashioned oath and curse, proclaimed
himself a partisan of the losing side a
follower of a ci-devant aristocrat.
It was quite enough. He received one or two
good blows, which were, in fact, aimed at his master;
and then, almost before he was aware, he found his
arms pinioned behind him with a woman’s garter,
which one of the viragos in the crowd had made
no scruple of pulling off in public, as soon as she
heard for what purpose it was wanted. Poor Jacques
was stunned and unhappy, his master was
out of sight, on before; and the old gardener scarce
knew whither they were taking him. His head
ached from the blows which had fallen upon it; it
was growing dark June day though it was, and
when first he seems to have become exactly aware of
what had happened to him, it was when he was turned
into one of the larger rooms of the Abbaye, in which
all were put who had no other allotted place wherein
to sleep. One or two iron lamps hung from the
ceiling by chains, giving a dim light for a little
circle. Jacques stumbled forwards over a sleeping
body lying on the ground. The sleeper wakened
up enough to complain; and the apology of the old man
in reply caught the ear of his master, who, until
this time, could hardly have been aware of the straits
and difficulties of his faithful Jacques. And
there they sat, against a pillar, the live-long
night, holding one another’s hands, and each
restraining expressions of pain, for fear of adding
to the other’s distress. That night made
them intimate friends, in spite of the difference
of age and rank. The disappointed hopes, the
acute suffering of the present, the apprehensions of
the future, made them seek solace in talking of the
past. Monsieur de Crequy and the gardener found
themselves disputing with interest in which chimney
of the stack the starling used to build, the
starling whose nest Clement sent to Urian, you remember,
and discussing the merits of different espalier-pears
which grew, and may grow still, in the old garden of
the Hotel de Crequy. Towards morning both fell
asleep. The old man wakened first. His
frame was deadened to suffering, I suppose, for he
felt relieved of his pain; but Clement moaned and
cried in feverish slumber. His broken arm was
beginning to inflame his blood. He was, besides,
much injured by some kicks from the crowd as he fell.
As the old man looked sadly on the white, baked lips,
and the flushed cheeks, contorted with suffering even
in his sleep, Clement gave a sharp cry which disturbed
his miserable neighbours, all slumbering around in
uneasy attitudes. They bade him with curses
be silent; and then turning round, tried again to forget
their own misery in sleep. For you see, the bloodthirsty
canaille had not been sated with guillotining
and hanging all the nobility they could find, but
were now informing, right and left, even against each
other; and when Clement and Jacques were in the prison,
there were few of gentle blood in the place, and fewer
still of gentle manners. At the sound of the
angry words and threats, Jacques thought it best to
awaken his master from his feverish uncomfortable
sleep, lest he should provoke more enmity; and, tenderly
lifting him up, he tried to adjust his own body, so
that it should serve as a rest and a pillow for the
younger man. The motion aroused Clement, and
he began to talk in a strange, feverish way, of Virginie,
too, whose name he would not have breathed
in such a place had he been quite himself. But
Jacques had as much delicacy of feeling as any lady
in the land, although, mind you, he knew neither how
to read nor write, and bent his head low
down, so that his master might tell him in a whisper
what messages he was to take to Mademoiselle de Crequy,
in case Poor Clement, he knew it must come
to that! No escape for him now, in Norman disguise
or otherwise! Either by gathering fever or guillotine,
death was sure of his prey. Well! when that happened,
Jacques was to go and find Mademoiselle de Crequy,
and tell her that her cousin loved her at the last
as he had loved her at the first; but that she should
never have heard another word of his attachment from
his living lips; that he knew he was not good enough
for her, his queen; and that no thought of earning
her love by his devotion had prompted his return to
France, only that, if possible, he might have the great
privilege of serving her whom he loved. And then
he went off into rambling talk about petit-maitres,
and such kind of expressions, said Jacques to Flechier,
the intendant, little knowing what a clue that one
word gave to much of the poor lad’s suffering.
“The summer morning came slowly
on in that dark prison, and when Jacques could look
round his master was now sleeping on his
shoulder, still the uneasy, starting sleep of fever he
saw that there were many women among the prisoners.
(I have heard some of those who have escaped from
the prisons say, that the look of despair and agony
that came into the faces of the prisoners on first
wakening, as the sense of their situation grew upon
them, was what lasted the longest in the memory of
the survivors. This look, they said, passed away
from the women’s faces sooner than it did from
those of the men.)
“Poor old Jacques kept falling
asleep, and plucking himself up again for fear lest,
if he did not attend to his master, some harm might
come to the swollen, helpless arm. Yet his weariness
grew upon him in spite of all his efforts, and at
last he felt as if he must give way to the irresistible
desire, if only for five minutes. But just then
there was a bustle at the door. Jacques opened
his eyes wide to look.
“‘The gaoler is early
with breakfast,’ said some one, lazily.
“’It is the darkness of
this accursed place that makes us think it early,’
said another.
“All this time a parley was
going on at the door. Some one came in; not
the gaoler a woman. The door was shut
to and locked behind her. She only advanced
a step or two, for it was too sudden a change, out
of the light into that dark shadow, for any one to
see clearly for the first few minutes. Jacques
had his eyes fairly open now, and was wide awake.
It was Mademoiselle de Crequy, looking bright, clear,
and resolute. The faithful heart of the old
man read that look like an open page. Her cousin
should not die there on her behalf, without at least
the comfort of her sweet presence.
“‘Here he is,’ he
whispered as her gown would have touched him in passing,
without her perceiving him, in the heavy obscurity
of the place.
“‘The good God bless you,
my friend!’ she murmured, as she saw the attitude
of the old man, propped against a pillar, and holding
Clement in his arms, as if the young man had been
a helpless baby, while one of the poor gardener’s
hands supported the broken limb in the easiest position.
Virginie sat down by the old man, and held out her
arms. Softly she moved Clement’s head
to her own shoulder; softly she transferred the task
of holding the arm to herself. Clement lay on
the floor, but she supported him, and Jacques was
at liberty to arise and stretch and shake his stiff,
weary old body. He then sat down at a little
distance, and watched the pair until he fell asleep.
Clement had muttered ‘Virginie,’ as they
half-roused him by their movements out of his stupor;
but Jacques thought he was only dreaming; nor did
he seem fully awake when once his eyes opened, and
he looked full at Virginie’s face bending over
him, and growing crimson under his gaze, though she
never stirred, for fear of hurting him if she moved.
Clement looked in silence, until his heavy eyelids
came slowly down, and he fell into his oppressive slumber
again. Either he did not recognize her, or she
came in too completely as a part of his sleeping visions
for him to be disturbed by her appearance there.
“When Jacques awoke it was full
daylight at least as full as it would ever
be in that place. His breakfast the
gaol-allowance of bread and vin ordinaire was
by his side. He must have slept soundly.
He looked for his master. He and Virginie had
recognized each other now, hearts, as well
as appearance. They were smiling into each other’s
faces, as if that dull, vaulted room in the grim Abbaye
were the sunny gardens of Versailles, with music and
festivity all abroad. Apparently they had much
to say to each other; for whispered questions and answers
never ceased.
“Virginie had made a sling for
the poor broken arm; nay, she had obtained two splinters
of wood in some way, and one of their fellow-prisoners having,
it appeared, some knowledge of surgery had
set it. Jacques felt more desponding by far
than they did, for he was suffering from the night
he had passed, which told upon his aged frame; while
they must have heard some good news, as it seemed
to him, so bright and happy did they look. Yet
Clement was still in bodily pain and suffering, and
Virginie, by her own act and deed, was a prisoner
in that dreadful Abbaye, whence the only issue was
the guillotine. But they were together:
they loved: they understood each other at length.
“When Virginie saw that Jacques
was awake, and languidly munching his breakfast, she
rose from the wooden stool on which she was sitting,
and went to him, holding out both hands, and refusing
to allow him to rise, while she thanked him with pretty
eagerness for all his kindness to Monsieur.
Monsieur himself came towards him, following Virginie,
but with tottering steps, as if his head was weak
and dizzy, to thank the poor old man, who now on his
feet, stood between them, ready to cry while they
gave him credit for faithful actions which he felt
to have been almost involuntary on his part, for
loyalty was like an instinct in the good old days,
before your educational cant had come up. And
so two days went on. The only event was the
morning call for the victims, a certain number of
whom were summoned to trial every day. And to
be tried was to be condemned. Every one of the
prisoners became grave, as the hour for their summons
approached. Most of the victims went to their
doom with uncomplaining resignation, and for a while
after their departure there was comparative silence
in the prison. But, by-and-by so said
Jacques the conversation or amusements began
again. Human nature cannot stand the perpetual
pressure of such keen anxiety, without an effort to
relieve itself by thinking of something else.
Jacques said that Monsieur and Mademoiselle were
for ever talking together of the past days, it
was ‘Do you remember this?’ or, ‘Do
you remember that?’ perpetually. He sometimes
thought they forgot where they were, and what was before
them. But Jacques did not, and every day he trembled
more and more as the list was called over.
“The third morning of their
incarceration, the gaoler brought in a man whom Jacques
did not recognize, and therefore did not at once observe;
for he was waiting, as in duty bound, upon his master
and his sweet young lady (as he always called her
in repeating the story). He thought that the
new introduction was some friend of the gaoler, as
the two seemed well acquainted, and the latter stayed
a few minutes talking with his visitor before leaving
him in prison. So Jacques was surprised when,
after a short time had elapsed, he looked round, and
saw the fierce stare with which the stranger was regarding
Monsieur and Mademoiselle de Crequy, as the pair sat
at breakfast, the said breakfast being laid
as well as Jacques knew how, on a bench fastened into
the prison wall, Virginie sitting on her
low stool, and Clement half lying on the ground by
her side, and submitting gladly to be fed by her pretty
white fingers; for it was one of her fancies, Jacques
said, to do all she could for him, in consideration
of his broken arm. And, indeed, Clement was
wasting away daily; for he had received other injuries,
internal and more serious than that to his arm, during
the melee which had ended in his capture. The
stranger made Jacques conscious of his presence by
a sigh, which was almost a groan. All three
prisoners looked round at the sound. Clement’s
face expressed little but scornful indifference; but
Virginie’s face froze into stony hate.
Jacques said he never saw such a look, and hoped
that he never should again. Yet after that first
revelation of feeling, her look was steady and fixed
in another direction to that in which the stranger
stood, still motionless still
watching. He came a step nearer at last.
“‘Mademoiselle,’
he said. Not the quivering of an eyelash showed
that she heard him. ‘Mademoiselle!’
he said again, with an intensity of beseeching that
made Jacques not knowing who he was almost
pity him, when he saw his young lady’s obdurate
face.
“There was perfect silence for
a space of time which Jacques could not measure.
Then again the voice, hesitatingly, saying, ‘Monsieur!’
Clement could not hold the same icy countenance as
Virginie; he turned his head with an impatient gesture
of disgust; but even that emboldened the man.
“‘Monsieur, do ask mademoiselle
to listen to me, just two words.’
“‘Mademoiselle de Crequy
only listens to whom she chooses.’ Very
haughtily my Clement would say that, I am sure.
“’But, mademoiselle,’ lowering
his voice, and coming a step or two nearer.
Virginie must have felt his approach, though she did
not see it; for she drew herself a little on one side,
so as to put as much space as possible between him
and her. ’Mademoiselle, it is not
too late. I can save you: but to-morrow
your name is down on the list. I can save you,
if you will listen.’
“Still no word or sign.
Jacques did not understand the affair. Why was
she so obdurate to one who might be ready to include
Clement in the proposal, as far as Jacques knew?
“The man withdrew a little,
but did not offer to leave the prison. He never
took his eyes off Virginie; he seemed to be suffering
from some acute and terrible pain as he watched her.
“Jacques cleared away the breakfast-things
as well as he could. Purposely, as I suspect,
he passed near the man.
“‘Hist!’ said the
stranger. ’You are Jacques, the gardener,
arrested for assisting an aristocrat. I know
the gaoler. You shall escape, if you will.
Only take this message from me to mademoiselle.
You heard. She will not listen to me:
I did not want her to come here. I never knew
she was here, and she will die to-morrow. They
will put her beautiful round throat under the guillotine.
Tell her, good old man, tell her how sweet life is;
and how I can save her; and how I will not ask for
more than just to see her from time to time.
She is so young; and death is annihilation, you know.
Why does she hate me so? I want to save her;
I have done her no harm. Good old man, tell
her how terrible death is; and that she will die to-morrow,
unless she listens to me.’
“Jacques saw no harm in repeating
this message. Clement listened in silence, watching
Virginie with an air of infinite tenderness.
“‘Will you not try him,
my cherished one?’ he said. ’Towards
you he may mean well’ (which makes me think
that Virginie had never repeated to Clement the conversation
which she had overheard that last night at Madame
Babette’s); ’you would be in no worse a
situation than you were before!’
“’No worse, Clement! and
I should have known what you were, and have lost you.
My Clement!’ said she, reproachfully.
“‘Ask him,’ said
she, turning to Jacques, suddenly, ’if he can
save Monsieur de Crequy as well, if he
can? O Clement, we might escape to England;
we are but young.’ And she hid her face
on his shoulder.
“Jacques returned to the stranger,
and asked him Virginie’s question. His
eyes were fixed on the cousins; he was very pale, and
the twitchings or contortions, which must have been
involuntary whenever he was agitated, convulsed his
whole body.
“He made a long pause.
’I will save mademoiselle and monsieur, if she
will go straight from prison to the mairie, and
be my wife.’
“‘Your wife!’ Jacques
could not help exclaiming, ’That she will never
be never!’
“‘Ask her!’ said Morin, hoarsely.
“But almost before Jacques thought
he could have fairly uttered the words, Clement caught
their meaning.
“‘Begone!’ said
he; ‘not one word more.’ Virginie
touched the old man as he was moving away. ’Tell
him he does not know how he makes me welcome death.’
And smiling, as if triumphant, she turned again to
Clement.
“The stranger did not speak
as Jacques gave him the meaning, not the words, of
their replies. He was going away, but stopped.
A minute or two afterwards, he beckoned to Jacques.
The old gardener seems to have thought it undesirable
to throw away even the chance of assistance from such
a man as this, for he went forward to speak to him.
“’Listen! I have
influence with the gaoler. He shall let thee
pass out with the victims to-morrow. No one
will notice it, or miss thee . They will
be led to trial, even at the last moment,
I will save her, if she sends me word she relents.
Speak to her, as the time draws on. Life is
very sweet, tell her how sweet. Speak
to him; he will do more with her than thou canst.
Let him urge her to live. Even at the last,
I will be at the Palais de Justice, at
the Greve. I have followers, I have
interest. Come among the crowd that follow the
victims, I shall see thee. It will
be no worse for him, if she escapes’
“‘Save my master, and I will do all,’
said Jacques.
“‘Only on my one condition,’
said Morin, doggedly; and Jacques was hopeless of
that condition ever being fulfilled. But he did
not see why his own life might not be saved.
By remaining in prison until the next day, he should
have rendered every service in his power to his master
and the young lady. He, poor fellow, shrank
from death; and he agreed with Morin to escape, if
he could, by the means Morin had suggested, and to
bring him word if Mademoiselle de Crequy relented.
(Jacques had no expectation that she would; but I
fancy he did not think it necessary to tell Morn of
this conviction of his.) This bargaining with so base
a man for so slight a thing as life, was the only
flaw that I heard of in the old gardener’s behaviour.
Of course, the mere reopening of the subject was
enough to stir Virginie to displeasure. Clement
urged her, it is true; but the light he had gained
upon Morin’s motions, made him rather try to
set the case before her in as fair a manner as possible
than use any persuasive arguments. And, even
as it was, what he said on the subject made Virginie
shed tears the first that had fallen from
her since she entered the prison. So, they were
summoned and went together, at the fatal call of the
muster-roll of victims the next morning. He,
feeble from his wounds and his injured health; she,
calm and serene, only petitioning to be allowed to
walk next to him, in order that she might hold him
up when he turned faint and giddy from his extreme
suffering.
“Together they stood at the
bar; together they were condemned. As the words
of judgment were pronounced, Virginie tuned to Clement,
and embraced him with passionate fondness. Then,
making him lean on her, they marched out towards the
Place de la Greve.
“Jacques was free now.
He had told Morin how fruitless his efforts at persuasion
had been; and scarcely caring to note the effect of
his information upon the man, he had devoted himself
to watching Monsieur and Mademoiselle de Crequy.
And now he followed them to the Place de la Greve.
He saw them mount the platform; saw them kneel down
together till plucked up by the impatient officials;
could see that she was urging some request to the
executioner; the end of which seemed to be, that Clement
advanced first to the guillotine, was executed (and
just at this moment there was a stir among the crowd,
as of a man pressing forward towards the scaffold).
Then she, standing with her face to the guillotine,
slowly made the sign of the cross, and knelt down.
“Jacques covered his eyes, blinded
with tears. The report of a pistol made him
look up. She was gone another victim
in her place and where there had been a
little stir in the crowd not five minutes before, some
men were carrying off a dead body. A man had
shot himself, they said. Pierre told me who that
man was.”