The next day at noon, as her Majesty
had advised the Seigneur, De la Foret was ushered
into the presence. The Queen’s eye quickened
as she saw him, and she remarked with secret pleasure
the figure and bearing of this young captain of the
Huguenots. She loved physical grace and prowess
with a full heart. The day had almost passed when
she would measure all men against Leicester in his
favour; and he, knowing this clearly now, saw with
haughty anxiety the gradual passing of his power,
and clutched futilely at the vanishing substance.
Thus it was that he now spent his strength in getting
his way with the Queen in little things. She
had been so long used to take his counsel in
some part wise and skilful that when she
at length did without it, or followed her own mind,
it became a fever with him to let no chance pass for
serving his own will by persuading her out of hers.
This was why he had spent an hour the day before in
sadly yet vaguely reproaching her for the slight she
put upon him in the presence-chamber by her frown;
and another in urging her to come to terms with Catherine
de Medici in this small affair since the
Frenchwoman had set her revengeful heart upon it that
larger matters might be settled to the gain of England.
It was not so much that he had reason to destroy De
la Foret, as that he saw that the Queen was disposed
to deal friendly by him and protect him. He did
not see the danger of rousing in the Queen the same
unreasoning tenaciousness of will upon just such lesser
things as might well be left to her advisers.
In spite of which he almost succeeded, this very day,
in regaining, for a time at least, the ground he had
lost with her. He had never been so adroit, so
brilliant, so witty, so insinuating; and he left her
with the feeling that if he had his way concerning
De la Foret a mere stubborn whim, with
no fair reason behind it his influence
would be again securely set. The sense of crisis
was on him.
On Michel de la Foret entering the
presence the Queen’s attention had become riveted.
She felt in him a spirit of mastery, yet of unselfish
purpose. Here was one, she thought, who might
well be in her household, or leading a regiment of
her troops. The clear fresh face, curling hair,
direct look, quiet energy, and air of nobility this
sort of man could only be begotten of a great cause;
he were not possible in idle or prosperous times.
Elizabeth looked him up and down,
then affected surprise. “Monsieur de la
Foret,” she said, “I do not recognise you
in this attire” glancing towards
his dress.
De la Foret bowed, and Elizabeth continued,
looking at a paper in her hand: “You landed
on our shores of Jersey in the robes of a priest of
France. The passport for a priest of France was
found upon your person when our officers in Jersey
made search of you. Which is yourself Michel
de la Foret, soldier, or a priest of France?”
De la Foret replied gravely that he
was a soldier, and that the priestly dress had been
but a disguise.
“In which papist attire, methinks,
Michel de la Foret, soldier and Huguenot, must have
been ill at ease the eagle with the vulture’s
wing. What say you, Monsieur?”
“That vulture’s wing hath
carried me to a safe dove-cote, your gracious Majesty,”
he answered, with a low obeisance.
“I’m none so sure of that,
Monsieur,” was Elizabeth’s answer, and
she glanced quizzically at Leicester, who made a gesture
of annoyance. “Our cousin France makes
you to us a dark intriguer and conspirator, a dangerous
weed in our good garden of England, a ’troublous,
treacherous violence’ such are you
called, Monsieur.”
“I am in your high Majesty’s
power,” he answered, “to do with me as
it seemeth best. If your Majesty wills it that
I be returned to France, I pray you set me upon its
coast as I came from it, a fugitive. Thence will
I try to find my way to the army and the poor stricken
people of whom I was. I pray for that only, and
not to be given to the red hand of the Medici.”
“Red hand by my faith, but you are
bold, Monsieur!”
Leicester tapped his foot upon the
floor impatiently, then caught the Queen’s eye,
and gave her a meaning look.
De la Foret saw the look and knew
his enemy, but he did not quail. “Bold
only by your high Majesty’s faith, indeed,”
he answered the Queen, with harmless guile.
Elizabeth smiled. She loved such
flattering speech from a strong man. It touched
a chord in her deeper than that under Leicester’s
finger. Leicester’s impatience only made
her more self-willed on the instant.
“You speak with the trumpet
note, Monsieur,” she said to De la Foret.
“We will prove you. You shall have a company
in my Lord Leicester’s army here, and we will
send you upon some service worthy of your fame.”
“I crave your Majesty’s
pardon, but I cannot do it,” was De la Foret’s
instant reply. “I have sworn that I will
lift my sword in one cause only, and to that I must
stand. And more the widow of my dead
chief, Gabriel de Montgomery, is set down in this
land unsheltered and alone. I have sworn to one
who loves her, and for my dead chief’s sake,
that I will serve her and be near her until better
days be come and she may return in quietness to France.
In exile we few stricken folk must stand together,
your august Majesty.”
Elizabeth’s eye flashed up.
She was impatient of refusal of her favour. She
was also a woman, and that De la Foret should flaunt
his devotion to another woman was little to her liking.
The woman in her, which had never been blessed with
a noble love, was roused. The sourness of a childless,
uncompanionable life was stronger for the moment than
her strong mind and sense.
“Monsieur has sworn this, and
Monsieur has sworn that,” she said petulantly “and
to one who loveth a lady, and for a cause tut,
tut, tut! ”
Suddenly a kind of intriguing laugh
leaped into her eye, and she turned to Leicester and
whispered in his ear. Leicester frowned, then
smiled, and glanced up and down De la Foret’s
figure impertinently.
“See, Monsieur de la Foret,”
she added; “since you will not fight, you shall
preach. A priest you came into my kingdom, and
a priest you shall remain; but you shall preach good
English doctrine and no Popish folly.”
De la Foret started, then composed
himself, and before he had time to reply, Elizabeth
continued: “Partly for your own sake am
I thus gracious; for as a preacher of the Word I have
not need to give you up, according to agreement with
our brother of France. As a rebel and conspirator
I were bound to do so, unless you were an officer of
my army. The Seigneur of Rozel has spoken for
you, and the Comtesse de Montgomery has written
a pleading letter. Also I have from another source
a tearful prayer the ink is scarce dry upon
it which has been of service to you.
But I myself have chosen this way of escape for you.
Prove yourself worthy, and all may be well but
prove yourself you shall. You have prepared your
own brine, Monsieur; in it you shall pickle.”
She smiled a sour smile, for she was
piqued, and added: “Do you think I will
have you here squiring of distressed dames, save
as a priest? You shall hence to Madame of Montgomery
as her faithful chaplain, once I have heard you preach
and know your doctrine.”
Leicester almost laughed outright
in the young man’s face now, for he had no thought
that De la Foret would accept, and refusal meant the
exile’s doom.
It seemed fantastic that this noble
gentleman, this very type of the perfect soldier,
with the brown face of a picaroon and an athletic
valour of body, should become a preacher even in necessity.
Elizabeth, seeing De la Foret’s
dumb amazement and anxiety, spoke up sharply:
“Do this, or get you hence to the Medici, and
Madame of Montgomery shall mourn her protector, and
Mademoiselle your mistress of the vermilion cheek,
shall have one lover the less; which, methinks, our
Seigneur of Rozel would thank me for.”
De la Foret started, his lips pressed
firmly together in effort of restraint. There
seemed little the Queen did not know concerning him;
and reference to Angele roused him to sharp solicitude.
“Well, well?” asked Elizabeth
impatiently, then made a motion to Leicester, and
he, going to the door, bade some one to enter.
There stepped inside the Seigneur
of Rozel, who made a lumbering obeisance, then got
to his knees before the Queen.
“You have brought the lady safely with
her father?” she asked.
Lempriere, puzzled, looked inquiringly
at the Queen, then replied: “Both are safe
without, your infinite Majesty.”
De la Foret’s face grew pale.
He knew now for the first time that Angele and her
father were in England, and he looked Lempriere suspiciously
in the eyes; but the swaggering Seigneur met his look
frankly, and bowed with ponderous and genial gravity.
Now De la Foret spoke. “Your
high Majesty,” said he, “if I may ask
Mademoiselle Aubert one question in your presence ”
“Your answer now; the lady in
due season,” interposed the Queen.
“She was betrothed to a soldier,
she may resent a priest,” said De la Foret,
with a touch of humour, for he saw the better way was
to take the matter with some outward ease.
Elizabeth smiled. “It is
the custom of her sex to have a fondness for both,”
she answered, with an acid smile. “But your
answer?”
De la Foret’s face became exceeding
grave. Bowing his head, he said: “My
sword has spoken freely for the Cause; God forbid that
my tongue should not speak also. I will do your
Majesty’s behest.”
The jesting word that was upon the
royal lips came not forth, for De la Foret’s
face was that of a man who had determined a great thing,
and Elizabeth was one who had a heart for high deeds.
“The man is brave indeed,” she said under
her breath, and, turning to the dumfounded Seigneur,
bade him bring in Mademoiselle Aubert.
A moment later Angele entered, came
a few steps forward, made obeisance, and stood still.
She showed no trepidation, but looked before her steadily.
She knew not what was to be required of her, she was
a stranger in a strange land; but persecution and
exile had gone far to strengthen her spirit and greaten
her composure.
Elizabeth gazed at the girl coldly
and critically. To women she was not over-amiable;
but as she looked at the young Huguenot maid, of this
calm bearing, warm of colour, clear of eye, and purposeful
of face, some thing kindled in her. Most like
it was that love for a cause, which was more to be
encouraged by her than any woman’s love for a
man, which as she grew older inspired her with aversion,
as talk of marriage brought cynical allusions to her
lips.
“I have your letter and its
protests and its pleadings. There were fine words
and adjurations are you so religious,
then?” she asked brusquely.
“I am a Huguenot, your noble
Majesty,” answered the girl, as though that
answered all.
“How is it, then, you are betrothed
to a roistering soldier?” asked the Queen.
“Some must pray for Christ’s
sake, and some must fight, your most christian Majesty,”
answered the girl. “Some must do both,”
rejoined the Queen, in a kinder voice, for the pure
spirit of the girl worked upon her. “I
am told that Monsieur de la Foret fights fairly.
If he can pray as well, methinks he shall have safety
in our kingdom, and ye shall all have peace.
On Trinity Sunday you shall preach in my chapel, Monsieur
de la Foret, and thereafter you shall know your fate.”
She rose. “My Lord,”
she said to Leicester, on whose face gloom had settled,
“you will tell the Lord Chamberlain that Monsieur
de la Foret’s durance must be made comfortable
in the west tower of my palace till chapel-going of
Trinity Day. I will send him for his comfort and
instruction some sermons of Latimer.”
She stepped down from the dais.
“You will come with me, mistress,” she
said to Angele, and reached out her hand.
Angele fell on her knees and kissed
it, tears falling down her cheek, then rose and followed
the Queen from the chamber. She greatly desired
to look backward towards De la Foret, but some good
angel bade her not. She realised that to offend
the Queen at this moment might ruin all; and Elizabeth
herself was little like to offer chance for farewell
and love-tokens.
So it was that, with bowed head, Angele
left the room with the Queen of England, leaving Lempriere
and De la Foret gazing at each other, the one bewildered,
the other lost in painful reverie, and Leicester smiling
maliciously at them both.