At Angle’s entrance a form
slowly raised itself on a couch, and a voice, not
Michel’s, said: “Mademoiselle by
our Lady, ’tis she!”
It was the voice of the Seigneur of
Rozel, and Angle started back amazed.
“You, Monsieur you!”
she gasped. “It was you that sent for me?”
“Send? Not I I
have not lost my manners yet. Rozel at Court is
no greater fool than Lempriere in Jersey.”
Angle wrung her hands. “I
thought it De la Foret who was ill. The surgeon
said to come quickly.” Lempriere braced
himself against the wall, for he was weak, and his
fever still high. “Ill? not he.
As sound in body and soul as any man in England.
That is a friend, that De la Foret lover of yours,
or I’m no butler to the Queen. He gets leave
and brings me here and coaxes me back to life again with
not a wink of sleep for him these five days past till
now.”
Angel had drawn nearer, and now stood
beside the couch, trembling and fearful, for it came
to her mind that she had been made the victim of some
foul device. The letter had read: “Your
friend is ill.” True, the Seigneur was
her friend, but he had not sent for her.
“Where is De la Foret?”
she asked quickly. “Yonder, asleep,”
said the Seigneur, pointing to a curtain which divided
the room from one adjoining. Angel ran quickly
towards the door, then stopped short. No, she
would not waken him. She would go back at once.
She would leave the palace by the way she came.
Without a word she turned and went towards the door
opening into the hallway. With her hand upon the
latch she stopped short again; for she realised that
she did not know her way through the passages and
corridors, and that she must make herself known to
the servants of the palace to obtain guidance and exit.
As she stood helpless and confused, the Seigneur called
hoarsely: “De la Foret De la
Foret!” Before Angele could decide upon her course,
the curtain of the other room was thrust aside, and
De la Foret entered. He was scarce awake, and
he yawned contentedly. He did not see Angele,
but turned towards Lempriere. For once the Seigneur
had a burst of inspiration. He saw that Angele
was in the shadow, and that De la Foret had not observed
her. He determined that the lovers should meet
alone.
“Your arm, De la Foret,” he grunted.
“I’ll get me to the bed in yonder room ’tis
easier than this couch.”
“Two hours ago you could not
bear the bed, and must get you to the couch and
now! Seigneur, do you know the weight you are?”
he added, laughing, as he stooped, and helping Lempriere
gently to his feet, raised him slowly in his arms
and went heavily with him to the bedroom. Angele
watched him with a strange thrill of timid admiration
and delight. Surely it could not be that Michel her
Michel could be bought from his allegiance
by any influence on earth. There was the same
old simple laugh on his lips, as, with chaffing words,
he carried the huge Seigneur to the other room.
Her heart acquitted him then and there of all blame,
past or to come.
“Michel!” she said aloud
involuntarily the call of her spirit which
spoke on her lips against her will.
De la Foret had helped Lempriere to
the bed again as he heard his name called, and he
stood suddenly still, looking straight before him into
space. Angele’s voice seemed ghostly and
unreal.
“Michel!” he heard again,
and he came forward into the room where she was.
Yet once again she said the word scarcely above a whisper,
for the look of rapt wonder and apprehension in his
manner overcame her. Now he turned towards her,
where she stood in the shadow by the door. He
saw her, but even yet he did not stir, for she seemed
to him still an apparition.
With a little cry she came forward
to him. “Michel help me!”
she murmured, and stretched out her hands. With
a cry of joy he took her in his arms and pressed her
to his heart. Then a realisation of danger came
to him.
“Why did you come?” he asked.
She told him hastily. He heard
with astonishment, and then said: “There
is some foul trick here. Have you the message?”
She handed it to him. “It is the surgeon’s
writing, verily,” he said; “but it is still
a trick, for the sick man here is Rozel. I see
it all. You and I forbidden to meet it
was a trick to bring you here.”
“Oh, let me go!” she cried.
“Michel, Michel, take me hence.” She
turned towards the door.
“The gates are closed,”
he said, as a cannon boomed on the evening air.
Angele trembled violently. “Oh,
what will come of this?” she cried, in tearful
despair.
“Be patient, sweet, and let
me think,” he answered. At that moment there
came a knocking at the door, then it was thrown open,
and there stepped inside the Earl of Leicester, preceded
by a page bearing a torch.
“Is Michel de la Foret within?”
he called; then stopped short, as though astonished,
seeing Angele. “So! so!” he said,
with a contemptuous laugh. Michel de la Foret’s
fingers twitched. He quickly stepped in front
of Angele, and answered: “What is your
business here, my lord?”
Leicester languorously took off a
glove, and seemed to stifle a yawn in it; then said:
“I came to take you into my service, to urge
upon you for your own sake to join my troops, going
upon duty in the North; for I fear that if you stay
here the Queen Mother of France will have her way.
But I fear I am too late. A man who has sworn
himself into service d’amour has no time for
service de la guerre.”
“I will gladly give an hour
from any service I may follow to teach the Earl of
Leicester that he is less a swordsman than a trickster.”
Leicester flushed, but answered coolly:
“I can understand your chagrin. You should
have locked your door. It is the safer custom.”
He bowed lightly towards Angele. “You have
not learned our English habits of discretion, Monsieur
de la Foret. I would only do you service.
I appreciate your choler. I should be no less
indignant. So, in the circumstances, I will see
that the gates are opened, of course you did not realise
the flight of time, and I will take Mademoiselle
to her lodgings. You may rely on my discretion.
I am wholly at your service tout a vous,
as who should say in your charming language.”
The insolence was so veiled in perfect
outward courtesy that it must have seemed impossible
for De la Foret to reply in terms equal to the moment.
He had, however, no need to reply, for the door of
the room suddenly opened, and two pages stepped inside
with torches.
They were followed by a gentleman
in scarlet and gold, who said, “The Queen!”
and stepped aside.
An instant afterwards Elizabeth, with
the Duke’s Daughter, entered.
The three dropped upon their knees,
and Elizabeth waved without the pages and the gentleman-in-waiting.
When the doors closed, the Queen eyed the three kneeling
figures, and as her glance fell on Leicester a strange
glitter came into her eyes. She motioned all to
rise, and with a hand upon the arm of the Duke’s
Daughter, said to Leicester:
“What brings the Earl of Leicester here?”
“I came to urge upon Monsieur
the wisdom of holding to the Sword and leaving the
Book to the butter-fingered religious. Your Majesty
needs good soldiers.”
He bowed, but not low, and it was
clear he was bent upon a struggle. He was confounded
by the Queen’s presence, he could not guess why
she should have come; and that she was prepared for
what she saw was clear.
“And brought an eloquent pleader
with you?” She made a scornful gesture towards
Angele.
“Nay, your Majesty; the lady’s
zeal outran my own, and crossed the threshold first.”
The Queen’s face wore a look
that Leicester had never seen on it before, and he
had observed it in many moods.
“You found the lady here, then?”
“With Monsieur alone. Seeing
she was placed unfortunately, I offered to escort
her hence to her father. But your Majesty came
upon the moment.”
There was a ring of triumph in Leicester’s
voice. No doubt, by some chance, the Queen had
become aware of Angele’s presence, he thought.
Fate had forestalled the letter he had already written
on this matter and meant to send her within the hour.
Chance had played into his hands with perfect suavity.
The Queen, less woman now than Queen, enraged by the
information got he knew not how, had come at once to
punish the gross breach of her orders and a dark misconduct-so
he thought.
The Queen’s look, as she turned
it on Angele, apparently had in it what must have
struck terror to even a braver soul than that of the
helpless Huguenot girl.
“So it is thus you spend the
hours of night? God’s faith, but you are
young to be so wanton!” she cried in a sharp
voice. “Get you from my sight and out of
my kingdom as fast as horse and ship may carry you as
feet may bear you.” Leicester’s face
lighted to hear. “Your high Majesty,”
pleaded the girl, dropping on her knees, “I am
innocent. As God lives, I am innocent.”
“The man, then, only is guilty?”
the Queen rejoined with scorn. “Is it innocent
to be here at night, my palace gates shut, with your
lover-alone?” Leicester laughed at the words.
“Your Majesty, oh, your gracious
Majesty, hear me. We were not alone not
alone ”
There was a rustle of curtains, a
heavy footstep, and Lempriere of Rozel staggered into
the room. De la Foret ran to help him, and throwing
an arm around him, almost carried him towards the couch.
Lempriere, however, slipped from De la Foret’s
grasp to his knees on the floor before the Queen.
“Not alone, your high and sacred
Majesty, I am here I have been here through
all. I was here when Mademoiselle came, brought
hither by trick of some knave not fit to be your immortal
Majesty’s subject. I speak the truth, for
I am butler to your Majesty and no liar. I am
Lempriere of Rozel.”
No man’s self-control could
meet such a surprise without wavering. Leicester
was confounded, for he had not known that Lempriere
was housed with De la Foret. For a moment he
could do naught but gaze at Lempriere. Then,
as the Seigneur suddenly swayed and would have fallen,
the instinct of effective courtesy, strong in him,
sent him with arms outstretched to lift him up.
Together, without a word, he and De la Foret carried
him to the couch and laid him down. That single
act saved Leicester’s life. There was something
so naturally (though, in truth, it was so hypocritically)
kind in the way he sprang to his enemy’s assistance
that an old spirit of fondness stirred in the Queen’s
breast, and she looked strangely at him. When,
however, they had disposed of Lempriere and Leicester
had turned again towards her, she said: “Did
you think I had no loyal and true gentlemen at my
Court, my lord? Did you think my leech would
not serve me as fair as he would serve the Earl of
Leicester? You have not bought us all, Robert
Dudley, who have bought and sold so long. The
good leech did your bidding and sent your note to
the lady; but there your bad play ended and Fate’s
began. A rabbit’s brains, Leicester and
a rabbit’s end. Fate has the brains you
need.”
Leicester’s anger burst forth
now under the lash of ridicule. “I cannot
hope to win when your Majesty plays Fate in caricature.”
With a little gasp of rage Elizabeth
leaned over and slapped his face with her long glove.
“Death of my life, but I who made you do unmake
you!” she cried.
He dropped his hand on his sword.
“If you were but a man, and not ”
he said, then stopped short, for there was that in
the Queen’s face which changed his purpose.
Anger was shaking her, but there were tears in her
eyes. The woman in her was stronger than the Queen.
It was nothing to her at this moment that she might
have his life as easily as she had struck his face
with her glove; this man had once shown the better
part of himself to her, and the memory of it shamed
her for his own sake now. She made a step towards
the door, then turned and spoke:
“My Lord, I have no palace and
no ground wherein your footstep will not be trespass.
Pray you, remember.”
She turned towards Lempriere, who
lay on his couch faint and panting. “For
you, my Lord of Rozel, I wish you better health, though
you have lost it somewhat in a good cause.”
Her glance fell on De la Foret.
Her look softened. “I will hear you preach
next Sunday, sir.”
There was an instant’s pause,
and then she said to Angele, with gracious look and
in a low voice: “You have heard from me
that calumny which the innocent never escape.
To try you I neglected you these many days; to see
your nature even more truly than I knew it, I accused
you but now. You might have been challenged first
by one who could do you more harm than Elizabeth of
England, whose office is to do good, not evil.
Nets are spread for those whose hearts are simple,
and your feet have been caught. Be thankful that
we understand; and know that Elizabeth is your loving
friend. You have had trials I have
kept you in suspense there has been trouble
for us all; but we are better now; our minds are more
content; so all may be well, please God! You will
rest this night with our lady-dove here, and to-morrow
early you shall return in peace to your father.
You have a good friend in our cousin.” She
made a gentle motion towards the Duke’s Daughter.
“She has proved it so. In my leech she
has a slave. To her you owe this help in time
of need. She hath wisdom, too, and we must listen
to her, even as I have done this day.”
She inclined her head towards the
door. Leicester opened it, and as she passed
out she gave him one look which told him that his game
was lost, if not for ever, yet for time uncertain
and remote. “You must not blame the leech,
my lord,” she said, suddenly turning back.
“The Queen of England has first claim on the
duty of her subjects. They serve me for love;
you they help at need as time-servers.”
She stepped on, then paused again
and looked back. “Also I forbid fighting
betwixt you,” she said, in a loud voice, looking
at De la Foret and Leicester.
Without further sign or look, she
moved on. Close behind came Angele and the Duke’s
Daughter, and Leicester followed at some distance.