That very day I set out. For
since the King was opposed to the affair, and knowing
the drastic measures by which he was wont to enforce
what he desired, I realized that did I linger he might
find a way definitely to prevent my going.
I travelled in a coach, attended by
two lacqueys and a score of men-at-arms in my own
livery, all commanded by Ganymede. My intendant
himself came in another coach with my wardrobe and
travelling necessaries. We were a fine and almost
regal cortege as we passed down the rue de l’Enfer
and quitted Paris by the Orleans gate, taking the
road south. So fine a cortege, indeed, that it
entered my mind. His Majesty would come to hear
of it, and, knowing my destination, send after me
to bring me back. To evade such a possibility,
I ordered a divergence to be made, and we struck east
and into Touraine. At Pont-lé-Duc,
near Tours, I had a cousin in the Vicomte d’Amaral,
and at his chateau I arrived on the third day after
quitting Paris.
Since that was the last place where
they would seek me, if to seek me they were inclined,
I elected to remain my cousin’s guest for fifteen
days. And whilst I was there we had news of trouble
in the South and of a rising in Languedoc under the
Duc de Montmorency. Thus was it that when
I came to take my leave of Amaral, he, knowing that
Languedoc was my destination, sought ardently to keep
me with him until we should learn that peace and order
were restored in the province. But I held the
trouble lightly, and insisted upon going.
Resolutely, then, if by slow stages,
we pursued our journey, and came at last to Montauban.
There we lay a night at the Auberge de Navarre, intending
to push on to Lavedan upon the morrow. My father
had been on more than friendly terms with the Vicomte
de Lavedan, and upon this I built my hopes of a cordial
welcome and an invitation to delay for a few days
the journey to Toulouse, upon which I should represent
myself as bound.
Thus, then, stood my plans. And
they remained unaltered for all that upon the morrow
there were wild rumours in the air of Montauban.
There were tellings of a battle fought the day before
at Castelnaudary, of the defeat of Monsieur’s
partisans, of the utter rout of Gonzalo de Cordova’s
Spanish tatterdemalions, and of the capture of Montmorency,
who was sorely wounded some said with twenty
and some with thirty wounds and little
like to live. Sorrow and discontent stalked abroad
in Languedoc that day, for they believed that it was
against the Cardinal, who sought to strip them of
so many privileges, that Gaston d’Orléans had
set up his standard.
That those rumours of battle and defeat
were true we had ample proof some few hours later,
when a company of dragoons in buff and steel rode
into the courtyard of the Auberge de Navarre, headed
by a young spark of an officer, who confirmed the
rumour and set the number of Montmorency’s wounds
at seventeen. He was lying, the officer told us,
at Castelnaudary, and his duchess was hastening to
him from Beziers. Poor woman! She was destined
to nurse him back to life and vigour only that he
might take his trial at Toulouse and pay with his head
the price of his rebellion.
Ganymede who, through the luxurious
habits of his more recent years had for
all his fine swagger developed a marked
distaste for warfare and excitement, besought me to
take thought for my safety and to lie quietly at Montauban
until the province should be more settled.
“The place is a hotbed of rebellion,”
he urged. “If these Chouans
but learn that we are from Paris and of the King’s
party, we shall have our throats slit, as I live.
There is not a peasant in all this countryside indeed,
scarce a man of any sort but is a red-hot Orleanist,
anti-Cardinalist, and friend of the Devil. Bethink
you, monseigneur, to push on at the present is
to court murder.”
“Why, then, we will court murder,”
said I coldly. “Give the word to saddle.”
I asked him at the moment of setting
out did he know the road to Lavedan, to which the
lying poltroon made answer that he did. In his
youth he may have known it, and the countryside may
have undergone since then such changes as bewildered
him. Or it may be that fear dulled his wits,
and lured him into taking what may have seemed the
safer rather than the likelier road. But this
I know, that as night was falling my carriage halted
with a lurch, and as I put forth my head I was confronted
by my trembling intendant, his great fat face gleaming
whitely in the gloom above the lawn collar on his doublet.
“Why do we halt, Ganymede?” quoth I.
“Monseigneur,” he faltered,
his trembling increasing as he spoke, and his eyes
meeting mine in a look of pitiful contrition, “I
fear we are lost.”
“Lost?” I echoed.
“Of what do you talk? Am I to sleep in the
coach?”
“Alas, monseigneur, I have done my best ”
“Why, then, God keep us from
your worst,” I snapped. “Open me this
door.”
I stepped down and looked about me,
and, by my faith, a more desolate spot to lose us
in my henchman could not have contrived had he been
at pains to do so. A bleak, barren landscape such
as I could hardly have credited was to be found in
all that fair province unfolded itself,
looking now more bleak, perhaps, by virtue of the dim
evening mist that hovered over it. Yonder, to
the right, a dull russet patch of sky marked the west,
and then in front of us I made out the hazy outline
of the Pyrénées. At sight of them, I swung round
and gripped my henchman by the shoulder.
“A fine trusty servant thou!”
I cried. “Boaster! Had you told us
that age and fat living had so stunted your wits as
to have extinguished memory, I had taken a guide at
Montauban to show us the way. Yet, here, with
the sun and the Pyrénées to guide you, even had you
no other knowledge, you lose yourself!”
“Monseigneur,” he whimpered,
“I was choosing my way by the sun and the mountains,
and it was thus that I came to this impasse. For
you may see, yourself, that the road ends here abruptly.”
“Ganymede,” said I slowly,
“when we return to Paris if you do
not die of fright ’twixt this and then I’ll
find a place for you in the kitchens. God send
you may make a better scullion than a follower!”
Then, vaulting over the wall, “Attend me, some
half-dozen of you,” I commanded, and stepped
out briskly towards the barn.
As the weather-beaten old door creaked
upon its rusty hinges, we were greeted by a groan
from within, and with it the soft rustle of straw
that is being moved. Surprised, I halted, and
waited whilst one of my men kindled a light in the
lanthorn that he carried.
By its rays we beheld a pitiable sight
in a corner of that building. A man, quite young
and of a tall and vigorous frame, lay stretched upon
the straw. He was fully dressed even to his great
riding-boots, and from the loose manner in which his
back-and-breast hung now upon him, it would seem as
if he had been making shift to divest himself of his
armour, but had lacked the strength to complete the
task. Beside him lay a feathered headpiece and
a sword attached to a richly broidered baldrick.
All about him the straw was clotted with brown, viscous
patches of blood. The doublet which had been of
sky-blue velvet was all sodden and stained, and inspection
showed us that he had been wounded in the right side,
between the straps of his breastplate.
As we stood about him now, a silent,
pitying group, appearing fantastic, perhaps, by the
dim light of that single lanthorn, he attempted to
raise his head, and then with a groan he dropped it
back upon the straw that pillowed it. From out
of a face white, as in death, and drawn with haggard
lines of pain, a pair of great lustrous blue eyes were
turned upon us, abject and pitiful as the gaze of
a dumb beast that is stricken mortally.
It needed no acuteness to apprehend
that we had before us one of yesterday’s defeated
warriors; one who had spent his last strength in creeping
hither to get his dying done in peace. Lest our
presence should add fear to the agony already upon
him, I knelt beside him in the blood-smeared straw,
and, raising his head, I pillowed it upon my arm.
“Have no fear,” said I
reassuringly. “We are friends. Do you
understand?”
The faint smile that played for a
second on his lips and lighted his countenance would
have told me that he understood, even had I not caught
his words, faint as a sigh “Merci, monsieur.”
He nestled his head into the crook of my arm.
“Water for the love of God!”
he gasped, to add in a groan, “Je me meurs,
monsieur.”
Assisted by a couple of knaves, Ganymede
went about attending to the rebel at once. Handling
him as carefully as might be, to avoid giving him
unnecessary pain they removed his back-and-breast,
which was flung with a clatter into one of the corners
of the barn. Then, whilst one of them gently
drew off his boots, Rodenard, with the lanthorn close
beside him, cut away the fellow’s doublet, and
laid bare the oozing sword-wound that gaped in his
mangled side. He whispered an order to Gilles,
who went swiftly off to the coach in quest of something
that he had asked for; then he sat on his heels and
waited, his hand upon the man’s pulse, his eyes
on his face.
I stooped until my lips were on a
level with my intendant’s ear.
“How is it with him?” I inquired.
“Dying,” whispered Rodenard
in answer. “He has lost too much blood,
and he is probably bleeding inwardly as well.
There is no hope of his life, but he may linger thus
some little while, sinking gradually, and we can at
least mitigate the suffering of his last moments.”
When presently the men returned with
the things that Ganymede had asked for, he mixed some
pungent liquid with water, and, whilst a servant held
the bowl, he carefully sponged the rebel’s wound.
This and a cordial that he had given him to drink
seemed to revive him and to afford him ease.
His breathing was no longer marked by any rasping sound,
and his eyes seemed to burn more intelligently.
“I am dying is it
not so?” he asked, and Ganymede bowed his head
in silence. The poor fellow sighed. “Raise
me,” he begged, and when this service had been
done him, his eyes wandered round until they found
me. Then “Monsieur,” he said, “will
you do me a last favour?”
“Assuredly, my poor friend,”
I answered, going down on my knees beside him.
“You you were not
for the Duke?” he inquired, eyeing me more keenly.
“No, monsieur. But do not
let that disturb you; I have no interest in this rising
and I have taken no side. I am from Paris, on
a journey of of pleasure. My name
is Bardelys Marcel de Bardelys.”
“Bardelys the Magnificent?”
he questioned, and I could not repress a smile.
“I am that overrated man.”
“But then you are for the King!”
And a note of disappointment crept into his voice.
Before I could make him any answer, he had resumed.
“No matter; Marcel de Bardelys is a gentleman,
and party signifies little when a man is dying.
I am René de Lesperon, of Lesperon in Gascony,”
he pursued. “Will you send word to my sister
afterwards?”
I bowed my head without speaking.
“She is the only relative I
have, monsieur. But” and his
tone grew wistful “there is one other
to whom I would have you bear a message.”
He raised his hand by a painful effort to the level
of his breast. Strength failed him, and he sank
back. “I cannot, monsieur,” he said
in a tone of pathetic apology. “See; there
is a chain about my neck with a locket. Take
it from me. Take it now, monsieur. There
are some papers also, monsieur. Take all.
I want to see them safely in your keeping.”
I did his bidding, and from the breast
of his doublet I drew some loose letters and a locket
which held the miniature of a woman’s face.
“I want you to deliver all to her, monsieur.”
“It shall be done,” I answered, deeply
moved.
“Hold it hold it
up,” he begged, his voice weakening. “Let
me behold the face.”
Long his eyes rested on the likeness
I held before him. At last, as one in a dream
“Well-beloved,” he sighed.
“Bien aimée!” And down his grey,
haggard cheeks the tears came slowly. “Forgive
this weakness, monsieur,” he whispered brokenly.
“We were to have been wed in a month, had I lived.”
He ended with a sob, and when next he spoke it was
more labouredly, as though that sob had robbed him
of the half of what vitality remained. “Tell
her, monsieur, that my dying thoughts were of her.
Tell tell her I ”
“Her name?” I cried, fearing
he would sink before I learned it. “Tell
me her name.”
He looked at me with eyes that were
growing glassy and vacant. Then he seemed to
brace himself and to rally for a second.
His head rolled on the suddenly relaxed
neck. He collapsed into Rodenard’s arms.
“Is he dead?” I asked.
Rodenard nodded in silence.