I do not know whether it was the influence
of that thing lying in a corner of the barn under
the cloak that Rodenard had flung over it, or whether
other influences of destiny were at work to impel me
to rise at the end of a half-hour and announce my
determination to set out on horseback and find myself
quarters more congenial.
“To-morrow,” I instructed
Ganymede, as I stood ready to mount, “you will
retrace your steps with the others, and, finding the
road to Lavedan, you will follow me to the chateau.”
“But you cannot hope to reach
it to-night, monseigneur, through a country that
is unknown to you,” he protested.
“I do not hope to reach it to-night.
I will ride south until I come upon some hamlet that
will afford me shelter and, in the morning, direction.”
I left him with that, and set out
at a brisk trot. Night had now fallen, but the
sky was clear, and a crescent moon came opportunely
if feebly to dispel the gloom.
I quitted the field, and went back
until I gained a crossroad, where, turning to the
right, I set my face to the Pyrénées, and rode briskly
amain. That I had chosen wisely was proved when
some twenty minutes later. I clattered into the
hamlet of Mirepoix, and drew up before an inn flaunting
the sign of a peacock as if in irony of
its humbleness, for it was no better than a wayside
tavern. Neither stable-boy nor ostler was here,
and the unclean, overgrown urchin to whom I entrusted
my horse could not say whether indeed Pere Abdon the
landlord would be able to find me a room to sleep
in. I thirsted, however; and so I determined
to alight, if it were only to drink a can of wine and
obtain information of my whereabouts.
As I was entering the hostelry there
was a clatter of hoofs in the street, and four dragoons
headed by a sergeant rode up and halted at the door
of the Paon. They seemed to have ridden hard and
some distance, for their horses were jaded almost
to the last point of endurance.
Within, I called the host, and having
obtained a flagon of the best vintage Heaven
fortify those that must be content with his worst! I
passed on to make inquiries touching my whereabouts
and the way to Lavedan. This I learnt was but
some three or four miles distant. About the other
table there were but two within the room stood
the dragoons in a whispered consultation, of which
it had been well had I taken heed, for it concerned
me more closely than I could have dreamt.
“He answers the description,”
said the sergeant, and though I heard the words I
took no thought that it was of me they spoke.
“Padrieu,” swore one of
his companions, “I’ll wager it is our man.”
And then, just as I was noticing that
Master Abdon, who had also overheard the conversation,
was eyeing me curiously, the sergeant stepped up to
me, and
“What is your name, monsieur?” quoth he.
I vouchsafed him a stare of surprise
before asking in my turn “How may that concern
you?”
“Your pardon, my master, but
we are on the King’s business.”
I remembered then that he had said
I answered some description. With that it flashed
through my mind that they had been sent after me by
His Majesty to enforce my obedience to his wishes and
to hinder me from reaching Lavedan. At once came
the dominant desire to conceal my identity that I
might go unhindered. The first name that occurred
to me was that of the poor wretch I had left in the
barn half an hour ago, and so
“I am,” said I, “Monsieur de Lesperon,
at your service.”
Too late I saw the mistake that I
had made. I own it was a blunder that no man
of ordinary intelligence should have permitted himself
to have committed. Remembering the unrest of
the province, I should rather have concluded that
their business was more like to be in that connection.
“He is bold, at least,”
cried one of the troopers, with a burst of laughter.
Then came the sergeant’s voice, cold and formal,
“In the King’s name, Monsieur de Lesperon,
I arrest you.”
He had whipped out his sword, and
the point was within an inch of my breast. But
his arm, I observed, was stretched to its fullest extent,
which forbade his making a sudden thrust. To hamper
him in the lunge there was the table between us.
So, my mind working quickly in this
desperate situation, and realizing how dire and urgent
the need to attempt an escape, I leapt suddenly back
to find myself in the arms of his followers. But
in moving I had caught up by one of its legs the stool
on which I had been sitting. As I raised it,
I eluded the pinioning grip of the troopers. I
twisted in their grasp, and brought the stool down
upon the head of one of them with a force that drove
him to his knees. Up went that three-legged stool
again, to descend like a thunderbolt upon the head
of another. That freed me. The sergeant
was coming up behind, but another flourish of my improvised
battle-axe sent the two remaining soldiers apart to
look to their swords. Ere they could draw, I
had darted like a hare between them and out into the
street. The sergeant, cursing them with horrid
volubility, followed closely upon my heels.
Leaping as far into the roadway as
I could, I turned to meet the fellow’s onslaught.
Using the stool as a buckler, I caught his thrust
upon it. So violently was it delivered that the
point buried itself in the wood and the blade snapped,
leaving him a hilt and a stump of steel. I wasted
no time in thought. Charging him wildly, I knocked
him over just as the two unhurt dragoons came stumbling
out of the tavern.
I gained my horse and vaulted into
the saddle. Tearing the reins from the urchin
that held them, and driving my spurs into the beast’s
flanks, I went careering down the street at a gallop,
gripping tightly with my knees, whilst the stirrups,
which I had had no time to step into, flew wildly
about my legs.
A pistol cracked behind me; then another,
and a sharp, stinging pain in the shoulder warned
me that I was hit. But I took no heed of it then.
The wound could not be serious, else I had already
been out of the saddle, and it would be time enough
to look to it when I had outdistanced my pursuers.
I say my pursuers, for already there were hoofbeats
behind me, and I knew that those gentlemen had taken
to their horses. But, as you may recall, I had
on their arrival noted the jaded condition of their
cattle, whilst I bestrode a horse that was comparatively
fresh, so that pursuit had but small terrors for me.
Nevertheless, they held out longer, and gave me more
to do than I had imagined would be the case.
For nigh upon a half-hour I rode, before I could be
said to have got clear of them, and then for aught
I knew they were still following, resolved to hound
me down by the aid of such information as they might
cull upon their way.
I was come by then to the Garonne.
I drew rein beside the swiftly flowing stream, winding
itself like a flood of glittering silver between the
black shadows of its banks. A little while I sat
there listening, and surveying the stately, turreted
chateau that loomed, a grey, noble pile, beyond the
water. I speculated what demesne this might be,
and I realized that it was probably Lavedan.
I pondered what I had best do, and
in the end I took the resolve to swim the river and
knock at the gates. If it were indeed Lavedan,
I had but to announce myself, and to one of my name
surely its hospitalities would be spread. If
it were some other household, even then the name of
Marcel de Bardelys should suffice to ensure me a welcome.
By spurring and coaxing, I lured my
steed into the river. There is a proverb having
it that though you may lead a horse to the water you
cannot make him drink. It would have now applied
to my case, for although I had brought mine to the
water I could not make him swim; or, at least, I could
not make him breast the rush of the stream. Vainly
did I urge him and try to hold him; he plunged frantically,
snorted, coughed, and struggled gamely, but the current
was bearing us swiftly away, and his efforts brought
us no nearer to the opposite shore. At last I
slipped from his back, and set myself to swim beside
him, leading him by the bridle. But even thus
he proved unequal to the task of resisting the current,
so that in the end I let him go, and swam ashore alone,
hoping that he would land farther down, and that I
might then recapture him. When, however, I had
reached the opposite bank, and stood under the shadow
of the chateau, I discovered that the cowardly beast
had turned back, and, having scrambled out, was now
trotting away along the path by which we had come.
Having no mind to go after him, I resigned myself
to the loss, and turned my attention to the mansion
now before me.
Some two hundred yards from the river
it raised its great square bulk against the background
of black, star-flecked sky. From the façade before
me down to the spot where I stood by the water, came
a flight of half a dozen terraces, each balustraded
in white marble, ending in square, flat-topped pillars
of Florentine design. What moon there was revealed
the quaint architecture of that stately edifice and
glittered upon the mullioned windows. But within
nothing stirred; no yellow glimmer came to clash with
the white purity of the moonlight; no sound of man
or beast broke the stillness of the night, for all
that the hour was early. The air of the place
was as that of some gigantic sepulchre. A little
daunted by this all-enveloping stillness, I skirted
the terraces and approached the house on the eastern
side. Here I found an old-world drawbridge now
naturally in disuse spanning a ditch fed
from the main river for the erstwhile purposes of a
moat. I crossed the bridge, and entered an imposing
courtyard. Within this quadrangle the same silence
dwelt, and there was the same obscurity in the windows
that overlooked it. I paused, at a loss how to
proceed, and I leaned against a buttress of the portcullis,
what time I considered.
I was weak from fasting, worn with
hard riding, and faint from the wound in my shoulder,
which had been the cause at least of my losing some
blood. In addition to all this, I was shivering
with the cold of my wet garments, and generally I
must have looked as little like that Bardelys they
called the Magnificent as you might well conceive.
How, then, if I were to knock, should I prevail in
persuading these people whoever they might
be of my identity? Infinitely more
had I the air of some fugitive rebel, and it was more
than probable that I should be kept in durance to
be handed over to my friends the dragoons, if later
they came to ride that way. I was separated from
those who knew me, and as things now stood unless
this were, indeed, Lavedan it might be days
before they found me again.
I was beginning to deplore my folly
at having cut myself adrift from my followers in the
first place, and having embroiled myself with the
soldiers in the second; I was beginning to contemplate
the wisdom of seeking some outhouse of this mansion
wherein to lie until morning, when of a sudden a broad
shaft of light, coming from one of the windows on
the first floor, fell athwart the courtyard. Instinctively
I crouched back into the shadow of my friendly buttress,
and looked up.
That sudden shaft of light resulted
from the withdrawal of the curtains that masked a
window. At this window, which opened outward on
to a balcony; I now beheld and to me it
was as the vision of Beatrice may have been to Dante the
white figure of a woman. The moonlight bathed
her, as in her white robe she leaned upon the parapet
gazing upward into the empyrean. A sweet, delicate
face I saw, not endowed, perhaps, with that exquisite
balance and proportion of feature wherein they tell
us beauty lies, but blessed with a wondrously dainty
beauty all its own; a beauty, perhaps, as much of
expression as of form; for in that gentle countenance
was mirrored every tender grace of girlhood, all that
is fresh and pure and virginal.
I held my breath, I think, as I stood
in ravished contemplation of that white vision.
If this were Lavedan, and that the cold Roxalanne who
had sent my bold Chatellerault back to Paris empty-handed
then were my task a very welcome one.
How little it had weighed with me
that I was come to Languedoc to woo a woman bearing
the name of Roxalanne de Lavedan I have already shown.
But here in this same Languedoc I beheld to-night
a woman whom it seemed I might have loved, for not
in ten years not, indeed, in all my life had
any face so wrought upon me and called to my nature
with so strong a voice.
I gazed at that child, and I thought
of the women that I had known the bold,
bedizened beauties of a Court said to be the first
in Europe. And then it came to me that this was
no demoiselle of Lavedan, no demoiselle at all in
fact, for the noblesse of France owned no such faces.
Candour and purity were not to be looked for in the
high-bred countenances of our great families; they
were sometimes found in the faces of the children
of their retainers. Yes; I had it now. This
child was the daughter of some custodian of the demesne
before me.
Suddenly, as she stood there in the
moonlight, a song, sung at half-voice, floated down
on the calm air. It was a ditty of old Provence,
a melody I knew and loved, and if aught had been wanting
to heighten the enchantment that already ravished
me, that soft melodious voice had done it. Singing
still, she turned and reentered the room, leaving
wide the windows, so that faintly, as from a distance,
her voice still reached me after she was gone from
sight.
It was in that hour that it came to
me to cast myself upon this fair creature’s
mercy. Surely one so sweet and saintly to behold
would take compassion on an unfortunate! Haply
my wound and all the rest that I had that night endured
made me dull-witted and warped my reason.
With what strength I still possessed
I went to work to scale her balcony. The task
was easy even for one in my spent condition. The
wall was thick with ivy, and, moreover, a window beneath
afforded some support, for by standing on the heavy
coping I could with my fingers touch the sill of the
balcony above. Thus I hoisted myself, and presently
I threw an arm over the parapet. Already I was
astride of that same Parapet before she became aware
of my presence.
The song died suddenly on her lips,
and her eyes, blue as forget-me-nots, were wide now
with the fear that the sight of me occasioned.
Another second and there had been an outcry that would
have brought the house about our ears, when, stepping
to the threshold of the room, “Mademoiselle,”
I entreated, “for the love of God, be silent!
I mean you no harm. I am a fugitive. I am
pursued.”
This was no considered speech.
There had been no preparing of words; I had uttered
them mechanically almost perhaps by inspiration,
for they were surely the best calculated to enlist
this lady’s sympathy. And so far as went
the words themselves, they were rigorously true.
With eyes wide open still, she confronted
me, and I now observed that she was not so tall as
from below I had imagined. She was, in fact, of
a short stature rather, but of proportions so exquisite
that she conveyed an impression of some height.
In her hand she held a taper by whose light she had
been surveying herself in her mirror at the moment
of my advent. Her unbound hair of brown fell
like a mantle about her shoulders, and this fact it
was drew me to notice that she was in her night-rail,
and that this room to which I had penetrated was her
chamber.
“Who are you?” she asked
breathlessly, as though in such a pass my identity
were a thing that signified.
I had almost answered her, as I had
answered the troopers at Mirepoix, that I was Lesperon.
Then, bethinking me that there was no need for such
equivocation here, I was on the point of giving her
my name. But noting my hesitation, and misconstruing
it, she forestalled me.
“I understand, monsieur,”
said she more composedly. “And you need
have no fear. You are among friends.”
Her eyes had travelled over my sodden
clothes, the haggard pallor of my face, and the blood
that stained my doublet from the shoulder downward.
From all this she had drawn her conclusions that I
was a hunted rebel. She drew me into the room,
and, closing the window, she dragged the heavy curtain
across it, thereby giving me a proof of confidence
that smote me hard impostor that I was.
“I crave your pardon, mademoiselle,
for having startled you by the rude manner of my coming,”
said I, and never in my life had I felt less at ease
than then. “But I was exhausted and desperate.
I am wounded, I have ridden hard, and I swam the river.”
The latter piece of information was
vastly unnecessary, seeing that the water from my
clothes was forming a pool about my feet. “I
saw you from below; mademoiselle, and surely, I thought,
so sweet a lady would have pity on an unfortunate.”
She observed that my eyes were upon her, and in an
act of instinctive maidenliness she bore her hand to
her throat to draw the draperies together and screen
the beauties of her neck from my unwarranted glance,
as though her daily gown did not reveal as much and
more of them.
That act, however, served to arouse
me to a sense of my position. What did I there?
It was a profanity a defiling, I swore;
from which you’ll see, that Bardelys was grown
of a sudden very nice.
“Monsieur,” she was saying, “you
are exhausted.”
“But that I rode hard,”
I laughed, “it is likely they had taken me to
Toulouse, were I might have lost my head before my
friends could have found and claimed me. I hope
you’ll see it is too comely a head to be so
lightly parted with.”
“For that,” said she,
half seriously, half whimsically, “the ugliest
head would be too comely.”
I laughed softly, amusedly; then of
a sudden, without warning, a faintness took me, and
I was forced to brace myself against the wall, breathing
heavily the while. At that she gave a little cry
of alarm.
“Monsieur, I beseech you to
be seated. I will summon my father, and we will
find a bed for you. You must not retain those
clothes.”
“Angel of goodness!” I
muttered gratefully, and being still half dazed, I
brought some of my Court tricks into that chamber by
taking her hand and carrying it towards my lips.
But ere I had imprinted the intended kiss upon her
fingers and by some miracle they were not
withdrawn my eyes encountered hers again.
I paused as one may pause who contemplates a sacrilege.
For a moment she held my glance with hers; then I fell
abashed, and released her hand.
The innocence peeping out of that
child’s eyes it was that had in that moment
daunted me, and made me tremble to think of being found
there, and of the vile thing it would be to have her
name coupled with mine. That thought lent me
strength. I cast my weariness from me as though
it were a garment, and, straightening myself, I stepped
of a sudden to the window. Without a word, I
made shift to draw back the curtain when her hand,
falling on my sodden sleeve, arrested me.
“What will you do, monsieur?”
she cried in alarm. “You may be seen.”
My mind was now possessed by the thing
I should have thought of before. I climbed to
her balcony, and my one resolve was to get me thence
as quickly as might be.
“I had not the right to enter
here,” I muttered. “I ”
I stopped short; to explain would only be to sully,
and so, “Good-night! Adieu!” I ended
brusquely.
“But, monsieur ” she began.
“Let me go,” I commanded
almost roughly, as I shook my arm free of her grasp.
“Bethink you that you are exhausted.
If you go forth now, monsieur, you will assuredly
be taken. You must not go.”
I laughed softly, and with some bitterness,
too, for I was angry with myself.
“Hush, child,” I said. “Better
so, if it is to be.”
And with that I drew aside the curtains
and pushed the leaves of the window apart. She
remained standing in the room, watching me, her face
pale, and hex eyes pained and puzzled.
One last glance I gave her as I bestrode
the rail of her balcony. Then I lowered myself
as I had ascended. I was hanging by my hands,
seeking with my foot for the coping of the window
beneath me, when, suddenly, there came a buzzing in
my ears. I had a fleeting vision of a white figure
leaning on the balcony above me; then a veil seemed
drawn over my eyes; there came a sense of falling;
a rush as of a tempestuous wind; then nothing.