When next I awakened, it was to find
myself abed in an elegant apartment, spacious and
sunlit, that was utterly strange to me. For some
seconds I was content to lie and take no count of my
whereabouts. My eyes travelled idly over the
handsome furnishings of that choicely appointed chamber,
and rested at last upon the lean, crooked figure of
a man whose back was towards me and who was busy with
some phials at a table not far distant. Then
recollection awakened also in me, and I set my wits
to work to grapple with my surroundings. I looked
through the open window, but from my position on the
bed no more was visible than the blue sky and a faint
haze of distant hills.
I taxed my memory, and the events
of yesternight recurred to me. I remembered the
girl, the balcony, and my flight ending in my giddiness
and my fall. Had they brought me into that same
chateau, or Or what? No other possibility
came to suggest itself, and, seeing scant need to tax
my brains with speculation, since there was one there
of whom I might ask the question
“Holà, my master!”
I called to him, and as I did so I essayed to move.
The act wrung a sharp cry of pain from me. My
left shoulder was numb and sore, but in my right foot
that sudden movement had roused a sharper pang.
At my cry that little wizened old
man swung suddenly round. He had the face of
a bird of prey, yellow as a louis d’or with
a great hooked nose, and a pair of beady black eyes
that observed me solemnly. The mouth alone was
the redeeming feature in a countenance that had otherwise
been evil; it was instinct with good-humour. But
I had small leisure to observe him then, for simultaneously
with his turning there had been another movement at
my bedside, which drew my eyes elsewhere. A gentleman,
richly dressed, and of an imposing height, approached
me.
“You are awake, monsieur?”
he said in a half interrogative tone.
“Will you do me the favour to
tell me where I am, monsieur?” quoth I.
“You do not know? You are
at Lavedan. I am the Vicomte de Lavedan at
your service.”
Although it was no more than I might
have expected, yet a dull wonder filled me, to which
presently I gave expression by asking stupidly
“At Lavedan? But how came I hither?”
“How you came is more than I
can tell,” he laughed. “But I’ll
swear the King’s dragoons were not far behind
you. We found you in the courtyard last night;
in a swoon of exhaustion, wounded in the shoulder,
and with a sprained foot. It was my daughter
who gave the alarm and called us to your assistance.
You were lying under her widow.” Then, seeing
the growing wonder in my eyes and misconstruing it
into alarm: “Nay, have no fear, monsieur,”
he cried. “You were very well advised in
coming to us. You have fallen among friends.
We are Orleanists too, at Lavedan, for
all that I was not in the fight at Castelnaudary.
That was no fault of mine. His Grace’s
messenger reached me overlate, and for all that I set
out with a company of my men, I put back when I had
reached Lautrec upon hearing that already a decisive
battle had been fought and that our side had suffered
a crushing defeat.” He uttered a weary sigh.
“God help us, monsieur!
Monseigneur de Richelieu is likely to have his way
with us. But let that be for the present.
You are here, and you are safe. As yet no suspicion
rests on Lavedan. I was, as I have said, too
late for the fight, and so I came quietly back to save
my skin, that I might serve the Cause in whatever
other way might offer still. In sheltering you
I am serving Gaston d’Orléans, and, that I may
continue so to do, I pray that suspicion may continue
to ignore me. If they were to learn of it at
Toulouse or of how with money and in other ways I have
helped this rebellion I make no doubt that
my head would be the forfeit I should be asked to
pay.”
I was aghast at the freedom of treasonable
speech with which this very débonnaire gentleman
ventured to address an utter stranger.
“But tell me, Monsieur de Lesperon,”
resumed my host, “how is it with you?”
I started in fresh astonishment.
“How how do you know that I am Lesperon?”
I asked.
“Ma foi!” he laughed,
“do you imagine I had spoken so unreservedly
to a man of whom I knew nothing? Think better
of me, monsieur, I beseech you. I found these
letters in your pocket last night, and their superscription
gave me your identity. Your name is well known
to me,” he added. “My friend Monsieur
de Marsac has often spoken of you and of your devotion
to the Cause, and it affords me no little satisfaction
to be of some service to one whom by repute I have
already learned to esteem.”
I lay back on my pillows, and I groaned.
Here was a predicament! Mistaking me for that
miserable rebel I had succoured at Mirepoix, and whose
letters I bore upon me that I might restore them to
some one whose name he had failed to give me at the
last moment, the Vicomte de Lavedan had poured the
damning story of his treason into my ears.
What if I were now to enlighten him?
What if I were to tell him that I was not Lesperon no
rebel at all, in fact but Marcel de Bardelys,
the King’s favourite? That he would account
me a spy I hardly thought; but assuredly he would
see that my life must be a danger to his own; he must
fear betrayal from me; and to protect himself he would
be justified in taking extreme measures. Rebels
were not addicted to an excess of niceness in their
methods, and it was more likely that I should rise
no more from the luxurious bed on which his hospitality
had laid me. But even if I had exaggerated matters,
and the Vicomte were not quite so bloodthirsty as
was usual with his order, even if he chose to accept
my promise that I would forget what he had said, he
must nevertheless in view of his indiscretion demand
my instant withdrawal from Lavedan. And what,
then, of my wager with Chatellerault?
Then, in thinking of my wager, I came
to think of Roxalanne herself that dainty,
sweet-faced child into whose chamber I had penetrated
on the previous night. And would you believe it
that I the satiated, cynical, unbelieving
Bardelys experienced dismay at the very
thought of leaving Lavedan for no other reason than
because it involved seeing no more of that provincial
damsel?
My unwillingness to be driven from
her presence determined me to stay. I had come
to Lavedan as Lesperon, a fugitive rebel. In that
character I had all but announced myself last night
to Mademoiselle. In that character I had been
welcomed by her father. In that character, then,
I must remain, that I might be near her, that I might
woo and win her, and thus though this,
I swear, had now become a minor consideration with
me make good my boast and win the wager
that must otherwise involve my ruin.
As I lay back with closed eyes and
gave myself over to pondering the situation, I took
a pleasure oddly sweet in the prospect of urging my
suit under such circumstances. Chatellerault had
given me a free hand. I was to go about the wooing
of Mademoiselle de Lavedan as I chose. But he
had cast it at me in defiance that not with all my
magnificence, not with all my retinue and all my state
to dazzle her, should I succeed in melting the coldest
heart in France.
And now, behold! I had cast from
me all these outward embellishments; I came without
pomp, denuded of every emblem of wealth, of every sign
of power; as a poor fugitive gentleman, I came, hunted,
proscribed, and penniless for Lesperon’s
estate would assuredly suffer sequestration.
To win her thus would, by my faith, be an exploit I
might take pride in, a worthy achievement to encompass.
And so I left things as they were,
and since I offered no denial to the identity that
was thrust upon me, as Lesperon I continued to be known
to the Vicomte and to his family.
Presently he called the old man to
my bedside and I heard them talking of my condition.
“You think, then, Anatole,”
he said in the end, “that in three or four days
Monsieur de Lesperon may be able to rise?”
“I am assured of it,” replied the old
servant.
Whereupon, turning to me, “Be
therefore of good courage, monsieur,” said Lavedan,
“for your hurt is none so grievous after all.”
I was muttering my thanks and my assurances
that I was in excellent spirits, when we were suddenly
disturbed by a rumbling noise as of distant thunder.
“Mort Dieu!” swore the
Vicomte, a look of alarm coming into his face.
With a bent head, he stood in a listening attitude.
“What is it?” I inquired.
“Horsemen on the
drawbridge,” he answered shortly. “A
troop, by the sound.”
And then, in confirmation of these
words, followed a stamping and rattle of hoofs on
the flags of the courtyard below. The old servant
stood wringing his hands in helpless terror, and wailing,
“Monsieur, monsieur!”
But the Vicomte crossed rapidly to
the window and looked out. Then he laughed with
intense relief; and in a wondering voice “They
are not troopers,” he announced. “They
have more the air of a company of servants in private
livery; and there is a carriage pardieu,
two carriages!”
At once the memory of Rodenard and
my followers occurred to me, and I thanked Heaven
that I was abed where he might not see me, and that
thus he would probably be sent forth empty-handed
with the news that his master was neither arrived
nor expected.
But in that surmise I went too fast.
Ganymede was of a tenacious mettle, and of this he
now afforded proof. Upon learning that naught
was known of the Marquis de Bardelys at Lavedan, my
faithful henchman announced his intention to remain
there and await me, since that was, he assured the
Vicomte, my destination.
“My first impulse,” said
Lavedan, when later he came to tell me of it, “was
incontinently to order his departure. But upon
considering the matter and remembering how high in
power and in the King’s favour stands that monstrous
libertine Bardelys, I deemed it wiser to afford shelter
to this outrageous retinue. His steward a
flabby, insolent creature says that Bardelys
left them last night near Mirepoix, to ride hither,
bidding them follow to-day. Curious that we should
have no news of him! That he should have fallen
into the Garonne and drowned himself were too great
a good fortune to be hoped for.”
The bitterness with which he spoke
of me afforded me ample cause for congratulation that
I had resolved to accept the rôle of Lesperon.
Yet, remembering that my father and he had been good
friends, his manner left me nonplussed. What
cause could he have for this animosity to the son?
Could it be merely my position at Court that made me
seem in his rebel eyes a natural enemy?
“You are acquainted with this
Bardelys?” I inquired, by way of drawing him.
“I knew his father,” he
answered gruffly. “An honest, upright gentleman.”
“And the son,” I inquired
timidly, “has he none of these virtues?”
“I know not what virtues he
may have; his vices are known to all the world.
He is a libertine, a gambler, a rake, a spendthrift.
They say he is one of the King’s favourites,
and that his monstrous extravagances have earned
for him the title of ’Magnificent’.”
He uttered a short laugh. “A fit servant
for such a master as Louis the Just!”
“Monsieur lé Vicomte,”
said I, warming in my own defence, “I swear
you do him injustice. He is extravagant, but then
he is rich; he is a libertine, but then he is young,
and he has been reared among libertines; he is a gamester,
but punctiliously honourable at play. Believe
me, monsieur, I have some acquaintance with Marcel
de Bardelys, and his vices are hardly so black as
is generally believed; whilst in his favour I think
the same may be said that you have just said of his
father he is an honest, upright gentleman.”
“And that disgraceful affair
with the Duchesse de Bourgogne?” inquired
Lavedan, with the air of a man setting an unanswerable
question.
“Mon Dieu!” I cried, “will
the world never forget that indiscretion? An
indiscretion of youth, no doubt much exaggerated outside
Court circles.”
The Vicomte eyed me in some astonishment for a moment.
“Monsieur de Lesperon,”
he said at length, “you appear to hold this
Bardelys in high esteem. He has a staunch supporter
in you and a stout advocate. Yet me you cannot
convince.” And he shook his head solemnly.
“Even if I did not hold him to be such a man
as I have pronounced him, but were to account him
a paragon of all the virtues, his coming hither remains
an act that I must resent.”
“But why, Monsieur lé Vicomte?”
“Because I know the errand that
brings him to Lavedan. He comes to woo my daughter.”
Had he flung a bomb into my bed he
could not more effectively have startled me.
“It astonishes you, eh?”
he laughed bitterly. “But I can assure you
that it is so. A month ago I was visited by the
Comte de Chatellerault another of His Majesty’s
fine favourites. He came unbidden; offered no
reason for his coming, save that he was making a tour
of the province for his amusement. His acquaintance
with me was of the slightest, and I had no desire
that it should increase; yet here he installed himself
with a couple of servants, and bade fair to take a
long stay.
“I was surprised, but on the
morrow I had an explanation. A courier, arriving
from an old friend of mine at Court, bore me a letter
with the information that Monsieur de Chatellerault
was come to Lavedan at the King’s instigation
to sue for my daughter’s hand in marriage.
The reasons were not far to seek. The King, who
loves him, would enrich him; the easiest way is by
a wealthy alliance, and Roxalanne is accounted an
heiress. In addition to that, my own power in
the province is known, whilst my defection from the
Cardinalist party is feared. What better link
wherewith to attach me again to the fortunes of the
Crown for Crown and Mitre have grown to
be synonymous in this topsy-turvy France than
to wed my daughter to one of the King’s favourites?
“But for that timely warning,
God knows what mischief had been wrought. As
it was, Monsieur de Chatellerault had but seen my daughter
upon two occasions. On the very day that I received
the tidings I speak of, I sent her to Auch to the
care of some relatives of her mother’s.
Chatellerault remained a week. Then, growing restive,
he asked when my daughter would return. ‘When
you depart, monsieur,’ I answered him, and,
being pressed for reasons, I dealt so frankly with
him that within twenty-four hours he was on his way
back to Paris.”
The Vicomte paused and took a turn
in the apartment, whilst I pondered his words, which
were bringing me a curious revelation. Presently
he resumed.
“And now, Chatellerault having
failed in his purpose, the King chooses a more dangerous
person for the gratifying of his desires. He sends
the Marquis, Marcel de Bardelys to Lavedan on the
same business. No doubt he attributes Chatellerault’s
failure to clumsiness, and he has decided this time
to choose a man famed for courtly address and gifted
with such arts of dalliance that he cannot fail but
enmesh my daughter in them. It is a great compliment
that he pays us in sending hither the handsomest and
most accomplished gentleman of all his Court so
fame has it yet it is a compliment of whose
flattery I am not sensible. Bardelys goes hence
as empty-handed as went Chatellerault. Let him
but show his face, and my daughter journeys to Auch
again. Am I not well advised, Monsieur de Lesperon?”
“Why, yes,” I answered
slowly, after the manner of one who deliberates, “if
you are persuaded that your conclusions touching Bardelys
are correct.”
“I am more than persuaded.
What other business could bring him to Lavedan?”
It was a question that I did not attempt
to answer. Haply he did not expect me to answer
it. He left me free to ponder another issue of
this same business of which my mind was become very
full. Chatellerault had not dealt fairly with
me. Often, since I had left Paris, had I marvelled
that he came to be so rash as to risk his fortune upon
a matter that turned upon a woman’s whim.
That I possessed undeniable advantages of person,
of birth, and of wealth, Chatellerault could not have
disregarded. Yet these, and the possibility that
they might suffice to engage this lady’s affections,
he appeared to have set at naught when he plunged
into that rash wager.
He must have realized that because
he had failed was no reason to presume that I must
also fail. There was no consequence in such an
argument, and often, as I have said, had I marvelled
during the past days at the readiness with which Chatellerault
had flung down the gage. Now I held the explanation
of it. He counted upon the Vicomte de Lavedan
to reason precisely as he was reasoning, and he was
confident that no opportunities would be afforded
me of so much as seeing this beautiful and cold Roxalanne.
It was a wily trap he had set me,
worthy only of a trickster.
Fate, however, had taken a hand in
the game, and the cards were redealt since I had left
Paris. The terms of the wager permitted me to
choose any line of action that I considered desirable;
but Destiny, it seemed, had chosen for me, and set
me in a line that should at least suffice to overcome
the parental resistance that breastwork
upon which Chatellerault had so confidently depended.
As the rebel René de Lesperon I was
sheltered at Lavedan and made welcome by my fellow-rebel
the Vicomte, who already seemed much taken with me,
and who had esteemed me before seeing me from the much
that Monsieur de Marsac whoever he might
be had told him of me. As René de
Lesperon I must remain, and turn to best account my
sojourn, praying God meanwhile that this same Monsieur
de Marsac might be pleased to refrain from visiting
Lavedan whilst I was there.