For that most amiable of Gascon cadets,
Monsieur de Castelroux, I have naught but the highest
praise. In his every dealing with me he revealed
himself so very gallant, generous, and high-minded
a gentleman that it was little short of a pleasure
to be his prisoner. He made no inquiries touching
the nature of my interview with those two gentlemen
at the Hotel de la Couronne, and when at the moment
of leaving I requested him to deliver a packet to
the taller of those same two he did so without comment
or question. That packet contained the portrait
of Mademoiselle de Marsac, but on the inner wrapper
was a note requesting Lesperon not to open it until
he should be in Spain.
Neither Marsac nor Lesperon did I
see again before we resumed our journey to Toulouse.
At the moment of setting out a curious
incident occurred. Castelroux’s company
of dragoons had ridden into the courtyard as we were
mounting. They lined up under their lieutenant’s
command, to allow us to pass; but as we reached the
porte-cochère we were delayed for a moment
by a travelling-carriage, entering for relays, and
coming, apparently, from Toulouse. Castelroux
and I backed our horses until we were in the midst
of the dragoons, and so we stood while the vehicle
passed in. As it went by, one of the leather
curtains was drawn back, and my heart was quickened
by the sight of a pale girl face, with eyes of blue,
and brown curls lying upon the slender neck.
Her glance lighted on me, swordless and in the midst
of that company of troopers, and I bowed low upon the
withers of my horse, doffing my hat in distant salutation.
The curtain dropped again, and eclipsed
the face of the woman that had betrayed me. With
my mind full of wild surmisings as to what emotions
might have awakened in her upon beholding me, I rode
away in silence at Monsieur de Castelroux’s
side. Had she experienced any remorse? Any
shame? Whether or not such feelings had been aroused
at sight of me, it certainly would not be long ere
she experienced them, for at the Hotel de la Couronne
were those who would enlighten her.
The contemplation of the remorseful
grief that might anon beset her when she came to ponder
the truth of matters, and, with that truth, those
things that at Lavedan I had uttered, filled me presently
with regret and pity. I grew impatient to reach
Toulouse and tell the judges of the mistake that there
had been. My name could not be unknown to them,
and the very mention of it, I thought, should suffice
to give them pause and lead them to make inquiries
before sending me to the scaffold. Yet I was
not without uneasiness, for the summariness with which
Castelroux had informed me they were in the habit
of dealing with those accused of high treason occasioned
me some apprehensive pangs.
This apprehension led me to converse
with my captor touching those trials, seeking to gather
from him who were the judges. I learnt then that
besides the ordinary Tribunal, a Commissioner had been
dispatched by His Majesty, and was hourly expected
to arrive at Toulouse. It would be his mission
to supervise and direct the inquiries that were taking
place. It was said, he added, that the King himself
was on his way thither, to be present at the trial
of Monsieur lé Duc de Montmorency.
But he was travelling by easy stages, and was not yet
expected for some days. My heart, which had leapt
at the news, as suddenly sank again with the consideration
that I should probably be disposed of before the King’s
arrival. It would behoove me, therefore, to look
elsewhere for help and for some one to swear to my
identity.
“Do you know the name of this
King’s Commissioner?” I asked.
“It is a certain Comte de Chatellerault,
a gentleman man said to stand very high in His Majesty’s
favour.”
“Chatellerault!” I cried in wondering
joy.
“You know him?”
“Most excellently!” I laughed. “We
are very intimately acquainted.”
“Why, then, monsieur, I augur
you this gentleman’s friendship, and that it
may pilot you through your trouble. Although ”
Being mercifully minded, he stopped short.
But I laughed easily. “Indeed,
my dear Captain, I think it will,” said I; “although
friendship in this world is a thing of which the unfortunate
know little.”
But I rejoiced too soon, as you shall hear.
We rode diligently on, our way lying
along the fertile banks of the Garonne, now yellow
with the rustling corn. Towards evening we made
our last halt at Fenouillet, whence a couple
of hours’ riding should bring us to Toulouse.
At the post-house we overtook a carriage
that seemingly had halted for relays, but upon which
I scarce bestowed a glance as I alighted.
Whilst Castelroux went to arrange
for fresh horses, I strode into the common room, and
there for some moments I stood discussing the viands
with our host. When at last I had resolved that
a cold pasty and a bottle of Armagnac would satisfy
our wants, I looked about me to take survey of those
in the room. One group in a remote corner suddenly
riveted my attention to such a degree that I remained
deaf to the voice of Castelroux, who had just entered,
and who stood now beside me. In the centre of
this group was the Comte de Chatellerault himself,
a thick-set, sombre figure, dressed with that funereal
magnificence he affected.
But it was not the sight of him that
filled me with amazement. For that, Castelroux’s
information had prepared me, and I well understood
in what capacity he was there. My surprise sprang
rather from the fact that amongst the half-dozen gentlemen
about him and evidently in attendance I
beheld the Chevalier de Saint-Eustache. Now, knowing
as I did, the Chevalier’s treasonable leanings,
there was ample cause for my astonishment at finding
him in such company. Apparently, too, he was
on very intimate terms with the Count, for in raising
my glance I had caught him in the act of leaning over
to whisper familiarly in Chatellerault’s ear.
Their eyes indeed, for
that matter the eyes of the entire company were
turned in my direction.
Perhaps it was not a surprising thing
that Chatellerault should gaze upon me in that curious
fashion, for was it not probable that he had heard
that I was dead? Besides, the fact that I was
without a sword, and that at my side stood a King’s
officer, afforded evidence enough of my condition,
and well might Chatellerault stare at beholding me
so manifestly a prisoner.
Even as I watched him, he appeared
to start at something that Saint-Eustache was saying,
and a curious change spread over his face. Its
whilom expression had been rather one of dismay; for,
having believed me dead, he no doubt accounted his
wager won, whereas seeing me alive had destroyed that
pleasant conviction. But now it took on a look
of relief and of something that suggested malicious
cunning.
“That,” said Castelroux
in my ear, “is the King’s commissioner.”
Did I not know it? I never waited
to answer him, but, striding across the room, I held
out my hand over the table to Chatellerault.
“My dear Comte,” I cried, “you are
most choicely met.”
I would have added more, but there
was something in his attitude that silenced me.
He had turned half from me, and stood now, hand on
hip, his great head thrown back and tilted towards
his shoulder, his expression one of freezing and disdainful
wonder.
Now, if his attitude filled me with
astonishment and apprehension, consider how these
feelings were heightened by his words.
“Monsieur de Lesperon, I can
but express amazement at your effrontery. If
we have been acquainted in the past, do you think that
is a sufficient reason for me to take your hand now
that you have placed yourself in a position which
renders it impossible for His Majesty’s loyal
servants to know you?”
I fell back a pace, my mind scarce
grasping yet the depths of this inexplicable attitude.
“This to me, Chatellerault?” I gasped.
“To you?” he blazed, stirred
to a sudden passion. “What else did you
expect, Monsieur de Lesperon?”
I had it in me to give him the lie,
to denounce him then for a low, swindling trickster.
I understood all at once the meaning of this wondrous
make-believe. From Saint-Eustache he had gathered
the mistake there was, and for his wager’s sake
he would let the error prevail, and hurry me to the
scaffold. What else might I have expected from
the man that had lured me into such a wager a
wager which the knowledge he possessed had made him
certain of winning? Would he who had cheated at
the dealing of the cards neglect an opportunity to
cheat again during the progress of the game?
As I have said, I had it in my mind
to cry out that he lied that I was not
Lesperon; that he knew I was Bardelys. But the
futility of such an outcry came to me simultaneously
with the thought of it. And, I fear me, I stood
before him and his satellites the mocking
Saint-Eustache amongst them a very foolish
figure.
“There is no more to be said,” I murmured
at last.
“But there is!” he retorted.
“There is much more to be said. You shall
render yet an account of your treason, and I am afraid,
my poor rebel, that your comely head will part company
with your shapely body. You and I will meet at
Toulouse. What more is to be said will be said
in the Tribunal there.”
A chill encompassed me. I was
doomed, it seemed. This man, ruling the province
pending the King’s arrival, would see to it that
none came forward to recognize me. He would expedite
the comedy of my trial, and close it with the tragedy
of my execution. My professions of a mistake
of identity if I wasted breath upon them
would be treated with disdain and disregarded utterly.
God! What a position had I got myself into, and
what a vein of comedy ran through it grim,
tragic comedy, if you will, yet comedy to all faith.
The very woman whom I had wagered to wed had betrayed
me into the hands of the very man with whom I laid
my wager.
But there was more in it than that.
As I had told Mironsac that night in Paris, when the
thing had been initiated, it was a duel that was being
fought betwixt Chatellerault and me a duel
for supremacy in the King’s good graces.
We were rivals, and he desired my removal from the
Court. To this end had he lured me into a bargain
that should result in my financial ruin, thereby compelling
me to withdraw from the costly life of the Luxembourg,
and leaving him supreme, the sole and uncontested
recipient of our master’s favour. Now into
his hand Fate had thrust a stouter weapon and a deadlier:
a weapon which not only should make him master of
the wealth that I had pledged, but one whereby he might
remove me for all time, a thousandfold more effectively
than the mere encompassing of my ruin would have done.
I was doomed. I realized it fully and very bitterly.
I was to go out of the ways of men
unnoticed and unmourned; as a rebel, under the obscure
name of another and bearing another’s sins upon
my shoulders, I was to pass almost unheeded to the
gallows. Bardelys the Magnificent the
Marquis Marcel Saint-Pol de Bardelys, whose splendour
had been a byword in France was to go out
like a guttering candle.
The thought filled me with the awful
frenzy that so often goes with impotency, such a frenzy
as the damned in hell may know. I forgot in that
hour my precept that under no conditions should a gentleman
give way to anger. In a blind access of fury
I flung myself across the table and caught that villainous
cheat by the throat, before any there could put out
a hand to stop me.
He was a heavy man, if a short one,
and the strength of his thick-set frame was a thing
abnormal. Yet at that moment such nervous power
did I gather from my rage, that I swung him from his
feet as though he had been the puniest weakling.
I dragged him down on to the table, and there I ground
his face with a most excellent good-will and relish.
“You liar, you cheat, you thief!”
I snarled like any cross-grained mongrel. “The
King shall hear of this, you knave! By God, he
shall!”
They dragged me from him at last those
lapdogs that attended him and with much
rough handling they sent me sprawling among the sawdust
on the floor. It is more than likely that but
for Castelroux’s intervention they had made
short work of me there and then.
But with a bunch of Mordieus, Sangdieus,
and Po’ Cap de Dieus, the little Gascon flung
himself before my prostrate figure, and bade them in
the King’s name, and at their peril, to stand
back.
Chatellerault, sorely shaken, his
face purple, and with blood streaming from his nostrils,
had sunk into a chair. He rose now, and his first
words were incoherent, raging gasps.
“What is your name, sir?”
he bellowed at last, addressing the Captain.
“Amedee de Mironsac de Castelroux,
of Chateau Rouge in Gascony,” answered my captor,
with a grand manner and a flourish, and added, “Your
servant.”
“What authority have you to
allow your prisoners this degree of freedom?”
“I do not need authority, monsieur,” replied
the Gascon.
“Do you not?” blazed the
Count. “We shall see. Wait until I
am in Toulouse, my malapert friend.”
Castelroux drew himself up, straight
as a rapier, his face slightly flushed and his glance
angry, yet he had the presence of mind to restrain
himself, partly at least.
“I have my orders from the Keeper
of the Seals, to effect the apprehension of Monsieur
de Lesperon; and to deliver him up, alive or dead,
at Toulouse. So that I do this, the manner of
it is my own affair, and who presumes to criticize
my methods censoriously impugns my honour and affronts
me. And who affronts me, monsieur, be he whosoever
he may be, renders me satisfaction. I beg that
you will bear that circumstance in mind.”
His moustaches bristled as he spoke,
and altogether his air was very fierce and truculent.
For a moment I trembled for him. But the Count
evidently thought better of it than to provoke a quarrel,
particularly one in which he would be manifestly in
the wrong, King’s Commissioner though he might
be. There was an exchange of questionable compliments
betwixt the officer and the Count, whereafter, to avoid
further unpleasantness, Castelroux conducted me to
a private room, where we took our meal in gloomy silence.
It was not until an hour later, when
we were again in the saddle and upon the last stage
of our journey, that I offered Castelroux an explanation
of my seemingly mad attack upon Chatellerault.
“You have done a very rash and
unwise thing, monsieur,” he had commented regretfully,
and it was in answer to this that I poured out the
whole story. I had determined upon this course
while we were supping, for Castelroux was now my only
hope, and as we rode beneath the stars of that September
night I made known to him my true identity.
I told him that Chatellerault knew
me, and I informed him that a wager lay between us withholding
the particulars of its nature which had
brought me into Languedoc and into the position wherein
he had found and arrested me. At first he hesitated
to believe me, but when at last I had convinced him
by the vehemence of my assurances as much as by the
assurances themselves, he expressed such opinions of
the Comte de Chatellerault as made my heart go out
to him.
“You see, my dear Castelroux,
that you are now my last hope,” I said.
“A forlorn one, my poor gentleman!” he
groaned.
“Nay, that need not be.
My intendant Rodenard and some twenty of my servants
should be somewhere betwixt this and Paris. Let
them be sought for monsieur, and let us pray God that
they be still in Languedoc and may be found in time.”
“It shall be done, monsieur,
I promise you,” he answered me solemnly.
“But I implore you not to hope too much from
it. Chatellerault has it in his power to act
promptly, and you may depend that he will waste no
time after what has passed.”
“Still, we may have two or three
days, and in those days you must do what you can,
my friend.”
“You may depend upon me,” he promised.
“And meanwhile, Castelroux,”
said I, “you will say no word of this to any
one.”
That assurance also he gave me, and
presently the lights of our destination gleamed out
to greet us.
That night I lay in a dank and gloomy
cell of the prison of Toulouse, with never a hope
to bear company during those dark, wakeful hours.
A dull rage was in my soul as I thought
of my position, for it had not needed Castelroux’s
recommendation to restrain me from building false
hopes upon his chances of finding Rodenard and my followers
in time to save me. Some little ray of consolation
I culled, perhaps, from my thoughts of Roxalanne.
Out of the gloom of my cell my fancy fashioned her
sweet girl face and stamped it with a look of gentle
pity, of infinite sorrow for me and for the hand she
had had in bringing me to this.
That she loved me I was assured, and
I swore that if I lived I would win her yet, in spite
of every obstacle that I myself had raised for my
undoing.