Within the room Chatellerault and
I faced each other in silence. And how vastly
changed were the circumstances since our last meeting!
The disorder that had stamped itself
upon his countenance when first he had beheld me still
prevailed. There was a lowering, sullen look in
his eyes and a certain displacement of their symmetry
which was peculiar to them when troubled.
Although a cunning plotter and a scheming
intriguer in his own interests, Chatellerault, as
I have said before, was not by nature a quick man.
His wits worked slowly, and he needed leisure to consider
a situation and his actions therein ere he was in a
position to engage with it.
“Monsieur lé Comte,”
quoth I ironically, “I make you my compliments
upon your astuteness and the depth of your schemes,
and my condolences upon the little accident owing
to which I am here, and in consequence of which your
pretty plans are likely to miscarry.”
He threw back his great head like
a horse that feels the curb, and his smouldering eyes
looked up at me balefully. Then his sensuous lips
parted in scorn.
“How much do you know?” he demanded with
sullen contempt.
“I have been in that room for
the half of an hour,” I answered, rapping the
partition with my knuckles.
“The dividing wall, as you will
observe, is thin, and I heard everything that passed
between you and Mademoiselle de Lavedan.”
“So that Bardelys, known as
the Magnificent; Bardelys the mirror of chivalry;
Bardelys the arbiter elegantiarum of the Court of France,
is no better, it seems, than a vulgar spy.”
If he sought by that word to anger me, he failed.
“Lord Count,” I answered
him very quietly, “you are of an age to know
that the truth alone has power to wound. I was
in that room by accident, and when the first words
of your conversation reached me I had not been human
had I not remained and strained my ears to catch every
syllable you uttered. For the rest, let me ask
you, my dear Chatellerault, since when have you become
so nice that you dare cast it at a man that he has
been eavesdropping?”
“You are obscure, monsieur. What is it
that you suggest?”
“I am signifying that when a
man stands unmasked for a cheat, a liar, and a thief,
his own character should give him concern enough to
restrain him from strictures upon that of another.”
A red flush showed through the tan
of his skin, then faded and left him livid a
very evil sight, as God lives. He flung his heavily-feathered
hat upon the table, and carried his hand to his hilt.
“God’s blood!” he cried. “You
shall answer me for this.”
I shook my head and smiled; but I made no sign of
drawing.
“Monsieur, we must talk a while. I think
that you had better.”
He raised his sullen eyes to mine.
Perhaps the earnest impressiveness of my tones prevailed.
Be that as it may, his half-drawn sword was thrust
back with a click, and “What have you to say?”
he asked.
“Be seated.” I motioned
him to a chair by the table and when he had taken
it I sat down opposite to him. Taking up a quill,
I dipped it in the ink-horn that stood by, and drew
towards me a sheet of paper.
“When you lured me into the
wager touching Mademoiselle de Lavedan,” said
I calmly, “you did so, counting upon certain
circumstances, of which you alone had knowledge, that
should render impossible the urging of my suit.
That, Monsieur lé Comte, was undeniably the action
of a cheat. Was it not?”
“Damnation!” he roared,
and would have risen, but, my hand upon his arm, I
restrained him and pressed him back into his chair.
“By a sequence of fortuitous
circumstances,” I pursued, “it became
possible for me to circumvent the obstacle upon which
you had based your calculations. Those same circumstances
led later to my being arrested in error and in place
of another man. You discovered how I had contravened
the influence upon which you counted; you trembled
to see how the unexpected had befriended me, and you
began to fear for your wager.
“What did you do? Seeing
me arraigned before you in your quality as King’s
Commissioner, you pretended to no knowledge of me;
you became blind to my being any but Lesperon the
rebel, and you sentenced me to death in his place,
so that being thus definitely removed I should be
unable to carry out my undertaking, and my lands should
consequently pass into your possession. That,
monsieur, was at once the act of a thief and a murderer.
Wait, monsieur; restrain yourself until I shall have
done. To-day again fortune comes to my rescue.
Again you see me slipping from your grasp, and you
are in despair. Then, in the eleventh hour, Mademoiselle
de Lavedan comes to you to plead for my life.
By that act she gives you the most ample proof that
your wager is lost. What would a gentleman, a
man of honour, have done under these circumstances?
What did you do? You seized that last chance;
you turned it to the best account; you made this poor
girl buy something from you; you made her sell herself
to you for nothing pretending that your
nothing was a something of great value. What
term shall we apply to that? To say that you
cheated again seems hardly adequate.”
“By God, Bardelys!”
“Wait!” I thundered, looking
him straight between the eyes, so that again he sank
back cowed. Then resuming the calm with which
hitherto I had addressed him, “Your cupidity,”
said I, “your greed for the estates of Bardelys,
and your jealousy and thirst to see me impoverished
and so ousted from my position at Court, to leave
you supreme in His Majesty’s favour, have put
you to strange shifts for a gentleman, Chatellerault.
Yet, wait.”
And, dipping my pen in the ink-horn,
I began to write. I was conscious of his eyes
upon me, and I could imagine his surmisings and bewildered
speculations as my pen scratched rapidly across the
paper. In a few moments it was done, and I tossed
the pen aside. I took up the sandbox.
“When a man cheats, Monsieur
lé Comte, and is detected, he is invariably adjudged
the loser of his stakes. On that count alone everything
that you have is now mine by rights.” Again
I had to quell an interruption. “But if
we wave that point, and proceed upon the supposition
that you have dealt fairly and honourably with me,
why, then, monsieur, you have still sufficient evidence the
word of Mademoiselle, herself, in fact that
I have won my wager. And so, if we take this,
the most lenient view of the case” I
paused to sprinkle the sand over my writing “your
estates are still lost to you, and pass to be my property.”
“Do they, by God?” he
roared, unable longer to restrain himself, and leaping
to his feet. “You have done, have you not?
You have said all that you can call to mind?
You have flung insults and epithets at me enough to
earn the cutting of a dozen throats. You have
dubbed me cheat and thief” he choked
in his passion “until you have had
your fill is it not so? Now, listen
to me, Master Bardelys, master spy, master buffoon,
master masquerader! What manner of proceeding
was yours to go to Lavedan under a false name?
How call you that? Was that, perhaps, not cheating?”
“No, monsieur, it was not,”
I answered quietly. “It was in the terms
of your challenge that I was free to go to Lavedan
in what guise I listed, employing what wiles I pleased.
But let that be,” I ended, and, creasing the
paper, I poured the sand back into the box, and dusted
the document. “The point is hardly worth
discussing at this time of day. If not one way,
why, then, in another, your wager is lost.”
“Is it?” He set his arms
akimbo and eyed me derisively, his thick-set frame
planted squarely before me. “You are satisfied
that it is so? Quite satisfied, eh?” He
leered in my face. “Why, then, Monsieur
lé Marquis, we will see whether a few inches
of steel will win it back for me.” And
once more his hand flew to his hilt.
Rising, I flung the document I had
accomplished upon the table. “Glance first
at that,” said I.
He stopped to look at me in inquiry,
my manner sowing so great a curiosity in him that
his passion was all scattered before it. Then
he stepped up to the table and lifted the paper.
As he read, his hand shook, amazement dilated his
eyes and furrowed his brow.
“What what does it signify?”
he gasped.
“It signifies that, although
fully conscious of having won, I prefer to acknowledge
that I have lost. I make over to you thus my estates
of Bardelys, because, monsieur, I have come to realize
that that wager was an infamous one one
in which a gentleman should have had no part and
the only atonement I can make to myself, my honour,
and the lady whom we insulted is that.”
“I do not understand,” he complained.
“I apprehend your difficulty,
Comte. The point is a nice one. But understand
at least that my Picardy estates are yours. Only,
monsieur, you will be well advised to make your will
forthwith, for you are not destined, yourself, to
enjoy them.”
He looked at me, his glance charged with inquiry.
“His Majesty,” I continued,
in answer to his glance, “is ordering your arrest
for betraying the trust he had reposed in you and for
perverting the ends of justice to do your own private
murdering.”
“Mon Dieu!” he cried,
falling of a sudden unto a most pitiful affright.
“The King knows?”
“Knows?” I laughed.
“In the excitement of these other matters you
have forgotten to ask how I come to be at liberty.
I have been to the King, monsieur, and I have told
him what has taken place here at Toulouse, and how
I was to have gone to the block tomorrow!”
“Scelerat!” he cried.
“You have ruined me!” Rage and grief were
blent in his accents. He stood before me, livid
of face and with hands clenching and unclenching at
his sides.
“Did you expect me to keep such
a matter silent? Even had I been so inclined
it had not been easy, for His Majesty had questions
to ask me. From what the King said, monsieur,
you may count upon mounting the scaffold in my stead.
So be advised, and make your will without delay, if
you would have your heirs enjoy my Picardy chateau.”
I have seen terror and anger distort
men’s countenances, but never have I seen aught
to compare with the disorder of Chatellerault at that
moment. He stamped and raved and fumed. He
poured forth a thousand ordures of speech in
his frenzy; he heaped insults upon me and imprecations
upon the King, whose lapdog he pronounced me.
His short, stout frame was quivering with passion
and fear, his broad face distorted by his hideous
grimaces of rage. And then, while yet his ravings
were in full flow, the door opened, and in stepped
the airy Chevalier de Saint-Eustache.
He stood still, amazed, beneath the
lintel marvelling to see all this anger,
and abashed at beholding me. His sudden appearance
reminded me that I had last seen him at Grenade in
the Count’s company, on the day of my arrest.
The surprise it had occasioned me now returned upon
seeing him so obviously and intimately seeking Chatellerault.
The Count turned on him in his anger.
“Well, popinjay?” he roared. “What
do you want with me?”
“Monsieur lé Comte!” cried the other,
in blent indignation and reproach.
“You will perceive that you
are come inopportunely,” I put in. “Monsieur
de Chatellerault is not quite himself.”
But my speech again drew his attention
to my presence; and the wonder grew in his eyes at
finding me there, for to him I was still Lesperon
the rebel, and he marvelled naturally that I should
be at large.
Then in the corridor there was a sound
of steps and voices, and as I turned I beheld in the
doorway, behind Saint-Eustache, the faces of Castelroux,
Mironsac, and my old acquaintance, the babbling, irresponsible
buffoon, La Fosse. From Mironsac he had heard
of my presence in Toulouse, and, piloted by Castelroux,
they were both come to seek me out. I’ll
swear it was not thus they had looked to find me.
They pushed their way into the room,
impelling Saint-Eustache forward, and there were greetings
exchanged and félicitations, whilst Chatellerault,
curbing his disorder, drew the Chevalier into a corner
of the room, and stood there listening to him.
At length I heard the Count exclaim
“Do as you please, Chevalier.
If you have interests of your own to serve, serve
them. As for myself I am past being
interested.”
“But why, monsieur?” the chevalier inquired.
“Why?” echoed Chatellerault,
his ferocity welling up again. Then, swinging
round, he came straight at me, as a bull makes a charge.
“Monsieur de Bardelys!” he blazed.
“Bardelys!” gasped Saint-Eustache in the
background.
“What now?” I inquired coldly, turning
from my friends.
“All that you said may be true,
and I may be doomed, but I swear before God that you
shall not go unpunished.”
“I think, monsieur, that you
run a grave risk of perjuring yourself!” I laughed.
“You shall render me satisfaction ere we part!”
he cried.
“If you do not deem that paper
satisfaction enough, then, monsieur, forgive me, but
your greed transcends all possibility of being ever
satisfied.”
“The devil take your paper and
your estates! What shall they profit me when
I am dead?”
“They may profit your heirs,” I suggested.
“How shall that profit me?”
“That is a riddle that I cannot pretend to elucidate.”
“You laugh, you knave!”
he snorted. Then, with an abrupt change of manner,
“You do not lack for friends,” said he.
“Beg one of these gentlemen to act for you,
and if you are a man of honour let us step out into
the yard and settle the matter.”
I shook my head.
“I am so much a man of honour
as to be careful with whom I cross steel. I prefer
to leave you to His Majesty’s vengeance; his
headsman may be less particular than am I. No, monsieur,
on the whole, I do not think that I can fight you.”
His face grew a shade paler.
It became grey; the jaw was set, and the eyes were
more out of symmetry than I had ever seen them.
Their glance approached what is known in Italy as
the mal’occhio, and to protect themselves against
the baneful influences of which men carry charms.
A moment he stood so, eyeing me. Then, coming
a step nearer
“You do not think that you
can fight me, eh? You do not think it?
Pardieu! How shall I make you change your
mind? To the insult of words you appear impervious.
You imagine your courage above dispute because by
a lucky accident you killed La Vertoile some years
ago and the fame of it has attached to you.”
In the intensity of his anger he was breathing heavily,
like a man overburdened. “You have been
living ever since by the reputation which that accident
gave you. Let us see if you can die by it, Monsieur
de Bardelys.” And, leaning forward, he struck
me on the breast, so suddenly and so powerfully for
he was a man of abnormal strength that
I must have fallen but that La Fosse caught me in his
arms.
“Kill him!” lisped the
classic-minded fool. “Play Theseus to this
bull of Marathon.”
Chatellerault stood back, his hands
on his hips, his head inclined towards his right shoulder,
and an insolent leer of expectancy upon his face.
“Will that resolve you?” he sneered.
“I will meet you,” I answered,
when I had recovered breath. “But I swear
that I shall not help you to escape the headsman.”
He laughed harshly.
“Do I not know it?” he
mocked. “How shall killing you help me to
escape? Come, messieurs, sortons. At once!”
“Sor,” I answered shortly;
and thereupon we crowded from the room, and went pèle-mêle
down the passage to the courtyard at the back.