La Fosse led the way with me, his
arm through mine, swearing that he would be my second.
He had such a stomach for a fight, had this irresponsible,
irrepressible rhymester, that it mounted to the heights
of passion with him, and when I mentioned, in answer
to a hint dropped in connection with the edict, that
I had the King’s sanction for this combat, he
was nearly mad with joy.
“Blood of La Fosse!” was
his oath. “The honour to stand by you shall
be mine, my Bardelys! You owe it me, for am I
not in part to blame for all this ado? Nay, you’ll
not deny me. That gentleman yonder, with the
wild-cat moustaches and a name like a Gascon oath that
cousin of Mironsac’s, I mean has
the flair of a fight in his nostrils, and a craving
to be in it. But you’ll grant me the honour,
will you not? Pardieu! It will earn
me a place in history.”
“Or the graveyard,” quoth
I, by way of cooling his ardour.
“Peste! What an augury!”
Then, with a laugh: “But,” he added,
indicating Saint-Eustache, “that long, lean
saint I forget of what he is patron hardly
wears a murderous air.”
To win peace from him, I promised
that he should stand by me. But the favour lost
much of its value in his eyes when presently I added
that I did not wish the seconds to engage, since the
matter was of so very personal a character.
Mironsac and Castelroux, assisted
by Saint-Eustache, closed the heavy portecochere,
and so shut us in from the observation of passers-by.
The clanging of those gates brought the landlord and
a couple of his knaves, and we were subjected to the
prayers and intercessions, to the stormings and
ravings that are ever the prelude of a stable-yard
fight, but which invariably end, as these ended, in
the landlord’s withdrawal to run for help to
the nearest corps-de-garde.
“Now, my myrmillones,”
cried La Fosse in bloodthirsty jubilation, “to
work before the host returns.”
“Po’ Cap de Dieu!”
growled Castelroux, “is this a time for jests,
master joker?”
“Jests?” I heard him retorting,
as he assisted me to doff my doublet. “Do
I jest? Diable! you Gascons are a slow-witted
folk! I have a taste for allegory, my friend,
but that never yet was accounted so low a thing as
jesting.”
At last we were ready, and I shifted
the whole of my attention to the short, powerful figure
of Chatellerault as he advanced upon me, stripped
to the waist, his face set and his eyes full of stern
resolve. Despite his low stature, and the breadth
of frame which argue sluggish motion, there was something
very formidable about the Count. His bared arms
were great masses of muscular flesh, and if his wrist
were but half as supple as it looked powerful, that
alone should render him a dangerous antagonist.
Yet I had no qualm of fear, no doubt,
even, touching the issue. Not that I was an habitual
ferrailleur. As I have indicated, I had fought
but one man in all my life. Nor yet am I of those
who are said to know no fear under any circumstances.
Such men are not truly brave; they are stupid and
unimaginative, in proof of which I will advance the
fact that you may incite a timid man to deeds of reckless
valour by drugging him with wine. But this is
by the way. It may be that the very regular fencing
practice that in Paris I was wont to take may so have
ordered my mind that the fact of meeting unbaited
steel had little power to move me.
Be that as it may, I engaged the Count
without a tremor either of the flesh or of the spirit.
I was resolved to wait and let him open the play,
that I might have an opportunity of measuring his power
and seeing how best I might dispose of him. I
was determined to do him no hurt, and to leave him,
as I had sworn, to the headsman; and so, either by
pressure or by seizure, it was my aim to disarm him.
But on his side also he entered upon
the duel with all caution and wariness. From
his rage I had hoped for a wild, angry rush that should
afford me an easy opportunity of gaining my ends with
him. Not so, however. Now that he came with
steel to defend his life and to seek mine, he appeared
to have realized the importance of having keen wits
to guide his hand; and so he put his anger from him,
and emerged calm and determined from his whilom disorder.
Some preliminary passes we made from
the first engagement in the lines of tierce, each
playing warily for an opening, yet neither of us giving
ground or betraying haste or excitement. Now his
blade slithered on mine with a ceaseless tremor; his
eyes watched mine from under lowering brows, and with
knees bent he crouched like a cat making ready for
a spring. Then it came. Sudden as lightning
was his disengage; he darted under my guard, then
over it, then back and under it again, and stretching
out in the lunge his double-feint completed he
straightened his arm to drive home the botte.
But with a flying point I cleared
his blade out of the line of my body. There had
been two sharp tinkles of our meeting swords, and now
Chatellerault stood at his fullest stretch, the half
of his steel past and behind me, for just a fraction
of time completely at my mercy. Yet I was content
to stand, and never move my blade from his until he
had recovered and we were back in our first position
once again.
I heard the deep bass of Castelroux’s
“Mordieux!” the sharp gasp of fear from
Saint-Eustache, who already in imagination beheld his
friend stretched lifeless on the ground, and the cry
of mortification from La Fosse as the Count recovered.
But I heeded these things little. As I have said,
to kill the Count was not my object. It had been
wise, perhaps, in Chatellerault to have appreciated
that fact; but he did not. From the manner in
which he now proceeded to press me, I was assured
that he set his having recovered guard to slowness
on my part, never thinking of the speed that had been
necessary to win myself such an opening as I had obtained.
My failure to run him through in that
moment of jeopardy inspired him with a contempt of
my swordplay. This he now made plain by the recklessness
with which he fenced, in his haste to have done ere
we might chance to be interrupted. Of this recklessness
I suddenly availed myself to make an attempt at disarming
him. I turned aside a vicious thrust by a close a
dangerously close parry, and whilst in the
act of encircling his blade I sought by pressure to
carry it out of his hand. I was within an ace
of succeeding, yet he avoided me, and doubled back.
He realized then, perhaps, that I
was not quite so contemptible an antagonist as he
had been imagining, and he went back to his earlier
and more cautious tactics. Then I changed my
plans. I simulated an attack, and drove him hard
for some moments. Strong he was, but there were
advantages of reach and suppleness with me, and even
these advantages apart, had I aimed at his life, I
could have made short work of him. But the game
I played was fraught with perils to myself, and once
I was in deadly danger, and as near death from the
sword as a man may go and live. My attack had
lured him, as I desired that it should, into making
a riposte. He did so, and as his blade twisted
round mine and came slithering at me, I again carried
it off by encircling it, and again I exerted pressure
to deprive him of it. But this time I was farther
from success than before. He laughed at the attempt,
as with a suddenness that I had been far from expecting
he disengaged again, and his point darted like a snake
upwards at my throat.
I parried that thrust, but I only
parried it when it was within some three inches of
my neck, and even as I turned it aside it missed me
as narrowly as it might without tearing my skin.
The imminence of the peril had been such that, as
we mutually recovered, I found a cold sweat bathing
me.
After that, I resolved to abandon
the attempt to disarm him by pressure, and I turned
my attention to drawing him into a position that might
lend itself to seizure. But even as I was making
up my mind to this we were engaged in sixte
at the time I saw a sudden chance.
His point was held low while he watched me; so low
that his arm was uncovered and my point was in line
with it. To see the opening, to estimate it, and
to take my resolve was all the work of a fraction
of a second. The next instant I had straightened
my elbow, my blade shot out in a lightning stroke and
transfixed his sword-arm.
There was a yell of pain, followed
by a deep growl of fury, as, wounded but not vanquished,
the enraged Count caught his falling sword in his
left hand, and whilst my own blade was held tight in
the bone of his right arm, he sought to run me through.
I leapt quickly aside, and then, before he could renew
the attempt, my friends had fallen upon him and wrenched
his sword from his hand and mine from his arm.
It would ill have become me to taunt
a man in his sorry condition, else might I now have
explained to him what I had meant when I had promised
to leave him for the headsman even though I did consent
to fight him.
Mironsac, Castelroux, and La Fosse
stood babbling around me, but I paid no heed either
to Castelroux’s patois or to La Fosse’s
misquotations of classic authors. The combat
had been protracted, and the methods I had pursued
had been of a very exhausting nature. I leaned
now against the porte-cochère, and mopped
myself vigorously. Then Saint-Eustache, who was
engaged in binding up his principal’s arm,
called to La Fosse.
I followed my second with my eyes
as he went across to Chatellerault. The Count
stood white, his lips compressed, no doubt from the
pain his arm was causing him. Then his voice
floated across to me as he addressed La Fosse.
“You will do me the favour,
monsieur, to inform your friend that this was no first
blood combat, but one a outrance. I fence as well
with my left arm as with my right, and if Monsieur
de Bardelys will do me the honour to engage again,
I shall esteem it.”
La Fosse bowed and came over with
the message that already we had heard.
“I fought,” said I in
answer, “in a spirit very different from that
by which Monsieur de Chatellerault appears to have
been actuated. He made it incumbent upon me to
afford proof of my courage. That proof I have
afforded; I decline to do more. Moreover, as Monsieur
de Chatellerault himself must perceive, the light
is failing us, and in a few minutes it will be too
dark for sword-play.”
“In a few minutes there will
be need for none, monsieur,” shouted Chatellerault,
to save time. He was boastful to the end.
“Here, monsieur, in any case,
come those who will resolve the question,” I
answered, pointing to the door of the inn.
As I spoke, the landlord stepped into
the yard, followed by an officer and a half-dozen
soldiers. These were no ordinary keepers of the
peace, but musketeers of the guard, and at sight of
them I knew that their business was not to interrupt
a duel, but to arrest my erstwhile opponent upon a
much graver charge.
The officer advanced straight to Chatellerault.
“In the King’s name, Monsieur lé
Comte,” said he. “I demand your sword.”
It may be that at bottom I was still
a man of soft heart, unfeeling cynic though they accounted
me; for upon remarking the misery and gloom that spread
upon Chatellerault’s face I was sorry for him,
notwithstanding the much that he had schemed against
me. Of what his fate would be he could have no
shadow of doubt. He knew none better how
truly the King loved me, and how he would punish such
an attempt as had been made upon my life, to say nothing
of the prostitution of justice of which he had been
guilty, and for which alone he had earned the penalty
of death.
He stood a moment with bent head,
the pain of his arm possibly forgotten in the agony
of his spirit. Then, straightening himself suddenly,
with a proud, half scornful air, he looked the officer
straight between the eyes.
“You desire my sword, monsieur?” he inquired.
The musketeer bowed respectfully.
“Saint-Eustache, will you do me the favour to
give it to me?”
And while the Chevalier picked up
the rapier from the ground where it had been flung,
that man waited with an outward calm for which at the
moment I admired him, as we must ever admire a tranquil
bearing in one smitten by a great adversity.
And than this I can conceive few greater. He
had played for much, and he had lost everything.
Ignominy, degradation, and the block were all that
impended for him in this world, and they were very
imminent.
He took the sword from the Chevalier.
He held it for a second by the hilt, like one in thought,
like one who is resolving upon something, whilst the
musketeer awaited his good pleasure with that deference
which all gentle minds must accord to the unfortunate.
Still holding his rapier, he raised
his eyes for a second and let them rest on me with
a grim malevolence. Then he uttered a short laugh,
and, shrugging his shoulders, he transferred his grip
to the blade, as if about to offer the hilt to the
officer. Holding it so, halfway betwixt point
and quillons, he stepped suddenly back, and before
any there could put forth a hand to stay him, he had
set the pummel on the ground and the point at his
breast, and so dropped upon it and impaled himself.
A cry went up from every throat, and
we sprang towards him. He rolled over on his
side, and with a grin of exquisite pain, yet in words
of unconquerable derision “You may have my sword
now, Monsieur l’Officier,” he said, and
sank back, swooning.
With an oath, the musketeer stepped
forward. He obeyed Chatellerault to the letter,
by kneeling beside him and carefully withdrawing the
sword. Then he ordered a couple of his men to
take up the body.
“Is he dead?” asked some
one; and some one else replied, “Not yet, but
he soon will be.”
Two of the musketeers bore him into
the inn and laid him on the floor of the very room
in which, an hour or so ago, he had driven a bargain
with Roxalanne. A cloak rolled into a pillow
was thrust under his head, and there we left him in
charge of his captors, the landlord, Saint-Eustache,
and La Fosse the latter inspired, I doubt not, by that
morbidity which is so often a feature of the poetic
mind, and which impelled him now to witness the death-agony
of my Lord of Chatellerault.
Myself, having resumed my garments,
I disposed myself to repair at once to the Hotel de
l’Epee, there to seek Roxalanne, that I might
set her fears and sorrows at rest, and that I might
at last make my confession.
As we stepped out into the street,
where the dusk was now thickening, I turned to Castelroux
to inquire how Saint-Eustache came into Chatellerault’s
company.
“He is of the family of the
Iscariot, I should opine,” answered the Gascon.
“As soon as he had news that Chatellerault was
come to Languedoc as the King’s Commissioner,
he repaired to him to offer his services in the work
of bringing rebels to justice. He urged that his
thorough acquaintance with the province should render
him of value to the King, as also that he had had
particular opportunities of becoming acquainted with
many treasonable dealings on the part of men whom the
State was far from suspecting.”
“Mort Dieu!” I cried,
“I had suspected something of such a nature.
You do well to call him of the family of the Iscariot.
He is more so than you imagine: I have knowledge
of this ample knowledge. He was until
lately a rebel himself, and himself a follower of Gaston
d’Orléans though of a lukewarm quality.
What reasons have driven him to such work, do you
know?”
“The same reason that impelled
his forefather, Judas of old. The desire to enrich
himself. For every hitherto unsuspected rebel
that shall be brought to justice and whose treason
shall be proven by his agency, he claims the half
of that rebel’s confiscated estates.”
“Diable!” I exclaimed.
“And does the Keeper of the Seals sanction this?”
“Sanction it? Saint-Eustache
holds a commission, has a free hand and a company
of horse to follow him in his rebel-hunting.”
“Has he done much so far?” was my next
question.
“He has reduced half a dozen
noblemen and their families. The wealth he must
thereby have amassed should be very considerable, indeed.”
“To-morrow, Castelroux, I will
see the King in connection with this pretty gentleman,
and not only shall we find him a dungeon deep and
dank, but we shall see that he disgorges his blood-money.”
“If you can prove his treason
you will be doing blessed work,” returned Castelroux.
“Until tomorrow, then, for here is the Hotel
de l’Epee.”
From the broad doorway of an imposing
building a warm glow of light issued out and spread
itself fanwise across the ill-paved street. In
this like bats about a lamp flitted
the black figures of gaping urchins and other stragglers,
and into this I now passed, having taken leave of
my companions.
I mounted the steps and I was about
to cross the threshold, when suddenly above a burst
of laughter that greeted my ears I caught the sound
of a singularly familiar voice. This seemed raised
at present to address such company as might be within.
One moment of doubt had I for it was a
month since last I had heard those soft, unctuous accents.
Then I was assured that the voice I heard was, indeed,
the voice of my steward Ganymede. Castelroux’s
messenger had found him at last, it seemed, and had
brought him to Toulouse.
I was moved to spring into the room
and greet that old retainer for whom, despite the
gross and sensuous ways that with advancing years were
claiming him more and more, I had a deep attachment.
But even as I was on the point of entering, not only
his voice, but the very words that he was uttering
floated out to my ears, and they were of a quality
that held me there to play the hidden listener for
the second time in my life in one and the same day.