On the occasion of my first visit
to Lavedan I had disregarded or, rather,
Fate had contrived that I should disregard Chatellerault’s
suggestion that I should go with all the panoply of
power with my followers, my liveries, and
my équipages to compose the magnificence all
France had come to associate with my name, and thus
dazzle by my brilliant lustre the lady I was come
to win. As you may remember, I had crept into
the chateau like a thief in the night, wounded,
bedraggled, and of miserable aspect, seeking to provoke
compassion rather than admiration.
Not so now that I made my second visit.
I availed myself of all the splendour to which I owed
my title of “Magnificent,” and rode into
the courtyard of the Chateau de Lavedan preceded by
twenty well-mounted knaves wearing the gorgeous Saint-Pol
liveries of scarlet and gold, with the Bardelys escutcheon
broidered on the breasts of their doublets on
a field or a bar azure surcharged by three lilies
of the field. They were armed with swords and
musketoons, and had more the air of a royal bodyguard
than of a company of attendant servants.
Our coming was in a way well timed.
I doubt if we could have stayed the execution of Saint-Eustache’s
warrant even had we arrived earlier. But
for effect to produce a striking coup de
theatre we could not have come more opportunely.
A coach stood in the quadrangle, at
the foot of the chateau steps: down these the
Vicomte was descending, with the Vicomtesse grim
and blasphemant as ever, on one side, and his daughter,
white of face and with tightly compressed lips, on
the other. Between these two women his
wife and his child as different in body
as they were different in soul, came Lavedan with
a firm step, a good colour, and a look of well-bred,
lofty indifference to his fate.
He disposed himself to enter the carriage
which was to bear him to prison with much the same
air he would have assumed had his destination been
a royal levee.
Around the coach were grouped a score
of men of Saint-Eustache’s company half
soldiers, half ploughboys ill-garbed and
indifferently accoutred in dull breastplates and steel
caps, many of which were rusted. By the carriage
door stood the long, lank figure of the Chevalier
himself, dressed with his wonted care, and perfumed,
curled, and beribboned beyond belief. His weak,
boyish face sought by scowls and by the adoption of
a grim smile to assume an air of martial ferocity.
Such was the grouping in the quadrangle
when my men, with Gilles at their head, thundered
across the drawbridge, giving pause to those within,
and drawing upon themselves the eyes of all, as they
rode, two by two, under the old-world arch of the
keep into the courtyard. And Gilles, who knew
our errand, and who was as ready-witted a rogue as
ever rode with me, took in the situation at a glance.
Knowing how much I desired to make a goodly show,
he whispered an order. This resulted in the couples
dividing at the gateway, one going to the left and
one to the right, so that as they came they spread
themselves in a crescent, and drawing rein, they faced
forward, confronting and half surrounding the Chevalier’s
company.
As each couple appeared, the curiosity the
uneasiness, probably of Saint-Eustache
and his men, had increased, and their expectancy was
on tiptoe to see what lord it was went abroad with
such regal pomp, when I appeared in the gateway and
advanced at the trot into the middle of the quadrangle.
There I drew rein and doffed my hat to them as they
stood, open-mouthed and gaping one and all. If
it was a theatrical display, a parade worthy of a
tilt-ground, it was yet a noble and imposing advent,
and their gaping told me that it was not without effect.
The men looked uneasily at the Chevalier; the Chevalier
looked uneasily at his men; mademoiselle, very pale,
lowered her eyes and pressed her lips yet more tightly;
the Vicomtesse uttered an oath of astonishment;
whilst Lavedan, too dignified to manifest surprise,
greeted me with a sober bow.
Behind them on the steps I caught
sight of a group of domestics, old Anatole standing
slightly in advance of his fellows, and wondering,
no doubt, whether this were, indeed, the bedraggled
Lesperon of a little while ago for if I
had thought of pomp in the display of my lacqueys,
no less had I considered it in the decking of my own
person. Without any of the ribbons and fopperies
that mark the coxcomb, yet was I clad, plumed, and
armed with a magnificence such as I’ll swear
had not been seen within the grey walls of that old
castle in the lifetime of any of those that were now
present.
Gilles leapt from his horse as I drew
rein, and hastened to hold my stirrup, with a murmured
“Monsieur,” which title drew a fresh astonishment
into the eyes of the beholders.
I advanced leisurely towards Saint-Eustache,
and addressed him with such condescension as I might
a groom, to impress and quell a man of this type your
best weapon is the arrogance that a nobler spirit would
resent.
“A world of odd meetings this,
Saint-Eustache,” I smiled disdainfully.
“A world of strange comings and goings, and of
strange transformations. The last time we were
here we stood mutually as guests of Monsieur lé
Vicomte; at present you appear to be officiating as
a a tipstaff.”
“Monsieur!” He coloured,
and he uttered the word in accents of awakening resentment.
I looked into his eyes, coldly, impassively, as if
waiting to hear what he might have to add, and so
I stayed until his glance fell and his spirit was
frozen in him. He knew me, and he knew how much
I was to be feared. A word from me to the King
might send him to the wheel. It was upon this
I played. Presently, as his eye fell, “Is
your business with me, Monsieur de Bardelys?”
he asked, and at that utterance of my name there was
a commotion on the steps, whilst the Vicomte started,
and his eyes frowned upon me, and the Vicomtesse
looked up suddenly to scan me with a fresh interest.
She beheld at last in the flesh the gentleman who
had played so notorious a part, ten years ago, in that
scandal connected with the Duchesse de Bourgogne,
of which she never tired of reciting the details.
And think that she had sat at table with him day by
day and been unconscious of that momentous fact!
Such, I make no doubt, was what passed through her
mind at the moment, and, to judge from her expression,
I should say that the excitement of beholding the
Magnificent Bardelys had for the nonce eclipsed beholding
even her husband’s condition and the imminent
sequestration of Lavedan.
“My business is with you, Chevalier,”
said I. “It relates to your mission here.”
His jaw fell. “You wish ?”
“To desire you to withdraw your
men and quit Lavedan at once, abandoning the execution
of your warrant.”
He flashed me a look of impotent hate.
“You know of the existence of my warrant, Monsieur
de Bardelys, and you must therefore realize that a
royal mandate alone can exempt me from delivering Monsieur
de Lavedan to the Keeper of the Seals.”
“My only warrant,” I answered,
somewhat baffled, but far from abandoning hope, “is
my word. You shall say to the Garde des
Sceaux that you have done this upon the authority
of the Marquis de Bardelys, and you have my promise
that His Majesty shall confirm my action.”
In saying that I said too much, as
I was quickly to realize.
“His Majesty will confirm it,
monsieur?” he said interrogatively, and he shook
his head. “That is a risk I dare not run.
My warrant sets me under imperative obligations which
I must discharge you will see the justice
of what I state.”
His tone was all humility, all subservience,
nevertheless it was firm to the point of being hard.
But my last card, the card upon which I was depending,
was yet to be played.
“Will you do me the honour to
step aside with me, Chevalier?” I commanded
rather than besought.
“At your service, sir,”
said he; and I drew him out of earshot of those others.
“Now, Saint-Eustache, we can
talk,” said I, with an abrupt change of manner
from the coldly arrogant to the coldly menacing.
“I marvel greatly at your temerity in pursuing
this Iscariot business after learning who I am, at
Toulouse two nights ago.”
He clenched his hands, and his weak face hardened.
“I would beg you to consider
your expressions, monsieur, and to control them,”
said he in a thick voice.
I vouchsafed him a stare of freezing
amazement. “You will no doubt remember
in what capacity I find you employed. Nay, keep
your hands still, Saint-Eustache. I don’t
fight catchpolls, and if you give me trouble my men
are yonder.” And I jerked my thumb over
my shoulder. “And now to business.
I am not minded to talk all day. I was saying
that I marvel at your temerity, and more particularly
at your having laid information against Monsieur de
Lavedan, and having come here to arrest him, knowing,
as you must know, that I am interested in the Vicomte.”
“I have heard of that interest,
monsieur,” said he, with a sneer for which I
could have struck him.
“This act of yours,” I
pursued, ignoring his interpolation, “savours
very much of flying in the face of Destiny. It
almost seems to me as if you were defying me.”
His lip trembled, and his eyes shunned my glance.
“Indeed indeed, monsieur ”
he was protesting, when I cut him short.
“You cannot be so great a fool
but that you must realize that if I tell the King
what I know of you, you will be stripped of your ill-gotten
gains, and broken on the wheel for a double traitor a
betrayer of your fellow-rebels.”
“But you will not do that, monsieur?”
he cried. “It would be unworthy in you.”
At that I laughed in his face.
“Heart of God! Are you to be what you please,
and do you still expect that men shall be nice in dealing
with you? I would do this thing, and, by my faith,
Monsieur de Eustache, I will do it, if you compel
me!”
He reddened and moved his foot uneasily.
Perhaps I did not take the best way with him, after
all. I might have confined myself to sowing fear
in his heart; that alone might have had the effect
I desired; by visiting upon him at the same time the
insults I could not repress, I may have aroused his
resistance, and excited his desire above all else to
thwart me.
“What do you want of me?”
he demanded, with a sudden arrogance which almost
cast mine into the shade.
“I want you,” said I,
deeming the time ripe to make a plain tale of it,
“to withdraw your men, and to ride back to Toulouse
without Monsieur de Lavedan, there to confess to the
Keeper of the Seals that your suspicions were unfounded,
and that you have culled evidence that the Vicomte
has had no relations with Monsieur the King’s
brother.”
He looked at me in amazement amusedly,
almost.
“A likely story that to bear
to the astute gentlemen in Toulouse,” said he.
“Aye, ma foi, a most likely
story,” said I. “When they come to
consider the profit that you are losing by not apprehending
the Vicomte, and can think of none that you are making,
they will have little difficulty in believing you.”
“But what of this evidence you refer to?”
“You have, I take it, discovered
no incriminating evidence no documents
that will tell against the Vicomte?”
“No, monsieur, it is true that I have not ”
He stopped and bit his lip, my smile
making him aware of his indiscretion.
“Very well, then, you must invent
some evidence to prove that he was in no way, associated
with the rebellion.”
“Monsieur de Bardelys,”
said he very insolently, “we waste time in idle
words. If you think that I will imperil my neck
for the sake of serving you or the Vicomte, you are
most prodigiously at fault.”
“I have never thought so.
But I have thought that you might be induced to imperil
your neck as you have it for
its own sake, and to the end that you might save it.”
He moved away. “Monsieur,
you talk in vain. You have no royal warrant to
supersede mine. Do what you will when you come
to Toulouse,” and he smiled darkly. “Meanwhile,
the Vicomte goes with me.”
“You have no evidence against
him!” I cried, scarce believing that he would
dare to defy me and that I had failed.
“I have the evidence of my word.
I am ready to swear to what I know that,
whilst I was here at Lavedan, some weeks ago, I discovered
his connection with the rebels.”
“And what think you, miserable
fool, shall your word weigh against mine?” I
cried. “Never fear, Monsieur lé Chevalier,
I shall be in Toulouse to give you the lie by showing
that your word is a word to which no man may attach
faith, and by exposing to the King your past conduct.
If you think that, after I have spoken, King Louis
whom they name the just will suffer the trial of the
Vicomte to go further on your instigation, or if you
think that you will be able to slip your own neck
from the noose I shall have set about it, you are an
infinitely greater fool than I deem you.”
He stood and looked at me over his
shoulder, his face crimson, and his brows black as
a thundercloud.
“All this may betide when you
come to Toulouse, Monsieur de Bardelys,” said
he darkly, “but from here to Toulouse it is a
matter of some twenty leagues.”
With that, he turned on his heel and
left me, baffled and angry, to puzzle out the inner
meaning of his parting words.
He gave his men the order to mount,
and bade Monsieur de Lavedan enter the coach, whereupon
Gilles shot me a glance of inquiry. For a second,
as I stepped slowly after the Chevalier, I was minded
to try armed resistance, and to convert that grey
courtyard into a shambles. Then I saw betimes
the futility of such a step, and I shrugged my shoulders
in answer to my servant’s glance.
I would have spoken to the Vicomte
ere he departed, but I was too deeply chagrined and
humiliated by my defeat. So much so that I had
no room in my thoughts even for the very natural conjecture
of what Lavedan must be thinking of me. I repented
me then of my rashness in coming to Lavedan without
having seen the King as Castelroux had counselled
me. I had come indulging vain dreams of a splendid
overthrow of Saint-Eustache. I had thought to
shine heroically in Mademoiselle’s eyes, and
thus I had hoped that both gratitude for having saved
her father and admiration at the manner in which I
had achieved it would predispose her to grant me a
hearing in which I might plead my rehabilitation.
Once that were accorded me, I did not doubt I should
prevail.
Now my dream was all dispelled, and
my pride had suffered just such a humiliating fall
as the moralists tell us pride must ever suffer.
There seemed little left me but to go hence with lambent
tail, like a dog that has been whipped my
dazzling escort become a mockery but that it served
the more loudly to advertise my true impotency.
As I approached the carriage, the
Vicomtesse swept suddenly down the steps and
came towards me with a friendly smile. “Monsieur
de Bardelys,” said she, “we are grateful
for your intervention in the cause of that rebel my
husband.”
“Madame,” I besought her,
under my breath, “if you would not totally destroy
him, I beseech you to be cautious. By your leave,
I will have my men refreshed, and thereafter I shall
take the road to Toulouse again. I can only hope
that my intervention with the King may bear better
fruit.”
Although I spoke in a subdued key,
Saint-Eustache, who stood near us, overheard me, as
his face very clearly testified.
“Remain here, sir,” she
replied, with some effusion, “and follow us when
you are rested.”
“Follow you?” I inquired.
“Do you then go with Monsieur de Lavedan?”
“No, Anne,” said the Vicomte
politely from the carriage. “It will be
tiring you unnecessarily. You were better advised
to remain here until my return.”
I doubt not that the poor Vicomte
was more concerned with how she would tire him than
with how the journey might tire her. But the Vicomtesse
was not to be gainsaid. The Chevalier had sneered
when the Vicomte spoke of returning. Madame had
caught that sneer, and she swung round upon him now
with the vehement fury of a virago.
“He’ll not return, you
think, you Judas!” she snarled at him, her lean,
swarthy face growing very evil to see. “But
he shall by God, he shall! And look
to your skin when he does, monsieur the catchpoll,
for, on my honour, you shall have a foretaste of hell
for your trouble in this matter.”
The Chevalier smiled with much restraint.
“A woman’s tongue,” said he, “does
no injury.”
“Will a woman’s arm, think
you?” demanded that warlike matron. “You
musk-stinking tipstaff, I’ll ”
“Anne, my love,” implored
the Vicomte soothingly, “I beg that you will
control yourself.”
“Shall I submit to the insolence
of this misbegotten vassal? Shall I ”
“Remember rather that it does
not become the dignity of your station to address
the fellow. We avoid venomous reptiles, but we
do not pause to reproach them with their venom.
God made them so.”
Saint-Eustache coloured to the roots
of his hair, then, turning hastily to the driver,
he bade him start. He would have closed the door
with that, but that madame thrust herself forward.
That was the Chevalier’s chance
to be avenged. “You cannot go,” said
he.
“Cannot?” Her cheeks reddened.
“Why not, monsieur Lesperon?
“I have no reasons to afford
you,” he answered brutally. “You cannot
go.”
“Your pardon, Chevalier,”
I interposed. “You go beyond your rights
in seeking to prevent her. Monsieur lé Vicomte
is not yet convicted. Do not, I beseech you,
transcend the already odious character of your work.”
And without more ado I shouldered
him aside, and held the door that she might enter.
She rewarded me with a smile half vicious,
half whimsical, and mounted the step. Saint-Eustache
would have interfered. He came at me as if resenting
that shoulder-thrust of mine, and for a second I almost
thought he would have committed the madness of striking
me.
“Take care, Saint-Eustache,”
I said very quietly, my eyes fixed on his. And
much as dead Caesar’s ghost may have threatened
Brutus with Philippi “We meet at Toulouse, Chevalier,”
said I, and closing the carriage door I stepped back.
There was a flutter of skirts behind
me. It was mademoiselle. So brave and outwardly
so calm until now, the moment of actual separation and
added thereunto perhaps her mother’s going and
the loneliness that for herself she foresaw proved
more than she could endure. I stepped aside,
and she swept past me and caught at the leather curtain
of the coach.
“Father!” she sobbed.
There are some things that a man of
breeding may not witness some things to
look upon which is near akin to eavesdropping or reading
the letters of another. Such a scene did I now
account the present one, and, turning, I moved away.
But Saint-Eustache cut it short, for scarce had I
taken three paces when his voice rang out the command
to move. The driver hesitated, for the girl was
still hanging at the window. But a second command,
accompanied by a vigorous oath, overcame his hesitation.
He gathered up his reins, cracked his whip, and the
lumbering wheels began to move.
“Have a care, child!”
I heard the Vicomte cry, “have a care! Adieu,
mon enfant!”
She sprang back, sobbing, and assuredly
she would have fallen, thrown out of balance by the
movement of the coach, but that I put forth my hands
and caught her.
I do not think she knew whose were
the arms that held her for that brief space, so desolated
was she by the grief so long repressed. At last
she realized that it was this worthless Bardelys against
whom she rested; this man who had wagered that he
would win and wed her; this impostor who had come
to her under an assumed name; this knave who had lied
to her as no gentleman could have lied, swearing to
love her, whilst, in reality, he did no more than
seek to win a wager. When all this she realized,
she shuddered a second, then moved abruptly from my
grasp, and, without so much as a glance at me, she
left me, and, ascending the steps of the chateau,
she passed from my sight.
I gave the order to dismount as the
last of Saint-Eustache’s followers vanished
under the portcullis.