My Lord of Tressan, His Majesty’s
Seneschal of Dauphiny, sat at his ease, his purple
doublet all undone, to yield greater freedom to his
vast bulk, a yellow silken undergarment visible through
the gap, as is visible the flesh of some fruit that,
swollen with over-ripeness, has burst its skin.
His wig imposed upon him
by necessity, not fashion lay on the table amid a
confusion of dusty papers, and on his little fat nose,
round and red as a cherry at its end, rested the bridge
of his horn-rimmed spectacles. His bald head so
bald and shining that it conveyed an unpleasant sense
of nakedness, suggesting that its uncovering had been
an act of indelicacy on the owner’s part rested
on the back of his great chair, and hid from sight
the gaudy escutcheon wrought upon the crimson leather.
His eyes were closed, his mouth open, and whether from
that mouth or from his nose or, perhaps,
conflicting for issue between both there
came a snorting, rumbling sound to proclaim that my
Lord the Seneschal was hard at work upon the King’s
business.
Yonder, at a meaner table, in an angle
between two windows, a pale-faced thread-bare secretary
was performing for a yearly pittance the duties for
which my Lord the Seneschal was rewarded by emoluments
disproportionately large.
The air of that vast apartment was
disturbed by the sounds of Monsieur de Tressan’s
slumbers, the scratch and splutter of the secretary’s
pen, and the occasional hiss and crackle of the logs
that burned in the great, cavern-like fireplace.
Suddenly to these another sound was added. With
a rasp and rattle the heavy curtains of blue velvet
flecked with silver fleurs-de-lys were swept
from the doorway, and the master of Monsieur de Tressan’s
household, in a well filled suit of black relieved
by his heavy chain of office, stepped pompously forward.
The secretary dropped his pen, and
shot a frightened glance at his slumbering master;
then raised his hands above his head, and shook them
wildly at the head lackey.
“Sh!” he whispered
tragically. “Doucement, Monsieur Anselme.”
Anselme paused. He appreciated
the gravity of the situation. His bearing lost
some of its dignity; his face underwent a change.
Then with a recovery of some part of his erstwhile
resolution:
“Nevertheless, he must be awakened,”
he announced, but in an undertone, as if afraid to
do the thing he said must needs be done.
The horror in the secretary’s
eyes increased, but Anselme’s reflected none
of it. It was a grave thing, he knew by former
experience, to arouse His Majesty’s Seneschal
of Dauphiny from his after-dinner nap; but it was
an almost graver thing to fail in obedience to that
black-eyed woman below who was demanding an audience.
Anselme realized that he was between
the sword and the wall. He was, however, a man
of a deliberate habit that was begotten of inherent
indolence and nurtured among the good things that fell
to his share as master of the Tressan household.
Thoughtfully he caressed his tuft of red beard, puffed
out his cheeks, and raised his eyes to the ceiling
in appeal or denunciation to the heaven which he believed
was somewhere beyond it.
“Nevertheless, he must be awakened,” he
repeated.
And then Fate came to his assistance.
Somewhere in the house a door banged like a cannon-shot.
Perspiration broke upon the secretary’s brow.
He sank limply back in his chair, giving himself up
for lost. Anselme started and bit the knuckle
of his forefinger in a manner suggesting an inarticulate
imprecation.
My Lord the Seneschal moved.
The noise of his slumbers culminated in a sudden,
choking grunt, and abruptly ceased. His eyelids
rolled slowly back, like an owl’s, revealing
pale blue eyes, which fixed themselves first upon
the ceiling, then upon Anselme. Instantly he sat
up, puffing and scowling, his hands shuffling his
papers.
“A thousand devils! Anselme,
why am I interrupted?” he grumbled querulously,
still half-asleep. “What the plague do you
want? Have you no thought for the King’s
affairs? Babylas” this to his
secretary “did I not tell you that
I had much to do; that I must not be disturbed?”
It was the great vanity of the life
of this man, who did nothing, to appear the busiest
fellow in all France, and no audience not
even that of his own lackeys was too mean
for him to take the stage to in that predilect rôle.
“Monsieur lé Comte,”
said Anselme, in tones of abject self-effacement,
“I had never dared intrude had the matter been
of less urgency. But Madame the Dowager of Condillac
is below. She begs to see Your Excellency instantly.”
At once there was a change. Tressan
became wide-awake upon the instant. His first
act was to pass one hand over the wax-like surface
of his bald head, whilst his other snatched at his
wig. Then he heaved himself ponderously out of
his great chair. He donned his wig, awry in his
haste, and lurched forward towards Anselme, his fat
fingers straining at his open doublet and drawing
it together.
“Madame la Douairière
here?” he cried. “Make fast these
buttons, rascal! Quick! Am I to receive
a lady thus? Am I ? Babylas,”
he snapped, interrupting himself and turning aside
even as Anselme put forth hands to do his bidding.
“A mirror, from my closet! Dispatch!”
The secretary was gone in a flash,
and in a flash returned, even as Anselme completed
his master’s toilet. But clearly Monsieur
de Tressan had awakened in a peevish humour, for no
sooner were the buttons of his doublet secured than
with his own fingers he tore them loose again, cursing
his majordomo the while with vigour.
“You dog, Anselme, have you
no sense of fitness, no discrimination? Am I
to appear in this garment of the mode of a half-century
ago before Madame la Marquise? Take it off; take
it off, man! Get me the coat that came last month
from Paris the yellow one with the hanging
sleeves and the gold buttons, and a sash the
crimson sash I had from Taillemant. Can you move
no quicker, animal? Are you still here?”
Anselme, thus enjoined, lent an unwonted
alacrity to his movements, waddling grotesquely like
a hastening waterfowl. Between him and the secretary
they dressed my Lord the Seneschal, and decked him
out till he was fit to compare with a bird of paradise
for gorgeousness of colouring if not for harmony of
hues and elegance of outline.
Babylas held the mirror, and Anselme
adjusted the Seneschal’s wig, whilst Tressan
himself twisted his black mustachios how
they kept their colour was a mystery to his acquaintance and
combed the tuft of beard that sprouted from one of
his several chins.
He took a last look at his reflection,
rehearsed a smile, and bade Anselme introduce his
visitor. He desired his secretary to go to the
devil, but, thinking better of it, he recalled him
as he reached the door. His cherished vanity
craved expression.
“Wait!” said he.
“There is a letter must be written. The
King’s business may not suffer postponement not
for all the dowagers in France. Sit down.”
Babylas obeyed him. Tressan stood
with his back to the open door. His ears, strained
to listen, had caught the swish of a woman’s
gown. He cleared his throat, and began to dictate:
“To Her Majesty the Queen-Regent ”
He paused, and stood with knitted brows, deep in thought.
Then he ponderously repeated “To Her
Majesty the Queen Regent Have you got that?”
“Yes, Monsieur lé Comte.
‘To Her Majesty the Queen Regent.’”
There was a step, and a throat-clearing cough behind
him.
“Monsieur de Tressan,”
said a woman’s voice, a rich, melodious voice,
if haughty and arrogant of intonation.
On the instant he turned, advanced a step, and bowed.
“Your humblest servant, madame,”
said he, his hand upon his heart. “This
is an honour which ”
“Which necessity thrusts upon
you,” she broke in imperiously. “Dismiss
that fellow.”
The secretary, pale and shy, had risen.
His eyes dilated at the woman’s speech.
He looked for a catastrophe as the natural result of
her taking such a tone with this man who was the terror
of his household and of all Grenoble. Instead,
the Lord Seneschal’s meekness left him breathless
with surprise.
“He is my secretary, madame.
We were at work as you came. I was on the point
of inditing a letter to Her Majesty. The office
of Seneschal in a province such as Dauphiny is helas! no
sinecure.” He sighed like one whose brain
is weary. “It leaves a man little time even
to eat or sleep.”
“You will be needing a holiday,
then,” said she, with cool insolence. “Take
one for once, and let the King’s business give
place for half an hour to mine.”
The secretary’s horror grew by leaps and bounds.
Surely the storm would burst at last
about this audacious woman’s head. But
the Lord Seneschal usually so fiery and
tempestuous did no more than make her another
of his absurd bows.
“You anticipate, madame,
the very words I was about to utter. Babylas,
vanish!” And he waved the scribbler doorwards
with a contemptuous hand. “Take your papers
with you into my closet there. We will
resume that letter to Her Majesty when madame
shall have left me.”
The secretary gathered up his papers,
his quills, and his inkhorn, and went his way, accounting
the end of the world at hand.
When the door had closed upon him,
the Seneschal, with another bow and a simper, placed
a chair at his visitor’s disposal. She looked
at the chair, then looked at the man much as she had
looked at the chair, and turning her back contemptuously
on both, she sauntered towards the fireplace.
She stood before the blaze, with her whip tucked under
her arm, drawing off her stout riding-gloves.
She was a tall, splendidly proportioned woman, of
a superb beauty of countenance, for all that she was
well past the spring of life.
In the waning light of that October
afternoon none would have guessed her age to be so
much as thirty, though in the sunlight you might have
set it at a little more. But in no light at all
would you have guessed the truth, that her next would
be her forty-second birthday. Her face was pale,
of an ivory pallor that gleamed in sharp contrast with
the ebony of her lustrous hair. Under the long
lashes of low lids a pair of eyes black and insolent
set off the haughty lines of her scarlet lips.
Her nose was thin and straight, her neck an ivory pillar
splendidly upright upon her handsome shoulders.
She was dressed for riding, in a gown
of sapphire velvet, handsomely laced in gold across
the stomacher, and surmounted at the neck, where it
was cut low and square, by the starched band of fine
linen which in France was already replacing the more
elaborate ruff. On her head, over a linen coif,
she wore a tall-crowned grey beaver, swathed with a
scarf of blue and gold.
Standing by the hearth, one foot on
the stone kerb, one elbow leaning lightly on the overmantel,
she proceeded leisurely to remove her gloves.
The Seneschal observed her with eyes
that held an odd mixture of furtiveness and admiration,
his fingers plump, indolent-looking stumps plucking
at his beard.
“Did you but know, Marquise,
with what joy, with what a ”
“I will imagine it, whatever
it may be,” she broke in, with that brusque
arrogance that marked her bearing. “The
time for flowers of rhetoric is not now. There
is trouble coming, man; trouble, dire trouble.”
Up went the Seneschal’s brows; his eyes grew
wider.
“Trouble?” quoth he.
And, having opened his mouth to give exit to that
single word, open he left it.
She laughed lazily, her lip curling,
her face twisting oddly, and mechanically she began
to draw on again the glove she had drawn off.
“By your face I see how well
you understand me,” she sneered. “The
trouble concerns Mademoiselle de La Vauvraye.”
“From Paris does
it come from Court?” His voice was sunk.
She nodded. “You are a
miracle of intuition today, Tressan.”
He thrust his tiny tuft of beard between
his teeth a trick he had when perplexed
or thoughtful. “Ah!” he exclaimed
at last, and it sounded like an indrawn breath of
apprehension. “Tell me more.”
“What more is there to tell?
You have the epitome of the story.”
“But what is the nature of the
trouble? What form does it take, and by whom
are you advised of it?”
“A friend in Paris sent me word,
and his messenger did his work well, else had Monsieur
de Garnache been here before him, and I had not so
much as had the mercy of this forewarning.”
“Garnache?” quoth the Count. “Who
is Garnache?”
“The emissary of the Queen-Regent.
He has been dispatched hither by her to see that Mademoiselle
de La Vauvraye has justice and enlargement.”
Tressan fell suddenly to groaning
and wringing his hands a pathetic figure had it been
less absurd.
“I warned you, madame!
I warned you how it would end,” he cried.
“I told you ”
“Oh, I remember the things you
told me,” she cut in, scorn in her voice.
“You may spare yourself their repetition.
What is done is done, and I’ll not I
would not have it undone. Queen-Regent
or no Queen-Regent, I am mistress at Condillac; my
word is the only law we know, and I intend that so
it shall continue.”
Tressan looked at her in surprise.
This unreasoning, feminine obstinacy so wrought upon
him that he permitted himself a smile and a lapse into
irony and banter.
“Parfaitement,” said he,
spreading his hands, and bowing. “Why speak
of trouble, then?”
She beat her whip impatiently against
her gown, her eyes staring into the fire. “Because,
my attitude being such as it is, trouble will there
be.”
The Seneschal shrugged his shoulders,
and moved a step towards her. He was cast down
to think that he might have spared himself the trouble
of donning his beautiful yellow doublet from Paris.
She had eyes for no finery that afternoon. He
was cast down, too, to think how things might go with
him when this trouble came. It entered his thoughts
that he had lain long on a bed of roses in this pleasant
corner of Dauphiny, and he was smitten now with fear
lest of the roses he should find nothing remaining
but the thorns.
“How came the Queen-Regent to
hear of of mademoiselle’s ah situation?”
he inquired.
The Marquise swung round upon him in a passion.
“The girl found a dog of a traitor
to bear a letter for her. That is enough.
If ever chance or fate should bring him my way, by
God! he shall hang without shrift.”
Then she put her anger from her; put
from her, too, the insolence and scorn with which
so lavishly she had addressed him hitherto. Instead
she assumed a suppliant air, her beautiful eyes meltingly
set upon his face.
“Tressan,” said she in
her altered voice, “I am beset by enemies.
But you will not forsake me? You will stand by
me to the end will you not, my friend?
I can count upon you, at least?”
“In all things, madame,”
he answered, under the spell of her gaze. “What
force does this man Garnache bring with him? Have
you ascertained?”
“He brings none,” she answered, triumph
in her glance.
“None?” he echoed, horror in his.
“None? Then then ”
He tossed his arms to heaven, and
stood a limp and shaken thing. She leaned forward,
and regarded him stricken in surprise.
“Diable! What ails
you?” she snapped. “Could I have given
you better news?”
“If you could have given me
worse, I cannot think what it might have been,”
he groaned. Then, as if smitten by a sudden notion
that flashed a gleam of hope into this terrifying
darkness that was settling down upon him, he suddenly
looked up. “You mean to resist him?”
he inquired.
She stared at him a second, then laughed,
a thought unpleasantly.
“Pish! But you are mad,”
she scorned him. “Do you need ask if I intend
to resist I, with the strongest castle in
Dauphiny? By God! sir, if you need to hear me
say it, hear me then say that I shall resist him and
as many as the Queen may send after him, for as long
as one stone of Condillac shall stand upon another.”
The Seneschal blew out his lips, and
fell once more to the chewing of his beard.
“What did you mean when you
said I could have given you no worse news than that
of his coming alone?” she questioned suddenly.
“Madame,” said he, “if
this man comes without force, and you resist the orders
of which he is the bearer, what think you will betide?”
“He will appeal to you for the
men he needs that he may batter down my walls,”
she answered calmly.
He looked at her incredulously.
“You realize it?” he ejaculated. “You
realize it?”
“What is there in it that should puzzle a babe?”
Her callousness was like a gust of
wind upon the living embers of his fears. It
blew them into a blaze of wrath, sudden and terrific
as that of such a man at bay could be. He advanced
upon her with the rolling gait of the obese, his cheeks
purple, his arms waving wildly, his dyed mustachios
bristling.
“And what of me, madame?”
he spluttered. “What of me? Am I to
be ruined, gaoled, and hanged, maybe, for refusing
him men? for that is what is in your mind.
Am I to make myself an outlaw? Am I, who have
been Lord Seneschal of Dauphiny these fifteen years,
to end my days in degradation in the cause of a woman’s
matrimonial projects for a simpering school-girl?
Seigneur du Ciel!” he roared, “I think
you are gone mad mad, mad! over this affair.
You would not think it too much to set the whole province
in flames so that you could have your way with this
wretched child. But, Ventregris! to ruin me to to ”
He fell silent for very want of words;
just gaped and gasped, and then, with hands folded
upon his paunch, he set himself to pace the chamber.
Madame de Condillac stood watching
him, her face composed, her glance cold. She
was like some stalwart oak, weathering with unshaken
front a hurricane. When he had done, she moved
away from the fireplace, and, beating her side gently
with her whip, she stepped to the door.
“Au revoir, Monsieur de Tressan,”
said she, mighty cool, her back towards him.
At that he halted in his feverish
stride, stood still and threw up his head. His
anger went out, as a candle is extinguished by a puff
of wind. And in its place a new fear crept into
his heart.
“Madame, madame!” he cried.
“Wait! Hear me.”
She paused, half-turned, and looked
at him over her shoulder, scorn in her glance, a sneer
on her scarlet mouth, insolence in every line of her.
“I think, monsieur, that I have
heard a little more than enough,” said she.
“I am assured, at least, that in you I have but
a fair-weather friend, a poor lipserver.”
“Ah, not that, madame,”
he cried, and his voice was stricken. “Say
not that. I would serve you as would none other
in all this world you know it, Marquise;
you know it.”
She faced about, and confronted him,
her smile a trifle broader, as if amusement were now
blending with her scorn.
“It is easy to protest.
Easy to say, ‘I will die for you,’ so long
as the need for such a sacrifice be remote. But
let me do no more than ask a favour, and it is, ’What
of my good name, madame? What of my seneschalship?
Am I to be gaoled or hanged to pleasure you?’
Faugh!” she ended, with a toss of her splendid
head. “The world is peopled with your kind,
and I alas! for a woman’s intuitions had
held you different from the rest.”
Her words were to his soul as a sword
of fire might have been to his flesh. They scorched
and shrivelled it. He saw himself as she would
have him see himself a mean, contemptible
craven; a coward who made big talk in times of peace,
but faced about and vanished into hiding at the first
sign of danger. He felt himself the meanest, vilest
thing a-crawl upon this sinful earth, and she dear
God! had thought him different from the
ruck. She had held him in high esteem, and behold,
how short had he not fallen of all her expectations!
Shame and vanity combined to work a sudden, sharp
revulsion in his feelings.
“Marquise,” he cried,
“you say no more than what is just. But
punish me no further. I meant not what I said.
I was beside myself. Let me atone let
my future actions make amends for that odious departure
from my true self.”
There was no scorn now in her smile;
only an ineffable tenderness, beholding which he felt
it in his heart to hang if need be that he might continue
high in her regard. He sprang forward, and took
the hand she extended to him.
“I knew, Tressan,” said
she, “that you were not yourself, and that when
you bethought you of what you had said, my valiant,
faithful friend would not desert me.”
He stooped over her hand, and slobbered
kisses upon her unresponsive glove.
“Madame,” said he, “you
may count upon me. This fellow out of Paris shall
have no men from me, depend upon it.”
She caught him by the shoulders, and
held him so, before her. Her face was radiant,
alluring; and her eyes dwelt on his with a kindness
he had never seen there save in some wild daydream
of his.
“I will not refuse a service
you offer me so gallantly,” said she. “It
were an ill thing to wound you by so refusing it.”
“Marquise,” he cried,
“it is as nothing to what I would do did the
occasion serve. But when this thing ’tis
done; when you have had your way with Mademoiselle
de La Vauvraye, and the nuptials shall have been celebrated,
then dare I hope ?”
He said no more in words, but his
little blue eyes had an eloquence that left nothing
to mere speech.
Their glances met, she holding him
always at arm’s length by that grip upon his
shoulders, a grip that was firm and nervous.
In the Seneschal of Dauphiny, as she
now gazed upon him, she beheld a very toad of a man,
and the soul of her shuddered at the sight of him
combining with the thing that he suggested. But
her glance was steady and her lips maintained their
smile, just as if that ugliness of his had been invested
with some abstract beauty existing only to her gaze;
a little colour crept into her cheeks, and red being
the colour of love’s livery, Tressan misread
its meaning.
She nodded to him across the little
distance of her outstretched arms, then smothered
a laugh that drove him crazed with hope, and breaking
from him she sped swiftly, shyly it almost seemed to
him, to the door.
There she paused a moment looking
back at him with a coyness that might have become
a girl of half her years, yet which her splendid beauty
saved from being unbecoming even in her.
One adorable smile she gave him, and
before he could advance to hold the door for her,
she had opened it and passed out.