Promptly at noon on the morrow Monsieur
de Garnache presented himself once more at the Seneschal’s
palace, and with him went Rabecque, his body-servant,
a lean, swarthy, sharp-faced man, a trifle younger
than his master.
Anselme, the obese master of the household,
received them with profound respect, and at once conducted
Garnache to Monsieur de Tressan’s presence.
On the stairs they met Captain d’Aubran,
who was descending. The captain was not in the
best of humours. For four-and-twenty hours he
had kept two hundred of his men under arms, ready
to march as soon as he should receive his orders from
the Lord Seneschal, yet those instructions were not
forthcoming. He had been to seek them again that
morning, only to be again put off.
Monsieur de Garnache had considerable
doubt, born of his yesterday’s interview with
the Seneschal, that Mademoiselle de La Vauvraye would
be delivered into his charge as he had stipulated.
His relief was, therefore, considerable, upon being
ushered into Tressan’s presence, to find a lady
in cloak and hat, dressed as for a journey, seated
in a chair by the great fireplace.
Tressan advanced to meet him, a smile
of cordial welcome on his lips, and they bowed to
each other in formal greeting.
“You see, monsieur,” said
the Seneschal, waving a plump hand in the direction
of the lady, “that you have been obeyed.
Here is your charge.”
Then to the lady: “This
is Monsieur de Garnache,” he announced, “of
whom I have already told you, who is to conduct you
to Paris by order of Her Majesty.
“And now, my good friends, however
great the pleasure I derive from your company, I care
not how soon you set out, for I have some prodigious
arrears of work upon my hands.”
Garnache bowed to the lady, who returned
his greeting by an inclination of the head, and his
keen eyes played briskly over her. She was a
plump-faced, insipid child, with fair hair and pale
blue eyes, stolid and bovine in their expressionlessness.
“I am quite ready, monsieur,”
said she, rising as she spoke, and gathering her cloak
about her; and Garnache remarked that her voice had
the southern drawl, her words the faintest suggestion
of a patois. It was amazing how a lady born and
bred could degenerate in the rusticity of Dauphiny.
Pigs and cows, he made no doubt, had been her chief
objectives. Yet, even so, he thought he might
have expected that she would have had more to say
to him than just those five words expressing her readiness
to depart. He had looked for some acknowledgment
of satisfaction at his presence, some utterances of
gratitude either to himself or to the Queen-Regent
for the promptness with which she had been succoured.
He was disappointed, but he showed nothing of it, as
with a simple inclination of the head
“Good!” said he.
“Since you are ready and Monsieur lé Seneschal
is anxious to be rid of us, let us by all means be
moving. You have a long and tedious journey before
you, mademoiselle.”
“I I am prepared for that,”
she faltered.
He stood aside, and bending from the
waist he made a sweeping gesture towards the door
with the hand that held his hat. To the invitation
to precede him she readily responded, and, with a
bow to the Seneschal, she began to walk across the
apartment.
Garnache’s eyes, narrowing slightly,
followed her, like points of steel. Suddenly
he shot a disturbing glance at Tressan’s face,
and the corner of his wild-cat mustachios twitched.
He stood erect, and called her very sharply.
“Mademoiselle!”
She stopped, and turned to face him,
an incredible shyness seeming to cause her to avoid
his gaze.
“You have, no doubt, Monsieur
lé Seneschal’s word for my identity.
But I think it is as well that you should satisfy
yourself. Before placing yourself entirely in
my care, as you are about to do, you would be well
advised to assure yourself, that I am indeed Her Majesty’s
emissary. Will you be good enough to glance at
this?”
He drew forth as he spoke the letter
in the queen’s own hand, turned it upside down,
and so presented it to her. The Seneschal looked
on stolidly, a few paces distant.
“But certainly, mademoiselle,
assure yourself that this gentleman is no other than
I have told you.”
Thus enjoined, she took the letter;
for a second her eyes met Garnache’s glittering
gaze, and she shivered. Then she bent her glance
to the writing, and studied it a moment, what time
the man from Paris watched her closely.
Presently she handed it back to him.
“Thank you, monsieur,” was all she said.
“You are satisfied that it is
in order, mademoiselle?” he inquired, and a
note of mockery too subtle for her or the Seneschal
ran through his question.
“I am quite satisfied.”
Garnache turned to Tressan. His
eyes were smiling, but unpleasantly, and in his voice
when he spoke there was something akin to the distant
rumble that heralds an approaching storm.
“Mademoiselle,” said he, “has received
an eccentric education.”
“Eh?” quoth Tressan, perplexed.
“I have heard tell, monsieur,
of a people somewhere in the East who read and write
from right to left; but never yet have I heard tell
of any particularly in France so
oddly schooled as to do their reading upside down.”
Tressan caught the drift of the other’s
meaning. He paled a little, and sucked his lip,
his eyes wandering to the girl, who stood in stolid
inapprehension of what was being said.
“Did she do that?” said
he, and he scarcely knew what he was saying; all that
he realized was that it urged him to explain this thing.
“Mademoiselle’s education has been neglected a
by no means uncommon happening in these parts.
She is sensitive of it; she seeks to hide the fact.”
Then the storm broke about their heads.
And it crashed and thundered awfully in the next few
minutes.
“O liar! O damned, audacious
liar,” roared Garnache uncompromisingly, advancing
a step upon the Seneschal, and shaking the parchment
threateningly in his very face, as though it were become
a weapon of offence. “Was it to hide the
fact that she had not been taught to write that she
sent the Queen a letter pages-long? Who is this
woman?” And the finger he pointed at the girl
quivered with the rage that filled him at this trick
they had thought to put upon him.
Tressan sought refuge in offended
dignity. He drew himself up, threw back his head,
and looked the Parisian fiercely in the eye.
“Since you take this tone with me, monsieur ”
“I take with you as
with any man the tone that to me seems best.
You miserable fool! As sure as you’re a
rogue this affair shall cost you your position.
You have waxed fat and sleek in your seneschalship;
this easy life in Dauphiny appears to have been well
suited to your health. But as your paunch has
grown, so, of a truth, have your brains dwindled,
else had you never thought to cheat me quite so easily.
“Am I some lout who has spent
his days herding swine, think you, that you could
trick me into believing this creature to be Mademoiselle
de La Vauvraye this creature with the mien
of a peasant, with a breath reeking of garlic like
a third-rate eating-house, and the walk of a woman
who has never known footgear until this moment?
Tell me, sir, for what manner of fool did you take
me?”
The Seneschal stood with blanched
face and gaping mouth, his fire all turned to ashes
before the passion of this gaunt man.
Garnache paid no heed to him.
He stepped to the girl, and roughly raised her chin
with his hand so that she was forced to look him in
the face.
“What is your name, wench?” he asked her.
“Margot,” she blubbered, bursting into
tears.
He dropped her chin, and turned away with a gesture
of disgust.
“Get you gone,” he bade
her harshly. “Get you back to the kitchen
or the onion-field from which they took you.”
And the girl, scarce believing her
good fortune, departed with a speed that bordered
on the ludicrous. Tressan had naught to say, no
word to stay her with; pretence, he realized, was
vain.
“Now, my Lord Seneschal,”
quoth Garnache, arms akimbo, feet planted wide, and
eyes upon the wretched man’s countenance, “what
may you have to say to me?”
Tressan shifted his position; he avoided
the other’s glance; he was visibly trembling,
and when presently he spoke it was in faltering accents.
“It it seems,
monsieur, that ah that I have
been the victim of some imposture.”
“It had rather seemed to me
that the victim chosen was myself.”
“Clearly we were both victims,”
the Seneschal rejoined. Then he proceeded to
explain. “I went to Condillac yesterday
as you desired me, and after a stormy interview with
the Marquise I obtained from her as I believed the
person of Mademoiselle de La Vauvraye. You see
I was not myself acquainted with the lady.”
Garnache looked at him. He did
not believe him. He regretted almost that he
had not further questioned the girl. But, after
all, perhaps it might be easier and more expedient
if he were to appear to accept the Seneschal’s
statement. But he must provide against further
fraud.
“Monsieur lé Seneschal,”
said he in calmer tones, putting his anger from him,
“at the best you are a blunderer and an ass,
at the worst a traitor. I will inquire no further
at present; I’ll not seek to discriminate too
finely.”
“Monsieur, these insults ”
began the Seneschal, summoning dignity to his aid.
But Garnache broke in:
“La, la! I speak in the
Queen’s name. If you have thought to aid
the Dowager of Condillac in this resistance of Her
Majesty’s mandate, let me enjoin you, as you
value your seneschalship as you value your
very neck to harbour that thought no longer.
“It seems that, after all, I
must deal myself with the situation. I must go
myself to Condillac. If they should resist me,
I shall look to you for the necessary means to overcome
that resistance.
“And bear you this in mind:
I have chosen to leave it an open question whether
you were a party to the trick it has been sought to
put upon the Queen, through me, her representative.
But it is a question that I have it in my power to
resolve at any moment to resolve as I choose.
Unless, monsieur, I find you hereafter as
I trust actuated by the most unswerving
loyalty, I shall resolve that question by proclaiming
you a traitor; and as a traitor I shall arrest you
and carry you to Paris. Monsieur lé Seneschal,
I have the honour to give you good-day!”
When he was gone, Monsieur de Tressan
flung off his wig, and mopped the perspiration from
his brow. He went white as snow and red as fire
by turns, as he paced the apartment in a frenzy.
Never in the fifteen years that were sped since he
had been raised to the governorship of the province
had any man taken such a tone with him and harangued
him in such terms.
A liar and a traitor had he been called
that morning, a knave and a fool; he had been browbeaten
and threatened; and he had swallowed it all, and almost
turned to lick the hand that administered the dose.
Dame! What manner of cur was he become? And
the man who had done all this a vulgar
upstart out of Paris, reeking of leather and the barrack-room
still lived!
Bloodshed was in his mind; murder
beckoned him alluringly to take her as his ally.
But he put the thought from him, frenzied though he
might be. He must fight this knave with other
weapons; frustrate his mission, and send him back
to Paris and the Queen’s scorn, beaten and empty-handed.
“Babylas’s!” he shouted.
Immediately the secretary appeared.
“Have you given thought to the
matter of Captain d’Aubran?” he asked,
his voice an impatient snarl.
“Yes, monsieur, I have pondered it all morning.”
“Well? And what have you concluded?”
“Helas! monsieur, nothing.”
Tressan smote the table before him
a blow that shook some of the dust out of the papers
that cumbered it. “Ventregris! How
am I served? For what do I pay you, and feed
you, and house you, good-for-naught, if you are to
fail me whenever I need the things you call your brains?
Have you no intelligence, no thought, no imagination?
Can you invent no plausible business, no likely rising,
no possible disturbances that shall justify my sending
Aubran and his men to Montelimar to the
very devil, if need be.”
The secretary trembled in his every
limb; his eyes shunned his master’s as his master’s
had shunned Garnache’s awhile ago. The Seneschal
was enjoying himself. If he had been bullied
and browbeaten, here, at least, was one upon whom
he, in his turn, might taste the joys of bullying and
browbeating.
“You lazy, miserable calf,”
he stormed, “I might be better served by a wooden
image. Go! It seems I must rely upon myself.
It is always so. Wait!” he thundered; for
the secretary, only too glad to obey his last order,
had already reached the door. “Tell Anselme
to bid the Captain attend me here at once.”
Babylas’s bowed and went his errand.
A certain amount of his ill-humour
vented, Tressan made an effort to regain his self-control.
He passed his handkerchief for the last time over
face and head, and resumed his wig.
When d’Aubran entered, the Seneschal
was composed and in his wonted habit of ponderous
dignity. “Ah, d’Aubran,” said
he, “your men are ready?”
“They have been ready these
four-and-twenty hours, monsieur.”
“Good. You are a brisk
soldier, d’Aubran. You are a man to be relied
upon.”
D’Aubran bowed. He was
a tall, active young fellow with a pleasant face and
a pair of fine black eyes.
“Monsieur lé Seneschal is very good.”
With a wave of the hand the Seneschal belittled his
own goodness.
“You will march out of Grenoble
within the hour, Captain, and you will lead your men
to Montelimar. There you will quarter them, and
await my further orders. Babylas will give you
a letter to the authorities, charging them to find
you suitable quarters. While there, d’Aubran,
and until my further orders reach you, you will employ
your time in probing the feeling in the hill district.
You understand?”
“Imperfectly,” d’Aubran confessed.
“You will understand better
when you have been in Montelimar a week or so.
It may, of course, be a false alarm. Still, we
must safeguard the King’s interests and be prepared.
Perhaps we may afterwards be charged with starting
at shadows; but it is better to be on the alert from
the moment the shadow is perceived than to wait until
the substance itself has overwhelmed us.”
It sounded so very much as if the
Seneschal’s words really had some hidden meaning,
that d’Aubran, if not content with going upon
an errand of which he knew so little, was, at least,
reconciled to obey the orders he received. He
uttered words that conveyed some such idea to Tressan’s
mind, and within a half-hour he was marching out of
Grenoble with beating drums, on his two days’
journey to Montelimar.