One friend did La Boulaye count in
the village of Bellecour. This was old Duhamel,
the schoolmaster, an eccentric pedant and a fellow-worshipper
of the immortal Jean Jacques. It was to him that
La Boulaye now repaired intent upon seeking counsel
touching a future that wore that morning a singularly
gloomy outlook.
He found Duhamel’s door open,
and he stepped across the threshold into the chief
room of the house. But there he paused, and hesitated.
The chamber was crowded with people in holiday attire,
and the centre of attraction was a well-set-up peasant
with a happy, sun-tanned face, whose golden locks
were covered by a huge round hat decked with a score
of gaily-coloured ribbons.
At sight of him La Boulaye remembered
that it was Charlot’s wedding-day. Popular
amongst the women by virtue of his comeliness, and
respected by the men by virtue of his strength, Charlot
Tardivet was a general favourite of the countryside,
and here, in the room of old Duhamel, the schoolmaster,
was half the village gathered to do him honour upon
his wedding morn. It was like Duhamel, who, in
fatherliness towards the villagers, went near out-rivalling
M. lé Cure, to throw open his house for
the assembling of Charlot’s friends, and La Boulaye
was touched by this fresh sign of kindliness from
a man whose good heart he had not lacked occasion
to observe and appreciate. But it came to the
secretary that there was no place for him in this
happy assemblage. His advent would, probably,
but serve to cast a gloom upon them, considering the
conditions under which he came, with the signs of violence
upon his face to remind them of the lords of life
and death who dwelt at the Chateau up yonder.
And such a reminder must fall upon them as does the
reminder of some overhanging evil clutch suddenly
at our hearts in happy moments of forgetfulness.
To let them be happy that day, to leave their feasts
free of a death’s head, La Boulaye would have
withdrawn had he not already been too late. Duhamel
had espied him, and the little, wizened old man came
hurrying forward, his horn-rimmed spectacles perched
on the very end of his nose, his keen little eyes
beaming with delight and welcome.
“Ah, Caron, you are very choicely
come,” he cried, holding out both hands to La
Boulaye. “You shall embrace our happy Hercules
yonder, and wish him joy of the wedded life he has
the audacity to exploit.” Then, as he espied
the crimson ridge across the secretary’s countenance,
“Mon Dieu!” he exclaimed, “what
have you done to yourself, Caron?”
“Pish! It is nothing,”
answered La Boulaye hurriedly, and would have had
the subject dismissed, but that one of the onlooking
peasants swore by the memory of some long-dead saint
that it was the cut of a whip. Duhamel’s
eyes kindled and his parchment-like skin was puckered
into a hundred evil wrinkles.
“Who did it, Caron?” he demanded.
“Since you insist, old master,”
answered the secretary, still endeavouring to make
light of it, “learn that is the lord Marquis’s
signature to his order of my dismissal from his service.”
“The dog!” ejaculated the school-master.
“Sh! let it be. Perhaps
I braved him overmuch. I will tell you of it
when these good folks have gone. Do not let us
cast a gloom over their happiness, old master.
And now to embrace this good Charlot.”
Though inwardly burning with curiosity
and boiling with indignation, Duhamel permitted himself
to be guided by La Boulaye, and for the moment allowed
the matter to rest. La Boulaye himself laughingly
set aside the many questions with which they pressed
him. He drank the health of the bride-elect who
was not yet of the party and he pledged
the happiness of the pair. He embraced Charlot,
and even went so far as to urge upon him, out of his
own scanty store, a louis d’or with which
to buy Marie a trinket in memory of him.
Then presently came one with the announcement
that M. lé Cure was waiting, and in answer
to that reminder that there was a ceremony to be gone
through, Charlot and his friends flung out of the house
in joyous confusion, and went their way with laughter
and jest to the little church of St. Ildefonse.
“We will follow presently M.
la Boulaye and I Charlot,” Duhamel
had said, as the sturdy bridegroom was departing.
“We shall be there to shake Madame by the hand
and wish her joy of you.”
When at last they were alone in the
schoolmaster’s room, the old man turned to La
Boulaye, the very embodiment of a note of interrogation.
The secretary told him all that had passed. He
reddened slightly when it came to speaking of his
love for Mlle. de Bellecour, but he realised
that if he would have guidance he must withhold nothing
from his friend.
Duhamel’s face grew dark as
the young man spoke, and his eyes became sad and very
thoughtful.
“Alas!” he sighed, when
La Boulaye had ended. “What shall I say
to you, my friend? The time is not yet for such
as we you and I to speak of
love for a daughter of the Seigneurie. It
is coming, I doubt it not. All things have their
climax, and France is tending swiftly to the climax
of her serfdom. Very soon we shall have the crisis,
this fire that is already smouldering, will leap into
a great blaze, that shall lick the old regime as completely
from the face of history as though it had never been.
A new condition of things will spring up, of that I
am convinced. Does not history afford us many
instances? And what is history but the repetition
of events under similar circumstances with different
peoples. It will come in France, and it will
come soon, for it is very direly needed.”
“I know, I know, old master,”
broke in La Boulaye; “but how shall all this
help me? For all that I have the welfare of France
at heart, it weighs little with me at the moment by
comparison with my own affairs. What am I to
do, Duhamel? How am I to take payment for this?”
And he pressed his finger to his seared cheek.
“Wait,” said the old man
impressively. “That is the moral you might
have drawn from what I have said. Be patient.
I promise you your patience shall not be overtaxed.
To-day they say that you presume; that you are not
one of them although, by my soul, you have
as good an air as any nobleman in France.”
And he eyed the lean height of the secretary with a
glance of such pride as a father might take in a well-grown
son.
Elegant of figure, La Boulaye was
no less elegant in dress, for all that, from head
to foot saving the silver buckles on his
shoes and the unpretentious lace at throat and wrists he
was dressed in the black that his office demanded.
His countenance, too, though cast in a mould of thoughtfulness
that bordered on the melancholy, bore a lofty stamp
that might have passed for birth and breeding, and
this was enhanced by the careful dressing of his black
unpowdered hair, gathered into a club by a broad ribbon
of black silk.
“But what shall waiting avail
me?” cried the young man, with some impatience.
“What am I to do in the meantime?”
“Go to Amiens,” said the
other. “You have learning, you have eloquence,
you have a presence and an excellent address.
For success no better attributes could be yours.”
He approached the secretary, and instinctively lowered
his voice. “We have a little club there a
sort of succursal to the Jacobins. We are numerous,
but we have no very shining member yet. Come
with me, and I will nominate you. Beginning thus,
I promise you that you shall presently become a man
of prominence in Picardy. Anon we may send you
to Paris to represent us in the States-General.
Then, when the change comes, who shall say to what
heights it may not be yours to leap?”
“I will think of it,”
answered La Boulaye cordially, “and not a doubt
of it but that I will come. I did not know that
you had gone so far ”
“Sh! You know now.
Let that suffice. It is not good to talk of these
things just yet.”
“But in the meantime,”
La Boulaye persisted, “what of this?” And
again he pointed to his cheek.
“Why, let it heal, boy.”
“I promised the Marquis that
I would demand satisfaction of his son, and I am tempted
to do so and risk the consequences.”
“I am afraid the consequences
will be the only satisfaction that you will get.
In fact, they will be anticipations rather than consequences,
for they’ll never let you near the boy.”
“I know not that,” he
answered. “The lad is more generous than
his sire, and if I were to send him word that I have
been affronted, he might consent to meet me.
For the rest, I could kill him blindfolded,”
he added, with a shrug.
“Bloodthirsty animal!”
rejoined Duhamel. “Unnatural tutor!
Do you forget that you were the boy’s preceptor?”
With that Duhamel carried the argument
into new fields, and showed La Boulaye that to avenge
upon the young Vicomte the insults received at the
hands of the old Marquis was hardly a worthy method
of taking vengeance. At last he won him to his
way, and it was settled that on the morrow La Boulaye
should journey with him to Amiens.
“But, Caron, we are forgetting
our friend Charlot and his bride,” he broke
off suddenly. “Come, boy; the ceremony will
be at an end by this.”
He took La Boulaye by the arm, and
led him out and down the street to the open space
opposite St. Ildefonse. The wedding-party was
streaming out through the door of the little church
into the warm sunshine of that April morning.
In the churchyard they formed into a procession of
happy be-ribboned and nosegayed men and women the
young preceding, the old following, the bridal couple.
Two by two they came, and the air rang with their
laughter and joyous chatter. Then another sound
arose, and if the secretary and the pedagogue could
have guessed of what that beating of hoofs was to
be the prelude, they had scarce smiled so easily as
they watched the approaching cortege.
From a side street there now emerged
a gaily apparelled cavalcade. At its head rode
the Marquis de Bellecour, the Vicomte, and a half-dozen
other gentlemen, followed by, perhaps, a dozen lacqueys.
It was a hunting party that was making its way across
the village to the open country beyond. The bridal
procession crossing their path caused them to draw
rein, and to wait until it should have passed which
argued a very condescending humour, for it would not
have been out of keeping with their habits to have
ridden headlong through it. Their presence cast
a restraint upon the peasants. The jests were
silenced, the laughter hushed, and like a flight of
pigeons under the eye of the hawk, they scurried past
the Seigneurie, and some of them prayed God that
they might be suffered to pass indeed.
Bellecour eyed them in cold disdain,
until presently Charlot and his bride were abreast
of him. Then his eye seemed to take life and his
sallow face to kindle into expression. He leant
lightly from the saddle.
“Stay!” he commanded coldly,
and as they came to a halt, daring not to disobey
him “approach, girl,” he added.
Charlot’s brows grew black.
He looked up at the Marquis, but if his glance was
sullen and threatening, it was also not free from fear.
Marie obeyed, with eyes downcast and a heightened
colour. If she conjectured at all why they had
been stopped, it was but to conclude that M. lé
Marquis was about to offer her some mark of appreciation.
Uneasiness, in her dear innocence, she knew none.
“What is your name, child?”
inquired the Marquis more gently.
“It was Marie Michelin,
Monseigneur,” she made answer timidly.
“But it has just been changed to Marie Tardivet.”
“You have just been wed, eh?”
“We are on our way from church, Monseigneur.”
“C’est ca,”
he murmured, as if to himself, and his eyes taking
such stock of her as made Charlot burn to tear him
from his horse. Then, in a kindly, fatherly voice,
he added: “My félicitations, Marie;
may you be a happy wife and a happier mother.”
“Merci, Monseigneur,”
she murmured, with crimson cheeks, whilst Charlot
breathed once more, and from his heart gave thanks
to Heaven, believing the interview at an end.
But he went too fast.
“Do you know, Marie, that you
are a very comely child?” quoth the Marquis,
in tones which made the bridegroom’s blood run
cold.
Some in that noble company nudged
one another, and one there was who burst into a loud
guffaw.
“Charlot has often told me so,”
she laughed, all unsuspicious.
The Marquis moved on his horse that
he might bend lower. With his forefinger he uptilted
her chin, and now, as she met his glance thus at close
quarters, an unaccountable fear took possession of
her, and the colour died out of her plump cheeks.
“Yes,” said Bellecour,
with a smile, “this Tardivet has good taste.
My congratulations, to him. We must find you
a wedding gift, little woman,” he continued
more briskly. “It is an ancient and honoured
custom that is falling somewhat into neglect.
Go up to the Chateau with Blaise and Jean there.
This good Tardivet must curb his impatience until to-morrow.”
He turned in his saddle, and beckoning
the two servants he had named, he bade Marie to mount
behind Blaise.
She drew back now, her cheeks white
as those of the dead. With a wild terror in her
eyes she turned to Charlot, who stood the very picture
of anguish and impotent rage. In the cortege,
where but a few moments ago all had been laughter,
a sob or two sounded now from some of the women.
“By my faith,” laughed
Bellecour contemptuously eyeing their dejection, “you
have more the air of a burial than a bridal party.”
“Mercy my lord!” cried
the agonised voice of Charlot, as, distraught with
grief, he flung himself before the Marquis.
“Who seeks to harm you, fool?”
was Bellecour’s half-derisive rejoinder.
“Do not take her from me, my
lord,” the young man pleaded piteously.
“She shall return to-morrow,
booby,” answered the noble. “Out of
the way!”
But Charlot was obstinate. The
Marquis might be claiming no more than by ancient
law was the due of the Seigneur, but Charlot was by
no means minded to submit in craven acquiescence to
that brutal, barbarous law.
“My lord,” he cried, “you
shall not take her. She is my wife. She
belongs to me. You shall not take her!”
He caught hold of the Marquis’s
bridle with such a strength and angry will that the
horse was forced to back before him.
“Insolent clod!” exclaimed
Bellecour, with an angry laugh and a sharp, downward
blow of the butt of his whip upon the peasant’s
head. Charlot’s hand grew nerveless and
released the bridle as he sank stunned to the ground.
Bellecour touched his horse with the spur and rode
over the prostrate fellow with no more concern than
had he been a dog’s carcase. “Blaise,
see to the girl,” he called over his shoulder,
adding to his company: “Come, messieurs,
we have wasted time enough.”
Not a hand was raised to stay him,
not a word of protest uttered, as the nobles rode
by, laughing, and chatting among themselves, with the
utmost unconcern of the tragedy that was being enacted.
Like a flock of frightened sheep the
peasants stood huddled together and watched them go.
In the same inaction for all that not a
little grief was blent with the terror on their countenances they
stood by and allowed Blaise to lift the half-swooning
girl to the withers of his horse. No reply had
they to the coarse jest with which he and his fellow-servant
rode off. But La Boulaye, who, from the point
where he and Duhamel had halted, had observed the
whole scene from its inception, turned now a livid
face upon his companion.
“Shall such things be?”
he cried passionately. “Merciful God!
Are we men, Duhamel, and do we permit such things
to take place?”
The old pedagogue shrugged his shoulders
in despair. His face was heavily scored by sorrow.
“Helas!” he sighed.
“Are they not masters of all that they may take?
The Marquis goes no further than is by ancient law
allowed his class. It is the law needs altering,
my friend, and then the men will alter. Meanwhile,
behold them lords of life and death.”
“Lords of hell are they!”
blazed the young revolutionist. “That is
where they belong, whence they are come, and whither
they shall return. Poltroons!” he cried,
shaking his fist at the group of cowed peasants that
surrounded the prostrate Charlot “Sheep!
Worthless clods! The nobles do well to despise
you, for, by my faith, you invite nothing but contempt,
you that will suffer rape and murder to be done under
your eyes, and never do more than look scared encouragement
upon your ravishers!”
“Blame not these poor wretches,
Caron,” sighed the old man. “They
dare not raise a hand.”
“Then, pardieu! here, at
least, is one who does dare,” he cried furiously,
as from the breast pocket of his coat he drew a pistol.
Blaise, with the girl across the withers
of his horse, was approaching them, followed by Jean.
“What would you do?” cried
the old man fearfully, setting a restraining hand
upon La Boulaye’s sleeve. But Caron shook
himself free.
“This,” was all he answered,
and simultaneously, he levelled his pistol and fired
at Blaise.
Shot through the head, the servant
collapsed forward; then, as the horse reared and started
off at a gallop, he toppled sideways and fell.
The girl went down with him and lay in the road whilst
he was dragged along, his head bumping horribly on
the stones as faster and faster went the frightened
horse.
With a shout that may have been either
anger or dismay Jean reined in his horse, and sat
for a second hesitating whether to begin by recovering
the girl, or avenging his comrade. But his doubts
were solved for him by La Boulaye, who took a deliberate
aim at him.
“Begone!” cried the secretary,
“unless you prefer to go by the road I’ve
sent your fellow.” And being a discreet
youth, Jean made off in silence by the street down
which poor Blaise had been dragged.
“Carom” cried Duhamel,
in a frenzy of apprehension. “I tremble
for you, my son. Fly from Bellecour at once now,
this very instant. Go to my friends at Amiens;
they will ”
But Caron had already left his side
to repair to the spot where Marie was lying.
The peasantry followed him, though leisurely, in their
timid hesitation. They were asking themselves
whether, even so remotely as by tending the girl,
they dared participate in the violence La Boulaye had
committed. That a swift vengeance would be the
Seigneur’s answer they were well assured, and
a great fear possessed them that in that vengeance
those of the Chateau might lack discrimination.
Charlot was amongst them, and on his feet, but still
too dazed to have a clear knowledge of the circumstances.
Presently, however, his faculties awakening and taking
in the situation, he staggered forward, and came lurching
towards La Boulaye, who was assisting the frightened
Marie to rise. With a great sob the girl flung
herself into her husband’s arms.
“Charlot, mon Charlot!”
she cried, and added a moment later: “It
was he this brave gentleman who
rescued me.”
“Monsieur,” said Charlot,
“I shall remember it to my dying day.”
He would have said more, but the peasants,
stirred by fear, now roused themselves and plucked
at his coat.
“Get you gone, Charlot, Get
you gone quickly,” they advised him. “And
if you are wise you will leave Bellecour without delay.
It is not safe for you here.”
“It is not safe for any of us,”
exclaimed one. “I have no mind to be caught
when the Seigneur returns. There will be a vengeance.
Ah Dieu! what a vengeance!”
The warning acted magically.
There were hurried leave-takings, and then, like a
parcel of scuttling rabbits, they made for their burrows
to hide from the huntsman that would not be long in
coming. And ere the last of them was out of sight
there arose a stamping of hoofs and a chorus of angry
voices. Down tine street thundered the Marquis’s
cavalcade, brought back by the servant who had escaped
and who had ridden after them. Some anger there
was particularly in the heart of the Lord
of Bellecour but greater than their anger
was their excitement at the prospect of a man-hunt,
with which the chase on which they had been originally
bent made but a poor comparison.
“There he is, Monseigneur”
cried Jean, as he pointed to La Boulaye. “And
yonder are the girl and her husband.”
“Ah! The secretary again,
eh?” laughed the nobleman, grimly, as he came
nearer. “Ma foi, life must have grown wearisome
to him. Secure the woman, Jean.”
Caron stood before him, pale in his
impotent rage, which was directed as much against
the peasants who had fled as against the nobles who
approached. Had these clods but stood there, and
defended themselves and their manhood with sticks
and stones and such weapons as came to their hands,
they might have taken pride in being trampled beneath
the hoofs of the Seigneurie. Thus, at least,
might they have proved themselves men. But to
fly thus some fifty of them from the approach
of less than a score was to confess unworthiness
of a better fate than that of which their seigneurs
rendered themselves the instruments.
Himself he could do no more than the
single shot in his pistol would allow. That much,
however, he would do, and like him whose resources
are reduced, and yet who desires to spend the little
that he has to best advantage, he levelled the weapon
boldly at the advancing Marquis, and pulled the trigger.
But Bellecour was an old campaigner, and by an old
campaigner’s trick he saved himself at the last
moment. At sight of that levelled barrel he pulled
his horse suddenly on to its haunches, and received
the charge in the animal’s belly. With a
shriek of pain the horse sought to recover its feet,
then tumbled forward hurling the Marquis from the
saddle. La Boulaye had an inspiration to fling
himself upon the old roue and seek with his hands
to kill him before they made an end of himself.
But ere he could move to execute his design a horseman
was almost on top of him. He received a stunning
blow on the head. The daylight faded in his eyes,
he felt a sensation of sinking, and a reverberating
darkness engulfed him.