La Boulaye awakened betimes next morning.
It may be that the matter on his mind and the business
that was toward aroused him; certainly it was none
of the sounds that are common to an inn at early morn,
for the place was as silent as a tomb.
Some seconds he remained on his back,
staring at the whitewashed ceiling and listening to
the patter of the rain against his window. Then,
as his mind gathered up the threads of recollection,
he leapt from his bed and made haste to assume a garment
or two.
He stood a moment at his casement,
looking out into the empty courtyard. From a
leaden sky the rain was descending in sheets, and the
gargoyle at the end of the eaves overhead was discharging
a steady column of water into the yard. Caron
shivered with the cold of that gloomy February morning,
and turned away from the window. A few moments
later he was in Tardivet’s bedchamber, vigorously
shaking the sleeping Captain.
“Up, Charlot! Awake!” he roared in
the man’s ear.
“What o’clock?”
he asked with a yawn. Then a sudden groan escaped
him, and he put his hand to his head. “Thousand
devils!” he swore, “what a headache!”
But La Boulaye was not there on any
mission of sympathy, nor did he waste words in conveying
his news.
“The coach is gone,” he announced emphatically.
“Coach? What coach?” asked the Captain,
knitting his brows.
“What coach?” echoed La
Boulaye testily. “How many coaches were
there? Why, the Bellecour coach; the coach with
the treasure.”
At that Charlot grew very wide-awake.
He forgot his headache and his interest in the time
of day.
“Gone?” he bellowed.
“How gone? Pardieu, it is not possible!”
“Look for yourself,” was
La Boulaye’s answer as he waved his hand in the
direction of the window. “I don’t
know what manner of watch your men can have kept that
such a thing should have come about. Probably,
knowing you ill a-bed, they abused the occasion by
getting drunk, and probably they are still sleeping
it off. The place is silent enough.”
But Tardivet scarcely heard him.
From his window he was staring into the yard below,
too thunderstruck by its emptiness to even have recourse
to profanity. Stable door and porte-cochère
alike stood open. He turned suddenly and made
for his coat. Seizing it, he thrust his hand in
one pocket after another. At last:
“Treachery!” he cried,
and letting the garment fall to the ground, he turned
upon La Boulaye a face so transfigured by anger that
it looked little like the usually good-humoured countenance
of Captain Tardivet “My keys have been stolen.
By St. Guillotine, I’ll have the thief hanged.”
“Did anybody know that the keys
were in your pocket?” asked the ingenuous Caron.
“I told you last night.”
“Yes, yes; I remember that. But did anybody
else know?”
“The ostler knew. He saw me lock the doors.”
“Why, then, let us find the
ostler,” urged Caron. “Put on some
clothes and we will go below.”
Mechanically Charlot obeyed him, and
as he did so he gave his feelings vent at last.
From between set teeth came now a flow of oaths and
imprecations as steady as the flow of water from the
gargoyle overhead.
At last they hastened down the stairs
together, and in the common-room they found the sleeping
company much as La Boulaye had left it the night before.
In an access of rage at what he saw, and at the ample
evidences of the debauch that had reduced them to
this condition, Charlot began by kicking the chair
from under Mother Capoulade. The noise of her
fall and the scream with which she awoke served to
arouse one or two others, who lifted their heads to
gaze stupidly about them.
But Charlot was busy stirring the
other slumberers. He had found a whip, and with
this he was now laying vigorously about him.
“Up, you swine!” he blazed
at them. “Afoot, you drunken scum!”
His whip cracked, and his imprecations
rang high and lurid. And La Boulaye assisted
him in his labours with kicks and cuffs and a tongue
no less vituperative.
At last they were on their feet a
pale, bewildered, shamefaced company receiving
from the infuriated Charlot the news that whilst they
had indulged themselves in their drunken slumbers their
prisoners had escaped and carried off the treasure
with them. The news was received with a groan
of dismay, and several turned to the door to ascertain
for themselves whether it was indeed exact. The
dreary emptiness of the rain-washed yard afforded
them more than ample confirmation.
“Where is your pig of an ostler,
Mother Capoulade?” demanded the angry Captain.
Quivering with terror, she answered
him that the rascal should be in the shed by the stables,
where it was his wont to sleep. Out into the rain,
despite the scantiness of his attire, went Charlot,
followed closely by La Boulaye and one or two stragglers.
The shed proved empty, as Caron could have told him and
so, too, did the stables. Here, at the spot where
Madame de Bellecour’s coachman had been left
bound, the Captain turned to La Boulaye and those
others that had followed him.
“It is the ostler’s work,”
he announced. “There was knavery and treachery
writ large upon his ugly face. I always felt it,
and this business proves how correct were my instincts.
The rogue was bribed when he discovered how things
were with you, you greasy sots. But you, La Boulaye,”
he cried suddenly, “were you drunk, too?”
“Not I,” answered the Deputy.
“Then, name of a name, how came
that lumbering coach to leave the yard without awakening
you?”
“You ask me to explain too much,”
was La Boulaye’s cool evasion. “I
have always accounted myself a light sleeper, and
I could not have believed that such a thing could
really have taken place without disturbing me.
But the fact remains that the coach has gone, and I
think that instead of standing here in idle speculation
as to how it went, you might find more profitable
employment in considering how it is to brought back
again. It cannot have gone very far.”
If any ray of suspicion had begun
to glimmer in Charlot’s brain, that suggestion
of La Boulaye’s was enough to utterly extinguish
it.
They returned indoors, and without
more ado Tardivet set himself to plan the pursuit.
He knew, he announced, that Prussia was their destination.
He had discovered it at the time of their capture from
certain papers that he had found in a portmanteau
of the Marquise’s. He discussed the matter
with La Boulaye, and it was now that Caron had occasion
to congratulate himself upon his wisdom in having
elected to remain behind.
The Captain proposed to recall the
fifty men that were watching the roads from France,
and to spread them along the River Sambre, as far as
Liege, to seek information of the way taken by the
fugitives. As soon as any one of the parties
struck the trail it was to send word to the others,
and start immediately in pursuit.
Now, had Charlot been permitted to
spread such a net as this, the Marquise must inevitably
fall into it, and Caron had pledged his word that
she should have an open road to Prussia. With
a map spread upon the table he now expounded to the
Captain how little necessity there was for so elaborate
a scheme. The nearest way to Prussia was by Charleroi,
Dinant, and Rochefort, into Luxembourg, and he
contended it was not only unlikely, but
incredible, that the Marquise should choose any but
the shortest road to carry her out of Belgium, seeing
the dangers that must beset her until the frontiers
of Luxembourg were passed.
“And so,” argued La Boulaye,
“why waste time in recalling your men?
Think of the captives you might miss by such an act!
It were infinitely better advised to assume that the
fugitives have taken the Charleroi-Dinant road, and
to despatch, at once, say, half-a-dozen men in pursuit.”
Tardivet pondered the matter for some moments.
“Yom are right,” he agreed
at last. “If they have resolved to continue
their journey, a half-dozen men should suffice to recapture
them. I will despatch these at once...”
La Boulaye looked up at that.
“If they have resolved to continue
their journey?” he echoed. “What else
should they have resolved?”
Tardivet stroked his reddish hair and smiled astutely.
“In organising a pursuit,”
said he, “the wise pursuer will always put himself
in the place of the fugitives, and seek to reason as
they would probably reason. Now, what more likely
than that these ladies, or their coachman, or that
rascally ostler, should have thought of doubling back
into France? They might naturally argue that we;
should never think of pursuing them in that direction.
Similarly placed, that is how I should reason, and
that is the course I should adopt, making for Prussia
through Lorraine. Perhaps I do their intelligences
too much honour yet, to me, it seems such
an obvious course."’
La Boulaye grew cold with apprehension.
Yet impassively he asked:
“But what of your men who are guarding the frontiers?”
“Pooh! A detour might circumvent
them. The Marquise might go as far north as Roubaix
or Comines, or as fair south as Rocroy, or even Charlemont.
Name of a name, but it is more than likely!”
he exclaimed, with sudden conviction. “What
do you say, Caron?”
“That you rave,” answered La Boulaye coldly.
“Well, we shall see. I
will despatch a message to my men, bidding them spread
themselves as far north as Comiines and as far south
as Charlemont. Should the fugitives have made
such a detour as I suggested there will be ample time
to take them.”
La Boulaye still contemned the notion
with a fine show of indifference, but Tardivet held
to his purpose, and presently despatched the messengers
as he had proposed. At that Caron felt his pulses
quickening with anxiety for Mademoiselle. These
astute measures must inevitably result im her capture for
was it not at Roubaix that he had bidden her await
him? There was but one thing to be done, to ride
out himself to meet her along the road from Soignies
to Oudenarde, and to escort her into France.
She should go ostensibly as his prisoner, and he was
confident that not all the brigands of Captain Tardivet
would suffice to take her from him.
Accordingly, he announced his intention
of resuming his interrupted journey, and ordered his
men to saddle and make ready. Meanwhile, having
taken measures to recapture the Marquise should she
have doubled back into France, Charlot was now organising
an expedition to scour the road to Prussia, against
the possibility of her having adhered to her original
intention of journeying that way. Thus he was
determined to take no risks, and leave her no loophole
of escape.
Tardivet would have set himself at
the head of the six horsemen of this expedition, but
that La Boulaye interfered, and this time to some
purpose. He assured the Captain that he was still
far from recovered, and that to spend a day in the
saddle might have the gravest of consequences for
him.
“If the occasion demanded it,”
he concluded, “I should myself urge you to chance
the matter of your health. But the occasion does
not. The business is of the simplest, and your
men can do as much without you as they could with
you.”
Tardivet permitted himself to be persuaded,
and Caron had again good cause to congratulate himself
that he had remained behind to influence him.
He opined that the men, failing to pick up the trail
at Charleroi, would probably go on as far as Dinant
before abandoning the chase; then they would return
to Boisvert to announce their failure, and by that
time it would be too late to reorganise the pursuit.
On the other hand, had Tardivet accompanied them,
upon failing to find any trace of the Marquise at
Charleroi, La Boulaye could imagine him pushing north
along the Sambre, and pressing the peasantry into
his service to form an impassable cordon.
And so, having won his way in this
at least, and seen the six men set out under the command
of Tardivet’s trusted Guyot, Caron took his leave
of the Captain. He was on the very point of setting
out when a courier dashed up to the door of the “Eagle,”
and called for a cup of wine. As it was brought
him he asked the hostess whether the Citizen-deputy
La Boulaye, Commissioner to the army of Dumouriez,
had passed that way. Upon being informed that
the Deputy was even then within the inn, the courier
got down from his horse and demanded to be taken to
him.
The hostess led him into the common-room,
and pointed out the Deputy. The courier heaved
a sigh of relief, and removing his sodden cloak he
bade the landlady get it dried and prepare him as stout
a meal as her hostelry afforded.
“Name of a name!” he swore,
as he pitched his dripping hat into a corner.
“But it is good to find you at last, Citizen-deputy?
I had expected to meet you at Valenciennes. But
as you were not there, and as my letters were urgent,
I have been compelled to ride for the past six hours
through that infernal deluge. Enfin, here you
are, and here is my letter from the Citizen-deputy
Maximilien Robespierre and here I’ll
rest me for the next six hours.”
Bidding the fellow by all means rest
and refresh himself, La Boulaye broke the seal, and
read the following:
Dear Caron,
My courier should deliver you this letter
as you are on the Point of reentering France, on
your return from the mission which you have discharged
with so much glory to yourself and credit to me who
recommended you for the task. I make you my compliments
on the tact and adroitness you have employed to
bring this stubborn Dumouriez into some semblance
of sympathy with the Convention. And now, my
friend, I have another task for you, which you can
discharge on your homeward journey. You will
make a slight detour, passing into Artois and riding
to the Chateau d’Ombreval, which is situated
some four miles south of Arras. Here I wish you
not only to Possess yourself of the person of the
ci-devant Vicomte d’Ombreval,
bringing him to Paris as your Prisoner, but further,
to make a very searching investigation of that aristocrat’s
papers, securing any documents that you may consider
of a nature treasonable to the French Republic,
One and Indivisible.
The letter ended with the usual greetings
and Robespierre’s signature.
La Boulaye swore softly to himself
as he folded the epistle.
“It seems,” he muttered
to Charlot, “that I am to turn catch-poll in
the service of the Republic.”
“To a true servant of the Nation,”
put in the courier, who had overheard him, “all
tasks that may tend to the advancement of the Republic
should be eagerly undertaken. Diable!
Have not I ridden in the rain these six hours past?”
La Boulaye paid no heed to him; he
was too inured to this sort of insolence since the
new rule had levelled all men. But Charlot turned
slowly to regard the fellow.
He was a tall man of rather slender
stature, but indifferently dressed in garments that
were splashed from head to foot with mud, and from
which a steam was beginning to rise as he stood now
with his back to the fire. Charlot eyed him so
narrowly that the fellow shifted his position and
dropped his glance in some discomfort. His speech,
though rough of purport, had not been ungentle of
delivery. But his face was dirty the
sure sign of an ardent patriot his hair
hung untidy about his face, and he wore that latest
abomination of the ultra-revolutionist, a dense black
beard and moustache.
“My friend,” said Charlot,
“although we are ready to acknowledge you our
equal, we should like you to understand that we do
not take lessons in duty even from our equals.
Bear you that in mind if you seek to have a peaceful
time while you are here, for it so happens that I am
quartered at this inn, and have a more important way
with me than this good-natured Deputy here.”
The fellow darted Charlot a malevolent glance.
“You talk of equality and you
outrage equality in a breath,” he growled.
“I half suspect you of being a turncoat aristocrat.”
And he spat ostentatiously on the ground.
“Suspect what you will, but
voice no suspicions here, else you’ll become
acquainted with the mighty short methods of Charlot
Tardivet. And as for aristocrats, my friend,
there are none so rabid as the newly-converted.
I wonder how long it is since you became a patriot?”
Before the fellow could make any answer
the corporal in command of La Boulaye’s escort
entered to inform Caron that the men were in the saddle.
At that the Deputy hurriedly took
his leave of Tardivet, and wrapping his heavy cloak
tightly about him he marched out into the rain, and
mounted.
A few moments later they clattered
briskly out of Boisvert, the thick grey mud flying
from their horses’ hoofs as they went, and took
the road to France. For a couple of miles they
rode steadily along under the unceasing rain and in
the teeth of that bleak February wind. Then at
a cross-road La Boulaye unexpectedly called a halt.
“My friends,” he said
to his escort, “we have yet a little business
to discharge in Belgium before we cross the frontier.”
With that he announced his intention
of going North, and so briskly did he cause them to
ride, that by noon a short three hours after
quitting Boisvert they had covered a distance
of twenty-five miles, and brought up their steaming
horses before the Hotel de Flandres at Leuze.
At this, the only post-house in the
place, La Boulaye made inquiries as to whether any
carriage had arrived from Soignies that morning, to
receive a negative answer. This nowise surprised
him, for he hardly thought that Mademoiselle could
have had time to come so far. She must, however,
be drawing nearer, and he determined to ride on to
meet her. From Leuze to Soignies is a distance
of some eight or nine leagues by a road which may
roughly be said to be the basis of a triangle having
its apex at Boisvert.
After his men had hurriedly refreshed
themselves, La Boulaye ordered them to horse again,
and they now cantered out, along this road, to Soignes.
But as mile after mile was covered without their coming
upon any sign of such a carriage as Mademoiselle should
be travelling in, La Boulaye almost unconsciously
quickened the pace until in the end they found themselves
careering along as fast as their jaded horses would
bear them, and speculating mightily upon the Deputy’s
odd behaviour.
Soignies itself was reached towards
four o’clock, and still they had not met her
whom La Boulaye expected. Here, in a state of
some wonder and even of some anxiety, Caron made straight
for the Auberge des Postes. Bidding
his men dismount and see to themselves and their beasts,
he went in quest of the host, and having found him,
bombarded him with questions.
In reply he elicited the information
that at noon that day a carriage such as he described
had reached Soignies in a very sorry condition.
One of the wheels had come off on the road, and although
the Marquise’s men had contrived to replace
it and to rudely secure it by an improvised pin, they
had been compelled to proceed at a walk for some fifteen
miles of the journey, which accounted for the lateness
of their arrival at Soignies. They had remained
at the Auberge des Postes until the
wheel had been properly mended, and it was not more
than an hour since they had resumed their journey
along the road to Liege.
“But did both the citoyennes
depart?” cried La Boulaye, in amazement, and
upon receiving an affirmative reply it at once entered
his mind that the Marquise must have influenced her
daughter to that end perhaps even employed
force.
“Did there appear to be any
signs of disagreement between them?” was his
next question.
“No, Citizen, I observed nothing.
They seemed in perfect accord.”
“The younger one did not by
any chance inquire of you whether it would be possible
to hire a berline?” asked Caron desperately.
“No,” the landlord answered
him, with wondering eyes. “She appeared
as anxious as her mother for the repairing of the
coach in which they came, that they might again depart
in it.”
La Boulaye stood a moment in thought,
his brows drawn together, his breathing seeming suspended,
for into his soul a suspicion had of a sudden been
thrust a hideous suspicion. Abruptly
he drew himself up to the full of his active figure,
and threw back his head, his resolve taken.
“Can I have fresh horses at
once?” he inquired. “I need eight.”
The landlord thoughtfully scratched his head.
“You can have two at once, and the other six
in a half-hour.”
“Very well,” he answered.
“Saddle me one at once, and have the other seven
ready for my men as soon as possible.”
And whilst the host sent the ostler
to execute the order, Caron called for a cup of wine
and a crust of bread. Munching his crust he entered
the common-room where his men were at table with a
steaming ragout before them.
“Garin,” he said to the
corporal, “in a half-hour the landlord will
be able to provide you with fresh horses. You
will set out at once to follow me along the road to
Liege. I am starting immediately.”
Garin, with the easy familiarity of
the Republican soldier, bade him take some thought
of his exhausted condition, and snatch at least the
half-hour’s rest that was to be theirs.
But La Boulaye was out of the room before he had finished.
A couple of minutes later they heard a clatter of
departing hoofs, and La Boulaye was gone along the
road too Liege in pursuit of the ladies of Bellecour.