It was well for La Boulaye that he
had tethered his horse to a tree before approaching
the coach. That solitary beast standing by the
roadside in the deepening gloom attracted the attention
of his followers, when a half-hour or so
later they rode that way, making for Liege,
as La Boulaye had bidden them.
At their approach the animal neighed,
and Garin, hearing the sound, reined in and peered
forward into the gloom, to descry the horse’s
head and back outlined above the blur of the hedge.
His men halted behind him whilst he approached the
riderless beast and made as well as he could
in the darkness an examination of the saddle.
One holster he found empty, at which he concluded
that the rider, whoever he had been, had met with
trouble; from the other he drew a heavy pistol, which,
however, gave him no clue.
“Get down,” he ordered
his men, “and search the roads hereabouts.
I’ll wager a horse to a horseshoe that you will
find a body somewhere.”
He was obeyed, and presently a cry
from one of the searchers announced a discovery.
It was succeeded by another exclamation.
“Sacre nom!”
swore the trooper. “It is the Citizen-deputy!”
In an instant Garin had leapt to the
ground and with the others crowding about him, their
bridles over their arms and their horses in a bunch
behind them, he was bending under the dripping hedge
to examine the body that lay supine in the sodden
road. A vigorous oath escaped him when he assured
himself that it was indeed La Boulaye.
“Is he dead?” cried the men in chorus.
“No not dead”
grumbled the corporal. “But there is a lump
on his brow the size of an egg, and God knows how
long he has been lying here in this bed of mud.”
They had no restoratives, and the
only thing was to convey him to the nearest habitation
and demand shelter. They held a short council
on the matter, and in the end Garin bade four of them
take him up and carry him in a cloak. Some two
miles back they had passed a house, and thither the
corporal now bade them retrace their steps. They
made an odd procession; first went two mounted troopers
leading the horses of the others, then the four on
foot, carrying the Deputy in a cloak, and lastly, Garin
riding in the rear.
In this manner they went back along
the dark road, and for close upon a half-hour for
their progress was slow they trudged along
in silence. At last there was a short exclamation
from one of the riders, as half a mile away an illuminated
window beamed invitingly. Encouraged by it, they
quickened their steps a little. But almost at
the same time La Boulaye stirred on the cloak, and
the men who carried him heard him speak. At first
it was an incoherent mutter, then his words came more
distinctly.
“Hold! Where are you carrying me?
Who the devil are you?”
It was Garin’s voice that came
instantly to reassure him. Caron essayed to sit
up, but finding it impracticable, he shortly bade his
men set him down. They halted. Garin dismounted
and came to the Deputy’s side, and it was found
that his condition was none so grave after all, for
he was able to stand unaided. When, however,
he attempted to walk, he reeled, and would of a certainty
have fallen, but that Garin put out his arm to support
him.
“Steady there, Citizen,” the corporal
admonished him.
“Get my horse!” he commanded briefly.
“But, name of a name! you are not fit to ride,”
Garin protested.
La Boulaye, however, would listen
to no reason. With the recovery of his faculties
came the consideration of how miserably Suzanne had
duped him, and of how she had dealt with him when
he had overtaken her. He burned now to be avenged,
and at all costs he would ride after and recapture
her. He announced, therefore, to the corporal
that they must push on to Liege. Garin gasped
at his obstinacy, and would have sought to have dissuaded
him, but that La Boulaye turned on him with a fierceness
that silenced his expostulations.
It was left to Nature to enforce what
Garin could not achieve. When La Boulaye came
to attempt to mount he found it impossible. He
was stiff and numb from his long exposure in the rain,
and when he moved with any vigour his head swam dizzily
and throbbed with pain.
At last he was forced to realise with
inward girding that he must relinquish
his determination, and he acknowledged himself ready
to take the corporal’s advice and make for the
house whose lighted window shone like a beacon in
the darkness that had descended. He even allowed
them to prevail upon him to lie down in the cloak again,
and thus they carried him the remainder of the way.
In his heart he still bore the hope that short rest,
restoratives, and fresh clothes would fit him for
the pursuit once more, and that if he set out within
the next few hours he might yet come up with Mademoiselle
before she had passed beyond his reach. Should
the morning still find him unequal to the task of going
after her, he would despatch Garin and his men.
At last they reached the cottage it
was little more and Garin rapped on the
door with his whip. It was opened by a woman,
who told them, in answer to the corporal’s request
for shelter, that her husband was from home, and that
she had no accommodation for them. It would seem
that the woman had housed soldiers of the Republic
before, and that her experiences had not been of a
nature calculated to encourage her in the practice.
But La Boulaye now staggered forward and promised her
generous payment if she would receive them.
“Payment?” she cried.
“In worthless assignats that nobody will
take from me. I know the ways of you.”
“Not in assignats,”
La Boulaye promised her, “but in coin.”
And having mollified her somewhat
with that assurance, he proceeded to urge her to admit
them. Yonder was a shed where the horses could
be stabled for the night. But still the woman
demurred.
“I lack the room,” she said, with some
firmness.
“But at least,” put in
Garin, “you could house the Citizen here.
He has been hurt, and he is scarcely able to stand.
Come, woman, if you will consent to that, we others
can lie with the horses in the shed.”
This in the end they gained by renewed
promises of good payment. She brewed a broth
for them, and for La Boulaye she found a suit of her
absent husband’s clothes, whilst his own wet
garments were spread to dry before the fire.
Some brandy, too, she found and brought him, and the
draught did much to restore him.
When they had supped, Garin and the
troopers withdrew to the outhouse, leaving La Boulaye
in sole possession of the cottage hearth. And
there, in a suit of the absent farmer’s grey
homespun, his legs encased in coarse woollen stockings
and sabots upon his feet, sat the young Deputy
alone with his unpleasant thoughts. The woman
had brought him a pipe, and, although the habit was
foreign to him as a rule, he had lighted it and found
the smoking somewhat soothing. Ruefully he passed
his hand across his bandaged brow, and in pondering
over all that had taken place since yesternight at
Boisvert, his cheeks grew flushed at once with anger
and with shame.
“To have been so duped!”
And now his mind growing
clearer as he recovered in vigour it occurred
to him that by to-morrow it would be too late to give
pursuit. Once she crossed the Sambre at Liege,
or elsewhere, who could tell him by what road she
would elect to continue her journey? He had not
sufficient men at his disposal to send out parties
along each of the possible roads. That her ultimate
destination was Treves he knew. But once there
she was beyond his reach, at safety from the talons
of the French Republic.
He sat on and thought, what time his
brows came closer together and his teeth fastened
viciously upon the stem of the pipe. By the table
sat the woman, knitting industriously, and ever and
anon glancing inquiry at her stern, thoughtful guest,
and the click of her needles was the only sound that
disturbed the stillness of the room. Outside the
wind was wailing like the damned, and the rain which
had recommenced with new vigour, rattled noisily upon
the panes.
Suddenly above the din of the elements
a shout sounded in the night. The Deputy raised
his head, and glanced towards the woman. A moment
later they heard the gate creak, and steps upon the
path that led to the cottage door.
“Your husband?” inquired La Boulaye.
“No, monsieur. He has gone
to Liege, and will not return until to-morrow.
I do not know who it can be.”
There was alarm on her face, which
La Boulaye now set himself to allay.
“At least you are well protected,
Citoyenne. My men are close at hand, and we can
summon them if there be the need.”
Reassured she rose, and at the same
moment a knock sounded on the door. She went
to open it, and from his seat by the hearth La Boulaye
heard a gentle, mincing voice that was oddly familiar
to him.
“Madame,” it said, “we
are two poor, lost wayfarers, and we crave shelter
for the night. We will pay you handsomely.”
“I am desolated that I have
no room, Messieur,” she answered, with courteous
firmness.
“Pardi!” interpolated
another voice. “We need no room. A
bundle of straw and a corner is all we seek.
Of your charity, Madame, is this a night on which
to leave a dog out of doors?”
A light of recollection leaped suddenly
to La Boulaye’s eyes, and with a sudden gasp
he stooped to the hearth.
“But I cannot, Messieurs,”
the woman was saying, when the second voice interrupted
her.
“I see your husband by the fire,
Madame. Let us hear what he has to say.”
The woman coloured to the roots of
her hair. She stepped back a pace, and was about
to answer them when, chancing to glance in La Boulaye’s
direction, she paused. He had risen, and was standing
with his back to the fire. There was a black
smudge across his face, which seemed to act as a mask,
and his dark eyes glowed with an intensity of meaning
which arrested her attention, and silenced the answer
which was rising to her lips.
In the brief pause the new-comers
had crossed the threshold, and stood within the rustic
chamber. The first of these was he whose gentle
voice La Boulaye had recognised old M.
des Cadoux, the friend of the Marquis de Bellecour.
His companion, to the Deputy’s vast surprise,
was none other than the bearded courier who had that
morning delivered him at Boisvert the letter from
Robespierre. What did these two together, and
upon such manifest terms of equality? That, it
should be his business to discover.
“Come in, Messieurs,”
he bade them, assuming the rôle of host. “We
are unused to strangers, and Mathilde there is timid
of robbers. Draw near the fire and dry yourselves.
We will do the best we can for you. We are poor
people, Messieurs; very poor.”
“I have already said that we
will pay you handsomely my friend,” quoth Des
Cadoux, coming forward with his companion. “Do
your best for us and you shall not regret it.
Have you aught to eat in the house?”
The woman was standing by the wall,
her face expressing bewilderment and suspicion.
Suspicious she was, yet that glance of La Boulaye’s
had ruled her strangely, and she was content to now
await developments.
“We will see what we can do,”
answered La Boulaye, as he made room for them by the
hearth. “Come, Mathilde, let us try what
the larder will yield.”
“I am afraid that Madame still
mistrusts us,” deplored Des Cadoux.
La Boulaye laughed for answer as he
gently but firmly drew her towards the door leading
to the interior of the house. He held it for her
to pass, what time his eyes were set in an intent
but puzzled glance upon the courier. There was
something about the man that was not wholly strange
to La Boulaye. That morning, when he had spoken
in the gruff accents of one of the rabble, no suspicion
had entered the Deputy’s mind that he was other
than he seemed, for all that he now recalled how Tardivet
had found the fellow’s patriotism a little too
patriotic. Now that he spoke in the voice that
was naturally usual to him, it seemed to La Boulaye
that it contained a note that he had heard before.
Still puzzled, he passed out of the
room to be questioned sharply by the woman of the
house touching his motives for passing himself off
as her husband and inviting the new-comers to enter.
“I promise you their stay will
be a very brief one,” he answered. “I
have suspicions to verify the ends to serve, as you
shall see. Will you do me the favour to go out
by the back and call my men? Tell the corporal
to make his way to the front of the house, and to hold
himself in readiness to enter the moment I call him.”
“What are you about to do?”
she asked and the face, as he saw it by the light
of the candle she held, wore an expression of sullen
disapproval.
He reassured her that there would
be no bloodshed, and suggested that the men were dangerous
characters whom it might be ill for her to entertain.
And so at last he won his way, and she went to do his
errand, whilst he reentered the kitchen.
He found Des Cadoux by the fire, intent
upon drying as much of himself as possible. The
younger man had seized upon the bottle of brandy that
had been left on the table, and was in the act of filling
himself a second glass. Nothing could be further
from the mind of either than a suspicion of the identity
of this rustically-clad and grimy-faced fellow.
“Mathilde will be here in a
moment,” said Caron deferentially. “She
is seeking something for you.”
Had he told them precisely what she
was seeking they had been, possibly, less at ease.
“Let her hasten,” cried the courier, “for
I am famished.”
“Have patience, Anatole,”
murmured the ever-gentle Cadoux. “The good
woman did not expect us.”
Anatole! The name buzzed through
Caron’s brain. To whom did it belong?
He knew of someone who bore it. Yet question himself
though he might, he could at the moment find no answer.
And then the courier created a diversion by addressing
him.
“Fill yourself a glass,
mon bonhomme,” said he. “I
have a toast for you.”
“For me, Monsieur,” cried
La Boulaye, with surprised humility. “It
were too great an honour.”
“Do as you are bidden, man,”
returned this very peremptory courier. “There;
now let us see how your favour runs. Cry ‘Long
Live the King!’”
Holding the brandy-glass, which the
man had forced upon him, La Boulaye eyed him whimsically
for a second.
“There is no toast I would more
gladly drink,” said he at last, “if I
considered it availing. But alas you
propose it over-late.”
“Diable! What may you mean?”
“Why, that since the King is
dead, it shall profit us little to cry, ‘Long
Live the King!’”
“The King, Monsieur, never dies,”
said Cadoux sententiously.
“Since you put it so, Monsieur,”
answered La Boulaye, as if convinced, “I’ll
honour the toast.” And with the cry they
asked of him he drained his glass.
“And so, my honest fellow,”
said Des Cadoux, producing his eternal snuff-box,
“it seems that you are a Royalist. We did
but test you with that toast, my friend.”
“What should a poor fellow know
of politics, Messieurs?” he deprecated.
“These are odd times. I doubt me the world
has never seen their like. No man may safely
know his neighbour. Now you, sir,” he pursued,
turning to the younger man, “you have the air
of a sans-culotte, yet from your speech you seem an
honest enough gentleman.”
The fellow laughed with unction.
“The air of a sans-culotte?”
he cried. “My faith, yes. So much so,
that this morning I imposed myself as a courier from
Paris upon no less an astute sleuth-hound of the Convention
than the Citizen-deputy La Boulaye.”
“Is it possible?” cried
Caron, his eyes opening wide in wonder. “But
how, Monsieurs? For surely a courier must bear
letters, and ”
“So did I, so did I, my friend,”
the other interrupted, with vain glory. “I
knocked a patriotic courier over the head to obtain
them. He was genuine, that other courier, and
I passed myself out of France with his papers.”
“Monsieur is amusing himself
at the expense of my credulity,” La Boulaye
complained.
“My good man, I am telling you
facts,” the other insisted.
“But how could such a thing
be accomplished?” asked Caron, seating himself
at the table, and resting his chin upon his hand, his
gaze so full of admiration as to seem awestruck.
“How? I will tell you. I am from Artois.”
“You’ll be repeating that
charming story once too often,” Des Cadoux cautioned
him.
“Pish, you timorous one!”
he laughed, and resumed his tale. “I am
from Artois, then. I have some property there,
and it lately came to my ears that this assembly of
curs they call the Convention had determined to make
an end of me. But before they could carry out
their design, those sons of dogs, my tenants, incited
by the choice examples set them by other tenantry,
made a descent on my Chateau one night, and did themselves
the pleasure of burning it to the ground. By a
miracle I escaped with my life and lay hidden for
three weeks in the house of an old peasant who had
remained faithful. In that time I let my beard
grow, and trained my hair into a patriotic unkemptness.
Then, in filthy garments, like any true Republican,
I set out to cross the frontier. As I approached
it, I was filled with fears that I might not win across,
and then, in the moment of my doubtings, I came upon
that most opportune of couriers. I had the notion
to change places with him, and I did. He was
the bearer of a letter to the Deputy La Boulaye, of
whom you may have heard, and this letter I opened
to discover that it charged him to effect my arrest.”
If La Boulaye was startled, his face
never betrayed it, not by so much as the quiver of
an eyelid. He sat on, his jaw in his palm, his
eyes admiringly bent upon the speaker.
“You may judge of my honesty,
and of how fully sensible I was of the trust I had
undertaken, when I tell you that with my own hand
I delivered the letter this morning to that animal
La Boulaye at Boisvert.” He seemed to swell
with pride in his achievement. “Diable!”
he continued. “Mine was a fine piece of
acting. I would you could have seen me play the
part of the patriot. Think of the irony of it!
I won out of France with the very papers ordering
my arrest. Ma foi! You should have seen
me befool that dirt of a deputy! It was a performance
worthy of Talma himself.” And he looked
from Cadoux to La Boulaye for applause.
“I doubt not,” said the
Deputy coldly. “It must have been worth
witnessing. But does it not seem a pity to spoil
everything and to neutralise so wonderful an achievement
for the mere sake of boasting of it to a poor, ignorant
peasant, Monsieur lé Vicomte Anatole d’Ombreval?”
With a sudden cry, the pseudo courier
leapt to his feet, whilst Des Cadoux turned on the
stool he occupied to stare alarmedly at the speaker.
“Name of God! Who are you?”
demanded Ombreval advancing a step.
With his sleeve La Boulaye rubbed
part of the disfiguring smear from his face as he
stood up and made answer coolly:
“I am that dirt of a Deputy
whom you befooled at Boisvert.” Then, raising
his voice, “Garin!” he shouted, and immediately
the door opened and the soldiers filed in.
Ombreval stood like a statue, thunderstruck
with amazement at this most unlooked-for turning of
the tables, his face ashen, his weak mouth fallen
open and his eyes fearful.
Des Cadoux, who had also risen, seemed
to take in the situation at a glance. Like a
well-bred gamester who knows how to lose with a good
grace the old gentleman laughed drily to himself as
he tapped his snuff-box.
“We are delightfully taken,
cher Vicomte,” he murmured, applying the tobacco
to his nostril as he spoke. “It’s
odds you won’t be able to repeat that pretty
story to any more of your friends. I warned you
that you inclined to relate it too often.”
With a sudden oath, Ombreval moved
to valour by the blind rage that possessed him sprang
at La Boulaye. But, as suddenly, Garin caught
his arms from behind and held him fast.
“Remove them both,” La
Boulaye commanded. “Place them in safety
for the night, and see that they do not escape you,
Garin, as you value your neck.”
Des Coudax shut his snuff-box with a snap.
“For my part, I am ready, Monsieur your
pardon Citizen,” he said, “and
I shall give you no trouble. But since I am not,
I take it, included in the orders you have received,
I have a proposal to make which may prove mutually
convenient.”
“Pray make it, Citizen,” said La Boulaye.
“It occurs to me that it may
occasion you some measure of annoyance to carry me
all the way to Paris and certainly, for
my part, I should much prefer not to undertake the
journey. For one thing, it will be fatiguing,
for another, I have no desire to look upon the next
world through the little window of the guillotine.
I wish, then, to propose, Citizen,” pursued
the old nobleman, nonchalantly dusting some fragments
of tobacco from his cravat, “that you deal with
me out of hand.”
“How, Citizen?” inquired La Boulaye.
“Why, your men, I take it are
tolerable marksmen. I think that it might prove
more convenient to both of us if you were to have me
shot as soon as there is light enough.”
La Boulaye’s eyes rested in
almost imperceptible kindness upon Des Cadoux.
Here, at least, was an aristocrat with a spirit to
be admired and emulated.
“You are choosing the lesser
of two evils, Citizen,” said the Deputy.
“Precisely,” answered Des Cadoux.
“But possibly, Citizen, it may
be yours to avoid both. You shall hear from me
in the morning. I beg that you will sleep tranquilly
in the meantime. Garin, remove the prisoners.”