La Boulaye sat once more in the Rue
Nationale and with his head in his hands, his
elbows supported by the writing-table, he stared before
him, his face drawn with the pain and anger of the
defeat he had sustained where no defeat had been expected.
He had been so assured that he had
but to ask for Ombreval’s life, and it would
be accorded him; he had promised Suzanne with such
confidence boasting almost that
he could do this, and to do it he had pledged his
word. And now? For very shame he could not
go to her and tell her that despite his fine promises
despite his bold bargaining, he was as powerless to
liberate Ombreval as was she herself.
And with reflection he came to see
that even did he bear her such a tale she would not
believe it. The infinite assurance of his power,
implicit in everything that he had said to her, must
now arise in her memory, and give the lie to his present
confession of powerlessness. She would not believe
him, and disbelieving him, she would seek a motive
for the words that she would deem untrue. And
that motive she would not find far to seek. She
would account his present attitude the consummation
of a miserable subterfuge by which he sought to win
her confidence and esteem. She would she
must believe that he had but made a semblance
of befriending her so disinterestedly only that he
might enlist her kindness and regard, and turn them
presently to his own purposes. She would infer
that he had posed as unselfish as self-sacrificing,
almost only that he might win her esteem,
and that by telling her now that Robespierre was inflexible
in his resolve to send Ombreval to the guillotine,
he sought to retain that esteem whilst doing nothing
for it. That he had ever intended to save Ombreval
she would not credit. She would think it all
a cunning scheme to win his own ends. And now
he bethought him of the grief that would beset her
upon learning that her journey had indeed been fruitless.
He smote the table a blow with his clenched hand,
and cursed the whole Republic, from Robespierre down
to the meanest sans-culotte that brayed the Ca
ira in the streets of Paris.
He had pledged his word, and for all
that he belonged to the class whose right to honour
was denied by the aristocrats, his word he had never
yet broken. That circumstance as personified
by Maximilien Robespierre should break
it for him now was matter enough to enrage him, for
than this never had there been an occasion on which
such a breach could have been less endurable.
He rose to his feet, and set himself
to pace the chamber, driven to action of body by the
agonised activity of his mind. From the street
rose the cry of the pastry-cook going his daily rounds,
as it had risen yesterday, he remembered, when Suzanne
had been with him. And now of a sudden he stood
still. His lips were compressed, his brows drawn
together in a forbidding scowl, and his eyes narrowed
until they seemed almost closed. Then with his
clenched right hand he smote the open palm of the
other. His resolve was taken. By fair means
or foul, with Robespierre’s sanction or without
it, he would keep his word. After not only the
hope but the assurance he had given Suzanne that her
betrothed should go free, he could do no less than
accomplish the Vicomte’s enlargement by whatever
means should present themselves.
And now to seek a way. He recalled
the free pardon to which Robespierre had gone the
length of appending his signature. He remembered
that it had not been destroyed; Robespierre had crumpled
it in his hand and tossed it aside. And by now
Robespierre would have departed, and it should not
be difficult for him the protege and intimate
of Robespierre to gain access to the Incorruptible’s
room.
If only he could find that document
and fill in the name of Ombreval the thing would be
as good as done. True, he would require the signatures
of three other Deputies; but one of these he could
supply himself, and another two were easily to be
requisitioned, seeing that already it bore Robespierre’s.
And then as suddenly as the idea of
the means had come to him, came now the spectre of
the consequences to affright him. How would it
fare with him on Robespierre’s return?
How angered would not Robespierre be upon discovering
that his wishes had been set at naught, his very measures
contravened and this by fraud? And
than Robespierre’s anger there were few things
more terrible in ’93. It was an anger that
shore away heads as recklessly as wayside flowers
are flicked from their stems by the idler’s
cane.
For a second it daunted him.
If he did this thing he must seek refuge in flight;
he must leave France, abandon the career which was
so full of promise for him, and wander abroad, a penniless
fortune-hunter. Well might the prospect give
him pause. Well might it cause him to survey
that pale, sardonic countenance that eyed him gloomily
from the mirror above his mantel shelf, and ask it
mockingly if it thought that Suzanne de Bellecour or
indeed, any woman living were worthy of
so great a sacrifice.
What had she done for him that he
should cast away everything for her sake? Once
she had told him that she loved him, only to betray
him. Was that a woman for whom a man should wanton
his fortunes? And then he smiled derisively,
mocking his reflections in the mirror even as he mocked
himself.
“Poor fool,” he muttered,
“it is not for the sake of what you are to her.
Were it for that alone, you would not stir a finger
to gratify her wishes. It is for the sake of
what she is to you, Caron.”
He turned from the mirror, his resolve
now firm, and going to the door he called his official.
Briefly he instructed Brutus touching the packing
of a valise, which he would probably need that night.
“You are going a journey, Citizen?”
inquired Brutus, to which La Boulaye returned a short
answer in the affirmative. “Do I accompany
you?” inquired the official, to which La Boulaye
shook his head.
At that Brutus, who, for all his insolence
of manner, was very devotedly attached to his employer,
broke into remonstrances, impertinent of diction but
affectionate of tenor. He protested that La Boulaye
had left him behind, and lonely, during his mission
to the army in Belgium, and he vowed that he would
not be left behind again.
“Well, well; we shall see, Brutus,”
answered the Deputy, laying his hand upon the fellow’s
shoulder. “But I am afraid that this time
I am going farther than you would care to come.”
The man’s ferrety eyes were
raised of a sudden to La Boulaye’s face in a
very searching glance. Caron’s tone had
been laden with insinuation.
“You are running way,” cried the official.
“Sh! My good Brutus,
what folly! Why should I run away and
from whom, pray?”
“I know not that. But you
are. I heard it in your voice. And you do
not trust me, Citizen La Boulaye,” the fellow
added, in a stricken voice. “I have served
you faithfully these two years, and yet you have not
learnt to trust me.”
“I do, I do, my friend.
You go too fast with your conclusions. Now see
to my valise, and on my return perhaps I’ll tell
you where I am going, and put your fidelity to the
test.”
“And you will take me with you?”
“Why, yes,” La Boulaye
promised him, “unless you should prefer to remain
in Paris.”
With that he got away and leaving
the house, he walked briskly up the street, round
the corner, and on until he stood once more before
Duplay’s.
“Has the Citizen Robespierre
departed yet?” he inquired of the woman who
answered his peremptory knock.
“He has been gone this hour,
Citizen La Boulaye,” she answered. “He
started almost immediately after you left him.”
“Diable!” grumbled
Caron, with well-feigned annoyance. “Quel
contretemps! I have left a most important document
in his room, and, of course, it will be locked.”
“But the Citoyenne Cecile has
the key,” answered the woman, eager to oblige
him.
“Why, yes naturally!
Now that is fortunate. Will you do me the favour
to procure the key from he Citoyenne for a few moments,
telling her, of course, that it is I who need it?”
“But certainly, Montez, Citoyen.”
And with a wave of the hand towards the stairs she
went before him.
He followed leisurely, and by the
time he had reached Robespierre’s door her voice
floated down to him from above, calling the Incorruptible’s
niece. Next he heard Cecile’s voice replying,
and then a whispered conference on the landing overhead,
to the accompaniment of the occasional tinkle of a
bunch of keys.
Presently the domestic returned, and
unlocking the door, she held it open for La Boulaye
to pass. From her attitude it seemed to Caron
as if she were intentioned probably she
had been instructed to remain there while
he obtained what he sought. Now he had no mind
that she should see him making his quest among the
wasted papers on the floor, and so:
“I shall not be more than a
few minutes,” he announced quietly. “I
will call you when I am ready to depart.”
Thus uncompromisingly dismissed, she
did not venture to remain, and, passing in, La Boulaye
closed the door. As great as had been his deliberation
hitherto was now the feverish haste with which he crossed
to the spot where he had seen the document flung.
He caught up a crumpled sheet and opened it out It
was not the thing he sought. He cast it aside
and took up another with no better luck. To crumple
discarded papers seemed the habit of the Incorruptible,
for there was a very litter of them on the ground.
One after another did Caron investigate without success.
He was on his knees now, and his exploration had carried
him as far as the table; another moment and he was
grovelling under it, still at his search, which with
each fresh disappointment grow more feverish.
Yonder by the leg of the
Incorruptible’s chair he espied
the ball of paper, and to reach it he stretched to
his full length, lying prone beneath a table in an
attitude scarce becoming a Deputy of the French Republic.
But it was worth the effort and the disregard of dignity,
for when presently on his knees he smoothed out that
document, he discovered it to be the one he sought
the order upon the gaolers of the Luxembourg to set
at liberty a person or persons whose names were to
be filled in, signed by Maximilien Robespierre.
He rose, absorbed in his successful
find, and he pursued upon the table the process of
smoothing the creases as much as possible from that
priceless document. That done he took up a pen
and attached his own signature alongside of Robespierre’s;
then into the blank space above he filled the name
of Anatole d’Ombreval ci-devant Vicomte
d’Ombreval. He dropped the pen and took
up the sand-box. He sprinkled the writing, creased
the paper, and dusted the sand back into the receptacle.
And then of a sudden his blood seemed to freeze, and
beads of cold sweat stood out upon his brow.
There had been the very slightest stir behind him,
and with it had come a warm breath upon his bowed neck.
Someone was looking over his shoulder. An instant
he remained in that bowed attitude with head half-raised.
Then suddenly straightening himself he swung round
and came face to face with Cecile Deshaix.
Confronting each other and very close
they now stood and each was breathing with more than
normal quickness. Her cheeks were white, her
nostrils dilated and quivering, her blue eyes baleful
and cruel, whilst her lips wore never so faint a smile.
For a second La Boulaye looked the very picture of
foolishness and alarm. Then it seemed as if he
drew a curtain, and his face assumed the expressionless
mask that was habitual to it in moments of great tension.
Instinctively he put behind him his hands which held
the paper. Cecile’s lips took on an added
curl of scorn as she observed the act.
“You thief!” she said,
very low, but very fiercely. “That was the
paper that you left behind you, was it?”
“The paper that I have is certainly
the paper that I left behind,” he answered serenely,
for he had himself well in hand by now. “And
as for dubbing me a thief so readily” he
paused, and shrugged his shoulders “you
are a woman,” he concluded, with an air suggesting
that that fact was a conclusion to all things.
“Fool!” she blazed.
“Do you think to overcome me by quibbles?
Do you think to dupe me with words and shrugs?”
“My dear Cecile” he begged
half-whimsically, “may I implore you to use
some restraint? Inured as I am to the unbounded
licence of your tongue and to the abandon that seems
so inherent in you, let me assure you that ”
“Ah! You can say Cecile
now?” she cried, leaving the remainder of his
speech unheeded. “Now that you need me;
now that you want me to be a party to your treacherous
designs against my uncle. Oh, you can say ‘Cecile’
and ‘dear Cecile’ instead of your everlasting
‘Citoyenne’.
“It seems I am doomed to be
always misunderstood by you,” he laughed, and
at the sound she started as if he had struck her.
Had she but looked in his eyes she
had seen no laughter there; she might have realised
that murder rather than mirth was in his soul for,
at all costs, he was determined to hold the paper
he had been at such pains to get.
“I understand you well enough,”
she cried hotly, her cheeks flaming red of a sudden.
“I understand you, you thief, you trickster.
Do you think that I heard nothing of what passed this
morning between my uncle and you? Do you think
I do not know whose name you have written on that
paper? Answer me,” she commanded him.
“Since you know so much, what
need for any questions?” quoth he coolly, transferring
the coveted paper to his pocket as he spoke. “And
since we are so far agreed that I am not contradicting
anything you say nor, indeed, intend to perhaps
you will see the convenience of ending an interview
that promises to be fruitless. My dear Cecile,
I am very grateful to you for the key of this room.
I beg that you will make my compliments to the Citizen
your uncle upon his return, and inform him of how
thoroughly you ministered to my wants.”
With that and a superb air of insouciance,
he made shift to go. But fronting him she barred
his way.
“Give me that paper, sclerat,”
she demanded imperiously. “You shall not
go until you surrender it. Give it to me or I
will call Duplay.”
“You may call the devil for
aught I care, you little fool,” he answered
her, very pleasantly. “Do you think Duplay
will be mad enough to lay hands upon a Deputy of the
Convention in the discharge of the affairs of the
Nation?”
“It is a lie!”
“Why, of course it is,”
he admitted sweetly. “But Duplay will not
be aware of that.”
“I shall tell him.”
“Tut! He won’t believe
you. I’ll threaten him with the guillotine
if he does. And I should think that Duplay has
sufficient dread of the national barber not to risk
having his toilet performed by him. Now, be reasonable,
and let me pass.”
Enraged beyond measure by his persiflage
and very manifest contempt of her, she sprang suddenly
upon him, and caught at the lapels of his redingote.
“Give me that paper!”
she screamed, exerting her entire strength in a vain
effort to boldly shake him.
Coldly he eyed this golden-haired
virago now, and looked in vain for some trace of her
wonted beauty in the stormy distortion of her face.
“You grow tiresome with your
repetitions,” he answered her impatiently, as,
snatching at her wrists, he made her release her hold.
“Let me go.” And with that he flung
her roughly from him.
A second she staggered, then, recovering
her balance and without an instant’s hesitation,
she sped to the door. Imagining her intent to
be to lock him in La Boulaye sprang after her.
But it seemed that his mind had been more swift to
fasten upon the wiser course than had hers. Instead,
she snatched the key and closed the door on the inside.
She wasted a moment fumbling at the lock, and even
as he caught her by the waist the key slipped in,
and before he dragged her back she had contrived to
turn it, and now held it in her hand. He laughed
a trifle angrily as she twisted out of his grasp,
and stood panting before him.
“You shall not leave this room
with that paper,” she gasped, her anger ever
swelling, and now rendering her speech almost incoherent.
He set his arms akimbo, and surveyed her whimsically.
“My dear Cecile,” quoth
he, “if you will take no thought for my convenience,
I beg that, at least, you will take some for your good
name. Thousand devils woman! Will you have
it said in Paris that you were found locked in a room
with me? What will your uncle your
virtuous, prudish, incorruptible uncle say
when he learns of it? If he does not demand a
heavy price from you for so dishonouring him, he is
not the man I deem him. Now be sensible, child,
and open that door while there is yet time, and before
anybody discovers us in this most compromising situation.”
He struck the tone most likely to
win him obedience, and that he had judged astutely
her face showed him. In the place of the anger
that had distorted it there came now into that countenance
a look of surprise and fear. She saw herself
baffled at every point. She had threatened him
with Duplay the only man available and
he had shown her how futile it must prove to summon
him. And now she had locked herself in with him,
thinking to sit there until he should do her will,
and he showed her the danger to herself therein, which
had escaped her notice.
There was a settle close behind her,
and on to this she sank, and bending her head she
opened the floodgates of her passionate little soul,
and let the rage that had so long possessed her dissolve
in tears. At sight of that sudden change of front
La Boulaye stamped his foot. He appreciated the
fact that she was about to fight him with weapons that
on a previous occasion when, however, it
is true, they were wielded by another had
accomplished his undoing.
And for all that he steeled his heart,
and evoked the memory of Suzanne to strengthen him
in his purpose: he approached her with a kindly
exterior. He sat him down beside her; he encompassed
her waist with his arm, and drawing her to him he
set himself to soothe her as one soothes a wilful
child. Had he then recalled what her attitude
had been towards him in the past he had thought twice
before adopting such a course. But in his mind
there was no sentiment that was not brotherly, and
far from his wishes was it to invest his action with
any other than a fraternal kindness.
But she, feeling that caressing arm
about her, and fired by it in her hapless passion
for this man, was quick to misinterpret him, and to
translate his attitude into one of a kindness far beyond
his dreams. She nestled closer to him; at his
bidding her weeping died down and ceased.
“There, Cecile, you will give me the key now?”
he begged.
She glanced up at him shyly through
wet lashes as peeps the sun through April
clouds.
“There is nothing I will not
do for you, Caron,” she murmured. “See,
I will even help you to play the traitor on my uncle.
For you love me a little, cher Caron, is it not so?”
He felt himself grow cold from head
to foot, and he grew sick at the thought that by the
indiscretion of his clumsy sympathy he had brought
this down upon his luckless head. Mechanically
his arm relaxed the hold of her waist and fell away.
Instinctively she apprehended that all was not as
she had thought. She turned on the seat to face
him squarely, and caught something of the dismay in
his glance of the loathing almost (for what is more
loathsome to a man than to be wooed by a woman he desires
not?) Gradually, inch by inch, she drew away from him,
ever facing him, and her eyes ever on his, as if fascinated
by the horror of what she saw. Thus until the
extremity of the settle permitted her to go no farther.
She started, then her glance flickered down, and she
gave a sudden gasp of passion. Simultaneously
the key rang on the boards at Caron’s feet angrily
flung there by Cecile.
“Go!” she exclaimed, in
a suffocating voice, “and never let me see your
face again.”
For a second or two he sat quite still,
his eyes observing her with a look of ineffable pity,
which might have increased her disorder had she perceived
it. Then slowly he stooped, and took up the key.
He rose from the settle, and without
a word for words he realised, could do
no more than heighten the tragic banality of the situation he
went to the door, unlocked it, and passed out.
Huddled in her corner sat Cecile,
listening until his steps had died away on the stairs.
Then she cast herself prone upon the settle, and in
a frenzy of sobs and tears she vented some of the rage
and shame that were distracting her.