At the Bar of the Revolutionary Tribunal
stood Deputy Caron La Boulaye upon his trial for treason
to the Nation and contravention of the ends of justice.
Fouquier-Tinvillle, the sleuth-hound Attorney-General,
advanced his charges, and detailed the nature of the
young revolutionist’s crime. But there
was in Fouquier-Tinvillle’s prosecution a lack
of virulence for once, just as among La Boulaye’s
fellows, sitting in judgment, there was a certain
uneasiness, for the Revolution was still young, and
it had not yet developed that Saturnian habit of devouring
its own children which was later to become one of its
main features.
The matter of La Boulaye’s crime,
however, was but too clear, and despite the hesitancy
on the part of the jury, despite the unwonted tameness
of Tinvillle’s invective, the Tribunal’s
course was well-defined, and admitted of not the slightest
doubt. And so, the production of evidence being
dispensed with by Caron’s ready concurrence
and acknowledgment of the offence, the President was
on the point of formally asking the jury for their
finding, when suddenly there happened a commotion,
and a small man in a blue coat and black-rimmed spectacles
rose at Tinvillle’s side, and began an impassioned
speech for the defence.
This man was Robespierre, and the
revolutionists sitting there listened to him in mute
wonder, for they recalled that it was upon the Incorruptible’s
own charge their brother-deputy had been arrested.
Ardently did Maximilien pour out his eloquence, enumerating
the many virtues of the accused and dwelling at length
upon his vast services to the Republic, his hitherto
unfaltering fidelity to the nation and the people’s
cause, and lastly, deploring that in a moment of weakness
he should have committed the indiscretion which had
brought him where he stood. And against this
thing of which he was now accused, Robespierre bade
the Deputies of the jury balance the young man’s
past, and the much that he had done for the Revolution,
and to offer him, in consideration of all that, a
chance of making atonement and regaining the position
of trust and of brotherly affection which for a moment
he had forfeited.
The Court was stirred by the address.
They knew the young sans-culotte’s worth, and
they were reluctant to pass sentence upon him and to
send him to the death designed for aristocrats and
traitors. And so they readily pronounced themselves
willing to extend him the most generous measure of
mercy, to open their arms and once more to clasp to
their hearts the brother who had strayed and to reinstate
him in their confidence and their councils. They
pressed Robespierre to name the act of atonement by
which he proposed La Boulaye should recover his prestige,
and Robespierre in answer cried:
“Let him repair the evil he
has done. Let him neutralise the treachery into
which a moment of human weakness betrayed him.
Let him return to us the aristocrat he has attempted
to save, and we will forget his indiscretion and receive
him back amongst us with open arms, as was the prodigal
son received.”
There was a salvo of applause.
Men rose to their feet excitedly, and with arms outstretched
in Caron’s direction they vociferously implored
him to listen to reason as uttered by the Incorruptible,
to repent him and to atone while there was yet time.
They loved him, they swore in voices of thunder, each
seeking to be heard above his neighbour’s din,
and it would break their hearts to find him guilty,
yet find him guilty they must unless he chose the
course which this good patriot Maximilien pointed
out to him.
La Boulaye stood pale but composed,
his lips compressed, his keen eyes alert. Inwardly
he was moved by this demonstration of goodwill, this
very storm of fraternity, but his purpose remained
adamant, and when at last the President’s bell
had tinkled his noisy judges into silence, his voice
rose clear and steady as he thanked them for leaning
to clemency on his behalf.
“Helas,” he ended, “words
cannot tell you how deeply I deplore that it is a
clemency of which I may not avail myself. What
I have done I may not undo. And so, Citizens,
whilst I would still retain your love and your sympathy,
you must suffer me to let justice take its course.
To delay would be but to waste your time the Nation’s
time.”
“But this is rank defiance,”
roared Tinvillle, roused at last into some semblance
of his habitual bloodthirstiness. “He whose
heart can be so insensible to our affections merits
no clemency at this bar.”
And so the President turned with a
shrug to his colleagues, and the verdict was taken.
The finding was “Guilty,” and the President
was on the point of passing sentence, when again Robespierre
sprang to his feet. The Incorruptible’s
complexion looked sicklier than its wont, for
mortification had turned him green outright. A
gust of passion swept through his soul, such as would
have made another man call for the death of this defiant
youth who had withstood his entreaties. But such
was Robespierre’s wonderful command of self,
such was his power of making his inclinations subservient
to the ends he had in view that he had but risen to
voice a fresh appeal.
He demanded that the sentence should
be passed with the reservation that the accused should
have twenty-four hours for reflection. Should
he at the end of that time be disposed to tell them
where the ci-devant Vicomte d’Ombreval
was to be found, let them reconsider his case.
On the other hand, should he still continue obdurate
by the noon of to-morrow, then let the sentence be
consummated.
There was some demur, but Robespierre
swept it fiercely aside with patriotic arguments.
La Boulaye was a stout servant of the Nation, whom
it must profit France to let live that he might serve
her; Ombreval was a base aristocrat, whose death all
true Republicans should aim at encompassing.
And so he won the day in the end, and when the sentence
of death was passed, it was passed with the reservation
that should the prisoner, upon reflection, be inclined
to show himself more loyal to France and the interests
of the Republic by telling them how Ornbreval might
be recaptured, he would find them still inclined to
mercy and forgiveness. Allowing his eyes to stray
round the Court at that moment, La Boulaye started
at sight of an unexpected face. It was Mademoiselle
de Bellecour, deathly pale and with the strained, piteous
look that haunts the eyes of the mad. He shivered
at the thought of the peril to herself in coming into
that assembly; then, recovering himself, he turned
to his judges.
“Citizen-President, Citizens
all, I thank you; but I should be unappreciative of
your kindness did I permit you to entertain false
hopes. My purpose is unalterable.”
“Take him away,” the President
commanded impatiently, and as they removed him Mademoiselle
crept from the Court, weeping softly in her poignant
grief, and realising that not so much for the President’s
ear as for her own had La Boulaye uttered those words.
They were meant to fortify her and to give her courage
with the assurance that Ombreval would not be betrayed.
To give her courage! Her lip was twisted into
an oddly bitter smile at the reflection, as she stepped
into her cabriolet, and bade the driver return to
Choisy. Caron was doing this for her. He
was casting away his young, vigorous life, with all
its wealth of promise, to the end that her betrothed the
man whom he believed she loved might be
spared. The greatness, the nobility of the sacrifice
overwhelmed her. She remembered the thoughts that
in the past she had entertained concerning this young
revolutionist. Never yet had she been able to
regard him as belonging to the same order of beings
as herself-not even when she had kissed his unconscious
lips that evening on the Ridge road. An immeasurable
gulf had seemed to yawn between them the
gulf between her nobility and his base origin.
And now, as her carriage trundled out of Paris and
took the dusty high road, she shuddered, and her cheeks
burned with shame at the memory of the wrong that
by such thoughts she had done him. Was she, indeed,
the nobler? By accident of birth, perhaps, but
by nature proper he was assuredly the noblest man
that ever woman bore.
In the Place de la Revolution a gruesome
engine they called the guillotine was levelling all
things, and fast establishing the reign of absolute
equality. But with all the swift mowing of its
bloody scythe, not half so fast did it level men as
Mademoiselle de Bellecour’s thoughts were doing
that afternoon.
So marked was the disorder in her
countenance when she reached Choisy that even unobservant
Ombreval whom continuous years of self-complacency
had rendered singularly obtuse could not
help but notice it, and fearing, no doubt,
that this agitation might in some way concern himself he
even went the length of questioning her, his voice
sounding the note of his alarm.
“It is nothing,” she answered,
in a dejected voice. “At least, nothing
that need cause you uneasiness. They have sentenced
La Boulaye to death,” she announced, a spasm
crossing her averted face.
He took a deep breath of relief.
“God knows they’ve sentenced
innocent men enough. It is high time they began
upon one another. It augurs well-extremely well.”
They were alone in Henriette’s
kitchen; the faithful woman was at market. Mademoiselle
was warming herself before the fire. Ombreval
stood by the window. He had spent the time of
her absence in the care of his clothes, and he had
contrived to dress himself with some semblance of
his old-time elegance which enhanced his good looks
and high-born air.
“You seem to utterly forget,
Monsieur, the nature of the charge upon which he has
been arraigned,” she said, in a tired voice.
“Why, no,” he answered,
and he smiled airily; “he was sufficiently a
fool to be lured by the brightest eyes in France into
a service for their mistress. My faith!
He’s not the first by many a thousand whom a
woman’s soft glances have undone ”
“The degree in which you profit
by the service he is doing those bright eyes, appears
singularly beneath the dignity of your notice.”
“What a jester you are becoming,
ma mie,” he laughed and at the sound
she shuddered again and drew mechanically nearer to
the fire as though her shuddering was the result of
cold.
“It is yet possible that he
may not die,” she said almost as if speaking
to herself. “They have offered him his liberty,
and his reinstatement even upon conditions.”
“How interesting!” he
murmured nonchalantly. “They have an odd
way of dispensing justice.”
“The conditions imposed are
that he shall amend the wrong he has done, and deliver
up to the Convention the person of one ci-devant
Vicomte d’Ombreval.”
“My God!”
It was a gasp of sudden dismay that
broke from the young nobleman. The colour swept
out of his face, and his eyes dilated with horror.
Watching him Suzanne observed the sudden change, and
took a fierce joy in having produced it.
“It interests you more closely now, Monsieur?”
she asked.
“Suzanne,” he cried, coming
a step nearer, and speaking eagerly; “he knows
my whereabouts. He brought me here himself.
Are you mad, girl, that you can sit there so composedly
and tell me this?”
“What else would you have me do?” she
inquired.
“Do? Why, leave Choisy
at once. Come; be stirring. In God’s
name, girl, bethink you that we have not a moment
to lose. I know these Republicans, and how far
they are to be trusted. This fellow would betray
me to save his skin with as little compunction as ”
“You fool!” she broke
in, an undercurrent of fierce indignation vibrating
through her scorn. “What are you saying?
He would betray you? He?” She tossed her
arms to Heaven, and burst into a laugh of infinite
derision. “Have no fear of that, M. lé
Vicomte, for you are dealing with a nature of
a nobility that you cannot so much as surmise.
If he were minded to betray you, why did he not do
so to-day, when they offered him his liberty in exchange
for information that would lead to your recapture?”
“But although he may have refused
to-day,” returned the Vicomte frenziedly, “he
may think better of it to-morrow-perhaps even tonight.
Ciel! Think of the risk we run; already it may
be too late. Oh, why,” he demanded reproachfully,
“why didn’t you listen to me when, days
ago, I counselled flight?”
“Because it neither was, nor is, my intention
to fly.”
“What?” he cried, and,
his jaw fallen and his eyes wide, he regarded her.
Then suddenly he caught her by the arm and shook her
roughly. “Are you mad?” he cried,
in a frenzy of anger and fear. “Am I to
die like a dog that a scum of a Republican may save
his miserable neck? Is this canaille of
a revolutionist to betray me to his rabble Tribunal?”
“Already have I told you that you need fear
no betrayal.”
“Need I not?” he sneered.
“Ma foi! but I know these ruffians. There
is not an ounce of honour in the whole National Convention.”
“Fool!” she blazed, rising
and confronting him with an anger before which he
recoiled, appalled. “Do you dare to stand
there and prate of honour you? Do
you forget why he stood his trial? Do you forget
why he is dying, and can you not see the vile thing
that you are doing in arguing flight, that you talk
of honour thus, and deny his claim to it? Mon
Dieu! Your effrontery stifles me! La Boulaye
was right when he said that with us honour is but
a word just so much wind, and nothing more.”
He stared at her in uncomprehending
wonder. He drew away another step. He accounted
her mad, and, that he might humour her, he put by his
own fears for the moment a wonderful unselfishness
this in the most nobly-born Vicomte d’Ombreval.
“My poor Suzanne,” he
murmured. “Our trouble has demoralised your
understanding. You take a false view of things.
You do not apprehend the situation.”
“In God’s name, be silent!” she
gasped.
“But the time is not one for silence,”
he returned.
“So I had thought,” quoth
she. “Yet since you can be silent and furtive
in other matters, I beg that you will be silent in
this also. You talk in vain, Monsieur, in any
case. For I am not minded to leave Choisy.
If you urge me further I shall burn our passport.”
And with that she left him, to seek
the solitude of her own room. In a passion of
tears she flung herself upon the little bed, and there
she lay, a prey to such an anguish as had never touched
her life before.
And now, in that hour of her grief,
it came to her as the sun pierces the mist that
she loved La Boulaye; that she had loved him, indeed,
since that night at Boisvert, although she had stifled
the very thought, and hidden it even from herself,
as being unworthy in one of her station to love a
man so lowly-born as Caron. But now, on the eve
of his death, the truth would no longer be denied.
It cried, perchance, the louder by virtue of the pusillanimity
of the craven below stairs in whose place Caron was
to die; but anyhow, it cried so loudly that it overbore
the stern voice of the blood that had hitherto urged
her to exclude the sentiment from her heart.
No account now did she take of any difference in station.
Be she nobler a thousand times, be he simpler a thousand
times, the fact remained that she was a woman, he a
man, and beyond that she did not seek to go.
Low indeed were the Lilies of France
when a daughter of the race of their upholders heeded
them so little and the caste they symbolised.
Henriette came to her that afternoon,
and, all ignorant of the sources of her grief, she
essayed to soothe and comfort her, in which, at last,
she succeeded.
In the evening Ombreval sent word
that he wished to speak to her and that
his need was urgent. But she returned him the
answer that she would see him in the morning.
She was indisposed that evening, she added, in apology.
And in the morning they met, as she
had promised him. Both pale, although from different
causes, and both showing signs of having slept but
little. They broke their fast together and in
silence, which at last he ended by asking her whether
the night had brought her reflection, and whether
such reflection had made her appreciate their position
and the need to set out at once.
“It needed no reflection to
make me realise our position better than I did yesterday,”
she answered. “I had hoped that it would
have brought you to a different frame of mind.
But I am afraid that it has not done so.”
“I fail to see what change my
frame of mind admits of,” he answered testily.
“Have you thought,” she
asked at last, and her voice was cold and concentrated,
“that this man is giving his life for you?”
“I have feared,” he answered,
with incredible callousness, “that to save his
craven skin he might elect to do differently at the
last moment.”
She looked at him in a mighty wonder,
her dark eyes open to their widest, and looking black
by the extreme dilation of the pupils. So vast
was her amazement at this unbounded egotism that it
almost overruled her disgust.
“You cast epithets about you
and bestow titles with a magnificent unconsciousness
of how well they might fit you.”
“Ah? For example?”
“In calling this man a craven,
you take no thought for the cowardice that actuates
you into hiding while he dies for you?”
“Cowardice?” he ejaculated.
Then a flush spread on his face. “Ma foi,
Mademoiselle,” said he, in a quivering voice,
“your words betray thoughts that would be scarcely
becoming in the Vicomtesse d’Ombreval.”
“That, Monsieur, is a point
that need give you little thought. I am not likely
to become the Vicomtesse.”
He bestowed her a look of mingling
wonder and anger. Had he, indeed, heard her aright?
Did her words imply that she disdained the honour?
“Surely,” he gasped, voicing
those doubts of his, “you do not mean that you
would violate your betrothal contract? You do
not ”
“I mean, Monsieur,” she
cut in, “that I will give myself to no man I
do not love.”
“Your immodesty,” said
he, “falls in nothing short of the extraordinary
frame of mind that you appear to be developing in connection
with other matters. We shall have you beating
a drum and screeching the Ca ira in the
streets of Paris presently, like Mademoiselle de Mericourt.”
She rose from the table, her face
very white, her hand pressing upon her corsage.
A moment she looked at him. Then:
“Do not let us talk of ourselves,”
she exclaimed at last. “There is a man
in the Conciergerie who dies at noon unless you
are forthcoming before then to save him. He himself
will not betray you because he No matter
why, he will not. Tell me, Monsieur, how do you,
who account yourself a man of honour above everything,
intend to deal with this situation?”
He shrugged his shoulders.
“Once he is dead and done with provided
that he does not first betray me I trust
that, no longer having this subject to harp upon, you
will consent to avail yourself of our passport, and
accompany me out of France.”
“Honour does not for instance,
suggest to you that you should repair to the Conciergerie
and take the place that belongs to you, and which
another is filling?”
A sudden light of comprehension swept now into his
face.
“At last I understand what has
been in your mind since yesterday, what has made you
so odd in your words and manner. You have thought
that it was perhaps my duty as a man of honour to
go and effect the rescue of this fellow. But,
my dear child, bethink you of what he is, and of what
I am. Were he a gentleman my equal my
course would stand clearly defined. I should
not have hesitated a moment. But this canaille!
Ma foi! let me beg of you to come to your senses.
The very thought is unworthy in you.”
“I understand you,” she
answered him, very coldly. “You use a coward’s
arguments, and you have the effrontery to consider
yourself a man of honour a nobleman.
I no longer marvel that there is a revolution in France.”
She stood surveying him for a moment,
then she quietly left the room. He stared after
her.
“Woman, woman!” he sighed,
as he set down his napkin and rose in his turn.
His humour was one of pitying patience
for a girl that had not the wit to see that to ask
him the most noble d’Ombreval to
die that La Boulaye might live was very much like
asking him to sacrifice his life to save a dog’s.