While the Abbe John was gone to seek
the passports from his uncle, and from what remained
of royal authority in a city now wholly given over
to the League, Anatole Long, college professor, explained
matters to his new charge.
“You saw but little of your
father, I take it?” he began gently. The
Sorbonnist was a large-framed, upstanding man, with
an easy-going face, and manners which could be velvet
soft or trampling, according to circumstances.
They were generally the former.
“There is no use in wasting
good anger,” he would say, “at least, on
a pack of cublings.”
He was referring to the young men
of his class, who thought themselves Platos for
wisdom and Kings of Navarre in experience. For
though they cursed “the Bearnais” in their
songs and causeway-side shoutings, in their hearts
they thought that there was none like him in the world at
once soldier, lover, and man.
“My father,” said Claire
Agnew, looking the Professor in the face, “was
a brave gentleman. He owed that to his race.
But he had long been in this service of politics,
which makes a man’s life like a precious glass
in the hands of a paralytic. One day or another,
as he takes his medicine, it will drop, and there
is an end.”
“You speak bitterly?”
The Professor’s voice was very
soft. It was a wonder that he had never married
again, for all knew that his youth had been severely
accidented.
“Bitterly,” said the girl;
“indeed, I may speak truly and yet without honey
under my tongue. For my father made himself a
hunted hare for the cause that was dear to him.
Yet the King he served left him often without a penny
or a crust. When he asked for his own, he was
put off with fair words. He spent his own estate,
which was all my portion, like water. Yet neither
from King James of Scots, nor from Elizabeth of the
English, did he get so much as a ‘thank you’
for the travail of years!”
“And from Henry of Navarre?”
said the Professor of the Sorbonne.
“Why,” said Claire Agnew,
“I am shamed to own it. But though never
a man needed money more than the King of Navarre,
it is on his bounty that we have been living these
four years. He is great and generous!”
“I have heard something less
than that said of the Bearnais,” answered the
Professor; “yet he is a true Frenchman of the
Gascon breed, great to men, generous to women, hail-fellow-well-met
with all the world. But he loves the world to
know it! And now, little lady,” said Professor
Anatole, “I must conduct you elsewhere.
It is not seemly that a pretty one like you should
be found in this dingy parchment den, counting the
sparrows under the dome of the Sorbonne. Have
you any friends in Paris to whose care I can commit
you for the time being?”
“Not one!” cried the girl
fiercely; “it is a city of murderers Leaguers our
enemies!”
“Gently fairly, little
one,” the Professor spoke soothingly; “there
are good men and bad in Paris, as elsewhere; but since
you have no friends here, I must conduct you to Havre
de Grace, where we will surely find a captain biding
for a fair wind to take him through Queen Bess’s
Sleeve into the North Sea, far on the way for Scotland.”
The girl began to cry bitterly, for the first time.
“I have no friends in Scotland,
not any more than in France,” she said.
“My father was a true man, but of a quick high
temper, and such friends as he had he quarrelled with
long ago. It began about his marrying my mother,
who was a little maid out of Roussillon, come to Paris
in the suite of the wife of some Governor of Catalonia
who had been made Spanish ambassador. It was
in the Emperor’s time, when men were men not
fighting machines and priests. My father,
Francis Agnew, was stiff-necked and not given to pardon-asking,
save of his Maker. And though little Colette
Llorient softened him to all the world else, she died
too soon to soften him towards his kinsfolk.”
The Professor meditated gravely, like
one solving a difficult problem.
“What?” he said “no,
it cannot be. Your mother was never little Colette
of the Llorients of Collioure?”
“I have indeed always believed
so,” said the girl; “but doubtless in my
father’s papers ”
“But they are Catholics of the
biggest grain, those Llorients of Collioure, deep-dyed
Leaguers, as fierce as if Collioure were in the heart
of Lorraine!”
Claire bent her head and nodded sadly.
“Yes,” she said, “for
my father’s sake my mother embroiled herself
with her relatives. She became a Huguenot, a
Calvinist like him. Then they had a family meeting
about her. All the black brothers, mailed and
gauntleted, they say, sat round a table and swore that
my poor mother should be no more of their family!”
“Yes, I can fancy it I
see them; there was huge Bernard, weasel-faced Giles,
subtle Philippe ”
“How,” cried the girl,
surprised in her turn; “you know them my
mother’s people?”
“Well, I ought,” said
the Professor of the Sorbonne, with a young look flushing
back into his face, “seeing that my mother has
held a ‘mas’ from the family of Llorient
of Collioure for more years than I can remember.
When I was a lad going to the collegiate school at
Elne, I remember your mother, Mademoiselle Colette,
as a little maid, playing by herself among the sand-dunes.
I looked up from my Greek grammar to watch her, till
the nurse in the flat Limousin cap shook her fist at
me, stopping her nursing to do it.”
Here the Professor seemed to rouse
himself as from a dream.
“That rascal John should be
getting back by now,” he said, “unless
he has elbowed a way into the crowd to fight or fall
for his great Duke!”
“You do not love the Duke of Guise?” said
the girl.
“I have not your reasons for
hating him,” the Professor of Eloquence answered.
“I am no Huguenot, by family or feeling.
But I think it is a poor day for France when the valet
chases the master out of house and home. The
King is the King, and all the Guises in the world cannot
alter that. Also, since the King has departed,
and I have been left, alone loyal of all the faculty
of the Sorbonne, it is time that I too made my way
to see my mother among the sand-hills of Collioure.
Ah, John, you rascal, what has kept you so long?”
“The porter at my uncle’s
would give me no satisfaction swore I had
come again to borrow money. A manifest falsehood!
As, indeed, I proved on the spot by pulling him out
of his lodge and thumping him well. A varlet to
dare to suppose, because a gentleman comes twice to
borrow money from a rich and loving relative, that
he has returned a third time upon the same errand!
But I got the passports, and they are countersigned
and stamped by Merlan at the Secretary’s office,
which will do no harm if we come across King’s
men!”
“As for the Bearnais and his
folk,” said the Professor to Claire, “I
suppose you have your father’s papers safe enough?”
The girl blushed and murmured something
indefinite. As a matter of fact, she had made
sure of these while he yet lay on the ground, and the
Royal Swiss were firing over her head. It was
the instinct of her hunted life.
They left the Sorbonne together, all
cloaked and hooded “like three carrion crows,”
said the Abbe John. None who saw them would have
supposed that a young maid’s face lurked beneath
the sombre muffling. Indeed, beneath that of
the Abbe John, curls of the same hue clustered just
as tightly and almost as abundantly.
The street were silent all about the
quarter of the University. But every hundred
yards great barricades of barrels and paving-stones,
earth and iron chains, had to be passed. Narrow
alleys, the breadth of a man and no more, were generally
left, zig-zagging among the defences. But almost
as often the barricades had to be surmounted, after
discovery of identity, by the aid of friendly pushes
and hauls. In all cases, however, the examination
was strict.
At every barricade they were stopped
and called upon to declare their mission. However,
the Doctor Anatole was generally recognised by some
scapegrace runaway student, at scrambling horse-play
among the pavement cobbles. At any rate, the
Abbe John, who had been conspicuous at the meetings
of the Elect Leaguers as the nephew of the great Cardinal
d’Albret, was universally hailed with favour.
He was also constantly asked who the
lady in the hood might be, whom he was convoying away
so secretly. He had but one reply to gentle and
simple.
“Give me a sword, come down
hither, and I will afford any three men of you satisfaction
on the spot!”
For, in spite of the Abbe John’s
peaceful cognomen, his credit as a pusher of the unbuttoned
foil was too good for any to accept his proposition.
They laughed instead.
One of the Duke Guise’s “mud-porters”
called the pair an ugly name. But it was (happily)
in the Latin quarter, and a score of eager hands propelled
him down into the gutter, where, after having his nose
rubbed in the mire, he was permitted (and even assisted)
to retire to the rear. He rubbed himself as he
went and regretted mournfully that these things had
not happened near the street of Saint Antoine.
Altogether they escaped well.
The Sorbonne, a difficult place to get into, is easy
to get out of for those who know how.
And so the three, guided by the Abbe John, slipped
into the great Rue St. Jacques by the little port
St. Benoit, which the students and even the professors
found so necessary, whenever their errands were of
such a private nature as to disqualify them from crossing
the square of the Sorbonne, with its rows on rows
of enfilading windows.
It was up the narrow stair of the
Abbe John’s lodgings that they found a temporary
shelter while the final arrangements were being made.
Horses and a serving-man (provided for in the passports)
were the most pressing of these.
It was in connection with the serving-man
that Claire Agnew first found a tongue.
“I know a lad,” she said,
“a Scot, seemingly stupid, but cunning as a
fox, who may be of service to us. His apparent
simplicity will be a protection. For it will
be evident that none bent on escaping would burden
themselves with such a ‘Cabbage Jock.’
He is of my father’s country and they were ofttimes
in close places together. His name is ”
“No matter for his name we
will call him Cabbage Jock,” cried the Abbe
John. “Where is this marvel to be found?”
“Not far away, as I judge,”
said the girl, taking a silver whistle, such as ladies
wore at that time to call their waiting-maids, from
about her neck. She blew lightly upon it, first
two long and then two short notes. And from the
street corner, prompt as if he had been watching (which,
indeed, he had been), came running the strangest object
ever seen in a civilised land. He gave one glance
at the window at which Claire’s head appeared.
Then, diving under the low door like a rat making for
a hole, he easily evaded the shouting concierge, and
in a moment more stood before them.