“And I suppose I am to bait the trap, as usual?”
“You forget, Valentine, that I am your uncle
and a grandee of Spain.”
It was the usual beginning of their
quarrels, of which they had had many as they posted
along the Bordeaux road Pariswards. The Marquis
Osorio was travelling on a secret mission to Paris,
a mission which had nothing to do with the crowned
and anointed King of France, now in uncertain refuge
at Blois.
King Philip had sent for him, and
the Demon of the South had been in good humour when
he gave the stout Leonese gentleman his instructions.
He had just heard of the Day of the Barricades, and
the success of the Duke of Guise.
The Marquis had stood up before the
master of two worlds, bronzed, hale and bearded:
not too clever, but just shrewd enough to please the
King, and certainly indomitable in doing what he was
told. He had very much the air of a free man
and good subject, with his flat travelling cap in
one hand and the fingers of the other gripped staunchly
about his sword-hilt.
“The iron is hot on the anvil,”
said the King, “strike, Osorio! It is a
good job that the Duke of Err is out of the way.
The pressure of the times was too much for him.
His poor old brain rocked. His Duchess has taken
him off somewhere to feed with spoon-meat. Olivarez,
whom I have sent to follow him, will give you no trouble.
He will occupy himself with King Henri and the Medici
woman. The League and Guise these are
your game especially Guise. I suspect
him to be a wind-bag, but put him under your arm,
and the wind in him will bravely play our music, like
a pair of Savoyard bagpipes. And hark ye, Osorio,
listen to the Jesuit fathers, especially Mariana a
very subtle man, Mariana, after mine own heart.
And also (here he sank his voice to something mysterious),
above all take with you your your niece Valentine?”
“Valentine la Nina!” ejaculated
the King’s representative, with a quick, startled
look at his master.
“Even so,” said Philip,
casting his eyes through the slit behind the high
altar of the Escorial to see what the priests were
doing; “even so; our Holy Mother Church is in
danger, and if any love father or mother, son or daughter
more than her, he is not worthy of her!”
So by royal command Valentine la Nina
rode northward with her uncle, and though these two
loved one another, they wrangled much by the way.
Claire and her cavalcade were reaching
Blois, when the uncle and niece entered Angers by
the Long Bridges of Ce.
The cause of the girl’s outbreak
of petulance had been a harangue of the envoy, in
which he had explained, amongst other things, the reasons
for keeping their mission a secret. The King
of France must not hear of it, because their Philip
did not want to show his hand. Henry of Navarre
must not hear of it, or he might send men to harry
the Cerdagne and Aran. Besides, what was the
use of making a show in Paris, when the very shop-tenders
and scullions there played King Philip’s game?
Was not the Sorbonne packed with wise doctors all
arguing for Spain? Wild monks and fanatic priests
proclaimed her as the only possible saviour of the
Faith. At the back of Guise stood King Philip.
Remained therefore (according to the envoy) to push
Guise forward, to use him, to empty him, and then let
the Valois and the Medici have their will of him.
There was no reason for Spain to appear in the matter
at all. Guise must be induced to go to Blois,
and his enemies would do the rest.
It was then that Valentine la Nina
burst forth in indignation.
She would not be the lure, she said,
even for a king a bait dangled before an
honest man’s eyes no, not even for
her uncle!
“I am an Osorio,” the
envoy answered her sternly, “the head of the
family, you can surely trust me that nothing shall
be asked of you which might cast a stain on the name ”
“Not more than was asked of
my mother!” she retorted scornfully, “only
to sacrifice herself and her children a
little thing for so good a king his people’s
father!”
“And for the Faith!” said
the Marquis, hastily, as if to escape discussion.
“Listen, Valentine! The famous Father of
the Gesù, Mariana, will be in Paris before us.
He has been reporting to the King, and he it is who
has asked for your presence. None can serve the
Church so well as you.”
“I know I know,”
cried the girl, “fear not, I have been well drilled.
My mother taught me that the whims of men were to be
called either high policy or holy necessity.
It little matters which; women have to be sacrificed
in either case. Let us ride on to Paris, Uncle
Osorio, and say no more about it!”
They lighted down in the empty courtyard
of the Spanish ambassador’s house, which was
next to the hotel of the Duke of Guise. A shouting
crowd had pursued them to their lodging. For the
Spaniards were popular in the city, and the arrival
of so fine a cavalcade had rightly enough been interpreted
to mean the adherence of Philip of Spain to the new
order of things.
“Had Spain been for the King,
this envoy would have hied him to Blois,” said
De Launay, the old provost of the merchants. “But
since Philip sends his ambassador direct to the good
city of Paris, why, then, it follows that he is of
the mind to put down Valois, to set aside Navarre,
and to help us to crown our only true king, the King
of Paris and of France, the King of the Faith, and
of his people’s hearts Guise, the
good Guise!”
Because, even thus early, the habit
of municipal eloquence had been formed and its pattern
set for all the ages. De Launay was considered
a good practitioner.
The windows of Valentine Osorio’s
chambers looked on the garden of the Hotel of Guise a
shady orchard close where in the evening the Duke
often walked with his gentlemen, and specially with
his handsome young brother, the Duke of Bar.
On an evening of mackerel cloud, pearl-grey
and flaky gold vaulting so high overhead that the
sky above the small smokeless Paris of 1588 seemed
infinite, Valentine sat gossiping with her maid Salome.
To them, with the slightest preface
of knocking, light as a bird, entered a priestly figure
in the sombre robes of the Society of Jesus a
little rosy-cheeked man, plump and dimpled with good
living, and, as it seemed, good nature.
But at the sight of him a nervous
shudder passed through the body of the young girl.
So in a school, when the master returns before his
time, playing scholars draw unwillingly with downcast,
discontented eyes to sterner tasks. Yet the Jesuit
was kindly and tolerant in manner, prodigal of smile
and compliment. There was nothing of the Inquisitor
about the famous father Mariana, historian and secret
politician.
“Fairer than ever, Mistress
Valentine,” he murmured, after he had exchanged
a glance with the maid Salome, “ah, the blessed
thing which is beauty when used for sanctified ends!
Seldom is it thus used in this world of foolish women!
But you are wise. The Gesù are under deep
obligations, and the King the King ah,
he will not forget. He has sent you hither, and
has commissioned me to speak with you. Your good,
your excellent uncle, Osorio, knows some part of King
Philip’s plans, but not all no, not
all. He is too blunt an instrument for such fine
work. But you can understand, and shall!”
The girl struck her hands together
angrily and turned upon him.
“Again again!” she said, “is
it to be treachery again?”
“Not treachery, dear lady,”
cooed the father; “but when you go to tickle
trout, you do not stand on the bank and throw in great
stones. You work softly underneath, and so guide
the fish to a place from which they cannot escape.”
“Is it Guise?” demanded
the girl, breaking fiercely through these dulcet explanations.
“As you say,” smiled the Jesuit; “himself
and no other.”
“And what is to be my particular infamy?”
“Child, beware of your speech,”
said the Jesuit; “there is no infamy in the
service of Holy Church, of the Society, and of your
King.”
“To a well-known air!”
said the girl, sneeringly; “well, I will sing
the song. I know the music.”
And she went and placed herself by
the window which overlooked the pleasaunce of the
Duke of Guise.
“Salome,” she said, “come
hither and comb out my tresses!”
And with the graceful ease of strong
young arms, she pulled out a tortoise-shell pin here
and a mother-of-pearl fastening there till a flood
of hair escaped, falling down her back, with dark,
coppery lights striking out of the duskier coils,
and the lingering sunset illuminating the ripples
of fine-spun gold.
“Thus goes the exercise,”
she said with a cold anger, “the Holy Society
trains us well. But for this, and all else, God
will enter into judgment with you and your like!”
But, heedless of her words, the priest
was already stooping and peering behind the curtain.
“There they go,” he whispered
eagerly, “Guise and Mayenne together, Bar and
the Cardinal behind ah, there, it takes!
Gripped netted what did I tell
the King? He has his kerchief out. Quick,
Valentine, yours! What, you have left it behind?
Here is mine. Twice I tell you, twice and
your hand upon your heart. Ah, he salutes!
He will soon call upon the envoy of the King of Spain
now. I wager we shall have him here in the morning
before breakfast! Ah, what news this will be to
send by the courier to-night to your to
King Philip! He will sleep sound, I warrant.
And remember, to-morrow, speak him fair when he comes.
All depends on that. I shall not be far away.
I shall know and report to the King. It shall
not be well with you otherwise. Guise must go
to Blois to the King of France. He
must take his gentlemen with him. No sulking
in his own territories. To Blois, and face it
out like a man.”
The girl rose from the window and
came back into the chamber. She opened the door,
and with a gesture of proud weariness indicated the
dark corridor without.
“Your turn is served,” she said, “now
go!”
But Mariana, a cunning smile on his face, held out
his hand.
“Give me first my kerchief!” he said.
The girl crushed the embroidered linen
into a ball in her hand, holding it at her side and
slightly behind. Then she threw it out of the
window with a gesture of contempt. The next moment
the door slammed unceremoniously in Father Mariana’s
face. But the church historian was not in the
least put out. He laid his finger slowly to the
side of his nose and smiled stilly.
He descended the stairs to the entresol,
and there from a window which overhung the court he
looked forth in time to see the Duke of Guise stooping
to pick up something white from the ground.
He saw him kiss it and thrust it into
the breast of his black velvet doublet.
And the worthy Jesuit chuckled softly,
saying to himself, “There are things in this
world which are cheap even at the loss of my best
broidered kerchief!”
As Mariana had foretold, the Duke
of Guise and his brother the young De Bar called upon
the Marquis Osorio the following day. That morning
the Duke had made the life of his valet a burden to
him while dressing, and he now appeared gorgeous in
a suit of dark blue velvet trimmed with gold lace.
A cape of silk was over one arm, and he carried Mariana’s
embroidered kerchief carefully in his hand.
In his most stately fashion the Marquis
Osorio received the head of the League. He presented
his credentials as to a reigning monarch, and began
to talk of revolutions of Holy Church, concerning the
culpable laxness of the Pope in his own interests,
and the fidelity of the King of Spain to his ideals
and to his allies. It was evident, however, that
Guise paid but scant heed. His ears were elsewhere.
As for De Bar, he stared insolently about him, now
at the ambassador, now at the tapestry on the walls,
and again and most often out at the window. But
his brother listened, almost without disguise, to
a slight noise, which came occasionally into the room
from without. There was, for instance, the rustling
of a woman’s silken robe in the passage.
Voices also, that sounded faint, pleading, expostulatory,
cut into the even rise and fall of Castilian diplomacy.
“For these reasons my royal
master judged it expedient to send me as his representative,
charged with ”
Guise twisted impatiently this way
and that in his black oaken chair, in vain efforts
to catch what was going on outside. De Bar observed
his brother’s uneasiness, and as the Lorraine
princes went at that time in constant fear of assassination,
it did not cost him two thoughts, even in the house
of the Spanish ambassador, to rise and throw the door
wide open.
Then through the wide Romanesque arch
of the audience chamber Valentine Osorio entered,
as a queen comes into a throne room.
At sight of her the envoy stayed his
speech to make the presentation in form. Guise
instantly dropped all interest in the goodwill of King
Philip and his views upon state policy. He crossed
over to the window-seat, where Valentine had seated
herself.
Mariana had followed, and the next
moment the Marquis resumed his interrupted speech,
addressing himself to the Jesuit and De Bar, whose
ears were rigid with listening to what was going on
in the window, but who feared his brother so much
that he dared not follow his movements with a single
lift of his eyelids.
“My lady,” said Guise,
as he stood before Valentine, “I judge that I
have the privilege of restoring to you a kerchief which
you dropped by accident last night into my garden we
are neighbours, you know.”
Valentine la Nina did not flush in
the least. She said only, “It is none of
mine. If you will throw it behind the curtain
there, my maid Salome will see that it goes to the
wash.”
Guise stood staring at her, internally
fuming at his own stupidity in thus attempting to
force the situation.
Valentine la Nina was dressed in a
vaporous greenish lawn, which added value to the clearness
of her skin, the coiled wealth of her fair hair, and
the honey-coloured eyes which looked past the great
Duke as if he were no more than a pillar between her
and the landscape.
Manifestly Guise was piqued.
He was a man of good fortunes, and of late the Parisians
had spoiled him. He was quite unaccustomed to
be treated in this fashion.
“Countess,” he said at
last, after long searching for a topic, “I am
from the north and you from the south. Yet to
look at us, it is I who am the Spaniard and you the
Frank!”
“My father was a Flamand!” said Valentine
la Nina calmly.
“And, may I ask, of what degree?”
“Of a degree higher than your
own!” said Valentine, turning her great eyes
indolently upon him.
Guise looked staggered. He had
not supposed that the world held any such.
“Then he must have been a reigning prince!”
he stammered.
“Well?” said Valentine, looking at him
with direct inquiry.
“I had not understood that even so ancient a
house as the Osorios ”
“I never said that my father was an Osorio!”
“Ah!” said the Duke, “then I ask
your pardon. I was indeed ignorant.”
He scented mystery, and being a plain,
hard-hearted, cruel man of the time, thrust into a
commanding position by circumstances, he resented
being puzzled, like a very justice of the peace.
“If you do not believe me ”
Valentine began.
“Most noble princess,”
he protested, bending nearer to her as she sat on
the low seat looking straight up at him; “not
once have I dreamed ”
“Go to my native country of
Leon and ask the first gentleman you meet whether
Valentine la Nina be not the honest daughter of a king.
Only do not, if you value your life, express such
disbelief as you did just now, or the chances are
that you will never again see fair Lorraine!”
She looked about her. What she
had expected all along had happened. They were
alone. By some art of the Jesuit father, subtly
piloting the course of events, Osorio had gone to
the private parlour to find certain papers. Mariana
and De Bar had followed him.
Instantly the girl’s demeanour
changed. Half rising, she reached out her hand
and clutched the astonished Guise by the cuff of his
black velvet sleeve.
“Do not trust the King of France,”
she whispered, “do not put yourself in the power
of the King of Spain. Do not listen to my uncle,
Osorio, who does his bidding. Keep away from
Blois. Make yourself strong in your own territories I,
who speak, warn you. There is but a hair’s
breadth between you and death. Above all, do
not listen to Mariana the Jesuit. Do not believe
him on his sworn oath. His Order seeks your death
now that you have served their turn, and I
do not wish harm to come to a brave man.”
Had Valentine’s eyes been upon
the door she would have seen it open slightly as if
a breeze were pushing it.
“And pray, princess,”
said Guise, smiling, well content, “would it
be the act of a brave man thus to shun danger?”
“The lion is not the braver
for leaping into the prepared pit with his eyes open.
He is only foolish!”
Guise laughed easily.
“If I were to take you at your
word, princess,” he said, “I should hear
no more of you in my dull Lorraine. I could not
carry you off to cheer me at Soissons. But here
in Paris I may at least see you daily hear
your voice, or if no better, see you at the window
as I walk in my garden ”
“Ah,” cried Valentine,
thrusting out her hand hastily, palm outward, “do
not think of me. I am but the snare set, the trap
baited. I am not my own. I can love no man choose
no man. I belong to Those Unseen ”
She cast her hand backward towards
Spain, as if to indicate infinite malign forces at
work there. “But I warn you get
hence quickly, avoid Blois. Do not trust the
King, nor any king. Do not listen to my uncle
Osorio, and, above all, do not listen to Mariana the
Jesuit.”
And with a rapid rustle of light garments
she was gone. Guise attempted to take her hand
in passing, but it easily evaded him. Valentine
vanished behind the arras, where was a door which led
directly to the women’s apartments.
A moment Guise stood pulling at his
moustache sourly enough, ruminating on the warning
he had received and, in the sudden disappointment,
half inclined to profit by it. To him entered
the Jesuit, smiling and dimpled as ever.
“My Lord Duke, I find you alone,”
he began courteously, “this is ill treatment
for an honoured guest. Permit me ”
“That lady,” demanded Guise, brusquely,
“who is she?”
“The niece of the Marquis Osorio,”
murmured the Jesuit, “my old scholar, dear to
me as the apple of mine eye, almost a daughter.”
“Is she of royal blood?”
said Guise, who, though he had to be upon his manners
with Valentine herself, saw no reason for mincing matters
with a mere Jesuit scribbler.
“As to that it were well to
consult her uncle,” said Mariana, very softly,
“we of the Society do not concern ourselves with
matters purely secular. In any case, be assured
that the family honour is quite safe in the Marquis’s
hands!”
“I did not doubt it,”
said Guise, tossing his silken cape over his arm and
evidently about to take flight. Mariana accompanied
him to the foot of the stairs, murmuring commonplaces,
how that there would likely be a thunderstorm which
would clear the air, and that he would take it upon
him to make the adieux of his Grace of Guise to the
Marquis Osorio, his good friend and kinsman.
But just at the last he glided in his dart.
“And by the way, we may not
see you again, unless you too are going south.
We start to-morrow for the Blois, where the Queen Mother
holds her court. She has written most graciously
to the Countess Valentine offering her hospitality,
and the gaiety which young folk love, among her maids
of honour!”
And as he tucked up his soutane in
order to remount the stairs, the Jesuit chuckled to
himself. “And that, I think, will do if
so be I know the blood of the breed of Guise!”