The Bearnais was too wise to venture
so near the wolf’s den as Loches or Tours.
The conference, therefore, took place in the little
town of Argenton, perched along either side of the
Creuse, a huddle of wooden-fronted houses cascading
down to a clear blue river, every balcony filled with
flowers and fluttering that day with banners.
Catherine, the Queen-Mother, was to
travel from Chartres to represent her son King Henry
III. of Valois, of Poland, and of France. Henry
the Bearnais rode over from his entrenched camp at
Beauregard with a retinue of Huguenot gentlemen, whose
plain dark armour and weather-beaten features showed
more acquaintance with camp than with court.
The Bearnais, as usual, proved himself
gay, kindly, débonnaire. The Queen-Mother
(also as usual) was ambassador for her slothful son,
conscious that her last summer was waning, mostly doing
her travelling in a litter. Catherine de Medici
never forgot for a moment that she was the centre
round which forty years of intrigue had revolved.
The wife of one king of France, the mother of three
others, she played her part as in her youngest days.
With death grappling at her heart, she surrounded
herself with the flower of the youth and beauty of
Italy and France, laughing with the gayest and ready
with smile and gracious word for king or knave.
The deportment of the Bearnais was
in strong contrast with that of his Huguenot suite.
The King of Navarre made merry with all the world.
He was ever the centre of a bright and changeful group
of maids-of-honour to the Queen-Mother, with whom
he jested and laughed freely, till Rosny whispered
behind his hand to D’Aubigne, “If this
goes on, we shall make but a poor treaty of it!”
And to him D’Aubigne replied
grimly, “I will wager that my Lord Duke d’Epernon
looks well to that.”
“No,” said Rosny shortly,
“the old vixen is the sly renard.”
Soon the festival ran its blithest.
The Queen-Mother had withdrawn herself, possibly to
repose, certainly to plot. With D’Epernon
and the maids-of-honour the Bearnais remained, our
Abbe John by his side, laughing with the merriest.
Turenne and the other Huguenot veterans brooded sullenly
in the background, seeing matters go badly, but not
able to help it. Afterwards well, they
had a way all their own of speaking their minds.
And the brave, good-humoured king would heed them
too, in nowise growing angry with their freedoms.
But, alas! by that time the steed would be stolen,
the treaty signed, and the Medici and her maids-of-dishonour
well on the way to Chartres.
The question was, whether or not Henry
III. would throw himself wholly into the hands of
the League at the forthcoming Parliament of Blois,
or if, by a secret compact with the Bearnais, the
gentlemen of the Huguenot Gascon provinces would attend
to support the royal authority.
“I shall go, if our Bearnais
commands me,” said Turenne; “but I wager
they will dye the Loire as red as ever they did the
Seine on Bartholomew’s Day aye, and
fringe the Chateau with us, as they did at Amboise.
These Guises do not forget their ancient tricks.”
“And right pretty you would
look, my good Lord Turenne, your frosty beard wagging
in the wind and a raven perched on your bald pate!”
“If I were in your shoes, I
would not talk so freely either of beards or of baldness,
D’Aubigne,” growled Turenne. “I
mind well when a certain clever lad had no more than
the beard of a rabbit, which only comes out at night
for fear of the dogs!”
“It is strange,” said
D’Aubigne, not in the least offended with his
comrade, “that he who has no fear of the swords,
should grow weak at the fluttering of a kerchief or
before the artful carelessness of a neck-ribbon.”
“Not strange at all,”
said Turenne; “is he not a man and a Bearnais?
Besides, being a Bourbon, he will pay those the best
to whom he owes least. And we, who have loved
him as we never loved father or mother, wife or child,
will be sent back to the chimney-corner with our thumbs
to suck!”
“Aye, because he is sure of
us!” retorted D’Aubigne gloomily, unconsciously
prefiguring a day when he should sit, an exile in a
foreign town, eating his heart out, and writing a great
book to the praise of an ungrateful, or perhaps forgetful
master.
“The most curious thing of all,”
said Rosny, “is that we shall always love him put
down his fickleness to the account of others, cherish
him as a deceived woman does the man from whom she
cannot wholly tear her heart!”
“Yes,” cried a new voice,
as a red hassock of hair showed itself over the brown
Capuchin’s robe, “these things will we
do some of us in exile, all in sorrow,
some in rags, and some in motley ”
He opened the robe wider, and under
the stained brown the jester’s motley met their
eyes.
“Who is this fool who mixes
so freely in the councils of his betters?” cried
Turenne. “Is there never a wooden horse
and a provost-marshal in this this ball-room?”
But Rosny, whose business it was to
know all things, had had dealings with Jean-aux-Choux.
“It is the Fool of the Three
Henries!” he whispered, “a wise man,
they say bachelor of Geneva, a deacon at
the trade of theology, and all that!”
“I see nothing for it,”
D’Aubigne interrupted drily, “but that
we should agree to put all three Henries into
motley, and set Jean-aux-Choux on the throne!”
“Speak your mind plainly, Jean-aux-Choux,”
cried Turenne peremptorily; “we are none of
us of the Three Henries. And we will bear
no fooling. What is your message to us Sir
Fool with the Death’s Head? Out with it,
and briefly.”
Jean-aux-Choux waved his hand in the
direction of the bridge of Gargilesse.
“Yonder yonder,”
he said, “is your answer coming to you!”
Beyond the crowded roofs of the old
town, thatched and tiled, the white track to Gargilesse
and Croizant meandered amid the sparse and sunburnt
vegetation of autumn. Sparks of light, stars seen
at noonday, began to dance behind the little broomy
knolls, where the pods were cracking open merrily
in the heat of the sun.
“They are spears,” cried
the well-advised veterans of the south, men of the
old Huguenot guard. “Who comes? None
from that direction to do us any good!”
Then Rosny, who, in moments of action,
could make every one afraid of him, with his fair
skin and the false air of innocence on his face, in
which two blue eyes strange and stern were set, rode
up to the King and, bidding him leave ribbons and
sashes to give his mind for a moment to sword-points,
he indicated, without an unnecessary word, the cavalcade
which approached from the south.
Henry of Navarre, who was never angered
by a just rebuke, instantly left the ladies with whom
he had been jesting, and jumping on horseback, rode
right up to the top of a steep bank, which commanded
the bridge by which the horsemen must cross.
There he remained for a long while,
none daring to speak further to him. For again,
in a moment, he had become the war-captain. Though
not very tall when on foot, the Bearnais sat his horse
like a centaur, and it was said of him, that the fiercer
the fray, the closer Henry gripped his knees, and
the looser the rein with which he rode into the smother.
“Why,” he cried, setting
his gloved hands on either hip, “it is Margot my
wife Margot, with another retinue of silks and furbelows!”
And the Bearnais laughed aloud.
“Check and checkmate for the
old apothecary’s daughter,” he chuckled.
“After all, our little Margot is spirituelle,
though she and I do not get on together.”
And setting spurs to his charger,
he rode on far ahead of all his gentlemen to welcome
the Queen of Navarre at the bridge-head of Argenton.
There he dismounted, and throwing the reins to the
nearest groom, he walked to the bridle of a lady,
who, fair, fresh, and smiling, came ambling easily
up on a white Arab.
It was Marguerite of Valois, his wife,
who five years ago had possessed herself of the strong
castle of Usson in Auvergne. Sole daughter of
one king of France, sole sister of three others, and
wife of the King of Navarre, Marguerite of Valois
had been a spoiled beauty from her earliest years.
The division of blame is no easy matter, but certainly
the Bearnais was not the right man to tame and keep
a butterfly-spirit like that of “La Reine Margot.”
The marriage had been made and finished
in the terrible days which preceded the Saint Bartholomew.
The two Queens of France and Navarre had the business
in hand. It had been baptised in torrents of Protestant
blood on that fatal night when the Guise ladies watched
at their windows, while beneath the Leaguers silently
bound the white crosses on their brows. Indeed,
from the side of Catherine de Medici, the marriage
of Henry of Navarre and Marguerite of Valois had been
arranged with the single proper intent of bringing
Coligny, Conde, and the other great Huguenots to the
shambles prepared for them.
It served its purpose well; but when
her mother, Catherine de Medici, and her royal brothers
would gladly have broken off the marriage, Margot’s
will was the firmest of any. But though there
was little of good in the life of the Queen Margot,
there was ever something good in her heart.
She refused to be separated from her
husband, merely to serve the intrigues of the Queen-Mother
and the Guises.
“Once already I have been sacrificed
to your plots,” she said. “Because
of that, I have a husband who will never love me.
A night of blood stands between us. Yet will
I do nothing against him, because he is my husband.
Nor yet for you, my kinsfolk, because ye paid me away
like the thirty pieces of silver which Judas scattered
in the potter’s field. I was the price
of blood,” so she taunted her mother, “and
for that my husband will never love me!”
No, it was not for that, as history
and legend tell all too plainly; but she was a woman,
and had the woman’s right to explain the matter
so.
Rather, it was the root-difference
of all lack of common interest and mutual love.
Two young people, with different upbringings, with
mothers wide apart as the heaven of Jeanne d’Albret
and the inferno of the Medici, were suddenly thrown
together with no bond save that of years to unite
them. Each went a several way neither
the right way and there is small wonder
that the result of such a marriage was only unhappiness.
Said Henry of Navarre to Rosny, his
best confidant, when there was question of his own
wedding:
“Seven things are needed in the woman I ought
to marry.”
“Seven is a great number, Your
Majesty,” answered the Right Hand of the Bearnais;
“but tell them to me, and I will at least cause
search to be made. I will make proclamation for
the lady who can put her foot into seven glass slippers,
each one smaller than the other!”
“First, then,” said the
King of Navarre, posing a forefinger on the palm of
his other hand, and speaking sagely, as a master setting
out the steps of a proposition, “she must have
beauty of person!”
“Good,” said Rosny; “Your
Majesty has doubtless satisfied himself that there
are such to be found in the land once or
twice!”
“Wait, Rosny let
me finish!” said the King. And so continued
his enumeration of wifely necessities, as they appeared
to a great prince of the sixteenth century.
“Item, she must be modest
in her life, of a happy humour, vivid in spirit, ready
in affection, eminent in extraction, and possessed
of great estates in her own right!”
For all answer Rosny held up his hands.
“I know I know,”
smiled the Bearnais, “you would say to me that
this marvel of womankind has been dead some time.
I would rather say to you that she has never been
born!”
So it came about that Marguerite,
the pretty, foolish butterfly of the Valois courts,
and her Bearnais husband, rough, soldierly, far-seeing,
politic, had not seen each other for five years.
Marguerite had shut herself up in the castle of Usson,
one of the dread prison fortresses built by “that
fox,” Louis the Eleventh.
Though sent almost as a prisoner there,
or at least under observation, she had speedily possessed
herself of castle and castellan, guard and officers,
kitchen scullions and gardener varlets. For
she had the open hand, especially when the money was
not her own, the ready wit, and above all, the charming
smile, though even that meant nothing. At least,
Margot the Queen was not malicious; and so it was without
any fear, but rather with the sort of silent amusement
with which we applaud a child’s new trick, that
the King dismounted, kissed his wife’s hand,
answered her gay greetings, and even cast a critic’s
eye on the array of beauties who followed in her train.
Many gallant gentlemen of the south
also accompanied her. Raimonds and Castellanes
were there, Princes of Baux and Seigneurs
de la Tour all willing at
once to visit the camp of the Bearnais, and to testify
their loyalty to the Court of France. For in
the south, the League and the Guises had made but
little progress.
“Why, Margot, what brings you
hither?” said the Bearnais, as he paced along
by his wife’s side, while the suite had dropped
far enough behind for them to speak freely.
“Well, husband mine,”
said the Queen Margot, “you have been a bad boy
to me, and if I had not been mine own sweet self,
you and my brother (peace to his ashes, as soon as
he is dead!) would have shut me up in a big, dull
castle to do needlework alone with a cat and a duenna.
But I was too clever for you. And, after that,
they poisoned your mind against little Margot oh,
I know. So I do not blame you greatly, Henry.
Also, I have a temper that is trying at short range I
admit it. So I am come to make up at
least, if you will. And further, if by chance
my good, simple mother and that gallant, crafty Epernon
lad have any tricks to try upon you why,
then I have brought a bag of them too, and can play
them, trick for trick, till we win you and
I, Harry!”
Margot the Queen waved her hand to
the covey of beauties who rode behind her.
“I would say that they are all
queens of beauty,” she said, smiling down at
him; “but do you know (I am speaking humbly because
I know well that you do not agree) I am the only really
pretty queen in the world?”
“As to that I do most heartily
take oath,” said the Bearnais.
“Ah, but,” said Margot,
touching him gently on the cheek with the lash of
her riding-whip, “I mind well how you swore you
would wed the Queen of England, provided she brought
you that rich land aye, though she had
as many wrinkles on her brow as the sea that surrounds
her isle, or even the Infanta of Spain, old and wizened
as a last year’s pippin, if only she brought
you in dower the Low Countries!”
“Ah, Margot,” said Henry,
smiling up at his wife, “and I thought it was
your sole boast that you never cast up old stories!
You always found new ones or made them!”
“I did but tease,” she
said; “but indeed, for all my mother is so ill,
this is no time for jesting. I have come to see
that you get fair play among them all, my little friend
Henry. Though you love me not greatly, and I
did sometimes throw the table-equipage at your head,
yet Margot of France and Navarre is not the woman
to see her husband wronged least of all
by her own mother and that good, excellent, mignon-loving
brother of mine, the King-titular of some small remnant
of France.”