Above, in the Chateau of Blois, there
were two men waiting the coming of Henry, Duke of
Guise. One was another Henry, he of Valois, King
of France. He had many things to avenge his
own folly and imprudence most of all, though, indeed,
these never troubled him. Only the matter of
Coligny, and the sombre shades of the dead upon St.
Bartholomew’s Eve, haunted his repose.
At the private gathering of the conspirators,
the King had found many who were willing to sympathise
with him in his woes, but few who would drive the
steel.
“The Parliament are to make
Constable of France the man who is intent on pulling
down my throne. I shudder with horror (he whined)
to think that the nobles of France support the Guises
in this I speak not of fanatic bishops
and loud-mouthed priests, who cry against me from every
pulpit because I will not have more Colignys gibbering
at my bed-foot, nor yet give them leave to burn Frenchmen
by the score, as Philip does his Spaniards t’other
side the mountains!”
The Marshal d’Aumont, D’O,
and Lognac, the Captain of the Forty-Five Guardsmen,
bowed respectful assent.
“What is the state of France,
friends,” the King cried, in a frenzy of rage,
“I bid you tell me, when an alien disputes the
throne of Francis First with the legitimate heir of
Saint Louis? And what of Paris, my capital city,
wherein I have lived like a bourgeois these many years,
which receives him with shouts and caressings, but
chases me without like a dog? aye, like
a dog!”
The comparison seemed to strike him.
“‘Without are dogs,’
I have heard the priests say. Well, as to heaven,
it may be so. But as to Paris, be sure that if
the dogs are without within are wolves
and serpents and all manner of unclean beasts!
I would rather trust the Bearnais than any of them!”
There was some dismay at this.
It stood out on the faces of the leaders at the council
board. If His Majesty went to the King of Navarre,
they knew well that their day would be over.
However, they swore to do everything that the King
required, but of them all, only Lognac meant to keep
his word. He was a stout fighter. The killing
of Guise was all in the way of business; and if the
worst came to the worst, the Bearnais would not refuse
a company to one who, in his time, had been Captain
of the Forty-Five.
Henry of Valois had been up early
that morning, called from his slumbers to bait the
trap with his most secret cunning. He did not
mean to take any part in the deed himself. For
the soldier who had fought so well against Coligny
now dodged out and in, like a rat behind the arras.
The Scots Guards were posted in the
courtyard of the Chateau, to shut the entrances as
soon as the Duke of Guise should have passed within.
In the great hall were the Lords of the Council the
Cardinal of Guise, the Archbishop of Lyons, that clarion
of the League, the Cardinal Vendome, the Marshal d’Aumont,
D’O, the Royal favourite, together with the
usual clerks and secretaries.
But within, in the ancient chamber
of audience, next to the cabinet of the King himself,
stood in waiting certain Gascons, ready with their
daggers only half-dissembled under their cloaks.
They were men of no determined courage, and the King
well knew that they might fail him at the last moment.
So, by the advice of Hamilton and Larchant of the Scots
Guard, he had placed nearest to the door one who would
make no mistake him whom the Man in the
Black Cloak had sent, even Jean-aux-Choux, the Fool
of the Three Henries.
But on that mask of a face there was
now no sign of folly. Stern, grey, immovable
was now the countenance of him who, by his mirth, had
set many courts in a roar. He could hear, as
he had heard it on the night of the Bartholomew, the
voice of the Duke of Guise crying, “Haste ye is
the work not done yet?”
And now another “work”
was to be done. The feet that had spurned Coligny
were even now upon the stairs. He thanked God.
Now he would perform his vow upon the man who had
made him go through life hideous and a laughing-stock.
For in those days the New Law concerning
the forgiveness of enemies was a dead letter.
If you wished to live, you had better not forgive your
enemy till after you had slain him.
And the dread “Remember the Bartholomew,”
printed on all Huguenot hearts, was murmured behind
the clenched teeth of Jean-aux-Choux. The Huguenots
would be avenged. Innocent blood would no more
cry unheeded from the ground. The hated League
would fall with its chief. With Guise would perish
the Guisards.
The princes of Lorraine had beheld
their power grow through four reigns. It culminated
on the day of the Barricades, when a king of France
appealed to a subject to deliver him from the anger
of the citizens of his own capital. So, secure
in his power, Guise scorned all thought of harm to
himself.
“They dare not,” he repeated
over and over, both to himself and to others; “the
King his kingdom hangs upon a
single hair, and that hair is my life!”
So he walked into the armed and defended
fortress of his mortal enemy as freely as into his
own house. Like perfect love, perfect contempt
casteth out fear.
Yet when once he had saluted the company
in the hall of audience, Guise sat him down by the
fire and complained of being cold. He had, he
said, lain down in his damp clothes, and had risen
up hastily to obey the King’s message.
“Soon you will be hot enough
upon the branders of Tophet!” muttered D’O,
the royal favourite, to Revol, the King’s secretary,
who went and came between the inner cabinet and the
chamber where the council were sitting about a great
table.
The superintendent of the finances,
one Petremol, was reading a report. The Archbishop
of Lyons bent over to the Duke of Guise, where he sat
warming him by the fire.
“Where goes our royal Penitent
so early I mistrust his zeal? And
specially,” he added, as a furious burst of sleet
battered like driven sea-spray on the leaded panes
of the council room, “on such a morning; it
were shame to turn out a dog.”
“Oh, the dog goes of his own
will into retreat, as usual!” said
the Duke carelessly; “in half-an-hour we shall
see him set off with a dozen silken scourges and the
softest down pillows in the castle. Our reverend
Henry is of the excellent order of Saint Commode!”
Presently, leaving the fireside, the
Duke returned to the table where the others sat.
It was observed that he was still pale. But the
qualm was physical only; no shade of fear mixed with
it. He asked for a handkerchief from any of his
people who might have followed him. As the greatest
care had been taken to exclude these, he was supplied
with one from the King’s own wardrobe by St.
Prix, the King’s valet de chambre.
Then he asked for comfits to stop his cold, but all
that could be found within the castle was only a paper
of prunes of Brignolles, with which Guise had to content
himself, instead of the Smyrna raisins and rose conserves
of Savoy which he asked for.
He chatted indifferently with one
and another while the routine of the council unrolled
itself monotonously.
“I think brother Henry might
have let us sleep in our beds, if this be all,”
he said. “What is the use of bringing us
here at this hour, to pronounce on the fate of rascals
who have done no worse than hold a few Huguenots to
ransom? Wait a while, and we will give the Huguenots
something that will put ransoming them out of the question!”
The Cardinal smiled at his brother shrewdly.
“Aye,” he murmured, “but
we will have the ransoms also. For, you know,
the earth belongeth to the Lord, and He has given it
to the chosen of His Church.”
A hand touched the Duke’s shoulder;
a voice murmured in his ear. A soft voice a
voice that trembled. It was that of Revol, the
King’s secretary, whom at first De Nambre, one
of the Forty-Five on guard at the door, would not
permit to pass. Whereupon the King popped his
head out of the closet to give the necessary order,
and seeing the young man pale, he called out, “Revol,
what’s the matter with you? Revol, you are
as white as paper, man! Rub your cheeks, Revol.
Else you will spoil all!”
Henry III. always liked handsome young
men about him, and certainly the messenger of death
never came in a prettier form to any than when young
Revol tapped the Duke of Guise on the shoulder as he
sat by the council board.
The chief of the League rose and,
courteous to the last, he bowed graciously to the
Cardinal Vendome, to whom he had not yet had the opportunity
of speaking that day. He threw his cloak carefully
over one arm, and in the other hand he took his silver
comfit-box (for he ever loved sweet things) containing
the prunes of Brignolles. He entered into the
little narrow passage. De Nambre shut the door
behind him. The tiger was in the fox’s
trap.
Vaguely Guise saw stern faces about
him, but as was usual with him, he paid no particular
heed, only saluting them as he had done the shouting
spice-merchants’ ’prentices and general
varletage of Paris, which followed everywhere on his
heels.
The eight Gascons held back, though
their hands were on their daggers. After all,
the tiger was a tiger, and they were but hirelings.
The curtain which hid the King’s closet shook
as in a gale of wind. But suddenly the terrible
mask of Jean-aux-Choux surged up, so changed that
the victim did not recognise the man who had often
made sport before him.
“For Coligny one!” cried the
tragic fool.
And at that dread word the other traitor
behind the arras might well have trembled also.
Then Jean struck his first blow.
“Saint Bartholomew!” cried
Jean-aux-Choux, and struck the second time.
The Duke fell on his knees. The
eight Gascons precipitated themselves upon the man
who had been deemed, and who had deemed himself, the
most invincible of the sons of men.
So strong was he that, even in death,
he dragged them all after him, like hounds tearing
at the flanks of a dying tiger, till, with a cry of
“Oh, my friends oh, what treachery!
My sins ” the breath of life
went from him. And he fell prone, still clutching
in his agony the foot of the King’s bed.
Then the turbaned, weasel face, pale
and ghastly, jerked out of the royal closet, and the
quavering voice of the King asked Guise’s own
question of sixteen years before “Have
you finished the work? Is he dead?”
Being assured that his enemy was indeed
dead, Henry at last came out, standing over the body
of the great Leaguer, holding back the skirts of his
dressing-gown with his hand.
“Ah, but he is big!” he
said, and spurned him with his foot. Then he put
his hands on his brow, as if for a moment to hide the
sight, or perhaps to commune with himself. Suddenly
he thrust out an arm and called the man-slayers about
him.
“Ye are my hands and arms,”
he said; “I shall not forget that you have done
this for my sake.”
“Not I!” said Jean-aux-Choux
promptly. “I have done it for the sake of
Coligny, whom he murdered even so. His blood my
master’s blood has called a long
while from the ground. And so” looking
straight at the King “perish all
those who put their hands to the slaughter of the
Bartholomew night.”
Then King Henry of Valois abased his
eyes, and men could hear his teeth chatter in his
head. For, indeed, he and Catherine, his mother the
same who now lay a-dying in the chamber below had
guided, with foxy cunning and Italianate guile, that
deadly conjuration.
He was, however, too much elated to be long subdued.
“At any rate,” he said,
“Guise is dead. I am avenged upon mine enemy.
Guise is dead! But some others yet live.”