There is a house in the city of Perpignan,
in the street called “of the money,” where
on a time strange things were done and still stranger
planned. It is the ancient House of the Holy Office,
that is to say, of the Inquisition. In an upper
room, after the fatigues of the day, three priests
were seated. One was a dark, thin man, the type
of Philip’s new inquisitors, a Torquemada reborn;
the second was a little grey-haired man, with watering
reddish eyes, and a small mouth, as if it had been
cut with one blow of a chisel; while in the only comfortable
chair lounged a certain smiling Jesuit father, who,
though under the open censure of his General, was
yet the most powerful man in all their terrible Order one
Mariana, historian, pamphleteer, disputant, plotter,
inquisitor, and chief firebrand of the new Society
which had come to turn the world upside down.
These three men awaited a messenger
who was to bring them momentous intelligence from
a city far away.
Little was said, though it was supper-time,
and wines and meat had been placed on the table.
The two Fathers of the Holy Office ate sparingly,
as became men whose eyes had seen their fellows endure
many hours of torment that day, in order that their
hearts and minds might be purified from heresy, and
their money chink in the coffers of Holy Church.
Only Mariana ate and drank heartily. For was
it not his business to go about the world with soft
compressive palm and a cheerful smile on his rosy
face, a complete refutation of the idea that a Jesuit
must of necessity be a dark and cunning plotter, or
an inquisitor, merely an ecclesiastical executioner?
The Chief Surintendant Teruel was
a grim Aragonese, a peasant brought up hardly, the
humanity ground out of him by long years of noviciate,
till now he knew no pity, no kindness, no faltering,
while he carried out the will of God as interpreted
to him by his hierarchical superiors.
Little Frey Tullio, on the contrary,
was a Neapolitan, who had been sent over from Rome
on purpose to familiarise himself with the best Spanish
methods. For nowhere did the Holy Office thrive
so congenially and root itself so deeply as in Catholic
Spain. Frey Tullio did his work conscientiously,
but without the stern joy of his Aragonese superior,
and certainly wholly without the supple, subtle wit
and smiling finesse of Mariana, the famous “outcast”
of the Company of the Gesù.
“A man is waiting below,”
said a black-robed acolyte, who had handled certain
confession-producing ropes and cords that day, and
was now also resting from his labours. The prisoners
who had been saved for the next auto de fe
(except those who, being delicate, had succumbed to
the Lesser and Greater Question) rested equally from
theirs in the cellars below, the blood
stiffening in their unwashed wounds, and their rack-tormented
bones setting into place a little so as to be ready
for ten of the clock on the morrow.
“A man waiting below?”
repeated the Chief Inquisitor; “what does he
want?”
“To see the Fathers of the Holy
Office,” said the servitor, wondering if he
had sufficiently wiped the wine from his mouth ere
he came in the Surintendant was regarding
him so sternly.
“He looks like a shepherd of
the hills,” said the acolyte; “indeed,
I have seen him before at Collioure.
He is a servant, so he says, of Don Raphael Llorient!”
“Ah,” said Mariana quickly,
“then I think I can guess his message. I
have already spoken of it with Don Raphael.”
“Bid three stout familiars of
the Office stand unseen behind the curtain there,
weapons in hand,” commanded Surintendant Teruel;
“then show the man up!”
Jean-aux-Choux entered, long-haired,
wild-eyed, his cloak of rough frieze falling low about
his ankles, and his hand upon the dagger-hilt which
had once been red with the blood of the Guise.
The three looked silently at him,
with that chill, pitiless gaze which made no difference
between a man asked to speak his message and him who,
by one word out of his own mouth, must deliver himself
to torture and to death.
“Stand!” commanded the
Chief Inquisitor, “speak your message briefly,
and if all be well, you are at liberty to return as
you came!”
The threat was hardly veiled, but
Jean-aux-Choux stood undaunted.
“Death is my familiar friend,”
he said; “I am not afraid. God, who hath
oft delivered me from the tooth of the lion and the
claw of the bear, can deliver me also from this Philistine.”
The two judges of men’s souls
looked at each other. This was perilously like
fanaticism. They knew well how to deal with that.
But Mariana only laughed and tapped his forehead covertly
with his forefinger.
“He is harmless, but mad, this
fellow,” he murmured; “I have often spoken
with him while I abode at the house of Don Raphael
of Collioure. He hath had in his youth some smattering
of letters, but now what little lear he had trots
all skimble-skamble in his head. Yet, failing
our young Dominican of Sens well, we might
go farther and fare worse.”
Then he turned to Jean-aux-Choux.
“Your message, shepherd?”
he said. “Fear nothing. We shall not
harm you.”
“Had I supposed so, you would
not have found me here out of the mouth
of the lion, and out of ”
“That will do,” said Mariana,
cutting him short; “whence come you?”
“From the camp of two kings,
a great and a little, a true and a false, the lion
and the dog ”
“Speak plainly we have little time
to waste!”
“Plainly then, I have seen the
meeting of Henry of Valois and Henry of Navarre!
They fell each on the other’s neck and kissed!”
The two inquisitors rose to their
feet. For the first time emotion showed on their
faces. The chief, tall, black, sombre, stood and
threatened Jean-aux-Choux with comminatory forefinger.
“If you speak lies, beware!”
The little Italian, formerly so grey
and still, nothing stirring about him save the restless,
beady eyes common to all Neapolitans, stood up and
vociferated.
“It is an open defiance of our
Holy Father,” he cried, “a shame of shames the
Valois shall be accursed! He has delivered his
realm to the Huguenot. He shall be burnt alive,
and I I would refuse him the viaticum!”
“He may not have time even for
that!” said Mariana softly “that
is, when his day comes. But haste you, man, tell
us what befel where, and how.”
“On Sunday last,” began
Jean-aux-Choux, looking his three inquisitors in the
face with the utmost calm, “I was, as Father
Mariana knows, in a certain place upon the affairs
of my master.
“It was in a park near a great
city of many towers. A river ran near by and
a bridge spanned it. At the bridge-head were three
great nobles dukes and peers of France,
so they said. Many people were in the park and
about the palace which stood within it. There
seemed no fear. The place was open to all.
About a chapel door they cried ’God save the
King!’ For within a man, splendidly arrayed,
was hearing mass I saw him enter.”
The inquisitors looked at one another,
nodding expressively.
“But I cared not for that.
I was at the bridge-head, and almost at my elbow the
three nobles conferred one with the other, doubtful
if he for whom they waited would come.
“‘I should not, if I were
he,’ said one of them; ’my father did the
like, and died! Only he had a written promise.’”
“That was Chatillon, Coligny’s
son, I warrant,” said Mariana, who seemed to
know everything.
“And another said, ’He
has my word he will believe that, though
he doubts that of the King!’”
“Epernon, for a wager!”
cried the Jesuit, clapping his hands; “there
spoke the man! And the third, what said he?”
“Oh, he no great
matter,” answered Jean-aux-Choux, gently stroking
his brow, as if to recall a matter long past.
“Ah, I do remember he only caused
great swelling words to come from his mouth, and rattled
his sword in his scabbard, declaring that if there
was any treachery he would thrust the traitor through
and through with ‘Monsieur la Chose’ (so
he named his sword), which he declared to be the peer
and overlord of any king in Christendie!”
“That would be the Marshal d’Aumont,”
said Mariana, after a pause. “Well, and
so these three waited there, on the bridge, did they?”
“Ay, I warrant. I was at
their elbow, as I say,” quoth Jean-aux-Choux,
“on the bridge called the ‘Pont de la Motte.’
And presently there came in sight a cloud of dust,
and out of the cloud galloping horses, with one that
rode in front. And there were spear-heads that
glinted, and musket-barrels, and swords with dinted
scabbards. And the armour of these men was all
tashed, and their helms like to a piece of lead that
one has smitten with a hammer long and long.”
“Battered armour is the worn
breviary of the soldier!” commented Mariana.
“Had these horsemen white scarves belting them?”
“Each man of them!” Jean-aux-Choux
answered. “But even he that rode at the
head had his armour (so much of it as he wore) in a
like state; but whereas all the others rode with plain
steel helms, there was a white plume in his.
Those who stood near called it his panache, and said
it was miracle-working. Also he wore a cloak,
like that of a night-sentinel, but underneath, his
doublet and hose were of olive-green velvet.
He was of a hearty countenance, robust of body, and
rode gallantly, with his head thrown back, laughing
at little things by the way as when a court
page-boy, all in cloth of gold, fell off the tree
on which he had climbed to see the show, and had to
be pulled out of the river, dripping and weeping,
with a countryman’s rake all tangled in the
hinder breadths of his raiment.”
“The Bearnais! To a hair!”
cried the Jesuit. “Ah, what a man!
What a man if only he were on the side
of Holy Church ”
“He is a heretic of heretics,”
said the Surintendant Temel, “and deserves only
the flames and the yellow robe!”
“It is a pity,” said Mariana,
with a certain contempt for such intolerance of idea;
“you would have found him an equally good man
in your father’s wheat-field, and I, at the
King’s council. One day he will give our
Philip tit-for-tat that is, if he live so
long!”
“Which God forbid!” said the inquisitor.
“Amen!” assented Frey Tullio.
“Well,” smiled Mariana,
“there is no pleasing you. For me, there
are many sorts of gallant men, but with you, a man
must either swallow all the Council of Trent, or be
food for flames.”
The inquisitors were silent.
Discussion was not their business. They worked
honestly from ten in the morning till five in the afternoon.
Therefore, they deserved their rest, and if Mariana
persisted in talking they would not get it. Still,
they were eager to hear what the servant of Raphael
Llorient had to say.
Mariana made Jean a signal to go on
with his tale. He continued:
“So being used to run on the
mountains, I outstripped the crowd and came to the
door of the chapel where the Other King, he in the
cloak of blue and gold, was at his prayers. The
crowd pressed and thronged all looking
the other way.
“And I waited. But not
long. From very far away there came a crying of
many people a great soughing whisper first,
then a sound like the strength of the wind among high
trees, and last, loud as the roar of many waters ’The
White Plume! The White Plume! Navarre!
Navarre!’
“Then the Other King, whom no
one cheered greatly nor took much heed of, came out
from his mass and strove to meet the king of the brisk
and smiling countenance. But for a long time
they could not. For the crowd broke in and pressed
them so tight that during a good quarter of an hour
these two Kings, the White Plume, and the Man-all-covered-with-Lilies,
stood within half-a-dozen paces of each other, unable
to embrace or even to touch hands. Whereat the
White Plume laughed and jested with those about, bidding
them remember that he had come without his breakfast,
and such-like. But the Man-with-the-Lilies was
sullen and angry with the concourse.”
“Ah, for a couple of good disciplined
Leaguers with long knives!” muttered the Chief
of the Inquisitors regretfully.
“And then,” continued
Jean-aux-Choux, “the angry Soldier-Man, who had
stood on the bridge with sword and baton, thrust back
the people, speaking many words hotly, which are not
fit that I should repeat in your reverend ears.
So finally the two Kings met and embraced, and the
people shouted, so that none might know what his neighbour
said. And presently I saw these two walk arm-in-arm
through the press, and so up into the chateau, out
of my sight. They abode there long time talking,
and then after eating they came out. For it was
time that the King-covered-with-Lilies should go back
to his chapel, being a man apparently very devout.”
The expression on the faces of the
two inquisitors was dreadful to behold in its contempt
and hate. But Mariana laughed.
“So he came out again, and the
King with the White Plume still with him. Only
he of the Plume entered not in to the chapel, but stayed
without, playing at tennis with the strongest and
bravest youths of the court, and laughing when they
beat him, or when the ball took him in his face.
“And all the while the crowd
cried, ’Long live the White Plume! Long
live Navarre!’ And sometimes from the back, one
or two would raise a feeble cry ‘Long live France!
Long live Henry of Valois!’”
The Chief Inquisitor brought down
his fist on the table with a crash, so that the wine-bottles
tottered and a glass smashed.
“But he shall not by
the crucifix, he shall not!” he hissed, chill-white
with anger. “He shall die if
there be poison in Italy, steel in France, or ”
“Money in Spain!” said
Mariana calmly, putting his hand on the arm of his
coadjutor. “Well, there is not much but
this is the Street of the Money and I judge
we shall find enough for that!”