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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>Count Hannibal</title>
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">Count Hannibal, by Stanley J. Weyman</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Count Hannibal, by Stanley J. Weyman
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Count Hannibal
+ A Romance of the Court of France
+
+
+Author: Stanley J. Weyman
+
+Release Date: May 3, 2005 [eBook #15763]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COUNT HANNIBAL***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>This eBook was prepared by Les Bowler from the 1922 John Murray edition.</p>
+<h1>COUNT HANNIBAL<br />
+A ROMANCE OF THE COURT OF FRANCE.<br />
+by Stanley J. Weyman.</h1>
+<p>SORORI<br />
+SU&Acirc; CAUSS&Acirc; CARAE<br />
+PRO ERGA MATREM AMORE<br />
+ETIAM CARIORI<br />
+HOC FRATER.</p>
+<p>CONTENTS</p>
+<p>I.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; CRIMSON FAVOURS<br />
+II.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; HANNIBAL DE SAULX, COMTE DE TAVANNES<br />
+III.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; THE HOUSE NEXT THE GOLDEN MAID<br />
+IV.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; THE EVE OF THE FEAST<br />
+V.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A ROUGH WOOING<br />
+VI.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &ldquo;WHO TOUCHES TAVANNES?&rdquo;<br />
+VII.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; IN THE AMPHITHEATRE<br />
+VIII.&nbsp;&nbsp; TWO HENS AND AN EGG<br />
+IX.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; UNSTABLE<br />
+X.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; MADAME ST. LO<br />
+XI.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A BARGAIN<br />
+XII.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; IN THE HALL OF THE LOUVRE<br />
+XIII.&nbsp;&nbsp; DIPLOMACY<br />
+XIV.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; TOO SHORT A SPOON<br />
+XV.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; THE BROTHER OF ST. MAGLOIRE<br />
+XVI.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; AT CLOSE QUARTERS<br />
+XVII.&nbsp;&nbsp; THE DUEL<br />
+XVIII.&nbsp; ANDROMEDA, PERSEUS BEING ABSENT<br />
+XIX.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; IN THE ORL&Eacute;ANNAIS<br />
+XX.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; ON THE CASTLE HILL<br />
+XXI.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; SHE WOULD, AND WOULD NOT<br />
+XXII.&nbsp;&nbsp; PLAYING WITH FIRE<br />
+XXIII.&nbsp; A MIND, AND NOT A MIND<br />
+XXIV.&nbsp;&nbsp; AT THE KING&rsquo;S INN<br />
+XXV.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; THE COMPANY OF THE BLEEDING HEART<br />
+XXVI.&nbsp;&nbsp; TEMPER<br />
+XXVII.&nbsp; THE BLACK TOWN<br />
+XXVIII. IN THE LITTLE CHAPTER-HOUSE<br />
+XXIX.&nbsp;&nbsp; THE ESCAPE<br />
+XXX.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; SACRILEGE!<br />
+XXXI.&nbsp;&nbsp; THE FLIGHT FROM ANGERS<br />
+XXXII.&nbsp; THE ORDEAL BY STEEL<br />
+XXXIII. THE AMBUSH<br />
+XXXIV.&nbsp; &ldquo;WHICH WILL YOU, MADAME?&rdquo;<br />
+XXXV.&nbsp;&nbsp; AGAINST THE WALL<br />
+XXXVI.&nbsp; HIS KINGDOM</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER I.&nbsp; CRIMSON FAVOURS.</h2>
+<p>M. de Tavannes smiled.&nbsp; Mademoiselle averted her eyes, and shivered;
+as if the air, even of that close summer night, entering by the door
+at her elbow, chilled her.&nbsp; And then came a welcome interruption.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tavannes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sire!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal rose slowly.&nbsp; The King had called, and he had
+no choice but to obey and go.&nbsp; Yet he hung a last moment over his
+companion, his hateful breath stirring her hair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our pleasure is cut short too soon, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; he
+said, in the tone, and with the look, she loathed.&nbsp; &ldquo;But
+for a few hours only.&nbsp; We shall meet to-morrow.&nbsp; Or, it may
+be&mdash;earlier.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She did not answer, and &ldquo;Tavannes!&rdquo; the King repeated
+with violence.&nbsp; &ldquo;Tavannes!&nbsp; Mordieu!&rdquo; his Majesty
+continued, looking round furiously.&nbsp; &ldquo;Will no one fetch him?&nbsp;
+Sacr&eacute; nom, am I King, or a dog of a&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I come, sire!&rdquo; the Count cried hastily.&nbsp; For Charles,
+King of France, Ninth of the name, was none of the most patient; and
+scarce another in the Court would have ventured to keep him waiting
+so long.&nbsp; &ldquo;I come, sire; I come!&rdquo; Tavannes repeated,
+as he moved from Mademoiselle&rsquo;s side.</p>
+<p>He shouldered his way through the circle of courtiers, who barred
+the road to the presence, and in part hid her from observation.&nbsp;
+He pushed past the table at which Charles and the Comte de Rochefoucauld
+had been playing primero, and at which the latter still sat, trifling
+idly with the cards.&nbsp; Three more paces, and he reached the King,
+who stood in the <i>ruelle</i> with Rambouillet and the Italian Marshal.&nbsp;
+It was the latter who, a moment before, had summoned his Majesty from
+his game.</p>
+<p>Mademoiselle, watching him go, saw so much; so much, and the King&rsquo;s
+roving eyes and haggard face, and the four figures, posed apart in the
+fuller light of the upper half of the Chamber.&nbsp; Then the circle
+of courtiers came together before her, and she sat back on her stool.&nbsp;
+A fluttering, long-drawn sigh escaped her.&nbsp; Now, if she could slip
+out and make her escape!&nbsp; Now&mdash;she looked round.&nbsp; She
+was not far from the door; to withdraw seemed easy.&nbsp; But a staring,
+whispering knot of gentlemen and pages blocked the way; and the girl,
+ignorant of the etiquette of the Court, and with no more than a week&rsquo;s
+experience of Paris, had not the courage to rise and pass alone through
+the group.</p>
+<p>She had come to the Louvre this Saturday evening under the wing of
+Madame d&rsquo;Yverne, her <i>fianc&eacute;&rsquo;s</i> cousin.&nbsp;
+By ill-hap Madame had been summoned to the Princess Dowager&rsquo;s
+closet, and perforce had left her.&nbsp; Still, Mademoiselle had her
+betrothed, and in his charge had sat herself down to wait, nothing loth,
+in the great gallery, where all was bustle and gaiety and entertainment.&nbsp;
+For this, the seventh day of the f&ecirc;tes, held to celebrate the
+marriage of the King of Navarre and Charles&rsquo;s sister&mdash;a marriage
+which was to reconcile the two factions of the Huguenots and the Catholics,
+so long at war&mdash;saw the Louvre as gay, as full, and as lively as
+the first of the f&ecirc;te days had found it; and in the humours of
+the throng, in the ceaseless passage of masks and maids of honour, guards
+and bishops, Swiss in the black, white, and green of Anjou, and Huguenot
+nobles in more sombre habits, the country-bred girl had found recreation
+and to spare.&nbsp; Until gradually the evening had worn away and she
+had begun to feel nervous; and M. de Tignonville, her betrothed, placing
+her in the embrasure of a window, had gone to seek Madame.</p>
+<p>She had waited for a time without much misgiving; expecting each
+moment to see him return.&nbsp; He would be back before she could count
+a hundred; he would be back before she could number the leagues that
+separated her from her beloved province, and the home by the Biscay
+Sea, to which even in that brilliant scene her thoughts turned fondly.&nbsp;
+But the minutes had passed, and passed, and he had not returned.&nbsp;
+Worse, in his place Tavannes&mdash;not the Marshal, but his brother,
+Count Hannibal&mdash;had found her; he, whose odious court, at once
+a menace and an insult, had subtly enveloped her for a week past.&nbsp;
+He had sat down beside her, he had taken possession of her, and, profiting
+by her inexperience, had played on her fears and smiled at her dislike.&nbsp;
+Finally, whether she would or no, he had swept her with him into the
+Chamber.&nbsp; The rest had been an obsession, a nightmare, from which
+only the King&rsquo;s voice summoning Tavannes to his side had relieved
+her.</p>
+<p>Her aim now was to escape before he returned, and before another,
+seeing her alone, adopted his <i>r&ocirc;le</i> and was rude to her.&nbsp;
+Already the courtiers about her were beginning to stare, the pages to
+turn and titter and whisper.&nbsp; Direct her gaze as she might, she
+met some eye watching her, some couple enjoying her confusion.&nbsp;
+To make matters worse, she presently discovered that she was the only
+woman in the Chamber; and she conceived the notion that she had no right
+to be there at that hour.&nbsp; At the thought her cheeks burned, her
+eyes dropped; the room seemed to buzz with her name, with gross words
+and jests, and gibes at her expense.</p>
+<p>At last, when the situation had grown nearly unbearable, the group
+before the door parted, and Tignonville appeared.&nbsp; The girl rose
+with a cry of relief, and he came to her.&nbsp; The courtiers glanced
+at the two and smiled.</p>
+<p>He did not conceal his astonishment at finding her there.&nbsp; &ldquo;But,
+Mademoiselle, how is this?&rdquo; he asked, in a low voice.&nbsp; He
+was as conscious of the attention they attracted as she was, and as
+uncertain on the point of her right to be there.&nbsp; &ldquo;I left
+you in the gallery.&nbsp; I came back, missed you, and&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She stopped him by a gesture.&nbsp; &ldquo;Not here!&rdquo; she muttered,
+with suppressed impatience.&nbsp; &ldquo;I will tell you outside.&nbsp;
+Take me&mdash;take me out, if you please, Monsieur, at once!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was as glad to be gone as she was to go.&nbsp; The group by the
+doorway parted; she passed through it, he followed.&nbsp; In a moment
+the two stood in the great gallery, above the Salle des Caryatides.&nbsp;
+The crowd which had paraded here an hour before was gone, and the vast
+echoing apartment, used at that date as a guard-room, was well-nigh
+empty.&nbsp; Only at rare intervals, in the embrasure of a window or
+the recess of a door, a couple talked softly.&nbsp; At the farther end,
+near the head of the staircase which led to the hall below, and the
+courtyard, a group of armed Swiss lounged on guard.&nbsp; Mademoiselle
+shot a keen glance up and down, then she turned to her lover, her face
+hot with indignation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why did you leave me?&rdquo; she asked.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why did
+you leave me, if you could not come back at once?&nbsp; Do you understand,
+sir,&rdquo; she continued, &ldquo;that it was at your instance I came
+to Paris, that I came to this Court, and that I look to you for protection?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;And&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And do you think Carlat and his wife fit guardians for me?&nbsp;
+Should I have come or thought of coming to this wedding, but for your
+promise, and Madame your cousin&rsquo;s?&nbsp; If I had not deemed myself
+almost your wife,&rdquo; she continued warmly, &ldquo;and secure of
+your protection, should I have come within a hundred miles of this dreadful
+city?&nbsp; To which, had I my will, none of our people should have
+come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dreadful?&nbsp; Pardieu, not so dreadful,&rdquo; he answered,
+smiling, and striving to give the dispute a playful turn.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+have seen more in a week than you would have seen at Vrillac in a lifetime,
+Mademoiselle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I choke!&rdquo; she retorted; &ldquo;I choke!&nbsp; Do
+you not see how they look at us, at us Huguenots, in the street?&nbsp;
+How they, who live here, point at us and curse us?&nbsp; How the very
+dogs scent us out and snarl at our heels, and the babes cross themselves
+when we go by?&nbsp; Can you see the Place des Gastines and not think
+what stood there?&nbsp; Can you pass the Gr&egrave;ve at night and not
+fill the air above the river with screams and wailings and horrible
+cries&mdash;the cries of our people murdered on that spot?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+She paused for breath, recovered herself a little, and in a lower tone,
+&ldquo;For me,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I think of Philippa de Luns by
+day and by night!&nbsp; The eaves are a threat to me; the tiles would
+fall on us had they their will; the houses nod to&mdash;to&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To what, Mademoiselle?&rdquo; he asked, shrugging his shoulders
+and assuming a tone of cynicism.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To crush us!&nbsp; Yes, Monsieur, to crush us!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And all this because I left you for a moment?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For an hour&mdash;or well-nigh an hour,&rdquo; she answered
+more soberly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if I could not help it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You should have thought of that&mdash;before you brought me
+to Paris, Monsieur.&nbsp; In these troublous times.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He coloured warmly.&nbsp; &ldquo;You are unjust, Mademoiselle,&rdquo;
+he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;There are things you forget; in a Court one is
+not always master of one&rsquo;s self.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it,&rdquo; she answered dryly, thinking of that through
+which she had gone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you do not know what happened!&rdquo; he returned with
+impatience.&nbsp; &ldquo;You do not understand that I am not to blame.&nbsp;
+Madame d&rsquo;Yverne, when I reached the Princess Dowager&rsquo;s closet,
+had left to go to the Queen of Navarre.&nbsp; I hurried after her, and
+found a score of gentlemen in the King of Navarre&rsquo;s chamber.&nbsp;
+They were holding a council, and they begged, nay, they compelled me
+to remain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And it was that which detained you so long?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To be sure, Mademoiselle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And not&mdash;Madame St. Lo?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. de Tignonville&rsquo;s face turned scarlet.&nbsp; The thrust in
+tierce was unexpected.&nbsp; This, then, was the key to Mademoiselle&rsquo;s
+spirt of temper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not understand you,&rdquo; he stammered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How long were you in the King of Navarre&rsquo;s chamber,
+and how long with Madame St. Lo?&rdquo; she asked with fine irony.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Or no, I will not tempt you,&rdquo; she went on quickly, seeing
+him hesitate.&nbsp; &ldquo;I heard you talking to Madame St. Lo in the
+gallery while I sat within.&nbsp; And I know how long you were with
+her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I met Madame as I returned,&rdquo; he stammered, his face
+still hot, &ldquo;and I asked her where you were.&nbsp; I did not know,
+Mademoiselle, that I was not to speak to ladies of my acquaintance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was alone, and I was waiting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I could not know that&mdash;for certain,&rdquo; he answered,
+making the best of it.&nbsp; &ldquo;You were not where I left you.&nbsp;
+I thought, I confess&mdash;that you had gone.&nbsp; That you had gone
+home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With whom?&nbsp; With whom?&rdquo; she repeated pitilessly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Was it likely?&nbsp; With whom was I to go?&nbsp; And yet it
+is true, I might have gone home had I pleased&mdash;with M. de Tavannes!&nbsp;
+Yes,&rdquo; she continued, in a tone of keen reproach, and with the
+blood mounting to her forehead, &ldquo;it is to that, Monsieur, you
+expose me!&nbsp; To be pursued, molested, harassed by a man whose look
+terrifies me, and whose touch I&mdash;I detest!&nbsp; To be addressed
+wherever I go by a man whose every word proves that he thinks me game
+for the hunter, and you a thing he may neglect.&nbsp; You are a man
+and you do not know, you cannot know what I suffer! What I have suffered
+this week past whenever you have left my side!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville looked gloomy.&nbsp; &ldquo;What has he said to you?&rdquo;
+he asked, between his teeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing I can tell you,&rdquo; she answered, with a shudder.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It was he who took me into the Chamber.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why did you go?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait until he bids you do something,&rdquo; she answered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;His manner, his smile, his tone, all frighten me.&nbsp; And to-night,
+in all these there was a something worse, a hundred times worse than
+when I saw him last&mdash;on Thursday!&nbsp; He seemed to&mdash;to gloat
+on me,&rdquo; the girl stammered, with a flush of shame, &ldquo;as if
+I were his!&nbsp; Oh, Monsieur, I wish we had not left our Poitou!&nbsp;
+Shall we ever see Vrillac again, and the fishers&rsquo; huts about the
+port, and the sea beating blue against the long brown causeway?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had listened darkly, almost sullenly; but at this, seeing the
+tears gather in her eyes, he forced a laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, you are as bad as M. de Rosny and the Vidame!&rdquo;
+he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;And they are as full of fears as an egg is of
+meat!&nbsp; Since the Admiral was wounded by that scoundrel on Friday,
+they think all Paris is in a league against us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And why not?&rdquo; she asked, her cheek grown pale, her eyes
+reading his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&nbsp; Why, because it is a monstrous thing even to
+think of!&rdquo; Tignonville answered, with the confidence of one who
+did not use the argument for the first time.&nbsp; &ldquo;Could they
+insult the King more deeply than by such a suspicion?&nbsp; A Borgia
+may kill his guests, but it was never a practice of the Kings of France!&nbsp;
+Pardieu, I have no patience with them!&nbsp; They may lodge where they
+please, across the river, or without the walls if they choose, the Rue
+de l&rsquo;Arbre Sec is good enough for me, and the King&rsquo;s name
+sufficient surety!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know you are not apt to be fearful,&rdquo; she answered,
+smiling; and she looked at him with a woman&rsquo;s pride in her lover.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;All the same, you will not desert me again, sir, will you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He vowed he would not, kissed her hand, looked into her eyes; then
+melting to her, stammering, blundering, he named Madame St. Lo.&nbsp;
+She stopped him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is no need,&rdquo; she said, answering his look with
+kind eyes, and refusing to hear his protestations.&nbsp; &ldquo;In a
+fortnight will you not be my husband?&nbsp; How should I distrust you?&nbsp;
+It was only that while she talked, I waited&mdash;I waited; and&mdash;and
+that Madame St. Lo is Count Hannibal&rsquo;s cousin.&nbsp; For a moment
+I was mad enough to dream that she held you on purpose.&nbsp; You do
+not think it was so?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She!&rdquo; he cried sharply; and he winced, as if the thought
+hurt him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Absurd!&nbsp; The truth is, Mademoiselle,&rdquo;
+he continued with a little heat, &ldquo;you are like so many of our
+people!&nbsp; You think a Catholic capable of the worst.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We have long thought so at Vrillac,&rdquo; she answered gravely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s over now, if people would only understand.&nbsp;
+This wedding has put an end to all that.&nbsp; But I&rsquo;m harking
+back,&rdquo; he continued awkwardly; and he stopped.&nbsp; &ldquo;Instead,
+let me take you home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you please.&nbsp; Carlat and the servants should be below.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He took her left hand in his right after the wont of the day, and
+with his other hand touching his sword-hilt, he led her down the staircase,
+that by a single turn reached the courtyard of the palace.&nbsp; Here
+a mob of armed servants, of lacqueys, and footboys, some bearing torches,
+and some carrying their masters&rsquo; cloaks and <i>galoshes</i>, loitered
+to and fro.&nbsp; Had M. de Tignonville been a little more observant,
+or a trifle less occupied with his own importance, he might have noted
+more than one face which looked darkly on him; he might have caught
+more than one overt sneer at his expense.&nbsp; But in the business
+of summoning Carlat&mdash;Mademoiselle de Vrillac&rsquo;s steward and
+major-domo&mdash;he lost the contemptuous &ldquo;Christaudins!&rdquo;
+that hissed from a footboy&rsquo;s lips, and the &ldquo;Southern dogs!&rdquo;
+that died in the moustachios of a bully in the livery of the King&rsquo;s
+brother.&nbsp; He was engaged in finding the steward, and in aiding
+him to cloak his mistress; then with a ruffling air, a new acquirement,
+which he had picked up since he came to Paris, he made a way for her
+through the crowd.&nbsp; A moment, and the three, followed by half a
+dozen armed servants, bearing pikes and torches, detached themselves
+from the throng, and crossing the courtyard, with its rows of lighted
+windows, passed out by the gate between the Tennis Courts, and so into
+the Rue des Fosses de St. Germain.</p>
+<p>Before them, against a sky in which the last faint glow of evening
+still contended with the stars, the spire and pointed arches of the
+church of St. Germain rose darkly graceful.&nbsp; It was something after
+nine: the heat of the August day brooded over the crowded city, and
+dulled the faint distant ring of arms and armour that yet would make
+itself heard above the hush; a hush which was not silence so much as
+a subdued hum.&nbsp; As Mademoiselle passed the closed house beside
+the Cloister of St. Germain, where only the day before Admiral Coligny,
+the leader of the Huguenots, had been wounded, she pressed her escort&rsquo;s
+hand, and involuntarily drew nearer to him.&nbsp; But he laughed at
+her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was a private blow,&rdquo; he said, answering her unspoken
+thought.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is like enough the Guises sped it.&nbsp; But
+they know now what is the King&rsquo;s will, and they have taken the
+hint and withdrawn themselves.&nbsp; It will not happen again, Mademoiselle.&nbsp;
+For proof, see the guards&rdquo;&mdash;they were passing the end of
+the Rue Bethizy, in the corner house of which, abutting on the Rue de
+l&rsquo;Arbre Sec, Coligny had his lodgings&mdash;&ldquo;whom the King
+has placed for his security.&nbsp; Fifty pikes under Cosseins.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cosseins?&rdquo; she repeated.&nbsp; &ldquo;But I thought
+Cosseins&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was not wont to love us!&rdquo; Tignonville answered, with
+a confident chuckle.&nbsp; &ldquo;He was not.&nbsp; But the dogs lick
+where the master wills, Mademoiselle.&nbsp; He was not, but he does.&nbsp;
+This marriage has altered all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope it may not prove an unlucky one!&rdquo; she murmured.&nbsp;
+She felt impelled to say it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not it!&rdquo; he answered confidently.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why should
+it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They stopped, as he spoke, before the last house, at the corner of
+the Rue St. Honor&eacute; opposite the Croix du Tiroir; which rose shadowy
+in the middle of the four ways.&nbsp; He hammered on the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; she said softly, looking in his face, &ldquo;the
+change is sudden, is it not?&nbsp; The King was not wont to be so good
+to us!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The King was not King until now,&rdquo; he answered warmly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;That is what I am trying to persuade our people.&nbsp; Believe
+me, Mademoiselle, you may sleep without fear; and early in the morning
+I will be with you.&nbsp; Carlat, have a care of your mistress until
+morning, and let Madame lie in her chamber.&nbsp; She is nervous to-night.&nbsp;
+There, sweet, until morning!&nbsp; God keep you, and pleasant dreams!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He uncovered, and bowing over her hand, kissed it; and the door being
+open he would have turned away.&nbsp; But she lingered as if unwilling
+to enter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is&mdash;do you hear it&mdash;a stir in <i>that</i>
+quarter?&rdquo; she said, pointing across the Rue St. Honor&eacute;.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What lies there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Northward?&nbsp; The markets,&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis
+nothing.&nbsp; They say, you know, that Paris never sleeps.&nbsp; Good
+night, sweet, and a fair awakening!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She shivered as she had shivered under Tavannes&rsquo; eye.&nbsp;
+And still she lingered, keeping him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you going to your lodging at once?&rdquo; she asked&mdash;for
+the sake, it seemed, of saying something.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I?&rdquo; he answered a little hurriedly.&nbsp; &ldquo;No,
+I was thinking of paying Rochefoucauld the compliment of seeing him
+home.&nbsp; He has taken a new lodging to be near the Admiral; a horrid
+bare place in the Rue Bethizy, without furniture, but he would go into
+it to-day.&nbsp; And he has a sort of claim on my family, you know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said simply.&nbsp; &ldquo;Of course.&nbsp;
+Then I must not detain you.&nbsp; God keep you safe,&rdquo; she continued,
+with a faint quiver in her tone; and her lip trembled.&nbsp; &ldquo;Good
+night, and fair dreams, Monsieur.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He echoed the words gallantly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Of you, sweet!&rdquo;
+he cried; and turning away with a gesture of farewell, he set off on
+his return.</p>
+<p>He walked briskly, nor did he look back, though she stood awhile
+gazing after him.&nbsp; She was not aware that she gave thought to this;
+nor that it hurt her.&nbsp; Yet when bolt and bar had shot behind her,
+and she had mounted the cold, bare staircase of that day&mdash;when
+she had heard the dull echoing footsteps of her attendants as they withdrew
+to their lairs and sleeping-places, and still more when she had crossed
+the threshold of her chamber, and signed to Madame Carlat and her woman
+to listen&mdash;it is certain she felt a lack of something.</p>
+<p>Perhaps the chill that possessed her came of that lack, which she
+neither defined nor acknowledged.&nbsp; Or possibly it came of the night
+air, August though it was; or of sheer nervousness, or of the remembrance
+of Count Hannibal&rsquo;s smile.&nbsp; Whatever its origin, she took
+it to bed with her and long after the house slept round her, long after
+the crowded quarter of the Halles had begun to heave and the Sorbonne
+to vomit a black-frocked band, long after the tall houses in the gabled
+streets, from St. Antoine to Montmartre and from St. Denis on the north
+to St. Jacques on the south, had burst into rows of twinkling lights&mdash;nay,
+long after the Quarter of the Louvre alone remained dark, girdled by
+this strange midnight brightness&mdash;she lay awake.&nbsp; At length
+she too slept, and dreamed of home and the wide skies of Poitou, and
+her castle of Vrillac washed day and night by the Biscay tides.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II.&nbsp; HANNIBAL DE SAULX, COMTE DE TAVANNES.</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;Tavannes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tavannes, we know, had been slow to obey the summons.&nbsp; Emerging
+from the crowd, he found that the King, with Retz and Rambouillet, his
+Marshal des Logis, had retired to the farther end of the Chamber; apparently
+Charles had forgotten that he had called.&nbsp; His head a little bent&mdash;he
+was tall and had a natural stoop&mdash;the King seemed to be listening
+to a low but continuous murmur of voices which proceeded from the door
+of his closet.&nbsp; One voice frequently raised was beyond doubt a
+woman&rsquo;s; a foreign accent, smooth and silky, marked another; a
+third, that from time to time broke in, wilful and impetuous, was the
+voice of Monsieur, the King&rsquo;s brother, Catherine de M&eacute;dicis&rsquo;
+favourite son.&nbsp; Tavannes, waiting respectfully two paces behind
+the King, could catch little that was said; but Charles, something more,
+it seemed, for on a sudden he laughed, a violent, mirthless laugh.&nbsp;
+And he clapped Rambouillet on the shoulder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There!&rdquo; he said, with one of his horrible oaths, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis
+settled!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis settled!&nbsp; Go, man, and take your orders!&nbsp;
+And you, M. de Retz,&rdquo; he continued, in a tone of savage mockery,
+&ldquo;go, my lord, and give them!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I, sire?&rdquo; the Italian Marshal answered, in accents of
+deprecation.&nbsp; There were times when the young King would show his
+impatience of the Italian ring, the Retzs and Biragues, the Strozzis
+and Gondys, with whom his mother surrounded him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, you!&rdquo; Charles answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;You and my
+lady mother!&nbsp; And in God&rsquo;s name answer for it at the day!&rdquo;
+he continued vehemently.&nbsp; &ldquo;You will have it!&nbsp; You will
+not let me rest till you have it!&nbsp; Then have it, only see to it,
+it be done thoroughly!&nbsp; There shall not be one left to cast it
+in the King&rsquo;s teeth and cry, &lsquo;Et tu, Carole!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Swim, swim in blood if you will,&rdquo; he continued, with growing wildness.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh, &rsquo;twill be a merry night!&nbsp; And it&rsquo;s true
+so far, you may kill fleas all day, but burn the coat, and there&rsquo;s
+an end.&nbsp; So burn it, burn it, and&mdash;&rdquo;&nbsp; He broke
+off with a start as he discovered Tavannes at his elbow.&nbsp; &ldquo;God&rsquo;s
+death, man!&rdquo; he cried roughly, &ldquo;who sent for you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your Majesty called me,&rdquo; Tavannes answered; while, partly
+urged by the King&rsquo;s hand, and partly anxious to escape, the others
+slipped into the closet and left them together.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I sent for you?&nbsp; I called your brother, the Marshal!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is within, sire,&rdquo; Tavannes answered, indicating the
+closet.&nbsp; &ldquo;A moment ago I heard his voice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles passed his shaking hand across his eyes.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is
+he?&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;So he is!&nbsp; I heard it too.&nbsp;
+And&mdash;and a man cannot be in two places at once!&rdquo;&nbsp; Then,
+while his haggard gaze, passing by Tavannes, roved round the Chamber,
+he laid his hand on Count Hannibal&rsquo;s breast.&nbsp; &ldquo;They
+give me no peace, Madame and the Guises,&rdquo; he whispered, his face
+hectic with excitement.&nbsp; &ldquo;They will have it.&nbsp; They say
+that Coligny&mdash;they say that he beards me in my own palace.&nbsp;
+And&mdash;and, <i>mordieu</i>,&rdquo; with sudden violence, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s
+true.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s true enough!&nbsp; It was but to-day he was for
+making terms with me!&nbsp; With me, the King!&nbsp; Making terms!&nbsp;
+So it shall be, by God and Devil, it shall!&nbsp; But not six or seven!&nbsp;
+No, no.&nbsp; All!&nbsp; All!&nbsp; There shall not be one left to say
+to me, &lsquo;You did it!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Softly, sire,&rdquo; Tavannes answered; for Charles had gradually
+raised his voice.&nbsp; &ldquo;You will be observed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For the first time the young King&mdash;he was but twenty-two years
+old, God pity him!&mdash;looked at his companion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To be sure,&rdquo; he whispered; and his eyes grew cunning.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Besides, and after all, there&rsquo;s another way, if I choose.&nbsp;
+Oh, I&rsquo;ve thought and thought, I&rsquo;d have you know.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And shrugging his shoulders, almost to his ears, he raised and lowered
+his open hands alternately, while his back hid the movement from the
+Chamber.&nbsp; &ldquo;See-saw!&nbsp; See-saw!&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And the King between the two, you see.&nbsp; That&rsquo;s Madame&rsquo;s
+king-craft.&nbsp; She&rsquo;s shown me that a hundred times.&nbsp; But
+look you, it is as easy to lower the one as the other,&rdquo; with a
+cunning glance at Tavannes&rsquo; face, &ldquo;or to cut off the right
+as the left.&nbsp; And&mdash;and the Admiral&rsquo;s an old man and
+will pass; and for the matter of that I like to hear him talk.&nbsp;
+He talks well.&nbsp; While the others, Guise and his kind, are young,
+and I&rsquo;ve thought, oh, yes, I&rsquo;ve thought&mdash;but there,&rdquo;
+with a sudden harsh laugh, &ldquo;my lady mother will have it her own
+way.&nbsp; And for this time she shall, but, All!&nbsp; All!&nbsp; Even
+Foucauld, there!&nbsp; Do you mark him.&nbsp; He&rsquo;s sorting the
+cards.&nbsp; Do you see him&mdash;as he will be to-morrow, with the
+slit in his throat and his teeth showing?&nbsp; Why, God!&rdquo; his
+voice rising almost to a scream, &ldquo;the candles by him are burning
+blue!&rdquo;&nbsp; And with a shaking hand, his face convulsed, the
+young King clutched his companion&rsquo;s arm, and pinched it.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal shrugged his shoulders, but answered nothing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;D&rsquo;you think we shall see them afterwards?&rdquo; Charles
+resumed, in a sharp, eager whisper.&nbsp; &ldquo;In our dreams, man?&nbsp;
+Or when the watchman cries, and we awake, and the monks are singing
+lauds at St. Germain, and&mdash;and the taper is low?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tavannes&rsquo; lip curled.&nbsp; &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t dream, sire,&rdquo;
+he answered coldly, &ldquo;and I seldom wake.&nbsp; For the rest, I
+fear my enemies neither alive nor dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you?&nbsp; By G-d, I wish I didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo;
+the young man exclaimed.&nbsp; His brow was wet with sweat.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+wish I didn&rsquo;t.&nbsp; But there, it&rsquo;s settled.&nbsp; They&rsquo;ve
+settled it, and I would it were done!&nbsp; What do you think of&mdash;of
+it, man?&nbsp; What do you think of it, yourself?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal&rsquo;s face was inscrutable.&nbsp; &ldquo;I think
+nothing, sire,&rdquo; he said dryly.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is for your Majesty
+and your council to think.&nbsp; It is enough for me that it is the
+King&rsquo;s will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you&rsquo;ll not flinch?&rdquo; Charles muttered, with
+a quick look of suspicion.&nbsp; &ldquo;But there,&rdquo; with a monstrous
+oath, &ldquo;I know you&rsquo;ll not!&nbsp; I believe you&rsquo;d as
+soon kill a monk&mdash;though, thank God,&rdquo; and he crossed himself
+devoutly, &ldquo;there is no question of that&mdash;as a man.&nbsp;
+And sooner than a maiden.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Much sooner, sire,&rdquo; Tavannes answered grimly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If you have any orders in the monkish direction&mdash;no?&nbsp;
+Then your Majesty must not talk to me longer.&nbsp; M. de Rochefoucauld
+is beginning to wonder what is keeping your Majesty from your game.&nbsp;
+And others are marking you, sire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By the Lord!&rdquo; Charles exclaimed, a ring of wonder mingled
+with horror in his tone, &ldquo;if they knew what was in our minds they&rsquo;d
+mark us more!&nbsp; Yet, see Nan&ccedil;ay there beside the door?&nbsp;
+He is unmoved.&nbsp; He looks to-day as he looked yesterday.&nbsp; Yet
+he has charge of the work in the palace&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For the first time Tavannes allowed a movement of surprise to escape
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the palace?&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is it to be
+done here, too, sire?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would you let some escape, to return by-and-by and cut our
+throats?&rdquo; the King retorted, with a strange spirt of fury; an
+incapacity to maintain the same attitude of mind for two minutes together
+was the most fatal weakness of his ill-balanced nature.&nbsp; &ldquo;No.&nbsp;
+All!&nbsp; All!&rdquo; he repeated with vehemence.&nbsp; &ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t
+Noah people the earth with eight?&nbsp; But I&rsquo;ll not leave eight!&nbsp;
+My cousins, for they are blood-royal, shall live if they will recant.&nbsp;
+And my old nurse, whether or no.&nbsp; And Par&eacute;, for no one else
+understands my complexion.&nbsp; And&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And Rochefoucauld, doubtless, sire?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The King, whose eye had sought his favourite companion, withdrew
+it.&nbsp; He darted a glance at Tavannes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Foucauld?&nbsp; Who said so?&rdquo; he muttered jealously.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Not I!&nbsp; But we shall see.&nbsp; We shall see!&nbsp; And
+do you see that you spare no one, M. le Comte, without an order.&nbsp;
+That is your business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I understand, sire,&rdquo; Tavannes answered coolly.&nbsp;
+And after a moment&rsquo;s silence, seeing that the King had done with
+him, he bowed low and withdrew; watched by the circle, as all about
+a King were watched in the days when a King&rsquo;s breath meant life
+or death, and his smile made the fortunes of men.&nbsp; As he passed
+Rochefoucauld, the latter looked up and nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What keeps brother Charles?&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
+madder than ever to-night.&nbsp; Is it a masque or a murder he is planning?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The vapours,&rdquo; Tavannes answered, with a sneer.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Old tales his old nurse has stuffed him withal.&nbsp; He&rsquo;ll
+come by-and-by, and &rsquo;twill be well if you can divert him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will, if he come,&rdquo; Rochefoucauld answered, shuffling
+the cards.&nbsp; &ldquo;If not &rsquo;tis Chicot&rsquo;s business, and
+he should attend to it.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m tired, and shall to bed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He will come,&rdquo; Tavannes answered, and moved, as if to
+go on.&nbsp; Then he paused for a last word.&nbsp; &ldquo;He will come,&rdquo;
+he muttered, stooping and speaking under his breath, his eyes on the
+other&rsquo;s face.&nbsp; &ldquo;But play him lightly.&nbsp; He is in
+an ugly mood.&nbsp; Please him, if you can, and it may serve.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The eyes of the two met an instant, and those of Foucauld&mdash;so
+the King called his Huguenot favourite&mdash;betrayed some surprise;
+for Count Hannibal and he were not intimate.&nbsp; But seeing that the
+other was in earnest, he raised his brows in acknowledgment.&nbsp; Tavannes
+nodded carelessly in return, looked an instant at the cards on the table,
+and passed on, pushed his way through the circle, and reached the door.&nbsp;
+He was lifting the curtain to go out, when Nan&ccedil;ay, the Captain
+of the Guard, plucked his sleeve.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What have you been saying to Foucauld, M. de Tavannes?&rdquo;
+he muttered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; with a jealous glance, &ldquo;you, M. le Comte.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal looked at him with the sudden ferocity that made the
+man a proverb at Court.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What I chose, M. le Capitaine des Suisses!&rdquo; he hissed.&nbsp;
+And his hand closed like a vice on the other&rsquo;s wrist.&nbsp; &ldquo;What
+I chose, look you! And remember, another time, that I am not a Huguenot,
+and say what I please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But there is great need of care,&rdquo; Nan&ccedil;ay protested,
+stammering and flinching.&nbsp; &ldquo;And&mdash;and I have orders,
+M. le Comte.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your orders are not for me,&rdquo; Tavannes answered, releasing
+his arm with a contemptuous gesture.&nbsp; &ldquo;And look you, man,
+do not cross my path to-night.&nbsp; You know our motto?&nbsp; Who touches
+my brother, touches Tavannes!&nbsp; Be warned by it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nan&ccedil;ay scowled.&nbsp; &ldquo;But the priests say, &lsquo;If
+your hand offend you, cut it off!&rsquo;&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
+<p>Tavannes laughed, a sinister laugh.&nbsp; &ldquo;If you offend me
+I&rsquo;ll cut your throat,&rdquo; he said; and with no ceremony he
+went out, and dropped the curtain behind him.</p>
+<p>Nan&ccedil;ay looked after him, his face pale with rage.&nbsp; &ldquo;Curse
+him!&rdquo; he whispered, rubbing his wrist.&nbsp; &ldquo;If he were
+any one else I would teach him!&nbsp; But he would as soon run you through
+in the presence as in the Pr&eacute; aux Clercs!&nbsp; And his brother,
+the Marshal, has the King&rsquo;s ear!&nbsp; And Madame Catherine&rsquo;s
+too, which is worse!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was still fuming, when an officer in the colours of Monsieur,
+the King&rsquo;s brother, entered hurriedly, and keeping his hand on
+the curtain, looked anxiously round the Chamber.&nbsp; As soon as his
+eye found Nan&ccedil;ay, his face cleared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you the reckoning?&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are seventeen Huguenots in the palace besides their
+Highnesses,&rdquo; Nan&ccedil;ay replied, in the same cautious tone.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Not counting two or three who are neither the one thing nor the
+other.&nbsp; In addition, there are the two Montmorencies; but they
+are to go safe for fear of their brother, who is not in the trap.&nbsp;
+He is too like his father, the old Bench-burner, to be lightly wronged!&nbsp;
+And, besides, there is Par&eacute;, who is to go to his Majesty&rsquo;s
+closet as soon as the gates are shut.&nbsp; If the King decides to save
+any one else, he will send him to his closet.&nbsp; So &rsquo;tis all
+clear and arranged here.&nbsp; If you are forward outside, it will be
+well!&nbsp; Who deals with the gentleman with the tooth-pick?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Admiral?&nbsp; Monsieur, Guise, and the Grand Prior; Cosseins
+and Besme have charge.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis to be done first.&nbsp; Then
+the Provost will raise the town.&nbsp; He will have a body of stout
+fellows ready at three or four rendezvous, so that the fire may blaze
+up everywhere at once.&nbsp; Marcel, the ex-provost, has the same commission
+south of the river.&nbsp; Orders to light the town as for a frolic have
+been given, and the Halles will be ready.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nan&ccedil;ay nodded, reflected a moment, and then with an involuntary
+shudder&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;God!&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;it will shake the world!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You think so?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, will it not!&rdquo;&nbsp; His next words showed that he
+bore Tavannes&rsquo; warning in mind.&nbsp; &ldquo;For me, my friend,
+I go in mail to-night,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;There will be many
+a score paid before morning, besides his Majesty&rsquo;s.&nbsp; And
+many a left-handed blow will be struck in the <i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The other crossed himself.&nbsp; &ldquo;Grant none light here!&rdquo;
+he said devoutly.&nbsp; And with a last look he nodded and went out.</p>
+<p>In the doorway he jostled a person who was in the act of entering.&nbsp;
+It was M. de Tignonville, who, seeing Nan&ccedil;ay at his elbow, saluted
+him, and stood looking round.&nbsp; The young man&rsquo;s face was flushed,
+his eyes were bright with unwonted excitement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. de Rochefoucauld?&rdquo; he asked eagerly.&nbsp; &ldquo;He
+has not left yet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nan&ccedil;ay caught the thrill in his voice, and marked the young
+man&rsquo;s flushed face and altered bearing.&nbsp; He noted, too, the
+crumpled paper he carried half-hidden in his hand; and the Captain&rsquo;s
+countenance grew dark.&nbsp; He drew a step nearer, and his hand reached
+softly for his dagger.&nbsp; But his voice, when he spoke, was smooth
+as the surface of the pleasure-loving Court, smooth as the externals
+of all things in Paris that summer evening.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is here still,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have you news,
+M. de Tignonville?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;News?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For M. de Rochefoucauld?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville laughed.&nbsp; &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+am here to see him to his lodging, that is all.&nbsp; News, Captain?&nbsp;
+What made you think so?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That which you have in your hand,&rdquo; Nan&ccedil;ay answered,
+his fears relieved.</p>
+<p>The young man blushed to the roots of his hair.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is
+not for him,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can see that, Monsieur,&rdquo; Nan&ccedil;ay answered politely.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;He has his successes, but all the billets-doux do not go one
+way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The young man laughed, a conscious, flattered laugh.&nbsp; He was
+handsome, with such a face as women love, but there was a lack of ease
+in the way he wore his Court suit.&nbsp; It was a trifle finer, too,
+than accorded with Huguenot taste; or it looked the finer for the way
+he wore it, even as Teligny&rsquo;s and Foucauld&rsquo;s velvet capes
+and stiff brocades lost their richness and became but the adjuncts,
+fitting and graceful, of the men.&nbsp; Odder still, as Tignonville
+laughed, half hiding and half revealing the dainty scented paper in
+his hand, his clothes seemed smarter and he more awkward than usual.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is from a lady,&rdquo; he admitted.&nbsp; &ldquo;But a
+bit of badinage, I assure you, nothing more!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Understood!&rdquo;&nbsp; M. de Nan&ccedil;ay murmured politely.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I congratulate you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say I congratulate you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But it is nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I understand.&nbsp; And see, the King is about to rise.&nbsp;
+Go forward, Monsieur,&rdquo; he continued benevolently.&nbsp; &ldquo;A
+young man should show himself.&nbsp; Besides, his Majesty likes you
+well,&rdquo; he added, with a leer.&nbsp; He had an unpleasant sense
+of humour, had his Majesty&rsquo;s Captain of the Guard; and this evening
+somewhat more than ordinary on which to exercise it.</p>
+<p>Tignonville held too good an opinion of himself to suspect the other
+of badinage; and thus encouraged, he pushed his way to the front of
+the circle.&nbsp; During his absence with his betrothed, the crowd in
+the Chamber had grown thin, the candles had burned an inch shorter in
+the sconces.&nbsp; But though many who had been there had left, the
+more select remained, and the King&rsquo;s return to his seat had given
+the company a fillip.&nbsp; An air of feverish gaiety, common in the
+unhealthy life of the Court, prevailed.&nbsp; At a table abreast of
+the King, Montpensier and Marshal Coss&eacute; were dicing and disputing,
+with now a yell of glee, and now an oath, that betrayed which way fortune
+inclined.&nbsp; At the back of the King&rsquo;s chair, Chicot, his gentleman-jester,
+hung over Charles&rsquo;s shoulder, now scanning his cards, and now
+making hideous faces that threw the on-lookers into fits of laughter.&nbsp;
+Farther up the Chamber, at the end of the alcove, Marshal Tavannes&mdash;our
+Hannibal&rsquo;s brother&mdash;occupied a low stool, which was set opposite
+the open door of the closet.&nbsp; Through this doorway a slender foot,
+silk-clad, shot now and again into sight; it came, it vanished, it came
+again, the gallant Marshal striving at each appearance to rob it of
+its slipper, a dainty jewelled thing of crimson velvet.&nbsp; He failed
+thrice, a peal of laughter greeting each failure.&nbsp; At the fourth
+essay, he upset his stool and fell to the floor, but held the slipper.&nbsp;
+And not the slipper only, but the foot.&nbsp; Amid a flutter of silken
+skirts and dainty laces&mdash;while the hidden beauty shrilly protested&mdash;he
+dragged first the ankle, and then a shapely leg into sight.&nbsp; The
+circle applauded; the lady, feeling herself still drawn on, screamed
+loudly and more loudly.&nbsp; All save the King and his opponent turned
+to look.&nbsp; And then the sport came to a sudden end.&nbsp; A sinewy
+hand appeared, interposed, released; for an instant the dark, handsome
+face of Guise looked through the doorway.&nbsp; It was gone as soon
+as seen; it was there a second only.&nbsp; But more than one recognised
+it, and wondered.&nbsp; For was not the young Duke in evil odour with
+the King by reason of the attack on the Admiral?&nbsp; And had he not
+been chased from Paris only that morning and forbidden to return?</p>
+<p>They were still wondering, still gazing, when abruptly&mdash;as he
+did all things&mdash;Charles thrust back his chair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Foucauld, you owe me ten pieces!&rdquo; he cried with glee,
+and he slapped the table.&nbsp; &ldquo;Pay, my friend; pay!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To-morrow, little master; to-morrow!&rdquo; Rochefoucauld
+answered in the same tone.&nbsp; And he rose to his feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To-morrow!&rdquo; Charles repeated.&nbsp; &ldquo;To-morrow?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And on the word his jaw fell.&nbsp; He looked wildly round.&nbsp; His
+face was ghastly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sire, and why not?&rdquo; Rochefoucauld answered in
+astonishment.&nbsp; And in his turn he looked round, wondering; and
+a chill fell on him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; he repeated.</p>
+<p>For a moment no one answered him: the silence in the Chamber was
+intense.&nbsp; Where he looked, wherever he looked, he met solemn, wondering
+eyes, such eyes as gaze on men in their coffins.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What has come to you all?&rdquo; he cried, with an effort.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What is the jest, for faith, sire, I don&rsquo;t see it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The King seemed incapable of speech, and it was Chicot who filled
+the gap.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is pretty apparent,&rdquo; he said, with a rude laugh.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The cock will lay and Foucauld will pay&mdash;to-morrow!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The young nobleman&rsquo;s colour rose; between him and the Gascon
+gentleman was no love lost.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are some debts I pay to-day,&rdquo; he cried haughtily.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;For the rest, farewell my little master!&nbsp; When one does
+not understand the jest it is time to be gone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was halfway to the door, watched by all, when the King spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Foucauld!&rdquo; he cried, in an odd, strangled voice.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Foucauld!&rdquo;&nbsp; And the Huguenot favourite turned back,
+wondering.&nbsp; &ldquo;One minute!&rdquo; the King continued, in the
+same forced voice.&nbsp; &ldquo;Stay till morning&mdash;in my closet.&nbsp;
+It is late now.&nbsp; We&rsquo;ll play away the rest of the night!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your Majesty must excuse me,&rdquo; Rochefoucauld answered
+frankly.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am dead asleep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can sleep in the Garde-Robe,&rdquo; the King persisted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you for nothing, sire!&rdquo; was the gay answer.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I know that bed!&nbsp; I shall sleep longer and better in my
+own.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The King shuddered, but strove to hide the movement under a shrug
+of his shoulders.&nbsp; He turned away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is God&rsquo;s will!&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp; He was white
+to the lips.</p>
+<p>Rochefoucauld did not catch the words.&nbsp; &ldquo;Good night, sire,&rdquo;
+he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Farewell, little master.&rdquo;&nbsp; And with
+a nod here and there, he passed to the door, followed by Mergey and
+Chamont, two gentlemen of his suite.</p>
+<p>Nan&ccedil;ay raised the curtain with an obsequious gesture.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Pardon me, M. le Comte,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;do you go to his
+Highness&rsquo;s?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For a few minutes, Nan&ccedil;ay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Permit me to go with you.&nbsp; The guards may be set.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do so, my friend,&rdquo; Rochefoucauld answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah,
+Tignonville, is it you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am come to attend you to your lodging,&rdquo; the young
+man said.&nbsp; And he ranged up beside the other, as, the curtain fallen
+behind them, they walked along the gallery.</p>
+<p>Rochefoucauld stopped and laid his hand on Tignonville&rsquo;s sleeve.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thanks, dear lad,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but I am going to
+the Princess Dowager&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Afterwards to his Highness&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+I may be detained an hour or more.&nbsp; You will not like to wait so
+long.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. de Tignonville&rsquo;s face fell ludicrously.&nbsp; &ldquo;Well,
+no,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&mdash;I don&rsquo;t think I could
+wait so long&mdash;to-night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then come to-morrow night,&rdquo; Rochefoucauld answered,
+with good nature.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With pleasure,&rdquo; the other cried heartily, his relief
+evident.&nbsp; &ldquo;Certainly.&nbsp; With pleasure.&rdquo;&nbsp; And,
+nodding good night, they parted.</p>
+<p>While Rochefoucauld, with Nan&ccedil;ay at his side and his gentlemen
+attending him, passed along the echoing and now empty gallery, the younger
+man bounded down the stairs to the great hall of the Caryatides, his
+face radiant.&nbsp; He for one was not sleepy.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III.&nbsp; THE HOUSE NEXT THE GOLDEN MAID.</h2>
+<p>We have it on record that before the Comte de la Rochefoucauld left
+the Louvre that night he received the strongest hints of the peril which
+threatened him; and at least one written warning was handed to him by
+a stranger in black, and by him in turn was communicated to the King
+of Navarre.&nbsp; We are told further that when he took his final leave,
+about the hour of eleven, he found the courtyard brilliantly lighted,
+and the three companies of guards&mdash;Swiss, Scotch, and French&mdash;drawn
+up in ranked array from the door of the great hall to the gate which
+opened on the street.&nbsp; But, the chronicler adds, neither this precaution,
+sinister as it appeared to some of his suite, nor the grave farewell
+which Rambouillet, from his post at the gate, took of one of his gentlemen,
+shook that chivalrous soul or sapped its generous confidence.</p>
+<p>M. de Tignonville was young and less versed in danger than the Governor
+of Rochelle; with him, had he seen so much, it might have been different.&nbsp;
+But he left the Louvre an hour earlier&mdash;at a time when the precincts
+of the palace, gloomy-seeming to us in the light cast by coming events,
+wore their wonted aspect.&nbsp; His thoughts, moreover, as he crossed
+the courtyard, were otherwise employed.&nbsp; So much so, indeed, that
+though he signed to his two servants to follow him, he seemed barely
+conscious what he was doing; nor did he shake off his reverie until
+he reached the corner of the Rue Baillet.&nbsp; Here the voices of the
+Swiss who stood on guard opposite Coligny&rsquo;s lodgings, at the end
+of the Rue Bethizy, could be plainly heard.&nbsp; They had kindled a
+fire in an iron basket set in the middle of the road, and knots of them
+were visible in the distance, moving to and fro about their piled arms.</p>
+<p>Tignonville paused before he came within the radius of the firelight,
+and, turning, bade his servants take their way home.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+shall follow, but I have business first,&rdquo; he added curtly.</p>
+<p>The elder of the two demurred.&nbsp; &ldquo;The streets are not too
+safe,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;In two hours or less, my lord, it
+will be midnight.&nbsp; And then&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go, booby; do you think I am a child?&rdquo; his master retorted
+angrily.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve my sword and can use it.&nbsp; I shall
+not be long.&nbsp; And do you hear, men, keep a still tongue, will you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The men, country fellows, obeyed reluctantly, and with a full intention
+of sneaking after him the moment he had turned his back.&nbsp; But he
+suspected them of this, and stood where he was until they had passed
+the fire, and could no longer detect his movements.&nbsp; Then he plunged
+quickly into the Rue Baillet, gained through it the Rue du Roule, and
+traversing that also, turned to the right into the Rue Ferronerie, the
+main thoroughfare, east and west, of Paris.&nbsp; Here he halted in
+front of the long, dark outer wall of the Cemetery of the Innocents,
+in which, across the tombstones and among the sepulchres of dead Paris,
+the living Paris of that day, bought and sold, walked, gossiped, and
+made love.</p>
+<p>About him things were to be seen that would have seemed stranger
+to him had he been less strange to the city.&nbsp; From the quarter
+of the markets north of him, a quarter which fenced in the cemetery
+on two sides, the same dull murmur proceeded, which Mademoiselle de
+Vrillac had remarked an hour earlier.&nbsp; The sky above the cemetery
+glowed with reflected light, the cause of which was not far to seek,
+for every window of the tall houses that overlooked it, and the huddle
+of booths about it, contributed a share of the illumination.&nbsp; At
+an hour late even for Paris, an hour when honest men should have been
+sunk in slumber, this strange brilliance did for a moment perplex him;
+but the past week had been so full of f&ecirc;tes, of masques and frolics,
+often devised on the moment and dependent on the King&rsquo;s whim,
+that he set this also down to such a cause, and wondered no more.</p>
+<p>The lights in the houses did not serve the purpose he had in his
+mind, but beside the closed gate of the cemetery, and between two stalls,
+was a votive lamp burning before an image of the Mother and Child.&nbsp;
+He crossed to this, and assuring himself by a glance to right and left
+that he stood in no danger from prowlers, he drew a note from his breast.&nbsp;
+It had been slipped into his hand in the gallery before he saw Mademoiselle
+to her lodging; it had been in his possession barely an hour.&nbsp;
+But brief as its contents were, and easily committed to memory, he had
+perused it thrice already.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At the house next the Golden Maid, Rue Cinq Diamants, an hour
+before midnight, you may find the door open should you desire to talk
+farther with C. St. L.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he read it for the fourth time the light of the lamp fell athwart
+his face; and even as his fine clothes had never seemed to fit him worse
+than when he faintly denied the imputations of gallantry launched at
+him by Nan&ccedil;ay, so his features had never looked less handsome
+than they did now.&nbsp; The glow of vanity which warmed his cheek as
+he read the message, the smile of conceit which wreathed his lips, bespoke
+a nature not of the most noble; or the lamp did him less than justice.&nbsp;
+Presently he kissed the note, and hid it.&nbsp; He waited until the
+clock of St. Jacques struck the hour before midnight; and then moving
+forward, he turned to the right by way of the narrow neck leading to
+the Rue Lombard.&nbsp; He walked in the kennel here, his sword in his
+hand and his eyes looking to right and left; for the place was notorious
+for robberies.&nbsp; But though he saw more than one figure lurking
+in a doorway or under the arch that led to a passage, it vanished on
+his nearer approach.&nbsp; In less than a minute he reached the southern
+end of the street that bore the odd title of the Five Diamonds.</p>
+<p>Situate in the crowded quarter of the butchers, and almost in the
+shadow of their famous church, this street&mdash;which farther north
+was continued in the Rue Quimcampoix&mdash;presented in those days a
+not uncommon mingling of poverty and wealth.&nbsp; On one side of the
+street a row of lofty gabled houses, built under Francis the First,
+sheltered persons of good condition; on the other, divided from these
+by the width of the road and a reeking kennel, a row of peat-houses,
+the hovels of cobblers and sausage-makers, leaned against shapeless
+timber houses which tottered upwards in a medley of sagging roofs and
+bulging gutters.&nbsp; Tignonville was strange to the place, and nine
+nights out of ten he would have been at a disadvantage.&nbsp; But, thanks
+to the tapers that to-night shone in many windows, he made out enough
+to see that he need search only the one side; and with a beating heart
+he passed along the row of newer houses, looking eagerly for the sign
+of the Golden Maid.</p>
+<p>He found it at last; and then for a moment he stood puzzled.&nbsp;
+The note said, next door to the Golden Maid, but it did not say on which
+side.&nbsp; He scrutinised the nearer house, but he saw nothing to determine
+him; and he was proceeding to the farther, when he caught sight of two
+men, who, ambushed behind a horse-block on the opposite side of the
+roadway, seemed to be watching his movements.&nbsp; Their presence flurried
+him; but much to his relief his next glance at the houses showed him
+that the door of the farther one was unlatched.&nbsp; It stood slightly
+ajar, permitting a beam of light to escape into the street.</p>
+<p>He stepped quickly to it&mdash;the sooner he was within the house
+the better&mdash;pushed the door open and entered.&nbsp; As soon as
+he was inside he tried to close the entrance behind him, but he found
+he could not; the door would not shut.&nbsp; After a brief trial he
+abandoned the attempt and passed quickly on, through a bare lighted
+passage which led to the foot of a staircase, equally bare.&nbsp; He
+stood at this point an instant and listened, in the hope that Madame&rsquo;s
+maid would come to him.&nbsp; At first he heard nothing save his own
+breathing; then a gruff voice from above startled him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This way, Monsieur,&rdquo; it said.&nbsp; &ldquo;You are early,
+but not too soon!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So Madame trusted her footman!&nbsp; M. de Tignonville shrugged his
+shoulders; but after all, it was no affair of his, and he went up.&nbsp;
+Halfway to the top, however, he stood, an oath on his lips.&nbsp; Two
+men had entered by the open door below&mdash;even as he had entered!&nbsp;
+And as quietly!</p>
+<p>The imprudence of it!&nbsp; The imprudence of leaving the door so
+that it could not be closed!&nbsp; He turned, and descended to meet
+them, his teeth set, his hand on his sword, one conjecture after another
+whirling in his brain.&nbsp; Was he beset?&nbsp; Was it a trap?&nbsp;
+Was it a rival?&nbsp; Was it chance?&nbsp; Two steps he descended; and
+then the voice he had heard before cried again, but more imperatively&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Monsieur, this way!&nbsp; Did you not hear me?&nbsp; This
+way, and be quick, if you please.&nbsp; By-and-by there will be a crowd,
+and then the more we have dealt with the better!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He knew now that he had made a mistake, that he had entered the wrong
+house; and naturally his impulse was to continue his descent and secure
+his retreat.&nbsp; But the pause had brought the two men who had entered
+face to face with him, and they showed no signs of giving way.&nbsp;
+On the contrary.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The room is above, Monsieur,&rdquo; the foremost said, in
+a matter-of-fact tone, and with a slight salutation.&nbsp; &ldquo;After
+you, if you please,&rdquo; and he signed to him to return.</p>
+<p>He was a burly man, grim and truculent in appearance, and his follower
+was like him.&nbsp; Tignonville hesitated, then turned and ascended.&nbsp;
+But as soon as he had reached the landing where they could pass him,
+he turned again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have made a mistake, I think,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+have entered the wrong house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you for the house next the Golden Maid, Monsieur?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rue Cinq Diamants, Quarter of the Boucherie?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No mistake, then,&rdquo; the stout man replied firmly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You are early, that is all.&nbsp; You have arms, I see.&nbsp;
+Maillard!&rdquo;&mdash;to the person whose voice Tignonville had heard
+at the head of the stairs&mdash;&ldquo;A white sleeve, and a cross for
+Monsieur&rsquo;s hat, and his name on the register.&nbsp; Come, make
+a beginning!&nbsp; Make a beginning, man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To be sure, Monsieur.&nbsp; All is ready.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then lose no time, I say.&nbsp; Here are others, also early
+in the good cause.&nbsp; Gentlemen, welcome!&nbsp; Welcome all who are
+for the true faith!&nbsp; Death to the heretics!&nbsp; &lsquo;Kill,
+and no quarter!&rsquo; is the word to-night!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Death to the heretics!&rdquo; the last comers cried in chorus.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Kill and no quarter!&nbsp; At what hour, M. le Pr&eacute;vot?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At daybreak,&rdquo; the Provost answered importantly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But have no fear, the tocsin will sound.&nbsp; The King and our
+good man M. de Guise have all in hand.&nbsp; A white sleeve, a white
+cross, and a sharp knife shall rid Paris of the vermin!&nbsp; Gentlemen
+of the quarter, the word of the night is &lsquo;Kill, and no quarter!&nbsp;
+Death to the Huguenots!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Death!&nbsp; Death to the Huguenots!&nbsp; Kill, and no quarter!&rdquo;
+A dozen&mdash;the room was beginning to fill&mdash;waved their weapons
+and echoed the cry.</p>
+<p>Tignonville had been fortunate enough to apprehend the position&mdash;and
+the peril in which he stood&mdash;before Maillard advanced to him bearing
+a white linen sleeve.&nbsp; In the instant of discovery his heart had
+stood a moment, the blood had left his cheeks; but with some faults,
+he was no coward, and he managed to hide his emotion.&nbsp; He held
+out his left arm, and suffered the beadle to pass the sleeve over it
+and to secure the white linen above the elbow.&nbsp; Then at a gesture
+he gave up his velvet cap, and saw it decorated with a white cross of
+the same material.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now the register, Monsieur,&rdquo; Maillard continued briskly;
+and waving him in the direction of a clerk, who sat at the end of the
+long table, having a book and a ink-horn before him, he turned to the
+next comer.</p>
+<p>Tignonville would fain have avoided the ordeal of the register, but
+the clerk&rsquo;s eye was on him.&nbsp; He had been fortunate so far,
+but he knew that the least breath of suspicion would destroy him, and
+summoning his wits together he gave his name in a steady voice.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Anne Desmartins.&rdquo;&nbsp; It was his mother&rsquo;s maiden
+name, and the first that came into his mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of Paris?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Recently; by birth, of the Limousin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good, Monsieur,&rdquo; the clerk answered, writing in the
+name.&nbsp; And he turned to the next.&nbsp; &ldquo;And you, my friend?&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.&nbsp; THE EVE OF THE FEAST.</h2>
+<p>It was Tignonville&rsquo;s salvation that the men who crowded the
+long white-walled room, and exchanged vile boasts under the naked flaring
+lights, were of all classes.&nbsp; There were butchers, natives of the
+surrounding quarter whom the scent of blood had drawn from their lairs;
+and there were priests with hatchet faces, who whispered in the butchers&rsquo;
+ears.&nbsp; There were gentlemen of the robe, and plain mechanics, rich
+merchants in their gowns, and bare-armed ragpickers, sleek choristers,
+and shabby led-captains; but differ as they might in other points, in
+one thing all were alike.&nbsp; From all, gentle or simple, rose the
+same cry for blood, the same aspiration to be first equipped for the
+fray.&nbsp; In one corner a man of rank stood silent and apart, his
+hand on his sword, the working of his face alone betraying the storm
+that reigned within.&nbsp; In another, a Norman horse-dealer talked
+in low whispers with two thieves.&nbsp; In a third, a gold-wire drawer
+addressed an admiring group from the Sorbonne; and meantime the middle
+of the floor grew into a seething mass of muttering, scowling men, through
+whom the last comers, thrust as they might, had much ado to force their
+way.</p>
+<p>And from all under the low ceiling rose a ceaseless hum, though none
+spoke loud.&nbsp; &ldquo;Kill! kill! kill!&rdquo; was the burden; the
+accompaniment such profanities and blasphemies as had long disgraced
+the Paris pulpits, and day by day had fanned the bigotry&mdash;already
+at a white heat&mdash;of the Parisian populace.&nbsp; Tignonville turned
+sick as he listened, and would fain have closed his ears.&nbsp; But
+for his life he dared not.&nbsp; And presently a cripple in a beggar&rsquo;s
+garb, a dwarfish, filthy creature with matted hair, twitched his sleeve,
+and offered him a whetstone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you sharp, noble sir?&rdquo; he asked, with a leer.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Are you sharp?&nbsp; It&rsquo;s surprising how the edge goes
+on the bone.&nbsp; A cut and thrust?&nbsp; Well, every man to his taste.&nbsp;
+But give me a broad butcher&rsquo;s knife and I&rsquo;ll ask no help,
+be it man, woman, or child!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A bystander, a lean man in rusty black, chuckled as he listened.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the woman or the child for choice, eh, Jehan?&rdquo; he
+said.&nbsp; And he looked to Tignonville to join in the jest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, give me a white throat for choice!&rdquo; the cripple
+answered, with horrible zest.&nbsp; &ldquo;And there&rsquo;ll be delicate
+necks to prick to-night!&nbsp; Lord, I think I hear them squeal!&nbsp;
+You don&rsquo;t need it, sir?&rdquo; he continued, again proffering
+the whetstone.&nbsp; &ldquo;No?&nbsp; Then I&rsquo;ll give my blade
+another whet, in the name of our Lady, the Saints, and good Father Pezelay!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, and give me a turn!&rdquo; the lean man cried, proffering
+his weapon.&nbsp; &ldquo;May I die if I do not kill one of the accursed
+for every finger of my hands!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And toe of my feet!&rdquo; the cripple answered, not to be
+outdone.&nbsp; &ldquo;And toe of my feet!&nbsp; A full score!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis according to your sins!&rdquo; the other, who had
+something of the air of a Churchman, answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;The more
+heretics killed, the more sins forgiven.&nbsp; Remember that, brother,
+and spare not if your soul be burdened!&nbsp; They blaspheme God and
+call Him paste!&nbsp; In the paste of their own blood,&rdquo; he continued
+ferociously, &ldquo;I will knead them and roll them out, saith the good
+Father Pezelay, my master!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The cripple crossed himself.&nbsp; &ldquo;Whom God keep,&rdquo; he
+said.&nbsp; &ldquo;He is a good man.&nbsp; But you are looking ill,
+noble sir?&rdquo; he continued, peering curiously at the young Huguenot.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis the heat,&rdquo; Tignonville muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+night is stifling, and the lights make it worse.&nbsp; I will go nearer
+the door.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He hoped to escape them; he had some hope even of escaping from the
+room and giving the alarm.&nbsp; But when he had forced his way to the
+threshold, he found it guarded by two pikemen; and glancing back to
+see if his movements were observed&mdash;for he knew that his agitation
+might have awakened suspicion&mdash;he found that the taller of the
+two whom he had left, the black-garbed man with the hungry face, was
+watching him a-tiptoe, over the shoulders of the crowd.</p>
+<p>With that, and the sense of his impotence, the lights began to swim
+before his eyes.&nbsp; The catastrophe that overhung his party, the
+fate so treacherously prepared for all whom he loved and all with whom
+his fortunes were bound up, confused his brain almost to delirium.&nbsp;
+He strove to think, to calculate chances, to imagine some way in which
+he might escape from the room, or from a window might cry the alarm.&nbsp;
+But he could not bring his mind to a point.&nbsp; Instead, in lightning
+flashes he foresaw what must happen: his betrothed in the hands of the
+murderers; the fair face that had smiled on him frozen with terror;
+brave men, the fighters of Montauban, the defenders of Angely, strewn
+dead through the dark lanes of the city.&nbsp; And now a gust of passion,
+and now a shudder of fear, seized him; and in any other assembly his
+agitation must have led to detection.&nbsp; But in that room were many
+twitching faces and trembling hands.&nbsp; Murder, cruel, midnight,
+and most foul, wrung even from the murderers her toll of horror.&nbsp;
+While some, to hide the nervousness they felt, babbled of what they
+would do, others betrayed by the intentness with which they awaited
+the signal, the dreadful anticipations that possessed their souls.</p>
+<p>Before he had formed any plan, a movement took place near the door.&nbsp;
+The stairs shook beneath the sudden trampling of feet, a voice cried
+&ldquo;De par le Roi!&nbsp; De par le Roi!&rdquo; and the babel of the
+room died down.&nbsp; The throng swayed and fell back on either hand,
+and Marshal Tavannes entered, wearing half armour, with a white sash;
+he was followed by six or eight gentlemen in like guise.&nbsp; Amid
+cries of &ldquo;Jarnac!&nbsp; Jarnac!&rdquo;&mdash;for to him the credit
+of that famous fight, nominally won by the King&rsquo;s brother, was
+popularly given&mdash;he advanced up the room, met the Provost of the
+merchants, and began to confer with him.&nbsp; Apparently he asked the
+latter to select some men who could be trusted on a special mission,
+for the Provost looked round and beckoned to his side one or two of
+higher rank than the herd, and then one or two of the most truculent
+aspect.</p>
+<p>Tignonville trembled lest he should be singled out.&nbsp; He had
+hidden himself as well as he could at the rear of the crowd by the door;
+but his dress, so much above the common, rendered him conspicuous.&nbsp;
+He fancied that the Provost&rsquo;s eye ranged the crowd for him; and
+to avoid it and efface himself he moved a pace to his left.</p>
+<p>The step was fatal.&nbsp; It saved him from the Provost, but it brought
+him face to face and eye to eye with Count Hannibal, who stood in the
+first rank at his brother&rsquo;s elbow.&nbsp; Tavannes stared an instant
+as if he doubted his eyesight.&nbsp; Then, as doubt gave slow place
+to certainty, and surprise to amazement, he smiled.&nbsp; And after
+a moment he looked another way.</p>
+<p>Tignonville&rsquo;s heart gave a great bump and seemed to stand still.&nbsp;
+The lights whirled before his eyes, there was a roaring in his ears.&nbsp;
+He waited for the word that should denounce him.&nbsp; It did not come.&nbsp;
+And still it did not come; and Marshal Tavannes was turning.&nbsp; Yes,
+turning, and going; the Provost, bowing low, was attending him to the
+door; his suite were opening on either side to let him pass.&nbsp; And
+Count Hannibal?&nbsp; Count Hannibal was following also, as if nothing
+had occurred.&nbsp; As if he had seen nothing!</p>
+<p>The young man caught his breath.&nbsp; Was it possible that he had
+imagined the start of recognition, the steady scrutiny, the sinister
+smile?&nbsp; No; for as Tavannes followed the others, he hung an instant
+on his heel, their eyes met again, and once more he smiled.&nbsp; In
+the next breath he was gone through the doorway, his spurs rang on the
+stairs; and the babel of the crowd, checked by the great man&rsquo;s
+presence, broke out anew, and louder.</p>
+<p>Tignonville shuddered.&nbsp; He was saved as by a miracle; saved,
+he did not know how.&nbsp; But the respite, though its strangeness diverted
+his thoughts for a while, brought short relief.&nbsp; The horrors which
+impended over others surged afresh into his mind, and filled him with
+a maddening sense of impotence.&nbsp; To be one hour, only one short
+half-hour without!&nbsp; To run through the sleeping streets, and scream
+in the dull ears which a King&rsquo;s flatteries had stopped as with
+wool!&nbsp; To go up and down and shake into life the guests whose royal
+lodgings daybreak would turn to a shambles reeking with their blood!&nbsp;
+They slept, the gentle Teligny, the brave Pardaillan, the gallant Rochefoucauld,
+Piles the hero of St. Jean, while the cruel city stirred rustling about
+them, and doom crept whispering to the door.&nbsp; They slept, they
+and a thousand others, gentle and simple, young and old; while the half-mad
+Valois shifted between two opinions, and the Italian woman, accursed
+daughter of an accursed race, cried, &ldquo;Hark!&rdquo; at her window,
+and looked eastwards for the dawn.</p>
+<p>And the women?&nbsp; The woman he was to marry?&nbsp; And the others?&nbsp;
+In an access of passion he thrust aside those who stood between, he
+pushed his way, disregarding complaints, disregarding opposition, to
+the door.&nbsp; But the pikes lay across it, and he could not utter
+a syllable to save his life.&nbsp; He would have flung himself on the
+doorkeepers, for he was losing control of himself; but as he drew back
+for the spring, a hand clutched his sleeve, and a voice he loathed hummed
+in his ear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, fair play, noble sir; fair play!&rdquo; the cripple Jehan
+muttered, forcibly drawing him aside.&nbsp; &ldquo;All start together,
+and it&rsquo;s no man&rsquo;s loss.&nbsp; But if there is any little
+business,&rdquo; he continued, lowering his tone and peering with a
+cunning look into the other&rsquo;s face, &ldquo;of your own, noble
+sir, or your friends&rsquo;, anything or anybody you want despatched,
+count on me.&nbsp; It were better, perhaps, you didn&rsquo;t appear
+in it yourself, and a man you can trust&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; the young man cried, recoiling from
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No need to look surprised, noble sir,&rdquo; the lean man,
+who had joined them, answered in a soothing tone.&nbsp; &ldquo;Who kills
+to-night does God service, and who serves God much may serve himself
+a little.&nbsp; &lsquo;Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth out
+the corn,&rsquo; says good Father Pezelay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hear, hear!&rdquo; the cripple chimed in eagerly, his impatience
+such that he danced on his toes.&nbsp; &ldquo;He preaches as well as
+the good father his master!&nbsp; So frankly, noble sir, what is it?&nbsp;
+What is it?&nbsp; A woman grown ugly?&nbsp; A rich man grown old, with
+perchance a will in his chest?&nbsp; Or a young heir that stands in
+my lord&rsquo;s way?&nbsp; Whichever it be, or whatever it be, trust
+me and our friend here, and my butcher&rsquo;s gully shall cut the knot.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville shook his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But something there is,&rdquo; the lean man persisted obstinately;
+and he cast a suspicious glance at Tignonville&rsquo;s clothes.&nbsp;
+It was evident that the two had discussed him, and the motives of his
+presence there.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have the dice proved fickle, my lord, and
+are you for the jewellers&rsquo; shops on the bridge to fill your purse
+again?&nbsp; If so, take my word, it were better to go three than one,
+and we&rsquo;ll enlist.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, we know shops on the bridge where you can plunge your
+arm elbow-deep in gold,&rdquo; the cripple muttered, his eyes sparkling
+greedily.&nbsp; &ldquo;There&rsquo;s Baillet&rsquo;s, noble sir!&nbsp;
+There&rsquo;s a shop for you!&nbsp; And there&rsquo;s the man&rsquo;s
+shop who works for the King.&nbsp; He&rsquo;s lame like me.&nbsp; And
+I know the way to all.&nbsp; Oh, it will be a merry night if they ring
+before the dawn.&nbsp; It must be near daybreak now.&nbsp; And what&rsquo;s
+that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ay, what was it?&nbsp; A score of voices called for silence; a breathless
+hush fell on the crowd.&nbsp; A moment the fiercest listened, with parted
+lips and starting eyes.&nbsp; Then, &ldquo;It was the bell!&rdquo; cried
+one, &ldquo;let us out!&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;It was not!&rdquo; cried
+another.&nbsp; &ldquo;It was a pistol shot!&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Anyhow
+let us out!&rdquo; the crowd roared in chorus; &ldquo;let us out!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And they pressed in a furious mass towards the door, as if they would
+force it, signal or no signal.</p>
+<p>But the pikemen stood fast, and the throng, checked in their first
+rush, turned on one another, and broke into wrangling and disputing;
+boasting, and calling Heaven and the saints to witness how thoroughly,
+how pitilessly, how remorselessly they would purge Paris of this leprosy
+when the signal did sound.&nbsp; Until again above the babel a man cried
+&ldquo;Silence!&rdquo; and again they listened.&nbsp; And this time,
+dulled by walls and distance, but unmistakable by the ears of fear or
+hate, the heavy note of a bell came to them on the hot night air.&nbsp;
+It was the boom, sullen and menacing, of the death signal.</p>
+<p>The doorkeepers lowered their pikes, and with a wild rush, as of
+wolves swarming on their prey, the band stormed the door, and thrust
+and struggled and battled a way down the narrow staircase, and along
+the narrow passage.&nbsp; &ldquo;A bas les Huguenots!&nbsp; Mort aux
+Huguenots!&rdquo; they shouted; and shrieking, sweating, spurning with
+vile hands, viler faces, they poured pell-mell into the street, and
+added their clamour to the boom of the tocsin that, as by magic and
+in a moment, turned the streets of Paris into a hell of blood and cruelty.&nbsp;
+For as it was here, so it was in a dozen other quarters.</p>
+<p>Quickly as they streamed out&mdash;and to have issued more quickly
+would have been impossible&mdash;fiercely as they pushed and fought
+and clove their way, Tignonville was of the foremost.&nbsp; And for
+a moment, seeing the street clear before him and almost empty, the Huguenot
+thought that he might do something.&nbsp; He might outstrip the stream
+of rapine, he might carry the alarm; at worst he might reach his betrothed
+before harm befell her.&nbsp; But when he had sped fifty yards, his
+heart sank.&nbsp; True, none passed him; but under the spell of the
+alarm-bell the stones themselves seemed to turn to men.&nbsp; Houses,
+courts, alleys, the very churches vomited men.&nbsp; In a twinkling
+the street was alive with men, roared with them as with a rushing tide,
+gleamed with their lights and weapons, thundered with the volume of
+their thousand voices.&nbsp; He was no longer ahead, men were running
+before him, behind him, on his right hand and on his left.&nbsp; In
+every side-street, every passage, men were running; and not men only,
+but women, children, furious creatures without age or sex.&nbsp; And
+all the time the bell tolled overhead, tolled faster and faster, and
+louder and louder; and shots and screams, and the clash of arms, and
+the fall of strong doors began to swell the maelstrom of sound.</p>
+<p>He was in the Rue St. Honor&eacute; now, and speeding westward.&nbsp;
+But the flood still rose with him, and roared abreast of him.&nbsp;
+Nay, it outstripped him.&nbsp; When he came, panting, within sight of
+his goal, and lacked but a hundred paces of it, he found his passage
+barred by a dense mass of people moving slowly to meet him.&nbsp; In
+the heart of the press the light of a dozen torches shone on half as
+many riders mailed and armed; whose eyes, as they moved on, and the
+furious gleaming eyes of the rabble about them, never left the gabled
+roofs on their right.&nbsp; On these from time to time a white-clad
+figure showed itself, and passed from chimney-stack to chimney-stack,
+or, stooping low, ran along the parapet.&nbsp; Every time that this
+happened, the men on horseback pointed upwards and the mob foamed with
+rage.</p>
+<p>Tignonville groaned, but he could not help.&nbsp; Unable to go forward,
+he turned, and with others hurrying, shouting, and brandishing weapons,
+he pressed into the Rue du Roule, passed through it, and gained the
+Bethizy.&nbsp; But here, as he might have foreseen, all passage was
+barred at the H&ocirc;tel Ponthieu by a horde of savages, who danced
+and yelled and sang songs round the Admiral&rsquo;s body, which lay
+in the middle of the way; while to right and left men were bursting
+into houses and forcing new victims into the street.&nbsp; The worst
+had happened there, and he turned panting, regained the Rue St. Honor&eacute;,
+and, crossing it and turning left-handed, darted through side streets
+until he came again into the main thoroughfare a little beyond the Croix
+du Tiroir, that marked the corner of Mademoiselle&rsquo;s house.</p>
+<p>Here his last hope left him.&nbsp; The street swarmed with bands
+of men hurrying to and fro as in a sacked city.&nbsp; The scum of the
+Halles, the rabble of the quarter poured this way and that, here at
+random, there swayed and directed by a few knots of men-at-arms, whose
+corselets reflected the glare of a hundred torches.&nbsp; At one time
+and within sight, three or four houses were being stormed.&nbsp; On
+every side rose heart-rending cries, mingled with brutal laughter, with
+savage jests, with cries of &ldquo;To the river!&rdquo;&nbsp; The most
+cruel of cities had burst its bounds and was not to be stayed; nor would
+be stayed until the Seine ran red to the sea, and leagues below, in
+pleasant Normandy hamlets, men, for fear of the pestilence, pushed the
+corpses from the bridges with poles and boat-hooks.</p>
+<p>All this Tignonville saw, though his eyes, leaping the turmoil, looked
+only to the door at which he had left Mademoiselle a few hours earlier.&nbsp;
+There a crowd of men pressed and struggled; but from the spot where
+he stood he could see no more.&nbsp; That was enough, however.&nbsp;
+Rage nerved him, and despair; his world was dying round him.&nbsp; If
+he could not save her he would avenge her.&nbsp; Recklessly he plunged
+into the tumult; blade in hand, with vigorous blows he thrust his way
+through, his white sleeve and the white cross in his hat gaining him
+passage until he reached the fringe of the band who beset the door.&nbsp;
+Here his first attempt to pass failed; and he might have remained hampered
+by the crowd, if a squad of archers had not ridden up.&nbsp; As they
+spurred to the spot, heedless over whom they rode, he clutched a stirrup,
+and was borne with them into the heart of the crowd.&nbsp; In a twinkling
+he stood on the threshold of the house, face to face and foot to foot
+with Count Hannibal, who stood also on the threshold, but with his back
+to the door, which, unbarred and unbolted, gaped open behind him.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V.&nbsp; ROUGH WOOING.</h2>
+<p>The young man had caught the delirium that was abroad that night.&nbsp;
+The rage of the trapped beast was in his heart, his hand held a sword.&nbsp;
+To strike blindly, to strike without question the first who withstood
+him was the wild-beast instinct; and if Count Hannibal had not spoken
+on the instant, the Marshal&rsquo;s brother had said his last word in
+the world.</p>
+<p>Yet as he stood there, a head above the crowd, he seemed unconscious
+alike of Tignonville and the point that all but pricked his breast.&nbsp;
+Swart and grim-visaged, his harsh features distorted by the glare which
+shone upon him, he looked beyond the Huguenot to the sea of tossing
+arms and raging faces that surged about the saddles of the horsemen.&nbsp;
+It was to these he spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Begone, dogs!&rdquo; he cried, in a voice that startled the
+nearest, &ldquo;or I will whip you away with my stirrup-leathers!&nbsp;
+Do you hear?&nbsp; Begone!&nbsp; This house is not for you!&nbsp; Burn,
+kill, plunder where you will, but go hence!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But &rsquo;tis on the list!&rdquo; one of the wretches yelled.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis on the list!&rdquo;&nbsp; And he pushed forward until
+he stood at Tignonville&rsquo;s elbow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And has no cross!&rdquo; shrieked another, thrusting himself
+forward in his turn.&nbsp; &ldquo;See you, let us by, whoever you are!&nbsp;
+In the King&rsquo;s name, kill!&nbsp; It has no cross!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; Tavannes thundered, &ldquo;will I nail you for
+a cross to the front of it!&nbsp; No cross, say you?&nbsp; I will make
+one of you, foul crow!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And as he spoke, his arm shot out; the man recoiled, his fellow likewise.&nbsp;
+But one of the mounted archers took up the matter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, but, my lord,&rdquo; he said&mdash;he knew Tavannes&mdash;&ldquo;it
+is the King&rsquo;s will there be no favour shown to-night to any, small
+or great.&nbsp; And this house is registered, and is full of heretics.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And has no cross!&rdquo; the rabble urged in chorus.&nbsp;
+And they leapt up and down in their impatience, and to see the better.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And has no cross!&rdquo; they persisted.&nbsp; They could understand
+that.&nbsp; Of what use crosses, if they were not to kill where there
+was no cross?&nbsp; Daylight was not plainer.&nbsp; Tavannes&rsquo;
+face grew dark, and he shook his finger at the archer who had spoken.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rogue,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;does the King&rsquo;s will
+run here only?&nbsp; Are there no other houses to sack or men to kill,
+that you must beard me?&nbsp; And favour?&nbsp; You will have little
+of mine, if you do not budge and take your vile tail with you!&nbsp;
+Off!&nbsp; Or must I cry &lsquo;Tavannes!&rsquo; and bid my people sweep
+you from the streets?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The foremost rank hesitated, awed by his manner and his name; while
+the rearmost, attracted by the prospect of easier pillage, had gone
+off already.&nbsp; The rest wavered; and another and another broke away.&nbsp;
+The archer who had put himself forward saw which way the wind was blowing,
+and he shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, my lord, as you will,&rdquo; he said sullenly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;All the same I would advise you to close the door and bolt and
+bar.&nbsp; We shall not be the last to call to-day.&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+he turned his horse in ill-humour, and forced it, snorting and plunging,
+through the crowd.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bolt and bar?&rdquo; Tavannes cried after him in fury.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;See you my answer to that!&rdquo;&nbsp; And turning on the threshold,
+&ldquo;Within there!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Open the shutters
+and set lights, and the table!&nbsp; Light, I say; light!&nbsp; And
+lay on quickly, if you value your lives!&nbsp; And throw open, for I
+sup with your mistress to-night, if it rain blood without!&nbsp; Do
+you hear me, rogues?&nbsp; Set on!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He flung the last word at the quaking servants; then he turned again
+to the street.&nbsp; He saw that the crowd was melting, and, looking
+in Tignonville&rsquo;s face, he laughed aloud.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does Monsieur sup with us?&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;To
+complete the party?&nbsp; Or will he choose to sup with our friends
+yonder?&nbsp; It is for him to say.&nbsp; I confess, for my part,&rdquo;
+with an awful smile, &ldquo;their hospitality seems a trifle crude,
+and boisterous.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville looked behind him and shuddered.&nbsp; The same horde
+which had so lately pressed about the door had found a victim lower
+down the street, and, as Tavannes spoke, came driving back along the
+roadway, a mass of tossing lights and leaping, running figures, from
+the heart of which rose the screams of a creature in torture.&nbsp;
+So terrible were the sounds that Tignonville leant half swooning against
+the door-post; and even the iron heart of Tavannes seemed moved for
+a moment.</p>
+<p>For a moment only: then he looked at his companion, and his lip curled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll join us, I think?&rdquo; he said, with an undisguised
+sneer.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then, after you, Monsieur.&nbsp; They are opening
+the shutters.&nbsp; Doubtless the table is laid, and Mademoiselle is
+expecting us.&nbsp; After you, Monsieur, if you please.&nbsp; A few
+hours ago I should have gone first, for you, in this house&rdquo;&mdash;with
+a sinister smile&mdash;&ldquo;were at home!&nbsp; Now, we have changed
+places.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Whatever he meant by the gibe&mdash;and some smack of an evil jest
+lurked in his tone&mdash;he played the host so far as to urge his bewildered
+companion along the passage and into the living-chamber on the left,
+where he had seen from without that his orders to light and lay were
+being executed.&nbsp; A dozen candles shone on the board, and lit up
+the apartment.&nbsp; What the house contained of food and wine had been
+got together and set on the table; from the low, wide window, beetle-browed
+and diamond-paned, which extended the whole length of the room and looked
+on the street at the height of a man&rsquo;s head above the roadway,
+the shutters had been removed&mdash;doubtless by trembling and reluctant
+fingers.&nbsp; To such eyes of passers-by as looked in, from the inferno
+of driving crowds and gleaming weapons which prevailed outside&mdash;and
+not outside only, but throughout Paris&mdash;the brilliant room and
+the laid table must have seemed strange indeed!</p>
+<p>To Tignonville, all that had happened, all that was happening, seemed
+a dream: a dream his entrance under the gentle impulsion of this man
+who dominated him; a dream Mademoiselle standing behind the table with
+blanched face and stony eyes; a dream the cowering servants huddled
+in a corner beyond her; a dream his silence, her silence, the moment
+of waiting before Count Hannibal spoke.</p>
+<p>When he did speak it was to count the servants.&nbsp; &ldquo;One,
+two, three, four, five,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;And two of them
+women.&nbsp; Mademoiselle is but poorly attended.&nbsp; Are there not&rdquo;&mdash;and
+he turned to her&mdash;&ldquo;some lacking?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girl opened her lips twice, but no sound issued.&nbsp; The third
+time&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Two went out,&rdquo; she muttered in a hoarse, strangled voice,
+&ldquo;and have not returned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And have not returned?&rdquo; he answered, raising his eyebrows.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Then I fear we must not wait for them.&nbsp; We might wait long!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And turning sharply to the panic-stricken servants, &ldquo;Go you to
+your places!&nbsp; Do you not see that Mademoiselle waits to be served?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girl shuddered and spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you wish me,&rdquo; she muttered, in the same strangled
+tone, &ldquo;to play this farce&mdash;to the end?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The end may be better, Mademoiselle, than you think,&rdquo;
+he answered, bowing.&nbsp; And then to the miserable servants, who hung
+back afraid to leave the shelter of their mistress&rsquo;s skirts, &ldquo;To
+your places!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Set Mademoiselle&rsquo;s
+chair.&nbsp; Are you so remiss on other days?&nbsp; If so,&rdquo; with
+a look of terrible meaning, &ldquo;you will be the less loss!&nbsp;
+Now, Mademoiselle, may I have the honour?&nbsp; And when we are at table
+we can talk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He extended his hand, and, obedient to his gesture, she moved to
+the place at the head of the table, but without letting her fingers
+come into contact with his.&nbsp; He gave no sign that he noticed this,
+but he strode to the place on her right, and signed to Tignonville to
+take that on her left.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you not be seated?&rdquo; he continued.&nbsp; For she
+kept her feet.</p>
+<p>She turned her head stiffly, until for the first time her eyes looked
+into his.&nbsp; A shudder more violent than the last shook her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Had you not better&mdash;kill us at once?&rdquo; she whispered.&nbsp;
+The blood had forsaken even her lips.&nbsp; Her face was the face of
+a statue&mdash;white, beautiful, lifeless.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; he said gravely.&nbsp; &ldquo;Be seated,
+and let us hope for the best.&nbsp; And you, sir,&rdquo; he continued,
+turning to Carlat, &ldquo;serve your mistress with wine.&nbsp; She needs
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The steward filled for her, and then for each of the men, his shaking
+hand spilling as much as it poured.&nbsp; Nor was this strange.&nbsp;
+Above the din and uproar of the street, above the crash of distant doors,
+above the tocsin that still rang from the reeling steeple of St. Germain&rsquo;s,
+the great bell of the Palais on the island had just begun to hurl its
+note of doom upon the town.&nbsp; A woman crouching at the end of the
+chamber burst into hysterical weeping, but, at a glance from Tavannes&rsquo;
+terrible eye, was mute again.</p>
+<p>Tignonville found voice at last.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have they&mdash;killed
+the Admiral?&rdquo; he muttered, his eyes on the table.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. Coligny?&nbsp; An hour ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And Teligny?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Him also.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. de Rochefoucauld?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are dealing with M. le Comte now, I believe,&rdquo; Tavannes
+answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;He had his chance and cast it away.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And he began to eat.</p>
+<p>The man at the table shuddered.&nbsp; The woman continued to look
+before her, but her lips moved as if she prayed.&nbsp; Suddenly a rush
+of feet, a roar of voices surged past the window; for a moment the glare
+of the torches, which danced ruddily on the walls of the room, showed
+a severed head borne above the multitude on a pike.&nbsp; Mademoiselle,
+with a low cry, made an effort to rise, but Count Hannibal grasped her
+wrist, and she sank back half fainting.&nbsp; Then the nearer clamour
+sank a little, and the bells, unchallenged, flung their iron tongues
+above the maddened city.&nbsp; In the east the dawn was growing; soon
+its grey light would fall on cold hearths, on battered doors and shattered
+weapons, on hordes of wretches drunk with greed and hate.</p>
+<p>When he could be heard, &ldquo;What are you going to do with us?&rdquo;
+the man asked hoarsely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That depends,&rdquo; Count Hannibal replied, after a moment&rsquo;s
+thought.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On what?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On Mademoiselle de Vrillac.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The other&rsquo;s eyes gleamed with passion.&nbsp; He leaned forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What has she to do with it?&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; And he
+stood up and sat down again in a breath.</p>
+<p>Tavannes raised his eyebrows with a blandness that seemed at odds
+with his harsh visage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will answer that question by another question,&rdquo; he
+replied.&nbsp; &ldquo;How many are there in the house, my friend?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can count.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tavannes counted again.&nbsp; &ldquo;Seven?&rdquo; he said.&nbsp;
+Tignonville nodded impatiently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Seven lives?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Monsieur, you know the King&rsquo;s will?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can guess it,&rdquo; the other replied furiously.&nbsp;
+And he cursed the King, and the King&rsquo;s mother, calling her Jezebel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can guess it?&rdquo; Tavannes answered; and then with
+sudden heat, as if that which he had to say could not be said even by
+him in cold blood, &ldquo;Nay, you know it!&nbsp; You heard it from
+the archer at the door.&nbsp; You heard him say, &lsquo;No favour, no
+quarter for man, for woman, or for child.&nbsp; So says the King.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+You heard it, but you fence with me.&nbsp; Foucauld, with whom his Majesty
+played to-night, hand to hand and face to face&mdash;Foucauld is dead!&nbsp;
+And you think to live?&nbsp; You?&rdquo; he continued, lashing himself
+into passion.&nbsp; &ldquo;I know not by what chance you came where
+I saw you an hour gone, nor by what chance you came by that and that&rdquo;&mdash;pointing
+with accusing finger to the badges the Huguenot wore.&nbsp; &ldquo;But
+this I know!&nbsp; I have but to cry your name from yonder casement,
+nay, Monsieur, I have but to stand aside when the mob go their rounds
+from house to house, as they will go presently, and you will perish
+as certainly as you have hitherto escaped!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For the second time Mademoiselle turned and looked at him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; she whispered, with white lips, &ldquo;to what
+end this&mdash;mockery?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To the end that seven lives may be saved, Mademoiselle,&rdquo;
+he answered, bowing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At a price?&rdquo; she muttered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At a price,&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;A price which
+women do not find it hard to pay&mdash;at Court.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis paid
+every day for pleasure or a whim, for rank or the <i>entr&eacute;e</i>,
+for robes and gewgaws.&nbsp; Few, Mademoiselle, are privileged to buy
+a life; still fewer, seven!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She began to tremble.&nbsp; &ldquo;I would rather die&mdash;seven
+times!&rdquo; she cried, her voice quivering.&nbsp; And she tried to
+rise, but sat down again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And these?&rdquo; he said, indicating the servants.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Far, far rather!&rdquo; she repeated passionately.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And Monsieur?&nbsp; And Monsieur?&rdquo; he urged with stern
+persistence, while his eyes passed lightly from her to Tignonville and
+back to her again, their depths inscrutable.&nbsp; &ldquo;If you love
+Monsieur, Mademoiselle, and I believe you do&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can die with him!&rdquo; she cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he with you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She writhed in her chair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he with you?&rdquo; Count Hannibal repeated, with emphasis;
+and he thrust forward his head.&nbsp; &ldquo;For that is the question.&nbsp;
+Think, think, Mademoiselle.&nbsp; It is in my power to save from death
+him whom you love; to save you; to save this <i>canaille</i>, if it
+so please you.&nbsp; It is in my power to save him, to save you, to
+save all; and I will save all&mdash;at a price!&nbsp; If, on the other
+hand, you deny me that price, I will as certainly leave all to perish,
+as perish they will, before the sun that is now rising sets to-night!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mademoiselle looked straight before her, the flicker of a dreadful
+prescience in her eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the price?&rdquo; she muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;The price?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You, Mademoiselle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, you!&nbsp; Nay, why fence with me?&rdquo; he continued
+gently.&nbsp; &ldquo;You knew it, you have said it.&nbsp; You have read
+it in my eyes these seven days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She did not speak, or move, or seem to breathe.&nbsp; As he said,
+she had foreseen, she had known the answer.&nbsp; But Tignonville, it
+seemed, had not.&nbsp; He sprang to his feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. de Tavannes,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;you are a villain!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Monsieur?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are a villain!&nbsp; But you shall pay for this!&rdquo;
+the young man continued vehemently.&nbsp; &ldquo;You shall not leave
+this room alive!&nbsp; You shall pay for this insult!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Insult?&rdquo; Tavannes answered in apparent surprise; and
+then, as if comprehension broke upon him, &ldquo;Ah! Monsieur mistakes
+me,&rdquo; he said, with a broad sweep of the hand.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+Mademoiselle also, perhaps?&nbsp; Oh! be content, she shall have bell,
+book, and candle; she shall be tied as tight as Holy Church can tie
+her!&nbsp; Or, if she please, and one survive, she shall have a priest
+of her own church&mdash;you call it a church?&nbsp; She shall have whichever
+of the two will serve her better.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis one to me!&nbsp;
+But for paying me, Monsieur,&rdquo; he continued, with irony in voice
+and manner; &ldquo;when, I pray you?&nbsp; In Eternity?&nbsp; For if
+you refuse my offer, you have done with time.&nbsp; Now?&nbsp; I have
+but to sound this whistle&rdquo;&mdash;he touched a silver whistle which
+hung at his breast&mdash;&ldquo;and there are those within hearing will
+do your business before you make two passes.&nbsp; Dismiss the notion,
+sir, and understand.&nbsp; You are in my power.&nbsp; Paris runs with
+blood, as noble as yours, as innocent as hers.&nbsp; If you would not
+perish with the rest, decide!&nbsp; And quickly!&nbsp; For what you
+have seen are but the forerunners, what you have heard are but the gentle
+whispers that predict the gale.&nbsp; Do not parley too long; so long
+that even I may no longer save you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would rather die!&rdquo; Mademoiselle moaned, her face covered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I would rather die!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And see him die?&rdquo; he answered quietly.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+see these die?&nbsp; Think, think, child!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will not do it!&rdquo; she gasped.&nbsp; She shook from
+head to foot.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall do nothing,&rdquo; he answered firmly.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+shall but leave you to your fate, and these to theirs.&nbsp; In the
+King&rsquo;s teeth I dare save my wife and her people; but no others.&nbsp;
+You must choose&mdash;and quickly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>One of the frightened women&mdash;it was Mademoiselle&rsquo;s tiring-maid,
+a girl called Javette&mdash;made a movement, as if to throw herself
+at her mistress&rsquo;s feet.&nbsp; Tignonville drove her to her place
+with a word.&nbsp; He turned to Count Hannibal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, M. le Comte,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you must be mad!&nbsp;
+Mad, to wish to marry her in this way!&nbsp; You do not love her.&nbsp;
+You do not want her.&nbsp; What is she to you more than other women?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is she to you more than other women?&rdquo; Tavannes
+retorted, in a tone so sharp and incisive that Tignonville started,
+and a faint touch of colour crept into the wan cheek of the girl, who
+sat between them, the prize of the contest.&nbsp; &ldquo;What is she
+more to you than other women?&nbsp; Is she more?&nbsp; And yet&mdash;you
+want her!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She is more to me,&rdquo; Tignonville answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is she?&rdquo; the other retorted, with a ring of keen meaning.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Is she?&nbsp; But we bandy words and the storm is rising, as
+I warned you it would rise.&nbsp; Enough for you that I <i>do</i> want
+her.&nbsp; Enough for you that I <i>will</i> have her.&nbsp; She shall
+be the wife, the willing wife, of Hannibal de Tavannes&mdash;or I leave
+her to her fate, and you to yours!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, God!&rdquo; she moaned.&nbsp; &ldquo;The willing wife!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, Mademoiselle, the willing wife,&rdquo; he answered sternly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Or no man&rsquo;s wife!&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.&nbsp; WHO TOUCHES TAVANNES?</h2>
+<p>In saying that the storm was rising Count Hannibal had said no more
+than the truth.&nbsp; A new mob had a minute before burst from the eastward
+into the Rue St. Honor&eacute;; and the roar of its thousand voices
+swelled louder than the importunate clangour of the bells.&nbsp; Behind
+its moving masses the dawn of a new day&mdash;Sunday, the 24th of August,
+the feast of St. Bartholomew&mdash;was breaking over the Bastille, as
+if to aid the crowd in its cruel work.&nbsp; The gabled streets, the
+lanes, and gothic courts, the stifling wynds, where the work awaited
+the workers, still lay in twilight; still the gleam of the torches,
+falling on the house-fronts, heralded the coming of the crowd.&nbsp;
+But the dawn was growing, the sun was about to rise.&nbsp; Soon the
+day would be here, giving up the lurking fugitive whom darkness, more
+pitiful, had spared, and stamping with legality the horrors that night
+had striven to hide.</p>
+<p>And with day, with the full light, killing would grow more easy,
+escape more hard.&nbsp; Already they were killing on the bridge where
+the rich goldsmiths lived, on the wharves, on the river.&nbsp; They
+were killing at the Louvre, in the courtyard under the King&rsquo;s
+eyes, and below the windows of the M&eacute;dicis.&nbsp; They were killing
+in St. Martin and St. Denis and St. Antoine; wherever hate, or bigotry,
+or private malice impelled the hand.&nbsp; From the whole city went
+up a din of lamentation, and wrath, and foreboding.&nbsp; From the Cour
+des Miracles, from the markets, from the Boucherie, from every haunt
+of crime and misery, hordes of wretched creatures poured forth; some
+to rob on their own account, and where they listed, none gainsaying;
+more to join themselves to one of the armed bands whose business it
+was to go from street to street, and house to house, quelling resistance,
+and executing through Paris the high justice of the King.</p>
+<p>It was one of these swollen bands which had entered the street while
+Tavannes spoke; nor could he have called to his aid a more powerful
+advocate.&nbsp; As the deep &ldquo;A bas!&nbsp; A bas!&rdquo; rolled
+like thunder along the fronts of the houses, as the more strident &ldquo;Tuez!&nbsp;
+Tuez!&rdquo; drew nearer and nearer, and the lights of the oncoming
+multitude began to flicker on the shuttered gables, the fortitude of
+the servants gave way.&nbsp; Madame Carlat, shivering in every limb,
+burst into moaning; the tiring-maid, Javette, flung herself in terror
+at Mademoiselle&rsquo;s knees, and, writhing herself about them, shrieked
+to her to save her, only to save her!&nbsp; One of the men moved forward
+on impulse, as if he would close the shutters; and only old Carlat remained
+silent, praying mutely with moving lips and a stern, set face.</p>
+<p>And Count Hannibal?&nbsp; As the glare of the links in the street
+grew brighter, and ousted the sickly daylight, his form seemed to dilate.&nbsp;
+He stilled the shrieking woman by a glance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Choose! Mademoiselle, and quickly!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;For
+I can only save my wife and her people!&nbsp; Quick, for the pinch is
+coming, and &rsquo;twill be no boy&rsquo;s play.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A shot, a scream from the street, a rush of racing feet before the
+window seconded his words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quick, Mademoiselle!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; And his breath
+came a little faster.&nbsp; &ldquo;Quick, before it be too late!&nbsp;
+Will you save life, or will you kill?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She looked at her lover with eyes of agony, dumbly questioning him.&nbsp;
+But he made no sign, and only Tavannes marked the look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Monsieur has done what he can to save himself,&rdquo; he said,
+with a sneer.&nbsp; &ldquo;He has donned the livery of the King&rsquo;s
+servants; he has said, &lsquo;Whoever perishes, I will live!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+But&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Curse you!&rdquo; the young man cried, and, stung to madness,
+he tore the cross from his cap and flung it on the ground.&nbsp; He
+seized his white sleeve and ripped it from shoulder to elbow.&nbsp;
+Then, when it hung by the string only, he held his hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Curse you!&rdquo; he cried furiously.&nbsp; &ldquo;I will
+not at your bidding!&nbsp; I may save her yet!&nbsp; I <i>will</i> save
+her!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fool!&rdquo; Tavannes answered&mdash;but his words were barely
+audible above the deafening uproar.&nbsp; &ldquo;Can you fight a thousand?&nbsp;
+Look!&nbsp; Look!&rdquo; and seizing the other&rsquo;s wrist he pointed
+to the window.</p>
+<p>The street glowed like a furnace in the red light of torches, raised
+on poles above a sea of heads; an endless sea of heads, and gaping faces,
+and tossing arms which swept on and on, and on and by.&nbsp; For a while
+it seemed that the torrent would flow past them and would leave them
+safe.&nbsp; Then came a check, a confused outcry, a surging this way
+and that; the torches reeled to and fro, and finally, with a dull roar
+of &ldquo;Open!&nbsp; Open!&rdquo; the mob faced about to the house
+and the lighted window.</p>
+<p>For a second it seemed that even Count Hannibal&rsquo;s iron nerves
+shook a little.&nbsp; He stood between the sullen group that surrounded
+the disordered table and the maddened rabble, that gloated on the victims
+before they tore them to pieces.&nbsp; &ldquo;Open!&nbsp; Open!&rdquo;
+the mob howled: and a man dashed in the window with his pike.</p>
+<p>In that crisis Mademoiselle&rsquo;s eyes met Tavannes&rsquo; for
+the fraction of a second.&nbsp; She did not speak; nor, had she retained
+the power to frame the words, would they have been audible.&nbsp; But
+something she must have looked, and something of import, though no other
+than he marked or understood it.&nbsp; For in a flash he was at the
+window and his hand was raised for silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Back!&rdquo; he thundered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Back, knaves!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And he whistled shrilly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do what you will,&rdquo; he went
+on in the same tone, &ldquo;but not here!&nbsp; Pass on!&nbsp; Pass
+on!&mdash;do you hear?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the crowd were not to be lightly diverted.&nbsp; With a persistence
+brutal and unquestioning they continued to howl, &ldquo;Open!&nbsp;
+Open!&rdquo; while the man who had broken the window the moment before,
+Jehan, the cripple with the hideous face, seized the lead-work, and
+tore away a great piece of it.&nbsp; Then, laying hold of a bar, he
+tried to drag it out, setting one foot against the wall below.&nbsp;
+Tavannes saw what he did, and his frame seemed to dilate with the fury
+and violence of his character.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dogs!&rdquo; he shouted, &ldquo;must I call out my riders
+and scatter you?&nbsp; Must I flog you through the streets with stirrup-leathers?&nbsp;
+I am Tavannes; beware of me!&nbsp; I have claws and teeth and I bite!&rdquo;
+he continued, the scorn in his words exceeding even the rage of the
+crowd, at which he flung them.&nbsp; &ldquo;Kill where you please, rob
+where you please, but not where I am!&nbsp; Or I will hang you by the
+heels on Montfaucon, man by man!&nbsp; I will flay your backs.&nbsp;
+Go!&nbsp; Go!&nbsp; I am Tavannes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the mob, cowed for a moment by the thunder of his voice, by his
+arrogance and recklessness, showed at this that their patience was exhausted.&nbsp;
+With a yell which drowned his tones they swayed forward; a dozen thundered
+on the door, crying, &ldquo;In the King&rsquo;s name!&rdquo;&nbsp; As
+many more tore out the remainder of the casement, seized the bars of
+the window, and strove to pull them out or to climb between them.&nbsp;
+Jehan, the cripple, with whom Tignonville had rubbed elbows at the rendezvous,
+led the way.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal watched them a moment, his harsh face bent down to
+them, his features plain in the glare of the torches.&nbsp; But when
+the cripple, raised on the others&rsquo; shoulders, and emboldened by
+his adversary&rsquo;s inactivity, began to squeeze himself through the
+bars, Tavannes raised a pistol, which he had held unseen behind him,
+cocked it at leisure, and levelled it at the foul face which leered
+close to his.&nbsp; The dwarf saw the weapon and tried to retreat; but
+it was too late.&nbsp; A flash, a scream, and the wretch, shot through
+the throat, flung up his hands, and fell back into the arms of a lean
+man in black who had lent him his shoulder to ascend.</p>
+<p>For a few seconds the smoke of the pistol filled the window and the
+room.&nbsp; There was a cry that the Huguenots were escaping, that the
+Huguenots were resisting, that it was a plot; and some shouted to guard
+the back and some to watch the roof, and some to be gone.&nbsp; But
+when the fumes cleared away, the mob saw, with stupor, that all was
+as it had been.&nbsp; Count Hannibal stood where he had stood before,
+a grim smile on his lips.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who comes next?&rdquo; he cried in a tone of mockery.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I have more pistols!&rdquo;&nbsp; And then with a sudden change
+to ferocity, &ldquo;You dogs!&rdquo; he went on.&nbsp; &ldquo;You scum
+of a filthy city, sweepings of the Halles!&nbsp; Do you think to beard
+me?&nbsp; Do you think to frighten me or murder me?&nbsp; I am Tavannes,
+and this is my house, and were there a score of Huguenots in it, you
+should not touch one, nor harm a hair of his head!&nbsp; Begone, I say
+again, while you may!&nbsp; Seek women and children, and kill them.&nbsp;
+But not here!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For an instant the mingled scorn and brutality of his words silenced
+them.&nbsp; Then from the rear of the crowd came an answer&mdash;the
+roar of an arquebuse.&nbsp; The ball whizzed past Count Hannibal&rsquo;s
+head, and, splashing the plaster from the wall within a pace of Tignonville,
+dropped to the ground.</p>
+<p>Tavannes laughed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Bungler!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Were
+you in my troop I would dip your trigger-finger in boiling oil to teach
+you to shoot!&nbsp; But you weary me, dogs.&nbsp; I must teach you a
+lesson, must I?&rdquo;&nbsp; And he lifted a pistol and levelled it.&nbsp;
+The crowd did not know whether it was the one he had discharged or another,
+but they gave back with a sharp gasp.&nbsp; &ldquo;I must teach you,
+must I?&rdquo; he continued with scorn.&nbsp; &ldquo;Here, Bigot, Badelon,
+drive me these blusterers!&nbsp; Rid the street of them!&nbsp; A Tavannes!&nbsp;
+A Tavannes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Not by word or look had he before this betrayed that he had supports.&nbsp;
+But as he cried the name, a dozen men armed to the teeth, who had stood
+motionless under the Croix du Tiroir, fell in a line on the right flank
+of the crowd.&nbsp; The surprise for those nearest them was complete.&nbsp;
+With the flash of the pikes before their eyes, with the cold steel in
+fancy between their ribs, they fled every way, uncertain how many pursued,
+or if any pursuit there was.&nbsp; For a moment the mob, which a few
+minutes before had seemed so formidable that a regiment might have quailed
+before it, bade fair to be routed by a dozen pikes.</p>
+<p>And so, had all in the crowd been what he termed them, the rabble
+and sweepings of the streets, it would have been.&nbsp; But in the heart
+of it, and felt rather than seen, were a handful of another kidney;
+Sorbonne students and fierce-eyed priests, with three or four mounted
+archers, the nucleus that, moving through the streets, had drawn together
+this concourse.&nbsp; And these with threats and curse and gleaming
+eyes stood fast, even Tavannes&rsquo; dare-devils recoiling before the
+tonsure.&nbsp; The check thus caused allowed those who had budged a
+breathing space.&nbsp; They rallied behind the black robes, and began
+to stone the pikes; who in their turn withdrew until they formed two
+groups, standing on their defence, the one before the window, the other
+before the door.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal had watched the attack and the check, as a man watches
+a play; with smiling interest.&nbsp; In the panic, the torches had been
+dropped or extinguished, and now between the house and the sullen crowd
+which hung back, yet grew moment by moment more dangerous, the daylight
+fell cold on the littered street and the cripple&rsquo;s huddled form
+prone in the gutter.&nbsp; A priest raised on the shoulders of the lean
+man in black began to harangue the mob, and the dull roar of assent,
+the brandished arms which greeted his appeal, had their effect on Tavannes&rsquo;
+men.&nbsp; They looked to the window, and muttered among themselves.&nbsp;
+It was plain that they had no stomach for a fight with the Church, and
+were anxious for the order to withdraw.</p>
+<p>But Count Hannibal gave no order, and, much as his people feared
+the cowls, they feared him more.&nbsp; Meanwhile the speaker&rsquo;s
+eloquence rose higher; he pointed with frenzied gestures to the house.&nbsp;
+The mob groaned, and suddenly a volley of stones fell among the pikemen,
+whose corselets rattled under the shower.&nbsp; The priest seized that
+moment.&nbsp; He sprang to the ground, and to the front.&nbsp; He caught
+up his robe and waved his hand, and the rabble, as if impelled by a
+single will, rolled forward in a huge one-fronted thundering wave, before
+which the two handfuls of pikemen&mdash;afraid to strike, yet afraid
+to fly&mdash;were swept away like straws upon the tide.</p>
+<p>But against the solid walls and oak-barred door of the house the
+wave beat, only to fall back again, a broken, seething mass of brandished
+arms and ravening faces.&nbsp; One point alone was vulnerable, the window,
+and there in the gap stood Tavannes.&nbsp; Quick as thought he fired
+two pistols into the crowd; then, while the smoke for a moment hid all,
+he whistled.</p>
+<p>Whether the signal was a summons to his men to fight their way back&mdash;as
+they were doing to the best of their power&mdash;or he had resources
+still unseen, was not to be known.&nbsp; For as the smoke began to rise,
+and while the rabble before the window, cowed by the fall of two of
+their number, were still pushing backward instead of forward, there
+rose behind them strange sounds&mdash;yells, and the clatter of hoofs,
+mingled with screams of alarm.&nbsp; A second, and into the loose skirts
+of the crowd came charging helter-skelter, pell-mell, a score of galloping,
+shrieking, cursing horsemen, attended by twice as many footmen, who
+clung to their stirrups or to the tails of the horses, and yelled and
+whooped, and struck in unison with the maddened riders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On! on!&rdquo; the foremost shrieked, rolling in his saddle,
+and foaming at the mouth.&nbsp; &ldquo;Bleed in August, bleed in May!&nbsp;
+Kill!&rdquo;&nbsp; And he fired a pistol among the rabble, who fled
+every way to escape his rearing, plunging charger.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Kill! Kill!&rdquo; cried his followers, cutting the air with
+their swords, and rolling to and fro on their horses in drunken emulation.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Bleed in August, bleed in May!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On!&nbsp; On!&rdquo; cried the leader, as the crowd which
+beset the house fled every way before his reckless onset.&nbsp; &ldquo;Bleed
+in August, bleed in May!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The rabble fled, but not so quickly but that one or two were ridden
+down, and this for an instant checked the riders.&nbsp; Before they
+could pass on&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh&eacute;!&rdquo; cried Count Hannibal from his window.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh&eacute;!&rdquo; with a shout of laughter, &ldquo;ride over
+them, dear brother!&nbsp; Make me a clean street for my wedding!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Marshal Tavannes&mdash;for he, the hero of Jarnac, was the leader
+of this wild orgy&mdash;turned that way, and strove to rein in his horse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What ails them?&rdquo; he cried, as the maddened animal reared
+upright, its iron hoofs striking fire from the slippery pavement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are rearing like thy Bayard!&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Whip them, whip them for me!&nbsp; Tavannes!&nbsp; Tavannes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&nbsp; This canaille?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, that canaille!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who touches my brother, touches Tavannes!&rdquo; the Marshal
+replied, and spurred his horse among the rabble, who had fled to the
+sides of the street and now strove hard to efface themselves against
+the walls.&nbsp; &ldquo;Begone, dogs; begone!&rdquo; he cried, still
+hunting them.&nbsp; And then, &ldquo;You would bite, would you?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And snatching another pistol from his boot, he fired it among them,
+careless whom he hit.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ha! ha!&nbsp; That stirs you, does
+it!&rdquo; he continued, as the wretches fled headlong.&nbsp; &ldquo;Who
+touches my brother, touches Tavannes!&nbsp; On!&nbsp; On!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Suddenly, from a doorway near at hand, a sombre figure darted into
+the roadway, caught the Marshal&rsquo;s rein, and for a second checked
+his course.&nbsp; The priest&mdash;for a priest it was, Father Pezelay,
+the same who had addressed the mob&mdash;held up a warning hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Halt!&rdquo; he cried, with burning eyes.&nbsp; &ldquo;Halt,
+my lord!&nbsp; It is written, thou shalt not spare the Canaanitish woman.&nbsp;
+&rsquo;Tis not to spare the King has given command and a sword, but
+to kill!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis not to harbour, but to smite!&nbsp; To smite!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then smite I will!&rdquo; the Marshal retorted, and with the
+butt of his pistol struck the zealot down.&nbsp; Then, with as much
+indifference as he would have treated a Huguenot, he spurred his horse
+over him, with a mad laugh at his jest.&nbsp; &ldquo;Who touches my
+brother, touches Tavannes!&rdquo; he yelled.&nbsp; &ldquo;Touches Tavannes!&nbsp;
+On!&nbsp; On!&nbsp; Bleed in August, bleed in May!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On!&rdquo; shouted his followers, striking about them in the
+same desperate fashion.&nbsp; They were young nobles who had spent the
+night feasting at the Palace, and, drunk with wine and mad with excitement,
+had left the Louvre at daybreak to rouse the city.&nbsp; &ldquo;A Jarnac!&nbsp;
+A Jarnac!&rdquo; they cried, and some saluted Count Hannibal as they
+passed.&nbsp; And so, shouting and spurring and following their leader,
+they swept away down the now empty street, carrying terror and a flame
+wherever their horses bore them that morning.</p>
+<p>Tavannes, his hands on the ledge of the shattered window, leaned
+out laughing, and followed them with his eyes.&nbsp; A moment, and the
+mob was gone, the street was empty; and one by one, with sheepish faces,
+his pikemen emerged from the doorways and alleys in which they had taken
+refuge.&nbsp; They gathered about the three huddled forms which lay
+prone and still in the gutter: or, not three&mdash;two.&nbsp; For even
+as they approached them, one, the priest, rose slowly and giddily to
+his feet.&nbsp; He turned a face bleeding, lean, and relentless towards
+the window at which Tavannes stood.&nbsp; Solemnly, with the sign of
+the cross, and with uplifted hands, he cursed him in bed and at board,
+by day and by night, in walking, in riding, in standing, in the day
+of battle, and at the hour of death.&nbsp; The pikemen fell back appalled,
+and hid their eyes; and those who were of the north crossed themselves,
+and those who came from the south bent two fingers horse-shoe fashion.&nbsp;
+But Hannibal de Tavannes laughed; laughed in his moustache, his teeth
+showing, and bade them move that carrion to a distance, for it would
+smell when the sun was high.&nbsp; Then he turned his back on the street,
+and looked into the room.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.&nbsp; IN THE AMPHITHEATRE.</h2>
+<p>The movements of the women had overturned two of the candles; a third
+had guttered out.&nbsp; The three which still burned, contending pallidly
+with the daylight that each moment grew stronger, imparted to the scene
+the air of a debauch too long sustained.&nbsp; The disordered board,
+the wan faces of the servants cowering in their corner, Mademoiselle&rsquo;s
+frozen look of misery, all increased the likeness; which a common exhaustion
+so far strengthened that when Tavannes turned from the window, and,
+flushed with his triumph, met the others&rsquo; eyes, his seemed the
+only vigour, and he the only man in the company.&nbsp; True, beneath
+the exhaustion, beneath the collapse of his victims, there burned passions,
+hatreds, repulsions, as fierce as the hidden fires of the volcano; but
+for the time they smouldered ash-choked and inert.</p>
+<p>He flung the discharged pistols on the table.&nbsp; &ldquo;If yonder
+raven speak truth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I am like to pay dearly for
+my wife, and have short time to call her wife.&nbsp; The more need,
+Mademoiselle, for speed, therefore.&nbsp; You know the old saying, &lsquo;Short
+signing, long seisin&rsquo;?&nbsp; Shall it be my priest, or your minister?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. de Tignonville started forward.&nbsp; &ldquo;She promised nothing!&rdquo;
+he cried.&nbsp; And he struck his hand on the table.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal smiled, his lip curling.&nbsp; &ldquo;That,&rdquo;
+he replied, &ldquo;is for Mademoiselle to say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if she says it?&nbsp; If she says it, Monsieur?&nbsp;
+What then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tavannes drew forth a comfit-box, such as it was the fashion of the
+day to carry, as men of a later time carried a snuff-box.&nbsp; He slowly
+chose a prune.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If she says it?&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then M. de
+Tignonville has regained his sweetheart.&nbsp; And M. de Tavannes has
+lost his bride.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You say so?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&nbsp; But&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But she will not say it,&rdquo; Tavannes replied coolly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Monsieur, why not?&rdquo; the younger man repeated, trembling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because, M. de Tignonville, it is not true.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But she did not speak!&rdquo; Tignonville retorted, with passion&mdash;the
+futile passion of the bird which beats its wings against a cage.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She did not speak.&nbsp; She could not promise, therefore.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tavannes ate the prune slowly, seemed to give a little thought to
+its flavour, approved it a true Agen plum, and at last spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is not for you to say whether she promised,&rdquo; he returned
+dryly, &ldquo;nor for me.&nbsp; It is for Mademoiselle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You leave it to her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I leave it to her to say whether she promised.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then she must say No!&rdquo; Tignonville cried in a tone of
+triumph and relief.&nbsp; &ldquo;For she did not speak.&nbsp; Mademoiselle,
+listen!&rdquo; he continued, turning with outstretched hands and appealing
+to her with passion.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you hear?&nbsp; Do you understand?&nbsp;
+You have but to speak to be free!&nbsp; You have but to say the word,
+and Monsieur lets you go!&nbsp; In God&rsquo;s name, speak!&nbsp; Speak
+then, Clotilde!&nbsp; Oh!&rdquo; with a gesture of despair, as she did
+not answer, but continued to sit stony and hopeless, looking straight
+before her, her hands picking convulsively at the fringe of her girdle.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She does not understand!&nbsp; Fright has stunned her!&nbsp;
+Be merciful, Monsieur.&nbsp; Give her time to recover, to know what
+she does.&nbsp; Fright has turned her brain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal smiled.&nbsp; &ldquo;I knew her father and her uncle,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;and in their time the Vrillacs were not wont to be cowards.&nbsp;
+Monsieur forgets, too,&rdquo; he continued with fine irony, &ldquo;that
+he speaks of my betrothed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a lie!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tavannes raised his eyebrows.&nbsp; &ldquo;You are in my power,&rdquo;
+he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;For the rest, if it be a lie, Mademoiselle has
+but to say so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You hear him?&rdquo; Tignonville cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then
+speak, Mademoiselle!&nbsp; Clotilde, speak!&nbsp; Say you never spoke,
+you never promised him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The young man&rsquo;s voice quivered with indignation, with rage,
+with pain; but most, if the truth be told, with shame&mdash;the shame
+of a position strange and unparalleled. For in proportion as the fear
+of death instant and violent was lifted from him, reflection awoke,
+and the situation in which he stood took uglier shape.&nbsp; It was
+not so much love that cried to her, love that suffered, anguished by
+the prospect of love lost; as in the highest natures it might have been.&nbsp;
+Rather it was the man&rsquo;s pride which suffered: the pride of a high
+spirit which found itself helpless between the hammer and the anvil,
+in a position so false that hereafter men might say of the unfortunate
+that he had bartered his mistress for his life.&nbsp; He had not!&nbsp;
+But he had perforce to stand by; he had to be passive under stress of
+circumstances, and by the sacrifice, if she consummated it, he would
+in fact be saved.</p>
+<p>There was the pinch.&nbsp; No wonder that he cried to her in a voice
+which roused even the servants from their lethargy of fear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say it!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Say it, before it be
+too late.&nbsp; Say, you did not promise!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Slowly she turned her face to him.&nbsp; &ldquo;I cannot,&rdquo;
+she whispered; &ldquo;I cannot.&nbsp; Go,&rdquo; she continued, a spasm
+distorting her features.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go, Monsieur.&nbsp; Leave me.&nbsp;
+It is over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; he exclaimed.&nbsp; &ldquo;You promised him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She bowed her head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; the young man cried, in a transport of resentment,
+&ldquo;I will be no part of the price.&nbsp; See!&nbsp; There!&nbsp;
+And there!&rdquo;&nbsp; He tore the white sleeve wholly from his arm,
+and, rending it in twain, flung it on the floor and trampled on it.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It shall never be said that I stood by and let you buy my life!&nbsp;
+I go into the street and I take my chance.&rdquo;&nbsp; And he turned
+to the door.</p>
+<p>But Tavannes was before him.&nbsp; &ldquo;No!&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;you
+will stay here, M. de Tignonville!&rdquo;&nbsp; And he set his back
+against the door.</p>
+<p>The young man looked at him, his face convulsed with passion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall stay here?&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;And why,
+Monsieur?&nbsp; What is it to you if I choose to perish?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only this,&rdquo; Tavannes retorted.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am answerable
+to Mademoiselle now, in an hour I shall be answerable to my wife&mdash;for
+your life.&nbsp; Live, then, Monsieur; you have no choice.&nbsp; In
+a month you will thank me&mdash;and her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am your prisoner?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Precisely.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I must stay here&mdash;to be tortured?&rdquo; Tignonville
+cried.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal&rsquo;s eyes sparkled.&nbsp; Sudden stormy changes,
+from indifference to ferocity, from irony to invective, were characteristic
+of the man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tortured!&rdquo; he repeated grimly.&nbsp; &ldquo;You talk
+of torture while Piles and Pardaillan, Teligny and Rochefoucauld lie
+dead in the street!&nbsp; While your cause sinks withered in a night,
+like a gourd!&nbsp; While your servants fall butchered, and France rises
+round you in a tide of blood!&nbsp; Bah!&rdquo;&mdash;with a gesture
+of disdain&mdash;&ldquo;you make me also talk, and I have no love for
+talk, and small time.&nbsp; Mademoiselle, you at least act and do not
+talk.&nbsp; By your leave I return in an hour, and I bring with me&mdash;shall
+it be my priest, or your minister?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She looked at him with the face of one who awakes slowly to the full
+horror, the full dread, of her position.&nbsp; For a moment she did
+not answer.&nbsp; Then&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A minister,&rdquo; she muttered, her voice scarcely audible.</p>
+<p>He nodded.&nbsp; &ldquo;A minister,&rdquo; he said lightly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Very well, if I can find one.&rdquo;&nbsp; And walking to the
+shattered, gaping casement&mdash;through which the cool morning air
+blew into the room and gently stirred the hair of the unhappy girl&mdash;he
+said some words to the man on guard outside.&nbsp; Then he turned to
+the door, but on the threshold he paused, looked with a strange expression
+at the pair, and signed to Carlat and the servants to go out before
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Up, and lie close above!&rdquo; he growled.&nbsp; &ldquo;Open
+a window or look out, and you will pay dearly for it!&nbsp; Do you hear?&nbsp;
+Up!&nbsp; Up!&nbsp; You, too, old crop-ears.&nbsp; What! would you?&rdquo;&mdash;with
+a sudden glare as Carlat hesitated&mdash;&ldquo;that is better!&nbsp;
+Mademoiselle, until my return.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He saw them all out, followed them, and closed the door on the two;
+who, left together, alone with the gaping window and the disordered
+feast, maintained a strange silence.&nbsp; The girl, gripping one hand
+in the other as if to quell her rising horror, sat looking before her,
+and seemed barely to breathe.&nbsp; The man, leaning against the wall
+at a little distance, bent his eyes, not on her, but on the floor, his
+face gloomy and distorted.</p>
+<p>His first thought should have been of her and for her; his first
+impulse to console, if he could not save her.&nbsp; His it should have
+been to soften, were that possible, the fate before her; to prove to
+her by words of farewell, the purest and most sacred, that the sacrifice
+she was making, not to save her own life but the lives of others, was
+appreciated by him who paid with her the price.</p>
+<p>And all these things, and more, may have been in M. de Tignonville&rsquo;s
+mind; they may even have been uppermost in it, but they found no expression.&nbsp;
+The man remained sunk in a sombre reverie.&nbsp; He had the appearance
+of thinking of himself, not of her; of his own position, not of hers.&nbsp;
+Otherwise he must have looked at her, he must have turned to her; he
+must have owned the subtle attraction of her unspoken appeal when she
+drew a deep breath and slowly turned her eyes on him, mute, asking,
+waiting what he should offer.</p>
+<p>Surely he should have!&nbsp; Yet it was long before he responded.&nbsp;
+He sat buried in thought of himself, and his position, the vile, the
+unworthy position in which her act had placed him.&nbsp; At length the
+constraint of her gaze wrought on him, or his thoughts became unbearable;
+and he looked up and met her eyes, and with an oath he sprang to his
+feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It shall not be!&rdquo; he cried, in a tone low, but full
+of fury.&nbsp; &ldquo;You shall not do it!&nbsp; I will kill him first!&nbsp;
+I will kill him with this hand!&nbsp; Or&mdash;&rdquo; a step took him
+to the window, a step brought him back&mdash;ay, brought him back exultant,
+and with a changed face.&nbsp; &ldquo;Or better, we will thwart him
+yet.&nbsp; See, Mademoiselle, do you see?&nbsp; Heaven is merciful!&nbsp;
+For a moment the cage is open!&rdquo;&nbsp; His eye shone with excitement,
+the sweat of sudden hope stood on his brow as he pointed to the unguarded
+casement.&nbsp; &ldquo;Come! it is our one chance!&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+he caught her by her arm and strove to draw her to the window.</p>
+<p>But she hung back, staring at him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh no, no!&rdquo;
+she cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes! I say!&rdquo; he responded.&nbsp; &ldquo;You do
+not understand.&nbsp; The way is open!&nbsp; We can escape, Clotilde,
+we can escape!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot!&nbsp; I cannot!&rdquo; she wailed, still resisting
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are afraid?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Afraid?&rdquo; she repeated the word in a tone of wonder.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;No, but I cannot.&nbsp; I promised him.&nbsp; I cannot.&nbsp;
+And, O God!&rdquo; she continued, in a sudden outburst of grief, as
+the sense of general loss, of the great common tragedy broke on her
+and whelmed for the moment her private misery.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why should
+we think of ourselves?&nbsp; They are dead, they are dying, who were
+ours, whom we loved!&nbsp; Why should we think to live?&nbsp; What does
+it matter how it fares with us?&nbsp; We cannot be happy.&nbsp; Happy?&rdquo;
+she continued wildly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Are any happy now?&nbsp; Or is the
+world all changed in a night?&nbsp; No, we could not be happy.&nbsp;
+And at least you will live, Tignonville.&nbsp; I have that to console
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Live!&rdquo; he responded vehemently.&nbsp; &ldquo;I live?&nbsp;
+I would rather die a thousand times.&nbsp; A thousand times rather than
+live shamed!&nbsp; Than see you sacrificed to that devil!&nbsp; Than
+go out with a brand on my brow, for every man to point at me!&nbsp;
+I would rather die a thousand times!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And do you think that I would not?&rdquo; she answered, shivering.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Better, far better die than&mdash;than live with him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why not die?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She stared at him, wide-eyed, and a sudden stillness possessed her.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;How?&rdquo; she whispered.&nbsp; &ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; As he spoke, he raised his hand
+and signed to her to listen.&nbsp; A sullen murmur, distant as yet,
+but borne to the ear on the fresh morning air, foretold the rising of
+another storm.&nbsp; The sound grew in intensity, even while she listened;
+and yet for a moment she misunderstood him.&nbsp; &ldquo;O God!&rdquo;
+she cried, out of the agony of nerves overwrought, &ldquo;will that
+bell never stop?&nbsp; Will it never stop?&nbsp; Will no one stop it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis not the bell!&rdquo; he cried, seizing her hand
+as if to focus her attention.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is the mob you hear.&nbsp;
+They are returning.&nbsp; We have but to stand a moment at this open
+window, we have but to show ourselves to them, and we need live no longer!&nbsp;
+Mademoiselle!&nbsp; Clotilde!&mdash;if you mean what you say, if you
+are in earnest, the way is open!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And we shall die&mdash;together!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, together.&nbsp; But have you the courage?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The courage?&rdquo; she cried, a brave smile lighting the
+whiteness of her face.&nbsp; &ldquo;The courage were needed to live.&nbsp;
+The courage were needed to do that.&nbsp; I am ready, quite ready.&nbsp;
+It can be no sin!&nbsp; To live with that in front of me were the sin!&nbsp;
+Come!&rdquo;&nbsp; For the moment she had forgotten her people, her
+promise, all!&nbsp; It seemed to her that death would absolve her from
+all.&nbsp; &ldquo;Come!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He moved with her under the impulse of her hand until they stood
+at the gaping window.&nbsp; The murmur, which he had heard indistinctly
+a moment before, had grown to a roar of voices.&nbsp; The mob, on its
+return eastward along the Rue St. Honor&eacute;, was nearing the house.&nbsp;
+He stood, his arm supporting her, and they waited, a little within the
+window.&nbsp; Suddenly he stooped, his face hardly less white than hers:
+their eyes met; he would have kissed her.</p>
+<p>She did not withdraw from his arm, but she drew back her face, her
+eyes half shut.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; she murmured.&nbsp; &ldquo;No!&nbsp; While I live
+I am his.&nbsp; But we die together, Tignonville!&nbsp; We die together.&nbsp;
+It will not last long, will it?&nbsp; And afterwards&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She did not finish the sentence, but her lips moved in prayer, and
+over her features came a far-away look; such a look as that which on
+the face of another Huguenot lady, Philippa de Luns&mdash;vilely done
+to death in the Place Maubert fourteen years before&mdash;silenced the
+ribald jests of the lowest rabble in the world.&nbsp; An hour or two
+earlier, awed by the abruptness of the outburst, Mademoiselle had shrunk
+from her fate; she had known fear.&nbsp; Now that she stood out voluntarily
+to meet it, she, like many a woman before and since, feared no longer.&nbsp;
+She was lifted out of and above herself.</p>
+<p>But death was long in coming.&nbsp; Some cause beyond their knowledge
+stayed the onrush of the mob along the street.&nbsp; The din, indeed,
+persisted, deafened, shook them; but the crowd seemed to be at a stand
+a few doors down the Rue St. Honor&eacute;.&nbsp; For a half-minute,
+a long half-minute, which appeared an age, it drew no nearer.&nbsp;
+Would it draw nearer?&nbsp; Would it come on?&nbsp; Or would it turn
+again?</p>
+<p>The doubt, so much worse than despair, began to sap that courage
+of the man which is always better fitted to do than to suffer.&nbsp;
+The sweat rose on Tignonville&rsquo;s brow as he stood listening, his
+arm round the girl&mdash;as he stood listening and waiting.&nbsp; It
+is possible that when he had said a minute or two earlier that he would
+rather die a thousand times than live thus shamed, he had spoken beyond
+the mark.&nbsp; Or it is possible that he had meant his words to the
+full.&nbsp; But in this case he had not pictured what was to come, he
+had not gauged correctly his power of passive endurance.&nbsp; He was
+as brave as the ordinary man, as the ordinary soldier; but martyrdom,
+the apotheosis of resignation, comes more naturally to women than to
+men, more hardly to men than to women.&nbsp; Yet had the crisis come
+quickly he might have met it.&nbsp; But he had to wait, and to wait
+with that howling of wild beasts in his ears; and for this he was not
+prepared.&nbsp; A woman might be content to die after this fashion;
+but a man?&nbsp; His colour went and came, his eyes began to rove hither
+and thither.&nbsp; Was it even now too late to escape?&nbsp; Too late
+to avoid the consequences of the girl&rsquo;s silly persistence?&nbsp;
+Too late to&mdash;?&nbsp; Her eyes were closed, she hung half lifeless
+on his arm.&nbsp; She would not know, she need not know until afterwards.&nbsp;
+And afterwards she would thank him!&nbsp; Afterwards&mdash;meantime
+the window was open, the street was empty, and still the crowd hung
+back and did not come.</p>
+<p>He remembered that two doors away was a narrow passage, which leaving
+the Rue St. Honor&eacute; turned at right angles under a beetling archway,
+to emerge in the Rue du Roule.&nbsp; If he could gain that passage unseen
+by the mob!&nbsp; He <i>would</i> gain it.&nbsp; With a swift movement,
+his mind made up, he took a step forward.&nbsp; He tightened his grasp
+of the girl&rsquo;s waist, and, seizing with his left hand the end of
+the bar which the assailants had torn from its setting in the window
+jamb, he turned to lower himself.&nbsp; One long step would land him
+in the street.</p>
+<p>At that moment she awoke from the stupor of exaltation.&nbsp; She
+opened her eyes with a startled movement; and her eyes met his.</p>
+<p>He was in the act of stepping backwards and downwards, dragging her
+after him.&nbsp; But it was not this betrayed him.&nbsp; It was his
+face, which in an instant told her all, and that he sought not death,
+but life!&nbsp; She struggled upright and strove to free herself.&nbsp;
+But he had the purchase of the bar, and by this time he was furious
+as well as determined.&nbsp; Whether she would or no, he would save
+her, he would drag her out.&nbsp; Then, as consciousness fully returned,
+she, too, took fire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;I will not!&rdquo; and she struggled
+more violently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You shall!&rdquo; he retorted between his teeth.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+shall not perish here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But she had her hands free, and as he spoke she thrust him from her
+passionately, desperately, with all her strength.&nbsp; He had his one
+foot in the air at the moment, and in a flash it was done.&nbsp; With
+a cry of rage he lost his balance, and, still holding the bar, reeled
+backwards through the window; while Mademoiselle, panting and half fainting,
+recoiled&mdash;recoiled into the arms of Hannibal de Tavannes, who,
+unseen by either, had entered the room a long minute before.&nbsp; From
+the threshold, and with a smile, all his own, he had watched the contest
+and the result.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII.&nbsp; TWO HENS AND AN EGG.</h2>
+<p>M. de Tignonville was shaken by the fall, and in the usual course
+of things he would have lain where he was, and groaned.&nbsp; But when
+a man has once turned his back on death he is apt to fancy it at his
+shoulder.&nbsp; He has small stomach for surprises, and is in haste
+to set as great a distance as possible between the ugly thing and himself.&nbsp;
+So it was with the Huguenot.&nbsp; Shot suddenly into the full publicity
+of the street, he knew that at any instant danger might take him by
+the nape; and he was on his legs and glancing up and down before the
+clatter of his fall had travelled the length of three houses.</p>
+<p>The rabble were still a hundred paces away, piled up and pressed
+about a house where men were being hunted as men hunt rats.&nbsp; He
+saw that he was unnoted, and apprehension gave place to rage.&nbsp;
+His thoughts turned back hissing hot to the thing that had happened,
+and in a paroxysm of shame he shook his fist at the gaping casement
+and the sneering face of his rival, dimly seen in the background.&nbsp;
+If a look would have killed Tavannes&mdash;and her&mdash;it had not
+been wanting.</p>
+<p>For it was not only the man M. de Tignonville hated at this moment;
+he hated Mademoiselle also, the unwitting agent of the other&rsquo;s
+triumph.&nbsp; She had thrust him from her; she had refused to be guided
+by him; she had resisted, thwarted, shamed him.&nbsp; Then let her take
+the consequences.&nbsp; She willed to perish: let her perish!</p>
+<p>He did not acknowledge even to himself the real cause of offence,
+the proof to which she had put his courage, and the failure of that
+courage to stand the test.&nbsp; Yet it was this, though he had himself
+provoked the trial, which burned up his chivalry, as the smuggler&rsquo;s
+fire burns up the dwarf heath upon the Landes.&nbsp; It was the discovery
+that in an heroic hour he was no hero that gave force to his passionate
+gesture, and next moment sent him storming down the beetling passage
+to the Rue du Roule, his heart a maelstrom of fierce vows and fiercer
+menaces.</p>
+<p>He had reached the further end of the alley and was on the point
+of entering the street before he remembered that he had nowhere to go.&nbsp;
+His lodgings were no longer his, since his landlord knew him to be a
+Huguenot, and would doubtless betray him.&nbsp; To approach those of
+his faith whom he had frequented was to expose them to danger; and,
+beyond the religion, he had few acquaintances and those of the newest.&nbsp;
+Yet the streets were impossible.&nbsp; He walked them on the utmost
+edge of peril; he lurked in them under the blade of an impending axe.&nbsp;
+And, whether he walked or lurked, he went at the mercy of the first
+comers bold enough to take his life.</p>
+<p>The sweat stood on his brow as he paused under the low arch of the
+alley-end, tasting the bitter forlornness of the dog banned and set
+for death in that sunlit city.&nbsp; In every window of the gable end
+which faced his hiding-place he fancied an eye watching his movements;
+in every distant step he heard the footfall of doom coming that way
+to his discovery.&nbsp; And while he trembled, he had to reflect, to
+think, to form some plan.</p>
+<p>In the town was no place for him, and short of the open country no
+safety.&nbsp; And how could he gain the open country?&nbsp; If he succeeded
+in reaching one of the gates&mdash;St. Antoine, or St. Denis, in itself
+a task of difficulty&mdash;it would only be to find the gate closed,
+and the guard on the alert.&nbsp; At last it flashed on him that he
+might cross the river; and at the notion hope awoke.&nbsp; It was possible
+that the massacre had not extended to the southern suburb; possible,
+that if it had, the Huguenots who lay there&mdash;Frontenay, and Montgomery,
+and Chartres, with the men of the North&mdash;might be strong enough
+to check it, and even to turn the tables on the Parisians.</p>
+<p>His colour returned.&nbsp; He was no coward, as soldiers go; if it
+came to fighting he had courage enough.&nbsp; He could not hope to cross
+the river by the bridge, for there, where the goldsmiths lived, the
+mob were like to be most busy.&nbsp; But if he could reach the bank
+he might procure a boat at some deserted point, or, at the worst, he
+might swim across.</p>
+<p>From the Louvre at his back came the sound of gunshots; from every
+quarter the murmur of distant crowds, or the faint lamentable cries
+of victims.&nbsp; But the empty street before him promised an easy passage,
+and he ventured into it and passed quickly through it.&nbsp; He met
+no one, and no one molested him; but as he went he had glimpses of pale
+faces that from behind the casements watched him come and turned to
+watch him go; and so heavy on his nerves was the pressure of this silent
+ominous attention, that he blundered at the end of the street.&nbsp;
+He should have taken the southerly turning; instead he held on, found
+himself in the Rue Ferronerie, and a moment later was all but in the
+arms of a band of city guards, who were making a house-to-house visitation.</p>
+<p>He owed his safety rather to the condition of the street than to
+his presence of mind.&nbsp; The Rue Ferronerie, narrow in itself, was
+so choked at this date by stalls and bulkheads, that an edict directing
+the removal of those which abutted on the cemetery had been issued a
+little before.&nbsp; Nothing had been done on it, however, and this
+neck of Paris, this main thoroughfare between the east and the west,
+between the fashionable quarter of the Marais and the fashionable quarter
+of the Louvre, was still a devious huddle of sheds and pent-houses.&nbsp;
+Tignonville slid behind one of these, found that it masked the mouth
+of an alley, and, heedless whither the passage led, ran hurriedly along
+it.&nbsp; Every instant he expected to hear the hue and cry behind him,
+and he did not halt or draw breath until he had left the soldiers far
+in the rear, and found himself astray at the junction of four noisome
+lanes, over two of which the projecting gables fairly met.&nbsp; Above
+the two others a scrap of sky appeared, but this was too small to indicate
+in which direction the river lay.</p>
+<p>Tignonville hesitated, but not for long; a burst of voices heralded
+a new danger, and he shrank into a doorway.&nbsp; Along one of the lanes
+a troop of children, the biggest not twelve years old, came dancing
+and leaping round something which they dragged by a string.&nbsp; Now
+one of the hindmost would burl it onward with a kick, now another, amid
+screams of childish laughter, tripped headlong over the cord; now at
+the crossways they stopped to wrangle and question which way they should
+go, or whose turn it was to pull and whose to follow.&nbsp; At last
+they started afresh with a whoop, the leader singing and all plucking
+the string to the cadence of the air.&nbsp; Their plaything leapt and
+dropped, sprang forward, and lingered like a thing of life.&nbsp; But
+it was no thing of life, as Tignonville saw with a shudder when they
+passed him.&nbsp; The object of their sport was the naked body of a
+child, an infant!</p>
+<p>His gorge rose at the sight.&nbsp; Fear such as he had not before
+experienced chilled his marrow.&nbsp; This was hate indeed, a hate before
+which the strong man quailed; the hate of which Mademoiselle had spoken
+when she said that the babes crossed themselves at her passing, and
+the houses tottered to fall upon her!</p>
+<p>He paused a minute to recover himself, so deeply had the sight moved
+him; and as he stood, he wondered if that hate already had its cold
+eye fixed on him.&nbsp; Instinctively his gaze searched the opposite
+wall, but save for two small double-grated windows it was blind; time-stained
+and stone-built, dark with the ordure of the city lane, it seemed but
+the back of a house, which looked another way.&nbsp; The outer gates
+of an arched doorway were open, and a loaded haycart, touching either
+side and brushing the arch above, blocked the passage.&nbsp; His gaze,
+leaving the windows, dropped to this&mdash;he scanned it a moment; and
+on a sudden he stiffened.&nbsp; Between the hay and the arch a hand
+flickered an instant, then vanished.</p>
+<p>Tignonville stared.&nbsp; At first he thought his eyes had tricked
+him.&nbsp; Then the hand appeared again, and this time it conveyed an
+unmistakable invitation.&nbsp; It is not from the unknown or the hidden
+that the fugitive has aught to fear, and Tignonville, after casting
+a glance down the lane&mdash;which revealed a single man standing with
+his face the other way&mdash;slipped across and pushed between the hay
+and the wall.&nbsp; He coughed.</p>
+<p>A voice whispered to him to climb up; a friendly hand clutched him
+in the act, and aided him.&nbsp; In a second he was lying on his face,
+tight squeezed between the hay and the roof of the arch.&nbsp; Beside
+him lay a man whose features his eyes, unaccustomed to the gloom, could
+not discern.&nbsp; But the man knew him and whispered his name.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You know me?&rdquo; Tignonville muttered in astonishment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I marked you, M. de Tignonville, at the preaching last Sunday,&rdquo;
+the stranger answered placidly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I preached.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you are M. la Tribe!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am,&rdquo; the clergyman answered quietly.&nbsp; &ldquo;They
+seized me on my threshold, but I left my cloak in their hands and fled.&nbsp;
+One tore my stocking with his point, another my doublet, but not a hair
+of my head was injured.&nbsp; They hunted me to the end of the next
+street, but I lived and still live, and shall live to lift up my voice
+against this wicked city.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sympathy between the Huguenot by faith and the Huguenot by politics
+was imperfect.&nbsp; Tignonville, like most men of rank of the younger
+generation, was a Huguenot by politics; and he was in a bitter humour.&nbsp;
+He felt, perhaps, that it was men such as this who had driven the other
+side to excesses such as these; and he hardly repressed a sneer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish I felt as sure!&rdquo; he muttered bluntly.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+know that all our people are dead?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He can save by few or by many,&rdquo; the preacher answered
+devoutly.&nbsp; &ldquo;We are of the few, blessed be God, and shall
+see Israel victorious, and our people as a flock of sheep!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see small chance of it,&rdquo; Tignonville answered contemptuously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it as certainly as I knew before you came, M. de Tignonville,
+that you would come!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That <i>I</i> should come?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That some one would come,&rdquo; La Tribe answered, correcting
+himself.&nbsp; &ldquo;I knew not who it would be until you appeared
+and placed yourself in the doorway over against me, even as Obadiah
+in the Holy Book passed before the hiding-place of Elijah.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two lay on their faces side by side, the rafters of the archway
+low on their heads.&nbsp; Tignonville lifted himself a little, and peered
+anew at the other.&nbsp; He fancied that La Tribe&rsquo;s mind, shaken
+by the horrors of the morning and his narrow escape, had given way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You rave, man,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;This is no time
+for visions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I said naught of visions,&rdquo; the other answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why so sure that we shall escape?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am certified of it,&rdquo; La Tribe replied.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+more than that, I know that we shall lie here some days.&nbsp; The time
+has not been revealed to me, but it will be days and a day.&nbsp; Then
+we shall leave this place unharmed, as we entered it, and, whatever
+betide others, we shall live.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville shrugged his shoulders.&nbsp; &ldquo;I tell you, you
+rave, M. la Tribe,&rdquo; he said petulantly.&nbsp; &ldquo;At any moment
+we may be discovered.&nbsp; Even now I hear footsteps.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They tracked me well-nigh to this place,&rdquo; the minister
+answered placidly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The deuce they did!&rdquo; Tignonville muttered, with irritation.&nbsp;
+He dared not raise his voice.&nbsp; &ldquo;I would you had told me that
+before I joined you, Monsieur, and I had found some safer hiding-place!&nbsp;
+When we are discovered&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; the other continued calmly, &ldquo;you will see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In any case we shall be better farther back,&rdquo; Tignonville
+retorted.&nbsp; &ldquo;Here, we are within an ace of being seen from
+the lane.&rdquo;&nbsp; And he began to wriggle himself backwards.</p>
+<p>The minister laid his hand on him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have a care!&rdquo;
+he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;And do not move, but listen.&nbsp; And you
+will understand.&nbsp; When I reached this place&mdash;it would be about
+five o&rsquo;clock this morning&mdash;breathless, and expecting each
+minute to be dragged forth to make my confession before men, I despaired
+as you despair now.&nbsp; Like Elijah under the juniper tree, I said,
+&lsquo;It is enough, O Lord!&nbsp; Take my soul also, for I am no better
+than my fellows!&rsquo;&nbsp; All the sky was black before my eyes,
+and my ears were filled with the wailings of the little ones and the
+lamentations of women.&nbsp; &lsquo;O Lord, it is enough,&rsquo; I prayed.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Take my soul, or, if it be Thy will, then, as the angel was sent
+to take the cakes to Elijah, give me also a sign that I shall live.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For a moment he paused, struggling with overpowering emotion.&nbsp;
+Even his impatient listener, hitherto incredulous, caught the infection,
+and in a tone of awe murmured&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&nbsp; And then, M. la Tribe!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The sign was given me.&nbsp; The words were scarcely out of
+my mouth when a hen flew up, and, scratching a nest in the hay at my
+feet, presently laid an egg.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville stared.&nbsp; &ldquo;It was timely, I admit,&rdquo; he
+said.&nbsp; &ldquo;But it is no uncommon thing.&nbsp; Probably it has
+its nest here and lays daily.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Young man, this is new-mown hay,&rdquo; the minister answered
+solemnly.&nbsp; &ldquo;This cart was brought here no further back than
+yesterday.&nbsp; It smells of the meadow, and the flowers hold their
+colour.&nbsp; No, the fowl was sent.&nbsp; To-morrow it will return,
+and the next, and the next, until the plague be stayed and I go hence.&nbsp;
+But that is not all.&nbsp; A while later a second hen appeared, and
+I thought it would lay in the same nest.&nbsp; But it made a new one,
+on the side on which you lie and not far from your foot.&nbsp; Then
+I knew that I was to have a companion, and that God had laid also for
+him a table in the wilderness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It did lay, then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is still on the nest, beside your foot.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville was about to reply when the preacher grasped his arm
+and by a sign enjoined silence.&nbsp; He did so not a moment too soon.&nbsp;
+Preoccupied by the story, narrator and listener had paid no heed to
+what was passing in the lane, and the voices of men speaking close at
+hand took them by surprise.&nbsp; From the first words which reached
+them, it was clear that the speakers were the same who had chased La
+Tribe as far as the meeting of the four ways, and, losing him there,
+had spent the morning in other business.&nbsp; Now they had returned
+to hunt him down; and but for a wrangle which arose among them and detained
+them, they had stolen on their quarry before their coming was suspected.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Twas this way he ran!&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;No, &rsquo;twas
+the other!&rdquo; they contended; and their words, winged with vile
+threats and oaths, grew noisy and hot.&nbsp; The two listeners dared
+scarcely to breathe.&nbsp; The danger was so near, it was so certain
+that if the men came three paces farther, they would observe and search
+the haycart, that Tignonville fancied the steel already at his throat.&nbsp;
+He felt the hay rustle under his slightest movement, and gripped one
+hand with the other to restrain the tremor of overpowering excitement.&nbsp;
+Yet when he glanced at the minister he found him unmoved, a smile on
+his face.&nbsp; And M. de Tignonville could have cursed him for his
+folly.</p>
+<p>For the men were coming on!&nbsp; An instant, and they perceived
+the cart, and the ruffian who had advised this route pounced on it in
+triumph.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There!&nbsp; Did I not say so?&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;He
+is curled up in that hay, for the Satan&rsquo;s grub he is!&nbsp; That
+is where he is, see you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe,&rdquo; another answered grudgingly, as they gathered
+before it.&nbsp; &ldquo;And maybe not, Simon!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To hell with your maybe not!&rdquo; the first replied.&nbsp;
+And he drove his pike deep into the hay and turned it viciously.</p>
+<p>The two on the top controlled themselves.&nbsp; Tignonville&rsquo;s
+face was livid; of himself he would have slid down amongst them and
+taken his chance, preferring to die fighting, to die in the open, rather
+than to perish like a rat in a stack.&nbsp; But La Tribe had gripped
+his arm and held him fast.</p>
+<p>The man whom the others called Simon thrust again, but too low and
+without result.&nbsp; He was for trying a third time, when one of his
+comrades who had gone to the other side of the lane announced that the
+men were on the top of the hay.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can you see them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, but there&rsquo;s room and to spare.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, a curse on your room!&rdquo; Simon retorted.&nbsp; &ldquo;Well,
+you can look.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If that&rsquo;s all, I&rsquo;ll soon look!&rdquo; was the
+answer.&nbsp; And the rogue, forcing himself between the hay and the
+side of the gateway, found the wheel of the cart, and began to raise
+himself on it.</p>
+<p>Tignonville, who lay on that hand, heard, though he could not see
+his movements.&nbsp; He knew what they meant, he knew that in a twinkling
+he must be discovered; and with a last prayer he gathered himself for
+a spring.</p>
+<p>It seemed an age before the intruder&rsquo;s head appeared on a level
+with the hay; and then the alarm came from another quarter.&nbsp; The
+hen which had made its nest at Tignonville&rsquo;s feet, disturbed by
+the movement or by the newcomer&rsquo;s hand, flew out with a rush and
+flutter as of a great firework.&nbsp; Upsetting the startled Simon,
+who slipped swearing to the ground, it swooped scolding and clucking
+over the heads of the other men, and reaching the street in safety,
+scuttled off at speed, its outspread wings sweeping the earth in its
+rage.</p>
+<p>They laughed uproariously as Simon emerged, rubbing his elbow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s for you!&nbsp; There&rsquo;s your preacher!&rdquo;
+his opponent jeered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;D---n her! she gives tongue as fast as any of them!&rdquo;
+gibed a second.&nbsp; &ldquo;Will you try again, Simon?&nbsp; You may
+find another love-letter there!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have done!&rdquo; a third cried impatiently.&nbsp; &ldquo;He&rsquo;ll
+not be where the hen is!&nbsp; Let&rsquo;s back!&nbsp; Let&rsquo;s back!&nbsp;
+I said before that it wasn&rsquo;t this way he turned!&nbsp; He&rsquo;s
+made for the river.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The plague in his vitals!&rdquo; Simon replied furiously.
+&ldquo;Wherever he is, I&rsquo;ll find him!&rdquo;&nbsp; And, reluctant
+to confess himself wrong, he lingered, casting vengeful glances at the
+hay.</p>
+<p>But one of the other men cursed him for a fool; and presently, forced
+to accept his defeat or be left alone, he rejoined his fellows.&nbsp;
+Slowly the footsteps and voices receded along the lane; slowly, until
+silence swallowed them, and on the quivering strained senses of the
+two who remained behind, descended the gentle influence of twilight
+and the sweet scent of the new-mown hay on which they lay.</p>
+<p>La Tribe turned to his companion, his eyes shining.&nbsp; &ldquo;Our
+soul is escaped,&rdquo; he murmured, &ldquo;even as a bird out of the
+snare of the fowler.&nbsp; The snare is broken and we are delivered!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+His voice shook as he whispered the ancient words of triumph.</p>
+<p>But when they came to look in the nest at Tignonville&rsquo;s feet
+there was no egg!</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX.&nbsp; UNSTABLE.</h2>
+<p>And that troubled M. la Tribe no little, although he did not impart
+his thoughts to his companion.&nbsp; Instead they talked in whispers
+of the things which had happened; of the Admiral, of Teligny, whom all
+loved, of Rochefoucauld the accomplished, the King&rsquo;s friend; of
+the princes in the Louvre whom they gave up for lost, and of the Huguenot
+nobles on the farther side of the river, of whose safety there seemed
+some hope.&nbsp; Tignonville&mdash;he best knew why&mdash;said nothing
+of the fate of his betrothed, or of his own adventures in that connection.&nbsp;
+But each told the other how the alarm had reached him, and painted in
+broken words his reluctance to believe in treachery so black.&nbsp;
+Thence they passed to the future of the cause, and of that took views
+as opposite as light and darkness, as Papegot and Huguenot.&nbsp; The
+one was confident, the other in despair.&nbsp; And some time in the
+afternoon, worn out by the awful experiences of the last twelve hours,
+they fell asleep, their heads on their arms, the hay tickling their
+faces; and, with death stalking the lane beside them, slept soundly
+until after sundown.</p>
+<p>When they awoke hunger awoke with them, and urged on La Tribe&rsquo;s
+mind the question of the missing egg.&nbsp; It was not altogether the
+prick of appetite which troubled him, but regarding the hiding-place
+in which they lay as an ark of refuge providentially supplied, protected
+and victualled, he could not refrain from asking reverently what the
+deficiency meant.&nbsp; It was not as if one hen only had appeared;
+as if no farther prospect had been extended.&nbsp; But up to a certain
+point the message was clear.&nbsp; Then when the Hand of Providence
+had shown itself most plainly, and in a manner to melt the heart with
+awe and thankfulness, the message had been blurred.&nbsp; Seriously
+the Huguenot asked himself what it portended.</p>
+<p>To Tignonville, if he thought of it at all, the matter was the matter
+of an egg, and stopped there.&nbsp; An egg might alleviate the growing
+pangs of hunger; its non-appearance was a disappointment, but he traced
+the matter no farther.&nbsp; It must be confessed, too, that the haycart
+was to him only a haycart&mdash;and not an ark; and the sooner he was
+safely away from it the better he would be pleased.&nbsp; While La Tribe,
+lying snug and warm beside him, thanked God for a lot so different from
+that of such of his fellows as had escaped&mdash;whom he pictured crouching
+in dank cellars, or on roof-trees exposed to the heat by day and the
+dews by night&mdash;the young man grew more and more restive.</p>
+<p>Hunger pricked him, and the meanness of the part he had played moved
+him to action.&nbsp; About midnight, resisting the dissuasions of his
+companion, he would have sallied out in search of food if the passage
+of a turbulent crowd had not warned him that the work of murder was
+still proceeding.&nbsp; He curbed himself after that and lay until daylight.&nbsp;
+But, ill content with his own conduct, on fire when he thought of his
+betrothed, he was in no temper to bear hardship cheerfully or long;
+and gradually there rose before his mind the picture of Madame St. Lo&rsquo;s
+smiling face, and the fair hair which curled low on the white of her
+neck.</p>
+<p>He would, and he would not.&nbsp; Death that had stalked so near
+him preached its solemn sermon.&nbsp; But death and pleasure are never
+far apart; and at no time and nowhere have they jostled one another
+more familiarly than in that age, wherever the influence of Italy and
+Italian art and Italian hopelessness extended.&nbsp; Again, on the one
+side, La Tribe&rsquo;s example went for something with his comrade in
+misfortune; but in the other scale hung relief from discomfort, with
+the prospect of a woman&rsquo;s smiles and a woman&rsquo;s flatteries,
+of dainty dishes, luxury, and passion.&nbsp; If he went now, he went
+to her from the jaws of death, with the glamour of adventure and peril
+about him; and the very going into her presence was a lure.&nbsp; Moreover,
+if he had been willing while his betrothed was still his, why not now
+when he had lost her?</p>
+<p>It was this last reflection&mdash;and one other thing which came
+on a sudden into his mind&mdash;which turned the scale.&nbsp; About
+noon he sat up in the hay, and, abruptly and sullenly, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
+lie here no longer,&rdquo; he said; and he dropped his legs over the
+side.&nbsp; &ldquo;I shall go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The movement was so unexpected that La Tribe stared at him in silence.&nbsp;
+Then, &ldquo;You will run a great risk, M. de Tignonville,&rdquo; he
+said gravely, &ldquo;if you do.&nbsp; You may go as far under cover
+of night as the river, or you may reach one of the gates.&nbsp; But
+as to crossing the one or passing the other, I reckon it a thing impossible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall not wait until night,&rdquo; Tignonville answered
+curtly, a ring of defiance in his tone.&nbsp; &ldquo;I shall go now!&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;ll lie here no longer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will be mad if you do,&rdquo; the other replied.&nbsp;
+He thought it the petulant outcry of youth tired of inaction; a protest,
+and nothing more.</p>
+<p>He was speedily undeceived.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mad or not, I am going!&rdquo;
+Tignonville retorted.&nbsp; And he slid to the ground, and from the
+covert of the hanging fringe of hay looked warily up and down the lane.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It is clear, I think,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Good-bye.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And with no more, without one upward glance or a gesture of the hand,
+with no further adieu or word of gratitude, he walked out into the lane,
+turned briskly to the left, and vanished.</p>
+<p>The minister uttered a cry of surprise, and made as if he would descend
+also.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come back, sir!&rdquo; he called, as loudly as he dared.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;M. de Tignonville, come back!&nbsp; This is folly or worse!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But M. de Tignonville was gone.</p>
+<p>La Tribe listened a while, unable to believe it, and still expecting
+his return.&nbsp; At last, hearing nothing, he slid, greatly excited,
+to the ground and looked out.&nbsp; It was not until he had peered up
+and down the lane and made sure that it was empty that he could persuade
+himself that the other had gone for good.&nbsp; Then he climbed slowly
+and seriously to his place again, and sighed as he settled himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Unstable as water thou shalt not excel!&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Now I know why there was only one egg.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Tignonville, after putting a hundred yards between himself
+and his bedfellow, plunged into the first dark entry which presented
+itself.&nbsp; Hurriedly, and with a frowning face, he cut off his left
+sleeve from shoulder to wrist; and this act, by disclosing his linen,
+put him in possession of the white sleeve which he had once involuntarily
+donned, and once discarded.&nbsp; The white cross on the cap he could
+not assume, for he was bareheaded.&nbsp; But he had little doubt that
+the sleeve would suffice, and with a bold demeanour he made his way
+northward until he reached again the Rue Ferronerie.</p>
+<p>Excited groups were wandering up and down the street, and, fearing
+to traverse its crowded narrows, he went by lanes parallel with it as
+far as the Rue St. Denis, which he crossed.&nbsp; Everywhere he saw
+houses gutted and doors burst in, and traces of a cruelty and a fanaticism
+almost incredible.&nbsp; Near the Rue des Lombards he saw a dead child,
+stripped stark and hanged on the hook of a cobbler&rsquo;s shutter.&nbsp;
+A little farther on in the same street he stepped over the body of a
+handsome young woman, distinguished by the length and beauty of her
+hair.&nbsp; To obtain her bracelets, her captors had cut off her hands;
+afterwards&mdash;but God knows how long afterwards&mdash;a passer-by,
+more pitiful than his fellows, had put her out of her misery with a
+spit, which still remained plunged in her body.</p>
+<p>M. de Tignonville shuddered at the sight, and at others like it.&nbsp;
+He loathed the symbol he wore, and himself for wearing it; and more
+than once his better nature bade him return and play the nobler part.&nbsp;
+Once he did turn with that intention.&nbsp; But he had set his mind
+on comfort and pleasure, and the value of these things is raised, not
+lowered, by danger and uncertainty.&nbsp; Quickly his stoicism oozed
+away; he turned again.&nbsp; Barely avoiding the rush of a crowd of
+wretches who were bearing a swooning victim to the river, he hurried
+through the Rue des Lombards, and reached in safety the house beside
+the Golden Maid.</p>
+<p>He had no doubt now on which side of the Maid Madame St. Lo lived;
+the house was plain before him.&nbsp; He had only to knock.&nbsp; But
+in proportion as he approached his haven, his anxiety grew.&nbsp; To
+lose all, with all in his grasp, to fail upon the threshold, was a thing
+which bore no looking at; and it was with a nervous hand and eyes cast
+fearfully behind him that he plied the heavy iron knocker which adorned
+the door.</p>
+<p>He could not turn his gaze from a knot of ruffians, who were gathered
+under one of the tottering gables on the farther side of the street.&nbsp;
+They seemed to be watching him, and he fancied&mdash;though the distance
+rendered this impossible&mdash;that he could see suspicion growing in
+their eyes.&nbsp; At any moment they might cross the roadway, they might
+approach, they might challenge him.&nbsp; And at the thought he knocked
+and knocked again.&nbsp; Why did not the porter come?</p>
+<p>Ay, why?&nbsp; For now a score of contingencies came into the young
+man&rsquo;s mind and tortured him.&nbsp; Had Madame St. Lo withdrawn
+to safer quarters and closed the house?&nbsp; Or, good Catholic as she
+was, had she given way to panic, and determined to open to no one?&nbsp;
+Or was she ill?&nbsp; Or had she perished in the general disorder?&nbsp;
+Or&mdash;</p>
+<p>And then, even as the men began to slink towards him, his heart leapt.&nbsp;
+He heard a footstep heavy and slow move through the house.&nbsp; It
+came nearer and nearer.&nbsp; A moment, and an iron-grated Judas-hole
+in the door slid open, and a servant, an elderly man, sleek and respectable,
+looked out at him.</p>
+<p>Tignonville could scarcely speak for excitement.&nbsp; &ldquo;Madame
+St. Lo?&rdquo; he muttered tremulously.&nbsp; &ldquo;I come to her from
+her cousin the Comte de Tavannes.&nbsp; Quick! quick! if you please.&nbsp;
+Open to me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Monsieur is alone?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&nbsp; Yes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man nodded gravely and slid back the bolts.&nbsp; He allowed
+M. de Tignonville to enter, then with care he secured the door, and
+led the way across a small square court, paved with red tiles and enclosed
+by the house, but open above to the sunshine and the blue sky.&nbsp;
+A gallery which ran round the upper floor looked on this court, in which
+a great quiet reigned, broken only by the music of a fountain.&nbsp;
+A vine climbed on the wooden pillars which supported the gallery, and,
+aspiring higher, embraced the wide carved eaves, and even tapestried
+with green the three gables that on each side of the court broke the
+skyline.&nbsp; The grapes hung nearly ripe, and amid their clusters
+and the green lattice of their foliage Tignonville&rsquo;s gaze sought
+eagerly but in vain the laughing eyes and piquant face of his new mistress.&nbsp;
+For with the closing of the door, and the passing from him of the horrors
+of the streets, he had entered, as by magic, a new and smiling world;
+a world of tennis and roses, of tinkling voices and women&rsquo;s wiles,
+a world which smacked of Florence and the South, and love and life;
+a world which his late experiences had set so far away from him, his
+memory of it seemed a dream.&nbsp; Now, as he drank in its stillness
+and its fragrance, as he felt its safety and its luxury lap him round
+once more, he sighed.&nbsp; And with that breath he rid himself of much.</p>
+<p>The servant led him to a parlour, a cool shady room on the farther
+side of the tiny quadrangle, and, muttering something inaudible, withdrew.&nbsp;
+A moment later a frolicsome laugh, and the light flutter of a woman&rsquo;s
+skirt as she tripped across the court, brought the blood to his cheeks.&nbsp;
+He went a step nearer to the door, and his eyes grew bright.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER X.&nbsp; MADAME ST. LO.</h2>
+<p>So far excitement had supported Tignonville in his escape.&nbsp;
+It was only when he knew himself safe, when he heard Madame St. Lo&rsquo;s
+footstep in the courtyard and knew that in a moment he would see her,
+that he knew also that he was failing for want of food.&nbsp; The room
+seemed to go round with him; the window to shift, the light to flicker.&nbsp;
+And then again, with equal abruptness, he grew strong and steady and
+perfectly master of himself.&nbsp; Nay, never had he felt a confidence
+in himself so overwhelming or a capacity so complete.&nbsp; The triumph
+of that which he had done, the knowledge that of so many he, almost
+alone, had escaped, filled his brain with a delicious and intoxicating
+vanity.&nbsp; When the door opened, and Madame St. Lo appeared on the
+threshold, he advanced holding out his arms.&nbsp; He expected that
+she would fall into them.</p>
+<p>But Madame only backed and curtseyed, a mischievous light in her
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A thousand thanks, Monsieur!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but you
+are more ready than I!&rdquo;&nbsp; And she remained by the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have come to you through all!&rdquo; he cried, speaking
+loudly because of a humming in his ears.&nbsp; &ldquo;They are lying
+in the streets!&nbsp; They are dying, are dead, are hunted, are pursued,
+are perishing!&nbsp; But I have come through all to you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She curtseyed anew.&nbsp; &ldquo;So I see, Monsieur!&rdquo; she answered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I am flattered!&rdquo;&nbsp; But she did not advance, and gradually,
+light-headed as he was, he began to see that she looked at him with
+an odd closeness.&nbsp; And he took offence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say, Madame, I have come to you!&rdquo; he repeated.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And you do not seem pleased!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She came forward a step and looked at him still more oddly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh yes,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am pleased, M. de
+Tignonville.&nbsp; It is what I intended.&nbsp; But tell me how you
+have fared.&nbsp; You are not hurt?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not a hair!&rdquo; he cried boastfully.&nbsp; And he told
+her in a dozen windy sentences of the adventure of the haycart and his
+narrow escape.&nbsp; He wound up with a foolish meaningless laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you have not eaten for thirty-six hours?&rdquo; she said.&nbsp;
+And when he did not answer, &ldquo;I understand,&rdquo; she continued,
+nodding and speaking as to a child.&nbsp; And she rang a silver handbell
+and gave an order.</p>
+<p>She addressed the servant in her usual tone, but to Tignonville&rsquo;s
+ear her voice seemed to fall to a whisper.&nbsp; Her figure&mdash;she
+was small and fairy-like&mdash;began to sway before him; and then in
+a moment, as it seemed to him, she was gone, and he was seated at a
+table, his trembling fingers grasping a cup of wine which the elderly
+servant who had admitted him was holding to his lips.&nbsp; On the table
+before him were a spit of partridges and a cake of white bread.&nbsp;
+When he had swallowed a second mouthful of wine&mdash;which cleared
+his eyes as by magic&mdash;the man urged him to eat.&nbsp; And he fell
+to with an appetite that grew as he ate.</p>
+<p>By-and-by, feeling himself again, he became aware that two of Madame&rsquo;s
+women were peering at him through the open doorway.&nbsp; He looked
+that way and they fled giggling into the court; but in a moment they
+were back again, and the sound of their tittering drew his eyes anew
+to the door.&nbsp; It was the custom of the day for ladies of rank to
+wait on their favourites at table; and he wondered if Madame were with
+them, and why she did not come and serve him herself.</p>
+<p>But for a while longer the savour of the roasted game took up the
+major part of his thoughts; and when prudence warned him to desist,
+and he sat back, satisfied after his long fast, he was in no mood to
+be critical.&nbsp; Perhaps&mdash;for somewhere in the house he heard
+a lute&mdash;Madame was entertaining those whom she could not leave?&nbsp;
+Or deluding some who might betray him if they discovered him?</p>
+<p>From that his mind turned back to the streets and the horrors through
+which he had passed; but for a moment and no more.&nbsp; A shudder,
+an emotion of prayerful pity, and he recalled his thoughts.&nbsp; In
+the quiet of the cool room, looking on the sunny, vine-clad court, with
+the tinkle of the lute and the murmurous sound of women&rsquo;s voices
+in his ears, it was hard to believe that the things from which he had
+emerged were real.&nbsp; It was still more unpleasant, and as futile,
+to dwell on them.&nbsp; A day of reckoning would come, and, if La Tribe
+were right, the cause would rally, bristling with pikes and snorting
+with war-horses, and the blood spilled in this wicked city would cry
+aloud for vengeance.&nbsp; But the hour was not yet.&nbsp; He had lost
+his mistress, and for that atonement must be exacted.&nbsp; But in the
+present another mistress awaited him, and as a man could only die once,
+and might die at any minute, so he could only live once, and in the
+present.&nbsp; Then <i>vogue la gal&egrave;re</i>!</p>
+<p>As he roused himself from this brief reverie and fell to wondering
+how long he was to be left to himself, a rosebud tossed by an unseen
+hand struck him on the breast and dropped to his knees.&nbsp; To seize
+it and kiss it gallantly, to spring to his feet and look about him were
+instinctive movements.&nbsp; But he could see no one; and, in the hope
+of surprising the giver, he stole to the window.&nbsp; The sound of
+the lute and the distant tinkle of laughter persisted.&nbsp; The court,
+save for a page, who lay asleep on a bench in the gallery, was empty.&nbsp;
+Tignonville scanned the boy suspiciously; a male disguise was often
+adopted by the court ladies, and if Madame would play a prank on him,
+this was a thing to be reckoned with.&nbsp; But a boy it seemed to be,
+and after a while the young man went back to his seat.</p>
+<p>Even as he sat down, a second flower struck him more sharply in the
+face, and this time he darted not to the window but to the door.&nbsp;
+He opened it quickly and looked out, but again he was too late.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall catch you presently, <i>ma reine</i>!&rdquo; he murmured
+tenderly, with intent to be heard.&nbsp; And he closed the door.&nbsp;
+But, wiser this time, he waited with his hand on the latch until he
+heard the rustling of a skirt, and saw the line of light at the foot
+of the door darkened by a shadow.&nbsp; That moment he flung the door
+wide, and, clasping the wearer of the skirt in his arms, kissed her
+lips before she had time to resist.</p>
+<p>Then he fell back as if he had been shot!&nbsp; For the wearer of
+the skirt, she whom he had kissed, was Madame St. Lo&rsquo;s woman,
+and behind her stood Madame herself, laughing, laughing, laughing with
+all the gay abandonment of her light little heart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, the gallant gentleman!&rdquo; she cried, and clapped her
+hands effusively.&nbsp; &ldquo;Was ever recovery so rapid?&nbsp; Or
+triumph so speedy?&nbsp; Suzanne, my child; you surpass Venus.&nbsp;
+Your charms conquer before they are seen!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. de Tignonville had put poor Suzanne from him as if she burned;
+and hot and embarrassed, cursing his haste, he stood looking awkwardly
+at them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; he stammered at last, &ldquo;you know quite
+well that&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Seeing is believing!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That I thought it was you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, what I have lost!&rdquo; she replied.&nbsp; And she looked
+archly at Suzanne, who giggled and tossed her head.</p>
+<p>He was growing angry.&nbsp; &ldquo;But, Madame,&rdquo; he protested,
+&ldquo;you know&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know what I know, and I have seen what I have seen!&rdquo;
+Madame answered merrily.&nbsp; And she hummed,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Ce fut le plus grand jour d&rsquo;est&eacute;<br />
+Que m&rsquo;embrassa la belle Suzanne!&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Oh yes, I know what I know!&rdquo; she repeated.&nbsp; And she fell
+again to laughing immoderately; while the pretty piece of mischief beside
+her hung her head, and, putting a finger in her mouth, mocked him with
+an affectation of modesty.</p>
+<p>The young man glowered at them between rage and embarrassment.&nbsp;
+This was not the reception, nor this the hero&rsquo;s return to which
+he had looked forward.&nbsp; And a doubt began to take form in his mind.&nbsp;
+The mistress he had pictured would not laugh at kisses given to another;
+nor forget in a twinkling the straits through which he had come to her,
+the hell from which he had plucked himself!&nbsp; Possibly the court
+ladies held love as cheap as this, and lovers but as playthings, butts
+for their wit, and pegs on which to hang their laughter.&nbsp; But&mdash;but
+he began to doubt, and, perplexed and irritated, he showed his feelings.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; he said stiffly, &ldquo;a jest is an excellent
+thing.&nbsp; But pardon me if I say that it is ill played on a fasting
+man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madame desisted from laughter that she might speak.&nbsp; &ldquo;A
+fasting man?&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;And he has eaten two partridges!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fasting from love, Madame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madame St. Lo held up her hands.&nbsp; &ldquo;And it&rsquo;s not
+two minutes since he took a kiss!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He winced, was silent a moment, and then seeing that he got nothing
+by the tone he had adopted he cried for quarter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A little mercy, Madame, as you are beautiful,&rdquo; he said,
+wooing her with his eyes.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do not plague me beyond what
+a man can bear.&nbsp; Dismiss, I pray you, this good creature&mdash;whose
+charms do but set off yours as the star leads the eye to the moon&mdash;and
+make me the happiest man in the world by so much of your company as
+you will vouchsafe to give me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That may be but a very little,&rdquo; she answered, letting
+her eyes fall coyly, and affecting to handle the tucker of her low ruff.&nbsp;
+But he saw that her lip twitched; and he could have sworn that she mocked
+him to Suzanne, for the girl giggled.</p>
+<p>Still by an effort he controlled his feelings.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why so
+cruel?&rdquo; he murmured, in a tone meant for her alone, and with a
+look to match.&nbsp; &ldquo;You were not so hard when I spoke with you
+in the gallery, two evenings ago, Madame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was I not?&rdquo; she asked.&nbsp; &ldquo;Did I look like
+this?&nbsp; And this?&rdquo;&nbsp; And, languishing, she looked at him
+very sweetly after two fashions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Something.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, then I meant nothing!&rdquo; she retorted with sudden
+vivacity.&nbsp; And she made a face at him, laughing under his nose.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I do that when I mean nothing, Monsieur!&nbsp; Do you see?&nbsp;
+But you are Gascon, and given, I fear, to flatter yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then he saw clearly that she played with him: and resentment, chagrin,
+pique got the better of his courtesy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I flatter myself?&rdquo; he cried, his voice choked with rage.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It may be I do now, Madame, but did I flatter myself when you
+wrote me this note?&rdquo;&nbsp; And he drew it out and flourished it
+in her face.&nbsp; &ldquo;Did I imagine when I read this?&nbsp; Or is
+it not in your hand?&nbsp; It is a forgery, perhaps,&rdquo; he continued
+bitterly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Or it means nothing?&nbsp; Nothing, this note
+bidding me be at Madame St. Lo&rsquo;s at an hour before midnight&mdash;it
+means nothing?&nbsp; At an hour before midnight, Madame!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On Saturday night?&nbsp; The night before last night?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On Saturday night, the night before last night!&nbsp; But
+Madame knows nothing of it?&nbsp; Nothing, I suppose?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She shrugged her shoulders and smiled cheerfully on him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh
+yes, I wrote it,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;But what of that, M.
+de Tignonville?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What of that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Monsieur, what of that?&nbsp; Did you think it was written
+out of love for you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was staggered for the moment by her coolness.&nbsp; &ldquo;Out
+of what, then?&rdquo; he cried hoarsely.&nbsp; &ldquo;Out of what, then,
+if not out of love?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, out of pity, my little gentleman!&rdquo; she answered
+sharply.&nbsp; &ldquo;And trouble thrown away, it seems.&nbsp; Love!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And she laughed so merrily and spontaneously it cut him to the heart.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;No; but you said a dainty thing or two, and smiled a smile; and
+like a fool, and like a woman, I was sorry for the innocent calf that
+bleated so prettily on its way to the butcher&rsquo;s!&nbsp; And I would
+lock you up, and save your life, I thought, until the blood-letting
+was over.&nbsp; Now you have it, M. de Tignonville, and I hope you like
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Like it, when every word she uttered stripped him of the selfish
+illusions in which he had wrapped himself against the blasts of ill-fortune?&nbsp;
+Like it, when the prospect of her charms had bribed him from the path
+of fortitude, when for her sake he had been false to his mistress, to
+his friends, to his faith, to his cause?&nbsp; Like it, when he knew
+as he listened that all was lost, and nothing gained, not even this
+poor, unworthy, shameful compensation?&nbsp; Like it?&nbsp; No wonder
+that words failed him, and he glared at her in rage, in misery, in shame.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, if you don&rsquo;t like it,&rdquo; she continued, tossing
+her head after a momentary pause, &ldquo;then you should not have come!&nbsp;
+It is of no profit to glower at me, Monsieur.&nbsp; You do not frighten
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would&mdash;I would to God I had not come!&rdquo; he groaned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And, I dare say, that you had never seen me&mdash;since you
+cannot win me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That too,&rdquo; he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>She was of an extraordinary levity, and at that, after staring at
+him a moment, she broke into shrill laughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A little more, and I&rsquo;ll send you to my cousin Hannibal!&rdquo;
+she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;You do not know how anxious he is to see you.&nbsp;
+Have you a mind,&rdquo; with a waggish look, &ldquo;to play bride&rsquo;s
+man, M. de Tignonville?&nbsp; Or will you give away the bride?&nbsp;
+It is not too late, though soon it will be!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He winced, and from red grew pale.&nbsp; &ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo;
+he stammered; and, averting his eyes in shame, seeing now all the littleness,
+all the baseness of his position, &ldquo;Has he&mdash;married her?&rdquo;
+he continued.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ho, ho!&rdquo; she cried in triumph.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+hit you now, have I, Monsieur?&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve hit you!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And mocking him, &ldquo;Has he&mdash;married her?&rdquo; she lisped.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;No; but he will marry her, have no fear of that!&nbsp; He will
+marry her.&nbsp; He waits but to get a priest.&nbsp; Would you like
+to see what he says?&rdquo; she continued, playing with him as a cat
+plays with a mouse.&nbsp; &ldquo;I had a note from him yesterday.&nbsp;
+Would you like to see how welcome you&rsquo;ll be at the wedding?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And she flaunted a piece of paper before his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give it me,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>She let him seize it the while she shrugged her shoulders.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s your affair, not mine,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;See
+it if you like, and keep it if you like.&nbsp; Cousin Hannibal wastes
+few words.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That was true, for the paper contained but a dozen or fifteen words,
+and an initial by way of signature.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I may need your shaveling to-morrow afternoon.&nbsp; Send
+him, and Tignonville in safeguard if he come.&mdash;H.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can guess what use he has for a priest,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It is not to confess him, I warrant.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s long, I
+fear, since Hannibal told his beads.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. de Tignonville swore.&nbsp; &ldquo;I would I had the confessing
+of him!&rdquo; he said between his teeth.</p>
+<p>She clapped her hands in glee.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why should you not?&rdquo;
+she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why should you not?&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis time yet,
+since I am to send to-day and have not sent.&nbsp; Will you be the shaveling
+to go confess or marry him?&rdquo;&nbsp; And she laughed recklessly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Will you, M. de Tignonville?&nbsp; The cowl will mask you as
+well as another, and pass you through the streets better than a cut
+sleeve.&nbsp; He will have both his wishes, lover and clerk in one then.&nbsp;
+And it will be pull monk, pull Hannibal with a vengeance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville gazed at her, and as he gazed courage and hope awoke
+in his eyes.&nbsp; What if, after all, he could undo the past?&nbsp;
+What if, after all, he could retrace the false step he had taken, and
+place himself again where he had been&mdash;by <i>her</i> side?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you meant it!&rdquo; he exclaimed, his breath coming fast.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If you only meant what you say, Madame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If?&rdquo; she answered, opening her eyes.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+why should I not mean it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because,&rdquo; he replied slowly, &ldquo;cowl or no cowl,
+when I meet your cousin&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Twill go hard with him?&rdquo; she cried, with a mocking
+laugh.&nbsp; &ldquo;And you think I fear for him.&nbsp; That is it,
+is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fear just <i>so much</i> for him!&rdquo; she retorted with
+contempt.&nbsp; &ldquo;Just so much!&rdquo;&nbsp; And coming a step
+nearer to Tignonville she snapped her small white fingers under his
+nose.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you see?&nbsp; No, M. de Tignonville,&rdquo; she
+continued, &ldquo;you do not know Count Hannibal if you think that he
+fears, or that any fear for him.&nbsp; If you will beard the lion in
+his den, the risk will be yours, not his!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The young man&rsquo;s face glowed.&nbsp; &ldquo;I take the risk!&rdquo;
+he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;And I thank you for the chance; that, Madame,
+whatever betide.&nbsp; But&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what?&rdquo; she asked, seeing that he hesitated and that
+his face fell.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he afterwards learn that you have played him a trick,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;will he not punish you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Punish me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He nodded.</p>
+<p>Madame laughed her high disdain.&nbsp; &ldquo;You do not yet know
+Hannibal de Tavannes,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;He does not war
+with women.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI.&nbsp; A BARGAIN.</h2>
+<p>It is the wont of the sex to snatch at an ell where an inch is offered,
+and to press an advantage in circumstances in which a man, acknowledging
+the claims of generosity, scruples to ask for more.&nbsp; The habit,
+now ingrained, may have sprung from long dependence on the male, and
+is one which a hundred instances, from the time of Judith downwards,
+prove to be at its strongest where the need is greatest.</p>
+<p>When Mademoiselle de Vrillac came out of the hour-long swoon into
+which her lover&rsquo;s defection had cast her, the expectation of the
+worst was so strong upon her that she could not at once credit the respite
+which Madame Carlat hastened to announce.&nbsp; She could not believe
+that she still lay safe, in her own room above stairs; that she was
+in the care of her own servants, and that the chamber held no presence
+more hateful than that of the good woman who sat weeping beside her.</p>
+<p>As was to be expected, she came to herself sighing and shuddering,
+trembling with nervous exhaustion.&nbsp; She looked for <i>him</i>,
+as soon as she looked for any; and even when she had seen the door locked
+and double-locked, she doubted&mdash;doubted, and shook and hid herself
+in the hangings of the bed.&nbsp; The noise of the riot and rapine which
+prevailed in the city, and which reached the ear even in that locked
+room&mdash;and although the window, of paper, with an upper pane of
+glass, looked into a courtyard&mdash;was enough to drive the blood from
+a woman&rsquo;s cheeks.&nbsp; But it was fear of the house, not of the
+street, fear from within, not from without, which impelled the girl
+into the darkest corner and shook her wits.&nbsp; She could not believe
+that even this short respite was hers, until she had repeatedly heard
+the fact confirmed at Madame Carlat&rsquo;s mouth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are deceiving me!&rdquo; she cried more than once.&nbsp;
+And each time she started up in fresh terror.&nbsp; &ldquo;He never
+said that he would not return until to-morrow!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He did, my lamb, he did!&rdquo; the old woman answered with
+tears.&nbsp; &ldquo;Would I deceive you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He said he would not return?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He said he would not return until to-morrow.&nbsp; You had
+until to-morrow, he said.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He would come and bring the priest with him,&rdquo; Madame
+Carlat replied sorrowfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The priest?&nbsp; To-morrow!&rdquo; Mademoiselle cried.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The priest!&rdquo; and she crouched anew with hot eyes behind
+the hangings of the bed, and, shivering, hid her face.</p>
+<p>But this for a time only.&nbsp; As soon as she had made certain of
+the respite, and that she had until the morrow, her courage rose, and
+with it the instinct of which mention has been made.&nbsp; Count Hannibal
+had granted a respite; short as it was, and no more than the barest
+humanity required, to grant one at all was not the act of the mere butcher
+who holds the trembling lamb, unresisting, in his hands.&nbsp; It was
+an act&mdash;no more, again be it said, than humanity required&mdash;and
+yet an act which bespoke an expectation of some return, of some correlative
+advantage.&nbsp; It was not in the part of the mere brigand.&nbsp; Something
+had been granted.&nbsp; Something short of the utmost in the captor&rsquo;s
+power had been exacted.&nbsp; He had shown that there were things he
+would not do.</p>
+<p>Then might not something more be won from him?&nbsp; A further delay,
+another point; something, no matter what, which could be turned to advantage?&nbsp;
+With the brigand it is not possible to bargain.&nbsp; But who gives
+a little may give more; who gives a day may give a week; who gives a
+week may give a month.&nbsp; And a month?&nbsp; Her heart leapt up.&nbsp;
+A month seemed a lifetime, an eternity, to her who had but until to-morrow!</p>
+<p>Yet there was one consideration which might have daunted a spirit
+less brave.&nbsp; To obtain aught from Tavannes it was needful to ask
+him, and to ask him it was needful to see him; and to see him <i>before</i>
+that to-morrow which meant so much to her.&nbsp; It was necessary, in
+a word, to run some risk; but without risk the card could not be played,
+and she did not hesitate.&nbsp; It might turn out that she was wrong,
+that the man was not only pitiless and without bowels of mercy, but
+lacked also the shred of decency for which she gave him credit, and
+on which she counted.&nbsp; In that case, if she sent for him&mdash;but
+she would not consider that case.</p>
+<p>The position of the window, while it increased the women&rsquo;s
+safety, debarred them from all knowledge of what was going forward,
+except that which their ears afforded them.&nbsp; They had no means
+of judging whether Tavannes remained in the house or had sallied forth
+to play his part in the work of murder.&nbsp; Madame Carlat, indeed,
+had no desire to know anything.&nbsp; In that room above stairs, with
+the door double-locked, lay a hope of safety in the present, and of
+ultimate deliverance; there she had a respite from terror, as long as
+she kept the world outside.&nbsp; To her, therefore, the notion of sending
+for Tavannes, or communicating with him, came as a thunderbolt.&nbsp;
+Was her mistress mad?&nbsp; Did she wish to court her fate?&nbsp; To
+reach Tavannes they must apply to his riders, for Carlat and the men-servants
+were confined above.&nbsp; Those riders were grim, brutal men, who might
+resort to rudeness on their own account.&nbsp; And Madame, clinging
+in a paroxysm of terror to her mistress, suggested all manner of horrors,
+one on top of the other, until she increased her own terror tenfold.&nbsp;
+And yet, to do her justice, nothing that even her frenzied imagination
+suggested exceeded the things which the streets of Paris, fruitful mother
+of horrors, were witnessing at that very hour.&nbsp; As we now know.</p>
+<p>For it was noon&mdash;or a little more&mdash;of Sunday, August the
+twenty-fourth, &ldquo;a holiday, and therefore the people could more
+conveniently find leisure to kill and plunder.&rdquo;&nbsp; From the
+bridges, and particularly from the stone bridge of Notre Dame&mdash;while
+they lay safe in that locked room, and Tignonville crouched in his haymow&mdash;Huguenots
+less fortunate were being cast, bound hand and foot, into the Seine.&nbsp;
+On the river bank Spire Niquet, the bookman, was being burnt over a
+slow fire, fed with his own books.&nbsp; In their houses, Ramus the
+scholar and Goujon the sculptor&mdash;than whom Paris has neither seen
+nor deserved a greater&mdash;were being butchered like sheep; and in
+the Valley of Misery, now the Quai de la Megisserie, seven hundred persons
+who had sought refuge in the prisons were being beaten to death with
+bludgeons.&nbsp; Nay, at this hour&mdash;a little sooner or a little
+later, what matters it?&mdash;M. de Tignonville&rsquo;s own cousin,
+Madame d&rsquo;Yverne, the darling of the Louvre the day before, perished
+in the hands of the mob; and the sister of M. de Taverny, equally ill-fated,
+died in the same fashion, after being dragged through the streets.</p>
+<p>Madame Carlat, then, went not a whit beyond the mark in her argument.&nbsp;
+But Mademoiselle had made up her mind, and was not to be dissuaded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I am to be Monsieur&rsquo;s wife,&rdquo; she said with
+quivering nostrils, &ldquo;shall I fear his servants?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And opening the door herself, for the others would not, she called.&nbsp;
+The man who answered was a Norman; and short of stature, and wrinkled
+and low-browed of feature, with a thatch of hair and a full beard, he
+seemed the embodiment of the women&rsquo;s apprehensions.&nbsp; Moreover,
+his <i>patois</i> of the cider-land was little better than German to
+them; their southern, softer tongue was sheer Italian to him.&nbsp;
+But he seemed not ill-disposed, or Mademoiselle&rsquo;s air overawed
+him; and presently she made him understand, and with a nod he descended
+to carry her message.</p>
+<p>Then Mademoiselle&rsquo;s heart began to beat; and beat more quickly
+when she heard <i>his</i> step&mdash;alas! she knew it already, knew
+it from all others&mdash;on the stairs.&nbsp; The table was set, the
+card must be played, to win or lose.&nbsp; It might be that with the
+low opinion he held of women he would think her reconciled to her lot;
+he would think this an overture, a step towards kinder treatment, one
+more proof of the inconstancy of the lower and the weaker sex, made
+to be men&rsquo;s playthings.&nbsp; And at that thought her eyes grew
+hot with rage.&nbsp; But if it were so, she must still put up with it.&nbsp;
+She must still put up with it!&nbsp; She had sent for him, and he was
+coming&mdash;he was at the door!</p>
+<p>He entered, and she breathed more freely.&nbsp; For once his face
+lacked the sneer, the look of smiling possession, which she had come
+to know and hate.&nbsp; It was grave, expectant, even suspicious; still
+harsh and dark, akin, as she now observed, to the low-browed, furrowed
+face of the rider who had summoned him.&nbsp; But the offensive look
+was gone, and she could breathe.</p>
+<p>He closed the door behind him, but he did not advance into the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At your pleasure, Mademoiselle?&rdquo; he said simply.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You sent for me, I think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was on her feet, standing before him with something of the submissiveness
+of Roxana before her conqueror.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did,&rdquo; she said; and stopped at that, her hand to her
+side as if she could not continue.&nbsp; But presently in a low voice,
+&ldquo;I have heard,&rdquo; she went on, &ldquo;what you said, Monsieur,
+after I lost consciousness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; he said; and was silent.&nbsp; Nor did he lose
+his watchful look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am obliged to you for your thought of me,&rdquo; she continued
+in a faint voice, &ldquo;and I shall be still further obliged&mdash;I
+speak to you thus quickly and thus early&mdash;if you will grant me
+a somewhat longer time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you mean&mdash;if I will postpone our marriage?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Monsieur.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is impossible!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do not say that,&rdquo; she cried, raising her voice impulsively.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I appeal to your generosity.&nbsp; And for a short, a very short,
+time only.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is impossible,&rdquo; he answered quietly.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+for reasons, Mademoiselle.&nbsp; In the first place, I can more easily
+protect my wife.&nbsp; In the second, I am even now summoned to the
+Louvre, and should be on my way thither.&nbsp; By to-morrow evening,
+unless I am mistaken in the business on which I am required, I shall
+be on my way to a distant province with royal letters.&nbsp; It is essential
+that our marriage take place before I go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; she asked stubbornly.</p>
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; he repeated.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Can you ask, Mademoiselle, after the events of last night?&nbsp;
+Because, if you please, I do not wish to share the fate of M. de Tignonville.&nbsp;
+Because in these days life is uncertain, and death too certain.&nbsp;
+Because it was our turn last night, and it may be the turn of your friends&mdash;to-morrow
+night!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then some have escaped?&rdquo; she cried.</p>
+<p>He smiled.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am glad to find you so shrewd,&rdquo; he
+replied.&nbsp; &ldquo;In an honest wife it is an excellent quality.&nbsp;
+Yes, Mademoiselle; one or two.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who?&nbsp; Who?&nbsp; I pray you tell me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. de Montgomery, who slept beyond the river, for one; and
+the Vidame, and some with him.&nbsp; M. de Biron, whom I count a Huguenot,
+and who holds the Arsenal in the King&rsquo;s teeth, for another.&nbsp;
+And a few more.&nbsp; Enough, in a word, Mademoiselle, to keep us wakeful.&nbsp;
+It is impossible, therefore, for me to postpone the fulfilment of your
+promise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A promise on conditions!&rdquo; she retorted, in rage that
+she could win no more.&nbsp; And every line of her splendid figure,
+every tone of her voice flamed sudden, hot rebellion.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+do not go for nothing!&nbsp; You gave me the lives of all in the house,
+Monsieur!&nbsp; Of all!&rdquo; she repeated with passion.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+all are not here!&nbsp; Before I marry you, you must show me M. de Tignonville
+alive and safe!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders.&nbsp; &ldquo;He has taken himself off,&rdquo;
+he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is naught to me what happens to him now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is all to me!&rdquo; she retorted.</p>
+<p>At that he glared at her, the veins of his forehead swelling suddenly.&nbsp;
+But after a seeming struggle with himself he put the insult by, perhaps
+for future reckoning and account.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did what I could,&rdquo; he said sullenly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Had
+I willed it he had died there and then in the room below.&nbsp; I gave
+him his life.&nbsp; If he has risked it anew and lost it, it is naught
+to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was his life you gave me,&rdquo; she repeated stubbornly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;His life&mdash;and the others.&nbsp; But that is not all,&rdquo;
+she continued; &ldquo;you promised me a minister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He nodded, smiling sourly to himself, as if this confirmed a suspicion
+he had entertained.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Or a priest,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, a minister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If one could be obtained.&nbsp; If not, a priest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, it was to be at my will; and I will a minister!&nbsp;
+I will a minister!&rdquo; she cried passionately.&nbsp; &ldquo;Show
+me M. de Tignonville alive, and bring me a minister of my faith, and
+I will keep my promise, M. de Tavannes.&nbsp; Have no fear of that.&nbsp;
+But otherwise, I will not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will not?&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;You will not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will not marry me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The moment she had said it fear seized her, and she could have fled
+from him, screaming.&nbsp; The flash of his eyes, the sudden passion
+of his face, burned themselves into her memory.&nbsp; She thought for
+a second that he would spring on her and strike her down.&nbsp; Yet
+though the women behind her held their breath, she faced him, and did
+not quail; and to that, she fancied, she owed it that he controlled
+himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will not?&rdquo; he repeated, as if he could not understand
+such resistance to his will&mdash;as if he could not credit his ears.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You will not?&rdquo;&nbsp; But after that, when he had said it
+three times, he laughed; a laugh, however, with a snarl in it that chilled
+her blood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You bargain, do you?&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;You will
+have the last tittle of the price, will you?&nbsp; And have thought
+of this and that to put me off, and to gain time until your lover, who
+is all to you, comes to save you?&nbsp; Oh, clever girl! clever!&nbsp;
+But have you thought where you stand&mdash;woman?&nbsp; Do you know
+that if I gave the word to my people they would treat you as the commonest
+baggage that tramps the Froidmantel?&nbsp; Do you know that it rests
+with me to save you, or to throw you to the wolves whose ravening you
+hear?&rdquo;&nbsp; And he pointed to the window.&nbsp; &ldquo;Minister?&nbsp;
+Priest?&rdquo; he continued grimly.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>Mon Dieu</i>, Mademoiselle,
+I stand astonished at my moderation.&nbsp; You chatter to me of ministers
+and priests, and the one or the other, when it might be neither!&nbsp;
+When you are as much and as hopelessly in my power to-day as the wench
+in my kitchen!&nbsp; You!&nbsp; You flout me, and make terms with me!&nbsp;
+You!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he came so near her with his dark harsh face, his tone rose so
+menacing on the last word, that her nerves, shattered before, gave way,
+and, unable to control herself, she flinched with a low cry, thinking
+he would strike her.</p>
+<p>He did not follow, nor move to follow; but he laughed a low laugh
+of content.&nbsp; And his eyes devoured her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ho! ho!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;We are not so brave as
+we pretend to be, it seems.&nbsp; And yet you dared to chaffer with
+me?&nbsp; You thought to thwart me&mdash;Tavannes!&nbsp; <i>Mon Dieu</i>,
+Mademoiselle, to what did you trust?&nbsp; To what did you trust?&nbsp;
+Ay, and to what do you trust?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She knew that by the movement which fear had forced from her she
+had jeopardized everything.&nbsp; That she stood to lose all and more
+than all which she had thought to win by a bold front.&nbsp; A woman
+less brave, of a spirit less firm, would have given up the contest,
+and have been glad to escape so.&nbsp; But this woman, though her bloodless
+face showed that she knew what cause she had for fear, and though her
+heart was indeed sick with terror, held her ground at the point to which
+she had retreated.&nbsp; She played her last card.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To what do I trust?&rdquo; she muttered with trembling lips.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; he answered between his teeth.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;To what do you trust&mdash;that you play with Tavannes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To his honour, Monsieur,&rdquo; she answered faintly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And to your promise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He looked at her with his mocking smile.&nbsp; &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo;
+he sneered, &ldquo;you thought a moment ago that I should strike you.&nbsp;
+You thought that I should beat you!&nbsp; And now it is my honour and
+my promise!&nbsp; Oh, clever, clever, Mademoiselle!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis
+so that women make fools of men.&nbsp; I knew that something of this
+kind was on foot when you sent for me, for I know women and their ways.&nbsp;
+But, let me tell you, it is an ill time to speak of honour when the
+streets are red!&nbsp; And of promises when the King&rsquo;s word is
+&lsquo;No faith with a heretic!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yet you will keep yours,&rdquo; she said bravely.</p>
+<p>He did not answer at once, and hope which was almost dead in her
+breast began to recover; nay, presently sprang up erect.&nbsp; For the
+man hesitated, it was evident; he brooded with a puckered brow and gloomy
+eyes; an observer might have fancied that he traced pain as well as
+doubt in his face.&nbsp; At last&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is a thing,&rdquo; he said slowly and with a sort of
+glare at her, &ldquo;which, it may be, you have not reckoned.&nbsp;
+You press me now, and will stand on your terms and your conditions,
+your <i>ifs</i> and your <i>unlesses</i>!&nbsp; You will have the most
+from me, and the bargain and a little beside the bargain!&nbsp; But
+I would have you think if you are wise.&nbsp; Bethink you how it will
+be between us when you are my wife&mdash;if you press me so now, Mademoiselle.&nbsp;
+How will it sweeten things then?&nbsp; How will it soften them?&nbsp;
+And to what, I pray you, will you trust for fair treatment then, if
+you will be so against me now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She shuddered.&nbsp; &ldquo;To the mercy of my husband,&rdquo; she
+said in a low voice.&nbsp; And her chin sank on her breast.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will be content to trust to that?&rdquo; he answered grimly.&nbsp;
+And his tone and the lifting of his brow promised little clemency.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Bethink you!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis your rights now, and your terms,
+Mademoiselle!&nbsp; And then it will be only my mercy&mdash;Madame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am content,&rdquo; she muttered faintly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the Lord have mercy on my soul, is what you would add,&rdquo;
+he retorted, &ldquo;so much trust have you in my mercy!&nbsp; And you
+are right!&nbsp; You are right, since you have played this trick on
+me.&nbsp; But as you will.&nbsp; If you will have it so, have it so!&nbsp;
+You shall stand on your conditions now; you shall have your pennyweight
+and full advantage, and the rigour of the pact.&nbsp; But afterwards&mdash;afterwards,
+Madame de Tavannes&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He did not finish his sentence, for at the first word which granted
+her petition, Mademoiselle had sunk down on the low wooden window-seat
+beside which she stood, and, cowering into its farthest corner, her
+face hidden on her arms, had burst into violent weeping.&nbsp; Her hair,
+hastily knotted up in the hurry of the previous night, hung in a thick
+plait to the curve of her waist; the nape of her neck showed beside
+it milk-white.&nbsp; The man stood awhile contemplating her in silence,
+his gloomy eyes watching the pitiful movement of her shoulders, the
+convulsive heaving of her figure.&nbsp; But he did not offer to touch
+her, and at length he turned about.&nbsp; First one and then the other
+of her women quailed and shrank under his gaze; he seemed about to add
+something.&nbsp; But he did not speak.&nbsp; The sentence he had left
+unfinished, the long look he bent on the weeping girl as he turned from
+her, spoke more eloquently of the future than a score of orations.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Afterwards, Madame de Tavannes</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII.&nbsp; IN THE HALL OF THE LOUVRE.</h2>
+<p>It is a strange thing that love&mdash;or passion, if the sudden fancy
+for Mademoiselle which had seized Count Hannibal be deemed unworthy
+of the higher name&mdash;should so entirely possess the souls of those
+who harbour it that the greatest events and the most astounding catastrophes,
+even measures which set their mark for all time on a nation, are to
+them of importance only so far as they affect the pursuit of the fair
+one.</p>
+<p>As Tavannes, after leaving Mademoiselle, rode through the paved lanes,
+beneath the gabled houses, and under the shadow of the Gothic spires
+of his day, he saw a score of sights, moving to pity, or wrath, or wonder.&nbsp;
+He saw Paris as a city sacked; a slaughter-house, where for a week a
+masque had moved to stately music; blood on the nailed doors and the
+close-set window bars; and at the corners of the ways strewn garments,
+broken weapons, the livid dead in heaps.&nbsp; But he saw all with eyes
+which in all and everywhere, among living and dead, sought only Tignonville;
+Tignonville first, and next a heretic minister, with enough of life
+in him to do his office.</p>
+<p>Probably it was to this that one man hunted through Paris owed his
+escape that day.&nbsp; He sprang from a narrow passage full in Tavannes&rsquo;
+view, and, hair on end, his eyes starting from his head, ran blindly&mdash;as
+a hare will run when chased&mdash;along the street to meet Count Hannibal&rsquo;s
+company.&nbsp; The man&rsquo;s face was wet with the dews of death,
+his lungs seemed cracking, his breath hissed from him as he ran.&nbsp;
+His pursuers were hard on him, and, seeing him headed by Count Hannibal&rsquo;s
+party, yelled in triumph, holding him for dead.&nbsp; And dead he would
+have been within thirty seconds had Tavannes played his part.&nbsp;
+But his thoughts were elsewhere.&nbsp; Either he took the poor wretch
+for Tignonville, or for the minister on whom his mind was running; anyway
+he suffered him to slip under the belly of his horse; then, to make
+matters worse, he wheeled to follow him in so untimely and clumsy a
+fashion that his horse blocked the way and stopped the pursuers in their
+tracks.&nbsp; The quarry slipped into an alley and vanished.&nbsp; The
+hunters stood and blasphemed, and even for a moment seemed inclined
+to resent the mistake.&nbsp; But Tavannes smiled; a broader smile lightened
+the faces of the six iron-clad men behind him; and for some reason the
+gang of ruffians thought better of it and slunk aside.</p>
+<p>There are hard men, who feel scorn of the things which in the breasts
+of others excite pity.&nbsp; Tavannes&rsquo; lip curled as he rode on
+through the streets, looking this way and that, and seeing what a King
+twenty-two years old had made of his capital.&nbsp; His lip curled most
+of all when he came, passing between the two tennis-courts, to the east
+gate of the Louvre, and found the entrance locked and guarded, and all
+communication between city and palace cut off.&nbsp; Such a proof of
+unkingly panic, in a crisis wrought by the King himself, astonished
+him less a few minutes later, when, the keys having been brought and
+the door opened, he entered the courtyard of the fortress.</p>
+<p>Within and about the door of the gatehouse some three-score archers
+and arquebusiers stood to their arms; not in array, but in disorderly
+groups, from which the babble of voices, of feverish laughter, and strained
+jests rose without ceasing.&nbsp; The weltering sun, of which the beams
+just topped the farther side of the quadrangle, fell slantwise on their
+armour, and heightened their exaggerated and restless movements.&nbsp;
+To a calm eye they seemed like men acting in a nightmare.&nbsp; Their
+fitful talk and disjointed gestures, their sweating brows and damp hair,
+no less than the sullen, brooding silence of one here and there, bespoke
+the abnormal and the terrible.&nbsp; There were livid faces among them,
+and twitching cheeks, and some who swallowed much; and some again who
+bared their crimson arms and bragged insanely of the part they had played.&nbsp;
+But perhaps the most striking thing was the thirst, the desire, the
+demand for news, and for fresh excitement.&nbsp; In the space of time
+it took him to pass through them, Count Hannibal heard a dozen rumours
+of what was passing in the city; that Montgomery and the gentlemen who
+had slept beyond the river had escaped on horseback in their shirts;
+that Guise had been shot in the pursuit; that he had captured the Vidame
+de Chartres and all the fugitives; that he had never left the city;
+that he was even then entering by the Porte de Bucy.&nbsp; Again that
+Biron had surrendered the Arsenal, that he had threatened to fire on
+the city, that he was dead, that with the Huguenots who had escaped
+he was marching on the Louvre, that&mdash;</p>
+<p>And then Tavannes passed out of the blinding sunshine, and out of
+earshot of their babble, and had plain in his sight across the quadrangle,
+the new fa&ccedil;ade, Italian, graceful, of the Renaissance; which
+rose in smiling contrast with the three dark Gothic sides that now,
+the central tower removed, frowned unimpeded at one another.&nbsp; But
+what was this which lay along the foot of the new Italian wall?&nbsp;
+This, round which some stood, gazing curiously, while others strewed
+fresh sand about it, or after long downward-looking glanced up to answer
+the question of a person at a window?</p>
+<p>Death; and over death&mdash;death in its most cruel aspect&mdash;a
+cloud of buzzing, whirling flies, and the smell, never to be forgotten,
+of much spilled blood.&nbsp; From a doorway hard by came shrill bursts
+of hysterical laughter; and with the laughter plumped out, even as Tavannes
+crossed the court, a young girl, thrust forth it seemed by her fellows,
+for she turned about and struggled as she came.&nbsp; Once outside she
+hung back, giggling and protesting, half willing, half unwilling; and
+meeting Tavannes&rsquo; eye thrust her way in again with a whirl of
+her petticoats, and a shriek.&nbsp; But before he had taken four paces
+she was out again.</p>
+<p>He paused to see who she was, and his thoughts involuntarily went
+back to the woman he had left weeping in the upper room.&nbsp; Then
+he turned about again and stood to count the dead.&nbsp; He identified
+Piles, identified Pardaillan, identified Soubise&mdash;whose corpse
+the murderers had robbed of the last rag&mdash;and Touchet and St. Galais.&nbsp;
+He made his reckoning with an unmoved face, and with the same face stopped
+and stared, and moved from one to another; had he not seen the slaughter
+about &ldquo;<i>le petit homme</i>&rdquo; at Jarnac, and the dead of
+three pitched fields?&nbsp; But when a bystander, smirking obsequiously,
+passed him a jest on Soubise, and with his finger pointed the jest,
+he had the same hard unmoved face for the gibe as for the dead.&nbsp;
+And the jester shrank away, abashed and perplexed by his stare and his
+reticence.</p>
+<p>Halfway up the staircase to the great gallery or guard-room above,
+Count Hannibal found his brother, the Marshal, huddled together in drunken
+slumber on a seat in a recess.&nbsp; In the gallery to which he passed
+on without awakening him, a crowd of courtiers and ladies, with arquebusiers
+and captains of the quarters, walked to and fro, talking in whispers;
+or peeped over shoulders towards the inner end of the hall, where the
+querulous voice of the King rose now and again above the hum.&nbsp;
+As Tavannes moved that way, Nan&ccedil;ay, in the act of passing out,
+booted and armed for the road, met him and almost jostled him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, well met, M. le Comte,&rdquo; he sneered, with as much
+hostility as he dared betray.&nbsp; &ldquo;The King has asked for you
+twice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am going to him.&nbsp; And you?&nbsp; Whither in such a
+hurry, M. Nan&ccedil;ay?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To Chatillon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On pleasant business?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Enough that it is on the King&rsquo;s!&rdquo; Nan&ccedil;ay
+replied, with unexpected temper.&nbsp; &ldquo;I hope that you may find
+yours as pleasant!&rdquo; he added with a grin.&nbsp; And he went on.</p>
+<p>The gleam of malice in the man&rsquo;s eye warned Tavannes to pause.&nbsp;
+He looked round for some one who might be in the secret, saw the Provost
+of the Merchants, and approached him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s amiss, M. le Charron?&rdquo; he asked.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Is not the affair going as it should?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis about the Arsenal, M. le Comte,&rdquo; the Provost
+answered busily.&nbsp; &ldquo;M. de Biron is harbouring the vermin there.&nbsp;
+He has lowered the portcullis and pointed his culverins over the gate
+and will not yield it or listen to reason.&nbsp; The King would bring
+him to terms, but no one will venture himself inside with the message.&nbsp;
+Rats in a trap, you know, bite hard, and care little whom they bite.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I begin to understand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Precisely, M. le Comte.&nbsp; His Majesty would have sent
+M. de Nan&ccedil;ay.&nbsp; But he elected to go to Chatillon, to seize
+the young brood there.&nbsp; The Admiral&rsquo;s children, you comprehend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whose teeth are not yet grown!&nbsp; He was wise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To be sure, M. de Tavannes, to be sure.&nbsp; But the King
+was annoyed, and on top of that came a priest with complaints, and if
+I may make so bold as to advise you, you will not&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Tavannes fancied that he had caught the gist of the difficulty,
+and with a nod he moved on; and so he missed the warning which the other
+had it in his mind to give.&nbsp; A moment and he reached the inner
+circle, and there halted, disconcerted, nay taken aback.&nbsp; For as
+soon as he showed his face, the King, who was pacing to and fro like
+a caged beast, before a table at which three clerks knelt on cushions,
+espied him, and stood still.&nbsp; With a glare of something like madness
+in his eyes, Charles raised his hand, and with a shaking finger singled
+him out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So, by G-d, you are there!&rdquo; he cried, with a volley
+of blasphemy.&nbsp; And he signed to those about Count Hannibal to stand
+away from him.&nbsp; &ldquo;You are there, are you?&nbsp; And you are
+not afraid to show your face?&nbsp; I tell you, it&rsquo;s you and such
+as you bring us into contempt! so that it is said everywhere Guise does
+all and serves God, and we follow because we must!&nbsp; It&rsquo;s
+you, and such as you, are stumbling-blocks to our good folk of Paris!&nbsp;
+Are you traitor, sirrah?&rdquo; he continued with passion, &ldquo;or
+are you of our brother Alen&ccedil;on&rsquo;s opinions, that you traverse
+our orders to the damnation of your soul and our discredit?&nbsp; Are
+you traitor?&nbsp; Or are you heretic?&nbsp; Or what are you?&nbsp;
+God in heaven, will you answer me, man, or shall I send you where you
+will find your tongue?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know not of what your Majesty accuses me,&rdquo; Count Hannibal
+answered, with a scarcely perceptible shrug of the shoulders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I?&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis not I,&rdquo; the King retorted.&nbsp;
+His hair hung damp on his brow, and he dried his hands continually;
+while his gestures had the ill-measured and eccentric violence of an
+epileptic.&nbsp; &ldquo;Here, you!&nbsp; Speak, father, and confound
+him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then Tavannes discovered on the farther side of the circle the priest
+whom his brother had ridden down that morning.&nbsp; Father Pezelay&rsquo;s
+pale hatchet-face gleamed paler than ordinary; and a great bandage hid
+one temple and part of his face.&nbsp; But below the bandage the flame
+of his eyes was not lessened, nor the venom of his tongue.&nbsp; To
+the King he had come&mdash;for no other would deal with his violent
+opponent; to the King&rsquo;s presence! and, as he prepared to blast
+his adversary, now his chance was come, his long lean frame, in its
+narrow black cassock, seemed to grow longer, leaner, more baleful, more
+snake-like.&nbsp; He stood there a fitting representative of the dark
+fanaticism of Paris, which Charles and his successor&mdash;the last
+of a doomed line&mdash;alternately used as tool or feared as master;
+and to which the most debased and the most immoral of courts paid, in
+its sober hours, a vile and slavish homage.&nbsp; Even in the midst
+of the drunken, shameless courtiers&mdash;who stood, if they stood for
+anything, for that other influence of the day, the Renaissance&mdash;he
+was to be reckoned with; and Count Hannibal knew it.&nbsp; He knew that
+in the eyes not of Charles only, but of nine out of ten who listened
+to him, a priest was more sacred than a virgin, and a tonsure than all
+the virtues of spotless innocence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shall the King give with one hand and withdraw with the other?&rdquo;
+the priest began, in a voice hoarse yet strident, a voice borne high
+above the crowd on the wings of passion.&nbsp; &ldquo;Shall he spare
+of the best of the men and the maidens whom God hath doomed, whom the
+Church hath devoted, whom the King hath given?&nbsp; Is the King&rsquo;s
+hand shortened or his word annulled that a man does as he forbiddeth
+and leaves undone what he commandeth?&nbsp; Is God mocked?&nbsp; Woe,
+woe unto you,&rdquo; he continued, turning swiftly, arms uplifted, towards
+Tavannes, &ldquo;who please yourself with the red and white of their
+maidens and take of the best of the spoil, sparing where the King&rsquo;s
+word is &lsquo;Spare not&rsquo;!&nbsp; Who strike at Holy Church with
+the sword!&nbsp; Who&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Answer, sirrah!&rdquo; Charles cried, spurning the floor in
+his fury.&nbsp; He could not listen long to any man.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is
+it so?&nbsp; Is it so?&nbsp; Do you do these things?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal shrugged his shoulders and was about to answer, when
+a thick, drunken voice rose from the crowd behind him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it what?&nbsp; Eh!&nbsp; Is it what?&rdquo; it droned.&nbsp;
+And a figure with bloodshot eyes, disordered beard, and rich clothes
+awry, forced its way through the obsequious circle.&nbsp; It was Marshal
+Tavannes.&nbsp; &ldquo;Eh, what?&nbsp; You&rsquo;d beard the King, would
+you?&rdquo; he hiccoughed truculently, his eyes on Father Pezelay, his
+hand on his sword.&nbsp; &ldquo;Were you a priest ten times&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silence!&rdquo; Charles cried, almost foaming with rage at
+this fresh interruption.&nbsp; &ldquo;It&rsquo;s not he, fool!&nbsp;
+&rsquo;Tis your pestilent brother.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who touches my brother touches Tavannes!&rdquo; the Marshal
+answered with a menacing gesture.&nbsp; He was sober enough, it appeared,
+to hear what was said, but not to comprehend its drift; and this caused
+a titter, which immediately excited his rage.&nbsp; He turned and seized
+the nearest laugher by the ear.&nbsp; &ldquo;Insolent!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I will teach you to laugh when the King speaks!&nbsp; Puppy!&nbsp;
+Who laughs at his Majesty or touches my brother has to do with Tavannes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The King, in a rage that almost deprived him of speech, stamped the
+floor twice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Idiot!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Imbecile!&nbsp; Let the
+man go!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis not he!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis your heretic brother,
+I tell you!&nbsp; By all the Saints!&nbsp; By the body of&mdash;&rdquo;
+and he poured forth a flood of oaths.&nbsp; &ldquo;Will you listen to
+me and be silent!&nbsp; Will you&mdash;your brother&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he be not your Majesty&rsquo;s servant, I will kill him
+with this sword!&rdquo; the irrepressible Marshal struck in.&nbsp; &ldquo;As
+I have killed ten to-day!&nbsp; Ten!&rdquo;&nbsp; And, staggering back,
+he only saved himself from falling by clutching Chicot about the neck.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Steady, my pretty Mar&eacute;chale!&rdquo; the jester cried,
+chucking him under the chin with one hand, while with some difficulty
+he supported him with the other&mdash;for he, too, was far from sober&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Pretty Margot, toy with me,<br />
+Maiden bashful&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Silence!&rdquo; Charles cried, darting forth his long arms
+in a fury of impatience.&nbsp; &ldquo;God, have I killed every man of
+sense?&nbsp; Are you all gone mad?&nbsp; Silence!&nbsp; Do you hear?&nbsp;
+Silence!&nbsp; And let me hear what he has to say,&rdquo; with a movement
+towards Count Hannibal.&nbsp; &ldquo;And look you, sirrah,&rdquo; he
+continued with a curse, &ldquo;see that it be to the purpose!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it be a question of your Majesty&rsquo;s service,&rdquo;
+Tavannes answered, &ldquo;and obedience to your Majesty&rsquo;s orders,
+I am deeper in it than he who stands there!&rdquo; with a sign towards
+the priest.&nbsp; &ldquo;I give my word for that.&nbsp; And I will prove
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How, sir?&rdquo; Charles cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;How, how, how?&nbsp;
+How will you prove it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By doing for you, sire, what he will not do!&rdquo; Tavannes
+answered scornfully.&nbsp; &ldquo;Let him stand out, and if he will
+serve his Church as I will serve my King&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Blaspheme not!&rdquo; cried the priest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Chatter not!&rdquo; Tavannes retorted hardily, &ldquo;but
+do!&nbsp; Better is he,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;who takes a city
+than he who slays women!&nbsp; Nay, sire,&rdquo; he went on hurriedly,
+seeing the King start, &ldquo;be not angry, but hear me!&nbsp; You would
+send to Biron, to the Arsenal?&nbsp; You seek a messenger, sire?&nbsp;
+Then let the good father be the man.&nbsp; Let him take your Majesty&rsquo;s
+will to Biron, and let him see the Grand Master face to face, and bring
+him to reason.&nbsp; Or, if he will not, I will!&nbsp; Let that be the
+test!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, ay!&rdquo; cried Marshal de Tavannes, &ldquo;you say well,
+brother!&nbsp; Let him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And if he will not, I will!&rdquo; Tavannes repeated.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Let that be the test, sire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The King wheeled suddenly to Father Pezelay.&nbsp; &ldquo;You hear,
+father?&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;What say you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The priest&rsquo;s face grew sallow, and more sallow.&nbsp; He knew
+that the walls of the Arsenal sheltered men whose hands no convention
+and no order of Biron&rsquo;s would keep from his throat, were the grim
+gate and frowning culverins once passed; men who had seen their women
+and children, their wives and sisters immolated at his word, and now
+asked naught but to stand face to face and eye to eye with him and tear
+him limb from limb before they died!&nbsp; The challenge, therefore,
+was one-sided and unfair; but for that very reason it shook him.&nbsp;
+The astuteness of the man who, taken by surprise, had conceived this
+snare filled him with dread.&nbsp; He dared not accept, and he scarcely
+dared to refuse the offer.&nbsp; And meantime the eyes of the courtiers,
+who grinned in their beards, were on him.&nbsp; At length he spoke,
+but it was in a voice which had lost its boldness and assurance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is not for me to clear myself,&rdquo; he cried, shrill
+and violent, &ldquo;but for those who are accused, for those who have
+belied the King&rsquo;s word, and set at nought his Christian orders.&nbsp;
+For you, Count Hannibal, heretic, or no better than heretic, it is easy
+to say &lsquo;I go.&rsquo;&nbsp; For you go but to your own, and your
+own will receive you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you will not go?&rdquo; with a jeer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At your command?&nbsp; No!&rdquo; the priest shrieked with
+passion.&nbsp; &ldquo;His Majesty knows whether I serve him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; Charles cried, stamping his foot in a fury,
+&ldquo;that you all serve me when it pleases you!&nbsp; That you are
+all sticks of the same faggot, wood of the same bundle, hell-babes in
+your own business, and sluggards in mine!&nbsp; You kill to-day and
+you&rsquo;ll lay it to me to-morrow!&nbsp; Ay, you will! you will!&rdquo;
+he repeated frantically, and drove home the asseveration with a fearful
+oath.&nbsp; &ldquo;The dead are as good servants as you!&nbsp; Foucauld
+was better!&nbsp; Foucauld?&nbsp; Foucauld?&nbsp; Ah, my God!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And abruptly in presence of them all, with the sacred name, which
+he so often defiled, on his lips, Charles turned, and covering his face
+burst into childish weeping; while a great silence fell on all&mdash;on
+Bussy with the blood of his cousin Resnel on his point, on Fervacques,
+the betrayer of his friend, on Chicot, the slayer of his rival, on Cocconnas
+the cruel&mdash;on men with hands unwashed from the slaughter, and on
+the shameless women who lined the walls; on all who used this sobbing
+man for their stepping-stone, and, to attain their ends and gain their
+purposes, trampled his dull soul in blood and mire.</p>
+<p>One looked at another in consternation.&nbsp; Fear grew in eyes that
+a moment before were bold; cheeks turned pale that a moment before were
+hectic.&nbsp; If <i>he</i> changed as rapidly as this, if so little
+dependence could be placed on his moods or his resolutions, who was
+safe?&nbsp; Whose turn might it not be to-morrow?&nbsp; Or who might
+not be held accountable for the deeds done this day?&nbsp; Many, from
+whom remorse had seemed far distant a while before, shuddered and glanced
+behind them.&nbsp; It was as if the dead who lay stark without the doors,
+ay, and the countless dead of Paris, with whose shrieks the air was
+laden, had flocked in shadowy shape into the hall; and there, standing
+beside their murderers, had whispered with their cold breath in the
+living ears, &ldquo;A reckoning!&nbsp; A reckoning!&nbsp; As I am, thou
+shalt be!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was Count Hannibal who broke the spell and the silence, and with
+his hand on his brother&rsquo;s shoulder stood forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, sire,&rdquo; he cried, in a voice which rang defiant
+in the roof, and seemed to challenge alike the living and the dead,
+&ldquo;if all deny the deed, yet will not I!&nbsp; What we have done
+we have done!&nbsp; So be it!&nbsp; The dead are dead!&nbsp; So be it!&nbsp;
+For the rest, your Majesty has still one servant who will do your will,
+one soldier whose life is at your disposition!&nbsp; I have said I will
+go, and I go, sire.&nbsp; And you, churchman,&rdquo; he continued, turning
+in bitter scorn to the priest, &ldquo;do you go too&mdash;to church!&nbsp;
+To church, shaveling!&nbsp; Go, watch and pray for us!&nbsp; Fast and
+flog for us!&nbsp; Whip those shoulders, whip them till the blood runs
+down!&nbsp; For it is all, it seems, you will do for your King!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles turned.&nbsp; &ldquo;Silence, railer!&rdquo; he said in a
+broken voice.&nbsp; &ldquo;Sow no more troubles!&nbsp; Already,&rdquo;
+a shudder shook his tall ungainly form, &ldquo;I see blood, blood, blood
+everywhere!&nbsp; Blood?&nbsp; Ah, God, shall I from this time see anything
+else?&nbsp; But there is no turning back.&nbsp; There is no undoing.&nbsp;
+So, do you go to Biron.&nbsp; And do you,&rdquo; he went on, sullenly
+addressing Marshal Tavannes, &ldquo;take him and tell him what it is
+needful he should know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis done, sire!&rdquo; the Marshal cried, with a hiccough.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Come, brother!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But when the two, the courtiers making quick way for them, had passed
+down the hall to the door, the Marshal tapped Hannibal&rsquo;s sleeve.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was touch and go,&rdquo; he muttered; it was plain he had
+been more sober than he seemed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mind you, it does not do
+to thwart our little master in his fits!&nbsp; Remember that another
+time, or worse will come of it, brother.&nbsp; As it is, you came out
+of it finely and tripped that black devil&rsquo;s heels to a marvel!&nbsp;
+But you won&rsquo;t be so mad as to go to Biron?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered coldly.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+shall go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Better not!&nbsp; Better not!&rdquo; the Marshal answered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Twill be easier to go in than to come out&mdash;with a
+whole throat!&nbsp; Have you taken wild cats in the hollow of a tree?&nbsp;
+The young first, and then the she-cat?&nbsp; Well, it will be that!&nbsp;
+Take my advice, brother.&nbsp; Have after Montgomery, if you please,
+ride with Nan&ccedil;ay to Chatillon&mdash;he is mounting now&mdash;go
+where you please out of Paris, but don&rsquo;t go there!&nbsp; Biron
+hates us, hates me.&nbsp; And for the King, if he do not see you for
+a few days, &rsquo;twill blow over in a week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal shrugged his shoulders.&nbsp; &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;I shall go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Marshal stared a moment.&nbsp; &ldquo;Morbleu!&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;why?&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis not to please the King, I know.&nbsp; What
+do you think to find there, brother?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A minister,&rdquo; Hannibal answered gently.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+want one with life in him, and they are scarce in the open.&nbsp; So
+I must to covert after him.&rdquo;&nbsp; And, twitching his sword-belt
+a little nearer to his hand, he passed across the court to the gate,
+and to his horses.</p>
+<p>The Marshal went back laughing, and, slapping his thigh as he entered
+the hall, jostled by accident a gentleman who was passing out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; the Gascon cried hotly; for it was Chicot
+he had jostled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who touches my brother touches Tavannes!&rdquo; the Marshal
+hiccoughed.&nbsp; And, smiting his thigh anew, he went off into another
+fit of laughter.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII.&nbsp; DIPLOMACY.</h2>
+<p>Where the old wall of Paris, of which no vestige remains, ran down
+on the east to the north bank of the river, the space in the angle between
+the Seine and the ramparts beyond the Rue St. Pol wore at this date
+an aspect typical of the troubles of the time.&nbsp; Along the waterside
+the gloomy old Palace of St. Pol, once the residence of the mad King
+Charles the Sixth&mdash;and his wife, the abandoned Isabeau de Bavi&egrave;re&mdash;sprawled
+its maze of mouldering courts and ruined galleries; a dreary monument
+of the Gothic days which were passing from France.&nbsp; Its spacious
+curtilage and dark pleasaunces covered all the ground between the river
+and the Rue St. Antoine; and north of this, under the shadow of the
+eight great towers of the Bastille, which looked, four outward to check
+the stranger, four inward to bridle the town, a second palace, beginning
+where St. Pol ended, carried the realm of decay to the city wall.</p>
+<p>This second palace was the H&ocirc;tel des Tournelles, a fantastic
+medley of turrets, spires, and gables, that equally with its neighbour
+recalled the days of the English domination; it had been the abode of
+the Regent Bedford.&nbsp; From his time it had remained for a hundred
+years the town residence of the kings of France; but the death of Henry
+II., slain in its lists by the lance of the same Montgomery who was
+this day fleeing for his life before Guise, had given his widow a distaste
+for it.&nbsp; Catherine de M&eacute;dicis, her sons, and the Court had
+abandoned it; already its gardens lay a tangled wilderness, its roofs
+let in the rain, rats played where kings had slept; and in &ldquo;our
+palace of the Tournelles&rdquo; reigned only silence and decay.&nbsp;
+Unless, indeed, as was whispered abroad, the grim shade of the eleventh
+Louis sometimes walked in its desolate precincts.</p>
+<p>In the innermost angle between the ramparts and the river, shut off
+from the rest of Paris by the decaying courts and enceintes of these
+forsaken palaces, stood the Arsenal.&nbsp; Destroyed in great part by
+the explosion of a powder-mill a few years earlier, it was in the main
+new; and by reason of its river frontage, which terminated at the ruined
+tower of Billy, and its proximity to the Bastille, it was esteemed one
+of the keys of Paris.&nbsp; It was the appanage of the Master of the
+Ordnance, and within its walls M. de Biron, a Huguenot in politics,
+if not in creed, who held the office at this time, had secured himself
+on the first alarm.&nbsp; During the day he had admitted a number of
+refugees, whose courage or good luck had led them to his gate; and as
+night fell&mdash;on such a carnage as the hapless city had not beheld
+since the great slaughter of the Armagnacs, one hundred and fifty-four
+years earlier&mdash;the glow of his matches through the dusk, and the
+sullen tramp of his watchmen as they paced the walls, indicated that
+there was still one place in Paris where the King&rsquo;s will did not
+run.</p>
+<p>In comparison of the disorder which prevailed in the city, a deadly
+quiet reigned here; a stillness so chill that a timid man must have
+stood and hesitated to approach.&nbsp; But a stranger who about nightfall
+rode down the street towards the entrance, a single footman running
+at his stirrup, only nodded a stern approval of the preparations.&nbsp;
+As he drew nearer he cast an attentive eye this way and that; nor stayed
+until a hoarse challenge brought him up when he had come within six
+horses&rsquo; lengths of the Arsenal gate.&nbsp; He reined up then,
+and raising his voice, asked in clear tones for M. de Biron.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go,&rdquo; he continued boldly, &ldquo;tell the Grand Master
+that one from the King is here, and would speak with him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From the King of France?&rdquo; the officer on the gate asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Surely!&nbsp; Is there more than one king in France?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A curse and a bitter cry of &ldquo;King?&nbsp; King Herod!&rdquo;
+were followed by a muttered discussion that, in the ears of one of the
+two who waited in the gloom below, boded little good.&nbsp; The two
+could descry figures moving to and fro before the faint red light of
+the smouldering matches; and presently a man on the gate kindled a torch,
+and held it so as to fling its light downward.&nbsp; The stranger&rsquo;s
+attendant cowered behind the horse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have a care, my lord!&rdquo; he whispered.&nbsp; &ldquo;They
+are aiming at us!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>If so the rider&rsquo;s bold front and unmoved demeanour gave them
+pause.&nbsp; Presently, &ldquo;I will send for the Grand Master&rdquo;
+the man who had spoken before announced.&nbsp; &ldquo;In whose name,
+monsieur?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No matter,&rdquo; the stranger answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Say,
+one from the King.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are alone?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall enter alone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The assurance seemed to be satisfactory, for the man answered &ldquo;Good!&rdquo;
+and after a brief delay a wicket in the gate was opened, the portcullis
+creaked upward, and a plank was thrust across the ditch.&nbsp; The horseman
+waited until the preparations were complete; then he slid to the ground,
+threw his rein to the servant, and boldly walked across.&nbsp; In an
+instant he left behind him the dark street, the river, and the sounds
+of outrage, which the night breeze bore from the farther bank, and found
+himself within the vaulted gateway, in a bright glare of light, the
+centre of a ring of gleaming eyes and angry faces.</p>
+<p>The light blinded him for a few seconds; but the guards, on their
+side, were in no better case.&nbsp; For the stranger was masked; and
+in their ignorance who it was looked at them through the slits in the
+black velvet they stared, disconcerted, and at a loss.&nbsp; There were
+some there with naked weapons in their hands who would have struck him
+through had they known who he was; and more who would have stood aside
+while the deed was done.&nbsp; But the uncertainty&mdash;that and the
+masked man&rsquo;s tone paralyzed them.&nbsp; For they reflected that
+he might be anyone.&nbsp; Cond&eacute;, indeed, stood too small, but
+Navarre, if he lived, might fill that cloak; or Guise, or Anjou, or
+the King himself.&nbsp; And while some would not have scrupled to strike
+the blood royal, more would have been quick to protect and avenge it.&nbsp;
+And so before the dark uncertainty of the mask, before the riddle of
+the smiling eyes which glittered through the slits, they stared irresolute;
+until a hand, the hand of one bolder than his fellows, was raised to
+pluck away the screen.</p>
+<p>The unknown dealt the fellow a buffet with his fist.&nbsp; &ldquo;Down,
+rascal!&rdquo; he said hoarsely.&nbsp; &ldquo;And you&rdquo;&mdash;to
+the officer&mdash;&ldquo;show me instantly to M. de Biron!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the lieutenant, who stood in fear of his men, looked at him doubtfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;not so fast!&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+one of the others, taking the lead, cried, &ldquo;No!&nbsp; We may have
+no need of M. de Biron.&nbsp; Your name, monsieur, first.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With a quick movement the stranger gripped the officer&rsquo;s wrist.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell your master,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that he who clasped
+his wrist <i>thus</i> on the night of Pentecost is here, and would speak
+with him!&nbsp; And say, mark you, that I will come to him, not he to
+me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sign and the tone imposed upon the boldest.&nbsp; Two-thirds
+of the watch were Huguenots, who burned to avenge the blood of their
+fellows; and these, overriding their officer, had agreed to deal with
+the intruder, if a Papegot, without recourse to the Grand Master, whose
+moderation they dreaded.&nbsp; A knife-thrust in the ribs, and another
+body in the ditch&mdash;why not, when such things were done outside?&nbsp;
+But even these doubted now; and M. Peridol, the lieutenant, reading
+in the eyes of his men the suspicions which he had himself conceived,
+was only anxious to obey, if they would let him.&nbsp; So gravely was
+he impressed, indeed, by the bearing of the unknown that he turned when
+he had withdrawn, and came back to assure himself that the men meditated
+no harm in his absence; nor until he had exchanged a whisper with one
+of them would he leave them and go.</p>
+<p>While he was gone on his errand the envoy leaned against the wall
+of the gateway, and, with his chin sunk on his breast and his mind fallen
+into reverie, seemed unconscious of the dark glances of which he was
+the target.&nbsp; He remained in this position until the officer came
+back, followed by a man with a lanthorn.&nbsp; Their coming roused the
+unknown, who, invited to follow Peridol, traversed two courts without
+remark, and in the same silence entered a building in the extreme eastern
+corner of the enceinte abutting on the ruined Tour de Billy.&nbsp; Here,
+in an upper floor, the Governor of the Arsenal had established his temporary
+lodging.</p>
+<p>The chamber into which the stranger was introduced betrayed the haste
+in which it had been prepared for its occupant.&nbsp; Two silver lamps
+which hung from the beams of the unceiled roof shed light on a medley
+of arms and inlaid armour, of parchments, books and steel caskets, which
+encumbered not the tables only, but the stools and chests that, after
+the fashion of that day, stood formally along the arras.&nbsp; In the
+midst of the disorder, on the bare floor, walked the man who, more than
+any other, had been instrumental in drawing the Huguenots to Paris&mdash;and
+to their doom.&nbsp; It was no marvel that the events of the day, the
+surprise and horror, still rode his mind; nor wonderful that even he,
+who passed for a model of stiffness and reticence, betrayed for once
+the indignation which filled his breast.&nbsp; Until the officer had
+withdrawn and closed the door he did, indeed, keep silence; standing
+beside the table and eyeing his visitor with a lofty porte and a stern
+glance.&nbsp; But the moment he was assured that they were alone he
+spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your Highness may unmask now,&rdquo; he said, making no effort
+to hide his contempt.&nbsp; &ldquo;Yet were you well advised to take
+the precaution, since you had hardly come at me in safety without it.&nbsp;
+Had those who keep the gate seen you, I would not have answered for
+your Highness&rsquo;s life.&nbsp; The more shame,&rdquo; he continued
+vehemently, &ldquo;on the deeds of this day which have compelled the
+brother of a king of France to hide his face in his own capital and
+in his own fortress.&nbsp; For I dare to say, Monsieur, what no other
+will say, now the Admiral is dead.&nbsp; You have brought back the days
+of the Armagnacs.&nbsp; You have brought bloody days and an evil name
+on France, and I pray God that you may not pay in your turn what you
+have exacted.&nbsp; But if you continue to be advised by M. de Guise,
+this I will say, Monsieur&rdquo;&mdash;and his voice fell low and stern.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Burgundy slew Orleans, indeed; but he came in his turn to the
+Bridge of Montereau.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You take me for Monsieur?&rdquo; the unknown asked.&nbsp;
+And it was plain that he smiled under his mask.</p>
+<p>Biron&rsquo;s face altered.&nbsp; &ldquo;I take you,&rdquo; he answered
+sharply, &ldquo;for him whose sign you sent me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The wisest are sometimes astray,&rdquo; the other answered
+with a low laugh.&nbsp; And he took off his mask.</p>
+<p>The Grand Master started back, his eyes sparkling with anger.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. de Tavannes?&rdquo; he cried, and for a moment he was silent
+in sheer astonishment.&nbsp; Then, striking his hand on the table, &ldquo;What
+means this trickery?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is of the simplest,&rdquo; Tavannes answered coolly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And yet, as you just now said, I had hardly come at you without
+it.&nbsp; And I had to come at you.&nbsp; No, M. de Biron,&rdquo; he
+added quickly, as Biron in a rage laid his hand on a bell which stood
+beside him on the table, &ldquo;you cannot that way undo what is done.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can at least deliver you,&rdquo; the Grand Master answered,
+in heat, &ldquo;to those who will deal with you as you have dealt with
+us and ours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will avail you nothing,&rdquo; Count Hannibal replied soberly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;For see here, Grand Master, I come from the King.&nbsp; If you
+are at war with him, and hold his fortress in his teeth, I am his ambassador
+and sacrosanct.&nbsp; If you are at peace with him and hold it at his
+will, I am his servant, and safe also.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At peace and safe?&rdquo; Biron cried, his voice trembling
+with indignation.&nbsp; &ldquo;And are those safe or at peace who came
+here trusting to <i>his</i> word, who lay in his palace and slept in
+his beds?&nbsp; Where are they, and how have they fared, that you dare
+appeal to the law of nations, or he to the loyalty of Biron?&nbsp; And
+for you to beard me, whose brother to-day hounded the dogs of this vile
+city on the noblest in France, who have leagued yourself with a crew
+of foreigners to do a deed which will make our country stink in the
+nostrils of the world when we are dust!&nbsp; You, to come here and
+talk of peace and safety!&nbsp; M. de Tavannes&rdquo;&mdash;and he struck
+his hand on the table&mdash;&ldquo;you are a bold man.&nbsp; I know
+why the King had a will to send you, but I know not why you had the
+will to come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That I will tell you later,&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered
+coolly.&nbsp; &ldquo;For the King, first.&nbsp; My message is brief,
+M. de Biron.&nbsp; Have you a mind to hold the scales in France?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Between?&rdquo; Biron asked contemptuously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Between the Lorrainers and the Huguenots.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Grand Master scowled fiercely.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have played the
+go-between once too often,&rdquo; he growled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is no question of going between, it is a question of holding
+between,&rdquo; Tavannes answered coolly.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is a question&mdash;but,
+in a word, have you a mind, M. de Biron, to be Governor of Rochelle?&nbsp;
+The King, having dealt the blow that has been struck to-day, looks to
+follow up severity, as a wise ruler should, with indulgence.&nbsp; And
+to quiet the minds of the Rochellois he would set over them a ruler
+at once acceptable to them&mdash;or war must come of it&mdash;and faithful
+to his Majesty.&nbsp; Such a man, M. de Biron, will in such a post be
+Master of the Kingdom; for he will hold the doors of Janus, and as he
+bridles his sea-dogs, or unchains them, there will be peace or war in
+France.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is all that from the King&rsquo;s mouth?&rdquo; Biron asked
+with sarcasm.&nbsp; But his passion had died down.&nbsp; He was grown
+thoughtful, suspicious; he eyed the other intently as if he would read
+his heart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The offer is his, and the reflections are mine,&rdquo; Tavannes
+answered dryly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Let me add one more.&nbsp; The Admiral
+is dead.&nbsp; The King of Navarre and the Prince of Cond&eacute; are
+prisoners.&nbsp; Who is now to balance the Italians and the Guises?&nbsp;
+The Grand Master&mdash;if he be wise and content to give the law to
+France from the citadel of Rochelle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Biron stared at the speaker in astonishment at his frankness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are a bold man,&rdquo; he cried at last.&nbsp; &ldquo;But
+<i>timeo Danaos et dona ferentes</i>,&rdquo; he continued bitterly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You offer, sir, too much.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The offer is the King&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the conditions?&nbsp; The price?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That you remain quiet, M. de Biron.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the Arsenal?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the Arsenal.&nbsp; And do not too openly counteract the
+King&rsquo;s will.&nbsp; That is all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Grand Master looked puzzled.&nbsp; &ldquo;I will give up no one,&rdquo;
+he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;No one!&nbsp; Let that be understood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The King requires no one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A pause.&nbsp; Then, &ldquo;Does M. de Guise know of the offer?&rdquo;
+Biron inquired; and his eye grew bright.&nbsp; He hated the Guises and
+was hated by them.&nbsp; It was <i>there</i> he was a Huguenot.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has gone far to-day,&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered dryly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And if no worse come of it should be content.&nbsp; Madame Catherine
+knows of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Grand Master was aware that Marshal Tavannes depended on the
+Queen-mother; and he shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, &rsquo;tis like her policy,&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis like her!&rdquo;&nbsp; And pointing his guest to a
+cushioned chest which stood against the wall, he sat down in a chair
+beside the table and thought awhile, his brow wrinkled, his eyes dreaming.&nbsp;
+By-and-by he laughed sourly.&nbsp; &ldquo;You have lighted the fire,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;and would fain I put it out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We would have you hinder it spreading.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have done the deed and are loth to pay the blood-money.&nbsp;
+That is it, is it?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We prefer to pay it to M. de Biron,&rdquo; Count Hannibal
+answered civilly.</p>
+<p>Again the Grand Master was silent awhile.&nbsp; At length he looked
+up and fixed Tavannes with eyes keen as steel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is behind?&rdquo; he growled.&nbsp; &ldquo;Say, man,
+what is it?&nbsp; What is behind?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If there be aught behind, I do not know it,&rdquo; Tavannes
+answered steadfastly.</p>
+<p>M. de Biron relaxed the fixity of his gaze.&nbsp; &ldquo;But you
+said that you had an object?&rdquo; he returned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had&mdash;in being the bearer of the message.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My object?&nbsp; To learn two things.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The first, if it please you?&rdquo;&nbsp; The Grand Master&rsquo;s
+chin stuck out a little, as he spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you in the Arsenal a M. de Tignonville, a gentleman of
+Poitou?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have not,&rdquo; Biron answered curtly.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+second?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you here a Huguenot minister?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have not.&nbsp; And if I had I should not give him up,&rdquo;
+he added firmly.</p>
+<p>Tavannes shrugged his shoulders.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have a use for one,&rdquo;
+he said carelessly.&nbsp; &ldquo;But it need not harm him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For what, then, do you need him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To marry me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The other stared.&nbsp; &ldquo;But you are a Catholic,&rdquo; he
+said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But she is a Huguenot,&rdquo; Tavannes answered.</p>
+<p>The Grand Master did not attempt to hide his astonishment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And she sticks on that?&rdquo; he exclaimed.&nbsp; &ldquo;To-day?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She sticks on that.&nbsp; To-day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To-day?&nbsp; <i>Nom de Dieu</i>!&nbsp; To-day!&nbsp; Well,&rdquo;
+brushing the matter aside after a pause of bewilderment, &ldquo;any
+way, I cannot help her.&nbsp; I have no minister here.&nbsp; If there
+be aught else I can do for her&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing, I thank you,&rdquo; Tavannes answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then
+it only remains for me to take your answer to the King?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And he rose politely, and taking his mask from the table prepared to
+assume it.</p>
+<p>M. de Biron gazed at him a moment without speaking, as if he pondered
+on the answer he should give.&nbsp; At length he nodded, and rang the
+bell which stood beside him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The mask!&rdquo; he muttered in a low voice as footsteps sounded
+without.&nbsp; And, obedient to the hint, Tavannes disguised himself.&nbsp;
+A second later the officer who had introduced him opened the door and
+entered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Peridol,&rdquo; M. de Biron said&mdash;he had risen to his
+feet&mdash;&ldquo;I have received a message which needs confirmation;
+and to obtain this I must leave the Arsenal.&nbsp; I am going to the
+house&mdash;you will remember this&mdash;of Marshal Tavannes, who will
+be responsible for my person; in the mean time this gentleman will remain
+under strict guard in the south chamber upstairs.&nbsp; You will treat
+him as a hostage, with all respect, and will allow him to preserve his
+<i>incognito</i>.&nbsp; But if I do not return by noon to-morrow, you
+will deliver him to the men below, who will know how to deal with him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal made no attempt to interrupt him, nor did he betray
+the discomfiture which he undoubtedly felt.&nbsp; But as the Grand Master
+paused&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. de Biron,&rdquo; he said, in a voice harsh and low, &ldquo;you
+will answer to me for this!&rdquo;&nbsp; And his eyes glittered through
+the slits in the mask.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Possibly, but not to-day or to-morrow!&rdquo; Biron replied,
+shrugging his shoulders contemptuously.&nbsp; &ldquo;Peridol! see the
+gentleman bestowed as I have ordered, and then return to me.&nbsp; Monsieur,&rdquo;
+with a bow, half courteous, half ironical, &ldquo;let me commend to
+you the advantages of silence and your mask.&rdquo;&nbsp; And he waved
+his hand in the direction of the door.</p>
+<p>A moment Count Hannibal hesitated.&nbsp; He was in the heart of a
+hostile fortress where the resistance of a single man armed to the teeth
+must have been futile; and he was unarmed, save for a poniard.&nbsp;
+Nevertheless, for a moment the impulse to spring on Biron, and with
+the dagger at his throat to make his life the price of a safe passage,
+was strong.&nbsp; Then&mdash;for with the warp of a harsh and passionate
+character were interwrought an odd shrewdness and some things little
+suspected&mdash;he resigned himself.&nbsp; Bowing gravely, he turned
+with dignity, and in silence followed the officer from the room.</p>
+<p>Peridol had two men in waiting at the door.&nbsp; From one of these
+the lieutenant took a lanthorn, and, with an air at once sullen and
+deferential, led the way up the stone staircase to the floor over that
+in which M. de Biron had his lodging.&nbsp; Tavannes followed; the two
+guards came last, carrying a second lanthorn.&nbsp; At the head of the
+staircase, whence a bare passage ran, north and south, the procession
+turned right-handed, and, passing two doors, halted before the third
+and last, which faced them at the end of the passage.&nbsp; The lieutenant
+unlocked it with a key which he took from a hook beside the doorpost.&nbsp;
+Then, holding up his light, he invited his charge to enter.</p>
+<p>The room was not small, but it was low in the roof, and prison-like,
+it had bare walls and smoke-marks on the ceiling.&nbsp; The window,
+set in a deep recess, the floor of which rose a foot above that of the
+room, was unglazed; and through the gloomy orifice the night wind blew
+in, laden even on that August evening with the dank mist of the river
+flats.&nbsp; A table, two stools, and a truckle bed without straw or
+covering made up the furniture; but Peridol, after glancing round, ordered
+one of the men to fetch a truss of straw and the other to bring up a
+pitcher of wine.&nbsp; While they were gone Tavannes and he stood silently
+waiting, until, observing that the captive&rsquo;s eyes sought the window,
+the lieutenant laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No bars?&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;No, Monsieur, and no
+need of them.&nbsp; You will not go by that road, bars or no bars.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is below?&rdquo; Count Hannibal asked carelessly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The river?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Monsieur,&rdquo; with a grin; &ldquo;but not water.&nbsp;
+Mud, and six feet of it, soft as Christmas porridge, but not so sweet.&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;ve known two puppies thrown in under this window that did not
+weigh more than a fat pullet apiece.&nbsp; One was gone before you could
+count fifty, and the other did not live thrice as long&mdash;nor would
+have lasted that time, but that it fell on the first and clung to it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tavannes dismissed the matter with a shrug, and, drawing his cloak
+about him, set a stool against the wall and sat down.&nbsp; The men
+who brought in the wine and the bundle of straw were inquisitive, and
+would have loitered, scanning him stealthily; but Peridol hurried them
+away.&nbsp; The lieutenant himself stayed only to cast a glance round
+the room, and to mutter that he would return when his lord returned;
+then, with a &ldquo;Good night&rdquo; which said more for his manners
+than his good will, he followed them out.&nbsp; A moment later the grating
+of the key in the lock and the sound of the bolts as they sped home
+told Tavannes that he was a prisoner.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV.&nbsp; TOO SHORT A SPOON.</h2>
+<p>Count Hannibal remained seated, his chin sunk on his breast, until
+his ear assured him that the three men had descended the stairs to the
+floor below.&nbsp; Then he rose, and, taking the lanthorn from the table,
+on which Peridol had placed it, he went softly to the door, which, like
+the window, stood in a recess&mdash;in this case the prolongation of
+the passage.&nbsp; A brief scrutiny satisfied him that escape that way
+was impossible, and he turned, after a cursory glance at the floor and
+ceiling, to the dark, windy aperture which yawned at the end of the
+apartment.&nbsp; Placing the lanthorn on the table, and covering it
+with his cloak, he mounted the window recess, and, stepping to the unguarded
+edge, looked out.</p>
+<p>He knew, rather than saw, that Peridol had told the truth.&nbsp;
+The smell of the aguish flats which fringed that part of Paris rose
+strong in his nostrils.&nbsp; He guessed that the sluggish arm of the
+Seine which divided the Arsenal from the &Icirc;le des Louviers crawled
+below; but the night was dark, and it was impossible to discern land
+from water.&nbsp; He fancied that he could trace the outline of the
+island&mdash;an uninhabited place, given up to wood piles; but the lights
+of the college quarter beyond it, which rose feebly twinkling to the
+crown of St. Genevieve, confused his sight and rendered the nearer gloom
+more opaque.&nbsp; From that direction and from the Cit&eacute; to his
+right came sounds which told of a city still heaving in its blood-stained
+sleep, and even in its dreams planning further excesses.&nbsp; Now a
+distant shot, and now a faint murmur on one of the bridges, or a far-off
+cry, raucous, sudden, curdled the blood.&nbsp; But even of what was
+passing under cover of the darkness, he could learn little; and after
+standing awhile with a hand on either side of the window he found the
+night air chill.&nbsp; He stepped back, and, descending to the floor,
+uncovered the lanthorn and set it on the table.&nbsp; His thoughts travelled
+back to the preparations he had made the night before with a view to
+securing Mademoiselle&rsquo;s person, and he considered, with a grim
+smile, how little he had foreseen that within twenty-four hours he would
+himself be a prisoner.&nbsp; Presently, finding his mask oppressive,
+he removed it, and, laying it on the table before him, sat scowling
+at the light.</p>
+<p>Biron had jockeyed him cleverly.&nbsp; Well, the worse for Armand
+de Gontaut de Biron if after this adventure the luck went against him!&nbsp;
+But in the mean time?&nbsp; In the mean time his fate was sealed if
+harm befell Biron.&nbsp; And what the King&rsquo;s real mind in Biron&rsquo;s
+case was, and what the Queen-Mother&rsquo;s, he could not say; just
+as it was impossible to predict how far, when they had the Grand Master
+at their mercy, they would resist the temptation to add him to the victims.&nbsp;
+If Biron placed himself at once in Marshal Tavannes&rsquo; hands, all
+might be well.&nbsp; But if he ventured within the long arm of the Guises,
+or went directly to the Louvre, the fact that with the Grand Master&rsquo;s
+fate Count Hannibal&rsquo;s was bound up, would not weigh a straw.&nbsp;
+In such crises the great sacrificed the less great, the less great the
+small, without a scruple.&nbsp; And the Guises did not love Count Hannibal;
+he was not loved by many.&nbsp; Even the strength of his brother the
+Marshal stood rather in the favour of the King&rsquo;s heir, for whom
+he had won the battle of Jarnac, than intrinsically; and, durable in
+ordinary times, might snap in the clash of forces and interests which
+the desperate madness of this day had let loose on Paris.</p>
+<p>It was not the peril in which he stood, however&mdash;though, with
+the cold clear eye of the man who had often faced peril, he appreciated
+it to a nicety&mdash;that Count Hannibal found least bearable, but his
+enforced inactivity.&nbsp; He had thought to ride the whirlwind and
+direct the storm, and out of the danger of others to compact his own
+success.&nbsp; Instead he lay here, not only powerless to guide his
+destiny, which hung on the discretion of another, but unable to stretch
+forth a finger to further his plans.</p>
+<p>As he sat looking darkly at the lanthorn, his mind followed Biron
+and his riders through the midnight streets along St. Antoine and La
+Verrerie, through the gloomy narrows of the Rue la Ferronerie, and so
+past the house in the Rue St. Honor&eacute; where Mademoiselle sat awaiting
+the morrow&mdash;sat awaiting Tignonville, the minister, the marriage!&nbsp;
+Doubtless there were still bands of plunderers roaming to and fro; at
+the barriers troops of archers stopping the suspected; at the windows
+pale faces gazing down; at the gates of the Temple, and of the walled
+enclosures which largely made up the city, strong guards set to prevent
+invasion.&nbsp; Biron would go with sufficient to secure himself; and
+unless he encountered the bodyguard of Guise his passage would quiet
+the town.&nbsp; But was it so certain that <i>she</i> was safe?&nbsp;
+He knew his men, and while he had been free he had not hesitated to
+leave her in their care.&nbsp; But now that he could not go, now that
+he could not raise a hand to help, the confidence which had not failed
+him in straits more dangerous grew weak.&nbsp; He pictured the things
+which might happen, at which, in his normal frame of mind, he would
+have laughed.&nbsp; Now they troubled him so that he started at a shadow,
+so that he quailed at a thought.&nbsp; He, who last night, when free
+to act, had timed his coming and her rescue to a minute!&nbsp; Who had
+rejoiced in the peril, since with the glamour of such things foolish
+women were taken!&nbsp; Who had not flinched when the crowd roared most
+fiercely for her blood!</p>
+<p>Why had he suffered himself to be trapped?&nbsp; Why indeed?&nbsp;
+And thrice in passion he paced the room.&nbsp; Long ago the famous Nostradamus
+had told him that he would live to be a king, but of the smallest kingdom
+in the world.&nbsp; &ldquo;Every man is a king in his coffin,&rdquo;
+he had answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;The grave is cold and your kingdom shall
+be warm,&rdquo; the wizard had rejoined.&nbsp; On which the courtiers
+had laughed, promising him a Moorish island and a black queen.&nbsp;
+And he had gibed with the rest, but secretly had taken note of the sovereign
+counties of France, their rulers and their heirs.&nbsp; Now he held
+the thought in horror, foreseeing no county, but the cage under the
+stifling tiles at Loches, in which Cardinal Balue and many another had
+worn out their hearts.</p>
+<p>He came to that thought not by way of his own peril, but of Mademoiselle&rsquo;s;
+which affected him in so novel a fashion that he wondered at his folly.&nbsp;
+At last, tired of watching the shadows which the draught set dancing
+on the wall, he drew his cloak about him and lay down on the straw.&nbsp;
+He had kept vigil the previous night, and in a few minutes, with a campaigner&rsquo;s
+ease, he was asleep.</p>
+<p>Midnight had struck.&nbsp; About two the light in the lanthorn burned
+low in the socket, and with a soft sputtering went out.&nbsp; For an
+hour after that the room lay still, silent, dark; then slowly the grey
+dawn, the greyer for the river mist which wrapped the neighbourhood
+in a clammy shroud, began to creep into the room and discover the vague
+shapes of things.&nbsp; Again an hour passed, and the sun was rising
+above Montreuil, and here and there the river began to shimmer through
+the fog.&nbsp; But in the room it was barely daylight when the sleeper
+awoke, and sat up, his face expectant.&nbsp; Something had roused him.&nbsp;
+He listened.</p>
+<p>His ear, and the habit of vigilance which a life of danger instils,
+had not deceived him.&nbsp; There were men moving in the passage; men
+who shuffled their feet impatiently.&nbsp; Had Biron returned?&nbsp;
+Or had aught happened to him, and were these men come to avenge him?&nbsp;
+Count Hannibal rose and stole across the boards to the door, and, setting
+his ear to it, listened.</p>
+<p>He listened while a man might count a hundred and fifty, counting
+slowly.&nbsp; Then, for the third part of a second, he turned his head,
+and his eyes travelled the room.&nbsp; He stooped again and listened
+more closely, scarcely breathing.&nbsp; There were voices as well as
+feet to be heard now; one voice&mdash;he thought it was Peridol&rsquo;s&mdash;which
+held on long, now low, now rising into violence.&nbsp; Others were audible
+at intervals, but only in a growl or a bitter exclamation, that told
+of minds made up and hands which would not be restrained.&nbsp; He caught
+his own name, <i>Tavannes</i>&mdash;the mask was useless, then!&nbsp;
+And once a noisy movement which came to nothing, foiled, he fancied,
+by Peridol.</p>
+<p>He knew enough.&nbsp; He rose to his full height, and his eyes seemed
+a little closer together; an ugly smile curved his lips.&nbsp; His gaze
+travelled over the objects in the room, the bare stools and table, the
+lanthorn, the wine-pitcher; beyond these, in a corner, the cloak and
+straw on the low bed.&nbsp; The light, cold and grey, fell cheerlessly
+on the dull chamber, and showed it in harmony with the ominous whisper
+which grew in the gallery; with the stern-faced listener who stood,
+his one hand on the door.&nbsp; He looked, but he found nothing to his
+purpose, nothing to serve his end, whatever his end was; and with a
+quick light step he left the door, mounted the window recess, and, poised
+on the very edge, looked down.</p>
+<p>If he thought to escape that way his hope was desperate.&nbsp; The
+depth to the water-level was not, he judged, twelve feet.&nbsp; But
+Peridol had told the truth.&nbsp; Below lay not water, but a smooth
+surface of viscid slime, here luminous with the florescence of rottenness,
+there furrowed by a tiny runnel of moisture which sluggishly crept across
+it to the slow stream beyond.&nbsp; This quicksand, vile and treacherous,
+lapped the wall below the window, and more than accounted for the absence
+of bars or fastenings.&nbsp; But, leaning far out, he saw that it ended
+at the angle of the building, at a point twenty feet or so to the right
+of his position.</p>
+<p>He sprang to the floor again, and listened an instant; then, with
+guarded movements&mdash;for there was fear in the air, fear in the silent
+room, and at any moment the rush might be made, the door burst in&mdash;he
+set the lanthorn and wine-pitcher on the floor, and took up the table
+in his arms.&nbsp; He began to carry it to the window, but, halfway
+thither, his eye told him that it would not pass through the opening,
+and he set it down again and glided to the bed.&nbsp; Again he was thwarted;
+the bed was screwed to the floor.&nbsp; Another might have despaired
+at that, but he rose with no sign of dismay, and listening, always listening,
+he spread his cloak on the floor, and deftly, with as little noise and
+rustling as might be, be piled the straw in it, compressed the bundle,
+and, cutting the bed-cords with his dagger, bound all together with
+them.&nbsp; In three steps he was in the embrasure of the window, and,
+even as the men in the passage thrust the lieutenant aside and with
+a sudden uproar came down to the door, he flung the bundle lightly and
+carefully to the right&mdash;so lightly and carefully, and with so nice
+and deliberate a calculation, that it seemed odd it fell beyond the
+reach of an ordinary leap.</p>
+<p>An instant and he was on the floor again.&nbsp; The men had to unlock,
+to draw back the bolts, to draw back the door which opened outwards;
+their numbers, as well as their savage haste, impeded them.&nbsp; When
+they burst in at last, with a roar of &ldquo;To the river!&nbsp; To
+the river!&rdquo;&mdash;burst in a rush of struggling shoulders and
+lowered pikes, they found him standing, a solitary figure, on the further
+side of the table, his arms folded.&nbsp; And the sight of the passive
+figure for a moment stayed them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say your prayers, child of Satan!&rdquo; cried the leader,
+waving his weapon.&nbsp; &ldquo;We give you one minute!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, one minute!&rdquo; his followers chimed in.&nbsp; &ldquo;Be
+ready!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You would murder me?&rdquo; he said with dignity.&nbsp; And
+when they shouted assent, &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;It
+is between you and M. de Biron, whose guest I am.&nbsp; But&rdquo;&mdash;with
+a glance which passed round the ring of glaring eyes and working features&mdash;&ldquo;I
+would leave a last word for some one.&nbsp; Is there any one here who
+values a safe-conduct from the King?&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis for two men coming
+and going for a fortnight.&rdquo;&nbsp; And he held up a slip of paper.</p>
+<p>The leader cried, &ldquo;To hell with his safe-conduct!&nbsp; Say
+your prayers!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But all were not of his mind.&nbsp; On one or two of the savage faces&mdash;the
+faces, for the most part, of honest men maddened by their wrongs&mdash;flashed
+an avaricious gleam.&nbsp; A safe-conduct?&nbsp; To avenge, to slay,
+to kill&mdash;and to go safe!&nbsp; For some minds such a thing has
+an invincible fascination.&nbsp; A man thrust himself forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, I&rsquo;ll have it!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Give
+it here!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is yours,&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered, &ldquo;if you
+will carry ten words to Marshal Tavannes&mdash;when I am gone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man&rsquo;s neighbour laid a restraining hand on his shoulder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And Marshal Tavannes will pay you finely,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>But Maudron, the man who had offered, shook off the hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I take the message!&rdquo; he muttered in a grim aside.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Do you think me mad?&rdquo;&nbsp; And then aloud he cried, &ldquo;Ay,
+I&rsquo;ll take your message!&nbsp; Give me the paper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You swear you will take it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man had no intention of taking it, but he perjured himself and
+went forward.&nbsp; The others would have pressed round too, half in
+envy, half in scorn; but Tavannes by a gesture stayed them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gentlemen, I ask a minute only,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;A
+minute for a dying man is not much.&nbsp; Your friends had as much.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the fellows, acknowledging the claim and assured that their victim
+could not escape, let Maudron go round the table to him.</p>
+<p>The man was in haste and ill at ease, conscious of his evil intentions
+and the fraud he was practising; and at once greedy to have, yet ashamed
+of the bargain he was making.&nbsp; His attention was divided between
+the slip of paper, on which his eyes fixed themselves, and the attitude
+of his comrades; he paid little heed to Count Hannibal, whom he knew
+to be unarmed.&nbsp; Only when Tavannes seemed to ponder on his message,
+and to be fain to delay, &ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; he muttered with brutal
+frankness; &ldquo;your time is up!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tavannes started, the paper slipped from his fingers.&nbsp; Maudron
+saw a chance of getting it without committing himself, and quick as
+the thought leapt up in his mind he stooped, and grasped the paper,
+and would have leapt back with it!&nbsp; But quick as he, and quicker,
+Tavannes too stooped, gripped him by the waist, and with a prodigious
+effort, and a yell in which all the man&rsquo;s stormy nature, restrained
+to a part during the last few minutes, broke forth, he flung the ill-fated
+wretch head first through the window.</p>
+<p>The movement carried Tavannes himself&mdash;even while his victim&rsquo;s
+scream rang through the chamber&mdash;into the embrasure.&nbsp; An instant
+he hung on the verge; then, as the men, a moment thunderstruck, sprang
+forward to avenge their comrade, he leapt out, jumping for the struggling
+body that had struck the mud, and now lay in it face downwards.</p>
+<p>He alighted on it, and drove it deep into the quaking slime; but
+he himself bounded off right-handed.&nbsp; The peril was appalling,
+the possibility untried, the chance one which only a doomed man would
+have taken.&nbsp; But he reached the straw-bale, and it gave him a momentary,
+a precarious footing.&nbsp; He could not regain his balance, he could
+not even for an instant stand upright on it.&nbsp; But from its support
+he leapt on convulsively, and, as a pike, flung from above, wounded
+him in the shoulder, he fell his length in the slough&mdash;but forward,
+with his outstretched hands resting on soil of a harder nature.&nbsp;
+They sank, it is true, to the elbow, but he dragged his body forward
+on them, and forward, and freeing one by a last effort of strength&mdash;he
+could not free both, and, as it was, half his face was submerged&mdash;he
+reached out another yard, and gripped a balk of wood, which projected
+from the corner of the building for the purpose of fending off the stream
+in flood-time.</p>
+<p>The men at the window shrieked with rage as he slowly drew himself
+from the slough, and stood from head to foot a pillar of mud.&nbsp;
+Shout as they might, they had no firearms, and, crowded together in
+the narrow embrasure, they could take no aim with their pikes.&nbsp;
+They could only look on in furious impotence, flinging curses at him
+until he passed from their view, behind the angle of the building.</p>
+<p>Here for a score of yards a strip of hard foreshore ran between mud
+and wall.&nbsp; He struggled along it until he reached the end of the
+wall; then with a shuddering glance at the black heaving pit from which
+he had escaped, and which yet gurgled above the body of the hapless
+Maudron&mdash;a tribute to horror which even his fierce nature could
+not withhold&mdash;he turned and painfully climbed the river-bank.&nbsp;
+The pike-wound in his shoulder was slight, but the effort had been supreme;
+the sweat poured from his brow, his visage was grey and drawn.&nbsp;
+Nevertheless, when he had put fifty paces between himself and the buildings
+of the Arsenal he paused, and turned.&nbsp; He saw that the men had
+run to other windows which looked that way; and his face lightened and
+his form dilated with triumph.</p>
+<p>He shook his fist at them.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ho, fools!&rdquo; he cried,
+&ldquo;you kill not Tavannes so!&nbsp; Till our next meeting at Montfaucon,
+fare you well!&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV.&nbsp; THE BROTHER OF ST. MAGLOIRE.</h2>
+<p>As the exertion of power is for the most part pleasing, so the exercise
+of that which a woman possesses over a man is especially pleasant.&nbsp;
+When in addition a risk of no ordinary kind has been run, and the happy
+issue has been barely expected&mdash;above all when the momentary gain
+seems an augury of final victory&mdash;it is impossible that a feeling
+akin to exultation should not arise in the mind, however black the horizon,
+and however distant the fair haven.</p>
+<p>The situation in which Count Hannibal left Mademoiselle de Vrillac
+will be remembered.&nbsp; She had prevailed over him; but in return
+he had bowed her to the earth, partly by subtle threats, and partly
+by sheer savagery.&nbsp; He had left her weeping, with the words &ldquo;Madame
+de Tavannes&rdquo; ringing doom in her ears, and the dark phantom of
+his will pointing onward to an inevitable future.&nbsp; Had she abandoned
+hope, it would have been natural.</p>
+<p>But the girl was of a spirit not long nor easily cowed; and Tavannes
+had not left her half an hour before the reflection, that so far the
+honours of the day were hers, rose up to console her.&nbsp; In spite
+of his power and her impotence, she had imposed her will upon his; she
+had established an influence over him, she had discovered a scruple
+which stayed him, and a limit beyond which he would not pass.&nbsp;
+In the result she might escape; for the conditions which he had accepted
+with an ill grace might prove beyond his fulfilling.&nbsp; She might
+escape!&nbsp; True, many in her place would have feared a worse fate
+and harsher handling.&nbsp; But there lay half the merit of her victory.&nbsp;
+It had left her not only in a better position, but with a new confidence
+in her power over her adversary.&nbsp; He would insist on the bargain
+struck between them; within its four corners she could look for no indulgence.&nbsp;
+But if the conditions proved to be beyond his power, she believed that
+he would spare her: with an ill grace, indeed, with such ferocity and
+coarse reviling as her woman&rsquo;s pride might scarcely support.&nbsp;
+But he would spare her.</p>
+<p>And if the worst befell her?&nbsp; She would still have the consolation
+of knowing that from the cataclysm which had overwhelmed her friends
+she had ransomed those most dear to her.&nbsp; Owing to the position
+of her chamber, she saw nothing of the excesses to which Paris gave
+itself up during the remainder of that day, and to which it returned
+with unabated zest on the following morning.&nbsp; But the Carlats and
+her women learned from the guards below what was passing; and quaking
+and cowering in their corners fixed frightened eyes on her, who was
+their stay and hope.&nbsp; How could she prove false to them?&nbsp;
+How doom them to perish, had there been no question of her lover?</p>
+<p>Of him she sat thinking by the hour together.&nbsp; She recalled
+with solemn tenderness the moment in which he had devoted himself to
+the death which came but halfway to seize them; nor was she slow to
+forgive his subsequent withdrawal, and his attempt to rescue her in
+spite of herself.&nbsp; She found the impulse to die glorious; the withdrawal&mdash;for
+the actor was her lover&mdash;a thing done for her, which he would not
+have done for himself, and which she quickly forgave him.&nbsp; The
+revulsion of feeling which had conquered her at the time, and led her
+to tear herself from him, no longer moved her much while all in his
+action that might have seemed in other eyes less than heroic, all in
+his conduct&mdash;in a crisis demanding the highest&mdash;that smacked
+of common or mean, vanished, for she still clung to him.&nbsp; Clung
+to him, not so much with the passion of the mature woman, as with the
+maiden and sentimental affection of one who has now no hope of possessing,
+and for whom love no longer spells life, but sacrifice.</p>
+<p>She had leisure for these musings, for she was left to herself all
+that day, and until late on the following day.&nbsp; Her own servants
+waited on her, and it was known that below stairs Count Hannibal&rsquo;s
+riders kept sullen ward behind barred doors and shuttered windows, refusing
+admission to all who came.&nbsp; Now and again echoes of the riot which
+filled the streets with bloodshed reached her ears: or word of the more
+striking occurrences was brought to her by Madame Carlat.&nbsp; And
+early on this second day, Monday, it was whispered that M. de Tavannes
+had not returned, and that the men below were growing uneasy.</p>
+<p>At last, when the suspense below and above was growing tense, it
+was broken.&nbsp; Footsteps and voices were heard ascending the stairs,
+the trampling and hubbub were followed by a heavy knock; perforce the
+door was opened.&nbsp; While Mademoiselle, who had risen, awaited with
+a beating heart she knew not what, a cowled father, in the dress of
+the monks of St. Magloire, stood on the threshold, and, crossing himself,
+muttered the words of benediction.&nbsp; He entered slowly.</p>
+<p>No sight could have been more dreadful to Mademoiselle; for it set
+at naught the conditions which she had so hardly exacted.&nbsp; What
+if Count Hannibal were behind, were even now mounting the stairs, prepared
+to force her to a marriage before this shaveling?&nbsp; Or ready to
+proceed, if she refused, to the last extremity?&nbsp; Sudden terror
+taking her by the throat choked her; her colour fled, her hand flew
+to her breast.&nbsp; Yet, before the door had closed on Bigot, she had
+recovered herself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This intrusion is not by M. de Tavannes&rsquo; orders!&rdquo;
+she cried, stepping forward haughtily.&nbsp; &ldquo;This person has
+no business here.&nbsp; How dare you admit him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Norman showed his bearded visage a moment at the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord&rsquo;s orders,&rdquo; he muttered sullenly.&nbsp;
+And he closed the door on them.</p>
+<p>She had a Huguenot&rsquo;s hatred of a cowl; and, in this crisis,
+her reasons for fearing it.&nbsp; Her eyes blazed with indignation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Enough!&rdquo; she cried, pointing, with a gesture of dismissal,
+to the door.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go back to him who sent you!&nbsp; If he will
+insult me, let him do it to my face!&nbsp; If he will perjure himself,
+let him forswear himself in person.&nbsp; Or, if you come on your own
+account,&rdquo; she continued, flinging prudence to the winds, &ldquo;as
+your brethren came to Philippa de Luns, to offer me the choice you offered
+her, I give you her answer!&nbsp; If I had thought of myself only, I
+had not lived so long!&nbsp; And rather than bear your presence or hear
+your arguments&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She came to a sudden, odd, quavering pause on the word; her lips
+remained parted, she swayed an instant on her feet.&nbsp; The next moment
+Madame Carlat, to whom the visitor had turned his shoulder, doubted
+her eyes, for Mademoiselle was in the monk&rsquo;s arms!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Clotilde!&nbsp; Clotilde!&rdquo; he cried, and held her to
+him.</p>
+<p>For the monk was M. de Tignonville!&nbsp; Under the cowl was the
+lover with whom Mademoiselle&rsquo;s thoughts had been engaged.&nbsp;
+In this disguise, and armed with Tavannes&rsquo; note to Madame St.
+Lo&mdash;which the guards below knew for Count Hannibal&rsquo;s hand,
+though they were unable to decipher the contents&mdash;he had found
+no difficulty in making his way to her.</p>
+<p>He had learned before he entered that Tavannes was abroad, and was
+aware, therefore, that he ran little risk.&nbsp; But his betrothed,
+who knew nothing of his adventures in the interval, saw in him one who
+came to her at the greatest risk, across unnumbered perils, through
+streets swimming with blood.&nbsp; And though she had never embraced
+him save in the crisis of the massacre, though she had never called
+him by his Christian name, in the joy of this meeting she abandoned
+herself to him, she clung to him weeping, she forgot for the time his
+defection, and thought only of him who had returned to her so gallantly,
+who brought into the room a breath of Poitou, and the sea, and the old
+days, and the old life; and at the sight of whom the horrors of the
+last two days fell from her&mdash;for the moment.</p>
+<p>And Madame Carlat wept also, and in the room was a sound of weeping.&nbsp;
+The least moved was, for a certainty, M. de Tignonville himself, who,
+as we know, had gone through much that day.&nbsp; But even his heart
+swelled, partly with pride, partly with thankfulness that he had returned
+to one who loved him so well.&nbsp; Fate had been kinder to him than
+he deserved; but he need not confess that now.&nbsp; When he had brought
+off the <i>coup</i> which he had in his mind, he would hasten to forget
+that he had entertained other ideas.</p>
+<p>Mademoiselle had been the first to be carried away; she was also
+the first to recover herself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had forgotten,&rdquo; she cried suddenly, &ldquo;I had forgotten,&rdquo;
+and she wrested herself from his embrace with violence, and stood panting,
+her face white, her eyes affrighted.&nbsp; &ldquo;I must not!&nbsp;
+And you&mdash;I had forgotten that too!&nbsp; To be here, Monsieur,
+is the worst office you can do me.&nbsp; You must go!&nbsp; Go, Monsieur,
+in mercy I beg of you, while it is possible.&nbsp; Every moment you
+are here, every moment you spend in this house, I shudder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You need not fear for me,&rdquo; he said, in a tone of bravado.&nbsp;
+He did not understand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fear for myself!&rdquo; she answered.&nbsp; And then, wringing
+her hands, divided between her love for him and her fear for herself,
+&ldquo;Oh, forgive me!&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;You do not know
+that he has promised to spare me, if he cannot produce you, and&mdash;and&mdash;a
+minister?&nbsp; He has granted me that; but I thought when you entered
+that he had gone back on his word, and sent a priest, and it maddened
+me!&nbsp; I could not bear to think that I had gained nothing.&nbsp;
+Now you understand, and you will pardon me, Monsieur?&nbsp; If he cannot
+produce you I am saved.&nbsp; Go then, leave me, I beg, without a moment&rsquo;s
+delay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He laughed derisively as he turned back his cowl and squared his
+shoulders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All that is over!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;over and done with,
+sweet!&nbsp; M. de Tavannes is at this moment a prisoner in the Arsenal.&nbsp;
+On my way hither I fell in with M. de Biron, and he told me.&nbsp; The
+Grand Master, who would have had me join his company, had been all night
+at Marshal Tavannes&rsquo; hotel, where he had been detained longer
+than he expected.&nbsp; He stood pledged to release Count Hannibal on
+his return, but at my request he consented to hold him one hour, and
+to do also a little thing for me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The glow of hope which had transfigured her face faded slowly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will not help,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;if he find you here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He will not!&nbsp; Nor you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How, Monsieur?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In a few minutes,&rdquo; he explained&mdash;he could not hide
+his exultation, &ldquo;a message will come from the Arsenal in the name
+of Tavannes, bidding the monk he sent to you bring you to him.&nbsp;
+A spoken message, corroborated by my presence, should suffice: &lsquo;<i>Bid
+the monk who is now with Mademoiselle</i>,&rsquo; it will run, &lsquo;<i>bring
+her to me at the Arsenal, and let four pikes guard them hither</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+When I begged M. de Biron to do this, he laughed.&nbsp; &lsquo;I can
+do better,&rsquo; he said.&nbsp; &lsquo;They shall bring one of Count
+Hannibal&rsquo;s gloves, which he left on my table.&nbsp; Always supposing
+my rascals have done him no harm, which God forbid, for I am answerable.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville, delighted with the stratagem which the meeting with
+Biron had suggested, could see no flaw in it.&nbsp; She could, and though
+she heard him to the end, no second glow of hope softened the lines
+of her features.&nbsp; With a gesture full of dignity, which took in
+not only Madame Carlat and the waiting-woman who stood at the door,
+but the absent servants&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what of these?&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;What of these?&nbsp;
+You forget them, Monsieur.&nbsp; You do not think, you cannot have thought,
+that I would abandon them?&nbsp; That I would leave them to such mercy
+as he, defeated, might extend to them?&nbsp; No, you forgot them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He did not know what to answer, for the jealous eyes of the frightened
+waiting-woman, fierce with the fierceness of a hunted animal, were on
+him.&nbsp; The Carlat and she had heard, could hear.&nbsp; At last&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Better one than none!&rdquo; he muttered, in a voice so low
+that if the servants caught his meaning it was but indistinctly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I have to think of you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I of them,&rdquo; she answered firmly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Nor
+is that all.&nbsp; Were they not here, it could not be.&nbsp; My word
+is passed&mdash;though a moment ago, Monsieur, in the joy of seeing
+you I forgot it.&nbsp; And how,&rdquo; she continued, &ldquo;if I keep
+not my word, can I expect him to keep his?&nbsp; Or how, if I am ready
+to break the bond, on this happening which I never expected, can I hold
+him to conditions which he loves as little&mdash;as little as I love
+him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her voice dropped piteously on the last words; her eyes, craving
+her lover&rsquo;s pardon, sought his.&nbsp; But rage, not pity or admiration,
+was the feeling roused in Tignonville&rsquo;s breast.&nbsp; He stood
+staring at her, struck dumb by folly so immense.&nbsp; At last&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You cannot mean this,&rdquo; he blurted out.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+cannot mean, Mademoiselle, that you intend to stand on that!&nbsp; To
+keep a promise wrung from you by force, by treachery, in the midst of
+such horrors as he and his have brought upon us!&nbsp; It is inconceivable!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She shook her head.&nbsp; &ldquo;I promised,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were forced to it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the promise saved our lives.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From murderers!&nbsp; From assassins!&rdquo; he protested.</p>
+<p>She shook her head.&nbsp; &ldquo;I cannot go back,&rdquo; she said
+firmly; &ldquo;I cannot.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you are willing to marry him,&rdquo; he cried in ignoble
+anger.&nbsp; &ldquo;That is it!&nbsp; Nay, you must wish to marry him!&nbsp;
+For, as for his conditions, Mademoiselle,&rdquo; the young man continued,
+with an insulting laugh, &ldquo;you cannot think seriously of them.&nbsp;
+<i>He</i> keep conditions and you in his power!&nbsp; He, Count Hannibal!&nbsp;
+But for the matter of that, and were he in the mind to keep them, what
+are they?&nbsp; There are plenty of ministers.&nbsp; I left one only
+this morning.&nbsp; I could lay my hand on one in five minutes.&nbsp;
+He has only to find one, therefore&mdash;and to find me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Monsieur,&rdquo; she cried, trembling with wounded pride,
+&ldquo;it is for that reason I implore you to go.&nbsp; The sooner you
+leave me, the sooner you place yourself in a position of security, the
+happier for me!&nbsp; Every moment that you spend here, you endanger
+both yourself and me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you will not be persuaded&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall not be persuaded,&rdquo; she answered firmly, &ldquo;and
+you do but&rdquo;&mdash;alas! her pride began to break down, her voice
+to quiver, she looked piteously at him&mdash;&ldquo;by staying here
+make it harder for me to&mdash;to&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; cried Madame Carlat.&nbsp; &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And as they started and turned towards her&mdash;she was at the end
+of the chamber by the door, almost out of earshot&mdash;she raised a
+warning hand.&nbsp; &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; she muttered, &ldquo;some
+one has entered the house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis my messenger from Biron,&rdquo; Tignonville answered
+sullenly.&nbsp; And he drew his cowl over his face, and, hiding his
+hands in his sleeves, moved towards the door.&nbsp; But on the threshold
+he turned and held out his arms.&nbsp; He could not go thus.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mademoiselle!&nbsp;
+Clotilde!&rdquo; he cried with passion, &ldquo;for the last time, listen
+to me, come with me.&nbsp; Be persuaded!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; Madame Carlat interposed again, and turned a
+scared face on them.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is no messenger!&nbsp; It is Tavannes
+himself: I know his voice.&rdquo;&nbsp; And she wrung her hands.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;<i>Oh, mon Dieu, mon Dieu</i>, what are we to do?&rdquo; she
+continued, panic-stricken.&nbsp; And she looked all ways about the room.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI.&nbsp; AT CLOSE QUARTERS.</h2>
+<p>Fear leapt into Mademoiselle&rsquo;s eyes, but she commanded herself.&nbsp;
+She signed to Madame Carlat to be silent, and they listened, gazing
+at one another, hoping against hope that the woman was mistaken.&nbsp;
+A long moment they waited, and some were beginning to breathe again,
+when the strident tones of Count Hannibal&rsquo;s voice rolled up the
+staircase, and put an end to doubt.&nbsp; Mademoiselle grasped the table
+and stood supporting herself by it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are we to do?&rdquo; she muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;What
+are we to do?&rdquo; and she turned distractedly towards the women.&nbsp;
+The courage which had supported her in her lover&rsquo;s absence had
+abandoned her now.&nbsp; &ldquo;If he finds him here I am lost!&nbsp;
+I am lost!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He will not know me,&rdquo; Tignonville muttered.&nbsp; But
+he spoke uncertainly; and his gaze, shifting hither and thither, belied
+the boldness of his words.</p>
+<p>Madame Carlat&rsquo;s eyes flew round the room; on her for once the
+burden seemed to rest.&nbsp; Alas! the room had no second door, and
+the windows looked on a courtyard guarded by Tavannes&rsquo; people.&nbsp;
+And even now Count Hannibal&rsquo;s step rang on the stair! his hand
+was almost on the latch.&nbsp; The woman wrung her hands; then, a thought
+striking her, she darted to a corner where Mademoiselle&rsquo;s robes
+hung on pegs against the wall.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here!&rdquo; she cried, raising them.&nbsp; &ldquo;Behind
+these!&nbsp; He may not be seen here!&nbsp; Quick, Monsieur, quick!&nbsp;
+Hide yourself!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was a forlorn hope&mdash;the suggestion of one who had not thought
+out the position; and, whatever its promise, Mademoiselle&rsquo;s pride
+revolted against it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Not there!&rdquo; while
+Tignonville, who knew that the step was useless, since Count Hannibal
+must have learned that a monk had entered, held his ground.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You could not deny yourself?&rdquo; he muttered hurriedly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And a priest with me?&rdquo; she answered; and she shook her
+head.</p>
+<p>There was no time for more, and even as Mademoiselle spoke Count
+Hannibal&rsquo;s knuckles tapped the door.&nbsp; She cast a last look
+at her lover.&nbsp; He had turned his back on the window; the light
+no longer fell on his face.&nbsp; It was possible that he might pass
+unrecognized, if Tavannes&rsquo; stay was brief; at any rate, the risk
+must be run.&nbsp; In a half stifled voice she bade her woman, Javette,
+open the door.&nbsp; Count Hannibal bowed low as he entered; and he
+deceived the others.&nbsp; But he did not deceive her.&nbsp; He had
+not crossed the threshold before she repented that she had not acted
+on Tignonville&rsquo;s suggestion, and denied herself.&nbsp; For what
+could escape those hard keen eyes, which swept the room, saw all, and
+seemed to see nothing&mdash;those eyes in which there dwelt even now
+a glint of cruel humour?&nbsp; He might deceive others, but she who
+panted within his grasp, as the wild bird palpitates in the hand of
+the fowler, was not deceived!&nbsp; He saw, he knew! although, as he
+bowed, and smiling, stood upright, he looked only at her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I expected to be with you before this,&rdquo; he said courteously,
+&ldquo;but I have been detained.&nbsp; First, Mademoiselle, by some
+of your friends, who were reluctant to part with me; then by some of
+your enemies, who, finding me in no handsome case, took me for a Huguenot
+escaped from the river, and drove me to shifts to get clear of them.&nbsp;
+However, now I am come, I have news.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;News?&rdquo; she muttered with dry lips.&nbsp; It could hardly
+be good news.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Mademoiselle, of M. de Tignonville,&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I have little doubt that I shall be able to produce him this
+evening, and so to satisfy one of your scruples.&nbsp; And as I trust
+that this good father,&rdquo; he went on, turning to the ecclesiastic,
+and speaking with the sneer from which he seldom refrained, Catholic
+as he was, when he mentioned a priest, &ldquo;has by this time succeeded
+in removing the other, and persuading you to accept his ministrations&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; she cried impulsively.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No?&rdquo; with a dubious smile, and a glance from one to
+the other.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, I had hoped better things.&nbsp; But he
+still may?&nbsp; He still may.&nbsp; I am sure he may.&nbsp; In which
+case, Mademoiselle, your modesty must pardon me if I plead urgency,
+and fix the hour after supper this evening for the fulfilment of your
+promise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She turned white to the lips.&nbsp; &ldquo;After supper?&rdquo; she
+gasped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Mademoiselle, this evening.&nbsp; Shall I say&mdash;at
+eight o&rsquo;clock?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In horror of the thing which menaced her, of the thing from which
+only two hours separated her, she could find no words but those which
+she had already used.&nbsp; The worst was upon her; worse than the worst
+could not befall her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But he has not persuaded me!&rdquo; she cried, clenching her
+hands in passion.&nbsp; &ldquo;He has not persuaded me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Still he may, Mademoiselle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He will not!&rdquo; she cried wildly.&nbsp; &ldquo;He will
+not!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The room was going round with her.&nbsp; The precipice yawned at
+her feet; its naked terrors turned her brain.&nbsp; She had been pushed
+nearer, and nearer, and nearer; struggle as she might, she was on the
+verge.&nbsp; A mist rose before her eyes, and though they thought she
+listened she understood nothing of what was passing.&nbsp; When she
+came to herself, after the lapse of a minute, Count Hannibal was speaking.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Permit him another trial,&rdquo; he was saying in a tone of
+bland irony.&nbsp; &ldquo;A short time longer, Mademoiselle!&nbsp; One
+more assault, father!&nbsp; The weapons of the Church could not be better
+directed or to a more worthy object; and, successful, shall not fail
+of due recognition and an earthly reward.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And while she listened, half fainting, with a humming in her ears,
+he was gone.&nbsp; The door closed on him, and the three&mdash;Mademoiselle&rsquo;s
+woman had withdrawn when she opened to him&mdash;looked at one another.&nbsp;
+The girl parted her lips to speak, but she only smiled piteously; and
+it was M. de Tignonville who broke the silence, in a tone which betrayed
+rather relief than any other feeling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, all is not lost yet,&rdquo; he said briskly.&nbsp; &ldquo;If
+I can escape from the house&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He knows you,&rdquo; she answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He knows you,&rdquo; Mademoiselle repeated in a tone almost
+apathetic.&nbsp; &ldquo;I read it in his eyes.&nbsp; He knew you at
+once: and knew, too,&rdquo; she added bitterly, &ldquo;that he had here
+under his hand one of the two things he required.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why did he hide his knowledge?&rdquo; the young man retorted
+sharply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; she answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;To induce me to waive
+the other condition in the hope of saving you.&nbsp; Oh!&rdquo; she
+continued in a tone of bitter raillery, &ldquo;he has the cunning of
+hell, of the priests!&nbsp; You are no match for him, Monsieur.&nbsp;
+Nor I; nor any of us.&nbsp; And&rdquo;&mdash;with a gesture of despair&mdash;&ldquo;he
+will be my master!&nbsp; He will break me to his will and to his hand!&nbsp;
+I shall be his!&nbsp; His, body and soul, body and soul!&rdquo; she
+continued drearily, as she sank into a chair and, rocking herself to
+and fro, covered her face.&nbsp; &ldquo;I shall be his!&nbsp; His till
+I die!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man&rsquo;s eyes burned, and the pulse in his temples beat wildly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you shall not!&rdquo; he exclaimed.&nbsp; &ldquo;I may
+be no match for him in cunning, you say well.&nbsp; But I can kill him.&nbsp;
+And I will!&rdquo;&nbsp; He paced up and down.&nbsp; &ldquo;I will!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You should have done it when he was here,&rdquo; she answered,
+half in scorn, half in earnest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is not too late,&rdquo; he cried; and then he stopped,
+silenced by the opening door.&nbsp; It was Javette who entered.&nbsp;
+They looked at her, and before she spoke were on their feet.&nbsp; Her
+face, white and eager, marking something besides fear, announced that
+she brought news.&nbsp; She closed the door behind her, and in a moment
+it was told.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Monsieur can escape, if he is quick,&rdquo; she cried in a
+low tone; and they saw that she trembled with excitement.&nbsp; &ldquo;They
+are at supper.&nbsp; But he must be quick!&nbsp; He must be quick!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is not the door guarded?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is, but&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he knows!&nbsp; Your mistress says that he knows that
+I am here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For a moment Javette looked startled.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is possible,&rdquo;
+she muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;But he has gone out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madame Carlat clapped her hands.&nbsp; &ldquo;I heard the door close,&rdquo;
+she said, &ldquo;three minutes ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And if Monsieur can reach the room in which he supped last
+night, the window that was broken is only blocked&rdquo;&mdash;she swallowed
+once or twice in her excitement&mdash;&ldquo;with something he can move.&nbsp;
+And then Monsieur is in the street, where his cowl will protect him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But Count Hannibal&rsquo;s men?&rdquo; he asked eagerly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are eating in the lodge by the door.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha!&nbsp; And they cannot see the other room from there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Javette nodded.&nbsp; Her tale told, she seemed to be unable to add
+a word.&nbsp; Mademoiselle, who knew her for a craven, wondered that
+she had found courage either to note what she had or to bring the news.&nbsp;
+But as Providence had been so good to them as to put it into this woman&rsquo;s
+head to act as she had, it behoved them to use the opportunity&mdash;the
+last, the very last opportunity they might have.</p>
+<p>She turned to Tignonville.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, go!&rdquo; she cried
+feverishly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go, I beg!&nbsp; Go now, Monsieur!&nbsp; The
+greatest kindness you can do me is to place yourself as quickly as possible
+beyond his reach.&rdquo;&nbsp; A faint colour, the flush of hope, had
+returned to her cheeks.&nbsp; Her eyes glittered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right, Mademoiselle!&rdquo; he cried, obedient for once, &ldquo;I
+go!&nbsp; And do you be of good courage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He held her hand: an instant, then, moving to the door, he opened
+it and listened.&nbsp; They all pressed behind him to hear.&nbsp; A
+murmur of voices, low and distant, mounted the staircase and bore out
+the girl&rsquo;s tale; apart from this the house was silent.&nbsp; Tignonville
+cast a last look at Mademoiselle, and, with a gesture of farewell, glided
+a-tiptoe to the stairs and began to descend, his face hidden in his
+cowl.&nbsp; They watched him reach the angle of the staircase, they
+watched him vanish beyond it; and still they listened, looking at one
+another when a board creaked or the voices below were hushed for a moment.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII.&nbsp; THE DUEL.</h2>
+<p>At the foot of the staircase Tignonville paused.&nbsp; The droning
+Norman voices of the men on guard issued from an open door a few paces
+before him on the left.&nbsp; He caught a jest, the coarse chuckling
+laughter which attended it, and the gurgle of applause which followed;
+and he knew that at any moment one of the men might step out and discover
+him.&nbsp; Fortunately the door of the room with the shattered window
+was almost within reach of his hand on the right side of the passage,
+and he stepped softly to it.&nbsp; He stood an instant hesitating, his
+hand on the latch; then, alarmed by a movement in the guard-room, as
+if some were rising, he pushed the door in a panic, slid into the room,
+and shut the door behind him.&nbsp; He was safe, and he had made no
+noise; but at the table, at supper, with his back to him and his face
+to the partly closed window, sat Count Hannibal!</p>
+<p>The young man&rsquo;s heart stood still.&nbsp; For a long minute
+he gazed at the Count&rsquo;s back, spellbound and unable to stir.&nbsp;
+Then, as Tavannes ate on without looking round, he began to take courage.&nbsp;
+Possibly he had entered so quietly that he had not been heard, or possibly
+his entrance was taken for that of a servant.&nbsp; In either case,
+there was a chance that he might retire after the same fashion; and
+he had actually raised the latch, and was drawing the door to him with
+infinite precaution, when Tavannes&rsquo; voice struck him, as it were,
+in the face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pray do not admit the draught, M. de Tignonville,&rdquo; he
+said, without looking round.&nbsp; &ldquo;In your cowl you do not feel
+it, but it is otherwise with me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The unfortunate Tignonville stood transfixed, glaring at the back
+of the other&rsquo;s head.&nbsp; For an instant he could not find his
+voice.&nbsp; At last&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Curse you!&rdquo; he hissed in a transport of rage.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Curse you!&nbsp; You did know, then?&nbsp; And she was right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you mean that I expected you, to be sure, Monsieur,&rdquo;
+Count Hannibal answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;See, your place is laid.&nbsp;
+You will not feel the air from without there.&nbsp; The very becoming
+dress which you have adopted secures you from cold.&nbsp; But&mdash;do
+you not find it somewhat oppressive this summer weather?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Curse you!&rdquo; the young man cried, trembling.</p>
+<p>Tavannes turned and looked at him with a dark smile.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+curse may fall,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but I fancy it will not be in
+consequence of your petitions, Monsieur.&nbsp; And now, were it not
+better you played the man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I were armed,&rdquo; the other cried passionately, &ldquo;you
+would not insult me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sit down, sir, sit down,&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered sternly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;We will talk of that presently.&nbsp; In the mean time I have
+something to say to you.&nbsp; Will you not eat?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Tignonville would not.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered; and he went on
+with his supper.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am indifferent whether you eat or not.&nbsp;
+It is enough for me that you are one of the two things I lacked an hour
+ago; and that I have you, M. de Tignonville.&nbsp; And through you I
+look to obtain the other.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What other?&rdquo; Tignonville cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A minister,&rdquo; Tavannes answered, smiling.&nbsp; &ldquo;A
+minister.&nbsp; There are not many left in Paris&mdash;of your faith.&nbsp;
+But you met one this morning, I know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I?&nbsp; I met one?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Monsieur, you!&nbsp; And can lay your hand on him in
+five minutes, you know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. de Tignonville gasped.&nbsp; His face turned a shade paler.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have a spy,&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;You have a spy
+upstairs!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tavannes raised his cup to his lips, and drank.&nbsp; When he had
+set it down&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It may be,&rdquo; he said, and he shrugged his shoulders.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I know, it boots not how I know.&nbsp; It is my business to make
+the most of my knowledge&mdash;and of yours!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. de Tignonville laughed rudely.&nbsp; &ldquo;Make the most of your
+own,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;you will have none of mine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That remains to be seen,&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Carry your mind back two days, M. de Tignonville.&nbsp; Had I
+gone to Mademoiselle de Vrillac last Saturday and said to her &lsquo;Marry
+me, or promise to marry me,&rsquo; what answer would she have given?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She would have called you an insolent!&rdquo; the young man
+replied hotly.&nbsp; &ldquo;And I&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No matter what you would have done!&rdquo; Tavannes said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Suffice it that she would have answered as you suggest.&nbsp;
+Yet to-day she has given me her promise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; the young man retorted, &ldquo;in circumstances
+in which no man of honour&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let us say in peculiar circumstances.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which still exist!&nbsp; Mark me, M. de Tignonville,&rdquo;
+Count Hannibal continued, leaning forward and eyeing the young man with
+meaning, &ldquo;<i>which still exist</i>!&nbsp; And may have the same
+effect on another&rsquo;s will as on hers!&nbsp; Listen!&nbsp; Do you
+hear?&rdquo;&nbsp; And rising from his seat with a darkening face, he
+pointed to the partly shuttered window, through which the measured tramp
+of a body of men came heavily to the ear.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you hear,
+Monsieur?&nbsp; Do you understand?&nbsp; As it was yesterday it is to-day!&nbsp;
+They killed the President La Place this morning!&nbsp; And they are
+searching!&nbsp; They are still searching!&nbsp; The river is not yet
+full, nor the gibbet glutted!&nbsp; I have but to open that window and
+denounce you, and your life would hang by no stronger thread than the
+life of a mad dog which they chase through the streets!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The younger man had risen also.&nbsp; He stood confronting Tavannes,
+the cowl fallen back from his face, his eyes dilated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You think to frighten me!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+think that I am craven enough to sacrifice her to save myself.&nbsp;
+You&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were craven enough to draw back yesterday, when you stood
+at this window and waited for death!&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered
+brutally.&nbsp; &ldquo;You flinched then, and may flinch again!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Try me!&rdquo; Tignonville retorted, trembling with passion.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Try me!&rdquo;&nbsp; And then, as the other stared at him and
+made no movement, &ldquo;But you dare not!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+dare not!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&nbsp; For if I die you lose her!&rdquo; Tignonville replied
+in a voice of triumph.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ha, ha!&nbsp; I touch you there!&rdquo;
+he continued.&nbsp; &ldquo;You dare not, for my safety is part of the
+price, and is more to you than it is to myself!&nbsp; You may threaten,
+M. de Tavannes, you may bluster, and shout and point to the window&rdquo;&mdash;and
+he mocked, with a disdainful mimicry, the other&rsquo;s gesture&mdash;&ldquo;but
+my safety is more to you than to me!&nbsp; And &rsquo;twill end there!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You believe that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In two strides Count Hannibal was at the window.&nbsp; He seized
+a great piece of the boarding which closed one-half of the opening;
+he wrenched it away.&nbsp; A flood of evening light burst in through
+the aperture, and fell on and heightened the flushed passion of his
+features, as he turned again to his opponent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then if you know it,&rdquo; he cried vehemently, &ldquo;in
+God&rsquo;s name act upon it!&rdquo;&nbsp; And he pointed to the window.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Act upon it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, act upon it!&rdquo; Tavannes repeated, with a glance of
+flame.&nbsp; &ldquo;The road is open!&nbsp; If you would save your mistress,
+behold the way!&nbsp; If you would save her from the embrace she abhors,
+from the eyes under which she trembles, from the hand of a master, there
+lies the way!&nbsp; And it is not her glove only you will save, but
+herself, her soul, her body!&nbsp; So,&rdquo; he continued, with a certain
+wildness, and in a tone wherein contempt and bitterness were mingled,
+&ldquo;to the lions, brave lover!&nbsp; Will you your life for her honour?&nbsp;
+Will you death that she may live a maid?&nbsp; Will you your head to
+save her finger?&nbsp; Then, leap down! leap down!&nbsp; The lists are
+open, the sand is strewed!&nbsp; Out of your own mouth I have it that
+if you perish she is saved!&nbsp; Then out, Monsieur!&nbsp; Cry &lsquo;I
+am a Huguenot!&rsquo;&nbsp; And God&rsquo;s will be done!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville was livid.&nbsp; &ldquo;Rather, your will!&rdquo; he
+panted.&nbsp; &ldquo;Your will, you devil!&nbsp; Nevertheless&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will go!&nbsp; Ha! ha!&nbsp; You will go!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For an instant it seemed that he would go.&nbsp; Stung by the challenge,
+wrought on by the contempt in which Tavannes held him, he shot a look
+of hate at the tempter; he caught his breath, and laid his hand on the
+edge of the shuttering as if he would leap out.</p>
+<p>But it goes hard with him who has once turned back from the foe.&nbsp;
+The evening light, glancing cold on the burnished pike-points of a group
+of archers who stood near, caught his eye and went chill to his heart.&nbsp;
+Death, not in the arena, not in the sight of shouting thousands, but
+in this darkening street, with an enemy laughing from the window, death
+with no revenge to follow, with no certainty that after all she would
+be safe, such a death could be compassed only by pure love&mdash;the
+love of a child for a parent, of a parent for a child, of a man for
+the one woman in the world!</p>
+<p>He recoiled.&nbsp; &ldquo;You would not spare her!&rdquo; he cried,
+his face damp with sweat&mdash;for he knew now that he would not go.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You want to be rid of me!&nbsp; You would fool me, and then&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Out of your own mouth you are convict!&rdquo; Count Hannibal
+retorted gravely.&nbsp; &ldquo;It was you who said it!&nbsp; But still
+I swear it!&nbsp; Shall I swear it to you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Tignonville recoiled another step and was silent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No?&nbsp; O <i>preux chevalier</i>, O gallant knight!&nbsp;
+I knew it!&nbsp; Do you think that I did not know with whom I had to
+deal?&rdquo;&nbsp; And Count Hannibal burst into harsh laughter, turning
+his back on the other, as if he no longer counted.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+will neither die with her nor for her!&nbsp; You were better in her
+petticoats and she in your breeches!&nbsp; Or no, you are best as you
+are, good father!&nbsp; Take my advice, M. de Tignonville, have done
+with arms; and with a string of beads, and soft words, and talk of Holy
+Mother Church, you will fool the women as surely as the best of them!&nbsp;
+They are not all like my cousin, a flouting, gibing, jeering woman&mdash;you
+had poor fortune there, I fear?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I had a sword!&rdquo; Tignonville hissed, his face livid
+with rage.&nbsp; &ldquo;You call me coward, because I will not die to
+please you.&nbsp; But give me a sword, and I will show you if I am a
+coward!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tavannes stood still.&nbsp; &ldquo;You are there, are you?&rdquo;
+he said in an altered tone.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give me a sword,&rdquo; Tignonville repeated, holding out
+his open trembling hands.&nbsp; &ldquo;A sword!&nbsp; A sword!&nbsp;
+&rsquo;Tis easy taunting an unarmed man, but&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You wish to fight?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ask no more!&nbsp; No more!&nbsp; Give me a sword,&rdquo;
+he urged, his voice quivering with eagerness.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is you
+who are the coward!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal stared at him.&nbsp; &ldquo;And what am I to get by
+fighting you?&rdquo; he reasoned slowly.&nbsp; &ldquo;You are in my
+power.&nbsp; I can do with you as I please.&nbsp; I can call from this
+window and denounce you, or I can summon my men&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Coward!&nbsp; Coward!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay?&nbsp; Well, I will tell you what I will do,&rdquo; with
+a subtle smile.&nbsp; &ldquo;I will give you a sword, M. de Tignonville,
+and I will meet you foot to foot here, in this room, on a condition.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it?&nbsp; What is it?&rdquo; the young man cried with
+incredible eagerness.&nbsp; &ldquo;Name your condition!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That if I get the better of you, you find me a minister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I find you a&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A minister.&nbsp; Yes, that is it.&nbsp; Or tell me where
+I can find one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The young man recoiled.&nbsp; &ldquo;Never!&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You know where to find one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never!&nbsp; Never!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can lay your hand on one in five minutes, you know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I shall not fight you!&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered
+coolly; and he turned from him, and back again.&nbsp; &ldquo;You will
+pardon me if I say, M. de Tignonville, that you are in as many minds
+about fighting as about dying!&nbsp; I do not think that you would have
+made your fortune at Court.&nbsp; Moreover, there is a thing which I
+fancy you have not considered.&nbsp; If we fight you may kill me, in
+which case the condition will not help me much.&nbsp; Or I&mdash;which
+is more likely&mdash;&rdquo; he added, with a harsh smile, &ldquo;may
+kill you, and again I am no better placed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The young man&rsquo;s pallid features betrayed the conflict in his
+breast.&nbsp; To do him justice, his hand itched for the sword-hilt&mdash;he
+was brave enough for that; he hated, and only so could he avenge himself.&nbsp;
+But the penalty if he had the worse!&nbsp; And yet what of it?&nbsp;
+He was in hell now, in a hell of humiliation, shame, defeat, tormented
+by this fiend!&nbsp; &rsquo;Twas only to risk a lower hell.</p>
+<p>At last, &ldquo;I will do it!&rdquo; he cried hoarsely.&nbsp; &ldquo;Give
+me a sword and look to yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You promise?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, I promise!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good,&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered suavely, &ldquo;but we
+cannot fight so, we must have more light.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And striding to the door he opened it, and calling the Norman bade
+him move the table and bring candles&mdash;a dozen candles; for in the
+narrow streets the light was waning, and in the half-shuttered room
+it was growing dusk.&nbsp; Tignonville, listening with a throbbing brain,
+wondered that the attendant expressed no surprise and said no word&mdash;until
+Tavannes added to his orders one for a pair of swords.</p>
+<p>Then, &ldquo;Monsieur&rsquo;s sword is here,&rdquo; Bigot answered
+in his half-intelligible patois.&nbsp; &ldquo;He left it here yester
+morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are a good fellow, Bigot,&rdquo; Tavannes answered, with
+a gaiety and good-humour which astonished Tignonville.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+one of these days you shall marry Suzanne.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Norman smiled sourly and went in search of the weapon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have a poniard?&rdquo; Count Hannibal continued in the
+same tone of unusual good temper, which had already struck Tignonville.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Excellent!&nbsp; Will you strip, then, or&mdash;as we are?&nbsp;
+Very good, Monsieur; in the unlikely event of fortune declaring for
+you, you will be in a better condition to take care of yourself.&nbsp;
+A man running through the streets in his shirt is exposed to inconveniences!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And he laughed gaily.</p>
+<p>While he laughed the other listened; and his rage began to give place
+to wonder.&nbsp; A man who regarded as a pastime a sword and dagger
+conflict between four walls, who, having his adversary in his power,
+was ready to discard the advantage, to descend into the lists, and to
+risk life for a whim, a fancy&mdash;such a man was outside his experience,
+though in Poitou in those days of war were men reckoned brave.&nbsp;
+For what, he asked himself as he waited, had Tavannes to gain by fighting?&nbsp;
+The possession of Mademoiselle?&nbsp; But Mademoiselle, if his passion
+for her overwhelmed him, was in his power; and if his promise were a
+barrier&mdash;which seemed inconceivable in the light of his reputation&mdash;he
+had only to wait, and to-morrow, or the next day, or the next, a minister
+would be found, and without risk he could gain that for which he was
+now risking all.</p>
+<p>Tignonville did not know that it was in the other&rsquo;s nature
+to find pleasure in such utmost ventures.&nbsp; Nevertheless the recklessness
+to which Tavannes&rsquo; action bore witness had its effect upon him.&nbsp;
+By the time the young man&rsquo;s sword arrived something of his passion
+for the conflict had evaporated; and though the touch of the hilt restored
+his determination, the locked door, the confined space, and the unaccustomed
+light went a certain distance towards substituting despair for courage.</p>
+<p>The use of the dagger in the duels of that day, however, rendered
+despair itself formidable.&nbsp; And Tignonville, when he took his place,
+appeared anything but a mean antagonist.&nbsp; He had removed his robe
+and cowl, and lithe and active as a cat he stood as it were on springs,
+throwing his weight now on this foot and now on that, and was continually
+in motion.&nbsp; The table bearing the candles had been pushed against
+the window, the boarding of which had been replaced by Bigot before
+he left the room.&nbsp; Tignonville had this, and consequently the lights,
+on his dagger hand; and he plumed himself on the advantage, considering
+his point the more difficult to follow.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal did not seem to notice this, however.&nbsp; &ldquo;Are
+you ready?&rdquo; he asked.&nbsp; And then&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On guard!&rdquo; he cried, and he stamped the echo to the
+word.&nbsp; But, that done, instead of bearing the other down with a
+headlong rush characteristic of the man&mdash;as Tignonville feared&mdash;he
+held off warily, stooping low; and when his slow opening was met by
+one as cautious, he began to taunt his antagonist.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come!&rdquo; he cried, and feinted half-heartedly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Come,
+Monsieur, are we going to fight, or play at fighting?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fight yourself, then!&rdquo; Tignonville answered, his breath
+quickened by excitement and growing hope.&nbsp; &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis not
+I hold back!&rdquo;&nbsp; And he lunged, but was put aside.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&Ccedil;a! &ccedil;a!&rdquo; Tavannes retorted; and he lunged
+and parried in his turn, but loosely and at a distance.</p>
+<p>After which the two moved nearer the door, their eyes glittering
+as they watched one another, their knees bent, the sinews of their backs
+straining for the leap.&nbsp; Suddenly Tavannes thrust, and leapt away,
+and as his antagonist thrust in return the Count swept the blade aside
+with a strong parry, and for a moment seemed to be on the point of falling
+on Tignonville with the poniard.&nbsp; But Tignonville retired his right
+foot nimbly, which brought them front to front again.&nbsp; And the
+younger man laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Try again, M. le Comte!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; And, with the
+word, he dashed in himself quick as light; for a second the blades ground
+on one another, the daggers hovered, the two suffused faces glared into
+one another; then the pair disengaged again.</p>
+<p>The blood trickled from a scratch on Count Hannibal&rsquo;s neck;
+half an inch to the right and the point had found his throat.&nbsp;
+And Tignonville, elated, laughed anew, and swaying from side to side
+on his hips, watched with growing confidence for a second chance.&nbsp;
+Lithe as one of the leopards Charles kept at the Louvre, he stooped
+lower and lower, and more and more with each moment took the attitude
+of the assailant, watching for an opening; while Count Hannibal, his
+face dark and his eyes vigilant, stood increasingly on the defence.&nbsp;
+The light was waning a little, the wicks of the candles were burning
+long; but neither noticed it or dared to remove his eyes from the other&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+Their laboured breathing found an echo on the farther side of the door,
+but this again neither observed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; Count Hannibal said at last.&nbsp; &ldquo;Are
+you coming?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When I please,&rdquo; Tignonville answered; and he feinted
+but drew back.</p>
+<p>The other did the same, and again they watched one another, their
+eyes seeming to grow smaller and smaller.&nbsp; Gradually a smile had
+birth on Tignonville&rsquo;s lips.&nbsp; He thrust!&nbsp; It was parried!&nbsp;
+He thrust again&mdash;parried!&nbsp; Tavannes, grown still more cautious,
+gave a yard.&nbsp; Tignonville pushed on, but did not allow confidence
+to master caution.&nbsp; He began, indeed, to taunt his adversary; to
+flout and jeer him.&nbsp; But it was with a motive.</p>
+<p>For suddenly, in the middle of a sentence, he repeated the peculiar
+thrust which had been successful before.&nbsp; This time, however, Tavannes
+was ready.&nbsp; He put aside the blade with a quick parade, and instead
+of making a riposte sprang within the other&rsquo;s guard.&nbsp; The
+two came face to face and breast to shoulder, and struck furiously with
+their daggers.&nbsp; Count Hannibal was outside his opponent&rsquo;s
+sword and had the advantage.&nbsp; Tignonville&rsquo;s dagger fell,
+but glanced off the metalwork of the other&rsquo;s hilt; Tavannes&rsquo;
+fell swift and hard between the young man&rsquo;s eyes.&nbsp; The Huguenot
+flung up his hands and staggered back, falling his length on the floor.</p>
+<p>In an instant Count Hannibal was on his breast, and had knocked away
+his dagger.&nbsp; Then&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You own yourself vanquished?&rdquo; he cried.</p>
+<p>The young man, blinded by the blood which trickled down his face,
+made a sign with his hands.&nbsp; Count Hannibal rose to his feet again,
+and stood a moment looking at his foe without speaking.&nbsp; Presently
+he seemed to be satisfied.&nbsp; He nodded, and going to the table dipped
+a napkin in water.&nbsp; He brought it, and carefully supporting Tignonville&rsquo;s
+head, laved his brow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is as I thought,&rdquo; he said, when he had stanched the
+blood.&nbsp; &ldquo;You are not hurt, man.&nbsp; You are stunned.&nbsp;
+It is no more than a bruise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The young man was coming to himself.&nbsp; &ldquo;But I thought&mdash;&rdquo;
+he muttered, and broke off to pass his hand over his face.&nbsp; Then
+he got up slowly, reeling a little, &ldquo;I thought it was the point,&rdquo;
+he muttered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, it was the pommel,&rdquo; Tavannes answered dryly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It would not have served me to kill you.&nbsp; I could have done
+that ten times.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville groaned, and, sitting down at the table, held the napkin
+to his aching head.&nbsp; One of the candles had been overturned in
+the struggle and lay on the floor, flaring in a little pool of grease.&nbsp;
+Tavannes set his heel upon it; then, striding to the farther end of
+the room, he picked up Tignonville&rsquo;s dagger and placed it beside
+his sword on the table.&nbsp; He looked about to see if aught else remained
+to do, and, finding nothing, he returned to Tignonville&rsquo;s side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Monsieur,&rdquo; he said in a voice hard and constrained,
+&ldquo;I must ask you to perform your part of the bargain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A groan of anguish broke from the unhappy man.&nbsp; And yet he had
+set his life on the cast; what more could he have done?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will not harm him?&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He shall go safe,&rdquo; Count Hannibal replied gravely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And&mdash;&rdquo; he fought a moment with his pride, then
+blurted out the words, &ldquo;you will not tell her&mdash;that it was
+through me&mdash;you found him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will not,&rdquo; Tavannes answered in the same tone.&nbsp;
+He stooped and picked up the other&rsquo;s robe and cowl, which had
+fallen from a chair&mdash;so that as he spoke his eyes were averted.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She shall never know through me,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>And Tignonville, his face hidden in his hands, told him.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.&nbsp; ANDROMEDA, PERSEUS BEING ABSENT.</h2>
+<p>Little by little&mdash;while they fought below&mdash;the gloom had
+thickened, and night had fallen in the room above.&nbsp; But Mademoiselle
+would not have candles brought.&nbsp; Seated in the darkness, on the
+uppermost step of the stairs, her hands clasped about her knees, she
+listened and listened, as if by that action she could avert misfortune;
+or as if, by going so far forward to meet it, she could turn aside the
+worst.&nbsp; The women shivering in the darkness about her would fain
+have struck a light and drawn her back into the room, for they felt
+safer there.&nbsp; But she was not to be moved.&nbsp; The laughter and
+chatter of the men in the guard-room, the coming and going of Bigot
+as he passed, below but out of sight, had no terrors for her; nay, she
+breathed more freely on the bare open landing of the staircase than
+in the close confines of a room which her fears made hateful to her.&nbsp;
+Here at least she could listen, her face unseen; and listening she bore
+the suspense more easily.</p>
+<p>A turn in the staircase, with the noise which proceeded from the
+guard-room, rendered it difficult to hear what happened in the closed
+room below.&nbsp; But she thought that if an alarm were raised there
+she must hear it; and as the moments passed and nothing happened, she
+began to feel confident that her lover had made good his escape by the
+window.</p>
+<p>Presently she got a fright.&nbsp; Three or four men came from the
+guard-room and went, as it seemed to her, to the door of the room with
+the shattered casement.&nbsp; She told herself that she had rejoiced
+too soon, and her heart stood still.&nbsp; She waited for a rush of
+feet, a cry, a struggle.&nbsp; But except an uncertain muffled sound
+which lasted for some minutes, and was followed by a dull shock, she
+heard nothing more.&nbsp; And presently the men went back whispering,
+the noise in the guard-room which had been partially hushed broke forth
+anew, and perplexed but relieved she breathed again.&nbsp; Surely he
+had escaped by this time.&nbsp; Surely by this time he was far away,
+in the Arsenal, or in some place of refuge!&nbsp; And she might take
+courage, and feel that for this day the peril was overpast.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mademoiselle will have the lights now?&rdquo; one of the women
+ventured.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No! no!&rdquo; she answered feverishly, and she continued
+to crouch where she was on the stairs, bathing herself and her burning
+face in the darkness and coolness of the stairway.&nbsp; The air entered
+freely through a window at her elbow, and the place was fresher, were
+that all, than the room she had left.&nbsp; Javette began to whimper,
+but she paid no heed to her; a man came and went along the passage below,
+and she heard the outer door unbarred, and the jarring tread of three
+or four men who passed through it.&nbsp; But all without disturbance;
+and afterwards the house was quiet again.&nbsp; And as on this Monday
+evening the prime virulence of the massacre had begun to abate&mdash;though
+it held after a fashion to the end of the week&mdash;Paris without was
+quiet also.&nbsp; The sounds which had chilled her heart at intervals
+during two days were no longer heard.&nbsp; A feeling almost of peace,
+almost of comfort&mdash;a drowsy feeling, that was three parts a reaction
+from excitement&mdash;took possession of her.&nbsp; In the darkness
+her head sank lower and lower on her knees.&nbsp; And half an hour passed,
+while Javette whimpered, and Madame Carlat slumbered, her broad back
+propped against the wall.</p>
+<p>Suddenly Mademoiselle opened her eyes, and saw, three steps below
+her, a strange man whose upward way she barred.&nbsp; Behind him came
+Carlat, and behind him Bigot, lighting both; and in the confusion of
+her thoughts as she rose to her feet the three, all staring at her in
+a common amazement, seemed a company.&nbsp; The air entering through
+the open window beside her blew the flame of the candle this way and
+that, and added to the nightmare character of the scene; for by the
+shifting light the men seemed to laugh one moment and scowl the next,
+and their shadows were now high and now low on the wall.&nbsp; In truth,
+they were as much amazed at coming on her in that place as she at their
+appearance; but they were awake, and she newly roused from sleep; and
+the advantage was with them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; she cried in a panic.&nbsp; &ldquo;What
+is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If Mademoiselle will return to her room?&rdquo; one of the
+men said courteously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;what is it?&rdquo;&nbsp; She was frightened.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If Mademoiselle&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then she turned without more and went back into the room, and the
+three followed, and her woman and Madame Carlat.&nbsp; She stood resting
+one hand on the table while Javette with shaking fingers lighted the
+candles.&nbsp; Then&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Monsieur,&rdquo; she said in a hard voice, &ldquo;if
+you will tell me your business?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do not know me?&rdquo;&nbsp; The stranger&rsquo;s eyes
+dwelt kindly and pitifully on her.</p>
+<p>She looked at him steadily, crushing down the fears which knocked
+at her heart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;And yet I think I have seen
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You saw me a week last Sunday,&rdquo; the stranger answered
+sorrowfully.&nbsp; &ldquo;My name is La Tribe.&nbsp; I preached that
+day, Mademoiselle, before the King of Navarre.&nbsp; I believe that
+you were there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For a moment she stared at him in silence, her lips parted.&nbsp;
+Then she laughed, a laugh which set the teeth on edge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, he is clever!&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;He has the
+wit of the priests!&nbsp; Or the devil!&nbsp; But you come too late,
+Monsieur!&nbsp; You come too late!&nbsp; The bird has flown.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mademoiselle&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you the bird has flown!&rdquo; she repeated vehemently.&nbsp;
+And her laugh of joyless triumph rang through the room.&nbsp; &ldquo;He
+is clever, but I have outwitted him!&nbsp; I have&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She paused and stared about her wildly, struck by the silence; struck
+too by something solemn, something pitiful in the faces that were turned
+on her.&nbsp; And her lip began to quiver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; she muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why do you look at
+me so?&nbsp; He has not&rdquo;&mdash;she turned from one to another&mdash;&ldquo;he
+has not been taken?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. Tignonville?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is below.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>They expected to see her break down, perhaps to see her fall.&nbsp;
+But she only groped blindly for a chair and sat.&nbsp; And for a moment
+there was silence in the room.&nbsp; It was the Huguenot minister who
+broke it in a tone formal and solemn.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Listen, all present!&rdquo; he said slowly.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+ways of God are past finding out.&nbsp; For two days in the midst of
+great perils I have been preserved by His hand and fed by His bounty,
+and I am told that I shall live if, in this matter, I do the will of
+those who hold me in their power.&nbsp; But be assured&mdash;and hearken
+all,&rdquo; he continued, lowering his voice to a sterner note.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Rather than marry this woman to this man against her will&mdash;if
+indeed in His sight such marriage can be&mdash;rather than save my life
+by such base compliance, I will die not once but ten times!&nbsp; See.&nbsp;
+I am ready!&nbsp; I will make no defence!&rdquo;&nbsp; And he opened
+his arms as if to welcome the stroke.&nbsp; &ldquo;If there be trickery
+here, if there has been practising below, where they told me this and
+that, it shall not avail!&nbsp; Until I hear from Mademoiselle&rsquo;s
+own lips that she is willing, I will not say over her so much as Yea,
+yea, or Nay, nay!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She is willing!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>La Tribe turned sharply, and beheld the speaker.&nbsp; It was Count
+Hannibal, who had entered a few seconds earlier, and had taken his stand
+within the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She is willing!&rdquo; Tavannes repeated quietly.&nbsp; And
+if, in this moment of the fruition of his schemes, he felt his triumph,
+he masked it under a face of sombre purpose.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you doubt
+me, man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From her own lips!&rdquo; the other replied, undaunted&mdash;and
+few could say as much&mdash;by that harsh presence.&nbsp; &ldquo;From
+no other&rsquo;s!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sirrah, you&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can die.&nbsp; And you can no more, my lord!&rdquo; the
+minister answered bravely.&nbsp; &ldquo;You have no threat can move
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not sure of that,&rdquo; Tavannes answered, more blandly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But had you listened to me and been less anxious to be brave,
+M. La Tribe, where no danger is, you had learned that here is no call
+for heroics!&nbsp; Mademoiselle is willing, and will tell you so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With her own lips?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal raised his eyebrows.&nbsp; &ldquo;With her own lips,
+if you will,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; And then, advancing a step and addressing
+her, with unusual gravity, &ldquo;Mademoiselle de Vrillac,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;you hear what this gentleman requires.&nbsp; Will you be
+pleased to confirm what I have said?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She did not answer, and in the intense silence which held the room
+in its freezing grasp a woman choked, another broke into weeping.&nbsp;
+The colour ebbed from the cheeks of more than one; the men fidgeted
+on their feet.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal looked round, his head high.&nbsp; &ldquo;There is
+no call for tears,&rdquo; he said; and whether he spoke in irony or
+in a strange obtuseness was known only to himself.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mademoiselle
+is in no hurry&mdash;and rightly&mdash;to answer a question so momentous.&nbsp;
+Under the pressure of utmost peril, she passed her word; the more reason
+that, now the time has come to redeem it, she should do so at leisure
+and after thought.&nbsp; Since she gave her promise, Monsieur, she has
+had more than one opportunity of evading its fulfilment.&nbsp; But she
+is a Vrillac, and I know that nothing is farther from her thoughts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was silent a moment; and then, &ldquo;Mademoiselle,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;I would not hurry you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her eyes were closed, but at that her lips moved.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+am&mdash;willing,&rdquo; she whispered.&nbsp; And a fluttering sigh,
+of relief, of pity, of God knows what, filled the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are satisfied, M. La Tribe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Man!&rdquo;&nbsp; With a growl as of a tiger, Count Hannibal
+dropped the mask.&nbsp; In two strides he was at the minister&rsquo;s
+side, his hand gripped his shoulder; his face, flushed with passion,
+glared into his.&nbsp; &ldquo;Will you play with lives?&rdquo; he hissed.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If you do not value your own, have you no thought of others?&nbsp;
+Of these?&nbsp; Look and count!&nbsp; Have you no bowels?&nbsp; If she
+will save them, will not you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My own I do not value.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Curse your own!&rdquo; Tavannes cried in furious scorn.&nbsp;
+And he shook the other to and fro.&nbsp; &ldquo;Who thought of your
+life?&nbsp; Will you doom these?&nbsp; Will you give them to the butcher?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; La Tribe answered, shaken in spite of himself,
+&ldquo;if she be willing&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She is willing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have nought to say.&nbsp; But I caught her words indistinctly.&nbsp;
+And without her consent&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She shall speak more plainly.&nbsp; Mademoiselle&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She anticipated him.&nbsp; She had risen, and stood looking straight
+before her, seeing nothing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am willing,&rdquo; she muttered with a strange gesture,
+&ldquo;if it must be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He did not answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it must be,&rdquo; she repeated slowly, and with a heavy
+sigh.&nbsp; And her chin dropped on her breast.&nbsp; Then, abruptly,
+suddenly&mdash;it was a strange thing to see&mdash;she looked up.&nbsp;
+A change as complete as the change which had come over Count Hannibal
+a minute before came over her.&nbsp; She sprang to his side; she clutched
+his arm and devoured his face with her eyes.&nbsp; &ldquo;You are not
+deceiving me?&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;You have Tignonville below?&nbsp;
+You&mdash;oh, no, no!&rdquo;&nbsp; And she fell back from him, her eyes
+distended, her voice grown suddenly shrill and defiant, &ldquo;You have
+not!&nbsp; You are deceiving me!&nbsp; He has escaped, and you have
+lied to me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, you have lied to me!&rdquo;&nbsp; It was the last fierce
+flicker of hope when hope seemed dead: the last clutch of the drowning
+at the straw that floated before the eyes.</p>
+<p>He laughed harshly.&nbsp; &ldquo;You will be my wife in five minutes,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;and you give me the lie?&nbsp; A week, and you will
+know me better!&nbsp; A month, and&mdash;but we will talk of that another
+time.&nbsp; For the present,&rdquo; he continued, turning to La Tribe,
+&ldquo;do you, sir, tell her that the gentleman is below.&nbsp; Perhaps
+she will believe you.&nbsp; For you know him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>La Tribe looked at her sorrowfully; his heart bled for her.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I have seen M. de Tignonville,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+M. le Comte says truly.&nbsp; He is in the same case with ourselves,
+a prisoner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have seen him?&rdquo; she wailed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I left him in the room below, when I mounted the stairs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal laughed, the grim mocking laugh which seemed to revel
+in the pain it inflicted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you have him for a witness?&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;There
+could not be a better, for he will not forget.&nbsp; Shall I fetch him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She bowed her head, shivering.&nbsp; &ldquo;Spare me that,&rdquo;
+she said.&nbsp; And she pressed her hands to her eyes while an uncontrollable
+shudder passed over her frame.&nbsp; Then she stepped forward: &ldquo;I
+am ready,&rdquo; she whispered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do with me as you will!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>When they had all gone out and closed the door behind them, and the
+two whom the minister had joined were left together, Count Hannibal
+continued for a time to pace the room, his hands clasped at his back,
+and his head sunk somewhat on his chest.&nbsp; His thoughts appeared
+to run in a new channel, and one, strange to say, widely diverted from
+his bride and from that which he had just done.&nbsp; For he did not
+look her way, or, for a time, speak to her.&nbsp; He stood once to snuff
+a candle, doing it with an absent face: and once to look, but still
+absently, and as if he read no word of it, at the marriage writing which
+lay, the ink still wet, upon the table.&nbsp; After each of these interruptions
+he resumed his steady pacing to and fro, to and fro, nor did his eye
+wander once in the direction of her chair.</p>
+<p>And she waited.&nbsp; The conflict of emotions, the strife between
+hope and fear, the final defeat had stunned her; had left her exhausted,
+almost apathetic.&nbsp; Yet not quite, nor wholly.&nbsp; For when in
+his walk he came a little nearer to her, a chill perspiration broke
+out on her brow, and shudderings crept over her; and when he passed
+farther from her&mdash;and then only, it seemed&mdash;she breathed again.&nbsp;
+But the change lay beneath the surface, and cheated the eye.&nbsp; Into
+her attitude, as she sat, her hands clasped on her lap, her eyes fixed,
+came no apparent change or shadow of movement.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, with a dull shock, she became aware that he was speaking.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was need of haste,&rdquo; he said, his tone strangely
+low and free from emotion, &ldquo;for I am under bond to leave Paris
+to-morrow for Angers, whither I bear letters from the King.&nbsp; And
+as matters stood, there was no one with whom I could leave you.&nbsp;
+I trust Bigot; he is faithful, and you may trust him, Madame, fair or
+foul!&nbsp; But he is not quick-witted.&nbsp; Badelon, also, you may
+trust.&nbsp; Bear it in mind.&nbsp; Your woman Javette is not faithful;
+but as her life is guaranteed she must stay with us until she can be
+securely placed.&nbsp; Indeed, I must take all with me&mdash;with one
+exception&mdash;for the priests and monks rule Paris, and they do not
+love me, nor would spare aught at my word.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was silent a few moments.&nbsp; Then he resumed in the same tone,
+&ldquo;You ought to know how we, Tavannes, stand.&nbsp; It is by Monsieur
+and the Queen-Mother; and <i>contra</i> the Guises.&nbsp; We have all
+been in this matter; but the latter push and we are pushed, and the
+old crack will reopen.&nbsp; As it is, I cannot answer for much beyond
+the reach of my arm.&nbsp; Therefore, we take all with us except M.
+de Tignonville, who desires to be conducted to the Arsenal.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She had begun to listen with averted eyes.&nbsp; But as he continued
+to speak surprise awoke in her, and something stronger than surprise&mdash;amazement,
+stupefaction.&nbsp; Slowly her eyes came to him, and when he ceased
+to speak&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why do you tell me these things?&rdquo; she muttered, her
+dry lips framing the words with difficulty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because it behoves you to know them,&rdquo; he answered, thoughtfully
+tapping the table.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have no one, save my brother, whom
+I can trust.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She would not ask him why he trusted her, nor why he thought he could
+trust her.&nbsp; For a moment or two she watched him, while he, with
+his eyes lowered, stood in deep thought.&nbsp; At last he looked up
+and his eyes met hers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come!&rdquo; he said abruptly, and in a different tone, &ldquo;we
+must end this!&nbsp; Is it to be a kiss or a blow between us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She rose, though her knees shook under her; and they stood face to
+face, her face white as paper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&mdash;do you mean?&rdquo; she whispered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it to be a kiss or a blow?&rdquo; he repeated.&nbsp; &ldquo;A
+husband must be a lover, Madame, or a master, or both!&nbsp; I am content
+to be the one or the other, or both, as it shall please you.&nbsp; But
+the one I will be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then, a thousand times, a blow,&rdquo; she cried, her eyes
+flaming, &ldquo;from you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He wondered at her courage, but he hid his wonder.&nbsp; &ldquo;So
+be it!&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp; And before she knew what he would be
+at, he struck her sharply across the cheek with the glove which he held
+in his hand.&nbsp; She recoiled with a low cry, and her cheek blazed
+scarlet where he had struck it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So be it!&rdquo; he continued sombrely.&nbsp; &ldquo;The choice
+shall be yours, but you will come to me daily for the one or the other.&nbsp;
+If I cannot be lover, Madame, I will be master.&nbsp; And by this sign
+I will have you know it, daily, and daily remember it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She stared at him, her bosom rising and falling, in an astonishment
+too deep for words.&nbsp; But he did not heed her.&nbsp; He did not
+look at her again.&nbsp; He had already turned to the door, and while
+she looked he passed through it, he closed it behind him.&nbsp; And
+she was alone.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX.&nbsp; IN THE ORL&Eacute;ANNAIS.</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;But you fear him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fear him?&rdquo; Madame St. Lo answered; and, to the surprise
+of the Countess, she made a little face of contempt.&nbsp; &ldquo;No;
+why should I fear him?&nbsp; I fear him no more than the puppy leaping
+at old Sancho&rsquo;s bridle fears his tall playfellow!&nbsp; Or than
+the cloud you see above us fears the wind before which it flies!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+She pointed to a white patch, the size of a man&rsquo;s hand, which
+hung above the hill on their left hand and formed the only speck in
+the blue summer sky.&nbsp; &ldquo;Fear him?&nbsp; Not I!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And, laughing gaily, she put her horse at a narrow rivulet which crossed
+the grassy track on which they rode.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But he is hard?&rdquo; the Countess murmured in a low voice,
+as she regained her companion&rsquo;s side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hard?&rdquo; Madame St. Lo rejoined with a gesture of pride.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Ay, hard as the stones in my jewelled ring!&nbsp; Hard as flint,
+or the nether millstone&mdash;to his enemies!&nbsp; But to women?&nbsp;
+Bah!&nbsp; Who ever heard that he hurt a woman?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, then, is he so feared?&rdquo; the Countess asked, her
+eyes on the subject of their discussion&mdash;a solitary figure riding
+some fifty paces in front of them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because he counts no cost!&rdquo; her companion answered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Because he killed Savillon in the court of the Louvre, though
+he knew his life the forfeit.&nbsp; He would have paid the forfeit too,
+or lost his right hand, if Monsieur, for his brother the Marshal&rsquo;s
+sake, had not intervened.&nbsp; But Savillon had whipped his dog, you
+see.&nbsp; Then he killed the Chevalier de Millaud, but &rsquo;twas
+in fair fight, in the snow, in their shirts.&nbsp; For that, Millaud&rsquo;s
+son lay in wait for him with two, in the passage under the Ch&acirc;telet;
+but Hannibal wounded one, and the others saved themselves.&nbsp; Undoubtedly
+he is feared!&rdquo; she added with the same note of pride in her voice.</p>
+<p>The two who talked, rode at the rear of the little company which
+had left Paris at daybreak two days before, by the Porte St. Jacques.&nbsp;
+Moving steadily south-westward by the lesser roads and bridle-tracks&mdash;for
+Count Hannibal seemed averse from the great road&mdash;they had lain
+the second night in a village three leagues from Bonneval.&nbsp; A journey
+of two days on fresh horses is apt to change scenery and eye alike;
+but seldom has an alteration&mdash;in themselves and all about them&mdash;as
+great as that which blessed this little company, been wrought in so
+short a time.&nbsp; From the stifling wynds and evil-smelling lanes
+of Paris, they had passed to the green uplands, the breezy woods and
+babbling streams of the upper Orl&eacute;annais; from sights and sounds
+the most appalling, to the solitude of the sandy heath, haunt of the
+great bustard, or the sunshine of the hillside, vibrating with the songs
+of larks; from an atmosphere of terror and gloom to the freedom of God&rsquo;s
+earth and sky.&nbsp; Numerous enough&mdash;they numbered a score of
+armed men&mdash;to defy the lawless bands which had their lairs in the
+huge forest of Orleans, they halted where they pleased: at mid-day under
+a grove of chestnut-trees, or among the willows beside a brook; at night,
+if they willed it, under God&rsquo;s heaven.&nbsp; Far, not only from
+Paris, but from the great road, with its gibbets and pillories&mdash;the
+great road which at that date ran through a waste, no peasant living
+willingly within sight of it&mdash;they rode in the morning and in the
+evening, resting in the heat of the day.&nbsp; And though they had left
+Paris with much talk of haste, they rode more at leisure with every
+league.</p>
+<p>For whatever Tavannes&rsquo; motive, it was plain that he was in
+no hurry to reach his destination.&nbsp; Nor for that matter were any
+of his company.&nbsp; Madame St. Lo, who had seized the opportunity
+of escaping from the capital under her cousin&rsquo;s escort, was in
+an ill-humour with cities, and declaimed much on the joys of a cell
+in the woods.&nbsp; For the time the coarsest nature and the dullest
+rider had had enough of alarums and conflicts.</p>
+<p>The whole company, indeed, though it moved in some fashion of array
+with an avant and a rear-guard, the ladies riding together, and Count
+Hannibal proceeding solitary in the midst, formed as peaceful a band,
+and one as innocently diverted, as if no man of them had ever grasped
+pike or blown a match.&nbsp; There was an old rider among them who had
+seen the sack of Rome, and the dead face of the great Constable the
+idol of the Free Companies.&nbsp; But he had a taste for simples and
+much skill in them; and when Madame had once seen Badelon on his knees
+in the grass searching for plants, she lost her fear of him.&nbsp; Bigot,
+with his low brow and matted hair, was the abject slave of Suzanne,
+Madame St. Lo&rsquo;s woman, who twitted him mercilessly on his Norman
+<i>patois</i>, and poured the vials of her scorn on him a dozen times
+a day.&nbsp; In all, with La Tribe and the Carlats, Madame St. Lo&rsquo;s
+servants, and the Countess&rsquo;s following, they numbered not far
+short of two score; and when they halted at noon, and under the shadow
+of some leafy tree, ate their mid-day meal, or drowsed to the tinkle
+of Madame St. Lo&rsquo;s lute, it was difficult to believe that Paris
+existed, or that these same people had so lately left its blood-stained
+pavements.</p>
+<p>They halted this morning a little earlier than usual.&nbsp; Madame
+St. Lo had barely answered her companion&rsquo;s question before the
+subject of their discussion swung himself from old Sancho&rsquo;s back,
+and stood waiting to assist them to dismount.&nbsp; Behind him, where
+the green valley through which the road passed narrowed to a rocky gate,
+an old mill stood among willows at the foot of a mound.&nbsp; On the
+mound behind it a ruined castle which had stood siege in the Hundred
+Years&rsquo; War raised its grey walls; and beyond this the stream which
+turned the mill poured over rocks with a cool rushing sound that proved
+irresistible.&nbsp; The men, their horses watered and hobbled, went
+off, shouting like boys, to bathe below the falls; and after a moment&rsquo;s
+hesitation Count Hannibal rose from the grass on which he had flung
+himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Guard that for me, Madame,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; And he dropped
+a packet, bravely sealed and tied with a silk thread, into the Countess&rsquo;s
+lap.&nbsp; &ldquo;&rsquo;Twill be safer than leaving it in my clothes.&nbsp;
+Oh&eacute;!&rdquo;&nbsp; And he turned to Madame St. Lo.&nbsp; &ldquo;Would
+you fancy a life that was all gipsying, cousin?&rdquo;&nbsp; And if
+there was irony in his voice, there was desire in his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is only one happy man in the world,&rdquo; she answered,
+with conviction.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The hermit of Compi&eacute;gne.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And in a week you would be wild for a masque!&rdquo; he said
+cynically.&nbsp; And turning on his heel he followed the men.</p>
+<p>Madame St. Lo sighed complacently.&nbsp; &ldquo;Heigho!&rdquo; she
+said.&nbsp; &ldquo;He&rsquo;s right!&nbsp; We are never content, <i>ma
+mie</i>!&nbsp; When I am trifling in the Gallery my heart is in the
+greenwood.&nbsp; And when I have eaten black bread and drank spring
+water for a fortnight I do nothing but dream of Zamet&rsquo;s, and white
+mulberry tarts!&nbsp; And you are in the same case.&nbsp; You have saved
+your round white neck, or it has been saved for you, by not so much
+as the thickness of Zamet&rsquo;s pie-crust&mdash;I declare my mouth
+is beginning to water for it!&mdash;and instead of being thankful and
+making the best of things, you are thinking of poor Madame d&rsquo;Yverne,
+or dreaming of your calf-love!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girl&rsquo;s face&mdash;for a girl she was, though they called
+her Madame&mdash;began to work.&nbsp; She struggled a moment with her
+emotion, and then broke down, and fell to weeping silently.&nbsp; For
+two days she had sat in public and not given way.&nbsp; But the reference
+to her lover was too much for her strength.</p>
+<p>Madame St. Lo looked at her with eyes which were not unkindly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sits the wind in that quarter?&rdquo; she murmured.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I thought so!&nbsp; But there, my dear, if you don&rsquo;t put
+that packet in your gown you&rsquo;ll wash out the address!&nbsp; Moreover,
+if you ask me, I don&rsquo;t think the young man is worth it.&nbsp;
+It is only that what we have not got&mdash;we want!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the young Countess had borne to the limit of her powers.&nbsp;
+With an incoherent word she rose to her feet, and walked hurriedly away.&nbsp;
+The thought of what was and of what might have been, the thought of
+the lover who still&mdash;though he no longer seemed, even to her, the
+perfect hero&mdash;held a place in her heart, filled her breast to overflowing.&nbsp;
+She longed for some spot where she could weep unseen; where the sunshine
+and the blue sky would not mock her grief; and seeing in front of her
+a little clump of alders, which grew beside the stream, in a bend that
+in winter was marshy, she hastened towards it.</p>
+<p>Madame St. Lo saw her figure blend with the shadow of the trees.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite <i>&agrave; la</i> Ronsard, I give my word!&rdquo; she
+murmured.&nbsp; &ldquo;And now she is out of sight!&nbsp; <i>La, la</i>!&nbsp;
+I could play at the game myself, and carve sweet sorrow on the barks
+of trees, if it were not so lonesome!&nbsp; And if I had a man!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And gazing pensively at the stream and the willows, my lady tried
+to work herself into a proper frame of mind; now murmuring the name
+of one gallant, and now, finding it unsuited, the name of another.&nbsp;
+But the soft inflection would break into a giggle, and finally into
+a yawn; and, tired of the attempt, she began to pluck grass and throw
+it from her.&nbsp; By-and-by she discovered that Madame Carlat and the
+women, who had their place a little apart, had disappeared; and affrighted
+by the solitude and silence&mdash;for neither of which she was made&mdash;she
+sprang up and stared about her, hoping to discern them.&nbsp; Right
+and left, however, the sweep of hillside curved upward to the skyline,
+lonely and untenanted; behind her the castled rock frowned down on the
+rugged gorge and filled it with dispiriting shadow.&nbsp; Madame St.
+Lo stamped her foot on the turf.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The little fool!&rdquo; she murmured pettishly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Does
+she think that I am to be murdered that she may fatten on sighs?&nbsp;
+Oh, come up, Madame, you must be dragged out of this!&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+she started briskly towards the alders, intent on gaining company as
+quickly as possible.</p>
+<p>She had gone about fifty yards, and had as many more to traverse
+when she halted.&nbsp; A man, bent double, was moving stealthily along
+the farther side of the brook, a little in front of her.&nbsp; Now she
+saw him, now she lost him; now she caught a glimpse of him again, through
+a screen of willow branches.&nbsp; He moved with the utmost caution,
+as a man moves who is pursued or in danger; and for a moment she deemed
+him a peasant whom the bathers had disturbed and who was bent on escaping.&nbsp;
+But when he came opposite to the alder-bed she saw that that was his
+point, for he crouched down, sheltered by a willow, and gazed eagerly
+among the trees, always with his back to her; and then he waved his
+hand to some one in the wood.</p>
+<p>Madame St. Lo drew in her breath.&nbsp; As if he had heard the sound&mdash;which
+was impossible&mdash;the man dropped down where he stood, crawled a
+yard or two on his face, and disappeared.</p>
+<p>Madame stared a moment, expecting to see him or hear him.&nbsp; Then,
+as nothing happened, she screamed.&nbsp; She was a woman of quick impulses,
+essentially feminine; and she screamed three or four times, standing
+where she was, her eyes on the edge of the wood.&nbsp; &ldquo;If that
+does not bring her out, nothing will!&rdquo; she thought.</p>
+<p>It brought her.&nbsp; An instant, and the Countess appeared, and
+hurried in dismay to her side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; the younger woman asked, glancing over
+her shoulder; for all the valley, all the hills were peaceful, and behind
+Madame St. Lo&mdash;but the lady had not discovered it&mdash;the servants
+who had returned were laying the meal.&nbsp; &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+she repeated anxiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who was it?&rdquo; Madame St. Lo asked curtly.&nbsp; She was
+quite calm now.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who was&mdash;who?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The man in the wood?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Countess stared a moment, then laughed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Only the
+old soldier they call Badelon, gathering simples.&nbsp; Did you think
+that he would harm me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was not old Badelon whom I saw!&rdquo; Madame St. Lo retorted.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It was a younger man, who crept along the other side of the brook,
+keeping under cover.&nbsp; When I first saw him he was there,&rdquo;
+she continued, pointing to the place.&nbsp; &ldquo;And he crept on and
+on until he came opposite to you.&nbsp; Then he waved his hand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madame nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if you saw him, who was he?&rdquo; the Countess asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did not see his face,&rdquo; Madame St. Lo answered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But he waved to you.&nbsp; That I saw.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Countess had a thought which slowly flooded her face with crimson.&nbsp;
+Madame St. Lo saw the change, saw the tender light which on a sudden
+softened the other&rsquo;s eyes; and the same thought occurred to her.&nbsp;
+And having a mind to punish her companion for her reticence&mdash;for
+she did not doubt that the girl knew more than she acknowledged&mdash;she
+proposed that they should return and find Badelon, and learn if he had
+seen the man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; Madame Tavannes asked.&nbsp; And she stood stubbornly,
+her head high.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why should we?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To clear it up,&rdquo; the elder woman answered mischievously.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But perhaps, it were better to tell your husband and let his
+men search the coppice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The colour left the Countess&rsquo;s face as quickly as it had come.&nbsp;
+For a moment she was tongue-tied.&nbsp; Then&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have we not had enough of seeking and being sought?&rdquo;
+she cried, more bitterly than befitted the occasion.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why
+should we hunt him?&nbsp; I am not timid, and he did me no harm.&nbsp;
+I beg, Madame, that you will do me the favour of being silent on the
+matter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, if you insist?&nbsp; But what a pother&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did not see him, and he did not see me,&rdquo; Madame de
+Tavannes answered vehemently.&nbsp; &ldquo;I fail, therefore, to understand
+why we should harass him, whoever he be.&nbsp; Besides, M. de Tavannes
+is waiting for us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And M. de Tignonville&mdash;is following us!&rdquo; Madame
+St. Lo muttered under her breath.&nbsp; And she made a face at the other&rsquo;s
+back.</p>
+<p>She was silent, however.&nbsp; They returned to the others and nothing
+of import, it would seem, had happened.&nbsp; The soft summer air played
+on the meal laid under the willows as it had played on the meal of yesterday
+laid under the chestnut-trees.&nbsp; The horses grazed within sight,
+moving now and again, with a jingle of trappings or a jealous neigh:
+the women&rsquo;s chatter vied with the unceasing sound of the mill-stream.&nbsp;
+After dinner, Madame St. Lo touched the lute, and Badelon&mdash;Badelon
+who had seen the sack of the Colonna&rsquo;s Palace, and been served
+by cardinals on the knee&mdash;fed a water-rat, which had its home in
+one of the willow-stumps, with carrot-parings.&nbsp; One by one the
+men laid themselves to sleep with their faces on their arms; and to
+the eyes all was as all had been yesterday in this camp of armed men
+living peacefully.</p>
+<p>But not to the Countess!&nbsp; She had accepted her life, she had
+resigned herself, she had marvelled that it was no worse.&nbsp; After
+the horrors of Paris the calm of the last two days had fallen on her
+as balm on a wound.&nbsp; Worn out in body and mind, she had rested,
+and only rested; without thought, almost without emotion, save for the
+feeling, half fear, half curiosity, which stirred her in regard to the
+strange man, her husband.&nbsp; Who on his side left her alone.</p>
+<p>But the last hour had wrought a change.&nbsp; Her eyes were grown
+restless, her colour came and went.&nbsp; The past stirred in its shallow&mdash;ah,
+so shallow&mdash;grave; and dead hopes and dead forebodings, strive
+as she might, thrust out hands to plague and torment her.&nbsp; If the
+man who sought to speak with her by stealth, who dogged her footsteps
+and hung on the skirts of her party, were Tignonville&mdash;her lover,
+who at his own request had been escorted to the Arsenal before their
+departure from Paris&mdash;then her plight was a sorry one.&nbsp; For
+what woman, wedded as she had been wedded, could think otherwise than
+indulgently of his persistence?&nbsp; And yet, lover and husband!&nbsp;
+What peril, what shame the words had often spelled!&nbsp; At the thought
+only she trembled and her colour ebbed.&nbsp; She saw, as one who stands
+on the brink of a precipice, the depth which yawned before her.&nbsp;
+She asked herself, shivering, if she would ever sink to <i>that</i>.</p>
+<p>All the loyalty of a strong nature, all the virtue of a good woman,
+revolted against the thought.&nbsp; True, her husband&mdash;husband
+she must call him&mdash;had not deserved her love; but his bizarre magnanimity,
+the gloomy, disdainful kindness with which he had crowned possession,
+even the unity of their interests, which he had impressed upon her in
+so strange a fashion, claimed a return in honour.</p>
+<p>To be paid&mdash;how? how?&nbsp; That was the crux which perplexed,
+which frightened, which harassed her.&nbsp; For, if she told her suspicions,
+she exposed her lover to capture by one who had no longer a reason to
+be merciful.&nbsp; And if she sought occasion to see Tignonville and
+so to dissuade him, she did it at deadly risk to herself.&nbsp; Yet
+what other course lay open to her if she would not stand by?&nbsp; If
+she would not play the traitor?&nbsp; If she&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madame,&rdquo;&mdash;it was her husband, and he spoke to her
+suddenly,&mdash;&ldquo;are you not well?&rdquo;&nbsp; And, looking up
+guiltily, she found his eyes fixed curiously on hers.</p>
+<p>Her face turned red and white and red again, and she faltered something
+and looked from him, but only to meet Madame St. Lo&rsquo;s eyes.&nbsp;
+My lady laughed softly in sheer mischief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; Count Hannibal asked sharply.</p>
+<p>But Madame St. Lo&rsquo;s answer was a line of Ronsard.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX.&nbsp; ON THE CASTLE HILL.</h2>
+<p>Thrice she hummed it, bland and smiling.&nbsp; Then from the neighbouring
+group came an interruption.&nbsp; The wine he had drunk had put it into
+Bigot&rsquo;s head to snatch a kiss from Suzanne; and Suzanne&rsquo;s
+modesty, which was very nice in company, obliged her to squeal.&nbsp;
+The uproar which ensued, the men backing the man and the women the woman,
+brought Tavannes to his feet.&nbsp; He did not speak, but a glance from
+his eyes was enough.&nbsp; There was not one who failed to see that
+something was amiss with him, and a sudden silence fell on the party.</p>
+<p>He turned to the Countess.&nbsp; &ldquo;You wished to see the castle?&rdquo;
+he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;You had better go now, but not alone.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He cast his eyes over the company, and summoned La Tribe, who was seated
+with the Carlats.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go with Madame,&rdquo; he said curtly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She has a mind to climb the hill.&nbsp; Bear in mind, we start
+at three, and do not venture out of hearing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I understand, M. le Comte,&rdquo; the minister answered.&nbsp;
+He spoke quietly, but there was a strange light in his face as he turned
+to go with her.</p>
+<p>None the less he was silent until Madame&rsquo;s lagging feet&mdash;for
+all her interest in the expedition was gone&mdash;had borne her a hundred
+paces from the company.&nbsp; Then&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who knoweth our thoughts and forerunneth all our desires,&rdquo;
+he murmured.&nbsp; And when she turned to him, astonished, &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo;
+he continued, &ldquo;I have prayed, ah, how I have prayed, for this
+opportunity of speaking to you!&nbsp; And it has come.&nbsp; I would
+it had come this morning, but it has come.&nbsp; Do not start or look
+round; many eyes are on us, and, alas! I have that to say to you which
+it will move you to hear, and that to ask of you which it must task
+your courage to perform.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She began to tremble, and stood looking up the green slope to the
+broken grey wall which crowned its summit.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; she whispered, commanding herself with
+an effort.&nbsp; &ldquo;What is it?&nbsp; If it have aught to do with
+M. Tignonville&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It has not!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In her surprise&mdash;for although she had put the question she had
+felt no doubt of the answer&mdash;she started and turned to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It has not?&rdquo; she exclaimed almost incredulously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then what is it, Monsieur?&rdquo; she replied, a little haughtily.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What can there be that should move me so?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Life or death, Madame,&rdquo; he answered solemnly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Nay, more; for since Providence has given me this chance of speaking
+to you, a thing of which I despaired, I know that the burden is laid
+on us, and that it is guilt or it is innocence, according as we refuse
+the burden or bear it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it, then?&rdquo; she cried impatiently.&nbsp; &ldquo;What
+is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tried to speak to you this morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was it you, then, whom Madame St. Lo saw stalking me before
+dinner?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She clasped her hands and heaved a sigh of relief.&nbsp; &ldquo;Thank
+God, Monsieur!&rdquo; she replied.&nbsp; &ldquo;You have lifted a weight
+from me.&nbsp; I fear nothing in comparison of that.&nbsp; Nothing!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; he answered sombrely, &ldquo;there is much to
+fear, for others if not for ourselves!&nbsp; Do you know what that is
+which M. de Tavannes bears always in his belt?&nbsp; What it is he carries
+with such care?&nbsp; What it was he handed to you to keep while he
+bathed to-day?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Letters from the King.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but the import of those letters?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And yet, should they be written in letters of blood!&rdquo;
+the minister exclaimed, his face kindling.&nbsp; &ldquo;They should
+scorch the hands that hold them and blister the eyes that read them.&nbsp;
+They are the fire and the sword!&nbsp; They are the King&rsquo;s order
+to do at Angers as they have done in Paris.&nbsp; To slay all of the
+religion who are found there&mdash;and they are many!&nbsp; To spare
+none, to have mercy neither on the old man nor the unborn child!&nbsp;
+See yonder hawk!&rdquo; he continued, pointing with a shaking hand to
+a falcon which hung light and graceful above the valley, the movement
+of its wings invisible.&nbsp; &ldquo;How it disports itself in the face
+of the sun!&nbsp; How easy its way, how smooth its flight!&nbsp; But
+see, it drops upon its prey in the rushes beside the brook, and the
+end of its beauty is slaughter!&nbsp; So is it with yonder company!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+His finger sank until it indicated the little camp seated toy-like in
+the green meadow four hundred feet below them, with every man and horse,
+and the very camp-kettle, clear-cut and visible, though diminished by
+distance to fairy-like proportions.&nbsp; &ldquo;So it is with yonder
+company!&rdquo; he repeated sternly.&nbsp; &ldquo;They play and are
+merry, and one fishes and another sleeps!&nbsp; But at the end of the
+journey is death.&nbsp; Death for their victims, and for them the judgment!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She stood, as he spoke, in the ruined gateway, a walled grass-plot
+behind her, and at her feet the stream, the smiling valley, the alders,
+and the little camp.&nbsp; The sky was cloudless, the scene drowsy with
+the stillness of an August afternoon.&nbsp; But his words went home
+so truly that the sunlit landscape before the eyes added one more horror
+to the picture he called up before the mind.</p>
+<p>The Countess turned white and sick.&nbsp; &ldquo;Are you sure?&rdquo;
+she whispered at last.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, God!&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;are we never to have peace?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And turning from the valley, she walked some distance into the grass
+court, and stood.&nbsp; After a time, she turned to him; he had followed
+her doggedly, pace for pace.&nbsp; &ldquo;What do you want me to do?&rdquo;
+she cried, despair in her voice.&nbsp; &ldquo;What can I do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Were the letters he bears destroyed&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The letters?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, were the letters destroyed,&rdquo; La Tribe answered
+relentlessly, &ldquo;he could do nothing!&nbsp; Nothing!&nbsp; Without
+that authority the magistrates of Angers would not move.&nbsp; He could
+do nothing.&nbsp; And men and women and children&mdash;men and women
+and children whose blood will otherwise cry for vengeance, perhaps for
+vengeance on us who might have saved them&mdash;will live!&nbsp; Will
+live!&rdquo; he repeated, with a softening eye.&nbsp; And with an all-embracing
+gesture he seemed to call to witness the open heavens, the sunshine
+and the summer breeze which wrapped them round.&nbsp; &ldquo;Will live!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She drew a deep breath.&nbsp; &ldquo;And you have brought me here,&rdquo;
+she said, &ldquo;to ask me to do this?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was sent here to ask you to do this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why me?&nbsp; Why me?&rdquo; she wailed, and she held out
+her open hands to him, her face wan and colourless.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+come to me, a woman!&nbsp; Why to me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are his wife!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he is my husband!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Therefore he trusts you,&rdquo; was the unyielding, the pitiless
+answer.&nbsp; &ldquo;You, and you alone, have the opportunity of doing
+this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She gazed at him in astonishment.&nbsp; &ldquo;And it is you who
+say that?&rdquo; she faltered, after a pause.&nbsp; &ldquo;You who made
+us one, who now bid me betray him, whom I have sworn to love?&nbsp;
+To ruin him whom I have sworn to honour?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do!&rdquo; he answered solemnly.&nbsp; &ldquo;On my head
+be the guilt, and on yours the merit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, but&mdash;&rdquo; she cried quickly, and her eyes glittered
+with passion&mdash;&ldquo;do you take both guilt and merit!&nbsp; You
+are a man,&rdquo; she continued, her words coming quickly in her excitement,
+&ldquo;he is but a man!&nbsp; Why do you not call him aside, trick him
+apart on some pretence or other, and when there are but you two, man
+to man, wrench the warrant from him?&nbsp; Staking your life against
+his, with all those lives for prize?&nbsp; And save them or perish?&nbsp;
+Why I, even I, a woman, could find it in my heart to do that, were he
+not my husband!&nbsp; Surely you, you who are a man, and young&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Am no match for him in strength or arms,&rdquo; the minister
+answered sadly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Else would I do it!&nbsp; Else would I
+stake my life, Heaven knows, as gladly to save their lives as I sit
+down to meat!&nbsp; But I should fail, and if I failed all were lost.&nbsp;
+Moreover,&rdquo; he continued solemnly, &ldquo;I am certified that this
+task has been set for you.&nbsp; It was not for nothing, Madame, nor
+to save one poor household that you were joined to this man; but to
+ransom all these lives and this great city.&nbsp; To be the Judith of
+our faith, the saviour of Angers, the&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fool!&nbsp; Fool!&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Will you
+be silent?&rdquo;&nbsp; And she stamped the turf passionately, while
+her eyes blazed in her white face.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am no Judith, and
+no madwoman as you are fain to make me.&nbsp; Mad?&rdquo; she continued,
+overwhelmed with agitation, &ldquo;My God, I would I were, and I should
+be free from this!&rdquo;&nbsp; And, turning, she walked a little way
+from him with the gesture of one under a crushing burden.</p>
+<p>He waited a minute, two minutes, three minutes, and still she did
+not return.&nbsp; At length she came back, her bearing more composed;
+she looked at him, and her eyes seized his and seemed as if they would
+read his soul.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you sure,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;of what you have told
+me?&nbsp; Will you swear that the contents of these letters are as you
+say?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As I live,&rdquo; he answered gravely.&nbsp; &ldquo;As God
+lives.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you know&mdash;of no other way, Monsieur?&nbsp; Of no
+other way?&rdquo; she repeated slowly and piteously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of none, Madame, of none, I swear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She sighed deeply, and stood sunk in thought.&nbsp; Then, &ldquo;When
+do we reach Angers?&rdquo; she asked heavily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The day after to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have&mdash;until the day after to-morrow?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&nbsp; To-night we lie near Vend&ocirc;me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And to-morrow night?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Near a place called La Fl&egrave;che.&nbsp; It is possible,&rdquo;
+he went on with hesitation&mdash;for he did not understand her&mdash;&ldquo;that
+he may bathe to-morrow, and may hand the packet to you, as he did to-day
+when I vainly sought speech with you.&nbsp; If he does that&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; she said, her eyes on his face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The taking will be easy.&nbsp; But when he finds you have
+it not&rdquo;&mdash;he faltered anew&mdash;&ldquo;it may go hard with
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She did not speak.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And there, I think, I can help you.&nbsp; If you will stray
+from the party, I will meet you and destroy the letter.&nbsp; That done&mdash;and
+would God it were done already&mdash;I will take to flight as best I
+can, and you will raise the alarm and say that I robbed you of it!&nbsp;
+And if you tear your dress&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>He looked a question.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; she repeated in a low voice.&nbsp; &ldquo;If I
+betray him I will not lie to him!&nbsp; And no other shall pay the price!&nbsp;
+If I ruin him it shall be between him and me, and no other shall have
+part in it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He shook his head.&nbsp; &ldquo;I do not know,&rdquo; he murmured,
+&ldquo;what he may do to you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor I,&rdquo; she said proudly.&nbsp; &ldquo;That will be
+for him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>Curious eyes had watched the two as they climbed the hill.&nbsp;
+For the path ran up the slope to the gap which served for gate, much
+as the path leads up to the Castle Beautiful in old prints of the Pilgrim&rsquo;s
+journey, and Madame St. Lo had marked the first halt and the second,
+and, noting every gesture, had lost nothing of the interview save the
+words.&nbsp; But until the two, after pausing a moment, passed out of
+sight she made no sign.&nbsp; Then she laughed.&nbsp; And as Count Hannibal,
+at whom the laugh was aimed, did not heed her, she laughed again.&nbsp;
+And she hummed the line of Ronsard.</p>
+<p>Still he would not be roused, and, piqued, she had recourse to words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder what you would do,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;if the
+old lover followed us, and she went off with him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She would not go,&rdquo; he answered coldly, and without looking
+up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if he rode off with her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She would come back on her feet!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madame St. Lo&rsquo;s prudence was not proof against that.&nbsp;
+She had the woman&rsquo;s inclination to hide a woman&rsquo;s secret;
+and she had not intended, when she laughed, to do more than play with
+the formidable man with whom so few dared to play.&nbsp; Now, stung
+by his tone and his assurance, she must needs show him that his trustfulness
+had no base.&nbsp; And, as so often happens in the circumstances, she
+went a little farther than the facts bore her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Any way, he has followed us so far!&rdquo; she cried viciously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. de Tignonville?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&nbsp; I saw him this morning while you were bathing.&nbsp;
+She left me and went into the little coppice.&nbsp; He came down the
+other side of the brook, stooping and running, and went to join her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How did he cross the brook?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madame St. Lo blushed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Old Badelon was there, gathering
+simples,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;He scared him.&nbsp; And he crawled
+away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he did not cross?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&nbsp; I did not say he did!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor speak to her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&nbsp; But if you think it will pass so next time&mdash;you
+do not know much of women!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of women generally, not much,&rdquo; he answered, grimly polite.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Of this woman a great deal!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You looked in her big eyes, I suppose!&rdquo;&nbsp; Madame
+St. Lo cried with heat.&nbsp; &ldquo;And straightway fell down and worshipped
+her!&rdquo;&nbsp; She liked rather than disliked the Countess; but she
+was of the lightest, and the least opposition drove her out of her course.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And you think you know her!&nbsp; And she, if she could save
+you from death by opening an eye, would go with a patch on it till her
+dying day!&nbsp; Take my word for it, Monsieur, between her and her
+lover you will come to harm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal&rsquo;s swarthy face darkened a tone, and his eyes
+grew a very little smaller.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fancy that he runs the greater risk,&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You may deal with him, but, for her&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can deal with her.&nbsp; You deal with some women with a
+whip&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You would whip me, I suppose?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said quietly.&nbsp; &ldquo;It would do you
+good, Madame.&nbsp; And with other women otherwise.&nbsp; There are
+women who, if they are well frightened, will not deceive you.&nbsp;
+And there are others who will not deceive you though they are frightened.&nbsp;
+Madame de Tavannes is of the latter kind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait!&nbsp; Wait and see!&rdquo;&nbsp; Madame cried in scorn.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am waiting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&nbsp; And whereas if you had come to me I could have
+told her that about M. de Tignonville which would have surprised her,
+you will go on waiting and waiting and waiting until one fine day you&rsquo;ll
+wake up and find Madame gone, and&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I&rsquo;ll take a wife I can whip!&rdquo; he answered,
+with a look which apprised her how far she had carried it.&nbsp; &ldquo;But
+it will not be you, sweet cousin.&nbsp; For I have no whip heavy enough
+for your case.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI.&nbsp; SHE WOULD, AND WOULD NOT.</h2>
+<p>We noted some way back the ease with which women use one concession
+as a stepping-stone to a second; and the lack of magnanimity, amounting
+almost to unscrupulousness, which the best display in their dealings
+with a retiring foe.&nbsp; But there are concessions which touch even
+a good woman&rsquo;s conscience; and Madame de Tavannes, free by the
+tenure of a blow, and with that exception treated from hour to hour
+with rugged courtesy, shrank appalled before the task which confronted
+her.</p>
+<p>To ignore what La Tribe had told her, to remain passive when a movement
+on her part might save men, women, and children from death, and a whole
+city from massacre&mdash;this was a line of conduct so craven, so selfish,
+that from the first she knew herself incapable of it.&nbsp; But to take
+the only other course open to her, to betray her husband and rob him
+of that, the loss of which might ruin him, this needed not courage only,
+not devotion only, but a hardness proof against reproaches as well as
+against punishment.&nbsp; And the Countess was no fanatic.&nbsp; No
+haze of bigotry glorified the thing she contemplated, or dressed it
+in colours other than its own.&nbsp; Even while she acknowledged the
+necessity of the act and its ultimate righteousness, even while she
+owned the obligation which lay upon her to perform it, she saw it as
+he would see it, and saw herself as he would see her.</p>
+<p>True, he had done her a great wrong; and this in the eyes of some
+might pass for punishment.&nbsp; But he had saved her life where many
+had perished; and, the wrong done, he had behaved to her with fantastic
+generosity.&nbsp; In return for which she was to ruin him?&nbsp; It
+was not hard to imagine what he would say of her, and of the reward
+with which she had requited him.</p>
+<p>She pondered over it as they rode that evening, with the weltering
+sun in their eyes and the lengthening shadows of the oaks falling athwart
+the bracken which fringed the track.&nbsp; Across breezy heaths and
+over downs, through green bottoms and by hamlets, from which every human
+creature fled at their approach, they ambled on by twos and threes;
+riding in a world of their own, so remote, so different from the real
+world&mdash;from which they came and to which they must return&mdash;that
+she could have wept in anguish, cursing God for the wickedness of man
+which lay so heavy on creation.&nbsp; The gaunt troopers riding at ease
+with swinging legs and swaying stirrups&mdash;and singing now a refrain
+from Ronsard, and now one of those verses of Marot&rsquo;s psalms which
+all the world had sung three decades before&mdash;wore their most lamb-like
+aspect.&nbsp; Behind them Madame St. Lo chattered to Suzanne of a riding
+mask which had not been brought, or planned expedients, if nothing sufficiently
+in the mode could be found at Angers.&nbsp; And the other women talked
+and giggled, screamed when they came to fords, and made much of steep
+places, where the men must help them.&nbsp; In time of war death&rsquo;s
+shadow covers but a day, and sorrow out of sight is out of mind.&nbsp;
+Of all the troop whom the sinking sun left within sight of the lofty
+towers and vine-clad hills of Vend&ocirc;me, three only wore faces attuned
+to the cruel August week just ending; three only, like dark beads strung
+far apart on a gay nun&rsquo;s rosary, rode, brooding and silent, in
+their places.&nbsp; The Countess was one&mdash;the others were the two
+men whose thoughts she filled, and whose eyes now and again sought her,
+La Tribe&rsquo;s with sombre fire in their depths, Count Hannibal&rsquo;s
+fraught with a gloomy speculation, which belied his brave words to Madame
+St. Lo.</p>
+<p>He, moreover, as he rode, had other thoughts; dark ones, which did
+not touch her.&nbsp; And she, too, had other thoughts at times, dreams
+of her young lover, spasms of regret, a wild revolt of heart, a cry
+out of the darkness which had suddenly whelmed her.&nbsp; So that of
+the three only La Tribe was single-minded.</p>
+<p>This day they rode a long league after sunset, through a scattered
+oak-wood, where the rabbits sprang up under their horses&rsquo; heads
+and the squirrels made angry faces at them from the lower branches.&nbsp;
+Night was hard upon them when they reached the southern edge of the
+forest, and looked across the dusky open slopes to a distant light or
+two which marked where Vend&ocirc;me stood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Another league,&rdquo; Count Hannibal muttered; and he bade
+the men light fires where they were, and unload the packhorses.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis pure and dry here,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Set
+a watch, Bigot, and let two men go down for water.&nbsp; I hear frogs
+below.&nbsp; You do not fear to be moonstruck, Madame?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I prefer this,&rdquo; she answered in a low voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Houses are for monks and nuns!&rdquo; he rejoined heartily.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Give me God&rsquo;s heaven.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The earth is His, but we deface it,&rdquo; she murmured, reverting
+to her thoughts, and unconscious that it was to him she spoke.</p>
+<p>He looked at her sharply, but the fire was not yet kindled; and in
+the gloaming her face was a pale blot undecipherable.&nbsp; He stood
+a moment, but she did not speak again; and Madame St. Lo bustling up,
+he moved away to give an order.&nbsp; By-and-by the fires burned up,
+and showed the pillared aisle in which they sat, small groups dotted
+here and there on the floor of Nature&rsquo;s cathedral.&nbsp; Through
+the shadowy Gothic vaulting, the groining of many boughs which met overhead,
+a rare star twinkled, as through some clerestory window; and from the
+dell below rose in the night, now the monotonous chanting of the frogs,
+and now, as some great bull-frog took the note, a diapason worthy of
+a Brescian organ.&nbsp; The darkness walled all in; the night was still;
+a falling caterpillar sounded.&nbsp; Even the rude men at the farthest
+fire stilled their voices at times; awed, they knew not why, by the
+silence and vastness of the night.</p>
+<p>The Countess long remembered that vigil&mdash;for she lay late awake;
+the cool gloom, the faint wood-rustlings, the distant cry of fox or
+wolf, the soft glow of the expiring fires that at last left the world
+to darkness and the stars; above all, the silent wheeling of the planets,
+which spoke indeed of a supreme Ruler, but crushed the heart under a
+sense of its insignificance, and of the insignificance of all human
+revolutions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yet, I believe!&rdquo; she cried, wrestling upwards, wrestling
+with herself.&nbsp; &ldquo;Though I have seen what I have seen, yet
+I believe!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And though she had to bear what she had to bear, and do that from
+which her soul shrank!&nbsp; The woman, indeed, within her continued
+to cry out against this tragedy ever renewed in her path, against this
+necessity for choosing evil, or good, ease for herself or life for others.&nbsp;
+But the moving heavens, pointing onward to a time when good and evil
+alike should be past, strengthened a nature essentially noble; and before
+she slept no shame and no suffering seemed&mdash;for the moment at least&mdash;too
+great a price to pay for the lives of little children.&nbsp; Love had
+been taken from her life; the pride which would fain answer generosity
+with generosity&mdash;that must go, too!</p>
+<p>She felt no otherwise when the day came, and the bustle of the start
+and the common round of the journey put to flight the ideals of the
+night.&nbsp; But things fell out in a manner she had not pictured.&nbsp;
+They halted before noon on the north bank of the Loir, in a level meadow
+with lines of poplars running this way and that, and filling all the
+place with the soft shimmer of leaves.&nbsp; Blue succory, tiny mirrors
+of the summer sky, flecked the long grass, and the women picked bunches
+of them, or, Italian fashion, twined the blossoms in their hair.&nbsp;
+A road ran across the meadow to a ferry, but the ferryman, alarmed by
+the aspect of the party, had conveyed his boat to the other side and
+hidden himself.</p>
+<p>Presently Madame St. Lo espied the boat, clapped her hands and must
+have it.&nbsp; The poplars threw no shade, the flies teased her, the
+life of a hermit&mdash;in a meadow&mdash;was no longer to her taste.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let us go on the water!&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Presently
+you will go to bathe, Monsieur, and leave us to grill!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Two livres to the man who will fetch the boat!&rdquo; Count
+Hannibal cried.</p>
+<p>In less than half a minute three men had thrown off their boots,
+and were swimming across, amid the laughter and shouts of their fellows.&nbsp;
+In five minutes the boat was brought.</p>
+<p>It was not large and would hold no more than four. Tavannes&rsquo;
+eye fell on Carlat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You understand a boat,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go with
+Madame St. Lo.&nbsp; And you, M. La Tribe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you are coming?&rdquo; Madame St. Lo cried, turning to
+the Countess.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, Madame,&rdquo; with a curtsey, &ldquo;you
+are not?&nbsp; You&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I will come,&rdquo; the Countess answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall bathe a short distance up the stream,&rdquo; Count
+Hannibal said.&nbsp; He took from his belt the packet of letters, and
+as Carlat held the boat for Madame St. Lo to enter, he gave it to the
+Countess, as he had given it to her yesterday.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have a care
+of it, Madame,&rdquo; he said in a low voice, &ldquo;and do not let
+it pass out of your hands.&nbsp; To lose it may be to lose my head.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The colour ebbed from her cheeks.&nbsp; In spite of herself her shaking
+hand put back the packet.&nbsp; &ldquo;Had you not better then&mdash;give
+it to Bigot?&rdquo; she faltered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is bathing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let him bathe afterwards.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he answered almost harshly; he found a species
+of pleasure in showing her that, strange as their relations were, he
+trusted her.&nbsp; &ldquo;No; take it, Madame.&nbsp; Only have a care
+of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She took it then, hid it in her dress, and he turned away; and she
+turned towards the boat.&nbsp; La Tribe stood beside the stern, holding
+it for her to enter, and as her fingers rested an instant on his arm
+their eyes met.&nbsp; His were alight, his arm even quivered; and she
+shuddered.</p>
+<p>She avoided looking at him a second time, and this was easy, since
+he took his seat in the bows beyond Carlat, who handled the oars.&nbsp;
+Silently the boat glided out on the surface of the stream, and floated
+downwards, Carlat now and again touching an oar, and Madame St. Lo chattering
+gaily in a voice which carried far on the water.&nbsp; Now it was a
+flowering rush she must have, now a green bough to shield her face from
+the sun&rsquo;s reflection; and now they must lie in some cool, shadowy
+pool under fern-clad banks, where the fish rose heavily, and the trickle
+of a rivulet fell down over stones.</p>
+<p>It was idyllic.&nbsp; But not to the Countess.&nbsp; Her face burned,
+her temples throbbed, her fingers gripped the side of the boat in the
+vain attempt to steady her pulses.&nbsp; The packet within her dress
+scorched her.&nbsp; The great city and its danger, Tavannes and his
+faith in her, the need of action, the irrevocableness of action hurried
+through her brain.&nbsp; The knowledge that she must act now&mdash;or
+never&mdash;pressed upon her with distracting force.&nbsp; Her hand
+felt the packet, and fell again nerveless.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The sun has caught you, <i>ma mie</i>,&rdquo; Madame St. Lo
+said.&nbsp; &ldquo;You should ride in a mask as I do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have not one with me,&rdquo; she muttered, her eyes on the
+water.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I but an old one.&nbsp; But at Angers&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Countess heard no more; on that word she caught La Tribe&rsquo;s
+eye.&nbsp; He was beckoning to her behind Carlat&rsquo;s back, pointing
+imperiously to the water, making signs to her to drop the packet over
+the side.&nbsp; When she did not obey&mdash;she felt sick and faint&mdash;she
+saw through a mist his brow grow dark.&nbsp; He menaced her secretly.&nbsp;
+And still the packet scorched her; and twice her hand went to it, and
+dropped again empty.</p>
+<p>On a sudden Madame St. Lo cried out.&nbsp; The bank on one side of
+the stream was beginning to rise more boldly above the water, and at
+the head of the steep thus formed she had espied a late rosebush in
+bloom; nothing would now serve but she must land at once and plunder
+it.&nbsp; The boat was put in therefore, she jumped ashore, and began
+to scale the bank.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go with Madame!&rdquo; La Tribe cried, roughly nudging Carlat
+in the back.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you not see that she cannot climb the bank?&nbsp;
+Up, man, up!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Countess opened her mouth to cry &ldquo;No!&rdquo; but the word
+died half-born on her lips; and when the steward looked at her, uncertain
+what she had said, she nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, go!&rdquo; she muttered.&nbsp; She was pale.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, man, go!&rdquo; cried the minister, his eyes burning.&nbsp;
+And he almost pushed the other out of the boat.</p>
+<p>The next second the craft floated from the bank, and began to drift
+downwards.&nbsp; La Tribe waited until a tree interposed and hid them
+from the two whom they had left; then he leaned forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Madame!&rdquo; he cried imperiously.&nbsp; &ldquo;In
+God&rsquo;s name, now!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Wait!&nbsp; Wait!&nbsp;
+I want to think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To think?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He trusted me!&rdquo; she wailed.&nbsp; &ldquo;He trusted
+me!&nbsp; How can I do it?&rdquo;&nbsp; Nevertheless, and even while
+she spoke, she drew forth the packet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Heaven has given you the opportunity!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I could have stolen it!&rdquo; she answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fool!&rdquo; he returned, rocking himself to and fro, and
+fairly beside himself with impatience.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why steal it?&nbsp;
+It is in your hands!&nbsp; You have it!&nbsp; It is Heaven&rsquo;s own
+opportunity, it is God&rsquo;s opportunity given to you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For he could not read her mind nor comprehend the scruple which held
+her hand.&nbsp; He was single-minded.&nbsp; He had but one aim, one
+object.&nbsp; He saw the haggard faces of brave men hopeless; he heard
+the dying cries of women and children.&nbsp; Such an opportunity of
+saving God&rsquo;s elect, of redeeming the innocent, was in his eyes
+a gift from Heaven.&nbsp; And having these thoughts and seeing her hesitate&mdash;hesitate
+when every movement caused him agony, so imperative was haste, so precious
+the opportunity&mdash;he could bear the suspense no longer.&nbsp; When
+she did not answer he stooped forward, until his knees touched the thwart
+on which Carlat had sat; then, without a word, he flung himself forward,
+and, with one hand far extended, grasped the packet.</p>
+<p>Had he not moved, she would have done his will; almost certainly
+she would have done it.&nbsp; But, thus attacked, she resisted instinctively;
+she clung to the letters.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;No!&nbsp; Let go, Monsieur!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And she tried to drag the packet from him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give it me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let go, Monsieur!&nbsp; Do you hear?&rdquo; she repeated.&nbsp;
+And, with a vigorous jerk, she forced it from him&mdash;he had caught
+it by the edge only&mdash;and held it behind her.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go back,
+and&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give it me!&rdquo; he panted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will not!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then throw it overboard!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will not!&rdquo; she cried again, though his face, dark
+with passion, glared into hers, and it was clear that the man, possessed
+by one idea only, was no longer master of himself.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go back
+to your place!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give it me,&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;or I will upset the boat!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And, seizing her by the shoulder, he reached over her, striving to take
+hold of the packet which she held behind her.&nbsp; The boat rocked;
+and, as much in rage as fear, she screamed.</p>
+<p>A cry uttered wholly in rage answered hers; it came from Carlat.&nbsp;
+La Tribe, however, whose whole mind was fixed on the packet, did not
+heed, nor would have heeded, the steward.&nbsp; But the next moment
+a second cry, fierce as that of a wild beast, clove the air from the
+lower and farther bank; and the Huguenot, recognizing Count Hannibal&rsquo;s
+voice, involuntarily desisted and stood erect.&nbsp; A moment the boat
+rocked perilously under him; then&mdash;for unheeded it had been drifting
+that way&mdash;it softly touched the bank on which Carlat stood staring
+and aghast.</p>
+<p>La Tribe&rsquo;s chance was gone; he saw that the steward must reach
+him before he could succeed in a second attempt.&nbsp; On the other
+hand, the undergrowth on the bank was thick, he could touch it with
+his hand, and if he fled at once he might escape.</p>
+<p>He hung an instant irresolute; then, with a look which went to the
+Countess&rsquo;s heart, he sprang ashore, plunged among the alders,
+and in a moment was gone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After him!&nbsp; After him!&rdquo; thundered Count Hannibal.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;After him, man!&rdquo; and Carlat, stumbling down the steep slope
+and through the rough briars, did his best to obey.&nbsp; But in vain.&nbsp;
+Before he reached the water&rsquo;s edge, the noise of the fugitive&rsquo;s
+retreat had grown faint.&nbsp; A few seconds and it died away.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII.&nbsp; PLAYING WITH FIRE.</h2>
+<p>The impulse of La Tribe&rsquo;s foot as he landed had driven the
+boat into the stream.&nbsp; It drifted slowly downward, and if naught
+intervened, would take the ground on Count Hannibal&rsquo;s side, a
+hundred and fifty yards below him.&nbsp; He saw this, and walked along
+the bank, keeping pace with it, while the Countess sat motionless, crouching
+in the stern of the craft, her fingers strained about the fatal packet.&nbsp;
+The slow glide of the boat, as almost imperceptibly it approached the
+low bank; the stillness of the mirror-like surface on which it moved,
+leaving only the faintest ripple behind it; the silence&mdash;for under
+the influence of emotion Count Hannibal too was mute&mdash;all were
+in tremendous contrast with the storm which raged in her breast.</p>
+<p>Should she&mdash;should she even now, with his eyes on her, drop
+the letters over the side?&nbsp; It needed but a movement.&nbsp; She
+had only to extend her hand, to relax the tension of her fingers, and
+the deed was done.&nbsp; It needed only that; but the golden sands of
+opportunity were running out&mdash;were running out fast.&nbsp; Slowly
+and more slowly, silently and more silently, the boat slid in towards
+the bank on which he stood, and still she hesitated.&nbsp; The stillness,
+and the waiting figure, and the watching eyes now but a few feet distant,
+weighed on her and seemed to paralyze her will.&nbsp; A foot, another
+foot!&nbsp; A moment and it would be too late, the last of the sands
+would have run out.&nbsp; The bow of the boat rustled softly through
+the rushes; it kissed the bank.&nbsp; And her hand still held the letters.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are not hurt?&rdquo; he asked curtly.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+scoundrel might have drowned you.&nbsp; Was he mad?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was silent.&nbsp; He held out his hand, and she gave him the
+packet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I owe you much,&rdquo; he said, a ring of gaiety, almost of
+triumph, in his tone.&nbsp; &ldquo;More than you guess, Madame.&nbsp;
+God made you for a soldier&rsquo;s wife, and a mother of soldiers.&nbsp;
+What?&nbsp; You are not well, I am afraid?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I could sit down a minute,&rdquo; she faltered.&nbsp; She
+was swaying on her feet.</p>
+<p>He supported her across the belt of meadow which fringed the bank,
+and made her recline against a tree.&nbsp; Then as his men began to
+come up&mdash;for the alarm had reached them&mdash;he would have sent
+two of them in the boat to fetch Madame St. Lo to her.&nbsp; But she
+would not let him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your maid, then?&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Monsieur, I need only to be alone a little!&nbsp; Only
+to be alone,&rdquo; she repeated, her face averted; and believing this
+he sent the men away, and, taking the boat himself, he crossed over,
+took in Madame St. Lo and Carlat, and rowed them to the ferry.&nbsp;
+Here the wildest rumours were current.&nbsp; One held that the Huguenot
+had gone out of his senses; another, that he had watched for this opportunity
+of avenging his brethren; a third, that his intention had been to carry
+off the Countess and hold her to ransom.&nbsp; Only Tavannes himself,
+from his position on the farther bank, had seen the packet of letters,
+and the hand which withheld them; and he said nothing.&nbsp; Nay, when
+some of the men would have crossed to search for the fugitive, he forbade
+them, he scarcely knew why, save that it might please her; and when
+the women would have hurried to join her and hear the tale from her
+lips he forbade them also.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She wishes to be alone,&rdquo; he said curtly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alone?&rdquo; Madame St. Lo cried, in a fever of curiosity.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll find her dead, or worse!&nbsp; What?&nbsp; Leave
+a woman alone after such a fright as that!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She wishes it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madame laughed cynically; and the laugh brought a tinge of colour
+to his brow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, does she?&rdquo; she sneered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then I understand!&nbsp;
+Have a care, have a care, or one of these days, Monsieur, when you leave
+her alone, you&rsquo;ll find them together!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be silent!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With pleasure,&rdquo; she returned.&nbsp; &ldquo;Only when
+it happens don&rsquo;t say that you were not warned.&nbsp; You think
+that she does not hear from him&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can she hear?&rdquo;&nbsp; The words were wrung from him.</p>
+<p>Madame St. Lo&rsquo;s contempt passed all limits.&nbsp; &ldquo;How
+can she!&rdquo; she retorted.&nbsp; &ldquo;You trail a woman across
+France, and let her sit by herself, and lie by herself, and all but
+drown by herself, and you ask how she hears from her lover?&nbsp; You
+leave her old servants about her, and you ask how she communicates with
+him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You know nothing!&rdquo; he snarled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know this,&rdquo; she retorted.&nbsp; &ldquo;I saw her sitting
+this morning, and smiling and weeping at the same time!&nbsp; Was she
+thinking of you, Monsieur?&nbsp; Or of him?&nbsp; She was looking at
+the hills through tears; a blue mist hung over them, and I&rsquo;ll
+wager she saw some one&rsquo;s eyes gazing and some one&rsquo;s hand
+beckoning out of the blue!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Curse you!&rdquo; he cried, tormented in spite of himself.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You love to make mischief!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; she answered swiftly.&nbsp; &ldquo;For &rsquo;twas
+not I made the match.&nbsp; But go your way, go your way, Monsieur,
+and see what kind of a welcome you&rsquo;ll get!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will,&rdquo; Count Hannibal growled.&nbsp; And he started
+along the bank to rejoin his wife.</p>
+<p>The light in his eyes had died down.&nbsp; Yet would they have been
+more sombre, and his face more harsh, had he known the mind of the woman
+to whom he was hastening.&nbsp; The Countess had begged to be left alone;
+alone, she found the solitude she had craved a cruel gift.&nbsp; She
+had saved the packet.&nbsp; She had fulfilled her trust.&nbsp; But only
+to experience, the moment the deed was done, the full poignancy of remorse.&nbsp;
+Before the act, while the choice had lain with her, the betrayal of
+her husband had loomed large; now she saw that to treat him as she had
+treated him was the true betrayal, and that even for his own sake, and
+to save him from a fearful sin, it had become her to destroy the letters.</p>
+<p>Now, it was no longer her duty to him which loomed large, but her
+duty to the innocent, to the victims of the massacre which she might
+have stayed, to the people of her faith whom she had abandoned, to the
+women and children whose death-warrant she had preserved.&nbsp; Now,
+she perceived that a part more divine had never fallen to woman, nor
+a responsibility so heavy been laid upon woman.&nbsp; Nor guilt more
+dread!</p>
+<p>She writhed in misery, thinking of it.&nbsp; What had she done?&nbsp;
+She could hear afar off the sounds of the camp; an occasional outcry,
+a snatch of laughter.&nbsp; And the cry and the laughter rang in her
+ears, a bitter mockery.&nbsp; This summer camp, to what was it the prelude?&nbsp;
+This forbearance on her husband&rsquo;s part, in what would it end?&nbsp;
+Were not the one and the other cruel make-believes?&nbsp; Two days,
+and the men who laughed beside the water would slay and torture with
+equal zest.&nbsp; A little, and the husband who now chose to be generous
+would show himself in his true colours.&nbsp; And it was for the sake
+of such as these that she had played the coward.&nbsp; That she had
+laid up for herself endless remorse.&nbsp; That henceforth the cries
+of the innocent would haunt her dreams.</p>
+<p>Racked by such thoughts she did not hear his step, and it was his
+shadow falling across her feet which first warned her of his presence.&nbsp;
+She looked up, saw him, and involuntarily recoiled.&nbsp; Then, seeing
+the change in his face&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! Monsieur,&rdquo; she stammered, affrighted, her hand pressed
+to her side, &ldquo;I ask your pardon!&nbsp; You startled me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So it seems,&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp; And he stood over her
+regarding her dryly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not quite&mdash;myself yet,&rdquo; she murmured.&nbsp;
+His look told her that her start had betrayed her feelings.</p>
+<p>Alas! the plan of taking a woman by force has drawbacks, and among
+others this one: that he must be a sanguine husband who deems her heart
+his, and a husband without jealousy, whose suspicions are not aroused
+by the faintest flush or the lightest word.&nbsp; He knows that she
+is his unwillingly, a victim, not a mistress; and behind every bush
+beside the road and behind every mask in the crowd he espies a rival.</p>
+<p>Moreover, where women are in question, who is always strong?&nbsp;
+Or who can say how long he will pursue this plan or that?&nbsp; A man
+of sternest temper, Count Hannibal had set out on a path of conduct
+carefully and deliberately chosen; knowing&mdash;and he still knew&mdash;that
+if he abandoned it he had little to hope, if the less to fear.&nbsp;
+But the proof of fidelity which the Countess had just given him had
+blown to a white heat the smouldering flame in his heart, and Madame
+St. Lo&rsquo;s gibes, which should have fallen as cold water alike on
+his hopes and his passion, had but fed the desire to know the best.&nbsp;
+For all that, he might not have spoken now, if he had not caught her
+look of affright; strange as it sounds, that look, which of all things
+should have silenced him and warned him that the time was not yet, stung
+him out of patience.&nbsp; Suddenly the man in him carried him away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You still fear me, then?&rdquo; he said, in a voice hoarse
+and unnatural.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is it for what I do or for what I leave
+undone that you hate me, Madame?&nbsp; Tell me, I beg, for&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For neither!&rdquo; she said, trembling.&nbsp; His eyes, hot
+and passionate, were on her, and the blood had mounted to his brow.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;For neither!&nbsp; I do not hate you, Monsieur!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You fear me then?&nbsp; I am right in that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fear&mdash;that which you carry with you,&rdquo; she stammered,
+speaking on impulse and scarcely knowing what she said.</p>
+<p>He started, and his expression changed.&nbsp; &ldquo;So?&rdquo; he
+exclaimed.&nbsp; &ldquo;So?&nbsp; You know what I carry, do you?&nbsp;
+And from whom?&nbsp; From whom,&rdquo; he continued in a tone of menace,
+&ldquo;if you please, did you get that knowledge?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From M. La Tribe,&rdquo; she muttered.&nbsp; She had not meant
+to tell him.&nbsp; Why had she told him?</p>
+<p>He nodded.&nbsp; &ldquo;I might have known it,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I more than suspected it.&nbsp; Therefore I should be the more
+beholden to you for saving the letters.&nbsp; But&rdquo;&mdash;he paused
+and laughed harshly&mdash;&ldquo;it was out of no love for me you saved
+them.&nbsp; That too I know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She did not answer or protest; and when he had waited a moment in
+vain expectation of her protest, a cruel look crept into his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; he said slowly, &ldquo;do you never reflect
+that you may push the part you play too far?&nbsp; That the patience,
+even of the worst of men, does not endure for ever?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have your word!&rdquo; she answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you do not fear?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have your word,&rdquo; she repeated.&nbsp; And now she looked
+him bravely in the face, her eyes full of the courage of her race.</p>
+<p>The lines of his mouth hardened as he met her look.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+what have I of yours?&rdquo; he said in a low voice.&nbsp; &ldquo;What
+have I of yours?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her face began to burn at that, her eyes fell and she faltered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My gratitude,&rdquo; she murmured, with an upward look that
+prayed for pity.&nbsp; &ldquo;God knows, Monsieur, you have that!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;God knows I do not want it!&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp; And
+he laughed derisively.&nbsp; &ldquo;Your gratitude!&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+he mocked her tone rudely and coarsely.&nbsp; &ldquo;Your gratitude!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Then for a minute&mdash;for so long a time that she began to wonder
+and to quake&mdash;he was silent.&nbsp; At last, &ldquo;A fig for your
+gratitude,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I want your love!&nbsp; I suppose&mdash;cold
+as you are, and a Huguenot&mdash;you can love like other women!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was the first, the very first time he had used the word to her;
+and though it fell from his lips like a threat, though he used it as
+a man presents a pistol, she flushed anew from throat to brow.&nbsp;
+But she did not quail.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is not mine to give,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is his?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Monsieur,&rdquo; she answered, wondering at her courage,
+at her audacity, her madness.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is his.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And it cannot be mine&mdash;at any time?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She shook her head, trembling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never?&rdquo;&nbsp; And, suddenly reaching forward, he gripped
+her wrist in an iron grasp.&nbsp; There was passion in his tone.&nbsp;
+His eyes burned her.</p>
+<p>Whether it was that set her on another track, or pure despair, or
+the cry in her ears of little children and of helpless women, something
+in a moment inspired her, flashed in her eyes and altered her voice.&nbsp;
+She raised her head and looked him firmly in the face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;do you mean by love?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You!&rdquo; he answered brutally.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then&mdash;it may be, Monsieur,&rdquo; she returned.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;There is a way if you will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A way!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you will!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As she spoke she rose slowly to her feet; for in his surprise he
+had released her wrist.&nbsp; He rose with her, and they stood confronting
+one another on the strip of grass between the river and the poplars.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I will?&rdquo;&nbsp; His form seemed to dilate, his eyes
+devoured her.&nbsp; &ldquo;If I will?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she replied.&nbsp; &ldquo;If you will give me
+the letters that are in your belt, the packet which I saved to-day&mdash;that
+I may destroy them&mdash;I will be yours freely and willingly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He drew a deep breath, still devouring her with his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean it?&rdquo; he said at last.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do.&rdquo;&nbsp; She looked him in the face as she spoke,
+and her cheeks were white, not red.&nbsp; &ldquo;Only&mdash;the letters!&nbsp;
+Give me the letters.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And for them you will give me your love?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her eyes flickered, and involuntarily she shivered.&nbsp; A faint
+blush rose and dyed her cheeks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only God can give love,&rdquo; she said, her tone low.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And yours is given?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To another?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have said it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is his.&nbsp; And yet for these letters&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For these lives!&rdquo; she cried proudly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will give yourself?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I swear it,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;if you will give them
+to me!&nbsp; If you will give them to me,&rdquo; she repeated.&nbsp;
+And she held out her hands; her face, full of passion, was bright with
+a strange light.&nbsp; A close observer might have thought her distraught;
+still excited by the struggle in the boat, and barely mistress of herself.</p>
+<p>But the man whom she tempted, the man who held her price at his belt,
+after one searching look at her turned from her; perhaps because he
+could not trust himself to gaze on her.&nbsp; Count Hannibal walked
+a dozen paces from her and returned, and again a dozen paces and returned;
+and again a third time, with something fierce and passionate in his
+gait.&nbsp; At last he stopped before her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have nothing to offer for them,&rdquo; he said, in a cold,
+hard tone.&nbsp; &ldquo;Nothing that is not mine already, nothing that
+is not my right, nothing that I cannot take at my will.&nbsp; My word?&rdquo;
+he continued, seeing her about to interrupt him.&nbsp; &ldquo;True,
+Madame, you have it, you had it.&nbsp; But why need I keep my word to
+you, who tempt me to break my word to the King?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She made a weak gesture with her hands.&nbsp; Her head had sunk on
+her breast&mdash;she seemed dazed by the shock of his contempt, dazed
+by his reception of her offer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You saved the letters?&rdquo; he continued, interpreting her
+action.&nbsp; &ldquo;True, but the letters are mine, and that which
+you offer for them is mine also.&nbsp; You have nothing to offer.&nbsp;
+For the rest, Madame,&rdquo; he went on, eyeing her cynically, &ldquo;you
+surprise me!&nbsp; You, whose modesty and virtue are so great, would
+corrupt your husband, would sell yourself, would dishonour the love
+of which you boast so loudly, the love that only God gives!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He laughed derisively as he quoted her words.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ay, and,
+after showing at how low a price you hold yourself, you still look,
+I doubt not, to me to respect you, and to keep my word.&nbsp; Madame!&rdquo;
+in a terrible voice, &ldquo;do not play with fire!&nbsp; You saved my
+letters, it is true!&nbsp; And for that, for this time, you shall go
+free, if God will help me to let you go!&nbsp; But tempt me not!&nbsp;
+Tempt me not!&rdquo; he repeated, turning from her and turning back
+again with a gesture of despair, as if he mistrusted the strength of
+the restraint which he put upon himself.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am no more than
+other men!&nbsp; Perhaps I am less.&nbsp; And you&mdash;you who prate
+of love, and know not what love is&mdash;could love! could love!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stopped on that word as if the word choked him&mdash;stopped,
+struggling with his passion.&nbsp; At last, with a half-stifled oath,
+he flung away from her, halted and hung a moment, then, with a swing
+of rage, went off again violently.&nbsp; His feet as he strode along
+the river-bank trampled the flowers, and slew the pale water forget-me-not,
+which grew among the grasses.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII.&nbsp; A MIND, AND NOT A MIND.</h2>
+<p>La Tribe tore through the thicket, imagining Carlat and Count Hannibal
+hot on his heels.&nbsp; He dared not pause even to listen.&nbsp; The
+underwood tripped him, the lissom branches of the alders whipped his
+face and blinded him; once he fell headlong over a moss-grown stone,
+and picked himself up groaning.&nbsp; But the hare hard-pushed takes
+no account of the briars, nor does the fox heed the mud through which
+it draws itself into covert.&nbsp; And for the time he was naught but
+a hunted beast.&nbsp; With elbows pinned to his sides, or with hands
+extended to ward off the boughs, with bursting lungs and crimson face,
+he plunged through the tangle, now slipping downwards, now leaping upwards,
+now all but prostrate, now breasting a mass of thorns.&nbsp; On and
+on he ran, until he came to the verge of the wood, saw before him an
+open meadow devoid of shelter or hiding-place, and with a groan of despair
+cast himself flat.&nbsp; He listened.&nbsp; How far were they behind
+him?</p>
+<p>He heard nothing&mdash;nothing, save the common noises of the wood,
+the angry chatter of a disturbed blackbird as it flew low into hiding,
+or the harsh notes of a flock of starlings as they rose from the meadow.&nbsp;
+The hum of bees filled the air, and the August flies buzzed about his
+sweating brow, for he had lost his cap.&nbsp; But behind him&mdash;nothing.&nbsp;
+Already the stillness of the wood had closed upon his track.</p>
+<p>He was not the less panic-stricken.&nbsp; He supposed that Tavannes&rsquo;
+people were getting to horse, and calculated that, if they surrounded
+and beat the wood, he must be taken.&nbsp; At the thought, though he
+had barely got his breath, he rose, and keeping within the coppice crawled
+down the slope towards the river.&nbsp; Gently, when he reached it,
+he slipped into the water, and stooping below the level of the bank,
+his head and shoulders hidden by the bushes, he waded down stream until
+he had put another hundred and fifty yards between himself and pursuit.&nbsp;
+Then he paused and listened.&nbsp; Still he heard nothing, and he waded
+on again, until the water grew deep.&nbsp; At this point he marked a
+little below him a clump of trees on the farther side; and reflecting
+that that side&mdash;if he could reach it unseen&mdash;would be less
+suspect, he swam across, aiming for a thorn bush which grew low to the
+water.&nbsp; Under its shelter he crawled out, and, worming himself
+like a snake across the few yards of grass which intervened, he stood
+at length within the shadow of the trees.&nbsp; A moment he paused to
+shake himself, and then, remembering that he was still within a mile
+of the camp, he set off, now walking, and now running in the direction
+of the hills which his party had crossed that morning.</p>
+<p>For a time he hurried on, thinking only of escape.&nbsp; But when
+he had covered a mile or two, and escape seemed probable, there began
+to mingle with his thankfulness a bitter&mdash;a something which grew
+more bitter with each moment.&nbsp; Why had he fled and left the work
+undone?&nbsp; Why had he given way to unworthy fear, when the letters
+were within his grasp?&nbsp; True, if he had lingered a few seconds
+longer, he would have failed to make good his escape; but what of that
+if in those seconds he had destroyed the letters, he had saved Angers,
+he had saved his brethren?&nbsp; Alas! he had played the coward.&nbsp;
+The terror of Tavannes&rsquo; voice had unmanned him.&nbsp; He had saved
+himself and left the flock to perish; he, whom God had set apart by
+many and great signs for this work!</p>
+<p>He had commonly courage enough.&nbsp; He could have died at the stake
+for his convictions.&nbsp; But he had not the presence of mind which
+is proof against a shock, nor the cool judgment which, in the face of
+death, sees to the end of two roads.&nbsp; He was no coward, but now
+he deemed himself one, and in an agony of remorse he flung himself on
+his face in the long grass.&nbsp; He had known trials and temptations,
+but hitherto he had held himself erect; now, like Peter, he had betrayed
+his Lord.</p>
+<p>He lay an hour groaning in the misery of his heart, and then he fell
+on the text &ldquo;Thou art Peter, and on this rock&mdash;&rdquo; and
+he sat up.&nbsp; Peter had betrayed his trust through cowardice&mdash;as
+he had.&nbsp; But Peter had not been held unworthy.&nbsp; Might it not
+be so with him?&nbsp; He rose to his feet, a new light in his eyes.&nbsp;
+He would return!&nbsp; He would return, and at all costs, even at the
+cost of surrendering himself, he would obtain access to the letters.&nbsp;
+And then&mdash;not the fear of Count Hannibal, not the fear of instant
+death, should turn him from his duty.</p>
+<p>He had cast himself down in a woodland glade which lay near the path
+along which he had ridden that morning.&nbsp; But the mental conflict
+from which he rose had shaken him so violently that he could not recall
+the side on which he had entered the clearing, and he turned himself
+about, endeavouring to remember.&nbsp; At that moment the light jingle
+of a bridle struck his ear; he caught through the green bushes the flash
+and sparkle of harness.&nbsp; They had tracked him then, they were here!&nbsp;
+So had he clear proof that this second chance was to be his.&nbsp; In
+a happy fervour he stood forward where the pursuers could not fail to
+see him.</p>
+<p>Or so he thought.&nbsp; Yet the first horseman, riding carelessly
+with his face averted and his feet dangling, would have gone by and
+seen nothing if his horse, more watchful, had not shied.&nbsp; The man
+turned then; and for a moment the two stared at one another between
+the pricked ears of the horse.&nbsp; At last&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. de Tignonville!&rdquo; the minister ejaculated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;La Tribe!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is truly you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well&mdash;I think so,&rdquo; the young man answered.</p>
+<p>The minister lifted up his eyes and seemed to call the trees and
+the clouds and the birds to witness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;I know that I am chosen!&nbsp;
+And that we were instruments to do this thing from the day when the
+hen saved us in the haycart in Paris!&nbsp; Now I know that all is forgiven
+and all is ordained, and that the faithful of Angers shall to-morrow
+live and not die!&rdquo;&nbsp; And with a face radiant, yet solemn,
+he walked to the young man&rsquo;s stirrup.</p>
+<p>An instant Tignonville looked sharply before him.&nbsp; &ldquo;How
+far ahead are they?&rdquo; he asked.&nbsp; His tone, hard and matter-of-fact,
+was little in harmony with the other&rsquo;s enthusiasm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are resting a league before you, at the ferry.&nbsp;
+You are in pursuit of them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not alone?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;&nbsp; The young man&rsquo;s look as he spoke was
+grim.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have five behind me&mdash;of your kidney, M. la
+Tribe.&nbsp; They are from the Arsenal.&nbsp; They have lost one his
+wife, and one his son.&nbsp; The three others&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sweethearts,&rdquo; Tignonville answered dryly.&nbsp; And
+he cast a singular look at the minister.</p>
+<p>But La Tribe&rsquo;s mind was so full of one matter, he could think
+only of that.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How did you hear of the letters?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The letters?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not know what you mean.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>La Tribe stared.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then why are you following him?&rdquo;
+he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; Tignonville echoed, a look of hate darkening his
+face.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you ask why we follow&mdash;&rdquo;&nbsp; But
+on the name he seemed to choke and was silent.</p>
+<p>By this time his men had come up, and one answered for him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why are we following Hannibal de Tavannes?&rdquo; he said
+sternly.&nbsp; &ldquo;To do to him as he has done to us!&nbsp; To rob
+him as he has robbed us&mdash;of more than gold!&nbsp; To kill him as
+he has killed ours, foully and by surprise!&nbsp; In his bed if we can!&nbsp;
+In the arms of his wife if God wills it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The speaker&rsquo;s face was haggard from brooding and lack of sleep,
+but his eyes glowed and burned, as his fellows growled assent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis simple why we follow,&rdquo; a second put in.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Is there a man of our faith who will not, when he hears the tale,
+rise up and stab the nearest of this black brood&mdash;though it be
+his brother?&nbsp; If so, God&rsquo;s curse on him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Amen!&nbsp; Amen!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So, and so only,&rdquo; cried the first, &ldquo;shall there
+be faith in our land!&nbsp; And our children, our little maids, shall
+lie safe in their beds!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Amen!&nbsp; Amen!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The speaker&rsquo;s chin sank on his breast, and with his last word
+the light died out of his eyes.&nbsp; La Tribe looked at him curiously,
+then at the others.&nbsp; Last of all at Tignonville, on whose face
+he fancied that he surprised a faint smile.&nbsp; Yet Tignonville&rsquo;s
+tone when he spoke was grave enough.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have heard,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you blame
+us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot,&rdquo; the minister answered, shivering.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+cannot.&rdquo;&nbsp; He had been for a while beyond the range of these
+feelings; and in the greenwood, under God&rsquo;s heaven, with the sunshine
+about him, they jarred on him.&nbsp; Yet he could not blame men who
+had suffered as these had suffered; who were maddened, as these were
+maddened, by the gravest wrongs which it is possible for one man to
+inflict on another.&nbsp; &ldquo;I dare not,&rdquo; he continued sorrowfully.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But in God&rsquo;s name I offer you a higher and a nobler errand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We need none,&rdquo; Tignonville muttered impatiently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yet many others need you,&rdquo; La Tribe answered in a tone
+of rebuke.&nbsp; &ldquo;You are not aware that the man you follow bears
+a packet from the King for the hands of the magistrates of Angers?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha!&nbsp; Does he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bidding them do at Angers as his Majesty has done in Paris?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The men broke into cries of execration.&nbsp; &ldquo;But he shall
+not see Angers!&rdquo; they swore.&nbsp; &ldquo;The blood that he has
+shed shall choke him by the way!&nbsp; And as he would do to others
+it shall be done to him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>La Tribe shuddered as he listened, as he looked.&nbsp; Try as he
+would, the thirst of these men for vengeance appalled him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How?&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;He has a score and more
+with him and you are only six.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Seven now,&rdquo; Tignonville answered with a smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True, but&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he lies to-night at La Fl&egrave;che?&nbsp; That is so?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was his intention this morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At the old King&rsquo;s Inn at the meeting of the great roads?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was mentioned,&rdquo; La Tribe admitted, with a reluctance
+he did not comprehend.&nbsp; &ldquo;But if the night be fair he is as
+like as not to lie in the fields.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>One of the men pointed to the sky.&nbsp; A dark bank of cloud fresh
+risen from the ocean, and big with tempest, hung low in the west.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See!&nbsp; God will deliver him into our hands!&rdquo; he
+cried.</p>
+<p>Tignonville nodded.&nbsp; &ldquo;If he lie there,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;He will.&rdquo;&nbsp; And then to one of his followers, as he
+dismounted, &ldquo;Do you ride on,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and stand
+guard that we be not surprised.&nbsp; And do you, Perrot, tell Monsieur.&nbsp;
+Perrot here, as God wills it,&rdquo; he added, with the faint smile
+which did not escape the minister&rsquo;s eye, &ldquo;married his wife
+from the great inn at La Fl&egrave;che, and he knows the place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None better,&rdquo; the man growled.&nbsp; He was a sullen,
+brooding knave, whose eyes when he looked up surprised by their savage
+fire.</p>
+<p>La Tribe shook his head.&nbsp; &ldquo;I know it, too,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis strong as a fortress, with a walled court, and all
+the windows look inwards.&nbsp; The gates are closed an hour after sunset,
+no matter who is without.&nbsp; If you think, M. de Tignonville, to
+take him there&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Patience, Monsieur, you have not heard me,&rdquo; Perrot interposed.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I know it after another fashion.&nbsp; Do you remember a rill
+of water which runs through the great yard and the stables?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>La Tribe nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Grated with iron at either end and no passage for so much
+as a dog?&nbsp; You do?&nbsp; Well, Monsieur, I have hunted rats there,
+and where the water passes under the wall is a culvert, a man&rsquo;s
+height in length.&nbsp; In it is a stone, one of those which frame the
+grating at the entrance, which a strong man can remove&mdash;and the
+man is in!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, in!&nbsp; But where?&rdquo; La Tribe asked, his eyebrows
+drawn together.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well said, Monsieur, where?&rdquo; Perrot rejoined in a tone
+of triumph.&nbsp; &ldquo;There lies the point.&nbsp; In the stables,
+where will be sleeping men, and a snorer on every truss?&nbsp; No, but
+in a fairway between two stables where the water at its entrance runs
+clear in a stone channel; a channel deepened in one place that they
+may draw for the chambers above with a rope and a bucket.&nbsp; The
+rooms above are the best in the house, four in one row, opening all
+on the gallery; which was uncovered, in the common fashion until Queen-Mother
+Jezebel, passing that way to Nantes, two years back, found the chambers
+draughty; and that end of the gallery was closed in against her return.&nbsp;
+Now, Monsieur, he and his Madame will lie there; and he will feel safe,
+for there is but one way to those four rooms&mdash;through the door
+which shuts off the covered gallery from the open part.&nbsp; But&mdash;&rdquo;
+he glanced up an instant and La Tribe caught the smouldering fire in
+his eyes&mdash;&ldquo;we shall not go in by the door.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The bucket rises through a trap?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the gallery?&nbsp; To be sure, monsieur.&nbsp; In the corner
+beyond the fourth door.&nbsp; There shall he fall into the pit which
+he dug for others, and the evil that he planned rebound on his own head!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>La Tribe was silent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What think you of it?&rdquo; Tignonville asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That it is cleverly planned,&rdquo; the minister answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No more than that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No more until I have eaten.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get him something!&rdquo; Tignonville replied in a surly tone.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And we may as well eat, ourselves.&nbsp; Lead the horses into
+the wood.&nbsp; And do you, Perrot, call Tuez-les-Moines, who is forward.&nbsp;
+Two hours&rsquo; riding should bring us to La Fl&egrave;che.&nbsp; We
+need not leave here, therefore, until the sun is low.&nbsp; To dinner!&nbsp;
+To dinner!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Probably he did not feel the indifference he affected, for his face
+as he ate grew darker, and from time to time he shot a glance, barbed
+with suspicion, at the minister.&nbsp; La Tribe on his side remained
+silent, although the men ate apart.&nbsp; He was in doubt, indeed, as
+to his own feelings.&nbsp; His instinct and his reason were at odds.&nbsp;
+Through all, however, a single purpose, the rescue of Angers, held good,
+and gradually other things fell into their places.&nbsp; When the meal
+was at an end, and Tignonville challenged him, he was ready.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your enthusiasm seems to have waned,&rdquo; the younger man
+said with a sneer, &ldquo;since we met, monsieur!&nbsp; May I ask now
+if you find any fault with the plan?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With the plan, none.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it was Providence brought us together, was it not Providence
+furnished me with Perrot who knows La Fl&egrave;che?&nbsp; If it was
+Providence brought the danger of the faithful in Angers to your knowledge,
+was it not Providence set us on the road&mdash;without whom you had
+been powerless?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then, in His name, what is the matter?&rdquo; Tignonville
+rejoined with a passion of which the other&rsquo;s manner seemed an
+inadequate cause.&nbsp; &ldquo;What will you!&nbsp; What is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would take your place,&rdquo; La Tribe answered quietly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My place?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, are we too many?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are enough without you, M. Tignonville,&rdquo; the minister
+answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;These men, who have wrongs to avenge, God will
+justify them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville&rsquo;s eyes sparkled with anger.&nbsp; &ldquo;And have
+I no wrongs to avenge?&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is it nothing to
+lose my mistress, to be robbed of my wife, to see the woman I love dragged
+off to be a slave and a toy?&nbsp; Are these no wrongs?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He spared your life, if he did not save it,&rdquo; the minister
+said solemnly.&nbsp; &ldquo;And hers.&nbsp; And her servants.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To suit himself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>La Tribe spread out his hands.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To suit himself!&nbsp; And for that you wish him to go free?&rdquo;
+Tignonville cried in a voice half-choked with rage.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do
+you know that this man, and this man alone, stood forth in the great
+Hall of the Louvre, and when even the King flinched, justified the murder
+of our people?&nbsp; After that is he to go free?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At your hands,&rdquo; La Tribe answered quietly.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+alone of our people must not pursue him.&rdquo;&nbsp; He would have
+added more, but Tignonville would not listen.</p>
+<p>Brooding on his wrongs behind the wall of the Arsenal, he had let
+hatred eat away his more generous instincts.&nbsp; Vain and conceited,
+he fancied that the world laughed at the poor figure he had cut; and
+the wound in his vanity festered until nothing would serve but to see
+the downfall of his enemy.&nbsp; Instant pursuit, instant vengeance&mdash;only
+these, he fancied, could restore him in his fellows&rsquo; eyes.</p>
+<p>In his heart he knew what would become him better.&nbsp; But vanity
+is a potent motive: and his conscience, even when supported by La Tribe,
+struggled but weakly.&nbsp; From neither would he hear more.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have travelled with him, until you side with him!&rdquo;
+he cried violently.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have a care, monsieur, have a care,
+lest we think you papist!&rdquo;&nbsp; And walking over to the men,
+he bade them saddle; adding a sour word which turned their eyes, in
+no friendly gaze, on the minister.</p>
+<p>After that La Tribe said no more.&nbsp; Of what use would it have
+been?</p>
+<p>But as darkness came on and cloaked the little troop, and the storm
+which the men had foreseen began to rumble in the west, his distaste
+for the business waxed.&nbsp; The summer lightning which presently began
+to play across the sky revealed not only the broad gleaming stream,
+between which and a wooded hill their road ran, but the faces of his
+companions; and these, in their turn, shed a grisly light on the bloody
+enterprise towards which they were set.&nbsp; Nervous and ill at ease,
+the minister&rsquo;s mind dwelt on the stages of that enterprise: the
+stealthy entrance through the waterway, the ascent through the trap,
+the surprise, the slaughter in the sleeping-chamber.&nbsp; And either
+because he had lived for days in the victim&rsquo;s company, or was
+swayed by the arguments he had addressed to another, the prospect shook
+his soul.</p>
+<p>In vain he told himself that this was the oppressor; he saw only
+the man, fresh roused from sleep, with the horror of impending dissolution
+in his eyes.&nbsp; And when the rider, behind whom he sat, pointed to
+a faint spark of light, at no great distance before them, and whispered
+that it was St. Agnes&rsquo;s Chapel, hard by the inn, he could have
+cried with the best Catholic of them all, &ldquo;Inter pontem et fontem,
+Domine!&rdquo;&nbsp; Nay, some such words did pass his lips.</p>
+<p>For the man before him turned halfway in his saddle.&nbsp; &ldquo;What?&rdquo;
+he asked.</p>
+<p>But the Huguenot did not explain.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIV.&nbsp; AT THE KING&rsquo;S INN.</h2>
+<p>The Countess sat up in the darkness of the chamber.&nbsp; She had
+writhed since noon under the stings of remorse; she could bear them
+no longer.&nbsp; The slow declension of the day, the evening light,
+the signs of coming tempest which had driven her company to the shelter
+of the inn at the crossroads, all had racked her, by reminding her that
+the hours were flying, and that soon the fault she had committed would
+be irreparable.&nbsp; One impulsive attempt to redeem it she had made;
+but it had failed, and, by rendering her suspect, had made reparation
+more difficult.&nbsp; Still, by daylight it had seemed possible to rest
+content with the trial made; not so now, when night had fallen, and
+the cries of little children and the haggard eyes of mothers peopled
+the darkness of her chamber.&nbsp; She sat up, and listened with throbbing
+temples.</p>
+<p>To shut out the lightning which played at intervals across the heavens,
+Madame St. Lo, who shared the room, had covered the window with a cloak;
+and the place was dark.&nbsp; To exclude the dull roll of the thunder
+was less easy, for the night was oppressively hot, and behind the cloak
+the casement was open.&nbsp; Gradually, too, another sound, the hissing
+fall of heavy rain, began to make itself heard, and to mingle with the
+regular breathing which proved that Madame St. Lo slept.</p>
+<p>Assured of this fact, the Countess presently heaved a sigh, and slipped
+from the bed.&nbsp; She groped in the darkness for her cloak, found
+it, and donned it over her night gear.&nbsp; Then, taking her bearings
+by her bed, which stood with its head to the window and its foot to
+the entrance, she felt her way across the floor to the door, and after
+passing her hands a dozen times over every part of it, she found the
+latch, and raised it.&nbsp; The door creaked, as she pulled it open,
+and she stood arrested; but the sound went no farther, for the roofed
+gallery outside, which looked by two windows on the courtyard, was full
+of outdoor noises, the rushing of rain and the running of spouts and
+eaves.&nbsp; One of the windows stood wide, admitting the rain and wind,
+and as she paused, holding the door open, the draught blew the cloak
+from her.&nbsp; She stepped out quickly and shut the door behind her.&nbsp;
+On her left was the blind end of the passage; she turned to the right.&nbsp;
+She took one step into the darkness and stood motionless.&nbsp; Beside
+her, within a few feet of her, some one had moved, with a dull sound
+as of a boot on wood; a sound so near her that she held her breath,
+and pressed herself against the wall.</p>
+<p>She listened.&nbsp; Perhaps some of the servants&mdash;it was a common
+usage&mdash;had made their beds on the floor.&nbsp; Perhaps one of the
+women had stirred in the room against the wall of which she crouched.&nbsp;
+Perhaps&mdash;but, even while she reassured herself, the sound rose
+anew at her feet.</p>
+<p>Fortunately at the same instant the glare of the lightning flooded
+all, and showed the passage, and showed it empty.&nbsp; It lit up the
+row of doors on her right and the small windows on her left, and discovered
+facing her the door which shut off the rest of the house.&nbsp; She
+could have thanked&mdash;nay, she did thank God for that light.&nbsp;
+If the sound she had heard recurred she did not hear it; for, as the
+thunder which followed hard on the flash crashed overhead and rolled
+heavily eastwards, she felt her way boldly along the passage, touching
+first one door, and then a second, and then a third.</p>
+<p>She groped for the latch of the last, and found it, but, with her
+hand on it, paused.&nbsp; In order to summon up her courage, she strove
+to hear again the cries of misery and to see again the haggard eyes
+which had driven her hither.&nbsp; And if she did not wholly succeed,
+other reflections came to her aid.&nbsp; This storm, which covered all
+smaller noises, and opened, now and again, God&rsquo;s lantern for her
+use, did it not prove that He was on her side, and that she might count
+on His protection?&nbsp; The thought at least was timely, and with a
+better heart she gathered her wits.&nbsp; Waiting until the thunder
+burst over her head, she opened the door, slid within it, and closed
+it.&nbsp; She would fain have left it ajar, that in case of need she
+might escape the more easily.&nbsp; But the wind, which beat into the
+passage through the open window, rendered the precaution too perilous.</p>
+<p>She went forward two paces into the room, and as the roll of the
+thunder died away she stooped forward and listened with painful intensity
+for the sound of Count Hannibal&rsquo;s breathing.&nbsp; But the window
+was open, and the hiss of the rain persisted; she could hear nothing
+through it, and fearfully she took another step forward.&nbsp; The window
+should be before her; the bed in the corner to the left.&nbsp; But nothing
+of either could she make out.&nbsp; She must wait for the lightning.</p>
+<p>It came, and for a second or more the room shone.&nbsp; The window,
+the low truckle-bed, the sleeper, she saw all with dazzling clearness,
+and before the flash had well passed she was crouching low, with the
+hood of her cloak dragged about her face.&nbsp; For the glare had revealed
+Count Hannibal; but not asleep!&nbsp; He lay on his side, his face towards
+her; lay with open eyes, staring at her.</p>
+<p>Or had the light tricked her?&nbsp; The light must have tricked her,
+for in the interval between the flash and the thunder, while she crouched
+quaking, he did not move or call.&nbsp; The light must have deceived
+her.&nbsp; She felt so certain of it that she found courage to remain
+where she was until another flash came and showed him sleeping with
+closed eyes.</p>
+<p>She drew a breath of relief at that, and rose slowly to her feet.&nbsp;
+But she dared not go forward until a third flash had confirmed the second.&nbsp;
+Then, while the thunder burst overhead and rolled away, she crept on
+until she stood beside the pillow, and, stooping, could hear the sleeper&rsquo;s
+breathing.</p>
+<p>Alas! the worst remained to be done.&nbsp; The packet, she was sure
+of it, lay under his pillow.&nbsp; How was she to find it, how remove
+it without rousing him?&nbsp; A touch might awaken him.&nbsp; And yet,
+if she would not return empty-handed, if she would not go back to the
+harrowing thoughts which had tortured her through the long hours of
+the day, it must be done, and done now.</p>
+<p>She knew this, yet she hung irresolute a while, blenching before
+the manual act, listening to the persistent rush and downpour of the
+rain.&nbsp; Then a second time she drew courage from the storm.&nbsp;
+How timely had it broken.&nbsp; How signally had it aided her!&nbsp;
+How slight had been her chance without it!&nbsp; And so at last, resolutely
+but with a deft touch, she slid her fingers between the pillow and the
+bed, slightly pressing down the latter with her other hand.&nbsp; For
+an instant she fancied that the sleeper&rsquo;s breathing stopped, and
+her heart gave a great bound.&nbsp; But the breathing went on the next
+instant&mdash;if it had stopped&mdash;and dreading the return of the
+lightning, shrinking from being revealed so near him, and in that act&mdash;for
+which the darkness seemed more fitting&mdash;she groped farther, and
+touched something.&nbsp; Then, as her fingers closed upon it and grasped
+it, and his breath rose hot to her burning cheek, she knew that the
+real danger lay in the withdrawal.</p>
+<p>At the first attempt he uttered a kind of grunt and moved, throwing
+out his hand.&nbsp; She thought that he was going to awake, and had
+hard work to keep herself where she was; but he did not move, and she
+began again with so infinite a precaution that the perspiration ran
+down her face and her hair within the hood hung dank on her neck.&nbsp;
+Slowly, oh so slowly, she drew back the hand, and with it the packet;
+so slowly, and yet so resolutely, being put to it, that when the dreaded
+flash surprised her, and she saw his harsh swarthy face, steeped in
+the mysterious aloofness of sleep, within a hand&rsquo;s breadth of
+hers, not a muscle of her arm moved, nor did her hand quiver.</p>
+<p>It was done&mdash;at last!&nbsp; With a burst of gratitude, of triumph,
+of exultation, she stood erect.&nbsp; She realized that it was done,
+and that here in her hand she held the packet.&nbsp; A deep gasp of
+relief, of joy, of thankfulness, and she glided towards the door.</p>
+<p>She groped for the latch, and in the act fancied his breathing was
+changed.&nbsp; She paused, and bent her head to listen.&nbsp; But the
+patter of the rain, drowning all sounds save those of the nearest origin,
+persuaded her that she was mistaken, and, finding the latch, she raised
+it, slipped like a shadow into the passage, and closed the door behind
+her.</p>
+<p>That done she stood arrested, all the blood in her body running to
+her heart.&nbsp; She must be dreaming!&nbsp; The passage in which she
+stood&mdash;the passage which she had left in black darkness&mdash;was
+alight; was so far lighted, at least, that to eyes fresh from the night,
+the figures of three men, grouped at the farther end, stood out against
+the glow of the lanthorn which they appeared to be trimming&mdash;for
+the two nearest were stooping over it.&nbsp; These two had their backs
+to her, the third his face; and it was the sight of this third man which
+had driven the blood to her heart.&nbsp; He ended at the waist!&nbsp;
+It was only after a few seconds, it was only when she had gazed at him
+awhile in speechless horror, that he rose another foot from the floor,
+and she saw that he had paused in the act of ascending through a trapdoor.&nbsp;
+What the scene meant, who these men were, or what their entrance portended,
+with these questions her brain refused at the moment to grapple.&nbsp;
+It was much that&mdash;still remembering who might hear her, and what
+she held&mdash;she did not shriek aloud.</p>
+<p>Instead, she stood in the gloom at her end of the passage, gazing
+with all her eyes until she had seen the third man step clear of the
+trap.&nbsp; She could see him; but the light intervened and blurred
+his view of her.&nbsp; He stooped, almost as soon as he had cleared
+himself, to help up a fourth man, who rose with a naked knife between
+his teeth.&nbsp; She saw then that all were armed, and something stealthy
+in their bearing, something cruel in their eyes as the light of the
+lanthorn fell now on one dark face and now on another, went to her heart
+and chilled it.&nbsp; Who were they, and why were they here?&nbsp; What
+was their purpose?&nbsp; As her reason awoke, as she asked herself these
+questions, the fourth man stooped in his turn, and gave his hand to
+a fifth.&nbsp; And on that she lost her self-control, and cried out.&nbsp;
+For the last man to ascend was La Tribe&mdash;La Tribe, from whom she
+had parted that morning.</p>
+<p>The sound she uttered was low, but it reached the men&rsquo;s ears,
+and the two whose backs were towards her turned as if they had been
+pricked.&nbsp; He who held the lanthorn raised it, and the five glared
+at her and she at them.&nbsp; Then a second cry, louder and more full
+of surprise, burst from her lips.&nbsp; The nearest man, he who held
+the lanthorn high that he might view her, was Tignonville, was her lover!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Mon Dieu</i>!&rdquo; she whispered.&nbsp; &ldquo;What is
+it?&nbsp; What is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then, not till then, did he know her.&nbsp; Until then the light
+of the lanthorn had revealed only a cloaked and cowled figure, a gloomy
+phantom which shook the heart of more than one with superstitious terror.&nbsp;
+But they knew her now&mdash;two of them; and slowly, as in a dream,
+Tignonville came forward.</p>
+<p>The mind has its moments of crisis, in which it acts upon instinct
+rather than upon reason.&nbsp; The girl never knew why she acted as
+she did; why she asked no questions, why she uttered no exclamations,
+no remonstrances; why, with a finger on her lips and her eyes on his,
+she put the packet into his hands.</p>
+<p>He took it from her, too, as mechanically as she gave it&mdash;with
+the hand which held his bare blade.&nbsp; That done, silent as she,
+with his eyes set hard, he would have gone by her.&nbsp; The sight of
+her <i>there</i>, guarding the door of him who had stolen her from him,
+exasperated his worst passions.&nbsp; But she moved to hinder him, and
+barred the way.&nbsp; With her hand raised she pointed to the trapdoor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go!&rdquo; she whispered, her tone stern and low, &ldquo;you
+have what you want!&nbsp; Go!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo;&nbsp; And he tried to pass her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go!&rdquo; she repeated in the same tone.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+have what you need.&rdquo;&nbsp; And still she held her hand extended;
+still without faltering she faced the five men, while the thunder, growing
+more distant, rolled sullenly eastward, and the midnight rain, pouring
+from every spout and dripping eave about the house, wrapped the passage
+in its sibilant hush.&nbsp; Gradually her eyes dominated his, gradually
+her nobler nature and nobler aim subdued his weaker parts.&nbsp; For
+she understood now; and he saw that she did, and had he been alone he
+would have slunk away, and said no word in his defence.</p>
+<p>But one of the men, savage and out of patience, thrust himself between
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is he?&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;What is the
+use of this?&nbsp; Where is he?&rdquo;&nbsp; And his bloodshot eyes&mdash;it
+was Tuez-les-Moines&mdash;questioned the doors, while his hand, trembling
+and shaking on the haft of his knife, bespoke his eagerness.&nbsp; &ldquo;Where
+is he?&nbsp; Where is he, woman?&nbsp; Quick, or&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall not tell you,&rdquo; she answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You lie,&rdquo; he cried, grinning like a dog.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+will tell us!&nbsp; Or we will kill you too!&nbsp; Where is he?&nbsp;
+Where is he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall not tell you,&rdquo; she repeated, standing before
+him in the fearlessness of scorn.&nbsp; &ldquo;Another step and I rouse
+the house!&nbsp; M. de Tignonville, to you who know me, I swear that
+if this man does not retire&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is in one of these rooms?&rdquo; was Tignonville&rsquo;s
+answer.&nbsp; &ldquo;In which?&nbsp; In which?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Search them!&rdquo; she answered, her voice low, but biting
+in its contempt.&nbsp; &ldquo;Try them.&nbsp; Rouse my women, alarm
+the house!&nbsp; And when you have his people at your throats&mdash;five
+as they will be to one of you&mdash;thank your own mad folly!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tuez-les-Moines&rsquo; eyes glittered.&nbsp; &ldquo;You will not
+tell us?&rdquo; he cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But as the fanatic sprang on her, La Tribe flung his arms round him
+and dragged him back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would be madness,&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Are you
+mad, fool?&nbsp; Have done!&rdquo; he panted, struggling with him.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If Madame gives the alarm&mdash;and he may be in any one of these
+four rooms, you cannot be sure which&mdash;we are undone.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He looked for support to Tignonville, whose movement to protect the
+girl he had anticipated, and who had since listened sullenly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;We have obtained what we need.&nbsp; Will you requite Madame,
+who has gained it for us at her own risk&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is Monsieur I would requite,&rdquo; Tignonville muttered
+grimly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By using violence to her?&rdquo; the minister retorted passionately.&nbsp;
+He and Tuez were still gripping one another.&nbsp; &ldquo;I tell you,
+to go on is to risk what we have got!&nbsp; And I for one&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Am chicken-hearted!&rdquo; the young man sneered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Madame&mdash;&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He seemed to choke on the word.&nbsp; &ldquo;Will you swear that he
+is not here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I swear that if you do not go I will raise the alarm!&rdquo;
+she hissed&mdash;all their words were sunk to that stealthy note.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Go! if you have not stayed too long already.&nbsp; Go!&nbsp;
+Or see!&rdquo;&nbsp; And she pointed to the trapdoor, from which the
+face and arms of a sixth man had that moment risen&mdash;the face dark
+with perturbation, so that her woman&rsquo;s wit told her at once that
+something was amiss.&nbsp; &ldquo;See what has come of your delay already!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The water is rising,&rdquo; the man muttered earnestly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;In God&rsquo;s name come, whether you have done it or not, or
+we cannot pass out again.&nbsp; It is within a foot of the crown of
+the culvert now, and it is rising.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Curse on the water!&rdquo; Tuez-les-Moines answered in a frenzied
+whisper.&nbsp; &ldquo;And on this Jezebel.&nbsp; Let us kill her and
+him!&nbsp; What matter afterwards?&rdquo;&nbsp; And he tried to shake
+off La Tribe&rsquo;s grasp.</p>
+<p>But the minister held him desperately.&nbsp; &ldquo;Are you mad?&nbsp;
+Are you mad?&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;What can we do against
+thirty?&nbsp; Let us be gone while we can.&nbsp; Let us be gone!&nbsp;
+Come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, come,&rdquo; Perrot cried, assenting reluctantly.&nbsp;
+He had taken no side hitherto.&nbsp; &ldquo;The luck is against us!&nbsp;
+&rsquo;Tis no use to-night, man!&rdquo;&nbsp; And he turned with an
+air of sullen resignation.&nbsp; Letting his legs drop through the trap,
+he followed the bearer of the tidings out of sight.&nbsp; Another made
+up his mind to go, and went.&nbsp; Then only Tignonville, holding the
+lanthorn, and La Tribe, who feared to release Tuez-les-Moines, remained
+with the fanatic.</p>
+<p>The Countess&rsquo;s eyes met her old lover&rsquo;s, and whether
+old memories overcame her, or, now that the danger was nearly past,
+she began to give way, she swayed a little on her feet.&nbsp; But he
+did not notice it.&nbsp; He was sunk in black rage&mdash;rage against
+her, rage against himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take the light,&rdquo; she muttered unsteadily.&nbsp; &ldquo;And&mdash;and
+he must follow!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But she could bear it no longer.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, go,&rdquo; she
+wailed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go!&nbsp; Will you never go?&nbsp; If you love
+me, if you ever loved me, I implore you to go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had betrayed little of a lover&rsquo;s feeling.&nbsp; But he could
+not resist that appeal, and he turned silently.&nbsp; Seizing Tuez-les-Moines
+by the other arm, he drew him by force to the trap.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quiet, fool,&rdquo; he muttered savagely when the man would
+have resisted, &ldquo;and go down!&nbsp; If we stay to kill him, we
+shall have no way of escape, and his life will be dearly bought.&nbsp;
+Down, man, down!&rdquo;&nbsp; And between them, in a struggling silence,
+with now and then an audible rap, or a ring of metal, the two forced
+the desperado to descend.</p>
+<p>La Tribe followed hastily.&nbsp; Tignonville was the last to go.&nbsp;
+In the act of disappearing he raised his lanthorn for a last glimpse
+of the Countess.&nbsp; To his astonishment the passage was empty; she
+was gone.&nbsp; Hard by him a door stood an inch or two ajar, and he
+guessed that it was hers, and swore under his breath, hating her at
+that moment.&nbsp; But he did not guess how nicely she had calculated
+her strength; how nearly exhaustion had overcome her; or that, even
+while he paused&mdash;a fatal pause had he known it&mdash;eyeing the
+dark opening of the door, she lay as one dead, on the bed within.&nbsp;
+She had fallen in a swoon, from which she did not recover until the
+sun had risen, and marched across one quarter of the heavens.</p>
+<p>Nor did he see another thing, or he might have hastened his steps.&nbsp;
+Before the yellow light of his lanthorn faded from the ceiling of the
+passage, the door of the room farthest from the trap slid open.&nbsp;
+A man, whose eyes, until darkness swallowed him, shone strangely in
+a face extraordinarily softened, came out on tip-toe.&nbsp; This man
+stood awhile, listening.&nbsp; At length, hearing those below utter
+a cry of dismay, he awoke to sudden activity.&nbsp; He opened with a
+turn of the key the door which stood at his elbow, the door which led
+to the other part of the house.&nbsp; He vanished through it.&nbsp;
+A second later a sharp whistle pierced the darkness of the courtyard,
+and brought a dozen sleepers to their senses and their feet.&nbsp; A
+moment, and the courtyard hummed with voices, above which one voice
+rang clear and insistent.&nbsp; With a startled cry the inn awoke.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXV.&nbsp; THE COMPANY OF THE BLEEDING HEART.</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;But why,&rdquo; Madame St. Lo asked, sticking her arms akimbo,
+&ldquo;why stay in this forsaken place a day and a night, when six hours
+in the saddle would set us in Angers?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because,&rdquo; Tavannes replied coldly&mdash;he and his cousin
+were walking before the gateway of the inn&mdash;&ldquo;the Countess
+is not well, and will be the better, I think, for staying a day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She slept soundly enough!&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll answer for that!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She never raised her head this morning, though my women were
+shrieking &lsquo;Murder!&rsquo; next door, and&mdash;Name of Heaven!&rdquo;
+Madame resumed, after breaking off abruptly, and shading her eyes with
+her hand, &ldquo;what comes here?&nbsp; Is it a funeral?&nbsp; Or a
+pilgrimage?&nbsp; If all the priests about here are as black, no wonder
+M. Rabelais fell out with them!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The inn stood without the walls for the convenience of those who
+wished to take the road early: a little also, perhaps, because food
+and forage were cheaper, and the wine paid no town-dues.&nbsp; Four
+great roads met before the house, along the most easterly of which the
+sombre company which had caught Madame St. Lo&rsquo;s attention could
+be seen approaching.&nbsp; At first Count Hannibal supposed with his
+companion that the travellers were conveying to the grave the corpse
+of some person of distinction; for the <i>cort&eacute;ge</i> consisted
+mainly of priests and the like mounted on mules, and clothed for the
+most part in black.&nbsp; Black also was the small banner which waved
+above them, and bore in place of arms the emblem of the Bleeding Heart.&nbsp;
+But a second glance failed to discover either litter or bier; and a
+nearer approach showed that the travellers, whether they wore the tonsure
+or not, bore weapons of one kind or another.</p>
+<p>Suddenly Madame St. Lo clapped her hands, and proclaimed in great
+astonishment that she knew them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, there is Father Boucher, the Cur&eacute; of St. Benoist!&rdquo;
+she said, &ldquo;and Father Pezelay of St. Magloire.&nbsp; And there
+is another I know, though I cannot remember his name!&nbsp; They are
+preachers from Paris!&nbsp; That is who they are!&nbsp; But what can
+they be doing here?&nbsp; Is it a pilgrimage, think you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, a pilgrimage of Blood!&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered
+between his teeth.&nbsp; And, turning to him to learn what moved him,
+she saw the look in his eyes which portended a storm.&nbsp; Before she
+could ask a question, however, the gloomy company, which had first appeared
+in the distance, moving, an inky blot, through the hot sunshine of the
+summer morning, had drawn near, and was almost abreast of them.&nbsp;
+Stepping from her side, he raised his hand and arrested the march.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who is master here?&rdquo; he asked haughtily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am the leader,&rdquo; answered a stout pompous Churchman,
+whose small malevolent eyes belied the sallow fatuity of his face.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I, M. de Tavannes, by your leave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you, by your leave,&rdquo; Tavannes sneered, &ldquo;are&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Archdeacon and Vicar of the Bishop of Angers and Prior of
+the Lesser Brethren of St. Germain, M. le Comte.&nbsp; Visitor also
+of the Diocese of Angers,&rdquo; the dignitary continued, puffing out
+his cheeks, &ldquo;and Chaplain to the Lieutenant-Governor of Saumur,
+whose unworthy brother I am.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A handsome glove, and well embroidered!&rdquo; Tavannes retorted
+in a tone of disdain.&nbsp; &ldquo;The hand I see yonder!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He pointed to the lean parchment mask of Father Pezelay, who coloured
+ever so faintly, but held his peace under the sneer.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+are bound for Angers?&rdquo; Count Hannibal continued.&nbsp; &ldquo;For
+what purpose, Sir Prior?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His Grace the Bishop is absent, and in his absence&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You go to fill his city with strife!&nbsp; I know you!&nbsp;
+Not you!&rdquo; he continued, contemptuously turning from the Prior,
+and regarding the third of the principal figures of the party.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But you!&nbsp; You were the Cur&eacute; who got the mob together
+last All Souls&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I speak the words of Him Who sent me!&rdquo; answered the
+third Churchman, whose brooding face and dull curtained eyes gave no
+promise of the fits of frenzied eloquence which had made his pulpit
+famous in Paris.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then Kill and Burn are His alphabet!&rdquo; Tavannes retorted,
+and heedless of the start of horror which a saying so near blasphemy
+excited among the Churchmen, he turned to Father Pezelay.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+you!&nbsp; You, too, I know!&rdquo; he continued.&nbsp; &ldquo;And you
+know me!&nbsp; And take this from me.&nbsp; Turn, father!&nbsp; Turn!&nbsp;
+Or worse than a broken head&mdash;you bear the scar, I see&mdash;will
+befall you.&nbsp; These good persons, whom you have moved, unless I
+am in error, to take this journey, may not know me; but you do, and
+can tell them.&nbsp; If they will to Angers, they must to Angers.&nbsp;
+But if I find trouble in Angers when I come, I will hang some one high.&nbsp;
+Don&rsquo;t scowl at me, man!&rdquo;&mdash;in truth, the look of hate
+in Father Pezelay&rsquo;s eyes was enough to provoke the exclamation.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Some one, and it shall not be a bare patch on the crown will
+save his windpipe from squeezing!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A murmur of indignation broke from the preachers&rsquo; attendants;
+one or two made a show of drawing their weapons.&nbsp; But Count Hannibal
+paid no heed to them, and had already turned on his heel when Father
+Pezelay spurred his mule a pace or two forward.&nbsp; Snatching a heavy
+brass cross from one of the acolytes, he raised it aloft, and in the
+voice which had often thrilled the heated congregation of St. Magloire,
+he called on Tavannes to pause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand, my lord!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;And take warning!&nbsp;
+Stand, reckless and profane, whose face is set hard as a stone, and
+his heart as a flint, against High Heaven and Holy Church!&nbsp; Stand
+and hear!&nbsp; Behold the word of the Lord is gone out against this
+city, even against Angers, for the unbelief thereof!&nbsp; Her place
+shall be left unto her desolate, and her children shall be dashed against
+the stones!&nbsp; Woe unto you, therefore, if you gainsay it, or fall
+short of that which is commanded! You shall perish as Achan, the son
+of Charmi, and as Saul!&nbsp; The curse that has gone out against you
+shall not tarry, nor your days continue!&nbsp; For the Canaanitish woman
+that is in your house, and for the thought that is in your heart, the
+place that was yours is given to another!&nbsp; Yea, the sword is even
+now drawn that shall pierce your side!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are more like to split my ears!&rdquo; Count Hannibal
+answered sternly.&nbsp; &ldquo;And now mark me!&nbsp; Preach as you
+please here.&nbsp; But a word in Angers, and though you be shaven twice
+over, I will have you silenced after a fashion which will not please
+you!&nbsp; If you value your tongue therefore, father&mdash;Oh, you
+shake off the dust, do you?&nbsp; Well, pass on!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis wise,
+perhaps.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And undismayed by the scowling brows, and the cross ostentatiously
+lifted to heaven, he gazed after the procession as it moved on under
+its swaying banner, now one and now another of the acolytes looking
+back and raising his hands to invoke the bolt of Heaven on the blasphemer.&nbsp;
+As the <i>cort&eacute;ge</i> passed the huge watering-troughs, and the
+open gateway of the inn, the knot of persons congregated there fell
+on their knees.&nbsp; In answer the Churchmen raised their banner higher,
+and began to sing the <i>Eripe me, Domine</i>! and to its strains, now
+vengeful, now despairing, now rising on a wave of menace, they passed
+slowly into the distance, slowly towards Angers and the Loire.</p>
+<p>Suddenly Madame St. Lo twitched his sleeve.&nbsp; &ldquo;Enough for
+me!&rdquo; she cried passionately.&nbsp; &ldquo;I go no farther with
+you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No farther!&rdquo; she repeated.&nbsp; She was pale, she shivered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Many thanks, my cousin, but we part company here.&nbsp; I do
+not go to Angers.&nbsp; I have seen horrors enough.&nbsp; I will take
+my people, and go to my aunt by Tours and the east road.&nbsp; For you,
+I foresee what will happen.&nbsp; You will perish between the hammer
+and the anvil.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You play too fine a game,&rdquo; she continued, her face quivering.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Give over the girl to her lover, and send away her people with
+her.&nbsp; And wash your hands of her and hers.&nbsp; Or you will see
+her fall, and fall beside her!&nbsp; Give her to him, I say&mdash;give
+her to him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My wife?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife?&rdquo; she echoed, for, fickle, and at all times swept
+away by the emotions of the moment, she was in earnest now.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is
+there a tie,&rdquo; and she pointed after the vanishing procession,
+&ldquo;that they cannot unloose?&nbsp; That they will not unloose?&nbsp;
+Is there a life which escapes if they doom it?&nbsp; Did the Admiral
+escape?&nbsp; Or Rochefoucauld?&nbsp; Or Madame de Luns in old days?&nbsp;
+I tell you they go to rouse Angers against you, and I see beforehand
+what will happen.&nbsp; She will perish, and you with her.&nbsp; Wife?&nbsp;
+A pretty wife, at whose door you took her lover last night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And at your door!&rdquo; he answered quietly, unmoved by the
+gibe.</p>
+<p>But she did not heed.&nbsp; &ldquo;I warned you of that!&rdquo; she
+cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;And you would not believe me.&nbsp; I told you he
+was following.&nbsp; And I warn you of this.&nbsp; You are between the
+hammer and the anvil, M. le Comte!&nbsp; If Tignonville does not murder
+you in your bed&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hold him in my power.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then Holy Church will fall on you and crush you.&nbsp; For
+me, I have seen enough and more than enough.&nbsp; I go to Tours by
+the east road.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders.&nbsp; &ldquo;As you please,&rdquo; he
+said.</p>
+<p>She flung away in disgust with him.&nbsp; She could not understand
+a man who played fast and loose at such a time.&nbsp; The game was too
+fine for her, its danger too apparent, the gain too small.&nbsp; She
+had, too, a woman&rsquo;s dread of the Church, a woman&rsquo;s belief
+in the power of the dead hand to punish.&nbsp; And in half an hour her
+orders were given.&nbsp; In two hours her people were gathered, and
+she departed by the eastward road, three of Tavannes&rsquo; riders reinforcing
+her servants for a part of the way.&nbsp; Count Hannibal stood to watch
+them start, and noticed Bigot riding by the side of Suzanne&rsquo;s
+mule.&nbsp; He smiled; and presently, as he turned away, he did a thing
+rare with him&mdash;he laughed outright.</p>
+<p>A laugh which reflected a mood rare as itself.&nbsp; Few had seen
+Count Hannibal&rsquo;s eye sparkle as it sparkled now; few had seen
+him laugh as he laughed, walking to and fro in the sunshine before the
+inn.&nbsp; His men watched him, and wondered, and liked it little, for
+one or two who had overheard his altercation with the Churchmen had
+reported it, and there was shaking of heads over it.&nbsp; The man who
+had singed the Pope&rsquo;s beard and chucked cardinals under the chin
+was growing old, and the most daring of the others had no mind to fight
+with foes whose weapons were not of this world.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal&rsquo;s gaiety, however, was well grounded, had they
+known it.&nbsp; He was gay, not because he foresaw peril, and it was
+his nature to love peril; not&mdash;in the main, though a little, perhaps&mdash;because
+he knew that the woman whose heart he desired to win had that night
+stood between him and death; not, though again a little, perhaps, because
+she had confirmed his choice by conduct which a small man might have
+deprecated, but which a great man loved; but chiefly, because the events
+of the night had placed in his grasp two weapons by the aid of which
+he looked to recover all the ground he had lost&mdash;lost by his impulsive
+departure from the pall of conduct on which he had started.</p>
+<p>Those weapons were Tignonville, taken like a rat in a trap by the
+rising of the water; and the knowledge that the Countess had stolen
+the precious packet from his pillow.&nbsp; The knowledge&mdash;for he
+had lain and felt her breath upon his cheek, he had lain and felt her
+hand beneath his pillow, he had lain while the impulse to fling his
+arms about her had been almost more than he could tame!&nbsp; He had
+lain and suffered her to go, to pass out safely as she had passed in.&nbsp;
+And then he had received his reward in the knowledge that, if she robbed
+him, she robbed him not for herself; and that where it was a question
+of his life she did not fear to risk her own.</p>
+<p>When he came, indeed, to that point, he trembled.&nbsp; How narrowly
+had he been saved from misjudging her!&nbsp; Had he not lain and waited,
+had he not possessed himself in patience, he might have thought her
+in collusion with the old lover whom he found at her door, and with
+those who came to slay him.&nbsp; Either he might have perished unwarned;
+or escaping that danger, he might have detected her with Tignonville
+and lost for all time the ideal of a noble woman.</p>
+<p>He had escaped that peril.&nbsp; More, he had gained the weapons
+we have indicated; and the sense of power, in regard to her, almost
+intoxicated him.&nbsp; Surely if he wielded those weapons to the best
+advantage, if he strained generosity to the uttermost, the citadel of
+her heart must yield at last!</p>
+<p>He had the defect of his courage and his nature, a tendency to do
+things after a flamboyant fashion.&nbsp; He knew that her act would
+plunge him in perils which she had not foreseen.&nbsp; If the preachers
+roused the Papists of Angers, if he arrived to find men&rsquo;s swords
+whetted for the massacre and the men themselves awaiting the signal,
+then if he did not give that signal there would be trouble.&nbsp; There
+would be trouble of the kind in which the soul of Hannibal de Tavannes
+revelled, trouble about the ancient cathedral and under the black walls
+of the Angevin castle; trouble amid which the hearts of common men would
+be as water.</p>
+<p>Then, when things seemed at their worst, he would reveal his knowledge.&nbsp;
+Then, when forgiveness must seem impossible, he would forgive.&nbsp;
+With the flood of peril which she had unloosed rising round them, he
+would say, &ldquo;Go!&rdquo; to the man who had aimed at his life; he
+would say to her, &ldquo;I know, and I forgive!&rdquo;&nbsp; That, that
+only, would fitly crown the policy on which he had decided from the
+first, though he had not hoped to conduct it on lines so splendid as
+those which now dazzled him.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVI.&nbsp; TEMPER.</h2>
+<p>It was his gaiety, that strange unusual gaiety, still continuing,
+which on the following day began by perplexing and ended by terrifying
+the Countess.&nbsp; She could not doubt that he had missed the packet
+on which so much hung and of which he had indicated the importance.&nbsp;
+But if he had missed it, why, she asked herself, did he not speak?&nbsp;
+Why did he not cry the alarm, search and question and pursue?&nbsp;
+Why did he not give her that opening to tell the truth, without which
+even her courage failed, her resolution died within her?</p>
+<p>Above all, what was the secret of his strange merriment?&nbsp; Of
+the snatches of song which broke from him, only to be hushed by her
+look of astonishment?&nbsp; Of the parades which his horse, catching
+the infection, made under him, as he tossed his riding-cane high in
+the air and caught it?</p>
+<p>Ay, what?&nbsp; Why, when he had suffered so great a loss, when he
+had been robbed of that of which he must give account&mdash;why did
+he cast off his melancholy and ride like the youngest?&nbsp; She wondered
+what the men thought, and looking, saw them stare, saw that they watched
+him stealthily, saw that they laid their heads together.&nbsp; What
+were they thinking of it?&nbsp; She could not tell; and slowly a terror,
+more insistent than any to which the extremity of violence would have
+reduced her, began to grip her heart.</p>
+<p>Twenty hours of rest had lifted her from the state of collapse into
+which the events of the night had cast her; still her limbs at starting
+had shaken under her.&nbsp; But the cool freshness of the early summer
+morning, and the sight of the green landscape and the winding Loir,
+beside which their road ran, had not failed to revive her spirits; and
+if he had shown himself merely gloomy, merely sunk in revengeful thoughts,
+or darting hither and thither the glance of suspicion, she felt that
+she could have faced him, and on the first opportunity could have told
+him the truth.</p>
+<p>But his new mood veiled she knew not what.&nbsp; It seemed, if she
+comprehended it at all, the herald of some bizarre, some dreadful vengeance,
+in harmony with his fierce and mocking spirit.&nbsp; Before it her heart
+became as water.&nbsp; Even her colour little by little left her cheeks.&nbsp;
+She knew that he had only to look at her now to read the truth; that
+it was written in her face, in her shrinking figure, in the eyes which
+now guiltily sought and now avoided his.&nbsp; And feeling sure that
+he did read it and know it, she fancied that he licked his lips, as
+the cat which plays with the mouse; she fancied that he gloated on her
+terror and her perplexity.</p>
+<p>This, though the day and the road were warrants for all cheerful
+thoughts.&nbsp; On one side vineyards clothed the warm red slopes, and
+rose in steps from the valley to the white buildings of a convent.&nbsp;
+On the other the stream wound through green flats where the black cattle
+stood knee-deep in grass, watched by wild-eyed and half-naked youths.&nbsp;
+Again the travellers lost sight of the Loir, and crossing a shoulder,
+rode through the dim aisles of a beech-forest, through deep rustling
+drifts of last year&rsquo;s leaves.&nbsp; And out again and down again
+they passed, and turning aside from the gateway, trailed along beneath
+the brown machicolated wall of an old town, from the crumbling battlements
+of which faces half-sleepy, half-suspicious, watched them as they moved
+below through the glare and heat.&nbsp; Down to the river-level again,
+where a squalid anchorite, seated at the mouth of a cave dug in the
+bank, begged of them, and the bell of a monastery on the farther bank
+tolled slumberously the hour of Nones.</p>
+<p>And still he said nothing, and she, cowed by his mysterious gaiety,
+yet spurning herself for her cowardice, was silent also.&nbsp; He hoped
+to arrive at Angers before nightfall.&nbsp; What, she wondered, shivering,
+would happen there?&nbsp; What was he planning to do to her?&nbsp; How
+would he punish her?&nbsp; Brave as she was, she was a woman, with a
+woman&rsquo;s nerves; and fear and anticipation got upon them; and his
+silence&mdash;his silence which must mean a thing worse than words!</p>
+<p>And then on a sudden, piercing all, a new thought.&nbsp; Was it possible
+that he had other letters?&nbsp; If his bearing were consistent with
+anything, it was consistent with that.&nbsp; Had he other genuine letters,
+or had he duplicate letters, so that he had lost nothing, but instead
+had gained the right to rack and torture her, to taunt and despise her?</p>
+<p>That thought stung her into sudden self-betrayal.&nbsp; They were
+riding along a broad dusty track which bordered a stone causey raised
+above the level of winter floods.&nbsp; Impulsively she turned to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have other letters!&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+have other letters!&rdquo;&nbsp; And freed for the moment from her terror,
+she fixed her eyes on his and strove to read his face.</p>
+<p>He looked at her, his mouth grown hard.&nbsp; &ldquo;What do you
+mean, Madame?&rdquo; he asked,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have other letters?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For whom?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From the King, for Angers!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He saw that she was going to confess, that she was going to derange
+his cherished plan; and unreasonable anger awoke in the man who had
+been more than willing to forgive a real injury.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you explain?&rdquo; he said between his teeth.&nbsp;
+And his eyes glittered unpleasantly.&nbsp; &ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have other letters,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;besides those
+which I stole.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which you stole?&rdquo;&nbsp; He repeated the words without
+passion.&nbsp; Enraged by this unexpected turn, he hardly knew how to
+take it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I!&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;I!&nbsp; I took them
+from under your pillow!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was silent a minute.&nbsp; Then he laughed and shook his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will not do, Madame,&rdquo; he said, his lip curling.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You are clever, but you do not deceive me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Deceive you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do not believe that I took the letters?&rdquo; she cried
+in great amazement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;and for a good reason.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He had hardened his heart now.&nbsp; He had chosen his line, and he
+would not spare her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, then?&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For the best of all reasons,&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Because
+the person who stole the letters was seized in the act of making his
+escape, and is now in my power.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The person&mdash;who stole the letters?&rdquo; she faltered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Madame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you mean M. de Tignonville?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have said it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She turned white to the lips, and trembling, could with difficulty
+sit her horse.&nbsp; With an effort she pulled it up, and he stopped
+also.&nbsp; Their attendants were some way ahead.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you have the letters?&rdquo; she whispered, her eyes meeting
+his.&nbsp; &ldquo;You have the letters?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, but I have the thief!&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered with
+sinister meaning.&nbsp; &ldquo;As I think you knew, Madame,&rdquo; he
+continued ironically, &ldquo;a while back before you spoke.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I?&nbsp; Oh no, no!&rdquo; and she swayed in her saddle.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What&mdash;what are you&mdash;going to do?&rdquo; she muttered
+after a moment&rsquo;s stricken silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The magistrates will decide, at Angers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But he did not do it!&nbsp; I swear he did not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal shook his head coldly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I swear, Monsieur, I took the letters!&rdquo; she repeated
+piteously.&nbsp; &ldquo;Punish me!&rdquo;&nbsp; Her figure, bowed like
+an old woman&rsquo;s over the neck of her horse, seemed to crave his
+mercy.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal smiled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do not believe me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; And then, in a tone which chilled
+her, &ldquo;If I did believe you,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;I should
+still punish him!&rdquo;&nbsp; She was broken; but he would see if he
+could not break her further.&nbsp; He would try if there were no weak
+spot in her armour.&nbsp; He would rack her now, since in the end she
+must go free.&nbsp; &ldquo;Understand, Madame,&rdquo; he continued in
+his harshest tone, &ldquo;I have had enough of your lover.&nbsp; He
+has crossed my path too often.&nbsp; You are my wife, I am your husband.&nbsp;
+In a day or two there shall be an end of this farce and of him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He did not take them!&rdquo; she wailed, her face sinking
+lower on her breast.&nbsp; &ldquo;He did not take them!&nbsp; Have mercy!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Any way, Madame, they are gone!&rdquo; Tavannes answered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You have taken them between you; and as I do not choose that
+you should pay, he will pay the price.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>If the discovery that Tignonville had fallen into her husband&rsquo;s
+hands had not sufficed to crush her, Count Hannibal&rsquo;s tone must
+have done so.&nbsp; The shoot of new life which had raised its head
+after those dreadful days in Paris, and&mdash;for she was young&mdash;had
+supported her under the weight which the peril of Angers had cast on
+her shoulders, died, withered under the heel of his brutality.&nbsp;
+The pride which had supported her, which had won Tavannes&rsquo; admiration
+and exacted his respect, sank, as she sank herself, bowed to her horse&rsquo;s
+neck, weeping bitter tears before him.&nbsp; She abandoned herself to
+her misery, as she had once abandoned herself in the upper room in Paris.</p>
+<p>And he looked at her.&nbsp; He had willed to crush her; he had his
+will, and he was not satisfied.&nbsp; He had bowed her so low that his
+magnanimity would now have its full effect, would shine as the sun into
+a dark world; and yet he was not happy.&nbsp; He could look forward
+to the morrow, and say, &ldquo;She will understand me, she will know
+me!&rdquo; and, lo, the thought that she wept for her lover stabbed
+him, and stabbed him anew; and he thought, &ldquo;Rather would she death
+from him, than life from me!&nbsp; Though I give her creation, it will
+not alter her!&nbsp; Though I strike the stars with my head, it is he
+who fills her world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The thought spurred him to further cruelty, impelled him to try if,
+prostrate as she was, he could not draw a prayer from her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t ask after him?&rdquo; he scoffed.&nbsp; &ldquo;He
+may be before or behind?&nbsp; Or wounded or well?&nbsp; Would you not
+know, Madame?&nbsp; And what message he sent you?&nbsp; And what he
+fears, and what hope he has?&nbsp; And his last wishes?&nbsp; And&mdash;for
+while there is life there is hope&mdash;would you not learn where the
+key of his prison lies to-night?&nbsp; How much for the key to-night,
+Madame?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Each question fell on her like the lash of a whip; but as one who
+has been flogged into insensibility, she did not wince.&nbsp; That drove
+him on: he felt a mad desire to hear her prayers, to force her lower,
+to bring her to her knees.&nbsp; And he sought about for a keener taunt.&nbsp;
+Their attendants were almost out of sight before them; the sun, declining
+apace, was in their eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In two hours we shall be in Angers,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Mon Dieu, Madame, it was a pity, when you two were taking letters,
+you did not go a step farther.&nbsp; You were surprised, or I doubt
+if I should be alive to-day!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then she did look up.&nbsp; She raised her head and met his gaze
+with such wonder in her eyes, such reproach in her tear-stained face,
+that his voice sank on the last word.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean&mdash;that I would have murdered you?&rdquo; she
+said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I would have cut off my hand first.&nbsp; What I
+did&rdquo;&mdash;and now her voice was as firm as it was low&mdash;&ldquo;what
+I did, I did to save my people.&nbsp; And if it were to be done again,
+I would do it again!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You dare to tell me that to my face?&rdquo; he cried, hiding
+feelings which almost choked him.&nbsp; &ldquo;You would do it again,
+would you?&nbsp; Mon Dieu, Madame, you need to be taught a lesson!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And by chance, meaning only to make the horses move on again, he
+raised his whip.&nbsp; She thought that he was going to strike her,
+and she flinched at last.&nbsp; The whip fell smartly on her horse&rsquo;s
+quarters, and it sprang forward.&nbsp; Count Hannibal swore between
+his teeth.</p>
+<p>He had turned pale, she red as fire.&nbsp; &ldquo;Get on!&nbsp; Get
+on!&rdquo; he cried harshly.&nbsp; &ldquo;We are falling behind!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And riding at her heels, flipping her horse now and then, he forced
+her to trot on until they overtook the servants.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVII.&nbsp; THE BLACK TOWN.</h2>
+<p>It was late evening when, riding wearily on jaded horses, they came
+to the outskirts of Angers, and saw before them the term of their journey.&nbsp;
+The glow of sunset had faded, but the sky was still warm with the last
+hues of day; and against its opal light the huge mass of the Angevin
+castle, which even in sunshine rises dark and forbidding above the Mayenne,
+stood up black and sharply defined.&nbsp; Below it, on both banks of
+the river, the towers and spires of the city soared up from a sombre
+huddle of ridge-roofs, broken here by a round-headed gateway, crumbling
+and pigeon-haunted, that dated from St. Louis, and there by the gaunt
+arms of a windmill.</p>
+<p>The city lay dark under a light sky, keeping well its secrets.&nbsp;
+Thousands were out of doors enjoying the evening coolness in alley and
+court, yet it betrayed the life which pulsed in its arteries only by
+the low murmur which rose from it.&nbsp; Nevertheless, the Countess
+at sight of its roofs tasted the first moment of happiness which had
+been hers that day.&nbsp; She might suffer, but she had saved.&nbsp;
+Those roofs would thank her!&nbsp; In that murmur were the voices of
+women and children she had redeemed!&nbsp; At the sight and at the thought
+a wave of love and tenderness swept all bitterness from her breast.&nbsp;
+A profound humility, a boundless thankfulness took possession of her.&nbsp;
+Her head sank lower above her horse&rsquo;s mane; but this time it sank
+in reverence, not in shame.</p>
+<p>Could she have known what was passing beneath those roofs which night
+was blending in a common gloom&mdash;could she have read the thoughts
+which at that moment paled the cheeks of many a stout burgher, whose
+gabled house looked on the great square, she had been still more thankful.&nbsp;
+For in attics and back rooms women were on their knees at that hour,
+praying with feverish eyes; and in the streets men&mdash;on whom their
+fellows, seeing the winding-sheet already at the chin, gazed askance&mdash;smiled,
+and showed brave looks abroad, while their hearts were sick with fear.</p>
+<p>For darkly, no man knew how, the news had come to Angers.&nbsp; It
+had been known, more or less, for three days.&nbsp; Men had read it
+in other men&rsquo;s eyes.&nbsp; The tongue of a scold, the sneer of
+an injured woman had spread it, the birds of the air had carried it.&nbsp;
+From garret window to garret window across the narrow lanes of the old
+town it had been whispered at dead of night; at convent grilles, and
+in the timber-yards beside the river.&nbsp; Ten thousand, fifty thousand,
+a hundred thousand, it was rumoured, had perished in Paris.&nbsp; In
+Orleans, all.&nbsp; In Tours this man&rsquo;s sister; at Saumur that
+man&rsquo;s son.&nbsp; Through France the word had gone forth that the
+Huguenots must die; and in the busy town the same roof-tree sheltered
+fear and hate, rage and cupidity.&nbsp; On one side of the party-wall
+murder lurked fierce-eyed; on the other, the victim lay watching the
+latch, and shaking at a step.&nbsp; Strong men tasted the bitterness
+of death, and women clasping their babes to their breasts smiled sickly
+into children&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
+<p>The signal only was lacking.&nbsp; It would come, said some, from
+Saumur, where Montsoreau, the Duke of Anjou&rsquo;s Lieutenant-Governor
+and a Papist, had his quarters.&nbsp; From Paris, said others, directly
+from the King.&nbsp; It might come at any hour now, in the day or in
+the night; the magistrates, it was whispered, were in continuous session,
+awaiting its coming.&nbsp; No wonder that from lofty gable windows,
+and from dormers set high above the tiles, haggard faces looked northward
+and eastward, and ears sharpened by fear imagined above the noises of
+the city the ring of the iron shoes that carried doom.</p>
+<p>Doubtless the majority desired&mdash;as the majority in France have
+always desired&mdash;peace.&nbsp; But in the purlieus about the cathedral
+and in the lanes where the sacristans lived, in convent parlours and
+college courts, among all whose livelihood the new faith threatened,
+was a stir as of a hive deranged.&nbsp; Here was grumbling against the
+magistrates&mdash;why wait?&nbsp; There, stealthy plannings and arrangements;
+everywhere a grinding of weapons and casting of slugs.&nbsp; Old grudges,
+new rivalries, a scholar&rsquo;s venom, a priest&rsquo;s dislike, here
+was final vent for all.&nbsp; None need leave this feast unsated!</p>
+<p>It was a man of this class, sent out for the purpose, who first espied
+Count Hannibal&rsquo;s company approaching.&nbsp; He bore the news into
+the town, and by the time the travellers reached the city gate, the
+dusky street within, on which lights were beginning to twinkle from
+booths and casements, was alive with figures running to meet them and
+crying the news as they ran.&nbsp; The travellers, weary and road-stained,
+had no sooner passed under the arch than they found themselves the core
+of a great crowd which moved with them and pressed about them; now unbonneting,
+and now calling out questions, and now shouting, &ldquo;Vive le Roi!&nbsp;
+Vive le Roi!&rdquo;&nbsp; Above the press, windows burst into light;
+and over all, the quaint leaning gables of the old timbered houses looked
+down on the hurry and tumult.</p>
+<p>They passed along a narrow street in which the rabble, hurrying at
+Count Hannibal&rsquo;s bridle, and often looking back to read his face,
+had much ado to escape harm; along this street and before the yawning
+doors of a great church whence a breath heavy with incense and burning
+wax issued to meet them.&nbsp; A portion of the congregation had heard
+the tumult and struggled out, and now stood close-packed on the steps
+under the double vault of the portal.&nbsp; Among them the Countess&rsquo;s
+eyes, as she rode by, a sturdy man-at-arms on either hand, caught and
+held one face.&nbsp; It was the face of a tall, lean man in dusty black;
+and though she did not know him she seemed to have an equal attraction
+for him; for as their eyes met he seized the shoulder of the man next
+him and pointed her out.&nbsp; And something in the energy of the gesture,
+or in the thin lips and malevolent eyes of the man who pointed, chilled
+the Countess&rsquo;s blood and shook her, she knew not why.</p>
+<p>Until then, she had known no fear save of her husband.&nbsp; But
+at that a sense of the force and pressure of the crowd&mdash;as well
+as of the fierce passions, straining about her, which a word might unloose&mdash;broke
+upon her; and looking to the stern men on either side she fancied that
+she read anxiety in their faces.</p>
+<p>She glanced behind.&nbsp; Boot to boot, the Count&rsquo;s men came
+on, pressing round her women and shielding them from the exuberance
+of the throng.&nbsp; In their faces too she thought that she traced
+uneasiness.&nbsp; What wonder if the scenes through which she had passed
+in Paris began to recur to her mind, and shook nerves already overwrought?</p>
+<p>She began to tremble.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is there&mdash;danger?&rdquo;
+she muttered, speaking in a low voice to Bigot, who rode on her right
+hand.&nbsp; &ldquo;Will they do anything?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Norman snorted.&nbsp; &ldquo;Not while he is in the saddle,&rdquo;
+he said, nodding towards his master, who rode a pace in front of them,
+his reins loose.&nbsp; &ldquo;There be some here know him!&rdquo; Bigot
+continued, in his drawling tone.&nbsp; &ldquo;And more will know him
+if they break line.&nbsp; Have no fear, Madame, he will bring you safe
+to the inn.&nbsp; Down with the Huguenots?&rdquo; he continued, turning
+from her and addressing a rogue who, holding his stirrup, was shouting
+the cry till he was crimson.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then why not away, and&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The King!&nbsp; The King&rsquo;s word and leave!&rdquo; the
+man answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, tell us!&rdquo; shrieked another, looking upward, while
+he waved his cap; &ldquo;have we the King&rsquo;s leave?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll bide <i>his</i> leave!&rdquo; the Norman retorted,
+indicating the Count with his thumb.&nbsp; &ldquo;Or &rsquo;twill be
+up with you&mdash;on the three-legged horse!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But he comes from the King!&rdquo; the man panted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To be sure.&nbsp; To be sure!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll bide his time!&nbsp; That&rsquo;s all!&rdquo;
+Bigot answered, rather it seemed for his own satisfaction than the other&rsquo;s
+enlightenment.&nbsp; &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll all bide it, you dogs!&rdquo;
+he continued in his beard, as he cast his eye over the weltering crowd.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Ha! so we are here, are we?&nbsp; And not too soon, either.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He fell silent as they entered an open space, overlooked on one side
+by the dark fa&ccedil;ade of the cathedral, on the other three sides
+by houses more or less illumined.&nbsp; The rabble swept into this open
+space with them and before them, filled much of it in an instant, and
+for a while eddied and swirled this way and that, thrust onward by the
+worshippers who had issued from the church and backwards by those who
+had been first in the square, and had no mind to be hustled out of hearing.&nbsp;
+A stranger, confused by the sea of excited faces, and deafened by the
+clamour of &ldquo;Vive le Roi!&rdquo; &ldquo;Vive Anjou!&rdquo; mingled
+with cries against the Huguenots, might have fancied that the whole
+city was arrayed before him.&nbsp; But he would have been wide of the
+mark.&nbsp; The scum, indeed&mdash;and a dangerous scum&mdash;frothed
+and foamed and spat under Tavannes&rsquo; bridle-hand; and here and
+there among them, but not of them, the dark-robed figure of a priest
+moved to and fro; or a Benedictine, or some smooth-faced acolyte egged
+on to the work he dared not do.&nbsp; But the decent burghers were not
+there.&nbsp; They lay bolted in their houses; while the magistrates,
+with little heart to do aught except bow to the mob&mdash;or other their
+masters for the time being&mdash;shook in their council chamber.</p>
+<p>There is not a city of France which has not seen it; which has not
+known the moment when the mass impended, and it lay with one man to
+start it or stay its course.&nbsp; Angers within its houses heard the
+clamour, and from the child, clinging to its mother&rsquo;s skirt, and
+wondering why she wept, to the Provost, trembled, believing that the
+hour had come.&nbsp; The Countess heard it too, and understood it.&nbsp;
+She caught the savage note in the voice of the mob&mdash;that note which
+means danger&mdash;and, her heart beating wildly, she looked to her
+husband.&nbsp; Then, fortunately for her, fortunately for Angers, it
+was given to all to see that in Count Hannibal&rsquo;s saddle sat a
+man.</p>
+<p>He raised his hand for silence, and in a minute or two&mdash;not
+at once, for the square was dusky&mdash;it was obtained.&nbsp; He rose
+in his stirrups, and bared his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am from the King!&rdquo; he cried, throwing his voice to
+all parts of the crowd.&nbsp; &ldquo;And this is his Majesty&rsquo;s
+pleasure and good will!&nbsp; That every man hold his hand until to-morrow
+on pain of death, or worse!&nbsp; And at noon his further pleasure will
+be known!&nbsp; Vive le Roi!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he covered his head again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Vive le Roi!&rdquo; cried a number of the foremost.&nbsp;
+But their shouts were feeble and half-hearted, and were quickly drowned
+in a rising murmur of discontent and ill-humour, which, mingled with
+cries of &ldquo;Is that all?&nbsp; Is there no more?&nbsp; Down with
+the Huguenots!&rdquo; rose from all parts.&nbsp; Presently these cries
+became merged in a persistent call, which had its origin, as far as
+could be discovered, in the darkest corner of the square.&nbsp; A call
+for &ldquo;Montsoreau!&nbsp; Montsoreau!&nbsp; Give us Montsoreau!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With another man, or had Tavannes turned or withdrawn, or betrayed
+the least anxiety, words had become actions, disorder a riot; and that
+in the twinkling of an eye.&nbsp; But Count Hannibal, sitting his horse,
+with his handful of riders behind him, watched the crowd, as little
+moved by it as the Armed Knight of Notre Dame.&nbsp; Only once did he
+say a word.&nbsp; Then, raising his hand as before to gain a hearing&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You ask for Montsoreau?&rdquo; he thundered.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+will have Montfaucon if you do not quickly go to your homes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At which, and at the glare of his eye, the more timid took fright.&nbsp;
+Feeling his gaze upon them, seeing that he had no intention of withdrawing,
+they began to sneak away by ones and twos.&nbsp; Soon others missed
+them and took the alarm, and followed.&nbsp; A moment and scores were
+streaming away through lanes and alleys and along the main street.&nbsp;
+At last the bolder and more turbulent found themselves a remnant.&nbsp;
+They glanced uneasily at one another and at Tavannes, took fright in
+their turn, and plunging into the current hastened away, raising now
+and then as they passed through the streets a cry of &ldquo;Vive Montsoreau!&nbsp;
+Montsoreau!&rdquo;&mdash;which was not without its menace for the morrow.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal waited motionless until no more than half a dozen
+groups remained in the open.&nbsp; Then he gave the word to dismount;
+for, so far, even the Countess and her women had kept their saddles,
+lest the movement which their retreat into the inn must have caused
+should be misread by the mob.&nbsp; Last of all he dismounted himself,
+and with lights going before him and behind, and preceded by Bigot,
+bearing his cloak and pistols, he escorted the Countess into the house.&nbsp;
+Not many minutes had elapsed since he had called for silence; but long
+before he reached the chamber looking over the square from the first
+floor, in which supper was being set for them, the news had flown through
+the length and breadth of Angers that for this night the danger was
+past.&nbsp; The hawk had come to Angers, and lo! it was a dove.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal strode to one of the open windows and looked out.&nbsp;
+In the room, which was well lighted, were people of the house, going
+to and fro, setting out the table; to Madame, standing beside the hearth&mdash;which
+held its summer dressing of green boughs&mdash;while her woman held
+water for her to wash, the scene recalled with painful vividness the
+meal at which she had been present on the morning of the St. Bartholomew&mdash;the
+meal which had ushered in her troubles.&nbsp; Naturally her eyes went
+to her husband, her mind to the horror in which she had held him then;
+and with a kind of shock&mdash;perhaps because the last few minutes
+had shown him in a new light&mdash;she compared her old opinion of him
+with that which, much as she feared him, she now entertained.</p>
+<p>This afternoon, if ever, within the last few hours, if at all, he
+had acted in a way to justify that horror and that opinion.&nbsp; He
+had treated her&mdash;brutally; he had insulted and threatened her,
+had almost struck her.&nbsp; And yet&mdash;and yet Madame felt that
+she had moved so far from the point which she had once occupied that
+the old attitude was hard to understand.&nbsp; Hardly could she believe
+that it was on this man, much as she still dreaded him, that she had
+looked with those feelings of repulsion.</p>
+<p>She was still gazing at him with eyes which strove to see two men
+in one, when he turned from the window.&nbsp; Absorbed in thought, she
+had forgotten her occupation, and stood, the towel suspended in her
+half-dried hands.&nbsp; Before she knew what he was doing he was at
+her side; he bade the woman hold the bowl, and he rinsed his hands.&nbsp;
+Then he turned, and without looking at the Countess, he dried his hands
+on the farther end of the towel which she was still using.</p>
+<p>She blushed faintly.&nbsp; A something in the act, more intimate
+and more familiar than had ever marked their intercourse, set her blood
+running strangely.&nbsp; When he turned away and bade Bigot unbuckle
+his spur-leathers, she stepped forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will do it!&rdquo; she murmured, acting on a sudden and
+unaccountable impulse.&nbsp; And as she knelt, she shook her hair about
+her face to hide its colour.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, Madame, but you will soil your fingers!&rdquo; he said
+coldly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Permit me,&rdquo; she muttered half coherently.&nbsp; And
+though her fingers shook, she pursued and performed her task.</p>
+<p>When she rose he thanked her; and then the devil in the man, or the
+Nemesis he had provoked when he took her by force from another&mdash;the
+Nemesis of jealousy, drove him to spoil all.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And for whose sake, Madame?&rdquo; he added, with a jeer;
+&ldquo;mine or M. de Tignonville&rsquo;s?&rdquo;&nbsp; And with a glance
+between jest and earnest, he tried to read her thoughts.</p>
+<p>She winced as if he had indeed struck her, and the hot colour fled
+her cheeks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For his sake!&rdquo; she said, with a shiver of pain.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;That his life may be spared!&rdquo;&nbsp; And she stood back
+humbly, like a beaten dog.&nbsp; Though, indeed, it was for the sake
+of Angers, in thankfulness for the past rather than in any desperate
+hope of propitiating her husband, that she had done it!</p>
+<p>Perhaps he would have withdrawn his words.&nbsp; But before he could
+answer, the host, bowing to the floor, came to announce that all was
+ready, and that the Provost of the City, for whom M. le Comte had sent,
+was in waiting below.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let him come up!&rdquo; Tavannes answered, grave and frowning.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And see you, close the room, sirrah!&nbsp; My people will wait
+on us.&nbsp; Ah!&rdquo; as the Provost, a burly man, with a face framed
+for jollity, but now pale and long, entered and approached him with
+many salutations.&nbsp; &ldquo;How comes it, M. le Pr&eacute;v&ocirc;t&mdash;you
+are the Pr&eacute;v&ocirc;t, are you not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, M. le Comte.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How comes it that so great a crowd is permitted to meet in
+the streets?&nbsp; And that at my entrance, though I come unannounced,
+I find half of the city gathered together?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Provost stared.&nbsp; &ldquo;Respect, M. le Comte,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;for His Majesty&rsquo;s letters, of which you are the bearer,
+no doubt induced some to come together.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who said I brought letters?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who said I brought letters?&rdquo; Count Hannibal repeated
+in a strenuous voice.&nbsp; And he ground his chair half about and faced
+the astonished magistrate.&nbsp; &ldquo;Who said I brought letters?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, my lord,&rdquo; the Provost stammered, &ldquo;it was
+everywhere yesterday&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yesterday?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Last night, at latest&mdash;that letters were coming from
+the King.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By my hand?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By your lordship&rsquo;s hand&mdash;whose name is so well
+known here,&rdquo; the magistrate added, in the hope of clearing the
+great man&rsquo;s brow.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal laughed darkly.&nbsp; &ldquo;My hand will be better
+known by-and-by,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;See you, sirrah, there
+is some practice here.&nbsp; What is this cry of Montsoreau that I hear?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your lordship knows that he is His Grace&rsquo;s lieutenant-governor
+in Saumur.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know that, man.&nbsp; But is he here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was at Saumur yesterday, and &rsquo;twas rumoured three
+days back that he was coming here to extirpate the Huguenots.&nbsp;
+Then word came of your lordship and of His Majesty&rsquo;s letters,
+and &rsquo;twas thought that M. de Montsoreau would not come, his authority
+being superseded.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see.&nbsp; And now your rabble think that they would prefer
+M. Montsoreau.&nbsp; That is it, is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The magistrate shrugged his shoulders and opened his hands.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pigs!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; And having spat on the floor,
+he looked apologetically at the lady.&nbsp; &ldquo;True pigs!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What connections has he here?&rdquo; Tavannes asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is a brother of my lord the Bishop&rsquo;s vicar, who arrived
+yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With a rout of shaven heads who have been preaching and stirring
+up the town!&rdquo; Count Hannibal cried, his face growing red.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Speak, man; is it so?&nbsp; But I&rsquo;ll be sworn it is!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There has been preaching,&rdquo; the Provost answered reluctantly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Montsoreau may count his brother, then, for one.&nbsp; He
+is a fool, but with a knave behind him, and a knave who has no cause
+to love us!&nbsp; And the Castle?&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis held by one of M.
+de Montsoreau&rsquo;s creatures, I take it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With what force?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The magistrate shrugged his shoulders, and looked doubtfully at Badelon,
+who was keeping the door.&nbsp; Tavannes followed the glance with his
+usual impatience.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mon Dieu, you need not look at him!&rdquo;
+he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;He has sacked St. Peter&rsquo;s and singed the
+Pope&rsquo;s beard with a holy candle!&nbsp; He has been served on the
+knee by Cardinals; and is Turk or Jew, or monk or Huguenot as I please.&nbsp;
+And Madame&rdquo;&mdash;for the Provost&rsquo;s astonished eyes, after
+resting awhile on the old soldier&rsquo;s iron visage, had passed to
+her&mdash;&ldquo;is Huguenot, so you need have no fear of her!&nbsp;
+There, speak, man,&rdquo; with impatience, &ldquo;and cease to think
+of your own skin!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Provost drew a deep breath, and fixed his small eyes on Count
+Hannibal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I knew, my lord, what you&mdash;why, my own sister&rsquo;s
+son&rdquo;&mdash;he paused, his face began to work, his voice shook&mdash;&ldquo;is
+a Huguenot!&nbsp; Ay, my lord, a Huguenot!&nbsp; And they know it!&rdquo;
+he continued, a flush of rage augmenting the emotion which his countenance
+betrayed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ay, they know it!&nbsp; And they push me on at
+the Council, and grin behind my back; Lescot, who was Provost two years
+back, and would match his son with my daughter; and Thuriot, who prints
+for the University!&nbsp; They nudge one another, and egg me on, till
+half the city thinks it is I who would kill the Huguenots!&nbsp; I!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Again his voice broke.&nbsp; &ldquo;And my own sister&rsquo;s son a
+Huguenot!&nbsp; And my girl at home white-faced for&mdash;for his sake.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tavannes scanned the man shrewdly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Perhaps she is of
+the same way of thinking?&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>The Provost started, and lost one half of his colour.&nbsp; &ldquo;God
+forbid!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;saving Madame&rsquo;s presence!&nbsp;
+Who says so, my lord, lies!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, lies not far from the truth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pish, man, Lescot has said it, and will act on it.&nbsp; And
+Thuriot, who prints for the University!&nbsp; Would you &rsquo;scape
+them?&nbsp; You would?&nbsp; Then listen to me.&nbsp; I want but two
+things.&nbsp; First, how many men has Montsoreau&rsquo;s fellow in the
+Castle?&nbsp; Few, I know, for he is a niggard, and if he spends, he
+spends the Duke&rsquo;s pay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Twelve.&nbsp; But five can hold it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, but twelve dare not leave it!&nbsp; Let them stew in their
+own broth!&nbsp; And now for the other matter.&nbsp; See, man, that
+before daybreak three gibbets, with a ladder and two ropes apiece, are
+set up in the square.&nbsp; And let one be before this door.&nbsp; You
+understand?&nbsp; Then let it be done!&nbsp; The rest,&rdquo; he added
+with a ferocious smile, &ldquo;you may leave to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The magistrate nodded rather feebly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Doubtless,&rdquo;
+he said, his eye wandering here and there, &ldquo;there are rogues in
+Angers.&nbsp; And for rogues the gibbet!&nbsp; But saving your presence,
+my lord, it is a question whether&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But M. de Tavannes&rsquo; patience was exhausted.&nbsp; &ldquo;Will
+you do it?&rdquo; he roared.&nbsp; &ldquo;That is the question.&nbsp;
+And the only question.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Provost jumped, he was so startled.&nbsp; &ldquo;Certainly, my
+lord, certainly!&rdquo; he muttered humbly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Certainly,
+I will!&rdquo;&nbsp; And bowing frequently, but saying no more, he backed
+himself out of the room.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal laughed grimly after his fashion, and doubtless thought
+that he had seen the last of the magistrate for that night.&nbsp; Great
+was his wrath, therefore, when, less than a minute later&mdash;and before
+Bigot had carved for him&mdash;the door opened, and the Provost appeared
+again.&nbsp; He slid in, and without giving the courage he had gained
+on the stairs time to cool, plunged into his trouble.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It stands this way, M. le Comte,&rdquo; he bleated.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If I put up the gibbets and a man is hanged, and you have letters
+from the King, &rsquo;tis a rogue the less, and no harm done.&nbsp;
+But if you have no letters from His Majesty, then it is on my shoulders
+they will put it, and &rsquo;twill be odd if they do not find a way
+to hang me to right him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal smiled grimly.&nbsp; &ldquo;And your sister&rsquo;s
+son?&rdquo; he sneered.&nbsp; &ldquo;And your girl who is white-faced
+for his sake, and may burn on the same bonfire with him?&nbsp; And&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mercy!&nbsp; Mercy!&rdquo; the wretched Provost cried.&nbsp;
+And he wrung his hands.&nbsp; &ldquo;Lescot and Thuriot&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps we may hang Lescot and Thuriot&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I see no way out,&rdquo; the Provost babbled.&nbsp; &ldquo;No
+way!&nbsp; No way!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am going to show you one,&rdquo; Tavannes retorted.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If the gibbets are not in place by sunrise, I shall hang you
+from this window.&nbsp; That is one way out; and you&rsquo;ll be wise
+to take the other!&nbsp; For the rest and for your comfort, if I have
+no letters, it is not always to paper that the King commits his inmost
+heart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The magistrate bowed.&nbsp; He quaked, he doubted, but he had no
+choice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I put myself in your hands.&nbsp;
+It shall be done, certainly it shall be done.&nbsp; But, but&mdash;&rdquo;
+and shaking his head in foreboding, he turned to the door.&nbsp; At
+the last moment, when he was within a pace of it, the Countess rose
+impulsively to her feet.&nbsp; She called to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. le Pr&eacute;v&ocirc;t, a minute, if you please,&rdquo;
+she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;There may be trouble to-morrow; your daughter
+may be in some peril.&nbsp; You will do well to send her to me.&nbsp;
+My lord&rdquo;&mdash;and on the word her voice, uncertain before, grew
+full and steady&mdash;&ldquo;will see that I am safe.&nbsp; And she
+will be safe with me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Provost saw before him only a gracious lady, moved by a thoughtfulness
+unusual in persons of her rank.&nbsp; He was at no pains to explain
+the flame in her cheek, or the soft light which glowed in her eyes,
+as she looked at him across her formidable husband.&nbsp; He was only
+profoundly grateful&mdash;moved even to tears.&nbsp; Humbly thanking
+her, he accepted her offer for his child, and withdrew wiping his eyes.&nbsp;
+When he was gone, and the door had closed behind him, Tavannes turned
+to the Countess, who still kept her feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are very confident this evening,&rdquo; he sneered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Gibbets do not frighten you, it seems, madame.&nbsp; Perhaps
+if you knew for whom the one before the door is intended?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She met his look with a searching gaze, and spoke with a ring of
+defiance in her tone.&nbsp; &ldquo;I do not believe it!&rdquo; she said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I do not believe it!&nbsp; You who save Angers will not destroy
+him!&rdquo;&nbsp; And then her woman&rsquo;s mood changing, with courage
+and colour ebbing together, &ldquo;Oh no, you will not!&nbsp; You will
+not!&rdquo; she wailed.&nbsp; And she dropped on her knees before him,
+and holding up her clasped hands, &ldquo;God will put it in your heart
+to spare him&mdash;and me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He rose with a stifled oath, took two steps from her, and in a tone
+hoarse and constrained, &ldquo;Go!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go,
+or sit!&nbsp; Do you hear, Madame?&nbsp; You try my patience too far!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But when she had gone his face was radiant.&nbsp; He had brought
+her, he had brought all, to the point at which he aimed.&nbsp; To-morrow
+his triumph awaited him.&nbsp; To-morrow he who had cast her down would
+raise her up.</p>
+<p>He did not foresee what a day would bring forth.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII.&nbsp; IN THE LITTLE CHAPTER-HOUSE.</h2>
+<p>The sun was an hour high, and in Angers the shops and booths, after
+the early fashion of the day, were open or opening.&nbsp; Through all
+the gates country folk were pressing into the gloomy streets of the
+Black Town with milk and fruit; and at doors and windows housewives
+cheapened fish, or chaffered over the fowl for the pot.&nbsp; For men
+must eat, though there be gibbets in the Place Ste.-Croix: gaunt gibbets,
+high and black and twofold, each, with its dangling ropes, like a double
+note of interrogation.</p>
+<p>But gibbets must eat also; and between ground and noose was so small
+a space in those days that a man dangled almost before he knew it.&nbsp;
+The sooner, then, the paniers were empty, and the clown, who pays for
+all, was beyond the gates, the better he, for one, would be pleased.&nbsp;
+In the market, therefore, was hurrying.&nbsp; Men cried their wares
+in lowered voices, and tarried but a little for the oldest customer.&nbsp;
+The bargain struck, the more timid among the buyers hastened to shut
+themselves into their houses again; the bolder, who ventured to the
+Place to confirm the rumour with their eyes, talked in corners and in
+lanes, avoided the open, and eyed the sinister preparations from afar.&nbsp;
+The shadow of the things which stood before the cathedral affronting
+the sunlight with their gaunt black shapes lay across the length and
+breadth of Angers.&nbsp; Even in the corners where men whispered, even
+in the cloisters where men bit their nails in impotent anger, the stillness
+of fear ruled all.&nbsp; Whatever Count Hannibal had it in his mind
+to tell the city, it seemed unlikely&mdash;and hour by hour it seemed
+less likely&mdash;that any would contradict him.</p>
+<p>He knew this as he walked in the sunlight before the inn, his spurs
+ringing on the stones as he made each turn, his movements watched by
+a hundred peering eyes.&nbsp; After all, it was not hard to rule, nor
+to have one&rsquo;s way in this world.&nbsp; But then, he went on to
+remember, not every one had his self-control, or that contempt for the
+weak and unsuccessful which lightly took the form of mercy.&nbsp; He
+held Angers safe, curbed by his gibbets.&nbsp; With M. de Montsoreau
+he might have trouble; but the trouble would be slight, for he knew
+Montsoreau, and what it was the Lieutenant-Governor valued above profitless
+bloodshed.</p>
+<p>He might have felt less confident had he known what was passing at
+that moment in a room off the small cloister of the Abbey of St. Aubin,
+a room known at Angers as the Little Chapter-house.&nbsp; It was a long
+chamber with a groined roof and stone walls, panelled as high as a tall
+man might reach with dark chestnut wood.&nbsp; Gloomily lighted by three
+grated windows, which looked on a small inner green, the last resting-place
+of the Benedictines, the room itself seemed at first sight no more than
+the last resting-place of worn-out odds and ends.&nbsp; Piles of thin
+sheepskin folios, dog&rsquo;s-eared and dirty, the rejected of the choir,
+stood against the walls; here and there among them lay a large brass-bound
+tome on which the chains that had fettered it to desk or lectern still
+rusted.&nbsp; A broken altar cumbered one corner: a stand bearing a
+curious&mdash;and rotting&mdash;map filled another.&nbsp; In the other
+two corners a medley of faded scutcheons and banners, which had seen
+their last Toussaint procession, mouldered slowly into dust&mdash;into
+much dust.&nbsp; The air of the room was full of it.</p>
+<p>In spite of which the long oak table that filled the middle of the
+chamber shone with use: so did the great metal standish which it bore.&nbsp;
+And though the seven men who sat about the table seemed, at a first
+glance and in that gloomy light, as rusty and faded as the rubbish behind
+them, it needed but a second look at their lean jaws and hungry eyes
+to be sure of their vitality.</p>
+<p>He who sat in the great chair at the end of the table was indeed
+rather plump than thin.&nbsp; His white hands, gay with rings, were
+well cared for; his peevish chin rested on a falling-collar of lace
+worthy of a Cardinal.&nbsp; But though the Bishop&rsquo;s Vicar was
+heard with deference, it was noticeable that when he had ceased to speak
+his hearers looked to the priest on his left, to Father Pezelay, and
+waited to hear his opinion before they gave their own.&nbsp; The Father&rsquo;s
+energy, indeed, had dominated the Angerins, clerks and townsfolk alike,
+as it had dominated the Parisian <i>d&eacute;votes</i> who knew him
+well.&nbsp; The vigour which hate inspires passes often for solid strength;
+and he who had seen with his own eyes the things done in Paris spoke
+with an authority to which the more timid quickly and easily succumbed.</p>
+<p>Yet gibbets are ugly things; and Thuriot, the printer, whose pride
+had been tickled by a summons to the conclave, began to wonder if he
+had done wisely in coming.&nbsp; Lescot, too, who presently ventured
+a word.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if M. de Tavannes&rsquo; order be to do nothing,&rdquo;
+he began doubtfully, &ldquo;you would not, reverend Father, have us
+resist his Majesty&rsquo;s will?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;God forbid, my friend!&rdquo; Father Pezelay answered with
+unction.&nbsp; &ldquo;But his Majesty&rsquo;s will is to do&mdash;to
+do for the glory of God and the saints and His Holy Church!&nbsp; How?&nbsp;
+Is that which was lawful at Saumur unlawful here?&nbsp; Is that which
+was lawful at Tours unlawful here?&nbsp; Is that which the King did
+in Paris&mdash;to the utter extermination of the unbelieving and the
+purging of that Sacred City&mdash;against his will here?&nbsp; Nay,
+his will is to do&mdash;to do as they have done in Paris and in Tours
+and in Saumur!&nbsp; But his Minister is unfaithful!&nbsp; The woman
+whom he has taken to his bosom has bewildered him with her charms and
+her sorceries, and put it in his mind to deny the mission he bears.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are sure, beyond chance of error, that he bears letters
+to that effect, good Father?&rdquo; the printer ventured.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ask my lord&rsquo;s Vicar!&nbsp; He knows the letters and
+the import of them!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are to that effect,&rdquo; the Archdeacon answered, drumming
+on the table with his fingers and speaking somewhat sullenly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I was in the Chancellery, and I saw them.&nbsp; They are duplicates
+of those sent to Bordeaux.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then the preparations he has made must be against the Huguenots,&rdquo;
+Lescot, the ex-Provost, said with a sigh of relief.&nbsp; And Thuriot&rsquo;s
+face lightened also.&nbsp; &ldquo;He must intend to hang one or two
+of the ringleaders, before he deals with the herd.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Think it not!&rdquo; Father Pezelay cried in his high shrill
+voice.&nbsp; &ldquo;I tell you the woman has bewitched him, and he will
+deny his letters!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For a moment there was silence.&nbsp; Then, &ldquo;But dare he do
+that, reverend Father?&rdquo; Lescot asked slowly and incredulously.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What?&nbsp; Suppress the King&rsquo;s letters?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is nothing he will not dare!&nbsp; There is nothing
+he has not dared!&rdquo; the priest answered vehemently, the recollection
+of the scene in the great guard-room of the Louvre, when Tavannes had
+so skilfully turned the tables on him, instilling venom into his tone.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She who lives with him is the devil&rsquo;s.&nbsp; She has bewitched
+him with her spells and her Sabbaths!&nbsp; She bears the mark of the
+Beast on her bosom, and for her the fire is even now kindling!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The laymen who were present shuddered.&nbsp; The two canons who faced
+them crossed themselves, muttering, &ldquo;Avaunt, Satan!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is for you to decide,&rdquo; the priest continued, gazing
+on them passionately, &ldquo;whether you will side with him or with
+the Angel of God!&nbsp; For I tell you it was none other executed the
+Divine judgments at Paris!&nbsp; It was none other but the Angel of
+God held the sword at Tours!&nbsp; It is none other holds the sword
+here!&nbsp; Are you for him or against him?&nbsp; Are you for him, or
+for the woman with the mark of the Beast?&nbsp; Are you for God or against
+God?&nbsp; For the hour draws near!&nbsp; The time is at hand!&nbsp;
+You must choose!&nbsp; You must choose!&rdquo;&nbsp; And, striking the
+table with his hand, he leaned forward, and with glittering eyes fixed
+each of them in turn, as he cried, &ldquo;You must choose!&nbsp; You
+must choose!&rdquo;&nbsp; He came to the Archdeacon last.</p>
+<p>The Bishop&rsquo;s Vicar fidgeted in his chair, his face a shade
+more shallow, his cheeks hanging a trifle more loosely, than ordinary.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If my brother were here!&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;If
+M. de Montsoreau had arrived!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Father Pezelay knew whose will would prevail if Montsoreau met
+Tavannes at his leisure.&nbsp; To force Montsoreau&rsquo;s hand, therefore,
+to surround him on his first entrance with a howling mob already committed
+to violence, to set him at their head and pledge him before he knew
+with whom he had to do&mdash;this had been, this still was, the priest&rsquo;s
+design.</p>
+<p>But how was he to pursue it while those gibbets stood?&nbsp; While
+their shadows lay even on the chapter table, and darkened the faces
+of his most forward associates?&nbsp; That for a moment staggered the
+priest; and had not private hatred, ever renewed by the touch of the
+scar on his brow, fed the fire of bigotry he had yielded, as the rabble
+of Angers were yielding, reluctant and scowling, to the hand which held
+the city in its grip.&nbsp; But to have come so far on the wings of
+hate, and to do nothing!&nbsp; To have come avowedly to preach a crusade,
+and to sneak away cowed!&nbsp; To have dragged the Bishop&rsquo;s Vicar
+hither, and fawned and cajoled and threatened by turns&mdash;and for
+nothing!&nbsp; These things were passing bitter&mdash;passing bitter,
+when the morsel of vengeance he had foreseen smacked so sweet on the
+tongue.</p>
+<p>For it was no common vengeance, no layman&rsquo;s vengeance, coarse
+and clumsy, which the priest had imagined in the dark hours of the night,
+when his feverish brain kept him wakeful.&nbsp; To see Count Hannibal
+roll in the dust had gone but a little way towards satisfying him.&nbsp;
+No!&nbsp; But to drag from his arms the woman for whom he had sinned,
+to subject her to shame and torture in the depths of some convent, and
+finally to burn her as a witch&mdash;it was that which had seemed to
+the priest in the night hours a vengeance sweet in the mouth.</p>
+<p>But the thing seemed unattainable in the circumstances.&nbsp; The
+city was cowed; the priest knew that no dependence was to be placed
+on Montsoreau, whose vice was avarice and whose object was plunder.&nbsp;
+To the Archdeacon&rsquo;s feeble words, therefore, &ldquo;We must look,&rdquo;
+the priest retorted sternly, &ldquo;not to M. de Montsoreau, reverend
+Father, but to the pious of Angers!&nbsp; We must cry in the streets,
+&lsquo;They do violence to God!&nbsp; They wound God and His Mother!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And so, and so only, shall the unholy thing be rooted out!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Amen!&rdquo; the Cur&eacute; of St.-Benoist muttered, lifting
+his head; and his dull eyes glowed awhile.&nbsp; &ldquo;Amen!&nbsp;
+Amen!&rdquo;&nbsp; Then his chin sank again upon his breast.</p>
+<p>But the Canons of Angers looked doubtfully at one another, and timidly
+at the speakers; the meat was too strong for them.&nbsp; And Lescot
+and Thuriot shuffled in their seats.&nbsp; At length, &ldquo;I do not
+know,&rdquo; Lescot muttered timidly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do not know?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What can be done!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The people will know!&rdquo; Father Pezelay retorted &ldquo;Trust
+them!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the people will not rise without a leader.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then will I lead them!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Even so, reverend Father&mdash;I doubt,&rdquo; Lescot faltered.&nbsp;
+And Thuriot nodded assent.&nbsp; Gibbets were erected in those days
+rather for laymen than for the Church.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You doubt!&rdquo; the priest cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;You doubt!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+His baleful eyes passed from one to the other; from them to the rest
+of the company.&nbsp; He saw that with the exception of the Cur&eacute;
+of St.-Benoist all were of a mind.&nbsp; &ldquo;You doubt!&nbsp; Nay,
+but I see what it is!&nbsp; It is this,&rdquo; he continued slowly and
+in a different tone, &ldquo;the King&rsquo;s will goes for nothing in
+Angers!&nbsp; His writ runs not here.&nbsp; And Holy Church cries in
+vain for help against the oppressor.&nbsp; I tell you, the sorceress
+who has bewitched him has bewitched you also.&nbsp; Beware! beware,
+therefore, lest it be with you as with him!&nbsp; And the fire that
+shall consume her, spare not your houses!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two citizens crossed themselves, grew pale and shuddered.&nbsp;
+The fear of witchcraft was great in Angers, the peril, if accused of
+it, enormous.&nbsp; Even the Canons looked startled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If&mdash;if my brother were here,&rdquo; the Archdeacon repeated
+feebly, &ldquo;something might be done!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Vain is the help of man!&rdquo; the priest retorted sternly,
+and with a gesture of sublime dismissal.&nbsp; &ldquo;I turn from you
+to a mightier than you!&rdquo;&nbsp; And, leaning his head on his hands,
+he covered his face.</p>
+<p>The Archdeacon and the churchmen looked at him, and from him their
+scared eyes passed to one another.&nbsp; Their one desire now was to
+be quit of the matter, to have done with it, to escape; and one by one
+with the air of whipped curs they rose to their feet, and in a hurry
+to be gone muttered a word of excuse shamefacedly and got themselves
+out of the room.&nbsp; Lescot and the printer were not slow to follow,
+and in less than a minute the two strange preachers, the men from Paris,
+remained the only occupants of the chamber; save, to be precise, a lean
+official in rusty black, who throughout the conference had sat by the
+door.</p>
+<p>Until the last shuffling footstep had ceased to sound in the still
+cloister no one spoke.&nbsp; Then Father Pezelay looked up, and the
+eyes of the two priests met in a long gaze.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What think you?&rdquo; Pezelay muttered at last.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wet hay,&rdquo; the other answered dreamily, &ldquo;is slow
+to kindle, yet burns if the fire be big enough.&nbsp; At what hour does
+he state his will?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At noon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the Council Chamber?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is so given out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is three hundred yards from the Place Ste.-Croix and he
+must go guarded,&rdquo; the Cur&eacute; of St.-Benoist continued in
+the same dull fashion.&nbsp; &ldquo;He cannot leave many in the house
+with the woman.&nbsp; If it were attacked in his absence&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He would return, and&mdash;&rdquo;&nbsp; Father Pezelay shook
+his head, his cheek turned a shade paler.&nbsp; Clearly, he saw with
+his mind&rsquo;s eye more than he expressed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Hoc est corpus</i>,&rdquo; the other muttered, his dreamy
+gaze on the table.&nbsp; &ldquo;If he met us then, on his way to the
+house and we had bell, book, and candle, would he stop?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He would not stop!&rdquo; Father Pezelay rejoined.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He would not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know the man!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then&mdash;&rdquo; but the rest St. Benoist whispered, his
+head drooping forward; whispered so low that even the lean man behind
+him, listening with greedy ears, failed to follow the meaning of his
+superior&rsquo;s words.&nbsp; But that he spoke plainly enough for his
+hearer Father Pezelay&rsquo;s face was witness.&nbsp; Astonishment,
+fear, hope, triumph, the lean pale face reflected all in turn; and,
+underlying all, a subtle malignant mischief, as if a devil&rsquo;s eyes
+peeped through the holes in an opera mask.</p>
+<p>When the other was at last silent, Pezelay drew a deep breath.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis bold!&nbsp; Bold!&nbsp; Bold!&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But have you thought?&nbsp; He who bears the&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Brunt?&rdquo; the other whispered, with a chuckle.&nbsp; &ldquo;He
+may suffer?&nbsp; Yes, but it will not be you or I!&nbsp; No, he who
+was last here shall be first there!&nbsp; The Archdeacon-Vicar&mdash;if
+we can persuade him&mdash;who knows but that even for him the crown
+of martyrdom is reserved?&rdquo;&nbsp; The dull eyes flickered with
+unholy amusement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the alarm that brings him from the Council Chamber?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Need not of necessity be real.&nbsp; The pinch will be to
+make use of it.&nbsp; Make use of it&mdash;and the hay will burn!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You think it will?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What can one man do against a thousand?&nbsp; His own people
+dare not support him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Father Pezelay turned to the lean man who kept the door, and, beckoning
+to him, conferred a while with him in a low voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A score or so I might get,&rdquo; the man answered presently,
+after some debate.&nbsp; &ldquo;And well posted, something might be
+done.&nbsp; But we are not in Paris, good father, where the Quarter
+of the Butchers is to be counted on, and men know that to kill Huguenots
+is to do God service!&nbsp; Here&rdquo;&mdash;he shrugged his shoulders
+contemptuously&mdash;&ldquo;they are sheep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is the King&rsquo;s will,&rdquo; the priest answered, frowning
+on him darkly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, but it is not Tavannes&rsquo;,&rdquo; the man in black
+answered with a grimace.&nbsp; &ldquo;And he rules here to-day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fool!&rdquo; Pezelay retorted.&nbsp; &ldquo;He has not twenty
+with him.&nbsp; Do you do as I say, and leave the rest to Heaven!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And to you, good master?&rdquo; the other answered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;For it is not all you are going to do,&rdquo; he continued, with
+a grin, &ldquo;that you have told me.&nbsp; Well, so be it!&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll
+do my part, but I wish we were in Paris.&nbsp; St. Genevieve is ever
+kind to her servants.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIX.&nbsp; THE ESCAPE.</h2>
+<p>In a small back room on the second floor of the inn at Angers, a
+mean, dingy room which looked into a narrow lane, and commanded no prospect
+more informing than a blind wall, two men sat, fretting; or, rather,
+one man sat, his chin resting on his hand, while his companion, less
+patient or more sanguine, strode ceaselessly to and fro.&nbsp; In the
+first despair of capture&mdash;for they were prisoners&mdash;they had
+made up their minds to the worst, and the slow hours of two days had
+passed over their heads without kindling more than a faint spark of
+hope in their breasts.&nbsp; But when they had been taken out and forced
+to mount and ride&mdash;at first with feet tied to the horses&rsquo;
+girths&mdash;they had let the change, the movement, and the open air
+fan the flame.&nbsp; They had muttered a word to one another, they had
+wondered, they had reasoned.&nbsp; And though the silence of their guards&mdash;from
+whose sour vigilance the keenest question drew no response&mdash;seemed
+of ill-omen, and, taken with their knowledge of the man into whose hands
+they had fallen, should have quenched the spark, these two, having special
+reasons, the one the buoyancy of youth, the other the faith of an enthusiast,
+cherished the flame.&nbsp; In the breast of one indeed it had blazed
+into a confidence so arrogant that he now took all for granted, and
+was not content.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is easy for you to say &lsquo;Patience!&rsquo;&rdquo; he
+cried, as he walked the floor in a fever.&nbsp; &ldquo;You stand to
+lose no more than your life, and if you escape go free at all points!&nbsp;
+But he has robbed me of more than life!&nbsp; Of my love, and my self-respect,
+curse him!&nbsp; He has worsted me not once, but twice and thrice!&nbsp;
+And if he lets me go now, dismissing me with my life, I shall&mdash;I
+shall kill him!&rdquo; he concluded, through his teeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are hard to please!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall kill him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That were to fall still lower!&rdquo; the minister answered,
+gravely regarding him.&nbsp; &ldquo;I would, M. de Tignonville, you
+remembered that you are not yet out of jeopardy.&nbsp; Such a frame
+of mind as yours is no good preparation for death, let me tell you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He will not kill us!&rdquo; Tignonville cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;He
+knows better than most men how to avenge himself!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he is above most!&rdquo; La Tribe retorted.&nbsp; &ldquo;For
+my part I wish I were sure of the fact, and I should sit here more at
+ease.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If we could escape, now, of ourselves!&rdquo; Tignonville
+cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then we should save not only life, but honour!&nbsp;
+Man, think of it!&nbsp; If we could escape, not by his leave, but against
+it!&nbsp; Are you sure that this is Angers?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As sure as a man can be who has only seen the Black Town once
+or twice!&rdquo; La Tribe answered, moving to the casement&mdash;which
+was not glazed&mdash;and peering through the rough wooden lattice.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But if we could escape we are strangers here.&nbsp; We know not
+which way to go, nor where to find shelter.&nbsp; And for the matter
+of that,&rdquo; he continued, turning from the window with a shrug of
+resignation, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis no use to talk of it while yonder foot
+goes up and down the passage, and its owner bears the key in his pocket.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If we could get out of his power as we came into it!&rdquo;
+Tignonville cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, if!&nbsp; But it is not every floor has a trap!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We could take up a board.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The minister raised his eyebrows.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We could take up a board!&rdquo; the younger man repeated;
+and he stepped the mean chamber from end to end, his eyes on the floor.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Or&mdash;yes, <i>mon Dieu</i>!&rdquo; with a change of attitude,
+&ldquo;we might break through the roof?&rdquo;&nbsp; And, throwing back
+his head, he scanned the cobwebbed surface of laths which rested on
+the unceiled joists.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Umph!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, why not, Monsieur?&nbsp; Why not break through the ceiling?&rdquo;
+Tignonville repeated, and in a fit of energy he seized his companion&rsquo;s
+shoulder and shook him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Stand on the bed, and you can reach
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the floor which rests on it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Par Dieu</i>, there is no floor!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis a cockloft
+above us!&nbsp; See there!&nbsp; And there!&rdquo;&nbsp; And the young
+man sprang on the bed, and thrust the rowel of a spur through the laths.&nbsp;
+La Tribe&rsquo;s expression changed.&nbsp; He rose slowly to his feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Try again!&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>Tignonville, his face red, drove the spur again between the laths,
+and worked it to and fro until he could pass his fingers into the hole
+he had made.&nbsp; Then he gripped and bent down a length of one of
+the laths, and, passing his arm as far as the elbow through the hole,
+moved it this way and that.&nbsp; His eyes, as he looked down at his
+companion through the falling rubbish, gleamed with triumph.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is your floor now?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can touch nothing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s open.&nbsp; A little more and I
+might touch the tiles.&rdquo;&nbsp; And he strove to reach higher.</p>
+<p>For answer La Tribe gripped him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Down!&nbsp; Down, Monsieur,&rdquo;
+he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;They are bringing our dinner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville thrust back the lath as well as he could, and slipped
+to the floor; and hastily the two swept the rubbish from the bed.&nbsp;
+When Badelon, attended by two men, came in with the meal he found La
+Tribe at the window blocking much of the light, and Tignonville laid
+sullenly on the bed.&nbsp; Even a suspicious eye must have failed to
+detect what had been done; the three who looked in suspected nothing
+and saw nothing.&nbsp; They went out, the key was turned again on the
+prisoners, and the footsteps of two of the men were heard descending
+the stairs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We have an hour, now!&rdquo; Tignonville cried; and leaping,
+with flaming eyes, on the bed, he fell to hacking and jabbing and tearing
+at the laths amid a rain of dust and rubbish.&nbsp; Fortunately the
+stuff, falling on the bed, made little noise; and in five minutes, working
+half-choked and in a frenzy of impatience, he had made a hole through
+which he could thrust his arms, a hole which extended almost from one
+joist to its neighbour.&nbsp; By this time the air was thick with floating
+lime; the two could scarcely breathe, yet they dared not pause.&nbsp;
+Mounting on La Tribe&rsquo;s shoulders&mdash;who took his stand on the
+bed&mdash;the young man thrust his head and arms through the hole, and,
+resting his elbows on the joists, dragged himself up, and with a final
+effort of strength landed nose and knees on the timbers, which formed
+his supports.&nbsp; A moment to take breath, and press his torn and
+bleeding fingers to his lips; then, reaching down, he gave a hand to
+his companion and dragged him to the same place of vantage.</p>
+<p>They found themselves in a long narrow cockloft, not more than six
+feet high at the highest, and insufferably hot.&nbsp; Between the tiles,
+which sloped steeply on either hand, a faint light filtered in, disclosing
+the giant rooftree running the length of the house, and at the farther
+end of the loft the main tie-beam, from which a network of knees and
+struts rose to the rooftree.</p>
+<p>Tignonville, who seemed possessed by unnatural energy, stayed only
+to put off his boots.&nbsp; Then &ldquo;Courage!&rdquo; he panted, &ldquo;all
+goes well!&rdquo; and, carrying his boots in his hands, he led the way,
+stepping gingerly from joist to joist until he reached the tie-beam.&nbsp;
+He climbed on it, and, squeezing himself between the struts, entered
+a second loft, similar to the first.&nbsp; At the farther end of this
+a rough wall of bricks in a timber-frame lowered his hopes; but as he
+approached it, joy!&nbsp; Low down in the corner where the roof descended,
+a small door, square, and not more than two feet high, disclosed itself.</p>
+<p>The two crept to it on hands and knees and listened.&nbsp; &ldquo;It
+will lead to the leads, I doubt?&rdquo; La Tribe whispered.&nbsp; They
+dared not raise their voices.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As well that way as another!&rdquo; Tignonville answered recklessly.&nbsp;
+He was the more eager, for there is a fear which transcends the fear
+of death.&nbsp; His eyes shone through the mask of dust, the sweat ran
+down to his chin, his breath came and went noisily.&nbsp; &ldquo;Naught
+matters if we can escape him!&rdquo; he panted.&nbsp; And he pushed
+the door recklessly.&nbsp; It flew open; the two drew back their faces
+with a cry of alarm.</p>
+<p>They were looking, not into the sunlight, but into a grey dingy garret
+open to the roof, and occupying the upper part of a gable-end somewhat
+higher than the wing in which they had been confined.&nbsp; Filthy truckle-beds
+and ragged pallets covered the floor, and, eked out by old saddles and
+threadbare horserugs, marked the sleeping quarters either of the servants
+or of travellers of the meaner sort.&nbsp; But the dinginess was naught
+to the two who knelt looking into it, afraid to move.&nbsp; Was the
+place empty?&nbsp; That was the point; the question which had first
+stayed, and then set their pulses at the gallop.</p>
+<p>Painfully their eyes searched each huddle of clothing, scanned each
+dubious shape.&nbsp; And slowly, as the silence persisted, their heads
+came forward until the whole floor lay within the field of sight.&nbsp;
+And still no sound!&nbsp; At last Tignonville stirred, crept through
+the doorway, and rose up, peering round him.&nbsp; He nodded, and, satisfied
+that all was safe, the minister followed him.</p>
+<p>They found themselves a pace or so from the head of a narrow staircase,
+leading downwards.&nbsp; Without moving, they could see the door which
+closed it below.&nbsp; Tignonville signed to La Tribe to wait, and himself
+crept down the stairs.&nbsp; He reached the door, and, stooping, set
+his eye to the hole through which the string of the latch passed.&nbsp;
+A moment he looked, and then, turning on tiptoe, he stole up again,
+his face fallen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You may throw the handle after the hatchet!&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The man on guard is within four yards of the door.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And in the rage of disappointment he struck the air with his hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is he looking this way?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&nbsp; He is looking down the passage towards our room.&nbsp;
+But it is impossible to pass him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>La Tribe nodded, and moved softly to one of the lattices which lighted
+the room.&nbsp; It might be possible to escape that way, by the parapet
+and the tiles.&nbsp; But he found that the casement was set high in
+the roof, which sloped steeply from its sill to the eaves.&nbsp; He
+passed to the other window, in which a little wicket in the lattice
+stood open.&nbsp; He looked through it.&nbsp; In the giddy void white
+pigeons were wheeling in the dazzling sunshine, and, gazing down, he
+saw far below him, in the hot square, a row of booths, and troops of
+people moving to and fro like pigmies; and&mdash;and a strange thing,
+in the middle of all!&nbsp; Involuntarily, as if the persons below could
+have seen his face at the tiny dormer, he drew back.</p>
+<p>He beckoned to M. Tignonville to come to him; and when the young
+man complied, he bade him in a whisper look down.&nbsp; &ldquo;See!&rdquo;
+he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;There!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The younger man saw and drew in his breath.&nbsp; Even under the
+coating of dust his face turned a shade greyer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You had no need to fear that he would let us go!&rdquo; the
+minister muttered, with half-conscious irony.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor I!&nbsp; There are two ropes.&rdquo;&nbsp; And La Tribe
+breathed a few words of prayer.&nbsp; The object which had fixed his
+gaze was a gibbet: the only one of the three which could be seen from
+their eyrie.</p>
+<p>Tignonville, on the other hand, turned sharply away, and with haggard
+eyes stared about the room.&nbsp; &ldquo;We might defend the staircase,&rdquo;
+he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Two men might hold it for a time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We have no food.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;&nbsp; Suddenly he gripped La Tribe&rsquo;s arm.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I have it!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;And it may do!&nbsp;
+It must do!&rdquo; he continued, his face working.&nbsp; &ldquo;See!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And lifting from the floor one of the ragged pallets, from which the
+straw protruded in a dozen places, he set it flat on his head.</p>
+<p>It drooped at each corner&mdash;it had seen much wear&mdash;and,
+while it almost hid his face, it revealed his grimy chin and mortar-stained
+shoulders.&nbsp; He turned to his companion.</p>
+<p>La Tribe&rsquo;s face glowed as he looked.&nbsp; &ldquo;It may do!&rdquo;
+he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a chance!&nbsp; But you are right!&nbsp;
+It may do!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville dropped the ragged mattress, and tore off his coat; then
+he rent his breeches at the knee, so that they hung loose about his
+calves.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you the same!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;And quick,
+man, quick!&nbsp; Leave your boots!&nbsp; Once outside we must pass
+through the streets under these&rdquo;&mdash;he took up his burden again
+and set it on his head&mdash;&ldquo;until we reach a quiet part, and
+there we&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can hide!&nbsp; Or swim the river!&rdquo; the minister said.&nbsp;
+He had followed his companion&rsquo;s example, and now stood under a
+similar burden.&nbsp; With breeches rent and whitened, and his upper
+garments in no better case, he looked a sorry figure.</p>
+<p>Tignonville eyed him with satisfaction, and turned to the staircase.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;there is not a moment to be
+lost.&nbsp; At any minute they may enter our room and find it empty!&nbsp;
+You are ready?&nbsp; Then, not too softly, or it may rouse suspicion!&nbsp;
+And mumble something at the door.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He began himself to scold, and, muttering incoherently, stumbled
+down the staircase, the pallet on his head rustling against the wall
+on each side.&nbsp; Arrived at the door, he fumbled clumsily with the
+latch, and, when the door gave way, plumped out with an oath&mdash;as
+if the awkward burden he bore were the only thing on his mind.&nbsp;
+Badelon&mdash;he was on duty&mdash;stared at the apparition; but the
+next moment he sniffed the pallet, which was none of the freshest, and,
+turning up his nose, he retreated a pace.&nbsp; He had no suspicion;
+the men did not come from the part of the house where the prisoners
+lay, and he stood aside to let them pass.&nbsp; In a moment, staggering,
+and going a little unsteadily, as if they scarcely saw their way, they
+had passed by him, and were descending the staircase.</p>
+<p>So far well!&nbsp; Unfortunately, when they reached the foot of that
+flight they came on the main passage of the first-floor.&nbsp; It ran
+right and left, and Tignonville did not know which way he must turn
+to reach the lower staircase.&nbsp; Yet he dared not hesitate; in the
+passage, waiting about the doors, were four or five servants, and in
+the distance he caught sight of three men belonging to Tavannes&rsquo;
+company.&nbsp; At any moment, too, an upper servant might meet them,
+ask what they were doing, and detect the fraud.&nbsp; He turned at random,
+therefore&mdash;to the left as it chanced&mdash;and marched along bravely,
+until the very thing happened which he had feared.&nbsp; A man came
+from a room plump upon them, saw them, and held up his hands in horror.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are you doing?&rdquo; he cried in a rage and with an
+oath.&nbsp; &ldquo;Who set you on this?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville&rsquo;s tongue clave to the roof of his mouth.&nbsp;
+La Tribe from behind muttered something about the stable.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And time too!&rdquo; the man said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Faugh!&nbsp;
+But how come you this way?&nbsp; Are you drunk?&nbsp; Here!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He opened the door of a musty closet beside him, &ldquo;Pitch them in
+here, do you hear?&nbsp; And take them down when it is dark.&nbsp; Faugh.&nbsp;
+I wonder you did not carry the things though her ladyship&rsquo;s room
+at once!&nbsp; If my lord had been in and met you!&nbsp; Now then, do
+as I tell you!&nbsp; Are you drunk?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With a sullen air Tignonville threw in his mattress.&nbsp; La Tribe
+did the same.&nbsp; Fortunately the passage was ill-lighted, and there
+were many helpers and strange servants in the inn.&nbsp; The butler
+only thought them ill-looking fellows who knew no better.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now be off!&rdquo; he continued irascibly.&nbsp; &ldquo;This
+is no place for your sort.&nbsp; Be off!&rdquo;&nbsp; And, as they moved,
+&ldquo;Coming!&nbsp; Coming!&rdquo; he cried in answer to a distant
+summons; and he hurried away on the errand which their appearance had
+interrupted.</p>
+<p>Tignonville would have gone to work to recover the pallets, for the
+man had left the key in the door.&nbsp; But as he went to do so the
+butler looked back, and the two were obliged to make a pretence of following
+him.&nbsp; A moment, however, and he was gone; and Tignonville turned
+anew to regain them.&nbsp; A second time fortune was adverse; a door
+within a pace of him opened, a woman came out.&nbsp; She recoiled from
+the strange figure; her eyes met his.&nbsp; Unluckily the light from
+the room behind her fell on his face, and with a shrill cry she named
+him.</p>
+<p>One second and all had been lost, for the crowd of idlers at the
+other end of the passage had caught her cry, and were looking that way.&nbsp;
+With presence of mind Tignonville clapped his hand on her mouth, and,
+huddling her by force into the room, followed her, with La Tribe at
+his heels.</p>
+<p>It was a large room, in which seven or eight people, who had been
+at prayers when the cry startled them, were rising from their knees.&nbsp;
+The first thing they saw was Javette on the threshold, struggling in
+the grasp of a wild man, ragged and begrimed; they deemed the city risen
+and the massacre upon them.&nbsp; Carlat threw himself before his mistress,
+the Countess in her turn sheltered a young girl, who stood beside her
+and from whose face the last trace of colour had fled.&nbsp; Madame
+Carlat and a waiting-woman ran shrieking to the window; another instant
+and the alarm would have gone abroad.</p>
+<p>Tignonville&rsquo;s voice stopped it.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you
+know me?&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;Madame! you at least!&nbsp; Carlat!&nbsp;
+Are you all mad?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words stayed them where they stood in an astonishment scarce
+less than their alarm.&nbsp; The Countess tried twice to speak; the
+third time&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you escaped?&rdquo; she muttered.</p>
+<p>Tignonville nodded, his eyes bright with triumph.&nbsp; &ldquo;So
+far,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;But they may be on our heels at any
+moment!&nbsp; Where can we hide?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Countess, her hand pressed to her side, looked at Javette.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The door, girl!&rdquo; she whispered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Lock it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, lock it!&nbsp; And they can go by the back-stairs,&rdquo;
+Madame Carlat answered, awaking suddenly to the situation.&nbsp; &ldquo;Through
+my closet!&nbsp; Once in the yard they may pass out through the stables.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which way?&rdquo; Tignonville asked impatiently.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
+stand looking at me, but&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Through this door!&rdquo; Madame Carlat answered, hurrying
+to it.</p>
+<p>He was following when the Countess stepped forward and interposed
+between him and the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stay!&rdquo; she cried; and there was not one who did not
+notice a new decision in her voice, a new dignity in her bearing.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Stay, Monsieur, we may be going too fast.&nbsp; To go out now
+and in that guise&mdash;may it not be to incur greater peril than you
+incur here?&nbsp; I feel sure that you are in no danger of your life
+at present.&nbsp; Therefore, why run the risk&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In no danger, Madame!&rdquo; he cried, interrupting her in
+astonishment.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have you seen the gibbet in the Square?&nbsp;
+Do you call that no danger?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is not erected for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Monsieur,&rdquo; she answered firmly, &ldquo;I swear it
+is not.&nbsp; And I know of reasons, urgent reasons, why you should
+not go.&nbsp; M. de Tavannes&rdquo;&mdash;she named her husband nervously,
+as conscious of the weak spot&mdash;&ldquo;before he rode abroad laid
+strict orders on all to keep within, since the smallest matter might
+kindle the city.&nbsp; Therefore, M. de Tignonville, I request, nay
+I entreat,&rdquo; she continued with greater urgency, as she saw his
+gesture of denial, &ldquo;you to stay here until he returns.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you, Madame, will answer for my life?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She faltered.&nbsp; For a moment, a moment only, her colour ebbed.&nbsp;
+What if she deceived herself?&nbsp; What if she surrendered her old
+lover to death?&nbsp; What if&mdash;but the doubt was of a moment only.&nbsp;
+Her duty was plain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will answer for it,&rdquo; she said, with pale lips, &ldquo;if
+you remain here.&nbsp; And I beg, I implore you&mdash;by the love you
+once had for me, M. de Tignonville,&rdquo; she added desperately, seeing
+that he was about to refuse, &ldquo;to remain here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Once!&rdquo; he retorted, lashing himself into ignoble rage.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;By the love I once had!&nbsp; Say, rather, the love I have, Madame&mdash;for
+I am no woman-weathercock to wed the winner, and hold or not hold, stay
+or go, as he commands!&nbsp; You, it seems,&rdquo; he continued with
+a sneer, &ldquo;have learned the wife&rsquo;s lesson well!&nbsp; You
+would practise on me now, as you practised on me the other night when
+you stood between him and me!&nbsp; I yielded then, I spared him.&nbsp;
+And what did I get by it?&nbsp; Bonds and a prison!&nbsp; And what shall
+I get now?&nbsp; The same!&nbsp; No, Madame,&rdquo; he continued bitterly,
+addressing himself as much to the Carlats and the others as to his old
+mistress.&nbsp; &ldquo;I do not change!&nbsp; I loved!&nbsp; I love!&nbsp;
+I was going and I go!&nbsp; If death lay beyond that door&rdquo;&mdash;and
+he pointed to it&mdash;&ldquo;and life at his will were certain here,
+I would pass the threshold rather than take my life of him!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And, dragging La Tribe with him, with a passionate gesture he rushed
+by her, opened the door, and disappeared in the next room.</p>
+<p>The Countess took one pace forward, as if she would have followed
+him, as if she would have tried further persuasion.&nbsp; But as she
+moved a cry rooted her to the spot.&nbsp; A rush of feet and the babel
+of many voices filled the passage with a tide of sound, which drew rapidly
+nearer.&nbsp; The escape was known!&nbsp; Would the fugitives have time
+to slip out below?</p>
+<p>Some one knocked at the door, tried it, pushed and beat on it.&nbsp;
+But the Countess and all in the room had run to the windows and were
+looking out.</p>
+<p>If the two had not yet made their escape they must be taken.&nbsp;
+Yet no; as the Countess leaned from the window, first one dusty figure
+and then a second darted from a door below, and made for the nearest
+turning, out of the Place Ste.-Croix.&nbsp; Before they gained it, four
+men, of whom, Badelon, his grey locks flying, was first, dashed out
+in pursuit, and the street rang with cries of &ldquo;Stop him!&nbsp;
+Seize him!&nbsp; Seize him!&rdquo;&nbsp; Some one&mdash;one of the pursuers
+or another&mdash;to add to the alarm let off a musket, and in a moment,
+as if the report had been a signal, the Place was in a hubbub, people
+flocked into it with mysterious quickness, and from a neighbouring roof&mdash;whence,
+precisely, it was impossible to say&mdash;the crackling fire of a dozen
+arquebuses alarmed the city far and wide.</p>
+<p>Unfortunately, the fugitives had been baulked at the first turning.&nbsp;
+Making for a second, they found it choked, and, swerving, darted across
+the Place towards St.-Maurice, seeking to lose themselves in the gathering
+crowd.&nbsp; But the pursuers clung desperately to their skirts, overturning
+here a man and there a child; and then in a twinkling, Tignonville,
+as he ran round a booth, tripped over a peg and fell, and La Tribe stumbled
+over him and fell also.&nbsp; The four riders flung themselves fiercely
+on their prey, secured them, and began to drag them with oaths and curses
+towards the door of the inn.</p>
+<p>The Countess had seen all from her window; had held her breath while
+they ran, had drawn it sharply when they fell.&nbsp; Now, &ldquo;They
+have them!&rdquo; she muttered, a sob choking her, &ldquo;they have
+them!&rdquo;&nbsp; And she clasped her hands.&nbsp; If he had followed
+her advice!&nbsp; If he had only followed her advice!</p>
+<p>But the issue proved less certain than she deemed it.&nbsp; The crowd,
+which grew each moment, knew nothing of pursuers or pursued.&nbsp; On
+the contrary, a cry went up that the riders were Huguenots, and that
+the Huguenots were rising and slaying the Catholics; and as no story
+was too improbable for those days, and this was one constantly set about,
+first one stone flew, and then another, and another.&nbsp; A man with
+a staff darted forward and struck Badelon on the shoulder, two or three
+others pressed in and jostled the riders; and if three of Tavannes&rsquo;
+following had not run out on the instant and faced the mob with their
+pikes, and for a moment forced them to give back, the prisoners would
+have been rescued at the very door of the inn.&nbsp; As it was they
+were dragged in, and the gates were flung to and barred in the nick
+of time.&nbsp; Another moment, almost another second, and the mob had
+seized them.&nbsp; As it was, a hail of stones poured on the front of
+the inn, and amid the rising yells of the rabble there presently floated
+heavy and slow over the city the tolling of the great bell of St.-Maurice.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXX.&nbsp; SACRILEGE!</h2>
+<p>M. de Montsoreau, Lieutenant-Governor of Saumur almost rose from
+his seat in his astonishment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What!&nbsp; No letters?&rdquo; he cried, a hand on either
+arm of the chair.</p>
+<p>The Magistrates stared, one and all.&nbsp; &ldquo;No letters?&rdquo;
+they muttered.</p>
+<p>And &ldquo;No letters?&rdquo; the Provost chimed in more faintly.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal looked smiling round the Council table.&nbsp; He alone
+was unmoved.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I bear none.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. de Montsoreau, who, travel-stained and in his corselet, had the
+second place of honour at the foot of the table, frowned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, M. le Comte,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;my instructions from
+Monsieur were to proceed to carry out his Majesty&rsquo;s will in co-operation
+with you, who, I understood, would bring letters <i>de par le Roi</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had letters,&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered negligently.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But on the way I mislaid them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mislaid them?&rdquo; Montsoreau cried, unable to believe his
+ears; while the smaller dignitaries of the city, the magistrates and
+churchmen who sat on either side of the table, gaped open-mouthed.&nbsp;
+It was incredible!&nbsp; It was unbelievable!&nbsp; Mislay the King&rsquo;s
+letters!&nbsp; Who had ever heard of such a thing?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I mislaid them.&nbsp; Lost them, if you like it better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you jest!&rdquo; the Lieutenant-Governor retorted, moving
+uneasily in his chair.&nbsp; He was a man more highly named for address
+than courage; and, like most men skilled in finesse, he was prone to
+suspect a trap.&nbsp; &ldquo;You jest, surely, Monsieur!&nbsp; Men do
+not lose his Majesty&rsquo;s letters, by the way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When they contain his Majesty&rsquo;s will, no,&rdquo; Tavannes
+answered, with a peculiar smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You imply, then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal shrugged his shoulders, but had not answered when
+Bigot entered and handed him his sweetmeat box; he paused to open it
+and select a prune.&nbsp; He was long in selecting; but no change of
+countenance led any of those at the table to suspect that inside the
+lid of the box was a message&mdash;a scrap of paper informing him that
+Montsoreau had left fifty spears in the suburb without the Saumur gate,
+besides those whom he had brought openly into the town.&nbsp; Tavannes
+read the note slowly while he seemed to be choosing his fruit.&nbsp;
+And then&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Imply?&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;I imply nothing, M.
+de Montsoreau.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But that sometimes his Majesty finds it prudent to give orders
+which he does not mean to be carried out.&nbsp; There are things which
+start up before the eye,&rdquo; Tavannes continued, negligently tapping
+the box on the table, &ldquo;and there are things which do not; sometimes
+the latter are the more important.&nbsp; You, better than I, M. de Montsoreau,
+know that the King in the Gallery at the Louvre is one, and in his closet
+is another.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that being so&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do not mean to carry the letters into effect?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Had I the letters, certainly, my friend.&nbsp; I should be
+bound by them.&nbsp; But I took good care to lose them,&rdquo; Tavannes
+added na&iuml;vely.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am no fool.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Umph!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;However,&rdquo; Count Hannibal continued, with an airy gesture,
+&ldquo;that is my affair.&nbsp; If you, M. de Montsoreau, feel inclined,
+in spite of the absence of my letters, to carry yours into effect, by
+all means do so&mdash;after midnight of to-day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. de Montsoreau breathed hard.&nbsp; &ldquo;And why,&rdquo; he asked,
+half sulkily and half ponderously, &ldquo;after midnight only, M. le
+Comte?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Merely that I may be clear of all suspicion of having lot
+or part in the matter,&rdquo; Count Hannibal answered pleasantly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;After midnight of to-night by all means do as you please.&nbsp;
+Until midnight, by your leave, we will be quiet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Lieutenant-Governor moved doubtfully in his chair, the fear&mdash;which
+Tavannes had shrewdly instilled into his mind&mdash;that he might be
+disowned if he carried out his instructions, struggling with his avarice
+and his self-importance.&nbsp; He was rather crafty than bold; and such
+things had been, he knew.&nbsp; Little by little, and while he sat gloomily
+debating, the notion of dealing with one or two and holding the body
+of the Huguenots to ransom&mdash;a notion which, in spite of everything,
+was to bear good fruit for Angers&mdash;began to form in his mind.&nbsp;
+The plan suited him: it left him free to face either way, and it would
+fill his pockets more genteelly than would open robbery.&nbsp; On the
+other hand, he would offend his brother and the fanatical party, with
+whom he commonly acted.&nbsp; They were looking to see him assert himself.&nbsp;
+They were looking to hear him declare himself.&nbsp; And&mdash;</p>
+<p>Harshly Count Hannibal&rsquo;s voice broke in on his thoughts; harshly,
+a something sinister in its tone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is your brother?&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; And it was evident
+that he had not noted his absence until then.&nbsp; &ldquo;My lord&rsquo;s
+Vicar of all people should be here!&rdquo; he continued, leaning forward
+and looking round the table.&nbsp; His brow was stormy.</p>
+<p>Lescot squirmed under his eye; Thuriot turned pale and trembled.&nbsp;
+It was one of the canons of St.-Maurice, who at length took on himself
+to answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His lordship requested, M. le Comte,&rdquo; he ventured, &ldquo;that
+you would excuse him.&nbsp; His duties&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is he ill?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is he ill, sirrah?&rdquo; Tavannes roared.&nbsp; And while
+all bowed before the lightning of his eye, no man at the table knew
+what had roused the sudden tempest.&nbsp; But Bigot knew, who stood
+by the door, and whose ear, keen as his master&rsquo;s, had caught the
+distant report of a musket shot.&nbsp; &ldquo;If he be not ill,&rdquo;
+Tavannes continued, rising and looking round the table in search of
+signs of guilt, &ldquo;and there be foul play here, and he the player,
+the Bishop&rsquo;s own hand shall not save him!&nbsp; By Heaven it shall
+not!&nbsp; Nor yours!&rdquo; he continued, looking fiercely at Montsoreau.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Nor your master&rsquo;s!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Lieutenant-Governor sprang to his feet.&nbsp; &ldquo;M. le Comte,&rdquo;
+he stammered, &ldquo;I do not understand this language!&nbsp; Nor this
+heat, which may be real or not!&nbsp; All I say is, if there be foul
+play here&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If!&rdquo; Tavannes retorted.&nbsp; &ldquo;At least, if there
+be, there be gibbets too!&nbsp; And I see necks!&rdquo; he added, leaning
+forward.&nbsp; &ldquo;Necks!&rdquo;&nbsp; And then, with a look of flame,
+&ldquo;Let no man leave this table until I return,&rdquo; he cried,
+&ldquo;or he will have to deal with me.&nbsp; Nay,&rdquo; he continued,
+changing his tone abruptly, as the prudence, which never entirely left
+him&mdash;and perhaps the remembrance of the other&rsquo;s fifty spearmen&mdash;sobered
+him in the midst of his rage, &ldquo;I am hasty.&nbsp; I mean not you,
+M. de Montsoreau!&nbsp; Ride where you will; ride with me, if you will,
+and I will thank you.&nbsp; Only remember, until midnight Angers is
+mine!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was still speaking when he moved from the table, and, leaving
+all staring after him, strode down the room.&nbsp; An instant he paused
+on the threshold and looked back; then he passed out, and clattered
+down the stone stairs.&nbsp; His horse and riders were waiting, but,
+his foot in the stirrup, he stayed for a word with Bigot.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it so?&rdquo; he growled.</p>
+<p>The Norman did not speak, but pointed towards the Place Ste.-Croix,
+whence an occasional shot made answer for him.</p>
+<p>In those days the streets of the Black City were narrow and crooked,
+overhung by timber houses, and hampered by booths; nor could Tavannes
+from the old Town Hall&mdash;now abandoned&mdash;see the Place Ste.-Croix.&nbsp;
+But that he could cure.&nbsp; He struck spurs to his horse, and, followed
+by his ten horsemen, he clattered noisily down the paved street.&nbsp;
+A dozen groups hurrying the same way sprang panic-stricken to the walls,
+or saved themselves in doorways.&nbsp; He was up with them, he was beyond
+them!&nbsp; Another hundred yards, and he would see the Place.</p>
+<p>And then, with a cry of rage, he drew rein a little, discovering
+what was before him.&nbsp; In the narrow gut of the way a great black
+banner, borne on two poles, was lurching towards him.&nbsp; It was moving
+in the van of a dark procession of priests, who, with their attendants
+and a crowd of devout, filled the street from wall to wall.&nbsp; They
+were chanting one of the penitential psalms, but not so loudly as to
+drown the uproar in the Place beyond them.</p>
+<p>They made no way, and Count Hannibal swore furiously, suspecting
+treachery.&nbsp; But he was no madman, and at the moment the least reflection
+would have sent him about to seek another road.&nbsp; Unfortunately,
+as he hesitated a man sprang with a gesture of warning to his horse&rsquo;s
+head and seized it; and Tavannes, mistaking the motive of the act, lost
+his self-control.&nbsp; He struck the fellow down, and, with a reckless
+word, rode headlong into the procession, shouting to the black robes
+to make way, make way!&nbsp; A cry, nay, a shriek of horror, answered
+him and rent the air.&nbsp; And in a minute the thing was done.&nbsp;
+Too late, as the Bishop&rsquo;s Vicar, struck by his horse, fell screaming
+under its hoofs&mdash;too late, as the consecrated vessels which he
+had been bearing rolled in the mud, Tavannes saw that they bore the
+canopy and the Host!</p>
+<p>He knew what he had done, then.&nbsp; Before his horse&rsquo;s iron
+shoes struck the ground again, his face&mdash;even his face&mdash;had
+lost its colour.&nbsp; But he knew also that to hesitate now, to pause
+now, was to be torn in pieces; for his riders, seeing that which the
+banner had veiled from him, had not followed him, and he was alone,
+in the middle of brandished fists and weapons.&nbsp; He hesitated not
+a moment.&nbsp; Drawing a pistol, he spurred onwards, his horse plunging
+wildly among the shrieking priests; and though a hundred hands, hands
+of acolytes, hands of shaven monks, clutched at his bridle or gripped
+his boot, he got clear of them.&nbsp; Clear, carrying with him the memory
+of one face seen an instant amid the crowd, one face seen, to be ever
+remembered&mdash;the face of Father Pezelay, white, evil, scarred, distorted
+by wicked triumph.</p>
+<p>Behind him, the thunder of &ldquo;Sacrilege!&nbsp; Sacrilege!&rdquo;
+rose to Heaven, and men were gathering.&nbsp; In front the crowd which
+skirmished about the inn was less dense, and, ignorant of the thing
+that had happened in the narrow street, made ready way for him, the
+boldest recoiling before the look on his face.&nbsp; Some who stood
+nearest to the inn, and had begun to hurl stones at the window and to
+beat on the doors&mdash;which had only the minute before closed on Badelon
+and his prisoners&mdash;supposed that he had his riders behind him;
+and these fled apace.&nbsp; But he knew better even than they the value
+of time; he pushed his horse up to the gates, and hammered them with
+his boot while be kept his pistol-hand towards the Place and the cathedral,
+watching for the transformation which he knew would come!</p>
+<p>And come it did; on a sudden, in a twinkling!&nbsp; A white-faced
+monk, frenzy in his eyes, appeared in the midst of the crowd.&nbsp;
+He stood and tore his garments before the people, and, stooping, threw
+dust on his head.&nbsp; A second and a third followed his example; then
+from a thousand throats the cry of &ldquo;Sacrilege!&nbsp; Sacrilege!&rdquo;
+rolled up, while clerks flew wildly hither and thither shrieking the
+tale, and priests denied the Sacraments to Angers until it should purge
+itself of the evil thing.</p>
+<p>By that time Count Hannibal had saved himself behind the great gates,
+by the skin of his teeth.&nbsp; The gates had opened to him in time.&nbsp;
+But none knew better than he that Angers had no gates thick enough,
+nor walls of a height, to save him for many hours from the storm he
+had let loose!</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXI.&nbsp; THE FLIGHT FROM ANGERS.</h2>
+<p>But that only the more roused the devil in the man; that, and the
+knowledge that he had his own headstrong act to thank for the position.&nbsp;
+He looked on the panic-stricken people who, scared by the turmoil without,
+had come together in the courtyard, wringing their hands and chattering;
+and his face was so dark and forbidding that fear of him took the place
+of all other fear, and the nearest shrank from contact with him.&nbsp;
+On any other entering as he had entered, they would have hailed questions;
+they would have asked what was amiss, and if the city were rising, and
+where were Bigot and his men.&nbsp; But Count Hannibal&rsquo;s eye struck
+curiosity dumb.&nbsp; When he cried from his saddle, &ldquo;Bring me
+the landlord!&rdquo; the trembling man was found, and brought, and thrust
+forward almost without a word.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have a back gate?&rdquo; Tavannes said, while the crowd
+leaned forward to catch his words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, my lord,&rdquo; the man faltered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Into the street which leads to the ramparts?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye-yes, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then&rdquo;&mdash;to Badelon&mdash;&ldquo;saddle!&nbsp; You
+have five minutes.&nbsp; Saddle as you never saddled before,&rdquo;
+he continued in a low tone, &ldquo;or&mdash;&rdquo;&nbsp; His tongue
+did not finish the threat, but his hand waved the man away.&nbsp; &ldquo;For
+you&rdquo;&mdash;he held Tignonville an instant with his lowering eye&mdash;&ldquo;and
+the preaching fool with you, get arms and mount!&nbsp; You have never
+played aught but the woman yet; but play me false now, or look aside
+but a foot from the path I bid you take, and you thwart me no more,
+Monsieur!&nbsp; And you, Madame,&rdquo; he continued, turning to the
+Countess, who stood bewildered at one of the doors, the Provost&rsquo;s
+daughter clinging and weeping about her, &ldquo;you have three minutes
+to get your women to horse!&nbsp; See you, if you please, that they
+take no longer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She found her voice with difficulty.&nbsp; &ldquo;And this child?&rdquo;
+she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;She is in my care.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bring her,&rdquo; he muttered with a scowl of impatience.&nbsp;
+And then, raising his voice as he turned on the terrified gang of hostlers
+and inn servants who stood gaping round him, &ldquo;Go help!&rdquo;
+he thundered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go help!&nbsp; And quickly!&rdquo; he added,
+his face growing a shade darker as a second bell began to toll from
+a neighbouring tower, and the confused babel in the Place Ste.-Croix
+settled into a dull roar of &ldquo;<i>Sacril&egrave;ge</i>! <i>sacril&egrave;ge</i>.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Hasten!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fortunately it had been his first intention to go to the Council
+attended by the whole of his troop; and eight horses stood saddled in
+the stalls.&nbsp; Others were hastily pulled out and bridled, and the
+women were mounted.&nbsp; La Tribe, at a look from Tavannes, took behind
+him the Provost&rsquo;s daughter, who was helpless with terror.&nbsp;
+Between the suddenness of the alarm, the uproar without, and the panic
+within, none but a man whose people served him at a nod and dreaded
+his very gesture could have got his party mounted in time.&nbsp; Javette
+would fain have swooned, but she dared not.&nbsp; Tignonville would
+fain have questioned, but he shrank from the venture.&nbsp; The Countess
+would fain have said something, but she forced herself to obey and no
+more.&nbsp; Even so the confusion in the courtyard, the mingling of
+horses and men and trappings and saddle-bags, would have made another
+despair; but wherever Count Hannibal, seated in his saddle in the middle,
+turned his face, chaos settled into a degree of order, servants, ceasing
+to listen to the yells and cries outside, ran to fetch, women dropped
+cloaks from the gallery, and men loaded muskets and strapped on bandoliers.</p>
+<p>Until at last&mdash;but none knew what those minutes of suspense
+cost him&mdash;he saw all mounted, and, pistol in hand, shepherded them
+to the back gates.&nbsp; As he did so he stooped for a few scowling
+words with Badelon, whom he sent to the van of the party: then he gave
+the word to open.&nbsp; It was done; and even as Montsoreau&rsquo;s
+horsemen, borne on the bosom of a second and more formidable throng,
+swept raging into the already crowded square, and the cry went up for
+&ldquo;a ram! a ram!&rdquo; to batter in the gates, Tavannes, hurling
+his little party before him, dashed out at the back, and putting to
+flight a handful of rascals who had wandered to that side, cantered
+unmolested down the lane to the ramparts.&nbsp; Turning eastward at
+the foot of the frowning Castle, he followed the inner side of the wall
+in the direction of the gate by which he had entered the preceding evening.</p>
+<p>To gain this his party had to pass the end of the Rue Toussaint,
+which issues from the Place Ste.-Croix and runs so straight that the
+mob seething in front of the inn had only to turn their heads to see
+them.&nbsp; The danger incurred at this point was great; for a party
+as small as Tavannes&rsquo; and encumbered with women would have had
+no chance if attacked within the walls.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal knew it.&nbsp; But he knew also that the act which
+he had committed rendered the north bank of the Loire impossible for
+him.&nbsp; Neither King nor Marshal, neither Charles of Valois nor Gaspard
+of Tavannes, would dare to shield him from an infuriated Church, a Church
+too wise to forgive certain offences.&nbsp; His one chance lay in reaching
+the southern bank of the Loire&mdash;roughly speaking, the Huguenot
+bank&mdash;and taking refuge in some town, Rochelle or St. Jean d&rsquo;Angely,
+where the Huguenots were strong, and whence he might take steps to set
+himself right with his own side.</p>
+<p>But to cross the great river which divides France into two lands
+widely differing he must leave the city by the east gate; for the only
+bridge over the Loire within forty miles of Angers lay eastward from
+the town, at Ponts de C&eacute;, four miles away.&nbsp; To this gate,
+therefore, past the Rue Toussaint, he whirled his party daringly; and
+though the women grew pale as the sounds of riot broke louder on the
+ear, and they discovered that they were approaching instead of leaving
+the danger&mdash;and though Tignonville for an instant thought him mad,
+and snatched at the Countess&rsquo;s rein&mdash;his men-at-arms, who
+knew him, galloped stolidly on, passed like clockwork the end of the
+street, and, reckless of the stream of persons hurrying in the direction
+of the alarm, heedless of the fright and anger their passage excited,
+pressed steadily on.&nbsp; A moment and the gate through which they
+had entered the previous evening appeared before them.&nbsp; And&mdash;a
+sight welcome to one of them&mdash;it was open.</p>
+<p>They were fortunate indeed, for a few seconds later they had been
+too late.&nbsp; The alarm had preceded them.&nbsp; As they dashed up,
+a man ran to the chains of the portcullis and tried to lower it.&nbsp;
+He failed to do so at the first touch, and, quailing, fled from Badelon&rsquo;s
+levelled pistol.&nbsp; A watchman on one of the bastions of the wall
+shouted to them to halt or he would fire: but the riders yelled in derision,
+and thundering through the echoing archway, emerged into the open, and
+saw, extended before them, in place of the gloomy vistas of the Black
+Town, the glory of the open country and the vine-clad hills, and the
+fields about the Loire yellow with late harvest.</p>
+<p>The women gasped their relief, and one or two who were most out of
+breath would have pulled up their horses and let them trot, thinking
+the danger at an end.&nbsp; But a curt savage word from the rear set
+them flying again, and down and up and on again they galloped, driven
+forward by the iron hand which never relaxed its grip of them.&nbsp;
+Silent and pitiless he whirled them before him until they were within
+a mile of the long Ponts de C&eacute;&mdash;a series of bridges rather
+than one bridge&mdash;and the broad shallow Loire lay plain before them,
+its sandbanks grilling in the sun, and grey lines of willows marking
+its eyots.&nbsp; By this time some of the women, white with fatigue,
+could only cling to their saddles with their hands; while others were
+red-hot, their hair unrolled, and the perspiration mingled with the
+dust on their faces.&nbsp; But he who drove them had no pity for weakness
+in an emergency.&nbsp; He looked back and saw, a half-mile behind them,
+the glitter of steel following hard on their heels: and &ldquo;Faster!
+faster!&rdquo; he cried, regardless of their prayers: and he beat the
+rearmost of the horses with his scabbard.&nbsp; A waiting-woman shrieked
+that she should fall, but he answered ruthlessly, &ldquo;Fall then,
+fool!&rdquo; and the instinct of self-preservation coming to her aid,
+she clung and bumped and toiled on with the rest until they reached
+the first houses of the town about the bridges, and Badelon raised his
+hand as a signal that they might slacken speed.</p>
+<p>The bewilderment of the start had been so great that it was then
+only, when they found their feet on the first link of the bridge, that
+two of the party, the Countess and Tignonville, awoke to the fact that
+their faces were set southwards.&nbsp; To cross the Loire in those days
+meant much to all: to a Huguenot, very much.&nbsp; It chanced that these
+two rode on to the bridge side by side, and the memory of their last
+crossing&mdash;the remembrance that, on their journey north a month
+before, they had crossed it hand-in-hand with the prospect of passing
+their lives together, and with no faintest thought of the events which
+were to ensue, flashed into the mind of each of them.&nbsp; It deepened
+the flush which exertion had brought to the woman&rsquo;s cheek, then
+left it paler than before.&nbsp; A minute earlier she had been wroth
+with her old lover; she had held him accountable for the outbreak in
+the town and this hasty retreat; now her anger died as she looked and
+she remembered.&nbsp; In the man, shallower of feeling and more alive
+to present contingencies, the uppermost emotion as he trod the bridge
+was one of surprise and congratulation.</p>
+<p>He could not at first believe in their good fortune.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>Mon
+Dieu</i>!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;we are crossing!&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+then again in a lower tone, &ldquo;We are crossing!&nbsp; We are crossing!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And he looked at her.</p>
+<p>It was impossible that she should not look back; that she who had
+ceased to be angry should not feel and remember; impossible that her
+answering glance should not speak to his heart.&nbsp; Below them, as
+on that day a month earlier, when they had crossed the bridges going
+northward, the broad shallow river ran its course in the sunshine, its
+turbid currents gleaming and flashing about the sandbanks and osier-beds.&nbsp;
+To the eye, the landscape, save that the vintage was farther advanced
+and the harvest in part gathered in, was the same.&nbsp; But how changed
+were their relations, their prospects, their hopes, who had then crossed
+the river hand-in-hand, planning a life to be passed together.</p>
+<p>The young man&rsquo;s rage boiled up at the thought.&nbsp; Too vividly,
+too sharply it showed him the wrongs which he had suffered at the hands
+of the man who rode behind him, the man who even now drove him on and
+ordered him and insulted him.&nbsp; He forgot that he might have perished
+in the general massacre if Count Hannibal had not intervened.&nbsp;
+He forgot that Count Hannibal had spared him once and twice.&nbsp; He
+laid on his enemy&rsquo;s shoulders the guilt of all, the blood of all:
+and, as quick on the thought of his wrongs and his fellows&rsquo; wrongs
+followed the reflection that with every league they rode southwards
+the chance of requital grew, he cried again, and this time joyously&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are crossing!&nbsp; A little, and we shall be in our own
+land!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The tears filled the Countess&rsquo;s eyes as she looked westwards
+and southwards.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Vrillac is there!&rdquo; she cried; and she pointed.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I smell the sea!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay!&rdquo; he answered, almost under his breath.&nbsp; &ldquo;It
+lies there!&nbsp; And no more than thirty leagues from us!&nbsp; With
+fresh horses we might see it in two days!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Badelon&rsquo;s voice broke in on them.&nbsp; &ldquo;Forward!&rdquo;
+he cried, as the party reached the southern bank.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>En
+avant</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp; And, obedient to the word, the little company,
+refreshed by the short respite, took the road out of Ponts de C&eacute;
+at a steady trot.&nbsp; Nor was the Countess the only one whose face
+glowed, being set southwards, or whose heart pulsed to the rhythm of
+the horses&rsquo; hoofs that beat out &ldquo;Home!&rdquo;&nbsp; Carlat&rsquo;s
+and Madame Carlat&rsquo;s also.&nbsp; Javette even, hearing from her
+neighbour that they were over the Loire, plucked up courage; while La
+Tribe, gazing before him with moistened eyes, cried &ldquo;Comfort&rdquo;
+to the scared and weeping girl who clung to his belt.&nbsp; It was singular
+to see how all sniffed the air as if already it smacked of the sea and
+of the south; and how they of Poitou sat their horses as if they asked
+nothing better than to ride on and on and on until the scenes of home
+arose about them.&nbsp; For them the sky had already a deeper blue,
+the air a softer fragrance, the sunshine a purity long unknown.</p>
+<p>Was it wonderful, when they had suffered so much on that northern
+bank?&nbsp; When their experience during the month had been comparable
+only with the direst nightmare?&nbsp; Yet one among them, after the
+first impulse of relief and satisfaction, felt differently.&nbsp; Tignonville&rsquo;s
+gorge rose against the sense of compulsion, of inferiority.&nbsp; To
+be driven forward after this fashion, whether he would or no, to be
+placed at the back of every base-born man-at-arms, to have no clearer
+knowledge of what had happened or of what was passing, or of the peril
+from which they fled, than the women among whom he rode&mdash;these
+things kindled anew the sullen fire of hate.&nbsp; North of the Loire
+there had been some excuse for his inaction under insult; he had been
+in the man&rsquo;s country and power.&nbsp; But south of the Loire,
+within forty leagues of Huguenot Niort, must he still suffer, still
+be supine?</p>
+<p>His rage was inflamed by a disappointment he presently underwent.&nbsp;
+Looking back as they rode clear of the wooden houses of Ponts de C&eacute;,
+he missed Tavannes and several of his men; and he wondered if Count
+Hannibal had remained on his own side of the river.&nbsp; It seemed
+possible; and in that event La Tribe and he and Carlat might deal with
+Badelon and the four who still escorted them.&nbsp; But when he looked
+back a minute later, Tavannes was within sight, following the party
+with a stern face; and not Tavannes only.&nbsp; Bigot, with two of the
+ten men who hitherto had been missing, was with him.</p>
+<p>It was clear, however, that they brought no good news, for they had
+scarcely ridden up before Count Hannibal cried, &ldquo;Faster! faster!&rdquo;
+in his harshest voice, and Bigot urged the horses to a quicker trot.&nbsp;
+Their course lay almost parallel with the Loire in the direction of
+Beaupr&eacute;au; and Tignonville began to fear that Count Hannibal
+intended to recross the river at Nantes, where the only bridge below
+Angers spanned the stream.&nbsp; With this in view it was easy to comprehend
+his wish to distance his pursuers before he recrossed.</p>
+<p>The Countess had no such thought.&nbsp; &ldquo;They must be close
+upon us!&rdquo; she murmured, as she urged her horse in obedience to
+the order.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whoever they are!&rdquo; Tignonville muttered bitterly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If we knew what had happened, or who followed, we should know
+more about it, Madame.&nbsp; For that matter, I know what I wish he
+would do.&nbsp; And our heads are set for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Make for Vrillac!&rdquo; he answered, a savage gleam in his
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For Vrillac?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, if he would!&rdquo; she cried, her face turning pale.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If he would.&nbsp; He would be safe there!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, quite safe!&rdquo; he answered with a peculiar intonation.&nbsp;
+And he looked at her askance.</p>
+<p>He fancied that his thought, the thought which had just flashed into
+his brain, was her thought; that she had the same notion in reserve,
+and that they were in sympathy.&nbsp; And Tavannes, seeing them talking
+together, and noting her look and the fervour of her gesture, formed
+the same opinion, and retired more darkly into himself.&nbsp; The downfall
+of his plan for dazzling her by a magnanimity unparalleled and beyond
+compare, a plan dependent on the submission of Angers&mdash;his disappointment
+in this might have roused the worst passions of a better man.&nbsp;
+But there was in this man a pride on a level at least with his other
+passions: and to bear himself in this hour of defeat and flight so that
+if she could not love him she must admire him, checked in a strange
+degree the current of his rage.</p>
+<p>When Tignonville presently looked back he found that Count Hannibal
+and six of his riders had pulled up and were walking their horses far
+in the rear.&nbsp; On which he would have done the same himself; but
+Badelon called over his shoulder the eternal &ldquo;Forward, Monsieur,
+<i>en avant</i>!&rdquo; and sullenly, hating the man and his master
+more deeply every hour, Tignonville was forced to push on, with thoughts
+of vengeance in his heart.</p>
+<p>Trot, trot!&nbsp; Trot, trot!&nbsp; Through a country which had lost
+its smiling wooded character and grew more sombre and less fertile the
+farther they left the Loire behind them.&nbsp; Trot, trot!&nbsp; Trot,
+trot!&mdash;for ever, it seemed to some.&nbsp; Javette wept with fatigue,
+and the other women were little better.&nbsp; The Countess herself spoke
+seldom except to cheer the Provost&rsquo;s daughter; who, poor girl,
+flung suddenly out of the round of her life and cast among strangers,
+showed a better spirit than might have been expected.&nbsp; At length,
+on the slopes of some low hills, which they had long seen before them,
+a cluster of houses and a church appeared; and Badelon, drawing rein,
+cried&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beaupr&eacute;au, Madame!&nbsp; We stay an hour!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was six o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; They had ridden some hours without
+a break.&nbsp; With sighs and cries of pain the women dropped from their
+clumsy saddles, while the men laid out such food&mdash;it was little&mdash;as
+had been brought, and hobbled the horses that they might feed.&nbsp;
+The hour passed rapidly, and when it had passed Badelon was inexorable.&nbsp;
+There was wailing when he gave the word to mount again; and Tignonville,
+fiercely resenting this dumb, reasonless flight, was at heart one of
+the mutineers.&nbsp; But Badelon said grimly that they might go on and
+live, or stay and die, as it pleased them; and once more they climbed
+painfully to their saddles, and jogged steadily on through the sunset,
+through the gloaming, through the darkness, across a weird, mysterious
+country of low hills and narrow plains which grew more wild and less
+cultivated as they advanced.&nbsp; Fortunately the horses had been well
+saved during the long leisurely journey to Angers, and now went well
+and strongly.&nbsp; When they at last unsaddled for the night in a little
+dismal wood within a mile of Clisson, they had placed some forty miles
+between themselves and Angers.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXII.&nbsp; THE ORDEAL BY STEEL.</h2>
+<p>The women for the most part fell like sacks and slept where they
+alighted, dead weary.&nbsp; The men, when they had cared for the horses,
+followed the example; for Badelon would suffer no fire.&nbsp; In less
+than half an hour, a sentry who stood on guard at the edge of the wood,
+and Tignonville and La Tribe, who talked in low voices with their backs
+against a tree, were the only persons who remained awake, with the exception
+of the Countess.&nbsp; Carlat had made a couch for her, and screened
+it with cloaks from the wind and the eye; for the moon had risen and
+where the trees stood sparsest its light flooded the soil with pools
+of white.&nbsp; But Madame had not yet retired to her bed.&nbsp; The
+two men, whose voices reached her, saw her from time to time moving
+restlessly to and fro between the road and the little encampment.&nbsp;
+Presently she came and stood over them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He led His people out of the wilderness,&rdquo; La Tribe was
+saying; &ldquo;out of the trouble of Paris, out of the trouble of Angers,
+and always, always southward.&nbsp; If you do not in this, Monsieur,
+see His finger&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And Angers?&rdquo; Tignonville struck in, with a faint sneer.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Has He led that out of trouble?&nbsp; A day or two ago you would
+risk all to save it, my friend.&nbsp; Now, with your back safely turned
+on it, you think all for the best.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We did our best,&rdquo; the minister answered humbly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;From the day we met in Paris we have been but instruments.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To save Angers?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To save a remnant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On a sudden the Countess raised her hand.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you not
+hear horses, Monsieur?&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; She had been listening
+to the noises of the night, and had paid little heed to what the two
+were saying.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One of ours moved,&rdquo; Tignonville answered listlessly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Why do you not lie down, Madame?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Instead of answering, &ldquo;Whither is he going?&rdquo; she asked.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Do you know?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish I did know,&rdquo; the young man answered peevishly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;To Niort, it may be.&nbsp; Or presently he will double back and
+recross the Loire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He would have gone by Cholet to Niort,&rdquo; La Tribe said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The direction is rather that of Rochelle.&nbsp; God grant we
+be bound thither!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Or to Vrillac,&rdquo; the Countess cried, clasping her hands
+in the darkness.&nbsp; &ldquo;Can it be to Vrillac he is going?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The minister shook his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, let it be to Vrillac!&rdquo; she cried, a thrill in her
+voice.&nbsp; &ldquo;We should be safe there.&nbsp; And he would be safe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Safe?&rdquo; echoed a fourth and deeper voice.&nbsp; And out
+of the darkness beside them loomed a tall figure.</p>
+<p>The minister looked and leapt to his feet.&nbsp; Tignonville rose
+more slowly.</p>
+<p>The voice was Tavannes&rsquo;.&nbsp; &ldquo;And where am I to be
+safe?&rdquo; he repeated slowly, a faint ring of saturnine amusement
+in his tone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At Vrillac!&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;In my house, Monsieur!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was silent a moment.&nbsp; Then, &ldquo;Your house, Madame?&nbsp;
+In which direction is it, from here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Westwards,&rdquo; she answered impulsively, her voice quivering
+with eagerness and emotion and hope.&nbsp; &ldquo;Westwards, Monsieur&mdash;on
+the sea.&nbsp; The causeway from the land is long, and ten can hold
+it against ten hundred.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Westwards?&nbsp; And how far westwards?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville answered for her; in his tone throbbed the same eagerness,
+the same anxiety, which spoke in hers.&nbsp; Nor was Count Hannibal&rsquo;s
+ear deaf to it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Through Challans,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;thirteen leagues.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From Clisson?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Monsieur le Comte.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And by Commequiers less,&rdquo; the Countess cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, it is a worse road,&rdquo; Tignonville answered quickly;
+&ldquo;and longer in time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But we came&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At our leisure, Madame.&nbsp; The road is by Challans, if
+we wish to be there quickly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; Count Hannibal said.&nbsp; In the darkness it was
+impossible to see his face or mark how he took it.&nbsp; &ldquo;But
+being there, I have few men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have forty will come at call,&rdquo; she cried with pride.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;A word to them, and in four hours or a little more&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They would outnumber mine by four to one,&rdquo; Count Hannibal
+answered coldly, dryly, in a voice like ice-water flung in their faces.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Thank you, Madame; I understand.&nbsp; To Vrillac is no long
+ride; but we will not ride it at present.&rdquo;&nbsp; And he turned
+sharply on his heel and strode from them.</p>
+<p>He had not covered thirty paces before she overtook him in the middle
+of a broad patch of moonlight, and touched his arm.&nbsp; He wheeled
+swiftly, his hand halfway to his hilt.&nbsp; Then he saw who it was.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I had forgotten, Madame.&nbsp;
+You have come&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; she cried passionately; and standing before him
+she shook back the hood of her cloak that he might look into her eyes.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You owe me no blow to-day.&nbsp; You have paid me, Monsieur.&nbsp;
+You have struck me already, and foully, like a coward.&nbsp; Do you
+remember,&rdquo; she continued rapidly, &ldquo;the hour after our marriage,
+and what you said to me?&nbsp; Do you remember what you told me?&nbsp;
+And whom to trust and whom to suspect, where lay our interest and where
+our foes&rsquo;?&nbsp; You trusted me then!&nbsp; What have I done that
+you now dare&mdash;ay, dare, Monsieur,&rdquo; she repeated fearlessly,
+her face pale and her eyes glittering with excitement, &ldquo;to insult
+me?&nbsp; That you treat me as&mdash;Javette?&nbsp; That you deem me
+capable of <i>that</i>?&nbsp; Of luring you into a trap, and in my own
+house, or the house that was mine, of&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Treating me as I have treated others.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have said it!&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; She could not herself
+understand why his distrust had wounded her so sharply, so home, that
+all fear of him was gone.&nbsp; &ldquo;You have said it, and put that
+between us which will not be removed.&nbsp; I could have forgiven blows,&rdquo;
+she continued, breathless in her excitement, &ldquo;so you had thought
+me what I am.&nbsp; But now you will do well to watch me!&nbsp; You
+will do well to leave Vrillac on one side.&nbsp; For were you there,
+and raised your hand against me&mdash;not that that touches me, but
+it will do&mdash;and there are those, I tell you, would fling you from
+the tower at my word.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, indeed!&nbsp; And indeed, Monsieur!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her face was in moonlight, his was in shadow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And this is your new tone, Madame, is it?&rdquo; he said,
+slowly and after a pregnant pause.&nbsp; &ldquo;The crossing of a river
+has wrought so great a change in you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; she cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; And, despite herself, she flinched
+before the grimness of his tone.&nbsp; &ldquo;You have yet to learn
+one thing, however: that I do not change.&nbsp; That, north or south,
+I am the same to those who are the same to me.&nbsp; That what I have
+won on the one bank I will hold on the other, in the teeth of all, and
+though God&rsquo;s Church be thundering on my heels!&nbsp; I go to Vrillac&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&mdash;go?&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;You go?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I go,&rdquo; he repeated, &ldquo;to-morrow.&nbsp; And among
+your own people I will see what language you will hold.&nbsp; While
+you were in my power I spared you.&nbsp; Now that you are in your own
+land, now that you lift your hand against me, I will show you of what
+make I am.&nbsp; If blows will not tame you, I will try that will suit
+you less.&nbsp; Ay, you wince, Madame!&nbsp; You had done well had you
+thought twice before you threatened, and thrice before you took in hand
+to scare Tavannes with a parcel of clowns and fisherfolk.&nbsp; To-morrow,
+to Vrillac and your duty!&nbsp; And one word more, Madame,&rdquo; he
+continued, turning back to her truculently when he had gone some paces
+from her.&nbsp; &ldquo;If I find you plotting with your lover by the
+way I will hang not you, but him.&nbsp; I have spared him a score of
+times; but I know him, and I do not trust him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor me,&rdquo; she said, and with a white, set face she looked
+at him in the moonlight.&nbsp; &ldquo;Had you not better hang me now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lest I do you an injury!&rdquo; she cried with passion; and
+she raised her hand and pointed northward.&nbsp; &ldquo;Lest I kill
+you some night, Monsieur!&nbsp; I tell you, a thousand men on your heels
+are less dangerous than the woman at your side&mdash;if she hate you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it so?&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; His hand flew to his hilt;
+his dagger flashed out.&nbsp; But she did not move, did not flinch,
+only she set her teeth; and her eyes, fascinated by the steel, grew
+wider.</p>
+<p>His hand sank slowly.&nbsp; He held the weapon to her, hilt foremost;
+she took it mechanically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You think yourself brave enough to kill me, do you?&rdquo;
+he sneered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then take this, and strike, if you dare.&nbsp;
+Take it&mdash;strike, Madame!&nbsp; It is sharp, and my arms are open.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And he flung them wide, standing within a pace of her.&nbsp; &ldquo;Here,
+above the collar-bone, is the surest for a weak hand.&nbsp; What, afraid?&rdquo;
+he continued, as, stiffly clutching the weapon which he had put into
+her hand, she glared at him, trembling and astonished.&nbsp; &ldquo;Afraid,
+and a Vrillac!&nbsp; Afraid, and &rsquo;tis but one blow!&nbsp; See,
+my arms are open.&nbsp; One blow home, and you will never lie in them.&nbsp;
+Think of that.&nbsp; One blow home, and you may lie in his.&nbsp; Think
+of that!&nbsp; Strike, then, Madame,&rdquo; he went on, piling taunt
+on taunt, &ldquo;if you dare, and if you hate me.&nbsp; What, still
+afraid!&nbsp; How shall I give you heart?&nbsp; Shall I strike you?&nbsp;
+It will not be the first time by ten.&nbsp; I keep count, you see,&rdquo;
+he continued mockingly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Or shall I kiss you?&nbsp; Ay,
+that may do.&nbsp; And it will not be against your will, either, for
+you have that in your hand will save you in an instant.&nbsp; Even&rdquo;&mdash;he
+drew a foot nearer&mdash;&ldquo;now!&nbsp; Even&mdash;&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And he stooped until his lips almost touched hers.</p>
+<p>She sprang back.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, do not!&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh, do not!&rdquo;&nbsp; And, dropping the dagger, she covered
+her face with her hands, and burst into weeping.</p>
+<p>He stooped coolly, and, after groping some time for the poniard,
+drew it from the leaves among which it had fallen.&nbsp; He put it into
+the sheath, and not until he had done that did he speak.&nbsp; Then
+it was with a sneer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have no need to fear overmuch,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+are a poor hater, Madame.&nbsp; And poor haters make poor lovers.&nbsp;
+&rsquo;Tis his loss!&nbsp; If you will not strike a blow for him, there
+is but one thing left.&nbsp; Go, dream of him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And, shrugging his shoulders contemptuously, he turned on his heel.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIII.&nbsp; THE AMBUSH.</h2>
+<p>The start they made at daybreak was gloomy and ill-omened, through
+one of those white mists which are blown from the Atlantic over the
+flat lands of Western Poitou.&nbsp; The horses, looming gigantic through
+the fog, winced as the cold harness was girded on them.&nbsp; The men
+hurried to and fro with saddles on their heads, and stumbled over other
+saddles, and swore savagely.&nbsp; The women turned mutinous and would
+not rise; or, being dragged up by force, shrieked wild, unfitting words,
+as they were driven to the horses.&nbsp; The Countess looked on and
+listened, and shuddered, waiting for Carlat to set her on her horse.&nbsp;
+She had gone during the last three weeks through much that was dreary,
+much that was hopeless; but the chill discomfort of this forced start,
+with tired horses and wailing women, would have darkened the prospect
+of home had there been no fear or threat to cloud it.</p>
+<p>He whose will compelled all stood a little apart and watched all,
+silent and gloomy.&nbsp; When Badelon, after taking his orders and distributing
+some slices of black bread to be eaten in the saddle, moved off at the
+head of his troop, Count Hannibal remained behind, attended by Bigot
+and the eight riders who had formed the rearguard so far.&nbsp; He had
+not approached the Countess since rising, and she had been thankful
+for it.&nbsp; But now, as she moved away, she looked back and saw him
+still standing; she marked that he wore his corselet, and in one of
+those revulsions of feeling&mdash;which outrun man&rsquo;s reason&mdash;she
+who had tossed on her couch through half the night, in passionate revolt
+against the fate before her, took fire at his neglect and his silence;
+she resented on a sudden the distance he kept, and his scorn of her.&nbsp;
+Her breast heaved, her colour came, involuntarily she checked her horse,
+as if she would return to him, and speak to him.&nbsp; Then the Carlats
+and the others closed up behind her, Badelon&rsquo;s monotonous &ldquo;Forward,
+Madame, <i>en avant</i>!&rdquo; proclaimed the day&rsquo;s journey begun,
+and she saw him no more.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless, the motionless figure, looming Homeric through the
+fog, with gleams of wet light reflected from the steel about it, dwelt
+long in her mind.&nbsp; The road which Badelon followed, slowly at first,
+and with greater speed as the horses warmed to their work, and the women,
+sore and battered resigned themselves to suffering, wound across a flat
+expanse broken by a few hills.&nbsp; These were little more than mounds,
+and for the most part were veiled from sight by the low-lying sea-mist,
+through which gnarled and stunted oaks rose mysterious, to fade as strangely.&nbsp;
+Weird trees they were, with branches unlike those of this world&rsquo;s
+trees, rising in a grey land without horizon or limit, through which
+our travellers moved, weary phantoms in a clinging nightmare.&nbsp;
+At a walk, at a trot, more often at a jaded amble, they pushed on behind
+Badelon&rsquo;s humped shoulders.&nbsp; Sometimes the fog hung so thick
+about them that they saw only those who rose and fell in the saddles
+immediately before them; sometimes the air cleared a little, the curtain
+rolled up a space, and for a minute or two they discerned stretches
+of unfertile fields, half-tilled and stony, or long tracts of gorse
+and broom, with here and there a thicket of dwarf shrubs or a wood of
+wind-swept pines.&nbsp; Some looked and saw these things; more rode
+on sulky and unseeing, supporting impatiently the toils of a flight
+from they knew not what.</p>
+<p>To do Tignonville justice, he was not of these.&nbsp; On the contrary,
+he seemed to be in a better temper on this day and, where so many took
+things unheroically, he showed to advantage.&nbsp; Avoiding the Countess
+and riding with Carlat, he talked and laughed with marked cheerfulness;
+nor did he ever fail, when the mist rose, to note this or that landmark,
+and confirm Badelon in the way he was going.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We shall be at L&eacute;ge by noon!&rdquo; he cried more than
+once, &ldquo;and if M. le Comte persists in his plan, may reach Vrillac
+by late sunset.&nbsp; By way of Challans!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And always Carlat answered, &ldquo;Ay, by Challans, Monsieur, so
+be it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He proved, too, so far right in his prediction that noon saw them
+drag, a weary train, into the hamlet of L&eacute;ge, where the road
+from Nantes to Olonne runs southward over the level of Poitou.&nbsp;
+An hour later Count Hannibal rode in with six of his eight men, and,
+after a few minutes&rsquo; parley with Badelon, who was scanning the
+horses, he called Carlat to him.&nbsp; The old man came.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can we reach Vrillac to-night?&rdquo; Count Hannibal asked
+curtly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By Challans, my lord,&rdquo; the steward answered, &ldquo;I
+think we can.&nbsp; We call it seven hours&rsquo; riding from here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that route is the shortest?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In time, M. le Comte, the road being better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal bent his brows.&nbsp; &ldquo;And the other way?&rdquo;
+he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is by Commequiers, my lord.&nbsp; It is shorter in distance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By how much?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Two leagues.&nbsp; But there are fordings and a salt marsh;
+and with Madame and the women&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would be longer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The steward hesitated.&nbsp; &ldquo;I think so,&rdquo; he said slowly,
+his eyes wandering to the grey misty landscape, against which the poor
+hovels of the village stood out naked and comfortless.&nbsp; A low thicket
+of oaks sheltered the place from south-westerly gales.&nbsp; On the
+other three sides it lay open.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very good,&rdquo; Tavannes said curtly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Be ready
+to start in ten minutes.&nbsp; You will guide us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But when the ten minutes had elapsed and the party were ready to
+start, to the astonishment of all the steward was not to be found.&nbsp;
+To peremptory calls for him no answer came; and a hurried search through
+the hamlet proved equally fruitless.&nbsp; The only person who had seen
+him since his interview with Tavannes turned out to be M. de Tignonville;
+and he had seen him mount his horse five minutes before, and move off&mdash;as
+he believed&mdash;by the Challans road.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ahead of us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, M. le Comte,&rdquo; Tignonville answered, shading his
+eyes and gazing in the direction of the fringe of trees.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+did not see him take the road, but he was beside the north end of the
+wood when I saw him last.&nbsp; Thereabouts!&rdquo; and he pointed to
+a place where the Challans road wound round the flank of the wood.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;When we are beyond that point, I think we shall see him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal growled a word in his beard, and, turning in his saddle,
+looked back the way he had come.&nbsp; Half a mile away, two or three
+dots could be seen approaching across the plain.&nbsp; He turned again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You know the road?&rdquo; he said, curtly addressing the young
+man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perfectly.&nbsp; As well as Carlat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then lead the way, Monsieur, with Badelon.&nbsp; And spare
+neither whip nor spur.&nbsp; There will be need of both, if we would
+lie warm to-night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tignonville nodded assent and, wheeling his horse, rode to the head
+of the party, a faint smile playing about his mouth.&nbsp; A moment,
+and the main body moved off behind him, leaving Count Hannibal and six
+men to cover the rear.&nbsp; The mist, which at noon had risen for an
+hour or two, was closing down again, and they had no sooner passed clear
+of the wood than the trees faded out of sight behind them.&nbsp; It
+was not wonderful that they could not see Carlat.&nbsp; Objects a hundred
+paces from them were completely hidden.</p>
+<p>Trot, trot!&nbsp; Trot, trot! through a grey world so featureless,
+so unreal that the riders, now dozing in the saddle, and now awaking,
+seemed to themselves to stand still, as in a nightmare.&nbsp; A trot
+and then a walk, and then a trot again; and all a dozen times repeated,
+while the women bumped along in their wretched saddles, and the horses
+stumbled, and the men swore at them.</p>
+<p>Ha!&nbsp; La Garnache at last, and a sharp turn southward to Challans.&nbsp;
+The Countess raised her head, and began to look about her.&nbsp; There,
+should be a church, she knew; and there, the old ruined tower built
+by wizards, or the Carthaginians, so old tradition ran; and there, to
+the westward, the great salt marshes towards Noirmoutier.&nbsp; The
+mist hid all, but the knowledge that they were there set her heart beating,
+brought tears to her eyes, and lightened the long road to Challans.</p>
+<p>At Challans they halted half an hour, and washed out the horses&rsquo;
+mouths with water and a little <i>guignolet</i>&mdash;the spirit of
+the country.&nbsp; A dose of the cordial was administered to the women;
+and a little after seven they began the last stage of the journey, through
+a landscape which even the mist could not veil from the eyes of love.&nbsp;
+There rose the windmill of Soullans!&nbsp; There the old dolmen, beneath
+which the grey wolf that ate the two children of Tornic had its lair.&nbsp;
+For a mile back they had been treading my lady&rsquo;s land; they had
+only two more leagues to ride, and one of those was crumbling under
+each dogged footfall.&nbsp; The salt flavour, which is new life to the
+shore-born, was in the fleecy reek which floated by them, now thinner,
+now more opaque; and almost they could hear the dull thunder of the
+Biscay waves falling on the rocks.</p>
+<p>Tignonville looked back at her and smiled.&nbsp; She caught the look;
+she fancied that she understood it and his thoughts.&nbsp; But her own
+eyes were moist at the moment with tears, and what his said, and what
+there was of strangeness in his glance, half-warning, half-exultant,
+escaped her.&nbsp; For there, not a mile before them, where the low
+hills about the fishing village began to rise from the dull inland level&mdash;hills
+green on the land side, bare and scarped towards the sea and the island&mdash;she
+espied the wayside chapel at which the nurse of her early childhood
+had told her beads.&nbsp; Where it stood, the road from Commequiers
+and the road she travelled became one: a short mile thence, after winding
+among the hillocks, it ran down to the beach and the causeway&mdash;and
+to her home.</p>
+<p>At the sight she bethought herself of Carlat, and calling to M. de
+Tignonville, she asked him what he thought of the steward&rsquo;s continued
+absence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must have outpaced us!&rdquo; he answered, with an odd
+laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But he must have ridden hard to do that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He reined back to her.&nbsp; &ldquo;Say nothing!&rdquo; he muttered
+under his breath.&nbsp; &ldquo;But look ahead, Madame, and see if we
+are expected!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Expected?&nbsp; How can we be expected?&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp;
+The colour rushed into her face.</p>
+<p>He put his finger to his lip, and looked warningly at Badelon&rsquo;s
+humped shoulders, jogging up and down in front of them.&nbsp; Then,
+stooping towards her, in a lower tone, &ldquo;If Carlat has arrived
+before us, he will have told them,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have told them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He came by the other road, and it is quicker.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She gazed at him in astonishment, her lips parted; and slowly she
+understood, and her eyes grew hard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;did you say it was longer.&nbsp;
+Had we been overtaken, Monsieur, we had had you to thank for it, it
+seems!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He bit his lip.&nbsp; &ldquo;But we have not been overtaken,&rdquo;
+he rejoined.&nbsp; &ldquo;On the contrary, you have me to thank for
+something quite different.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As unwelcome, perhaps!&rdquo; she retorted.&nbsp; &ldquo;For
+what?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Softly, Madame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For what?&rdquo; she repeated, refusing to lower her voice.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Speak, Monsieur, if you please.&rdquo;&nbsp; He had never seen
+her look at him in that way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For the fact,&rdquo; he answered, stung by her look and tone,
+&ldquo;that when you arrive you will find yourself mistress in your
+own house!&nbsp; Is that nothing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have called in my people?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Carlat has done so, or should have,&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Henceforth,&rdquo; he continued, a ring of exultation in his
+voice, &ldquo;it will go hard with M. le Comte, if he does not treat
+you better than he has treated you hitherto.&nbsp; That is all!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean that it will go hard with him in any case?&rdquo;
+she cried, her bosom rising and falling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I mean, Madame&mdash;But there they are!&nbsp; Good Carlat!&nbsp;
+Brave Carlat!&nbsp; He has done well!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Carlat?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, there they are!&nbsp; And you are mistress in your own
+land!&nbsp; At last you are mistress, and you have me to thank for it!&nbsp;
+See!&rdquo;&nbsp; And heedless in his exultation whether Badelon understood
+or not, he pointed to a place before them where the road wound between
+two low hills.&nbsp; Over the green shoulder of one of these, a dozen
+bright points caught and reflected the last evening light; while as
+he spoke a man rose to his feet on the hillside above, and began to
+make signs to persons below.&nbsp; A pennon, too, showed an instant
+over the shoulder, fluttered, and was gone.</p>
+<p>Badelon looked as they looked.&nbsp; The next instant he uttered
+a low oath, and dragged his horse across the front of the party.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pierre!&rdquo; he cried to the man on his left, &ldquo;ride
+for your life!&nbsp; To my lord, and tell him we are ambushed!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And as the trained soldier wheeled about and spurred away, the sacker
+of Rome turned a dark scowling face on Tignonville.&nbsp; &ldquo;If
+this be your work,&rdquo; he hissed, &ldquo;we shall thank you for it
+in hell!&nbsp; For it is where most of us will lie to-night!&nbsp; They
+are Montsoreau&rsquo;s spears, and they have those with them are worse
+to deal with than themselves!&rdquo;&nbsp; Then in a different tone,
+and throwing off all disguise, &ldquo;Men to the front!&rdquo; he shouted.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And you, Madame, to the rear quickly, and the women with you!&nbsp;
+Now, men, forward, and draw!&nbsp; Steady!&nbsp; Steady!&nbsp; They
+are coming!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was an instant of confusion, disorder, panic; horses jostling
+one another, women screaming and clutching at men, men shaking them
+off and forcing their way to the van.&nbsp; Fortunately the enemy did
+not fall on at once, as Badelon expected, but after showing themselves
+in the mouth of the valley, at a distance of three hundred paces, hung
+for some reason irresolute.&nbsp; This gave Badelon time to array his
+seven swords in front; but real resistance was out of the question,
+as he knew.&nbsp; And to none seemed less in question than to Tignonville.</p>
+<p>When the truth, and what he had done, broke on the young man, he
+sat a moment motionless with horror.&nbsp; It was only when Badelon
+had twice summoned him with opprobrious words that he awoke to the relief
+of action.&nbsp; Even after that he hung an instant trying to meet the
+Countess&rsquo;s eyes, despair in his own; but it was not to be.&nbsp;
+She had turned her head, and was looking back, as if thence only and
+not from him could help come.&nbsp; It was not to him she turned; and
+he saw it, and the justice of it.&nbsp; And silent, grim, more formidable
+even than old Badelon, the veteran fighter, who knew all the tricks
+and shifts of the <i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</i>, he spurred to the flank
+of the line.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, steady!&rdquo; Badelon cried again, seeing that the enemy
+were beginning to move.&nbsp; &ldquo;Steady!&nbsp; Ha!&nbsp; Thank God,
+my lord!&nbsp; My lord is coming!&nbsp; Stand!&nbsp; Stand!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The distant sound of galloping hoofs had reached his ear in the nick
+of time.&nbsp; He stood in his stirrups and looked back.&nbsp; Yes,
+Count Hannibal was coming, riding a dozen paces in front of his men.&nbsp;
+The odds were still desperate&mdash;for he brought but six&mdash;the
+enemy were still three to one.&nbsp; But the thunder of his hoofs as
+he came up checked for a moment the enemy&rsquo;s onset; and before
+Montsoreau&rsquo;s people got started again Count Hannibal had ridden
+up abreast of the women, and the Countess, looking at him, knew that,
+desperate as was their strait, she had not looked behind in vain.&nbsp;
+The glow of battle, the stress of the moment, had displaced the cloud
+from his face; the joy of the born fighter lightened in his eye.&nbsp;
+His voice rang clear and loud above the press.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Badelon! wait you and two with Madame!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Follow at fifty paces&rsquo; distance, and, when we have broken
+them, ride through!&nbsp; The others with me!&nbsp; Now forward, men,
+and show your teeth!&nbsp; A Tavannes!&nbsp; A Tavannes!&nbsp; A Tavannes!&nbsp;
+We carry it yet!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he dashed forward, leading them on, leaving the women behind;
+and down the sward to meet him, thundering in double line, came Montsoreau&rsquo;s
+men-at-arms, and with the men-at-arms, a dozen pale, fierce-eyed men
+in the Church&rsquo;s black, yelling the Church&rsquo;s curses.&nbsp;
+Madame&rsquo;s heart grew sick as she heard, as she waited, as she judged
+him by the fast-failing light a horse&rsquo;s length before his men&mdash;with
+only Tignonville beside him.</p>
+<p>She held her breath&mdash;would the shock never come?&nbsp; If Badelon
+had not seized her rein and forced her forward, she would not have moved.&nbsp;
+And then, even as she moved, they met!&nbsp; With yells and wild cries
+and a mare&rsquo;s savage scream, the two bands crashed together in
+a huddle of fallen or rearing horses, of flickering weapons, of thrusting
+men, of grapples hand-to-hand.&nbsp; What happened, what was happening
+to any one, who it was fell, stabbed through and through by four, or
+who were those who still fought single combats, twisting round one another&rsquo;s
+horses, those on her right and on her left, she could not tell.&nbsp;
+For Badelon dragged her on with whip and spur, and two horsemen&mdash;who
+obscured her view&mdash;galloped in front of her, and rode down bodily
+the only man who undertook to bar her passage.&nbsp; She had a glimpse
+of that man&rsquo;s face, as his horse, struck in the act of turning,
+fell sideways on him; and she knew it, in its agony of terror, though
+she had seen it but once.&nbsp; It was the face of the man whose eyes
+had sought hers from the steps of the church in Angers; the lean man
+in black, who had turned soldier of the Church&mdash;to his misfortune.</p>
+<p>Through?&nbsp; Yes, through, the way was clear before them!&nbsp;
+The fight with its screams and curses died away behind them.&nbsp; The
+horses swayed and all but sank under them.&nbsp; But Badelon knew it
+no time for mercy; iron-shod hoofs rang on the road behind, and at any
+moment the pursuers might be on their heels.&nbsp; He flogged on until
+the cots of the hamlet appeared on either side of the way; on, until
+the road forked and the Countess with strange readiness cried &ldquo;The
+left!&rdquo;&mdash;on, until the beach appeared below them at the foot
+of a sharp pitch, and beyond the beach the slow heaving grey of the
+ocean.</p>
+<p>The tide was high.&nbsp; The causeway ran through it, a mere thread
+lipped by the darkling waves, and at the sight a grunt of relief broke
+from Badelon.&nbsp; For at the end of the causeway, black against the
+western sky, rose the gateway and towers of Vrillac; and he saw that,
+as the Countess had said, it was a place ten men could hold against
+ten hundred!</p>
+<p>They stumbled down the beach, reached the causeway and trotted along
+it; more slowly now, and looking back.&nbsp; The other women had followed
+by hook or by crook, some crying hysterically, yet clinging to their
+horses and even urging them; and in a medley, the causeway clear behind
+them and no one following, they reached the drawbridge, and passed under
+the arch of the gate beyond.</p>
+<p>There friendly hands, Carlat&rsquo;s foremost, welcomed them and
+aided them to alight, and the Countess saw, as in a dream, the familiar
+scene, all unfamiliar: the gate, where she had played, a child, aglow
+with lantern-light and arms.&nbsp; Men, whose rugged faces she had known
+in infancy, stood at the drawbridge chains and at the winches.&nbsp;
+Others blew matches and handled primers, while old servants crowded
+round her, and women looked at her, scared and weeping.&nbsp; She saw
+it all at a glance&mdash;the lights, the black shadows, the sudden glow
+of a match on the groining of the arch above.&nbsp; She saw it, and
+turning swiftly, looked back the way she had come; along the dusky causeway
+to the low, dark shore, which night was stealing quickly from their
+eyes.&nbsp; She clasped her hands.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is Badelon?&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Where is
+he?&nbsp; Where is he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>One of the men who had ridden before her answered that he had turned
+back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Turned back!&rdquo; she repeated.&nbsp; And then, shading
+her eyes, &ldquo;Who is coming?&rdquo; she asked, her voice insistent.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;There is some one coming.&nbsp; Who is it?&nbsp; Who is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Two were coming out of the gloom, travelling slowly and painfully
+along the causeway.&nbsp; One was La Tribe, limping; the other a rider,
+slashed across the forehead, and sobbing curses.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No more!&rdquo; she muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Are there no more?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The minister shook his head.&nbsp; The rider wiped the blood from
+his eyes, and turned up his face that he might see the better.&nbsp;
+But he seemed to be dazed, and only babbled strange words in a strange
+<i>patois</i>.</p>
+<p>She stamped her foot in passion.&nbsp; &ldquo;More lights!&rdquo;
+she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Lights!&nbsp; How can they find their way?&nbsp;
+And let six men go down the <i>digue</i>, and meet them.&nbsp; Will
+you let them be butchered between the shore and this?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Carlat, who had not been able to collect more than a dozen men,
+shook his head; and before she could repeat the order, sounds of battle,
+shrill, faint, like cries of hungry seagulls, pierced the darkness which
+shrouded the farther end of the causeway.&nbsp; The women shrank inward
+over the threshold, while Carlat cried to the men at the chains to be
+ready, and to some who stood at loopholes above, to blow up their matches
+and let fly at his word.&nbsp; And then they all waited, the Countess
+foremost, peering eagerly into the growing darkness.&nbsp; They could
+see nothing.</p>
+<p>A distant scuffle, an oath, a cry, silence!&nbsp; The same, a little
+nearer, a little louder, followed this time, not by silence, but by
+the slow tread of a limping horse.&nbsp; Again a rush of feet, the clash
+of steel, a scream, a laugh, all weird and unreal, issuing from the
+night; then out of the darkness into the light, stepping slowly with
+hanging head, moved a horse, bearing on its back a man&mdash;or was
+it a man?&mdash;bending low in the saddle, his feet swinging loose.&nbsp;
+For an instant the horse and the man seemed to be alone, a ghostly pair;
+then at their heels came into view two figures, skirmishing this way
+and that; and now coming nearer, and now darting back into the gloom.&nbsp;
+One, a squat figure, stooping low, wielded a sword with two hands; the
+other covered him with a half-pike.&nbsp; And then beyond these&mdash;abruptly
+as it seemed&mdash;the night gave up to sight a swarm of dark figures
+pressing on them and after them, driving them before them.</p>
+<p>Carlat had an inspiration.&nbsp; &ldquo;Fire!&rdquo; he cried; and
+four arquebuses poured a score of slugs into the knot of pursuers.&nbsp;
+A man fell, another shrieked and stumbled, the rest gave back.&nbsp;
+Only the horse came on spectrally, with hanging head and shining eyeballs,
+until a man ran out and seized its head, and dragged it, more by his
+strength than its own, over the drawbridge.&nbsp; After it Badelon,
+with a gaping wound in his knee, and Bigot, bleeding from a dozen hurts,
+walked over the bridge, and stood on either side of the saddle, smiling
+foolishly at the man on the horse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Leave me!&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Leave me!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He made a feeble movement with his hand, as if it held a weapon; then
+his head sank lower.&nbsp; It was Count Hannibal.&nbsp; His thigh was
+broken, and there was a lance-head in his arm.&nbsp; The Countess looked
+at him, then beyond him, past him into the darkness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are there no more?&rdquo; she whispered tremulously.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;No more?&nbsp; Tignonville&mdash;my&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Badelon shook his head.&nbsp; The Countess covered her face and wept.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIV.&nbsp; WHICH WILL YOU, MADAME?</h2>
+<p>It was in the grey dawning of the next day, at the hour before the
+sun rose, that word of M. de Tignonville&rsquo;s fate came to them in
+the castle.&nbsp; The fog which had masked the van and coming of night
+hung thick on its retreating skirts, and only reluctantly and little
+by little gave up to sight and daylight a certain thing which night
+had left at the end of the causeway.&nbsp; The first man to see it was
+Carlat, from the roof of the gateway; and he rubbed eyes weary with
+watching, and peered anew at it through the mist, fancying himself back
+in the Place Ste.-Croix at Angers, supposing for a wild moment the journey
+a dream, and the return a nightmare.&nbsp; But rub as he might, and
+stare as he might, the ugly outlines of the thing he had seen persisted&mdash;nay,
+grew sharper as the haze began to lift from the grey, slow-heaving floor
+of sea.&nbsp; He called another man and bade him look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;D&rsquo;you see,
+there?&nbsp; Below the village?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis a gibbet,&rdquo; the man answered, with a foolish
+laugh; they had watched all night.&nbsp; &ldquo;God keep us from it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A gibbet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what is it for?&nbsp; What is it doing there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is there to hang those they have taken, very like,&rdquo;
+the man answered, stupidly practical.&nbsp; And then other men came
+up, and stared at it and growled in their beards.&nbsp; Presently there
+were eight or ten on the roof of the gateway looking towards the land
+and discussing the thing; and by-and-by a man was descried approaching
+along the causeway with a white flag in his hand.</p>
+<p>At that Carlat bade one fetch the minister.&nbsp; &ldquo;He understands
+things,&rdquo; he muttered, &ldquo;and I misdoubt this.&nbsp; And see,&rdquo;
+he cried after the messenger, &ldquo;that no word of it come to Mademoiselle!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Instinctively in the maiden home he reverted to the maiden title.</p>
+<p>The messenger went, and came again bringing La Tribe, whose head
+rose above the staircase at the moment the envoy below came to a halt
+before the gate.&nbsp; Carlat signed to the minister to come forward;
+and La Tribe, after sniffing the salt air, and glancing at the long,
+low, misty shore and the stiff ugly shape which stood at the end of
+the causeway, looked down and met the envoy&rsquo;s eyes.&nbsp; For
+a moment no one spoke.&nbsp; Only the men who had remained on the gateway,
+and had watched the stranger&rsquo;s coming, breathed hard.</p>
+<p>At last, &ldquo;I bear a message,&rdquo; the man announced loudly
+and clearly, &ldquo;for the lady of Vrillac.&nbsp; Is she present?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give your message!&rdquo; La Tribe replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is for her ears only.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you want to enter?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo;&nbsp; The man answered so hurriedly that more than
+one smiled.&nbsp; He had the bearing of a lay clerk of some precinct,
+a verger or sacristan; and after a fashion the dress of one also, for
+he was in dusty black and wore no sword, though he was girded with a
+belt.&nbsp; &ldquo;No!&rdquo; he repeated, &ldquo;but if Madame will
+come to the gate, and speak to me&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madame has other fish to fry,&rdquo; Carlat blurted out.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Do you think that she has naught to do but listen to messages
+from a gang of bandits?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If she does not listen she will repent it all her life!&rdquo;
+the fellow answered hardily.&nbsp; &ldquo;That is part of my message.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a pause while La Tribe considered the matter.&nbsp; In
+the end, &ldquo;From whom do you come?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From His Excellency the Lieutenant-Governor of Saumur,&rdquo;
+the envoy answered glibly, &ldquo;and from my Lord Bishop of Angers,
+him assisting by his Vicar; and from others gathered lawfully, who will
+as lawfully depart if their terms are accepted.&nbsp; Also from M. de
+Tignonville, a gentleman, I am told, of these parts, now in their hands
+and adjudged to die at sunset this day if the terms I bring be not accepted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a long silence on the gate.&nbsp; The men looked down fixedly;
+not a feature of one of them moved, for no one was surprised.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Wherefore is he to die?&rdquo; La Tribe asked at last.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For good cause shown.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wherefore?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is a Huguenot.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The minister nodded.&nbsp; &ldquo;And the terms?&rdquo; Carlat muttered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, the terms!&rdquo; La Tribe repeated, nodding afresh.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What are they?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are for Madame&rsquo;s ear only,&rdquo; the messenger
+made answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then they will not reach it!&rdquo; Carlat broke forth in
+wrath.&nbsp; &ldquo;So much for that!&nbsp; And for yourself, see you
+go quickly before we make a target of you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, I go,&rdquo; the envoy answered sullenly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what?&rdquo; La Tribe cried, gripping Carlat&rsquo;s shoulder
+to quiet him.&nbsp; &ldquo;But what?&nbsp; Say what you have to say,
+man!&nbsp; Speak out, and have done with it!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will say it to her and to no other.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you will not say it!&rdquo; Carlat cried again.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;For you will not see her.&nbsp; So you may go.&nbsp; And the
+black fever in your vitals.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, go!&rdquo; La Tribe added more quietly.</p>
+<p>The man turned away with a shrug of the shoulders, and moved off
+a dozen paces, watched by all on the gate with the same fixed attention.&nbsp;
+But presently he paused; he returned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; he said, looking up with an ill grace.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I will do my office here, if I cannot come to her.&nbsp; But
+I hold also a letter from M. de Tignonville, and that I can deliver
+to no other hands than hers!&rdquo;&nbsp; He held it up as he spoke,
+a thin scrap of greyish paper, the fly-leaf of a missal perhaps.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;See!&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;and take notice!&nbsp; If she
+does not get this, and learns when it is too late that it was offered&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The terms,&rdquo; Carlat growled impatiently.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+terms!&nbsp; Come to them!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will have them?&rdquo; the man answered, nervously passing
+his tongue over his lips.&nbsp; &ldquo;You will not let me see her,
+or speak to her privately?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then hear them.&nbsp; His Excellency is informed that one
+Hannibal de Tavannes, guilty of the detestable crime of sacrilege and
+of other gross crimes, has taken refuge here.&nbsp; He requires that
+the said Hannibal de Tavannes be handed to him for punishment, and,
+this being done before sunset this evening, he will yield to you free
+and uninjured the said M. de Tignonville, and will retire from the lands
+of Vrillac.&nbsp; But if you refuse&rdquo;&mdash;the man passed his
+eye along the line of attentive faces which fringed the battlement&mdash;&ldquo;he
+will at sunset hang the said Tignonville on the gallows raised for Tavannes,
+and will harry the demesne of Vrillac to its farthest border!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a long silence on the gate.&nbsp; Some, their gaze still
+fixed on him, moved their lips as if they chewed.&nbsp; Others looked
+aside, met their fellows&rsquo; eyes in a pregnant glance, and slowly
+returned to him.&nbsp; But no one spoke.&nbsp; At his back the flush
+of dawn was flooding the east, and spreading and waxing brighter.&nbsp;
+The air was growing warm; the shore below, from grey, was turning green.</p>
+<p>In a minute or two the sun, whose glowing marge already peeped above
+the low hills of France, would top the horizon.</p>
+<p>The man, getting no answer, shifted his feet uneasily.&nbsp; &ldquo;Well,&rdquo;
+he cried, &ldquo;what answer am I to take?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Still no one moved.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve done my part.&nbsp; Will no one give her the letter?&rdquo;
+he cried.&nbsp; And he held it up.&nbsp; &ldquo;Give me my answer, for
+I am going.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take the letter!&rdquo;&nbsp; The words came from the rear
+of the group in a voice that startled all.&nbsp; They turned, as though
+some one had struck them, and saw the Countess standing beside the hood
+which covered the stairs.&nbsp; They guessed that she had heard all
+or nearly all; but the glory of the sunrise, shining full on her at
+that moment, lent a false warmth to her face, and life to eyes woefully
+and tragically set.&nbsp; It was not easy to say whether she had heard
+or not.&nbsp; &ldquo;Take the letter,&rdquo; she repeated.</p>
+<p>Carlat looked helplessly over the parapet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go down!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He cast a glance at La Tribe, but he got none in return, and he was
+preparing to do her bidding when a cry of dismay broke from those who
+still had their eyes bent downwards.&nbsp; The messenger, waving the
+letter in a last appeal, had held it too loosely; a light air, as treacherous,
+as unexpected, had snatched it from his hand, and bore it&mdash;even
+as the Countess, drawn by the cry, sprang to the parapet&mdash;fifty
+paces from him.&nbsp; A moment it floated in the air, eddying, rising,
+falling; then, light as thistledown, it touched the water and began
+to sink.</p>
+<p>The messenger uttered frantic lamentations, and stamped the causeway
+in his rage.&nbsp; The Countess only looked, and looked, until the rippling
+crest of a baby wave broke over the tiny venture, and with its freight
+of tidings it sank from sight.</p>
+<p>The man, silent now, stared a moment, then shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, &rsquo;tis fortunate it was his,&rdquo; he cried brutally,
+&ldquo;and not His Excellency&rsquo;s, or my back had suffered!&nbsp;
+And now,&rdquo; he added impatiently, &ldquo;by your leave, what answer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What answer?&nbsp; Ah, God, what answer?&nbsp; The men who leant
+on the parapet, rude and coarse as they were, felt the tragedy of the
+question and the dilemma, guessed what they meant to her, and looked
+everywhere save at her.</p>
+<p>What answer?&nbsp; Which of the two was to live?&nbsp; Which die&mdash;shamefully?&nbsp;
+Which?&nbsp; Which?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell him&mdash;to come back&mdash;an hour before sunset,&rdquo;
+she muttered.</p>
+<p>They told him and he went; and one by one the men began to go too,
+and stole from the roof, leaving her standing alone, her face to the
+shore, her hands resting on the parapet.&nbsp; The light breeze which
+blew off the land stirred loose ringlets of her hair, and flattened
+the thin robe against her sunlit figure.&nbsp; So had she stood a thousand
+times in old days, in her youth, in her maidenhood.&nbsp; So in her
+father&rsquo;s time had she stood to see her lover come riding along
+the sands to woo her!&nbsp; So had she stood to welcome him on the eve
+of that fatal journey to Paris!&nbsp; Thence had others watched her
+go with him.&nbsp; The men remembered&mdash;remembered all; and one
+by one they stole shamefacedly away, fearing lest she should speak or
+turn tragic eyes on them.</p>
+<p>True, in their pity for her was no doubt of the end, or thought of
+the victim who must suffer&mdash;of Tavannes.&nbsp; They, of Poitou,
+who had not been with him, knew nothing of him; they cared as little.&nbsp;
+He was a northern man, a stranger, a man of the sword, who had seized
+her&mdash;so they heard&mdash;by the sword.&nbsp; But they saw that
+the burden of choice was laid on her; there, in her sight and in theirs,
+rose the gibbet; and, clowns as they were, they discerned the tragedy
+of her <i>r&ocirc;le</i>, play it as she might, and though her act gave
+life to her lover.</p>
+<p>When all had retired save three or four, she turned and saw these
+gathered at the head of the stairs in a ring about Carlat, who was addressing
+them in a low eager voice.&nbsp; She could not catch a syllable, but
+a look hard and almost cruel flashed into her eyes as she gazed; and
+raising her voice she called the steward to her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The bridge is up,&rdquo; she said, her tone hard, &ldquo;but
+the gates?&nbsp; Are they locked?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Madame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The wicket?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, not the wicket.&rdquo;&nbsp; And Carlat looked another
+way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then go, lock it, and bring the keys to me!&rdquo; she replied.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Or stay!&rdquo;&nbsp; Her voice grew harder, her eyes spiteful
+as a cat&rsquo;s.&nbsp; &ldquo;Stay, and be warned that you play me
+no tricks!&nbsp; Do you hear?&nbsp; Do you understand?&nbsp; Or old
+as you are, and long as you have served us, I will have you thrown from
+this tower, with as little pity as Isabeau flung her gallants to the
+fishes.&nbsp; I am still mistress here, never more mistress than this
+day.&nbsp; Woe to you if you forget it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He blenched and cringed before her, muttering incoherently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I read you!&nbsp; And now
+the keys.&nbsp; Go, bring them to me!&nbsp; And if by chance I find
+the wicket unlocked when I come down, pray, Carlat, pray!&nbsp; For
+you will have need of prayers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He slunk away, the men with him; and she fell to pacing the roof
+feverishly.&nbsp; Now and then she extended her arms, and low cries
+broke from her, as from a dumb creature in pain.&nbsp; Wherever she
+looked, old memories rose up to torment her and redouble her misery.&nbsp;
+A thing she could have borne in the outer world, a thing which might
+have seemed tolerable in the reeking air of Paris or in the gloomy streets
+of Angers wore here its most appalling aspect.&nbsp; Henceforth, whatever
+choice she made, this home, where even in those troublous times she
+had known naught but peace, must bear a damning stain!&nbsp; Henceforth
+this day and this hour must come between her and happiness, must brand
+her brow, and fix her with a deed of which men and women would tell
+while she lived!&nbsp; Oh, God&mdash;pray?&nbsp; Who said, pray?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I!&rdquo;&nbsp; And La Tribe with tears in his eyes held out
+the keys to her.&nbsp; &ldquo;I, Madame,&rdquo; he continued solemnly,
+his voice broken with emotion.&nbsp; &ldquo;For in man is no help.&nbsp;
+The strongest man, he who rode yesterday a master of men, a very man
+of war in his pride and his valour&mdash;see him, now, and&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; she cried, sharp pain in her voice.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t!&rdquo;&nbsp; And she stopped him with her hand,
+her face averted.&nbsp; After an interval, &ldquo;You come from him?&rdquo;
+she muttered faintly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is he&mdash;hurt to death, think you?&rdquo;&nbsp; She spoke
+low, and kept her face hidden from him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas, no!&rdquo; he answered, speaking the thought in his
+heart.&nbsp; &ldquo;The men who are with him seem confident of his recovery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do they know?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Badelon has had experience.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no.&nbsp; Do they know of this?&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Of this!&rdquo;&nbsp; And she pointed with a gesture of loathing
+to the black gibbet on the farther strand.</p>
+<p>He shook his head.&nbsp; &ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp;
+And after a moment, &ldquo;God help you!&rdquo; he added fervently.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;God help and guide you, Madame!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She turned on him suddenly, fiercely.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is that all you
+can do?&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is that all the help you can
+give?&nbsp; You are a man.&nbsp; Go down, lead them out; drive off these
+cowards who drain our life&rsquo;s blood, who trade on a woman&rsquo;s
+heart!&nbsp; On them!&nbsp; Do something, anything, rather than lie
+in safety here&mdash;here!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The minister shook his head sadly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Alas, Madame!&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;to sally were to waste life.&nbsp; They outnumber us
+three to one.&nbsp; If Count Hannibal could do no more than break through
+last night, with scarce a man unwounded&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He had the women!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And we have not him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He would not have left us!&rdquo; she cried hysterically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Had they taken me, do you think he would have lain behind
+walls?&nbsp; Or skulked in safety here, while&mdash;while&mdash;&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Her voice failed her.</p>
+<p>He shook his head despondently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that is all you can do?&rdquo; she cried, and turned from
+him, and to him again, extending her arms, in bitter scorn.&nbsp; &ldquo;All
+you will do?&nbsp; Do you forget that twice he spared your life?&nbsp;
+That in Paris once, and once in Angers, he held his hand?&nbsp; That
+always, whether he stood or whether he fled, he held himself between
+us and harm?&nbsp; Ay, always?&nbsp; And who will now raise a hand for
+him?&nbsp; Who?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madame!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who?&nbsp; Who?&nbsp; Had he died in the field,&rdquo; she
+continued, her voice shaking with grief, her hands beating the parapet&mdash;for
+she had turned from him&mdash;&ldquo;had he fallen where he rode last
+night, in the front, with his face to the foe, I had viewed him tearless,
+I had deemed him happy!&nbsp; I had prayed dry-eyed for him who&mdash;who
+spared me all these days and weeks!&nbsp; Whom I robbed and he forgave
+me!&nbsp; Whom I tempted, and he forbore me!&nbsp; Ay, and who spared
+not once or twice him for whom he must now&mdash;he must now&mdash;&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And unable to finish the sentence she beat her hands again and passionately
+on the stones.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Heaven knows, Madame,&rdquo; the minister cried vehemently,
+&ldquo;Heaven knows, I would advise you if I could.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why did he wear his corselet?&rdquo; she wailed, as if she
+had not heard him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Was there no spear could reach his breast,
+that he must come to this?&nbsp; No foe so gentle he would spare him
+this?&nbsp; Or why did <i>he</i> not die with me in Paris when we waited?&nbsp;
+In another minute death might have come and saved us this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With the tears running down his face he tried to comfort her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Man that is a shadow,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;passeth away&mdash;what
+matter how?&nbsp; A little while, a very little while, and we shall
+pass!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With his curse upon us!&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; And, shuddering,
+she pressed her hands to her eyes to shut out the sight her fancy pictured.</p>
+<p>He left her for a while, hoping that in solitude she might regain
+control of herself.&nbsp; When he returned he found her seated, and
+outwardly more composed; her arms resting on the parapet-wall, her eyes
+bent steadily on the long stretch of hard sand which ran northward from
+the village.&nbsp; By that route her lover had many a time come to her;
+there she had ridden with him in the early days; and that way they had
+started for Paris on such a morning and at such an hour as this, with
+sunshine about them, and larks singing hope above the sand-dunes, and
+with wavelets creaming to the horses&rsquo; hoofs!</p>
+<p>Of all which La Tribe, a stranger, knew nothing.&nbsp; The rapt gaze,
+the unchanging attitude only confirmed his opinion of the course she
+would adopt.&nbsp; He was thankful to find her more composed; and in
+fear of such a scene as had already passed between them, he stole away
+again.&nbsp; He returned by-and-by, but with the greatest reluctance,
+and only because Carlat&rsquo;s urgency would take no refusal.</p>
+<p>He came this time to crave the key of the wicket, explaining that&mdash;rather
+to satisfy his own conscience and the men than with any hope of success&mdash;he
+proposed to go halfway along the causeway, and thence by signs invite
+a conference.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is just possible,&rdquo; he added, hesitating&mdash;he
+feared nothing so much as to raise hopes in her&mdash;&ldquo;that by
+the offer of a money ransom, Madame&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go,&rdquo; she said, without turning her head.&nbsp; &ldquo;Offer
+what you please.&nbsp; But&rdquo;&mdash;bitterly&mdash;&ldquo;have a
+care of them!&nbsp; Montsoreau is very like Montereau!&nbsp; Beware
+of the bridge!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He went and came again in half an hour.&nbsp; Then, indeed, though
+she had spoken as if hope was dead in her, she was on her feet at the
+first sound of his tread on the stairs; her parted lips and her white
+face questioned him.&nbsp; He shook his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is a priest,&rdquo; he said in broken tones, &ldquo;with
+them, whom God will judge.&nbsp; It is his plan, and he is without mercy
+or pity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You bring nothing from&mdash;him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They will not suffer him to write again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You did not see him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXV.&nbsp; AGAINST THE WALL.</h2>
+<p>In a room beside the gateway, into which, as the nearest and most
+convenient place, Count Hannibal had been carried from his saddle, a
+man sat sideways in the narrow embrasure of a loophole, to which his
+eyes seemed glued.&nbsp; The room, which formed part of the oldest block
+of the ch&acirc;teau, and was ordinarily the quarters of the Carlats,
+possessed two other windows, deep-set indeed, yet superior to that through
+which Bigot&mdash;for he it was&mdash;peered so persistently.&nbsp;
+But the larger windows looked southwards, across the bay&mdash;at this
+moment the noon-high sun was pouring his radiance through them; while
+the object which held Bigot&rsquo;s gaze and fixed him to his irksome
+seat, lay elsewhere.&nbsp; The loophole commanded the causeway leading
+shorewards; through it the Norman could see who came and went, and even
+the cross-beam of the ugly object which rose where the causeway touched
+the land.</p>
+<p>On a flat truckle-bed behind the door lay Count Hannibal, his injured
+leg protected from the coverlid by a kind of cage.&nbsp; His eyes were
+bright with fever, and his untended beard and straggling hair heightened
+the wildness of his aspect.&nbsp; But he was in possession of his senses;
+and as his gaze passed from Bigot at the window to the old Free Companion,
+who sat on a stool beside him, engaged in shaping a piece of wood into
+a splint, an expression almost soft crept into his harsh face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Old fool!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; And his voice, though changed,
+had not lost all its strength and harshness.&nbsp; &ldquo;Did the Constable
+need a splint when you laid him under the tower at Gaeta?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The old man lifted his eyes from his task, and glanced through the
+nearest window.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is long from noon to night,&rdquo; he said quietly, &ldquo;and
+far from cup to lip, my lord!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would be if I had two legs,&rdquo; Tavannes answered, with
+a grimace, half-snarl, half-smile.&nbsp; &ldquo;As it is&mdash;where
+is that dagger?&nbsp; It leaves me every minute.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It had slipped from the coverlid to the ground.&nbsp; Badelon took
+it up, and set it on the bed within reach of his master&rsquo;s hand.</p>
+<p>Bigot swore fiercely.&nbsp; &ldquo;It would be farther still,&rdquo;
+he growled, &ldquo;if you would be guided by me, my lord.&nbsp; Give
+me leave to bar the door, and &rsquo;twill be long before these fisher
+clowns force it.&nbsp; Badelon and I&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Being in your full strength,&rdquo; Count Hannibal murmured
+cynically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Could hold it.&nbsp; We have strength enough for that,&rdquo;
+the Norman boasted, though his livid face and his bandages gave the
+lie to his words.&nbsp; He could not move without pain; and for Badelon,
+his knee was as big as two with plaisters of his own placing.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal stared at the ceiling.&nbsp; &ldquo;You could not
+strike two blows!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t lie to me!&nbsp;
+And Badelon cannot walk two yards!&nbsp; Fine fighters!&rdquo; he continued
+with bitterness, not all bitter.&nbsp; &ldquo;Fine bars &rsquo;twixt
+a man and death!&nbsp; No, it is time to turn the face to the wall.&nbsp;
+And, since go I must, it shall not be said Count Hannibal dared not
+go alone!&nbsp; Besides&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bigot stopped him with an oath that was in part a cry of pain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;D---n her!&rdquo; he exclaimed in fury, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis
+she is that <i>besides</i>!&nbsp; I know it.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis she has
+been our ruin from the day we saw her first, ay, to this day!&nbsp;
+&rsquo;Tis she has bewitched you until your blood, my lord, has turned
+to water.&nbsp; Or you would never, to save the hand that betrayed us,
+never to save a man&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silence!&rdquo; Count Hannibal cried, in a terrible voice.&nbsp;
+And rising on his elbow, he poised the dagger as if he would hurl it.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Silence, or I will spit you like the vermin you are!&nbsp; Silence,
+and listen!&nbsp; And you, old ban-dog, listen too, for I know you obstinate!&nbsp;
+It is not to save him.&nbsp; It is because I will die as I have lived,
+fearing nothing and asking nothing!&nbsp; It were easy to bar the door
+as you would have me, and die in the corner here like a wolf at bay,
+biting to the last.&nbsp; That were easy, old wolf-hound!&nbsp; Pleasant
+and good sport!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay!&nbsp; That were a death!&rdquo; the veteran cried, his
+eyes brightening.&nbsp; &ldquo;So I would fain die!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I!&rdquo; Count Hannibal returned, showing his teeth in
+a grim smile.&nbsp; &ldquo;I too!&nbsp; Yet I will not!&nbsp; I will
+not!&nbsp; Because so to die were to die unwillingly, and give them
+triumph.&nbsp; Be dragged to death?&nbsp; No, old dog, if die we must,
+we will go to death!&nbsp; We will die grandly, highly, as becomes Tavannes!&nbsp;
+That when we are gone they may say, &lsquo;There died a man!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>She</i> may say!&rdquo; Bigot muttered, scowling.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal heard and glared at him, but presently thought better
+of it, and after a pause&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, she too!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why not?&nbsp; As
+we have played the game&mdash;for her&mdash;so, though we lose, we will
+play it to the end; nor because we lose throw down the cards!&nbsp;
+Besides, man, die in the corner, die biting, and he dies too!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And why not?&rdquo; Bigot asked, rising in a fury.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why
+not?&nbsp; Whose work is it we lie here, snared by these clowns of fisherfolk?&nbsp;
+Who led us wrong and betrayed us?&nbsp; He die?&nbsp; Would the devil
+had taken him a year ago!&nbsp; Would he were within my reach now!&nbsp;
+I would kill him with my bare fingers!&nbsp; He die?&nbsp; And why not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, because, fool, his death would not save me!&rdquo; Count
+Hannibal answered coolly.&nbsp; &ldquo;If it would, he would die!&nbsp;
+But it will not; and we must even do again as we have done.&nbsp; I
+have spared him&mdash;he&rsquo;s a white-livered hound!&mdash;both once
+and twice, and we must go to the end with it since no better can be!&nbsp;
+I have thought it out, and it must be.&nbsp; Only see you, old dog,
+that I have the dagger hid in the splint where I can reach it.&nbsp;
+And then, when the exchange has been made, and my lady has her silk
+glove again&mdash;to put in her bosom!&rdquo;&mdash;with a grimace and
+a sudden reddening of his harsh features&mdash;&ldquo;if master priest
+come within reach of my arm, I&rsquo;ll send him before me, where I
+go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, ay!&rdquo; said Badelon.&nbsp; &ldquo;And if you fail
+of your stroke I will not fail of mine!&nbsp; I shall be there, and
+I will see to it he goes!&nbsp; I shall be there!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, why not?&rdquo; the old man answered quietly.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+may halt on this leg for aught I know, and come to starve on crutches
+like old Claude Boiteux who was at the taking of Milan and now begs
+in the passage under the Ch&acirc;telet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bah, man, you will get a new lord!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Badelon nodded.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ay, a new lord with new ways!&rdquo;
+he answered slowly and thoughtfully.&nbsp; &ldquo;And I am tired.&nbsp;
+They are of another sort, lords now, than they were when I was young.&nbsp;
+It was a word and a blow then.&nbsp; Now I am old, with most it is&mdash;&rsquo;Old
+hog, your distance!&nbsp; You scent my lady!&rsquo;&nbsp; Then they
+rode, and hunted, and tilted year in and year out, and summer or winter
+heard the lark sing.&nbsp; Now they are curled, and paint themselves,
+and lie in silk and toy with ladies&mdash;who shamed to be seen at Court
+or board when I was a boy&mdash;and love better to hear the mouse squeak
+than the lark sing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Still, if I give you my gold chain,&rdquo; Count Hannibal
+answered quietly, &ldquo;&rsquo;twill keep you from that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give it to Bigot,&rdquo; the old man answered.&nbsp; The splint
+he was fashioning had fallen on his knees, and his eyes were fixed on
+the distance of his youth.&nbsp; &ldquo;For me, my lord, I am tired,
+and I go with you.&nbsp; I go with you.&nbsp; It is a good death to
+die biting before the strength be quite gone.&nbsp; Have the dagger
+too, if you please, and I&rsquo;ll fit it within the splint right neatly.&nbsp;
+But I shall be there&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you&rsquo;ll strike home?&rdquo; Tavannes cried eagerly.&nbsp;
+He raised himself on his elbow, a gleam of joy in his gloomy eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have no fear, my lord.&nbsp; See, does it tremble?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He held out his hand.&nbsp; &ldquo;And when you are sped, I will try
+the Spanish stroke&mdash;upwards with a turn ere you withdraw, that
+I learned from Ruiz&mdash;on the shaven pate.&nbsp; I see them about
+me now!&rdquo; the old man continued, his face flushing, his form dilating.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It will be odd if I cannot snatch a sword and hew down three
+to go with Tavannes!&nbsp; And Bigot, he will see my lord the Marshal
+by-and-by; and as I do to the priest, the Marshal will do to Montsoreau.&nbsp;
+Ho! ho!&nbsp; He will teach him the <i>coup de Jarnac</i>, never fear!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And the old man&rsquo;s moustaches curled up ferociously.</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal&rsquo;s eyes sparkled with joy.&nbsp; &ldquo;Old dog!&rdquo;
+he cried&mdash;and he held his hand to the veteran, who brushed it reverently
+with his lips&mdash;&ldquo;we will go together then!&nbsp; Who touches
+my brother, touches Tavannes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Touches Tavannes!&rdquo; Badelon cried, the glow of battle
+lighting his bloodshot eyes.&nbsp; He rose to his feet.&nbsp; &ldquo;Touches
+Tavannes!&nbsp; You mind at Jarnac&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&nbsp; At Jarnac!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When we charged their horse, was my boot a foot from yours,
+my lord?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not a foot!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And at Dreux,&rdquo; the old man continued with a proud, elated
+gesture, &ldquo;when we rode down the German pikemen&mdash;they were
+grass before us, leaves on the wind, thistledown&mdash;was it not I
+who covered your bridle hand, and swerved not in the <i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</i>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was!&nbsp; It was!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And at St. Quentin, when we fled before the Spaniard&mdash;it
+was his day, you remember, and cost us dear&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, I was young then,&rdquo; Tavannes cried in turn, his eyes
+glistening.&nbsp; &ldquo;St. Quentin!&nbsp; It was the tenth of August.&nbsp;
+And you were new with me, and seized my rein&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And we rode off together, my lord&mdash;of the last, of the
+last, as God sees me!&nbsp; And striking as we went, so that they left
+us for easier game.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was so, good sword!&nbsp; I remember it as if it had been
+yesterday!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And at Cerisoles, the Battle of the Plain, in the old Spanish
+wars, that was most like a joust of all the pitched fields I ever saw&mdash;at
+Cerisoles, where I caught your horse?&nbsp; You mind me?&nbsp; It was
+in the shock when we broke Guasto&rsquo;s line&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At Cerisoles?&rdquo; Count Hannibal muttered slowly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Why, man, I&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I caught your horse, and mounted you afresh?&nbsp; You remember,
+my lord?&nbsp; And at Landriano, where Leyva turned the tables on us
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal stared.&nbsp; &ldquo;Landriano?&rdquo; he muttered
+bluntly.&nbsp; &ldquo;&rsquo;Twas in &rsquo;29, forty years ago and
+more!&nbsp; My father, indeed&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And at Rome&mdash;at Rome, my lord?&nbsp; <i>Mon Dieu</i>!
+in the old days at Rome!&nbsp; When the Spanish company scaled the wall&mdash;Ruiz
+was first, I next&mdash;was it not my foot you held?&nbsp; And was it
+not I who dragged you up, while the devils of Swiss pressed us hard?&nbsp;
+Ah, those were days, my lord!&nbsp; I was young then, and you, my lord,
+young too, and handsome as the morning&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You rave!&rdquo; Tavannes cried, finding his tongue at last.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Rome?&nbsp; You rave, old man!&nbsp; Why, I was not born in those
+days.&nbsp; My father even was a boy!&nbsp; It was in &rsquo;27 you
+sacked it&mdash;five-and-forty years ago!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The old man passed his hands over his heated face, and, as a man
+roused suddenly from sleep looks, he looked round the room.&nbsp; The
+light died out of his eyes&mdash;as a light blown out in a room; his
+form seemed to shrink, even while the others gazed at him, and he sat
+down.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I remember,&rdquo; he muttered slowly.&nbsp; &ldquo;It
+was Prince Philibert of Chalons, my lord of Orange.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dead these forty years!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, dead these forty years!&nbsp; All dead!&rdquo; the old
+man whispered, gazing at his gnarled hand, and opening and shutting
+it by turns.&nbsp; &ldquo;And I grow childish!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis time,
+high time, I followed them!&nbsp; It trembles now; but have no fear,
+my lord, this hand will not tremble then.&nbsp; All dead!&nbsp; Ay,
+all dead!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He sank into a mournful silence; and Tavannes, after gazing at him
+awhile in rough pity, fell to his own meditations, which were gloomy
+enough.&nbsp; The day was beginning to wane, and with the downward turn,
+though the sun still shone brightly through the southern windows, a
+shadow seemed to fall across his thoughts.&nbsp; They no longer rioted
+in a turmoil of defiance as in the forenoon.&nbsp; In its turn, sober
+reflection marshalled the past before his eyes.&nbsp; The hopes of a
+life, the ambitions of a life, moved in sombre procession, and things
+done and things left undone, the sovereignty which Nostradamus had promised,
+the faces of men he had spared and of men he had not spared&mdash;and
+the face of one woman.</p>
+<p>She would not now be his.&nbsp; He had played highly, and he would
+lose highly, playing the game to the end, that to-morrow she might think
+of him highly.&nbsp; Had she begun to think of him at all?&nbsp; In
+the chamber of the inn at Angers he had fancied a change in her, an
+awakening to life and warmth, a shadow of turning to him.&nbsp; It had
+pleased him to think so, at any rate.&nbsp; It pleased him still to
+imagine&mdash;of this he was more confident&mdash;that in the time to
+come, when she was Tignonville&rsquo;s, she would think of him secretly
+and kindly.&nbsp; She would remember him, and in her thoughts and in
+her memory he would grow to the heroic, even as the man she had chosen
+would shrink as she learned to know him.</p>
+<p>It pleased him, that.&nbsp; It was almost all that was left to please
+him&mdash;that, and to die proudly as he had lived.&nbsp; But as the
+day wore on, and the room grew hot and close, and the pain in his thigh
+became more grievous, the frame of his mind altered.&nbsp; A sombre
+rage was born and grew in him, and a passion fierce and ill-suppressed.&nbsp;
+To end thus, with nothing done, nothing accomplished of all his hopes
+and ambitions!&nbsp; To die thus, crushed in a corner by a mean priest
+and a rabble of spearmen, he who had seen Dreux and Jarnac, had defied
+the King, and dared to turn the St. Bartholomew to his ends!&nbsp; To
+die thus, and leave her to that puppet!&nbsp; Strong man as he was,
+of a strength of will surpassed by few, it taxed him to the utmost to
+lie and make no sign.&nbsp; Once, indeed, he raised himself on his elbow
+with something between an oath and a snarl, and he seemed about to speak.&nbsp;
+So that Bigot came hurriedly to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Water!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Water, fool!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And, having drunk, he turned his face to the wall, lest he should name
+her or ask for her.</p>
+<p>For the desire to see her before he died, to look into her eyes,
+to touch her hand once, only once, assailed his mind and all but whelmed
+his will.&nbsp; She had been with him, he knew it, in the night; she
+had left him only at daybreak.&nbsp; But then, in his state of collapse,
+he had been hardly conscious of her presence.&nbsp; Now to ask for her
+or to see her would stamp him coward, say what he might to her.&nbsp;
+The proverb, that the King&rsquo;s face gives grace, applied to her;
+and an overture on his side could mean but one thing, that he sought
+her grace.&nbsp; And that he would not do though the cold waters of
+death covered him more and more, and the coming of the end&mdash;in
+that quiet chamber, while the September sun sank to the appointed place&mdash;awoke
+wild longings and a wild rebellion in his breast.&nbsp; His thoughts
+were very bitter, as he lay, his loneliness of the uttermost.&nbsp;
+He turned his face to the wall.</p>
+<p>In that posture he slept after a time, watched over by Bigot with
+looks of rage and pity.&nbsp; And on the room fell a long silence.&nbsp;
+The sun had lacked three hours of setting when he fell asleep.&nbsp;
+When he re-opened his eyes, and, after lying for a few minutes between
+sleep and waking, became conscious of his position, of the day, of the
+things which had happened, and his helplessness&mdash;an awakening which
+wrung from him an involuntary groan&mdash;the light in the room was
+still strong, and even bright.&nbsp; He fancied for a moment that he
+had merely dozed off and awaked again; and he continued to lie with
+his face to the wall, courting a return of slumber.</p>
+<p>But sleep did not come, and little by little, as he lay listening
+and thinking and growing more restless, he got the fancy that he was
+alone.&nbsp; The light fell brightly on the wall to which his face was
+turned; how could that be if Bigot&rsquo;s broad shoulders still blocked
+the loophole? Presently, to assure himself, he called the man by name.</p>
+<p>He got no answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Badelon!&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Badelon!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Had he gone, too, the old and faithful?&nbsp; It seemed so, for again
+no answer came.</p>
+<p>He had been accustomed all his life to instant service; to see the
+act follow the word ere the word ceased to sound.&nbsp; And nothing
+which had gone before, nothing which he had suffered since his defeat
+at Angers, had brought him to feel his impotence and his position&mdash;and
+that the end of his power was indeed come&mdash;as sharply as this.&nbsp;
+The blood rushed to his head; almost the tears to eyes which had not
+shed them since boyhood, and would not shed them now, weak as he was!&nbsp;
+He rose on his elbow and looked with a full heart; it was as he had
+fancied.&nbsp; Badelon&rsquo;s stool was empty; the embrasure&mdash;that
+was empty too.&nbsp; Through its narrow outlet he had a tiny view of
+the shore and the low rocky hill, of which the summit shone warm in
+the last rays of the setting sun.</p>
+<p>The setting sun!&nbsp; Ay, for the lower part of the hill was growing
+cold; the shore at its foot was grey.&nbsp; Then he had slept long,
+and the time was come.&nbsp; He drew a deep breath and listened.&nbsp;
+But on all within and without lay silence, a silence marked, rather
+than broken, by the dull fall of a wave on the causeway.&nbsp; The day
+had been calm, but with the sunset a light breeze was rising.</p>
+<p>He set his teeth hard, and continued to listen.&nbsp; An hour before
+sunset was the time they had named for the exchange.&nbsp; What did
+it mean?&nbsp; In five minutes the sun would be below the horizon; already
+the zone of warmth on the hillside was moving and retreating upwards.&nbsp;
+And Bigot and old Badelon?&nbsp; Why had they left him while he slept?&nbsp;
+An hour before sunset!&nbsp; Why, the room was growing grey, grey and
+dark in the corners, and&mdash;what was that?</p>
+<p>He started, so violently that he jarred his leg, and the pain wrung
+a groan from him.&nbsp; At the foot of the bed, overlooked until then,
+a woman lay prone on the floor, her face resting on her outstretched
+arms.&nbsp; She lay without motion, her head and her clasped hands towards
+the loophole, her thick, clubbed hair hiding her neck.&nbsp; A woman!&nbsp;
+Count Hannibal stared, and, fancying he dreamed, closed his eyes, then
+looked again.&nbsp; It was no phantasm.&nbsp; It was the Countess; it
+was his wife!</p>
+<p>He drew a deep breath, but he did not speak, though the colour rose
+slowly to his cheek.&nbsp; And slowly his eyes devoured her from head
+to foot, from the hands lying white in the light below the window to
+the shod feet; unchecked he took his fill of that which he had so much
+desired&mdash;the seeing her!&nbsp; A woman prone, with all of her hidden
+but her hands: a hundred acquainted with her would not have known her.&nbsp;
+But he knew her, and would have known her from a hundred, nay from a
+thousand, by her hands alone.</p>
+<p>What was she doing here, and in this guise?&nbsp; He pondered; then
+he looked from her for an instant, and saw that while he had gazed at
+her the sun had set, the light had passed from the top of the hill;
+the world without and the room within were growing cold.&nbsp; Was that
+the cause she no longer lay quiet?&nbsp; He saw a shudder run through
+her, and a second; then it seemed to him&mdash;or was he going mad?&mdash;that
+she moaned, and prayed in half-heard words, and, wrestling with herself,
+beat her forehead on her arms, and then was still again, as still as
+death.&nbsp; By the time the paroxysm had passed, the last flush of
+sunset had faded from the sky, and the hills were growing dark.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXVI.&nbsp; HIS KINGDOM.</h2>
+<p>Count Hannibal could not have said why he did not speak to her at
+once.&nbsp; Warned by an instinct vague and ill-understood, he remained
+silent, his eyes riveted on her, until she rose from the floor.&nbsp;
+A moment later she met his gaze, and he looked to see her start.&nbsp;
+Instead, she stood quiet and thoughtful, regarding him with a kind of
+sad solemnity, as if she saw not him only, but the dead; while first
+one tremor and then a second shook her frame.</p>
+<p>At length &ldquo;It is over!&rdquo; she whispered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Patience,
+Monsieur; have no fear, I will be brave.&nbsp; But I must give a little
+to him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To him!&rdquo; Count Hannibal muttered, his face extraordinarily,
+pale.</p>
+<p>She smiled with an odd passionateness.&nbsp; &ldquo;Who was my lover!&rdquo;
+she cried, her voice a-thrill.&nbsp; &ldquo;Who will ever be my lover,
+though I have denied him, though I have left him to die!&nbsp; It was
+just.&nbsp; He who has so tried me knows it was just!&nbsp; He whom
+I have sacrificed&mdash;he knows it too, now!&nbsp; But it is hard to
+be&mdash;just,&rdquo; with a quavering smile.&nbsp; &ldquo;You who take
+all may give him a little, may pardon me a little, may have&mdash;patience!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Count Hannibal uttered a strangled cry, between a moan and a roar.&nbsp;
+A moment he beat the coverlid with his hands in impotence.&nbsp; Then
+he sank back on the bed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Water!&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Water!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She fetched it hurriedly, and, raising his head on her arm, held
+it to his lips.&nbsp; He drank, and lay back again with closed eyes.&nbsp;
+He lay so still and so long that she thought that he had fainted; but
+after a pause he spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have done that?&rdquo; he whispered; &ldquo;you have done
+that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she answered, shuddering.&nbsp; &ldquo;God forgive
+me!&nbsp; I have done that!&nbsp; I had to do that, or&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And is it too late&mdash;to undo it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is too late.&rdquo;&nbsp; A sob choked her voice.</p>
+<p>Tears&mdash;tears incredible, unnatural&mdash;welled from under Count
+Hannibal&rsquo;s closed eyelids, and rolled sluggishly down his harsh
+cheek to the edge of his beard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would have gone,&rdquo; he muttered.&nbsp; &ldquo;If you
+had spoken, I would have spared you this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; she answered unsteadily; &ldquo;the men told
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And yet&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was just.&nbsp; And you are my husband,&rdquo; she replied.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;More, I am the captive of your sword, and as you spared me in
+your strength, my lord, I spared you in your weakness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mon Dieu!&nbsp; Mon Dieu, Madame!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;at
+what a cost!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And that arrested, that touched her in the depths of her grief and
+her horror; even while the gibbet on the causeway, which had burned
+itself into her eyeballs, hung before her.&nbsp; For she knew that it
+was the cost to <i>her</i> he was counting.&nbsp; She knew that for
+himself he had ever held life cheap, that he could have seen Tignonville
+suffer without a qualm.&nbsp; And the thoughtfulness for her, the value
+he placed on a thing&mdash;even on a rival&rsquo;s life&mdash;because
+its was dear to her, touched her home, moved her as few things could
+have moved her at that moment.&nbsp; She saw it of a piece with all
+that had gone before, with all that had passed between them, since that
+fatal Sunday in Paris.&nbsp; But she made no sign.&nbsp; More than she
+had said she would not say; words of love, even of reconciliation, had
+no place on her lips while he whom she had sacrificed awaited his burial.</p>
+<p>And meantime the man beside her lay and found it incredible.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It was just,&rdquo; she had said.&nbsp; And he knew it; Tignonville&rsquo;s
+folly&mdash;that and that only had led them into the snare and caused
+his own capture.&nbsp; But what had justice to do with the things of
+this world?&nbsp; In his experience, the strong hand&mdash;that was
+justice, in France; and possession&mdash;that was law.&nbsp; By the
+strong hand he had taken her, and by the strong hand she might have
+freed herself.</p>
+<p>And she had not.&nbsp; There was the incredible thing.&nbsp; She
+had chosen instead to do justice!&nbsp; It passed belief.&nbsp; Opening
+his eyes on a silence which had lasted some minutes, a silence rendered
+more solemn by the lapping water without, Tavannes saw her kneeling
+in the dusk of the chamber, her head bowed over his couch, her face
+hidden in her hands.&nbsp; He knew that she prayed, and feebly he deemed
+the whole a dream.&nbsp; No scene akin to it had had place in his life;
+and, weakened and in pain, he prayed that the vision might last for
+ever, that he might never awake.</p>
+<p>But by-and-by, wrestling with the dread thought of what she had done,
+and the horror which would return upon her by fits and spasms, she flung
+out a hand, and it fell on him.&nbsp; He started, and the movement,
+jarring the broken limb, wrung from him a cry of pain.&nbsp; She looked
+up and was going to speak, when a scuffling of feet under the gateway
+arch, and a confused sound of several voices raised at once, arrested
+the words on her lips.&nbsp; She rose to her feet and listened.&nbsp;
+Dimly he could see her face through the dusk.&nbsp; Her eyes were on
+the door, and she breathed quickly.</p>
+<p>A moment or two passed in this way, and then from the hurly-burly
+in the gateway the footsteps of two men&mdash;one limped&mdash;detached
+themselves and came nearer and nearer.&nbsp; They stopped without.&nbsp;
+A gleam of light shone under the door, and some one knocked.</p>
+<p>She went to the door, and, withdrawing the bar, stepped quickly back
+to the bedside, where for an instant the light borne by those who entered
+blinded her.&nbsp; Then, above the lanthorn, the faces of La Tribe and
+Bigot broke upon her, and their shining eyes told her that they bore
+good news.&nbsp; It was well, for the men seemed tongue-tied.&nbsp;
+The minister&rsquo;s fluency was gone; he was very pale, and it was
+Bigot who in the end spoke for both.&nbsp; He stepped forward, and,
+kneeling, kissed her cold hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lady,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you have gained all, and lost
+nothing.&nbsp; Blessed be God!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Blessed be God!&rdquo; the minister wept.&nbsp; And from the
+passage without came the sound of laughter and weeping and many voices,
+with a flutter of lights and flying skirts, and women&rsquo;s feet.</p>
+<p>She stared at him wildly, doubtfully, her hand at her throat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;he is not dead&mdash;M. de Tignonville?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, he is alive,&rdquo; La Tribe answered, &ldquo;he is alive.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And he lifted up his hands as if he gave thanks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alive?&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Alive!&nbsp; Oh, Heaven
+is merciful.&nbsp; You are sure?&nbsp; You are sure?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure, Madame, sure.&nbsp; He was not in their hands.&nbsp;
+He was dismounted in the first shock, it seems, and, coming to himself
+after a time, crept away and reached St. Gilles, and came hither in
+a boat.&nbsp; But the enemy learned that he had not entered with us,
+and of this the priest wove his snare.&nbsp; Blessed be God, who put
+it into your heart to escape it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Countess stood motionless, and with closed eyes pressed her hands
+to her temples.&nbsp; Once she swayed as if she would fall her length,
+and Bigot sprang forward to support and save her.&nbsp; But she opened
+her eyes at that, sighed very deeply, and seemed to recover herself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are sure?&rdquo; she said faintly.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is
+no trick?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Madame, it is no trick,&rdquo; La Tribe answered.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;M. de Tignonville is alive, and here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here!&rdquo;&nbsp; She started at the word.&nbsp; The colour
+fluttered in her cheek.&nbsp; &ldquo;But the keys,&rdquo; she murmured.&nbsp;
+And she passed her hand across her brow.&nbsp; &ldquo;I thought&mdash;that
+I had them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has not entered,&rdquo; the minister answered, &ldquo;for
+that reason.&nbsp; He is waiting at the postern, where he landed.&nbsp;
+He came, hoping to be of use to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She paused a moment, and when she spoke again her aspect had undergone
+a subtle change.&nbsp; Her head was high, a flush had risen to her cheeks,
+her eyes were bright.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; she said, addressing La Tribe, &ldquo;do you,
+Monsieur, go to him, and pray him in my name to retire to St. Gilles,
+if he can do so without peril.&nbsp; He has no place here&mdash;now;
+and if he can go safely to his home it will be well that he do so.&nbsp;
+Add, if you please, that Madame de Tavannes thanks him for his offer
+of aid, but in her husband&rsquo;s house she needs no other protection.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bigot&rsquo;s eyes sparkled with joy.</p>
+<p>The minister hesitated.&nbsp; &ldquo;No more, Madame?&rdquo; he faltered.&nbsp;
+He was tender-hearted, and Tignonville was of his people.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No more,&rdquo; she said gravely, bowing her head.&nbsp; &ldquo;It
+is not M. de Tignonville I have to thank, but Heaven&rsquo;s mercy,
+that I do not stand here at this moment unhappy as I entered&mdash;a
+woman accursed, to be pointed at while I live.&nbsp; And the dead&rdquo;&mdash;she
+pointed solemnly through the dark casement to the shore&mdash;&ldquo;the
+dead lie there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>La Tribe went.</p>
+<p>She stood a moment in thought, and then took the keys from the rough
+stone window-ledge on which she had laid them when she entered.&nbsp;
+As the cold iron touched her fingers she shuddered.&nbsp; The contact
+awoke again the horror and misery in which she had groped, a lost thing,
+when she last felt that chill.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take them,&rdquo; she said; and she gave them to Bigot.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Until my lord can leave his couch they will remain in your charge,
+and you will answer for all to him.&nbsp; Go, now, take the light; and
+in half an hour send Madame Carlat to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A wave broke heavily on the causeway and ran down seething to the
+sea; and another and another, filling the room with rhythmical thunders.&nbsp;
+But the voice of the sea was no longer the same in the darkness, where
+the Countess knelt in silence beside the bed&mdash;knelt, her head bowed
+on her clasped hands, as she had knelt before, but with a mind how different,
+with what different thoughts!&nbsp; Count Hannibal could see her head
+but dimly, for the light shed upwards by the spume of the sea fell only
+on the rafters.&nbsp; But he knew she was there, and he would fain,
+for his heart was full, have laid his hand on her hair.</p>
+<p>And yet he would not.&nbsp; He would not, out of pride.&nbsp; Instead
+he bit on his harsh beard, and lay looking upward to the rafters, waiting
+what would come.&nbsp; He who had held her at his will now lay at hers,
+and waited.&nbsp; He who had spared her life at a price now took his
+own a gift at her hands, and bore it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Afterwards, Madame de Tavannes</i>&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His mind went back by some chance to those words&mdash;the words
+he had neither meant nor fulfilled.&nbsp; It passed from them to the
+marriage and the blow; to the scene in the meadow beside the river;
+to the last ride between La Fl&egrave;che and Angers&mdash;the ride
+during which he had played with her fears and hugged himself on the
+figure he would make on the morrow.&nbsp; The figure?&nbsp; Alas! of
+all his plans for dazzling her had come&mdash;<i>this</i>!&nbsp; Angers
+had defeated him, a priest had worsted him.&nbsp; In place of releasing
+Tignonville after the fashion of Bayard and the Paladins, and in the
+teeth of snarling thousands, he had come near to releasing him after
+another fashion and at his own expense.&nbsp; Instead of dazzling her
+by his mastery and winning her by his magnanimity, he lay here, owing
+her his life, and so weak, so broken, that the tears of childhood welled
+up in his eyes.</p>
+<p>Out of the darkness a hand, cool and firm, slid into his, clasped
+it tightly, drew it to warm lips, carried it to a woman&rsquo;s bosom.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; she murmured, &ldquo;I was the captive of
+your sword, and you spared me.&nbsp; Him I loved you took and spared
+him too&mdash;not once or twice.&nbsp; Angers, also, and my people you
+would have saved for my sake.&nbsp; And you thought I could do this!&nbsp;
+Oh! shame, shame!&rdquo;&nbsp; But her hand held his always.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You loved him,&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I loved him,&rdquo; she answered slowly and thoughtfully.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I loved him.&rdquo;&nbsp; And she fell silent a minute.&nbsp;
+Then, &ldquo;And I feared you,&rdquo; she added, her voice low.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh, how I feared you&mdash;and hated you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not fear him,&rdquo; she answered, smiling in the darkness.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Nor hate him.&nbsp; And for you, my lord, I am your wife and
+must do your bidding, whether I will or no.&nbsp; I have no choice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was silent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is that not so?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
+<p>He tried weakly to withdraw his hand.</p>
+<p>But she clung to it.&nbsp; &ldquo;I must bear your blows or your
+kisses.&nbsp; I must be as you will and do as you will, and go happy
+or sad, lonely or with you, as you will!&nbsp; As you will, my lord!&nbsp;
+For I am your chattel, your property, your own.&nbsp; Have you not told
+me so?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But your heart,&rdquo; he cried fiercely, &ldquo;is his!&nbsp;
+Your heart, which you told me in the meadow could never be mine!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I lied,&rdquo; she murmured, laughing tearfully, and her hands
+hovered over him.&nbsp; &ldquo;It has come back!&nbsp; And it is on
+my lips.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she leant over and kissed him.&nbsp; And Count Hannibal knew
+that he had entered into his kingdom, the sovereignty of a woman&rsquo;s
+heart.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>An hour later there was a stir in the village on the mainland.&nbsp;
+Lanthorns began to flit to and fro.&nbsp; Sulkily men were saddling
+and preparing for the road.&nbsp; It was far to Challans, farther to
+L&egrave;ge&mdash;more than one day, and many a weary league to Ponts
+de C&eacute; and the Loire.&nbsp; The men who had ridden gaily southwards
+on the scent of spoil and revenge turned their backs on the castle with
+many a sullen oath and word.&nbsp; They burned a hovel or two, and stripped
+such as they spared, after the fashion of the day; and it had gone ill
+with the peasant woman who fell into their hands.&nbsp; Fortunately,
+under cover of the previous night every soul had escaped from the village,
+some to sea, and the rest to take shelter among the sand-dunes; and
+as the troopers rode up the path from the beach, and through the green
+valley, where their horses shied from the bodies of the men they had
+slain, there was not an eye to see them go.</p>
+<p>Or to mark the man who rode last, the man of the white face&mdash;scarred
+on the temple&mdash;and the burning eyes, who paused on the brow of
+the hill, and, before he passed beyond, cursed with quivering lips the
+foe who had escaped him.&nbsp; The words were lost, as soon as spoken,
+in the murmur of the sea on the causeway; the sea, fit emblem of the
+Eternal, which rolled its tide regardless of blessing or cursing, good
+or ill will, nor spared one jot of ebb or flow because a puny creature
+had spoken to the night.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COUNT HANNIBAL***</p>
+<pre>
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+</pre></body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Count Hannibal, by Stanley J. Weyman
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Count Hannibal
+ A Romance of the Court of France
+
+
+Author: Stanley J. Weyman
+
+Release Date: May 3, 2005 [eBook #15763]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COUNT HANNIBAL***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+This eBook was prepared by Les Bowler from the 1922 John Murray edition.
+
+
+
+
+
+COUNT HANNIBAL
+A ROMANCE OF THE COURT OF FRANCE.
+by Stanley J. Weyman.
+
+
+SORORI
+SUA CAUSSA CARAE
+PRO ERGA MATREM AMORE
+ETIAM CARIORI
+HOC FRATER.
+
+CONTENTS
+
+I. CRIMSON FAVOURS
+II. HANNIBAL DE SAULX, COMTE DE TAVANNES
+III. THE HOUSE NEXT THE GOLDEN MAID
+IV. THE EVE OF THE FEAST
+V. A ROUGH WOOING
+VI. "WHO TOUCHES TAVANNES?"
+VII. IN THE AMPHITHEATRE
+VIII. TWO HENS AND AN EGG
+IX. UNSTABLE
+X. MADAME ST. LO
+XI. A BARGAIN
+XII. IN THE HALL OF THE LOUVRE
+XIII. DIPLOMACY
+XIV. TOO SHORT A SPOON
+XV. THE BROTHER OF ST. MAGLOIRE
+XVI. AT CLOSE QUARTERS
+XVII. THE DUEL
+XVIII. ANDROMEDA, PERSEUS BEING ABSENT
+XIX. IN THE ORLEANNAIS
+XX. ON THE CASTLE HILL
+XXI. SHE WOULD, AND WOULD NOT
+XXII. PLAYING WITH FIRE
+XXIII. A MIND, AND NOT A MIND
+XXIV. AT THE KING'S INN
+XXV. THE COMPANY OF THE BLEEDING HEART
+XXVI. TEMPER
+XXVII. THE BLACK TOWN
+XXVIII. IN THE LITTLE CHAPTER-HOUSE
+XXIX. THE ESCAPE
+XXX. SACRILEGE!
+XXXI. THE FLIGHT FROM ANGERS
+XXXII. THE ORDEAL BY STEEL
+XXXIII. THE AMBUSH
+XXXIV. "WHICH WILL YOU, MADAME?"
+XXXV. AGAINST THE WALL
+XXXVI. HIS KINGDOM
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. CRIMSON FAVOURS.
+
+
+M. de Tavannes smiled. Mademoiselle averted her eyes, and shivered; as
+if the air, even of that close summer night, entering by the door at her
+elbow, chilled her. And then came a welcome interruption.
+
+"Tavannes!"
+
+"Sire!"
+
+Count Hannibal rose slowly. The King had called, and he had no choice
+but to obey and go. Yet he hung a last moment over his companion, his
+hateful breath stirring her hair.
+
+"Our pleasure is cut short too soon, Mademoiselle," he said, in the tone,
+and with the look, she loathed. "But for a few hours only. We shall
+meet to-morrow. Or, it may be--earlier."
+
+She did not answer, and "Tavannes!" the King repeated with violence.
+"Tavannes! Mordieu!" his Majesty continued, looking round furiously.
+"Will no one fetch him? Sacre nom, am I King, or a dog of a--"
+
+"I come, sire!" the Count cried hastily. For Charles, King of France,
+Ninth of the name, was none of the most patient; and scarce another in
+the Court would have ventured to keep him waiting so long. "I come,
+sire; I come!" Tavannes repeated, as he moved from Mademoiselle's side.
+
+He shouldered his way through the circle of courtiers, who barred the
+road to the presence, and in part hid her from observation. He pushed
+past the table at which Charles and the Comte de Rochefoucauld had been
+playing primero, and at which the latter still sat, trifling idly with
+the cards. Three more paces, and he reached the King, who stood in the
+_ruelle_ with Rambouillet and the Italian Marshal. It was the latter
+who, a moment before, had summoned his Majesty from his game.
+
+Mademoiselle, watching him go, saw so much; so much, and the King's
+roving eyes and haggard face, and the four figures, posed apart in the
+fuller light of the upper half of the Chamber. Then the circle of
+courtiers came together before her, and she sat back on her stool. A
+fluttering, long-drawn sigh escaped her. Now, if she could slip out and
+make her escape! Now--she looked round. She was not far from the door;
+to withdraw seemed easy. But a staring, whispering knot of gentlemen and
+pages blocked the way; and the girl, ignorant of the etiquette of the
+Court, and with no more than a week's experience of Paris, had not the
+courage to rise and pass alone through the group.
+
+She had come to the Louvre this Saturday evening under the wing of Madame
+d'Yverne, her _fiance's_ cousin. By ill-hap Madame had been summoned to
+the Princess Dowager's closet, and perforce had left her. Still,
+Mademoiselle had her betrothed, and in his charge had sat herself down to
+wait, nothing loth, in the great gallery, where all was bustle and gaiety
+and entertainment. For this, the seventh day of the fetes, held to
+celebrate the marriage of the King of Navarre and Charles's sister--a
+marriage which was to reconcile the two factions of the Huguenots and the
+Catholics, so long at war--saw the Louvre as gay, as full, and as lively
+as the first of the fete days had found it; and in the humours of the
+throng, in the ceaseless passage of masks and maids of honour, guards and
+bishops, Swiss in the black, white, and green of Anjou, and Huguenot
+nobles in more sombre habits, the country-bred girl had found recreation
+and to spare. Until gradually the evening had worn away and she had
+begun to feel nervous; and M. de Tignonville, her betrothed, placing her
+in the embrasure of a window, had gone to seek Madame.
+
+She had waited for a time without much misgiving; expecting each moment
+to see him return. He would be back before she could count a hundred; he
+would be back before she could number the leagues that separated her from
+her beloved province, and the home by the Biscay Sea, to which even in
+that brilliant scene her thoughts turned fondly. But the minutes had
+passed, and passed, and he had not returned. Worse, in his place
+Tavannes--not the Marshal, but his brother, Count Hannibal--had found
+her; he, whose odious court, at once a menace and an insult, had subtly
+enveloped her for a week past. He had sat down beside her, he had taken
+possession of her, and, profiting by her inexperience, had played on her
+fears and smiled at her dislike. Finally, whether she would or no, he
+had swept her with him into the Chamber. The rest had been an obsession,
+a nightmare, from which only the King's voice summoning Tavannes to his
+side had relieved her.
+
+Her aim now was to escape before he returned, and before another, seeing
+her alone, adopted his _role_ and was rude to her. Already the courtiers
+about her were beginning to stare, the pages to turn and titter and
+whisper. Direct her gaze as she might, she met some eye watching her,
+some couple enjoying her confusion. To make matters worse, she presently
+discovered that she was the only woman in the Chamber; and she conceived
+the notion that she had no right to be there at that hour. At the
+thought her cheeks burned, her eyes dropped; the room seemed to buzz with
+her name, with gross words and jests, and gibes at her expense.
+
+At last, when the situation had grown nearly unbearable, the group before
+the door parted, and Tignonville appeared. The girl rose with a cry of
+relief, and he came to her. The courtiers glanced at the two and smiled.
+
+He did not conceal his astonishment at finding her there. "But,
+Mademoiselle, how is this?" he asked, in a low voice. He was as
+conscious of the attention they attracted as she was, and as uncertain on
+the point of her right to be there. "I left you in the gallery. I came
+back, missed you, and--"
+
+She stopped him by a gesture. "Not here!" she muttered, with suppressed
+impatience. "I will tell you outside. Take me--take me out, if you
+please, Monsieur, at once!"
+
+He was as glad to be gone as she was to go. The group by the doorway
+parted; she passed through it, he followed. In a moment the two stood in
+the great gallery, above the Salle des Caryatides. The crowd which had
+paraded here an hour before was gone, and the vast echoing apartment,
+used at that date as a guard-room, was well-nigh empty. Only at rare
+intervals, in the embrasure of a window or the recess of a door, a couple
+talked softly. At the farther end, near the head of the staircase which
+led to the hall below, and the courtyard, a group of armed Swiss lounged
+on guard. Mademoiselle shot a keen glance up and down, then she turned
+to her lover, her face hot with indignation.
+
+"Why did you leave me?" she asked. "Why did you leave me, if you could
+not come back at once? Do you understand, sir," she continued, "that it
+was at your instance I came to Paris, that I came to this Court, and that
+I look to you for protection?"
+
+"Surely," he said. "And--"
+
+"And do you think Carlat and his wife fit guardians for me? Should I
+have come or thought of coming to this wedding, but for your promise, and
+Madame your cousin's? If I had not deemed myself almost your wife," she
+continued warmly, "and secure of your protection, should I have come
+within a hundred miles of this dreadful city? To which, had I my will,
+none of our people should have come."
+
+"Dreadful? Pardieu, not so dreadful," he answered, smiling, and striving
+to give the dispute a playful turn. "You have seen more in a week than
+you would have seen at Vrillac in a lifetime, Mademoiselle."
+
+"And I choke!" she retorted; "I choke! Do you not see how they look at
+us, at us Huguenots, in the street? How they, who live here, point at us
+and curse us? How the very dogs scent us out and snarl at our heels, and
+the babes cross themselves when we go by? Can you see the Place des
+Gastines and not think what stood there? Can you pass the Greve at night
+and not fill the air above the river with screams and wailings and
+horrible cries--the cries of our people murdered on that spot?" She
+paused for breath, recovered herself a little, and in a lower tone, "For
+me," she said, "I think of Philippa de Luns by day and by night! The
+eaves are a threat to me; the tiles would fall on us had they their will;
+the houses nod to--to--"
+
+"To what, Mademoiselle?" he asked, shrugging his shoulders and assuming a
+tone of cynicism.
+
+"To crush us! Yes, Monsieur, to crush us!"
+
+"And all this because I left you for a moment?"
+
+"For an hour--or well-nigh an hour," she answered more soberly.
+
+"But if I could not help it?"
+
+"You should have thought of that--before you brought me to Paris,
+Monsieur. In these troublous times."
+
+He coloured warmly. "You are unjust, Mademoiselle," he said. "There are
+things you forget; in a Court one is not always master of one's self."
+
+"I know it," she answered dryly, thinking of that through which she had
+gone.
+
+"But you do not know what happened!" he returned with impatience. "You
+do not understand that I am not to blame. Madame d'Yverne, when I
+reached the Princess Dowager's closet, had left to go to the Queen of
+Navarre. I hurried after her, and found a score of gentlemen in the King
+of Navarre's chamber. They were holding a council, and they begged, nay,
+they compelled me to remain."
+
+"And it was that which detained you so long?"
+
+"To be sure, Mademoiselle."
+
+"And not--Madame St. Lo?"
+
+M. de Tignonville's face turned scarlet. The thrust in tierce was
+unexpected. This, then, was the key to Mademoiselle's spirt of temper.
+
+"I do not understand you," he stammered.
+
+"How long were you in the King of Navarre's chamber, and how long with
+Madame St. Lo?" she asked with fine irony. "Or no, I will not tempt
+you," she went on quickly, seeing him hesitate. "I heard you talking to
+Madame St. Lo in the gallery while I sat within. And I know how long you
+were with her."
+
+"I met Madame as I returned," he stammered, his face still hot, "and I
+asked her where you were. I did not know, Mademoiselle, that I was not
+to speak to ladies of my acquaintance."
+
+"I was alone, and I was waiting."
+
+"I could not know that--for certain," he answered, making the best of it.
+"You were not where I left you. I thought, I confess--that you had gone.
+That you had gone home."
+
+"With whom? With whom?" she repeated pitilessly. "Was it likely? With
+whom was I to go? And yet it is true, I might have gone home had I
+pleased--with M. de Tavannes! Yes," she continued, in a tone of keen
+reproach, and with the blood mounting to her forehead, "it is to that,
+Monsieur, you expose me! To be pursued, molested, harassed by a man
+whose look terrifies me, and whose touch I--I detest! To be addressed
+wherever I go by a man whose every word proves that he thinks me game for
+the hunter, and you a thing he may neglect. You are a man and you do not
+know, you cannot know what I suffer! What I have suffered this week past
+whenever you have left my side!"
+
+Tignonville looked gloomy. "What has he said to you?" he asked, between
+his teeth.
+
+"Nothing I can tell you," she answered, with a shudder. "It was he who
+took me into the Chamber."
+
+"Why did you go?"
+
+"Wait until he bids you do something," she answered. "His manner, his
+smile, his tone, all frighten me. And to-night, in all these there was a
+something worse, a hundred times worse than when I saw him last--on
+Thursday! He seemed to--to gloat on me," the girl stammered, with a
+flush of shame, "as if I were his! Oh, Monsieur, I wish we had not left
+our Poitou! Shall we ever see Vrillac again, and the fishers' huts about
+the port, and the sea beating blue against the long brown causeway?"
+
+He had listened darkly, almost sullenly; but at this, seeing the tears
+gather in her eyes, he forced a laugh.
+
+"Why, you are as bad as M. de Rosny and the Vidame!" he said. "And they
+are as full of fears as an egg is of meat! Since the Admiral was wounded
+by that scoundrel on Friday, they think all Paris is in a league against
+us."
+
+"And why not?" she asked, her cheek grown pale, her eyes reading his
+eyes.
+
+"Why not? Why, because it is a monstrous thing even to think of!"
+Tignonville answered, with the confidence of one who did not use the
+argument for the first time. "Could they insult the King more deeply
+than by such a suspicion? A Borgia may kill his guests, but it was never
+a practice of the Kings of France! Pardieu, I have no patience with
+them! They may lodge where they please, across the river, or without the
+walls if they choose, the Rue de l'Arbre Sec is good enough for me, and
+the King's name sufficient surety!"
+
+"I know you are not apt to be fearful," she answered, smiling; and she
+looked at him with a woman's pride in her lover. "All the same, you will
+not desert me again, sir, will you?"
+
+He vowed he would not, kissed her hand, looked into her eyes; then
+melting to her, stammering, blundering, he named Madame St. Lo. She
+stopped him.
+
+"There is no need," she said, answering his look with kind eyes, and
+refusing to hear his protestations. "In a fortnight will you not be my
+husband? How should I distrust you? It was only that while she talked,
+I waited--I waited; and--and that Madame St. Lo is Count Hannibal's
+cousin. For a moment I was mad enough to dream that she held you on
+purpose. You do not think it was so?"
+
+"She!" he cried sharply; and he winced, as if the thought hurt him.
+"Absurd! The truth is, Mademoiselle," he continued with a little heat,
+"you are like so many of our people! You think a Catholic capable of the
+worst."
+
+"We have long thought so at Vrillac," she answered gravely.
+
+"That's over now, if people would only understand. This wedding has put
+an end to all that. But I'm harking back," he continued awkwardly; and
+he stopped. "Instead, let me take you home."
+
+"If you please. Carlat and the servants should be below."
+
+He took her left hand in his right after the wont of the day, and with
+his other hand touching his sword-hilt, he led her down the staircase,
+that by a single turn reached the courtyard of the palace. Here a mob of
+armed servants, of lacqueys, and footboys, some bearing torches, and some
+carrying their masters' cloaks and _galoshes_, loitered to and fro. Had
+M. de Tignonville been a little more observant, or a trifle less occupied
+with his own importance, he might have noted more than one face which
+looked darkly on him; he might have caught more than one overt sneer at
+his expense. But in the business of summoning Carlat--Mademoiselle de
+Vrillac's steward and major-domo--he lost the contemptuous
+"Christaudins!" that hissed from a footboy's lips, and the "Southern
+dogs!" that died in the moustachios of a bully in the livery of the
+King's brother. He was engaged in finding the steward, and in aiding him
+to cloak his mistress; then with a ruffling air, a new acquirement, which
+he had picked up since he came to Paris, he made a way for her through
+the crowd. A moment, and the three, followed by half a dozen armed
+servants, bearing pikes and torches, detached themselves from the throng,
+and crossing the courtyard, with its rows of lighted windows, passed out
+by the gate between the Tennis Courts, and so into the Rue des Fosses de
+St. Germain.
+
+Before them, against a sky in which the last faint glow of evening still
+contended with the stars, the spire and pointed arches of the church of
+St. Germain rose darkly graceful. It was something after nine: the heat
+of the August day brooded over the crowded city, and dulled the faint
+distant ring of arms and armour that yet would make itself heard above
+the hush; a hush which was not silence so much as a subdued hum. As
+Mademoiselle passed the closed house beside the Cloister of St. Germain,
+where only the day before Admiral Coligny, the leader of the Huguenots,
+had been wounded, she pressed her escort's hand, and involuntarily drew
+nearer to him. But he laughed at her.
+
+"It was a private blow," he said, answering her unspoken thought. "It is
+like enough the Guises sped it. But they know now what is the King's
+will, and they have taken the hint and withdrawn themselves. It will not
+happen again, Mademoiselle. For proof, see the guards"--they were
+passing the end of the Rue Bethizy, in the corner house of which,
+abutting on the Rue de l'Arbre Sec, Coligny had his lodgings--"whom the
+King has placed for his security. Fifty pikes under Cosseins."
+
+"Cosseins?" she repeated. "But I thought Cosseins--"
+
+"Was not wont to love us!" Tignonville answered, with a confident
+chuckle. "He was not. But the dogs lick where the master wills,
+Mademoiselle. He was not, but he does. This marriage has altered all."
+
+"I hope it may not prove an unlucky one!" she murmured. She felt
+impelled to say it.
+
+"Not it!" he answered confidently. "Why should it?"
+
+They stopped, as he spoke, before the last house, at the corner of the
+Rue St. Honore opposite the Croix du Tiroir; which rose shadowy in the
+middle of the four ways. He hammered on the door.
+
+"But," she said softly, looking in his face, "the change is sudden, is it
+not? The King was not wont to be so good to us!"
+
+"The King was not King until now," he answered warmly. "That is what I
+am trying to persuade our people. Believe me, Mademoiselle, you may
+sleep without fear; and early in the morning I will be with you. Carlat,
+have a care of your mistress until morning, and let Madame lie in her
+chamber. She is nervous to-night. There, sweet, until morning! God
+keep you, and pleasant dreams!"
+
+He uncovered, and bowing over her hand, kissed it; and the door being
+open he would have turned away. But she lingered as if unwilling to
+enter.
+
+"There is--do you hear it--a stir in _that_ quarter?" she said, pointing
+across the Rue St. Honore. "What lies there?"
+
+"Northward? The markets," he answered. "'Tis nothing. They say, you
+know, that Paris never sleeps. Good night, sweet, and a fair awakening!"
+
+She shivered as she had shivered under Tavannes' eye. And still she
+lingered, keeping him.
+
+"Are you going to your lodging at once?" she asked--for the sake, it
+seemed, of saying something.
+
+"I?" he answered a little hurriedly. "No, I was thinking of paying
+Rochefoucauld the compliment of seeing him home. He has taken a new
+lodging to be near the Admiral; a horrid bare place in the Rue Bethizy,
+without furniture, but he would go into it to-day. And he has a sort of
+claim on my family, you know."
+
+"Yes," she said simply. "Of course. Then I must not detain you. God
+keep you safe," she continued, with a faint quiver in her tone; and her
+lip trembled. "Good night, and fair dreams, Monsieur."
+
+He echoed the words gallantly. "Of you, sweet!" he cried; and turning
+away with a gesture of farewell, he set off on his return.
+
+He walked briskly, nor did he look back, though she stood awhile gazing
+after him. She was not aware that she gave thought to this; nor that it
+hurt her. Yet when bolt and bar had shot behind her, and she had mounted
+the cold, bare staircase of that day--when she had heard the dull echoing
+footsteps of her attendants as they withdrew to their lairs and sleeping-
+places, and still more when she had crossed the threshold of her chamber,
+and signed to Madame Carlat and her woman to listen--it is certain she
+felt a lack of something.
+
+Perhaps the chill that possessed her came of that lack, which she neither
+defined nor acknowledged. Or possibly it came of the night air, August
+though it was; or of sheer nervousness, or of the remembrance of Count
+Hannibal's smile. Whatever its origin, she took it to bed with her and
+long after the house slept round her, long after the crowded quarter of
+the Halles had begun to heave and the Sorbonne to vomit a black-frocked
+band, long after the tall houses in the gabled streets, from St. Antoine
+to Montmartre and from St. Denis on the north to St. Jacques on the
+south, had burst into rows of twinkling lights--nay, long after the
+Quarter of the Louvre alone remained dark, girdled by this strange
+midnight brightness--she lay awake. At length she too slept, and dreamed
+of home and the wide skies of Poitou, and her castle of Vrillac washed
+day and night by the Biscay tides.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. HANNIBAL DE SAULX, COMTE DE TAVANNES.
+
+
+"Tavannes!"
+
+"Sire."
+
+Tavannes, we know, had been slow to obey the summons. Emerging from the
+crowd, he found that the King, with Retz and Rambouillet, his Marshal des
+Logis, had retired to the farther end of the Chamber; apparently Charles
+had forgotten that he had called. His head a little bent--he was tall
+and had a natural stoop--the King seemed to be listening to a low but
+continuous murmur of voices which proceeded from the door of his closet.
+One voice frequently raised was beyond doubt a woman's; a foreign accent,
+smooth and silky, marked another; a third, that from time to time broke
+in, wilful and impetuous, was the voice of Monsieur, the King's brother,
+Catherine de Medicis' favourite son. Tavannes, waiting respectfully two
+paces behind the King, could catch little that was said; but Charles,
+something more, it seemed, for on a sudden he laughed, a violent,
+mirthless laugh. And he clapped Rambouillet on the shoulder.
+
+"There!" he said, with one of his horrible oaths, "'tis settled! 'Tis
+settled! Go, man, and take your orders! And you, M. de Retz," he
+continued, in a tone of savage mockery, "go, my lord, and give them!"
+
+"I, sire?" the Italian Marshal answered, in accents of deprecation. There
+were times when the young King would show his impatience of the Italian
+ring, the Retzs and Biragues, the Strozzis and Gondys, with whom his
+mother surrounded him.
+
+"Yes, you!" Charles answered. "You and my lady mother! And in God's
+name answer for it at the day!" he continued vehemently. "You will have
+it! You will not let me rest till you have it! Then have it, only see
+to it, it be done thoroughly! There shall not be one left to cast it in
+the King's teeth and cry, 'Et tu, Carole!' Swim, swim in blood if you
+will," he continued, with growing wildness. "Oh, 'twill be a merry
+night! And it's true so far, you may kill fleas all day, but burn the
+coat, and there's an end. So burn it, burn it, and--" He broke off with
+a start as he discovered Tavannes at his elbow. "God's death, man!" he
+cried roughly, "who sent for you?"
+
+"Your Majesty called me," Tavannes answered; while, partly urged by the
+King's hand, and partly anxious to escape, the others slipped into the
+closet and left them together.
+
+"I sent for you? I called your brother, the Marshal!"
+
+"He is within, sire," Tavannes answered, indicating the closet. "A
+moment ago I heard his voice."
+
+Charles passed his shaking hand across his eyes. "Is he?" he muttered.
+"So he is! I heard it too. And--and a man cannot be in two places at
+once!" Then, while his haggard gaze, passing by Tavannes, roved round
+the Chamber, he laid his hand on Count Hannibal's breast. "They give me
+no peace, Madame and the Guises," he whispered, his face hectic with
+excitement. "They will have it. They say that Coligny--they say that he
+beards me in my own palace. And--and, _mordieu_," with sudden violence,
+"it's true. It's true enough! It was but to-day he was for making terms
+with me! With me, the King! Making terms! So it shall be, by God and
+Devil, it shall! But not six or seven! No, no. All! All! There shall
+not be one left to say to me, 'You did it!'"
+
+"Softly, sire," Tavannes answered; for Charles had gradually raised his
+voice. "You will be observed."
+
+For the first time the young King--he was but twenty-two years old, God
+pity him!--looked at his companion.
+
+"To be sure," he whispered; and his eyes grew cunning. "Besides, and
+after all, there's another way, if I choose. Oh, I've thought and
+thought, I'd have you know." And shrugging his shoulders, almost to his
+ears, he raised and lowered his open hands alternately, while his back
+hid the movement from the Chamber. "See-saw! See-saw!" he muttered.
+"And the King between the two, you see. That's Madame's king-craft.
+She's shown me that a hundred times. But look you, it is as easy to
+lower the one as the other," with a cunning glance at Tavannes' face, "or
+to cut off the right as the left. And--and the Admiral's an old man and
+will pass; and for the matter of that I like to hear him talk. He talks
+well. While the others, Guise and his kind, are young, and I've thought,
+oh, yes, I've thought--but there," with a sudden harsh laugh, "my lady
+mother will have it her own way. And for this time she shall, but, All!
+All! Even Foucauld, there! Do you mark him. He's sorting the cards. Do
+you see him--as he will be to-morrow, with the slit in his throat and his
+teeth showing? Why, God!" his voice rising almost to a scream, "the
+candles by him are burning blue!" And with a shaking hand, his face
+convulsed, the young King clutched his companion's arm, and pinched it.
+
+Count Hannibal shrugged his shoulders, but answered nothing.
+
+"D'you think we shall see them afterwards?" Charles resumed, in a sharp,
+eager whisper. "In our dreams, man? Or when the watchman cries, and we
+awake, and the monks are singing lauds at St. Germain, and--and the taper
+is low?"
+
+Tavannes' lip curled. "I don't dream, sire," he answered coldly, "and I
+seldom wake. For the rest, I fear my enemies neither alive nor dead."
+
+"Don't you? By G-d, I wish I didn't," the young man exclaimed. His brow
+was wet with sweat. "I wish I didn't. But there, it's settled. They've
+settled it, and I would it were done! What do you think of--of it, man?
+What do you think of it, yourself?"
+
+Count Hannibal's face was inscrutable. "I think nothing, sire," he said
+dryly. "It is for your Majesty and your council to think. It is enough
+for me that it is the King's will."
+
+"But you'll not flinch?" Charles muttered, with a quick look of
+suspicion. "But there," with a monstrous oath, "I know you'll not! I
+believe you'd as soon kill a monk--though, thank God," and he crossed
+himself devoutly, "there is no question of that--as a man. And sooner
+than a maiden."
+
+"Much sooner, sire," Tavannes answered grimly. "If you have any orders
+in the monkish direction--no? Then your Majesty must not talk to me
+longer. M. de Rochefoucauld is beginning to wonder what is keeping your
+Majesty from your game. And others are marking you, sire."
+
+"By the Lord!" Charles exclaimed, a ring of wonder mingled with horror in
+his tone, "if they knew what was in our minds they'd mark us more! Yet,
+see Nancay there beside the door? He is unmoved. He looks to-day as he
+looked yesterday. Yet he has charge of the work in the palace--"
+
+For the first time Tavannes allowed a movement of surprise to escape him.
+
+"In the palace?" he muttered. "Is it to be done here, too, sire?"
+
+"Would you let some escape, to return by-and-by and cut our throats?" the
+King retorted, with a strange spirt of fury; an incapacity to maintain
+the same attitude of mind for two minutes together was the most fatal
+weakness of his ill-balanced nature. "No. All! All!" he repeated with
+vehemence. "Didn't Noah people the earth with eight? But I'll not leave
+eight! My cousins, for they are blood-royal, shall live if they will
+recant. And my old nurse, whether or no. And Pare, for no one else
+understands my complexion. And--"
+
+"And Rochefoucauld, doubtless, sire?"
+
+The King, whose eye had sought his favourite companion, withdrew it. He
+darted a glance at Tavannes.
+
+"Foucauld? Who said so?" he muttered jealously. "Not I! But we shall
+see. We shall see! And do you see that you spare no one, M. le Comte,
+without an order. That is your business."
+
+"I understand, sire," Tavannes answered coolly. And after a moment's
+silence, seeing that the King had done with him, he bowed low and
+withdrew; watched by the circle, as all about a King were watched in the
+days when a King's breath meant life or death, and his smile made the
+fortunes of men. As he passed Rochefoucauld, the latter looked up and
+nodded.
+
+"What keeps brother Charles?" he muttered. "He's madder than ever to-
+night. Is it a masque or a murder he is planning?"
+
+"The vapours," Tavannes answered, with a sneer. "Old tales his old nurse
+has stuffed him withal. He'll come by-and-by, and 'twill be well if you
+can divert him."
+
+"I will, if he come," Rochefoucauld answered, shuffling the cards. "If
+not 'tis Chicot's business, and he should attend to it. I'm tired, and
+shall to bed."
+
+"He will come," Tavannes answered, and moved, as if to go on. Then he
+paused for a last word. "He will come," he muttered, stooping and
+speaking under his breath, his eyes on the other's face. "But play him
+lightly. He is in an ugly mood. Please him, if you can, and it may
+serve."
+
+The eyes of the two met an instant, and those of Foucauld--so the King
+called his Huguenot favourite--betrayed some surprise; for Count Hannibal
+and he were not intimate. But seeing that the other was in earnest, he
+raised his brows in acknowledgment. Tavannes nodded carelessly in
+return, looked an instant at the cards on the table, and passed on,
+pushed his way through the circle, and reached the door. He was lifting
+the curtain to go out, when Nancay, the Captain of the Guard, plucked his
+sleeve.
+
+"What have you been saying to Foucauld, M. de Tavannes?" he muttered.
+
+"I?"
+
+"Yes," with a jealous glance, "you, M. le Comte."
+
+Count Hannibal looked at him with the sudden ferocity that made the man a
+proverb at Court.
+
+"What I chose, M. le Capitaine des Suisses!" he hissed. And his hand
+closed like a vice on the other's wrist. "What I chose, look you! And
+remember, another time, that I am not a Huguenot, and say what I please."
+
+"But there is great need of care," Nancay protested, stammering and
+flinching. "And--and I have orders, M. le Comte."
+
+"Your orders are not for me," Tavannes answered, releasing his arm with a
+contemptuous gesture. "And look you, man, do not cross my path to-night.
+You know our motto? Who touches my brother, touches Tavannes! Be warned
+by it."
+
+Nancay scowled. "But the priests say, 'If your hand offend you, cut it
+off!'" he muttered.
+
+Tavannes laughed, a sinister laugh. "If you offend me I'll cut your
+throat," he said; and with no ceremony he went out, and dropped the
+curtain behind him.
+
+Nancay looked after him, his face pale with rage. "Curse him!" he
+whispered, rubbing his wrist. "If he were any one else I would teach
+him! But he would as soon run you through in the presence as in the Pre
+aux Clercs! And his brother, the Marshal, has the King's ear! And
+Madame Catherine's too, which is worse!"
+
+He was still fuming, when an officer in the colours of Monsieur, the
+King's brother, entered hurriedly, and keeping his hand on the curtain,
+looked anxiously round the Chamber. As soon as his eye found Nancay, his
+face cleared.
+
+"Have you the reckoning?" he muttered.
+
+"There are seventeen Huguenots in the palace besides their Highnesses,"
+Nancay replied, in the same cautious tone. "Not counting two or three
+who are neither the one thing nor the other. In addition, there are the
+two Montmorencies; but they are to go safe for fear of their brother, who
+is not in the trap. He is too like his father, the old Bench-burner, to
+be lightly wronged! And, besides, there is Pare, who is to go to his
+Majesty's closet as soon as the gates are shut. If the King decides to
+save any one else, he will send him to his closet. So 'tis all clear and
+arranged here. If you are forward outside, it will be well! Who deals
+with the gentleman with the tooth-pick?"
+
+"The Admiral? Monsieur, Guise, and the Grand Prior; Cosseins and Besme
+have charge. 'Tis to be done first. Then the Provost will raise the
+town. He will have a body of stout fellows ready at three or four
+rendezvous, so that the fire may blaze up everywhere at once. Marcel,
+the ex-provost, has the same commission south of the river. Orders to
+light the town as for a frolic have been given, and the Halles will be
+ready."
+
+Nancay nodded, reflected a moment, and then with an involuntary shudder--
+
+"God!" he exclaimed, "it will shake the world!"
+
+"You think so?"
+
+"Ay, will it not!" His next words showed that he bore Tavannes' warning
+in mind. "For me, my friend, I go in mail to-night," he said. "There
+will be many a score paid before morning, besides his Majesty's. And
+many a left-handed blow will be struck in the _melee_!"
+
+The other crossed himself. "Grant none light here!" he said devoutly.
+And with a last look he nodded and went out.
+
+In the doorway he jostled a person who was in the act of entering. It
+was M. de Tignonville, who, seeing Nancay at his elbow, saluted him, and
+stood looking round. The young man's face was flushed, his eyes were
+bright with unwonted excitement.
+
+"M. de Rochefoucauld?" he asked eagerly. "He has not left yet?"
+
+Nancay caught the thrill in his voice, and marked the young man's flushed
+face and altered bearing. He noted, too, the crumpled paper he carried
+half-hidden in his hand; and the Captain's countenance grew dark. He
+drew a step nearer, and his hand reached softly for his dagger. But his
+voice, when he spoke, was smooth as the surface of the pleasure-loving
+Court, smooth as the externals of all things in Paris that summer
+evening.
+
+"He is here still," he said. "Have you news, M. de Tignonville?"
+
+"News?"
+
+"For M. de Rochefoucauld?"
+
+Tignonville laughed. "No," he said. "I am here to see him to his
+lodging, that is all. News, Captain? What made you think so?"
+
+"That which you have in your hand," Nancay answered, his fears relieved.
+
+The young man blushed to the roots of his hair. "It is not for him," he
+said.
+
+"I can see that, Monsieur," Nancay answered politely. "He has his
+successes, but all the billets-doux do not go one way."
+
+The young man laughed, a conscious, flattered laugh. He was handsome,
+with such a face as women love, but there was a lack of ease in the way
+he wore his Court suit. It was a trifle finer, too, than accorded with
+Huguenot taste; or it looked the finer for the way he wore it, even as
+Teligny's and Foucauld's velvet capes and stiff brocades lost their
+richness and became but the adjuncts, fitting and graceful, of the men.
+Odder still, as Tignonville laughed, half hiding and half revealing the
+dainty scented paper in his hand, his clothes seemed smarter and he more
+awkward than usual.
+
+"It is from a lady," he admitted. "But a bit of badinage, I assure you,
+nothing more!"
+
+"Understood!" M. de Nancay murmured politely. "I congratulate you."
+
+"But--"
+
+"I say I congratulate you!"
+
+"But it is nothing."
+
+"Oh, I understand. And see, the King is about to rise. Go forward,
+Monsieur," he continued benevolently. "A young man should show himself.
+Besides, his Majesty likes you well," he added, with a leer. He had an
+unpleasant sense of humour, had his Majesty's Captain of the Guard; and
+this evening somewhat more than ordinary on which to exercise it.
+
+Tignonville held too good an opinion of himself to suspect the other of
+badinage; and thus encouraged, he pushed his way to the front of the
+circle. During his absence with his betrothed, the crowd in the Chamber
+had grown thin, the candles had burned an inch shorter in the sconces.
+But though many who had been there had left, the more select remained,
+and the King's return to his seat had given the company a fillip. An air
+of feverish gaiety, common in the unhealthy life of the Court, prevailed.
+At a table abreast of the King, Montpensier and Marshal Cosse were dicing
+and disputing, with now a yell of glee, and now an oath, that betrayed
+which way fortune inclined. At the back of the King's chair, Chicot, his
+gentleman-jester, hung over Charles's shoulder, now scanning his cards,
+and now making hideous faces that threw the on-lookers into fits of
+laughter. Farther up the Chamber, at the end of the alcove, Marshal
+Tavannes--our Hannibal's brother--occupied a low stool, which was set
+opposite the open door of the closet. Through this doorway a slender
+foot, silk-clad, shot now and again into sight; it came, it vanished, it
+came again, the gallant Marshal striving at each appearance to rob it of
+its slipper, a dainty jewelled thing of crimson velvet. He failed
+thrice, a peal of laughter greeting each failure. At the fourth essay,
+he upset his stool and fell to the floor, but held the slipper. And not
+the slipper only, but the foot. Amid a flutter of silken skirts and
+dainty laces--while the hidden beauty shrilly protested--he dragged first
+the ankle, and then a shapely leg into sight. The circle applauded; the
+lady, feeling herself still drawn on, screamed loudly and more loudly.
+All save the King and his opponent turned to look. And then the sport
+came to a sudden end. A sinewy hand appeared, interposed, released; for
+an instant the dark, handsome face of Guise looked through the doorway.
+It was gone as soon as seen; it was there a second only. But more than
+one recognised it, and wondered. For was not the young Duke in evil
+odour with the King by reason of the attack on the Admiral? And had he
+not been chased from Paris only that morning and forbidden to return?
+
+They were still wondering, still gazing, when abruptly--as he did all
+things--Charles thrust back his chair.
+
+"Foucauld, you owe me ten pieces!" he cried with glee, and he slapped the
+table. "Pay, my friend; pay!"
+
+"To-morrow, little master; to-morrow!" Rochefoucauld answered in the same
+tone. And he rose to his feet.
+
+"To-morrow!" Charles repeated. "To-morrow?" And on the word his jaw
+fell. He looked wildly round. His face was ghastly.
+
+"Well, sire, and why not?" Rochefoucauld answered in astonishment. And
+in his turn he looked round, wondering; and a chill fell on him. "Why
+not?" he repeated.
+
+For a moment no one answered him: the silence in the Chamber was intense.
+Where he looked, wherever he looked, he met solemn, wondering eyes, such
+eyes as gaze on men in their coffins.
+
+"What has come to you all?" he cried, with an effort. "What is the jest,
+for faith, sire, I don't see it?"
+
+The King seemed incapable of speech, and it was Chicot who filled the
+gap.
+
+"It is pretty apparent," he said, with a rude laugh. "The cock will lay
+and Foucauld will pay--to-morrow!"
+
+The young nobleman's colour rose; between him and the Gascon gentleman
+was no love lost.
+
+"There are some debts I pay to-day," he cried haughtily. "For the rest,
+farewell my little master! When one does not understand the jest it is
+time to be gone."
+
+He was halfway to the door, watched by all, when the King spoke.
+
+"Foucauld!" he cried, in an odd, strangled voice. "Foucauld!" And the
+Huguenot favourite turned back, wondering. "One minute!" the King
+continued, in the same forced voice. "Stay till morning--in my closet.
+It is late now. We'll play away the rest of the night!"
+
+"Your Majesty must excuse me," Rochefoucauld answered frankly. "I am
+dead asleep."
+
+"You can sleep in the Garde-Robe," the King persisted.
+
+"Thank you for nothing, sire!" was the gay answer. "I know that bed! I
+shall sleep longer and better in my own."
+
+The King shuddered, but strove to hide the movement under a shrug of his
+shoulders. He turned away.
+
+"It is God's will!" he muttered. He was white to the lips.
+
+Rochefoucauld did not catch the words. "Good night, sire," he cried.
+"Farewell, little master." And with a nod here and there, he passed to
+the door, followed by Mergey and Chamont, two gentlemen of his suite.
+
+Nancay raised the curtain with an obsequious gesture. "Pardon me, M. le
+Comte," he said, "do you go to his Highness's?"
+
+"For a few minutes, Nancay."
+
+"Permit me to go with you. The guards may be set."
+
+"Do so, my friend," Rochefoucauld answered. "Ah, Tignonville, is it
+you?"
+
+"I am come to attend you to your lodging," the young man said. And he
+ranged up beside the other, as, the curtain fallen behind them, they
+walked along the gallery.
+
+Rochefoucauld stopped and laid his hand on Tignonville's sleeve.
+
+"Thanks, dear lad," he said, "but I am going to the Princess Dowager's.
+Afterwards to his Highness's. I may be detained an hour or more. You
+will not like to wait so long."
+
+M. de Tignonville's face fell ludicrously. "Well, no," he said. "I--I
+don't think I could wait so long--to-night."
+
+"Then come to-morrow night," Rochefoucauld answered, with good nature.
+
+"With pleasure," the other cried heartily, his relief evident.
+"Certainly. With pleasure." And, nodding good night, they parted.
+
+While Rochefoucauld, with Nancay at his side and his gentlemen attending
+him, passed along the echoing and now empty gallery, the younger man
+bounded down the stairs to the great hall of the Caryatides, his face
+radiant. He for one was not sleepy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. THE HOUSE NEXT THE GOLDEN MAID.
+
+
+We have it on record that before the Comte de la Rochefoucauld left the
+Louvre that night he received the strongest hints of the peril which
+threatened him; and at least one written warning was handed to him by a
+stranger in black, and by him in turn was communicated to the King of
+Navarre. We are told further that when he took his final leave, about
+the hour of eleven, he found the courtyard brilliantly lighted, and the
+three companies of guards--Swiss, Scotch, and French--drawn up in ranked
+array from the door of the great hall to the gate which opened on the
+street. But, the chronicler adds, neither this precaution, sinister as
+it appeared to some of his suite, nor the grave farewell which
+Rambouillet, from his post at the gate, took of one of his gentlemen,
+shook that chivalrous soul or sapped its generous confidence.
+
+M. de Tignonville was young and less versed in danger than the Governor
+of Rochelle; with him, had he seen so much, it might have been different.
+But he left the Louvre an hour earlier--at a time when the precincts of
+the palace, gloomy-seeming to us in the light cast by coming events, wore
+their wonted aspect. His thoughts, moreover, as he crossed the
+courtyard, were otherwise employed. So much so, indeed, that though he
+signed to his two servants to follow him, he seemed barely conscious what
+he was doing; nor did he shake off his reverie until he reached the
+corner of the Rue Baillet. Here the voices of the Swiss who stood on
+guard opposite Coligny's lodgings, at the end of the Rue Bethizy, could
+be plainly heard. They had kindled a fire in an iron basket set in the
+middle of the road, and knots of them were visible in the distance,
+moving to and fro about their piled arms.
+
+Tignonville paused before he came within the radius of the firelight,
+and, turning, bade his servants take their way home. "I shall follow,
+but I have business first," he added curtly.
+
+The elder of the two demurred. "The streets are not too safe," he said.
+"In two hours or less, my lord, it will be midnight. And then--"
+
+"Go, booby; do you think I am a child?" his master retorted angrily.
+"I've my sword and can use it. I shall not be long. And do you hear,
+men, keep a still tongue, will you?"
+
+The men, country fellows, obeyed reluctantly, and with a full intention
+of sneaking after him the moment he had turned his back. But he
+suspected them of this, and stood where he was until they had passed the
+fire, and could no longer detect his movements. Then he plunged quickly
+into the Rue Baillet, gained through it the Rue du Roule, and traversing
+that also, turned to the right into the Rue Ferronerie, the main
+thoroughfare, east and west, of Paris. Here he halted in front of the
+long, dark outer wall of the Cemetery of the Innocents, in which, across
+the tombstones and among the sepulchres of dead Paris, the living Paris
+of that day, bought and sold, walked, gossiped, and made love.
+
+About him things were to be seen that would have seemed stranger to him
+had he been less strange to the city. From the quarter of the markets
+north of him, a quarter which fenced in the cemetery on two sides, the
+same dull murmur proceeded, which Mademoiselle de Vrillac had remarked an
+hour earlier. The sky above the cemetery glowed with reflected light,
+the cause of which was not far to seek, for every window of the tall
+houses that overlooked it, and the huddle of booths about it, contributed
+a share of the illumination. At an hour late even for Paris, an hour
+when honest men should have been sunk in slumber, this strange brilliance
+did for a moment perplex him; but the past week had been so full of
+fetes, of masques and frolics, often devised on the moment and dependent
+on the King's whim, that he set this also down to such a cause, and
+wondered no more.
+
+The lights in the houses did not serve the purpose he had in his mind,
+but beside the closed gate of the cemetery, and between two stalls, was a
+votive lamp burning before an image of the Mother and Child. He crossed
+to this, and assuring himself by a glance to right and left that he stood
+in no danger from prowlers, he drew a note from his breast. It had been
+slipped into his hand in the gallery before he saw Mademoiselle to her
+lodging; it had been in his possession barely an hour. But brief as its
+contents were, and easily committed to memory, he had perused it thrice
+already.
+
+"At the house next the Golden Maid, Rue Cinq Diamants, an hour before
+midnight, you may find the door open should you desire to talk farther
+with C. St. L."
+
+As he read it for the fourth time the light of the lamp fell athwart his
+face; and even as his fine clothes had never seemed to fit him worse than
+when he faintly denied the imputations of gallantry launched at him by
+Nancay, so his features had never looked less handsome than they did now.
+The glow of vanity which warmed his cheek as he read the message, the
+smile of conceit which wreathed his lips, bespoke a nature not of the
+most noble; or the lamp did him less than justice. Presently he kissed
+the note, and hid it. He waited until the clock of St. Jacques struck
+the hour before midnight; and then moving forward, he turned to the right
+by way of the narrow neck leading to the Rue Lombard. He walked in the
+kennel here, his sword in his hand and his eyes looking to right and
+left; for the place was notorious for robberies. But though he saw more
+than one figure lurking in a doorway or under the arch that led to a
+passage, it vanished on his nearer approach. In less than a minute he
+reached the southern end of the street that bore the odd title of the
+Five Diamonds.
+
+Situate in the crowded quarter of the butchers, and almost in the shadow
+of their famous church, this street--which farther north was continued in
+the Rue Quimcampoix--presented in those days a not uncommon mingling of
+poverty and wealth. On one side of the street a row of lofty gabled
+houses, built under Francis the First, sheltered persons of good
+condition; on the other, divided from these by the width of the road and
+a reeking kennel, a row of peat-houses, the hovels of cobblers and
+sausage-makers, leaned against shapeless timber houses which tottered
+upwards in a medley of sagging roofs and bulging gutters. Tignonville
+was strange to the place, and nine nights out of ten he would have been
+at a disadvantage. But, thanks to the tapers that to-night shone in many
+windows, he made out enough to see that he need search only the one side;
+and with a beating heart he passed along the row of newer houses, looking
+eagerly for the sign of the Golden Maid.
+
+He found it at last; and then for a moment he stood puzzled. The note
+said, next door to the Golden Maid, but it did not say on which side. He
+scrutinised the nearer house, but he saw nothing to determine him; and he
+was proceeding to the farther, when he caught sight of two men, who,
+ambushed behind a horse-block on the opposite side of the roadway, seemed
+to be watching his movements. Their presence flurried him; but much to
+his relief his next glance at the houses showed him that the door of the
+farther one was unlatched. It stood slightly ajar, permitting a beam of
+light to escape into the street.
+
+He stepped quickly to it--the sooner he was within the house the
+better--pushed the door open and entered. As soon as he was inside he
+tried to close the entrance behind him, but he found he could not; the
+door would not shut. After a brief trial he abandoned the attempt and
+passed quickly on, through a bare lighted passage which led to the foot
+of a staircase, equally bare. He stood at this point an instant and
+listened, in the hope that Madame's maid would come to him. At first he
+heard nothing save his own breathing; then a gruff voice from above
+startled him.
+
+"This way, Monsieur," it said. "You are early, but not too soon!"
+
+So Madame trusted her footman! M. de Tignonville shrugged his shoulders;
+but after all, it was no affair of his, and he went up. Halfway to the
+top, however, he stood, an oath on his lips. Two men had entered by the
+open door below--even as he had entered! And as quietly!
+
+The imprudence of it! The imprudence of leaving the door so that it
+could not be closed! He turned, and descended to meet them, his teeth
+set, his hand on his sword, one conjecture after another whirling in his
+brain. Was he beset? Was it a trap? Was it a rival? Was it chance?
+Two steps he descended; and then the voice he had heard before cried
+again, but more imperatively--
+
+"No, Monsieur, this way! Did you not hear me? This way, and be quick,
+if you please. By-and-by there will be a crowd, and then the more we
+have dealt with the better!"
+
+He knew now that he had made a mistake, that he had entered the wrong
+house; and naturally his impulse was to continue his descent and secure
+his retreat. But the pause had brought the two men who had entered face
+to face with him, and they showed no signs of giving way. On the
+contrary.
+
+"The room is above, Monsieur," the foremost said, in a matter-of-fact
+tone, and with a slight salutation. "After you, if you please," and he
+signed to him to return.
+
+He was a burly man, grim and truculent in appearance, and his follower
+was like him. Tignonville hesitated, then turned and ascended. But as
+soon as he had reached the landing where they could pass him, he turned
+again.
+
+"I have made a mistake, I think," he said. "I have entered the wrong
+house."
+
+"Are you for the house next the Golden Maid, Monsieur?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Rue Cinq Diamants, Quarter of the Boucherie?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"No mistake, then," the stout man replied firmly. "You are early, that
+is all. You have arms, I see. Maillard!"--to the person whose voice
+Tignonville had heard at the head of the stairs--"A white sleeve, and a
+cross for Monsieur's hat, and his name on the register. Come, make a
+beginning! Make a beginning, man."
+
+"To be sure, Monsieur. All is ready."
+
+"Then lose no time, I say. Here are others, also early in the good
+cause. Gentlemen, welcome! Welcome all who are for the true faith!
+Death to the heretics! 'Kill, and no quarter!' is the word to-night!"
+
+"Death to the heretics!" the last comers cried in chorus. "Kill and no
+quarter! At what hour, M. le Prevot?"
+
+"At daybreak," the Provost answered importantly. "But have no fear, the
+tocsin will sound. The King and our good man M. de Guise have all in
+hand. A white sleeve, a white cross, and a sharp knife shall rid Paris
+of the vermin! Gentlemen of the quarter, the word of the night is 'Kill,
+and no quarter! Death to the Huguenots!'"
+
+"Death! Death to the Huguenots! Kill, and no quarter!" A dozen--the
+room was beginning to fill--waved their weapons and echoed the cry.
+
+Tignonville had been fortunate enough to apprehend the position--and the
+peril in which he stood--before Maillard advanced to him bearing a white
+linen sleeve. In the instant of discovery his heart had stood a moment,
+the blood had left his cheeks; but with some faults, he was no coward,
+and he managed to hide his emotion. He held out his left arm, and
+suffered the beadle to pass the sleeve over it and to secure the white
+linen above the elbow. Then at a gesture he gave up his velvet cap, and
+saw it decorated with a white cross of the same material.
+
+"Now the register, Monsieur," Maillard continued briskly; and waving him
+in the direction of a clerk, who sat at the end of the long table, having
+a book and a ink-horn before him, he turned to the next comer.
+
+Tignonville would fain have avoided the ordeal of the register, but the
+clerk's eye was on him. He had been fortunate so far, but he knew that
+the least breath of suspicion would destroy him, and summoning his wits
+together he gave his name in a steady voice. "Anne Desmartins." It was
+his mother's maiden name, and the first that came into his mind.
+
+"Of Paris?"
+
+"Recently; by birth, of the Limousin."
+
+"Good, Monsieur," the clerk answered, writing in the name. And he turned
+to the next. "And you, my friend?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. THE EVE OF THE FEAST.
+
+
+It was Tignonville's salvation that the men who crowded the long white-
+walled room, and exchanged vile boasts under the naked flaring lights,
+were of all classes. There were butchers, natives of the surrounding
+quarter whom the scent of blood had drawn from their lairs; and there
+were priests with hatchet faces, who whispered in the butchers' ears.
+There were gentlemen of the robe, and plain mechanics, rich merchants in
+their gowns, and bare-armed ragpickers, sleek choristers, and shabby led-
+captains; but differ as they might in other points, in one thing all were
+alike. From all, gentle or simple, rose the same cry for blood, the same
+aspiration to be first equipped for the fray. In one corner a man of
+rank stood silent and apart, his hand on his sword, the working of his
+face alone betraying the storm that reigned within. In another, a Norman
+horse-dealer talked in low whispers with two thieves. In a third, a gold-
+wire drawer addressed an admiring group from the Sorbonne; and meantime
+the middle of the floor grew into a seething mass of muttering, scowling
+men, through whom the last comers, thrust as they might, had much ado to
+force their way.
+
+And from all under the low ceiling rose a ceaseless hum, though none
+spoke loud. "Kill! kill! kill!" was the burden; the accompaniment such
+profanities and blasphemies as had long disgraced the Paris pulpits, and
+day by day had fanned the bigotry--already at a white heat--of the
+Parisian populace. Tignonville turned sick as he listened, and would
+fain have closed his ears. But for his life he dared not. And presently
+a cripple in a beggar's garb, a dwarfish, filthy creature with matted
+hair, twitched his sleeve, and offered him a whetstone.
+
+"Are you sharp, noble sir?" he asked, with a leer. "Are you sharp? It's
+surprising how the edge goes on the bone. A cut and thrust? Well, every
+man to his taste. But give me a broad butcher's knife and I'll ask no
+help, be it man, woman, or child!"
+
+A bystander, a lean man in rusty black, chuckled as he listened.
+
+"But the woman or the child for choice, eh, Jehan?" he said. And he
+looked to Tignonville to join in the jest.
+
+"Ay, give me a white throat for choice!" the cripple answered, with
+horrible zest. "And there'll be delicate necks to prick to-night! Lord,
+I think I hear them squeal! You don't need it, sir?" he continued, again
+proffering the whetstone. "No? Then I'll give my blade another whet, in
+the name of our Lady, the Saints, and good Father Pezelay!"
+
+"Ay, and give me a turn!" the lean man cried, proffering his weapon. "May
+I die if I do not kill one of the accursed for every finger of my hands!"
+
+"And toe of my feet!" the cripple answered, not to be outdone. "And toe
+of my feet! A full score!"
+
+"'Tis according to your sins!" the other, who had something of the air of
+a Churchman, answered. "The more heretics killed, the more sins
+forgiven. Remember that, brother, and spare not if your soul be
+burdened! They blaspheme God and call Him paste! In the paste of their
+own blood," he continued ferociously, "I will knead them and roll them
+out, saith the good Father Pezelay, my master!"
+
+The cripple crossed himself. "Whom God keep," he said. "He is a good
+man. But you are looking ill, noble sir?" he continued, peering
+curiously at the young Huguenot.
+
+"'Tis the heat," Tignonville muttered. "The night is stifling, and the
+lights make it worse. I will go nearer the door."
+
+He hoped to escape them; he had some hope even of escaping from the room
+and giving the alarm. But when he had forced his way to the threshold,
+he found it guarded by two pikemen; and glancing back to see if his
+movements were observed--for he knew that his agitation might have
+awakened suspicion--he found that the taller of the two whom he had left,
+the black-garbed man with the hungry face, was watching him a-tiptoe,
+over the shoulders of the crowd.
+
+With that, and the sense of his impotence, the lights began to swim
+before his eyes. The catastrophe that overhung his party, the fate so
+treacherously prepared for all whom he loved and all with whom his
+fortunes were bound up, confused his brain almost to delirium. He strove
+to think, to calculate chances, to imagine some way in which he might
+escape from the room, or from a window might cry the alarm. But he could
+not bring his mind to a point. Instead, in lightning flashes he foresaw
+what must happen: his betrothed in the hands of the murderers; the fair
+face that had smiled on him frozen with terror; brave men, the fighters
+of Montauban, the defenders of Angely, strewn dead through the dark lanes
+of the city. And now a gust of passion, and now a shudder of fear,
+seized him; and in any other assembly his agitation must have led to
+detection. But in that room were many twitching faces and trembling
+hands. Murder, cruel, midnight, and most foul, wrung even from the
+murderers her toll of horror. While some, to hide the nervousness they
+felt, babbled of what they would do, others betrayed by the intentness
+with which they awaited the signal, the dreadful anticipations that
+possessed their souls.
+
+Before he had formed any plan, a movement took place near the door. The
+stairs shook beneath the sudden trampling of feet, a voice cried "De par
+le Roi! De par le Roi!" and the babel of the room died down. The throng
+swayed and fell back on either hand, and Marshal Tavannes entered,
+wearing half armour, with a white sash; he was followed by six or eight
+gentlemen in like guise. Amid cries of "Jarnac! Jarnac!"--for to him
+the credit of that famous fight, nominally won by the King's brother, was
+popularly given--he advanced up the room, met the Provost of the
+merchants, and began to confer with him. Apparently he asked the latter
+to select some men who could be trusted on a special mission, for the
+Provost looked round and beckoned to his side one or two of higher rank
+than the herd, and then one or two of the most truculent aspect.
+
+Tignonville trembled lest he should be singled out. He had hidden
+himself as well as he could at the rear of the crowd by the door; but his
+dress, so much above the common, rendered him conspicuous. He fancied
+that the Provost's eye ranged the crowd for him; and to avoid it and
+efface himself he moved a pace to his left.
+
+The step was fatal. It saved him from the Provost, but it brought him
+face to face and eye to eye with Count Hannibal, who stood in the first
+rank at his brother's elbow. Tavannes stared an instant as if he doubted
+his eyesight. Then, as doubt gave slow place to certainty, and surprise
+to amazement, he smiled. And after a moment he looked another way.
+
+Tignonville's heart gave a great bump and seemed to stand still. The
+lights whirled before his eyes, there was a roaring in his ears. He
+waited for the word that should denounce him. It did not come. And
+still it did not come; and Marshal Tavannes was turning. Yes, turning,
+and going; the Provost, bowing low, was attending him to the door; his
+suite were opening on either side to let him pass. And Count Hannibal?
+Count Hannibal was following also, as if nothing had occurred. As if he
+had seen nothing!
+
+The young man caught his breath. Was it possible that he had imagined
+the start of recognition, the steady scrutiny, the sinister smile? No;
+for as Tavannes followed the others, he hung an instant on his heel,
+their eyes met again, and once more he smiled. In the next breath he was
+gone through the doorway, his spurs rang on the stairs; and the babel of
+the crowd, checked by the great man's presence, broke out anew, and
+louder.
+
+Tignonville shuddered. He was saved as by a miracle; saved, he did not
+know how. But the respite, though its strangeness diverted his thoughts
+for a while, brought short relief. The horrors which impended over
+others surged afresh into his mind, and filled him with a maddening sense
+of impotence. To be one hour, only one short half-hour without! To run
+through the sleeping streets, and scream in the dull ears which a King's
+flatteries had stopped as with wool! To go up and down and shake into
+life the guests whose royal lodgings daybreak would turn to a shambles
+reeking with their blood! They slept, the gentle Teligny, the brave
+Pardaillan, the gallant Rochefoucauld, Piles the hero of St. Jean, while
+the cruel city stirred rustling about them, and doom crept whispering to
+the door. They slept, they and a thousand others, gentle and simple,
+young and old; while the half-mad Valois shifted between two opinions,
+and the Italian woman, accursed daughter of an accursed race, cried,
+"Hark!" at her window, and looked eastwards for the dawn.
+
+And the women? The woman he was to marry? And the others? In an access
+of passion he thrust aside those who stood between, he pushed his way,
+disregarding complaints, disregarding opposition, to the door. But the
+pikes lay across it, and he could not utter a syllable to save his life.
+He would have flung himself on the doorkeepers, for he was losing control
+of himself; but as he drew back for the spring, a hand clutched his
+sleeve, and a voice he loathed hummed in his ear.
+
+"No, fair play, noble sir; fair play!" the cripple Jehan muttered,
+forcibly drawing him aside. "All start together, and it's no man's loss.
+But if there is any little business," he continued, lowering his tone and
+peering with a cunning look into the other's face, "of your own, noble
+sir, or your friends', anything or anybody you want despatched, count on
+me. It were better, perhaps, you didn't appear in it yourself, and a man
+you can trust--"
+
+"What do you mean?" the young man cried, recoiling from him.
+
+"No need to look surprised, noble sir," the lean man, who had joined
+them, answered in a soothing tone. "Who kills to-night does God service,
+and who serves God much may serve himself a little. 'Thou shalt not
+muzzle the ox that treadeth out the corn,' says good Father Pezelay."
+
+"Hear, hear!" the cripple chimed in eagerly, his impatience such that he
+danced on his toes. "He preaches as well as the good father his master!
+So frankly, noble sir, what is it? What is it? A woman grown ugly? A
+rich man grown old, with perchance a will in his chest? Or a young heir
+that stands in my lord's way? Whichever it be, or whatever it be, trust
+me and our friend here, and my butcher's gully shall cut the knot."
+
+Tignonville shook his head.
+
+"But something there is," the lean man persisted obstinately; and he cast
+a suspicious glance at Tignonville's clothes. It was evident that the
+two had discussed him, and the motives of his presence there. "Have the
+dice proved fickle, my lord, and are you for the jewellers' shops on the
+bridge to fill your purse again? If so, take my word, it were better to
+go three than one, and we'll enlist."
+
+"Ay, we know shops on the bridge where you can plunge your arm elbow-deep
+in gold," the cripple muttered, his eyes sparkling greedily. "There's
+Baillet's, noble sir! There's a shop for you! And there's the man's
+shop who works for the King. He's lame like me. And I know the way to
+all. Oh, it will be a merry night if they ring before the dawn. It must
+be near daybreak now. And what's that?"
+
+Ay, what was it? A score of voices called for silence; a breathless hush
+fell on the crowd. A moment the fiercest listened, with parted lips and
+starting eyes. Then, "It was the bell!" cried one, "let us out!" "It
+was not!" cried another. "It was a pistol shot!" "Anyhow let us out!"
+the crowd roared in chorus; "let us out!" And they pressed in a furious
+mass towards the door, as if they would force it, signal or no signal.
+
+But the pikemen stood fast, and the throng, checked in their first rush,
+turned on one another, and broke into wrangling and disputing; boasting,
+and calling Heaven and the saints to witness how thoroughly, how
+pitilessly, how remorselessly they would purge Paris of this leprosy when
+the signal did sound. Until again above the babel a man cried "Silence!"
+and again they listened. And this time, dulled by walls and distance,
+but unmistakable by the ears of fear or hate, the heavy note of a bell
+came to them on the hot night air. It was the boom, sullen and menacing,
+of the death signal.
+
+The doorkeepers lowered their pikes, and with a wild rush, as of wolves
+swarming on their prey, the band stormed the door, and thrust and
+struggled and battled a way down the narrow staircase, and along the
+narrow passage. "A bas les Huguenots! Mort aux Huguenots!" they
+shouted; and shrieking, sweating, spurning with vile hands, viler faces,
+they poured pell-mell into the street, and added their clamour to the
+boom of the tocsin that, as by magic and in a moment, turned the streets
+of Paris into a hell of blood and cruelty. For as it was here, so it was
+in a dozen other quarters.
+
+Quickly as they streamed out--and to have issued more quickly would have
+been impossible--fiercely as they pushed and fought and clove their way,
+Tignonville was of the foremost. And for a moment, seeing the street
+clear before him and almost empty, the Huguenot thought that he might do
+something. He might outstrip the stream of rapine, he might carry the
+alarm; at worst he might reach his betrothed before harm befell her. But
+when he had sped fifty yards, his heart sank. True, none passed him; but
+under the spell of the alarm-bell the stones themselves seemed to turn to
+men. Houses, courts, alleys, the very churches vomited men. In a
+twinkling the street was alive with men, roared with them as with a
+rushing tide, gleamed with their lights and weapons, thundered with the
+volume of their thousand voices. He was no longer ahead, men were
+running before him, behind him, on his right hand and on his left. In
+every side-street, every passage, men were running; and not men only, but
+women, children, furious creatures without age or sex. And all the time
+the bell tolled overhead, tolled faster and faster, and louder and
+louder; and shots and screams, and the clash of arms, and the fall of
+strong doors began to swell the maelstrom of sound.
+
+He was in the Rue St. Honore now, and speeding westward. But the flood
+still rose with him, and roared abreast of him. Nay, it outstripped him.
+When he came, panting, within sight of his goal, and lacked but a hundred
+paces of it, he found his passage barred by a dense mass of people moving
+slowly to meet him. In the heart of the press the light of a dozen
+torches shone on half as many riders mailed and armed; whose eyes, as
+they moved on, and the furious gleaming eyes of the rabble about them,
+never left the gabled roofs on their right. On these from time to time a
+white-clad figure showed itself, and passed from chimney-stack to chimney-
+stack, or, stooping low, ran along the parapet. Every time that this
+happened, the men on horseback pointed upwards and the mob foamed with
+rage.
+
+Tignonville groaned, but he could not help. Unable to go forward, he
+turned, and with others hurrying, shouting, and brandishing weapons, he
+pressed into the Rue du Roule, passed through it, and gained the Bethizy.
+But here, as he might have foreseen, all passage was barred at the Hotel
+Ponthieu by a horde of savages, who danced and yelled and sang songs
+round the Admiral's body, which lay in the middle of the way; while to
+right and left men were bursting into houses and forcing new victims into
+the street. The worst had happened there, and he turned panting,
+regained the Rue St. Honore, and, crossing it and turning left-handed,
+darted through side streets until he came again into the main
+thoroughfare a little beyond the Croix du Tiroir, that marked the corner
+of Mademoiselle's house.
+
+Here his last hope left him. The street swarmed with bands of men
+hurrying to and fro as in a sacked city. The scum of the Halles, the
+rabble of the quarter poured this way and that, here at random, there
+swayed and directed by a few knots of men-at-arms, whose corselets
+reflected the glare of a hundred torches. At one time and within sight,
+three or four houses were being stormed. On every side rose
+heart-rending cries, mingled with brutal laughter, with savage jests,
+with cries of "To the river!" The most cruel of cities had burst its
+bounds and was not to be stayed; nor would be stayed until the Seine ran
+red to the sea, and leagues below, in pleasant Normandy hamlets, men, for
+fear of the pestilence, pushed the corpses from the bridges with poles
+and boat-hooks.
+
+All this Tignonville saw, though his eyes, leaping the turmoil, looked
+only to the door at which he had left Mademoiselle a few hours earlier.
+There a crowd of men pressed and struggled; but from the spot where he
+stood he could see no more. That was enough, however. Rage nerved him,
+and despair; his world was dying round him. If he could not save her he
+would avenge her. Recklessly he plunged into the tumult; blade in hand,
+with vigorous blows he thrust his way through, his white sleeve and the
+white cross in his hat gaining him passage until he reached the fringe of
+the band who beset the door. Here his first attempt to pass failed; and
+he might have remained hampered by the crowd, if a squad of archers had
+not ridden up. As they spurred to the spot, heedless over whom they
+rode, he clutched a stirrup, and was borne with them into the heart of
+the crowd. In a twinkling he stood on the threshold of the house, face
+to face and foot to foot with Count Hannibal, who stood also on the
+threshold, but with his back to the door, which, unbarred and unbolted,
+gaped open behind him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. ROUGH WOOING.
+
+
+The young man had caught the delirium that was abroad that night. The
+rage of the trapped beast was in his heart, his hand held a sword. To
+strike blindly, to strike without question the first who withstood him
+was the wild-beast instinct; and if Count Hannibal had not spoken on the
+instant, the Marshal's brother had said his last word in the world.
+
+Yet as he stood there, a head above the crowd, he seemed unconscious
+alike of Tignonville and the point that all but pricked his breast. Swart
+and grim-visaged, his harsh features distorted by the glare which shone
+upon him, he looked beyond the Huguenot to the sea of tossing arms and
+raging faces that surged about the saddles of the horsemen. It was to
+these he spoke.
+
+"Begone, dogs!" he cried, in a voice that startled the nearest, "or I
+will whip you away with my stirrup-leathers! Do you hear? Begone! This
+house is not for you! Burn, kill, plunder where you will, but go hence!"
+
+"But 'tis on the list!" one of the wretches yelled. "'Tis on the list!"
+And he pushed forward until he stood at Tignonville's elbow.
+
+"And has no cross!" shrieked another, thrusting himself forward in his
+turn. "See you, let us by, whoever you are! In the King's name, kill!
+It has no cross!"
+
+"Then," Tavannes thundered, "will I nail you for a cross to the front of
+it! No cross, say you? I will make one of you, foul crow!"
+
+And as he spoke, his arm shot out; the man recoiled, his fellow likewise.
+But one of the mounted archers took up the matter.
+
+"Nay, but, my lord," he said--he knew Tavannes--"it is the King's will
+there be no favour shown to-night to any, small or great. And this house
+is registered, and is full of heretics."
+
+"And has no cross!" the rabble urged in chorus. And they leapt up and
+down in their impatience, and to see the better. "And has no cross!"
+they persisted. They could understand that. Of what use crosses, if
+they were not to kill where there was no cross? Daylight was not
+plainer. Tavannes' face grew dark, and he shook his finger at the archer
+who had spoken.
+
+"Rogue," he cried, "does the King's will run here only? Are there no
+other houses to sack or men to kill, that you must beard me? And favour?
+You will have little of mine, if you do not budge and take your vile tail
+with you! Off! Or must I cry 'Tavannes!' and bid my people sweep you
+from the streets?"
+
+The foremost rank hesitated, awed by his manner and his name; while the
+rearmost, attracted by the prospect of easier pillage, had gone off
+already. The rest wavered; and another and another broke away. The
+archer who had put himself forward saw which way the wind was blowing,
+and he shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Well, my lord, as you will," he said sullenly. "All the same I would
+advise you to close the door and bolt and bar. We shall not be the last
+to call to-day." And he turned his horse in ill-humour, and forced it,
+snorting and plunging, through the crowd.
+
+"Bolt and bar?" Tavannes cried after him in fury. "See you my answer to
+that!" And turning on the threshold, "Within there!" he cried. "Open
+the shutters and set lights, and the table! Light, I say; light! And
+lay on quickly, if you value your lives! And throw open, for I sup with
+your mistress to-night, if it rain blood without! Do you hear me,
+rogues? Set on!"
+
+He flung the last word at the quaking servants; then he turned again to
+the street. He saw that the crowd was melting, and, looking in
+Tignonville's face, he laughed aloud.
+
+"Does Monsieur sup with us?" he said. "To complete the party? Or will
+he choose to sup with our friends yonder? It is for him to say. I
+confess, for my part," with an awful smile, "their hospitality seems a
+trifle crude, and boisterous."
+
+Tignonville looked behind him and shuddered. The same horde which had so
+lately pressed about the door had found a victim lower down the street,
+and, as Tavannes spoke, came driving back along the roadway, a mass of
+tossing lights and leaping, running figures, from the heart of which rose
+the screams of a creature in torture. So terrible were the sounds that
+Tignonville leant half swooning against the door-post; and even the iron
+heart of Tavannes seemed moved for a moment.
+
+For a moment only: then he looked at his companion, and his lip curled.
+
+"You'll join us, I think?" he said, with an undisguised sneer. "Then,
+after you, Monsieur. They are opening the shutters. Doubtless the table
+is laid, and Mademoiselle is expecting us. After you, Monsieur, if you
+please. A few hours ago I should have gone first, for you, in this
+house"--with a sinister smile--"were at home! Now, we have changed
+places."
+
+Whatever he meant by the gibe--and some smack of an evil jest lurked in
+his tone--he played the host so far as to urge his bewildered companion
+along the passage and into the living-chamber on the left, where he had
+seen from without that his orders to light and lay were being executed. A
+dozen candles shone on the board, and lit up the apartment. What the
+house contained of food and wine had been got together and set on the
+table; from the low, wide window, beetle-browed and diamond-paned, which
+extended the whole length of the room and looked on the street at the
+height of a man's head above the roadway, the shutters had been
+removed--doubtless by trembling and reluctant fingers. To such eyes of
+passers-by as looked in, from the inferno of driving crowds and gleaming
+weapons which prevailed outside--and not outside only, but throughout
+Paris--the brilliant room and the laid table must have seemed strange
+indeed!
+
+To Tignonville, all that had happened, all that was happening, seemed a
+dream: a dream his entrance under the gentle impulsion of this man who
+dominated him; a dream Mademoiselle standing behind the table with
+blanched face and stony eyes; a dream the cowering servants huddled in a
+corner beyond her; a dream his silence, her silence, the moment of
+waiting before Count Hannibal spoke.
+
+When he did speak it was to count the servants. "One, two, three, four,
+five," he said. "And two of them women. Mademoiselle is but poorly
+attended. Are there not"--and he turned to her--"some lacking?"
+
+The girl opened her lips twice, but no sound issued. The third time--
+
+"Two went out," she muttered in a hoarse, strangled voice, "and have not
+returned."
+
+"And have not returned?" he answered, raising his eyebrows. "Then I fear
+we must not wait for them. We might wait long!" And turning sharply to
+the panic-stricken servants, "Go you to your places! Do you not see that
+Mademoiselle waits to be served?"
+
+The girl shuddered and spoke.
+
+"Do you wish me," she muttered, in the same strangled tone, "to play this
+farce--to the end?"
+
+"The end may be better, Mademoiselle, than you think," he answered,
+bowing. And then to the miserable servants, who hung back afraid to
+leave the shelter of their mistress's skirts, "To your places!" he cried.
+"Set Mademoiselle's chair. Are you so remiss on other days? If so,"
+with a look of terrible meaning, "you will be the less loss! Now,
+Mademoiselle, may I have the honour? And when we are at table we can
+talk."
+
+He extended his hand, and, obedient to his gesture, she moved to the
+place at the head of the table, but without letting her fingers come into
+contact with his. He gave no sign that he noticed this, but he strode to
+the place on her right, and signed to Tignonville to take that on her
+left.
+
+"Will you not be seated?" he continued. For she kept her feet.
+
+She turned her head stiffly, until for the first time her eyes looked
+into his. A shudder more violent than the last shook her.
+
+"Had you not better--kill us at once?" she whispered. The blood had
+forsaken even her lips. Her face was the face of a statue--white,
+beautiful, lifeless.
+
+"I think not," he said gravely. "Be seated, and let us hope for the
+best. And you, sir," he continued, turning to Carlat, "serve your
+mistress with wine. She needs it."
+
+The steward filled for her, and then for each of the men, his shaking
+hand spilling as much as it poured. Nor was this strange. Above the din
+and uproar of the street, above the crash of distant doors, above the
+tocsin that still rang from the reeling steeple of St. Germain's, the
+great bell of the Palais on the island had just begun to hurl its note of
+doom upon the town. A woman crouching at the end of the chamber burst
+into hysterical weeping, but, at a glance from Tavannes' terrible eye,
+was mute again.
+
+Tignonville found voice at last. "Have they--killed the Admiral?" he
+muttered, his eyes on the table.
+
+"M. Coligny? An hour ago."
+
+"And Teligny?"
+
+"Him also."
+
+"M. de Rochefoucauld?"
+
+"They are dealing with M. le Comte now, I believe," Tavannes answered.
+"He had his chance and cast it away." And he began to eat.
+
+The man at the table shuddered. The woman continued to look before her,
+but her lips moved as if she prayed. Suddenly a rush of feet, a roar of
+voices surged past the window; for a moment the glare of the torches,
+which danced ruddily on the walls of the room, showed a severed head
+borne above the multitude on a pike. Mademoiselle, with a low cry, made
+an effort to rise, but Count Hannibal grasped her wrist, and she sank
+back half fainting. Then the nearer clamour sank a little, and the
+bells, unchallenged, flung their iron tongues above the maddened city. In
+the east the dawn was growing; soon its grey light would fall on cold
+hearths, on battered doors and shattered weapons, on hordes of wretches
+drunk with greed and hate.
+
+When he could be heard, "What are you going to do with us?" the man asked
+hoarsely.
+
+"That depends," Count Hannibal replied, after a moment's thought.
+
+"On what?"
+
+"On Mademoiselle de Vrillac."
+
+The other's eyes gleamed with passion. He leaned forward.
+
+"What has she to do with it?" he cried. And he stood up and sat down
+again in a breath.
+
+Tavannes raised his eyebrows with a blandness that seemed at odds with
+his harsh visage.
+
+"I will answer that question by another question," he replied. "How many
+are there in the house, my friend?"
+
+"You can count."
+
+Tavannes counted again. "Seven?" he said. Tignonville nodded
+impatiently.
+
+"Seven lives?"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Well, Monsieur, you know the King's will?"
+
+"I can guess it," the other replied furiously. And he cursed the King,
+and the King's mother, calling her Jezebel.
+
+"You can guess it?" Tavannes answered; and then with sudden heat, as if
+that which he had to say could not be said even by him in cold blood,
+"Nay, you know it! You heard it from the archer at the door. You heard
+him say, 'No favour, no quarter for man, for woman, or for child. So
+says the King.' You heard it, but you fence with me. Foucauld, with
+whom his Majesty played to-night, hand to hand and face to face--Foucauld
+is dead! And you think to live? You?" he continued, lashing himself
+into passion. "I know not by what chance you came where I saw you an
+hour gone, nor by what chance you came by that and that"--pointing with
+accusing finger to the badges the Huguenot wore. "But this I know! I
+have but to cry your name from yonder casement, nay, Monsieur, I have but
+to stand aside when the mob go their rounds from house to house, as they
+will go presently, and you will perish as certainly as you have hitherto
+escaped!"
+
+For the second time Mademoiselle turned and looked at him.
+
+"Then," she whispered, with white lips, "to what end this--mockery?"
+
+"To the end that seven lives may be saved, Mademoiselle," he answered,
+bowing.
+
+"At a price?" she muttered.
+
+"At a price," he answered. "A price which women do not find it hard to
+pay--at Court. 'Tis paid every day for pleasure or a whim, for rank or
+the _entree_, for robes and gewgaws. Few, Mademoiselle, are privileged
+to buy a life; still fewer, seven!"
+
+She began to tremble. "I would rather die--seven times!" she cried, her
+voice quivering. And she tried to rise, but sat down again.
+
+"And these?" he said, indicating the servants.
+
+"Far, far rather!" she repeated passionately.
+
+"And Monsieur? And Monsieur?" he urged with stern persistence, while his
+eyes passed lightly from her to Tignonville and back to her again, their
+depths inscrutable. "If you love Monsieur, Mademoiselle, and I believe
+you do--"
+
+"I can die with him!" she cried.
+
+"And he with you?"
+
+She writhed in her chair.
+
+"And he with you?" Count Hannibal repeated, with emphasis; and he thrust
+forward his head. "For that is the question. Think, think,
+Mademoiselle. It is in my power to save from death him whom you love; to
+save you; to save this _canaille_, if it so please you. It is in my
+power to save him, to save you, to save all; and I will save all--at a
+price! If, on the other hand, you deny me that price, I will as
+certainly leave all to perish, as perish they will, before the sun that
+is now rising sets to-night!"
+
+Mademoiselle looked straight before her, the flicker of a dreadful
+prescience in her eyes.
+
+"And the price?" she muttered. "The price?"
+
+"You, Mademoiselle."
+
+"I?"
+
+"Yes, you! Nay, why fence with me?" he continued gently. "You knew it,
+you have said it. You have read it in my eyes these seven days."
+
+She did not speak, or move, or seem to breathe. As he said, she had
+foreseen, she had known the answer. But Tignonville, it seemed, had not.
+He sprang to his feet.
+
+"M. de Tavannes," he cried, "you are a villain!"
+
+"Monsieur?"
+
+"You are a villain! But you shall pay for this!" the young man continued
+vehemently. "You shall not leave this room alive! You shall pay for
+this insult!"
+
+"Insult?" Tavannes answered in apparent surprise; and then, as if
+comprehension broke upon him, "Ah! Monsieur mistakes me," he said, with a
+broad sweep of the hand. "And Mademoiselle also, perhaps? Oh! be
+content, she shall have bell, book, and candle; she shall be tied as
+tight as Holy Church can tie her! Or, if she please, and one survive,
+she shall have a priest of her own church--you call it a church? She
+shall have whichever of the two will serve her better. 'Tis one to me!
+But for paying me, Monsieur," he continued, with irony in voice and
+manner; "when, I pray you? In Eternity? For if you refuse my offer, you
+have done with time. Now? I have but to sound this whistle"--he touched
+a silver whistle which hung at his breast--"and there are those within
+hearing will do your business before you make two passes. Dismiss the
+notion, sir, and understand. You are in my power. Paris runs with
+blood, as noble as yours, as innocent as hers. If you would not perish
+with the rest, decide! And quickly! For what you have seen are but the
+forerunners, what you have heard are but the gentle whispers that predict
+the gale. Do not parley too long; so long that even I may no longer save
+you."
+
+"I would rather die!" Mademoiselle moaned, her face covered. "I would
+rather die!"
+
+"And see him die?" he answered quietly. "And see these die? Think,
+think, child!"
+
+"You will not do it!" she gasped. She shook from head to foot.
+
+"I shall do nothing," he answered firmly. "I shall but leave you to your
+fate, and these to theirs. In the King's teeth I dare save my wife and
+her people; but no others. You must choose--and quickly."
+
+One of the frightened women--it was Mademoiselle's tiring-maid, a girl
+called Javette--made a movement, as if to throw herself at her mistress's
+feet. Tignonville drove her to her place with a word. He turned to
+Count Hannibal.
+
+"But, M. le Comte," he said, "you must be mad! Mad, to wish to marry her
+in this way! You do not love her. You do not want her. What is she to
+you more than other women?"
+
+"What is she to you more than other women?" Tavannes retorted, in a tone
+so sharp and incisive that Tignonville started, and a faint touch of
+colour crept into the wan cheek of the girl, who sat between them, the
+prize of the contest. "What is she more to you than other women? Is she
+more? And yet--you want her!"
+
+"She is more to me," Tignonville answered.
+
+"Is she?" the other retorted, with a ring of keen meaning. "Is she? But
+we bandy words and the storm is rising, as I warned you it would rise.
+Enough for you that I _do_ want her. Enough for you that I _will_ have
+her. She shall be the wife, the willing wife, of Hannibal de Tavannes--or
+I leave her to her fate, and you to yours!"
+
+"Ah, God!" she moaned. "The willing wife!"
+
+"Ay, Mademoiselle, the willing wife," he answered sternly. "Or no man's
+wife!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. WHO TOUCHES TAVANNES?
+
+
+In saying that the storm was rising Count Hannibal had said no more than
+the truth. A new mob had a minute before burst from the eastward into
+the Rue St. Honore; and the roar of its thousand voices swelled louder
+than the importunate clangour of the bells. Behind its moving masses the
+dawn of a new day--Sunday, the 24th of August, the feast of St.
+Bartholomew--was breaking over the Bastille, as if to aid the crowd in
+its cruel work. The gabled streets, the lanes, and gothic courts, the
+stifling wynds, where the work awaited the workers, still lay in
+twilight; still the gleam of the torches, falling on the house-fronts,
+heralded the coming of the crowd. But the dawn was growing, the sun was
+about to rise. Soon the day would be here, giving up the lurking
+fugitive whom darkness, more pitiful, had spared, and stamping with
+legality the horrors that night had striven to hide.
+
+And with day, with the full light, killing would grow more easy, escape
+more hard. Already they were killing on the bridge where the rich
+goldsmiths lived, on the wharves, on the river. They were killing at the
+Louvre, in the courtyard under the King's eyes, and below the windows of
+the Medicis. They were killing in St. Martin and St. Denis and St.
+Antoine; wherever hate, or bigotry, or private malice impelled the hand.
+From the whole city went up a din of lamentation, and wrath, and
+foreboding. From the Cour des Miracles, from the markets, from the
+Boucherie, from every haunt of crime and misery, hordes of wretched
+creatures poured forth; some to rob on their own account, and where they
+listed, none gainsaying; more to join themselves to one of the armed
+bands whose business it was to go from street to street, and house to
+house, quelling resistance, and executing through Paris the high justice
+of the King.
+
+It was one of these swollen bands which had entered the street while
+Tavannes spoke; nor could he have called to his aid a more powerful
+advocate. As the deep "A bas! A bas!" rolled like thunder along the
+fronts of the houses, as the more strident "Tuez! Tuez!" drew nearer and
+nearer, and the lights of the oncoming multitude began to flicker on the
+shuttered gables, the fortitude of the servants gave way. Madame Carlat,
+shivering in every limb, burst into moaning; the tiring-maid, Javette,
+flung herself in terror at Mademoiselle's knees, and, writhing herself
+about them, shrieked to her to save her, only to save her! One of the
+men moved forward on impulse, as if he would close the shutters; and only
+old Carlat remained silent, praying mutely with moving lips and a stern,
+set face.
+
+And Count Hannibal? As the glare of the links in the street grew
+brighter, and ousted the sickly daylight, his form seemed to dilate. He
+stilled the shrieking woman by a glance.
+
+"Choose! Mademoiselle, and quickly!" he said. "For I can only save my
+wife and her people! Quick, for the pinch is coming, and 'twill be no
+boy's play."
+
+A shot, a scream from the street, a rush of racing feet before the window
+seconded his words.
+
+"Quick, Mademoiselle!" he cried. And his breath came a little faster.
+"Quick, before it be too late! Will you save life, or will you kill?"
+
+She looked at her lover with eyes of agony, dumbly questioning him. But
+he made no sign, and only Tavannes marked the look.
+
+"Monsieur has done what he can to save himself," he said, with a sneer.
+"He has donned the livery of the King's servants; he has said, 'Whoever
+perishes, I will live!' But--"
+
+"Curse you!" the young man cried, and, stung to madness, he tore the
+cross from his cap and flung it on the ground. He seized his white
+sleeve and ripped it from shoulder to elbow. Then, when it hung by the
+string only, he held his hand.
+
+"Curse you!" he cried furiously. "I will not at your bidding! I may
+save her yet! I _will_ save her!"
+
+"Fool!" Tavannes answered--but his words were barely audible above the
+deafening uproar. "Can you fight a thousand? Look! Look!" and seizing
+the other's wrist he pointed to the window.
+
+The street glowed like a furnace in the red light of torches, raised on
+poles above a sea of heads; an endless sea of heads, and gaping faces,
+and tossing arms which swept on and on, and on and by. For a while it
+seemed that the torrent would flow past them and would leave them safe.
+Then came a check, a confused outcry, a surging this way and that; the
+torches reeled to and fro, and finally, with a dull roar of "Open! Open!"
+the mob faced about to the house and the lighted window.
+
+For a second it seemed that even Count Hannibal's iron nerves shook a
+little. He stood between the sullen group that surrounded the disordered
+table and the maddened rabble, that gloated on the victims before they
+tore them to pieces. "Open! Open!" the mob howled: and a man dashed in
+the window with his pike.
+
+In that crisis Mademoiselle's eyes met Tavannes' for the fraction of a
+second. She did not speak; nor, had she retained the power to frame the
+words, would they have been audible. But something she must have looked,
+and something of import, though no other than he marked or understood it.
+For in a flash he was at the window and his hand was raised for silence.
+
+"Back!" he thundered. "Back, knaves!" And he whistled shrilly. "Do
+what you will," he went on in the same tone, "but not here! Pass on!
+Pass on!--do you hear?"
+
+But the crowd were not to be lightly diverted. With a persistence brutal
+and unquestioning they continued to howl, "Open! Open!" while the man
+who had broken the window the moment before, Jehan, the cripple with the
+hideous face, seized the lead-work, and tore away a great piece of it.
+Then, laying hold of a bar, he tried to drag it out, setting one foot
+against the wall below. Tavannes saw what he did, and his frame seemed
+to dilate with the fury and violence of his character.
+
+"Dogs!" he shouted, "must I call out my riders and scatter you? Must I
+flog you through the streets with stirrup-leathers? I am Tavannes;
+beware of me! I have claws and teeth and I bite!" he continued, the
+scorn in his words exceeding even the rage of the crowd, at which he
+flung them. "Kill where you please, rob where you please, but not where
+I am! Or I will hang you by the heels on Montfaucon, man by man! I will
+flay your backs. Go! Go! I am Tavannes!"
+
+But the mob, cowed for a moment by the thunder of his voice, by his
+arrogance and recklessness, showed at this that their patience was
+exhausted. With a yell which drowned his tones they swayed forward; a
+dozen thundered on the door, crying, "In the King's name!" As many more
+tore out the remainder of the casement, seized the bars of the window,
+and strove to pull them out or to climb between them. Jehan, the
+cripple, with whom Tignonville had rubbed elbows at the rendezvous, led
+the way.
+
+Count Hannibal watched them a moment, his harsh face bent down to them,
+his features plain in the glare of the torches. But when the cripple,
+raised on the others' shoulders, and emboldened by his adversary's
+inactivity, began to squeeze himself through the bars, Tavannes raised a
+pistol, which he had held unseen behind him, cocked it at leisure, and
+levelled it at the foul face which leered close to his. The dwarf saw
+the weapon and tried to retreat; but it was too late. A flash, a scream,
+and the wretch, shot through the throat, flung up his hands, and fell
+back into the arms of a lean man in black who had lent him his shoulder
+to ascend.
+
+For a few seconds the smoke of the pistol filled the window and the room.
+There was a cry that the Huguenots were escaping, that the Huguenots were
+resisting, that it was a plot; and some shouted to guard the back and
+some to watch the roof, and some to be gone. But when the fumes cleared
+away, the mob saw, with stupor, that all was as it had been. Count
+Hannibal stood where he had stood before, a grim smile on his lips.
+
+"Who comes next?" he cried in a tone of mockery. "I have more pistols!"
+And then with a sudden change to ferocity, "You dogs!" he went on. "You
+scum of a filthy city, sweepings of the Halles! Do you think to beard
+me? Do you think to frighten me or murder me? I am Tavannes, and this
+is my house, and were there a score of Huguenots in it, you should not
+touch one, nor harm a hair of his head! Begone, I say again, while you
+may! Seek women and children, and kill them. But not here!"
+
+For an instant the mingled scorn and brutality of his words silenced
+them. Then from the rear of the crowd came an answer--the roar of an
+arquebuse. The ball whizzed past Count Hannibal's head, and, splashing
+the plaster from the wall within a pace of Tignonville, dropped to the
+ground.
+
+Tavannes laughed. "Bungler!" he cried. "Were you in my troop I would
+dip your trigger-finger in boiling oil to teach you to shoot! But you
+weary me, dogs. I must teach you a lesson, must I?" And he lifted a
+pistol and levelled it. The crowd did not know whether it was the one he
+had discharged or another, but they gave back with a sharp gasp. "I must
+teach you, must I?" he continued with scorn. "Here, Bigot, Badelon,
+drive me these blusterers! Rid the street of them! A Tavannes! A
+Tavannes!"
+
+Not by word or look had he before this betrayed that he had supports. But
+as he cried the name, a dozen men armed to the teeth, who had stood
+motionless under the Croix du Tiroir, fell in a line on the right flank
+of the crowd. The surprise for those nearest them was complete. With
+the flash of the pikes before their eyes, with the cold steel in fancy
+between their ribs, they fled every way, uncertain how many pursued, or
+if any pursuit there was. For a moment the mob, which a few minutes
+before had seemed so formidable that a regiment might have quailed before
+it, bade fair to be routed by a dozen pikes.
+
+And so, had all in the crowd been what he termed them, the rabble and
+sweepings of the streets, it would have been. But in the heart of it,
+and felt rather than seen, were a handful of another kidney; Sorbonne
+students and fierce-eyed priests, with three or four mounted archers, the
+nucleus that, moving through the streets, had drawn together this
+concourse. And these with threats and curse and gleaming eyes stood
+fast, even Tavannes' dare-devils recoiling before the tonsure. The check
+thus caused allowed those who had budged a breathing space. They rallied
+behind the black robes, and began to stone the pikes; who in their turn
+withdrew until they formed two groups, standing on their defence, the one
+before the window, the other before the door.
+
+Count Hannibal had watched the attack and the check, as a man watches a
+play; with smiling interest. In the panic, the torches had been dropped
+or extinguished, and now between the house and the sullen crowd which
+hung back, yet grew moment by moment more dangerous, the daylight fell
+cold on the littered street and the cripple's huddled form prone in the
+gutter. A priest raised on the shoulders of the lean man in black began
+to harangue the mob, and the dull roar of assent, the brandished arms
+which greeted his appeal, had their effect on Tavannes' men. They looked
+to the window, and muttered among themselves. It was plain that they had
+no stomach for a fight with the Church, and were anxious for the order to
+withdraw.
+
+But Count Hannibal gave no order, and, much as his people feared the
+cowls, they feared him more. Meanwhile the speaker's eloquence rose
+higher; he pointed with frenzied gestures to the house. The mob groaned,
+and suddenly a volley of stones fell among the pikemen, whose corselets
+rattled under the shower. The priest seized that moment. He sprang to
+the ground, and to the front. He caught up his robe and waved his hand,
+and the rabble, as if impelled by a single will, rolled forward in a huge
+one-fronted thundering wave, before which the two handfuls of
+pikemen--afraid to strike, yet afraid to fly--were swept away like straws
+upon the tide.
+
+But against the solid walls and oak-barred door of the house the wave
+beat, only to fall back again, a broken, seething mass of brandished arms
+and ravening faces. One point alone was vulnerable, the window, and
+there in the gap stood Tavannes. Quick as thought he fired two pistols
+into the crowd; then, while the smoke for a moment hid all, he whistled.
+
+Whether the signal was a summons to his men to fight their way back--as
+they were doing to the best of their power--or he had resources still
+unseen, was not to be known. For as the smoke began to rise, and while
+the rabble before the window, cowed by the fall of two of their number,
+were still pushing backward instead of forward, there rose behind them
+strange sounds--yells, and the clatter of hoofs, mingled with screams of
+alarm. A second, and into the loose skirts of the crowd came charging
+helter-skelter, pell-mell, a score of galloping, shrieking, cursing
+horsemen, attended by twice as many footmen, who clung to their stirrups
+or to the tails of the horses, and yelled and whooped, and struck in
+unison with the maddened riders.
+
+"On! on!" the foremost shrieked, rolling in his saddle, and foaming at
+the mouth. "Bleed in August, bleed in May! Kill!" And he fired a
+pistol among the rabble, who fled every way to escape his rearing,
+plunging charger.
+
+"Kill! Kill!" cried his followers, cutting the air with their swords, and
+rolling to and fro on their horses in drunken emulation. "Bleed in
+August, bleed in May!"
+
+"On! On!" cried the leader, as the crowd which beset the house fled
+every way before his reckless onset. "Bleed in August, bleed in May!"
+
+The rabble fled, but not so quickly but that one or two were ridden down,
+and this for an instant checked the riders. Before they could pass on--
+
+"Ohe!" cried Count Hannibal from his window. "Ohe!" with a shout of
+laughter, "ride over them, dear brother! Make me a clean street for my
+wedding!"
+
+Marshal Tavannes--for he, the hero of Jarnac, was the leader of this wild
+orgy--turned that way, and strove to rein in his horse.
+
+"What ails them?" he cried, as the maddened animal reared upright, its
+iron hoofs striking fire from the slippery pavement.
+
+"They are rearing like thy Bayard!" Count Hannibal answered. "Whip them,
+whip them for me! Tavannes! Tavannes!"
+
+"What? This canaille?"
+
+"Ay, that canaille!"
+
+"Who touches my brother, touches Tavannes!" the Marshal replied, and
+spurred his horse among the rabble, who had fled to the sides of the
+street and now strove hard to efface themselves against the walls.
+"Begone, dogs; begone!" he cried, still hunting them. And then, "You
+would bite, would you?" And snatching another pistol from his boot, he
+fired it among them, careless whom he hit. "Ha! ha! That stirs you,
+does it!" he continued, as the wretches fled headlong. "Who touches my
+brother, touches Tavannes! On! On!"
+
+Suddenly, from a doorway near at hand, a sombre figure darted into the
+roadway, caught the Marshal's rein, and for a second checked his course.
+The priest--for a priest it was, Father Pezelay, the same who had
+addressed the mob--held up a warning hand.
+
+"Halt!" he cried, with burning eyes. "Halt, my lord! It is written,
+thou shalt not spare the Canaanitish woman. 'Tis not to spare the King
+has given command and a sword, but to kill! 'Tis not to harbour, but to
+smite! To smite!"
+
+"Then smite I will!" the Marshal retorted, and with the butt of his
+pistol struck the zealot down. Then, with as much indifference as he
+would have treated a Huguenot, he spurred his horse over him, with a mad
+laugh at his jest. "Who touches my brother, touches Tavannes!" he
+yelled. "Touches Tavannes! On! On! Bleed in August, bleed in May!"
+
+"On!" shouted his followers, striking about them in the same desperate
+fashion. They were young nobles who had spent the night feasting at the
+Palace, and, drunk with wine and mad with excitement, had left the Louvre
+at daybreak to rouse the city. "A Jarnac! A Jarnac!" they cried, and
+some saluted Count Hannibal as they passed. And so, shouting and
+spurring and following their leader, they swept away down the now empty
+street, carrying terror and a flame wherever their horses bore them that
+morning.
+
+Tavannes, his hands on the ledge of the shattered window, leaned out
+laughing, and followed them with his eyes. A moment, and the mob was
+gone, the street was empty; and one by one, with sheepish faces, his
+pikemen emerged from the doorways and alleys in which they had taken
+refuge. They gathered about the three huddled forms which lay prone and
+still in the gutter: or, not three--two. For even as they approached
+them, one, the priest, rose slowly and giddily to his feet. He turned a
+face bleeding, lean, and relentless towards the window at which Tavannes
+stood. Solemnly, with the sign of the cross, and with uplifted hands, he
+cursed him in bed and at board, by day and by night, in walking, in
+riding, in standing, in the day of battle, and at the hour of death. The
+pikemen fell back appalled, and hid their eyes; and those who were of the
+north crossed themselves, and those who came from the south bent two
+fingers horse-shoe fashion. But Hannibal de Tavannes laughed; laughed in
+his moustache, his teeth showing, and bade them move that carrion to a
+distance, for it would smell when the sun was high. Then he turned his
+back on the street, and looked into the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. IN THE AMPHITHEATRE.
+
+
+The movements of the women had overturned two of the candles; a third had
+guttered out. The three which still burned, contending pallidly with the
+daylight that each moment grew stronger, imparted to the scene the air of
+a debauch too long sustained. The disordered board, the wan faces of the
+servants cowering in their corner, Mademoiselle's frozen look of misery,
+all increased the likeness; which a common exhaustion so far strengthened
+that when Tavannes turned from the window, and, flushed with his triumph,
+met the others' eyes, his seemed the only vigour, and he the only man in
+the company. True, beneath the exhaustion, beneath the collapse of his
+victims, there burned passions, hatreds, repulsions, as fierce as the
+hidden fires of the volcano; but for the time they smouldered ash-choked
+and inert.
+
+He flung the discharged pistols on the table. "If yonder raven speak
+truth," he said, "I am like to pay dearly for my wife, and have short
+time to call her wife. The more need, Mademoiselle, for speed,
+therefore. You know the old saying, 'Short signing, long seisin'? Shall
+it be my priest, or your minister?"
+
+M. de Tignonville started forward. "She promised nothing!" he cried. And
+he struck his hand on the table.
+
+Count Hannibal smiled, his lip curling. "That," he replied, "is for
+Mademoiselle to say."
+
+"But if she says it? If she says it, Monsieur? What then?"
+
+Tavannes drew forth a comfit-box, such as it was the fashion of the day
+to carry, as men of a later time carried a snuff-box. He slowly chose a
+prune.
+
+"If she says it?" he answered. "Then M. de Tignonville has regained his
+sweetheart. And M. de Tavannes has lost his bride."
+
+"You say so?"
+
+"Yes. But--"
+
+"But what?"
+
+"But she will not say it," Tavannes replied coolly.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Yes, Monsieur, why not?" the younger man repeated, trembling.
+
+"Because, M. de Tignonville, it is not true."
+
+"But she did not speak!" Tignonville retorted, with passion--the futile
+passion of the bird which beats its wings against a cage. "She did not
+speak. She could not promise, therefore."
+
+Tavannes ate the prune slowly, seemed to give a little thought to its
+flavour, approved it a true Agen plum, and at last spoke.
+
+"It is not for you to say whether she promised," he returned dryly, "nor
+for me. It is for Mademoiselle."
+
+"You leave it to her?"
+
+"I leave it to her to say whether she promised."
+
+"Then she must say No!" Tignonville cried in a tone of triumph and
+relief. "For she did not speak. Mademoiselle, listen!" he continued,
+turning with outstretched hands and appealing to her with passion. "Do
+you hear? Do you understand? You have but to speak to be free! You
+have but to say the word, and Monsieur lets you go! In God's name,
+speak! Speak then, Clotilde! Oh!" with a gesture of despair, as she did
+not answer, but continued to sit stony and hopeless, looking straight
+before her, her hands picking convulsively at the fringe of her girdle.
+"She does not understand! Fright has stunned her! Be merciful,
+Monsieur. Give her time to recover, to know what she does. Fright has
+turned her brain."
+
+Count Hannibal smiled. "I knew her father and her uncle," he said, "and
+in their time the Vrillacs were not wont to be cowards. Monsieur
+forgets, too," he continued with fine irony, "that he speaks of my
+betrothed."
+
+"It is a lie!"
+
+Tavannes raised his eyebrows. "You are in my power," he said. "For the
+rest, if it be a lie, Mademoiselle has but to say so."
+
+"You hear him?" Tignonville cried. "Then speak, Mademoiselle! Clotilde,
+speak! Say you never spoke, you never promised him!"
+
+The young man's voice quivered with indignation, with rage, with pain;
+but most, if the truth be told, with shame--the shame of a position
+strange and unparalleled. For in proportion as the fear of death instant
+and violent was lifted from him, reflection awoke, and the situation in
+which he stood took uglier shape. It was not so much love that cried to
+her, love that suffered, anguished by the prospect of love lost; as in
+the highest natures it might have been. Rather it was the man's pride
+which suffered: the pride of a high spirit which found itself helpless
+between the hammer and the anvil, in a position so false that hereafter
+men might say of the unfortunate that he had bartered his mistress for
+his life. He had not! But he had perforce to stand by; he had to be
+passive under stress of circumstances, and by the sacrifice, if she
+consummated it, he would in fact be saved.
+
+There was the pinch. No wonder that he cried to her in a voice which
+roused even the servants from their lethargy of fear.
+
+"Say it!" he cried. "Say it, before it be too late. Say, you did not
+promise!"
+
+Slowly she turned her face to him. "I cannot," she whispered; "I cannot.
+Go," she continued, a spasm distorting her features. "Go, Monsieur.
+Leave me. It is over."
+
+"What?" he exclaimed. "You promised him?"
+
+She bowed her head.
+
+"Then," the young man cried, in a transport of resentment, "I will be no
+part of the price. See! There! And there!" He tore the white sleeve
+wholly from his arm, and, rending it in twain, flung it on the floor and
+trampled on it. "It shall never be said that I stood by and let you buy
+my life! I go into the street and I take my chance." And he turned to
+the door.
+
+But Tavannes was before him. "No!" he said; "you will stay here, M. de
+Tignonville!" And he set his back against the door.
+
+The young man looked at him, his face convulsed with passion.
+
+"I shall stay here?" he cried. "And why, Monsieur? What is it to you if
+I choose to perish?"
+
+"Only this," Tavannes retorted. "I am answerable to Mademoiselle now, in
+an hour I shall be answerable to my wife--for your life. Live, then,
+Monsieur; you have no choice. In a month you will thank me--and her."
+
+"I am your prisoner?"
+
+"Precisely."
+
+"And I must stay here--to be tortured?" Tignonville cried.
+
+Count Hannibal's eyes sparkled. Sudden stormy changes, from indifference
+to ferocity, from irony to invective, were characteristic of the man.
+
+"Tortured!" he repeated grimly. "You talk of torture while Piles and
+Pardaillan, Teligny and Rochefoucauld lie dead in the street! While your
+cause sinks withered in a night, like a gourd! While your servants fall
+butchered, and France rises round you in a tide of blood! Bah!"--with a
+gesture of disdain--"you make me also talk, and I have no love for talk,
+and small time. Mademoiselle, you at least act and do not talk. By your
+leave I return in an hour, and I bring with me--shall it be my priest, or
+your minister?"
+
+She looked at him with the face of one who awakes slowly to the full
+horror, the full dread, of her position. For a moment she did not
+answer. Then--
+
+"A minister," she muttered, her voice scarcely audible.
+
+He nodded. "A minister," he said lightly. "Very well, if I can find
+one." And walking to the shattered, gaping casement--through which the
+cool morning air blew into the room and gently stirred the hair of the
+unhappy girl--he said some words to the man on guard outside. Then he
+turned to the door, but on the threshold he paused, looked with a strange
+expression at the pair, and signed to Carlat and the servants to go out
+before him.
+
+"Up, and lie close above!" he growled. "Open a window or look out, and
+you will pay dearly for it! Do you hear? Up! Up! You, too, old crop-
+ears. What! would you?"--with a sudden glare as Carlat hesitated--"that
+is better! Mademoiselle, until my return."
+
+He saw them all out, followed them, and closed the door on the two; who,
+left together, alone with the gaping window and the disordered feast,
+maintained a strange silence. The girl, gripping one hand in the other
+as if to quell her rising horror, sat looking before her, and seemed
+barely to breathe. The man, leaning against the wall at a little
+distance, bent his eyes, not on her, but on the floor, his face gloomy
+and distorted.
+
+His first thought should have been of her and for her; his first impulse
+to console, if he could not save her. His it should have been to soften,
+were that possible, the fate before her; to prove to her by words of
+farewell, the purest and most sacred, that the sacrifice she was making,
+not to save her own life but the lives of others, was appreciated by him
+who paid with her the price.
+
+And all these things, and more, may have been in M. de Tignonville's
+mind; they may even have been uppermost in it, but they found no
+expression. The man remained sunk in a sombre reverie. He had the
+appearance of thinking of himself, not of her; of his own position, not
+of hers. Otherwise he must have looked at her, he must have turned to
+her; he must have owned the subtle attraction of her unspoken appeal when
+she drew a deep breath and slowly turned her eyes on him, mute, asking,
+waiting what he should offer.
+
+Surely he should have! Yet it was long before he responded. He sat
+buried in thought of himself, and his position, the vile, the unworthy
+position in which her act had placed him. At length the constraint of
+her gaze wrought on him, or his thoughts became unbearable; and he looked
+up and met her eyes, and with an oath he sprang to his feet.
+
+"It shall not be!" he cried, in a tone low, but full of fury. "You shall
+not do it! I will kill him first! I will kill him with this hand! Or--"
+a step took him to the window, a step brought him back--ay, brought him
+back exultant, and with a changed face. "Or better, we will thwart him
+yet. See, Mademoiselle, do you see? Heaven is merciful! For a moment
+the cage is open!" His eye shone with excitement, the sweat of sudden
+hope stood on his brow as he pointed to the unguarded casement. "Come!
+it is our one chance!" And he caught her by her arm and strove to draw
+her to the window.
+
+But she hung back, staring at him. "Oh no, no!" she cried.
+
+"Yes, yes! I say!" he responded. "You do not understand. The way is
+open! We can escape, Clotilde, we can escape!"
+
+"I cannot! I cannot!" she wailed, still resisting him.
+
+"You are afraid?"
+
+"Afraid?" she repeated the word in a tone of wonder. "No, but I cannot.
+I promised him. I cannot. And, O God!" she continued, in a sudden
+outburst of grief, as the sense of general loss, of the great common
+tragedy broke on her and whelmed for the moment her private misery. "Why
+should we think of ourselves? They are dead, they are dying, who were
+ours, whom we loved! Why should we think to live? What does it matter
+how it fares with us? We cannot be happy. Happy?" she continued wildly.
+"Are any happy now? Or is the world all changed in a night? No, we
+could not be happy. And at least you will live, Tignonville. I have
+that to console me."
+
+"Live!" he responded vehemently. "I live? I would rather die a thousand
+times. A thousand times rather than live shamed! Than see you
+sacrificed to that devil! Than go out with a brand on my brow, for every
+man to point at me! I would rather die a thousand times!"
+
+"And do you think that I would not?" she answered, shivering. "Better,
+far better die than--than live with him!"
+
+"Then why not die?"
+
+She stared at him, wide-eyed, and a sudden stillness possessed her.
+"How?" she whispered. "What do you mean?"
+
+"That!" he said. As he spoke, he raised his hand and signed to her to
+listen. A sullen murmur, distant as yet, but borne to the ear on the
+fresh morning air, foretold the rising of another storm. The sound grew
+in intensity, even while she listened; and yet for a moment she
+misunderstood him. "O God!" she cried, out of the agony of nerves
+overwrought, "will that bell never stop? Will it never stop? Will no
+one stop it?"
+
+"'Tis not the bell!" he cried, seizing her hand as if to focus her
+attention. "It is the mob you hear. They are returning. We have but to
+stand a moment at this open window, we have but to show ourselves to
+them, and we need live no longer! Mademoiselle! Clotilde!--if you mean
+what you say, if you are in earnest, the way is open!"
+
+"And we shall die--together!"
+
+"Yes, together. But have you the courage?"
+
+"The courage?" she cried, a brave smile lighting the whiteness of her
+face. "The courage were needed to live. The courage were needed to do
+that. I am ready, quite ready. It can be no sin! To live with that in
+front of me were the sin! Come!" For the moment she had forgotten her
+people, her promise, all! It seemed to her that death would absolve her
+from all. "Come!"
+
+He moved with her under the impulse of her hand until they stood at the
+gaping window. The murmur, which he had heard indistinctly a moment
+before, had grown to a roar of voices. The mob, on its return eastward
+along the Rue St. Honore, was nearing the house. He stood, his arm
+supporting her, and they waited, a little within the window. Suddenly he
+stooped, his face hardly less white than hers: their eyes met; he would
+have kissed her.
+
+She did not withdraw from his arm, but she drew back her face, her eyes
+half shut.
+
+"No!" she murmured. "No! While I live I am his. But we die together,
+Tignonville! We die together. It will not last long, will it? And
+afterwards--"
+
+She did not finish the sentence, but her lips moved in prayer, and over
+her features came a far-away look; such a look as that which on the face
+of another Huguenot lady, Philippa de Luns--vilely done to death in the
+Place Maubert fourteen years before--silenced the ribald jests of the
+lowest rabble in the world. An hour or two earlier, awed by the
+abruptness of the outburst, Mademoiselle had shrunk from her fate; she
+had known fear. Now that she stood out voluntarily to meet it, she, like
+many a woman before and since, feared no longer. She was lifted out of
+and above herself.
+
+But death was long in coming. Some cause beyond their knowledge stayed
+the onrush of the mob along the street. The din, indeed, persisted,
+deafened, shook them; but the crowd seemed to be at a stand a few doors
+down the Rue St. Honore. For a half-minute, a long half-minute, which
+appeared an age, it drew no nearer. Would it draw nearer? Would it come
+on? Or would it turn again?
+
+The doubt, so much worse than despair, began to sap that courage of the
+man which is always better fitted to do than to suffer. The sweat rose
+on Tignonville's brow as he stood listening, his arm round the girl--as
+he stood listening and waiting. It is possible that when he had said a
+minute or two earlier that he would rather die a thousand times than live
+thus shamed, he had spoken beyond the mark. Or it is possible that he
+had meant his words to the full. But in this case he had not pictured
+what was to come, he had not gauged correctly his power of passive
+endurance. He was as brave as the ordinary man, as the ordinary soldier;
+but martyrdom, the apotheosis of resignation, comes more naturally to
+women than to men, more hardly to men than to women. Yet had the crisis
+come quickly he might have met it. But he had to wait, and to wait with
+that howling of wild beasts in his ears; and for this he was not
+prepared. A woman might be content to die after this fashion; but a man?
+His colour went and came, his eyes began to rove hither and thither. Was
+it even now too late to escape? Too late to avoid the consequences of
+the girl's silly persistence? Too late to--? Her eyes were closed, she
+hung half lifeless on his arm. She would not know, she need not know
+until afterwards. And afterwards she would thank him!
+Afterwards--meantime the window was open, the street was empty, and still
+the crowd hung back and did not come.
+
+He remembered that two doors away was a narrow passage, which leaving the
+Rue St. Honore turned at right angles under a beetling archway, to emerge
+in the Rue du Roule. If he could gain that passage unseen by the mob! He
+_would_ gain it. With a swift movement, his mind made up, he took a step
+forward. He tightened his grasp of the girl's waist, and, seizing with
+his left hand the end of the bar which the assailants had torn from its
+setting in the window jamb, he turned to lower himself. One long step
+would land him in the street.
+
+At that moment she awoke from the stupor of exaltation. She opened her
+eyes with a startled movement; and her eyes met his.
+
+He was in the act of stepping backwards and downwards, dragging her after
+him. But it was not this betrayed him. It was his face, which in an
+instant told her all, and that he sought not death, but life! She
+struggled upright and strove to free herself. But he had the purchase of
+the bar, and by this time he was furious as well as determined. Whether
+she would or no, he would save her, he would drag her out. Then, as
+consciousness fully returned, she, too, took fire.
+
+"No!" she cried, "I will not!" and she struggled more violently.
+
+"You shall!" he retorted between his teeth. "You shall not perish here."
+
+But she had her hands free, and as he spoke she thrust him from her
+passionately, desperately, with all her strength. He had his one foot in
+the air at the moment, and in a flash it was done. With a cry of rage he
+lost his balance, and, still holding the bar, reeled backwards through
+the window; while Mademoiselle, panting and half fainting,
+recoiled--recoiled into the arms of Hannibal de Tavannes, who, unseen by
+either, had entered the room a long minute before. From the threshold,
+and with a smile, all his own, he had watched the contest and the result.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. TWO HENS AND AN EGG.
+
+
+M. de Tignonville was shaken by the fall, and in the usual course of
+things he would have lain where he was, and groaned. But when a man has
+once turned his back on death he is apt to fancy it at his shoulder. He
+has small stomach for surprises, and is in haste to set as great a
+distance as possible between the ugly thing and himself. So it was with
+the Huguenot. Shot suddenly into the full publicity of the street, he
+knew that at any instant danger might take him by the nape; and he was on
+his legs and glancing up and down before the clatter of his fall had
+travelled the length of three houses.
+
+The rabble were still a hundred paces away, piled up and pressed about a
+house where men were being hunted as men hunt rats. He saw that he was
+unnoted, and apprehension gave place to rage. His thoughts turned back
+hissing hot to the thing that had happened, and in a paroxysm of shame he
+shook his fist at the gaping casement and the sneering face of his rival,
+dimly seen in the background. If a look would have killed Tavannes--and
+her--it had not been wanting.
+
+For it was not only the man M. de Tignonville hated at this moment; he
+hated Mademoiselle also, the unwitting agent of the other's triumph. She
+had thrust him from her; she had refused to be guided by him; she had
+resisted, thwarted, shamed him. Then let her take the consequences. She
+willed to perish: let her perish!
+
+He did not acknowledge even to himself the real cause of offence, the
+proof to which she had put his courage, and the failure of that courage
+to stand the test. Yet it was this, though he had himself provoked the
+trial, which burned up his chivalry, as the smuggler's fire burns up the
+dwarf heath upon the Landes. It was the discovery that in an heroic hour
+he was no hero that gave force to his passionate gesture, and next moment
+sent him storming down the beetling passage to the Rue du Roule, his
+heart a maelstrom of fierce vows and fiercer menaces.
+
+He had reached the further end of the alley and was on the point of
+entering the street before he remembered that he had nowhere to go. His
+lodgings were no longer his, since his landlord knew him to be a
+Huguenot, and would doubtless betray him. To approach those of his faith
+whom he had frequented was to expose them to danger; and, beyond the
+religion, he had few acquaintances and those of the newest. Yet the
+streets were impossible. He walked them on the utmost edge of peril; he
+lurked in them under the blade of an impending axe. And, whether he
+walked or lurked, he went at the mercy of the first comers bold enough to
+take his life.
+
+The sweat stood on his brow as he paused under the low arch of the alley-
+end, tasting the bitter forlornness of the dog banned and set for death
+in that sunlit city. In every window of the gable end which faced his
+hiding-place he fancied an eye watching his movements; in every distant
+step he heard the footfall of doom coming that way to his discovery. And
+while he trembled, he had to reflect, to think, to form some plan.
+
+In the town was no place for him, and short of the open country no
+safety. And how could he gain the open country? If he succeeded in
+reaching one of the gates--St. Antoine, or St. Denis, in itself a task of
+difficulty--it would only be to find the gate closed, and the guard on
+the alert. At last it flashed on him that he might cross the river; and
+at the notion hope awoke. It was possible that the massacre had not
+extended to the southern suburb; possible, that if it had, the Huguenots
+who lay there--Frontenay, and Montgomery, and Chartres, with the men of
+the North--might be strong enough to check it, and even to turn the
+tables on the Parisians.
+
+His colour returned. He was no coward, as soldiers go; if it came to
+fighting he had courage enough. He could not hope to cross the river by
+the bridge, for there, where the goldsmiths lived, the mob were like to
+be most busy. But if he could reach the bank he might procure a boat at
+some deserted point, or, at the worst, he might swim across.
+
+From the Louvre at his back came the sound of gunshots; from every
+quarter the murmur of distant crowds, or the faint lamentable cries of
+victims. But the empty street before him promised an easy passage, and
+he ventured into it and passed quickly through it. He met no one, and no
+one molested him; but as he went he had glimpses of pale faces that from
+behind the casements watched him come and turned to watch him go; and so
+heavy on his nerves was the pressure of this silent ominous attention,
+that he blundered at the end of the street. He should have taken the
+southerly turning; instead he held on, found himself in the Rue
+Ferronerie, and a moment later was all but in the arms of a band of city
+guards, who were making a house-to-house visitation.
+
+He owed his safety rather to the condition of the street than to his
+presence of mind. The Rue Ferronerie, narrow in itself, was so choked at
+this date by stalls and bulkheads, that an edict directing the removal of
+those which abutted on the cemetery had been issued a little before.
+Nothing had been done on it, however, and this neck of Paris, this main
+thoroughfare between the east and the west, between the fashionable
+quarter of the Marais and the fashionable quarter of the Louvre, was
+still a devious huddle of sheds and pent-houses. Tignonville slid behind
+one of these, found that it masked the mouth of an alley, and, heedless
+whither the passage led, ran hurriedly along it. Every instant he
+expected to hear the hue and cry behind him, and he did not halt or draw
+breath until he had left the soldiers far in the rear, and found himself
+astray at the junction of four noisome lanes, over two of which the
+projecting gables fairly met. Above the two others a scrap of sky
+appeared, but this was too small to indicate in which direction the river
+lay.
+
+Tignonville hesitated, but not for long; a burst of voices heralded a new
+danger, and he shrank into a doorway. Along one of the lanes a troop of
+children, the biggest not twelve years old, came dancing and leaping
+round something which they dragged by a string. Now one of the hindmost
+would burl it onward with a kick, now another, amid screams of childish
+laughter, tripped headlong over the cord; now at the crossways they
+stopped to wrangle and question which way they should go, or whose turn
+it was to pull and whose to follow. At last they started afresh with a
+whoop, the leader singing and all plucking the string to the cadence of
+the air. Their plaything leapt and dropped, sprang forward, and lingered
+like a thing of life. But it was no thing of life, as Tignonville saw
+with a shudder when they passed him. The object of their sport was the
+naked body of a child, an infant!
+
+His gorge rose at the sight. Fear such as he had not before experienced
+chilled his marrow. This was hate indeed, a hate before which the strong
+man quailed; the hate of which Mademoiselle had spoken when she said that
+the babes crossed themselves at her passing, and the houses tottered to
+fall upon her!
+
+He paused a minute to recover himself, so deeply had the sight moved him;
+and as he stood, he wondered if that hate already had its cold eye fixed
+on him. Instinctively his gaze searched the opposite wall, but save for
+two small double-grated windows it was blind; time-stained and
+stone-built, dark with the ordure of the city lane, it seemed but the
+back of a house, which looked another way. The outer gates of an arched
+doorway were open, and a loaded haycart, touching either side and
+brushing the arch above, blocked the passage. His gaze, leaving the
+windows, dropped to this--he scanned it a moment; and on a sudden he
+stiffened. Between the hay and the arch a hand flickered an instant,
+then vanished.
+
+Tignonville stared. At first he thought his eyes had tricked him. Then
+the hand appeared again, and this time it conveyed an unmistakable
+invitation. It is not from the unknown or the hidden that the fugitive
+has aught to fear, and Tignonville, after casting a glance down the
+lane--which revealed a single man standing with his face the other
+way--slipped across and pushed between the hay and the wall. He coughed.
+
+A voice whispered to him to climb up; a friendly hand clutched him in the
+act, and aided him. In a second he was lying on his face, tight squeezed
+between the hay and the roof of the arch. Beside him lay a man whose
+features his eyes, unaccustomed to the gloom, could not discern. But the
+man knew him and whispered his name.
+
+"You know me?" Tignonville muttered in astonishment.
+
+"I marked you, M. de Tignonville, at the preaching last Sunday," the
+stranger answered placidly.
+
+"You were there?"
+
+"I preached."
+
+"Then you are M. la Tribe!"
+
+"I am," the clergyman answered quietly. "They seized me on my threshold,
+but I left my cloak in their hands and fled. One tore my stocking with
+his point, another my doublet, but not a hair of my head was injured.
+They hunted me to the end of the next street, but I lived and still live,
+and shall live to lift up my voice against this wicked city."
+
+The sympathy between the Huguenot by faith and the Huguenot by politics
+was imperfect. Tignonville, like most men of rank of the younger
+generation, was a Huguenot by politics; and he was in a bitter humour. He
+felt, perhaps, that it was men such as this who had driven the other side
+to excesses such as these; and he hardly repressed a sneer.
+
+"I wish I felt as sure!" he muttered bluntly. "You know that all our
+people are dead?"
+
+"He can save by few or by many," the preacher answered devoutly. "We are
+of the few, blessed be God, and shall see Israel victorious, and our
+people as a flock of sheep!"
+
+"I see small chance of it," Tignonville answered contemptuously.
+
+"I know it as certainly as I knew before you came, M. de Tignonville,
+that you would come!"
+
+"That _I_ should come?"
+
+"That some one would come," La Tribe answered, correcting himself. "I
+knew not who it would be until you appeared and placed yourself in the
+doorway over against me, even as Obadiah in the Holy Book passed before
+the hiding-place of Elijah."
+
+The two lay on their faces side by side, the rafters of the archway low
+on their heads. Tignonville lifted himself a little, and peered anew at
+the other. He fancied that La Tribe's mind, shaken by the horrors of the
+morning and his narrow escape, had given way.
+
+"You rave, man," he said. "This is no time for visions."
+
+"I said naught of visions," the other answered.
+
+"Then why so sure that we shall escape?"
+
+"I am certified of it," La Tribe replied. "And more than that, I know
+that we shall lie here some days. The time has not been revealed to me,
+but it will be days and a day. Then we shall leave this place unharmed,
+as we entered it, and, whatever betide others, we shall live."
+
+Tignonville shrugged his shoulders. "I tell you, you rave, M. la Tribe,"
+he said petulantly. "At any moment we may be discovered. Even now I
+hear footsteps."
+
+"They tracked me well-nigh to this place," the minister answered
+placidly.
+
+"The deuce they did!" Tignonville muttered, with irritation. He dared
+not raise his voice. "I would you had told me that before I joined you,
+Monsieur, and I had found some safer hiding-place! When we are
+discovered--"
+
+"Then," the other continued calmly, "you will see."
+
+"In any case we shall be better farther back," Tignonville retorted.
+"Here, we are within an ace of being seen from the lane." And he began
+to wriggle himself backwards.
+
+The minister laid his hand on him. "Have a care!" he muttered. "And do
+not move, but listen. And you will understand. When I reached this
+place--it would be about five o'clock this morning--breathless, and
+expecting each minute to be dragged forth to make my confession before
+men, I despaired as you despair now. Like Elijah under the juniper tree,
+I said, 'It is enough, O Lord! Take my soul also, for I am no better
+than my fellows!' All the sky was black before my eyes, and my ears were
+filled with the wailings of the little ones and the lamentations of
+women. 'O Lord, it is enough,' I prayed. 'Take my soul, or, if it be
+Thy will, then, as the angel was sent to take the cakes to Elijah, give
+me also a sign that I shall live.'"
+
+For a moment he paused, struggling with overpowering emotion. Even his
+impatient listener, hitherto incredulous, caught the infection, and in a
+tone of awe murmured--
+
+"Yes? And then, M. la Tribe!"
+
+"The sign was given me. The words were scarcely out of my mouth when a
+hen flew up, and, scratching a nest in the hay at my feet, presently laid
+an egg."
+
+Tignonville stared. "It was timely, I admit," he said. "But it is no
+uncommon thing. Probably it has its nest here and lays daily."
+
+"Young man, this is new-mown hay," the minister answered solemnly. "This
+cart was brought here no further back than yesterday. It smells of the
+meadow, and the flowers hold their colour. No, the fowl was sent. To-
+morrow it will return, and the next, and the next, until the plague be
+stayed and I go hence. But that is not all. A while later a second hen
+appeared, and I thought it would lay in the same nest. But it made a new
+one, on the side on which you lie and not far from your foot. Then I
+knew that I was to have a companion, and that God had laid also for him a
+table in the wilderness."
+
+"It did lay, then?"
+
+"It is still on the nest, beside your foot."
+
+Tignonville was about to reply when the preacher grasped his arm and by a
+sign enjoined silence. He did so not a moment too soon. Preoccupied by
+the story, narrator and listener had paid no heed to what was passing in
+the lane, and the voices of men speaking close at hand took them by
+surprise. From the first words which reached them, it was clear that the
+speakers were the same who had chased La Tribe as far as the meeting of
+the four ways, and, losing him there, had spent the morning in other
+business. Now they had returned to hunt him down; and but for a wrangle
+which arose among them and detained them, they had stolen on their quarry
+before their coming was suspected.
+
+"'Twas this way he ran!" "No, 'twas the other!" they contended; and
+their words, winged with vile threats and oaths, grew noisy and hot. The
+two listeners dared scarcely to breathe. The danger was so near, it was
+so certain that if the men came three paces farther, they would observe
+and search the haycart, that Tignonville fancied the steel already at his
+throat. He felt the hay rustle under his slightest movement, and gripped
+one hand with the other to restrain the tremor of overpowering
+excitement. Yet when he glanced at the minister he found him unmoved, a
+smile on his face. And M. de Tignonville could have cursed him for his
+folly.
+
+For the men were coming on! An instant, and they perceived the cart, and
+the ruffian who had advised this route pounced on it in triumph.
+
+"There! Did I not say so?" he cried. "He is curled up in that hay, for
+the Satan's grub he is! That is where he is, see you!"
+
+"Maybe," another answered grudgingly, as they gathered before it. "And
+maybe not, Simon!"
+
+"To hell with your maybe not!" the first replied. And he drove his pike
+deep into the hay and turned it viciously.
+
+The two on the top controlled themselves. Tignonville's face was livid;
+of himself he would have slid down amongst them and taken his chance,
+preferring to die fighting, to die in the open, rather than to perish
+like a rat in a stack. But La Tribe had gripped his arm and held him
+fast.
+
+The man whom the others called Simon thrust again, but too low and
+without result. He was for trying a third time, when one of his comrades
+who had gone to the other side of the lane announced that the men were on
+the top of the hay.
+
+"Can you see them?"
+
+"No, but there's room and to spare."
+
+"Oh, a curse on your room!" Simon retorted. "Well, you can look."
+
+"If that's all, I'll soon look!" was the answer. And the rogue, forcing
+himself between the hay and the side of the gateway, found the wheel of
+the cart, and began to raise himself on it.
+
+Tignonville, who lay on that hand, heard, though he could not see his
+movements. He knew what they meant, he knew that in a twinkling he must
+be discovered; and with a last prayer he gathered himself for a spring.
+
+It seemed an age before the intruder's head appeared on a level with the
+hay; and then the alarm came from another quarter. The hen which had
+made its nest at Tignonville's feet, disturbed by the movement or by the
+newcomer's hand, flew out with a rush and flutter as of a great firework.
+Upsetting the startled Simon, who slipped swearing to the ground, it
+swooped scolding and clucking over the heads of the other men, and
+reaching the street in safety, scuttled off at speed, its outspread wings
+sweeping the earth in its rage.
+
+They laughed uproariously as Simon emerged, rubbing his elbow.
+
+"There's for you! There's your preacher!" his opponent jeered.
+
+"D---n her! she gives tongue as fast as any of them!" gibed a second.
+"Will you try again, Simon? You may find another love-letter there!"
+
+"Have done!" a third cried impatiently. "He'll not be where the hen is!
+Let's back! Let's back! I said before that it wasn't this way he
+turned! He's made for the river."
+
+"The plague in his vitals!" Simon replied furiously. "Wherever he is,
+I'll find him!" And, reluctant to confess himself wrong, he lingered,
+casting vengeful glances at the hay.
+
+But one of the other men cursed him for a fool; and presently, forced to
+accept his defeat or be left alone, he rejoined his fellows. Slowly the
+footsteps and voices receded along the lane; slowly, until silence
+swallowed them, and on the quivering strained senses of the two who
+remained behind, descended the gentle influence of twilight and the sweet
+scent of the new-mown hay on which they lay.
+
+La Tribe turned to his companion, his eyes shining. "Our soul is
+escaped," he murmured, "even as a bird out of the snare of the fowler.
+The snare is broken and we are delivered!" His voice shook as he
+whispered the ancient words of triumph.
+
+But when they came to look in the nest at Tignonville's feet there was no
+egg!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. UNSTABLE.
+
+
+And that troubled M. la Tribe no little, although he did not impart his
+thoughts to his companion. Instead they talked in whispers of the things
+which had happened; of the Admiral, of Teligny, whom all loved, of
+Rochefoucauld the accomplished, the King's friend; of the princes in the
+Louvre whom they gave up for lost, and of the Huguenot nobles on the
+farther side of the river, of whose safety there seemed some hope.
+Tignonville--he best knew why--said nothing of the fate of his betrothed,
+or of his own adventures in that connection. But each told the other how
+the alarm had reached him, and painted in broken words his reluctance to
+believe in treachery so black. Thence they passed to the future of the
+cause, and of that took views as opposite as light and darkness, as
+Papegot and Huguenot. The one was confident, the other in despair. And
+some time in the afternoon, worn out by the awful experiences of the last
+twelve hours, they fell asleep, their heads on their arms, the hay
+tickling their faces; and, with death stalking the lane beside them,
+slept soundly until after sundown.
+
+When they awoke hunger awoke with them, and urged on La Tribe's mind the
+question of the missing egg. It was not altogether the prick of appetite
+which troubled him, but regarding the hiding-place in which they lay as
+an ark of refuge providentially supplied, protected and victualled, he
+could not refrain from asking reverently what the deficiency meant. It
+was not as if one hen only had appeared; as if no farther prospect had
+been extended. But up to a certain point the message was clear. Then
+when the Hand of Providence had shown itself most plainly, and in a
+manner to melt the heart with awe and thankfulness, the message had been
+blurred. Seriously the Huguenot asked himself what it portended.
+
+To Tignonville, if he thought of it at all, the matter was the matter of
+an egg, and stopped there. An egg might alleviate the growing pangs of
+hunger; its non-appearance was a disappointment, but he traced the matter
+no farther. It must be confessed, too, that the haycart was to him only
+a haycart--and not an ark; and the sooner he was safely away from it the
+better he would be pleased. While La Tribe, lying snug and warm beside
+him, thanked God for a lot so different from that of such of his fellows
+as had escaped--whom he pictured crouching in dank cellars, or on roof-
+trees exposed to the heat by day and the dews by night--the young man
+grew more and more restive.
+
+Hunger pricked him, and the meanness of the part he had played moved him
+to action. About midnight, resisting the dissuasions of his companion,
+he would have sallied out in search of food if the passage of a turbulent
+crowd had not warned him that the work of murder was still proceeding. He
+curbed himself after that and lay until daylight. But, ill content with
+his own conduct, on fire when he thought of his betrothed, he was in no
+temper to bear hardship cheerfully or long; and gradually there rose
+before his mind the picture of Madame St. Lo's smiling face, and the fair
+hair which curled low on the white of her neck.
+
+He would, and he would not. Death that had stalked so near him preached
+its solemn sermon. But death and pleasure are never far apart; and at no
+time and nowhere have they jostled one another more familiarly than in
+that age, wherever the influence of Italy and Italian art and Italian
+hopelessness extended. Again, on the one side, La Tribe's example went
+for something with his comrade in misfortune; but in the other scale hung
+relief from discomfort, with the prospect of a woman's smiles and a
+woman's flatteries, of dainty dishes, luxury, and passion. If he went
+now, he went to her from the jaws of death, with the glamour of adventure
+and peril about him; and the very going into her presence was a lure.
+Moreover, if he had been willing while his betrothed was still his, why
+not now when he had lost her?
+
+It was this last reflection--and one other thing which came on a sudden
+into his mind--which turned the scale. About noon he sat up in the hay,
+and, abruptly and sullenly, "I'll lie here no longer," he said; and he
+dropped his legs over the side. "I shall go."
+
+The movement was so unexpected that La Tribe stared at him in silence.
+Then, "You will run a great risk, M. de Tignonville," he said gravely,
+"if you do. You may go as far under cover of night as the river, or you
+may reach one of the gates. But as to crossing the one or passing the
+other, I reckon it a thing impossible."
+
+"I shall not wait until night," Tignonville answered curtly, a ring of
+defiance in his tone. "I shall go now! I'll lie here no longer!"
+
+"Now?"
+
+"Yes, now."
+
+"You will be mad if you do," the other replied. He thought it the
+petulant outcry of youth tired of inaction; a protest, and nothing more.
+
+He was speedily undeceived. "Mad or not, I am going!" Tignonville
+retorted. And he slid to the ground, and from the covert of the hanging
+fringe of hay looked warily up and down the lane. "It is clear, I
+think," he said. "Good-bye." And with no more, without one upward
+glance or a gesture of the hand, with no further adieu or word of
+gratitude, he walked out into the lane, turned briskly to the left, and
+vanished.
+
+The minister uttered a cry of surprise, and made as if he would descend
+also.
+
+"Come back, sir!" he called, as loudly as he dared. "M. de Tignonville,
+come back! This is folly or worse!"
+
+But M. de Tignonville was gone.
+
+La Tribe listened a while, unable to believe it, and still expecting his
+return. At last, hearing nothing, he slid, greatly excited, to the
+ground and looked out. It was not until he had peered up and down the
+lane and made sure that it was empty that he could persuade himself that
+the other had gone for good. Then he climbed slowly and seriously to his
+place again, and sighed as he settled himself.
+
+"Unstable as water thou shalt not excel!" he muttered. "Now I know why
+there was only one egg."
+
+Meanwhile Tignonville, after putting a hundred yards between himself and
+his bedfellow, plunged into the first dark entry which presented itself.
+Hurriedly, and with a frowning face, he cut off his left sleeve from
+shoulder to wrist; and this act, by disclosing his linen, put him in
+possession of the white sleeve which he had once involuntarily donned,
+and once discarded. The white cross on the cap he could not assume, for
+he was bareheaded. But he had little doubt that the sleeve would
+suffice, and with a bold demeanour he made his way northward until he
+reached again the Rue Ferronerie.
+
+Excited groups were wandering up and down the street, and, fearing to
+traverse its crowded narrows, he went by lanes parallel with it as far as
+the Rue St. Denis, which he crossed. Everywhere he saw houses gutted and
+doors burst in, and traces of a cruelty and a fanaticism almost
+incredible. Near the Rue des Lombards he saw a dead child, stripped
+stark and hanged on the hook of a cobbler's shutter. A little farther on
+in the same street he stepped over the body of a handsome young woman,
+distinguished by the length and beauty of her hair. To obtain her
+bracelets, her captors had cut off her hands; afterwards--but God knows
+how long afterwards--a passer-by, more pitiful than his fellows, had put
+her out of her misery with a spit, which still remained plunged in her
+body.
+
+M. de Tignonville shuddered at the sight, and at others like it. He
+loathed the symbol he wore, and himself for wearing it; and more than
+once his better nature bade him return and play the nobler part. Once he
+did turn with that intention. But he had set his mind on comfort and
+pleasure, and the value of these things is raised, not lowered, by danger
+and uncertainty. Quickly his stoicism oozed away; he turned again.
+Barely avoiding the rush of a crowd of wretches who were bearing a
+swooning victim to the river, he hurried through the Rue des Lombards,
+and reached in safety the house beside the Golden Maid.
+
+He had no doubt now on which side of the Maid Madame St. Lo lived; the
+house was plain before him. He had only to knock. But in proportion as
+he approached his haven, his anxiety grew. To lose all, with all in his
+grasp, to fail upon the threshold, was a thing which bore no looking at;
+and it was with a nervous hand and eyes cast fearfully behind him that he
+plied the heavy iron knocker which adorned the door.
+
+He could not turn his gaze from a knot of ruffians, who were gathered
+under one of the tottering gables on the farther side of the street. They
+seemed to be watching him, and he fancied--though the distance rendered
+this impossible--that he could see suspicion growing in their eyes. At
+any moment they might cross the roadway, they might approach, they might
+challenge him. And at the thought he knocked and knocked again. Why did
+not the porter come?
+
+Ay, why? For now a score of contingencies came into the young man's mind
+and tortured him. Had Madame St. Lo withdrawn to safer quarters and
+closed the house? Or, good Catholic as she was, had she given way to
+panic, and determined to open to no one? Or was she ill? Or had she
+perished in the general disorder? Or--
+
+And then, even as the men began to slink towards him, his heart leapt. He
+heard a footstep heavy and slow move through the house. It came nearer
+and nearer. A moment, and an iron-grated Judas-hole in the door slid
+open, and a servant, an elderly man, sleek and respectable, looked out at
+him.
+
+Tignonville could scarcely speak for excitement. "Madame St. Lo?" he
+muttered tremulously. "I come to her from her cousin the Comte de
+Tavannes. Quick! quick! if you please. Open to me!"
+
+"Monsieur is alone?"
+
+"Yes! Yes!"
+
+The man nodded gravely and slid back the bolts. He allowed M. de
+Tignonville to enter, then with care he secured the door, and led the way
+across a small square court, paved with red tiles and enclosed by the
+house, but open above to the sunshine and the blue sky. A gallery which
+ran round the upper floor looked on this court, in which a great quiet
+reigned, broken only by the music of a fountain. A vine climbed on the
+wooden pillars which supported the gallery, and, aspiring higher,
+embraced the wide carved eaves, and even tapestried with green the three
+gables that on each side of the court broke the skyline. The grapes hung
+nearly ripe, and amid their clusters and the green lattice of their
+foliage Tignonville's gaze sought eagerly but in vain the laughing eyes
+and piquant face of his new mistress. For with the closing of the door,
+and the passing from him of the horrors of the streets, he had entered,
+as by magic, a new and smiling world; a world of tennis and roses, of
+tinkling voices and women's wiles, a world which smacked of Florence and
+the South, and love and life; a world which his late experiences had set
+so far away from him, his memory of it seemed a dream. Now, as he drank
+in its stillness and its fragrance, as he felt its safety and its luxury
+lap him round once more, he sighed. And with that breath he rid himself
+of much.
+
+The servant led him to a parlour, a cool shady room on the farther side
+of the tiny quadrangle, and, muttering something inaudible, withdrew. A
+moment later a frolicsome laugh, and the light flutter of a woman's skirt
+as she tripped across the court, brought the blood to his cheeks. He
+went a step nearer to the door, and his eyes grew bright.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. MADAME ST. LO.
+
+
+So far excitement had supported Tignonville in his escape. It was only
+when he knew himself safe, when he heard Madame St. Lo's footstep in the
+courtyard and knew that in a moment he would see her, that he knew also
+that he was failing for want of food. The room seemed to go round with
+him; the window to shift, the light to flicker. And then again, with
+equal abruptness, he grew strong and steady and perfectly master of
+himself. Nay, never had he felt a confidence in himself so overwhelming
+or a capacity so complete. The triumph of that which he had done, the
+knowledge that of so many he, almost alone, had escaped, filled his brain
+with a delicious and intoxicating vanity. When the door opened, and
+Madame St. Lo appeared on the threshold, he advanced holding out his
+arms. He expected that she would fall into them.
+
+But Madame only backed and curtseyed, a mischievous light in her eyes.
+
+"A thousand thanks, Monsieur!" she said, "but you are more ready than I!"
+And she remained by the door.
+
+"I have come to you through all!" he cried, speaking loudly because of a
+humming in his ears. "They are lying in the streets! They are dying,
+are dead, are hunted, are pursued, are perishing! But I have come
+through all to you!"
+
+She curtseyed anew. "So I see, Monsieur!" she answered. "I am
+flattered!" But she did not advance, and gradually, light-headed as he
+was, he began to see that she looked at him with an odd closeness. And
+he took offence.
+
+"I say, Madame, I have come to you!" he repeated. "And you do not seem
+pleased!"
+
+She came forward a step and looked at him still more oddly.
+
+"Oh yes," she said. "I am pleased, M. de Tignonville. It is what I
+intended. But tell me how you have fared. You are not hurt?"
+
+"Not a hair!" he cried boastfully. And he told her in a dozen windy
+sentences of the adventure of the haycart and his narrow escape. He
+wound up with a foolish meaningless laugh.
+
+"Then you have not eaten for thirty-six hours?" she said. And when he
+did not answer, "I understand," she continued, nodding and speaking as to
+a child. And she rang a silver handbell and gave an order.
+
+She addressed the servant in her usual tone, but to Tignonville's ear her
+voice seemed to fall to a whisper. Her figure--she was small and fairy-
+like--began to sway before him; and then in a moment, as it seemed to
+him, she was gone, and he was seated at a table, his trembling fingers
+grasping a cup of wine which the elderly servant who had admitted him was
+holding to his lips. On the table before him were a spit of partridges
+and a cake of white bread. When he had swallowed a second mouthful of
+wine--which cleared his eyes as by magic--the man urged him to eat. And
+he fell to with an appetite that grew as he ate.
+
+By-and-by, feeling himself again, he became aware that two of Madame's
+women were peering at him through the open doorway. He looked that way
+and they fled giggling into the court; but in a moment they were back
+again, and the sound of their tittering drew his eyes anew to the door.
+It was the custom of the day for ladies of rank to wait on their
+favourites at table; and he wondered if Madame were with them, and why
+she did not come and serve him herself.
+
+But for a while longer the savour of the roasted game took up the major
+part of his thoughts; and when prudence warned him to desist, and he sat
+back, satisfied after his long fast, he was in no mood to be critical.
+Perhaps--for somewhere in the house he heard a lute--Madame was
+entertaining those whom she could not leave? Or deluding some who might
+betray him if they discovered him?
+
+From that his mind turned back to the streets and the horrors through
+which he had passed; but for a moment and no more. A shudder, an emotion
+of prayerful pity, and he recalled his thoughts. In the quiet of the
+cool room, looking on the sunny, vine-clad court, with the tinkle of the
+lute and the murmurous sound of women's voices in his ears, it was hard
+to believe that the things from which he had emerged were real. It was
+still more unpleasant, and as futile, to dwell on them. A day of
+reckoning would come, and, if La Tribe were right, the cause would rally,
+bristling with pikes and snorting with war-horses, and the blood spilled
+in this wicked city would cry aloud for vengeance. But the hour was not
+yet. He had lost his mistress, and for that atonement must be exacted.
+But in the present another mistress awaited him, and as a man could only
+die once, and might die at any minute, so he could only live once, and in
+the present. Then _vogue la galere_!
+
+As he roused himself from this brief reverie and fell to wondering how
+long he was to be left to himself, a rosebud tossed by an unseen hand
+struck him on the breast and dropped to his knees. To seize it and kiss
+it gallantly, to spring to his feet and look about him were instinctive
+movements. But he could see no one; and, in the hope of surprising the
+giver, he stole to the window. The sound of the lute and the distant
+tinkle of laughter persisted. The court, save for a page, who lay asleep
+on a bench in the gallery, was empty. Tignonville scanned the boy
+suspiciously; a male disguise was often adopted by the court ladies, and
+if Madame would play a prank on him, this was a thing to be reckoned
+with. But a boy it seemed to be, and after a while the young man went
+back to his seat.
+
+Even as he sat down, a second flower struck him more sharply in the face,
+and this time he darted not to the window but to the door. He opened it
+quickly and looked out, but again he was too late.
+
+"I shall catch you presently, _ma reine_!" he murmured tenderly, with
+intent to be heard. And he closed the door. But, wiser this time, he
+waited with his hand on the latch until he heard the rustling of a skirt,
+and saw the line of light at the foot of the door darkened by a shadow.
+That moment he flung the door wide, and, clasping the wearer of the skirt
+in his arms, kissed her lips before she had time to resist.
+
+Then he fell back as if he had been shot! For the wearer of the skirt,
+she whom he had kissed, was Madame St. Lo's woman, and behind her stood
+Madame herself, laughing, laughing, laughing with all the gay abandonment
+of her light little heart.
+
+"Oh, the gallant gentleman!" she cried, and clapped her hands effusively.
+"Was ever recovery so rapid? Or triumph so speedy? Suzanne, my child;
+you surpass Venus. Your charms conquer before they are seen!"
+
+M. de Tignonville had put poor Suzanne from him as if she burned; and hot
+and embarrassed, cursing his haste, he stood looking awkwardly at them.
+
+"Madame," he stammered at last, "you know quite well that--"
+
+"Seeing is believing!"
+
+"That I thought it was you!"
+
+"Oh, what I have lost!" she replied. And she looked archly at Suzanne,
+who giggled and tossed her head.
+
+He was growing angry. "But, Madame," he protested, "you know--"
+
+"I know what I know, and I have seen what I have seen!" Madame answered
+merrily. And she hummed,
+
+ "'Ce fut le plus grand jour d'este
+ Que m'embrassa la belle Suzanne!'
+
+Oh yes, I know what I know!" she repeated. And she fell again to
+laughing immoderately; while the pretty piece of mischief beside her hung
+her head, and, putting a finger in her mouth, mocked him with an
+affectation of modesty.
+
+The young man glowered at them between rage and embarrassment. This was
+not the reception, nor this the hero's return to which he had looked
+forward. And a doubt began to take form in his mind. The mistress he
+had pictured would not laugh at kisses given to another; nor forget in a
+twinkling the straits through which he had come to her, the hell from
+which he had plucked himself! Possibly the court ladies held love as
+cheap as this, and lovers but as playthings, butts for their wit, and
+pegs on which to hang their laughter. But--but he began to doubt, and,
+perplexed and irritated, he showed his feelings.
+
+"Madame," he said stiffly, "a jest is an excellent thing. But pardon me
+if I say that it is ill played on a fasting man."
+
+Madame desisted from laughter that she might speak. "A fasting man?" she
+cried. "And he has eaten two partridges!"
+
+"Fasting from love, Madame."
+
+Madame St. Lo held up her hands. "And it's not two minutes since he took
+a kiss!"
+
+He winced, was silent a moment, and then seeing that he got nothing by
+the tone he had adopted he cried for quarter.
+
+"A little mercy, Madame, as you are beautiful," he said, wooing her with
+his eyes. "Do not plague me beyond what a man can bear. Dismiss, I pray
+you, this good creature--whose charms do but set off yours as the star
+leads the eye to the moon--and make me the happiest man in the world by
+so much of your company as you will vouchsafe to give me."
+
+"That may be but a very little," she answered, letting her eyes fall
+coyly, and affecting to handle the tucker of her low ruff. But he saw
+that her lip twitched; and he could have sworn that she mocked him to
+Suzanne, for the girl giggled.
+
+Still by an effort he controlled his feelings. "Why so cruel?" he
+murmured, in a tone meant for her alone, and with a look to match. "You
+were not so hard when I spoke with you in the gallery, two evenings ago,
+Madame."
+
+"Was I not?" she asked. "Did I look like this? And this?" And,
+languishing, she looked at him very sweetly after two fashions.
+
+"Something."
+
+"Oh, then I meant nothing!" she retorted with sudden vivacity. And she
+made a face at him, laughing under his nose. "I do that when I mean
+nothing, Monsieur! Do you see? But you are Gascon, and given, I fear,
+to flatter yourself."
+
+Then he saw clearly that she played with him: and resentment, chagrin,
+pique got the better of his courtesy.
+
+"I flatter myself?" he cried, his voice choked with rage. "It may be I
+do now, Madame, but did I flatter myself when you wrote me this note?"
+And he drew it out and flourished it in her face. "Did I imagine when I
+read this? Or is it not in your hand? It is a forgery, perhaps," he
+continued bitterly. "Or it means nothing? Nothing, this note bidding me
+be at Madame St. Lo's at an hour before midnight--it means nothing? At
+an hour before midnight, Madame!"
+
+"On Saturday night? The night before last night?"
+
+"On Saturday night, the night before last night! But Madame knows
+nothing of it? Nothing, I suppose?"
+
+She shrugged her shoulders and smiled cheerfully on him. "Oh yes, I
+wrote it," she said. "But what of that, M. de Tignonville?"
+
+"What of that?"
+
+"Yes, Monsieur, what of that? Did you think it was written out of love
+for you?"
+
+He was staggered for the moment by her coolness. "Out of what, then?" he
+cried hoarsely. "Out of what, then, if not out of love?"
+
+"Why, out of pity, my little gentleman!" she answered sharply. "And
+trouble thrown away, it seems. Love!" And she laughed so merrily and
+spontaneously it cut him to the heart. "No; but you said a dainty thing
+or two, and smiled a smile; and like a fool, and like a woman, I was
+sorry for the innocent calf that bleated so prettily on its way to the
+butcher's! And I would lock you up, and save your life, I thought, until
+the blood-letting was over. Now you have it, M. de Tignonville, and I
+hope you like it."
+
+Like it, when every word she uttered stripped him of the selfish
+illusions in which he had wrapped himself against the blasts of
+ill-fortune? Like it, when the prospect of her charms had bribed him
+from the path of fortitude, when for her sake he had been false to his
+mistress, to his friends, to his faith, to his cause? Like it, when he
+knew as he listened that all was lost, and nothing gained, not even this
+poor, unworthy, shameful compensation? Like it? No wonder that words
+failed him, and he glared at her in rage, in misery, in shame.
+
+"Oh, if you don't like it," she continued, tossing her head after a
+momentary pause, "then you should not have come! It is of no profit to
+glower at me, Monsieur. You do not frighten me."
+
+"I would--I would to God I had not come!" he groaned.
+
+"And, I dare say, that you had never seen me--since you cannot win me!"
+
+"That too," he exclaimed.
+
+She was of an extraordinary levity, and at that, after staring at him a
+moment, she broke into shrill laughter.
+
+"A little more, and I'll send you to my cousin Hannibal!" she said. "You
+do not know how anxious he is to see you. Have you a mind," with a
+waggish look, "to play bride's man, M. de Tignonville? Or will you give
+away the bride? It is not too late, though soon it will be!"
+
+He winced, and from red grew pale. "What do you mean?" he stammered;
+and, averting his eyes in shame, seeing now all the littleness, all the
+baseness of his position, "Has he--married her?" he continued.
+
+"Ho, ho!" she cried in triumph. "I've hit you now, have I, Monsieur?
+I've hit you!" And mocking him, "Has he--married her?" she lisped. "No;
+but he will marry her, have no fear of that! He will marry her. He
+waits but to get a priest. Would you like to see what he says?" she
+continued, playing with him as a cat plays with a mouse. "I had a note
+from him yesterday. Would you like to see how welcome you'll be at the
+wedding?" And she flaunted a piece of paper before his eyes.
+
+"Give it me," he said.
+
+She let him seize it the while she shrugged her shoulders. "It's your
+affair, not mine," she said. "See it if you like, and keep it if you
+like. Cousin Hannibal wastes few words."
+
+That was true, for the paper contained but a dozen or fifteen words, and
+an initial by way of signature.
+
+"I may need your shaveling to-morrow afternoon. Send him, and
+Tignonville in safeguard if he come.--H."
+
+"I can guess what use he has for a priest," she said. "It is not to
+confess him, I warrant. It's long, I fear, since Hannibal told his
+beads."
+
+M. de Tignonville swore. "I would I had the confessing of him!" he said
+between his teeth.
+
+She clapped her hands in glee. "Why should you not?" she cried. "Why
+should you not? 'Tis time yet, since I am to send to-day and have not
+sent. Will you be the shaveling to go confess or marry him?" And she
+laughed recklessly. "Will you, M. de Tignonville? The cowl will mask
+you as well as another, and pass you through the streets better than a
+cut sleeve. He will have both his wishes, lover and clerk in one then.
+And it will be pull monk, pull Hannibal with a vengeance."
+
+Tignonville gazed at her, and as he gazed courage and hope awoke in his
+eyes. What if, after all, he could undo the past? What if, after all,
+he could retrace the false step he had taken, and place himself again
+where he had been--by _her_ side?
+
+"If you meant it!" he exclaimed, his breath coming fast. "If you only
+meant what you say, Madame."
+
+"If?" she answered, opening her eyes. "And why should I not mean it?"
+
+"Because," he replied slowly, "cowl or no cowl, when I meet your cousin--"
+
+"'Twill go hard with him?" she cried, with a mocking laugh. "And you
+think I fear for him. That is it, is it?"
+
+He nodded.
+
+"I fear just _so much_ for him!" she retorted with contempt. "Just so
+much!" And coming a step nearer to Tignonville she snapped her small
+white fingers under his nose. "Do you see? No, M. de Tignonville," she
+continued, "you do not know Count Hannibal if you think that he fears, or
+that any fear for him. If you will beard the lion in his den, the risk
+will be yours, not his!"
+
+The young man's face glowed. "I take the risk!" he cried. "And I thank
+you for the chance; that, Madame, whatever betide. But--"
+
+"But what?" she asked, seeing that he hesitated and that his face fell.
+
+"If he afterwards learn that you have played him a trick," he said, "will
+he not punish you?"
+
+"Punish me?"
+
+He nodded.
+
+Madame laughed her high disdain. "You do not yet know Hannibal de
+Tavannes," she said. "He does not war with women."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. A BARGAIN.
+
+
+It is the wont of the sex to snatch at an ell where an inch is offered,
+and to press an advantage in circumstances in which a man, acknowledging
+the claims of generosity, scruples to ask for more. The habit, now
+ingrained, may have sprung from long dependence on the male, and is one
+which a hundred instances, from the time of Judith downwards, prove to be
+at its strongest where the need is greatest.
+
+When Mademoiselle de Vrillac came out of the hour-long swoon into which
+her lover's defection had cast her, the expectation of the worst was so
+strong upon her that she could not at once credit the respite which
+Madame Carlat hastened to announce. She could not believe that she still
+lay safe, in her own room above stairs; that she was in the care of her
+own servants, and that the chamber held no presence more hateful than
+that of the good woman who sat weeping beside her.
+
+As was to be expected, she came to herself sighing and shuddering,
+trembling with nervous exhaustion. She looked for _him_, as soon as she
+looked for any; and even when she had seen the door locked and double-
+locked, she doubted--doubted, and shook and hid herself in the hangings
+of the bed. The noise of the riot and rapine which prevailed in the
+city, and which reached the ear even in that locked room--and although
+the window, of paper, with an upper pane of glass, looked into a
+courtyard--was enough to drive the blood from a woman's cheeks. But it
+was fear of the house, not of the street, fear from within, not from
+without, which impelled the girl into the darkest corner and shook her
+wits. She could not believe that even this short respite was hers, until
+she had repeatedly heard the fact confirmed at Madame Carlat's mouth.
+
+"You are deceiving me!" she cried more than once. And each time she
+started up in fresh terror. "He never said that he would not return
+until to-morrow!"
+
+"He did, my lamb, he did!" the old woman answered with tears. "Would I
+deceive you?"
+
+"He said he would not return?"
+
+"He said he would not return until to-morrow. You had until to-morrow,
+he said."
+
+"And then?"
+
+"He would come and bring the priest with him," Madame Carlat replied
+sorrowfully.
+
+"The priest? To-morrow!" Mademoiselle cried. "The priest!" and she
+crouched anew with hot eyes behind the hangings of the bed, and,
+shivering, hid her face.
+
+But this for a time only. As soon as she had made certain of the
+respite, and that she had until the morrow, her courage rose, and with it
+the instinct of which mention has been made. Count Hannibal had granted
+a respite; short as it was, and no more than the barest humanity
+required, to grant one at all was not the act of the mere butcher who
+holds the trembling lamb, unresisting, in his hands. It was an act--no
+more, again be it said, than humanity required--and yet an act which
+bespoke an expectation of some return, of some correlative advantage. It
+was not in the part of the mere brigand. Something had been granted.
+Something short of the utmost in the captor's power had been exacted. He
+had shown that there were things he would not do.
+
+Then might not something more be won from him? A further delay, another
+point; something, no matter what, which could be turned to advantage?
+With the brigand it is not possible to bargain. But who gives a little
+may give more; who gives a day may give a week; who gives a week may give
+a month. And a month? Her heart leapt up. A month seemed a lifetime,
+an eternity, to her who had but until to-morrow!
+
+Yet there was one consideration which might have daunted a spirit less
+brave. To obtain aught from Tavannes it was needful to ask him, and to
+ask him it was needful to see him; and to see him _before_ that to-morrow
+which meant so much to her. It was necessary, in a word, to run some
+risk; but without risk the card could not be played, and she did not
+hesitate. It might turn out that she was wrong, that the man was not
+only pitiless and without bowels of mercy, but lacked also the shred of
+decency for which she gave him credit, and on which she counted. In that
+case, if she sent for him--but she would not consider that case.
+
+The position of the window, while it increased the women's safety,
+debarred them from all knowledge of what was going forward, except that
+which their ears afforded them. They had no means of judging whether
+Tavannes remained in the house or had sallied forth to play his part in
+the work of murder. Madame Carlat, indeed, had no desire to know
+anything. In that room above stairs, with the door double-locked, lay a
+hope of safety in the present, and of ultimate deliverance; there she had
+a respite from terror, as long as she kept the world outside. To her,
+therefore, the notion of sending for Tavannes, or communicating with him,
+came as a thunderbolt. Was her mistress mad? Did she wish to court her
+fate? To reach Tavannes they must apply to his riders, for Carlat and
+the men-servants were confined above. Those riders were grim, brutal
+men, who might resort to rudeness on their own account. And Madame,
+clinging in a paroxysm of terror to her mistress, suggested all manner of
+horrors, one on top of the other, until she increased her own terror
+tenfold. And yet, to do her justice, nothing that even her frenzied
+imagination suggested exceeded the things which the streets of Paris,
+fruitful mother of horrors, were witnessing at that very hour. As we now
+know.
+
+For it was noon--or a little more--of Sunday, August the twenty-fourth,
+"a holiday, and therefore the people could more conveniently find leisure
+to kill and plunder." From the bridges, and particularly from the stone
+bridge of Notre Dame--while they lay safe in that locked room, and
+Tignonville crouched in his haymow--Huguenots less fortunate were being
+cast, bound hand and foot, into the Seine. On the river bank Spire
+Niquet, the bookman, was being burnt over a slow fire, fed with his own
+books. In their houses, Ramus the scholar and Goujon the sculptor--than
+whom Paris has neither seen nor deserved a greater--were being butchered
+like sheep; and in the Valley of Misery, now the Quai de la Megisserie,
+seven hundred persons who had sought refuge in the prisons were being
+beaten to death with bludgeons. Nay, at this hour--a little sooner or a
+little later, what matters it?--M. de Tignonville's own cousin, Madame
+d'Yverne, the darling of the Louvre the day before, perished in the hands
+of the mob; and the sister of M. de Taverny, equally ill-fated, died in
+the same fashion, after being dragged through the streets.
+
+Madame Carlat, then, went not a whit beyond the mark in her argument. But
+Mademoiselle had made up her mind, and was not to be dissuaded.
+
+"If I am to be Monsieur's wife," she said with quivering nostrils, "shall
+I fear his servants?"
+
+And opening the door herself, for the others would not, she called. The
+man who answered was a Norman; and short of stature, and wrinkled and low-
+browed of feature, with a thatch of hair and a full beard, he seemed the
+embodiment of the women's apprehensions. Moreover, his _patois_ of the
+cider-land was little better than German to them; their southern, softer
+tongue was sheer Italian to him. But he seemed not ill-disposed, or
+Mademoiselle's air overawed him; and presently she made him understand,
+and with a nod he descended to carry her message.
+
+Then Mademoiselle's heart began to beat; and beat more quickly when she
+heard _his_ step--alas! she knew it already, knew it from all others--on
+the stairs. The table was set, the card must be played, to win or lose.
+It might be that with the low opinion he held of women he would think her
+reconciled to her lot; he would think this an overture, a step towards
+kinder treatment, one more proof of the inconstancy of the lower and the
+weaker sex, made to be men's playthings. And at that thought her eyes
+grew hot with rage. But if it were so, she must still put up with it.
+She must still put up with it! She had sent for him, and he was
+coming--he was at the door!
+
+He entered, and she breathed more freely. For once his face lacked the
+sneer, the look of smiling possession, which she had come to know and
+hate. It was grave, expectant, even suspicious; still harsh and dark,
+akin, as she now observed, to the low-browed, furrowed face of the rider
+who had summoned him. But the offensive look was gone, and she could
+breathe.
+
+He closed the door behind him, but he did not advance into the room.
+
+"At your pleasure, Mademoiselle?" he said simply. "You sent for me, I
+think."
+
+She was on her feet, standing before him with something of the
+submissiveness of Roxana before her conqueror.
+
+"I did," she said; and stopped at that, her hand to her side as if she
+could not continue. But presently in a low voice, "I have heard," she
+went on, "what you said, Monsieur, after I lost consciousness."
+
+"Yes?" he said; and was silent. Nor did he lose his watchful look.
+
+"I am obliged to you for your thought of me," she continued in a faint
+voice, "and I shall be still further obliged--I speak to you thus quickly
+and thus early--if you will grant me a somewhat longer time."
+
+"Do you mean--if I will postpone our marriage?"
+
+"Yes, Monsieur."
+
+"It is impossible!"
+
+"Do not say that," she cried, raising her voice impulsively. "I appeal
+to your generosity. And for a short, a very short, time only."
+
+"It is impossible," he answered quietly. "And for reasons, Mademoiselle.
+In the first place, I can more easily protect my wife. In the second, I
+am even now summoned to the Louvre, and should be on my way thither. By
+to-morrow evening, unless I am mistaken in the business on which I am
+required, I shall be on my way to a distant province with royal letters.
+It is essential that our marriage take place before I go."
+
+"Why?" she asked stubbornly.
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. "Why?" he repeated. "Can you ask,
+Mademoiselle, after the events of last night? Because, if you please, I
+do not wish to share the fate of M. de Tignonville. Because in these
+days life is uncertain, and death too certain. Because it was our turn
+last night, and it may be the turn of your friends--to-morrow night!"
+
+"Then some have escaped?" she cried.
+
+He smiled. "I am glad to find you so shrewd," he replied. "In an honest
+wife it is an excellent quality. Yes, Mademoiselle; one or two."
+
+"Who? Who? I pray you tell me."
+
+"M. de Montgomery, who slept beyond the river, for one; and the Vidame,
+and some with him. M. de Biron, whom I count a Huguenot, and who holds
+the Arsenal in the King's teeth, for another. And a few more. Enough,
+in a word, Mademoiselle, to keep us wakeful. It is impossible,
+therefore, for me to postpone the fulfilment of your promise."
+
+"A promise on conditions!" she retorted, in rage that she could win no
+more. And every line of her splendid figure, every tone of her voice
+flamed sudden, hot rebellion. "I do not go for nothing! You gave me the
+lives of all in the house, Monsieur! Of all!" she repeated with passion.
+"And all are not here! Before I marry you, you must show me M. de
+Tignonville alive and safe!"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. "He has taken himself off," he said. "It is
+naught to me what happens to him now."
+
+"It is all to me!" she retorted.
+
+At that he glared at her, the veins of his forehead swelling suddenly.
+But after a seeming struggle with himself he put the insult by, perhaps
+for future reckoning and account.
+
+"I did what I could," he said sullenly. "Had I willed it he had died
+there and then in the room below. I gave him his life. If he has risked
+it anew and lost it, it is naught to me."
+
+"It was his life you gave me," she repeated stubbornly. "His life--and
+the others. But that is not all," she continued; "you promised me a
+minister."
+
+He nodded, smiling sourly to himself, as if this confirmed a suspicion he
+had entertained.
+
+"Or a priest," he said.
+
+"No, a minister."
+
+"If one could be obtained. If not, a priest."
+
+"No, it was to be at my will; and I will a minister! I will a minister!"
+she cried passionately. "Show me M. de Tignonville alive, and bring me a
+minister of my faith, and I will keep my promise, M. de Tavannes. Have
+no fear of that. But otherwise, I will not."
+
+"You will not?" he cried. "You will not?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"You will not marry me?"
+
+"No!"
+
+The moment she had said it fear seized her, and she could have fled from
+him, screaming. The flash of his eyes, the sudden passion of his face,
+burned themselves into her memory. She thought for a second that he
+would spring on her and strike her down. Yet though the women behind her
+held their breath, she faced him, and did not quail; and to that, she
+fancied, she owed it that he controlled himself.
+
+"You will not?" he repeated, as if he could not understand such
+resistance to his will--as if he could not credit his ears. "You will
+not?" But after that, when he had said it three times, he laughed; a
+laugh, however, with a snarl in it that chilled her blood.
+
+"You bargain, do you?" he said. "You will have the last tittle of the
+price, will you? And have thought of this and that to put me off, and to
+gain time until your lover, who is all to you, comes to save you? Oh,
+clever girl! clever! But have you thought where you stand--woman? Do
+you know that if I gave the word to my people they would treat you as the
+commonest baggage that tramps the Froidmantel? Do you know that it rests
+with me to save you, or to throw you to the wolves whose ravening you
+hear?" And he pointed to the window. "Minister? Priest?" he continued
+grimly. "_Mon Dieu_, Mademoiselle, I stand astonished at my moderation.
+You chatter to me of ministers and priests, and the one or the other,
+when it might be neither! When you are as much and as hopelessly in my
+power to-day as the wench in my kitchen! You! You flout me, and make
+terms with me! You!"
+
+And he came so near her with his dark harsh face, his tone rose so
+menacing on the last word, that her nerves, shattered before, gave way,
+and, unable to control herself, she flinched with a low cry, thinking he
+would strike her.
+
+He did not follow, nor move to follow; but he laughed a low laugh of
+content. And his eyes devoured her.
+
+"Ho! ho!" he said. "We are not so brave as we pretend to be, it seems.
+And yet you dared to chaffer with me? You thought to thwart me--Tavannes!
+_Mon Dieu_, Mademoiselle, to what did you trust? To what did you trust?
+Ay, and to what do you trust?"
+
+She knew that by the movement which fear had forced from her she had
+jeopardized everything. That she stood to lose all and more than all
+which she had thought to win by a bold front. A woman less brave, of a
+spirit less firm, would have given up the contest, and have been glad to
+escape so. But this woman, though her bloodless face showed that she
+knew what cause she had for fear, and though her heart was indeed sick
+with terror, held her ground at the point to which she had retreated. She
+played her last card.
+
+"To what do I trust?" she muttered with trembling lips.
+
+"Yes, Mademoiselle," he answered between his teeth. "To what do you
+trust--that you play with Tavannes?"
+
+"To his honour, Monsieur," she answered faintly. "And to your promise."
+
+He looked at her with his mocking smile. "And yet," he sneered, "you
+thought a moment ago that I should strike you. You thought that I should
+beat you! And now it is my honour and my promise! Oh, clever, clever,
+Mademoiselle! 'Tis so that women make fools of men. I knew that
+something of this kind was on foot when you sent for me, for I know women
+and their ways. But, let me tell you, it is an ill time to speak of
+honour when the streets are red! And of promises when the King's word is
+'No faith with a heretic!'"
+
+"Yet you will keep yours," she said bravely.
+
+He did not answer at once, and hope which was almost dead in her breast
+began to recover; nay, presently sprang up erect. For the man hesitated,
+it was evident; he brooded with a puckered brow and gloomy eyes; an
+observer might have fancied that he traced pain as well as doubt in his
+face. At last--
+
+"There is a thing," he said slowly and with a sort of glare at her,
+"which, it may be, you have not reckoned. You press me now, and will
+stand on your terms and your conditions, your _ifs_ and your _unlesses_!
+You will have the most from me, and the bargain and a little beside the
+bargain! But I would have you think if you are wise. Bethink you how it
+will be between us when you are my wife--if you press me so now,
+Mademoiselle. How will it sweeten things then? How will it soften them?
+And to what, I pray you, will you trust for fair treatment then, if you
+will be so against me now?"
+
+She shuddered. "To the mercy of my husband," she said in a low voice.
+And her chin sank on her breast.
+
+"You will be content to trust to that?" he answered grimly. And his tone
+and the lifting of his brow promised little clemency. "Bethink you! 'Tis
+your rights now, and your terms, Mademoiselle! And then it will be only
+my mercy--Madame."
+
+"I am content," she muttered faintly.
+
+"And the Lord have mercy on my soul, is what you would add," he retorted,
+"so much trust have you in my mercy! And you are right! You are right,
+since you have played this trick on me. But as you will. If you will
+have it so, have it so! You shall stand on your conditions now; you
+shall have your pennyweight and full advantage, and the rigour of the
+pact. But afterwards--afterwards, Madame de Tavannes--"
+
+He did not finish his sentence, for at the first word which granted her
+petition, Mademoiselle had sunk down on the low wooden window-seat beside
+which she stood, and, cowering into its farthest corner, her face hidden
+on her arms, had burst into violent weeping. Her hair, hastily knotted
+up in the hurry of the previous night, hung in a thick plait to the curve
+of her waist; the nape of her neck showed beside it milk-white. The man
+stood awhile contemplating her in silence, his gloomy eyes watching the
+pitiful movement of her shoulders, the convulsive heaving of her figure.
+But he did not offer to touch her, and at length he turned about. First
+one and then the other of her women quailed and shrank under his gaze; he
+seemed about to add something. But he did not speak. The sentence he
+had left unfinished, the long look he bent on the weeping girl as he
+turned from her, spoke more eloquently of the future than a score of
+orations.
+
+"_Afterwards, Madame de Tavannes_!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. IN THE HALL OF THE LOUVRE.
+
+
+It is a strange thing that love--or passion, if the sudden fancy for
+Mademoiselle which had seized Count Hannibal be deemed unworthy of the
+higher name--should so entirely possess the souls of those who harbour it
+that the greatest events and the most astounding catastrophes, even
+measures which set their mark for all time on a nation, are to them of
+importance only so far as they affect the pursuit of the fair one.
+
+As Tavannes, after leaving Mademoiselle, rode through the paved lanes,
+beneath the gabled houses, and under the shadow of the Gothic spires of
+his day, he saw a score of sights, moving to pity, or wrath, or wonder.
+He saw Paris as a city sacked; a slaughter-house, where for a week a
+masque had moved to stately music; blood on the nailed doors and the
+close-set window bars; and at the corners of the ways strewn garments,
+broken weapons, the livid dead in heaps. But he saw all with eyes which
+in all and everywhere, among living and dead, sought only Tignonville;
+Tignonville first, and next a heretic minister, with enough of life in
+him to do his office.
+
+Probably it was to this that one man hunted through Paris owed his escape
+that day. He sprang from a narrow passage full in Tavannes' view, and,
+hair on end, his eyes starting from his head, ran blindly--as a hare will
+run when chased--along the street to meet Count Hannibal's company. The
+man's face was wet with the dews of death, his lungs seemed cracking, his
+breath hissed from him as he ran. His pursuers were hard on him, and,
+seeing him headed by Count Hannibal's party, yelled in triumph, holding
+him for dead. And dead he would have been within thirty seconds had
+Tavannes played his part. But his thoughts were elsewhere. Either he
+took the poor wretch for Tignonville, or for the minister on whom his
+mind was running; anyway he suffered him to slip under the belly of his
+horse; then, to make matters worse, he wheeled to follow him in so
+untimely and clumsy a fashion that his horse blocked the way and stopped
+the pursuers in their tracks. The quarry slipped into an alley and
+vanished. The hunters stood and blasphemed, and even for a moment seemed
+inclined to resent the mistake. But Tavannes smiled; a broader smile
+lightened the faces of the six iron-clad men behind him; and for some
+reason the gang of ruffians thought better of it and slunk aside.
+
+There are hard men, who feel scorn of the things which in the breasts of
+others excite pity. Tavannes' lip curled as he rode on through the
+streets, looking this way and that, and seeing what a King twenty-two
+years old had made of his capital. His lip curled most of all when he
+came, passing between the two tennis-courts, to the east gate of the
+Louvre, and found the entrance locked and guarded, and all communication
+between city and palace cut off. Such a proof of unkingly panic, in a
+crisis wrought by the King himself, astonished him less a few minutes
+later, when, the keys having been brought and the door opened, he entered
+the courtyard of the fortress.
+
+Within and about the door of the gatehouse some three-score archers and
+arquebusiers stood to their arms; not in array, but in disorderly groups,
+from which the babble of voices, of feverish laughter, and strained jests
+rose without ceasing. The weltering sun, of which the beams just topped
+the farther side of the quadrangle, fell slantwise on their armour, and
+heightened their exaggerated and restless movements. To a calm eye they
+seemed like men acting in a nightmare. Their fitful talk and disjointed
+gestures, their sweating brows and damp hair, no less than the sullen,
+brooding silence of one here and there, bespoke the abnormal and the
+terrible. There were livid faces among them, and twitching cheeks, and
+some who swallowed much; and some again who bared their crimson arms and
+bragged insanely of the part they had played. But perhaps the most
+striking thing was the thirst, the desire, the demand for news, and for
+fresh excitement. In the space of time it took him to pass through them,
+Count Hannibal heard a dozen rumours of what was passing in the city;
+that Montgomery and the gentlemen who had slept beyond the river had
+escaped on horseback in their shirts; that Guise had been shot in the
+pursuit; that he had captured the Vidame de Chartres and all the
+fugitives; that he had never left the city; that he was even then
+entering by the Porte de Bucy. Again that Biron had surrendered the
+Arsenal, that he had threatened to fire on the city, that he was dead,
+that with the Huguenots who had escaped he was marching on the Louvre,
+that--
+
+And then Tavannes passed out of the blinding sunshine, and out of earshot
+of their babble, and had plain in his sight across the quadrangle, the
+new facade, Italian, graceful, of the Renaissance; which rose in smiling
+contrast with the three dark Gothic sides that now, the central tower
+removed, frowned unimpeded at one another. But what was this which lay
+along the foot of the new Italian wall? This, round which some stood,
+gazing curiously, while others strewed fresh sand about it, or after long
+downward-looking glanced up to answer the question of a person at a
+window?
+
+Death; and over death--death in its most cruel aspect--a cloud of
+buzzing, whirling flies, and the smell, never to be forgotten, of much
+spilled blood. From a doorway hard by came shrill bursts of hysterical
+laughter; and with the laughter plumped out, even as Tavannes crossed the
+court, a young girl, thrust forth it seemed by her fellows, for she
+turned about and struggled as she came. Once outside she hung back,
+giggling and protesting, half willing, half unwilling; and meeting
+Tavannes' eye thrust her way in again with a whirl of her petticoats, and
+a shriek. But before he had taken four paces she was out again.
+
+He paused to see who she was, and his thoughts involuntarily went back to
+the woman he had left weeping in the upper room. Then he turned about
+again and stood to count the dead. He identified Piles, identified
+Pardaillan, identified Soubise--whose corpse the murderers had robbed of
+the last rag--and Touchet and St. Galais. He made his reckoning with an
+unmoved face, and with the same face stopped and stared, and moved from
+one to another; had he not seen the slaughter about "_le petit homme_" at
+Jarnac, and the dead of three pitched fields? But when a bystander,
+smirking obsequiously, passed him a jest on Soubise, and with his finger
+pointed the jest, he had the same hard unmoved face for the gibe as for
+the dead. And the jester shrank away, abashed and perplexed by his stare
+and his reticence.
+
+Halfway up the staircase to the great gallery or guard-room above, Count
+Hannibal found his brother, the Marshal, huddled together in drunken
+slumber on a seat in a recess. In the gallery to which he passed on
+without awakening him, a crowd of courtiers and ladies, with arquebusiers
+and captains of the quarters, walked to and fro, talking in whispers; or
+peeped over shoulders towards the inner end of the hall, where the
+querulous voice of the King rose now and again above the hum. As
+Tavannes moved that way, Nancay, in the act of passing out, booted and
+armed for the road, met him and almost jostled him.
+
+"Ah, well met, M. le Comte," he sneered, with as much hostility as he
+dared betray. "The King has asked for you twice."
+
+"I am going to him. And you? Whither in such a hurry, M. Nancay?"
+
+"To Chatillon."
+
+"On pleasant business?"
+
+"Enough that it is on the King's!" Nancay replied, with unexpected
+temper. "I hope that you may find yours as pleasant!" he added with a
+grin. And he went on.
+
+The gleam of malice in the man's eye warned Tavannes to pause. He looked
+round for some one who might be in the secret, saw the Provost of the
+Merchants, and approached him.
+
+"What's amiss, M. le Charron?" he asked. "Is not the affair going as it
+should?"
+
+"'Tis about the Arsenal, M. le Comte," the Provost answered busily. "M.
+de Biron is harbouring the vermin there. He has lowered the portcullis
+and pointed his culverins over the gate and will not yield it or listen
+to reason. The King would bring him to terms, but no one will venture
+himself inside with the message. Rats in a trap, you know, bite hard,
+and care little whom they bite."
+
+"I begin to understand."
+
+"Precisely, M. le Comte. His Majesty would have sent M. de Nancay. But
+he elected to go to Chatillon, to seize the young brood there. The
+Admiral's children, you comprehend."
+
+"Whose teeth are not yet grown! He was wise."
+
+"To be sure, M. de Tavannes, to be sure. But the King was annoyed, and
+on top of that came a priest with complaints, and if I may make so bold
+as to advise you, you will not--"
+
+But Tavannes fancied that he had caught the gist of the difficulty, and
+with a nod he moved on; and so he missed the warning which the other had
+it in his mind to give. A moment and he reached the inner circle, and
+there halted, disconcerted, nay taken aback. For as soon as he showed
+his face, the King, who was pacing to and fro like a caged beast, before
+a table at which three clerks knelt on cushions, espied him, and stood
+still. With a glare of something like madness in his eyes, Charles
+raised his hand, and with a shaking finger singled him out.
+
+"So, by G-d, you are there!" he cried, with a volley of blasphemy. And
+he signed to those about Count Hannibal to stand away from him. "You are
+there, are you? And you are not afraid to show your face? I tell you,
+it's you and such as you bring us into contempt! so that it is said
+everywhere Guise does all and serves God, and we follow because we must!
+It's you, and such as you, are stumbling-blocks to our good folk of
+Paris! Are you traitor, sirrah?" he continued with passion, "or are you
+of our brother Alencon's opinions, that you traverse our orders to the
+damnation of your soul and our discredit? Are you traitor? Or are you
+heretic? Or what are you? God in heaven, will you answer me, man, or
+shall I send you where you will find your tongue?"
+
+"I know not of what your Majesty accuses me," Count Hannibal answered,
+with a scarcely perceptible shrug of the shoulders.
+
+"I? 'Tis not I," the King retorted. His hair hung damp on his brow, and
+he dried his hands continually; while his gestures had the ill-measured
+and eccentric violence of an epileptic. "Here, you! Speak, father, and
+confound him!"
+
+Then Tavannes discovered on the farther side of the circle the priest
+whom his brother had ridden down that morning. Father Pezelay's pale
+hatchet-face gleamed paler than ordinary; and a great bandage hid one
+temple and part of his face. But below the bandage the flame of his eyes
+was not lessened, nor the venom of his tongue. To the King he had
+come--for no other would deal with his violent opponent; to the King's
+presence! and, as he prepared to blast his adversary, now his chance was
+come, his long lean frame, in its narrow black cassock, seemed to grow
+longer, leaner, more baleful, more snake-like. He stood there a fitting
+representative of the dark fanaticism of Paris, which Charles and his
+successor--the last of a doomed line--alternately used as tool or feared
+as master; and to which the most debased and the most immoral of courts
+paid, in its sober hours, a vile and slavish homage. Even in the midst
+of the drunken, shameless courtiers--who stood, if they stood for
+anything, for that other influence of the day, the Renaissance--he was to
+be reckoned with; and Count Hannibal knew it. He knew that in the eyes
+not of Charles only, but of nine out of ten who listened to him, a priest
+was more sacred than a virgin, and a tonsure than all the virtues of
+spotless innocence.
+
+"Shall the King give with one hand and withdraw with the other?" the
+priest began, in a voice hoarse yet strident, a voice borne high above
+the crowd on the wings of passion. "Shall he spare of the best of the
+men and the maidens whom God hath doomed, whom the Church hath devoted,
+whom the King hath given? Is the King's hand shortened or his word
+annulled that a man does as he forbiddeth and leaves undone what he
+commandeth? Is God mocked? Woe, woe unto you," he continued, turning
+swiftly, arms uplifted, towards Tavannes, "who please yourself with the
+red and white of their maidens and take of the best of the spoil, sparing
+where the King's word is 'Spare not'! Who strike at Holy Church with the
+sword! Who--"
+
+"Answer, sirrah!" Charles cried, spurning the floor in his fury. He
+could not listen long to any man. "Is it so? Is it so? Do you do these
+things?"
+
+Count Hannibal shrugged his shoulders and was about to answer, when a
+thick, drunken voice rose from the crowd behind him.
+
+"Is it what? Eh! Is it what?" it droned. And a figure with bloodshot
+eyes, disordered beard, and rich clothes awry, forced its way through the
+obsequious circle. It was Marshal Tavannes. "Eh, what? You'd beard the
+King, would you?" he hiccoughed truculently, his eyes on Father Pezelay,
+his hand on his sword. "Were you a priest ten times--"
+
+"Silence!" Charles cried, almost foaming with rage at this fresh
+interruption. "It's not he, fool! 'Tis your pestilent brother."
+
+"Who touches my brother touches Tavannes!" the Marshal answered with a
+menacing gesture. He was sober enough, it appeared, to hear what was
+said, but not to comprehend its drift; and this caused a titter, which
+immediately excited his rage. He turned and seized the nearest laugher
+by the ear. "Insolent!" he cried. "I will teach you to laugh when the
+King speaks! Puppy! Who laughs at his Majesty or touches my brother has
+to do with Tavannes!"
+
+The King, in a rage that almost deprived him of speech, stamped the floor
+twice.
+
+"Idiot!" he cried. "Imbecile! Let the man go! 'Tis not he! 'Tis your
+heretic brother, I tell you! By all the Saints! By the body of--" and
+he poured forth a flood of oaths. "Will you listen to me and be silent!
+Will you--your brother--"
+
+"If he be not your Majesty's servant, I will kill him with this sword!"
+the irrepressible Marshal struck in. "As I have killed ten to-day! Ten!"
+And, staggering back, he only saved himself from falling by clutching
+Chicot about the neck.
+
+"Steady, my pretty Marechale!" the jester cried, chucking him under the
+chin with one hand, while with some difficulty he supported him with the
+other--for he, too, was far from sober--
+
+ "Pretty Margot, toy with me,
+ Maiden bashful--"
+
+"Silence!" Charles cried, darting forth his long arms in a fury of
+impatience. "God, have I killed every man of sense? Are you all gone
+mad? Silence! Do you hear? Silence! And let me hear what he has to
+say," with a movement towards Count Hannibal. "And look you, sirrah," he
+continued with a curse, "see that it be to the purpose!"
+
+"If it be a question of your Majesty's service," Tavannes answered, "and
+obedience to your Majesty's orders, I am deeper in it than he who stands
+there!" with a sign towards the priest. "I give my word for that. And I
+will prove it."
+
+"How, sir?" Charles cried. "How, how, how? How will you prove it?"
+
+"By doing for you, sire, what he will not do!" Tavannes answered
+scornfully. "Let him stand out, and if he will serve his Church as I
+will serve my King--"
+
+"Blaspheme not!" cried the priest.
+
+"Chatter not!" Tavannes retorted hardily, "but do! Better is he," he
+continued, "who takes a city than he who slays women! Nay, sire," he
+went on hurriedly, seeing the King start, "be not angry, but hear me! You
+would send to Biron, to the Arsenal? You seek a messenger, sire? Then
+let the good father be the man. Let him take your Majesty's will to
+Biron, and let him see the Grand Master face to face, and bring him to
+reason. Or, if he will not, I will! Let that be the test!"
+
+"Ay, ay!" cried Marshal de Tavannes, "you say well, brother! Let him!"
+
+"And if he will not, I will!" Tavannes repeated. "Let that be the test,
+sire."
+
+The King wheeled suddenly to Father Pezelay. "You hear, father?" he
+said. "What say you?"
+
+The priest's face grew sallow, and more sallow. He knew that the walls
+of the Arsenal sheltered men whose hands no convention and no order of
+Biron's would keep from his throat, were the grim gate and frowning
+culverins once passed; men who had seen their women and children, their
+wives and sisters immolated at his word, and now asked naught but to
+stand face to face and eye to eye with him and tear him limb from limb
+before they died! The challenge, therefore, was one-sided and unfair;
+but for that very reason it shook him. The astuteness of the man who,
+taken by surprise, had conceived this snare filled him with dread. He
+dared not accept, and he scarcely dared to refuse the offer. And
+meantime the eyes of the courtiers, who grinned in their beards, were on
+him. At length he spoke, but it was in a voice which had lost its
+boldness and assurance.
+
+"It is not for me to clear myself," he cried, shrill and violent, "but
+for those who are accused, for those who have belied the King's word, and
+set at nought his Christian orders. For you, Count Hannibal, heretic, or
+no better than heretic, it is easy to say 'I go.' For you go but to your
+own, and your own will receive you!"
+
+"Then you will not go?" with a jeer.
+
+"At your command? No!" the priest shrieked with passion. "His Majesty
+knows whether I serve him."
+
+"I know," Charles cried, stamping his foot in a fury, "that you all serve
+me when it pleases you! That you are all sticks of the same faggot, wood
+of the same bundle, hell-babes in your own business, and sluggards in
+mine! You kill to-day and you'll lay it to me to-morrow! Ay, you will!
+you will!" he repeated frantically, and drove home the asseveration with
+a fearful oath. "The dead are as good servants as you! Foucauld was
+better! Foucauld? Foucauld? Ah, my God!"
+
+And abruptly in presence of them all, with the sacred name, which he so
+often defiled, on his lips, Charles turned, and covering his face burst
+into childish weeping; while a great silence fell on all--on Bussy with
+the blood of his cousin Resnel on his point, on Fervacques, the betrayer
+of his friend, on Chicot, the slayer of his rival, on Cocconnas the
+cruel--on men with hands unwashed from the slaughter, and on the
+shameless women who lined the walls; on all who used this sobbing man for
+their stepping-stone, and, to attain their ends and gain their purposes,
+trampled his dull soul in blood and mire.
+
+One looked at another in consternation. Fear grew in eyes that a moment
+before were bold; cheeks turned pale that a moment before were hectic. If
+_he_ changed as rapidly as this, if so little dependence could be placed
+on his moods or his resolutions, who was safe? Whose turn might it not
+be to-morrow? Or who might not be held accountable for the deeds done
+this day? Many, from whom remorse had seemed far distant a while before,
+shuddered and glanced behind them. It was as if the dead who lay stark
+without the doors, ay, and the countless dead of Paris, with whose
+shrieks the air was laden, had flocked in shadowy shape into the hall;
+and there, standing beside their murderers, had whispered with their cold
+breath in the living ears, "A reckoning! A reckoning! As I am, thou
+shalt be!"
+
+It was Count Hannibal who broke the spell and the silence, and with his
+hand on his brother's shoulder stood forward.
+
+"Nay, sire," he cried, in a voice which rang defiant in the roof, and
+seemed to challenge alike the living and the dead, "if all deny the deed,
+yet will not I! What we have done we have done! So be it! The dead are
+dead! So be it! For the rest, your Majesty has still one servant who
+will do your will, one soldier whose life is at your disposition! I have
+said I will go, and I go, sire. And you, churchman," he continued,
+turning in bitter scorn to the priest, "do you go too--to church! To
+church, shaveling! Go, watch and pray for us! Fast and flog for us!
+Whip those shoulders, whip them till the blood runs down! For it is all,
+it seems, you will do for your King!"
+
+Charles turned. "Silence, railer!" he said in a broken voice. "Sow no
+more troubles! Already," a shudder shook his tall ungainly form, "I see
+blood, blood, blood everywhere! Blood? Ah, God, shall I from this time
+see anything else? But there is no turning back. There is no undoing.
+So, do you go to Biron. And do you," he went on, sullenly addressing
+Marshal Tavannes, "take him and tell him what it is needful he should
+know."
+
+"'Tis done, sire!" the Marshal cried, with a hiccough. "Come, brother!"
+
+But when the two, the courtiers making quick way for them, had passed
+down the hall to the door, the Marshal tapped Hannibal's sleeve.
+
+"It was touch and go," he muttered; it was plain he had been more sober
+than he seemed. "Mind you, it does not do to thwart our little master in
+his fits! Remember that another time, or worse will come of it, brother.
+As it is, you came out of it finely and tripped that black devil's heels
+to a marvel! But you won't be so mad as to go to Biron?"
+
+"Yes," Count Hannibal answered coldly. "I shall go."
+
+"Better not! Better not!" the Marshal answered. "'Twill be easier to go
+in than to come out--with a whole throat! Have you taken wild cats in
+the hollow of a tree? The young first, and then the she-cat? Well, it
+will be that! Take my advice, brother. Have after Montgomery, if you
+please, ride with Nancay to Chatillon--he is mounting now--go where you
+please out of Paris, but don't go there! Biron hates us, hates me. And
+for the King, if he do not see you for a few days, 'twill blow over in a
+week."
+
+Count Hannibal shrugged his shoulders. "No," he said, "I shall go."
+
+The Marshal stared a moment. "Morbleu!" he said, "why? 'Tis not to
+please the King, I know. What do you think to find there, brother?"
+
+"A minister," Hannibal answered gently. "I want one with life in him,
+and they are scarce in the open. So I must to covert after him." And,
+twitching his sword-belt a little nearer to his hand, he passed across
+the court to the gate, and to his horses.
+
+The Marshal went back laughing, and, slapping his thigh as he entered the
+hall, jostled by accident a gentleman who was passing out.
+
+"What is it?" the Gascon cried hotly; for it was Chicot he had jostled.
+
+"Who touches my brother touches Tavannes!" the Marshal hiccoughed. And,
+smiting his thigh anew, he went off into another fit of laughter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. DIPLOMACY.
+
+
+Where the old wall of Paris, of which no vestige remains, ran down on the
+east to the north bank of the river, the space in the angle between the
+Seine and the ramparts beyond the Rue St. Pol wore at this date an aspect
+typical of the troubles of the time. Along the waterside the gloomy old
+Palace of St. Pol, once the residence of the mad King Charles the
+Sixth--and his wife, the abandoned Isabeau de Baviere--sprawled its maze
+of mouldering courts and ruined galleries; a dreary monument of the
+Gothic days which were passing from France. Its spacious curtilage and
+dark pleasaunces covered all the ground between the river and the Rue St.
+Antoine; and north of this, under the shadow of the eight great towers of
+the Bastille, which looked, four outward to check the stranger, four
+inward to bridle the town, a second palace, beginning where St. Pol
+ended, carried the realm of decay to the city wall.
+
+This second palace was the Hotel des Tournelles, a fantastic medley of
+turrets, spires, and gables, that equally with its neighbour recalled the
+days of the English domination; it had been the abode of the Regent
+Bedford. From his time it had remained for a hundred years the town
+residence of the kings of France; but the death of Henry II., slain in
+its lists by the lance of the same Montgomery who was this day fleeing
+for his life before Guise, had given his widow a distaste for it.
+Catherine de Medicis, her sons, and the Court had abandoned it; already
+its gardens lay a tangled wilderness, its roofs let in the rain, rats
+played where kings had slept; and in "our palace of the Tournelles"
+reigned only silence and decay. Unless, indeed, as was whispered abroad,
+the grim shade of the eleventh Louis sometimes walked in its desolate
+precincts.
+
+In the innermost angle between the ramparts and the river, shut off from
+the rest of Paris by the decaying courts and enceintes of these forsaken
+palaces, stood the Arsenal. Destroyed in great part by the explosion of
+a powder-mill a few years earlier, it was in the main new; and by reason
+of its river frontage, which terminated at the ruined tower of Billy, and
+its proximity to the Bastille, it was esteemed one of the keys of Paris.
+It was the appanage of the Master of the Ordnance, and within its walls
+M. de Biron, a Huguenot in politics, if not in creed, who held the office
+at this time, had secured himself on the first alarm. During the day he
+had admitted a number of refugees, whose courage or good luck had led
+them to his gate; and as night fell--on such a carnage as the hapless
+city had not beheld since the great slaughter of the Armagnacs, one
+hundred and fifty-four years earlier--the glow of his matches through the
+dusk, and the sullen tramp of his watchmen as they paced the walls,
+indicated that there was still one place in Paris where the King's will
+did not run.
+
+In comparison of the disorder which prevailed in the city, a deadly quiet
+reigned here; a stillness so chill that a timid man must have stood and
+hesitated to approach. But a stranger who about nightfall rode down the
+street towards the entrance, a single footman running at his stirrup,
+only nodded a stern approval of the preparations. As he drew nearer he
+cast an attentive eye this way and that; nor stayed until a hoarse
+challenge brought him up when he had come within six horses' lengths of
+the Arsenal gate. He reined up then, and raising his voice, asked in
+clear tones for M. de Biron.
+
+"Go," he continued boldly, "tell the Grand Master that one from the King
+is here, and would speak with him."
+
+"From the King of France?" the officer on the gate asked.
+
+"Surely! Is there more than one king in France?"
+
+A curse and a bitter cry of "King? King Herod!" were followed by a
+muttered discussion that, in the ears of one of the two who waited in the
+gloom below, boded little good. The two could descry figures moving to
+and fro before the faint red light of the smouldering matches; and
+presently a man on the gate kindled a torch, and held it so as to fling
+its light downward. The stranger's attendant cowered behind the horse.
+
+"Have a care, my lord!" he whispered. "They are aiming at us!"
+
+If so the rider's bold front and unmoved demeanour gave them pause.
+Presently, "I will send for the Grand Master" the man who had spoken
+before announced. "In whose name, monsieur?"
+
+"No matter," the stranger answered. "Say, one from the King."
+
+"You are alone?"
+
+"I shall enter alone."
+
+The assurance seemed to be satisfactory, for the man answered "Good!" and
+after a brief delay a wicket in the gate was opened, the portcullis
+creaked upward, and a plank was thrust across the ditch. The horseman
+waited until the preparations were complete; then he slid to the ground,
+threw his rein to the servant, and boldly walked across. In an instant
+he left behind him the dark street, the river, and the sounds of outrage,
+which the night breeze bore from the farther bank, and found himself
+within the vaulted gateway, in a bright glare of light, the centre of a
+ring of gleaming eyes and angry faces.
+
+The light blinded him for a few seconds; but the guards, on their side,
+were in no better case. For the stranger was masked; and in their
+ignorance who it was looked at them through the slits in the black velvet
+they stared, disconcerted, and at a loss. There were some there with
+naked weapons in their hands who would have struck him through had they
+known who he was; and more who would have stood aside while the deed was
+done. But the uncertainty--that and the masked man's tone paralyzed
+them. For they reflected that he might be anyone. Conde, indeed, stood
+too small, but Navarre, if he lived, might fill that cloak; or Guise, or
+Anjou, or the King himself. And while some would not have scrupled to
+strike the blood royal, more would have been quick to protect and avenge
+it. And so before the dark uncertainty of the mask, before the riddle of
+the smiling eyes which glittered through the slits, they stared
+irresolute; until a hand, the hand of one bolder than his fellows, was
+raised to pluck away the screen.
+
+The unknown dealt the fellow a buffet with his fist. "Down, rascal!" he
+said hoarsely. "And you"--to the officer--"show me instantly to M. de
+Biron!"
+
+But the lieutenant, who stood in fear of his men, looked at him
+doubtfully.
+
+"Nay," he said, "not so fast!" And one of the others, taking the lead,
+cried, "No! We may have no need of M. de Biron. Your name, monsieur,
+first."
+
+With a quick movement the stranger gripped the officer's wrist.
+
+"Tell your master," he said, "that he who clasped his wrist _thus_ on the
+night of Pentecost is here, and would speak with him! And say, mark you,
+that I will come to him, not he to me!"
+
+The sign and the tone imposed upon the boldest. Two-thirds of the watch
+were Huguenots, who burned to avenge the blood of their fellows; and
+these, overriding their officer, had agreed to deal with the intruder, if
+a Papegot, without recourse to the Grand Master, whose moderation they
+dreaded. A knife-thrust in the ribs, and another body in the ditch--why
+not, when such things were done outside? But even these doubted now; and
+M. Peridol, the lieutenant, reading in the eyes of his men the suspicions
+which he had himself conceived, was only anxious to obey, if they would
+let him. So gravely was he impressed, indeed, by the bearing of the
+unknown that he turned when he had withdrawn, and came back to assure
+himself that the men meditated no harm in his absence; nor until he had
+exchanged a whisper with one of them would he leave them and go.
+
+While he was gone on his errand the envoy leaned against the wall of the
+gateway, and, with his chin sunk on his breast and his mind fallen into
+reverie, seemed unconscious of the dark glances of which he was the
+target. He remained in this position until the officer came back,
+followed by a man with a lanthorn. Their coming roused the unknown, who,
+invited to follow Peridol, traversed two courts without remark, and in
+the same silence entered a building in the extreme eastern corner of the
+enceinte abutting on the ruined Tour de Billy. Here, in an upper floor,
+the Governor of the Arsenal had established his temporary lodging.
+
+The chamber into which the stranger was introduced betrayed the haste in
+which it had been prepared for its occupant. Two silver lamps which hung
+from the beams of the unceiled roof shed light on a medley of arms and
+inlaid armour, of parchments, books and steel caskets, which encumbered
+not the tables only, but the stools and chests that, after the fashion of
+that day, stood formally along the arras. In the midst of the disorder,
+on the bare floor, walked the man who, more than any other, had been
+instrumental in drawing the Huguenots to Paris--and to their doom. It
+was no marvel that the events of the day, the surprise and horror, still
+rode his mind; nor wonderful that even he, who passed for a model of
+stiffness and reticence, betrayed for once the indignation which filled
+his breast. Until the officer had withdrawn and closed the door he did,
+indeed, keep silence; standing beside the table and eyeing his visitor
+with a lofty porte and a stern glance. But the moment he was assured
+that they were alone he spoke.
+
+"Your Highness may unmask now," he said, making no effort to hide his
+contempt. "Yet were you well advised to take the precaution, since you
+had hardly come at me in safety without it. Had those who keep the gate
+seen you, I would not have answered for your Highness's life. The more
+shame," he continued vehemently, "on the deeds of this day which have
+compelled the brother of a king of France to hide his face in his own
+capital and in his own fortress. For I dare to say, Monsieur, what no
+other will say, now the Admiral is dead. You have brought back the days
+of the Armagnacs. You have brought bloody days and an evil name on
+France, and I pray God that you may not pay in your turn what you have
+exacted. But if you continue to be advised by M. de Guise, this I will
+say, Monsieur"--and his voice fell low and stern. "Burgundy slew
+Orleans, indeed; but he came in his turn to the Bridge of Montereau."
+
+"You take me for Monsieur?" the unknown asked. And it was plain that he
+smiled under his mask.
+
+Biron's face altered. "I take you," he answered sharply, "for him whose
+sign you sent me."
+
+"The wisest are sometimes astray," the other answered with a low laugh.
+And he took off his mask.
+
+The Grand Master started back, his eyes sparkling with anger.
+
+"M. de Tavannes?" he cried, and for a moment he was silent in sheer
+astonishment. Then, striking his hand on the table, "What means this
+trickery?" he asked.
+
+"It is of the simplest," Tavannes answered coolly. "And yet, as you just
+now said, I had hardly come at you without it. And I had to come at you.
+No, M. de Biron," he added quickly, as Biron in a rage laid his hand on a
+bell which stood beside him on the table, "you cannot that way undo what
+is done."
+
+"I can at least deliver you," the Grand Master answered, in heat, "to
+those who will deal with you as you have dealt with us and ours."
+
+"It will avail you nothing," Count Hannibal replied soberly. "For see
+here, Grand Master, I come from the King. If you are at war with him,
+and hold his fortress in his teeth, I am his ambassador and sacrosanct.
+If you are at peace with him and hold it at his will, I am his servant,
+and safe also."
+
+"At peace and safe?" Biron cried, his voice trembling with indignation.
+"And are those safe or at peace who came here trusting to _his_ word, who
+lay in his palace and slept in his beds? Where are they, and how have
+they fared, that you dare appeal to the law of nations, or he to the
+loyalty of Biron? And for you to beard me, whose brother to-day hounded
+the dogs of this vile city on the noblest in France, who have leagued
+yourself with a crew of foreigners to do a deed which will make our
+country stink in the nostrils of the world when we are dust! You, to
+come here and talk of peace and safety! M. de Tavannes"--and he struck
+his hand on the table--"you are a bold man. I know why the King had a
+will to send you, but I know not why you had the will to come."
+
+"That I will tell you later," Count Hannibal answered coolly. "For the
+King, first. My message is brief, M. de Biron. Have you a mind to hold
+the scales in France?"
+
+"Between?" Biron asked contemptuously.
+
+"Between the Lorrainers and the Huguenots."
+
+The Grand Master scowled fiercely. "I have played the go-between once
+too often," he growled.
+
+"It is no question of going between, it is a question of holding
+between," Tavannes answered coolly. "It is a question--but, in a word,
+have you a mind, M. de Biron, to be Governor of Rochelle? The King,
+having dealt the blow that has been struck to-day, looks to follow up
+severity, as a wise ruler should, with indulgence. And to quiet the
+minds of the Rochellois he would set over them a ruler at once acceptable
+to them--or war must come of it--and faithful to his Majesty. Such a
+man, M. de Biron, will in such a post be Master of the Kingdom; for he
+will hold the doors of Janus, and as he bridles his sea-dogs, or unchains
+them, there will be peace or war in France."
+
+"Is all that from the King's mouth?" Biron asked with sarcasm. But his
+passion had died down. He was grown thoughtful, suspicious; he eyed the
+other intently as if he would read his heart.
+
+"The offer is his, and the reflections are mine," Tavannes answered
+dryly. "Let me add one more. The Admiral is dead. The King of Navarre
+and the Prince of Conde are prisoners. Who is now to balance the
+Italians and the Guises? The Grand Master--if he be wise and content to
+give the law to France from the citadel of Rochelle."
+
+Biron stared at the speaker in astonishment at his frankness.
+
+"You are a bold man," he cried at last. "But _timeo Danaos et dona
+ferentes_," he continued bitterly. "You offer, sir, too much."
+
+"The offer is the King's."
+
+"And the conditions? The price?"
+
+"That you remain quiet, M. de Biron."
+
+"In the Arsenal?"
+
+"In the Arsenal. And do not too openly counteract the King's will. That
+is all."
+
+The Grand Master looked puzzled. "I will give up no one," he said. "No
+one! Let that be understood."
+
+"The King requires no one."
+
+A pause. Then, "Does M. de Guise know of the offer?" Biron inquired; and
+his eye grew bright. He hated the Guises and was hated by them. It was
+_there_ he was a Huguenot.
+
+"He has gone far to-day," Count Hannibal answered dryly. "And if no
+worse come of it should be content. Madame Catherine knows of it."
+
+The Grand Master was aware that Marshal Tavannes depended on the Queen-
+mother; and he shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Ay, 'tis like her policy," he muttered. "'Tis like her!" And pointing
+his guest to a cushioned chest which stood against the wall, he sat down
+in a chair beside the table and thought awhile, his brow wrinkled, his
+eyes dreaming. By-and-by he laughed sourly. "You have lighted the
+fire," he said, "and would fain I put it out."
+
+"We would have you hinder it spreading."
+
+"You have done the deed and are loth to pay the blood-money. That is it,
+is it?
+
+"We prefer to pay it to M. de Biron," Count Hannibal answered civilly.
+
+Again the Grand Master was silent awhile. At length he looked up and
+fixed Tavannes with eyes keen as steel.
+
+"What is behind?" he growled. "Say, man, what is it? What is behind?"
+
+"If there be aught behind, I do not know it," Tavannes answered
+steadfastly.
+
+M. de Biron relaxed the fixity of his gaze. "But you said that you had
+an object?" he returned.
+
+"I had--in being the bearer of the message."
+
+"What was it?"
+
+"My object? To learn two things."
+
+"The first, if it please you?" The Grand Master's chin stuck out a
+little, as he spoke.
+
+"Have you in the Arsenal a M. de Tignonville, a gentleman of Poitou?"
+
+"I have not," Biron answered curtly. "The second?"
+
+"Have you here a Huguenot minister?"
+
+"I have not. And if I had I should not give him up," he added firmly.
+
+Tavannes shrugged his shoulders. "I have a use for one," he said
+carelessly. "But it need not harm him."
+
+"For what, then, do you need him?"
+
+"To marry me."
+
+The other stared. "But you are a Catholic," he said.
+
+"But she is a Huguenot," Tavannes answered.
+
+The Grand Master did not attempt to hide his astonishment.
+
+"And she sticks on that?" he exclaimed. "To-day?"
+
+"She sticks on that. To-day."
+
+"To-day? _Nom de Dieu_! To-day! Well," brushing the matter aside after
+a pause of bewilderment, "any way, I cannot help her. I have no minister
+here. If there be aught else I can do for her--"
+
+"Nothing, I thank you," Tavannes answered. "Then it only remains for me
+to take your answer to the King?" And he rose politely, and taking his
+mask from the table prepared to assume it.
+
+M. de Biron gazed at him a moment without speaking, as if he pondered on
+the answer he should give. At length he nodded, and rang the bell which
+stood beside him.
+
+"The mask!" he muttered in a low voice as footsteps sounded without. And,
+obedient to the hint, Tavannes disguised himself. A second later the
+officer who had introduced him opened the door and entered.
+
+"Peridol," M. de Biron said--he had risen to his feet--"I have received a
+message which needs confirmation; and to obtain this I must leave the
+Arsenal. I am going to the house--you will remember this--of Marshal
+Tavannes, who will be responsible for my person; in the mean time this
+gentleman will remain under strict guard in the south chamber upstairs.
+You will treat him as a hostage, with all respect, and will allow him to
+preserve his _incognito_. But if I do not return by noon to-morrow, you
+will deliver him to the men below, who will know how to deal with him."
+
+Count Hannibal made no attempt to interrupt him, nor did he betray the
+discomfiture which he undoubtedly felt. But as the Grand Master paused--
+
+"M. de Biron," he said, in a voice harsh and low, "you will answer to me
+for this!" And his eyes glittered through the slits in the mask.
+
+"Possibly, but not to-day or to-morrow!" Biron replied, shrugging his
+shoulders contemptuously. "Peridol! see the gentleman bestowed as I have
+ordered, and then return to me. Monsieur," with a bow, half courteous,
+half ironical, "let me commend to you the advantages of silence and your
+mask." And he waved his hand in the direction of the door.
+
+A moment Count Hannibal hesitated. He was in the heart of a hostile
+fortress where the resistance of a single man armed to the teeth must
+have been futile; and he was unarmed, save for a poniard. Nevertheless,
+for a moment the impulse to spring on Biron, and with the dagger at his
+throat to make his life the price of a safe passage, was strong. Then--for
+with the warp of a harsh and passionate character were interwrought an
+odd shrewdness and some things little suspected--he resigned himself.
+Bowing gravely, he turned with dignity, and in silence followed the
+officer from the room.
+
+Peridol had two men in waiting at the door. From one of these the
+lieutenant took a lanthorn, and, with an air at once sullen and
+deferential, led the way up the stone staircase to the floor over that in
+which M. de Biron had his lodging. Tavannes followed; the two guards
+came last, carrying a second lanthorn. At the head of the staircase,
+whence a bare passage ran, north and south, the procession turned right-
+handed, and, passing two doors, halted before the third and last, which
+faced them at the end of the passage. The lieutenant unlocked it with a
+key which he took from a hook beside the doorpost. Then, holding up his
+light, he invited his charge to enter.
+
+The room was not small, but it was low in the roof, and prison-like, it
+had bare walls and smoke-marks on the ceiling. The window, set in a deep
+recess, the floor of which rose a foot above that of the room, was
+unglazed; and through the gloomy orifice the night wind blew in, laden
+even on that August evening with the dank mist of the river flats. A
+table, two stools, and a truckle bed without straw or covering made up
+the furniture; but Peridol, after glancing round, ordered one of the men
+to fetch a truss of straw and the other to bring up a pitcher of wine.
+While they were gone Tavannes and he stood silently waiting, until,
+observing that the captive's eyes sought the window, the lieutenant
+laughed.
+
+"No bars?" he said. "No, Monsieur, and no need of them. You will not go
+by that road, bars or no bars."
+
+"What is below?" Count Hannibal asked carelessly. "The river?"
+
+"Yes, Monsieur," with a grin; "but not water. Mud, and six feet of it,
+soft as Christmas porridge, but not so sweet. I've known two puppies
+thrown in under this window that did not weigh more than a fat pullet
+apiece. One was gone before you could count fifty, and the other did not
+live thrice as long--nor would have lasted that time, but that it fell on
+the first and clung to it."
+
+Tavannes dismissed the matter with a shrug, and, drawing his cloak about
+him, set a stool against the wall and sat down. The men who brought in
+the wine and the bundle of straw were inquisitive, and would have
+loitered, scanning him stealthily; but Peridol hurried them away. The
+lieutenant himself stayed only to cast a glance round the room, and to
+mutter that he would return when his lord returned; then, with a "Good
+night" which said more for his manners than his good will, he followed
+them out. A moment later the grating of the key in the lock and the
+sound of the bolts as they sped home told Tavannes that he was a
+prisoner.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. TOO SHORT A SPOON.
+
+
+Count Hannibal remained seated, his chin sunk on his breast, until his
+ear assured him that the three men had descended the stairs to the floor
+below. Then he rose, and, taking the lanthorn from the table, on which
+Peridol had placed it, he went softly to the door, which, like the
+window, stood in a recess--in this case the prolongation of the passage.
+A brief scrutiny satisfied him that escape that way was impossible, and
+he turned, after a cursory glance at the floor and ceiling, to the dark,
+windy aperture which yawned at the end of the apartment. Placing the
+lanthorn on the table, and covering it with his cloak, he mounted the
+window recess, and, stepping to the unguarded edge, looked out.
+
+He knew, rather than saw, that Peridol had told the truth. The smell of
+the aguish flats which fringed that part of Paris rose strong in his
+nostrils. He guessed that the sluggish arm of the Seine which divided
+the Arsenal from the Ile des Louviers crawled below; but the night was
+dark, and it was impossible to discern land from water. He fancied that
+he could trace the outline of the island--an uninhabited place, given up
+to wood piles; but the lights of the college quarter beyond it, which
+rose feebly twinkling to the crown of St. Genevieve, confused his sight
+and rendered the nearer gloom more opaque. From that direction and from
+the Cite to his right came sounds which told of a city still heaving in
+its blood-stained sleep, and even in its dreams planning further
+excesses. Now a distant shot, and now a faint murmur on one of the
+bridges, or a far-off cry, raucous, sudden, curdled the blood. But even
+of what was passing under cover of the darkness, he could learn little;
+and after standing awhile with a hand on either side of the window he
+found the night air chill. He stepped back, and, descending to the
+floor, uncovered the lanthorn and set it on the table. His thoughts
+travelled back to the preparations he had made the night before with a
+view to securing Mademoiselle's person, and he considered, with a grim
+smile, how little he had foreseen that within twenty-four hours he would
+himself be a prisoner. Presently, finding his mask oppressive, he
+removed it, and, laying it on the table before him, sat scowling at the
+light.
+
+Biron had jockeyed him cleverly. Well, the worse for Armand de Gontaut
+de Biron if after this adventure the luck went against him! But in the
+mean time? In the mean time his fate was sealed if harm befell Biron.
+And what the King's real mind in Biron's case was, and what the Queen-
+Mother's, he could not say; just as it was impossible to predict how far,
+when they had the Grand Master at their mercy, they would resist the
+temptation to add him to the victims. If Biron placed himself at once in
+Marshal Tavannes' hands, all might be well. But if he ventured within
+the long arm of the Guises, or went directly to the Louvre, the fact that
+with the Grand Master's fate Count Hannibal's was bound up, would not
+weigh a straw. In such crises the great sacrificed the less great, the
+less great the small, without a scruple. And the Guises did not love
+Count Hannibal; he was not loved by many. Even the strength of his
+brother the Marshal stood rather in the favour of the King's heir, for
+whom he had won the battle of Jarnac, than intrinsically; and, durable in
+ordinary times, might snap in the clash of forces and interests which the
+desperate madness of this day had let loose on Paris.
+
+It was not the peril in which he stood, however--though, with the cold
+clear eye of the man who had often faced peril, he appreciated it to a
+nicety--that Count Hannibal found least bearable, but his enforced
+inactivity. He had thought to ride the whirlwind and direct the storm,
+and out of the danger of others to compact his own success. Instead he
+lay here, not only powerless to guide his destiny, which hung on the
+discretion of another, but unable to stretch forth a finger to further
+his plans.
+
+As he sat looking darkly at the lanthorn, his mind followed Biron and his
+riders through the midnight streets along St. Antoine and La Verrerie,
+through the gloomy narrows of the Rue la Ferronerie, and so past the
+house in the Rue St. Honore where Mademoiselle sat awaiting the
+morrow--sat awaiting Tignonville, the minister, the marriage! Doubtless
+there were still bands of plunderers roaming to and fro; at the barriers
+troops of archers stopping the suspected; at the windows pale faces
+gazing down; at the gates of the Temple, and of the walled enclosures
+which largely made up the city, strong guards set to prevent invasion.
+Biron would go with sufficient to secure himself; and unless he
+encountered the bodyguard of Guise his passage would quiet the town. But
+was it so certain that _she_ was safe? He knew his men, and while he had
+been free he had not hesitated to leave her in their care. But now that
+he could not go, now that he could not raise a hand to help, the
+confidence which had not failed him in straits more dangerous grew weak.
+He pictured the things which might happen, at which, in his normal frame
+of mind, he would have laughed. Now they troubled him so that he started
+at a shadow, so that he quailed at a thought. He, who last night, when
+free to act, had timed his coming and her rescue to a minute! Who had
+rejoiced in the peril, since with the glamour of such things foolish
+women were taken! Who had not flinched when the crowd roared most
+fiercely for her blood!
+
+Why had he suffered himself to be trapped? Why indeed? And thrice in
+passion he paced the room. Long ago the famous Nostradamus had told him
+that he would live to be a king, but of the smallest kingdom in the
+world. "Every man is a king in his coffin," he had answered. "The grave
+is cold and your kingdom shall be warm," the wizard had rejoined. On
+which the courtiers had laughed, promising him a Moorish island and a
+black queen. And he had gibed with the rest, but secretly had taken note
+of the sovereign counties of France, their rulers and their heirs. Now
+he held the thought in horror, foreseeing no county, but the cage under
+the stifling tiles at Loches, in which Cardinal Balue and many another
+had worn out their hearts.
+
+He came to that thought not by way of his own peril, but of
+Mademoiselle's; which affected him in so novel a fashion that he wondered
+at his folly. At last, tired of watching the shadows which the draught
+set dancing on the wall, he drew his cloak about him and lay down on the
+straw. He had kept vigil the previous night, and in a few minutes, with
+a campaigner's ease, he was asleep.
+
+Midnight had struck. About two the light in the lanthorn burned low in
+the socket, and with a soft sputtering went out. For an hour after that
+the room lay still, silent, dark; then slowly the grey dawn, the greyer
+for the river mist which wrapped the neighbourhood in a clammy shroud,
+began to creep into the room and discover the vague shapes of things.
+Again an hour passed, and the sun was rising above Montreuil, and here
+and there the river began to shimmer through the fog. But in the room it
+was barely daylight when the sleeper awoke, and sat up, his face
+expectant. Something had roused him. He listened.
+
+His ear, and the habit of vigilance which a life of danger instils, had
+not deceived him. There were men moving in the passage; men who shuffled
+their feet impatiently. Had Biron returned? Or had aught happened to
+him, and were these men come to avenge him? Count Hannibal rose and
+stole across the boards to the door, and, setting his ear to it,
+listened.
+
+He listened while a man might count a hundred and fifty, counting slowly.
+Then, for the third part of a second, he turned his head, and his eyes
+travelled the room. He stooped again and listened more closely, scarcely
+breathing. There were voices as well as feet to be heard now; one
+voice--he thought it was Peridol's--which held on long, now low, now
+rising into violence. Others were audible at intervals, but only in a
+growl or a bitter exclamation, that told of minds made up and hands which
+would not be restrained. He caught his own name, _Tavannes_--the mask
+was useless, then! And once a noisy movement which came to nothing,
+foiled, he fancied, by Peridol.
+
+He knew enough. He rose to his full height, and his eyes seemed a little
+closer together; an ugly smile curved his lips. His gaze travelled over
+the objects in the room, the bare stools and table, the lanthorn, the
+wine-pitcher; beyond these, in a corner, the cloak and straw on the low
+bed. The light, cold and grey, fell cheerlessly on the dull chamber, and
+showed it in harmony with the ominous whisper which grew in the gallery;
+with the stern-faced listener who stood, his one hand on the door. He
+looked, but he found nothing to his purpose, nothing to serve his end,
+whatever his end was; and with a quick light step he left the door,
+mounted the window recess, and, poised on the very edge, looked down.
+
+If he thought to escape that way his hope was desperate. The depth to
+the water-level was not, he judged, twelve feet. But Peridol had told
+the truth. Below lay not water, but a smooth surface of viscid slime,
+here luminous with the florescence of rottenness, there furrowed by a
+tiny runnel of moisture which sluggishly crept across it to the slow
+stream beyond. This quicksand, vile and treacherous, lapped the wall
+below the window, and more than accounted for the absence of bars or
+fastenings. But, leaning far out, he saw that it ended at the angle of
+the building, at a point twenty feet or so to the right of his position.
+
+He sprang to the floor again, and listened an instant; then, with guarded
+movements--for there was fear in the air, fear in the silent room, and at
+any moment the rush might be made, the door burst in--he set the lanthorn
+and wine-pitcher on the floor, and took up the table in his arms. He
+began to carry it to the window, but, halfway thither, his eye told him
+that it would not pass through the opening, and he set it down again and
+glided to the bed. Again he was thwarted; the bed was screwed to the
+floor. Another might have despaired at that, but he rose with no sign of
+dismay, and listening, always listening, he spread his cloak on the
+floor, and deftly, with as little noise and rustling as might be, be
+piled the straw in it, compressed the bundle, and, cutting the bed-cords
+with his dagger, bound all together with them. In three steps he was in
+the embrasure of the window, and, even as the men in the passage thrust
+the lieutenant aside and with a sudden uproar came down to the door, he
+flung the bundle lightly and carefully to the right--so lightly and
+carefully, and with so nice and deliberate a calculation, that it seemed
+odd it fell beyond the reach of an ordinary leap.
+
+An instant and he was on the floor again. The men had to unlock, to draw
+back the bolts, to draw back the door which opened outwards; their
+numbers, as well as their savage haste, impeded them. When they burst in
+at last, with a roar of "To the river! To the river!"--burst in a rush
+of struggling shoulders and lowered pikes, they found him standing, a
+solitary figure, on the further side of the table, his arms folded. And
+the sight of the passive figure for a moment stayed them.
+
+"Say your prayers, child of Satan!" cried the leader, waving his weapon.
+"We give you one minute!"
+
+"Ay, one minute!" his followers chimed in. "Be ready!"
+
+"You would murder me?" he said with dignity. And when they shouted
+assent, "Good!" he answered. "It is between you and M. de Biron, whose
+guest I am. But"--with a glance which passed round the ring of glaring
+eyes and working features--"I would leave a last word for some one. Is
+there any one here who values a safe-conduct from the King? 'Tis for two
+men coming and going for a fortnight." And he held up a slip of paper.
+
+The leader cried, "To hell with his safe-conduct! Say your prayers!"
+
+But all were not of his mind. On one or two of the savage faces--the
+faces, for the most part, of honest men maddened by their wrongs--flashed
+an avaricious gleam. A safe-conduct? To avenge, to slay, to kill--and
+to go safe! For some minds such a thing has an invincible fascination. A
+man thrust himself forward.
+
+"Ay, I'll have it!" he cried. "Give it here!"
+
+"It is yours," Count Hannibal answered, "if you will carry ten words to
+Marshal Tavannes--when I am gone."
+
+The man's neighbour laid a restraining hand on his shoulder.
+
+"And Marshal Tavannes will pay you finely," he said.
+
+But Maudron, the man who had offered, shook off the hand.
+
+"If I take the message!" he muttered in a grim aside. "Do you think me
+mad?" And then aloud he cried, "Ay, I'll take your message! Give me the
+paper."
+
+"You swear you will take it?"
+
+The man had no intention of taking it, but he perjured himself and went
+forward. The others would have pressed round too, half in envy, half in
+scorn; but Tavannes by a gesture stayed them.
+
+"Gentlemen, I ask a minute only," he said. "A minute for a dying man is
+not much. Your friends had as much."
+
+And the fellows, acknowledging the claim and assured that their victim
+could not escape, let Maudron go round the table to him.
+
+The man was in haste and ill at ease, conscious of his evil intentions
+and the fraud he was practising; and at once greedy to have, yet ashamed
+of the bargain he was making. His attention was divided between the slip
+of paper, on which his eyes fixed themselves, and the attitude of his
+comrades; he paid little heed to Count Hannibal, whom he knew to be
+unarmed. Only when Tavannes seemed to ponder on his message, and to be
+fain to delay, "Go on," he muttered with brutal frankness; "your time is
+up!"
+
+Tavannes started, the paper slipped from his fingers. Maudron saw a
+chance of getting it without committing himself, and quick as the thought
+leapt up in his mind he stooped, and grasped the paper, and would have
+leapt back with it! But quick as he, and quicker, Tavannes too stooped,
+gripped him by the waist, and with a prodigious effort, and a yell in
+which all the man's stormy nature, restrained to a part during the last
+few minutes, broke forth, he flung the ill-fated wretch head first
+through the window.
+
+The movement carried Tavannes himself--even while his victim's scream
+rang through the chamber--into the embrasure. An instant he hung on the
+verge; then, as the men, a moment thunderstruck, sprang forward to avenge
+their comrade, he leapt out, jumping for the struggling body that had
+struck the mud, and now lay in it face downwards.
+
+He alighted on it, and drove it deep into the quaking slime; but he
+himself bounded off right-handed. The peril was appalling, the
+possibility untried, the chance one which only a doomed man would have
+taken. But he reached the straw-bale, and it gave him a momentary, a
+precarious footing. He could not regain his balance, he could not even
+for an instant stand upright on it. But from its support he leapt on
+convulsively, and, as a pike, flung from above, wounded him in the
+shoulder, he fell his length in the slough--but forward, with his
+outstretched hands resting on soil of a harder nature. They sank, it is
+true, to the elbow, but he dragged his body forward on them, and forward,
+and freeing one by a last effort of strength--he could not free both,
+and, as it was, half his face was submerged--he reached out another yard,
+and gripped a balk of wood, which projected from the corner of the
+building for the purpose of fending off the stream in flood-time.
+
+The men at the window shrieked with rage as he slowly drew himself from
+the slough, and stood from head to foot a pillar of mud. Shout as they
+might, they had no firearms, and, crowded together in the narrow
+embrasure, they could take no aim with their pikes. They could only look
+on in furious impotence, flinging curses at him until he passed from
+their view, behind the angle of the building.
+
+Here for a score of yards a strip of hard foreshore ran between mud and
+wall. He struggled along it until he reached the end of the wall; then
+with a shuddering glance at the black heaving pit from which he had
+escaped, and which yet gurgled above the body of the hapless Maudron--a
+tribute to horror which even his fierce nature could not withhold--he
+turned and painfully climbed the river-bank. The pike-wound in his
+shoulder was slight, but the effort had been supreme; the sweat poured
+from his brow, his visage was grey and drawn. Nevertheless, when he had
+put fifty paces between himself and the buildings of the Arsenal he
+paused, and turned. He saw that the men had run to other windows which
+looked that way; and his face lightened and his form dilated with
+triumph.
+
+He shook his fist at them. "Ho, fools!" he cried, "you kill not Tavannes
+so! Till our next meeting at Montfaucon, fare you well!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. THE BROTHER OF ST. MAGLOIRE.
+
+
+As the exertion of power is for the most part pleasing, so the exercise
+of that which a woman possesses over a man is especially pleasant. When
+in addition a risk of no ordinary kind has been run, and the happy issue
+has been barely expected--above all when the momentary gain seems an
+augury of final victory--it is impossible that a feeling akin to
+exultation should not arise in the mind, however black the horizon, and
+however distant the fair haven.
+
+The situation in which Count Hannibal left Mademoiselle de Vrillac will
+be remembered. She had prevailed over him; but in return he had bowed
+her to the earth, partly by subtle threats, and partly by sheer savagery.
+He had left her weeping, with the words "Madame de Tavannes" ringing doom
+in her ears, and the dark phantom of his will pointing onward to an
+inevitable future. Had she abandoned hope, it would have been natural.
+
+But the girl was of a spirit not long nor easily cowed; and Tavannes had
+not left her half an hour before the reflection, that so far the honours
+of the day were hers, rose up to console her. In spite of his power and
+her impotence, she had imposed her will upon his; she had established an
+influence over him, she had discovered a scruple which stayed him, and a
+limit beyond which he would not pass. In the result she might escape;
+for the conditions which he had accepted with an ill grace might prove
+beyond his fulfilling. She might escape! True, many in her place would
+have feared a worse fate and harsher handling. But there lay half the
+merit of her victory. It had left her not only in a better position, but
+with a new confidence in her power over her adversary. He would insist
+on the bargain struck between them; within its four corners she could
+look for no indulgence. But if the conditions proved to be beyond his
+power, she believed that he would spare her: with an ill grace, indeed,
+with such ferocity and coarse reviling as her woman's pride might
+scarcely support. But he would spare her.
+
+And if the worst befell her? She would still have the consolation of
+knowing that from the cataclysm which had overwhelmed her friends she had
+ransomed those most dear to her. Owing to the position of her chamber,
+she saw nothing of the excesses to which Paris gave itself up during the
+remainder of that day, and to which it returned with unabated zest on the
+following morning. But the Carlats and her women learned from the guards
+below what was passing; and quaking and cowering in their corners fixed
+frightened eyes on her, who was their stay and hope. How could she prove
+false to them? How doom them to perish, had there been no question of
+her lover?
+
+Of him she sat thinking by the hour together. She recalled with solemn
+tenderness the moment in which he had devoted himself to the death which
+came but halfway to seize them; nor was she slow to forgive his
+subsequent withdrawal, and his attempt to rescue her in spite of herself.
+She found the impulse to die glorious; the withdrawal--for the actor was
+her lover--a thing done for her, which he would not have done for
+himself, and which she quickly forgave him. The revulsion of feeling
+which had conquered her at the time, and led her to tear herself from
+him, no longer moved her much while all in his action that might have
+seemed in other eyes less than heroic, all in his conduct--in a crisis
+demanding the highest--that smacked of common or mean, vanished, for she
+still clung to him. Clung to him, not so much with the passion of the
+mature woman, as with the maiden and sentimental affection of one who has
+now no hope of possessing, and for whom love no longer spells life, but
+sacrifice.
+
+She had leisure for these musings, for she was left to herself all that
+day, and until late on the following day. Her own servants waited on
+her, and it was known that below stairs Count Hannibal's riders kept
+sullen ward behind barred doors and shuttered windows, refusing admission
+to all who came. Now and again echoes of the riot which filled the
+streets with bloodshed reached her ears: or word of the more striking
+occurrences was brought to her by Madame Carlat. And early on this
+second day, Monday, it was whispered that M. de Tavannes had not
+returned, and that the men below were growing uneasy.
+
+At last, when the suspense below and above was growing tense, it was
+broken. Footsteps and voices were heard ascending the stairs, the
+trampling and hubbub were followed by a heavy knock; perforce the door
+was opened. While Mademoiselle, who had risen, awaited with a beating
+heart she knew not what, a cowled father, in the dress of the monks of
+St. Magloire, stood on the threshold, and, crossing himself, muttered the
+words of benediction. He entered slowly.
+
+No sight could have been more dreadful to Mademoiselle; for it set at
+naught the conditions which she had so hardly exacted. What if Count
+Hannibal were behind, were even now mounting the stairs, prepared to
+force her to a marriage before this shaveling? Or ready to proceed, if
+she refused, to the last extremity? Sudden terror taking her by the
+throat choked her; her colour fled, her hand flew to her breast. Yet,
+before the door had closed on Bigot, she had recovered herself.
+
+"This intrusion is not by M. de Tavannes' orders!" she cried, stepping
+forward haughtily. "This person has no business here. How dare you
+admit him?"
+
+The Norman showed his bearded visage a moment at the door.
+
+"My lord's orders," he muttered sullenly. And he closed the door on
+them.
+
+She had a Huguenot's hatred of a cowl; and, in this crisis, her reasons
+for fearing it. Her eyes blazed with indignation.
+
+"Enough!" she cried, pointing, with a gesture of dismissal, to the door.
+"Go back to him who sent you! If he will insult me, let him do it to my
+face! If he will perjure himself, let him forswear himself in person.
+Or, if you come on your own account," she continued, flinging prudence to
+the winds, "as your brethren came to Philippa de Luns, to offer me the
+choice you offered her, I give you her answer! If I had thought of
+myself only, I had not lived so long! And rather than bear your presence
+or hear your arguments--"
+
+She came to a sudden, odd, quavering pause on the word; her lips remained
+parted, she swayed an instant on her feet. The next moment Madame
+Carlat, to whom the visitor had turned his shoulder, doubted her eyes,
+for Mademoiselle was in the monk's arms!
+
+"Clotilde! Clotilde!" he cried, and held her to him.
+
+For the monk was M. de Tignonville! Under the cowl was the lover with
+whom Mademoiselle's thoughts had been engaged. In this disguise, and
+armed with Tavannes' note to Madame St. Lo--which the guards below knew
+for Count Hannibal's hand, though they were unable to decipher the
+contents--he had found no difficulty in making his way to her.
+
+He had learned before he entered that Tavannes was abroad, and was aware,
+therefore, that he ran little risk. But his betrothed, who knew nothing
+of his adventures in the interval, saw in him one who came to her at the
+greatest risk, across unnumbered perils, through streets swimming with
+blood. And though she had never embraced him save in the crisis of the
+massacre, though she had never called him by his Christian name, in the
+joy of this meeting she abandoned herself to him, she clung to him
+weeping, she forgot for the time his defection, and thought only of him
+who had returned to her so gallantly, who brought into the room a breath
+of Poitou, and the sea, and the old days, and the old life; and at the
+sight of whom the horrors of the last two days fell from her--for the
+moment.
+
+And Madame Carlat wept also, and in the room was a sound of weeping. The
+least moved was, for a certainty, M. de Tignonville himself, who, as we
+know, had gone through much that day. But even his heart swelled, partly
+with pride, partly with thankfulness that he had returned to one who
+loved him so well. Fate had been kinder to him than he deserved; but he
+need not confess that now. When he had brought off the _coup_ which he
+had in his mind, he would hasten to forget that he had entertained other
+ideas.
+
+Mademoiselle had been the first to be carried away; she was also the
+first to recover herself.
+
+"I had forgotten," she cried suddenly, "I had forgotten," and she wrested
+herself from his embrace with violence, and stood panting, her face
+white, her eyes affrighted. "I must not! And you--I had forgotten that
+too! To be here, Monsieur, is the worst office you can do me. You must
+go! Go, Monsieur, in mercy I beg of you, while it is possible. Every
+moment you are here, every moment you spend in this house, I shudder."
+
+"You need not fear for me," he said, in a tone of bravado. He did not
+understand.
+
+"I fear for myself!" she answered. And then, wringing her hands, divided
+between her love for him and her fear for herself, "Oh, forgive me!" she
+said. "You do not know that he has promised to spare me, if he cannot
+produce you, and--and--a minister? He has granted me that; but I thought
+when you entered that he had gone back on his word, and sent a priest,
+and it maddened me! I could not bear to think that I had gained nothing.
+Now you understand, and you will pardon me, Monsieur? If he cannot
+produce you I am saved. Go then, leave me, I beg, without a moment's
+delay."
+
+He laughed derisively as he turned back his cowl and squared his
+shoulders.
+
+"All that is over!" he said, "over and done with, sweet! M. de Tavannes
+is at this moment a prisoner in the Arsenal. On my way hither I fell in
+with M. de Biron, and he told me. The Grand Master, who would have had
+me join his company, had been all night at Marshal Tavannes' hotel, where
+he had been detained longer than he expected. He stood pledged to
+release Count Hannibal on his return, but at my request he consented to
+hold him one hour, and to do also a little thing for me."
+
+The glow of hope which had transfigured her face faded slowly.
+
+"It will not help," she said, "if he find you here."
+
+"He will not! Nor you!"
+
+"How, Monsieur?"
+
+"In a few minutes," he explained--he could not hide his exultation, "a
+message will come from the Arsenal in the name of Tavannes, bidding the
+monk he sent to you bring you to him. A spoken message, corroborated by
+my presence, should suffice: '_Bid the monk who is now with
+Mademoiselle_,' it will run, '_bring her to me at the Arsenal, and let
+four pikes guard them hither_.' When I begged M. de Biron to do this, he
+laughed. 'I can do better,' he said. 'They shall bring one of Count
+Hannibal's gloves, which he left on my table. Always supposing my
+rascals have done him no harm, which God forbid, for I am answerable.'"
+
+Tignonville, delighted with the stratagem which the meeting with Biron
+had suggested, could see no flaw in it. She could, and though she heard
+him to the end, no second glow of hope softened the lines of her
+features. With a gesture full of dignity, which took in not only Madame
+Carlat and the waiting-woman who stood at the door, but the absent
+servants--
+
+"And what of these?" she said. "What of these? You forget them,
+Monsieur. You do not think, you cannot have thought, that I would
+abandon them? That I would leave them to such mercy as he, defeated,
+might extend to them? No, you forgot them."
+
+He did not know what to answer, for the jealous eyes of the frightened
+waiting-woman, fierce with the fierceness of a hunted animal, were on
+him. The Carlat and she had heard, could hear. At last--
+
+"Better one than none!" he muttered, in a voice so low that if the
+servants caught his meaning it was but indistinctly. "I have to think of
+you."
+
+"And I of them," she answered firmly. "Nor is that all. Were they not
+here, it could not be. My word is passed--though a moment ago, Monsieur,
+in the joy of seeing you I forgot it. And how," she continued, "if I
+keep not my word, can I expect him to keep his? Or how, if I am ready to
+break the bond, on this happening which I never expected, can I hold him
+to conditions which he loves as little--as little as I love him?"
+
+Her voice dropped piteously on the last words; her eyes, craving her
+lover's pardon, sought his. But rage, not pity or admiration, was the
+feeling roused in Tignonville's breast. He stood staring at her, struck
+dumb by folly so immense. At last--
+
+"You cannot mean this," he blurted out. "You cannot mean, Mademoiselle,
+that you intend to stand on that! To keep a promise wrung from you by
+force, by treachery, in the midst of such horrors as he and his have
+brought upon us! It is inconceivable!"
+
+She shook her head. "I promised," she said.
+
+"You were forced to it."
+
+"But the promise saved our lives."
+
+"From murderers! From assassins!" he protested.
+
+She shook her head. "I cannot go back," she said firmly; "I cannot."
+
+"Then you are willing to marry him," he cried in ignoble anger. "That is
+it! Nay, you must wish to marry him! For, as for his conditions,
+Mademoiselle," the young man continued, with an insulting laugh, "you
+cannot think seriously of them. _He_ keep conditions and you in his
+power! He, Count Hannibal! But for the matter of that, and were he in
+the mind to keep them, what are they? There are plenty of ministers. I
+left one only this morning. I could lay my hand on one in five minutes.
+He has only to find one, therefore--and to find me!"
+
+"Yes, Monsieur," she cried, trembling with wounded pride, "it is for that
+reason I implore you to go. The sooner you leave me, the sooner you
+place yourself in a position of security, the happier for me! Every
+moment that you spend here, you endanger both yourself and me!"
+
+"If you will not be persuaded--"
+
+"I shall not be persuaded," she answered firmly, "and you do but"--alas!
+her pride began to break down, her voice to quiver, she looked piteously
+at him--"by staying here make it harder for me to--to--"
+
+"Hush!" cried Madame Carlat. "Hush!" And as they started and turned
+towards her--she was at the end of the chamber by the door, almost out of
+earshot--she raised a warning hand. "Listen!" she muttered, "some one
+has entered the house."
+
+"'Tis my messenger from Biron," Tignonville answered sullenly. And he
+drew his cowl over his face, and, hiding his hands in his sleeves, moved
+towards the door. But on the threshold he turned and held out his arms.
+He could not go thus. "Mademoiselle! Clotilde!" he cried with passion,
+"for the last time, listen to me, come with me. Be persuaded!"
+
+"Hush!" Madame Carlat interposed again, and turned a scared face on them.
+"It is no messenger! It is Tavannes himself: I know his voice." And she
+wrung her hands. "_Oh, mon Dieu, mon Dieu_, what are we to do?" she
+continued, panic-stricken. And she looked all ways about the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. AT CLOSE QUARTERS.
+
+
+Fear leapt into Mademoiselle's eyes, but she commanded herself. She
+signed to Madame Carlat to be silent, and they listened, gazing at one
+another, hoping against hope that the woman was mistaken. A long moment
+they waited, and some were beginning to breathe again, when the strident
+tones of Count Hannibal's voice rolled up the staircase, and put an end
+to doubt. Mademoiselle grasped the table and stood supporting herself by
+it.
+
+"What are we to do?" she muttered. "What are we to do?" and she turned
+distractedly towards the women. The courage which had supported her in
+her lover's absence had abandoned her now. "If he finds him here I am
+lost! I am lost!"
+
+"He will not know me," Tignonville muttered. But he spoke uncertainly;
+and his gaze, shifting hither and thither, belied the boldness of his
+words.
+
+Madame Carlat's eyes flew round the room; on her for once the burden
+seemed to rest. Alas! the room had no second door, and the windows
+looked on a courtyard guarded by Tavannes' people. And even now Count
+Hannibal's step rang on the stair! his hand was almost on the latch. The
+woman wrung her hands; then, a thought striking her, she darted to a
+corner where Mademoiselle's robes hung on pegs against the wall.
+
+"Here!" she cried, raising them. "Behind these! He may not be seen
+here! Quick, Monsieur, quick! Hide yourself!"
+
+It was a forlorn hope--the suggestion of one who had not thought out the
+position; and, whatever its promise, Mademoiselle's pride revolted
+against it.
+
+"No," she cried. "Not there!" while Tignonville, who knew that the step
+was useless, since Count Hannibal must have learned that a monk had
+entered, held his ground.
+
+"You could not deny yourself?" he muttered hurriedly.
+
+"And a priest with me?" she answered; and she shook her head.
+
+There was no time for more, and even as Mademoiselle spoke Count
+Hannibal's knuckles tapped the door. She cast a last look at her lover.
+He had turned his back on the window; the light no longer fell on his
+face. It was possible that he might pass unrecognized, if Tavannes' stay
+was brief; at any rate, the risk must be run. In a half stifled voice
+she bade her woman, Javette, open the door. Count Hannibal bowed low as
+he entered; and he deceived the others. But he did not deceive her. He
+had not crossed the threshold before she repented that she had not acted
+on Tignonville's suggestion, and denied herself. For what could escape
+those hard keen eyes, which swept the room, saw all, and seemed to see
+nothing--those eyes in which there dwelt even now a glint of cruel
+humour? He might deceive others, but she who panted within his grasp, as
+the wild bird palpitates in the hand of the fowler, was not deceived! He
+saw, he knew! although, as he bowed, and smiling, stood upright, he
+looked only at her.
+
+"I expected to be with you before this," he said courteously, "but I have
+been detained. First, Mademoiselle, by some of your friends, who were
+reluctant to part with me; then by some of your enemies, who, finding me
+in no handsome case, took me for a Huguenot escaped from the river, and
+drove me to shifts to get clear of them. However, now I am come, I have
+news."
+
+"News?" she muttered with dry lips. It could hardly be good news.
+
+"Yes, Mademoiselle, of M. de Tignonville," he answered. "I have little
+doubt that I shall be able to produce him this evening, and so to satisfy
+one of your scruples. And as I trust that this good father," he went on,
+turning to the ecclesiastic, and speaking with the sneer from which he
+seldom refrained, Catholic as he was, when he mentioned a priest, "has by
+this time succeeded in removing the other, and persuading you to accept
+his ministrations--"
+
+"No!" she cried impulsively.
+
+"No?" with a dubious smile, and a glance from one to the other. "Oh, I
+had hoped better things. But he still may? He still may. I am sure he
+may. In which case, Mademoiselle, your modesty must pardon me if I plead
+urgency, and fix the hour after supper this evening for the fulfilment of
+your promise."
+
+She turned white to the lips. "After supper?" she gasped.
+
+"Yes, Mademoiselle, this evening. Shall I say--at eight o'clock?"
+
+In horror of the thing which menaced her, of the thing from which only
+two hours separated her, she could find no words but those which she had
+already used. The worst was upon her; worse than the worst could not
+befall her.
+
+"But he has not persuaded me!" she cried, clenching her hands in passion.
+"He has not persuaded me!"
+
+"Still he may, Mademoiselle."
+
+"He will not!" she cried wildly. "He will not!"
+
+The room was going round with her. The precipice yawned at her feet; its
+naked terrors turned her brain. She had been pushed nearer, and nearer,
+and nearer; struggle as she might, she was on the verge. A mist rose
+before her eyes, and though they thought she listened she understood
+nothing of what was passing. When she came to herself, after the lapse
+of a minute, Count Hannibal was speaking.
+
+"Permit him another trial," he was saying in a tone of bland irony. "A
+short time longer, Mademoiselle! One more assault, father! The weapons
+of the Church could not be better directed or to a more worthy object;
+and, successful, shall not fail of due recognition and an earthly
+reward."
+
+And while she listened, half fainting, with a humming in her ears, he was
+gone. The door closed on him, and the three--Mademoiselle's woman had
+withdrawn when she opened to him--looked at one another. The girl parted
+her lips to speak, but she only smiled piteously; and it was M. de
+Tignonville who broke the silence, in a tone which betrayed rather relief
+than any other feeling.
+
+"Come, all is not lost yet," he said briskly. "If I can escape from the
+house--"
+
+"He knows you," she answered.
+
+"What?"
+
+"He knows you," Mademoiselle repeated in a tone almost apathetic. "I
+read it in his eyes. He knew you at once: and knew, too," she added
+bitterly, "that he had here under his hand one of the two things he
+required."
+
+"Then why did he hide his knowledge?" the young man retorted sharply.
+
+"Why?" she answered. "To induce me to waive the other condition in the
+hope of saving you. Oh!" she continued in a tone of bitter raillery, "he
+has the cunning of hell, of the priests! You are no match for him,
+Monsieur. Nor I; nor any of us. And"--with a gesture of despair--"he
+will be my master! He will break me to his will and to his hand! I
+shall be his! His, body and soul, body and soul!" she continued
+drearily, as she sank into a chair and, rocking herself to and fro,
+covered her face. "I shall be his! His till I die!"
+
+The man's eyes burned, and the pulse in his temples beat wildly.
+
+"But you shall not!" he exclaimed. "I may be no match for him in
+cunning, you say well. But I can kill him. And I will!" He paced up
+and down. "I will!"
+
+"You should have done it when he was here," she answered, half in scorn,
+half in earnest.
+
+"It is not too late," he cried; and then he stopped, silenced by the
+opening door. It was Javette who entered. They looked at her, and
+before she spoke were on their feet. Her face, white and eager, marking
+something besides fear, announced that she brought news. She closed the
+door behind her, and in a moment it was told.
+
+"Monsieur can escape, if he is quick," she cried in a low tone; and they
+saw that she trembled with excitement. "They are at supper. But he must
+be quick! He must be quick!"
+
+"Is not the door guarded?"
+
+"It is, but--"
+
+"And he knows! Your mistress says that he knows that I am here."
+
+For a moment Javette looked startled. "It is possible," she muttered.
+"But he has gone out."
+
+Madame Carlat clapped her hands. "I heard the door close," she said,
+"three minutes ago."
+
+"And if Monsieur can reach the room in which he supped last night, the
+window that was broken is only blocked"--she swallowed once or twice in
+her excitement--"with something he can move. And then Monsieur is in the
+street, where his cowl will protect him."
+
+"But Count Hannibal's men?" he asked eagerly.
+
+"They are eating in the lodge by the door."
+
+"Ha! And they cannot see the other room from there?"
+
+Javette nodded. Her tale told, she seemed to be unable to add a word.
+Mademoiselle, who knew her for a craven, wondered that she had found
+courage either to note what she had or to bring the news. But as
+Providence had been so good to them as to put it into this woman's head
+to act as she had, it behoved them to use the opportunity--the last, the
+very last opportunity they might have.
+
+She turned to Tignonville. "Oh, go!" she cried feverishly. "Go, I beg!
+Go now, Monsieur! The greatest kindness you can do me is to place
+yourself as quickly as possible beyond his reach." A faint colour, the
+flush of hope, had returned to her cheeks. Her eyes glittered.
+
+"Right, Mademoiselle!" he cried, obedient for once, "I go! And do you be
+of good courage."
+
+He held her hand: an instant, then, moving to the door, he opened it and
+listened. They all pressed behind him to hear. A murmur of voices, low
+and distant, mounted the staircase and bore out the girl's tale; apart
+from this the house was silent. Tignonville cast a last look at
+Mademoiselle, and, with a gesture of farewell, glided a-tiptoe to the
+stairs and began to descend, his face hidden in his cowl. They watched
+him reach the angle of the staircase, they watched him vanish beyond it;
+and still they listened, looking at one another when a board creaked or
+the voices below were hushed for a moment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. THE DUEL.
+
+
+At the foot of the staircase Tignonville paused. The droning Norman
+voices of the men on guard issued from an open door a few paces before
+him on the left. He caught a jest, the coarse chuckling laughter which
+attended it, and the gurgle of applause which followed; and he knew that
+at any moment one of the men might step out and discover him. Fortunately
+the door of the room with the shattered window was almost within reach of
+his hand on the right side of the passage, and he stepped softly to it.
+He stood an instant hesitating, his hand on the latch; then, alarmed by a
+movement in the guard-room, as if some were rising, he pushed the door in
+a panic, slid into the room, and shut the door behind him. He was safe,
+and he had made no noise; but at the table, at supper, with his back to
+him and his face to the partly closed window, sat Count Hannibal!
+
+The young man's heart stood still. For a long minute he gazed at the
+Count's back, spellbound and unable to stir. Then, as Tavannes ate on
+without looking round, he began to take courage. Possibly he had entered
+so quietly that he had not been heard, or possibly his entrance was taken
+for that of a servant. In either case, there was a chance that he might
+retire after the same fashion; and he had actually raised the latch, and
+was drawing the door to him with infinite precaution, when Tavannes'
+voice struck him, as it were, in the face.
+
+"Pray do not admit the draught, M. de Tignonville," he said, without
+looking round. "In your cowl you do not feel it, but it is otherwise
+with me."
+
+The unfortunate Tignonville stood transfixed, glaring at the back of the
+other's head. For an instant he could not find his voice. At last--
+
+"Curse you!" he hissed in a transport of rage. "Curse you! You did
+know, then? And she was right."
+
+"If you mean that I expected you, to be sure, Monsieur," Count Hannibal
+answered. "See, your place is laid. You will not feel the air from
+without there. The very becoming dress which you have adopted secures
+you from cold. But--do you not find it somewhat oppressive this summer
+weather?"
+
+"Curse you!" the young man cried, trembling.
+
+Tavannes turned and looked at him with a dark smile. "The curse may
+fall," he said, "but I fancy it will not be in consequence of your
+petitions, Monsieur. And now, were it not better you played the man?"
+
+"If I were armed," the other cried passionately, "you would not insult
+me!"
+
+"Sit down, sir, sit down," Count Hannibal answered sternly. "We will
+talk of that presently. In the mean time I have something to say to you.
+Will you not eat?"
+
+But Tignonville would not.
+
+"Very well," Count Hannibal answered; and he went on with his supper. "I
+am indifferent whether you eat or not. It is enough for me that you are
+one of the two things I lacked an hour ago; and that I have you, M. de
+Tignonville. And through you I look to obtain the other."
+
+"What other?" Tignonville cried.
+
+"A minister," Tavannes answered, smiling. "A minister. There are not
+many left in Paris--of your faith. But you met one this morning, I
+know."
+
+"I? I met one?"
+
+"Yes, Monsieur, you! And can lay your hand on him in five minutes, you
+know."
+
+M. de Tignonville gasped. His face turned a shade paler.
+
+"You have a spy," he cried. "You have a spy upstairs!"
+
+Tavannes raised his cup to his lips, and drank. When he had set it down--
+
+"It may be," he said, and he shrugged his shoulders. "I know, it boots
+not how I know. It is my business to make the most of my knowledge--and
+of yours!"
+
+M. de Tignonville laughed rudely. "Make the most of your own," he said;
+"you will have none of mine."
+
+"That remains to be seen," Count Hannibal answered. "Carry your mind
+back two days, M. de Tignonville. Had I gone to Mademoiselle de Vrillac
+last Saturday and said to her 'Marry me, or promise to marry me,' what
+answer would she have given?"
+
+"She would have called you an insolent!" the young man replied hotly.
+"And I--"
+
+"No matter what you would have done!" Tavannes said. "Suffice it that
+she would have answered as you suggest. Yet to-day she has given me her
+promise."
+
+"Yes," the young man retorted, "in circumstances in which no man of
+honour--"
+
+"Let us say in peculiar circumstances."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Which still exist! Mark me, M. de Tignonville," Count Hannibal
+continued, leaning forward and eyeing the young man with meaning, "_which
+still exist_! And may have the same effect on another's will as on hers!
+Listen! Do you hear?" And rising from his seat with a darkening face,
+he pointed to the partly shuttered window, through which the measured
+tramp of a body of men came heavily to the ear. "Do you hear, Monsieur?
+Do you understand? As it was yesterday it is to-day! They killed the
+President La Place this morning! And they are searching! They are still
+searching! The river is not yet full, nor the gibbet glutted! I have
+but to open that window and denounce you, and your life would hang by no
+stronger thread than the life of a mad dog which they chase through the
+streets!"
+
+The younger man had risen also. He stood confronting Tavannes, the cowl
+fallen back from his face, his eyes dilated.
+
+"You think to frighten me!" he cried. "You think that I am craven enough
+to sacrifice her to save myself. You--"
+
+"You were craven enough to draw back yesterday, when you stood at this
+window and waited for death!" Count Hannibal answered brutally. "You
+flinched then, and may flinch again!"
+
+"Try me!" Tignonville retorted, trembling with passion. "Try me!" And
+then, as the other stared at him and made no movement, "But you dare
+not!" he cried. "You dare not!"
+
+"No?"
+
+"No! For if I die you lose her!" Tignonville replied in a voice of
+triumph. "Ha, ha! I touch you there!" he continued. "You dare not, for
+my safety is part of the price, and is more to you than it is to myself!
+You may threaten, M. de Tavannes, you may bluster, and shout and point to
+the window"--and he mocked, with a disdainful mimicry, the other's
+gesture--"but my safety is more to you than to me! And 'twill end
+there!"
+
+"You believe that?"
+
+"I know it!"
+
+In two strides Count Hannibal was at the window. He seized a great piece
+of the boarding which closed one-half of the opening; he wrenched it
+away. A flood of evening light burst in through the aperture, and fell
+on and heightened the flushed passion of his features, as he turned again
+to his opponent.
+
+"Then if you know it," he cried vehemently, "in God's name act upon it!"
+And he pointed to the window.
+
+"Act upon it?"
+
+"Ay, act upon it!" Tavannes repeated, with a glance of flame. "The road
+is open! If you would save your mistress, behold the way! If you would
+save her from the embrace she abhors, from the eyes under which she
+trembles, from the hand of a master, there lies the way! And it is not
+her glove only you will save, but herself, her soul, her body! So," he
+continued, with a certain wildness, and in a tone wherein contempt and
+bitterness were mingled, "to the lions, brave lover! Will you your life
+for her honour? Will you death that she may live a maid? Will you your
+head to save her finger? Then, leap down! leap down! The lists are
+open, the sand is strewed! Out of your own mouth I have it that if you
+perish she is saved! Then out, Monsieur! Cry 'I am a Huguenot!' And
+God's will be done!"
+
+Tignonville was livid. "Rather, your will!" he panted. "Your will, you
+devil! Nevertheless--"
+
+"You will go! Ha! ha! You will go!"
+
+For an instant it seemed that he would go. Stung by the challenge,
+wrought on by the contempt in which Tavannes held him, he shot a look of
+hate at the tempter; he caught his breath, and laid his hand on the edge
+of the shuttering as if he would leap out.
+
+But it goes hard with him who has once turned back from the foe. The
+evening light, glancing cold on the burnished pike-points of a group of
+archers who stood near, caught his eye and went chill to his heart.
+Death, not in the arena, not in the sight of shouting thousands, but in
+this darkening street, with an enemy laughing from the window, death with
+no revenge to follow, with no certainty that after all she would be safe,
+such a death could be compassed only by pure love--the love of a child
+for a parent, of a parent for a child, of a man for the one woman in the
+world!
+
+He recoiled. "You would not spare her!" he cried, his face damp with
+sweat--for he knew now that he would not go. "You want to be rid of me!
+You would fool me, and then--"
+
+"Out of your own mouth you are convict!" Count Hannibal retorted gravely.
+"It was you who said it! But still I swear it! Shall I swear it to
+you?"
+
+But Tignonville recoiled another step and was silent.
+
+"No? O _preux chevalier_, O gallant knight! I knew it! Do you think
+that I did not know with whom I had to deal?" And Count Hannibal burst
+into harsh laughter, turning his back on the other, as if he no longer
+counted. "You will neither die with her nor for her! You were better in
+her petticoats and she in your breeches! Or no, you are best as you are,
+good father! Take my advice, M. de Tignonville, have done with arms; and
+with a string of beads, and soft words, and talk of Holy Mother Church,
+you will fool the women as surely as the best of them! They are not all
+like my cousin, a flouting, gibing, jeering woman--you had poor fortune
+there, I fear?"
+
+"If I had a sword!" Tignonville hissed, his face livid with rage. "You
+call me coward, because I will not die to please you. But give me a
+sword, and I will show you if I am a coward!"
+
+Tavannes stood still. "You are there, are you?" he said in an altered
+tone. "I--"
+
+"Give me a sword," Tignonville repeated, holding out his open trembling
+hands. "A sword! A sword! 'Tis easy taunting an unarmed man, but--"
+
+"You wish to fight?"
+
+"I ask no more! No more! Give me a sword," he urged, his voice
+quivering with eagerness. "It is you who are the coward!"
+
+Count Hannibal stared at him. "And what am I to get by fighting you?" he
+reasoned slowly. "You are in my power. I can do with you as I please. I
+can call from this window and denounce you, or I can summon my men--"
+
+"Coward! Coward!"
+
+"Ay? Well, I will tell you what I will do," with a subtle smile. "I
+will give you a sword, M. de Tignonville, and I will meet you foot to
+foot here, in this room, on a condition."
+
+"What is it? What is it?" the young man cried with incredible eagerness.
+"Name your condition!"
+
+"That if I get the better of you, you find me a minister."
+
+"I find you a--"
+
+"A minister. Yes, that is it. Or tell me where I can find one."
+
+The young man recoiled. "Never!" he said.
+
+"You know where to find one."
+
+"Never! Never!"
+
+"You can lay your hand on one in five minutes, you know."
+
+"I will not."
+
+"Then I shall not fight you!" Count Hannibal answered coolly; and he
+turned from him, and back again. "You will pardon me if I say, M. de
+Tignonville, that you are in as many minds about fighting as about dying!
+I do not think that you would have made your fortune at Court. Moreover,
+there is a thing which I fancy you have not considered. If we fight you
+may kill me, in which case the condition will not help me much. Or
+I--which is more likely--" he added, with a harsh smile, "may kill you,
+and again I am no better placed."
+
+The young man's pallid features betrayed the conflict in his breast. To
+do him justice, his hand itched for the sword-hilt--he was brave enough
+for that; he hated, and only so could he avenge himself. But the penalty
+if he had the worse! And yet what of it? He was in hell now, in a hell
+of humiliation, shame, defeat, tormented by this fiend! 'Twas only to
+risk a lower hell.
+
+At last, "I will do it!" he cried hoarsely. "Give me a sword and look to
+yourself."
+
+"You promise?"
+
+"Yes, yes, I promise!"
+
+"Good," Count Hannibal answered suavely, "but we cannot fight so, we must
+have more light."
+
+And striding to the door he opened it, and calling the Norman bade him
+move the table and bring candles--a dozen candles; for in the narrow
+streets the light was waning, and in the half-shuttered room it was
+growing dusk. Tignonville, listening with a throbbing brain, wondered
+that the attendant expressed no surprise and said no word--until Tavannes
+added to his orders one for a pair of swords.
+
+Then, "Monsieur's sword is here," Bigot answered in his half-intelligible
+patois. "He left it here yester morning."
+
+"You are a good fellow, Bigot," Tavannes answered, with a gaiety and good-
+humour which astonished Tignonville. "And one of these days you shall
+marry Suzanne."
+
+The Norman smiled sourly and went in search of the weapon.
+
+"You have a poniard?" Count Hannibal continued in the same tone of
+unusual good temper, which had already struck Tignonville. "Excellent!
+Will you strip, then, or--as we are? Very good, Monsieur; in the
+unlikely event of fortune declaring for you, you will be in a better
+condition to take care of yourself. A man running through the streets in
+his shirt is exposed to inconveniences!" And he laughed gaily.
+
+While he laughed the other listened; and his rage began to give place to
+wonder. A man who regarded as a pastime a sword and dagger conflict
+between four walls, who, having his adversary in his power, was ready to
+discard the advantage, to descend into the lists, and to risk life for a
+whim, a fancy--such a man was outside his experience, though in Poitou in
+those days of war were men reckoned brave. For what, he asked himself as
+he waited, had Tavannes to gain by fighting? The possession of
+Mademoiselle? But Mademoiselle, if his passion for her overwhelmed him,
+was in his power; and if his promise were a barrier--which seemed
+inconceivable in the light of his reputation--he had only to wait, and to-
+morrow, or the next day, or the next, a minister would be found, and
+without risk he could gain that for which he was now risking all.
+
+Tignonville did not know that it was in the other's nature to find
+pleasure in such utmost ventures. Nevertheless the recklessness to which
+Tavannes' action bore witness had its effect upon him. By the time the
+young man's sword arrived something of his passion for the conflict had
+evaporated; and though the touch of the hilt restored his determination,
+the locked door, the confined space, and the unaccustomed light went a
+certain distance towards substituting despair for courage.
+
+The use of the dagger in the duels of that day, however, rendered despair
+itself formidable. And Tignonville, when he took his place, appeared
+anything but a mean antagonist. He had removed his robe and cowl, and
+lithe and active as a cat he stood as it were on springs, throwing his
+weight now on this foot and now on that, and was continually in motion.
+The table bearing the candles had been pushed against the window, the
+boarding of which had been replaced by Bigot before he left the room.
+Tignonville had this, and consequently the lights, on his dagger hand;
+and he plumed himself on the advantage, considering his point the more
+difficult to follow.
+
+Count Hannibal did not seem to notice this, however. "Are you ready?" he
+asked. And then--
+
+"On guard!" he cried, and he stamped the echo to the word. But, that
+done, instead of bearing the other down with a headlong rush
+characteristic of the man--as Tignonville feared--he held off warily,
+stooping low; and when his slow opening was met by one as cautious, he
+began to taunt his antagonist.
+
+"Come!" he cried, and feinted half-heartedly. "Come, Monsieur, are we
+going to fight, or play at fighting?"
+
+"Fight yourself, then!" Tignonville answered, his breath quickened by
+excitement and growing hope. "'Tis not I hold back!" And he lunged, but
+was put aside.
+
+"Ca! ca!" Tavannes retorted; and he lunged and parried in his turn, but
+loosely and at a distance.
+
+After which the two moved nearer the door, their eyes glittering as they
+watched one another, their knees bent, the sinews of their backs
+straining for the leap. Suddenly Tavannes thrust, and leapt away, and as
+his antagonist thrust in return the Count swept the blade aside with a
+strong parry, and for a moment seemed to be on the point of falling on
+Tignonville with the poniard. But Tignonville retired his right foot
+nimbly, which brought them front to front again. And the younger man
+laughed.
+
+"Try again, M. le Comte!" he said. And, with the word, he dashed in
+himself quick as light; for a second the blades ground on one another,
+the daggers hovered, the two suffused faces glared into one another; then
+the pair disengaged again.
+
+The blood trickled from a scratch on Count Hannibal's neck; half an inch
+to the right and the point had found his throat. And Tignonville,
+elated, laughed anew, and swaying from side to side on his hips, watched
+with growing confidence for a second chance. Lithe as one of the
+leopards Charles kept at the Louvre, he stooped lower and lower, and more
+and more with each moment took the attitude of the assailant, watching
+for an opening; while Count Hannibal, his face dark and his eyes
+vigilant, stood increasingly on the defence. The light was waning a
+little, the wicks of the candles were burning long; but neither noticed
+it or dared to remove his eyes from the other's. Their laboured
+breathing found an echo on the farther side of the door, but this again
+neither observed.
+
+"Well?" Count Hannibal said at last. "Are you coming?"
+
+"When I please," Tignonville answered; and he feinted but drew back.
+
+The other did the same, and again they watched one another, their eyes
+seeming to grow smaller and smaller. Gradually a smile had birth on
+Tignonville's lips. He thrust! It was parried! He thrust
+again--parried! Tavannes, grown still more cautious, gave a yard.
+Tignonville pushed on, but did not allow confidence to master caution. He
+began, indeed, to taunt his adversary; to flout and jeer him. But it was
+with a motive.
+
+For suddenly, in the middle of a sentence, he repeated the peculiar
+thrust which had been successful before. This time, however, Tavannes
+was ready. He put aside the blade with a quick parade, and instead of
+making a riposte sprang within the other's guard. The two came face to
+face and breast to shoulder, and struck furiously with their daggers.
+Count Hannibal was outside his opponent's sword and had the advantage.
+Tignonville's dagger fell, but glanced off the metalwork of the other's
+hilt; Tavannes' fell swift and hard between the young man's eyes. The
+Huguenot flung up his hands and staggered back, falling his length on the
+floor.
+
+In an instant Count Hannibal was on his breast, and had knocked away his
+dagger. Then--
+
+"You own yourself vanquished?" he cried.
+
+The young man, blinded by the blood which trickled down his face, made a
+sign with his hands. Count Hannibal rose to his feet again, and stood a
+moment looking at his foe without speaking. Presently he seemed to be
+satisfied. He nodded, and going to the table dipped a napkin in water.
+He brought it, and carefully supporting Tignonville's head, laved his
+brow.
+
+"It is as I thought," he said, when he had stanched the blood. "You are
+not hurt, man. You are stunned. It is no more than a bruise."
+
+The young man was coming to himself. "But I thought--" he muttered, and
+broke off to pass his hand over his face. Then he got up slowly, reeling
+a little, "I thought it was the point," he muttered.
+
+"No, it was the pommel," Tavannes answered dryly. "It would not have
+served me to kill you. I could have done that ten times."
+
+Tignonville groaned, and, sitting down at the table, held the napkin to
+his aching head. One of the candles had been overturned in the struggle
+and lay on the floor, flaring in a little pool of grease. Tavannes set
+his heel upon it; then, striding to the farther end of the room, he
+picked up Tignonville's dagger and placed it beside his sword on the
+table. He looked about to see if aught else remained to do, and, finding
+nothing, he returned to Tignonville's side.
+
+"Now, Monsieur," he said in a voice hard and constrained, "I must ask you
+to perform your part of the bargain."
+
+A groan of anguish broke from the unhappy man. And yet he had set his
+life on the cast; what more could he have done?
+
+"You will not harm him?" he muttered.
+
+"He shall go safe," Count Hannibal replied gravely.
+
+"And--" he fought a moment with his pride, then blurted out the words,
+"you will not tell her--that it was through me--you found him?"
+
+"I will not," Tavannes answered in the same tone. He stooped and picked
+up the other's robe and cowl, which had fallen from a chair--so that as
+he spoke his eyes were averted. "She shall never know through me," he
+said.
+
+And Tignonville, his face hidden in his hands, told him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. ANDROMEDA, PERSEUS BEING ABSENT.
+
+
+Little by little--while they fought below--the gloom had thickened, and
+night had fallen in the room above. But Mademoiselle would not have
+candles brought. Seated in the darkness, on the uppermost step of the
+stairs, her hands clasped about her knees, she listened and listened, as
+if by that action she could avert misfortune; or as if, by going so far
+forward to meet it, she could turn aside the worst. The women shivering
+in the darkness about her would fain have struck a light and drawn her
+back into the room, for they felt safer there. But she was not to be
+moved. The laughter and chatter of the men in the guard-room, the coming
+and going of Bigot as he passed, below but out of sight, had no terrors
+for her; nay, she breathed more freely on the bare open landing of the
+staircase than in the close confines of a room which her fears made
+hateful to her. Here at least she could listen, her face unseen; and
+listening she bore the suspense more easily.
+
+A turn in the staircase, with the noise which proceeded from the guard-
+room, rendered it difficult to hear what happened in the closed room
+below. But she thought that if an alarm were raised there she must hear
+it; and as the moments passed and nothing happened, she began to feel
+confident that her lover had made good his escape by the window.
+
+Presently she got a fright. Three or four men came from the guard-room
+and went, as it seemed to her, to the door of the room with the shattered
+casement. She told herself that she had rejoiced too soon, and her heart
+stood still. She waited for a rush of feet, a cry, a struggle. But
+except an uncertain muffled sound which lasted for some minutes, and was
+followed by a dull shock, she heard nothing more. And presently the men
+went back whispering, the noise in the guard-room which had been
+partially hushed broke forth anew, and perplexed but relieved she
+breathed again. Surely he had escaped by this time. Surely by this time
+he was far away, in the Arsenal, or in some place of refuge! And she
+might take courage, and feel that for this day the peril was overpast.
+
+"Mademoiselle will have the lights now?" one of the women ventured.
+
+"No! no!" she answered feverishly, and she continued to crouch where she
+was on the stairs, bathing herself and her burning face in the darkness
+and coolness of the stairway. The air entered freely through a window at
+her elbow, and the place was fresher, were that all, than the room she
+had left. Javette began to whimper, but she paid no heed to her; a man
+came and went along the passage below, and she heard the outer door
+unbarred, and the jarring tread of three or four men who passed through
+it. But all without disturbance; and afterwards the house was quiet
+again. And as on this Monday evening the prime virulence of the massacre
+had begun to abate--though it held after a fashion to the end of the
+week--Paris without was quiet also. The sounds which had chilled her
+heart at intervals during two days were no longer heard. A feeling
+almost of peace, almost of comfort--a drowsy feeling, that was three
+parts a reaction from excitement--took possession of her. In the
+darkness her head sank lower and lower on her knees. And half an hour
+passed, while Javette whimpered, and Madame Carlat slumbered, her broad
+back propped against the wall.
+
+Suddenly Mademoiselle opened her eyes, and saw, three steps below her, a
+strange man whose upward way she barred. Behind him came Carlat, and
+behind him Bigot, lighting both; and in the confusion of her thoughts as
+she rose to her feet the three, all staring at her in a common amazement,
+seemed a company. The air entering through the open window beside her
+blew the flame of the candle this way and that, and added to the
+nightmare character of the scene; for by the shifting light the men
+seemed to laugh one moment and scowl the next, and their shadows were now
+high and now low on the wall. In truth, they were as much amazed at
+coming on her in that place as she at their appearance; but they were
+awake, and she newly roused from sleep; and the advantage was with them.
+
+"What is it?" she cried in a panic. "What is it?"
+
+"If Mademoiselle will return to her room?" one of the men said
+courteously.
+
+"But--what is it?" She was frightened.
+
+"If Mademoiselle--"
+
+Then she turned without more and went back into the room, and the three
+followed, and her woman and Madame Carlat. She stood resting one hand on
+the table while Javette with shaking fingers lighted the candles. Then--
+
+"Now, Monsieur," she said in a hard voice, "if you will tell me your
+business?"
+
+"You do not know me?" The stranger's eyes dwelt kindly and pitifully on
+her.
+
+She looked at him steadily, crushing down the fears which knocked at her
+heart.
+
+"No," she said. "And yet I think I have seen you."
+
+"You saw me a week last Sunday," the stranger answered sorrowfully. "My
+name is La Tribe. I preached that day, Mademoiselle, before the King of
+Navarre. I believe that you were there."
+
+For a moment she stared at him in silence, her lips parted. Then she
+laughed, a laugh which set the teeth on edge.
+
+"Oh, he is clever!" she cried. "He has the wit of the priests! Or the
+devil! But you come too late, Monsieur! You come too late! The bird
+has flown."
+
+"Mademoiselle--"
+
+"I tell you the bird has flown!" she repeated vehemently. And her laugh
+of joyless triumph rang through the room. "He is clever, but I have
+outwitted him! I have--"
+
+She paused and stared about her wildly, struck by the silence; struck too
+by something solemn, something pitiful in the faces that were turned on
+her. And her lip began to quiver.
+
+"What?" she muttered. "Why do you look at me so? He has not"--she
+turned from one to another--"he has not been taken?"
+
+"M. Tignonville?"
+
+She nodded.
+
+"He is below."
+
+"Ah!" she said.
+
+They expected to see her break down, perhaps to see her fall. But she
+only groped blindly for a chair and sat. And for a moment there was
+silence in the room. It was the Huguenot minister who broke it in a tone
+formal and solemn.
+
+"Listen, all present!" he said slowly. "The ways of God are past finding
+out. For two days in the midst of great perils I have been preserved by
+His hand and fed by His bounty, and I am told that I shall live if, in
+this matter, I do the will of those who hold me in their power. But be
+assured--and hearken all," he continued, lowering his voice to a sterner
+note. "Rather than marry this woman to this man against her will--if
+indeed in His sight such marriage can be--rather than save my life by
+such base compliance, I will die not once but ten times! See. I am
+ready! I will make no defence!" And he opened his arms as if to welcome
+the stroke. "If there be trickery here, if there has been practising
+below, where they told me this and that, it shall not avail! Until I
+hear from Mademoiselle's own lips that she is willing, I will not say
+over her so much as Yea, yea, or Nay, nay!"
+
+"She is willing!"
+
+La Tribe turned sharply, and beheld the speaker. It was Count Hannibal,
+who had entered a few seconds earlier, and had taken his stand within the
+door.
+
+"She is willing!" Tavannes repeated quietly. And if, in this moment of
+the fruition of his schemes, he felt his triumph, he masked it under a
+face of sombre purpose. "Do you doubt me, man?"
+
+"From her own lips!" the other replied, undaunted--and few could say as
+much--by that harsh presence. "From no other's!"
+
+"Sirrah, you--"
+
+"I can die. And you can no more, my lord!" the minister answered
+bravely. "You have no threat can move me."
+
+"I am not sure of that," Tavannes answered, more blandly. "But had you
+listened to me and been less anxious to be brave, M. La Tribe, where no
+danger is, you had learned that here is no call for heroics! Mademoiselle
+is willing, and will tell you so."
+
+"With her own lips?"
+
+Count Hannibal raised his eyebrows. "With her own lips, if you will," he
+said. And then, advancing a step and addressing her, with unusual
+gravity, "Mademoiselle de Vrillac," he said, "you hear what this
+gentleman requires. Will you be pleased to confirm what I have said?"
+
+She did not answer, and in the intense silence which held the room in its
+freezing grasp a woman choked, another broke into weeping. The colour
+ebbed from the cheeks of more than one; the men fidgeted on their feet.
+
+Count Hannibal looked round, his head high. "There is no call for
+tears," he said; and whether he spoke in irony or in a strange obtuseness
+was known only to himself. "Mademoiselle is in no hurry--and rightly--to
+answer a question so momentous. Under the pressure of utmost peril, she
+passed her word; the more reason that, now the time has come to redeem
+it, she should do so at leisure and after thought. Since she gave her
+promise, Monsieur, she has had more than one opportunity of evading its
+fulfilment. But she is a Vrillac, and I know that nothing is farther
+from her thoughts."
+
+He was silent a moment; and then, "Mademoiselle," he said, "I would not
+hurry you."
+
+Her eyes were closed, but at that her lips moved. "I am--willing," she
+whispered. And a fluttering sigh, of relief, of pity, of God knows what,
+filled the room.
+
+"You are satisfied, M. La Tribe?"
+
+"I do not--"
+
+"Man!" With a growl as of a tiger, Count Hannibal dropped the mask. In
+two strides he was at the minister's side, his hand gripped his shoulder;
+his face, flushed with passion, glared into his. "Will you play with
+lives?" he hissed. "If you do not value your own, have you no thought of
+others? Of these? Look and count! Have you no bowels? If she will
+save them, will not you?"
+
+"My own I do not value."
+
+"Curse your own!" Tavannes cried in furious scorn. And he shook the
+other to and fro. "Who thought of your life? Will you doom these? Will
+you give them to the butcher?"
+
+"My lord," La Tribe answered, shaken in spite of himself, "if she be
+willing--"
+
+"She is willing."
+
+"I have nought to say. But I caught her words indistinctly. And without
+her consent--"
+
+"She shall speak more plainly. Mademoiselle--"
+
+She anticipated him. She had risen, and stood looking straight before
+her, seeing nothing.
+
+"I am willing," she muttered with a strange gesture, "if it must be."
+
+He did not answer.
+
+"If it must be," she repeated slowly, and with a heavy sigh. And her
+chin dropped on her breast. Then, abruptly, suddenly--it was a strange
+thing to see--she looked up. A change as complete as the change which
+had come over Count Hannibal a minute before came over her. She sprang
+to his side; she clutched his arm and devoured his face with her eyes.
+"You are not deceiving me?" she cried. "You have Tignonville below?
+You--oh, no, no!" And she fell back from him, her eyes distended, her
+voice grown suddenly shrill and defiant, "You have not! You are
+deceiving me! He has escaped, and you have lied to me!"
+
+"I?"
+
+"Yes, you have lied to me!" It was the last fierce flicker of hope when
+hope seemed dead: the last clutch of the drowning at the straw that
+floated before the eyes.
+
+He laughed harshly. "You will be my wife in five minutes," he said, "and
+you give me the lie? A week, and you will know me better! A month,
+and--but we will talk of that another time. For the present," he
+continued, turning to La Tribe, "do you, sir, tell her that the gentleman
+is below. Perhaps she will believe you. For you know him."
+
+La Tribe looked at her sorrowfully; his heart bled for her. "I have seen
+M. de Tignonville," he said. "And M. le Comte says truly. He is in the
+same case with ourselves, a prisoner."
+
+"You have seen him?" she wailed.
+
+"I left him in the room below, when I mounted the stairs."
+
+Count Hannibal laughed, the grim mocking laugh which seemed to revel in
+the pain it inflicted.
+
+"Will you have him for a witness?" he cried. "There could not be a
+better, for he will not forget. Shall I fetch him?"
+
+She bowed her head, shivering. "Spare me that," she said. And she
+pressed her hands to her eyes while an uncontrollable shudder passed over
+her frame. Then she stepped forward: "I am ready," she whispered. "Do
+with me as you will!"
+
+* * * * *
+
+When they had all gone out and closed the door behind them, and the two
+whom the minister had joined were left together, Count Hannibal continued
+for a time to pace the room, his hands clasped at his back, and his head
+sunk somewhat on his chest. His thoughts appeared to run in a new
+channel, and one, strange to say, widely diverted from his bride and from
+that which he had just done. For he did not look her way, or, for a
+time, speak to her. He stood once to snuff a candle, doing it with an
+absent face: and once to look, but still absently, and as if he read no
+word of it, at the marriage writing which lay, the ink still wet, upon
+the table. After each of these interruptions he resumed his steady
+pacing to and fro, to and fro, nor did his eye wander once in the
+direction of her chair.
+
+And she waited. The conflict of emotions, the strife between hope and
+fear, the final defeat had stunned her; had left her exhausted, almost
+apathetic. Yet not quite, nor wholly. For when in his walk he came a
+little nearer to her, a chill perspiration broke out on her brow, and
+shudderings crept over her; and when he passed farther from her--and then
+only, it seemed--she breathed again. But the change lay beneath the
+surface, and cheated the eye. Into her attitude, as she sat, her hands
+clasped on her lap, her eyes fixed, came no apparent change or shadow of
+movement.
+
+Suddenly, with a dull shock, she became aware that he was speaking.
+
+"There was need of haste," he said, his tone strangely low and free from
+emotion, "for I am under bond to leave Paris to-morrow for Angers,
+whither I bear letters from the King. And as matters stood, there was no
+one with whom I could leave you. I trust Bigot; he is faithful, and you
+may trust him, Madame, fair or foul! But he is not quick-witted.
+Badelon, also, you may trust. Bear it in mind. Your woman Javette is
+not faithful; but as her life is guaranteed she must stay with us until
+she can be securely placed. Indeed, I must take all with me--with one
+exception--for the priests and monks rule Paris, and they do not love me,
+nor would spare aught at my word."
+
+He was silent a few moments. Then he resumed in the same tone, "You
+ought to know how we, Tavannes, stand. It is by Monsieur and the Queen-
+Mother; and _contra_ the Guises. We have all been in this matter; but
+the latter push and we are pushed, and the old crack will reopen. As it
+is, I cannot answer for much beyond the reach of my arm. Therefore, we
+take all with us except M. de Tignonville, who desires to be conducted to
+the Arsenal."
+
+She had begun to listen with averted eyes. But as he continued to speak
+surprise awoke in her, and something stronger than surprise--amazement,
+stupefaction. Slowly her eyes came to him, and when he ceased to speak--
+
+"Why do you tell me these things?" she muttered, her dry lips framing the
+words with difficulty.
+
+"Because it behoves you to know them," he answered, thoughtfully tapping
+the table. "I have no one, save my brother, whom I can trust."
+
+She would not ask him why he trusted her, nor why he thought he could
+trust her. For a moment or two she watched him, while he, with his eyes
+lowered, stood in deep thought. At last he looked up and his eyes met
+hers.
+
+"Come!" he said abruptly, and in a different tone, "we must end this! Is
+it to be a kiss or a blow between us?"
+
+She rose, though her knees shook under her; and they stood face to face,
+her face white as paper.
+
+"What--do you mean?" she whispered.
+
+"Is it to be a kiss or a blow?" he repeated. "A husband must be a lover,
+Madame, or a master, or both! I am content to be the one or the other,
+or both, as it shall please you. But the one I will be."
+
+"Then, a thousand times, a blow," she cried, her eyes flaming, "from
+you!"
+
+He wondered at her courage, but he hid his wonder. "So be it!" he
+answered. And before she knew what he would be at, he struck her sharply
+across the cheek with the glove which he held in his hand. She recoiled
+with a low cry, and her cheek blazed scarlet where he had struck it.
+
+"So be it!" he continued sombrely. "The choice shall be yours, but you
+will come to me daily for the one or the other. If I cannot be lover,
+Madame, I will be master. And by this sign I will have you know it,
+daily, and daily remember it."
+
+She stared at him, her bosom rising and falling, in an astonishment too
+deep for words. But he did not heed her. He did not look at her again.
+He had already turned to the door, and while she looked he passed through
+it, he closed it behind him. And she was alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. IN THE ORLEANNAIS.
+
+
+"But you fear him?"
+
+"Fear him?" Madame St. Lo answered; and, to the surprise of the Countess,
+she made a little face of contempt. "No; why should I fear him? I fear
+him no more than the puppy leaping at old Sancho's bridle fears his tall
+playfellow! Or than the cloud you see above us fears the wind before
+which it flies!" She pointed to a white patch, the size of a man's hand,
+which hung above the hill on their left hand and formed the only speck in
+the blue summer sky. "Fear him? Not I!" And, laughing gaily, she put
+her horse at a narrow rivulet which crossed the grassy track on which
+they rode.
+
+"But he is hard?" the Countess murmured in a low voice, as she regained
+her companion's side.
+
+"Hard?" Madame St. Lo rejoined with a gesture of pride. "Ay, hard as the
+stones in my jewelled ring! Hard as flint, or the nether millstone--to
+his enemies! But to women? Bah! Who ever heard that he hurt a woman?"
+
+"Why, then, is he so feared?" the Countess asked, her eyes on the subject
+of their discussion--a solitary figure riding some fifty paces in front
+of them.
+
+"Because he counts no cost!" her companion answered. "Because he killed
+Savillon in the court of the Louvre, though he knew his life the forfeit.
+He would have paid the forfeit too, or lost his right hand, if Monsieur,
+for his brother the Marshal's sake, had not intervened. But Savillon had
+whipped his dog, you see. Then he killed the Chevalier de Millaud, but
+'twas in fair fight, in the snow, in their shirts. For that, Millaud's
+son lay in wait for him with two, in the passage under the Chatelet; but
+Hannibal wounded one, and the others saved themselves. Undoubtedly he is
+feared!" she added with the same note of pride in her voice.
+
+The two who talked, rode at the rear of the little company which had left
+Paris at daybreak two days before, by the Porte St. Jacques. Moving
+steadily south-westward by the lesser roads and bridle-tracks--for Count
+Hannibal seemed averse from the great road--they had lain the second
+night in a village three leagues from Bonneval. A journey of two days on
+fresh horses is apt to change scenery and eye alike; but seldom has an
+alteration--in themselves and all about them--as great as that which
+blessed this little company, been wrought in so short a time. From the
+stifling wynds and evil-smelling lanes of Paris, they had passed to the
+green uplands, the breezy woods and babbling streams of the upper
+Orleannais; from sights and sounds the most appalling, to the solitude of
+the sandy heath, haunt of the great bustard, or the sunshine of the
+hillside, vibrating with the songs of larks; from an atmosphere of terror
+and gloom to the freedom of God's earth and sky. Numerous enough--they
+numbered a score of armed men--to defy the lawless bands which had their
+lairs in the huge forest of Orleans, they halted where they pleased: at
+mid-day under a grove of chestnut-trees, or among the willows beside a
+brook; at night, if they willed it, under God's heaven. Far, not only
+from Paris, but from the great road, with its gibbets and pillories--the
+great road which at that date ran through a waste, no peasant living
+willingly within sight of it--they rode in the morning and in the
+evening, resting in the heat of the day. And though they had left Paris
+with much talk of haste, they rode more at leisure with every league.
+
+For whatever Tavannes' motive, it was plain that he was in no hurry to
+reach his destination. Nor for that matter were any of his company.
+Madame St. Lo, who had seized the opportunity of escaping from the
+capital under her cousin's escort, was in an ill-humour with cities, and
+declaimed much on the joys of a cell in the woods. For the time the
+coarsest nature and the dullest rider had had enough of alarums and
+conflicts.
+
+The whole company, indeed, though it moved in some fashion of array with
+an avant and a rear-guard, the ladies riding together, and Count Hannibal
+proceeding solitary in the midst, formed as peaceful a band, and one as
+innocently diverted, as if no man of them had ever grasped pike or blown
+a match. There was an old rider among them who had seen the sack of
+Rome, and the dead face of the great Constable the idol of the Free
+Companies. But he had a taste for simples and much skill in them; and
+when Madame had once seen Badelon on his knees in the grass searching for
+plants, she lost her fear of him. Bigot, with his low brow and matted
+hair, was the abject slave of Suzanne, Madame St. Lo's woman, who twitted
+him mercilessly on his Norman _patois_, and poured the vials of her scorn
+on him a dozen times a day. In all, with La Tribe and the Carlats,
+Madame St. Lo's servants, and the Countess's following, they numbered not
+far short of two score; and when they halted at noon, and under the
+shadow of some leafy tree, ate their mid-day meal, or drowsed to the
+tinkle of Madame St. Lo's lute, it was difficult to believe that Paris
+existed, or that these same people had so lately left its blood-stained
+pavements.
+
+They halted this morning a little earlier than usual. Madame St. Lo had
+barely answered her companion's question before the subject of their
+discussion swung himself from old Sancho's back, and stood waiting to
+assist them to dismount. Behind him, where the green valley through
+which the road passed narrowed to a rocky gate, an old mill stood among
+willows at the foot of a mound. On the mound behind it a ruined castle
+which had stood siege in the Hundred Years' War raised its grey walls;
+and beyond this the stream which turned the mill poured over rocks with a
+cool rushing sound that proved irresistible. The men, their horses
+watered and hobbled, went off, shouting like boys, to bathe below the
+falls; and after a moment's hesitation Count Hannibal rose from the grass
+on which he had flung himself.
+
+"Guard that for me, Madame," he said. And he dropped a packet, bravely
+sealed and tied with a silk thread, into the Countess's lap. "'Twill be
+safer than leaving it in my clothes. Ohe!" And he turned to Madame St.
+Lo. "Would you fancy a life that was all gipsying, cousin?" And if
+there was irony in his voice, there was desire in his eyes.
+
+"There is only one happy man in the world," she answered, with
+conviction.
+
+"By name?"
+
+"The hermit of Compiegne."
+
+"And in a week you would be wild for a masque!" he said cynically. And
+turning on his heel he followed the men.
+
+Madame St. Lo sighed complacently. "Heigho!" she said. "He's right! We
+are never content, _ma mie_! When I am trifling in the Gallery my heart
+is in the greenwood. And when I have eaten black bread and drank spring
+water for a fortnight I do nothing but dream of Zamet's, and white
+mulberry tarts! And you are in the same case. You have saved your round
+white neck, or it has been saved for you, by not so much as the thickness
+of Zamet's pie-crust--I declare my mouth is beginning to water for
+it!--and instead of being thankful and making the best of things, you are
+thinking of poor Madame d'Yverne, or dreaming of your calf-love!"
+
+The girl's face--for a girl she was, though they called her Madame--began
+to work. She struggled a moment with her emotion, and then broke down,
+and fell to weeping silently. For two days she had sat in public and not
+given way. But the reference to her lover was too much for her strength.
+
+Madame St. Lo looked at her with eyes which were not unkindly.
+
+"Sits the wind in that quarter?" she murmured. "I thought so! But
+there, my dear, if you don't put that packet in your gown you'll wash out
+the address! Moreover, if you ask me, I don't think the young man is
+worth it. It is only that what we have not got--we want!"
+
+But the young Countess had borne to the limit of her powers. With an
+incoherent word she rose to her feet, and walked hurriedly away. The
+thought of what was and of what might have been, the thought of the lover
+who still--though he no longer seemed, even to her, the perfect hero--held
+a place in her heart, filled her breast to overflowing. She longed for
+some spot where she could weep unseen; where the sunshine and the blue
+sky would not mock her grief; and seeing in front of her a little clump
+of alders, which grew beside the stream, in a bend that in winter was
+marshy, she hastened towards it.
+
+Madame St. Lo saw her figure blend with the shadow of the trees.
+
+"Quite _a la_ Ronsard, I give my word!" she murmured. "And now she is
+out of sight! _La, la_! I could play at the game myself, and carve
+sweet sorrow on the barks of trees, if it were not so lonesome! And if I
+had a man!"
+
+And gazing pensively at the stream and the willows, my lady tried to work
+herself into a proper frame of mind; now murmuring the name of one
+gallant, and now, finding it unsuited, the name of another. But the soft
+inflection would break into a giggle, and finally into a yawn; and, tired
+of the attempt, she began to pluck grass and throw it from her. By-and-by
+she discovered that Madame Carlat and the women, who had their place a
+little apart, had disappeared; and affrighted by the solitude and
+silence--for neither of which she was made--she sprang up and stared
+about her, hoping to discern them. Right and left, however, the sweep of
+hillside curved upward to the skyline, lonely and untenanted; behind her
+the castled rock frowned down on the rugged gorge and filled it with
+dispiriting shadow. Madame St. Lo stamped her foot on the turf.
+
+"The little fool!" she murmured pettishly. "Does she think that I am to
+be murdered that she may fatten on sighs? Oh, come up, Madame, you must
+be dragged out of this!" And she started briskly towards the alders,
+intent on gaining company as quickly as possible.
+
+She had gone about fifty yards, and had as many more to traverse when she
+halted. A man, bent double, was moving stealthily along the farther side
+of the brook, a little in front of her. Now she saw him, now she lost
+him; now she caught a glimpse of him again, through a screen of willow
+branches. He moved with the utmost caution, as a man moves who is
+pursued or in danger; and for a moment she deemed him a peasant whom the
+bathers had disturbed and who was bent on escaping. But when he came
+opposite to the alder-bed she saw that that was his point, for he
+crouched down, sheltered by a willow, and gazed eagerly among the trees,
+always with his back to her; and then he waved his hand to some one in
+the wood.
+
+Madame St. Lo drew in her breath. As if he had heard the sound--which
+was impossible--the man dropped down where he stood, crawled a yard or
+two on his face, and disappeared.
+
+Madame stared a moment, expecting to see him or hear him. Then, as
+nothing happened, she screamed. She was a woman of quick impulses,
+essentially feminine; and she screamed three or four times, standing
+where she was, her eyes on the edge of the wood. "If that does not bring
+her out, nothing will!" she thought.
+
+It brought her. An instant, and the Countess appeared, and hurried in
+dismay to her side.
+
+"What is it?" the younger woman asked, glancing over her shoulder; for
+all the valley, all the hills were peaceful, and behind Madame St. Lo--but
+the lady had not discovered it--the servants who had returned were laying
+the meal. "What is it?" she repeated anxiously.
+
+"Who was it?" Madame St. Lo asked curtly. She was quite calm now.
+
+"Who was--who?"
+
+"The man in the wood?"
+
+The Countess stared a moment, then laughed. "Only the old soldier they
+call Badelon, gathering simples. Did you think that he would harm me?"
+
+"It was not old Badelon whom I saw!" Madame St. Lo retorted. "It was a
+younger man, who crept along the other side of the brook, keeping under
+cover. When I first saw him he was there," she continued, pointing to
+the place. "And he crept on and on until he came opposite to you. Then
+he waved his hand."
+
+"To me?"
+
+Madame nodded.
+
+"But if you saw him, who was he?" the Countess asked.
+
+"I did not see his face," Madame St. Lo answered. "But he waved to you.
+That I saw."
+
+The Countess had a thought which slowly flooded her face with crimson.
+Madame St. Lo saw the change, saw the tender light which on a sudden
+softened the other's eyes; and the same thought occurred to her. And
+having a mind to punish her companion for her reticence--for she did not
+doubt that the girl knew more than she acknowledged--she proposed that
+they should return and find Badelon, and learn if he had seen the man.
+
+"Why?" Madame Tavannes asked. And she stood stubbornly, her head high.
+"Why should we?"
+
+"To clear it up," the elder woman answered mischievously. "But perhaps,
+it were better to tell your husband and let his men search the coppice."
+
+The colour left the Countess's face as quickly as it had come. For a
+moment she was tongue-tied. Then--
+
+"Have we not had enough of seeking and being sought?" she cried, more
+bitterly than befitted the occasion. "Why should we hunt him? I am not
+timid, and he did me no harm. I beg, Madame, that you will do me the
+favour of being silent on the matter."
+
+"Oh, if you insist? But what a pother--"
+
+"I did not see him, and he did not see me," Madame de Tavannes answered
+vehemently. "I fail, therefore, to understand why we should harass him,
+whoever he be. Besides, M. de Tavannes is waiting for us."
+
+"And M. de Tignonville--is following us!" Madame St. Lo muttered under
+her breath. And she made a face at the other's back.
+
+She was silent, however. They returned to the others and nothing of
+import, it would seem, had happened. The soft summer air played on the
+meal laid under the willows as it had played on the meal of yesterday
+laid under the chestnut-trees. The horses grazed within sight, moving
+now and again, with a jingle of trappings or a jealous neigh: the women's
+chatter vied with the unceasing sound of the mill-stream. After dinner,
+Madame St. Lo touched the lute, and Badelon--Badelon who had seen the
+sack of the Colonna's Palace, and been served by cardinals on the
+knee--fed a water-rat, which had its home in one of the willow-stumps,
+with carrot-parings. One by one the men laid themselves to sleep with
+their faces on their arms; and to the eyes all was as all had been
+yesterday in this camp of armed men living peacefully.
+
+But not to the Countess! She had accepted her life, she had resigned
+herself, she had marvelled that it was no worse. After the horrors of
+Paris the calm of the last two days had fallen on her as balm on a wound.
+Worn out in body and mind, she had rested, and only rested; without
+thought, almost without emotion, save for the feeling, half fear, half
+curiosity, which stirred her in regard to the strange man, her husband.
+Who on his side left her alone.
+
+But the last hour had wrought a change. Her eyes were grown restless,
+her colour came and went. The past stirred in its shallow--ah, so
+shallow--grave; and dead hopes and dead forebodings, strive as she might,
+thrust out hands to plague and torment her. If the man who sought to
+speak with her by stealth, who dogged her footsteps and hung on the
+skirts of her party, were Tignonville--her lover, who at his own request
+had been escorted to the Arsenal before their departure from Paris--then
+her plight was a sorry one. For what woman, wedded as she had been
+wedded, could think otherwise than indulgently of his persistence? And
+yet, lover and husband! What peril, what shame the words had often
+spelled! At the thought only she trembled and her colour ebbed. She
+saw, as one who stands on the brink of a precipice, the depth which
+yawned before her. She asked herself, shivering, if she would ever sink
+to _that_.
+
+All the loyalty of a strong nature, all the virtue of a good woman,
+revolted against the thought. True, her husband--husband she must call
+him--had not deserved her love; but his bizarre magnanimity, the gloomy,
+disdainful kindness with which he had crowned possession, even the unity
+of their interests, which he had impressed upon her in so strange a
+fashion, claimed a return in honour.
+
+To be paid--how? how? That was the crux which perplexed, which
+frightened, which harassed her. For, if she told her suspicions, she
+exposed her lover to capture by one who had no longer a reason to be
+merciful. And if she sought occasion to see Tignonville and so to
+dissuade him, she did it at deadly risk to herself. Yet what other
+course lay open to her if she would not stand by? If she would not play
+the traitor? If she--
+
+"Madame,"--it was her husband, and he spoke to her suddenly,--"are you
+not well?" And, looking up guiltily, she found his eyes fixed curiously
+on hers.
+
+Her face turned red and white and red again, and she faltered something
+and looked from him, but only to meet Madame St. Lo's eyes. My lady
+laughed softly in sheer mischief.
+
+"What is it?" Count Hannibal asked sharply.
+
+But Madame St. Lo's answer was a line of Ronsard.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. ON THE CASTLE HILL.
+
+
+Thrice she hummed it, bland and smiling. Then from the neighbouring
+group came an interruption. The wine he had drunk had put it into
+Bigot's head to snatch a kiss from Suzanne; and Suzanne's modesty, which
+was very nice in company, obliged her to squeal. The uproar which
+ensued, the men backing the man and the women the woman, brought Tavannes
+to his feet. He did not speak, but a glance from his eyes was enough.
+There was not one who failed to see that something was amiss with him,
+and a sudden silence fell on the party.
+
+He turned to the Countess. "You wished to see the castle?" he said. "You
+had better go now, but not alone." He cast his eyes over the company,
+and summoned La Tribe, who was seated with the Carlats. "Go with
+Madame," he said curtly. "She has a mind to climb the hill. Bear in
+mind, we start at three, and do not venture out of hearing."
+
+"I understand, M. le Comte," the minister answered. He spoke quietly,
+but there was a strange light in his face as he turned to go with her.
+
+None the less he was silent until Madame's lagging feet--for all her
+interest in the expedition was gone--had borne her a hundred paces from
+the company. Then--
+
+"Who knoweth our thoughts and forerunneth all our desires," he murmured.
+And when she turned to him, astonished, "Madame," he continued, "I have
+prayed, ah, how I have prayed, for this opportunity of speaking to you!
+And it has come. I would it had come this morning, but it has come. Do
+not start or look round; many eyes are on us, and, alas! I have that to
+say to you which it will move you to hear, and that to ask of you which
+it must task your courage to perform."
+
+She began to tremble, and stood looking up the green slope to the broken
+grey wall which crowned its summit.
+
+"What is it?" she whispered, commanding herself with an effort. "What is
+it? If it have aught to do with M. Tignonville--"
+
+"It has not!"
+
+In her surprise--for although she had put the question she had felt no
+doubt of the answer--she started and turned to him.
+
+"It has not?" she exclaimed almost incredulously.
+
+"No."
+
+"Then what is it, Monsieur?" she replied, a little haughtily. "What can
+there be that should move me so?"
+
+"Life or death, Madame," he answered solemnly. "Nay, more; for since
+Providence has given me this chance of speaking to you, a thing of which
+I despaired, I know that the burden is laid on us, and that it is guilt
+or it is innocence, according as we refuse the burden or bear it."
+
+"What is it, then?" she cried impatiently. "What is it?"
+
+"I tried to speak to you this morning."
+
+"Was it you, then, whom Madame St. Lo saw stalking me before dinner?
+
+"It was."
+
+She clasped her hands and heaved a sigh of relief. "Thank God,
+Monsieur!" she replied. "You have lifted a weight from me. I fear
+nothing in comparison of that. Nothing!"
+
+"Alas!" he answered sombrely, "there is much to fear, for others if not
+for ourselves! Do you know what that is which M. de Tavannes bears
+always in his belt? What it is he carries with such care? What it was
+he handed to you to keep while he bathed to-day?"
+
+"Letters from the King."
+
+"Yes, but the import of those letters?"
+
+"No."
+
+"And yet, should they be written in letters of blood!" the minister
+exclaimed, his face kindling. "They should scorch the hands that hold
+them and blister the eyes that read them. They are the fire and the
+sword! They are the King's order to do at Angers as they have done in
+Paris. To slay all of the religion who are found there--and they are
+many! To spare none, to have mercy neither on the old man nor the unborn
+child! See yonder hawk!" he continued, pointing with a shaking hand to a
+falcon which hung light and graceful above the valley, the movement of
+its wings invisible. "How it disports itself in the face of the sun! How
+easy its way, how smooth its flight! But see, it drops upon its prey in
+the rushes beside the brook, and the end of its beauty is slaughter! So
+is it with yonder company!" His finger sank until it indicated the
+little camp seated toy-like in the green meadow four hundred feet below
+them, with every man and horse, and the very camp-kettle, clear-cut and
+visible, though diminished by distance to fairy-like proportions. "So it
+is with yonder company!" he repeated sternly. "They play and are merry,
+and one fishes and another sleeps! But at the end of the journey is
+death. Death for their victims, and for them the judgment!"
+
+She stood, as he spoke, in the ruined gateway, a walled grass-plot behind
+her, and at her feet the stream, the smiling valley, the alders, and the
+little camp. The sky was cloudless, the scene drowsy with the stillness
+of an August afternoon. But his words went home so truly that the sunlit
+landscape before the eyes added one more horror to the picture he called
+up before the mind.
+
+The Countess turned white and sick. "Are you sure?" she whispered at
+last.
+
+"Quite sure."
+
+"Ah, God!" she cried, "are we never to have peace?" And turning from the
+valley, she walked some distance into the grass court, and stood. After
+a time, she turned to him; he had followed her doggedly, pace for pace.
+"What do you want me to do?" she cried, despair in her voice. "What can
+I do?"
+
+"Were the letters he bears destroyed--"
+
+"The letters?"
+
+"Yes, were the letters destroyed," La Tribe answered relentlessly, "he
+could do nothing! Nothing! Without that authority the magistrates of
+Angers would not move. He could do nothing. And men and women and
+children--men and women and children whose blood will otherwise cry for
+vengeance, perhaps for vengeance on us who might have saved them--will
+live! Will live!" he repeated, with a softening eye. And with an all-
+embracing gesture he seemed to call to witness the open heavens, the
+sunshine and the summer breeze which wrapped them round. "Will live!"
+
+She drew a deep breath. "And you have brought me here," she said, "to
+ask me to do this?"
+
+"I was sent here to ask you to do this."
+
+"Why me? Why me?" she wailed, and she held out her open hands to him,
+her face wan and colourless. "You come to me, a woman! Why to me?"
+
+"You are his wife!"
+
+"And he is my husband!"
+
+"Therefore he trusts you," was the unyielding, the pitiless answer. "You,
+and you alone, have the opportunity of doing this."
+
+She gazed at him in astonishment. "And it is you who say that?" she
+faltered, after a pause. "You who made us one, who now bid me betray
+him, whom I have sworn to love? To ruin him whom I have sworn to
+honour?"
+
+"I do!" he answered solemnly. "On my head be the guilt, and on yours the
+merit."
+
+"Nay, but--" she cried quickly, and her eyes glittered with passion--"do
+you take both guilt and merit! You are a man," she continued, her words
+coming quickly in her excitement, "he is but a man! Why do you not call
+him aside, trick him apart on some pretence or other, and when there are
+but you two, man to man, wrench the warrant from him? Staking your life
+against his, with all those lives for prize? And save them or perish?
+Why I, even I, a woman, could find it in my heart to do that, were he not
+my husband! Surely you, you who are a man, and young--"
+
+"Am no match for him in strength or arms," the minister answered sadly.
+"Else would I do it! Else would I stake my life, Heaven knows, as gladly
+to save their lives as I sit down to meat! But I should fail, and if I
+failed all were lost. Moreover," he continued solemnly, "I am certified
+that this task has been set for you. It was not for nothing, Madame, nor
+to save one poor household that you were joined to this man; but to
+ransom all these lives and this great city. To be the Judith of our
+faith, the saviour of Angers, the--"
+
+"Fool! Fool!" she cried. "Will you be silent?" And she stamped the
+turf passionately, while her eyes blazed in her white face. "I am no
+Judith, and no madwoman as you are fain to make me. Mad?" she continued,
+overwhelmed with agitation, "My God, I would I were, and I should be free
+from this!" And, turning, she walked a little way from him with the
+gesture of one under a crushing burden.
+
+He waited a minute, two minutes, three minutes, and still she did not
+return. At length she came back, her bearing more composed; she looked
+at him, and her eyes seized his and seemed as if they would read his
+soul.
+
+"Are you sure," she said, "of what you have told me? Will you swear that
+the contents of these letters are as you say?"
+
+"As I live," he answered gravely. "As God lives."
+
+"And you know--of no other way, Monsieur? Of no other way?" she repeated
+slowly and piteously.
+
+"Of none, Madame, of none, I swear."
+
+She sighed deeply, and stood sunk in thought. Then, "When do we reach
+Angers?" she asked heavily.
+
+"The day after to-morrow."
+
+"I have--until the day after to-morrow?"
+
+"Yes. To-night we lie near Vendome."
+
+"And to-morrow night?"
+
+"Near a place called La Fleche. It is possible," he went on with
+hesitation--for he did not understand her--"that he may bathe to-morrow,
+and may hand the packet to you, as he did to-day when I vainly sought
+speech with you. If he does that--"
+
+"Yes?" she said, her eyes on his face.
+
+"The taking will be easy. But when he finds you have it not"--he
+faltered anew--"it may go hard with you."
+
+She did not speak.
+
+"And there, I think, I can help you. If you will stray from the party, I
+will meet you and destroy the letter. That done--and would God it were
+done already--I will take to flight as best I can, and you will raise the
+alarm and say that I robbed you of it! And if you tear your dress--"
+
+"No," she said.
+
+He looked a question.
+
+"No!" she repeated in a low voice. "If I betray him I will not lie to
+him! And no other shall pay the price! If I ruin him it shall be
+between him and me, and no other shall have part in it!"
+
+He shook his head. "I do not know," he murmured, "what he may do to
+you!"
+
+"Nor I," she said proudly. "That will be for him."
+
+* * * * *
+
+Curious eyes had watched the two as they climbed the hill. For the path
+ran up the slope to the gap which served for gate, much as the path leads
+up to the Castle Beautiful in old prints of the Pilgrim's journey, and
+Madame St. Lo had marked the first halt and the second, and, noting every
+gesture, had lost nothing of the interview save the words. But until the
+two, after pausing a moment, passed out of sight she made no sign. Then
+she laughed. And as Count Hannibal, at whom the laugh was aimed, did not
+heed her, she laughed again. And she hummed the line of Ronsard.
+
+Still he would not be roused, and, piqued, she had recourse to words.
+
+"I wonder what you would do," she said, "if the old lover followed us,
+and she went off with him!"
+
+"She would not go," he answered coldly, and without looking up.
+
+"But if he rode off with her?"
+
+"She would come back on her feet!"
+
+Madame St. Lo's prudence was not proof against that. She had the woman's
+inclination to hide a woman's secret; and she had not intended, when she
+laughed, to do more than play with the formidable man with whom so few
+dared to play. Now, stung by his tone and his assurance, she must needs
+show him that his trustfulness had no base. And, as so often happens in
+the circumstances, she went a little farther than the facts bore her.
+
+"Any way, he has followed us so far!" she cried viciously.
+
+"M. de Tignonville?"
+
+"Yes. I saw him this morning while you were bathing. She left me and
+went into the little coppice. He came down the other side of the brook,
+stooping and running, and went to join her."
+
+"How did he cross the brook?"
+
+Madame St. Lo blushed. "Old Badelon was there, gathering simples," she
+said. "He scared him. And he crawled away."
+
+"Then he did not cross?"
+
+"No. I did not say he did!"
+
+"Nor speak to her?"
+
+"No. But if you think it will pass so next time--you do not know much of
+women!"
+
+"Of women generally, not much," he answered, grimly polite. "Of this
+woman a great deal!"
+
+"You looked in her big eyes, I suppose!" Madame St. Lo cried with heat.
+"And straightway fell down and worshipped her!" She liked rather than
+disliked the Countess; but she was of the lightest, and the least
+opposition drove her out of her course. "And you think you know her! And
+she, if she could save you from death by opening an eye, would go with a
+patch on it till her dying day! Take my word for it, Monsieur, between
+her and her lover you will come to harm."
+
+Count Hannibal's swarthy face darkened a tone, and his eyes grew a very
+little smaller.
+
+"I fancy that he runs the greater risk," he muttered.
+
+"You may deal with him, but, for her--"
+
+"I can deal with her. You deal with some women with a whip--"
+
+"You would whip me, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes," he said quietly. "It would do you good, Madame. And with other
+women otherwise. There are women who, if they are well frightened, will
+not deceive you. And there are others who will not deceive you though
+they are frightened. Madame de Tavannes is of the latter kind."
+
+"Wait! Wait and see!" Madame cried in scorn.
+
+"I am waiting."
+
+"Yes! And whereas if you had come to me I could have told her that about
+M. de Tignonville which would have surprised her, you will go on waiting
+and waiting and waiting until one fine day you'll wake up and find Madame
+gone, and--"
+
+"Then I'll take a wife I can whip!" he answered, with a look which
+apprised her how far she had carried it. "But it will not be you, sweet
+cousin. For I have no whip heavy enough for your case."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. SHE WOULD, AND WOULD NOT.
+
+
+We noted some way back the ease with which women use one concession as a
+stepping-stone to a second; and the lack of magnanimity, amounting almost
+to unscrupulousness, which the best display in their dealings with a
+retiring foe. But there are concessions which touch even a good woman's
+conscience; and Madame de Tavannes, free by the tenure of a blow, and
+with that exception treated from hour to hour with rugged courtesy,
+shrank appalled before the task which confronted her.
+
+To ignore what La Tribe had told her, to remain passive when a movement
+on her part might save men, women, and children from death, and a whole
+city from massacre--this was a line of conduct so craven, so selfish,
+that from the first she knew herself incapable of it. But to take the
+only other course open to her, to betray her husband and rob him of that,
+the loss of which might ruin him, this needed not courage only, not
+devotion only, but a hardness proof against reproaches as well as against
+punishment. And the Countess was no fanatic. No haze of bigotry
+glorified the thing she contemplated, or dressed it in colours other than
+its own. Even while she acknowledged the necessity of the act and its
+ultimate righteousness, even while she owned the obligation which lay
+upon her to perform it, she saw it as he would see it, and saw herself as
+he would see her.
+
+True, he had done her a great wrong; and this in the eyes of some might
+pass for punishment. But he had saved her life where many had perished;
+and, the wrong done, he had behaved to her with fantastic generosity. In
+return for which she was to ruin him? It was not hard to imagine what he
+would say of her, and of the reward with which she had requited him.
+
+She pondered over it as they rode that evening, with the weltering sun in
+their eyes and the lengthening shadows of the oaks falling athwart the
+bracken which fringed the track. Across breezy heaths and over downs,
+through green bottoms and by hamlets, from which every human creature
+fled at their approach, they ambled on by twos and threes; riding in a
+world of their own, so remote, so different from the real world--from
+which they came and to which they must return--that she could have wept
+in anguish, cursing God for the wickedness of man which lay so heavy on
+creation. The gaunt troopers riding at ease with swinging legs and
+swaying stirrups--and singing now a refrain from Ronsard, and now one of
+those verses of Marot's psalms which all the world had sung three decades
+before--wore their most lamb-like aspect. Behind them Madame St. Lo
+chattered to Suzanne of a riding mask which had not been brought, or
+planned expedients, if nothing sufficiently in the mode could be found at
+Angers. And the other women talked and giggled, screamed when they came
+to fords, and made much of steep places, where the men must help them. In
+time of war death's shadow covers but a day, and sorrow out of sight is
+out of mind. Of all the troop whom the sinking sun left within sight of
+the lofty towers and vine-clad hills of Vendome, three only wore faces
+attuned to the cruel August week just ending; three only, like dark beads
+strung far apart on a gay nun's rosary, rode, brooding and silent, in
+their places. The Countess was one--the others were the two men whose
+thoughts she filled, and whose eyes now and again sought her, La Tribe's
+with sombre fire in their depths, Count Hannibal's fraught with a gloomy
+speculation, which belied his brave words to Madame St. Lo.
+
+He, moreover, as he rode, had other thoughts; dark ones, which did not
+touch her. And she, too, had other thoughts at times, dreams of her
+young lover, spasms of regret, a wild revolt of heart, a cry out of the
+darkness which had suddenly whelmed her. So that of the three only La
+Tribe was single-minded.
+
+This day they rode a long league after sunset, through a scattered oak-
+wood, where the rabbits sprang up under their horses' heads and the
+squirrels made angry faces at them from the lower branches. Night was
+hard upon them when they reached the southern edge of the forest, and
+looked across the dusky open slopes to a distant light or two which
+marked where Vendome stood.
+
+"Another league," Count Hannibal muttered; and he bade the men light
+fires where they were, and unload the packhorses. "'Tis pure and dry
+here," he said. "Set a watch, Bigot, and let two men go down for water.
+I hear frogs below. You do not fear to be moonstruck, Madame?"
+
+"I prefer this," she answered in a low voice.
+
+"Houses are for monks and nuns!" he rejoined heartily. "Give me God's
+heaven."
+
+"The earth is His, but we deface it," she murmured, reverting to her
+thoughts, and unconscious that it was to him she spoke.
+
+He looked at her sharply, but the fire was not yet kindled; and in the
+gloaming her face was a pale blot undecipherable. He stood a moment, but
+she did not speak again; and Madame St. Lo bustling up, he moved away to
+give an order. By-and-by the fires burned up, and showed the pillared
+aisle in which they sat, small groups dotted here and there on the floor
+of Nature's cathedral. Through the shadowy Gothic vaulting, the groining
+of many boughs which met overhead, a rare star twinkled, as through some
+clerestory window; and from the dell below rose in the night, now the
+monotonous chanting of the frogs, and now, as some great bull-frog took
+the note, a diapason worthy of a Brescian organ. The darkness walled all
+in; the night was still; a falling caterpillar sounded. Even the rude
+men at the farthest fire stilled their voices at times; awed, they knew
+not why, by the silence and vastness of the night.
+
+The Countess long remembered that vigil--for she lay late awake; the cool
+gloom, the faint wood-rustlings, the distant cry of fox or wolf, the soft
+glow of the expiring fires that at last left the world to darkness and
+the stars; above all, the silent wheeling of the planets, which spoke
+indeed of a supreme Ruler, but crushed the heart under a sense of its
+insignificance, and of the insignificance of all human revolutions.
+
+"Yet, I believe!" she cried, wrestling upwards, wrestling with herself.
+"Though I have seen what I have seen, yet I believe!"
+
+And though she had to bear what she had to bear, and do that from which
+her soul shrank! The woman, indeed, within her continued to cry out
+against this tragedy ever renewed in her path, against this necessity for
+choosing evil, or good, ease for herself or life for others. But the
+moving heavens, pointing onward to a time when good and evil alike should
+be past, strengthened a nature essentially noble; and before she slept no
+shame and no suffering seemed--for the moment at least--too great a price
+to pay for the lives of little children. Love had been taken from her
+life; the pride which would fain answer generosity with generosity--that
+must go, too!
+
+She felt no otherwise when the day came, and the bustle of the start and
+the common round of the journey put to flight the ideals of the night.
+But things fell out in a manner she had not pictured. They halted before
+noon on the north bank of the Loir, in a level meadow with lines of
+poplars running this way and that, and filling all the place with the
+soft shimmer of leaves. Blue succory, tiny mirrors of the summer sky,
+flecked the long grass, and the women picked bunches of them, or, Italian
+fashion, twined the blossoms in their hair. A road ran across the meadow
+to a ferry, but the ferryman, alarmed by the aspect of the party, had
+conveyed his boat to the other side and hidden himself.
+
+Presently Madame St. Lo espied the boat, clapped her hands and must have
+it. The poplars threw no shade, the flies teased her, the life of a
+hermit--in a meadow--was no longer to her taste.
+
+"Let us go on the water!" she cried. "Presently you will go to bathe,
+Monsieur, and leave us to grill!"
+
+"Two livres to the man who will fetch the boat!" Count Hannibal cried.
+
+In less than half a minute three men had thrown off their boots, and were
+swimming across, amid the laughter and shouts of their fellows. In five
+minutes the boat was brought.
+
+It was not large and would hold no more than four. Tavannes' eye fell on
+Carlat.
+
+"You understand a boat," he said. "Go with Madame St. Lo. And you, M.
+La Tribe."
+
+"But you are coming?" Madame St. Lo cried, turning to the Countess. "Oh,
+Madame," with a curtsey, "you are not? You--"
+
+"Yes, I will come," the Countess answered.
+
+"I shall bathe a short distance up the stream," Count Hannibal said. He
+took from his belt the packet of letters, and as Carlat held the boat for
+Madame St. Lo to enter, he gave it to the Countess, as he had given it to
+her yesterday. "Have a care of it, Madame," he said in a low voice, "and
+do not let it pass out of your hands. To lose it may be to lose my
+head."
+
+The colour ebbed from her cheeks. In spite of herself her shaking hand
+put back the packet. "Had you not better then--give it to Bigot?" she
+faltered.
+
+"He is bathing."
+
+"Let him bathe afterwards."
+
+"No," he answered almost harshly; he found a species of pleasure in
+showing her that, strange as their relations were, he trusted her. "No;
+take it, Madame. Only have a care of it."
+
+She took it then, hid it in her dress, and he turned away; and she turned
+towards the boat. La Tribe stood beside the stern, holding it for her to
+enter, and as her fingers rested an instant on his arm their eyes met.
+His were alight, his arm even quivered; and she shuddered.
+
+She avoided looking at him a second time, and this was easy, since he
+took his seat in the bows beyond Carlat, who handled the oars. Silently
+the boat glided out on the surface of the stream, and floated downwards,
+Carlat now and again touching an oar, and Madame St. Lo chattering gaily
+in a voice which carried far on the water. Now it was a flowering rush
+she must have, now a green bough to shield her face from the sun's
+reflection; and now they must lie in some cool, shadowy pool under fern-
+clad banks, where the fish rose heavily, and the trickle of a rivulet
+fell down over stones.
+
+It was idyllic. But not to the Countess. Her face burned, her temples
+throbbed, her fingers gripped the side of the boat in the vain attempt to
+steady her pulses. The packet within her dress scorched her. The great
+city and its danger, Tavannes and his faith in her, the need of action,
+the irrevocableness of action hurried through her brain. The knowledge
+that she must act now--or never--pressed upon her with distracting force.
+Her hand felt the packet, and fell again nerveless.
+
+"The sun has caught you, _ma mie_," Madame St. Lo said. "You should ride
+in a mask as I do."
+
+"I have not one with me," she muttered, her eyes on the water.
+
+"And I but an old one. But at Angers--"
+
+The Countess heard no more; on that word she caught La Tribe's eye. He
+was beckoning to her behind Carlat's back, pointing imperiously to the
+water, making signs to her to drop the packet over the side. When she
+did not obey--she felt sick and faint--she saw through a mist his brow
+grow dark. He menaced her secretly. And still the packet scorched her;
+and twice her hand went to it, and dropped again empty.
+
+On a sudden Madame St. Lo cried out. The bank on one side of the stream
+was beginning to rise more boldly above the water, and at the head of the
+steep thus formed she had espied a late rosebush in bloom; nothing would
+now serve but she must land at once and plunder it. The boat was put in
+therefore, she jumped ashore, and began to scale the bank.
+
+"Go with Madame!" La Tribe cried, roughly nudging Carlat in the back. "Do
+you not see that she cannot climb the bank? Up, man, up!"
+
+The Countess opened her mouth to cry "No!" but the word died half-born on
+her lips; and when the steward looked at her, uncertain what she had
+said, she nodded.
+
+"Yes, go!" she muttered. She was pale.
+
+"Yes, man, go!" cried the minister, his eyes burning. And he almost
+pushed the other out of the boat.
+
+The next second the craft floated from the bank, and began to drift
+downwards. La Tribe waited until a tree interposed and hid them from the
+two whom they had left; then he leaned forward.
+
+"Now, Madame!" he cried imperiously. "In God's name, now!"
+
+"Oh!" she cried. "Wait! Wait! I want to think."
+
+"To think?"
+
+"He trusted me!" she wailed. "He trusted me! How can I do it?"
+Nevertheless, and even while she spoke, she drew forth the packet.
+
+"Heaven has given you the opportunity!"
+
+"If I could have stolen it!" she answered.
+
+"Fool!" he returned, rocking himself to and fro, and fairly beside
+himself with impatience. "Why steal it? It is in your hands! You have
+it! It is Heaven's own opportunity, it is God's opportunity given to
+you!"
+
+For he could not read her mind nor comprehend the scruple which held her
+hand. He was single-minded. He had but one aim, one object. He saw the
+haggard faces of brave men hopeless; he heard the dying cries of women
+and children. Such an opportunity of saving God's elect, of redeeming
+the innocent, was in his eyes a gift from Heaven. And having these
+thoughts and seeing her hesitate--hesitate when every movement caused him
+agony, so imperative was haste, so precious the opportunity--he could
+bear the suspense no longer. When she did not answer he stooped forward,
+until his knees touched the thwart on which Carlat had sat; then, without
+a word, he flung himself forward, and, with one hand far extended,
+grasped the packet.
+
+Had he not moved, she would have done his will; almost certainly she
+would have done it. But, thus attacked, she resisted instinctively; she
+clung to the letters.
+
+"No!" she cried. "No! Let go, Monsieur!" And she tried to drag the
+packet from him.
+
+"Give it me!"
+
+"Let go, Monsieur! Do you hear?" she repeated. And, with a vigorous
+jerk, she forced it from him--he had caught it by the edge only--and held
+it behind her. "Go back, and--"
+
+"Give it me!" he panted.
+
+"I will not!"
+
+"Then throw it overboard!"
+
+"I will not!" she cried again, though his face, dark with passion, glared
+into hers, and it was clear that the man, possessed by one idea only, was
+no longer master of himself. "Go back to your place!"
+
+"Give it me," he gasped, "or I will upset the boat!" And, seizing her by
+the shoulder, he reached over her, striving to take hold of the packet
+which she held behind her. The boat rocked; and, as much in rage as
+fear, she screamed.
+
+A cry uttered wholly in rage answered hers; it came from Carlat. La
+Tribe, however, whose whole mind was fixed on the packet, did not heed,
+nor would have heeded, the steward. But the next moment a second cry,
+fierce as that of a wild beast, clove the air from the lower and farther
+bank; and the Huguenot, recognizing Count Hannibal's voice, involuntarily
+desisted and stood erect. A moment the boat rocked perilously under him;
+then--for unheeded it had been drifting that way--it softly touched the
+bank on which Carlat stood staring and aghast.
+
+La Tribe's chance was gone; he saw that the steward must reach him before
+he could succeed in a second attempt. On the other hand, the undergrowth
+on the bank was thick, he could touch it with his hand, and if he fled at
+once he might escape.
+
+He hung an instant irresolute; then, with a look which went to the
+Countess's heart, he sprang ashore, plunged among the alders, and in a
+moment was gone.
+
+"After him! After him!" thundered Count Hannibal. "After him, man!" and
+Carlat, stumbling down the steep slope and through the rough briars, did
+his best to obey. But in vain. Before he reached the water's edge, the
+noise of the fugitive's retreat had grown faint. A few seconds and it
+died away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. PLAYING WITH FIRE.
+
+
+The impulse of La Tribe's foot as he landed had driven the boat into the
+stream. It drifted slowly downward, and if naught intervened, would take
+the ground on Count Hannibal's side, a hundred and fifty yards below him.
+He saw this, and walked along the bank, keeping pace with it, while the
+Countess sat motionless, crouching in the stern of the craft, her fingers
+strained about the fatal packet. The slow glide of the boat, as almost
+imperceptibly it approached the low bank; the stillness of the mirror-
+like surface on which it moved, leaving only the faintest ripple behind
+it; the silence--for under the influence of emotion Count Hannibal too
+was mute--all were in tremendous contrast with the storm which raged in
+her breast.
+
+Should she--should she even now, with his eyes on her, drop the letters
+over the side? It needed but a movement. She had only to extend her
+hand, to relax the tension of her fingers, and the deed was done. It
+needed only that; but the golden sands of opportunity were running
+out--were running out fast. Slowly and more slowly, silently and more
+silently, the boat slid in towards the bank on which he stood, and still
+she hesitated. The stillness, and the waiting figure, and the watching
+eyes now but a few feet distant, weighed on her and seemed to paralyze
+her will. A foot, another foot! A moment and it would be too late, the
+last of the sands would have run out. The bow of the boat rustled softly
+through the rushes; it kissed the bank. And her hand still held the
+letters.
+
+"You are not hurt?" he asked curtly. "The scoundrel might have drowned
+you. Was he mad?"
+
+She was silent. He held out his hand, and she gave him the packet.
+
+"I owe you much," he said, a ring of gaiety, almost of triumph, in his
+tone. "More than you guess, Madame. God made you for a soldier's wife,
+and a mother of soldiers. What? You are not well, I am afraid?"
+
+"If I could sit down a minute," she faltered. She was swaying on her
+feet.
+
+He supported her across the belt of meadow which fringed the bank, and
+made her recline against a tree. Then as his men began to come up--for
+the alarm had reached them--he would have sent two of them in the boat to
+fetch Madame St. Lo to her. But she would not let him.
+
+"Your maid, then?" he said.
+
+"No, Monsieur, I need only to be alone a little! Only to be alone," she
+repeated, her face averted; and believing this he sent the men away, and,
+taking the boat himself, he crossed over, took in Madame St. Lo and
+Carlat, and rowed them to the ferry. Here the wildest rumours were
+current. One held that the Huguenot had gone out of his senses; another,
+that he had watched for this opportunity of avenging his brethren; a
+third, that his intention had been to carry off the Countess and hold her
+to ransom. Only Tavannes himself, from his position on the farther bank,
+had seen the packet of letters, and the hand which withheld them; and he
+said nothing. Nay, when some of the men would have crossed to search for
+the fugitive, he forbade them, he scarcely knew why, save that it might
+please her; and when the women would have hurried to join her and hear
+the tale from her lips he forbade them also.
+
+"She wishes to be alone," he said curtly.
+
+"Alone?" Madame St. Lo cried, in a fever of curiosity. "You'll find her
+dead, or worse! What? Leave a woman alone after such a fright as that!"
+
+"She wishes it."
+
+Madame laughed cynically; and the laugh brought a tinge of colour to his
+brow.
+
+"Oh, does she?" she sneered. "Then I understand! Have a care, have a
+care, or one of these days, Monsieur, when you leave her alone, you'll
+find them together!"
+
+"Be silent!"
+
+"With pleasure," she returned. "Only when it happens don't say that you
+were not warned. You think that she does not hear from him--"
+
+"How can she hear?" The words were wrung from him.
+
+Madame St. Lo's contempt passed all limits. "How can she!" she retorted.
+"You trail a woman across France, and let her sit by herself, and lie by
+herself, and all but drown by herself, and you ask how she hears from her
+lover? You leave her old servants about her, and you ask how she
+communicates with him?"
+
+"You know nothing!" he snarled.
+
+"I know this," she retorted. "I saw her sitting this morning, and
+smiling and weeping at the same time! Was she thinking of you, Monsieur?
+Or of him? She was looking at the hills through tears; a blue mist hung
+over them, and I'll wager she saw some one's eyes gazing and some one's
+hand beckoning out of the blue!"
+
+"Curse you!" he cried, tormented in spite of himself. "You love to make
+mischief!"
+
+"No!" she answered swiftly. "For 'twas not I made the match. But go
+your way, go your way, Monsieur, and see what kind of a welcome you'll
+get!"
+
+"I will," Count Hannibal growled. And he started along the bank to
+rejoin his wife.
+
+The light in his eyes had died down. Yet would they have been more
+sombre, and his face more harsh, had he known the mind of the woman to
+whom he was hastening. The Countess had begged to be left alone; alone,
+she found the solitude she had craved a cruel gift. She had saved the
+packet. She had fulfilled her trust. But only to experience, the moment
+the deed was done, the full poignancy of remorse. Before the act, while
+the choice had lain with her, the betrayal of her husband had loomed
+large; now she saw that to treat him as she had treated him was the true
+betrayal, and that even for his own sake, and to save him from a fearful
+sin, it had become her to destroy the letters.
+
+Now, it was no longer her duty to him which loomed large, but her duty to
+the innocent, to the victims of the massacre which she might have stayed,
+to the people of her faith whom she had abandoned, to the women and
+children whose death-warrant she had preserved. Now, she perceived that
+a part more divine had never fallen to woman, nor a responsibility so
+heavy been laid upon woman. Nor guilt more dread!
+
+She writhed in misery, thinking of it. What had she done? She could
+hear afar off the sounds of the camp; an occasional outcry, a snatch of
+laughter. And the cry and the laughter rang in her ears, a bitter
+mockery. This summer camp, to what was it the prelude? This forbearance
+on her husband's part, in what would it end? Were not the one and the
+other cruel make-believes? Two days, and the men who laughed beside the
+water would slay and torture with equal zest. A little, and the husband
+who now chose to be generous would show himself in his true colours. And
+it was for the sake of such as these that she had played the coward. That
+she had laid up for herself endless remorse. That henceforth the cries
+of the innocent would haunt her dreams.
+
+Racked by such thoughts she did not hear his step, and it was his shadow
+falling across her feet which first warned her of his presence. She
+looked up, saw him, and involuntarily recoiled. Then, seeing the change
+in his face--
+
+"Oh! Monsieur," she stammered, affrighted, her hand pressed to her side,
+"I ask your pardon! You startled me!"
+
+"So it seems," he answered. And he stood over her regarding her dryly.
+
+"I am not quite--myself yet," she murmured. His look told her that her
+start had betrayed her feelings.
+
+Alas! the plan of taking a woman by force has drawbacks, and among others
+this one: that he must be a sanguine husband who deems her heart his, and
+a husband without jealousy, whose suspicions are not aroused by the
+faintest flush or the lightest word. He knows that she is his
+unwillingly, a victim, not a mistress; and behind every bush beside the
+road and behind every mask in the crowd he espies a rival.
+
+Moreover, where women are in question, who is always strong? Or who can
+say how long he will pursue this plan or that? A man of sternest temper,
+Count Hannibal had set out on a path of conduct carefully and
+deliberately chosen; knowing--and he still knew--that if he abandoned it
+he had little to hope, if the less to fear. But the proof of fidelity
+which the Countess had just given him had blown to a white heat the
+smouldering flame in his heart, and Madame St. Lo's gibes, which should
+have fallen as cold water alike on his hopes and his passion, had but fed
+the desire to know the best. For all that, he might not have spoken now,
+if he had not caught her look of affright; strange as it sounds, that
+look, which of all things should have silenced him and warned him that
+the time was not yet, stung him out of patience. Suddenly the man in him
+carried him away.
+
+"You still fear me, then?" he said, in a voice hoarse and unnatural. "Is
+it for what I do or for what I leave undone that you hate me, Madame?
+Tell me, I beg, for--"
+
+"For neither!" she said, trembling. His eyes, hot and passionate, were
+on her, and the blood had mounted to his brow. "For neither! I do not
+hate you, Monsieur!"
+
+"You fear me then? I am right in that."
+
+"I fear--that which you carry with you," she stammered, speaking on
+impulse and scarcely knowing what she said.
+
+He started, and his expression changed. "So?" he exclaimed. "So? You
+know what I carry, do you? And from whom? From whom," he continued in a
+tone of menace, "if you please, did you get that knowledge?"
+
+"From M. La Tribe," she muttered. She had not meant to tell him. Why
+had she told him?
+
+He nodded. "I might have known it," he said. "I more than suspected it.
+Therefore I should be the more beholden to you for saving the letters.
+But"--he paused and laughed harshly--"it was out of no love for me you
+saved them. That too I know."
+
+She did not answer or protest; and when he had waited a moment in vain
+expectation of her protest, a cruel look crept into his eyes.
+
+"Madame," he said slowly, "do you never reflect that you may push the
+part you play too far? That the patience, even of the worst of men, does
+not endure for ever?"
+
+"I have your word!" she answered.
+
+"And you do not fear?"
+
+"I have your word," she repeated. And now she looked him bravely in the
+face, her eyes full of the courage of her race.
+
+The lines of his mouth hardened as he met her look. "And what have I of
+yours?" he said in a low voice. "What have I of yours?"
+
+Her face began to burn at that, her eyes fell and she faltered.
+
+"My gratitude," she murmured, with an upward look that prayed for pity.
+"God knows, Monsieur, you have that!"
+
+"God knows I do not want it!" he answered. And he laughed derisively.
+"Your gratitude!" And he mocked her tone rudely and coarsely. "Your
+gratitude!" Then for a minute--for so long a time that she began to
+wonder and to quake--he was silent. At last, "A fig for your gratitude,"
+he said. "I want your love! I suppose--cold as you are, and a
+Huguenot--you can love like other women!"
+
+It was the first, the very first time he had used the word to her; and
+though it fell from his lips like a threat, though he used it as a man
+presents a pistol, she flushed anew from throat to brow. But she did not
+quail.
+
+"It is not mine to give," she said.
+
+"It is his?"
+
+"Yes, Monsieur," she answered, wondering at her courage, at her audacity,
+her madness. "It is his."
+
+"And it cannot be mine--at any time?"
+
+She shook her head, trembling.
+
+"Never?" And, suddenly reaching forward, he gripped her wrist in an iron
+grasp. There was passion in his tone. His eyes burned her.
+
+Whether it was that set her on another track, or pure despair, or the cry
+in her ears of little children and of helpless women, something in a
+moment inspired her, flashed in her eyes and altered her voice. She
+raised her head and looked him firmly in the face.
+
+"What," she said, "do you mean by love?"
+
+"You!" he answered brutally.
+
+"Then--it may be, Monsieur," she returned. "There is a way if you will."
+
+"A way!"
+
+"If you will!"
+
+As she spoke she rose slowly to her feet; for in his surprise he had
+released her wrist. He rose with her, and they stood confronting one
+another on the strip of grass between the river and the poplars.
+
+"If I will?" His form seemed to dilate, his eyes devoured her. "If I
+will?"
+
+"Yes," she replied. "If you will give me the letters that are in your
+belt, the packet which I saved to-day--that I may destroy them--I will be
+yours freely and willingly."
+
+He drew a deep breath, still devouring her with his eyes.
+
+"You mean it?" he said at last.
+
+"I do." She looked him in the face as she spoke, and her cheeks were
+white, not red. "Only--the letters! Give me the letters."
+
+"And for them you will give me your love?"
+
+Her eyes flickered, and involuntarily she shivered. A faint blush rose
+and dyed her cheeks.
+
+"Only God can give love," she said, her tone low.
+
+"And yours is given?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"To another?"
+
+"I have said it."
+
+"It is his. And yet for these letters--"
+
+"For these lives!" she cried proudly.
+
+"You will give yourself?"
+
+"I swear it," she answered, "if you will give them to me! If you will
+give them to me," she repeated. And she held out her hands; her face,
+full of passion, was bright with a strange light. A close observer might
+have thought her distraught; still excited by the struggle in the boat,
+and barely mistress of herself.
+
+But the man whom she tempted, the man who held her price at his belt,
+after one searching look at her turned from her; perhaps because he could
+not trust himself to gaze on her. Count Hannibal walked a dozen paces
+from her and returned, and again a dozen paces and returned; and again a
+third time, with something fierce and passionate in his gait. At last he
+stopped before her.
+
+"You have nothing to offer for them," he said, in a cold, hard tone.
+"Nothing that is not mine already, nothing that is not my right, nothing
+that I cannot take at my will. My word?" he continued, seeing her about
+to interrupt him. "True, Madame, you have it, you had it. But why need
+I keep my word to you, who tempt me to break my word to the King?"
+
+She made a weak gesture with her hands. Her head had sunk on her
+breast--she seemed dazed by the shock of his contempt, dazed by his
+reception of her offer.
+
+"You saved the letters?" he continued, interpreting her action. "True,
+but the letters are mine, and that which you offer for them is mine also.
+You have nothing to offer. For the rest, Madame," he went on, eyeing her
+cynically, "you surprise me! You, whose modesty and virtue are so great,
+would corrupt your husband, would sell yourself, would dishonour the love
+of which you boast so loudly, the love that only God gives!" He laughed
+derisively as he quoted her words. "Ay, and, after showing at how low a
+price you hold yourself, you still look, I doubt not, to me to respect
+you, and to keep my word. Madame!" in a terrible voice, "do not play
+with fire! You saved my letters, it is true! And for that, for this
+time, you shall go free, if God will help me to let you go! But tempt me
+not! Tempt me not!" he repeated, turning from her and turning back again
+with a gesture of despair, as if he mistrusted the strength of the
+restraint which he put upon himself. "I am no more than other men!
+Perhaps I am less. And you--you who prate of love, and know not what
+love is--could love! could love!"
+
+He stopped on that word as if the word choked him--stopped, struggling
+with his passion. At last, with a half-stifled oath, he flung away from
+her, halted and hung a moment, then, with a swing of rage, went off again
+violently. His feet as he strode along the river-bank trampled the
+flowers, and slew the pale water forget-me-not, which grew among the
+grasses.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. A MIND, AND NOT A MIND.
+
+
+La Tribe tore through the thicket, imagining Carlat and Count Hannibal
+hot on his heels. He dared not pause even to listen. The underwood
+tripped him, the lissom branches of the alders whipped his face and
+blinded him; once he fell headlong over a moss-grown stone, and picked
+himself up groaning. But the hare hard-pushed takes no account of the
+briars, nor does the fox heed the mud through which it draws itself into
+covert. And for the time he was naught but a hunted beast. With elbows
+pinned to his sides, or with hands extended to ward off the boughs, with
+bursting lungs and crimson face, he plunged through the tangle, now
+slipping downwards, now leaping upwards, now all but prostrate, now
+breasting a mass of thorns. On and on he ran, until he came to the verge
+of the wood, saw before him an open meadow devoid of shelter or hiding-
+place, and with a groan of despair cast himself flat. He listened. How
+far were they behind him?
+
+He heard nothing--nothing, save the common noises of the wood, the angry
+chatter of a disturbed blackbird as it flew low into hiding, or the harsh
+notes of a flock of starlings as they rose from the meadow. The hum of
+bees filled the air, and the August flies buzzed about his sweating brow,
+for he had lost his cap. But behind him--nothing. Already the stillness
+of the wood had closed upon his track.
+
+He was not the less panic-stricken. He supposed that Tavannes' people
+were getting to horse, and calculated that, if they surrounded and beat
+the wood, he must be taken. At the thought, though he had barely got his
+breath, he rose, and keeping within the coppice crawled down the slope
+towards the river. Gently, when he reached it, he slipped into the
+water, and stooping below the level of the bank, his head and shoulders
+hidden by the bushes, he waded down stream until he had put another
+hundred and fifty yards between himself and pursuit. Then he paused and
+listened. Still he heard nothing, and he waded on again, until the water
+grew deep. At this point he marked a little below him a clump of trees
+on the farther side; and reflecting that that side--if he could reach it
+unseen--would be less suspect, he swam across, aiming for a thorn bush
+which grew low to the water. Under its shelter he crawled out, and,
+worming himself like a snake across the few yards of grass which
+intervened, he stood at length within the shadow of the trees. A moment
+he paused to shake himself, and then, remembering that he was still
+within a mile of the camp, he set off, now walking, and now running in
+the direction of the hills which his party had crossed that morning.
+
+For a time he hurried on, thinking only of escape. But when he had
+covered a mile or two, and escape seemed probable, there began to mingle
+with his thankfulness a bitter--a something which grew more bitter with
+each moment. Why had he fled and left the work undone? Why had he given
+way to unworthy fear, when the letters were within his grasp? True, if
+he had lingered a few seconds longer, he would have failed to make good
+his escape; but what of that if in those seconds he had destroyed the
+letters, he had saved Angers, he had saved his brethren? Alas! he had
+played the coward. The terror of Tavannes' voice had unmanned him. He
+had saved himself and left the flock to perish; he, whom God had set
+apart by many and great signs for this work!
+
+He had commonly courage enough. He could have died at the stake for his
+convictions. But he had not the presence of mind which is proof against
+a shock, nor the cool judgment which, in the face of death, sees to the
+end of two roads. He was no coward, but now he deemed himself one, and
+in an agony of remorse he flung himself on his face in the long grass. He
+had known trials and temptations, but hitherto he had held himself erect;
+now, like Peter, he had betrayed his Lord.
+
+He lay an hour groaning in the misery of his heart, and then he fell on
+the text "Thou art Peter, and on this rock--" and he sat up. Peter had
+betrayed his trust through cowardice--as he had. But Peter had not been
+held unworthy. Might it not be so with him? He rose to his feet, a new
+light in his eyes. He would return! He would return, and at all costs,
+even at the cost of surrendering himself, he would obtain access to the
+letters. And then--not the fear of Count Hannibal, not the fear of
+instant death, should turn him from his duty.
+
+He had cast himself down in a woodland glade which lay near the path
+along which he had ridden that morning. But the mental conflict from
+which he rose had shaken him so violently that he could not recall the
+side on which he had entered the clearing, and he turned himself about,
+endeavouring to remember. At that moment the light jingle of a bridle
+struck his ear; he caught through the green bushes the flash and sparkle
+of harness. They had tracked him then, they were here! So had he clear
+proof that this second chance was to be his. In a happy fervour he stood
+forward where the pursuers could not fail to see him.
+
+Or so he thought. Yet the first horseman, riding carelessly with his
+face averted and his feet dangling, would have gone by and seen nothing
+if his horse, more watchful, had not shied. The man turned then; and for
+a moment the two stared at one another between the pricked ears of the
+horse. At last--
+
+"M. de Tignonville!" the minister ejaculated.
+
+"La Tribe!"
+
+"It is truly you?"
+
+"Well--I think so," the young man answered.
+
+The minister lifted up his eyes and seemed to call the trees and the
+clouds and the birds to witness.
+
+"Now," he cried, "I know that I am chosen! And that we were instruments
+to do this thing from the day when the hen saved us in the haycart in
+Paris! Now I know that all is forgiven and all is ordained, and that the
+faithful of Angers shall to-morrow live and not die!" And with a face
+radiant, yet solemn, he walked to the young man's stirrup.
+
+An instant Tignonville looked sharply before him. "How far ahead are
+they?" he asked. His tone, hard and matter-of-fact, was little in
+harmony with the other's enthusiasm.
+
+"They are resting a league before you, at the ferry. You are in pursuit
+of them?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Not alone?"
+
+"No." The young man's look as he spoke was grim. "I have five behind
+me--of your kidney, M. la Tribe. They are from the Arsenal. They have
+lost one his wife, and one his son. The three others--"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Sweethearts," Tignonville answered dryly. And he cast a singular look
+at the minister.
+
+But La Tribe's mind was so full of one matter, he could think only of
+that.
+
+"How did you hear of the letters?" he asked.
+
+"The letters?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I do not know what you mean."
+
+La Tribe stared. "Then why are you following him?" he asked.
+
+"Why?" Tignonville echoed, a look of hate darkening his face. "Do you
+ask why we follow--" But on the name he seemed to choke and was silent.
+
+By this time his men had come up, and one answered for him.
+
+"Why are we following Hannibal de Tavannes?" he said sternly. "To do to
+him as he has done to us! To rob him as he has robbed us--of more than
+gold! To kill him as he has killed ours, foully and by surprise! In his
+bed if we can! In the arms of his wife if God wills it!"
+
+The speaker's face was haggard from brooding and lack of sleep, but his
+eyes glowed and burned, as his fellows growled assent.
+
+"'Tis simple why we follow," a second put in. "Is there a man of our
+faith who will not, when he hears the tale, rise up and stab the nearest
+of this black brood--though it be his brother? If so, God's curse on
+him!"
+
+"Amen! Amen!"
+
+"So, and so only," cried the first, "shall there be faith in our land!
+And our children, our little maids, shall lie safe in their beds!"
+
+"Amen! Amen!"
+
+The speaker's chin sank on his breast, and with his last word the light
+died out of his eyes. La Tribe looked at him curiously, then at the
+others. Last of all at Tignonville, on whose face he fancied that he
+surprised a faint smile. Yet Tignonville's tone when he spoke was grave
+enough.
+
+"You have heard," he said. "Do you blame us?"
+
+"I cannot," the minister answered, shivering. "I cannot." He had been
+for a while beyond the range of these feelings; and in the greenwood,
+under God's heaven, with the sunshine about him, they jarred on him. Yet
+he could not blame men who had suffered as these had suffered; who were
+maddened, as these were maddened, by the gravest wrongs which it is
+possible for one man to inflict on another. "I dare not," he continued
+sorrowfully. "But in God's name I offer you a higher and a nobler
+errand."
+
+"We need none," Tignonville muttered impatiently.
+
+"Yet many others need you," La Tribe answered in a tone of rebuke. "You
+are not aware that the man you follow bears a packet from the King for
+the hands of the magistrates of Angers?"
+
+"Ha! Does he?"
+
+"Bidding them do at Angers as his Majesty has done in Paris?"
+
+The men broke into cries of execration. "But he shall not see Angers!"
+they swore. "The blood that he has shed shall choke him by the way! And
+as he would do to others it shall be done to him."
+
+La Tribe shuddered as he listened, as he looked. Try as he would, the
+thirst of these men for vengeance appalled him.
+
+"How?" he said. "He has a score and more with him and you are only six."
+
+"Seven now," Tignonville answered with a smile.
+
+"True, but--"
+
+"And he lies to-night at La Fleche? That is so?"
+
+"It was his intention this morning."
+
+"At the old King's Inn at the meeting of the great roads?"
+
+"It was mentioned," La Tribe admitted, with a reluctance he did not
+comprehend. "But if the night be fair he is as like as not to lie in the
+fields."
+
+One of the men pointed to the sky. A dark bank of cloud fresh risen from
+the ocean, and big with tempest, hung low in the west.
+
+"See! God will deliver him into our hands!" he cried.
+
+Tignonville nodded. "If he lie there," he said, "He will." And then to
+one of his followers, as he dismounted, "Do you ride on," he said, "and
+stand guard that we be not surprised. And do you, Perrot, tell Monsieur.
+Perrot here, as God wills it," he added, with the faint smile which did
+not escape the minister's eye, "married his wife from the great inn at La
+Fleche, and he knows the place."
+
+"None better," the man growled. He was a sullen, brooding knave, whose
+eyes when he looked up surprised by their savage fire.
+
+La Tribe shook his head. "I know it, too," he said. "'Tis strong as a
+fortress, with a walled court, and all the windows look inwards. The
+gates are closed an hour after sunset, no matter who is without. If you
+think, M. de Tignonville, to take him there--"
+
+"Patience, Monsieur, you have not heard me," Perrot interposed. "I know
+it after another fashion. Do you remember a rill of water which runs
+through the great yard and the stables?"
+
+La Tribe nodded.
+
+"Grated with iron at either end and no passage for so much as a dog? You
+do? Well, Monsieur, I have hunted rats there, and where the water passes
+under the wall is a culvert, a man's height in length. In it is a stone,
+one of those which frame the grating at the entrance, which a strong man
+can remove--and the man is in!"
+
+"Ay, in! But where?" La Tribe asked, his eyebrows drawn together.
+
+"Well said, Monsieur, where?" Perrot rejoined in a tone of triumph.
+"There lies the point. In the stables, where will be sleeping men, and a
+snorer on every truss? No, but in a fairway between two stables where
+the water at its entrance runs clear in a stone channel; a channel
+deepened in one place that they may draw for the chambers above with a
+rope and a bucket. The rooms above are the best in the house, four in
+one row, opening all on the gallery; which was uncovered, in the common
+fashion until Queen-Mother Jezebel, passing that way to Nantes, two years
+back, found the chambers draughty; and that end of the gallery was closed
+in against her return. Now, Monsieur, he and his Madame will lie there;
+and he will feel safe, for there is but one way to those four
+rooms--through the door which shuts off the covered gallery from the open
+part. But--" he glanced up an instant and La Tribe caught the
+smouldering fire in his eyes--"we shall not go in by the door."
+
+"The bucket rises through a trap?"
+
+"In the gallery? To be sure, monsieur. In the corner beyond the fourth
+door. There shall he fall into the pit which he dug for others, and the
+evil that he planned rebound on his own head!"
+
+La Tribe was silent.
+
+"What think you of it?" Tignonville asked.
+
+"That it is cleverly planned," the minister answered.
+
+"No more than that?"
+
+"No more until I have eaten."
+
+"Get him something!" Tignonville replied in a surly tone. "And we may as
+well eat, ourselves. Lead the horses into the wood. And do you, Perrot,
+call Tuez-les-Moines, who is forward. Two hours' riding should bring us
+to La Fleche. We need not leave here, therefore, until the sun is low.
+To dinner! To dinner!"
+
+Probably he did not feel the indifference he affected, for his face as he
+ate grew darker, and from time to time he shot a glance, barbed with
+suspicion, at the minister. La Tribe on his side remained silent,
+although the men ate apart. He was in doubt, indeed, as to his own
+feelings. His instinct and his reason were at odds. Through all,
+however, a single purpose, the rescue of Angers, held good, and gradually
+other things fell into their places. When the meal was at an end, and
+Tignonville challenged him, he was ready.
+
+"Your enthusiasm seems to have waned," the younger man said with a sneer,
+"since we met, monsieur! May I ask now if you find any fault with the
+plan?"
+
+"With the plan, none."
+
+"If it was Providence brought us together, was it not Providence
+furnished me with Perrot who knows La Fleche? If it was Providence
+brought the danger of the faithful in Angers to your knowledge, was it
+not Providence set us on the road--without whom you had been powerless?"
+
+"I believe it!"
+
+"Then, in His name, what is the matter?" Tignonville rejoined with a
+passion of which the other's manner seemed an inadequate cause. "What
+will you! What is it?"
+
+"I would take your place," La Tribe answered quietly.
+
+"My place?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What, are we too many?"
+
+"We are enough without you, M. Tignonville," the minister answered.
+"These men, who have wrongs to avenge, God will justify them."
+
+Tignonville's eyes sparkled with anger. "And have I no wrongs to
+avenge?" he cried. "Is it nothing to lose my mistress, to be robbed of
+my wife, to see the woman I love dragged off to be a slave and a toy? Are
+these no wrongs?"
+
+"He spared your life, if he did not save it," the minister said solemnly.
+"And hers. And her servants."
+
+"To suit himself."
+
+La Tribe spread out his hands.
+
+"To suit himself! And for that you wish him to go free?" Tignonville
+cried in a voice half-choked with rage. "Do you know that this man, and
+this man alone, stood forth in the great Hall of the Louvre, and when
+even the King flinched, justified the murder of our people? After that
+is he to go free?"
+
+"At your hands," La Tribe answered quietly. "You alone of our people
+must not pursue him." He would have added more, but Tignonville would
+not listen.
+
+Brooding on his wrongs behind the wall of the Arsenal, he had let hatred
+eat away his more generous instincts. Vain and conceited, he fancied
+that the world laughed at the poor figure he had cut; and the wound in
+his vanity festered until nothing would serve but to see the downfall of
+his enemy. Instant pursuit, instant vengeance--only these, he fancied,
+could restore him in his fellows' eyes.
+
+In his heart he knew what would become him better. But vanity is a
+potent motive: and his conscience, even when supported by La Tribe,
+struggled but weakly. From neither would he hear more.
+
+"You have travelled with him, until you side with him!" he cried
+violently. "Have a care, monsieur, have a care, lest we think you
+papist!" And walking over to the men, he bade them saddle; adding a sour
+word which turned their eyes, in no friendly gaze, on the minister.
+
+After that La Tribe said no more. Of what use would it have been?
+
+But as darkness came on and cloaked the little troop, and the storm which
+the men had foreseen began to rumble in the west, his distaste for the
+business waxed. The summer lightning which presently began to play
+across the sky revealed not only the broad gleaming stream, between which
+and a wooded hill their road ran, but the faces of his companions; and
+these, in their turn, shed a grisly light on the bloody enterprise
+towards which they were set. Nervous and ill at ease, the minister's
+mind dwelt on the stages of that enterprise: the stealthy entrance
+through the waterway, the ascent through the trap, the surprise, the
+slaughter in the sleeping-chamber. And either because he had lived for
+days in the victim's company, or was swayed by the arguments he had
+addressed to another, the prospect shook his soul.
+
+In vain he told himself that this was the oppressor; he saw only the man,
+fresh roused from sleep, with the horror of impending dissolution in his
+eyes. And when the rider, behind whom he sat, pointed to a faint spark
+of light, at no great distance before them, and whispered that it was St.
+Agnes's Chapel, hard by the inn, he could have cried with the best
+Catholic of them all, "Inter pontem et fontem, Domine!" Nay, some such
+words did pass his lips.
+
+For the man before him turned halfway in his saddle. "What?" he asked.
+
+But the Huguenot did not explain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. AT THE KING'S INN.
+
+
+The Countess sat up in the darkness of the chamber. She had writhed
+since noon under the stings of remorse; she could bear them no longer.
+The slow declension of the day, the evening light, the signs of coming
+tempest which had driven her company to the shelter of the inn at the
+crossroads, all had racked her, by reminding her that the hours were
+flying, and that soon the fault she had committed would be irreparable.
+One impulsive attempt to redeem it she had made; but it had failed, and,
+by rendering her suspect, had made reparation more difficult. Still, by
+daylight it had seemed possible to rest content with the trial made; not
+so now, when night had fallen, and the cries of little children and the
+haggard eyes of mothers peopled the darkness of her chamber. She sat up,
+and listened with throbbing temples.
+
+To shut out the lightning which played at intervals across the heavens,
+Madame St. Lo, who shared the room, had covered the window with a cloak;
+and the place was dark. To exclude the dull roll of the thunder was less
+easy, for the night was oppressively hot, and behind the cloak the
+casement was open. Gradually, too, another sound, the hissing fall of
+heavy rain, began to make itself heard, and to mingle with the regular
+breathing which proved that Madame St. Lo slept.
+
+Assured of this fact, the Countess presently heaved a sigh, and slipped
+from the bed. She groped in the darkness for her cloak, found it, and
+donned it over her night gear. Then, taking her bearings by her bed,
+which stood with its head to the window and its foot to the entrance, she
+felt her way across the floor to the door, and after passing her hands a
+dozen times over every part of it, she found the latch, and raised it.
+The door creaked, as she pulled it open, and she stood arrested; but the
+sound went no farther, for the roofed gallery outside, which looked by
+two windows on the courtyard, was full of outdoor noises, the rushing of
+rain and the running of spouts and eaves. One of the windows stood wide,
+admitting the rain and wind, and as she paused, holding the door open,
+the draught blew the cloak from her. She stepped out quickly and shut
+the door behind her. On her left was the blind end of the passage; she
+turned to the right. She took one step into the darkness and stood
+motionless. Beside her, within a few feet of her, some one had moved,
+with a dull sound as of a boot on wood; a sound so near her that she held
+her breath, and pressed herself against the wall.
+
+She listened. Perhaps some of the servants--it was a common usage--had
+made their beds on the floor. Perhaps one of the women had stirred in
+the room against the wall of which she crouched. Perhaps--but, even
+while she reassured herself, the sound rose anew at her feet.
+
+Fortunately at the same instant the glare of the lightning flooded all,
+and showed the passage, and showed it empty. It lit up the row of doors
+on her right and the small windows on her left, and discovered facing her
+the door which shut off the rest of the house. She could have
+thanked--nay, she did thank God for that light. If the sound she had
+heard recurred she did not hear it; for, as the thunder which followed
+hard on the flash crashed overhead and rolled heavily eastwards, she felt
+her way boldly along the passage, touching first one door, and then a
+second, and then a third.
+
+She groped for the latch of the last, and found it, but, with her hand on
+it, paused. In order to summon up her courage, she strove to hear again
+the cries of misery and to see again the haggard eyes which had driven
+her hither. And if she did not wholly succeed, other reflections came to
+her aid. This storm, which covered all smaller noises, and opened, now
+and again, God's lantern for her use, did it not prove that He was on her
+side, and that she might count on His protection? The thought at least
+was timely, and with a better heart she gathered her wits. Waiting until
+the thunder burst over her head, she opened the door, slid within it, and
+closed it. She would fain have left it ajar, that in case of need she
+might escape the more easily. But the wind, which beat into the passage
+through the open window, rendered the precaution too perilous.
+
+She went forward two paces into the room, and as the roll of the thunder
+died away she stooped forward and listened with painful intensity for the
+sound of Count Hannibal's breathing. But the window was open, and the
+hiss of the rain persisted; she could hear nothing through it, and
+fearfully she took another step forward. The window should be before
+her; the bed in the corner to the left. But nothing of either could she
+make out. She must wait for the lightning.
+
+It came, and for a second or more the room shone. The window, the low
+truckle-bed, the sleeper, she saw all with dazzling clearness, and before
+the flash had well passed she was crouching low, with the hood of her
+cloak dragged about her face. For the glare had revealed Count Hannibal;
+but not asleep! He lay on his side, his face towards her; lay with open
+eyes, staring at her.
+
+Or had the light tricked her? The light must have tricked her, for in
+the interval between the flash and the thunder, while she crouched
+quaking, he did not move or call. The light must have deceived her. She
+felt so certain of it that she found courage to remain where she was
+until another flash came and showed him sleeping with closed eyes.
+
+She drew a breath of relief at that, and rose slowly to her feet. But
+she dared not go forward until a third flash had confirmed the second.
+Then, while the thunder burst overhead and rolled away, she crept on
+until she stood beside the pillow, and, stooping, could hear the
+sleeper's breathing.
+
+Alas! the worst remained to be done. The packet, she was sure of it, lay
+under his pillow. How was she to find it, how remove it without rousing
+him? A touch might awaken him. And yet, if she would not return empty-
+handed, if she would not go back to the harrowing thoughts which had
+tortured her through the long hours of the day, it must be done, and done
+now.
+
+She knew this, yet she hung irresolute a while, blenching before the
+manual act, listening to the persistent rush and downpour of the rain.
+Then a second time she drew courage from the storm. How timely had it
+broken. How signally had it aided her! How slight had been her chance
+without it! And so at last, resolutely but with a deft touch, she slid
+her fingers between the pillow and the bed, slightly pressing down the
+latter with her other hand. For an instant she fancied that the
+sleeper's breathing stopped, and her heart gave a great bound. But the
+breathing went on the next instant--if it had stopped--and dreading the
+return of the lightning, shrinking from being revealed so near him, and
+in that act--for which the darkness seemed more fitting--she groped
+farther, and touched something. Then, as her fingers closed upon it and
+grasped it, and his breath rose hot to her burning cheek, she knew that
+the real danger lay in the withdrawal.
+
+At the first attempt he uttered a kind of grunt and moved, throwing out
+his hand. She thought that he was going to awake, and had hard work to
+keep herself where she was; but he did not move, and she began again with
+so infinite a precaution that the perspiration ran down her face and her
+hair within the hood hung dank on her neck. Slowly, oh so slowly, she
+drew back the hand, and with it the packet; so slowly, and yet so
+resolutely, being put to it, that when the dreaded flash surprised her,
+and she saw his harsh swarthy face, steeped in the mysterious aloofness
+of sleep, within a hand's breadth of hers, not a muscle of her arm moved,
+nor did her hand quiver.
+
+It was done--at last! With a burst of gratitude, of triumph, of
+exultation, she stood erect. She realized that it was done, and that
+here in her hand she held the packet. A deep gasp of relief, of joy, of
+thankfulness, and she glided towards the door.
+
+She groped for the latch, and in the act fancied his breathing was
+changed. She paused, and bent her head to listen. But the patter of the
+rain, drowning all sounds save those of the nearest origin, persuaded her
+that she was mistaken, and, finding the latch, she raised it, slipped
+like a shadow into the passage, and closed the door behind her.
+
+That done she stood arrested, all the blood in her body running to her
+heart. She must be dreaming! The passage in which she stood--the
+passage which she had left in black darkness--was alight; was so far
+lighted, at least, that to eyes fresh from the night, the figures of
+three men, grouped at the farther end, stood out against the glow of the
+lanthorn which they appeared to be trimming--for the two nearest were
+stooping over it. These two had their backs to her, the third his face;
+and it was the sight of this third man which had driven the blood to her
+heart. He ended at the waist! It was only after a few seconds, it was
+only when she had gazed at him awhile in speechless horror, that he rose
+another foot from the floor, and she saw that he had paused in the act of
+ascending through a trapdoor. What the scene meant, who these men were,
+or what their entrance portended, with these questions her brain refused
+at the moment to grapple. It was much that--still remembering who might
+hear her, and what she held--she did not shriek aloud.
+
+Instead, she stood in the gloom at her end of the passage, gazing with
+all her eyes until she had seen the third man step clear of the trap. She
+could see him; but the light intervened and blurred his view of her. He
+stooped, almost as soon as he had cleared himself, to help up a fourth
+man, who rose with a naked knife between his teeth. She saw then that
+all were armed, and something stealthy in their bearing, something cruel
+in their eyes as the light of the lanthorn fell now on one dark face and
+now on another, went to her heart and chilled it. Who were they, and why
+were they here? What was their purpose? As her reason awoke, as she
+asked herself these questions, the fourth man stooped in his turn, and
+gave his hand to a fifth. And on that she lost her self-control, and
+cried out. For the last man to ascend was La Tribe--La Tribe, from whom
+she had parted that morning.
+
+The sound she uttered was low, but it reached the men's ears, and the two
+whose backs were towards her turned as if they had been pricked. He who
+held the lanthorn raised it, and the five glared at her and she at them.
+Then a second cry, louder and more full of surprise, burst from her lips.
+The nearest man, he who held the lanthorn high that he might view her,
+was Tignonville, was her lover!
+
+"_Mon Dieu_!" she whispered. "What is it? What is it?"
+
+Then, not till then, did he know her. Until then the light of the
+lanthorn had revealed only a cloaked and cowled figure, a gloomy phantom
+which shook the heart of more than one with superstitious terror. But
+they knew her now--two of them; and slowly, as in a dream, Tignonville
+came forward.
+
+The mind has its moments of crisis, in which it acts upon instinct rather
+than upon reason. The girl never knew why she acted as she did; why she
+asked no questions, why she uttered no exclamations, no remonstrances;
+why, with a finger on her lips and her eyes on his, she put the packet
+into his hands.
+
+He took it from her, too, as mechanically as she gave it--with the hand
+which held his bare blade. That done, silent as she, with his eyes set
+hard, he would have gone by her. The sight of her _there_, guarding the
+door of him who had stolen her from him, exasperated his worst passions.
+But she moved to hinder him, and barred the way. With her hand raised
+she pointed to the trapdoor.
+
+"Go!" she whispered, her tone stern and low, "you have what you want!
+Go!"
+
+"No!" And he tried to pass her.
+
+"Go!" she repeated in the same tone. "You have what you need." And
+still she held her hand extended; still without faltering she faced the
+five men, while the thunder, growing more distant, rolled sullenly
+eastward, and the midnight rain, pouring from every spout and dripping
+eave about the house, wrapped the passage in its sibilant hush. Gradually
+her eyes dominated his, gradually her nobler nature and nobler aim
+subdued his weaker parts. For she understood now; and he saw that she
+did, and had he been alone he would have slunk away, and said no word in
+his defence.
+
+But one of the men, savage and out of patience, thrust himself between
+them.
+
+"Where is he?" he muttered. "What is the use of this? Where is he?" And
+his bloodshot eyes--it was Tuez-les-Moines--questioned the doors, while
+his hand, trembling and shaking on the haft of his knife, bespoke his
+eagerness. "Where is he? Where is he, woman? Quick, or--"
+
+"I shall not tell you," she answered.
+
+"You lie," he cried, grinning like a dog. "You will tell us! Or we will
+kill you too! Where is he? Where is he?"
+
+"I shall not tell you," she repeated, standing before him in the
+fearlessness of scorn. "Another step and I rouse the house! M. de
+Tignonville, to you who know me, I swear that if this man does not
+retire--"
+
+"He is in one of these rooms?" was Tignonville's answer. "In which? In
+which?"
+
+"Search them!" she answered, her voice low, but biting in its contempt.
+"Try them. Rouse my women, alarm the house! And when you have his
+people at your throats--five as they will be to one of you--thank your
+own mad folly!"
+
+Tuez-les-Moines' eyes glittered. "You will not tell us?" he cried.
+
+"No!"
+
+"Then--"
+
+But as the fanatic sprang on her, La Tribe flung his arms round him and
+dragged him back.
+
+"It would be madness," he cried. "Are you mad, fool? Have done!" he
+panted, struggling with him. "If Madame gives the alarm--and he may be
+in any one of these four rooms, you cannot be sure which--we are undone."
+He looked for support to Tignonville, whose movement to protect the girl
+he had anticipated, and who had since listened sullenly. "We have
+obtained what we need. Will you requite Madame, who has gained it for us
+at her own risk--"
+
+"It is Monsieur I would requite," Tignonville muttered grimly.
+
+"By using violence to her?" the minister retorted passionately. He and
+Tuez were still gripping one another. "I tell you, to go on is to risk
+what we have got! And I for one--"
+
+"Am chicken-hearted!" the young man sneered. "Madame--" He seemed to
+choke on the word. "Will you swear that he is not here?"
+
+"I swear that if you do not go I will raise the alarm!" she hissed--all
+their words were sunk to that stealthy note. "Go! if you have not stayed
+too long already. Go! Or see!" And she pointed to the trapdoor, from
+which the face and arms of a sixth man had that moment risen--the face
+dark with perturbation, so that her woman's wit told her at once that
+something was amiss. "See what has come of your delay already!"
+
+"The water is rising," the man muttered earnestly. "In God's name come,
+whether you have done it or not, or we cannot pass out again. It is
+within a foot of the crown of the culvert now, and it is rising."
+
+"Curse on the water!" Tuez-les-Moines answered in a frenzied whisper.
+"And on this Jezebel. Let us kill her and him! What matter afterwards?"
+And he tried to shake off La Tribe's grasp.
+
+But the minister held him desperately. "Are you mad? Are you mad?" he
+answered. "What can we do against thirty? Let us be gone while we can.
+Let us be gone! Come."
+
+"Ay, come," Perrot cried, assenting reluctantly. He had taken no side
+hitherto. "The luck is against us! 'Tis no use to-night, man!" And he
+turned with an air of sullen resignation. Letting his legs drop through
+the trap, he followed the bearer of the tidings out of sight. Another
+made up his mind to go, and went. Then only Tignonville, holding the
+lanthorn, and La Tribe, who feared to release Tuez-les-Moines, remained
+with the fanatic.
+
+The Countess's eyes met her old lover's, and whether old memories
+overcame her, or, now that the danger was nearly past, she began to give
+way, she swayed a little on her feet. But he did not notice it. He was
+sunk in black rage--rage against her, rage against himself.
+
+"Take the light," she muttered unsteadily. "And--and he must follow!"
+
+"And you?"
+
+But she could bear it no longer. "Oh, go," she wailed. "Go! Will you
+never go? If you love me, if you ever loved me, I implore you to go."
+
+He had betrayed little of a lover's feeling. But he could not resist
+that appeal, and he turned silently. Seizing Tuez-les-Moines by the
+other arm, he drew him by force to the trap.
+
+"Quiet, fool," he muttered savagely when the man would have resisted,
+"and go down! If we stay to kill him, we shall have no way of escape,
+and his life will be dearly bought. Down, man, down!" And between them,
+in a struggling silence, with now and then an audible rap, or a ring of
+metal, the two forced the desperado to descend.
+
+La Tribe followed hastily. Tignonville was the last to go. In the act
+of disappearing he raised his lanthorn for a last glimpse of the
+Countess. To his astonishment the passage was empty; she was gone. Hard
+by him a door stood an inch or two ajar, and he guessed that it was hers,
+and swore under his breath, hating her at that moment. But he did not
+guess how nicely she had calculated her strength; how nearly exhaustion
+had overcome her; or that, even while he paused--a fatal pause had he
+known it--eyeing the dark opening of the door, she lay as one dead, on
+the bed within. She had fallen in a swoon, from which she did not
+recover until the sun had risen, and marched across one quarter of the
+heavens.
+
+Nor did he see another thing, or he might have hastened his steps. Before
+the yellow light of his lanthorn faded from the ceiling of the passage,
+the door of the room farthest from the trap slid open. A man, whose
+eyes, until darkness swallowed him, shone strangely in a face
+extraordinarily softened, came out on tip-toe. This man stood awhile,
+listening. At length, hearing those below utter a cry of dismay, he
+awoke to sudden activity. He opened with a turn of the key the door
+which stood at his elbow, the door which led to the other part of the
+house. He vanished through it. A second later a sharp whistle pierced
+the darkness of the courtyard, and brought a dozen sleepers to their
+senses and their feet. A moment, and the courtyard hummed with voices,
+above which one voice rang clear and insistent. With a startled cry the
+inn awoke.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. THE COMPANY OF THE BLEEDING HEART.
+
+
+"But why," Madame St. Lo asked, sticking her arms akimbo, "why stay in
+this forsaken place a day and a night, when six hours in the saddle would
+set us in Angers?"
+
+"Because," Tavannes replied coldly--he and his cousin were walking before
+the gateway of the inn--"the Countess is not well, and will be the
+better, I think, for staying a day."
+
+"She slept soundly enough! I'll answer for that!"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"She never raised her head this morning, though my women were shrieking
+'Murder!' next door, and--Name of Heaven!" Madame resumed, after breaking
+off abruptly, and shading her eyes with her hand, "what comes here? Is
+it a funeral? Or a pilgrimage? If all the priests about here are as
+black, no wonder M. Rabelais fell out with them!"
+
+The inn stood without the walls for the convenience of those who wished
+to take the road early: a little also, perhaps, because food and forage
+were cheaper, and the wine paid no town-dues. Four great roads met
+before the house, along the most easterly of which the sombre company
+which had caught Madame St. Lo's attention could be seen approaching. At
+first Count Hannibal supposed with his companion that the travellers were
+conveying to the grave the corpse of some person of distinction; for the
+_cortege_ consisted mainly of priests and the like mounted on mules, and
+clothed for the most part in black. Black also was the small banner
+which waved above them, and bore in place of arms the emblem of the
+Bleeding Heart. But a second glance failed to discover either litter or
+bier; and a nearer approach showed that the travellers, whether they wore
+the tonsure or not, bore weapons of one kind or another.
+
+Suddenly Madame St. Lo clapped her hands, and proclaimed in great
+astonishment that she knew them.
+
+"Why, there is Father Boucher, the Cure of St. Benoist!" she said, "and
+Father Pezelay of St. Magloire. And there is another I know, though I
+cannot remember his name! They are preachers from Paris! That is who
+they are! But what can they be doing here? Is it a pilgrimage, think
+you?"
+
+"Ay, a pilgrimage of Blood!" Count Hannibal answered between his teeth.
+And, turning to him to learn what moved him, she saw the look in his eyes
+which portended a storm. Before she could ask a question, however, the
+gloomy company, which had first appeared in the distance, moving, an inky
+blot, through the hot sunshine of the summer morning, had drawn near, and
+was almost abreast of them. Stepping from her side, he raised his hand
+and arrested the march.
+
+"Who is master here?" he asked haughtily.
+
+"I am the leader," answered a stout pompous Churchman, whose small
+malevolent eyes belied the sallow fatuity of his face. "I, M. de
+Tavannes, by your leave."
+
+"And you, by your leave," Tavannes sneered, "are--"
+
+"Archdeacon and Vicar of the Bishop of Angers and Prior of the Lesser
+Brethren of St. Germain, M. le Comte. Visitor also of the Diocese of
+Angers," the dignitary continued, puffing out his cheeks, "and Chaplain
+to the Lieutenant-Governor of Saumur, whose unworthy brother I am."
+
+"A handsome glove, and well embroidered!" Tavannes retorted in a tone of
+disdain. "The hand I see yonder!" He pointed to the lean parchment mask
+of Father Pezelay, who coloured ever so faintly, but held his peace under
+the sneer. "You are bound for Angers?" Count Hannibal continued. "For
+what purpose, Sir Prior?"
+
+"His Grace the Bishop is absent, and in his absence--"
+
+"You go to fill his city with strife! I know you! Not you!" he
+continued, contemptuously turning from the Prior, and regarding the third
+of the principal figures of the party. "But you! You were the Cure who
+got the mob together last All Souls'."
+
+"I speak the words of Him Who sent me!" answered the third Churchman,
+whose brooding face and dull curtained eyes gave no promise of the fits
+of frenzied eloquence which had made his pulpit famous in Paris.
+
+"Then Kill and Burn are His alphabet!" Tavannes retorted, and heedless of
+the start of horror which a saying so near blasphemy excited among the
+Churchmen, he turned to Father Pezelay. "And you! You, too, I know!" he
+continued. "And you know me! And take this from me. Turn, father!
+Turn! Or worse than a broken head--you bear the scar, I see--will befall
+you. These good persons, whom you have moved, unless I am in error, to
+take this journey, may not know me; but you do, and can tell them. If
+they will to Angers, they must to Angers. But if I find trouble in
+Angers when I come, I will hang some one high. Don't scowl at me,
+man!"--in truth, the look of hate in Father Pezelay's eyes was enough to
+provoke the exclamation. "Some one, and it shall not be a bare patch on
+the crown will save his windpipe from squeezing!"
+
+A murmur of indignation broke from the preachers' attendants; one or two
+made a show of drawing their weapons. But Count Hannibal paid no heed to
+them, and had already turned on his heel when Father Pezelay spurred his
+mule a pace or two forward. Snatching a heavy brass cross from one of
+the acolytes, he raised it aloft, and in the voice which had often
+thrilled the heated congregation of St. Magloire, he called on Tavannes
+to pause.
+
+"Stand, my lord!" he cried. "And take warning! Stand, reckless and
+profane, whose face is set hard as a stone, and his heart as a flint,
+against High Heaven and Holy Church! Stand and hear! Behold the word of
+the Lord is gone out against this city, even against Angers, for the
+unbelief thereof! Her place shall be left unto her desolate, and her
+children shall be dashed against the stones! Woe unto you, therefore, if
+you gainsay it, or fall short of that which is commanded! You shall
+perish as Achan, the son of Charmi, and as Saul! The curse that has gone
+out against you shall not tarry, nor your days continue! For the
+Canaanitish woman that is in your house, and for the thought that is in
+your heart, the place that was yours is given to another! Yea, the sword
+is even now drawn that shall pierce your side!"
+
+"You are more like to split my ears!" Count Hannibal answered sternly.
+"And now mark me! Preach as you please here. But a word in Angers, and
+though you be shaven twice over, I will have you silenced after a fashion
+which will not please you! If you value your tongue therefore,
+father--Oh, you shake off the dust, do you? Well, pass on! 'Tis wise,
+perhaps."
+
+And undismayed by the scowling brows, and the cross ostentatiously lifted
+to heaven, he gazed after the procession as it moved on under its swaying
+banner, now one and now another of the acolytes looking back and raising
+his hands to invoke the bolt of Heaven on the blasphemer. As the
+_cortege_ passed the huge watering-troughs, and the open gateway of the
+inn, the knot of persons congregated there fell on their knees. In
+answer the Churchmen raised their banner higher, and began to sing the
+_Eripe me, Domine_! and to its strains, now vengeful, now despairing, now
+rising on a wave of menace, they passed slowly into the distance, slowly
+towards Angers and the Loire.
+
+Suddenly Madame St. Lo twitched his sleeve. "Enough for me!" she cried
+passionately. "I go no farther with you!"
+
+"Ah?"
+
+"No farther!" she repeated. She was pale, she shivered. "Many thanks,
+my cousin, but we part company here. I do not go to Angers. I have seen
+horrors enough. I will take my people, and go to my aunt by Tours and
+the east road. For you, I foresee what will happen. You will perish
+between the hammer and the anvil."
+
+"Ah?"
+
+"You play too fine a game," she continued, her face quivering. "Give
+over the girl to her lover, and send away her people with her. And wash
+your hands of her and hers. Or you will see her fall, and fall beside
+her! Give her to him, I say--give her to him!"
+
+"My wife?"
+
+"Wife?" she echoed, for, fickle, and at all times swept away by the
+emotions of the moment, she was in earnest now. "Is there a tie," and
+she pointed after the vanishing procession, "that they cannot unloose?
+That they will not unloose? Is there a life which escapes if they doom
+it? Did the Admiral escape? Or Rochefoucauld? Or Madame de Luns in old
+days? I tell you they go to rouse Angers against you, and I see
+beforehand what will happen. She will perish, and you with her. Wife? A
+pretty wife, at whose door you took her lover last night."
+
+"And at your door!" he answered quietly, unmoved by the gibe.
+
+But she did not heed. "I warned you of that!" she cried. "And you would
+not believe me. I told you he was following. And I warn you of this.
+You are between the hammer and the anvil, M. le Comte! If Tignonville
+does not murder you in your bed--"
+
+"I hold him in my power."
+
+"Then Holy Church will fall on you and crush you. For me, I have seen
+enough and more than enough. I go to Tours by the east road."
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. "As you please," he said.
+
+She flung away in disgust with him. She could not understand a man who
+played fast and loose at such a time. The game was too fine for her, its
+danger too apparent, the gain too small. She had, too, a woman's dread
+of the Church, a woman's belief in the power of the dead hand to punish.
+And in half an hour her orders were given. In two hours her people were
+gathered, and she departed by the eastward road, three of Tavannes'
+riders reinforcing her servants for a part of the way. Count Hannibal
+stood to watch them start, and noticed Bigot riding by the side of
+Suzanne's mule. He smiled; and presently, as he turned away, he did a
+thing rare with him--he laughed outright.
+
+A laugh which reflected a mood rare as itself. Few had seen Count
+Hannibal's eye sparkle as it sparkled now; few had seen him laugh as he
+laughed, walking to and fro in the sunshine before the inn. His men
+watched him, and wondered, and liked it little, for one or two who had
+overheard his altercation with the Churchmen had reported it, and there
+was shaking of heads over it. The man who had singed the Pope's beard
+and chucked cardinals under the chin was growing old, and the most daring
+of the others had no mind to fight with foes whose weapons were not of
+this world.
+
+Count Hannibal's gaiety, however, was well grounded, had they known it.
+He was gay, not because he foresaw peril, and it was his nature to love
+peril; not--in the main, though a little, perhaps--because he knew that
+the woman whose heart he desired to win had that night stood between him
+and death; not, though again a little, perhaps, because she had confirmed
+his choice by conduct which a small man might have deprecated, but which
+a great man loved; but chiefly, because the events of the night had
+placed in his grasp two weapons by the aid of which he looked to recover
+all the ground he had lost--lost by his impulsive departure from the pall
+of conduct on which he had started.
+
+Those weapons were Tignonville, taken like a rat in a trap by the rising
+of the water; and the knowledge that the Countess had stolen the precious
+packet from his pillow. The knowledge--for he had lain and felt her
+breath upon his cheek, he had lain and felt her hand beneath his pillow,
+he had lain while the impulse to fling his arms about her had been almost
+more than he could tame! He had lain and suffered her to go, to pass out
+safely as she had passed in. And then he had received his reward in the
+knowledge that, if she robbed him, she robbed him not for herself; and
+that where it was a question of his life she did not fear to risk her
+own.
+
+When he came, indeed, to that point, he trembled. How narrowly had he
+been saved from misjudging her! Had he not lain and waited, had he not
+possessed himself in patience, he might have thought her in collusion
+with the old lover whom he found at her door, and with those who came to
+slay him. Either he might have perished unwarned; or escaping that
+danger, he might have detected her with Tignonville and lost for all time
+the ideal of a noble woman.
+
+He had escaped that peril. More, he had gained the weapons we have
+indicated; and the sense of power, in regard to her, almost intoxicated
+him. Surely if he wielded those weapons to the best advantage, if he
+strained generosity to the uttermost, the citadel of her heart must yield
+at last!
+
+He had the defect of his courage and his nature, a tendency to do things
+after a flamboyant fashion. He knew that her act would plunge him in
+perils which she had not foreseen. If the preachers roused the Papists
+of Angers, if he arrived to find men's swords whetted for the massacre
+and the men themselves awaiting the signal, then if he did not give that
+signal there would be trouble. There would be trouble of the kind in
+which the soul of Hannibal de Tavannes revelled, trouble about the
+ancient cathedral and under the black walls of the Angevin castle;
+trouble amid which the hearts of common men would be as water.
+
+Then, when things seemed at their worst, he would reveal his knowledge.
+Then, when forgiveness must seem impossible, he would forgive. With the
+flood of peril which she had unloosed rising round them, he would say,
+"Go!" to the man who had aimed at his life; he would say to her, "I know,
+and I forgive!" That, that only, would fitly crown the policy on which
+he had decided from the first, though he had not hoped to conduct it on
+lines so splendid as those which now dazzled him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI. TEMPER.
+
+
+It was his gaiety, that strange unusual gaiety, still continuing, which
+on the following day began by perplexing and ended by terrifying the
+Countess. She could not doubt that he had missed the packet on which so
+much hung and of which he had indicated the importance. But if he had
+missed it, why, she asked herself, did he not speak? Why did he not cry
+the alarm, search and question and pursue? Why did he not give her that
+opening to tell the truth, without which even her courage failed, her
+resolution died within her?
+
+Above all, what was the secret of his strange merriment? Of the snatches
+of song which broke from him, only to be hushed by her look of
+astonishment? Of the parades which his horse, catching the infection,
+made under him, as he tossed his riding-cane high in the air and caught
+it?
+
+Ay, what? Why, when he had suffered so great a loss, when he had been
+robbed of that of which he must give account--why did he cast off his
+melancholy and ride like the youngest? She wondered what the men
+thought, and looking, saw them stare, saw that they watched him
+stealthily, saw that they laid their heads together. What were they
+thinking of it? She could not tell; and slowly a terror, more insistent
+than any to which the extremity of violence would have reduced her, began
+to grip her heart.
+
+Twenty hours of rest had lifted her from the state of collapse into which
+the events of the night had cast her; still her limbs at starting had
+shaken under her. But the cool freshness of the early summer morning,
+and the sight of the green landscape and the winding Loir, beside which
+their road ran, had not failed to revive her spirits; and if he had shown
+himself merely gloomy, merely sunk in revengeful thoughts, or darting
+hither and thither the glance of suspicion, she felt that she could have
+faced him, and on the first opportunity could have told him the truth.
+
+But his new mood veiled she knew not what. It seemed, if she
+comprehended it at all, the herald of some bizarre, some dreadful
+vengeance, in harmony with his fierce and mocking spirit. Before it her
+heart became as water. Even her colour little by little left her cheeks.
+She knew that he had only to look at her now to read the truth; that it
+was written in her face, in her shrinking figure, in the eyes which now
+guiltily sought and now avoided his. And feeling sure that he did read
+it and know it, she fancied that he licked his lips, as the cat which
+plays with the mouse; she fancied that he gloated on her terror and her
+perplexity.
+
+This, though the day and the road were warrants for all cheerful
+thoughts. On one side vineyards clothed the warm red slopes, and rose in
+steps from the valley to the white buildings of a convent. On the other
+the stream wound through green flats where the black cattle stood knee-
+deep in grass, watched by wild-eyed and half-naked youths. Again the
+travellers lost sight of the Loir, and crossing a shoulder, rode through
+the dim aisles of a beech-forest, through deep rustling drifts of last
+year's leaves. And out again and down again they passed, and turning
+aside from the gateway, trailed along beneath the brown machicolated wall
+of an old town, from the crumbling battlements of which faces
+half-sleepy, half-suspicious, watched them as they moved below through
+the glare and heat. Down to the river-level again, where a squalid
+anchorite, seated at the mouth of a cave dug in the bank, begged of them,
+and the bell of a monastery on the farther bank tolled slumberously the
+hour of Nones.
+
+And still he said nothing, and she, cowed by his mysterious gaiety, yet
+spurning herself for her cowardice, was silent also. He hoped to arrive
+at Angers before nightfall. What, she wondered, shivering, would happen
+there? What was he planning to do to her? How would he punish her?
+Brave as she was, she was a woman, with a woman's nerves; and fear and
+anticipation got upon them; and his silence--his silence which must mean
+a thing worse than words!
+
+And then on a sudden, piercing all, a new thought. Was it possible that
+he had other letters? If his bearing were consistent with anything, it
+was consistent with that. Had he other genuine letters, or had he
+duplicate letters, so that he had lost nothing, but instead had gained
+the right to rack and torture her, to taunt and despise her?
+
+That thought stung her into sudden self-betrayal. They were riding along
+a broad dusty track which bordered a stone causey raised above the level
+of winter floods. Impulsively she turned to him.
+
+"You have other letters!" she cried. "You have other letters!" And
+freed for the moment from her terror, she fixed her eyes on his and
+strove to read his face.
+
+He looked at her, his mouth grown hard. "What do you mean, Madame?" he
+asked,
+
+"You have other letters?"
+
+"For whom?"
+
+"From the King, for Angers!"
+
+He saw that she was going to confess, that she was going to derange his
+cherished plan; and unreasonable anger awoke in the man who had been more
+than willing to forgive a real injury.
+
+"Will you explain?" he said between his teeth. And his eyes glittered
+unpleasantly. "What do you mean?"
+
+"You have other letters," she cried, "besides those which I stole."
+
+"Which you stole?" He repeated the words without passion. Enraged by
+this unexpected turn, he hardly knew how to take it.
+
+"Yes, I!" she cried. "I! I took them from under your pillow!"
+
+He was silent a minute. Then he laughed and shook his head.
+
+"It will not do, Madame," he said, his lip curling. "You are clever, but
+you do not deceive me."
+
+"Deceive you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You do not believe that I took the letters?" she cried in great
+amazement.
+
+"No," he answered, "and for a good reason." He had hardened his heart
+now. He had chosen his line, and he would not spare her.
+
+"Why, then?" she cried. "Why?"
+
+"For the best of all reasons," he answered. "Because the person who
+stole the letters was seized in the act of making his escape, and is now
+in my power."
+
+"The person--who stole the letters?" she faltered.
+
+"Yes, Madame."
+
+"Do you mean M. de Tignonville?"
+
+"You have said it."
+
+She turned white to the lips, and trembling, could with difficulty sit
+her horse. With an effort she pulled it up, and he stopped also. Their
+attendants were some way ahead.
+
+"And you have the letters?" she whispered, her eyes meeting his. "You
+have the letters?"
+
+"No, but I have the thief!" Count Hannibal answered with sinister
+meaning. "As I think you knew, Madame," he continued ironically, "a
+while back before you spoke."
+
+"I? Oh no, no!" and she swayed in her saddle. "What--what are you--going
+to do?" she muttered after a moment's stricken silence.
+
+"To him?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"The magistrates will decide, at Angers."
+
+"But he did not do it! I swear he did not."
+
+Count Hannibal shook his head coldly.
+
+"I swear, Monsieur, I took the letters!" she repeated piteously. "Punish
+me!" Her figure, bowed like an old woman's over the neck of her horse,
+seemed to crave his mercy.
+
+Count Hannibal smiled.
+
+"You do not believe me?"
+
+"No," he said. And then, in a tone which chilled her, "If I did believe
+you," he continued, "I should still punish him!" She was broken; but he
+would see if he could not break her further. He would try if there were
+no weak spot in her armour. He would rack her now, since in the end she
+must go free. "Understand, Madame," he continued in his harshest tone,
+"I have had enough of your lover. He has crossed my path too often. You
+are my wife, I am your husband. In a day or two there shall be an end of
+this farce and of him."
+
+"He did not take them!" she wailed, her face sinking lower on her breast.
+"He did not take them! Have mercy!"
+
+"Any way, Madame, they are gone!" Tavannes answered. "You have taken
+them between you; and as I do not choose that you should pay, he will pay
+the price."
+
+If the discovery that Tignonville had fallen into her husband's hands had
+not sufficed to crush her, Count Hannibal's tone must have done so. The
+shoot of new life which had raised its head after those dreadful days in
+Paris, and--for she was young--had supported her under the weight which
+the peril of Angers had cast on her shoulders, died, withered under the
+heel of his brutality. The pride which had supported her, which had won
+Tavannes' admiration and exacted his respect, sank, as she sank herself,
+bowed to her horse's neck, weeping bitter tears before him. She
+abandoned herself to her misery, as she had once abandoned herself in the
+upper room in Paris.
+
+And he looked at her. He had willed to crush her; he had his will, and
+he was not satisfied. He had bowed her so low that his magnanimity would
+now have its full effect, would shine as the sun into a dark world; and
+yet he was not happy. He could look forward to the morrow, and say, "She
+will understand me, she will know me!" and, lo, the thought that she wept
+for her lover stabbed him, and stabbed him anew; and he thought, "Rather
+would she death from him, than life from me! Though I give her creation,
+it will not alter her! Though I strike the stars with my head, it is he
+who fills her world."
+
+The thought spurred him to further cruelty, impelled him to try if,
+prostrate as she was, he could not draw a prayer from her.
+
+"You don't ask after him?" he scoffed. "He may be before or behind? Or
+wounded or well? Would you not know, Madame? And what message he sent
+you? And what he fears, and what hope he has? And his last wishes?
+And--for while there is life there is hope--would you not learn where the
+key of his prison lies to-night? How much for the key to-night, Madame?"
+
+Each question fell on her like the lash of a whip; but as one who has
+been flogged into insensibility, she did not wince. That drove him on:
+he felt a mad desire to hear her prayers, to force her lower, to bring
+her to her knees. And he sought about for a keener taunt. Their
+attendants were almost out of sight before them; the sun, declining
+apace, was in their eyes.
+
+"In two hours we shall be in Angers," he said. "Mon Dieu, Madame, it was
+a pity, when you two were taking letters, you did not go a step farther.
+You were surprised, or I doubt if I should be alive to-day!"
+
+Then she did look up. She raised her head and met his gaze with such
+wonder in her eyes, such reproach in her tear-stained face, that his
+voice sank on the last word.
+
+"You mean--that I would have murdered you?" she said. "I would have cut
+off my hand first. What I did"--and now her voice was as firm as it was
+low--"what I did, I did to save my people. And if it were to be done
+again, I would do it again!"
+
+"You dare to tell me that to my face?" he cried, hiding feelings which
+almost choked him. "You would do it again, would you? Mon Dieu, Madame,
+you need to be taught a lesson!"
+
+And by chance, meaning only to make the horses move on again, he raised
+his whip. She thought that he was going to strike her, and she flinched
+at last. The whip fell smartly on her horse's quarters, and it sprang
+forward. Count Hannibal swore between his teeth.
+
+He had turned pale, she red as fire. "Get on! Get on!" he cried
+harshly. "We are falling behind!" And riding at her heels, flipping her
+horse now and then, he forced her to trot on until they overtook the
+servants.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII. THE BLACK TOWN.
+
+
+It was late evening when, riding wearily on jaded horses, they came to
+the outskirts of Angers, and saw before them the term of their journey.
+The glow of sunset had faded, but the sky was still warm with the last
+hues of day; and against its opal light the huge mass of the Angevin
+castle, which even in sunshine rises dark and forbidding above the
+Mayenne, stood up black and sharply defined. Below it, on both banks of
+the river, the towers and spires of the city soared up from a sombre
+huddle of ridge-roofs, broken here by a round-headed gateway, crumbling
+and pigeon-haunted, that dated from St. Louis, and there by the gaunt
+arms of a windmill.
+
+The city lay dark under a light sky, keeping well its secrets. Thousands
+were out of doors enjoying the evening coolness in alley and court, yet
+it betrayed the life which pulsed in its arteries only by the low murmur
+which rose from it. Nevertheless, the Countess at sight of its roofs
+tasted the first moment of happiness which had been hers that day. She
+might suffer, but she had saved. Those roofs would thank her! In that
+murmur were the voices of women and children she had redeemed! At the
+sight and at the thought a wave of love and tenderness swept all
+bitterness from her breast. A profound humility, a boundless
+thankfulness took possession of her. Her head sank lower above her
+horse's mane; but this time it sank in reverence, not in shame.
+
+Could she have known what was passing beneath those roofs which night was
+blending in a common gloom--could she have read the thoughts which at
+that moment paled the cheeks of many a stout burgher, whose gabled house
+looked on the great square, she had been still more thankful. For in
+attics and back rooms women were on their knees at that hour, praying
+with feverish eyes; and in the streets men--on whom their fellows, seeing
+the winding-sheet already at the chin, gazed askance--smiled, and showed
+brave looks abroad, while their hearts were sick with fear.
+
+For darkly, no man knew how, the news had come to Angers. It had been
+known, more or less, for three days. Men had read it in other men's
+eyes. The tongue of a scold, the sneer of an injured woman had spread
+it, the birds of the air had carried it. From garret window to garret
+window across the narrow lanes of the old town it had been whispered at
+dead of night; at convent grilles, and in the timber-yards beside the
+river. Ten thousand, fifty thousand, a hundred thousand, it was
+rumoured, had perished in Paris. In Orleans, all. In Tours this man's
+sister; at Saumur that man's son. Through France the word had gone forth
+that the Huguenots must die; and in the busy town the same roof-tree
+sheltered fear and hate, rage and cupidity. On one side of the party-
+wall murder lurked fierce-eyed; on the other, the victim lay watching the
+latch, and shaking at a step. Strong men tasted the bitterness of death,
+and women clasping their babes to their breasts smiled sickly into
+children's eyes.
+
+The signal only was lacking. It would come, said some, from Saumur,
+where Montsoreau, the Duke of Anjou's Lieutenant-Governor and a Papist,
+had his quarters. From Paris, said others, directly from the King. It
+might come at any hour now, in the day or in the night; the magistrates,
+it was whispered, were in continuous session, awaiting its coming. No
+wonder that from lofty gable windows, and from dormers set high above the
+tiles, haggard faces looked northward and eastward, and ears sharpened by
+fear imagined above the noises of the city the ring of the iron shoes
+that carried doom.
+
+Doubtless the majority desired--as the majority in France have always
+desired--peace. But in the purlieus about the cathedral and in the lanes
+where the sacristans lived, in convent parlours and college courts, among
+all whose livelihood the new faith threatened, was a stir as of a hive
+deranged. Here was grumbling against the magistrates--why wait? There,
+stealthy plannings and arrangements; everywhere a grinding of weapons and
+casting of slugs. Old grudges, new rivalries, a scholar's venom, a
+priest's dislike, here was final vent for all. None need leave this
+feast unsated!
+
+It was a man of this class, sent out for the purpose, who first espied
+Count Hannibal's company approaching. He bore the news into the town,
+and by the time the travellers reached the city gate, the dusky street
+within, on which lights were beginning to twinkle from booths and
+casements, was alive with figures running to meet them and crying the
+news as they ran. The travellers, weary and road-stained, had no sooner
+passed under the arch than they found themselves the core of a great
+crowd which moved with them and pressed about them; now unbonneting, and
+now calling out questions, and now shouting, "Vive le Roi! Vive le Roi!"
+Above the press, windows burst into light; and over all, the quaint
+leaning gables of the old timbered houses looked down on the hurry and
+tumult.
+
+They passed along a narrow street in which the rabble, hurrying at Count
+Hannibal's bridle, and often looking back to read his face, had much ado
+to escape harm; along this street and before the yawning doors of a great
+church whence a breath heavy with incense and burning wax issued to meet
+them. A portion of the congregation had heard the tumult and struggled
+out, and now stood close-packed on the steps under the double vault of
+the portal. Among them the Countess's eyes, as she rode by, a sturdy man-
+at-arms on either hand, caught and held one face. It was the face of a
+tall, lean man in dusty black; and though she did not know him she seemed
+to have an equal attraction for him; for as their eyes met he seized the
+shoulder of the man next him and pointed her out. And something in the
+energy of the gesture, or in the thin lips and malevolent eyes of the man
+who pointed, chilled the Countess's blood and shook her, she knew not
+why.
+
+Until then, she had known no fear save of her husband. But at that a
+sense of the force and pressure of the crowd--as well as of the fierce
+passions, straining about her, which a word might unloose--broke upon
+her; and looking to the stern men on either side she fancied that she
+read anxiety in their faces.
+
+She glanced behind. Boot to boot, the Count's men came on, pressing
+round her women and shielding them from the exuberance of the throng. In
+their faces too she thought that she traced uneasiness. What wonder if
+the scenes through which she had passed in Paris began to recur to her
+mind, and shook nerves already overwrought?
+
+She began to tremble. "Is there--danger?" she muttered, speaking in a
+low voice to Bigot, who rode on her right hand. "Will they do anything?"
+
+The Norman snorted. "Not while he is in the saddle," he said, nodding
+towards his master, who rode a pace in front of them, his reins loose.
+"There be some here know him!" Bigot continued, in his drawling tone.
+"And more will know him if they break line. Have no fear, Madame, he
+will bring you safe to the inn. Down with the Huguenots?" he continued,
+turning from her and addressing a rogue who, holding his stirrup, was
+shouting the cry till he was crimson. "Then why not away, and--"
+
+"The King! The King's word and leave!" the man answered.
+
+"Ay, tell us!" shrieked another, looking upward, while he waved his cap;
+"have we the King's leave?"
+
+"You'll bide _his_ leave!" the Norman retorted, indicating the Count with
+his thumb. "Or 'twill be up with you--on the three-legged horse!"
+
+"But he comes from the King!" the man panted.
+
+"To be sure. To be sure!"
+
+"Then--"
+
+"You'll bide his time! That's all!" Bigot answered, rather it seemed for
+his own satisfaction than the other's enlightenment. "You'll all bide
+it, you dogs!" he continued in his beard, as he cast his eye over the
+weltering crowd. "Ha! so we are here, are we? And not too soon,
+either."
+
+He fell silent as they entered an open space, overlooked on one side by
+the dark facade of the cathedral, on the other three sides by houses more
+or less illumined. The rabble swept into this open space with them and
+before them, filled much of it in an instant, and for a while eddied and
+swirled this way and that, thrust onward by the worshippers who had
+issued from the church and backwards by those who had been first in the
+square, and had no mind to be hustled out of hearing. A stranger,
+confused by the sea of excited faces, and deafened by the clamour of
+"Vive le Roi!" "Vive Anjou!" mingled with cries against the Huguenots,
+might have fancied that the whole city was arrayed before him. But he
+would have been wide of the mark. The scum, indeed--and a dangerous
+scum--frothed and foamed and spat under Tavannes' bridle-hand; and here
+and there among them, but not of them, the dark-robed figure of a priest
+moved to and fro; or a Benedictine, or some smooth-faced acolyte egged on
+to the work he dared not do. But the decent burghers were not there.
+They lay bolted in their houses; while the magistrates, with little heart
+to do aught except bow to the mob--or other their masters for the time
+being--shook in their council chamber.
+
+There is not a city of France which has not seen it; which has not known
+the moment when the mass impended, and it lay with one man to start it or
+stay its course. Angers within its houses heard the clamour, and from
+the child, clinging to its mother's skirt, and wondering why she wept, to
+the Provost, trembled, believing that the hour had come. The Countess
+heard it too, and understood it. She caught the savage note in the voice
+of the mob--that note which means danger--and, her heart beating wildly,
+she looked to her husband. Then, fortunately for her, fortunately for
+Angers, it was given to all to see that in Count Hannibal's saddle sat a
+man.
+
+He raised his hand for silence, and in a minute or two--not at once, for
+the square was dusky--it was obtained. He rose in his stirrups, and
+bared his head.
+
+"I am from the King!" he cried, throwing his voice to all parts of the
+crowd. "And this is his Majesty's pleasure and good will! That every
+man hold his hand until to-morrow on pain of death, or worse! And at
+noon his further pleasure will be known! Vive le Roi!"
+
+And he covered his head again.
+
+"Vive le Roi!" cried a number of the foremost. But their shouts were
+feeble and half-hearted, and were quickly drowned in a rising murmur of
+discontent and ill-humour, which, mingled with cries of "Is that all? Is
+there no more? Down with the Huguenots!" rose from all parts. Presently
+these cries became merged in a persistent call, which had its origin, as
+far as could be discovered, in the darkest corner of the square. A call
+for "Montsoreau! Montsoreau! Give us Montsoreau!"
+
+With another man, or had Tavannes turned or withdrawn, or betrayed the
+least anxiety, words had become actions, disorder a riot; and that in the
+twinkling of an eye. But Count Hannibal, sitting his horse, with his
+handful of riders behind him, watched the crowd, as little moved by it as
+the Armed Knight of Notre Dame. Only once did he say a word. Then,
+raising his hand as before to gain a hearing--
+
+"You ask for Montsoreau?" he thundered. "You will have Montfaucon if you
+do not quickly go to your homes!"
+
+At which, and at the glare of his eye, the more timid took fright.
+Feeling his gaze upon them, seeing that he had no intention of
+withdrawing, they began to sneak away by ones and twos. Soon others
+missed them and took the alarm, and followed. A moment and scores were
+streaming away through lanes and alleys and along the main street. At
+last the bolder and more turbulent found themselves a remnant. They
+glanced uneasily at one another and at Tavannes, took fright in their
+turn, and plunging into the current hastened away, raising now and then
+as they passed through the streets a cry of "Vive Montsoreau!
+Montsoreau!"--which was not without its menace for the morrow.
+
+Count Hannibal waited motionless until no more than half a dozen groups
+remained in the open. Then he gave the word to dismount; for, so far,
+even the Countess and her women had kept their saddles, lest the movement
+which their retreat into the inn must have caused should be misread by
+the mob. Last of all he dismounted himself, and with lights going before
+him and behind, and preceded by Bigot, bearing his cloak and pistols, he
+escorted the Countess into the house. Not many minutes had elapsed since
+he had called for silence; but long before he reached the chamber looking
+over the square from the first floor, in which supper was being set for
+them, the news had flown through the length and breadth of Angers that
+for this night the danger was past. The hawk had come to Angers, and lo!
+it was a dove.
+
+Count Hannibal strode to one of the open windows and looked out. In the
+room, which was well lighted, were people of the house, going to and fro,
+setting out the table; to Madame, standing beside the hearth--which held
+its summer dressing of green boughs--while her woman held water for her
+to wash, the scene recalled with painful vividness the meal at which she
+had been present on the morning of the St. Bartholomew--the meal which
+had ushered in her troubles. Naturally her eyes went to her husband, her
+mind to the horror in which she had held him then; and with a kind of
+shock--perhaps because the last few minutes had shown him in a new
+light--she compared her old opinion of him with that which, much as she
+feared him, she now entertained.
+
+This afternoon, if ever, within the last few hours, if at all, he had
+acted in a way to justify that horror and that opinion. He had treated
+her--brutally; he had insulted and threatened her, had almost struck her.
+And yet--and yet Madame felt that she had moved so far from the point
+which she had once occupied that the old attitude was hard to understand.
+Hardly could she believe that it was on this man, much as she still
+dreaded him, that she had looked with those feelings of repulsion.
+
+She was still gazing at him with eyes which strove to see two men in one,
+when he turned from the window. Absorbed in thought, she had forgotten
+her occupation, and stood, the towel suspended in her half-dried hands.
+Before she knew what he was doing he was at her side; he bade the woman
+hold the bowl, and he rinsed his hands. Then he turned, and without
+looking at the Countess, he dried his hands on the farther end of the
+towel which she was still using.
+
+She blushed faintly. A something in the act, more intimate and more
+familiar than had ever marked their intercourse, set her blood running
+strangely. When he turned away and bade Bigot unbuckle his
+spur-leathers, she stepped forward.
+
+"I will do it!" she murmured, acting on a sudden and unaccountable
+impulse. And as she knelt, she shook her hair about her face to hide its
+colour.
+
+"Nay, Madame, but you will soil your fingers!" he said coldly.
+
+"Permit me," she muttered half coherently. And though her fingers shook,
+she pursued and performed her task.
+
+When she rose he thanked her; and then the devil in the man, or the
+Nemesis he had provoked when he took her by force from another--the
+Nemesis of jealousy, drove him to spoil all.
+
+"And for whose sake, Madame?" he added, with a jeer; "mine or M. de
+Tignonville's?" And with a glance between jest and earnest, he tried to
+read her thoughts.
+
+She winced as if he had indeed struck her, and the hot colour fled her
+cheeks.
+
+"For his sake!" she said, with a shiver of pain. "That his life may be
+spared!" And she stood back humbly, like a beaten dog. Though, indeed,
+it was for the sake of Angers, in thankfulness for the past rather than
+in any desperate hope of propitiating her husband, that she had done it!
+
+Perhaps he would have withdrawn his words. But before he could answer,
+the host, bowing to the floor, came to announce that all was ready, and
+that the Provost of the City, for whom M. le Comte had sent, was in
+waiting below.
+
+"Let him come up!" Tavannes answered, grave and frowning. "And see you,
+close the room, sirrah! My people will wait on us. Ah!" as the Provost,
+a burly man, with a face framed for jollity, but now pale and long,
+entered and approached him with many salutations. "How comes it, M. le
+Prevot--you are the Prevot, are you not?"
+
+"Yes, M. le Comte."
+
+"How comes it that so great a crowd is permitted to meet in the streets?
+And that at my entrance, though I come unannounced, I find half of the
+city gathered together?"
+
+The Provost stared. "Respect, M. le Comte," he said, "for His Majesty's
+letters, of which you are the bearer, no doubt induced some to come
+together."
+
+"Who said I brought letters?"
+
+"Who--?"
+
+"Who said I brought letters?" Count Hannibal repeated in a strenuous
+voice. And he ground his chair half about and faced the astonished
+magistrate. "Who said I brought letters?"
+
+"Why, my lord," the Provost stammered, "it was everywhere yesterday--"
+
+"Yesterday?"
+
+"Last night, at latest--that letters were coming from the King."
+
+"By my hand?"
+
+"By your lordship's hand--whose name is so well known here," the
+magistrate added, in the hope of clearing the great man's brow.
+
+Count Hannibal laughed darkly. "My hand will be better known by-and-by,"
+he said. "See you, sirrah, there is some practice here. What is this
+cry of Montsoreau that I hear?"
+
+"Your lordship knows that he is His Grace's lieutenant-governor in
+Saumur."
+
+"I know that, man. But is he here?"
+
+"He was at Saumur yesterday, and 'twas rumoured three days back that he
+was coming here to extirpate the Huguenots. Then word came of your
+lordship and of His Majesty's letters, and 'twas thought that M. de
+Montsoreau would not come, his authority being superseded."
+
+"I see. And now your rabble think that they would prefer M. Montsoreau.
+That is it, is it?"
+
+The magistrate shrugged his shoulders and opened his hands.
+
+"Pigs!" he said. And having spat on the floor, he looked apologetically
+at the lady. "True pigs!"
+
+"What connections has he here?" Tavannes asked.
+
+"He is a brother of my lord the Bishop's vicar, who arrived yesterday."
+
+"With a rout of shaven heads who have been preaching and stirring up the
+town!" Count Hannibal cried, his face growing red. "Speak, man; is it
+so? But I'll be sworn it is!"
+
+"There has been preaching," the Provost answered reluctantly.
+
+"Montsoreau may count his brother, then, for one. He is a fool, but with
+a knave behind him, and a knave who has no cause to love us! And the
+Castle? 'Tis held by one of M. de Montsoreau's creatures, I take it?"
+
+"Yes, my lord."
+
+"With what force?"
+
+The magistrate shrugged his shoulders, and looked doubtfully at Badelon,
+who was keeping the door. Tavannes followed the glance with his usual
+impatience. "Mon Dieu, you need not look at him!" he cried. "He has
+sacked St. Peter's and singed the Pope's beard with a holy candle! He
+has been served on the knee by Cardinals; and is Turk or Jew, or monk or
+Huguenot as I please. And Madame"--for the Provost's astonished eyes,
+after resting awhile on the old soldier's iron visage, had passed to
+her--"is Huguenot, so you need have no fear of her! There, speak, man,"
+with impatience, "and cease to think of your own skin!"
+
+The Provost drew a deep breath, and fixed his small eyes on Count
+Hannibal.
+
+"If I knew, my lord, what you--why, my own sister's son"--he paused, his
+face began to work, his voice shook--"is a Huguenot! Ay, my lord, a
+Huguenot! And they know it!" he continued, a flush of rage augmenting
+the emotion which his countenance betrayed. "Ay, they know it! And they
+push me on at the Council, and grin behind my back; Lescot, who was
+Provost two years back, and would match his son with my daughter; and
+Thuriot, who prints for the University! They nudge one another, and egg
+me on, till half the city thinks it is I who would kill the Huguenots!
+I!" Again his voice broke. "And my own sister's son a Huguenot! And my
+girl at home white-faced for--for his sake."
+
+Tavannes scanned the man shrewdly. "Perhaps she is of the same way of
+thinking?" he said.
+
+The Provost started, and lost one half of his colour. "God forbid!" he
+cried, "saving Madame's presence! Who says so, my lord, lies!"
+
+"Ay, lies not far from the truth."
+
+"My lord!"
+
+"Pish, man, Lescot has said it, and will act on it. And Thuriot, who
+prints for the University! Would you 'scape them? You would? Then
+listen to me. I want but two things. First, how many men has
+Montsoreau's fellow in the Castle? Few, I know, for he is a niggard, and
+if he spends, he spends the Duke's pay."
+
+"Twelve. But five can hold it."
+
+"Ay, but twelve dare not leave it! Let them stew in their own broth! And
+now for the other matter. See, man, that before daybreak three gibbets,
+with a ladder and two ropes apiece, are set up in the square. And let
+one be before this door. You understand? Then let it be done! The
+rest," he added with a ferocious smile, "you may leave to me."
+
+The magistrate nodded rather feebly. "Doubtless," he said, his eye
+wandering here and there, "there are rogues in Angers. And for rogues
+the gibbet! But saving your presence, my lord, it is a question
+whether--"
+
+But M. de Tavannes' patience was exhausted. "Will you do it?" he roared.
+"That is the question. And the only question."
+
+The Provost jumped, he was so startled. "Certainly, my lord, certainly!"
+he muttered humbly. "Certainly, I will!" And bowing frequently, but
+saying no more, he backed himself out of the room.
+
+Count Hannibal laughed grimly after his fashion, and doubtless thought
+that he had seen the last of the magistrate for that night. Great was
+his wrath, therefore, when, less than a minute later--and before Bigot
+had carved for him--the door opened, and the Provost appeared again. He
+slid in, and without giving the courage he had gained on the stairs time
+to cool, plunged into his trouble.
+
+"It stands this way, M. le Comte," he bleated. "If I put up the gibbets
+and a man is hanged, and you have letters from the King, 'tis a rogue the
+less, and no harm done. But if you have no letters from His Majesty,
+then it is on my shoulders they will put it, and 'twill be odd if they do
+not find a way to hang me to right him."
+
+Count Hannibal smiled grimly. "And your sister's son?" he sneered. "And
+your girl who is white-faced for his sake, and may burn on the same
+bonfire with him? And--"
+
+"Mercy! Mercy!" the wretched Provost cried. And he wrung his hands.
+"Lescot and Thuriot--"
+
+"Perhaps we may hang Lescot and Thuriot--"
+
+"But I see no way out," the Provost babbled. "No way! No way!"
+
+"I am going to show you one," Tavannes retorted. "If the gibbets are not
+in place by sunrise, I shall hang you from this window. That is one way
+out; and you'll be wise to take the other! For the rest and for your
+comfort, if I have no letters, it is not always to paper that the King
+commits his inmost heart."
+
+The magistrate bowed. He quaked, he doubted, but he had no choice.
+
+"My lord," he said, "I put myself in your hands. It shall be done,
+certainly it shall be done. But, but--" and shaking his head in
+foreboding, he turned to the door. At the last moment, when he was
+within a pace of it, the Countess rose impulsively to her feet. She
+called to him.
+
+"M. le Prevot, a minute, if you please," she said. "There may be trouble
+to-morrow; your daughter may be in some peril. You will do well to send
+her to me. My lord"--and on the word her voice, uncertain before, grew
+full and steady--"will see that I am safe. And she will be safe with
+me."
+
+The Provost saw before him only a gracious lady, moved by a
+thoughtfulness unusual in persons of her rank. He was at no pains to
+explain the flame in her cheek, or the soft light which glowed in her
+eyes, as she looked at him across her formidable husband. He was only
+profoundly grateful--moved even to tears. Humbly thanking her, he
+accepted her offer for his child, and withdrew wiping his eyes. When he
+was gone, and the door had closed behind him, Tavannes turned to the
+Countess, who still kept her feet.
+
+"You are very confident this evening," he sneered. "Gibbets do not
+frighten you, it seems, madame. Perhaps if you knew for whom the one
+before the door is intended?"
+
+She met his look with a searching gaze, and spoke with a ring of defiance
+in her tone. "I do not believe it!" she said. "I do not believe it! You
+who save Angers will not destroy him!" And then her woman's mood
+changing, with courage and colour ebbing together, "Oh no, you will not!
+You will not!" she wailed. And she dropped on her knees before him, and
+holding up her clasped hands, "God will put it in your heart to spare
+him--and me!"
+
+He rose with a stifled oath, took two steps from her, and in a tone
+hoarse and constrained, "Go!" he said. "Go, or sit! Do you hear,
+Madame? You try my patience too far!"
+
+But when she had gone his face was radiant. He had brought her, he had
+brought all, to the point at which he aimed. To-morrow his triumph
+awaited him. To-morrow he who had cast her down would raise her up.
+
+He did not foresee what a day would bring forth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII. IN THE LITTLE CHAPTER-HOUSE.
+
+
+The sun was an hour high, and in Angers the shops and booths, after the
+early fashion of the day, were open or opening. Through all the gates
+country folk were pressing into the gloomy streets of the Black Town with
+milk and fruit; and at doors and windows housewives cheapened fish, or
+chaffered over the fowl for the pot. For men must eat, though there be
+gibbets in the Place Ste.-Croix: gaunt gibbets, high and black and
+twofold, each, with its dangling ropes, like a double note of
+interrogation.
+
+But gibbets must eat also; and between ground and noose was so small a
+space in those days that a man dangled almost before he knew it. The
+sooner, then, the paniers were empty, and the clown, who pays for all,
+was beyond the gates, the better he, for one, would be pleased. In the
+market, therefore, was hurrying. Men cried their wares in lowered
+voices, and tarried but a little for the oldest customer. The bargain
+struck, the more timid among the buyers hastened to shut themselves into
+their houses again; the bolder, who ventured to the Place to confirm the
+rumour with their eyes, talked in corners and in lanes, avoided the open,
+and eyed the sinister preparations from afar. The shadow of the things
+which stood before the cathedral affronting the sunlight with their gaunt
+black shapes lay across the length and breadth of Angers. Even in the
+corners where men whispered, even in the cloisters where men bit their
+nails in impotent anger, the stillness of fear ruled all. Whatever Count
+Hannibal had it in his mind to tell the city, it seemed unlikely--and
+hour by hour it seemed less likely--that any would contradict him.
+
+He knew this as he walked in the sunlight before the inn, his spurs
+ringing on the stones as he made each turn, his movements watched by a
+hundred peering eyes. After all, it was not hard to rule, nor to have
+one's way in this world. But then, he went on to remember, not every one
+had his self-control, or that contempt for the weak and unsuccessful
+which lightly took the form of mercy. He held Angers safe, curbed by his
+gibbets. With M. de Montsoreau he might have trouble; but the trouble
+would be slight, for he knew Montsoreau, and what it was the Lieutenant-
+Governor valued above profitless bloodshed.
+
+He might have felt less confident had he known what was passing at that
+moment in a room off the small cloister of the Abbey of St. Aubin, a room
+known at Angers as the Little Chapter-house. It was a long chamber with
+a groined roof and stone walls, panelled as high as a tall man might
+reach with dark chestnut wood. Gloomily lighted by three grated windows,
+which looked on a small inner green, the last resting-place of the
+Benedictines, the room itself seemed at first sight no more than the last
+resting-place of worn-out odds and ends. Piles of thin sheepskin folios,
+dog's-eared and dirty, the rejected of the choir, stood against the
+walls; here and there among them lay a large brass-bound tome on which
+the chains that had fettered it to desk or lectern still rusted. A
+broken altar cumbered one corner: a stand bearing a curious--and
+rotting--map filled another. In the other two corners a medley of faded
+scutcheons and banners, which had seen their last Toussaint procession,
+mouldered slowly into dust--into much dust. The air of the room was full
+of it.
+
+In spite of which the long oak table that filled the middle of the
+chamber shone with use: so did the great metal standish which it bore.
+And though the seven men who sat about the table seemed, at a first
+glance and in that gloomy light, as rusty and faded as the rubbish behind
+them, it needed but a second look at their lean jaws and hungry eyes to
+be sure of their vitality.
+
+He who sat in the great chair at the end of the table was indeed rather
+plump than thin. His white hands, gay with rings, were well cared for;
+his peevish chin rested on a falling-collar of lace worthy of a Cardinal.
+But though the Bishop's Vicar was heard with deference, it was noticeable
+that when he had ceased to speak his hearers looked to the priest on his
+left, to Father Pezelay, and waited to hear his opinion before they gave
+their own. The Father's energy, indeed, had dominated the Angerins,
+clerks and townsfolk alike, as it had dominated the Parisian _devotes_
+who knew him well. The vigour which hate inspires passes often for solid
+strength; and he who had seen with his own eyes the things done in Paris
+spoke with an authority to which the more timid quickly and easily
+succumbed.
+
+Yet gibbets are ugly things; and Thuriot, the printer, whose pride had
+been tickled by a summons to the conclave, began to wonder if he had done
+wisely in coming. Lescot, too, who presently ventured a word.
+
+"But if M. de Tavannes' order be to do nothing," he began doubtfully,
+"you would not, reverend Father, have us resist his Majesty's will?"
+
+"God forbid, my friend!" Father Pezelay answered with unction. "But his
+Majesty's will is to do--to do for the glory of God and the saints and
+His Holy Church! How? Is that which was lawful at Saumur unlawful here?
+Is that which was lawful at Tours unlawful here? Is that which the King
+did in Paris--to the utter extermination of the unbelieving and the
+purging of that Sacred City--against his will here? Nay, his will is to
+do--to do as they have done in Paris and in Tours and in Saumur! But his
+Minister is unfaithful! The woman whom he has taken to his bosom has
+bewildered him with her charms and her sorceries, and put it in his mind
+to deny the mission he bears."
+
+"You are sure, beyond chance of error, that he bears letters to that
+effect, good Father?" the printer ventured.
+
+"Ask my lord's Vicar! He knows the letters and the import of them!"
+
+"They are to that effect," the Archdeacon answered, drumming on the table
+with his fingers and speaking somewhat sullenly. "I was in the
+Chancellery, and I saw them. They are duplicates of those sent to
+Bordeaux."
+
+"Then the preparations he has made must be against the Huguenots,"
+Lescot, the ex-Provost, said with a sigh of relief. And Thuriot's face
+lightened also. "He must intend to hang one or two of the ringleaders,
+before he deals with the herd."
+
+"Think it not!" Father Pezelay cried in his high shrill voice. "I tell
+you the woman has bewitched him, and he will deny his letters!"
+
+For a moment there was silence. Then, "But dare he do that, reverend
+Father?" Lescot asked slowly and incredulously. "What? Suppress the
+King's letters?"
+
+"There is nothing he will not dare! There is nothing he has not dared!"
+the priest answered vehemently, the recollection of the scene in the
+great guard-room of the Louvre, when Tavannes had so skilfully turned the
+tables on him, instilling venom into his tone. "She who lives with him
+is the devil's. She has bewitched him with her spells and her Sabbaths!
+She bears the mark of the Beast on her bosom, and for her the fire is
+even now kindling!"
+
+The laymen who were present shuddered. The two canons who faced them
+crossed themselves, muttering, "Avaunt, Satan!"
+
+"It is for you to decide," the priest continued, gazing on them
+passionately, "whether you will side with him or with the Angel of God!
+For I tell you it was none other executed the Divine judgments at Paris!
+It was none other but the Angel of God held the sword at Tours! It is
+none other holds the sword here! Are you for him or against him? Are
+you for him, or for the woman with the mark of the Beast? Are you for
+God or against God? For the hour draws near! The time is at hand! You
+must choose! You must choose!" And, striking the table with his hand,
+he leaned forward, and with glittering eyes fixed each of them in turn,
+as he cried, "You must choose! You must choose!" He came to the
+Archdeacon last.
+
+The Bishop's Vicar fidgeted in his chair, his face a shade more shallow,
+his cheeks hanging a trifle more loosely, than ordinary.
+
+"If my brother were here!" he muttered. "If M. de Montsoreau had
+arrived!"
+
+But Father Pezelay knew whose will would prevail if Montsoreau met
+Tavannes at his leisure. To force Montsoreau's hand, therefore, to
+surround him on his first entrance with a howling mob already committed
+to violence, to set him at their head and pledge him before he knew with
+whom he had to do--this had been, this still was, the priest's design.
+
+But how was he to pursue it while those gibbets stood? While their
+shadows lay even on the chapter table, and darkened the faces of his most
+forward associates? That for a moment staggered the priest; and had not
+private hatred, ever renewed by the touch of the scar on his brow, fed
+the fire of bigotry he had yielded, as the rabble of Angers were
+yielding, reluctant and scowling, to the hand which held the city in its
+grip. But to have come so far on the wings of hate, and to do nothing!
+To have come avowedly to preach a crusade, and to sneak away cowed! To
+have dragged the Bishop's Vicar hither, and fawned and cajoled and
+threatened by turns--and for nothing! These things were passing
+bitter--passing bitter, when the morsel of vengeance he had foreseen
+smacked so sweet on the tongue.
+
+For it was no common vengeance, no layman's vengeance, coarse and clumsy,
+which the priest had imagined in the dark hours of the night, when his
+feverish brain kept him wakeful. To see Count Hannibal roll in the dust
+had gone but a little way towards satisfying him. No! But to drag from
+his arms the woman for whom he had sinned, to subject her to shame and
+torture in the depths of some convent, and finally to burn her as a
+witch--it was that which had seemed to the priest in the night hours a
+vengeance sweet in the mouth.
+
+But the thing seemed unattainable in the circumstances. The city was
+cowed; the priest knew that no dependence was to be placed on Montsoreau,
+whose vice was avarice and whose object was plunder. To the Archdeacon's
+feeble words, therefore, "We must look," the priest retorted sternly,
+"not to M. de Montsoreau, reverend Father, but to the pious of Angers! We
+must cry in the streets, 'They do violence to God! They wound God and
+His Mother!' And so, and so only, shall the unholy thing be rooted out!"
+
+"Amen!" the Cure of St.-Benoist muttered, lifting his head; and his dull
+eyes glowed awhile. "Amen! Amen!" Then his chin sank again upon his
+breast.
+
+But the Canons of Angers looked doubtfully at one another, and timidly at
+the speakers; the meat was too strong for them. And Lescot and Thuriot
+shuffled in their seats. At length, "I do not know," Lescot muttered
+timidly.
+
+"You do not know?"
+
+"What can be done!"
+
+"The people will know!" Father Pezelay retorted "Trust them!"
+
+"But the people will not rise without a leader."
+
+"Then will I lead them!"
+
+"Even so, reverend Father--I doubt," Lescot faltered. And Thuriot nodded
+assent. Gibbets were erected in those days rather for laymen than for
+the Church.
+
+"You doubt!" the priest cried. "You doubt!" His baleful eyes passed
+from one to the other; from them to the rest of the company. He saw that
+with the exception of the Cure of St.-Benoist all were of a mind. "You
+doubt! Nay, but I see what it is! It is this," he continued slowly and
+in a different tone, "the King's will goes for nothing in Angers! His
+writ runs not here. And Holy Church cries in vain for help against the
+oppressor. I tell you, the sorceress who has bewitched him has bewitched
+you also. Beware! beware, therefore, lest it be with you as with him!
+And the fire that shall consume her, spare not your houses!"
+
+The two citizens crossed themselves, grew pale and shuddered. The fear
+of witchcraft was great in Angers, the peril, if accused of it, enormous.
+Even the Canons looked startled.
+
+"If--if my brother were here," the Archdeacon repeated feebly, "something
+might be done!"
+
+"Vain is the help of man!" the priest retorted sternly, and with a
+gesture of sublime dismissal. "I turn from you to a mightier than you!"
+And, leaning his head on his hands, he covered his face.
+
+The Archdeacon and the churchmen looked at him, and from him their scared
+eyes passed to one another. Their one desire now was to be quit of the
+matter, to have done with it, to escape; and one by one with the air of
+whipped curs they rose to their feet, and in a hurry to be gone muttered
+a word of excuse shamefacedly and got themselves out of the room. Lescot
+and the printer were not slow to follow, and in less than a minute the
+two strange preachers, the men from Paris, remained the only occupants of
+the chamber; save, to be precise, a lean official in rusty black, who
+throughout the conference had sat by the door.
+
+Until the last shuffling footstep had ceased to sound in the still
+cloister no one spoke. Then Father Pezelay looked up, and the eyes of
+the two priests met in a long gaze.
+
+"What think you?" Pezelay muttered at last.
+
+"Wet hay," the other answered dreamily, "is slow to kindle, yet burns if
+the fire be big enough. At what hour does he state his will?"
+
+"At noon."
+
+"In the Council Chamber?"
+
+"It is so given out."
+
+"It is three hundred yards from the Place Ste.-Croix and he must go
+guarded," the Cure of St.-Benoist continued in the same dull fashion. "He
+cannot leave many in the house with the woman. If it were attacked in
+his absence--"
+
+"He would return, and--" Father Pezelay shook his head, his cheek turned
+a shade paler. Clearly, he saw with his mind's eye more than he
+expressed.
+
+"_Hoc est corpus_," the other muttered, his dreamy gaze on the table. "If
+he met us then, on his way to the house and we had bell, book, and
+candle, would he stop?"
+
+"He would not stop!" Father Pezelay rejoined.
+
+"He would not?"
+
+"I know the man!"
+
+"Then--" but the rest St. Benoist whispered, his head drooping forward;
+whispered so low that even the lean man behind him, listening with greedy
+ears, failed to follow the meaning of his superior's words. But that he
+spoke plainly enough for his hearer Father Pezelay's face was witness.
+Astonishment, fear, hope, triumph, the lean pale face reflected all in
+turn; and, underlying all, a subtle malignant mischief, as if a devil's
+eyes peeped through the holes in an opera mask.
+
+When the other was at last silent, Pezelay drew a deep breath.
+
+"'Tis bold! Bold! Bold!" he muttered. "But have you thought? He who
+bears the--"
+
+"Brunt?" the other whispered, with a chuckle. "He may suffer? Yes, but
+it will not be you or I! No, he who was last here shall be first there!
+The Archdeacon-Vicar--if we can persuade him--who knows but that even for
+him the crown of martyrdom is reserved?" The dull eyes flickered with
+unholy amusement.
+
+"And the alarm that brings him from the Council Chamber?"
+
+"Need not of necessity be real. The pinch will be to make use of it.
+Make use of it--and the hay will burn!"
+
+"You think it will?"
+
+"What can one man do against a thousand? His own people dare not support
+him."
+
+Father Pezelay turned to the lean man who kept the door, and, beckoning
+to him, conferred a while with him in a low voice.
+
+"A score or so I might get," the man answered presently, after some
+debate. "And well posted, something might be done. But we are not in
+Paris, good father, where the Quarter of the Butchers is to be counted
+on, and men know that to kill Huguenots is to do God service! Here"--he
+shrugged his shoulders contemptuously--"they are sheep."
+
+"It is the King's will," the priest answered, frowning on him darkly.
+
+"Ay, but it is not Tavannes'," the man in black answered with a grimace.
+"And he rules here to-day."
+
+"Fool!" Pezelay retorted. "He has not twenty with him. Do you do as I
+say, and leave the rest to Heaven!"
+
+"And to you, good master?" the other answered. "For it is not all you
+are going to do," he continued, with a grin, "that you have told me.
+Well, so be it! I'll do my part, but I wish we were in Paris. St.
+Genevieve is ever kind to her servants."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX. THE ESCAPE.
+
+
+In a small back room on the second floor of the inn at Angers, a mean,
+dingy room which looked into a narrow lane, and commanded no prospect
+more informing than a blind wall, two men sat, fretting; or, rather, one
+man sat, his chin resting on his hand, while his companion, less patient
+or more sanguine, strode ceaselessly to and fro. In the first despair of
+capture--for they were prisoners--they had made up their minds to the
+worst, and the slow hours of two days had passed over their heads without
+kindling more than a faint spark of hope in their breasts. But when they
+had been taken out and forced to mount and ride--at first with feet tied
+to the horses' girths--they had let the change, the movement, and the
+open air fan the flame. They had muttered a word to one another, they
+had wondered, they had reasoned. And though the silence of their
+guards--from whose sour vigilance the keenest question drew no
+response--seemed of ill-omen, and, taken with their knowledge of the man
+into whose hands they had fallen, should have quenched the spark, these
+two, having special reasons, the one the buoyancy of youth, the other the
+faith of an enthusiast, cherished the flame. In the breast of one indeed
+it had blazed into a confidence so arrogant that he now took all for
+granted, and was not content.
+
+"It is easy for you to say 'Patience!'" he cried, as he walked the floor
+in a fever. "You stand to lose no more than your life, and if you escape
+go free at all points! But he has robbed me of more than life! Of my
+love, and my self-respect, curse him! He has worsted me not once, but
+twice and thrice! And if he lets me go now, dismissing me with my life,
+I shall--I shall kill him!" he concluded, through his teeth.
+
+"You are hard to please!"
+
+"I shall kill him!"
+
+"That were to fall still lower!" the minister answered, gravely regarding
+him. "I would, M. de Tignonville, you remembered that you are not yet
+out of jeopardy. Such a frame of mind as yours is no good preparation
+for death, let me tell you!"
+
+"He will not kill us!" Tignonville cried. "He knows better than most men
+how to avenge himself!"
+
+"Then he is above most!" La Tribe retorted. "For my part I wish I were
+sure of the fact, and I should sit here more at ease."
+
+"If we could escape, now, of ourselves!" Tignonville cried. "Then we
+should save not only life, but honour! Man, think of it! If we could
+escape, not by his leave, but against it! Are you sure that this is
+Angers?"
+
+"As sure as a man can be who has only seen the Black Town once or twice!"
+La Tribe answered, moving to the casement--which was not glazed--and
+peering through the rough wooden lattice. "But if we could escape we are
+strangers here. We know not which way to go, nor where to find shelter.
+And for the matter of that," he continued, turning from the window with a
+shrug of resignation, "'tis no use to talk of it while yonder foot goes
+up and down the passage, and its owner bears the key in his pocket."
+
+"If we could get out of his power as we came into it!" Tignonville cried.
+
+"Ay, if! But it is not every floor has a trap!"
+
+"We could take up a board."
+
+The minister raised his eyebrows.
+
+"We could take up a board!" the younger man repeated; and he stepped the
+mean chamber from end to end, his eyes on the floor. "Or--yes, _mon
+Dieu_!" with a change of attitude, "we might break through the roof?"
+And, throwing back his head, he scanned the cobwebbed surface of laths
+which rested on the unceiled joists.
+
+"Umph!"
+
+"Well, why not, Monsieur? Why not break through the ceiling?"
+Tignonville repeated, and in a fit of energy he seized his companion's
+shoulder and shook him. "Stand on the bed, and you can reach it."
+
+"And the floor which rests on it!"
+
+"_Par Dieu_, there is no floor! 'Tis a cockloft above us! See there!
+And there!" And the young man sprang on the bed, and thrust the rowel of
+a spur through the laths. La Tribe's expression changed. He rose slowly
+to his feet.
+
+"Try again!" he said.
+
+Tignonville, his face red, drove the spur again between the laths, and
+worked it to and fro until he could pass his fingers into the hole he had
+made. Then he gripped and bent down a length of one of the laths, and,
+passing his arm as far as the elbow through the hole, moved it this way
+and that. His eyes, as he looked down at his companion through the
+falling rubbish, gleamed with triumph.
+
+"Where is your floor now?" he asked.
+
+"You can touch nothing?"
+
+"Nothing. It's open. A little more and I might touch the tiles." And
+he strove to reach higher.
+
+For answer La Tribe gripped him. "Down! Down, Monsieur," he muttered.
+"They are bringing our dinner."
+
+Tignonville thrust back the lath as well as he could, and slipped to the
+floor; and hastily the two swept the rubbish from the bed. When Badelon,
+attended by two men, came in with the meal he found La Tribe at the
+window blocking much of the light, and Tignonville laid sullenly on the
+bed. Even a suspicious eye must have failed to detect what had been
+done; the three who looked in suspected nothing and saw nothing. They
+went out, the key was turned again on the prisoners, and the footsteps of
+two of the men were heard descending the stairs.
+
+"We have an hour, now!" Tignonville cried; and leaping, with flaming
+eyes, on the bed, he fell to hacking and jabbing and tearing at the laths
+amid a rain of dust and rubbish. Fortunately the stuff, falling on the
+bed, made little noise; and in five minutes, working half-choked and in a
+frenzy of impatience, he had made a hole through which he could thrust
+his arms, a hole which extended almost from one joist to its neighbour.
+By this time the air was thick with floating lime; the two could scarcely
+breathe, yet they dared not pause. Mounting on La Tribe's shoulders--who
+took his stand on the bed--the young man thrust his head and arms through
+the hole, and, resting his elbows on the joists, dragged himself up, and
+with a final effort of strength landed nose and knees on the timbers,
+which formed his supports. A moment to take breath, and press his torn
+and bleeding fingers to his lips; then, reaching down, he gave a hand to
+his companion and dragged him to the same place of vantage.
+
+They found themselves in a long narrow cockloft, not more than six feet
+high at the highest, and insufferably hot. Between the tiles, which
+sloped steeply on either hand, a faint light filtered in, disclosing the
+giant rooftree running the length of the house, and at the farther end of
+the loft the main tie-beam, from which a network of knees and struts rose
+to the rooftree.
+
+Tignonville, who seemed possessed by unnatural energy, stayed only to put
+off his boots. Then "Courage!" he panted, "all goes well!" and, carrying
+his boots in his hands, he led the way, stepping gingerly from joist to
+joist until he reached the tie-beam. He climbed on it, and, squeezing
+himself between the struts, entered a second loft, similar to the first.
+At the farther end of this a rough wall of bricks in a timber-frame
+lowered his hopes; but as he approached it, joy! Low down in the corner
+where the roof descended, a small door, square, and not more than two
+feet high, disclosed itself.
+
+The two crept to it on hands and knees and listened. "It will lead to
+the leads, I doubt?" La Tribe whispered. They dared not raise their
+voices.
+
+"As well that way as another!" Tignonville answered recklessly. He was
+the more eager, for there is a fear which transcends the fear of death.
+His eyes shone through the mask of dust, the sweat ran down to his chin,
+his breath came and went noisily. "Naught matters if we can escape him!"
+he panted. And he pushed the door recklessly. It flew open; the two
+drew back their faces with a cry of alarm.
+
+They were looking, not into the sunlight, but into a grey dingy garret
+open to the roof, and occupying the upper part of a gable-end somewhat
+higher than the wing in which they had been confined. Filthy truckle-
+beds and ragged pallets covered the floor, and, eked out by old saddles
+and threadbare horserugs, marked the sleeping quarters either of the
+servants or of travellers of the meaner sort. But the dinginess was
+naught to the two who knelt looking into it, afraid to move. Was the
+place empty? That was the point; the question which had first stayed,
+and then set their pulses at the gallop.
+
+Painfully their eyes searched each huddle of clothing, scanned each
+dubious shape. And slowly, as the silence persisted, their heads came
+forward until the whole floor lay within the field of sight. And still
+no sound! At last Tignonville stirred, crept through the doorway, and
+rose up, peering round him. He nodded, and, satisfied that all was safe,
+the minister followed him.
+
+They found themselves a pace or so from the head of a narrow staircase,
+leading downwards. Without moving, they could see the door which closed
+it below. Tignonville signed to La Tribe to wait, and himself crept down
+the stairs. He reached the door, and, stooping, set his eye to the hole
+through which the string of the latch passed. A moment he looked, and
+then, turning on tiptoe, he stole up again, his face fallen.
+
+"You may throw the handle after the hatchet!" he muttered. "The man on
+guard is within four yards of the door." And in the rage of
+disappointment he struck the air with his hand.
+
+"Is he looking this way?"
+
+"No. He is looking down the passage towards our room. But it is
+impossible to pass him."
+
+La Tribe nodded, and moved softly to one of the lattices which lighted
+the room. It might be possible to escape that way, by the parapet and
+the tiles. But he found that the casement was set high in the roof,
+which sloped steeply from its sill to the eaves. He passed to the other
+window, in which a little wicket in the lattice stood open. He looked
+through it. In the giddy void white pigeons were wheeling in the
+dazzling sunshine, and, gazing down, he saw far below him, in the hot
+square, a row of booths, and troops of people moving to and fro like
+pigmies; and--and a strange thing, in the middle of all! Involuntarily,
+as if the persons below could have seen his face at the tiny dormer, he
+drew back.
+
+He beckoned to M. Tignonville to come to him; and when the young man
+complied, he bade him in a whisper look down. "See!" he muttered.
+"There!"
+
+The younger man saw and drew in his breath. Even under the coating of
+dust his face turned a shade greyer.
+
+"You had no need to fear that he would let us go!" the minister muttered,
+with half-conscious irony.
+
+"No."
+
+"Nor I! There are two ropes." And La Tribe breathed a few words of
+prayer. The object which had fixed his gaze was a gibbet: the only one
+of the three which could be seen from their eyrie.
+
+Tignonville, on the other hand, turned sharply away, and with haggard
+eyes stared about the room. "We might defend the staircase," he
+muttered. "Two men might hold it for a time."
+
+"We have no food."
+
+"No." Suddenly he gripped La Tribe's arm. "I have it!" he cried. "And
+it may do! It must do!" he continued, his face working. "See!" And
+lifting from the floor one of the ragged pallets, from which the straw
+protruded in a dozen places, he set it flat on his head.
+
+It drooped at each corner--it had seen much wear--and, while it almost
+hid his face, it revealed his grimy chin and mortar-stained shoulders. He
+turned to his companion.
+
+La Tribe's face glowed as he looked. "It may do!" he cried. "It's a
+chance! But you are right! It may do!"
+
+Tignonville dropped the ragged mattress, and tore off his coat; then he
+rent his breeches at the knee, so that they hung loose about his calves.
+
+"Do you the same!" he cried. "And quick, man, quick! Leave your boots!
+Once outside we must pass through the streets under these"--he took up
+his burden again and set it on his head--"until we reach a quiet part,
+and there we--"
+
+"Can hide! Or swim the river!" the minister said. He had followed his
+companion's example, and now stood under a similar burden. With breeches
+rent and whitened, and his upper garments in no better case, he looked a
+sorry figure.
+
+Tignonville eyed him with satisfaction, and turned to the staircase.
+
+"Come," he cried, "there is not a moment to be lost. At any minute they
+may enter our room and find it empty! You are ready? Then, not too
+softly, or it may rouse suspicion! And mumble something at the door."
+
+He began himself to scold, and, muttering incoherently, stumbled down the
+staircase, the pallet on his head rustling against the wall on each side.
+Arrived at the door, he fumbled clumsily with the latch, and, when the
+door gave way, plumped out with an oath--as if the awkward burden he bore
+were the only thing on his mind. Badelon--he was on duty--stared at the
+apparition; but the next moment he sniffed the pallet, which was none of
+the freshest, and, turning up his nose, he retreated a pace. He had no
+suspicion; the men did not come from the part of the house where the
+prisoners lay, and he stood aside to let them pass. In a moment,
+staggering, and going a little unsteadily, as if they scarcely saw their
+way, they had passed by him, and were descending the staircase.
+
+So far well! Unfortunately, when they reached the foot of that flight
+they came on the main passage of the first-floor. It ran right and left,
+and Tignonville did not know which way he must turn to reach the lower
+staircase. Yet he dared not hesitate; in the passage, waiting about the
+doors, were four or five servants, and in the distance he caught sight of
+three men belonging to Tavannes' company. At any moment, too, an upper
+servant might meet them, ask what they were doing, and detect the fraud.
+He turned at random, therefore--to the left as it chanced--and marched
+along bravely, until the very thing happened which he had feared. A man
+came from a room plump upon them, saw them, and held up his hands in
+horror.
+
+"What are you doing?" he cried in a rage and with an oath. "Who set you
+on this?"
+
+Tignonville's tongue clave to the roof of his mouth. La Tribe from
+behind muttered something about the stable.
+
+"And time too!" the man said. "Faugh! But how come you this way? Are
+you drunk? Here!" He opened the door of a musty closet beside him,
+"Pitch them in here, do you hear? And take them down when it is dark.
+Faugh. I wonder you did not carry the things though her ladyship's room
+at once! If my lord had been in and met you! Now then, do as I tell
+you! Are you drunk?"
+
+With a sullen air Tignonville threw in his mattress. La Tribe did the
+same. Fortunately the passage was ill-lighted, and there were many
+helpers and strange servants in the inn. The butler only thought them
+ill-looking fellows who knew no better.
+
+"Now be off!" he continued irascibly. "This is no place for your sort.
+Be off!" And, as they moved, "Coming! Coming!" he cried in answer to a
+distant summons; and he hurried away on the errand which their appearance
+had interrupted.
+
+Tignonville would have gone to work to recover the pallets, for the man
+had left the key in the door. But as he went to do so the butler looked
+back, and the two were obliged to make a pretence of following him. A
+moment, however, and he was gone; and Tignonville turned anew to regain
+them. A second time fortune was adverse; a door within a pace of him
+opened, a woman came out. She recoiled from the strange figure; her eyes
+met his. Unluckily the light from the room behind her fell on his face,
+and with a shrill cry she named him.
+
+One second and all had been lost, for the crowd of idlers at the other
+end of the passage had caught her cry, and were looking that way. With
+presence of mind Tignonville clapped his hand on her mouth, and, huddling
+her by force into the room, followed her, with La Tribe at his heels.
+
+It was a large room, in which seven or eight people, who had been at
+prayers when the cry startled them, were rising from their knees. The
+first thing they saw was Javette on the threshold, struggling in the
+grasp of a wild man, ragged and begrimed; they deemed the city risen and
+the massacre upon them. Carlat threw himself before his mistress, the
+Countess in her turn sheltered a young girl, who stood beside her and
+from whose face the last trace of colour had fled. Madame Carlat and a
+waiting-woman ran shrieking to the window; another instant and the alarm
+would have gone abroad.
+
+Tignonville's voice stopped it. "Don't you know me?" he cried, "Madame!
+you at least! Carlat! Are you all mad?"
+
+The words stayed them where they stood in an astonishment scarce less
+than their alarm. The Countess tried twice to speak; the third time--
+
+"Have you escaped?" she muttered.
+
+Tignonville nodded, his eyes bright with triumph. "So far," he said.
+"But they may be on our heels at any moment! Where can we hide?"
+
+The Countess, her hand pressed to her side, looked at Javette.
+
+"The door, girl!" she whispered. "Lock it!"
+
+"Ay, lock it! And they can go by the back-stairs," Madame Carlat
+answered, awaking suddenly to the situation. "Through my closet! Once
+in the yard they may pass out through the stables."
+
+"Which way?" Tignonville asked impatiently. "Don't stand looking at me,
+but--"
+
+"Through this door!" Madame Carlat answered, hurrying to it.
+
+He was following when the Countess stepped forward and interposed between
+him and the door.
+
+"Stay!" she cried; and there was not one who did not notice a new
+decision in her voice, a new dignity in her bearing. "Stay, Monsieur, we
+may be going too fast. To go out now and in that guise--may it not be to
+incur greater peril than you incur here? I feel sure that you are in no
+danger of your life at present. Therefore, why run the risk--"
+
+"In no danger, Madame!" he cried, interrupting her in astonishment. "Have
+you seen the gibbet in the Square? Do you call that no danger?"
+
+"It is not erected for you."
+
+"No?"
+
+"No, Monsieur," she answered firmly, "I swear it is not. And I know of
+reasons, urgent reasons, why you should not go. M. de Tavannes"--she
+named her husband nervously, as conscious of the weak spot--"before he
+rode abroad laid strict orders on all to keep within, since the smallest
+matter might kindle the city. Therefore, M. de Tignonville, I request,
+nay I entreat," she continued with greater urgency, as she saw his
+gesture of denial, "you to stay here until he returns."
+
+"And you, Madame, will answer for my life?"
+
+She faltered. For a moment, a moment only, her colour ebbed. What if
+she deceived herself? What if she surrendered her old lover to death?
+What if--but the doubt was of a moment only. Her duty was plain.
+
+"I will answer for it," she said, with pale lips, "if you remain here.
+And I beg, I implore you--by the love you once had for me, M. de
+Tignonville," she added desperately, seeing that he was about to refuse,
+"to remain here."
+
+"Once!" he retorted, lashing himself into ignoble rage. "By the love I
+once had! Say, rather, the love I have, Madame--for I am no
+woman-weathercock to wed the winner, and hold or not hold, stay or go, as
+he commands! You, it seems," he continued with a sneer, "have learned
+the wife's lesson well! You would practise on me now, as you practised
+on me the other night when you stood between him and me! I yielded then,
+I spared him. And what did I get by it? Bonds and a prison! And what
+shall I get now? The same! No, Madame," he continued bitterly,
+addressing himself as much to the Carlats and the others as to his old
+mistress. "I do not change! I loved! I love! I was going and I go! If
+death lay beyond that door"--and he pointed to it--"and life at his will
+were certain here, I would pass the threshold rather than take my life of
+him!" And, dragging La Tribe with him, with a passionate gesture he
+rushed by her, opened the door, and disappeared in the next room.
+
+The Countess took one pace forward, as if she would have followed him, as
+if she would have tried further persuasion. But as she moved a cry
+rooted her to the spot. A rush of feet and the babel of many voices
+filled the passage with a tide of sound, which drew rapidly nearer. The
+escape was known! Would the fugitives have time to slip out below?
+
+Some one knocked at the door, tried it, pushed and beat on it. But the
+Countess and all in the room had run to the windows and were looking out.
+
+If the two had not yet made their escape they must be taken. Yet no; as
+the Countess leaned from the window, first one dusty figure and then a
+second darted from a door below, and made for the nearest turning, out of
+the Place Ste.-Croix. Before they gained it, four men, of whom, Badelon,
+his grey locks flying, was first, dashed out in pursuit, and the street
+rang with cries of "Stop him! Seize him! Seize him!" Some one--one of
+the pursuers or another--to add to the alarm let off a musket, and in a
+moment, as if the report had been a signal, the Place was in a hubbub,
+people flocked into it with mysterious quickness, and from a neighbouring
+roof--whence, precisely, it was impossible to say--the crackling fire of
+a dozen arquebuses alarmed the city far and wide.
+
+Unfortunately, the fugitives had been baulked at the first turning.
+Making for a second, they found it choked, and, swerving, darted across
+the Place towards St.-Maurice, seeking to lose themselves in the
+gathering crowd. But the pursuers clung desperately to their skirts,
+overturning here a man and there a child; and then in a twinkling,
+Tignonville, as he ran round a booth, tripped over a peg and fell, and La
+Tribe stumbled over him and fell also. The four riders flung themselves
+fiercely on their prey, secured them, and began to drag them with oaths
+and curses towards the door of the inn.
+
+The Countess had seen all from her window; had held her breath while they
+ran, had drawn it sharply when they fell. Now, "They have them!" she
+muttered, a sob choking her, "they have them!" And she clasped her
+hands. If he had followed her advice! If he had only followed her
+advice!
+
+But the issue proved less certain than she deemed it. The crowd, which
+grew each moment, knew nothing of pursuers or pursued. On the contrary,
+a cry went up that the riders were Huguenots, and that the Huguenots were
+rising and slaying the Catholics; and as no story was too improbable for
+those days, and this was one constantly set about, first one stone flew,
+and then another, and another. A man with a staff darted forward and
+struck Badelon on the shoulder, two or three others pressed in and
+jostled the riders; and if three of Tavannes' following had not run out
+on the instant and faced the mob with their pikes, and for a moment
+forced them to give back, the prisoners would have been rescued at the
+very door of the inn. As it was they were dragged in, and the gates were
+flung to and barred in the nick of time. Another moment, almost another
+second, and the mob had seized them. As it was, a hail of stones poured
+on the front of the inn, and amid the rising yells of the rabble there
+presently floated heavy and slow over the city the tolling of the great
+bell of St.-Maurice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX. SACRILEGE!
+
+
+M. de Montsoreau, Lieutenant-Governor of Saumur almost rose from his seat
+in his astonishment.
+
+"What! No letters?" he cried, a hand on either arm of the chair.
+
+The Magistrates stared, one and all. "No letters?" they muttered.
+
+And "No letters?" the Provost chimed in more faintly.
+
+Count Hannibal looked smiling round the Council table. He alone was
+unmoved.
+
+"No," he said. "I bear none."
+
+M. de Montsoreau, who, travel-stained and in his corselet, had the second
+place of honour at the foot of the table, frowned.
+
+"But, M. le Comte," he said, "my instructions from Monsieur were to
+proceed to carry out his Majesty's will in co-operation with you, who, I
+understood, would bring letters _de par le Roi_."
+
+"I had letters," Count Hannibal answered negligently. "But on the way I
+mislaid them."
+
+"Mislaid them?" Montsoreau cried, unable to believe his ears; while the
+smaller dignitaries of the city, the magistrates and churchmen who sat on
+either side of the table, gaped open-mouthed. It was incredible! It was
+unbelievable! Mislay the King's letters! Who had ever heard of such a
+thing?
+
+"Yes, I mislaid them. Lost them, if you like it better."
+
+"But you jest!" the Lieutenant-Governor retorted, moving uneasily in his
+chair. He was a man more highly named for address than courage; and,
+like most men skilled in finesse, he was prone to suspect a trap. "You
+jest, surely, Monsieur! Men do not lose his Majesty's letters, by the
+way."
+
+"When they contain his Majesty's will, no," Tavannes answered, with a
+peculiar smile.
+
+"You imply, then?"
+
+Count Hannibal shrugged his shoulders, but had not answered when Bigot
+entered and handed him his sweetmeat box; he paused to open it and select
+a prune. He was long in selecting; but no change of countenance led any
+of those at the table to suspect that inside the lid of the box was a
+message--a scrap of paper informing him that Montsoreau had left fifty
+spears in the suburb without the Saumur gate, besides those whom he had
+brought openly into the town. Tavannes read the note slowly while he
+seemed to be choosing his fruit. And then--
+
+"Imply?" he answered. "I imply nothing, M. de Montsoreau."
+
+"But--"
+
+"But that sometimes his Majesty finds it prudent to give orders which he
+does not mean to be carried out. There are things which start up before
+the eye," Tavannes continued, negligently tapping the box on the table,
+"and there are things which do not; sometimes the latter are the more
+important. You, better than I, M. de Montsoreau, know that the King in
+the Gallery at the Louvre is one, and in his closet is another."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And that being so--"
+
+"You do not mean to carry the letters into effect?"
+
+"Had I the letters, certainly, my friend. I should be bound by them. But
+I took good care to lose them," Tavannes added naively. "I am no fool."
+
+"Umph!"
+
+"However," Count Hannibal continued, with an airy gesture, "that is my
+affair. If you, M. de Montsoreau, feel inclined, in spite of the absence
+of my letters, to carry yours into effect, by all means do so--after
+midnight of to-day."
+
+M. de Montsoreau breathed hard. "And why," he asked, half sulkily and
+half ponderously, "after midnight only, M. le Comte?"
+
+"Merely that I may be clear of all suspicion of having lot or part in the
+matter," Count Hannibal answered pleasantly. "After midnight of to-night
+by all means do as you please. Until midnight, by your leave, we will be
+quiet."
+
+The Lieutenant-Governor moved doubtfully in his chair, the fear--which
+Tavannes had shrewdly instilled into his mind--that he might be disowned
+if he carried out his instructions, struggling with his avarice and his
+self-importance. He was rather crafty than bold; and such things had
+been, he knew. Little by little, and while he sat gloomily debating, the
+notion of dealing with one or two and holding the body of the Huguenots
+to ransom--a notion which, in spite of everything, was to bear good fruit
+for Angers--began to form in his mind. The plan suited him: it left him
+free to face either way, and it would fill his pockets more genteelly
+than would open robbery. On the other hand, he would offend his brother
+and the fanatical party, with whom he commonly acted. They were looking
+to see him assert himself. They were looking to hear him declare
+himself. And--
+
+Harshly Count Hannibal's voice broke in on his thoughts; harshly, a
+something sinister in its tone.
+
+"Where is your brother?" he said. And it was evident that he had not
+noted his absence until then. "My lord's Vicar of all people should be
+here!" he continued, leaning forward and looking round the table. His
+brow was stormy.
+
+Lescot squirmed under his eye; Thuriot turned pale and trembled. It was
+one of the canons of St.-Maurice, who at length took on himself to
+answer.
+
+"His lordship requested, M. le Comte," he ventured, "that you would
+excuse him. His duties--"
+
+"Is he ill?"
+
+"He--"
+
+"Is he ill, sirrah?" Tavannes roared. And while all bowed before the
+lightning of his eye, no man at the table knew what had roused the sudden
+tempest. But Bigot knew, who stood by the door, and whose ear, keen as
+his master's, had caught the distant report of a musket shot. "If he be
+not ill," Tavannes continued, rising and looking round the table in
+search of signs of guilt, "and there be foul play here, and he the
+player, the Bishop's own hand shall not save him! By Heaven it shall
+not! Nor yours!" he continued, looking fiercely at Montsoreau. "Nor
+your master's!"
+
+The Lieutenant-Governor sprang to his feet. "M. le Comte," he stammered,
+"I do not understand this language! Nor this heat, which may be real or
+not! All I say is, if there be foul play here--"
+
+"If!" Tavannes retorted. "At least, if there be, there be gibbets too!
+And I see necks!" he added, leaning forward. "Necks!" And then, with a
+look of flame, "Let no man leave this table until I return," he cried,
+"or he will have to deal with me. Nay," he continued, changing his tone
+abruptly, as the prudence, which never entirely left him--and perhaps the
+remembrance of the other's fifty spearmen--sobered him in the midst of
+his rage, "I am hasty. I mean not you, M. de Montsoreau! Ride where you
+will; ride with me, if you will, and I will thank you. Only remember,
+until midnight Angers is mine!"
+
+He was still speaking when he moved from the table, and, leaving all
+staring after him, strode down the room. An instant he paused on the
+threshold and looked back; then he passed out, and clattered down the
+stone stairs. His horse and riders were waiting, but, his foot in the
+stirrup, he stayed for a word with Bigot.
+
+"Is it so?" he growled.
+
+The Norman did not speak, but pointed towards the Place Ste.-Croix,
+whence an occasional shot made answer for him.
+
+In those days the streets of the Black City were narrow and crooked,
+overhung by timber houses, and hampered by booths; nor could Tavannes
+from the old Town Hall--now abandoned--see the Place Ste.-Croix. But
+that he could cure. He struck spurs to his horse, and, followed by his
+ten horsemen, he clattered noisily down the paved street. A dozen groups
+hurrying the same way sprang panic-stricken to the walls, or saved
+themselves in doorways. He was up with them, he was beyond them! Another
+hundred yards, and he would see the Place.
+
+And then, with a cry of rage, he drew rein a little, discovering what was
+before him. In the narrow gut of the way a great black banner, borne on
+two poles, was lurching towards him. It was moving in the van of a dark
+procession of priests, who, with their attendants and a crowd of devout,
+filled the street from wall to wall. They were chanting one of the
+penitential psalms, but not so loudly as to drown the uproar in the Place
+beyond them.
+
+They made no way, and Count Hannibal swore furiously, suspecting
+treachery. But he was no madman, and at the moment the least reflection
+would have sent him about to seek another road. Unfortunately, as he
+hesitated a man sprang with a gesture of warning to his horse's head and
+seized it; and Tavannes, mistaking the motive of the act, lost his self-
+control. He struck the fellow down, and, with a reckless word, rode
+headlong into the procession, shouting to the black robes to make way,
+make way! A cry, nay, a shriek of horror, answered him and rent the air.
+And in a minute the thing was done. Too late, as the Bishop's Vicar,
+struck by his horse, fell screaming under its hoofs--too late, as the
+consecrated vessels which he had been bearing rolled in the mud, Tavannes
+saw that they bore the canopy and the Host!
+
+He knew what he had done, then. Before his horse's iron shoes struck the
+ground again, his face--even his face--had lost its colour. But he knew
+also that to hesitate now, to pause now, was to be torn in pieces; for
+his riders, seeing that which the banner had veiled from him, had not
+followed him, and he was alone, in the middle of brandished fists and
+weapons. He hesitated not a moment. Drawing a pistol, he spurred
+onwards, his horse plunging wildly among the shrieking priests; and
+though a hundred hands, hands of acolytes, hands of shaven monks,
+clutched at his bridle or gripped his boot, he got clear of them. Clear,
+carrying with him the memory of one face seen an instant amid the crowd,
+one face seen, to be ever remembered--the face of Father Pezelay, white,
+evil, scarred, distorted by wicked triumph.
+
+Behind him, the thunder of "Sacrilege! Sacrilege!" rose to Heaven, and
+men were gathering. In front the crowd which skirmished about the inn
+was less dense, and, ignorant of the thing that had happened in the
+narrow street, made ready way for him, the boldest recoiling before the
+look on his face. Some who stood nearest to the inn, and had begun to
+hurl stones at the window and to beat on the doors--which had only the
+minute before closed on Badelon and his prisoners--supposed that he had
+his riders behind him; and these fled apace. But he knew better even
+than they the value of time; he pushed his horse up to the gates, and
+hammered them with his boot while be kept his pistol-hand towards the
+Place and the cathedral, watching for the transformation which he knew
+would come!
+
+And come it did; on a sudden, in a twinkling! A white-faced monk, frenzy
+in his eyes, appeared in the midst of the crowd. He stood and tore his
+garments before the people, and, stooping, threw dust on his head. A
+second and a third followed his example; then from a thousand throats the
+cry of "Sacrilege! Sacrilege!" rolled up, while clerks flew wildly
+hither and thither shrieking the tale, and priests denied the Sacraments
+to Angers until it should purge itself of the evil thing.
+
+By that time Count Hannibal had saved himself behind the great gates, by
+the skin of his teeth. The gates had opened to him in time. But none
+knew better than he that Angers had no gates thick enough, nor walls of a
+height, to save him for many hours from the storm he had let loose!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI. THE FLIGHT FROM ANGERS.
+
+
+But that only the more roused the devil in the man; that, and the
+knowledge that he had his own headstrong act to thank for the position.
+He looked on the panic-stricken people who, scared by the turmoil
+without, had come together in the courtyard, wringing their hands and
+chattering; and his face was so dark and forbidding that fear of him took
+the place of all other fear, and the nearest shrank from contact with
+him. On any other entering as he had entered, they would have hailed
+questions; they would have asked what was amiss, and if the city were
+rising, and where were Bigot and his men. But Count Hannibal's eye
+struck curiosity dumb. When he cried from his saddle, "Bring me the
+landlord!" the trembling man was found, and brought, and thrust forward
+almost without a word.
+
+"You have a back gate?" Tavannes said, while the crowd leaned forward to
+catch his words.
+
+"Yes, my lord," the man faltered.
+
+"Into the street which leads to the ramparts?"
+
+"Ye-yes, my lord."
+
+"Then"--to Badelon--"saddle! You have five minutes. Saddle as you never
+saddled before," he continued in a low tone, "or--" His tongue did not
+finish the threat, but his hand waved the man away. "For you"--he held
+Tignonville an instant with his lowering eye--"and the preaching fool
+with you, get arms and mount! You have never played aught but the woman
+yet; but play me false now, or look aside but a foot from the path I bid
+you take, and you thwart me no more, Monsieur! And you, Madame," he
+continued, turning to the Countess, who stood bewildered at one of the
+doors, the Provost's daughter clinging and weeping about her, "you have
+three minutes to get your women to horse! See you, if you please, that
+they take no longer!"
+
+She found her voice with difficulty. "And this child?" she said. "She
+is in my care."
+
+"Bring her," he muttered with a scowl of impatience. And then, raising
+his voice as he turned on the terrified gang of hostlers and inn servants
+who stood gaping round him, "Go help!" he thundered. "Go help! And
+quickly!" he added, his face growing a shade darker as a second bell
+began to toll from a neighbouring tower, and the confused babel in the
+Place Ste.-Croix settled into a dull roar of "_Sacrilege_!
+_sacrilege_."--"Hasten!"
+
+Fortunately it had been his first intention to go to the Council attended
+by the whole of his troop; and eight horses stood saddled in the stalls.
+Others were hastily pulled out and bridled, and the women were mounted.
+La Tribe, at a look from Tavannes, took behind him the Provost's
+daughter, who was helpless with terror. Between the suddenness of the
+alarm, the uproar without, and the panic within, none but a man whose
+people served him at a nod and dreaded his very gesture could have got
+his party mounted in time. Javette would fain have swooned, but she
+dared not. Tignonville would fain have questioned, but he shrank from
+the venture. The Countess would fain have said something, but she forced
+herself to obey and no more. Even so the confusion in the courtyard, the
+mingling of horses and men and trappings and saddle-bags, would have made
+another despair; but wherever Count Hannibal, seated in his saddle in the
+middle, turned his face, chaos settled into a degree of order, servants,
+ceasing to listen to the yells and cries outside, ran to fetch, women
+dropped cloaks from the gallery, and men loaded muskets and strapped on
+bandoliers.
+
+Until at last--but none knew what those minutes of suspense cost him--he
+saw all mounted, and, pistol in hand, shepherded them to the back gates.
+As he did so he stooped for a few scowling words with Badelon, whom he
+sent to the van of the party: then he gave the word to open. It was
+done; and even as Montsoreau's horsemen, borne on the bosom of a second
+and more formidable throng, swept raging into the already crowded square,
+and the cry went up for "a ram! a ram!" to batter in the gates, Tavannes,
+hurling his little party before him, dashed out at the back, and putting
+to flight a handful of rascals who had wandered to that side, cantered
+unmolested down the lane to the ramparts. Turning eastward at the foot
+of the frowning Castle, he followed the inner side of the wall in the
+direction of the gate by which he had entered the preceding evening.
+
+To gain this his party had to pass the end of the Rue Toussaint, which
+issues from the Place Ste.-Croix and runs so straight that the mob
+seething in front of the inn had only to turn their heads to see them.
+The danger incurred at this point was great; for a party as small as
+Tavannes' and encumbered with women would have had no chance if attacked
+within the walls.
+
+Count Hannibal knew it. But he knew also that the act which he had
+committed rendered the north bank of the Loire impossible for him.
+Neither King nor Marshal, neither Charles of Valois nor Gaspard of
+Tavannes, would dare to shield him from an infuriated Church, a Church
+too wise to forgive certain offences. His one chance lay in reaching the
+southern bank of the Loire--roughly speaking, the Huguenot bank--and
+taking refuge in some town, Rochelle or St. Jean d'Angely, where the
+Huguenots were strong, and whence he might take steps to set himself
+right with his own side.
+
+But to cross the great river which divides France into two lands widely
+differing he must leave the city by the east gate; for the only bridge
+over the Loire within forty miles of Angers lay eastward from the town,
+at Ponts de Ce, four miles away. To this gate, therefore, past the Rue
+Toussaint, he whirled his party daringly; and though the women grew pale
+as the sounds of riot broke louder on the ear, and they discovered that
+they were approaching instead of leaving the danger--and though
+Tignonville for an instant thought him mad, and snatched at the
+Countess's rein--his men-at-arms, who knew him, galloped stolidly on,
+passed like clockwork the end of the street, and, reckless of the stream
+of persons hurrying in the direction of the alarm, heedless of the fright
+and anger their passage excited, pressed steadily on. A moment and the
+gate through which they had entered the previous evening appeared before
+them. And--a sight welcome to one of them--it was open.
+
+They were fortunate indeed, for a few seconds later they had been too
+late. The alarm had preceded them. As they dashed up, a man ran to the
+chains of the portcullis and tried to lower it. He failed to do so at
+the first touch, and, quailing, fled from Badelon's levelled pistol. A
+watchman on one of the bastions of the wall shouted to them to halt or he
+would fire: but the riders yelled in derision, and thundering through the
+echoing archway, emerged into the open, and saw, extended before them, in
+place of the gloomy vistas of the Black Town, the glory of the open
+country and the vine-clad hills, and the fields about the Loire yellow
+with late harvest.
+
+The women gasped their relief, and one or two who were most out of breath
+would have pulled up their horses and let them trot, thinking the danger
+at an end. But a curt savage word from the rear set them flying again,
+and down and up and on again they galloped, driven forward by the iron
+hand which never relaxed its grip of them. Silent and pitiless he
+whirled them before him until they were within a mile of the long Ponts
+de Ce--a series of bridges rather than one bridge--and the broad shallow
+Loire lay plain before them, its sandbanks grilling in the sun, and grey
+lines of willows marking its eyots. By this time some of the women,
+white with fatigue, could only cling to their saddles with their hands;
+while others were red-hot, their hair unrolled, and the perspiration
+mingled with the dust on their faces. But he who drove them had no pity
+for weakness in an emergency. He looked back and saw, a half-mile behind
+them, the glitter of steel following hard on their heels: and "Faster!
+faster!" he cried, regardless of their prayers: and he beat the rearmost
+of the horses with his scabbard. A waiting-woman shrieked that she
+should fall, but he answered ruthlessly, "Fall then, fool!" and the
+instinct of self-preservation coming to her aid, she clung and bumped and
+toiled on with the rest until they reached the first houses of the town
+about the bridges, and Badelon raised his hand as a signal that they
+might slacken speed.
+
+The bewilderment of the start had been so great that it was then only,
+when they found their feet on the first link of the bridge, that two of
+the party, the Countess and Tignonville, awoke to the fact that their
+faces were set southwards. To cross the Loire in those days meant much
+to all: to a Huguenot, very much. It chanced that these two rode on to
+the bridge side by side, and the memory of their last crossing--the
+remembrance that, on their journey north a month before, they had crossed
+it hand-in-hand with the prospect of passing their lives together, and
+with no faintest thought of the events which were to ensue, flashed into
+the mind of each of them. It deepened the flush which exertion had
+brought to the woman's cheek, then left it paler than before. A minute
+earlier she had been wroth with her old lover; she had held him
+accountable for the outbreak in the town and this hasty retreat; now her
+anger died as she looked and she remembered. In the man, shallower of
+feeling and more alive to present contingencies, the uppermost emotion as
+he trod the bridge was one of surprise and congratulation.
+
+He could not at first believe in their good fortune. "_Mon Dieu_!" he
+cried, "we are crossing!" And then again in a lower tone, "We are
+crossing! We are crossing!" And he looked at her.
+
+It was impossible that she should not look back; that she who had ceased
+to be angry should not feel and remember; impossible that her answering
+glance should not speak to his heart. Below them, as on that day a month
+earlier, when they had crossed the bridges going northward, the broad
+shallow river ran its course in the sunshine, its turbid currents
+gleaming and flashing about the sandbanks and osier-beds. To the eye,
+the landscape, save that the vintage was farther advanced and the harvest
+in part gathered in, was the same. But how changed were their relations,
+their prospects, their hopes, who had then crossed the river
+hand-in-hand, planning a life to be passed together.
+
+The young man's rage boiled up at the thought. Too vividly, too sharply
+it showed him the wrongs which he had suffered at the hands of the man
+who rode behind him, the man who even now drove him on and ordered him
+and insulted him. He forgot that he might have perished in the general
+massacre if Count Hannibal had not intervened. He forgot that Count
+Hannibal had spared him once and twice. He laid on his enemy's shoulders
+the guilt of all, the blood of all: and, as quick on the thought of his
+wrongs and his fellows' wrongs followed the reflection that with every
+league they rode southwards the chance of requital grew, he cried again,
+and this time joyously--
+
+"We are crossing! A little, and we shall be in our own land!"
+
+The tears filled the Countess's eyes as she looked westwards and
+southwards.
+
+"Vrillac is there!" she cried; and she pointed. "I smell the sea!"
+
+"Ay!" he answered, almost under his breath. "It lies there! And no more
+than thirty leagues from us! With fresh horses we might see it in two
+days!"
+
+Badelon's voice broke in on them. "Forward!" he cried, as the party
+reached the southern bank. "_En avant_!" And, obedient to the word, the
+little company, refreshed by the short respite, took the road out of
+Ponts de Ce at a steady trot. Nor was the Countess the only one whose
+face glowed, being set southwards, or whose heart pulsed to the rhythm of
+the horses' hoofs that beat out "Home!" Carlat's and Madame Carlat's
+also. Javette even, hearing from her neighbour that they were over the
+Loire, plucked up courage; while La Tribe, gazing before him with
+moistened eyes, cried "Comfort" to the scared and weeping girl who clung
+to his belt. It was singular to see how all sniffed the air as if
+already it smacked of the sea and of the south; and how they of Poitou
+sat their horses as if they asked nothing better than to ride on and on
+and on until the scenes of home arose about them. For them the sky had
+already a deeper blue, the air a softer fragrance, the sunshine a purity
+long unknown.
+
+Was it wonderful, when they had suffered so much on that northern bank?
+When their experience during the month had been comparable only with the
+direst nightmare? Yet one among them, after the first impulse of relief
+and satisfaction, felt differently. Tignonville's gorge rose against the
+sense of compulsion, of inferiority. To be driven forward after this
+fashion, whether he would or no, to be placed at the back of every base-
+born man-at-arms, to have no clearer knowledge of what had happened or of
+what was passing, or of the peril from which they fled, than the women
+among whom he rode--these things kindled anew the sullen fire of hate.
+North of the Loire there had been some excuse for his inaction under
+insult; he had been in the man's country and power. But south of the
+Loire, within forty leagues of Huguenot Niort, must he still suffer,
+still be supine?
+
+His rage was inflamed by a disappointment he presently underwent. Looking
+back as they rode clear of the wooden houses of Ponts de Ce, he missed
+Tavannes and several of his men; and he wondered if Count Hannibal had
+remained on his own side of the river. It seemed possible; and in that
+event La Tribe and he and Carlat might deal with Badelon and the four who
+still escorted them. But when he looked back a minute later, Tavannes
+was within sight, following the party with a stern face; and not Tavannes
+only. Bigot, with two of the ten men who hitherto had been missing, was
+with him.
+
+It was clear, however, that they brought no good news, for they had
+scarcely ridden up before Count Hannibal cried, "Faster! faster!" in his
+harshest voice, and Bigot urged the horses to a quicker trot. Their
+course lay almost parallel with the Loire in the direction of Beaupreau;
+and Tignonville began to fear that Count Hannibal intended to recross the
+river at Nantes, where the only bridge below Angers spanned the stream.
+With this in view it was easy to comprehend his wish to distance his
+pursuers before he recrossed.
+
+The Countess had no such thought. "They must be close upon us!" she
+murmured, as she urged her horse in obedience to the order.
+
+"Whoever they are!" Tignonville muttered bitterly. "If we knew what had
+happened, or who followed, we should know more about it, Madame. For
+that matter, I know what I wish he would do. And our heads are set for
+it."
+
+"What?"
+
+"Make for Vrillac!" he answered, a savage gleam in his eyes.
+
+"For Vrillac?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Ah, if he would!" she cried, her face turning pale. "If he would. He
+would be safe there!"
+
+"Ay, quite safe!" he answered with a peculiar intonation. And he looked
+at her askance.
+
+He fancied that his thought, the thought which had just flashed into his
+brain, was her thought; that she had the same notion in reserve, and that
+they were in sympathy. And Tavannes, seeing them talking together, and
+noting her look and the fervour of her gesture, formed the same opinion,
+and retired more darkly into himself. The downfall of his plan for
+dazzling her by a magnanimity unparalleled and beyond compare, a plan
+dependent on the submission of Angers--his disappointment in this might
+have roused the worst passions of a better man. But there was in this
+man a pride on a level at least with his other passions: and to bear
+himself in this hour of defeat and flight so that if she could not love
+him she must admire him, checked in a strange degree the current of his
+rage.
+
+When Tignonville presently looked back he found that Count Hannibal and
+six of his riders had pulled up and were walking their horses far in the
+rear. On which he would have done the same himself; but Badelon called
+over his shoulder the eternal "Forward, Monsieur, _en avant_!" and
+sullenly, hating the man and his master more deeply every hour,
+Tignonville was forced to push on, with thoughts of vengeance in his
+heart.
+
+Trot, trot! Trot, trot! Through a country which had lost its smiling
+wooded character and grew more sombre and less fertile the farther they
+left the Loire behind them. Trot, trot! Trot, trot!--for ever, it
+seemed to some. Javette wept with fatigue, and the other women were
+little better. The Countess herself spoke seldom except to cheer the
+Provost's daughter; who, poor girl, flung suddenly out of the round of
+her life and cast among strangers, showed a better spirit than might have
+been expected. At length, on the slopes of some low hills, which they
+had long seen before them, a cluster of houses and a church appeared; and
+Badelon, drawing rein, cried--
+
+"Beaupreau, Madame! We stay an hour!"
+
+It was six o'clock. They had ridden some hours without a break. With
+sighs and cries of pain the women dropped from their clumsy saddles,
+while the men laid out such food--it was little--as had been brought, and
+hobbled the horses that they might feed. The hour passed rapidly, and
+when it had passed Badelon was inexorable. There was wailing when he
+gave the word to mount again; and Tignonville, fiercely resenting this
+dumb, reasonless flight, was at heart one of the mutineers. But Badelon
+said grimly that they might go on and live, or stay and die, as it
+pleased them; and once more they climbed painfully to their saddles, and
+jogged steadily on through the sunset, through the gloaming, through the
+darkness, across a weird, mysterious country of low hills and narrow
+plains which grew more wild and less cultivated as they advanced.
+Fortunately the horses had been well saved during the long leisurely
+journey to Angers, and now went well and strongly. When they at last
+unsaddled for the night in a little dismal wood within a mile of Clisson,
+they had placed some forty miles between themselves and Angers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII. THE ORDEAL BY STEEL.
+
+
+The women for the most part fell like sacks and slept where they
+alighted, dead weary. The men, when they had cared for the horses,
+followed the example; for Badelon would suffer no fire. In less than
+half an hour, a sentry who stood on guard at the edge of the wood, and
+Tignonville and La Tribe, who talked in low voices with their backs
+against a tree, were the only persons who remained awake, with the
+exception of the Countess. Carlat had made a couch for her, and screened
+it with cloaks from the wind and the eye; for the moon had risen and
+where the trees stood sparsest its light flooded the soil with pools of
+white. But Madame had not yet retired to her bed. The two men, whose
+voices reached her, saw her from time to time moving restlessly to and
+fro between the road and the little encampment. Presently she came and
+stood over them.
+
+"He led His people out of the wilderness," La Tribe was saying; "out of
+the trouble of Paris, out of the trouble of Angers, and always, always
+southward. If you do not in this, Monsieur, see His finger--"
+
+"And Angers?" Tignonville struck in, with a faint sneer. "Has He led
+that out of trouble? A day or two ago you would risk all to save it, my
+friend. Now, with your back safely turned on it, you think all for the
+best."
+
+"We did our best," the minister answered humbly. "From the day we met in
+Paris we have been but instruments."
+
+"To save Angers?"
+
+"To save a remnant."
+
+On a sudden the Countess raised her hand. "Do you not hear horses,
+Monsieur?" she cried. She had been listening to the noises of the night,
+and had paid little heed to what the two were saying.
+
+"One of ours moved," Tignonville answered listlessly. "Why do you not
+lie down, Madame?"
+
+Instead of answering, "Whither is he going?" she asked. "Do you know?"
+
+"I wish I did know," the young man answered peevishly. "To Niort, it may
+be. Or presently he will double back and recross the Loire."
+
+"He would have gone by Cholet to Niort," La Tribe said. "The direction
+is rather that of Rochelle. God grant we be bound thither!"
+
+"Or to Vrillac," the Countess cried, clasping her hands in the darkness.
+"Can it be to Vrillac he is going?"
+
+The minister shook his head.
+
+"Ah, let it be to Vrillac!" she cried, a thrill in her voice. "We should
+be safe there. And he would be safe."
+
+"Safe?" echoed a fourth and deeper voice. And out of the darkness beside
+them loomed a tall figure.
+
+The minister looked and leapt to his feet. Tignonville rose more slowly.
+
+The voice was Tavannes'. "And where am I to be safe?" he repeated
+slowly, a faint ring of saturnine amusement in his tone.
+
+"At Vrillac!" she cried. "In my house, Monsieur!"
+
+He was silent a moment. Then, "Your house, Madame? In which direction
+is it, from here?"
+
+"Westwards," she answered impulsively, her voice quivering with eagerness
+and emotion and hope. "Westwards, Monsieur--on the sea. The causeway
+from the land is long, and ten can hold it against ten hundred."
+
+"Westwards? And how far westwards?"
+
+Tignonville answered for her; in his tone throbbed the same eagerness,
+the same anxiety, which spoke in hers. Nor was Count Hannibal's ear deaf
+to it.
+
+"Through Challans," he said, "thirteen leagues."
+
+"From Clisson?"
+
+"Yes, Monsieur le Comte."
+
+"And by Commequiers less," the Countess cried.
+
+"No, it is a worse road," Tignonville answered quickly; "and longer in
+time."
+
+"But we came--"
+
+"At our leisure, Madame. The road is by Challans, if we wish to be there
+quickly."
+
+"Ah!" Count Hannibal said. In the darkness it was impossible to see his
+face or mark how he took it. "But being there, I have few men."
+
+"I have forty will come at call," she cried with pride. "A word to them,
+and in four hours or a little more--"
+
+"They would outnumber mine by four to one," Count Hannibal answered
+coldly, dryly, in a voice like ice-water flung in their faces. "Thank
+you, Madame; I understand. To Vrillac is no long ride; but we will not
+ride it at present." And he turned sharply on his heel and strode from
+them.
+
+He had not covered thirty paces before she overtook him in the middle of
+a broad patch of moonlight, and touched his arm. He wheeled swiftly, his
+hand halfway to his hilt. Then he saw who it was.
+
+"Ah," he said, "I had forgotten, Madame. You have come--"
+
+"No!" she cried passionately; and standing before him she shook back the
+hood of her cloak that he might look into her eyes. "You owe me no blow
+to-day. You have paid me, Monsieur. You have struck me already, and
+foully, like a coward. Do you remember," she continued rapidly, "the
+hour after our marriage, and what you said to me? Do you remember what
+you told me? And whom to trust and whom to suspect, where lay our
+interest and where our foes'? You trusted me then! What have I done
+that you now dare--ay, dare, Monsieur," she repeated fearlessly, her face
+pale and her eyes glittering with excitement, "to insult me? That you
+treat me as--Javette? That you deem me capable of _that_? Of luring you
+into a trap, and in my own house, or the house that was mine, of--"
+
+"Treating me as I have treated others."
+
+"You have said it!" she cried. She could not herself understand why his
+distrust had wounded her so sharply, so home, that all fear of him was
+gone. "You have said it, and put that between us which will not be
+removed. I could have forgiven blows," she continued, breathless in her
+excitement, "so you had thought me what I am. But now you will do well
+to watch me! You will do well to leave Vrillac on one side. For were
+you there, and raised your hand against me--not that that touches me, but
+it will do--and there are those, I tell you, would fling you from the
+tower at my word."
+
+"Indeed?"
+
+"Ay, indeed! And indeed, Monsieur!"
+
+Her face was in moonlight, his was in shadow.
+
+"And this is your new tone, Madame, is it?" he said, slowly and after a
+pregnant pause. "The crossing of a river has wrought so great a change
+in you?"
+
+"No!" she cried.
+
+"Yes," he said. And, despite herself, she flinched before the grimness
+of his tone. "You have yet to learn one thing, however: that I do not
+change. That, north or south, I am the same to those who are the same to
+me. That what I have won on the one bank I will hold on the other, in
+the teeth of all, and though God's Church be thundering on my heels! I
+go to Vrillac--"
+
+"You--go?" she cried. "You go?"
+
+"I go," he repeated, "to-morrow. And among your own people I will see
+what language you will hold. While you were in my power I spared you.
+Now that you are in your own land, now that you lift your hand against
+me, I will show you of what make I am. If blows will not tame you, I
+will try that will suit you less. Ay, you wince, Madame! You had done
+well had you thought twice before you threatened, and thrice before you
+took in hand to scare Tavannes with a parcel of clowns and fisherfolk. To-
+morrow, to Vrillac and your duty! And one word more, Madame," he
+continued, turning back to her truculently when he had gone some paces
+from her. "If I find you plotting with your lover by the way I will hang
+not you, but him. I have spared him a score of times; but I know him,
+and I do not trust him."
+
+"Nor me," she said, and with a white, set face she looked at him in the
+moonlight. "Had you not better hang me now?"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Lest I do you an injury!" she cried with passion; and she raised her
+hand and pointed northward. "Lest I kill you some night, Monsieur! I
+tell you, a thousand men on your heels are less dangerous than the woman
+at your side--if she hate you."
+
+"Is it so?" he cried. His hand flew to his hilt; his dagger flashed out.
+But she did not move, did not flinch, only she set her teeth; and her
+eyes, fascinated by the steel, grew wider.
+
+His hand sank slowly. He held the weapon to her, hilt foremost; she took
+it mechanically.
+
+"You think yourself brave enough to kill me, do you?" he sneered. "Then
+take this, and strike, if you dare. Take it--strike, Madame! It is
+sharp, and my arms are open." And he flung them wide, standing within a
+pace of her. "Here, above the collar-bone, is the surest for a weak
+hand. What, afraid?" he continued, as, stiffly clutching the weapon
+which he had put into her hand, she glared at him, trembling and
+astonished. "Afraid, and a Vrillac! Afraid, and 'tis but one blow! See,
+my arms are open. One blow home, and you will never lie in them. Think
+of that. One blow home, and you may lie in his. Think of that! Strike,
+then, Madame," he went on, piling taunt on taunt, "if you dare, and if
+you hate me. What, still afraid! How shall I give you heart? Shall I
+strike you? It will not be the first time by ten. I keep count, you
+see," he continued mockingly. "Or shall I kiss you? Ay, that may do.
+And it will not be against your will, either, for you have that in your
+hand will save you in an instant. Even"--he drew a foot nearer--"now!
+Even--" And he stooped until his lips almost touched hers.
+
+She sprang back. "Oh, do not!" she cried. "Oh, do not!" And, dropping
+the dagger, she covered her face with her hands, and burst into weeping.
+
+He stooped coolly, and, after groping some time for the poniard, drew it
+from the leaves among which it had fallen. He put it into the sheath,
+and not until he had done that did he speak. Then it was with a sneer.
+
+"I have no need to fear overmuch," he said. "You are a poor hater,
+Madame. And poor haters make poor lovers. 'Tis his loss! If you will
+not strike a blow for him, there is but one thing left. Go, dream of
+him!"
+
+And, shrugging his shoulders contemptuously, he turned on his heel.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII. THE AMBUSH.
+
+
+The start they made at daybreak was gloomy and ill-omened, through one of
+those white mists which are blown from the Atlantic over the flat lands
+of Western Poitou. The horses, looming gigantic through the fog, winced
+as the cold harness was girded on them. The men hurried to and fro with
+saddles on their heads, and stumbled over other saddles, and swore
+savagely. The women turned mutinous and would not rise; or, being
+dragged up by force, shrieked wild, unfitting words, as they were driven
+to the horses. The Countess looked on and listened, and shuddered,
+waiting for Carlat to set her on her horse. She had gone during the last
+three weeks through much that was dreary, much that was hopeless; but the
+chill discomfort of this forced start, with tired horses and wailing
+women, would have darkened the prospect of home had there been no fear or
+threat to cloud it.
+
+He whose will compelled all stood a little apart and watched all, silent
+and gloomy. When Badelon, after taking his orders and distributing some
+slices of black bread to be eaten in the saddle, moved off at the head of
+his troop, Count Hannibal remained behind, attended by Bigot and the
+eight riders who had formed the rearguard so far. He had not approached
+the Countess since rising, and she had been thankful for it. But now, as
+she moved away, she looked back and saw him still standing; she marked
+that he wore his corselet, and in one of those revulsions of
+feeling--which outrun man's reason--she who had tossed on her couch
+through half the night, in passionate revolt against the fate before her,
+took fire at his neglect and his silence; she resented on a sudden the
+distance he kept, and his scorn of her. Her breast heaved, her colour
+came, involuntarily she checked her horse, as if she would return to him,
+and speak to him. Then the Carlats and the others closed up behind her,
+Badelon's monotonous "Forward, Madame, _en avant_!" proclaimed the day's
+journey begun, and she saw him no more.
+
+Nevertheless, the motionless figure, looming Homeric through the fog,
+with gleams of wet light reflected from the steel about it, dwelt long in
+her mind. The road which Badelon followed, slowly at first, and with
+greater speed as the horses warmed to their work, and the women, sore and
+battered resigned themselves to suffering, wound across a flat expanse
+broken by a few hills. These were little more than mounds, and for the
+most part were veiled from sight by the low-lying sea-mist, through which
+gnarled and stunted oaks rose mysterious, to fade as strangely. Weird
+trees they were, with branches unlike those of this world's trees, rising
+in a grey land without horizon or limit, through which our travellers
+moved, weary phantoms in a clinging nightmare. At a walk, at a trot,
+more often at a jaded amble, they pushed on behind Badelon's humped
+shoulders. Sometimes the fog hung so thick about them that they saw only
+those who rose and fell in the saddles immediately before them; sometimes
+the air cleared a little, the curtain rolled up a space, and for a minute
+or two they discerned stretches of unfertile fields, half-tilled and
+stony, or long tracts of gorse and broom, with here and there a thicket
+of dwarf shrubs or a wood of wind-swept pines. Some looked and saw these
+things; more rode on sulky and unseeing, supporting impatiently the toils
+of a flight from they knew not what.
+
+To do Tignonville justice, he was not of these. On the contrary, he
+seemed to be in a better temper on this day and, where so many took
+things unheroically, he showed to advantage. Avoiding the Countess and
+riding with Carlat, he talked and laughed with marked cheerfulness; nor
+did he ever fail, when the mist rose, to note this or that landmark, and
+confirm Badelon in the way he was going.
+
+"We shall be at Lege by noon!" he cried more than once, "and if M. le
+Comte persists in his plan, may reach Vrillac by late sunset. By way of
+Challans!"
+
+And always Carlat answered, "Ay, by Challans, Monsieur, so be it!"
+
+He proved, too, so far right in his prediction that noon saw them drag, a
+weary train, into the hamlet of Lege, where the road from Nantes to
+Olonne runs southward over the level of Poitou. An hour later Count
+Hannibal rode in with six of his eight men, and, after a few minutes'
+parley with Badelon, who was scanning the horses, he called Carlat to
+him. The old man came.
+
+"Can we reach Vrillac to-night?" Count Hannibal asked curtly.
+
+"By Challans, my lord," the steward answered, "I think we can. We call
+it seven hours' riding from here."
+
+"And that route is the shortest?"
+
+"In time, M. le Comte, the road being better."
+
+Count Hannibal bent his brows. "And the other way?" he said.
+
+"Is by Commequiers, my lord. It is shorter in distance."
+
+"By how much?"
+
+"Two leagues. But there are fordings and a salt marsh; and with Madame
+and the women--"
+
+"It would be longer?"
+
+The steward hesitated. "I think so," he said slowly, his eyes wandering
+to the grey misty landscape, against which the poor hovels of the village
+stood out naked and comfortless. A low thicket of oaks sheltered the
+place from south-westerly gales. On the other three sides it lay open.
+
+"Very good," Tavannes said curtly. "Be ready to start in ten minutes.
+You will guide us."
+
+But when the ten minutes had elapsed and the party were ready to start,
+to the astonishment of all the steward was not to be found. To
+peremptory calls for him no answer came; and a hurried search through the
+hamlet proved equally fruitless. The only person who had seen him since
+his interview with Tavannes turned out to be M. de Tignonville; and he
+had seen him mount his horse five minutes before, and move off--as he
+believed--by the Challans road.
+
+"Ahead of us?"
+
+"Yes, M. le Comte," Tignonville answered, shading his eyes and gazing in
+the direction of the fringe of trees. "I did not see him take the road,
+but he was beside the north end of the wood when I saw him last.
+Thereabouts!" and he pointed to a place where the Challans road wound
+round the flank of the wood. "When we are beyond that point, I think we
+shall see him."
+
+Count Hannibal growled a word in his beard, and, turning in his saddle,
+looked back the way he had come. Half a mile away, two or three dots
+could be seen approaching across the plain. He turned again.
+
+"You know the road?" he said, curtly addressing the young man.
+
+"Perfectly. As well as Carlat."
+
+"Then lead the way, Monsieur, with Badelon. And spare neither whip nor
+spur. There will be need of both, if we would lie warm to-night."
+
+Tignonville nodded assent and, wheeling his horse, rode to the head of
+the party, a faint smile playing about his mouth. A moment, and the main
+body moved off behind him, leaving Count Hannibal and six men to cover
+the rear. The mist, which at noon had risen for an hour or two, was
+closing down again, and they had no sooner passed clear of the wood than
+the trees faded out of sight behind them. It was not wonderful that they
+could not see Carlat. Objects a hundred paces from them were completely
+hidden.
+
+Trot, trot! Trot, trot! through a grey world so featureless, so unreal
+that the riders, now dozing in the saddle, and now awaking, seemed to
+themselves to stand still, as in a nightmare. A trot and then a walk,
+and then a trot again; and all a dozen times repeated, while the women
+bumped along in their wretched saddles, and the horses stumbled, and the
+men swore at them.
+
+Ha! La Garnache at last, and a sharp turn southward to Challans. The
+Countess raised her head, and began to look about her. There, should be
+a church, she knew; and there, the old ruined tower built by wizards, or
+the Carthaginians, so old tradition ran; and there, to the westward, the
+great salt marshes towards Noirmoutier. The mist hid all, but the
+knowledge that they were there set her heart beating, brought tears to
+her eyes, and lightened the long road to Challans.
+
+At Challans they halted half an hour, and washed out the horses' mouths
+with water and a little _guignolet_--the spirit of the country. A dose
+of the cordial was administered to the women; and a little after seven
+they began the last stage of the journey, through a landscape which even
+the mist could not veil from the eyes of love. There rose the windmill
+of Soullans! There the old dolmen, beneath which the grey wolf that ate
+the two children of Tornic had its lair. For a mile back they had been
+treading my lady's land; they had only two more leagues to ride, and one
+of those was crumbling under each dogged footfall. The salt flavour,
+which is new life to the shore-born, was in the fleecy reek which floated
+by them, now thinner, now more opaque; and almost they could hear the
+dull thunder of the Biscay waves falling on the rocks.
+
+Tignonville looked back at her and smiled. She caught the look; she
+fancied that she understood it and his thoughts. But her own eyes were
+moist at the moment with tears, and what his said, and what there was of
+strangeness in his glance, half-warning, half-exultant, escaped her. For
+there, not a mile before them, where the low hills about the fishing
+village began to rise from the dull inland level--hills green on the land
+side, bare and scarped towards the sea and the island--she espied the
+wayside chapel at which the nurse of her early childhood had told her
+beads. Where it stood, the road from Commequiers and the road she
+travelled became one: a short mile thence, after winding among the
+hillocks, it ran down to the beach and the causeway--and to her home.
+
+At the sight she bethought herself of Carlat, and calling to M. de
+Tignonville, she asked him what he thought of the steward's continued
+absence.
+
+"He must have outpaced us!" he answered, with an odd laugh.
+
+"But he must have ridden hard to do that."
+
+He reined back to her. "Say nothing!" he muttered under his breath. "But
+look ahead, Madame, and see if we are expected!"
+
+"Expected? How can we be expected?" she cried. The colour rushed into
+her face.
+
+He put his finger to his lip, and looked warningly at Badelon's humped
+shoulders, jogging up and down in front of them. Then, stooping towards
+her, in a lower tone, "If Carlat has arrived before us, he will have told
+them," he said.
+
+"Have told them?"
+
+"He came by the other road, and it is quicker."
+
+She gazed at him in astonishment, her lips parted; and slowly she
+understood, and her eyes grew hard.
+
+"Then why," she said, "did you say it was longer. Had we been overtaken,
+Monsieur, we had had you to thank for it, it seems!"
+
+He bit his lip. "But we have not been overtaken," he rejoined. "On the
+contrary, you have me to thank for something quite different."
+
+"As unwelcome, perhaps!" she retorted. "For what?"
+
+"Softly, Madame."
+
+"For what?" she repeated, refusing to lower her voice. "Speak, Monsieur,
+if you please." He had never seen her look at him in that way.
+
+"For the fact," he answered, stung by her look and tone, "that when you
+arrive you will find yourself mistress in your own house! Is that
+nothing?"
+
+"You have called in my people?"
+
+"Carlat has done so, or should have," he answered. "Henceforth," he
+continued, a ring of exultation in his voice, "it will go hard with M. le
+Comte, if he does not treat you better than he has treated you hitherto.
+That is all!"
+
+"You mean that it will go hard with him in any case?" she cried, her
+bosom rising and falling.
+
+"I mean, Madame--But there they are! Good Carlat! Brave Carlat! He has
+done well!"
+
+"Carlat?"
+
+"Ay, there they are! And you are mistress in your own land! At last you
+are mistress, and you have me to thank for it! See!" And heedless in
+his exultation whether Badelon understood or not, he pointed to a place
+before them where the road wound between two low hills. Over the green
+shoulder of one of these, a dozen bright points caught and reflected the
+last evening light; while as he spoke a man rose to his feet on the
+hillside above, and began to make signs to persons below. A pennon, too,
+showed an instant over the shoulder, fluttered, and was gone.
+
+Badelon looked as they looked. The next instant he uttered a low oath,
+and dragged his horse across the front of the party.
+
+"Pierre!" he cried to the man on his left, "ride for your life! To my
+lord, and tell him we are ambushed!" And as the trained soldier wheeled
+about and spurred away, the sacker of Rome turned a dark scowling face on
+Tignonville. "If this be your work," he hissed, "we shall thank you for
+it in hell! For it is where most of us will lie to-night! They are
+Montsoreau's spears, and they have those with them are worse to deal with
+than themselves!" Then in a different tone, and throwing off all
+disguise, "Men to the front!" he shouted. "And you, Madame, to the rear
+quickly, and the women with you! Now, men, forward, and draw! Steady!
+Steady! They are coming!"
+
+There was an instant of confusion, disorder, panic; horses jostling one
+another, women screaming and clutching at men, men shaking them off and
+forcing their way to the van. Fortunately the enemy did not fall on at
+once, as Badelon expected, but after showing themselves in the mouth of
+the valley, at a distance of three hundred paces, hung for some reason
+irresolute. This gave Badelon time to array his seven swords in front;
+but real resistance was out of the question, as he knew. And to none
+seemed less in question than to Tignonville.
+
+When the truth, and what he had done, broke on the young man, he sat a
+moment motionless with horror. It was only when Badelon had twice
+summoned him with opprobrious words that he awoke to the relief of
+action. Even after that he hung an instant trying to meet the Countess's
+eyes, despair in his own; but it was not to be. She had turned her head,
+and was looking back, as if thence only and not from him could help come.
+It was not to him she turned; and he saw it, and the justice of it. And
+silent, grim, more formidable even than old Badelon, the veteran fighter,
+who knew all the tricks and shifts of the _melee_, he spurred to the
+flank of the line.
+
+"Now, steady!" Badelon cried again, seeing that the enemy were beginning
+to move. "Steady! Ha! Thank God, my lord! My lord is coming! Stand!
+Stand!" The distant sound of galloping hoofs had reached his ear in the
+nick of time. He stood in his stirrups and looked back. Yes, Count
+Hannibal was coming, riding a dozen paces in front of his men. The odds
+were still desperate--for he brought but six--the enemy were still three
+to one. But the thunder of his hoofs as he came up checked for a moment
+the enemy's onset; and before Montsoreau's people got started again Count
+Hannibal had ridden up abreast of the women, and the Countess, looking at
+him, knew that, desperate as was their strait, she had not looked behind
+in vain. The glow of battle, the stress of the moment, had displaced the
+cloud from his face; the joy of the born fighter lightened in his eye.
+His voice rang clear and loud above the press.
+
+"Badelon! wait you and two with Madame!" he cried. "Follow at fifty
+paces' distance, and, when we have broken them, ride through! The others
+with me! Now forward, men, and show your teeth! A Tavannes! A
+Tavannes! A Tavannes! We carry it yet!"
+
+And he dashed forward, leading them on, leaving the women behind; and
+down the sward to meet him, thundering in double line, came Montsoreau's
+men-at-arms, and with the men-at-arms, a dozen pale, fierce-eyed men in
+the Church's black, yelling the Church's curses. Madame's heart grew
+sick as she heard, as she waited, as she judged him by the fast-failing
+light a horse's length before his men--with only Tignonville beside him.
+
+She held her breath--would the shock never come? If Badelon had not
+seized her rein and forced her forward, she would not have moved. And
+then, even as she moved, they met! With yells and wild cries and a
+mare's savage scream, the two bands crashed together in a huddle of
+fallen or rearing horses, of flickering weapons, of thrusting men, of
+grapples hand-to-hand. What happened, what was happening to any one, who
+it was fell, stabbed through and through by four, or who were those who
+still fought single combats, twisting round one another's horses, those
+on her right and on her left, she could not tell. For Badelon dragged
+her on with whip and spur, and two horsemen--who obscured her
+view--galloped in front of her, and rode down bodily the only man who
+undertook to bar her passage. She had a glimpse of that man's face, as
+his horse, struck in the act of turning, fell sideways on him; and she
+knew it, in its agony of terror, though she had seen it but once. It was
+the face of the man whose eyes had sought hers from the steps of the
+church in Angers; the lean man in black, who had turned soldier of the
+Church--to his misfortune.
+
+Through? Yes, through, the way was clear before them! The fight with
+its screams and curses died away behind them. The horses swayed and all
+but sank under them. But Badelon knew it no time for mercy; iron-shod
+hoofs rang on the road behind, and at any moment the pursuers might be on
+their heels. He flogged on until the cots of the hamlet appeared on
+either side of the way; on, until the road forked and the Countess with
+strange readiness cried "The left!"--on, until the beach appeared below
+them at the foot of a sharp pitch, and beyond the beach the slow heaving
+grey of the ocean.
+
+The tide was high. The causeway ran through it, a mere thread lipped by
+the darkling waves, and at the sight a grunt of relief broke from
+Badelon. For at the end of the causeway, black against the western sky,
+rose the gateway and towers of Vrillac; and he saw that, as the Countess
+had said, it was a place ten men could hold against ten hundred!
+
+They stumbled down the beach, reached the causeway and trotted along it;
+more slowly now, and looking back. The other women had followed by hook
+or by crook, some crying hysterically, yet clinging to their horses and
+even urging them; and in a medley, the causeway clear behind them and no
+one following, they reached the drawbridge, and passed under the arch of
+the gate beyond.
+
+There friendly hands, Carlat's foremost, welcomed them and aided them to
+alight, and the Countess saw, as in a dream, the familiar scene, all
+unfamiliar: the gate, where she had played, a child, aglow with lantern-
+light and arms. Men, whose rugged faces she had known in infancy, stood
+at the drawbridge chains and at the winches. Others blew matches and
+handled primers, while old servants crowded round her, and women looked
+at her, scared and weeping. She saw it all at a glance--the lights, the
+black shadows, the sudden glow of a match on the groining of the arch
+above. She saw it, and turning swiftly, looked back the way she had
+come; along the dusky causeway to the low, dark shore, which night was
+stealing quickly from their eyes. She clasped her hands.
+
+"Where is Badelon?" she cried. "Where is he? Where is he?"
+
+One of the men who had ridden before her answered that he had turned
+back.
+
+"Turned back!" she repeated. And then, shading her eyes, "Who is
+coming?" she asked, her voice insistent. "There is some one coming. Who
+is it? Who is it?"
+
+Two were coming out of the gloom, travelling slowly and painfully along
+the causeway. One was La Tribe, limping; the other a rider, slashed
+across the forehead, and sobbing curses.
+
+"No more!" she muttered. "Are there no more?"
+
+The minister shook his head. The rider wiped the blood from his eyes,
+and turned up his face that he might see the better. But he seemed to be
+dazed, and only babbled strange words in a strange _patois_.
+
+She stamped her foot in passion. "More lights!" she cried. "Lights! How
+can they find their way? And let six men go down the _digue_, and meet
+them. Will you let them be butchered between the shore and this?"
+
+But Carlat, who had not been able to collect more than a dozen men, shook
+his head; and before she could repeat the order, sounds of battle,
+shrill, faint, like cries of hungry seagulls, pierced the darkness which
+shrouded the farther end of the causeway. The women shrank inward over
+the threshold, while Carlat cried to the men at the chains to be ready,
+and to some who stood at loopholes above, to blow up their matches and
+let fly at his word. And then they all waited, the Countess foremost,
+peering eagerly into the growing darkness. They could see nothing.
+
+A distant scuffle, an oath, a cry, silence! The same, a little nearer, a
+little louder, followed this time, not by silence, but by the slow tread
+of a limping horse. Again a rush of feet, the clash of steel, a scream,
+a laugh, all weird and unreal, issuing from the night; then out of the
+darkness into the light, stepping slowly with hanging head, moved a
+horse, bearing on its back a man--or was it a man?--bending low in the
+saddle, his feet swinging loose. For an instant the horse and the man
+seemed to be alone, a ghostly pair; then at their heels came into view
+two figures, skirmishing this way and that; and now coming nearer, and
+now darting back into the gloom. One, a squat figure, stooping low,
+wielded a sword with two hands; the other covered him with a half-pike.
+And then beyond these--abruptly as it seemed--the night gave up to sight
+a swarm of dark figures pressing on them and after them, driving them
+before them.
+
+Carlat had an inspiration. "Fire!" he cried; and four arquebuses poured
+a score of slugs into the knot of pursuers. A man fell, another shrieked
+and stumbled, the rest gave back. Only the horse came on spectrally,
+with hanging head and shining eyeballs, until a man ran out and seized
+its head, and dragged it, more by his strength than its own, over the
+drawbridge. After it Badelon, with a gaping wound in his knee, and
+Bigot, bleeding from a dozen hurts, walked over the bridge, and stood on
+either side of the saddle, smiling foolishly at the man on the horse.
+
+"Leave me!" he muttered. "Leave me!" He made a feeble movement with his
+hand, as if it held a weapon; then his head sank lower. It was Count
+Hannibal. His thigh was broken, and there was a lance-head in his arm.
+The Countess looked at him, then beyond him, past him into the darkness.
+
+"Are there no more?" she whispered tremulously. "No more?
+Tignonville--my--"
+
+Badelon shook his head. The Countess covered her face and wept.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV. WHICH WILL YOU, MADAME?
+
+
+It was in the grey dawning of the next day, at the hour before the sun
+rose, that word of M. de Tignonville's fate came to them in the castle.
+The fog which had masked the van and coming of night hung thick on its
+retreating skirts, and only reluctantly and little by little gave up to
+sight and daylight a certain thing which night had left at the end of the
+causeway. The first man to see it was Carlat, from the roof of the
+gateway; and he rubbed eyes weary with watching, and peered anew at it
+through the mist, fancying himself back in the Place Ste.-Croix at
+Angers, supposing for a wild moment the journey a dream, and the return a
+nightmare. But rub as he might, and stare as he might, the ugly outlines
+of the thing he had seen persisted--nay, grew sharper as the haze began
+to lift from the grey, slow-heaving floor of sea. He called another man
+and bade him look.
+
+"What is it?" he said. "D'you see, there? Below the village?"
+
+"'Tis a gibbet," the man answered, with a foolish laugh; they had watched
+all night. "God keep us from it."
+
+"A gibbet?"
+
+"Ay!"
+
+"But what is it for? What is it doing there?"
+
+"It is there to hang those they have taken, very like," the man answered,
+stupidly practical. And then other men came up, and stared at it and
+growled in their beards. Presently there were eight or ten on the roof
+of the gateway looking towards the land and discussing the thing; and by-
+and-by a man was descried approaching along the causeway with a white
+flag in his hand.
+
+At that Carlat bade one fetch the minister. "He understands things," he
+muttered, "and I misdoubt this. And see," he cried after the messenger,
+"that no word of it come to Mademoiselle!" Instinctively in the maiden
+home he reverted to the maiden title.
+
+The messenger went, and came again bringing La Tribe, whose head rose
+above the staircase at the moment the envoy below came to a halt before
+the gate. Carlat signed to the minister to come forward; and La Tribe,
+after sniffing the salt air, and glancing at the long, low, misty shore
+and the stiff ugly shape which stood at the end of the causeway, looked
+down and met the envoy's eyes. For a moment no one spoke. Only the men
+who had remained on the gateway, and had watched the stranger's coming,
+breathed hard.
+
+At last, "I bear a message," the man announced loudly and clearly, "for
+the lady of Vrillac. Is she present?"
+
+"Give your message!" La Tribe replied.
+
+"It is for her ears only."
+
+"Do you want to enter?"
+
+"No!" The man answered so hurriedly that more than one smiled. He had
+the bearing of a lay clerk of some precinct, a verger or sacristan; and
+after a fashion the dress of one also, for he was in dusty black and wore
+no sword, though he was girded with a belt. "No!" he repeated, "but if
+Madame will come to the gate, and speak to me--"
+
+"Madame has other fish to fry," Carlat blurted out. "Do you think that
+she has naught to do but listen to messages from a gang of bandits?"
+
+"If she does not listen she will repent it all her life!" the fellow
+answered hardily. "That is part of my message."
+
+There was a pause while La Tribe considered the matter. In the end,
+"From whom do you come?" he asked.
+
+"From His Excellency the Lieutenant-Governor of Saumur," the envoy
+answered glibly, "and from my Lord Bishop of Angers, him assisting by his
+Vicar; and from others gathered lawfully, who will as lawfully depart if
+their terms are accepted. Also from M. de Tignonville, a gentleman, I am
+told, of these parts, now in their hands and adjudged to die at sunset
+this day if the terms I bring be not accepted."
+
+There was a long silence on the gate. The men looked down fixedly; not a
+feature of one of them moved, for no one was surprised. "Wherefore is he
+to die?" La Tribe asked at last.
+
+"For good cause shown."
+
+"Wherefore?"
+
+"He is a Huguenot."
+
+The minister nodded. "And the terms?" Carlat muttered.
+
+"Ay, the terms!" La Tribe repeated, nodding afresh. "What are they?"
+
+"They are for Madame's ear only," the messenger made answer.
+
+"Then they will not reach it!" Carlat broke forth in wrath. "So much for
+that! And for yourself, see you go quickly before we make a target of
+you!"
+
+"Very well, I go," the envoy answered sullenly. "But--"
+
+"But what?" La Tribe cried, gripping Carlat's shoulder to quiet him. "But
+what? Say what you have to say, man! Speak out, and have done with it!'
+
+"I will say it to her and to no other."
+
+"Then you will not say it!" Carlat cried again. "For you will not see
+her. So you may go. And the black fever in your vitals."
+
+"Ay, go!" La Tribe added more quietly.
+
+The man turned away with a shrug of the shoulders, and moved off a dozen
+paces, watched by all on the gate with the same fixed attention. But
+presently he paused; he returned.
+
+"Very well," he said, looking up with an ill grace. "I will do my office
+here, if I cannot come to her. But I hold also a letter from M. de
+Tignonville, and that I can deliver to no other hands than hers!" He
+held it up as he spoke, a thin scrap of greyish paper, the fly-leaf of a
+missal perhaps. "See!" he continued, "and take notice! If she does not
+get this, and learns when it is too late that it was offered--"
+
+"The terms," Carlat growled impatiently. "The terms! Come to them!"
+
+"You will have them?" the man answered, nervously passing his tongue over
+his lips. "You will not let me see her, or speak to her privately?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then hear them. His Excellency is informed that one Hannibal de
+Tavannes, guilty of the detestable crime of sacrilege and of other gross
+crimes, has taken refuge here. He requires that the said Hannibal de
+Tavannes be handed to him for punishment, and, this being done before
+sunset this evening, he will yield to you free and uninjured the said M.
+de Tignonville, and will retire from the lands of Vrillac. But if you
+refuse"--the man passed his eye along the line of attentive faces which
+fringed the battlement--"he will at sunset hang the said Tignonville on
+the gallows raised for Tavannes, and will harry the demesne of Vrillac to
+its farthest border!"
+
+There was a long silence on the gate. Some, their gaze still fixed on
+him, moved their lips as if they chewed. Others looked aside, met their
+fellows' eyes in a pregnant glance, and slowly returned to him. But no
+one spoke. At his back the flush of dawn was flooding the east, and
+spreading and waxing brighter. The air was growing warm; the shore
+below, from grey, was turning green.
+
+In a minute or two the sun, whose glowing marge already peeped above the
+low hills of France, would top the horizon.
+
+The man, getting no answer, shifted his feet uneasily. "Well," he cried,
+"what answer am I to take?"
+
+Still no one moved.
+
+"I've done my part. Will no one give her the letter?" he cried. And he
+held it up. "Give me my answer, for I am going."
+
+"Take the letter!" The words came from the rear of the group in a voice
+that startled all. They turned, as though some one had struck them, and
+saw the Countess standing beside the hood which covered the stairs. They
+guessed that she had heard all or nearly all; but the glory of the
+sunrise, shining full on her at that moment, lent a false warmth to her
+face, and life to eyes woefully and tragically set. It was not easy to
+say whether she had heard or not. "Take the letter," she repeated.
+
+Carlat looked helplessly over the parapet.
+
+"Go down!"
+
+He cast a glance at La Tribe, but he got none in return, and he was
+preparing to do her bidding when a cry of dismay broke from those who
+still had their eyes bent downwards. The messenger, waving the letter in
+a last appeal, had held it too loosely; a light air, as treacherous, as
+unexpected, had snatched it from his hand, and bore it--even as the
+Countess, drawn by the cry, sprang to the parapet--fifty paces from him.
+A moment it floated in the air, eddying, rising, falling; then, light as
+thistledown, it touched the water and began to sink.
+
+The messenger uttered frantic lamentations, and stamped the causeway in
+his rage. The Countess only looked, and looked, until the rippling crest
+of a baby wave broke over the tiny venture, and with its freight of
+tidings it sank from sight.
+
+The man, silent now, stared a moment, then shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Well, 'tis fortunate it was his," he cried brutally, "and not His
+Excellency's, or my back had suffered! And now," he added impatiently,
+"by your leave, what answer?"
+
+What answer? Ah, God, what answer? The men who leant on the parapet,
+rude and coarse as they were, felt the tragedy of the question and the
+dilemma, guessed what they meant to her, and looked everywhere save at
+her.
+
+What answer? Which of the two was to live? Which die--shamefully?
+Which? Which?
+
+"Tell him--to come back--an hour before sunset," she muttered.
+
+They told him and he went; and one by one the men began to go too, and
+stole from the roof, leaving her standing alone, her face to the shore,
+her hands resting on the parapet. The light breeze which blew off the
+land stirred loose ringlets of her hair, and flattened the thin robe
+against her sunlit figure. So had she stood a thousand times in old
+days, in her youth, in her maidenhood. So in her father's time had she
+stood to see her lover come riding along the sands to woo her! So had
+she stood to welcome him on the eve of that fatal journey to Paris!
+Thence had others watched her go with him. The men remembered--remembered
+all; and one by one they stole shamefacedly away, fearing lest she should
+speak or turn tragic eyes on them.
+
+True, in their pity for her was no doubt of the end, or thought of the
+victim who must suffer--of Tavannes. They, of Poitou, who had not been
+with him, knew nothing of him; they cared as little. He was a northern
+man, a stranger, a man of the sword, who had seized her--so they heard--by
+the sword. But they saw that the burden of choice was laid on her;
+there, in her sight and in theirs, rose the gibbet; and, clowns as they
+were, they discerned the tragedy of her _role_, play it as she might, and
+though her act gave life to her lover.
+
+When all had retired save three or four, she turned and saw these
+gathered at the head of the stairs in a ring about Carlat, who was
+addressing them in a low eager voice. She could not catch a syllable,
+but a look hard and almost cruel flashed into her eyes as she gazed; and
+raising her voice she called the steward to her.
+
+"The bridge is up," she said, her tone hard, "but the gates? Are they
+locked?"
+
+"Yes, Madame."
+
+"The wicket?"
+
+"No, not the wicket." And Carlat looked another way.
+
+"Then go, lock it, and bring the keys to me!" she replied. "Or stay!"
+Her voice grew harder, her eyes spiteful as a cat's. "Stay, and be
+warned that you play me no tricks! Do you hear? Do you understand? Or
+old as you are, and long as you have served us, I will have you thrown
+from this tower, with as little pity as Isabeau flung her gallants to the
+fishes. I am still mistress here, never more mistress than this day. Woe
+to you if you forget it."
+
+He blenched and cringed before her, muttering incoherently.
+
+"I know," she said, "I read you! And now the keys. Go, bring them to
+me! And if by chance I find the wicket unlocked when I come down, pray,
+Carlat, pray! For you will have need of prayers."
+
+He slunk away, the men with him; and she fell to pacing the roof
+feverishly. Now and then she extended her arms, and low cries broke from
+her, as from a dumb creature in pain. Wherever she looked, old memories
+rose up to torment her and redouble her misery. A thing she could have
+borne in the outer world, a thing which might have seemed tolerable in
+the reeking air of Paris or in the gloomy streets of Angers wore here its
+most appalling aspect. Henceforth, whatever choice she made, this home,
+where even in those troublous times she had known naught but peace, must
+bear a damning stain! Henceforth this day and this hour must come
+between her and happiness, must brand her brow, and fix her with a deed
+of which men and women would tell while she lived! Oh, God--pray? Who
+said, pray?
+
+"I!" And La Tribe with tears in his eyes held out the keys to her. "I,
+Madame," he continued solemnly, his voice broken with emotion. "For in
+man is no help. The strongest man, he who rode yesterday a master of
+men, a very man of war in his pride and his valour--see him, now, and--"
+
+"Don't!" she cried, sharp pain in her voice. "Don't!" And she stopped
+him with her hand, her face averted. After an interval, "You come from
+him?" she muttered faintly.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Is he--hurt to death, think you?" She spoke low, and kept her face
+hidden from him.
+
+"Alas, no!" he answered, speaking the thought in his heart. "The men who
+are with him seem confident of his recovery."
+
+"Do they know?"
+
+"Badelon has had experience."
+
+"No, no. Do they know of this?" she cried. "Of this!" And she pointed
+with a gesture of loathing to the black gibbet on the farther strand.
+
+He shook his head. "I think not," he muttered. And after a moment, "God
+help you!" he added fervently. "God help and guide you, Madame!"
+
+She turned on him suddenly, fiercely. "Is that all you can do?" she
+cried. "Is that all the help you can give? You are a man. Go down,
+lead them out; drive off these cowards who drain our life's blood, who
+trade on a woman's heart! On them! Do something, anything, rather than
+lie in safety here--here!"
+
+The minister shook his head sadly. "Alas, Madame!" he said, "to sally
+were to waste life. They outnumber us three to one. If Count Hannibal
+could do no more than break through last night, with scarce a man
+unwounded--"
+
+"He had the women!"
+
+"And we have not him!"
+
+"He would not have left us!" she cried hysterically.
+
+"I believe it."
+
+"Had they taken me, do you think he would have lain behind walls? Or
+skulked in safety here, while--while--" Her voice failed her.
+
+He shook his head despondently.
+
+"And that is all you can do?" she cried, and turned from him, and to him
+again, extending her arms, in bitter scorn. "All you will do? Do you
+forget that twice he spared your life? That in Paris once, and once in
+Angers, he held his hand? That always, whether he stood or whether he
+fled, he held himself between us and harm? Ay, always? And who will now
+raise a hand for him? Who?"
+
+"Madame!"
+
+"Who? Who? Had he died in the field," she continued, her voice shaking
+with grief, her hands beating the parapet--for she had turned from
+him--"had he fallen where he rode last night, in the front, with his face
+to the foe, I had viewed him tearless, I had deemed him happy! I had
+prayed dry-eyed for him who--who spared me all these days and weeks! Whom
+I robbed and he forgave me! Whom I tempted, and he forbore me! Ay, and
+who spared not once or twice him for whom he must now--he must now--" And
+unable to finish the sentence she beat her hands again and passionately
+on the stones.
+
+"Heaven knows, Madame," the minister cried vehemently, "Heaven knows, I
+would advise you if I could."
+
+"Why did he wear his corselet?" she wailed, as if she had not heard him.
+"Was there no spear could reach his breast, that he must come to this? No
+foe so gentle he would spare him this? Or why did _he_ not die with me
+in Paris when we waited? In another minute death might have come and
+saved us this."
+
+With the tears running down his face he tried to comfort her.
+
+"Man that is a shadow," he said, "passeth away--what matter how? A
+little while, a very little while, and we shall pass!"
+
+"With his curse upon us!" she cried. And, shuddering, she pressed her
+hands to her eyes to shut out the sight her fancy pictured.
+
+He left her for a while, hoping that in solitude she might regain control
+of herself. When he returned he found her seated, and outwardly more
+composed; her arms resting on the parapet-wall, her eyes bent steadily on
+the long stretch of hard sand which ran northward from the village. By
+that route her lover had many a time come to her; there she had ridden
+with him in the early days; and that way they had started for Paris on
+such a morning and at such an hour as this, with sunshine about them, and
+larks singing hope above the sand-dunes, and with wavelets creaming to
+the horses' hoofs!
+
+Of all which La Tribe, a stranger, knew nothing. The rapt gaze, the
+unchanging attitude only confirmed his opinion of the course she would
+adopt. He was thankful to find her more composed; and in fear of such a
+scene as had already passed between them, he stole away again. He
+returned by-and-by, but with the greatest reluctance, and only because
+Carlat's urgency would take no refusal.
+
+He came this time to crave the key of the wicket, explaining that--rather
+to satisfy his own conscience and the men than with any hope of
+success--he proposed to go halfway along the causeway, and thence by
+signs invite a conference.
+
+"It is just possible," he added, hesitating--he feared nothing so much as
+to raise hopes in her--"that by the offer of a money ransom, Madame--"
+
+"Go," she said, without turning her head. "Offer what you please.
+But"--bitterly--"have a care of them! Montsoreau is very like Montereau!
+Beware of the bridge!"
+
+He went and came again in half an hour. Then, indeed, though she had
+spoken as if hope was dead in her, she was on her feet at the first sound
+of his tread on the stairs; her parted lips and her white face questioned
+him. He shook his head.
+
+"There is a priest," he said in broken tones, "with them, whom God will
+judge. It is his plan, and he is without mercy or pity."
+
+"You bring nothing from--him?"
+
+"They will not suffer him to write again."
+
+"You did not see him?"
+
+"No."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV. AGAINST THE WALL.
+
+
+In a room beside the gateway, into which, as the nearest and most
+convenient place, Count Hannibal had been carried from his saddle, a man
+sat sideways in the narrow embrasure of a loophole, to which his eyes
+seemed glued. The room, which formed part of the oldest block of the
+chateau, and was ordinarily the quarters of the Carlats, possessed two
+other windows, deep-set indeed, yet superior to that through which
+Bigot--for he it was--peered so persistently. But the larger windows
+looked southwards, across the bay--at this moment the noon-high sun was
+pouring his radiance through them; while the object which held Bigot's
+gaze and fixed him to his irksome seat, lay elsewhere. The loophole
+commanded the causeway leading shorewards; through it the Norman could
+see who came and went, and even the cross-beam of the ugly object which
+rose where the causeway touched the land.
+
+On a flat truckle-bed behind the door lay Count Hannibal, his injured leg
+protected from the coverlid by a kind of cage. His eyes were bright with
+fever, and his untended beard and straggling hair heightened the wildness
+of his aspect. But he was in possession of his senses; and as his gaze
+passed from Bigot at the window to the old Free Companion, who sat on a
+stool beside him, engaged in shaping a piece of wood into a splint, an
+expression almost soft crept into his harsh face.
+
+"Old fool!" he said. And his voice, though changed, had not lost all its
+strength and harshness. "Did the Constable need a splint when you laid
+him under the tower at Gaeta?"
+
+The old man lifted his eyes from his task, and glanced through the
+nearest window.
+
+"It is long from noon to night," he said quietly, "and far from cup to
+lip, my lord!"
+
+"It would be if I had two legs," Tavannes answered, with a grimace, half-
+snarl, half-smile. "As it is--where is that dagger? It leaves me every
+minute."
+
+It had slipped from the coverlid to the ground. Badelon took it up, and
+set it on the bed within reach of his master's hand.
+
+Bigot swore fiercely. "It would be farther still," he growled, "if you
+would be guided by me, my lord. Give me leave to bar the door, and
+'twill be long before these fisher clowns force it. Badelon and I--"
+
+"Being in your full strength," Count Hannibal murmured cynically.
+
+"Could hold it. We have strength enough for that," the Norman boasted,
+though his livid face and his bandages gave the lie to his words. He
+could not move without pain; and for Badelon, his knee was as big as two
+with plaisters of his own placing.
+
+Count Hannibal stared at the ceiling. "You could not strike two blows!"
+he said. "Don't lie to me! And Badelon cannot walk two yards! Fine
+fighters!" he continued with bitterness, not all bitter. "Fine bars
+'twixt a man and death! No, it is time to turn the face to the wall.
+And, since go I must, it shall not be said Count Hannibal dared not go
+alone! Besides--"
+
+Bigot stopped him with an oath that was in part a cry of pain.
+
+"D---n her!" he exclaimed in fury, "'tis she is that _besides_! I know
+it. 'Tis she has been our ruin from the day we saw her first, ay, to
+this day! 'Tis she has bewitched you until your blood, my lord, has
+turned to water. Or you would never, to save the hand that betrayed us,
+never to save a man--"
+
+"Silence!" Count Hannibal cried, in a terrible voice. And rising on his
+elbow, he poised the dagger as if he would hurl it. "Silence, or I will
+spit you like the vermin you are! Silence, and listen! And you, old ban-
+dog, listen too, for I know you obstinate! It is not to save him. It is
+because I will die as I have lived, fearing nothing and asking nothing!
+It were easy to bar the door as you would have me, and die in the corner
+here like a wolf at bay, biting to the last. That were easy, old wolf-
+hound! Pleasant and good sport!"
+
+"Ay! That were a death!" the veteran cried, his eyes brightening. "So I
+would fain die!"
+
+"And I!" Count Hannibal returned, showing his teeth in a grim smile. "I
+too! Yet I will not! I will not! Because so to die were to die
+unwillingly, and give them triumph. Be dragged to death? No, old dog,
+if die we must, we will go to death! We will die grandly, highly, as
+becomes Tavannes! That when we are gone they may say, 'There died a
+man!'"
+
+"_She_ may say!" Bigot muttered, scowling.
+
+Count Hannibal heard and glared at him, but presently thought better of
+it, and after a pause--
+
+"Ay, she too!" he said. "Why not? As we have played the game--for
+her--so, though we lose, we will play it to the end; nor because we lose
+throw down the cards! Besides, man, die in the corner, die biting, and
+he dies too!"
+
+"And why not?" Bigot asked, rising in a fury. "Why not? Whose work is
+it we lie here, snared by these clowns of fisherfolk? Who led us wrong
+and betrayed us? He die? Would the devil had taken him a year ago!
+Would he were within my reach now! I would kill him with my bare
+fingers! He die? And why not?"
+
+"Why, because, fool, his death would not save me!" Count Hannibal
+answered coolly. "If it would, he would die! But it will not; and we
+must even do again as we have done. I have spared him--he's a
+white-livered hound!--both once and twice, and we must go to the end with
+it since no better can be! I have thought it out, and it must be. Only
+see you, old dog, that I have the dagger hid in the splint where I can
+reach it. And then, when the exchange has been made, and my lady has her
+silk glove again--to put in her bosom!"--with a grimace and a sudden
+reddening of his harsh features--"if master priest come within reach of
+my arm, I'll send him before me, where I go."
+
+"Ay, ay!" said Badelon. "And if you fail of your stroke I will not fail
+of mine! I shall be there, and I will see to it he goes! I shall be
+there!"
+
+"You?"
+
+"Ay, why not?" the old man answered quietly. "I may halt on this leg for
+aught I know, and come to starve on crutches like old Claude Boiteux who
+was at the taking of Milan and now begs in the passage under the
+Chatelet."
+
+"Bah, man, you will get a new lord!"
+
+Badelon nodded. "Ay, a new lord with new ways!" he answered slowly and
+thoughtfully. "And I am tired. They are of another sort, lords now,
+than they were when I was young. It was a word and a blow then. Now I
+am old, with most it is--'Old hog, your distance! You scent my lady!'
+Then they rode, and hunted, and tilted year in and year out, and summer
+or winter heard the lark sing. Now they are curled, and paint
+themselves, and lie in silk and toy with ladies--who shamed to be seen at
+Court or board when I was a boy--and love better to hear the mouse squeak
+than the lark sing."
+
+"Still, if I give you my gold chain," Count Hannibal answered quietly,
+"'twill keep you from that."
+
+"Give it to Bigot," the old man answered. The splint he was fashioning
+had fallen on his knees, and his eyes were fixed on the distance of his
+youth. "For me, my lord, I am tired, and I go with you. I go with you.
+It is a good death to die biting before the strength be quite gone. Have
+the dagger too, if you please, and I'll fit it within the splint right
+neatly. But I shall be there--"
+
+"And you'll strike home?" Tavannes cried eagerly. He raised himself on
+his elbow, a gleam of joy in his gloomy eyes.
+
+"Have no fear, my lord. See, does it tremble?" He held out his hand.
+"And when you are sped, I will try the Spanish stroke--upwards with a
+turn ere you withdraw, that I learned from Ruiz--on the shaven pate. I
+see them about me now!" the old man continued, his face flushing, his
+form dilating. "It will be odd if I cannot snatch a sword and hew down
+three to go with Tavannes! And Bigot, he will see my lord the Marshal by-
+and-by; and as I do to the priest, the Marshal will do to Montsoreau. Ho!
+ho! He will teach him the _coup de Jarnac_, never fear!" And the old
+man's moustaches curled up ferociously.
+
+Count Hannibal's eyes sparkled with joy. "Old dog!" he cried--and he
+held his hand to the veteran, who brushed it reverently with his lips--"we
+will go together then! Who touches my brother, touches Tavannes!"
+
+"Touches Tavannes!" Badelon cried, the glow of battle lighting his
+bloodshot eyes. He rose to his feet. "Touches Tavannes! You mind at
+Jarnac--"
+
+"Ah! At Jarnac!"
+
+"When we charged their horse, was my boot a foot from yours, my lord?"
+
+"Not a foot!"
+
+"And at Dreux," the old man continued with a proud, elated gesture, "when
+we rode down the German pikemen--they were grass before us, leaves on the
+wind, thistledown--was it not I who covered your bridle hand, and swerved
+not in the _melee_?"
+
+"It was! It was!"
+
+"And at St. Quentin, when we fled before the Spaniard--it was his day,
+you remember, and cost us dear--"
+
+"Ay, I was young then," Tavannes cried in turn, his eyes glistening. "St.
+Quentin! It was the tenth of August. And you were new with me, and
+seized my rein--"
+
+"And we rode off together, my lord--of the last, of the last, as God sees
+me! And striking as we went, so that they left us for easier game."
+
+"It was so, good sword! I remember it as if it had been yesterday!"
+
+"And at Cerisoles, the Battle of the Plain, in the old Spanish wars, that
+was most like a joust of all the pitched fields I ever saw--at Cerisoles,
+where I caught your horse? You mind me? It was in the shock when we
+broke Guasto's line--"
+
+"At Cerisoles?" Count Hannibal muttered slowly. "Why, man, I--"
+
+"I caught your horse, and mounted you afresh? You remember, my lord? And
+at Landriano, where Leyva turned the tables on us again."
+
+Count Hannibal stared. "Landriano?" he muttered bluntly. "'Twas in '29,
+forty years ago and more! My father, indeed--"
+
+"And at Rome--at Rome, my lord? _Mon Dieu_! in the old days at Rome!
+When the Spanish company scaled the wall--Ruiz was first, I next--was it
+not my foot you held? And was it not I who dragged you up, while the
+devils of Swiss pressed us hard? Ah, those were days, my lord! I was
+young then, and you, my lord, young too, and handsome as the morning--"
+
+"You rave!" Tavannes cried, finding his tongue at last. "Rome? You
+rave, old man! Why, I was not born in those days. My father even was a
+boy! It was in '27 you sacked it--five-and-forty years ago!"
+
+The old man passed his hands over his heated face, and, as a man roused
+suddenly from sleep looks, he looked round the room. The light died out
+of his eyes--as a light blown out in a room; his form seemed to shrink,
+even while the others gazed at him, and he sat down.
+
+"No, I remember," he muttered slowly. "It was Prince Philibert of
+Chalons, my lord of Orange."
+
+"Dead these forty years!"
+
+"Ay, dead these forty years! All dead!" the old man whispered, gazing at
+his gnarled hand, and opening and shutting it by turns. "And I grow
+childish! 'Tis time, high time, I followed them! It trembles now; but
+have no fear, my lord, this hand will not tremble then. All dead! Ay,
+all dead!"
+
+He sank into a mournful silence; and Tavannes, after gazing at him awhile
+in rough pity, fell to his own meditations, which were gloomy enough. The
+day was beginning to wane, and with the downward turn, though the sun
+still shone brightly through the southern windows, a shadow seemed to
+fall across his thoughts. They no longer rioted in a turmoil of defiance
+as in the forenoon. In its turn, sober reflection marshalled the past
+before his eyes. The hopes of a life, the ambitions of a life, moved in
+sombre procession, and things done and things left undone, the
+sovereignty which Nostradamus had promised, the faces of men he had
+spared and of men he had not spared--and the face of one woman.
+
+She would not now be his. He had played highly, and he would lose
+highly, playing the game to the end, that to-morrow she might think of
+him highly. Had she begun to think of him at all? In the chamber of the
+inn at Angers he had fancied a change in her, an awakening to life and
+warmth, a shadow of turning to him. It had pleased him to think so, at
+any rate. It pleased him still to imagine--of this he was more
+confident--that in the time to come, when she was Tignonville's, she
+would think of him secretly and kindly. She would remember him, and in
+her thoughts and in her memory he would grow to the heroic, even as the
+man she had chosen would shrink as she learned to know him.
+
+It pleased him, that. It was almost all that was left to please
+him--that, and to die proudly as he had lived. But as the day wore on,
+and the room grew hot and close, and the pain in his thigh became more
+grievous, the frame of his mind altered. A sombre rage was born and grew
+in him, and a passion fierce and ill-suppressed. To end thus, with
+nothing done, nothing accomplished of all his hopes and ambitions! To
+die thus, crushed in a corner by a mean priest and a rabble of spearmen,
+he who had seen Dreux and Jarnac, had defied the King, and dared to turn
+the St. Bartholomew to his ends! To die thus, and leave her to that
+puppet! Strong man as he was, of a strength of will surpassed by few, it
+taxed him to the utmost to lie and make no sign. Once, indeed, he raised
+himself on his elbow with something between an oath and a snarl, and he
+seemed about to speak. So that Bigot came hurriedly to him.
+
+"My lord?"
+
+"Water!" he said. "Water, fool!" And, having drunk, he turned his face
+to the wall, lest he should name her or ask for her.
+
+For the desire to see her before he died, to look into her eyes, to touch
+her hand once, only once, assailed his mind and all but whelmed his will.
+She had been with him, he knew it, in the night; she had left him only at
+daybreak. But then, in his state of collapse, he had been hardly
+conscious of her presence. Now to ask for her or to see her would stamp
+him coward, say what he might to her. The proverb, that the King's face
+gives grace, applied to her; and an overture on his side could mean but
+one thing, that he sought her grace. And that he would not do though the
+cold waters of death covered him more and more, and the coming of the
+end--in that quiet chamber, while the September sun sank to the appointed
+place--awoke wild longings and a wild rebellion in his breast. His
+thoughts were very bitter, as he lay, his loneliness of the uttermost. He
+turned his face to the wall.
+
+In that posture he slept after a time, watched over by Bigot with looks
+of rage and pity. And on the room fell a long silence. The sun had
+lacked three hours of setting when he fell asleep. When he re-opened his
+eyes, and, after lying for a few minutes between sleep and waking, became
+conscious of his position, of the day, of the things which had happened,
+and his helplessness--an awakening which wrung from him an involuntary
+groan--the light in the room was still strong, and even bright. He
+fancied for a moment that he had merely dozed off and awaked again; and
+he continued to lie with his face to the wall, courting a return of
+slumber.
+
+But sleep did not come, and little by little, as he lay listening and
+thinking and growing more restless, he got the fancy that he was alone.
+The light fell brightly on the wall to which his face was turned; how
+could that be if Bigot's broad shoulders still blocked the loophole?
+Presently, to assure himself, he called the man by name.
+
+He got no answer.
+
+"Badelon!" he muttered. "Badelon!"
+
+Had he gone, too, the old and faithful? It seemed so, for again no
+answer came.
+
+He had been accustomed all his life to instant service; to see the act
+follow the word ere the word ceased to sound. And nothing which had gone
+before, nothing which he had suffered since his defeat at Angers, had
+brought him to feel his impotence and his position--and that the end of
+his power was indeed come--as sharply as this. The blood rushed to his
+head; almost the tears to eyes which had not shed them since boyhood, and
+would not shed them now, weak as he was! He rose on his elbow and looked
+with a full heart; it was as he had fancied. Badelon's stool was empty;
+the embrasure--that was empty too. Through its narrow outlet he had a
+tiny view of the shore and the low rocky hill, of which the summit shone
+warm in the last rays of the setting sun.
+
+The setting sun! Ay, for the lower part of the hill was growing cold;
+the shore at its foot was grey. Then he had slept long, and the time was
+come. He drew a deep breath and listened. But on all within and without
+lay silence, a silence marked, rather than broken, by the dull fall of a
+wave on the causeway. The day had been calm, but with the sunset a light
+breeze was rising.
+
+He set his teeth hard, and continued to listen. An hour before sunset
+was the time they had named for the exchange. What did it mean? In five
+minutes the sun would be below the horizon; already the zone of warmth on
+the hillside was moving and retreating upwards. And Bigot and old
+Badelon? Why had they left him while he slept? An hour before sunset!
+Why, the room was growing grey, grey and dark in the corners, and--what
+was that?
+
+He started, so violently that he jarred his leg, and the pain wrung a
+groan from him. At the foot of the bed, overlooked until then, a woman
+lay prone on the floor, her face resting on her outstretched arms. She
+lay without motion, her head and her clasped hands towards the loophole,
+her thick, clubbed hair hiding her neck. A woman! Count Hannibal
+stared, and, fancying he dreamed, closed his eyes, then looked again. It
+was no phantasm. It was the Countess; it was his wife!
+
+He drew a deep breath, but he did not speak, though the colour rose
+slowly to his cheek. And slowly his eyes devoured her from head to foot,
+from the hands lying white in the light below the window to the shod
+feet; unchecked he took his fill of that which he had so much desired--the
+seeing her! A woman prone, with all of her hidden but her hands: a
+hundred acquainted with her would not have known her. But he knew her,
+and would have known her from a hundred, nay from a thousand, by her
+hands alone.
+
+What was she doing here, and in this guise? He pondered; then he looked
+from her for an instant, and saw that while he had gazed at her the sun
+had set, the light had passed from the top of the hill; the world without
+and the room within were growing cold. Was that the cause she no longer
+lay quiet? He saw a shudder run through her, and a second; then it
+seemed to him--or was he going mad?--that she moaned, and prayed in half-
+heard words, and, wrestling with herself, beat her forehead on her arms,
+and then was still again, as still as death. By the time the paroxysm
+had passed, the last flush of sunset had faded from the sky, and the
+hills were growing dark.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI. HIS KINGDOM.
+
+
+Count Hannibal could not have said why he did not speak to her at once.
+Warned by an instinct vague and ill-understood, he remained silent, his
+eyes riveted on her, until she rose from the floor. A moment later she
+met his gaze, and he looked to see her start. Instead, she stood quiet
+and thoughtful, regarding him with a kind of sad solemnity, as if she saw
+not him only, but the dead; while first one tremor and then a second
+shook her frame.
+
+At length "It is over!" she whispered. "Patience, Monsieur; have no
+fear, I will be brave. But I must give a little to him."
+
+"To him!" Count Hannibal muttered, his face extraordinarily, pale.
+
+She smiled with an odd passionateness. "Who was my lover!" she cried,
+her voice a-thrill. "Who will ever be my lover, though I have denied
+him, though I have left him to die! It was just. He who has so tried me
+knows it was just! He whom I have sacrificed--he knows it too, now! But
+it is hard to be--just," with a quavering smile. "You who take all may
+give him a little, may pardon me a little, may have--patience!"
+
+Count Hannibal uttered a strangled cry, between a moan and a roar. A
+moment he beat the coverlid with his hands in impotence. Then he sank
+back on the bed.
+
+"Water!" he muttered. "Water!"
+
+She fetched it hurriedly, and, raising his head on her arm, held it to
+his lips. He drank, and lay back again with closed eyes. He lay so
+still and so long that she thought that he had fainted; but after a pause
+he spoke.
+
+"You have done that?" he whispered; "you have done that?"
+
+"Yes," she answered, shuddering. "God forgive me! I have done that! I
+had to do that, or--"
+
+"And is it too late--to undo it?"
+
+"It is too late." A sob choked her voice.
+
+Tears--tears incredible, unnatural--welled from under Count Hannibal's
+closed eyelids, and rolled sluggishly down his harsh cheek to the edge of
+his beard.
+
+"I would have gone," he muttered. "If you had spoken, I would have
+spared you this."
+
+"I know," she answered unsteadily; "the men told me."
+
+"And yet--"
+
+"It was just. And you are my husband," she replied. "More, I am the
+captive of your sword, and as you spared me in your strength, my lord, I
+spared you in your weakness."
+
+"Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu, Madame!" he cried, "at what a cost!"
+
+And that arrested, that touched her in the depths of her grief and her
+horror; even while the gibbet on the causeway, which had burned itself
+into her eyeballs, hung before her. For she knew that it was the cost to
+_her_ he was counting. She knew that for himself he had ever held life
+cheap, that he could have seen Tignonville suffer without a qualm. And
+the thoughtfulness for her, the value he placed on a thing--even on a
+rival's life--because its was dear to her, touched her home, moved her as
+few things could have moved her at that moment. She saw it of a piece
+with all that had gone before, with all that had passed between them,
+since that fatal Sunday in Paris. But she made no sign. More than she
+had said she would not say; words of love, even of reconciliation, had no
+place on her lips while he whom she had sacrificed awaited his burial.
+
+And meantime the man beside her lay and found it incredible. "It was
+just," she had said. And he knew it; Tignonville's folly--that and that
+only had led them into the snare and caused his own capture. But what
+had justice to do with the things of this world? In his experience, the
+strong hand--that was justice, in France; and possession--that was law.
+By the strong hand he had taken her, and by the strong hand she might
+have freed herself.
+
+And she had not. There was the incredible thing. She had chosen instead
+to do justice! It passed belief. Opening his eyes on a silence which
+had lasted some minutes, a silence rendered more solemn by the lapping
+water without, Tavannes saw her kneeling in the dusk of the chamber, her
+head bowed over his couch, her face hidden in her hands. He knew that
+she prayed, and feebly he deemed the whole a dream. No scene akin to it
+had had place in his life; and, weakened and in pain, he prayed that the
+vision might last for ever, that he might never awake.
+
+But by-and-by, wrestling with the dread thought of what she had done, and
+the horror which would return upon her by fits and spasms, she flung out
+a hand, and it fell on him. He started, and the movement, jarring the
+broken limb, wrung from him a cry of pain. She looked up and was going
+to speak, when a scuffling of feet under the gateway arch, and a confused
+sound of several voices raised at once, arrested the words on her lips.
+She rose to her feet and listened. Dimly he could see her face through
+the dusk. Her eyes were on the door, and she breathed quickly.
+
+A moment or two passed in this way, and then from the hurly-burly in the
+gateway the footsteps of two men--one limped--detached themselves and
+came nearer and nearer. They stopped without. A gleam of light shone
+under the door, and some one knocked.
+
+She went to the door, and, withdrawing the bar, stepped quickly back to
+the bedside, where for an instant the light borne by those who entered
+blinded her. Then, above the lanthorn, the faces of La Tribe and Bigot
+broke upon her, and their shining eyes told her that they bore good news.
+It was well, for the men seemed tongue-tied. The minister's fluency was
+gone; he was very pale, and it was Bigot who in the end spoke for both.
+He stepped forward, and, kneeling, kissed her cold hand.
+
+"My lady," he said, "you have gained all, and lost nothing. Blessed be
+God!"
+
+"Blessed be God!" the minister wept. And from the passage without came
+the sound of laughter and weeping and many voices, with a flutter of
+lights and flying skirts, and women's feet.
+
+She stared at him wildly, doubtfully, her hand at her throat.
+
+"What?" she said, "he is not dead--M. de Tignonville?"
+
+"No, he is alive," La Tribe answered, "he is alive." And he lifted up
+his hands as if he gave thanks.
+
+"Alive?" she cried. "Alive! Oh, Heaven is merciful. You are sure? You
+are sure?"
+
+"Sure, Madame, sure. He was not in their hands. He was dismounted in
+the first shock, it seems, and, coming to himself after a time, crept
+away and reached St. Gilles, and came hither in a boat. But the enemy
+learned that he had not entered with us, and of this the priest wove his
+snare. Blessed be God, who put it into your heart to escape it!"
+
+The Countess stood motionless, and with closed eyes pressed her hands to
+her temples. Once she swayed as if she would fall her length, and Bigot
+sprang forward to support and save her. But she opened her eyes at that,
+sighed very deeply, and seemed to recover herself.
+
+"You are sure?" she said faintly. "It is no trick?"
+
+"No, Madame, it is no trick," La Tribe answered. "M. de Tignonville is
+alive, and here."
+
+"Here!" She started at the word. The colour fluttered in her cheek.
+"But the keys," she murmured. And she passed her hand across her brow.
+"I thought--that I had them."
+
+"He has not entered," the minister answered, "for that reason. He is
+waiting at the postern, where he landed. He came, hoping to be of use to
+you."
+
+She paused a moment, and when she spoke again her aspect had undergone a
+subtle change. Her head was high, a flush had risen to her cheeks, her
+eyes were bright.
+
+"Then," she said, addressing La Tribe, "do you, Monsieur, go to him, and
+pray him in my name to retire to St. Gilles, if he can do so without
+peril. He has no place here--now; and if he can go safely to his home it
+will be well that he do so. Add, if you please, that Madame de Tavannes
+thanks him for his offer of aid, but in her husband's house she needs no
+other protection."
+
+Bigot's eyes sparkled with joy.
+
+The minister hesitated. "No more, Madame?" he faltered. He was tender-
+hearted, and Tignonville was of his people.
+
+"No more," she said gravely, bowing her head. "It is not M. de
+Tignonville I have to thank, but Heaven's mercy, that I do not stand here
+at this moment unhappy as I entered--a woman accursed, to be pointed at
+while I live. And the dead"--she pointed solemnly through the dark
+casement to the shore--"the dead lie there."
+
+La Tribe went.
+
+She stood a moment in thought, and then took the keys from the rough
+stone window-ledge on which she had laid them when she entered. As the
+cold iron touched her fingers she shuddered. The contact awoke again the
+horror and misery in which she had groped, a lost thing, when she last
+felt that chill.
+
+"Take them," she said; and she gave them to Bigot. "Until my lord can
+leave his couch they will remain in your charge, and you will answer for
+all to him. Go, now, take the light; and in half an hour send Madame
+Carlat to me."
+
+A wave broke heavily on the causeway and ran down seething to the sea;
+and another and another, filling the room with rhythmical thunders. But
+the voice of the sea was no longer the same in the darkness, where the
+Countess knelt in silence beside the bed--knelt, her head bowed on her
+clasped hands, as she had knelt before, but with a mind how different,
+with what different thoughts! Count Hannibal could see her head but
+dimly, for the light shed upwards by the spume of the sea fell only on
+the rafters. But he knew she was there, and he would fain, for his heart
+was full, have laid his hand on her hair.
+
+And yet he would not. He would not, out of pride. Instead he bit on his
+harsh beard, and lay looking upward to the rafters, waiting what would
+come. He who had held her at his will now lay at hers, and waited. He
+who had spared her life at a price now took his own a gift at her hands,
+and bore it.
+
+"_Afterwards, Madame de Tavannes_--"
+
+His mind went back by some chance to those words--the words he had
+neither meant nor fulfilled. It passed from them to the marriage and the
+blow; to the scene in the meadow beside the river; to the last ride
+between La Fleche and Angers--the ride during which he had played with
+her fears and hugged himself on the figure he would make on the morrow.
+The figure? Alas! of all his plans for dazzling her had come--_this_!
+Angers had defeated him, a priest had worsted him. In place of releasing
+Tignonville after the fashion of Bayard and the Paladins, and in the
+teeth of snarling thousands, he had come near to releasing him after
+another fashion and at his own expense. Instead of dazzling her by his
+mastery and winning her by his magnanimity, he lay here, owing her his
+life, and so weak, so broken, that the tears of childhood welled up in
+his eyes.
+
+Out of the darkness a hand, cool and firm, slid into his, clasped it
+tightly, drew it to warm lips, carried it to a woman's bosom.
+
+"My lord," she murmured, "I was the captive of your sword, and you spared
+me. Him I loved you took and spared him too--not once or twice. Angers,
+also, and my people you would have saved for my sake. And you thought I
+could do this! Oh! shame, shame!" But her hand held his always.
+
+"You loved him," he muttered.
+
+"Yes, I loved him," she answered slowly and thoughtfully. "I loved him."
+And she fell silent a minute. Then, "And I feared you," she added, her
+voice low. "Oh, how I feared you--and hated you!"
+
+"And now?"
+
+"I do not fear him," she answered, smiling in the darkness. "Nor hate
+him. And for you, my lord, I am your wife and must do your bidding,
+whether I will or no. I have no choice."
+
+He was silent.
+
+"Is that not so?" she asked.
+
+He tried weakly to withdraw his hand.
+
+But she clung to it. "I must bear your blows or your kisses. I must be
+as you will and do as you will, and go happy or sad, lonely or with you,
+as you will! As you will, my lord! For I am your chattel, your
+property, your own. Have you not told me so?"
+
+"But your heart," he cried fiercely, "is his! Your heart, which you told
+me in the meadow could never be mine!"
+
+"I lied," she murmured, laughing tearfully, and her hands hovered over
+him. "It has come back! And it is on my lips."
+
+And she leant over and kissed him. And Count Hannibal knew that he had
+entered into his kingdom, the sovereignty of a woman's heart.
+
+* * * * *
+
+An hour later there was a stir in the village on the mainland. Lanthorns
+began to flit to and fro. Sulkily men were saddling and preparing for
+the road. It was far to Challans, farther to Lege--more than one day,
+and many a weary league to Ponts de Ce and the Loire. The men who had
+ridden gaily southwards on the scent of spoil and revenge turned their
+backs on the castle with many a sullen oath and word. They burned a
+hovel or two, and stripped such as they spared, after the fashion of the
+day; and it had gone ill with the peasant woman who fell into their
+hands. Fortunately, under cover of the previous night every soul had
+escaped from the village, some to sea, and the rest to take shelter among
+the sand-dunes; and as the troopers rode up the path from the beach, and
+through the green valley, where their horses shied from the bodies of the
+men they had slain, there was not an eye to see them go.
+
+Or to mark the man who rode last, the man of the white face--scarred on
+the temple--and the burning eyes, who paused on the brow of the hill,
+and, before he passed beyond, cursed with quivering lips the foe who had
+escaped him. The words were lost, as soon as spoken, in the murmur of
+the sea on the causeway; the sea, fit emblem of the Eternal, which rolled
+its tide regardless of blessing or cursing, good or ill will, nor spared
+one jot of ebb or flow because a puny creature had spoken to the night.
+
+
+
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